HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1913-10-16, Page 2Llitaa0N 111.--OCTOBEII 19. 1913.
•••-r•
t it el
cin'Av.anS.--ilow far had Israel Jour -
into ow dew of demean? What para.
Repel from Sinai? Why del the soles go
eular dircetions weie given. them? Dow
tar aid they go iu searelting the lend?
llow long woes they gone? In waat re+
spnete dia the too mate which the
apies broleght Weir twee? In what re -
Apt ets did they differ?' Willett report
slid the people adapt? How were the
The report of the tip:too-Num. 13. 1-3, Peoid" 317"teC" DeSerThe MaS"' Inter -
17 -141 25. etesurns ew Israel. What punishment
wi Et meneueeea upon the unbelievers?
Connumetary,---1. The epics sent out .What pi -maw was made to Caleb?
Moses -Weisel; Stood between God awl PRACTICAL SURATY.
(vg, 1-3, 17-25). 1. The Lord sotto unto
the people, lie had vommuniou with Jo- Tono..c.-A Prieeliao Privilege.
L Offered.
hovah on the one hand, and on the et, ueened.
other, Lad the confidence of the Israel- IIT. Lost.
itesse What .God would csay to hie people I. Offeleu. It wog et the desire of the
he spoke to them throtigh Mertes, 2. people end for their sataafaction that
Send thou men -From Deut, 1. 22, it is the sOcS were sent eut. Instead Of go.
hoe reeolutely forwaed, with the shiniug
learned that the plea of sending men Idler of the divine deresenee for their
to inYeetigete renditions iu Canaan had guide, and the promise of God for their
its origin in tire Israelites themselves, support, the people desired to have the
aud, beeaase tney aeulanded it, God geve land reported upon hy chosee men of
it his sanetiorellearch the lanO -The their own cempany. lo thie they ' he-
oPeeific directione given to the epiee are trayed a lurking distrust of the Lends
braced in vs. 17-20. Of every tribe.... proutires and leaderehip. Ithateg God's
a man -There were to be. twelve spies, Command rod promise given them, tee
eorreeporeling to the twelve tribes of greatest boldness would have been their
lerael, Every one a ruler -The most truest wiedoin. Lerma Ilea come to de -
capable men of the nation, and notmere pend upon twelve limited ntinde like
edeeuturers, were selected for this iin- their own, inetead of ou Goil. God had
portant misethe. Every spy wee "a brought them to the borders of Canaan,
fiance MVO) 3. larona the wilderneee of but they mild, not enter listless their
Paran-Thie was the oeneral name of will united with his and they went In
the thoion in which Kat'desh-barnea was Ws name and hie strength. Victory
eituete% Heade of children of Israel- was.adeured on those cenditione. The
Their namee are mentioned th Yti. 4-15, crisis came to Terra] when they had to
The tribe of Levi, is not mentioned,. but altonee between the majority and minor.
the tribe of Ephraim may be tilted to ity reports of the spies. Whether the
tato its place, Olnd Joseph is repreeent• Canaanites were strong or weak, minty
ed by Mamma, or few, sheet(' have been nothing to the
17-20. Tim Ivies were to go with a leraelites, Clients and walled eities
well defined purpose, They were to en- weam as nothing to him who had divid-
ter Carman at the south and proceed ed the Red Sea. for Ws people,
through the country, observing patient- IL Refused. God looked on Israel as
arty of the inhabitante, the manner of the heir to Cannata, but Israel obstin-
their dwelling and the facilitieg, for mak- ately refused 4o make ready for the
lag a defence agaiost invadeth They great inheritance. They looked upon
were commanded to bring bee]: with Canaan as worse than the grave, a
them samples of the preclude of the seene of vain strugglen and harassend
soil. Moees was careful to tell them to privations. To them their only hope
snake their observation with hearth full appeared in retracing their steps. To
of courage. No doubt it would have been Caleb and Joshua that Wfl6 the utter
better if the peoplehad refrained from extinction of a great opportunity, the
eending the spies, and simply trusted drawing' back from certain o.nd inestim
(Imre word; for He had promised. them able blessinge, whieh lay within their
reach, Their real danger wes rebellion
the land of Canaan as their posseesion,
against God'e appointments for therm It
and He would have given it te them, no
. was not mere weakness, but wickedness.
matter how strong and numerous the ,iu
In retuning to Egypt, jerael would
habitants were, 21-O4. The spies probah-
vaned of do,' have had le part •from Moses their lead-
ly went northward along the er, and .Aaron their priest. They would
Jordan, reaching Hamada in the reoion
have lied to abandon the ark and the
of Lebanon, and returned through °the
altar. They could not expect manna
western. part of the land of Canaan
foO food, or the cloud to guide therm
They returned with figs, pomegranates
Could they presume that God would
and grape They carried a large cluster
it. systain them in a cowardly retreat?
of grapes "between two upon a staff."
cruel) and joehtia spoke entreatingly,
was earrieri in this way not altogether
because .of Re raze, but that it might „o,nly to be threatened with stoning.
were rescued from danger by the
be brought to Ierael freeh and intact eheY
tnterposition of God. Teruel Proposed
Clusters of grapes weighino twenty
to;subs.titute a captain. in place of their
pounds are °wagon:Illy found..25. Fotty tited fund and God-grven leader. That
daye-The spies had traveled probably ,„ perhaps, the bitterest hour in
five hundred mile, in making their "a'
aloe& life. Proetrate before the taber-
investigation naele were Moses and Aaron in deep Ri-
ll. The two reports (vs. 26-33). 20. flietion for Israel.
.Brought hack word -They went as rep- III. Lost, The invasion of Canaan,
without - strong faith, courage and self-
resentatives of lerael and reported the
vomits of their investieations to them restraint would have ended in national
through Meees anti Aftrine Showed them disaster and deetruction. Miserable as
the frnit of the land - The, signt the 'desert wandering might be, it was
of the fruit woold make a stronger a disciple which prepaeed the nation for
impression upon the minds of the pee- better things. Israel as a nation was
pie sts to the fertility of the soil than spared for a glorious future but the m-
a mere descrintiore $2e, Eloweth -with bellious individeals were sentenced to
milk and honey -This expreesion is fre-
quently used to deaote superior fertil-
ity. The words of the splee otere con-
firmed by the frulta shown. The spies
prefaced their report by deciaring the
excellenee of the land, 28.. Neverthe,
lees -Here begins ,the. spies' exelo.don
of their unbelief. Walled, and very
great -They- were telting what they
saw, aud that was a proper thing to do,
' but they were thavingeout faith in God.
• The cities were' strongly fortified. Chil-
dren of Anak-Taey Were called giants
lo v. 33. d9. Amalekites-thraet had
already encountererl the army of .Arnel-
eit and had conqueeed them (Exact. 17:
8-13). Ilittites-Deceenclants of 'fah.
aebusites-A. people who long held. the
44011{01°W tipon will& jerusalmun was
afterward built, Amerites-afountain-
etre. They were warlike, and the most
formidable of the Inhabitauts of Canaan.
Canaanites-The term 'is here applied
to Come living upon the /owlands.
These various - inhabitants of Canaan
appeared to the ten spies as being un-
eonqueranle, and the Israelites lacked
the foith neeessary to believe that God
would give them possession of the land.
30. Caleb stilled the people -Joshua
held the same view of the nratrin that
Caleb AN (14:0). The people were al-
most in a frenzy over the evil report
s of the spies. Calea uttered words
of encouragement and confidence, Let
tut go up at onee-Caleb was Vete to
- eounsel going up to the agsault at once,
for there is no better cure for fear than
e ction.-Whetion. We are well .eble to
overcome it-Thie is the declaration of
faith and courage. Caleb. and Joshua
saw the same thinos in Canaea that
the other spies saW,r'hut they saw what
the other spies fallea to eee, the arm
of Jettevahe es their steength, and, re,
!yaw upon him Ma the God of battles,
Caleb said, "We ere yeti able." 31.
'fluty are stronger than we -The unbe-
lieving, spies uow boldly declared whet
they had before left to be iuferred.
They left out entirely the thought ot
help from God, .22. An evil report -
Their report was evil, berause it ex-
preeeed distrust of God's wool and
power, it was evil oleo beeause of the
trouble whiett it brought upon e nation.
leatetli up the inhabitante-tiome sup-
pose the spiels meout that the land was
barren, and did not afford stistenttnee
foe. ite bibehitants, but this woe eon-
tredietory to the statement in V. 21.
Some. think the !Ties meant that !vett
Issnee were. frequent, awl ethers tbet
on Recount of the richflese of the coon -
try there wars conetent strife among
&Herta peoples for its poseetedon. The
last view seems reasonable, Of a great
S tature -1u comparison with the Ts-
raelitera 33. Am gresehoppers-An Or -
kestrel eetiggeration of the disperity of
otature between the Hebrew's .and :some
of the Cana:matte. The fear of the un-
believinz spies triagoified their foes.
Probobly the average stature of the
itaraellies did not fall meet' below that
Of the Canaanitee.--Whedon.
HI, tataelief puniehed tont feith re,
Warded. (11.! 1-24,) Tile hoes; of Israel
believed the evil report of the ten Spies
MA blitrMitred against *Moses ono _tear-
sni end Jehovah. The. appetite of dm:11MA
, and Cedeb bad no effeet upon them,
ene thryy even eeeiree ea sled te,,le
ler bringing hard: a good report. The
Lord threittenell to (loamy the withe•
Erving Israelite% but Moses Made a
twrwerful pleta iti their behalf, TOt LAM
was moved by 'Mears' Twayer and did e
itiet eut them oft, hot Ire thd not let ardidrropettreatthed on tete, aity. A
tome 00 maims:At d, They were sen• ( or reinetating 17.helnliiSeir oltiT Zerairsl b • 1 , - •
tetteed to die in the wildeenese without hip sitlicets,providing they 'levee to bain.
iitiiitolt .titeenerattion. • - .
enterine the promieed land. Thoge who . Wehiltel"tirVetti(lW
traleved the tool and hemeght a tavola molt by the men of°tvlitiMogrtgild"o"
"tainted gods." it would mutiny Inv'olvef
ahle report Were pecolliSed entranee into the recognition of .TAIneP Lark;n and Die
Ceriaate, hitt the peofee who Lulea to be- rransport %corkers t Mon by the On.. St. Thomae-rhe priee of live tome 11.' •
TORONTO MARKETS
iwouats, mAiticta,
Dressed hoed, heavy . • . •814 23 812 00
Do., li,glit .. 13 00 13 50
33
Butter, daily .. 30
40
Eggs, new tall, dee. ,. 35
20
thieldns, lb. 18
lb, .. 14. 15
17
Dueks lb 15
23
Turkeys, lb. .. 20
Apples, bbl. , 2 50 a 0900
Potatoes, bag .. 80
0 00
Reef, forequertent, cwt.- 8 00
Do., medium 0 23 14 00
Do„ 'linage:uteri .. 30
Do., mimeo .. 8 50 1001,a:tow:
Da, ellolve sides .. 11 00
Mutton, light, ewt, 0 00 IL 00
Do., prime, cwt. ... .. 19, 00 1131 2305
Veal, emornou, ewt, 10 00
13 30
Lamb, cwt. . „ . 13 00
SVG.A.It :MARKET.
Sugars are quoted in Toronto, whole-
sale, as follows:
Extre Grattnlated, Itedmaltai, 100 -
lb, bilge . • ..$1 50
,441 5:000'
j,)0.1.,.:71,,It.leinicoei3, Rifl-11). bags • . • • • 4 50
Do., 20-1,b, bane 4 00
Acadia 100 -lb age .. 4 40
Do., 'barrels .. 4 45
Beaver, 100-1b. Mtge 4 35
Imperial .. .. 4 35
Yellow, No. 1 bags 4 10
Do., barrels 4 15
• HIDES, S1QNS, WOOL.
BEIEEBIDEIS--City 13utcher Ifides flat.
14 to 15 1-4e per lb, inspected Mies
No. 1 13 1-2c. No. 2 12 1-2. Country
Bldes, fiat, cured, 13 1-2 to 14 1-2c. Part
cured, 13 to 13 1-2e.
CALFSKINS-City skins green, flat 16
1-2c. Country, cured 17 1-2c to 19q, part
cured 17c, according to t.ondltion and
takc-off. Deaeons or Pam calf, $1.00 to
040.
FlOnSEDIDES-City take off V1.50 to
$4.00. Country tako off No. 1 $3.50 to
14.00. No. 2 $2,50 to $3.60,
SIMI0PSICINS-Olty Lambskins, Pel ts
or Sheatlings se to 05e, Country Lamb-
skins or •Shearlings 80 to 65e.
WOOL -Washed combing fleeee (coarse)
23c to ft.; is2c, waehed clothing flee&
(fine) Sti 1-2 to 27c. Washed reieetleas
(burry, chaffs', etc.) 19 to 19 1-3 Un-
washed. Ocoee combing' (coarse) 16 to 16
1-2e. Unwashed fleece elothing, (fine)
17 1-4 to 17 3-4o,
TALLOW -;•City rendered solid in bar-
rels 6 to 6 1-4e.• Country etook, send id
6 1-2e, Cake No. 1-4 to 1-20- N0.
2 5 1-2 to 0e.
boalr:els, No. 1 (I to 6 1.4e, No, 2, 5 to
to 40e-liallain's 'Weekly .1tarket ne-
ROSS10 TIAIR-Fermer pettier etoek. 3T
. theelsed mot edranteel to $3.7 teint
, env, 11 eel to $40, itud been tu 821. Otda
rr prices remein otteuly. Butter 19 quot-
ed at 28e to 30e, .egge at 2ae to 30e,
Loney at 14e to /5e- pounds eitiekens at
Se to 18e a pound, Opiates at 20e peck,
(eaelaes at 25e to 40e basket, aotnateree
tt, 40e it 1)481101, pears at 20e basket,
tides at Oe to lie, eate at 3ae
°foie bay at 812 a ton, and baled hay at
*16 a ton,
LIVE STOCK.
Receipts were--Catios 1876, elaves 430`,
sheep 1904. boo 521.
Export cattle, choice.. .7 35 to 7 65
do do medium .., 7 00 to 7 35
do bulls .., 6 50 to 6 60
Butchers ca'ttle, choice„ .; 7 30 to 7 65
do do medium... 75 to 7 25
do do common 5 GO to G 50
Butcher cows, C 00 •to 03
do do mediuin ... 4 75 to 65
cio ao canners .... 2 o0 to 3 00
do buns ... 4 40 to 0 50
reeding steers ... .. 5 25 to 6 65
Stockers, choice . 5 00 10 5 50
(3., light 3 75 to 4 'Cie
Milkers, choice, ea.ch .... 03 00 to 98 00
Springers.. ....... 45 00 to 85 00
Sheep, ewes 4 00 to 6 00
Bucks and culls 2 50 to 4 00
Lambs . • 0 75 to 7 20
Irogs. red rtn'd 'watered 0 83
Calves .. 8 00 to 10 30
()TOR MARKETS
exile and destruction. The appeal of
Caleb and joehne was Israel's lard op- WINNIpEGOOpRoALILOb.P.TLI0OwN.Se.kiso,
portunity. The glory of the Lord ap-
pea.red no loner to opeo up a wey for. Wheato-
them, but to feastreae their rebellious Oct. .... 82 82% 81% 81%
attack upon* his two faithful servente, Dee. .... 81. 81% 81. 811/4
and to pass 'eeoteoce of condemnation May .. 87% 87% . 80% 80%
upon the eotire eeogregation. The first Oats -
fruit of their refueal edvapee was Oct. 341/4 34% 34% 34a/,
mourning, the second igurnmeing, the Dec. . „ . 34% 34% 341/4 341/4
third robe:lion, so thet Cenaap was a May .. , 38% 38% 3SIA. 38-1;!,
i. •
last passessioa. to that generation. new
punishment' was total exclusion from
the land they refused to cuter. Unbe-
lief of the promise wee a forfeiture' of
the benefit of to In reward for their
faithfulness. -Caleb and Jost= were
spared in the hour of judgment upon
.A second time Jehovah propos-
ed to make Moses the head of a right-
eous seed to receive the inheritance
which Israel had forfeited, but Moses
had an iuttilifile greatness of soul be-
yond all that. Gait so deelt With Tsreel's
sin as to bring out.that singelar good-
ness of his servant. He knew the hid-
den nobleness of his faithful servant.
and he would have revealed it to all the
world. Mese8 was at has greatest In
hie passionate pltadings for Israel.
T. R. A.
THE BEILISS TRIAL
Testimony for Prisoner
Ritual Murder Case.
Rief, Russia, Oct. -The entire court
engaged in the. trial of Medil Beiliss
for the louder of the bey Andrew
Yushinsky, in 1910, was transferred
temporgrily to -day to the cave in
which the hoy'a body . was touted.
Judges, jury and cooneet were driyea
in carriages to the brick weeks 1vhere
Beiliss had been employed, and ia the
vicinito Of which the 'body wes dje-
covered.
The first witness was Dobjanesky,
a publican, Who testified that he
had heard aushinsky's aunt Natalie,
who hes since died atom tuberculosis,
say; oIlls own people killed hint."
This remelt, aceording to the wit-
ness, was made on the arriOal of the
aetthorities et the eeve, end befere
tile charecter or the wounqs 04 the
boy'e body had been escertgthea.
Dobjanesity odaed that Yushins
sky's uttele, Theodor Nejinsky, had
visited a eafe April 1.0, tell days
after the erinte, Wheu he seemed ex.
-cited, and bis overcoat was splashed
with elaY,
A. boy gave evidelke tit .t he had
bruehed end eleansed Nejinsky's coat
-on that day.
I :1.
FOR DUBLIN PEACE
The Conference To -day May
Settle the Trouble.
Dublin, Oct. 12. -The reaccoSotentittee
ablell was formed for the Oureose of
nuaing waY out Of the tabby deadlOck
has seetwerl the vortee»t of linth eides
to I -oater wail the cornmittee atondao,
„„e ...domently emend that a Settle.
NEWS OF THE
mark of the fall to -day when they were Panic
Mathew -Eggs, reaehed the high
quoted 'at 30e on the local tnarket. But-
ter Sold readily at Me. Tornatoefdare
lower lit prim and brotteht only 15e a
peek. Wheat is moiled at 78e to 80e,
per Intehel to -day, .while corn 10 bringing
000 to 65e per 70 110UndS On the ear, or
65e per bushel shelled. Oats were 28e
to OW, while barley 00e to $1 per cwt.
Beans are steady at $1.25 to $1.O0, aud
inICIOVIICat at 4;ie to 48e. Hay is *11
a ten and Iiinited offeringS. thiwaill-
ed wool is still 15e, calfskins 12,e, lamb-
skins 30e to 'OOe and sheepekine 750 to
*I. Export eattla of whieh there are
very few here obont, are rooted et $0,25
to $0.a0 and common cattle 01 *3 to $3,
Hogs are lower at *8.47 to $8.50, and
fat sows Odd". Sheep, Iambs awl %Lives
market firm.
Stretford.--Egge, 20e to a0e per dozen.
Butler, 23e to 27e per poond, Chiekens,
40e • to dile each. Dueler, 75e each, Po•
tutees., *1 per bag. Wheat, 83e per
bushel. Oats, 30e per bushel. Hay, 815
per ton. Dogs, live, $8,25 to $8.40 per
ewt. Wool, weehed, 10e te 20idie per
pound. •Ilides, 10e per pound, Calfslons,
13c to 14e per pound.
Sarni:Ls-Wheat, Stle per bushel; oats,
32e per bushel; barley 4Re. per bushel;
blended flour, $4.80 per barrel,
with No. 1 -.1.thoitoba patent at $5.50 to
$6. Brae sold at $10 per ton, with oat
ehop at *23, and corn ehop at $32, which
is up a couple of dollars. llay sold at
$10 per load, Other prices on the mar-
ket were: Tomatoce, per 11 -quart bad.
ket, 23e to 30e; peacties, 30c to 40e;
grapes, 30e; onions, per bag, $1.55; turn-
ips, 50e bag; carrots, 60e; parsnips, 03ei
potatoes, 90e. Pears brought 110e to 40e
mar basket, and apples rae.50 to 83 eer
barrel. The merket priees in this na-
tion have not yet been affeetea by the
new American tariff,
OWen Sound.-Tbe ouly chanee of im-
portance in the local markets was la the
price of live and dressed hogs, which
dropped 15c to 25e, Appended ere the
prevailing pricee, with offerings general-
ly brisk: Pall wheat, 80e to 1320; bar -
led, 50e; peas, 80e to 95e; •oats, 30e to
34e; butcher& cattle, fai,50 to $6;
butehers' cows, $4 to $3; dressed hogs,
$11.73; live hogs, $R.40; lambs, *5 caelt;
ealves, $10 to *15 eaell; pullets, 16e to
17e; ogee, 22e to 23e; butter, 2O.e to
25e; potatoee, 75e per bag; hay, $10 10
$17.50,
Peteehoro.--The figure for live boge
stands at *8.25, Billed hay is $18 to
$20; loose hay, $10 to $18; wheat, 85e
to 87c: oats, 38e; farmers' hides, 10c;
do., butchers" hides, 1/e; potatoes, $1 a
hag; appless, $1 a bag; pigs, for feeding,
$8 a pair; ducks, 00e a pair; ellickens,
28e.
90c a pair; butt_er, 28e; eggs, 26e to
lielleville,--Butter, 33e. to 33e; eggs,
28c to 32e; (thickens, 80e a imir; ducks,
00e a piece; potatoes, $1.20 a bag;
wheat, 85c a bushel; oats, 38e to 40e;
hegs, dressed, *12 a cwt.; hogs, live,
*8.54 per ewto bides, butehere,
to 12c; do., faimerrie Oe to lles lamb-
skins, 50e to 05e; wool, 22e a. pound;
hay, loose, *15 a ton.
CRICAG0 LIVE STOCK:
' BeCeavteuse, r.ece.m.t.s... 21,000. .
Atarket strong.
7 00, to 9 05
Texas Bteers .. .._. .... 0 85 to 8 00
Stockers and feeders 5 25 to 7 70
.cows and heifers ,.. ... 3 GO tO 8 40
Calves ... .,. ...., ... 7 00 to 11 00
Oct. .. 1 ISM 1 lils,!k 1 191/4 1 191A
es,.- Bogs, receipts 80,000.
Dee. ,.. 1 201/4 1 20% 1 Ion 1 10:1,%c 1.1,1 it'Aelxii_ailael:tiiii.c...e.t...... a: t..r.o....7,..... ..: s500 Iii 1 763
DULUTH GRAIN 11EARKET. Bough.. .... .... .... ,.. 7 85 to 8 01
. 8 05 to 8 70
Duluth -Close. Wheat -No. 1 hard, 11)niels,kei;:.T1V-e:1,•,','''' 'it' ile6 .... : . S5 tr.° tt°() SS NS°
86 1-4e; No. 1 northern, 85 1-4e; No. 2 . leaaaaat ''d`:dee'ded ::°--d
3-8c tusked; -May, 80 1-8e to -80e asked. Native ... ...- ..... .., ... 3 SO to 4 90
do., 83 1-4e to 83 3-4c; Dec., 84e to 34 -
MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN MARKET. Lambs, notNe ..'... ... ... ... 5 85 to 7 10
"Yearlings . ... .., 5 00 to 6 00
MinneapOlis-ClOset Wheat BUFFALO LIVE STOCK.
7-.2c to 84,e; Ma,y, 80 1 -Se to 80 lele; No. iMob!)1,34CeitVeillOiiggrec;oitMln (?,•-i q1:1*.t
Vaet Buffalo despatch: CaUle-Receipts
--Dec , 83..
I hard, 86 1 -Ac; :"..Q. 1 northern, 84c to gents lower:- prime steers $8.75 .to $8.83;
He; .1s.4-0. 2 do., re to 84c; No. 3 white shipping $8.25 to $S.60; butchers -$7.00 _to
Sle to 82e. ( $3.35; COAVS.$150 to W.75; bulls $3.00 to 67.25;
Corne-No. 3 yellow, 67 1-2e to 68e. • storeys P.45 to $7.55; stock heifers $5.00
Oats --No. 2 white, 36 3-4e to 37e. $7.25; fresh COWS and .springers steady
to f.3.25; stockers .and feeders $8.00- to
Flour end bran-tnehanged. s33.00 to $97,00.
Veals. recelpts NO; native calves active-,
as cents lower; $6.00 to $11.70; Canada
"CHEESE MARKET.
• •calves slow $3.50 to_63.50.
Hogs, receipts 17,600' active and 10 to
Perth -There were GOO boxes of white 15 cents .hlglier; pigs' 50 cents higher
ebeeee and 400 boxee of cokired boarded 14-14,,' aS8stsed°0$84eddineldei IN tg 9,2
i
here this week. All were (told, the ruling. Newts eleso- to essie: sings W.50 to 7.50
priee being 12. 5-8e. dairies $8.50 to $8.96. • ..
Isoftdep--Orte hurtdred Rod twenty•five eerdP
e isa re elgidbP; WiiiMt. ssiTtr; escileeil3
bone of elmeee weee offered, with . U0 cents lower; lames $5'.50 to $7.30;nyeari-
sale9, tl)e hi.df41ng peing 12 3-4c to 12- legs e.t.a! to $0and wethers $5:00- to $5.501
1-8e. ' ewes Med to 400; sheep, mixed, $.4.7o
to Oasis,
St. Hyeeintile, Que.-There were 350
LIVERPOOL PRODUCE.
pachages of butter sold at 26 5-8c, aod
200 boxes; cheese sold at 12c. Liverpool cable sayer Whoa- Spot,
Cowansville, Que.-At the meeting of steady; No. 1 Mattitoba, nesv, is 3(13
the Ealstern Townships •Dairymen's -As. No. 2 Manitoba, old, 76 5d; No. 3 Matti-
sociation beld bere title afternooh, toba, old, is 3d. Futures, eteady; Octo.
twelve faetories offered 706 packagee of ber, 7s 1-8d; Deeembar, 78 Id; March,
butter. Three buyere were present. The is 1 1-26.
ruling priep was 27 3-8c. All (mid except Corn ---Spot, quiet; Amerieen iniaed,
63 86; future.; steady; *fat:totter, 4s
olle faatOlai
'Watertown, N. Y.---Clotege Wee were 11 3•8di Deeemlser, 5s; 2 3-811.
. 5,000 at 15 7•8e, and and on the curb 1;110opusr, iNnVinLtOoln'410>antOnA,e2ifSise Ocd0.0t), 63
16c.
w.ere 1,825 white of. 111(130etz. 70ext5rtlit. Twin, mess.
Belleville ---There
12•2e 6d.
feretl, all being sold at 12 3.4c.
Pork, prime mese, western, 110e,
mein as follower Veal. $11 to $13; 73s.
25e per basket, pear!! 7Oe to *1. peftchee Lard, prime western, in eleeedd. 556 od,
is 13e to 14e per poutol. Other meats: re.
teef, yodng dile to $10.ii0; beef, sowe,$8 Long clear middlce, heevy, 33 to 40
to *0; mutter, alt to $10.051 potatoee lbs., 72e.
per bog. Fruit woe; pleutiful, grapes at Squa,re sliouldersell to 13 Ilia., 02s.
there wog no abetter in the pr:ee of
lower, being $12 to $12.25 par ewt. le.mb
continue 10' sell retail for 83e to 00e Short clear barks, 16 to 20 lbs., .00s,
ere plerttiful, There was
dairy pricee ttod on the, grain market, Do., colored, ne.w, 64s Otl.
.a0c to 45e, 1 04. plums Die to 25e. Apples Do., Atneriean irefined. 50s 6d.
wheat, 85e pea bushel. Oats, however, Do., Attetralian in London, 35s.
are retailing at 50e to 80e iter bushel met Cheesat, Caoadian, fineat white, new
Leaden --Dressed hege eve sligli tat, es, -.1
PROV1NC,I.,11. MARKETS.
00 clomp, ill 63171sEittlir0ipoile,::,:tiiplee:n6lepireiitt143:' 330s29,0'd.
Bacon; Cumberland cut, 26 to 30 lbs.,
eae belliee, 14 to 10 Ild., 68s Od.
Long clear middles, laglit, 28 to d,1 lbs.,
Hants, short cut, 14 to 16 lbe., iltle.
were firmer, bringlog 03e to 05c per
Petroleum, refined, 0 3-8d.
Rome eonetton, 10e 3d.
mot.
20s fia.
Lingeed oil, 26s,
Cotton seed oil, Trull refituel, spot,
Guelph -The price of eggs has eaten to
34e to 35c a rlozen. The price petal for
butter was .froat 90e to 30e a pound.
The prieee of all melte have- gone up
two eente lty the Meese, and retailere,
001101 they feel that they eannot ;Piet
new put tot their !Mete, will be commit -
ed to an so very sthertly. Other peicee
-were prrtty unult the aline. Apples '25e
0 NIA -A, peaellea 30e to 40e a 'basket.
green tomatoest, 115e beeket. poiettoeg
23e n basket, rotators, 30e a hesket or
TWINS OF DIFFERENT NATION-
ALITY.
Eagle Pass, WV., Oct. tl-to the great
crowd of reingees that fled 00 foot into
the Milted litotes froni the advonelng
FEARS DETENTION
So Mrs. Pankhurst Has
DAY IN BRIEF Postponed Sailing.
in Galician Syna-
gogue Kills Sixteen. ,
WOODRUFF IS DEAD
Rich
Oil Strike on We,stern
Prairie.
A Weleit f3inging Festival was inau-
gurated Toronto,
Over three thousand men joined In
the Toronto Garrison chetah parade.
Rix raen were arreetal following
series of fights at a Polielt wedding in
Toronto.
Two armed men held ap and robbed a
railway man near the C.Pat. station .01
Panatela
Prank Pedley has resigned bie post as
Meat -taut Superintendent -General of In -
(lien Affteira.
A Ressitto fopative, despondenabecause
he conld not return home, committed
suicide in Toronto,
Ma William Livingston, a ranch -own-
er near Calgary, received word of a AO
oil -strike on lus property,
• Eli Stout, eighty ;teem of age, was in-
stantlee killed while walking on the 0,
T. 11. track near lloekwood.
The commission .of five doetoth ap-
Pointed to examine. info the sanity of
George Smith, _Alleged bigamiet, in jail
f41. Thome, pronounce hint sane. .
The bode. of an unidentifiea man was
found floating in Torooto Bay, about
10Q feet east- of the old water werke pipe
near ifanlon's Point, on Saturday by
'Melt AYkreYd.
Coming home from ehurch at King-
ston, a party of four walked into a
live wire on 'Montreal street, and are
now in the General' Hospital ifs a criti-
eel condition.
News was theelved at Ottawa of the
drowuing at Rigitud, Quebec, on Satur-
day of Walter H. Ithwan, superintendent
of the Money Wee Branch of the Post -
office 3)epartment.
Lying ermaebed in the bottom of a
benxine tank, the body of a Pole named
Antantes Thomasanks was found in the
eleaning and dyeing establishment of
White & Sone, at 135 William street,
Toronto.
A party of thirty suffragettes dis-
turbed the service iu St. Paul's Cathe-
dral, London, England. They persisted
in chanting appeals to the Almighty for
their "sistei,s being tortured by forcible
feeling in Holloway jail.
Michael Murray, a man 31 yeare of
age, who lived at 101 Wood street, To-
ronto, was found dead ia the woodshed
of- Iris home Saturday afternoon. The
man had been dead for some homes, and
the cause was carbolic -aeid poisoning.
The fainting of a woman in a crowded
synagogue at Chodorow, Galicia, caused
a great panic. Hundrede of women rush-
ed ta tee. doors, fold sixteen of them
were orusbed to death, Scores were
injured.
John Coughlin is under errest• at
Kingeten, dinged with stabbing his
brother-in-law, john N. Merriott. The
latter is in the General 'towpath! suffer-
ing front terrible knife' wounds, and doc-
tors say that his condition is very
serious.
The main barn and stablea at the
Government Experimental ferm, Ottawa,
were deetroyed by fire Saturday morn -
The lose is estimated at $100,000.
The cause of the fire is unkoown. There
were about 140 head of 'cattle in the
building, and all were saved,
Timothy Woodruff, former Limn:en.
ant -Governor of New York State, diet!
at 9.10 o'clock SuRday night. About
two weeks • ago he was stricken with
paralysie while addressing a meeting to
ratify the eandideey of John Purroy
Mitchell, W. A. Prendergast add George
McAneny, for city office:a. Mr. Wood-
roff wae fifty-five years of age.
Canadian one dollar counterfeit bills
are circulating in Buffalo.
Adolphus Bteseh, the at. Louie brewer,
died in Prussia.
Alex. Smith, ex-M.P. fer North Mid•
dlasex, died et hie Juane at Maple
Lodge, Mean.
The Government was aekea in behalf
of the municipalities of the Province to
increase the taxation on the railways.
Magastrate Leggett, of Windsor, - is
trying to cure a. morphine victim who ie
convicted of passing bad cheques.
The returns of the essessor, complet-
ed to -day, give Galt a population of
11,032, an increase for the year of 800.
Midland ratepayers corded by a
sweeping majority a by-law te loan
$60,000 to esteblieh a malleable iron
works.
Clarence Parker, the Miehigan Cen-
tral Railway fireman who was terribly
scalded in the wreck at Queenston
Thursday, died from his injuries.
At. SC Joseph, Beauce, Alexander
Winne was tried before Judge Cimont
for the 'miler of his wife, Prances Eliza
Wright, on ;July 11, 1012. end sentenced
to life imprisonment
Cardinal Gregory Mario Aguirre y
Gareia, Archbishop of Toledo arid Prim-
ate of Spain. 18 dead. Ife was born at
Polo di aerdaa cot March 12, 1833, and
was proclaimed Cardinal April 15, 1907.
Up to date $0,800,000 has heeO paid
by the. 'Government to the Canadiao
Northern Railway under the fifteen-mil-
liou-dollar subsidy ngreement of laid
seselort for the eorupartede treescon-
tinental
Thomas Stark employed ae tt. driver
for W. IC Colville & Sons, eartage
agents, Toronto, Was terribly injured
when be was crashed between the upper
Noting of tile door of the :Merchants'
Mntual wharf Alert and the load on Me
oven. Die restorers,' is eot thought
posslide,
Ndw York, tkt. 13, --Mrs, Pankhuret
will not leave for this estuary on the
steamer Lo Vrovettee to-motrow, as had
been twanged, as she has heard elle is
lilosly to be detained by the immig,ratiou
authorities hole, according to a cable
Message received here toothy, She will
take another eteamer and sail under
en asetuned name, ''to test the efficiency
of male government."
Tite eablegram was sent from Paris
t‘, Alias Jean 'Wickham, Airs, Peak -
!mate advent* representative in this
vountry. giVen out hero to -night
the, message read:
"Understand 'United States immigra-
tion Officials will detain me, questioning
my right to entranee. Heve ehanged
plans, Will not sail on 1.a Provence,
but will take another steamer under an
essamed name to test the effiethecy of
male government. Will wirelees you
doe before errival in confidence, (Sign-
ed) Emmeline Pankhurst."
It was announced from women's suf-
frage quarters to-niebt that Mrs. 0. IL
Delmoet will be prepared to furnish
is bond of $100,000 for Mos. Panklmrst.
if rows:mote 'on the militant thaderai
arrival here.
Dr,. Anna Howard Shaw, president of
the National Woman's Suffrage Asso-
elation. to -day crowelled an engagement
to eneak at the. ineetine arranged to
welcome Mrs. Pankhurst, the militant
English leader, Imre next week, Dr.
Shaw said ber unwillingness to speak
was due to the feet that, .while Mrs.
Panithurst bad been guareuteed $1,500
and part of. the gate reeeipte, she (Dr,
Shaw) lied been unable; to procure a
guarantee of $1,000 for her cause.
e -
WILD MAN AT CHATHAM,
A. Chatham, Ont., deepateit; A. nutn
wile Is atinnesed to be an escaped
Ate•xlean rederais wIts Alarla ifernandez, 111110110 frem the 1 talon Asyluel, is
who had given birth to o etiiid on the terrorizing the residents in the vlelnis
niglit prevent% At the detention vamp
in Eagle Pass the conniving night another 1Y tr kern, aajeadaa,' Dais
mind was horn to her, raus twine were stietnge man made his 'appearance
ilt1 a bag. pumpltina 10e eath, elnekens States, Vie other in' Mexleo, bro'aging near a tanner's hettee and gave ehaee
75e to *130 a Italia, 01111finworg 10e. to thedleal records hi the matter. to two small beye. lie earried a re-
ii3e it losea, ealdieiree 10e a hissel, tenth vetorg '4.i.litletat a ins alifldethynn:(11 gs.,. volver and shot It Off several times
IN' to Lie a pound, and ettione 50e a west borriPto ttheire :nal the hientgrateen during the thage. The boys were 110t
bafiket. superintendent has before bini the eines- injured, but they and their parents
Win of deporting ft natuial born Ameriette were badly scared, Ife hen also fright.
44,.....a......41.............. cud several other people Of the
lIete God ratiet wander fotty aears In l'igYet8. ,....w..,..+4.4p....-...A. . teen eredher drat toelay, being quoted It ie quite riaturel ilea the doetor Vieinity. Constables Fagan mid Earl
ilie willierneee, d year for 0.1eh day itt,i Spiev eoutereation Rhould be liattilhel ' ai eee10. as tielthst altatt a week age. • slteuld tarot hie petieldg in lie welt heel- tried to Iseate the lunatic, but tie is
epiee were *aorta -due 0111 ti e land. gingerly. Wheet dropped iron e450 to afie a Inteto ed. 1011 at large.
FOUND SEIS DEAD
Returned Miner Learns of
His Recent Burial,
Jas.
Eck, Supposed Auto
Victim, is Alive.
Catharines, Oct. el3.--dItetarned
ficen limit to -day and was informed of
-my Eaut death. Kindly convey my eym-
pethy with ail for. title aleappointment,
for 1 am still alive ana far from feeling
dead_ (Signed) Jaincs Vineent Eek."
The aiJOVO telegram wae to -day re-
ceived from Thnminst Ont., Porcupine
district, by ex-Ald. Riehmond Robinson,
-of this city, who with his brother -ill -law,
fe, Singletonoof Cobalt, recently- returned
from having buried in the Roman Cana-
lic cemetery at Peterboro a body telielt
had been positively identified ad
of Eck,
Acting under instructione from vele.
eves cre the 'supposed deceased young
man, adesers. Singleton and Robinson
went to Kingeton University, where the
body had originally been eend confirmed
the identification, and had the betty re-
moved to Peterboro and given propee
EoldOfether being a weelthy rests
dent of Harrow, Midatesex, England, and
• extedelve owner of niteate mince he
South Ainerica.
Not only did the body roam*, leek
in every particerlar but a tattoq mark
whith when "callea" by 4
Peterlioro, caused cether cloilatutte tel
the bocly a_b.andon their claims, was
also taken' by Singletog and Rehinson to
be conclusive evidence that thev hed the
correct body.
Consequently when the above tele -
glom was received to -day it was at first
taken as a, hoax, but a wire to Manager
Robins, et the Hollinger mine at Tim-
mins, Ont., attested to the fact that Eefs
wae there and was mate well.
1-1 ilopofseittle fee Mr. hobigeon to
understana why at least ooe qf the
numerdus acquaintances of Eck ie Tim -
mine did. not give any infermatioo ea te
the whereabouts of Eck when sueli wide -
sprawl publicity was given to the identi-
fication of the body at Peterleno, and
of the effort.; Of the friende of the fam-
ily it this country to save it,frent. the
medic:11 etudenth.
The erown ettoroey at Peterbora has
been notified that the body burieci there
is not that of the man reeorded. The
bode, burkel at Peterhoro is that of a
Man Med in en auto aceident at I.,ake-
field about two weeks agq.
GAMBOA DYKE
BLOWN AWAY
ONTGETHISMONEY
Rich Frenchman Turns Can-
' adian to Punish Daughters.
Montreal, Oct. 13. - Because one
daught • eloped with a plumber, and
being unwilling to pay the dowey of
another daughter to his grandehild,
but being pneble to avoid onder the
French law giving his childrtla a
certain portion of leis wealth, Auguste
Piedallu, a Parisian osillionoire, de,
cided to Deeowe oaturalleed Cnna,
dia.n and leave his money where he
aked, as he could do uuder the Quebec
law, On taking advice from certain
Parisian counsel lie eame to Canada
and took out naturalization papers.
He then went to Quebec and Made
a, Will disinheriting his chilareo. Hie
relatives in France, however, learn-
ing of his edits% and asLortaining
that lie had not oomplied with the
eesidence requirement before becom-
ing naturalized, cauSed hini to bo
summoned before the local cOurts nit
a charge of perjury. Judge Choouet,
after hearing the evIdenee, diSMISsed
the charge on the ground that the
CoMplainants had failed to prove wil-
ful latent on the part of Pledallu in
Signing the false deelaration at the
time of his naturalization.
I
tVICTING DUBLIN STRIKERS.
DeWitt, Oct. 13. •-• The bitternese of
the labor fight here between the
transport workers and the employ.
ers is melded to be increasea by the
action. of the Dublin Tramways Com -
peaty to -day itt obtaining ejectment
decrees against 32 striking employ-
ees who. are occupying cottages OViti.
ed by the company in defla»ce of
lietiees tO Ouit, which haVe been serv..
ed ttpon them..
Mother transport 'firm recently
applied for 80 similar, decrees, but
agreed to postpone action in the mat.
ter tor two Weeke, belting for a set -
Clement in the ine..tititue. The de-
erees obtained by the Tramways
Company are 01110000Ahle In a week.
111111111111111•11..11iN1.111.111•11.1111LI"
Last .Remaining Panama
Barrier Cleared Out,
WORK NOT FINISHED
e
As Cucucroa Slide Blocks
the Channel.
RILEY COMMITTED
Must Stand Trial for the
London Murder.
Panama, Oet. 13. ---The Gamboa dyke,
whieh separated the north entranee of
Culebra eut from Oahu' take, and the
only remaining barrier to the flow of
water through the Panama Canal, wits
blown up at 230 o'clock this afternoon
by an eleetric eurrent, switched on by
table by President Wilson, in lae office
aVesbington, The explosion threw
200 feet of the eentre of the dyke high
into the air 111 a fan-like mast; of reek,
earth and meter. The destruction of
this dyke permittett the waters of dle-
tun Lake to flow freely into the Cule-
bra eut, which after Mee years of the
greatest digging the world has ever
Keen, is now almost cempleted.
\Viten the smoke clearea away 2,000
persone gathered on every side of the
dyke eaw the water from the lake flow
rapidly into the 'ewer level of the ettt,
Inaps.irain at a mint where
The sigbt wee not especially spec-
taeular becauge .the difference of levels
between the lake and the eut Is only six
feet, the level of both being. 67.7 feet
above the sea.
Three minutes after the explosion the
effect.; of the ruell of water were appar-
ent at the Cuetteroa Slide. the summit
of the but the full depth of
water did not rush there until five
o'clock. Another charge of dynamite
was exploded at 4.30 on top of the slide,
where it blocked the channel of the
canal, to make a trench several feet
deep through which the water can flow
into the north end of the cut and
againet the leeks at Pedro Miguel.
-Colonel Goethels said: "I cannot pre-
-diet the time when the eanal will be
openea to navigation. The etteueroa
Slide 110W blaCki elomne] to a length
of 600 feet, and it ie estimeted that
2.000,000 eubie yards must be reached.
This work will be begun by dredges
within two weeks. If we can take out
500,000 yards a month and no more,
the Slide will be empty by Jan. 1, I
hope the channel will be entirely eleared
by the first of the year."
. NINE YEARS OP DTGGING.
• The work in Culebra cut, to witich
the Gamboa dyke le in a seuse the key,
hag been going on muter sOmerican di-
rection for nine years. Out of the cut
has been token more than 100,000,000
cubic yards of material, meetly reek,
which had th be Masted out with mil-
lions of tong of dynamite. :The eut hae
emit, roughly eetimating, nearly 0100,-
000,000, While the original estimate ot
the material to he taken out of the mit
has been found too small by more than
100 per eent., the added exeavation bas
been done with the original expenditure
allowed. In other words, the eost -of
exeavation per cublv hae been eo
reduced by. promotieg ellicieney that the
dotible task has been done at the esti-
mated cost of the original amount.
When the Americana came to Culebra
eut it resembled a wilderness more than
the beginnings of a canal. The French
bad removed in the seore or more of
euble•yards, but So overgrown with h.°.
years they put in at the tee': 28,900,600
pieal herbage was the eourse of the cut
that none but an engineer coirk1 here
told what haa been done.
For twelve months after the Anted.
cane took hold they teted the Perna
equipment,. and it wee not until the
most modern steam shovels were receiv-
ed on the isthmus that there began
that talc of "making the dirt fly" which
is now medically finished.
NEW PAPAL CODE
Most Important Reform in
Church's History Coming.
nome, i2. -Pope Pius win sign a
document next year whicb wIn not only
be the only important to whieli he ha.s
affixea ills signature during his pontifi-
cate, but one which is looked on as the
mast huportant in the history of the
Catholic Church, and one of the "Teat -
est reforms attempted by any °Pope,
namely the codification of the canon
law decreed by Pope Plus hi 1901, and
now practically completed.
An Idea of the importance of the work
may be gathered from the fact that the
canon law at present consists at women
and traditional constittitions or the
Church sinee the days of apostles, (loco:
ments exlending over practically nine,
s.‘it)ae.„reayatnekt1;inetelefernot Jeri etoilfisitt.:hieeeraCiplaavriegttiliellInislitri.ogl
trees and constitutions which will cease
to hose force when the Pope has pro-
mulgated the new code,
_
LARKIN IN LONDON
arum.. matorm.amami.
Dublin Strike Leader De
nounces English Heads.
Londe% Oct. 13. --The Counteee
Werwiek spoke at .ft meetiug ineLondon
to -day, the principal speaker at which
was Larkin, the leader of the 1)111)11)1
strikers. the'reeeut conflict with the
police. Larkin denouneea in equally
vituperative tome the Dublin employers
and the ItInglisit labor readers.
The Countess of Warwick introdtteed
Larkin as "oar friend and .contraile, who
it; collecting funds to briug the children
the Dublin strikers to England to find
homes among the Ithiglieh Socialists dur-
ing the etrike." She said Careoniern was
routed and Larkinism triumphant, mei
that the word Larkiniem would eoon
find Ha way into the dietionarise,
- • - - •
BIG DREDGE IS 8AFE. .
Ottawit tiespatelo Tim safe arrital at
Port Nelson of the big aredge Port Nel-
IsIrliittti ail() ri0 sic; Nell:1'311(1)e; tiikoltyt itN• 1;3
reported by the Railway Department
this. Afternoon be. the steamer Beattie,
whiell returning from the bay. The
Mg, dredge, which Was Wilt in TOMO,
Wag towed by the Bellaventure, and
made the trip in 46 days. The dredge
will he put te WOrk at (Mee in the W-
olin:51 improePtiMiti nOW 141111lI
Swing at l'ot•t Nelemo
London, Out., deepatch: Tom liner
was to -day et».uniitted for trial by Po-
lice Magistrate Jetta, charged with the
nunaler of George allaekburn, a balloon
er of the Hotel Ceti!. Ws ease now
"OW over to the Winter Aseize Court,
r •
ut January.
(Sown Attorney afeltitlep presented
the ease pra(tieally as it will go to the
yowl, WW1) will finally deeide Idley'e
guilt or innoeenee. Throughout the re.
eital of the fade eonneeted with the
shooting and the stories of witnesies,
who declared they k•aW fire the
fatal ebot alter an enervation in the
tar, the palmier rattietained am air of
absaute composure, rose to be identi-
fied by oitnesees and. mulled through the
bare at friends among the opedotors.
Ilarry Andrews?, e Gland "'rattle'
conducted with whom Riley ran out
of Lendon as a brakeman, gave testi-
mony, muter preseure from the Crown
Waa eoneidered to be verv danger-
ous te the Oefence in that it ia suppos-
ed to have shown premeditation. Au-
drews wag with Riley after the dispute
In the bar and while walking. AWRY from
the piece Riley, then fairly Bober, is field
to haver ileelarerl, "1 would like to shoot
that blitek
The witnessee were Howard Beattie,
a Irina of Illaelsbunds, who oote
the bar and who witneeeed the shoots
lug, William "Dublin" Burrows, are,
other barten.ler, who saw the fatal
shot fired: Charles E. Helliday. and"
Heine White, who were also present;
Fred. llatheriy, who witnessed the fad
dispute between Illeekburn• and
aria who saw Riley ejected, ant1 T.
Greene, who was with him; Dr. la. P.
Dreke, Detective aereeant Thoniaa
Nickle, who predueed 44-
ealibre revelver. amt the Millet taken
from. Blaekburn's. body; W. A. Brock,
ginamith, and Charles Polehili,
fireman at the cential atation.
11111 states that on the night et the
sheeting he heard. a shot from the'
aireetion of the Hotel Cecil, and that
a, moment latrr he 13aW a man run-
ning uith a smoking revolver in his
hand. The man in fliglit geabbed his
fedora hat from his head anod held
it over hie floe nail he was lest
sight of in the Grand Truuk Reilway
yards.
M. C. R. WRECK
Cars Leave ihe Rails Near
Niagara Falls, N. Y.
Fireman Parker's Scalds
May be Fatal.
Niagara Falls, N.Y., despatch: Travel-
liog at o rale of probably 50 miles on
hood the Michigan Central pithect,ger
(rola leaving this eity for ldingara-on-
thedLake at le o'eloek this merniug was
wrecked five mike north of heee, and
oillizeiz.f,itientnitatruedand the. engineer were seri-
That no one was killed is regarded as
remarkable. The train was going down
the eteep grade at the brow of the
Queenstort :i1Ountain, w hen i t t ook a
elvitch et the eand.pit. It is el:timed
itlewiatn. ifiarcsIt'lcoeectiteittatuo57prleel lovsithr,
nh(tigat these- ofel-rgue-at k ee, latil:aerp 1:Y4;1611°41'1'106o!
the eah and frightfully scalded. Edward
lhileeneda°bw. stilt (111 aSeeli•leg.:•onluyere'liwitto4ntdIttla)r%iYililSeidr0.111
el telephone call front the fiend pit
summoned Dr. McGarry, wito, with a
couple of trained nurses, was deep:atilt-
ed to the semi° of the accident in an
automobile. • Dr, Evan, of Queeneton,
was also summoned. Parker VMS brought
here to the hospital late in the after-
Intoonelne,. and Meadows, 16110 aleo lives at
Niag,ara-on-the-Lake, was sent to
KNOWN' IN ST. THOMAS.
St, Thome deepatch-Clarence Pa rker,
fireman, and Engineer Ephraiiii Mea-
dows, who:were &seriously sealded and
lajhred at the derailment of the af. C.
pessenger train on the Niagara -on -
the -Lake division to -day, are former mi.
dente of St. Thorned -Fireman Parker
WaS few days ago transferred Wel: to
the M. C. R. mein line, and. intended
moving to St. Thomas next week. Tie
ig steffoing from severe seelle ell over
the lower part of big body, ana his eon-
eritieal. Meadow's eufferieg
coneid era My from shock and severe
bruiees. The auxiliary from St. Thomas
(-leaved the wreek.
COAL SMOKE BLAMED
By British Scientists for
Cancer's increase.
Lmulon, Oct. 13. -The cooclusioni
leached ley Charlee E. Green, uf Edins
burgh, taut there ie aistinet relations
ship between the (meant:nee of calmer
and the kind of fuel ttsed for clomeetie
purpoeess was itecepted deeieive by.
Sir William Bennett, the 01114110111 sue-
geon, in his presidential addrese to day
at the meeting of the Coal Smoke Abate-
ment Society.
Sir William said investigetion haa
',shown that the increase of cancer WaS
limited to those areae where coal was
the staple feel, while it 'MIS lamest non-
existent where ordinary peat alone waft
usea. The only exeeption yet cliecoverea
to this rule, Ile declared, wee in dig.
triete where the peat WAS hard, Mack
eubstatee, whielt erackled 111;0 toai and
was quite 0»like the swear:tering, etelin.
ary. peat. Sir William Beneett m eon -
elusion apoke etrongly in fever of gag
substitute for eoal.
1
CANADIAN'S DEATH IN CINCH+
Cincinnati, 01 Oet. la -A man ot
inyetery, touts Potittion, 1Pronehmon,
was found dead, apparently a sitlehlo 1,r a
murdered man, in his vomit lit 1264 West
tinStti:elteterti-ttl.::
wound In his bead was found. ITN !loose
that Isere rouidi intlicatEd death ten (WS
age.
-4 111
THOUGHT IT WAS A CURTAIR
LECTURE.
"Did yeti (1r1'.‘"lishtlinillatthinnaSatt!b)e third flea
Igvrieethrivaersi:etid2t;e1;tielwitea of.m,
"Tee, We hrowhtutt and badgered tildt
::geha(losdetadiolead°4:1 merely moment:a
tiOW end them "Yes, my dear. You're
Perfeetly right.°
A
1