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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1912-11-28, Page 4THE I EIi3 PECOHD'S CLOG- GING LIST FOR 1012-13 wl6fl1KLIDs, ,. ewe-P,enord . and Mail and Bonaire.$152 ons-Renar,i_ and GIobo- lvows.Record and Family herald -pend 1.79 Star with From hue t,75 �lows.lilll:aord and 1i ituoss . 1, 6. Howe -Record -and Son , cwsecord and Froo''F• resa 1,(3 News -Record and Advertiser •7 News•R000rd. and Torontp. Saturday b,26 Night News -Record •. and Parmas Advocate 2.25 ows.Reca ord .and Farm and Dtilry,., 175 News -Record and Catiadlan l+arm... 8.75 aws-R000rd Rad 'Youth's Companion 4.25 ewe -Record, and Canadian Country' DAILIES.. News -Record and Mail and Empire , 4.25 ppews=Record and Globe... ., . 4,25 News -Record and News 2.30 News -Record and Star 2.30 Vowe-Record and World . 3.25 `fowe-Record and Morning Free Frees 3,25. ows-Record and livening Free Press 2.76' News-R000rd' and Advertiser 3.02 .MONTHLY. , News -Record and Poultry Review .... 1.25 Naw'pp-R000rd' aid Lippincott's,. Maga, lino ,,,,: . •News -Record and::'Canada Monthly, 3f' what you want is not in this list let 318 know: about it, Wo can supply you 84 less than it would cost you to send direct. In remitting( pleas do so by Post-oface Order, Postal Note, Expreee Order or Reg- istered letter and address W. J. MITCHELL, Pupilsf,ter News -Record CLINTON, ONTARIQ OUR Synopsis of Canadian Northwest Land Regulations. Any person who is the sole head of a family, ce any male. over 18 years old, may homestead a quart- er section of available Dominion land in Manitoba, Saskatchewan or Alberta. The applicant must ;ap- ar in person re the Dominion ands Agency or Sub -Agency for ands the di triot. Entry by proxy may be made' at any agency, on cer- tain conditions by father, mother, son, daughter, brother or sister of Intending homesteader. Duties. -Six months residence upon and cultivation of the land in each of 'three, years. A homestead- er may live within nine miles of his homestead on a farm of at least BO acres solely owned and oc- cupied by him or by his father,: mother, son, daughter, brother or sister. In certain districts a homestead- er in good standing may pre-empt a quarter -section alongside hie.. s I homestead. Price,. 3.00 per aea'e, ' • Dutfee.-Must reside upon' the homestead or pre-emption six. months in each of six years from date of homestead entry (including the time required to earn home- stead patent) and oultivate fifty acre's extra, A homesteader ,who has exhausted his home tend' right and cannot ob- tain"'sb'. re-emption may enter for incertain h st purchased orae ad e a pure Price, $3.00. ' Dutiep.-Must reside six months in each of three years, cultivate fifty acres and erect a house worth $300,00. W. W. CORY, Deputy of the Minister of the In- terior. N.B.-Unauthorized 1:;;,tblioation of this advertisement will not . be paid for. .Whooping Cough 'SPASMODIC CROUP • ASTHOIA COUGHS BRONCHITIS CATARRH COLDS CRIMINAL FIGL'RES Population of the Canadian Penitentiaries Increased Slightly During the Year. 60TA0LI0H0n tale A simple, onto and effective treatment for bran. ahiat trnunioo, avoiding drugs. Vaporized Crisolene atop. the oaroayem. of Whoopfnscouge end relieves Spasmodic Croup atone. ft len 1300N -to sufferer° from Asthma. The nir cartyi08 the antiseptiovnpov, inspired with every brenth, maims breathing easy; soothes the sore throntand stops the cough, assuring restful nights. ft is invaluable to mothers, with 80511 children. Send postal for descriptive booklet. ALL DRUGGISTS. • ` Try CRESOLENC ANTISEPTIC THROAT _TABLETS th oat. They Arcirritated B mule Oeffective d nptineetic f your druggist or front us, 10c. In stumps. Vapo Cresolene Co. 62 Cordell& St, N.Y. I-cuntnd Miles Building Montreal, Can.. e.. A despatch from Ottawa says: Statistics respecting Canada's criminal population are. set forth in the annual report of the penitenti- aries tabled in the House by the Minister of Justice, Hon. C. J. Doherty, on Wednesday. The aver- age daily population was shown to have been 1,853 last year, as com- pared with 1,834 in the year previ- ous. The actual population at the end of the financial year was 1,895, di- vided as follows Kingston, 491; St, Vincent de Paul, 442; Dorches- ter. 229 ; Manitoba, 183; British Co- lumbia, 331; Alberta, 167; Sas- lcatchewan, 58, ,The parol system works admirab- ly according to W. P. Archibald, Dominion Parole Officer. Since the Act was passed, 3,780 sentences have C,OI',LEG1. AWARDED $139,607. ;. '- For Land Expropriated by the Transcontinental Railway. A despatch from Ottawa says: been completed on parole. Of this number only, 237 may be character - lied as delinquents. The percent- age of failures is 5.17, Last year 848 prisoners were thus released. To the penitentiary population of the year, Montreal contributed the most and Ottawa the fewest. The figures from the principal centres are :--Montreal, 293 ; Vancouver, 174; Winnipeg, 114; Toronto, 96; Quebec, bl ; Victoria, 42; Edmon- ton, 39; Hamilton, 35; Sydney, 34; Halifax, 33; Calgary, 31; New Westminster, 27 ; Regina, 21 Ot- tawa, 19. By creeds the penitentiary popu- lation comprises 934 Catholics, 925 Protestants, 30 Hebrews and. 39 Buddhists. The 'total cost of main- tenance was ain-tenanco:Mas- $565,472, or 84 cents per head per clay. C1i1tIS`i'Afig STAMPS. National. Sanitarium Association Will Issue 8,000,000. Every person in Ontario will be given an opportunity of assisting in a small but practical way the work carried on by the National Sanitar- ium Association kr the cure and prevention of tuberculosis. Three million little red Christmas stamps are being placed on sale at one cent each, and the proceedswill go to the funds available for combat- ting the 'white plague in Ontario. These attractive little stiokers . are designed to be affixed to all classes' of mail during the holiday season, and serve to remind the recipient" of the needs of the sick and suf- fering. They are being distributed through various business, social, religious and philanthropic organiz- ations, or may be purchaseddirect from' the Association secretary, at 347 King St. West, Toronto. "These stamps will not carry any mail, but all mail can carry these stamps," is the legend on the en- velope in which the stamps are sold. Judgment was given by Mr, Justice Audette in the Exchequer Court on Wednesday,' awarding the College of St. Boniface, Manitoba,, 339,607, ; with interest •and. costs, for forty i�' acres of land expropriated by the `I National Transcontinental Railway. tri !,' Frank Doyle was sentenced. at Parry Sound to four years for bee- s glary, Ybarl MONTREAL. i1 IMMIGRATION REST CLASS. Canada Receiving the Finest, Min biter of Interior Reports. A despatch from Ottawa says: That Canada is receiving the high- est class of immigrants, though a smaller number of free homestead- ers were located last year than the year before, is Weed in the annual report. of the Minister of the In- terior just out. The railway cora- ponies disposed of more land last year than ever before, their receipts from o:ctual settlers 'being $18,200,- 000. The average price paid was $13.70 per acre. This is taken as indicating that the newcomers are possessed of considerable means. The. year's homestead estries were 39,151, representing a population of 91,372, as compared with 44,479 en- tries, and 107,884 souls in the pre- vious year. immigration figures in the report have already been pub- lished. The Yukon gold production was $4,024,236, 'a, falling off of $2,590. 0' BIGGEST WOMAN 'DEAD. Weighed 780 Lbs.,and Would Break Down Walls in Her Room. A despatch from Montreal says: Justine Massen, who weighed seven hundred and eighty pounds, died on Thursday in St. Jean de Dieu Asy- lum. She was the biggest woman in theworld,rod few years ago was THE STANDARD is the National' , ?Weekly Newspaper of the Dominion ' Of Canada, It is national In all its It uses the moat expensive engrav-.. 'rugs, procuring the photographs from Jhalt' over the world. • 'Its articles are carefully selected and its editorial polloY , is thoroughly Independent, A subscription to The' Standard:. c,ete $2.00 por year to any address la Oaalada or Great Britain. TRY IT FOR 19121 k i' iltntreal Standard Publishing Ce,. Pnhllohere, „ . MINER BECOMES INSANE. He Suddenly Attacks Two Fellow- Workinen. A despatch from South Porcupine says: A Frenoh-+0anadiaa suddenly went crazy in the Dome bunk -house on Wednesday afternoon and at tacked two Austrian miners with a knife and an iron bar. They were lying quietly in their bunks when he drew a knife and slashed one man in the face and struck another savagely with an iron bar. Both men are severely hurt, but not seri- ously injured. The Frenchman was arrested 'by the Provincial Police, and will be medically examined. All three men had come to work but a few days. ago at, the Dome, and are unknown, except by num- ber. WORLD'S BUSINESS BOOMED. Grand Total for Present Year Will Reach $35,000,000,000. A despatch from Washington says: In the present year the world's international burliness will reach the enormous total of $35,- 000,000,000, according to a report issued on Friday by the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce. The estimate is made on official re- turns- of exports and imports from virtually every commercial country in the world. Nearly every nation reported a greater exchange of commodities than ever before had been known. 51 MAN FOUND DEAD. Gee Heater in His Roonl ill Toron- to was Turned on Pull. A despatch from Toronto :says: Andrew Latta of Belleville, aged sixty-seven years, was found as- phyxiated in his !bedroom at 83 Ann street on Friday morning. Ho had arrived in the city the night before from Manitoba and intend- ed visiting relatives in the 'city for a few days_•before returning to Belleville. iiliiotta®1fQdlf31----- is certainly one of the inoet disagree- able ailments which flesh is heir to. Coated fougue-bitter taste in the - mouth -nausea -- dizziness - these combine to make life a burden. The cause is a disordered liver -the cure Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills. They go. straight: to the root of the trouble, put the liver right, cleanse the stom- ach and bowels, clear the tongue and take away the bitter taste from the mouth. At the first sign of bilious- ness take Dr. Mors4e's 40 Indiana Root Pills 1 "' ESOF FARM POOOIICT S PLIC A Iii DEPORTS FROM TH0.. LBADIN0 Tnaoe CENTRES OF AMERtOA. Prtow et Cattle, Crain, Choose and ether Produce a Noma and Abroad. ereadstuifs. Toronto, Dee. 3, -Flour -Ninety per cent.' patents, 34.10:to $4.20. Mannobaa- Firet patents, in Jute bags, 35.3e; second patents.: in jute bags, 94.80; strong bak- ere', in jute 'hags, $4.60. Manitoba Wheat -No. 1 Northern,. 900, Bay ports; No. 1 at 871.2c. ;and No, 3' at 351•2o, -Bay ports. Feed wheat, 65 to 67c, Bay ports. Ontario Wheat -No. 2 now' white and. red wheat 96 to 97c. outside, and sprout- ed,. 86: to 90o, outside. Olute-Ontario oats, 34 to 35o, outeido, and 87 to 371.20 on track, Toronto. Weet- rn• canasta' eats, 40o for. No, 2, and at 6 d Ba ports. agP for'foo y Peas -There � are buyers outside for No. 2 at 31,16 to 03,25. but efferiuge are nil. .Barley=Forty-eight-lb. barleyof good neater, 5656 to 700 outside. Fee, 45 to. 60o. Corn -No. 0 old American, 66e, all-raH; Toronto, and No. 3 at 65o all•rall. New corn, D oember dolivery, 01o, Toron'o, Bre-21o. 2 at 03' to Ho. outside. Buokwheat-61 to:620, outside. Bran -Manitoba bran,.222 to 322.66, in gs,$25.60 nto freight. Shorts are quot- ed Country Produce. Butter -Bolls, oho'loe, 26 to 27.1 bakers', inferior, 22 to 24o• choice dairy, tulle, 26o: creamery, 31 to no for rolls and 890 for solids: Eggs -Case lots of frealr, 320 per demon, and of oold storage, 27 to 28o; strictly now. laid,: 40to46c per dozen. Choose -141.4o for large and 141.2c for twine, Beans -Hand -nicked, $3 per. bushel; primes, $2.90, in a jobbing way. Honey-Extraoted In tine, 12 to i21.2e por Pound for No. 1, wholesale; combs, $2.50' to $3 per dozen for No, 1, and 82.40, for No. 2. Poultry-Wol1•fatted, clean. dryploked stook' was quoad as follows;-Oliiokeue, 13 to 15o per 1b; fowl, 10 to 120; ducks, 14 to 16o; geese, 18 to 14o; turkeys, 18 to'21o. Dive poultry, about. 20 lower than the above. Potatoes -Good stook quoted at 80 to 85o per bag. on track, and New Brunswick 96o per bag. Baled Hay and Straw. Baled Hay No. 1 at $14 to $14.50 0 track, Toronto; No. 2, 61$ to $12.60. a{ixed hay, $10 to 811 a ton, on track, Baled Straw -610, on track, Toronto, Montreal Markets. Montreal, Deo. 3. ate, Canadian West ern, Mo. 2, 441.2 to 450 • extra No, 1- feed 44 to 441.80; No. 2 local white, 480; No, 1 local white, 41e; No, 4 local white, 40o, Barley Man. feed. 614o 620, malting, 80 to 82o, Bnokwheat No.'8, 66 to Ole, Flour Tian, Springwheat patents, firsts, $5.40; ascends, $4,902 strong bakers', 84,70; Win- ter patents, onoico, $6.36; straight rollers, 62.40. to Coats, barrels. $505; do.,,8hag 90 lbs, $2.40. Bran, 321, Shorts 326 to $26. 9fiddlinga 328 to 330. Mouillfe, 30 E 13 to $1, Hay,t, leo, 2,. per tan ear lots, to 21.2e; est ea roast westerns,2o B t- -to 721.20• inset enaterns, ii L2 to 120. But- ter, choicest creamery, 301.4 to 301.231 seconds, 282.4 to 09o. Eggs, selected, 30 to 31e; No, 2 stook, 21 to 220. Potatoes. per bag, oar lots, 70 to 85c. LIVO Stook Markets, Are You Droopy, Tired, Worn Out? Here is Good Advice to All Who• Feel as if Their Vigor and Life Had All Oozed Away. This Condition Can' be Quickly Cured by a Coed: Cleansing Medicine. Your experience is probably a a somewhat similar to that described f ia figure r on the streets of be Mr. J. T. Fleming in the follow - the city. Her mind became affect -g a amt ir g t in letter from his home in Leban ed, however, andshe was taken in charge by the "Assistance Pub- lique." 'Durin'g her stay in the in- stitution her exploits became fain= ous.' She was so big and so strong that in her fits of insanity she used to break down the walls of the rooms in which she was enclosed, and it was finally found necessary to build a special house for her oll.t- side the .main ,building. • -.-5. NEW ROLLING STOCK. C.P.B. Orders This Year 467 Loco- motives and 28,671 Cars. A despatch from Montreal says: The Canadian Pacific 'Railway will spend forty-eight million dollars in new rolling stock ordered this year. This money will secure them 467 locomotives and 28,671 cars of vari- ous descriptions. When this large order is completed the company will have in commission. 2,225 locomo- tives and 98,804 cars. The new locomotives ordered cost nine mil - dens, the balance of forty-eight millions being'expended for cars of various kinds. This equipment will he operated.over a trackage of more than 12,500 miles. on: 1f1 think I must have the most sluggish sort of a liver. In the morning my mouth was bitter, and that foul, soft feeling that tells you, 'No breakfast needed here this morning.' A cup of coffee would sort of brace me up, but in two hours I was disposed to quit work,. all energy having oozed out of rue. Supper was my only good meal, but I guess I didn't digest very `well, for I dreamt to beat the band. A friend of mine- put me wise to Dr. Hamilton's Pills. I think they must have taken hold of my liver, perhaps my stoinach, too, because at the very start they made things go right. Look at me now -not, sleepy in the daytime, but hustling for the mighty dollar and .getting fun out of life every minute, That's what : Dr. Hamilton's Pills have done for me -they have re- built and rejuvenated my entire system." To keep free from headaches, to feel ,young and bright, to enjoy your meals, to sleep sound and look your best, nothing can help like Dr. Hamilton's Pills, 25c. per box, five for $1.00 at all druggists and storekeepers or postpaid from The Catarrhozone Co., Buffalo, N.Y., and Kiugston,� Canada. A POLICE OFFICIAL SHOT Three Shots Fired at, Sir Edward R. Henry, One Causing a Serious Wound A despatch from London, Eng- land, says: Sir Edward Richard. Henry, Chief Commissioner of the London Metropolitan Police, was shot and seriously wounded on Wednesday night by a man who had. an alleged grievance against him. Sir Edward was alighting temp a motor -oar at hisresidence in Ken- sington on his return from Scot- land Yard, when the man 'rushed from the opposite side of the street and Shot at him three tunes with a rev.Jlvcr, One bullet entered the Montreal, Dec. 3. --Steers sold from 36,00 to $4.00. Cows from $2.50 to 05.28, and bulla at 80.50 to $3.25 per cwt. Canning stook from 81.50 to 82,50 per owt. Limbs 86.25 to $6.50, while ahem) brought 54.03 Per cwt. Selected lots- of hogs, 39.25 per cwt., weighed off oars. Calves from 63.00 to $12.00 each, as to size and quality, Toronto, Deo. 3.-0attle-Choice butcher, 86.76 to 66,85; export, $6 to $5,25; good medium, 55.26 to $5.751 common, $2.75 to $3.78; cows $3 to 94; bulls, $3 to $4,60; canners, $1.50 to $2. Calves -Good veal, 87 to 09; common, $3 to 83.25. Stoekore and feeders -Steers. 550 •to 750 pounds, 8,2 $3,75 to 84,85; feeding bulls, 600 to 1,200 Bounds, at 82.75 to $4.26. ' Mil11ere and springers -Steady domnnd for good stook,. at from $50 - to $80. Sheep and lambs- Light ewes, $4 to 64.50; heavy ewes 33 to $3.50 lambs, 6 to 36.85. bogs-lllarkot firm at $8.35 to 38.50, fed and watered, and $8. to 90.15 f.o.b. United States Markets: Minneapolis, Doo. 3.-Wheat-Deoolnber, 801.4o; May, 86 3.8 to 861.20; No,. 1 hard, 031.2o; No. 1 Northern, 811-2 to 83o; No. 2 do., 791.2 to Ole, Corn -No. 3 yellow 44 to 450. Oats -No. 3 white, 291.2 to 29 3.4e. Rye -No. 2, 65. to 57o. Bran --$18 to 310,50, Flour -First Patents, $4.15 to 34.45; sec- ond patents, 34 to $4.25; first clears, $3 to 63.30• second clears, 82.20 to $2.50 Duluth, Dt:e. 3. -Linseed -On track, 51.- 281.2; 1:281.2; to arrive, 51.281.2; November, 31.30 bid; December, $0,271.2 bid; January.. $1.- 201.2 bide Ilay, 31.32 bid. Wheat -Ifo. 1 hard, 82 3.6e; No, I Northern, 813.0o• No. g Mardo.,, 851.0793.0t80•fd, December, 803.8 to 801.20; - - THE NEWS IN A PARAGRAPH UAPPENINGS FROM ALL OVEi] TIIE GLOBE IN A N U TSII ELL. Canada,•tbe Empire and the World in General Before Your Eyes.' Canada. The Canadian Northern Railway will erect a large office building in Toronto. The Cobalt post -office will be re moved to the Royal Exchange builcl- ing, George W. Vale of Waterloo'suc- cumbed to blood -poisoning from a scratch on the finger, A Montreal department storo is to inaugurate the eight-hour day for its 1,400'female employes. Berlin has. -been notified by the Provincial Board of Health to pro- vide additional sewage disposal beds. Mr. James M. Shenly, one of the best-known civil engineers: in Can- ada, died at Montreal, on Friday, aged fifty-five. The new departmental store plan- ned for Scroggies, Limited, Mont- real, will include restaurants;thea- tre and hea=tre'and roof garden. Miss Louise Moore of Elizabeth- town walked out while asleep into a snowy field in her night dreas and perished from exposure. Wm. L, Beatty, head of the firm of M. Beatty & Son, Welland, manufacturers, died on Friday, at the age of, seventy-one, A baby in Montreal in convulsion was put by its frightened ,mother into a bath of boiling watewith fatal results. Mr. and en Mrs.'Daniel Sweeney Point Anne, near Belleville, wof were drowned on Friday, when their mo- tor •boat was pierced by ice and sank. ' Sarnia authorities are investigat- ing why the police didn't discover the fire in a hub and spoke factory, the first alarm being telephoned from Port Huron, Mioh., across the river. Alphonse Raney, of Newfound- land, and John Carter of Nova Scotia, students at the College of Propaganda Fide, in Rome, were, injuredwhen a runaway auto struck them. The Grand Trunk Pacific and the Grand Trunk have each applied to Parliament for authority to issue $25,000,000 four . per cent. deben- ture stock, or $60,000,000 in. all for the purchase of equipment. Great Britain. Three suffragettes were arrested at a Lloyd George meeting. . Great Britain has arranged with the Sultan of Oanan' to stop the gun -running, whereby the border tribes of,the north-western part of India, get arms. France is squoez- ing the Sultan to cancel the ar- rangement because it affects a French industry. 'United Slates. left `groin, inflicting ' a dangerous wound; the others missed their mark. The Commissioner's chauf- feur, who is an ex -policeman, grap- pled with the assailant and over- powered him. It turned out that the: man, whose name ie Bowcs, had a month ago applied 'nit Scotland Yard for a taxicab license, whieh was refused. Subsequently he wrote to the Commissioner, plead- ing for a reconsideration, but with- out avail. For this reason he nursed a grudge against Sir Ed- ward and lay in wait for him. '7 Too Busy. "What's the matter' with that man's farm l" "He's too enthusiastic;" replied Mr.. Corntossel. "He gets so inter- ested reading agricultural' 'litera- ture that he forgets ,all about tend - in' the crops an' the stook." BOLD SORES AHD WARS ARE REALER BY Z i4•DUK Cold sores, chapped hands, ulcers, and winter eczema are common. troubles just now, and for all these Zam-Buk will be found the surest and quickest remedy. Sometimes cold sores arise from chilblains on, the tons or finger%, and in the former case, where colored nooks are worn, there is a danger of blood -poisoning from the dye. Zam-Buk being so power- fully antiseptic removes the danger ap soon as applied and quickly heals. Mr. W. J. Halliday, of Ash Grove, Ont„ say% : " I had ley little finger frozen, and it cracked at the first joint, causing a bad sore, whioh dis- charged freely and would not heal. The pain was very bad, and the whole o1 my hand beams swollen and in bad shape. a A friendadvised ins to try Sam - flak, and 1 moon found that Zam-Buk was altogether different to any pro- paratlon I had ever tried,a0 very short time it Foaled the sore." Miss Lilits May, of Stoney ,Creek, the., • says : " A few weeks mince, several nasty, disfiguring cold sores suddenly broke out 'on my Ws, Whlek became much %Welien. Soelne my condition, .a friend',aitvised me to try Nam -Bak and leave all other prepara- tions aside. This I did, and was much pleased, atter a few application% of this balm, to see every sere healed." Zam-Iluk will also be found e. euro onto for eczema, blood -poison, vari- coAe sores, piles, scalp sores, ring- worm, inflamed pwrchoe, bubies' orup. tion% and chapped places, outs, burns, bruises, and skin injurie%enorally. All druggists and stored Sell at 600. box, or poet free front Zam-Buk Co., Toronto, upon receipt of price, 'O3- 1uselutes, tb harmful. imitations and_ s sti- 0 Use also Zam-Link Soap, 29c. tablet, Best fqr baby's, Conder skin! POSITIVELY THE LARGEST SALE IN CA SERVIANS OCCUPY DU Autrian AllO Government Preparing for Any Develop• meat in the Balkan Crisis A despatch from London says : The-Sorvians ignoring the procla- mation roclamation of Alranian independence, have occupied the port of Durazzo without resistance. This informa- tion comes in a direct despatch from that town on Thursday night, No resistance was offered to the entry of the Servian troops, "We have now occupied Durant; for perpetuity," is the tele'gram which General Jankovitch, the Ser- vian commander, has stent to the Belgrade Government, The fact that the Belgrade Gov- ernment has made public this tele- gram, says the Vienna oorrespon- dent of The Daily Telegraph, is re- garded as proving Servla'sirrecon- cilable attitude. Budapest papers assert that Ser- via is mobilizing against Austria, and intends to form, a new army, o armed t.ith the weapons captured from the Turks. Wm. Castlebury, of Bartlesville, Okla., aged 90, is a proud father once again. His wife is 36. The 52 general' chairmen repre- senting the engineers of asmany; railroads . east of Chicago have formed a permanent organization to be known as the "Eastern Gener- al Chairmen :Association, Brother- hood of Locomotive Engineers," Evidence that a jaildelivery was planned by prisoners during the time John Sohrank, would-be assas- sin of Theodore Roosevelt, was con- fined in Milwaukee, was revealed when twelve steel saws were found hidden under a mattress. Albert Patrick, lawyer, condemn- ed in New York city in 1900, the sentence later being commuted to life ,imprisonment for poisoning Wm. Rice, an aged millionaire, has been pardoned. Ile made several legal fights for freedom. It was charged he bribed Rice's valet to give poison. General. Five hundred Armenian. notabili- ties havesigned a petition'to' the Czar of Russia invoking .Russian Warlike Feeling in Vienna. A despatch from Vienna says: Much excitement has been occasion- ed by the action of the Government in arranging for the mobilization of the Austrian army, which' proves the Ministers' determivation to be fully prepared for any development :. in the Balkan crisis, The. Parka mentary leaders 'met 'en Thursday night and decided to allow th¢ Premier's three bills dealing with matters connected with -'`the mobil* izatian tri go to ea .Dittos without the customary first ceding, Turkish Force ewitetirelI. A despatch from Sofit- .says :.Two entire divisions of Turkish reserved eurrendered on Frisky to the Bul- garian troops near the village o Narhamli; between the port of De- deabhach and. Demotica, according to an announcement made by the official news agency here. A very fierce, fight between the 'Perlis and Bulgarians preceded the eaipitula tion of the two divisions of Turkish force reserves. The Turkish f o e was commanded by YaderPasha.. Tw Generals, 252 Turkish officers and 8,879 men surrendered. The loot captured by the Bulgarians includ- ed eight mountain guns, ewe ma- chine guns, 1,000 horses and large. quantities of munitions. The Ter -s- igh prisoners have been sent' to Demotic•. MODERN JEKYLL AND HYDE. J. Frank Hickey Confesses to Mur - dors of Boys. A despatch from Buffalo, N. Y., says: J. Frank Hickey, termed a "modern Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde," on Friday macro a complete confession of the murder. of Joseph Josephs, the seven-year-old Lacka- wanna boy, whose dismembered body was found in a cesspool back kaw anna Nov. a saloon in Lackawanna, , 16, and also admitted that he (tilled Michael Kruck, the 12 -year-old newsboy of New York, whose body was found in Central' Park ten years ago. Death in both instances was due eo strangulation. Hickey attributed his crimes to the exces- sive use of liquor. .7 CAIRNEGIE TO, DIE POOR. Will. Turn Over all His Wealth but a Beggarly $25,000,000. A despatch from New York says: Andrew Carnegie announces that all but $25,000,000 of hie fortune, which will be disposed of under, his will, will be left to the Carnegie Corporation of New York, which will carry on his educational and charitable work. Money Talks TTIE first oopaideration, when in. vesting surplus funds, is the security of the money Invented, Investment. in 'First Mortgage bonds, guarankeeesecurity ofprin- tape,. and al, the same time yields the Investor from 5 80 0 Der cent. We oan offer high-class bonds 1n denominations of 5180; 0000, snit.. 81,000 each, so that the ,marl in- vestor has the same opportunity of Investment MI have Banks, Trust Companies and large tnvo,tore. We shell be glad to submit part) oulars of certain issues, which we now have on hand, J. A. MACKAY tic COMPANY LIMITED Guardian 8162, : Royal Bank Bldg, MONTREAL TORONTO A contractor recently advertised for three hundred weeder) "sleep- ers." By return of pest he receiv- ed a letter from a neighboring clergyman offering him the whole of his congregation on seasonable terms. _ BUSINESS AND SHORTHAND . Subjects taught. by expert instructors at the 2.1ed/"APetVa Y M,'0. A. BLDG. LOINDON. 01617. Students assisted to positions. College in session from Sept. 3rd, Catalogue free. Enter any time, J.W. Westervelt J. W. Westervelt, Jr. PrincipalCoortereSAeoountant 18 - Vico-Prinelnal I" Start that savings account this week. Start where you know your savings wilibe safe --With acom- pany that has a reserve fund equaito its pall -up capital. Start with a company incorporated in 1864 -that has already paid over five million dollars of interest to depositors and debenture -holders Call or write us to -day, OVER 13 MIILL1ONS OF ASSETS .Coe & Sowings Co.,, St. Thomas. eCOlfdOlj aftd ftj ALE --- STOUT --- LAGER PURE-- PALATABLE - NUTRITIOUS --- BEVERAGES FOR SALE BY WINE AND SPIRRIT MERCHANTS EVERYWHERE. LOCAL OPTION -Residents in the local option districts can legally order from this brewery whatever they require for personal or family use. Write to JOHN 'LABATT, LIMIXTED, LONDON, CANADA •��, annnnnnnnnmmenseislnsen n