HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1899-5-11, Page 7't
ffNEWS1
THE VERY
ALL THH
lateresting items A
fireat Britain,
All Parts of th
Assorted for ida.s
0A
Manitoba elect
21st.
Dr. Demontign
real, is about to
The employes
ing Mills, Huai
union
The new C. P.
the Canadian Soo
traffic.
A London, Out
Ball was fatally i
ing to board a m
Manitoba land
and seeding is ge
25 per cent. more
eaaacia„,this year th
Montreal ha.s
Taillon, a 6 -year
Charles, who our
matism by laying
Electric headlig
ed on the Grand
* Pacific this sum
in the steps of san
ways In the Unit
Miss Maud
Kingston, has tec
New York Cent
juries received i
She lives in, Phil
From present in
of customs cone
Winnipeg, for th
la, June_ 30,. -will
Lasriear it was
Mr. 11. D. Lu
gineer of Montrea
'
the purpose of
IA the cost of do
P. R. between Wi
liaan.
There is a poss
won the iron
masters ef Montr
'ors' Union havin
a'their emeilosers f
of 2.50aaday.
Mass Gartie M
Warden Metcalfe
itentiary,, has be
a ant accountant o
ary of $500, and
with a year's sale
Twe Montrealer
a candidate for t
senting that they
could use -the m
bars of the Polio
be prosecuted for
and officials." •
Mr. Tatazgoso
Consul -General f
section of the U
lug between the
Rockies, is nove
he may reside
hitherto lived in
Mr. John A.,K
t Inspector o
or thw es t Terri t
ncipal of the
1 set out on lVf
•Z., where he wil
.
A. Ruddick, a
Is the dairy exp
New Zealand Go
An amusing re
Hon. G. W. Ste
Mayor Prefontain
the ground that
expenditure, has
Mayor noticed th
alleged under oat
accordance with
laid a elearge of
Stephens.
GREAT
The Duke pf B
Lord Byroa, a
is a bankrupt at
A. look of Na
five guineas at a
The British Ad
experiment with
The British Ad
to entertain the
marine boats,
The Lakes of K
for sale, and it is
chaser may exelu
The Midland R
placed, an order
with an America
ordere, will likely
The first keel
Drake, designed t
ful warship of he
was laid on Wethi
dockyard. ,
Wireless telegr
value in, marine
\eSands lightship h
means of it to s
ehiviti aki accide
Cotton spinners
the northern cou
Vance in wages of
the alternative of
Winch will affect
. Lord Charles Be
banqaet of the
lzs Ibnacia., on W
that England is
States and Japan i
catty on warsitips.
UNITED
Ex -Governor Og
dod at Springfiel
Toledo clergyra
ownership of saloo
A copper catobin
ized at jerSeY
000,000. .
Rev. Dr. Connell
(alined the eall t
Church, New York.
It is reported: 1:
per ledges ever dis
have been found
Teeema.
Spain has intinia
o accept the $20,0
price for the Phili
will be paid with°
The ooronerls ju
the Windsor Hots,
tilt of tin .acciden
10,000 worth of je
Three thous,ind
lilooded. Gatlin wor
THE EXETER IrriVIE
a
4 ti
N
T. ,......q
LATEST
roRLD OVER.
i
,.,
'
States,
of
position
form
•
bridge
attempt'
,
conditioh
mildew,
..in
Point
or
introdue-
Canadian
following
• •
frora
accident.'
E
FROM
Country,
July
Monts-
Roll-
Frank
will
John
rhea-
rail-
for
• •
,,
[ 4
and
and
`
a
at
for
be
St.
'
..
• of.
the
be_
lay -the burning of the learn on the,
, ., . ., .
14H4iikaone. cranier, farm near Saratoga.
•
aro aesaylea 01,000 a geld ,te ow
otof4j3jhatiwacmbteemnout4uktae?4,°:etardLittiteMoSiodire:
Arke ead farmers ave quit their fleads
mad e•one prespeeting.
W. . . ' ,
DerrY, elia,e F, H. Montrogle,
tepreseatea hilalself ea Warden, af
Kingston Penitentiary, and defrauded
aalea , i t • I firms' f $a e00
gO 'e ec. rica Out 0 ' 0,
before he .was aerested. •
. .
Five staelents of St. Laweence Ufa-
versity, Canton, N, Y., were wounded
by the college steward, who fired Imola
theta as tbeY were attempting to burn
down: a sraall f nee buildi
ra ng near -
. , Col
lege Hall, ,
'
The Unitea• States transport Cro
ia Nowyorlc,ola wedaesdaaky
arrived t '
rom Ponce Sa:ntiago and. Guantana-
,
neo with 35'6 ' bodies' ot soldiern who
were killed I b •ttl died • r
. . n a e 'or in Porto
Rico and Cuba. •
• Paeldefna McKinley has appreeed.the
projee or a new traasatlantic .cable
between Germany ' and. the, TJnited
States.. -
The new eompany• is to be
kuovvrt as the Germ.an-Americaa Tel-
, eve:ph Co. The termbai will be New
York and, Ems,. ead the route will be
, by the Azores, ,• , e
,A.1; Warciner,. Idaho, a. mob- that eV-
rived from Burke on a train that thei,
had seized blew up the I3unker . Hill
• -
• . . . .before
and Sullivan Mill with giant powder,
destroying $250;000 worth of peoaerty.•
During the visit of the mob its mem-
berg began firing on One another, and
one :man was killed. '
The race question' was raised at ,the
International Sunday &la& colleen-
tion which met at Atlanta, Georgia,
a
audit Was peinted out that both city
anaStates laws forbade white and col-
°red. people ,to sit together in . public
gatherings. After a discussion at was
decided' to allow the delegates to sit
SHARKS DEVOURED THE CAPTAIN.
_
s , ' •
. , . , .
So Think the Crew or the Vessel Frosts
-Whieh the Master -Was lost.
' The thrilling tale' of the , loss at sea.
of Ca.pt. j. Masson, the well allowa
commander of the Munson Line steam-
. - .... . . , .
ehila Vimeira, and, of his body. being
devoured be, hungry ,sharks was made
- - ' '
known Thursday afternoon upon ar-
. - '
rival of taut ship at Philadelphia from
Cub lb . , t Th
vtnaeJVal, Apedaart,no Sngar. . e
Car"nan and
Matanzas in charge af Chief Officer
;3'34"n* 'who took 0(nnmand when the
unfertunate Calet. Maalson Wee lost.
,
,.The vessel Was en route from Phil."'
adelphia to Havel* With coal, having
- • -
left here March 11, On the 21st she
was passing close to the Baharna Le:
• ' ' •
lands, and. Capt.. Masson was on the
starboard side of . thee bridge, with.the
teleccope glaeses in. his hands. :looking
' • ,
for a baOY, from whicn he could judge
tile correct position of the ship Mate
'
Ronald was on the bridge end in • the
amidship, seetion. '
. me ship was under fall speed, when
suddenly the 'Captain fell overboard.
Tee ert - . • d (I; life-
games were reverse an a
boat was ' launched, .- but the body of
,the Captain was never seen again. VOT
' hours the boat rowed about the local-
ity, which was 'alive with sharks,. and
the conclusion reaeheel by the officers
and men of the shit) is that their Cap-
tain wasat once. swallowed up by these
monsters of the deep. '
Capt. Masson was well known both in
Philadelphia and New York, between
.which ports and Cuba. he had' been
running on a dale. charter with the
Munson line, for some years. He sue-
ceeded Capt. Thomson in the command
of the,Vimeria., and was well liked , •hY
every one. Tae unfortunate .skipper
was a robust man, about 50 years old,
and leaves a wife and 'fatally near, Gies-
e
' T
THE REIGN OF THE B CYCLE
I
'
- 1114i41 t4''t)rni's 4" in aleek4. The »ret"
tie's' t sults are made of a COnilun'' tititm
a twe klAds at geode, The outeide As
plapi, and the lining la- in (ibeele or
I d .The ek•xts are flitish d r and
p at ., , a , . a . a. a. .
the bottom with eevel'al rows a stitch-
imt, about half au inch aParta and a
' deal) kieni of -goods like the eutside is
turn''' up ‘sona'Itohelviexlris4g: :,idae-te' aSvoemrye
at 04 k ,Jt , re . lei a
- • s s 14' • ' • '
, pretty oae , Wae of, derk gray rough
goods Rued With a sratill eheekin Week
and White, The plain side was fcar
lacyclina, aled the tibeck side for golf.
,-.• • • -
. aome a the.btcYcle (tresses are macie
with Eto - rk t (I ' an h t
coat Inntliael ett"'44 w' 'st7'
e a'-' 4 6 4 .6X• -94s6' they*alas a
XeeedinglY Plat:ailed" ' '3.-ila aatTest
shoe for ladtes. is tea. inehect higa
taheagla high ee canes :are shown. l'he'
, ' " 1 ' -h '
neateat hoe is a p am leat ee and
eaPPortea ley a Frenen heel. The toes
are neithet "bulldog" or pointed, but
edium and round, The cloth top
al . ' a
uppers are pre - y, but It is argue
that they do not hold their shape so
4 • the• 1 t• - f h h ld. b
use 8C ICLI o a "a 8 °11 he
guided entirely by the amoant and
- e .• • - - r
kind. of weal. that it is to have, For
country runs and. ' hard -usage the
French kidaand heels, -though pretty
• .,, , , . '
are run nearly so appropriate as the
heavy soled shoe with the low, . mili-
tary heel. . •
FOR THE MAN ON .A. W1-11SEL
' '
There ate a u be of • kinds •
A ro. r new in.
the a:SO/eats for men. Last year, the
cuffs tle the trousers Were either plain
felt or Saf plaid. goods. Ma year the
distinetly correct thing is to have the
cuffs made of the same material as the
rest of .t.he garment. Of course, there
is always 'a feetin.g of satisfaction •in
b. ' th ' .
elatestan fashion, but it is
sometimee had'at the expense of a more
becoming style. :The bright colored.
plaids and , the striking effee the
t of
felt cuffs are eery- picturesque, and
for that f th •
• reason . many o em are,
DrAlli . i
KETO OF THE 17011,11D
aireeeae•
p 1 ' ' .
a CO4 of Or311), Cattle, Cheese, SGP'
'
Toronto, May Mreaas,la to -day
, a ,
fi'lacadt:,('invretleiarnAg °I.a,:titOlg bog, 41045rlershee:
and lagalbs, between. 50 .and 00 Pelves,
and 30 peilkers, , •
Ty, '
''" was ad adevent:tal day dh ' the
market,' and the conditione of Met
Tuo'sday exactly prevailed, only riot be-
lug', a recagnized warket• daY, things
were a little more .dull, '
Shippin' g cattle wes' very q,uiet, and
quota tame range from $1.25 per cwt.
for light tuff, up to a4.80 for choice
loads; , 4,,5 a. .a ' .Twenty-two
was pal for it few melted
ote, but was not a Lately representa-
tive• figure, ,.
-uatc-net eatti6 seus well at 'fraaa..41
41 64.60 Per cwt.; and, good stuff-. is in
. - '. .
steady demand. I aTeere was a good
ampu•nt of trading to -day but much
• ' • ' e '
of the cattle watch cane in on Thurs-
' - 0 e•
day is usually sent here with no intent-
tion of selling it Until the neat day,
without, of course, a good should'
offer
ri . e •here ,
be ma e. The cattl is sent, the
to make sure that k 'doe
day - • - s
not miss the early market on Fri-
•
day' ' • '
atook,ers are worth from 4 to ta-4c
Pea:Pound. There is a good enquiry.
,]bortp_bulls are worth from $S.50 to
Only a LOW came. la to -day.
OL • u
Feeders are uoted at from at 50 to-
• . a -*, - ,
-,. , •
mita cows are , unonanged at from
625 t $45 h
o eac , ' ,
Calves weak at from 6:1 to $6 • eh;
, ea
quality as a rule poor. Good. -calves
,
are wanted. • •
Dyspepsta
„
common at
. 5eases'
curei, with readily
yle104 reaally
C 1 N
C' err. . erve
W. H. Buckingham
Eat, tiontliton,
iwn ad ei :ezulobil,e at
acouid get no
Manley's Celery
which ehreer71PY„
speak too highly
and Wdigestion.,.
- . hard
butto
*0 .
,
to
tO inamey s
. 4""I
'
MANY PERSONS DECLARED THAT IT
WAS ONLY .A.FAD. '
a e yaw • , .•
, . a .0., so...k4, 010•Wit Int° it Necessary
, Thing--liefetenee ere Hs rernianeuee-
laislOons For Woinen end Bleu.
•
To yeas age there used, to beeenae
funnY, sigats on the streets just ribbut
th. t. , , . .. .
le tine of year. The btcyele ot that
Perirta belonged to the •
eireffe familY,
and when J len • b u lit out hi
a' ale 'ra .g. • a
bread neW wheal to' learn, to ride,. the'
neighbors lined uie On the front Poreh
or the back fen e or an where that
. . c , y t
Would
• ' command e good view of the
hair-raising exploit. Of eou.rse the
embryo of most every invention is
, - ,.
crude, but tale ' en the begilminga• of
,
the modern. bicycle was the most fear-
'
fully and. wonderfully Wrought off-
•
saoot o/ bcitellect that the world has
• • •4
seen •sinee Noahbuilt his ark. There
are wheel dwheelsi this world so
, s an n . .,,
1 - • • •
many .peop e have them that there is
'
almost no limit to their eccentric, var-
laty. • But it; is doubtful if a pair ever
• '
'existed that or awkWardaess and pe-
culiarit of coriebinattan cOula vie with
a • ,
the un qual beace of cycles that made
ua, theitald time wheel. 'TO' mount: one
was art act of heroism To fall off a-
' ,
was to chanae to the nomenclature of
a .
"Mud " This o • "Ferris wheel"
. . • old timeeying
remained a curiosity as long as it livea.,
Now and then the Alpine fever would
strike some one, he would, invest in
, . . ,- .
one of his own climb up and, take pos-
, , .
C 'd
ornpo' un
396 gitig$t
eat„ saysi-"I
witha10134v:17i el a, :11
or
tenet usaii I tried '
-Nerve compound,
and I cannot
la its praise,"
,,,•.,..
bout Our On
die United
, (Hobe, condensed
y aerating.
iteese,
NADA.
,ons take place
a recorder,
resioi his
,f the Ontario
ltoa, will .
R. swing
has been opened
.
named
, boy na,
ajured while
wing, trein•
is in good
este!. There
land •under
n last.
i enation
.eid lad of
hi paralysis
on his hands.
hts will be
Trunk and
nor, thus
le•of the largest
act States.
Valsh, formerly.
eived 62,500
:al Railway
s a recent
athapaiee
-
WOULD
world.
WO 'in reserve,
,
Milk, if
the beat
Th 8 j11108.
'
in. tannin,
shoe .blacking.
Mr. Chamberlain,
'
West. India
to investigate
colonial
A French
two statues
• •
Nile, one
representing
d
an . one
in Abrah'ara's
G,Amitum.q.ka.mmusimmom
FLOAT A DTG $HIP
• ' •
" ' '
million. bottle.% of diem -
. •
in
A Rheims dealer keep a 9;000,-
SI101,E ANTIDOTE.
--
taken be large quailatlea, la
antidote for parbolie acid -
HANNA JUICE.
' ' f t he banana citron
0 , being El
makes an Indelible ink and
.
•
in a letter to the
.
. Committee, has promised
the • surtax , levied an
rum, • ,
Egyptian. has. unearthed
at Karnak On the Upper
1
of alabaster, a . feet long,
the T'heban goldAmmon,
, e • . •
set up y King Usertesen le
time. ,
,
dications the amount'
ted at the port Of
' • ' '
, /meal year, closing
be about §1,000,000.
.about 6900,000. .
sden, consulting .en-
1, is in Winnipeg for
naking ran estimate
dhle_tz.„king the a
anipeg• and Port Wil-
.
•
bility of trouble be-
moulders and iron
eel, the Iron Mould-
; made. a demand .on
er a minimum wage
:Walla daughter of
of the Kingston Pen-
en appointed assist-
the prison on a sal-
er father will retire
ry, '
y.
s who took 6150. frame
a police force, repree
hacl influence, and
aney to bribe mem-
- .
a Coramittee, are to
"defaming aldermen
,
Nosse, the Japanese
a, Canada and that
,
aited States .extend-
Alleghenies and ' th'e
, .
in Montreal, where
Permanently, having
Cificege.401V12
insella, late Govern-
f Creameries in the
. -
ries,and betore that
ingson Dairy School,
..
.jr 20 for Wellington,
. be assistant to Prof.
so a Canadian, . h
Iv -9
xt emaloved by the
• - - •
-ernment. •
nit of the effort of
awns to , disqualify
e of Montreal on
•
ae .authorized illegal
.
coene, to. light. The•••at
Lt. certain. things areI
le which are not in
the facts, and has
perjury against Mr.
r
BRITAIN.
nfort is dead. ,
!elative of the poet,
London. .
deon's- heir brought
iction in London.
. .
nixalty will shortly
wireless telegraphy.
,published.
niralty has declined
_an o _tit__Ing slib-
Barney will soon be
feared that the p:ur-
le '
the public..
,ilvvay Company bas
for 130 locomotives
•
i 'company. Other
rollow,
,
gate of the cruiser
' be. tlik MO8t, Power-
. class in the world, •
Lesday at Pembroke
•
•phy has proved of
afairs, the. GoOdwin
eying been able by
ammon help on re-
acil injury. •
of Lancashire and
Ales went an ad-
•
one per cent. with
a general strike,
60,000 operators. ,
.
resford, speaking at
;ociety a Engineers
dnesday night, said
behind the United
. , ,
n the use of electri-
„ ,,
,'
esby, of Illinois, la
a
in favor municipal
,, ae„
e has been e'''''"''''''
- ...
tau. Capital 675, -countries.
of London has de- •
, the Fi t Avenue .
,4/eveeliatent
,at the largest Op-
coVered in the wt
miles east of
'
tel her willingness
90,000, ' - b.' h • 1
NV le is ler
PPines, The money
ut delay'.
1" has decided that
fire Was the re-
t. rlhe police have
et
O. ec. ; -
- ,
dollars worth of
. ,
8 killed. last aight
as they pleased.
' , GENERAL,
ktepewea . reports of distress frora
famina -come frem Russia,.
, ; e
Aaatria will build two new battle-
ships, and four new °rut ' t add,
sees o a
to her navy. '
-.-..
W..tre Queen of England, Thursday
meened a new bridge across the Paillon
River in France '
.
Electric ' launches are spoken of as
.' .
likely to .replace the picturesque gon-
• ,
deliere of Venice. •combination
Portugal has approved a project for
layina a 'cable from the Azores , to
North America Great Britaind Ger
.. an -
many.
Nuns of a ecnivent at Rome recent-
ly refused admittance to firemen ,with-
.1 - g ' " f • • - "
the muncle o their convent, which
was on fire. . '
; Thule:at. smallpox leas appeared sim-
iiltaneously ' ' 'f t -i .
in various parts o ere
Mena', notably at Iserlelen, .HanoverBECAME
•and. laczadlo. . . .
The fanatic police ' officer who at-
tempted to assassinate the Czar while,
travelling in Japan, before his awes-
sion. to the throne, has died in a .Ta-
Panese prison. . •
The, strike, that has been in prog-
ress at Buciareis, Behemia, for .some
time •etli - t d -d ' th
. mina. e in rioting, an in e
collisions between the troops and the
rioters several persons were wounded.
In the Transvaal President Ken-
ger's chief of staffG ' ' Joubert,' ' ' ' '
, on. is in-
.-Flour-There
speoting the frontiers and seleeting
places suitable for enirenchtnents.
More rigid a f the ' '
• mspecaon o . e Military
has been ordered. • -
. . ..Manitoba
England will support Emperor Wil-
l'a ' h f -
l 108 ge eme or the bettbr adtainis.
'•
tration of. the Asiet* ' ' f a'
to provinces o ur.
. • •
key, if all the nations enjoy equal come
meatial rivile es in th • '' d G "
• p , t g e :propose er-
man protec orate.
The Govern ' '
ment of Finland has ob-
, tai dauthorityfr '
ne can the Czar to
exile allt d f b. '
people suspeo e o osti 1 y
to Russia and to the work '
' i , • now in
progress of "Russianizing" Finland.
The order affects thousands of people
. • . •, •
Ivan, Hapax, an Austrian boy 17
years old, has invented a - new magi,
zinc,' rifle which the. Austrian War
• • •• • • ' • • •
Office is investigating. The gun takes
fifteen cartridges at a load, and it is
.. „
said that it can be discharged at the
rate of. 40 shit:its a minute. •
tow, Scotland.
session; but envy seldom followed him
further than around the °other. It es
.
said, that falling off the woodshed OT
,
jumping' freight trains was the most
approved methods of preparing for
,,. ..... ,, • , • , • •
neade,rs, and 'Mlle. ' Lulu, the fam-
s ' '
ous ciecus perforraer, describes the sen-
satioarlas very mach akin to her spea
• a
ma ry o cumout o a cannon.
1'1. 1 a h • shot t * f '
.
• . • a ' • • .• • •
Afteleawla .
• le someone concmved the
• •
idea . of boiling .up the incongruous
. • • . • . , .
and dividing the wheels
evenly. As a result we were given
e
the safety." And. how everybody
e
,stered.axid laughed at it at first 1 How
they look," soe' said, or
awkwardm
, • • , • '
' How squatty -humph -I woulan I; ride
oriel" But time changes all things
. • . ,
-even- to money -and in a few years
' 'Spring
bicycle riding
' ...,
' ' THE FASHION,
. ,
s, Stiad.enly, ne the midst of --a ail f
-a/7-
th Id ' • d ' '
er, e world was setae with . a chat-
Of horror -for women had.: begun to •
•
ride! Conservatives' froward, bus-
,
bands, commanded, and brothers raged
their sisters and . wives went
• ht 'buildingtheir suits and
rig along.
'mount. Of course the fev-
learning to , ,
er "bad to run its course before get-
ting to the 00TP0-8,1' stage Of
sense and taste, and as •a conee uence
. - , . 'O. , ,
we had -the inacker-booker eatremist
•
and the bloomer. girl. 'But, despite
everything, enthusiasm grew apace.
, „ . _
Finally,, leaders of fashion- took it up
-shed it along. Two
and royalty pushed .,
. .
ago seemed to be the climax and
, , .
many said, ' Oh, it's only a fad, and will
soon die out." • But tne stars that
pronapted. that prediction were badly
mixed. 33i:cycling is no longer a fad,
. .
Many more titan riding in a street ear
is a fad. It is an institution that
• • . .
has become inseparable from our mOde
of living and it is here •to stay. Any
who . wish to cansid.er it as passe,
and therefore not to be indulged, can
do so .but that is not going to affect
' - .._'• • .' • 0.
the pecycle buanass or the riders, . 1
course, everybody ricles-there is no-
tbing exclusive about the pleasure, but
then, for th t matter,everybody eats
,. a. ,
at is1 very .rcia.ny per-
and " doubtful 1
sons Would. enjoy starvation for the
sake of being unlike other people.
It ' doubtful if ' i noeatiot of
isany n ,
the century has established_ itself so
universally as has bicycle riding.
Horse b • ha ' b t "-II f
reeding s een ma eria y. a -
fected by it, and it bas wowed its way
into many forms of business.
. REGULAR .... SYSTEM
A CHECKINte
• • •
with a man to care .for the wheels ,is
found et most of the large stores, pro-
vegan is made for them at churches,
bicycle stores and .patience,
repair
shops have sprung up to grow int° sale-,
1 tat
a an. la useness p aces, am . a cos,
t t' 1 'b ' le
tames :a . e street have. ma elle y
f ' th ' • - ' h t a' 11
changeal as a result ,of their require-
naents.5 Another order of insurance
• •
has been instituted on amount of
tiliern, !mid seen thieves have a new
bueineas "because of ahem. . •
Mere is little . differenoe , between
this. year's 'wheels and those a a year
ago. Lt suromer the prices were
as ,
vaxy accommodating, but now they are
even more so: • The most noticeable
difference' is in be fact that many wo-
Men area -baying diamond frames. They
are much More. rigidly built than the .Colony,
.
e- a .
eaaaParY., lady s wiled," and there,
'
fore eve,„ the rider a feeleag. of great-
er ,seceeity. • and, strength. Indeed,
when the aavanteges of the diamond
frame come to be generally known. it
- . th rk 1 tb't th • -
is moth , an i e y a e vele, ne-
tura]prejudices of most women against
ridingtie ' '11 - d'
era. will pass away an they
come into extended use. To some
the faet that woraela are taking to
men's wheels may he,ra.ld the feat that
/mother .edition of the new woman is
:
out -abut there is no cause for anxiety.
,, ,, ,, . , „ •
Tho mount le accomplished very
• • f ll b al 1 •••1
glace a y y , tilting e whee til
steppin.g over is an easy matter. A
diVided skirt ' of eourse ig the style
. , , . .
of •.dress Worn. , • .„„ .
• . •
13ICYCLE FASHIONS
, . • • ,
A.nd, speaking of dreaea the fashions
• '
in bicycle clothes do . , , ,.
not differ greAtly
from abose of last year, and the dis- '
ta tl t tit' • 't ' a '
'me Y uaaras -"IP 'I.'" 4eeesearl' Y
he determined by details. It is to be
that 9.0 - a - .• that
hoped that no one is of t e opinion ,
, ,
'env old thine" will do' for a bievele
; • . - ' .. -
suit. No part' of the Wardrobe is so
.
00aapictious, Rad. fot a natty appear -
-
:ince ohe seldoite WO se gpod. an op-
peetanity as be the eeleeting ef one's
bieyele a:Alma. ', The Mast populer
shades for women are I/lila-brown mid
dianamob eolor, and these are seen in
bough. this .y-e.ar in preference to lat-
er die •
tates of La Mode. • Small checks
'
With an autlined plaid,, is the latest
•
ea goods or trousers, an a est eon.
f t d. the b t
to combin.•e with 'sada a' style is one
made in a, plain color. '
. Sweaters will be very much worn ,•
and they are found in eaarbon, •navy,
black, anti combinations, of which the
a"Uaof M." colors tn horizontal stripes,
are, ahoWn •
, . • ..
. - .
Perhaps some do. not know it, at
least few admit it, but nothing is eoamenable
becohning to the , avea-age man' as a
. . , . • •
negligee shirt and it is doubtful if
f • • ' ' •' . • •
a ter the painstaking incarceratton in
.his dress suit he ever draws down the
a.dmixation of half so ma fl tt ' '
ny u ermg
h.earts as when he has on one of these
dainty, easy . coverings, . limy new
a' • ndesigns
-,,l'e eh are s)aown this sum-
.e ' - o whiteEwes,
m'r, mostly in stripes f • • alter-
/eating with tints. • ' .
Boles oaate at Ewan be light
a own,
tan, .olive and black, and fasten with
a heavy barnees buckle in nickel place
or leather.;
The hose are inplain eolersand fin-
• • • ' • •
eshed with fancy tops, in cheeks or fine
• • •
Plaids- . • • e
No attem t at "a suit to Match!" is
. P .
necessary -with the bicycle, costume.
. •
• taste in combining col-
ora and pleturesque:ness are the
things to be aimed. at. "
•
Good grain -fed yearlings, light ship -
• b. ' • d fewf
ping s eep,., an a . better class o
spring lambs wanted.
.
Hogs are steady and unchanged... •
Singers are quoted. at from 4 1-4 to
4 1-2c., as the top price.
. ,
Light hogs are worth from 4: to 41 -So
per pound.
Tbiek fat hogs fetched ic per pound.
Sows fetch Se per lb.'
. s e
tags sell at ac per pound. .
Store gs are no
St • leo twanted.
Following is the range of ottrrent
ouotatio s: -
- a
' Cattle ,
e.,.... , • . •
'..'4Ipping, . per cwt. . . $4.25 $5.00
Butcher, 'choice, do. . . 4.00 4.50
Butcher, med. to good • . 3,50 .S.80
Butcher, inferior. . .... . 3S0 3.50
' '
and Iambi
.,„ . , • ,
-a' per cwt. . .. . . 3.50 4.00
Yeara t 5 5 5 75
ings ,per cw . . . , . 9 .
a
Bucks, per cwt. . . . . . 3.00 3.25
lambs,. each. . .. 2.00 5.00
Milkers and Calves. .
Cows, each. . . . . . . 25.00. 45.00
Calves, each'...'. ..... . . 2.00 0.00
' • ' Raga- '
Choice .hogs, per cwt. .... 4.00 4.50
Light hogs, per cwt. .... 4.00 4.12 1-2
Heavy hugs, per owt• •••• 3.50 4.00
-- . •
Montreal, May 5. -Grain -Business is
becoming more active with. the opening
of navigation, Manitoba. No. 1 hard:
wheat said at "720; .peas 1-2c higher .a.t
74 1-20. afloat May; • oats, 36 1-4e. afloat
May; .buckwheat was in ,demand and
sold. about 2o higher at 01e.
. • , ..
. . . Is a fair demand at
steady prices.' We quote: -Winter
patents, $3.75 to $4; straight rollers,
$3.50 to §3.430; in bags, $1.65 to $1.75;
patents, 83.90 to S4 05 • strong
bakers' _, - - ' ' • -
, ld.a5 .to 83.80. , .
Feed --Trade was fairly active. On-
tario white wheat bran in bulk sold at
$16 to 017 and shorts at $17 to $19 per
ton; 'Manitoba bran 616, shorte 318 and
famine flE to 625 per ton, inc ad ng
1 i
hags
' • '
Meal -Business was slow and prices
, _ , .
were unchanged in oatmeal at $3.60
to 3 65 per r
0 . P. bar el. .
Butter -There is a fair demand .
at
16.1-4e to 17c for ,creamery and 12 1-2o
• .
' lac fo • • 1
to i western dairy rol s.
Eggs -There is a good deniand at 11
le2e to 12e • • •
' - ' . • , •
Provisions -The market is quiet and
unchanged, We quote :-Canadian pork
.
In barrels, $15 to $15,50; pure Canadian
lard in pails 6 3-4 to 70. per lb. and
, . . *
compound . refined at 5c to 5 1-2c per
lb; hams, i& to 12c and bacon 10 1-2c
to 110 per ib.• . , • ,_
Toledo, May 5. -Close -.Wheat ac-
tive; cash 75 1e4e, May 75 1-2c, bid. July
75 haw No 3 soft 73 1-4o Corn cash
• ' • '' '
and May 31 3-4o, July 35c. Oats, cash
290, nominal, May 27 5-8c, July 25 1-4c.
Seed, cas.h $3.55, April $3,75, October
64.40. ,
Oswego, May 5. -Wheat market firm
No. 1 hazel, 87 1-2o; No; 1 northern, 85
No. 2 northern 84c• No. 2. red,
gse ' . -' ' 9
- ' Corri steady; No, 2 yellow, 4a
I -2c• No 3 high 'mixed 41 1-2c to 42c.
N .. ' : ' ' " '
a 3 mixed 410 Oats steady- No • 2
• ' ' ' ' '
white, 35 3-4c; No. 2 white clipped, 36c.
Bart k t h d- C d
ey mar e Une ange , ana a
$2c, to 860; western, . 50e to 570; no
tra.nsactions. ' Cianal freights to Neer
York -Wheat, peas and rye 2c, buck-
Wheat and barley 2 1-20 per bush. •
Heart
•
DR. ASKEW%
A
lin organ
whose
tooted
medical
tali% palpitation
ness of
svvellipg
left side,
deticy,
case.
Dr. Agnew's
care -It
--acts surely-aota
"2 was
and
Cure
six
ear's
61
Guarantees
Sold by
01100000004114000900
Spasms ,I
,
CURE FOR THE HEART
. '
.WONDERFUL LIFE-SAVER. .
DISTRESS IN RUSSIA.
-
Vivid 1.0sellpilloit or the sweep 0 groans
-' toast; the Faust tic -Stricken Plains..
A. despatch from London, says :-Let-
, _ . ,
ters from the.famine provinces of Rus-
sla tell ,of a harrowing condition of (Ilea
' ' • ' .
tress. In the Province of Kezar; - the
. • • •
centre of the •fanune district, the Rad
,
t. is.'f '
Cross .Seeto y atone feeding 132,000
people., The relief , delegate in the
,
Province of Ufa reports that peasants
ran after him and begged for food on
their ' knees in the snow. The St.
Petersburg Skyea, viesamosti, in a
' ' ''Sheep
the miser and dis-
-vivid d.escription of y
ease prevalent en Kazan says
, d ' -
"Crime, ,mertatety an the number of
still -born infants have inereaeed and
'• • ' •
now scurvy and typhus are devouring
the population like a conflagration
y e wind,is is a case
fanned. b th 'but tit' •
not of houses and. beans but of human
lives being destroyed." • . .
a .
In the human anatomy to -day
diseases can. be more readily de-
than those of the heart -and•
discovery has made them
to proper treatment, If ,Toti
or flattering, shore:
breath, weak or irregu lar pulse,
of feet or ankles., .pain in the.
fainting spells, dropsical ton -
any of. these indicate heart dice
No matter of how -long standing
Cure tor thellear
t 't will
s a heart speeitto--aets quickly'
safely •
given" te,die by physicians
friends. Mt dose of br Agnew's
for the eart gave me'ease, and.
bottles cured nay case of fifteen
stariding,_kfitS. J.L. RICLI,E4,
tewood,N.W.T. 90
relief in 30 minutest
C. Lutz, Exeter.
NOW SEEK PEACE.
aa_
Ica:: ,* Uri eael e. •,..„ e
,-9.
S15-..,,,,,
Iv
e .
of America
In Detroit.
. . ,.
000 Cured
• • -- • .
The Filipino Oppositioi Has. About Cuded.Becomingness,
•-aw/alle
A espa c .. n says : -Col-
a t h from .ala Manila
• oael . Manuel Argueteees and Lieut.,
'Rase Bermil, chief 'of General Luna's
,
ac T ur s
staff,entered General M A th
line bearing a flag of truce on 'Friday
• • - '
niarnhag. They -were escorted to Man-
,., • '
"a, where they intervieWed 'General
is.
Otis. - They told' General Otis that
direpresentativesf General
they were o.
Lima who hail been requested, by Agu-
' - id.' t ask General'Oti f c
ma. o o s • or a_ es-
t f hostilities in • order to allow
sa ion oyears
, ,. • ,., • .
time for the summoning of the Filipino
Congress, Which • body would decide
whether the people wanted peace. Gen-
Brat Otis replied that he did not recog-
nize the existence of a Filipino Gov-
- . • -
ernment. • There will be another. con-
*.
S t da
evince on a ur y.
WAR WITH THE BOERS.
•
K The Leading
WECURESTRICTURE
Thousands
. muneOlons.eiottzsibriedrhieyiligisae:41
a ina .sensation.
sharp cutting
charge,
_. , 'organs,
'' e yumov.oillocligagitt/o-otthoreT
you, i•g•
you. Thiswill
turn.
MENT
henoeremovesthestriotnrepermaneaft
-
_ at cut
in no
tk g.
.ze- method.
- ened
-•- ' -
. the bliss
K WE
& Thousands
..„. men are
ee vitality
ease. They
EN of the cause
. Weakness,
ing Manhood,
ory, Irritability,_at
Itt.i:kitlatTkk.e8..eEnreraeswlth
of Ambition,
Parts, eto.
m aybe the
doctors
these. .speoisl
Quacks
Speeialists,whohavemadealifostnayof.
Diseases
METHOD
tively OUTO
for a case
cannotcure.•
______,
CURES
We treat
VARICOCELE,SYPHILIS,
BTRIO
DRAINYUNNATAI.
B0,1II
FREE.
faaJESTro
TREATMENT.
.. .
K KENNEDY
'R -
EA Car. MI
, • , .
K (..-
-8.41; .42 -1;•i•
K • . IV
Specialists
20 Years
250
.
---
Ti e nisi 1 etbi ' t'.4 lit U " • -
i t $ A a 36.8 . it c o . ave serums,.
• /ye/eau-dee et. •
. ' . • • •
.A. despatch' fro London, Says -The
.
chronic; mutual suspicion between Great
, , .
Britain and the Transva.a.1 has been in-
tensified recently by the dynamite
. , .
.questiori, the continued refusal of the
Transvaal GI-oven:meant to redress ,.the
grievances of the Uitlanders, and the
reassertion of British!' suzerainty, with
the It that a • 1
.. result various sensationa
•„
rumors are afloat, of •which., however,
the newspapers have hitherto .taken
little notice. One of these,, d' '
ese,. issemm-
e. .
t• author-
a enba the Central News, "on au
itY-," is to the effect that the probabil.-
• . • •
ity of .war was seriously • regarded
' e • ' •
y the Cabinet. , The Cep-
tral News ascribes to "a. very aromin-
ent•Mni t not Mr. Ch b 1 ' ."
, i s er, n . am er am, a.
statement that the dis utes lietiV
1:1 nen
'
the two countries are trending towards
• •
an acute crisis.
Vie Johannesburg corresponde,nt of
- ' - - ' '
the 9.iraes confirms the reports of ex-
. ,
treme . unrest among the Intlandere.
He says that when he arrived at John-
nesbu.rg., some months ago he thought
that time was on the side of the Uit-
a _
landa- cl that there rat
tare an ,ete was roo for
,1-20;
bac. now he is compelled to
abandonthis theory.H d 1 a
is, e ec ares I. at
the virus of Krugerism is spreading
••
throu ghout South Africa
, ,threatening
a regime. worse than that of Tanamany.
11 i ,. . ' ' .
ha n New, York. :
Nine thousand Uitlanders co e
, , „ • , e , m.pos d
t
o Britrela . Americans, Germans.
French, Dutch, and others, have peti-
tioned the Government to ignore the,
petition•sigaed recently by 21,000 Brit-
sh subjects protesting against the
' • ' in-
justice's to which they were subjected
,by the Transvaal Government, Which
was , sent to Queen Victoria through .
Sir Alfred Milner' Governor. of Cape
and nigh Commissioner of
‘
boitth, Africa. These latest petitioners
p than to the
declare that the et' • - Queen.'Carrier's•
yvz.is the iVO.T1 of capitals, the at-
taanment,of whose wishes would be de-
trimental to the public, who are per-
ree,y sa. is le we. - e taus ing. -
f ' ' I t' f• a al th • t' Ad
ministration.
'
of 'young ancltaiddle•aged
smt7
small twist stream-
• ' ' 't ti ing ht die:
pains a mer, slig
difficulty in. commencing, weak
emissions, =dill the symptoras
hail:D. STAI0C-ii .
cutting, stretelling..or testing':
net cure_you, as iterillee-
Our NEW METHOD TREAT-
absoibs the .strietur• thistle;
=vex return, No pain, no iniftert ,
detention from business ley ear..
Thesexnalorsansareetrgosta.
The nerves are invIstorated.and.
of mankood-ratums. %
CURE GLEET ' K
of young and middle-aged 2
having their sexual vigor and ,!LI'''';
continually sapped. by this dis- ••..,
are frequently unconsoions rik,
of these symptom. General-
Unnatural Diseharges, Fail -
Nervonsness,-.Poor Mein,. -
times Smarting Sea- K
claris circler,. .
1 Depression, Leek. 15
Varicocele,_ Shrunken Or
GLEET and STRICTURE .'
(muse. Don't consalt family Le
as they have no experience in •r‘
diseases -don't allow ' "
to. experiment on you.• 00118;lit
,
of Menitnd.Women. OuraTEW y
TREATMENT will pose a
you,. One thousand dollars 9
we accept for treatment and Ot
Tetrasmoderataforacure.
, „
GUARANTEED
.
and cure: ElVIISSIONS.
GLEET,
RE IMPCITENOYJEORET
DiSallARG-
NITY,andBLADD,ERDiseases.
12 FR1E. BOORS
, unable to call, write for
• BLANK for afOlala
reniate
KERGAN-,
, &
c gen . ve..an . e, y .
III Ave. Sh ih St.
DETROIT, MICH.
' K ai- ' le. -'
..'.-%. :;:15,',,,,, - ,
ALLEGED PLAGUE IN PARIS.
•
wow.
-weenie who conduct the Fronde* Stick 0
' '
Their Alarming statement.
, • • • -
•
A despatch from Perha gives , a re -Wednesday
report of a visit to the office of the
Fronde, a publication written, printed,
and produced exclusively . by women,
where he interviewed several of , the
writers. - The Fronde a •few days ago
the t t t that three e .8 a emen ,ree
. .
eases of bu.bonic plague had. developed
.
in a Paris.' shop, their origin being
tradeable to Oriental rugs recently
brought there.. The women stick to
this statement, despite the denials of
tae Prefect of Police and other authori-
ties, and declare that several oases at'
plague have occurred..
The interviewer, ,seeing a handsome
. , .
youth in the office, remarked that henumberless
understood that -the staff of the paper
. . • .-
was wholly fen:in:rune To his amaze-.
' ' ' ' '
malt, the "youth" declared that .such
' - th f t • It ' • t
was e ac . was a,vvoman ins ead
f a ()Wag Man . he was addressing.
0 .3'
She explained that•she had worn' mas-
online habiliments for 19 years for the
sake uf convenience.,
,
HARD TIMES AT COOPER RIVER.•
. ' ' . ..
'
---'
'
;Savages or Scurvy and Frost- Footless
Fitgrhus Returning-nertiships on the
• Trail. ,
. A despatch from Seattle, Wash,
.
says: -Sixty prOspeetors arrived here
- '
on Monday from copper , 'neer, Alaska,
on the • r eska They brought
• steame., Al. . .
with. them a repetition of the stories
-
of the ravages of scurvy and frost. A
man named Young hobbled off the ve e-
sel on the st ' f t 1 A th
umps o wo egs. no er
a . .
man, Alexander Powell, had but one
. -
foot. . .
F'. C. Goodwin of Oakland, Clal., whose
legs are black with scurvy, and whose
' ' ' •
knees ere bruised by contact with the,
ice, tells an interesting story of his
,
eXperiences, which were similar tothat
of others. While camped in tbe inter,
•
air, is par ner, , esley Scheidecker, of
h" ' ' t W • '
.
Grange Ridge, Ill.,• fell eick with scurvy
and soon beeame unable to travel,
Goodwin strapped him on a sled and
ar e or . e Imes . er our days
st tarted f ." the t Aft f ca
h' r 'v d t th th f th Clat
e, a ri. e a e e mou o e i na
River' but i0 partner was frozen stark
and stiff to the sled. He bailed him
-will
in the itenow. Continuing his journey;
across a tent in which there
he came , ,
were two men sick with seurvy., They
were Dixon Hutton of Memphis, Tenn.
ah T. , aw nags o .,
d T 13 11. ' l• f Little Rock
Ark. Another man happeated along. at
the same dinie,. and he .aaa o clevm
nut Ravelinge and Hutton on slede and
dragged them to tim Coast. -
Just before the Excelsior left Valdes
g ,s i e was repor e on e g ewer,
but no tiarticalars' were learned. .
The Government- eXpedition under
, .
Captain Abercrombie %yea' arranging
to begin tbe construction of a road bato
e w en e es. e sior beft.
th interior- h - ' the r -6 1 - 1 ft
Retie? parties with provisiona endanti-
ecorbaties lied been sent into the in
a ,, .., : , - '
tenor, ' '
FOLLOWING US. •
.,- ,
r HEIGH"' TO 'COME BY CANADA.'
Three Australian Colonies Emitting , Pro
. -
kremlin' Tariffs. •
A despatch from London,. aays:-At a
meeting 'of the Britisa 'Empire Lea.gue
held at Eastbourne on Saturday, the
Agent -General of Tasmania, after pre-
c mg . spe . a unani o s
di ta ' the • edy and 'It 0
adoption by Paxlianae,nt of the -Austra-
•
lien federationbill, addad tae import-
ant announcement thatrecently he
been a e e me ary
had b bl to informthe Se ' ' t
a State for the Colonies, Mr. Cham-
berlaia, that three of the Australian
were framing tariff bills d'fa
coloniese , . g . . . dif.
ferentiating in favor of British :menu-
facturers and against imports from
, . , . ,
ether •
s
As the Result et a tabor Strike Contractors
„ . will Close Down linifalo Shipping.,
_._
A despatch , from Buffalo, N. X..
•
says; ' -: :President Corrigan. of
•
the Lake Association,
arrived in Buffalo to -night. In an
.. . , . . a. , t . .,.
,uttervaaw he state tee tne. associa-
' ' II' h • 1 11 f' la la• '
tam, w ie contrees .i -t . o t es Japing
on the great lakeoutside �f Canada,
intended to back up the aontractors in
Buffalo in their fight 'with the grain
satwellees, and the first step in 't
cl• t• taken'11
irec lori was to-day,when a .
' • '
grain shipments to Baffalo had been
,
orderedstalVe • ' '
et -a'
th M
was e intention,r. Corrigan
-
divert the :grain to. CI v an
Said' to d • a ; a• a al a
•
and other lake poi ts 1whe,ie there Were
' " ' '
elevators, and aiso to utiliee the Wel-
land 1 , a a a're:' , ' • -
an t. , • Wrenee river
. ,
routes, Shotad the, etrikes cohlanue any
*
i ength of tittle Mr. Cerrigan said it
, . ' •
would. mean the ruination of Buffalo
•"' - • • ' - "
ae a grain shipping valet, and would
tadeabtedts, ptove a board( 'of the big-
•le* - ' • • '. •-, •
gest; • aid for the Canadian route atea-
, , „ .
pere 'who had never before utilized the
Montreal outlet, would now do so, acid
in. lieceming familiar with it would eone
tio, to ship their 'grain that way,
',„ , , ----a-- ,„ „
Diving the hiSt four days' the ' Mint.,4.,,,,,,m,,
bee of miaow. on strike in Daigle:hi has.
jumped from 40,000 to 70,000. '
.
. ,
illEAD-MAKER'S
127141.41619*W
, NEUF-FRS It Olifi SATTSMOIla
IMr. neoit. .gSTATES.! ft:15:41 TI71414
'A BRIGHT SON-IN-LAW.
Olct I-Iar rocks -I've deeideto take
young Sharpleigh into beeiness with
. : .
• t a a h and m • d u 11-
me jus , s so it as e a Y a a
ter get; back%from their wedding -tour.
• ' a ' ' '
ninon Bonds-esat I thought you had
no use' for the fellow?
c al io s- i n a ws u
01 I II 'd • ek I d'cl at t f' t b t
I've changed i . • ,
. my an nd.. l told him, he
couldn't hive • ma daughter till
' • . . . . -eana
, , • , . .n. , .. .,
hi, had at. least al,000 1 , the bank.,
He got Incto put it in writing and
'
then went out and borrowed the $1,-
000 oat the etrength of • becoming: any
.Such }amines'
, e ability as
that mustn't b. elloeved. to a to -
* . - ,. , g , waste.
, ,. ,_.
HEROIC TREATMENT,
' , . ,, ,
Illow are Yeu gettilag along wan
that raw Swede girt you hired.?
She 18 net tfINV noW. My, wife's
mother has beet roasting'. her three
, .
tinlea a day ever sinee she tante.
.
'
e In'
' .,.......jea61
'e i qv
,
" I) U 1
CRICKS IV.
„,...eaa
eaenaLLIA '
"..!...,'. - •
• easal EON
Dig, to,
PI ill''''.....' TIN
.---100
r [AMON.'"
,*\•• ' ' '
'
AlgtillMcrUittita
. . .
,
tn4H014
D8fLtgli 1
BESTANTI-RNEUMATIG %,
PLASTER MADE
- E4
Pl.a5aLsa IN Eivalatal)
LD ,
00a PIRICD.25$460 ItilYaati '
R01.1,5 FR10E *1 0 0 '
' •
.
WIS8OMENCECOL
' Tiv
,
FloNIVAL
, , .. ,
. -
.
DYING Oli ASHCROFT TRAIL.
• ,
, „aee ,
. . . • .
Asitell.tor Send Iminediate Re-
.
lief to gee Starving mem . ,
._.. „e
A desputoly from Victoria, B.C., ea •
_ '' ---aa
Mail - Carrier Alex. S. Brinale 11
alas
. . . • • .
Made a Perilous' trip from the StiCkine
, . ,
d Pro
river to urge . the Dominion an -
v'ncial Governments to send iminedi-
1 ,
ate relief to upwards, of 200 Men ' W11`0
are fameg starvatIon on the Aeheroft
factng -
trail. , ', , -
lefulee and dogs had be the sole
diet of the men for weeks past when
the Mail carriet left, ., : :
,
THE
• ,
a'a--•``' OF Atnr
aa.MES, ' ' '
.
At: the Antwerp liarticaltural Eta '
position, £4,000 Werti offeeed for three
speci , .4 , . .,,
IPWIS 'of oreatiagi which was re-