HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1912-11-21, Page 201 CHOLERA PLAGUE
King Ferdinand Will Stop t th. eates of the
Turkish Capitali
A. assacro atteared.
A despatch from Sella says t King
Ferdinand has decided not to miter
Coeseantineple if hts takes the
Tchataldja lines, because of a fear
that a niassacre of Christians will
eccu.r before he cart aocure full eOta-
trol of tlie city and Seel sure of
keepiug order. Feer issf a cholera
plague, aided him in this decision.
Ferdinand's Government favors his
decisioe. L Natehovitch., Bulgar-
ian Foreige.Miniater, in an inter-
view with the correspondent a the
Neue Freie Proem, said that Bul-
garia wants Constantinople and
Salonica made free 'cities, and that
the Bulgarian a,rmy will halt before,
the gates a Constantinople and
leave the fate of the Turkish ca-
pital to the powers.
The Darken allies ab Salonica
are displaying a fine erop a petty
jealowsies. The Bulgarians who
followed the Greeks into that city
wired tie King Ferdinand that the
city was now under his rule, there-
by stirring in the brats a the
Greeks a feeling that due credit
bad not been given to them.
Wounded Left to Die.
A despatch front London says:
From the accounts of correspon-
dents on the Bulgarian side, their
wounded are in just as bad condi-
tion as the Turks. One correepore
dent in deseribing 'die poor ambu-
lance service of the Bulgarians,
whose wounded are driven for miles
in joiting oxen carts, says this is not
the worst part of their sufferings.
He continues :—
"After several battles the woun-
ded were left lying on the bare
fields where they had fallen for two
or three hot days and bitterly cold
nights, and the worst sighta in the
hospitals are the rows of poor fel-
lows with swollen and gangreeed
limbs, for whom there is no laope
of recovery."
The eorrespenclent adds that
many are clyiag from exposure and
not from wounds,
Grim Toll at Yersidje.
A despatch from Athens says:
It is announced that 35.000 Turks
were engaged in the battle against
the. Greeks at Yenidje. They had
42 heavy guns. The Terkiah loses
numbered 2,000 killed, 500 made
prisoner and 22 guns captured.
The Greek losses were 500 killed
and wounded, including fifteen of-
ficers..
Six Thousand Massacred.
A deepatch from Athens sans
Six thousand women and children,
25 men and two prieats have been
reassured in the aeighborhood of
Janina, by 750 men of the Turkish
hofantry and 300 Bashi-Bazouks,
who pillaged and sot fire to the vil-
lages.
Murderous Fighting.
A despatch from Bulgerian head-
quarters says After , four days'
murderous fighting, the Bulgarian
arzny has tucceeded its breaking
through the Turkieh position at
Tehatalja in the centre of the lines
and completely rolling up the Tark-
ish defence. The Bulgarian ad-
vance is being pushed forward with
the greatest energy with the view
of forcing the Turkish troops away
frora Constantinople.
Cholera Stops Bulgaria,.
A despatch from London says:
Cholera at Tchatadelja and Oenstan-
tineple is doing meee than all the
men under Namm Pasha to stop the
march of the Bulgars. Eye -witness-
es tell of horrible scenes in the be-
leaguered forts, where hundreds of
bodies of viotims of the diseases are
piled into shallow trenches.
It is doubtful if King Ferdinand
will risk the lives of any more of
his men by marching them into a
plague -stricken city, and there is a,
report that already many of the
Bulgarian troops have been striek-
en with cholera, which they caught
in positions from which they had
routed the diseased Tarks.
A Constantinople despatch to the
Cologne Gazette declares that Bul-
garia has abandoned her intentions
to enter Constantinoplh, being thus
advised by Russia and Great Bri-
tain. Altogether, although the re-
port.that an armistice already has
been arranged has not been con-
firmed, all indications point in that
direction, and it may be supposed
that the terrible eenditions of tam-
inp and destitution prevailing
among the refugees in the neiehber-
hoed of Constantinople, which are
calculated to provide a hotbed for
the spread ef cholera, may have had
something to- .do with Bulgaria's de-
cision.
Constantinople still waits her fate
in. the calm of despair. Ste far, in
spite of alarmist reports, there has
been no great disorder there.
ikeemwookaroaftokombeekaarmar
IT OATI$F1ES MILLIONS
OF PEOPLE
WOrth your while to test it
LIPT N's
TE
Suste,ins alaa Cheers.
toetroe40$4....wasokob
'74040'
Beente—Ranemicked, 8 01, bushel;
primes, 82,90, in a Jobbing war.
Bonen—Detracted. in tins, 12 to 12 1.2e
Per lb. for No. 1. vrheneaales combs, 42 50
to $3, wbolesale.
Peultry—Weinfatted, clean, ereaicece
stook was ginned as follows:—Chicktant
14 to 15e per Ino fowl. le to 1.3e; ducks, 14
to 16es goose, 13 to 14o; tureeys, 22 to 24e.
Lite PanitrY, about 2e lower than the
above.
Potateree—Good etoek quoted • at 80 to
90e per oaron traok.
Provisions.
Bacon—Long clear. 15 1-4 to 15 tee per
in ease Iota. Pork—Shere cut, $26 to
$27; do„ Vests, $21,50 to $23. Hams—Moil.
um. to light, 17 to 17 1.2e; heavy, 151-2 to
16e; rolls, 141-0 to 150; breakfast baeon,
/8e; bac. 21 14e.
Lard—Tierces, 14 1.2e; tubs, 14 3-4e; Dane<
150.
Baled Hay and Strata.
Baled Itay—No 1 at $14 to 514.50 on
Creek, Toronto; nine 2, 512 to 512.50. Mixed
hey,
500 to 511 a ton, on track.
13aled Straw—$10, on track, Toronto.
Montreal illarkeis.
Montreal, Nov. 19e—elate Cauadian
Western, No. 2. 46 1-2 to 47e; extra No. 1
feed, 46 to 46 1-2e. Barley— MAO. feed,
61 to 6213; malting. 78 to 810. Buckwheet—
No. 2, 55 to am Flour—Man. spring wheat
patents. firsts, 56 60; immune 55.10; strong
bakers'. $4.90; winter patents. choice, $5.-
36; straight rollers, $4.95 to $5 00; araight
TORNIO CORRESPONDENCE'"
INTERESTIMO SO'S OF OOSS1P FROM
THE (1410EN CITIn.
A Fakir acts Hie thiet nues—A LosniaolouS
Ridert11311—Oraft in the CitY—Piellt
Railway Board Chairillani.
"Iieeter" atuesCievalie Evans* whit boas
Jest bowl eentemsed te fiftema moistens le
Ittugston peuitentiare On e interest ot tors
g4Z1r, never made teach of a epicene in
Toreates, thouea he has beett travelling
around the Provimee for several yearn.
itriteti the Last year or two ler." eivane
.411.4a0 his heedquertere Ifingston, where
sse now rotaries ba A different cepstoity.
#0 arrived there &wet dein reeve /too
tram whence ao one knows. Le forthwith
beeame active in aaseionare worn, 4.n4,
AZAL)Ag mony actieities, evoltsee ..olo pet
scheme of establioniag a mistilonary boat
en the river Jorden. The boat wealsl
travel up anti down the river 'carrying
Chrestiauity to the Jetta and the Mahom-
modeles of the Holy Land. In ndrooan
ing thie and other stater:atm "Dr: nvAno
often asounied Oriental costume, which
added. to his pietureaqueness and imPres-
stymies% and the sensattea hie appear,
ranee caused will be recalled at many
points. Subsoripaons for his missionary
nous -boot flowed in uutil ono dey
traveller Just returned from Palestine ate
serted that the river at that eoint would
hardly iloat a ohip, let alone a noustaboat,
"Dr," Beans was not per.urbed. Ie
simply switened to some other eclimne,
The truth about Brans is that, he was
a morphine nend. His arms are a maim
of punctures; where the needle has been
injected. That'aceounts for his visionary
seheraes and his absolute irresponsibility.
Duke Saw Medals.
1Zeeelet1ee wben the Duke of Connauglib
as riening Toronto, there was to be a
review of the Veterans' Asaociatiott. Beene
hurried up and got in line as a veteran.
Lo and beheld his immectulate frock coat
Was decorated with a string of medals and
badges for valor, long service Red other
military a,cocanpliehments, that turned
the heart of the proudest veteran greeti
with envy, When the Duke of Connaught
peened along the Hee his sheep eye ()aught
the array. Re stopped, examined the
rollers, bees., 52.30 to 52.40. Relied oats, medals keenly, and, it Is said, detected
barrels. 15.05n do., barre, 90 lba.. $2.40. Bran,
the fraud. Stiortly Afterwards came
"3. glit°rts' $26 I° 527. Idtrldline, $2'„ te"Itr" Byane' arrest and subsequent- sae
e30. Mottillie, 530 to 535, Ray. rto 2 Per peseta.
ton, car lots, 13 to 13 1.-2e. Cheese, finest Polite years ago, when the Rusnian nap -
westerns, 2270 to 13e; fineat eastere a. 12 14 anese war brehe out, tiler° was erect!.
to 123.10. Butter, choicest creamery. 301-4 cally no one en tine continent who knew
to 30 1-2,e1 seoonda, 28 3-4 to 210. Eggs'', se- mush about conditiene at tbe scene of
lone& 31 to 310; No. 2 stock, 21 to 22e. fighting. Clubs and associations searched
Potatoes, per bee, car lots, 80 to 135e.
with the seblect, but none WAS fettle -
United States itiarkete. owning. "Dr.' Evans Juxueed into the
Mtnneepolis. Noy. Ie.—Wheat—December, breaebt tle knew. Needlese to say, his
84 1.4c; May, 80 3-4e; Nei 1 Northern,87 1-4o; leeturee were a frost, although the first
No. 2 do., 83 to 84 nee norn—No. 3 yellow, ones were largely attended. Ile advertia
69 to 60e. Cats—No. 3 'militia 29 to 29 1-2c. ed pictures, and fulfilled his promise by
Itye—No. 2, 57 to 60e. Pran--518 to $18 50. shelving pictures of a boat sailing into
Plour—First patents, $4,35 to $4.55; secone various porte all around the world, but
Patents, $4.20 to $4.45; first clears, $3,20 to when she got to Jauan he calmly an-
nounced that trom thia point *II the can -
$3.50; second. clears, $2.40 to $2.70.
Ituluth, Nov. 19.--Whent—No. i hard. sor would allow uo pictures out.
86 3, -Se; No. 1 Northern, 83 ate; Ne. 2 , In the J.911 eleetion "Dr.” Evans jumped
83 3-8c; December, 84 3-8c; May, 89 3-8c bid, to the front ae an Imperialistic orator,
Linseed—On trark and to arrive, $1.40 3-4; and in one capacity or another he is
widely, known throeghout the Province.
Ills 'schemes' rarely did anybodY anY
harm. Been the forgery on wbieli Ins
was oonneeted, arising in connection *with
a private College here, was not serious in
its consequences.
eoctuaciceis "Sam" McBride.
November, 51.39 1-4 bid; December, 51.33
bid; January, 51.361-2 asked; May, 51.39
ne 0 .
—
Live Stock Markets.
Montreal, Nov. 19.—Steers. 53.75 to- $6
per cwt. Some choice 'tows brought $4.50,
and the oommon sold at 53 to 54, while
the bulls, which were prineipally °annexe'
steek, sold at from 52 to 53.25 per ewt.
Lambs sold at 56 to 86.25 and sheep at
$4 per evrt, while maven brought from
53 to 512 oath, as to size and qualitY.
Ilegs—$8.50 to 23,65 per cwt., weighed off
oars.
Toronto, Note 19. --Good to chalets butela
ere brought from 55.25 to 55,90, medium at
from 54.50 to 55.00. Good butcher cows
ranged from 54.75 to55.00, with COMILIOA
TURKISIl BATTLESleue rt ik BY A GRECIAN TORPEDO.
This is a, photograph of the Sultan's warship Feth-l-Bulend, -which was blown irp and sunk by a
daring Clreciare torpedo boat that escaped unscathed. It is probable scores of men forming the crew,
if not several hundred, were drowned, as the vessel sank in five minutes.
HES OF FARM PROTICTS
SIEPORTs FR030 THE LEarHeita THAD*
CENTRES OF AMERICA.
'mot or Corti% Crain, Chaess utnol own
Pres:tun at Haim and Abrand.
Breadstulle.
Toronto. Nov. 19.—Plour—Ninete per
cent. patents, 54 to 54.10. Manitobas, $5.-
60 for Arab patents, 55 for seconds. and
5440 for sarong bakers'.
Naeitoba Meat—No. 1 Northern, 901-2e,
Bay ports.; Ng. 2 oa 9143; and No. 3 at ine,
Bay porta Feed wheat, 65 to b'ic, Bay
porta.
Ontario Wheat—No. 2 new white and red
wheat, 96 to 97o, outside, and sprouted,
in to 85e, onteide,
'Date— o. 3 Ontario, 35 to 390, outside,
i
and 40e, on trues, Toronto. Western to mediuma at from 53.50 to 54.50, and can -
Canada oats quoted at 411-20 cash for No. nem; s_t from 5215 to 53.00. Pair to medi-
2 and 4114e for No. 3. um bulls went at from $3.35 to $4.25. Milk-
Peas—No. 2 at $1,10 'to $1.15. ers and springers, $50 to 580. Light stock-
Barley—Porty-eight-lb. barley of good erg went at $3.75 to 54.00 per hundred -
quality, 65 to 70e, outside. weight. Larabs ranged from 56.15 to 56.40;
Corn—No. 2 old .emericari, 651.10. ail.- light ewes from 54.00 to 55.50; bucks and
rail, Toronto, and No. 3 at 6414e, all -rail. mine from $2.00 to 53.50; good calves from
lee. 3, Bay items, 611 20. New cora, De. 57 00 to $9.00, with roughs at from 53. -
comber delivery, 66c, Toronto. 37 1.2 to 56.00. llogs, 58.10; 58.00 was paid
Rye—No. 2 at 80 to 82e, outside. for the most part, on the fed and water-
nuckwheat-52 to 550, o-atside. ed basis.
Brent -Manitoba bran, 522.50 to 523, in *on.
bags, recreate freight. Shorts, $22.50 to
846, ENGINE BOILER EXPLODES.
Country Produce. •
Fireman Fatally Mart and Engineer
nott.11.- acus, choir.% 26 to 27e; bakers',
Inferior, 22 to 24e; choice, dairy tubs, 260; Critically Injured.
creamery, 31 10 390 for Della and 28 to 290
tor solidi?. A despatch from Harailtore says:
and of cold to morage, 25 28c; strictly e WO men were injured, one fatally
Bggs—Caee lots of fresh, 32o per dozen, rp
newlaid, 40 to 45G per dozen.
O0ieese-14 1-2e for large, and 143.4o for
twins.
111E PANAMA CANAL TOLLS
Merchant Vessel Rate To Be $0.20 Per Net Ton
Carrying Capacity.
A despatch from Washington
nays: President Taft on Wednesday
night issued a proclamation fixing
the rates that the foreign shipping
of the vrerld elzall pay for passage
through the Panama Canal. The
proatarriation, made under author-
ity of the canal act passed by Con-
grosa hi August, establishes a mer-
efiant vessel to of 4H-20 Per net
ton of acetal eserying estpsoity,
with a reduedion of 40 per cent. orz
ships in ballast.
The provisictes a the proclama-
tion are as foIl'onte :
1. On merehatit vessels carrying
pate -angora or cargo, $1.20 per net
vessel ton -each 100 cubic foot—of
actual earning capacity.
2. flet veiairele in ballast without
passengyors or come, 40 per cent.
less than the rate of bolls for vessels
with passengers or erg.
a. ITposi naval vesselso other than
transports, colliers, hospital ships
and supply ships, 59 cents per dis-
plaeenaent ton.
4. Upon army and navy trans-
ports, colliers, hospital ships and
supply ships, $1.20 per net ton, the
•vessele to be measured by the same
rules as are employed in determin-
ing the not tonnage of merehant
vessels.
"The Secretary of War will p.re-
pare and prescribe latch rules for
the measurement of vessels and
such regolations as may be neces-
sary and proper to earry this pro-
clamation into hill force and ef-
fect,"
American 000tWi2g Shipping was
exempted from toll payment by
Congress. It was to this prevision
of the net that Great Britain diple-
matically protested, but to relay.
emus to the incident is made in the
P
0eside:4V p roelain WOO.
and the other 'critically, and several
persons were shaken up early on
Friday, when the engine of G.T.R.
train No. 11, an aecommodation
running between Niagara Fells and
Windsor, exploded at the "Y" near
the Desjardins Canal. The victims
were :—George E. Cook, engineer,
Niagara Falls, Ont„ aged 55 years,
badly scalded about the breast, face
and hands, lacerated about the
shoulders, and suffered from shook,
will probably recover s Samuel
Sault, fireman, Niagara 'Falls, N.
Y., aged 38, right leg crushed, hied
to be amputated at the knees skull
fractured; terribly welded about
the upper portion of the body.
Taken to City Beepital, where he
died at 1.30 in the afternoon. •
)1.11 0 rse"s
'Indian Root Pills
exactly meet the need which so often
arit,es an every family fer a medicine
to open up and regulate the bowela
Not only are they effective in all
cases of Constipation, hut they help
Krcatly in breaking up a Cold or La
Grippe hy, cleaning out the systems
and purifying the blood. In the same
way they relieve or cute Biliousness,
IndigestIon, Sick Idearlaches, Rheum,
atisrn and other common aliments,
in the fullest sense of the words Dr.
Morse's Indian Root Pills ate 47
A Itiewunattorwid Ittinutocciy.
everywnere, for looturers who could deal
One of the spectacular figures of the
Toronto City C,ouneil its Alderman Sam
McBride. Sam is decidedly loquacious.
That is one of his ehiefest entitas to lame.
A favorite pastime of the reportere at
Council meetings is to keep track of the
member of times Sam speake Sbmetimes
the record runs to surprising 15,gures—once
it ran to 75 different speeches, which for it
session of live hours' duration means that
be averaged one epeeoli every four min.
utes throognout the performance. Na-
turally Ftant does not talk very long at a
time, and soreetimee what he says is not
much to the point. Again it in too point-
ed for some of his fellow aldermen, for
he ban the fie:salty of getting under the
skin of his companions with personal re.
marks. Generally he is good natured, but
the ether day he thre.atetted across the
Council board to ebove his fist down the
long throat of Controller Church. The
good people of. the town were greatly
shocked and the newspapers read the
Council lectures on the indecency of bear
garden exhibitiona. But Sam afterwards
apologized and said lie did Dot mean
what he said.
Picks Unpopular Side.
Another Ohara to fame Alderman Mc-
Bride has is that he generally votes with
the minority. Ile eeeros to have a faculty
of picking out the unpopular side of an
argument. As an "exam:riser" he is an ex-
pert. leCe was instrumental in blocking
tne Humber Boulevard scheme for a year,
hie ground ostensibly being that it is a
scheme to make a millionaire of Mr. Itome
Smith at the expense of the city. If the
peoJect limn been unpopular Aid. Markle
"multi have probably supported it.
Newspapers and others threaten Ald.
McBride with defeat at the polls for hes
obstructive tactics. But he doesn't worry.
Bvery First of January since 1905, with
one exception, he has bobbed up serenely
neer the top of the poll in ward three.
Ile seems to go on the theory that by op-
posing everything he gathers in all the
votes of the knockere and soreheads. They
are the ones wb.o don't forget.
In prerato life Sam is krtolen to fame
for Ins support af harness racing. Ne is
an ardent follower ef trotting races in
Toronto and throughout the Province and
illumines the meetings of Counoil with
horsey talk and the pietureegue atmos-
phere of the raee track.
Draft in Toronto.
A Toronto Journalist has been =Ante
aix investigation tate various forme of
"graft" thet are practised here,and lute
found some surprising illustrations.
One charge he makes is against under-
tekers wieose charms% he same are often
extortionate. A eltaple, thoagn thorough-
ly decent funeral. can be made up on the
foLlowing charges and still allow the
undertaker it good profit of ;IS:
Ooffln . ... ..... 815 00
Outfit -de box 6 00
Hearse ........................800
Itrabaltaing ..... 10 00
Shroud ...,.... 6 00
Total ........ ........ .,..., 543 00
Yet the oharges often run up OVOT 5100.
Not lore; ago a Toronto undertaker sent
in a bill for 1634,- but in this, ease the
eneoutors contested the bill in court and
had it out to 5129. The °genet, which was
• ilne one, had been charges at $250,
though the undertaker admitted in the
box that it had cOot birn only $41. Prob-
ably ninety-nine out of it hunsb'ed people '
pay the elierge, even if extortionate, ra-
ther than appear to be mean about auth
a Matter. haul this feeling is planed up-
on.
It le ?barged, too, thwt sorties in the
lustitatione stand ilk with undeltaltere
and receive teen/ taleM gine of (meeker,
Sewers, theatre eiekets, etc., In reliant
tor which they give prompt, notate+, 41/4.?
deathno that the nothmllter ears eet
on the $01 before a riwd.
15olno dootars aro elite ehrettote,w 121
gettisig meneoestone Irons andertalsone.
Thee therer le eta JemitoreS "graft/ 'Phis
Intuirlshee In an apartment houses, where
from tee taaszlies tip may reside. Nee
turalle, each fentily would exoetiit, to pat.
roniee the grocer, or the butcher, or 1,1113
dairy they preferred. But the Janitor
reootamende obrtalti people. If Ins advice
is; not smeepteel the deleveriee never seine
right. There in alweyst something serene,
until he gets his way. The vresampiten
1st the* he gets his "rake oft."
The learbor'S craw
Thee tbore Itt tho barber's "graft." A
gew years two 11 used to Wet aittedeet
16 exiiite 10 got a haitirat. ktor the own*
ANY brands of Baking Powder contain alum.
• which is an injurious acid, The ingredients of
alum baking powder are never printed on the label.
Magic Baking Powder
contains no alum and is the
only baking powder made
in Canada that has all the
ingredients Friaiaiy printed
on the label.
EWORLIITT COMPANY LIMITED
TORONTO. omr.
VteneN1P20 IMONTRBAL
r'eepeaceossee
.."'"ttlesteseet
Int5
i▪ stimitairfPleM
Emirotaea ai6Hasciort•
Ps
VAC'
00PCIAtris
NT
NE PERSONS IROWPiED
Old Mayflower Springs Leak In Madawaska River
Near Barry's Bay, and Sinks.
A despatch .from Ottawa says
Nine lives are believed to have
been lost in the Madawaska River
on Tuesday night soon after 7,
o'clock, when the old wheel steam-
er Mayflower, a small 50 -foot beat,
eapsized and sank three miles out
of Barry's Bay, after springing a
leak. Of the twelve people aboard,
ten of whom were passengers and
two members of the crew, three
passengers, namely, Gorden 0.
Peverley, J. S. Imleeth and M. J.
Idarper, all of Ottawa, and eora-
mercial travelers, are alive .to tell
the story of the. terrible disaster.
They were found by a search party
who rowed out from. Barry's Bay
to an island about three miles down
the river, in a very exhausted con-
dition.
From the brief story of the dis-
aster that could be obtained from
the three survivors, they say that
the Mayflower sprang a leak.soon
after she left Barry's Bay. Her
hold rapidly fined with water, and
those on hotted quickly realized that
death was imminent, There was
hardly a moment to decide on how
their lives could be saved. A howl-
ing wind was sweeping dow-n over
the river, which is nearly a, mile
wide at the point where the beat
sprang a leak, and the water was
lashing the sides •gf the ill-fated
boat with a vengeaeoe. All around
wee black.
Not a light eould be seen any-
where. The boat began to lurch a
,e•Amirmin
little, a little more and' theu ter-
ribly, when the old ooal-oil lamps
went out by being crashed to the
floor, and in a few minutes when
all was in darkness the boat keeled
over broadside and sank suddenly,
throwing passengers, crew, freight
and all, of which there was a good
deal aboard, and machinery, into
the icy water. The wooded shores
threw back the echoes of the cries
of the drowning souls. The three
survivors were able to discern some
spars of timber floating near to
where they had been hurled into
the water. Each tried to cheer the
other with words of encouragement,
and half perished in water that was
elogged with ioe, and almost numb-
ed to the paint of unconsciousness
they drifted ashore, but more dead
than alive.
Words, they say, could net de.
scribe these' hours of suffering on
the island up to the time they were
found. They were too exhausted
to walk, or even to get to their
feet, Throughout the long, cold
night, and terrible, even colder day,
in a, blinding snow storm, they
waited and payed that help would
come to them. Death seemed in-
evitable until at last, when hope
seemed practically gone, they heard
the quiet swish of oars and the
sound of hunian voices, and from
that moment from sheer joy they
remembered nothing more until
they- awoke it a house with kind
feces around them and kind hands
to attend to their wants.
service cords 40 cents, made up Male way:
Hair -out ...... .••• .......
Barber's tip -.—.. ..
. . 10e.
Tip to boy with whisk04.
And the bey may be sore -because he only
gets five cents.
Another form of graft goes on ratione
foremen on canstruotion work where easn-
ual labor is employed. They make a pree-
tise of °attesting a commission front the
men they take on. Some foreinen are
said to etaleet from 515 to 520 it week in
this way.
New Railway Board Chairman.
The appointment of Donald If. Mein.
tyre, LO„ of Ningstene to the chairman-
ship of the Ontario Railway and Muni.
ape) Board Is regarded as a promising
one. His knowledge of ratuncipal taw is
admitted. lie bas now the opportunity
to show the other smalities which will
enable latin to stand up to the Job. Ile
can molly make it orte of the biggest
ID tine Provinoe.
Mr. McIntyre is unmarried. Onee, when
asked why, he replied that he had sever
had time. Ile lives with two maiden sis-
ters.
It is again remarked that 81r /atoms
Whitney in his anpantraents shows it
strong predilictiou to go outside Toronto.
12.-
MARMOT PROPAGANDA.
Great Mission 1.—n. Southern Alberta
Is Planned.
A despatch from Raymond. Alta.,
says: Three hundred Morn:ion mis-
menariee from the Mormon town
south of Lethbridge are to engage
in -what will be the, greatest mis-
sion propaganda ever ilia -agent -
ed in southern Alberta,. The work
is to be conducted during the win-
ter months, and all the territory
south of the nia,in line of the Cana-
dian Pacific Railway will be touela
ed. The mission is under President
Grandley, former President of, the
Swiss ll/fistion, and he will have as-
sisting him bushiess men and farm-
ers of the best ability procurable.
The plan is 0110 which hes recently
been adopted in Utah, where it
was found to be very successful.
MAN TIURIGED TO DEATH.
Oliver Pottier Canght in Shafting
in Cornwall Mill.
A despateh front Oorriwell says:
Oliver Peirier, aged about sixty-
two, mot a. horrible death it the
basement of the Weave shed of the
Canada, Mill here on Thursday af-
ternoon, when he VMS 1/1 the act of
oiling tho shafting. Hi s clothing
caught in the shafting, .and before
the speed could be shut off he was
dead, Roth arras, both liege, his
neck and every rib were broken,
whik his firstly was a mass of
bruises. Poirier was born oear Co -
teen, Qua., arid is survived by his
mother, his wife, two esters and
two brothete
'
County Sedge Reerle lute upheld
the decision est Magistrate Blake of
Galt that breweries tney not adver-
tise it keel option distelets, it be -
leg a forte of trolieitieg buriitiese,
MILLIONS IN BLACK. FOXES.
P. E. Islanders" Prosper Also in
Agricultural Products.
A despatch from Charlottetown,
P. E. I., says: "Prince Edward
Islanders at home never before
made so much money in a. single
year as this year," said Publicity
Agent McCready in an interview.
"The farmers had bountiful oreps
and are getting top prices. But-
ter, cheese, eggi and poultry will
this year bring in more than be-
fore. Of 187 lobster canneries the
product will be soraewhat less in
quantity than in some former
'years, but better prites will make
this good. In, black foxes alone the
gain has run into millions. Of say
400 old foxes, the increase hes been
at least $2,000 each, making $800,-
000, while as many more young ones
littered last spring, sold easily for
$5,000 each, making $2,000,000
more. There is already quite brisk
bidding for options to purchase the
coming erop ef young, due to ar-
rive in April, 1913, at $5,000 to
000 each.'
BRITISH NAVAL GII1N
Some of the Tagm43nts Were
Blown Three Miles.
A despatch from. Lorition says:
While the new eaval 13.5 inch gun
was heing tested on Friday at Shoe-
buryness it burst, some of the frag-
raents being blown three miles.
Thirteen pereons were injured.
Save
to
oney
Tait Ranker, the Business
Man and Shrewd Inves-
tor to -day places his surplus
in Bonds.
Bonds have the seenrity
behind them, whit+ abso-
lutely assuree payment of
principal and interest:
They Pay a high fate ot
iftterest and are easily eon-”,
vcrted into cash.
We are in the market to
buy and sell Bonds. Write
us.
J. A. MACKAY & COMPANY
' LIMITED
Ottertitsh skim Royal Omar Bldg,
IneNTRZAL TORONTO
VI, D. 3101/8816Rr Toronto Menagerie.
IIIE NEW IN A PARAGRA
IIAPPENINGS FROM ALL OVEN
TUE GLOBS IN A
NVPS�ILLS
Canada, the Empire and the W9
in General Before Your
ir ,Tames 'Whitney has left for
Britain on a month's vacation.
A large-sized bust of Andrew Car-
negie for the new Hamilton library
building has ari•ived,.
The Haanilton police eldef says he
will prosecute, autoists who allow
their eera to milt a trail of $1110ko.
Mr. E. A. Lanoaster, M.P., in-
tends to fight to the, lest the assase-
meet on bis Parliginentary aikrw-
ance.
Radical changes are determine
upon in Pacific Coast fisheries, to
giveano.
e swhit e men preference over Ja.
p
The Hamilton Club failed in its
appeal to thc. Court of Revision
against a $10,000 bueinees ea -
meet.
The Mitister of Railways
ises $50,000 from the Geyer
tathries.
waardsnahigh-level bridge
Real estate men sai.ilifttk.xen
Hamilton will 15e increased by fr
ten to fifteen per cent, in t
spring.
F. Harwood of London has been
made agent for the G.T.R. ear sees
vice department with headquarters
at Detroit.
Employees of the G.T.R. car,
shops at London will pretest over
short working hourand late ar-
rival of the pay ear.
• London. ratepayers will be celled
taport to 'Vote on by-laws calling for
the expenditure of over $1,580,000
on the first of january.
Navigation will probably be kept
.open on the lakes till December 20.
Norfolk county won thirty-five
per cent. of the prizes at the Herti-
-cultural Exhibition at Toronto. ,
The Dominion Coal Company's''
tug Douglas H. 'Thomas was run
down by the City Of Sydney as the
two were steaming down Halifax
harbor, and four men were drown -
Two huge power schemes are be-
fore the Government, the Long
Sault and Eastern Canada Gores- -
panies both -wanting permission to
dreaa.
mlthe St. Lawrence above Monte
GREAT BRITAIN.
Unionists; condemn the pay -men*
of members of Parliament.
United States. -
Wm. ,Bennott, a Chicago real es-
tate salesman, Ieft that city, 'Octo-
ber 5, with $12,000 cash to use in
buying land in Canada, and hes net
been heard from since.
Disappointed beeause their ten -
days' -old baby was a boy when they
tvantecl a girl, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Kipp of Oinematti, etaMh 22 years
old, wrapped the child in a shawl
and Wasd him into the Ohio River. -
General.
The federated Malay States have
offered Britain a Dreadnought.
Angered by tenets of strikers,
strike -breaking gold miners at Wai-
hi, New Zealand, attacked Union
Hall. In the rioting a policeman
and a citizen were killed.
PETER LIALL DEAD.
Head of Well-Enown Construction
Company of Mentreal.
A despatch from Mentroal saws,:
Peter Lyall, the head of the great
eoestructioa emattaany of Peter Ly-
all et Sons, is dead here, after a
long Meese. Mr. Lyall Wan born ie
Citiehneeeehire, Soetlend, 1841„
and eame out le Montreal in 1870.
Ple was for two years President- of
the Montreal Caledonian Society,
and had given large sums to char-
ity. His firm lase handled large
building oontrecte in all pares of
Canada.
• SPONTANEOUS 0031BITSTI01.
—
A Barn Fill of This Year's Crop\
Was Dattroeed.
A despatch from Brockville says
Early en Thursday morning fire cle-
stroyed a barn .owned by Charles B.
Murray, in Augusta, three miles
east of here. inolucled in the lees
was the year'e, crop of hay and
grain, on which bbere was no in-
surance. Spontaneous ,.orr.13ti6t1on
is given as the .eti,11,513.
—144 •
LORD STRATITOONA 111()N0ltED.
Presented vvitit Royal Society's
Abell Medal.
A despatch from London sans
M the Royal Society of Arta on
Friday evening Lord Sanderson, in
behalf of ihe ltukc of Connaught,
who is president of the society, pre-
sented Lord Stratheons, with the
society's Albett medal, for services
in improving railway communieso
tion aiit developing the, resources
of Canaria, end for soreioes l,he
Empire in general.
,.„