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Exeter Advocate, 1905-03-09, Page 7NOW REVOLUTIONS BEGIN! y. •;� ;;,�;��ttt:,,,; U,rio��os Rus- - his ---- sia and Austria. THEIR ORIGIN, DETAILS AND The revolution which began in the GRIM ENDINGS. United States its IH60 started from peculiar causes. The Aman who French Revolution Began Much realty set it in motion was a uetotu- Like the Present Riots in maniac en the slavery question, Russia. named John Brown. Ifo was a prominent leader in the violent con - The revolution %%Mich has Begun in filets which took place in Kansas Itussia by the wholesale maseacro of during the ugitatiun respecting the utrikers in the streets of St. Peters- question of the State's taking up burg promises to be one of the slavery. greatest in modern history. It hos been brought about by several (Citifi- es. The t watery has been plunged into u disastrous and unnecessary war w•itli one of the most formid- able 1'nwers of the world by the reckless schetne•s of the military party. As a result Russia lets suffered de- feat after defeat. She hes seen her greatest fleet nniiihi1ated, almost without loss to the victors, her greatest fortress captured, her great- est awry. led by her best general, twice defeated in the field. At home the itussian people tried to enlist the sympathies of their Tsar by the (peaceful methods of re- solution -s and petitions. calling at- tention t- tention to their wrongs nae gt iev- ances. Tired of the conditions of life in Russia: of tyranny; of injustice and corruption: of the autocratic system which biee(Is them of their earning, and refuses there (elevation: of the ineptitude and brutality of the bure- anerntt-they attempted to put one last. petition before the Tsar in his Winter Palace. 'NIB TSAR HAD FLED. But he had fled, find in his stead was t Grand Duke Vladimir -upon whose consric•,'eo lies the slaughter of thousands of Russian workmen and their wives and children To his barbarous cruelty Russia really owes her revolution. In ninny respects the events close- ly resemble those which ushered into history the fearful French Revolu- tion of 1749. The profligacy of the nobility, their comparative exemp- tion from taxation. which. in con- sequence. fell all the heavier upon the intpoveii. hed people, the aboli- tion of municipal institutions. the Bale of positions in the State and law courts to the biggest bidders - these. together with the 'refusal of Louis XVi. anti his advisers to the reasonable demands of the Deputies, Were the chief causes of the inslirteC- tionary outbreak at Paris on the momentous morning of July 12th. The firstgreat act was the storm- ing of the Bastille. which was pulled down by the populace. and its Gov- ernor and other officers frightfully mut Rated. Then, in quick succession followed the flight of the Itoyal Princes and nobles. the confiscation of the property belonging to the clergy, and the transference to the mint of their silver c,rnatnents for the purposes of coinage. PRISONS BROKEN OPi•:N. Eor three years and more I'aris and every part of France was in re- volt. The prisons were broken open, thousands were slain. On the 21st of January. 170:3, Louis XVI. ryas beheaded, the wid- owed Queen Marie Antoinette met her fate on the guillotine soon after. and then a reign of blood and terrcrr suit(eded. Denton and Robespierre, after hav- ing condemned countless numbers to the guillotine. suffered each in turn a similar fate. lite the people had had enough of bloc Ielied, and were ti anxious for peace and order at any price. Vet several Years elapsed before this desirable slate \of things existed. Since that titne Fiance has had several other revolutions. in 1848, by the prohll.itiou of the grand re- form o-form ba.uguet. at Pur is. the Iced Re- publicans broke out into insurrec- tionary tumult. it began with the refusal of Louis Phillippe to the destre for electoral reform. and the proclamation. after that monarch's abdication. of a pro- visional 1:ovei nnit•nt under the pre- sidency ro-sidency of I.ouls Napoleon. Again were rho prisons Thrown open. the Tuileries. the Imperial Palace of Franco. 'vas ransacked. and barricades thrown up In the ttr.-ots. Before the Meer reel ion was • :rushed 16.000 persons were either tilled or won•.ded, %chile the nation- al loss was estimated at 30,000.000 !rams. '1'111•: CRUSHING 1)K,i•'I:A'I S of the f•'reneh army In the teerible Frwico-German 11'ar were the prime Souse of the re% olution of 1R70. when the Senate was dlssolted, a Repub- lic once again proclaimed amid prat excittenent, rand the Empress Regent sent it fugit1)0 to Great Britain. The following year France was again disturh••d by the beim reel ion of the Conmmnees. 11 wits et.'nlunll: eiuel- led by the regular 111 111 , but riot before 'earl' loss of life and grievous * go heti been done to public and private prop, rty. In i830 i'olnnd w -as in the throes of a greet insurrection. it began with the vr•nt•ral discontent of the people, who cemplaioed of the inter- ference with the Press, and with the ftrrnation of numerous secret socle- lie.s. 'The (Grand Duke was forced to (reit the city. a diet nfor being t1, ' led In General ('holol•ichi. A largo Itucsiart nrmc (1l tired the come ry, and after a series of sanguinary bat- tles had been waged. 10onght the Ineurrectlon to nn end by the cap- ture of the city of Warsaw. By the revolution Poland lest her Plintep••ndence. and in the billowing treat was declared an integral port of the Russian Empire The miihty revolution whfrh In 1848. anti for f we years following. shook the fierntlntions of Austria and hiingnrv, begun with the rebel- lion of the 11.tngsaria,' people. who had long[ been diecmitett•el etth t he Awe elan rule. A score of battles were boleti!. which in n••trly (eery ease ender) ht fat or of 1 he if tinge H- i ens Vii tnr% was within :heir r.ytch when there leader. %fore et. tondo s '1'IIE A111:Iti('AN CIV11. tl'AR. Lathering about hint a bund of desperate characters. Brown seized the (treenail at Harper's refry, a town on the borders of Virginia and /Lowland, stopped the railway trains and cut the telegraph wires. From this beginning sprang the revolution, which lasted live years, which cost the American nation $11t,000,000,O00, and which brought about the death of 600,000 persons besides as many Inure wounded. Vet it receued the Southeen Slates from the incubus of slavery, and settled once and for al whether the iJnited States was one nation or an aggre- gate of ninny. Corrupt administ rat ion hi ought about a tevolt of the Spanish peo- ple in 1868, when for the two years following they adopted provisional Government, one result of which was to furnish the pretext for the Franco-Prussian War by their selec- tion of a ruler in Amadeus of Savoy. fly the differences of the -Federalists and the Conservative Republicans Spain in 187.4 was again split up, and the second Carlist wear resulted. itreeil was in revolt in 1849. It began at ltio Janeiro be the arifs.v. who imprisoned the Emperor. and afterwards sent hint tied his family into exile, and n Republic was pro- claimed. The unconstitutional Government of President l{aleinreda was the cause of ('hill's insurrection in 1891, while the revolution raised by the Radicals at. Belgrade. which brought about the mnsenrrc of the King and Queen of Servia in 1903. with all its grins details, is still fresh in the memory. The Revolution in England, led by Cromwell, in 1619, against Charles 1., is another instance of a mon- arch's downfall, being. due to his own profligacy. 'I'hc King's tight was not a long one. and on January 30th. 1019, he paid thepenalty of his folly on the scaffold.-Penrson's Weekly. HOW THE WORLD WORKS. Employment of Population in Various Countries. Interesting facts are brought out by a table publisher in a German industrial organ giving the percen- LEADING MARKETS' The Ruling Prices In Live Stoc>s and Breadstuffs.• til ?1 \It"T1 EFS, Toronto, March rT.-Wheat--Ontario -heti and elute, $1.05 to 81.00; spring. 98e to 99t•: goose, 00c to 92c. Manitoba quotations are now generally n11 -rule No. 1. northern, $1.13; No. 2 northern, $1.10; No. 3 northern, Sleet, delivered. Flour -9O per cent, patents, $1.41 to $1.50, buyers' sacks, east and west; 15c to 20c higher for choice. Manitoba, 85.50 to $3.70 for first patents, and 55 to $5.30 fur bran export 5. Millfeed-Firmer at $11.50 to $15 fur bran in bulk, 517 to 517.50 for shorts east and west: Manitoba, $19 for shorts, $17 for bran exports. Barley -466 to 47e for No. 2, 41c to 43c for No. 3 extra. and 42c for No. 3 malting, out side, 'Toronto freights. Itye_eee to 71ic for No. 2 f.o.b. outside. Corn -Canadian limn; 4-11c to 4Sc for yellow-, and 435c to 44c for mix- ed f.o.b. ('hathunt freights; American 5c easier; No, 3 yellow, 535c; mixed, 531°, on track, 'Toronto. Oats --ire firmer, No. 2 being quot- ed ut 41c to 42c outside. Rolled Oats -$1.15 for cars of bags anis $4.10 for barrels un track here; 25c more for broken lots here, and 40c outside, Peas -Pinner at 67c to 671c for No. 2 west and east. Buckwheat -55c east and west.. ('OriN'17tY PRODUCE. Butter -Dairy has an easier tone, receipts coining forward fairly well. Creamery prints 27c to 28c Dairy tubs, good to choice 111e 2('r do meinl►n1 170 1Fc' do inferior grades rbc 1(ic Dairy Ib, trolls, good to choice ...22c 21c do tare° rolls ..20c 21e do medium 18c 19c Cheese-ls steady to first and quot- ed unchanged at tic for large and lllc for twins. Eggs -New laid aro quoted at 21i:- to 1cto 2Se, fresh at 20c to 21c. and tint- ed at 19c. Potatoes -Ontario, 65c to 70c on track, 75c to 80c out of store: east- ern, 75c to 80c on track and 90c to 95c out of store. Baled I lay-Quotit i are un- changed at $R for No1 timothy and $7 per ton for mixed and clover. on track here. Baled Straw -is quoted fairly' steady at $6 per ton for car lots on track here. MONTREAL MARKETS. Montreal, 'Blare!' 7. -(rail) -Firm • tone to oats and sales aro confined to car lots ut 46c fur No. 2 white and at 455c for No. 3, per bushel, ex Cages of persons, in the leading store. Sole demand front over the countries of the world, engaged in cable for Manilobn spring wheat, and the principal lines -of "gainful activ- sales of several lama of sapless its•." The table is instructive enough wheat were made. which is the to be worth reproducing: first that has beet' taken for some Menu- Commerce Agrirltl- factures and days past. Inquiry for American ture end and tramper- corn continues gooi,but bids wore Fore,.try. Mining Cation. again out of line. '17.5 3(.4 101ii flour -Manitoba spring; wheat pa - 58.2 22.3 7•:B tents, 83.80; strong bakers', $5.50; 58.6 12.6 3,3 %vitae:• wheat patents, $5.711 to SJ 7.4 80; straight rollers, x5.3(1 to 55.111, 11).7 and in bags at $'2. Se) to 82.60. 9,4 Feed -Manitoba bran, in bags, $17: 11.7 shorts, $131 per ton; Ont nein u iit.•r 17,2 wheat bran, in bulk, $17 to $1s: 11.8 shorts, 318 to 520; utouillic, $24 to 7.5 $28 per ton, as to quality. 11,7 1Meal-ihtsiness in rolled oats re - 54 :3 58. 13.0 mains quiet, but prices are well muin- 312.4 tallied, at $2.125 per I•ng. and ie r $1.50 per barrel. Cornmeal is ale, quiet 0t $1.35 to $1.45 per hug. llav-No. 1, 59 to 59.50; No. . Country. Germany Austria Hungary Italy , 59,4 21.5 Switzerland ..837.4 40.7 France .., •14.3 :12,13 Belgium .-..., 21,1 41.6 Netherlands ,:10.7 33.7 Denmark ... ,..48,0 '21,1► Sweden ,., 49.8 20.9 Norway ... 49.6 '22.1) England and Wales 8.0 Scotland ,., 12.0 Ireland '... 11.6 32.6 5.0 United States 33.9 21.1 10.3 Some of the figures are rather sur- prising. at least at lust. sight. Ilow ninny of the Inst informed persons know that from the "percentage" point of View Scotland leads in man- ufacture? Again, that holland uses more mien in transport at ion than any other country, not excepting the United Slater and that tight busy little island, (treat Britain, cannot be a familiar fact. Europe has hail n good deal to say about the American industrial in- vasion, yet, arcort'irg to this table, even Italy's perrenttge of men en- gaged in manufactures and mining exceeds that of the tinned States'. Finally, what n pitiful showing England snakes in her 8 per cent. of Wren engaged in agriculture and for- estry! No wonder her statesmen and philosophers nre agitating the quen- t ion of 41113slcnl deterioration and tieing "back to the land!" The contrast between England and France in this respect is striking. feels it not been said that the wealth of Prance Is in the stocking of her peasant proprietors? 1'O�llt RINK S. There is a telephone in their resi- dence, and as it is used principally by Mrs. Minks sed her friends, it is, perhaps. nnt'trn1 that it should bo identified solely with Mrs. Minks, and 51.101; Septette er, 92:c. any of the three legal opportunities that Mr• Thinks ---•tell, the bell rang, Mile aukee, March 7. -Wheat -No. 1 on the invitation of the clergynxtn, Northern. $1.15 to $1.151• No. 2. the Rev. L. Sevatard, to put for - Northern. $1,09 to $1.13; May, *1.- wats1 any "cause or just Impevli- 15 nsked. less -Nu. 1, 8:3c• to Sic. meet." all was assumed to be well, Barley -No. 2, 51c to 32r; 'sample, and the young couple trade all their CANADA LIFE l Assurance Company Financial Statement 58th Annual Report ASSETS 4:merrimlent, ltfuniclpal, and other Monis, Stocks, and De- bentures... ... ... Mortgages on Real Estate Loans on Bonds, Stocks, Etc Loans on Policies Real Estate owned (Including Company's Buildings in To- ronto, Hamilton, Montreal, Winnipeg, St. John, N.B., and London, Eng.) Premiums in Transit and defer- red (net) and Interest ac- crued. .. ...... ... Other As -.('t8 Cash on hand and in Batiks 517.249,744.96 4,506,711.29 368,093.66 8,501,421.18 1.762,63349 989,898,30 402,990.00 590,099.62 529,074.599.00 LIABILITIES Reserve Fund Company's Stan- dard (Hrs 37,, and 31%) $30,403,050.00 Death Claims in Course of Set- tlement, and Instalment Fund 237,445.23 Dividends to Polley -holders in Course of Payment 10,126.80 Reserve for Policies which may be revived 33,670.00 Other idabllitIos 2,280.98 Total Surplus on Policy -holders' Account, Company's Stan- dard 2,376,425.99 329.074.599.00 RECEIPTS Premleun and Annuity Income (net) 33,043,178.15 Interest, etc 1,204,851.50 Profits on sale of Securities 52,361.63 $4.300.391.28 PAYMENTS Death Claims (net)... , , .• Matured } iidowntents (net) • • . Dividends paid Polley -holders (including Bonus Addition paid with Death Claims and with Matured Endowments) 207,781.12 Surrender Values paid Policy- holders 76,500.95 Paid Annuitants 23,597.01 $1,221,815.60 218,857.00 Total paid to Policy -holders $1,748,551.68 Con niission, Salaries, (rte. .... 681,292.71 Taxes, Dividends, etc. ...... .. 320,126.80 Excess of Receipts over Pay- ments 1,550,420.09 $4,300,391.28 Net Surplus over all Liabilities (Company's Standard) • • ;x,376,000 Net Surplus over all Liabilities (Government Standard) . • $4,326,000 GAINS IN 1904 191)1 1903 Increase Number of applications received 7,221 0,863 358 Amount of Assurances applied for. $ 14,571,153 1x13,881,900 $ 689.193 Policies Issued 13,043,503 12,63.3,032 408,471 Policies paid for 11,211,721 10,122,134) 1,089.582 Total business to force 101,805,944 95,0:31,110 6.274,834 The new business paid for in 1904 was greater In amount than that of any previous year In the Company's history. A full report of the annual meeting will appear In toe Company's paper, "Life Echoes." 58.25 to $8.75; clover, 'liked, $7 to quoted nt $2.50 to $4.40, and The clergyman was nstonishief, and stockers its 51.50 to $3.1(1. asked for nn explanation. Milch Cows --Prices are quoted un- "My son," he said, "shall not changed nt 830 to 860 each- merry the daughter of a mean with Calves -- 'Trade was active and whom i am not on friendly terata. priers were steady at. ;35e to (1lc per 'Tv son is a minor, and without my pound and $2 to 812 each. consent he cannot marry." Sheep find Lambs -Export sheep The clergyman sought to move aro quoted higher at $3.50 to 85.- hits. t he young couple nutde tearful appeals: hut the father refused to yield, though his son will be of ago in a few months. The corennony was abandoned. DYING OF A BROKEN HEART. Lion- That Attacked Its Trainer is Grief-stricken. "Can a lion die from a broken heart?" Several of the most noted veterinary surgeons of I'aris and Berlin have declared during the past week that Balt Metro. once the heavi- est and largest lion of the hundred and fifty at the Bostock hippodrome, Paris, is slowly but st surely passing away front brie!, and that it Is past human aid. Baltimore, on July :31st last, during n performance at I►reant:and, New York's coliersal summer resort, savagely attacked his tnicer, Captain Jack Ilona%itn, the conn in whose care he had been ever since his rapture in the jungle tiro years ago. Two thousand people saw the un- equal struggle. in which the wound?' inflicted upon t ho t rniner were 80 terrible that live sargeone in con- sultation despaired of saving the "No." :305c to 40c. ('orn-'steady; No. :t, preparations for marred life. mntt's life at all. liallintor(' cons - "1 mean is this Mrs. Binks's tele- 131r to 451c; May, 471e. Then a bot fell from the blue. The Mutely lost control of hinrielf, and, phone?" 1 St. Louis, March 7. -Wheat -('ash.' 111.8(15 of the two families quarrelled! leiter across his victim's lively, 11nd "No; it's the company's." *1.111, lint. 51.121; July, 94fc' Montague and Capulet were at fetl. (,ane of Iionavita's hands in hie "Well, is this 31rs. hinks's house?"i September, 91c. The young couple deemed it no mouth, tearing off the fingers, when "I don't knew. 1'n► beginning to `_ qunrrel of theirs, and went on wit h a keeper, named \((:(•'geld, pushed an think perhaps it is " What?LIVID STOCK 1f,11t1CF"1s their preparations, resoltgng, how- immense bar let the cage and so "Ve., 1 suppose it IR. f•:veryohe1'uronto, 1inrch 7. ever• to keep the date of their pro- bfuiiatc'd ti:e jungle king that he c.rrns to think it is, anytcay•" spectivv wedding a secret. Romeo left his victim for it se:•ond nett at - A fairly hetivy run of ',lock was wools wed, no matter what the ote tempted to reach Mellott'. "Is Mrs. Itink's daughter there?" offering at the meeker this morning. etude, and Juliet, like Barker, was In that second the propriet or, Mr. fiend silence for n few se•tonde, "Von t but the demand In nli pines had a "willing•' " Frank Rostock, braids. plunged into are quite sure it is all on the table?" Well, who is flits good tone, and with he exception t "Oh, this is only Mrs. Itinks's hum- g IOne rias fast week, abjuring wed- :the arena, and while fighting off the "Quite rite ser ' "'Then, sir you have band, the father of Mrs. Ilinks'.8 u( those for Infrtlor grads butchers' ding finery and wearing their every- lion by means of shooting blank no money in soar pockets. ' No one prices were fairly well n►nintatin,'tl. day clotht's, they each teens secretly cartridges into his face, at 1ho same enjoyed this simple Irick more than daughter, the man who lives in Mus. 1:x{►.ret ('netts.-4'huice are quoted to church. :time 1111rl anti carried Ihonavit6 to the ()liven, who chaffed the '•tietlrn" Itinks's house. and occasionally at 54.10 to 8.90, good to ilxihunt Alas' the wedding ceremony which i the door, where Wilber' bends were on his temporary poverty, • united the real Romeo and Juliet •r,'a(1,y to receive hip bee/len-whether ♦---�-•-- Was destine'(! to be interrupter) In !dead or olive none knew. Laura hating been asked a quraion this rase They lint' renrhe(1 the Por ninny days the poor ratan tar by a certain lady, her friend Lucy altar, and the tverldints service had ;In the h•espital nt t he point of remarked: "She asked Thai (vestina begun. when it commotion at the death. In. Edward the Omaha lust out of idle curio •i( . don't sot, church door heralded the irimtntic +surgeon, oho nt tended I'retedeitt ler- Think? •'\o," replies) (aura, "it Even a good Mistress woman makes arrival of Ih„ brieeygr 's father. I Kiniev after the shootings in the 1 s was busy tt11ioeity-her curiosity Is a poor silent partner, •'I forbid the ceremony," he crlod, position grounds of Buffalo, was never Idle!' SC.5►0, and pure clover, 50.50 to 56.- 75 per ton, in car lots. Bonus-Choieo primes, $1.40 to 51: 15 per bushel. 81.23 to $1.'271 in car bots. Provisions -livery Canadian short cut pork, 816.30 to $17.50; light short cut. $16.50 to $17.:,11; Ameri- can cut clear fat bac'e, 520; cont- 125, butchers' limn at $3.50 to pound lard, 131° to 7c; Cunndiitu 81.30. grain -fed lambs at 5(1.50 to lard, 65c to 75c; kettle rendered, 8;e 57, I nenvards at 53.50 to 5(1.50, to 115c, according to quality; Unna, horse -The market is quoted steady 12c to 1:3e; h:u•on, 1'2c toy 1: e; fresh- nt $3.130 per ret, for seies•ts and killed abattoir bogs, $4.23 to 58.- 83,1:, Mr Lights and tuts. 50; Imo.).Imo.).fat sows, 53.25 to $5.50; mixed lots, $6 to 86.15; select, 813.- 25 to $6.40, off cars: country dress- ed, $7.25 to $7.75. STOPPED AT THE ALTAR. C'he'ese -Ontario fall white, 101c to lops colored, 101e to 101e; Quebec, Family Quarrel Interrupts Wedding 10c to 101°. Quotations are nom- in English Church. inn!. llulter-Finestracks, 2Nc to 30c; The romance, though happily m ordinary finest. .tic to 27c; western the tragedy, of Romeo in(i .Juliet, dairy, 22c to 23c; roll butter, 2,,c has just bcon rc-en.(etetl in real life to 2►ic. in the small East i-uncashiix town Eggs -St rtIcht cold stera se stock, of 1)1ww", 803.8 "1" 1. 1)000 Daily 14 t to 2ecVNo. 2, 14c to 111e; Mon-, Express. treat limed, 24,c t0 21c; selected. '21c Both Romeo end Juliet were mcmt- to 25c, and new laid. 29c to 30c berm of families of equal status', next --' having trade up their minds to be i quietly married nt Holy'Trinity UNITED STATES !WAiME'l'S. ) Church. the banns were put up and moh, March 7.-11•henl-No. 1 published the required number of Northern. 31.11)1; May, 51.11,'„ July. times. As no one curate forward on and this conversation took plat. e•- Ilallna!" "Well?" said 31r 'links "Is this Mrs. Minks?" 4 1 •1 4 4 4 1 4 4 tl ( 4 4 4 1 4 4 4 4 4 4 1 4 1 4 4 • called in consultation, and to the 1 work of the surgeons lionnvita owes 4 his life. That portion of the Band chewed by the infuriated Ilan was amputated. A month ngu the ani- 4 stats were taken from America to 4 Paris by Mr. Bostock, and, against 4 •1 the wishes of the doctors, Iionavita, with his am in a sling, cause along. Despite his liedup arta, the troupe of lions have been put into the ex- hibition ureas every morning. and ldonavita has gone In with then' and halt half an hour's frolic, so that none of the !ions might forget Mtn. Of them all {Baltimore has appeared thoroughly depressed. ile has refused his food, and wheenever Bonavita spoke to hint or looked in his direction the big lion, which is now wasting ntt•(ty, would slink into • a corner, as though anxious to ex- press hie sorrow and beg fotgivo- ness. Minas -11a !las tried to stroke the animal's shaggy mane, at which Italtinture turns over on his back 4 and t ries 10 lick Bonet"! a's good frond, "1 r.v .•rather Mr. Bost 'irk coming into the . nee and picking me up - then 1 i, -1 coneciouxne.s," said icon - at Nita the other day, "Poor old , I;,.Ii.u�,•te' I hate tried to get hint to eat 1 nt he won't. So the 'vets' so. he is thing of• a broken heart." ( u11P1;-TA'T1ON MADE I .1:•11', The enterinine1' known as Malin' recently performed some of his card tricks before a gathering which in - chided the (lu(en, says the London ('hronicle. At the close Alec of the visitors asked1lulini to tell hien how much money he had In Its pockets. '"that is easil,v done," re- plied the "nunglclen." '1'0 olluw of no deception.linlimi was t,linrl(ulderl, and nt his reg -i tu51 the 1i -iter placed nil the reeler? 011 a till ie, In full View of the spectators. 'There ens n drives Mrs Binke's horses She got hire with the house, you know, "Oh, she d1d)" "Ves. she 01.1." "Rough on Mrs. Rinks, isn't It?" at 51.25 to 54.40, good cows at $:3.25to:it. Itul(h.•r Tattle -hood to choice ere qu.ele0 tt 141.15 to R1.eie fair to gotnl it 14:3 :,tt to Sl, mixed nt 52,50 to es common at *2 to $3, and tors nt $2.50 ►n R1 Stockers and i•'e•telers.-Feeefers are