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The Clinton New Era, 1913-05-29, Page 3r'.L-I411,5.. 1013 +e++++' '?++4004t+t44pot+►+++++++++++++++�Ir+++44+t+f000♦00044++++++++44+++i++:+t+4++U4+ff01040if♦0N110141f011+++4'+++++++++++++++4t•1+1+++++ 'F+4++t+t+t4ltt+tt4t+titlil♦IMif1i;;;0;4;;;i+;ii1 he s• . 4. orld Local I �� r� rs ♦ Foroign �.. 1 .....„ • ♦ 04+++ 4++++++.4.404.e+++++++++41+++++• ocS®000000f4iAOA®0e aro►+0G0OaoAfi040e�o,�bey®0 vOi04f00N+0010£1♦i+9vvarvr wmOOf;10►Of0/11f11f6Y10140 t4+4+tbtttttttt4t+t+4i0ii00000400000a004t+4+1+4t4++++t++O+Ot+4444 airy -Three filled; any Double -Decked Pier Crowded With Thousands h ands of British -Dorn Holiday - Makers y Makers Collapses -Under Weight and Mass of Human Beings Is Plunged on Lower Pier and Then on to Sandy Beach. LONG flEACIT. Cal., Ma;y 26.—Too weak to uphold the burden of pearly 10,000 human beings assembled for the festivities' of "British Empire Day," the land end of the big double deck municipal pier in front of the city auditorium collapsed yesterday.. Hundreds of pereons ou the top deck were plunged clown on the heads al other hundrecle crowded on the second' deck. The lower deck then rave way. and all were dropped down a chute of shattered woodwork to the tide washed sands, 25 feet below. Thirey-three persons -mostly women -were killed by the shivered timbers; or crushed to death by the failing bodies of companions ancl friends. Fifty more were seriously injured, while hysteria and fright caused the disabling of scores of others. The victims were subjects or former subjects of. Great Britain, now resi- dent in various cities and towns in southern California. Following is a list of the dead: Mrs. Frank Matthews, David Black, aged i ; Mrs. Dan Thomas, Mrs. D. D. McSparron, Mrs. August Barth, Mrs. Richard G. Doale, Mrs, Cheshire, Mrs. Arthur C. Helps, Mrs. A. K. Hill, Fannie McGhee, Harold Letts, Mrs. D. S. Holmee, Martha J. Ben- n_tt, I). MeSpears, Mrs. rine Wyvel, Mrs. Warren C. Lett: and daughter Dorothy, Mrs. E. C. Valentine, Mrs. Frank Shaw, MIT. Emma Prigmore, Mrs. Elizabeth IL Richardson, Mrs, Pauline McGhee, Thomas Beek, Mrs. Lily M. Holmes, young son of H L. Bayles, Mrs. Ada E. Ing-r'am, Mrs. Anna Longfellow. Mrs. Williamson, Mrs. J. Nicoll, Miss Anna Stone, Mrs. D. J. Lomas, Mrs. D. E. Wallace, Mrs. C. H. Lawrence. The aeeident occurred a few minutes before 12 o'clock, The Empire Day parade, the feature of the celebration in honer of the late Queen Victoria's birthday, had just ended and the par- ticipants, with thousands of other "latera. were crnwdfnu lip the sten. 13RORCHITIS SUFFERER Takes Druggist's Advice With re Injured Splendid Result. If anyone sboulcl know the worth of a medicine, it is the retail druggist who sone it over his counter every day+ in the week, and is in a position to knew what r dy gives tote best of the j'er and soy irate.tote rd the auditorium when the pier floor sag- ged. e instant n,ta e' ' later �l rt 1 tit the supports gat way and the creel; and groan of breaking timbers mingled with the shrieks and cries of the vi.tinr; as all went down into a mass of broken wood and 'writhing ]Duman forms on the sand, Virtually the entire• lari(1 end of the pier was wrecked and a portion of thh auditorium front fell. The cause. of the accident was the overburdening n1 the pier. This, as - cording to an oft tial statement yes- terd0,y was clue to the delay in unlock, trig the doors, Rad the doers been unlocked at the propel' time, it was. • asserted, the crowd would have got into the auditorium instead of imass- ing at the don,: where the weight overwhelmed the pier supports, Mayor Hatch of Lone Beach, who was to have been one of the principal speakers et the eelebratirr, escaped unhurt, however, and aided by Mayor George Alexand r of Los Angeles, who came down at the head of that city's public hospital corps and several pia - teens of police, helped direct the work of rescue. Soon the huge pile of wreckage marking the spot where the dead and wounded were, was surrounded by a dense throng, whirl overwhelmed the comparatively fen' Ilnlivr'llton on 'the strand, and fnr some line. rendered futile every effort at rescue. The police could not get through the crowds and settee Chief of Police - Austin gathered his entire force on t'. 0 scene. An appeal was sent to Los Angeles, 24 miles away, for re.inforce- n:ents. Tho title was out, when the crash occurred, else the collapse would have thrown hundreds of persons into the ant and mans drowning:: wnaid have been added to the list of fatalities. Those who fell into the hole last were able to scramble over the en- tangled bodes to the broken ends of the floor, so deep wee it massed. with fruggling bodies. Fallen timbers and £tooting were lammed among the limbs of those caught in the trap. and ropes wre required to p'll heck the jaeged edges of the sunken ficinrine at . broken joists before t:e.i dead and in.iured could be taken out. rem,. ,,,nil: nr eemeykn5 the bodice; i a' eme i satisfaction. Mrs, Frank III. Cline, of West Sand Lake, N. Y, says: "For a number of years I was a great sufferer from bronchitis. Last July I had an attack which was more severe than any, and my friends thought I could not recover from it, Then, I was advised by my druggist to try Viuol, which I did,' with wonderful results. •My cough. has left me; I have gained in weight and appetite, and I 'am, as strong as ever I was. I advi>;e all who have bronchitis, chronic coughs, or who are run down to . try Vinol." It is; the combined action of the medicinal curative elements of the cod's liver, without the greasy oil, aided by the blood -making and strength -creating properties of tonic iron that makes Vinol so efficient, Remember, : we guarantee - Vinol to do just what . we. say — we pay baok your money if it does not. W. S.R.—, • Jaolme's, -Druggist Clinton, Ont. to hong Beach morgues did not begin until well in the evening. Long rows of saddened spectators, most of them still wearing tiny Union Jacks, em- blematic ofthe day, watched in 511- enee as the dead were taken from the temporary morgue in the armory to tbe waiting undertakers' wagons. The Long Beach council held an executive session late Saturday, and it ivas announced by Mayor Batch at its conclusion that the municipal gov- ernment was assuming ill expense. paying the funeral costs of the dead and supplying funds for the relief of. the injured. Belleville Now Has "Poetics." BELLEEVILLE, May 2G.—On toria Day free mail delivery was in- augurated in this city math consider- able ceremony, and. in the presence of hundreds of citizens. The newly - appointed carriers were sworn in by Mr, George Roes of Toronto, chief pastor te superintendent, and the first letter wee di'livered to Mr. Porter, lesey., Dt P„ finrn the no toffiee steps. �a[iitrSen „ epic family remedy for Coughs and Cnids Shiloh casts so little and does so much!". ROYAL PMR WEDDED' Princess Victoria Louise of Ger- many Married in Berlin. TWO HOUSES ARE UNITED Breach Between' Hanover and the Hohenzollerns is. Mended by Im- portant Alliance, at Which Three Monarchs and a Host of Royal Princes Are, Present —, Garter Ceremony Toned Down, BERLIN, Mae 26 -Princess Victoria Louise of Pressia, only daughter of the German Emperor and Empress, arul Prince Ernest August of Cumber- land, were harried wftfu tole rites of the Lutheran Church at five. o'clock Saturday evening, in the Royal Chapel of the Imperial Castle, the ceremony sealing the House of Han- over and the House of Hohenzollern. The presence of the three most powerful sovereigns of Europe,- the British King -:Emperor, the Russian Emperor and `the .German Emperor— on terms of intimate friendship, made the event a demonstration of inter- .national peace. The civil ceremony had been per- formed half an hour earlier in the great Electors' Hall, a serail room in the most ancient part of the castle, attended by only the immediate fami- lies of the bride and bridegroom. At the' conclusion of the civil oere- mony the bridal procession was mar - stinted thin line Icy Count August: Zu 1 , sd i v 'INTACT, COMPLETE: AND CINCH ANGJI1) FROM ITS TOUR .OF THE WORLD -- DWARFING AND OVERSHADOWING EVERY OTHER TENTED EXHIBITION. HELARDgST 9VD OIO.SiPERFEGT SH®hBlW5 CONTINENT.. TheTravelitt, Amusement Sensation ef The Da THE MONARCHS 'SUPREME N O�s. S�M AMS REALM! g MANY TI MES THE BIGGEST AND MOST BEWILDERING PRODUCTION EVERSEEN` COQNt $ .zit .•r. I ,• e �lt�`' r�UgN f� � 't.: rg /20 FUNNY CLOWNS I50LEAPER 1IOOACROBATS xgoHIGH SCHOOLHORSES 4 ND' 50 LOFTYTUNTRERS 200 GREAT ACTS. morn 1Oa®l ILD ANIMALS .FROPI ALL PARTS IDFTRETW'o CONTINENTS TBE MARVELOUS £'DYs T,NE MOMARC/IS SUPREMES TIE ROYAL 17E000 JAPANESE TROPE DIRECT FROM VOKONOffiL 41 til p*i 20 .. E��°�.. � :.;�� Moralities., . 400 ��:�1, lam �� Horses. Troupe of 'Performing Elepiiintts, Performing Lions. Camels.', 'TEE DUBLIN GRAYS. THE BLAC i ` HUSSARS. 3 BANDS. ROYAL ROMAN (HIPPODROME. TRAINED ANIMAL EXHIBITION.. re, .Free Street Parade, IO A. M. 2 Exhibitions, Afternoon at 2. Night at PRINCESS LOUISE, Eulenburg., grant] marshal of the Im• perial Court, and then proceeded the whole length of the castle, through a long series of state apartments to the Royal Chapel It was led by tbe bridal couple. the prim css' train being borne by four of her god friends, Prince Ernest August of Cumber- land was dressed in Prussian Hussar uniform, After them came Emperor William with the Duchess of Cum- borland. Then followed, in order, the Duke of Ctunberland with the German Empress, the Emperor Nicholas of Russia with Queen Mary of England, Ring George of England with .Crown Princess Cecilie, the Emperor Wil- liam's sons with their consorts, and 50 or more other princes and prin- cesses of the royal blood. Dr, Ernest Dryander, the grand chaplain of the court, who had bap- tized Princess Victoria Louise and prepared her for her colrfirmation, performed the ceremony, which was the simple Lutheran rite. He then delivered the customary address of ad- vice and admonition to the newly married couple. As the ring was ex- changefl before the altar a battery of artillery stationed outside the castle fired a royal salute. From an early hour the streets were alive with people watching the con- stant passing of brilliantly uniformed attendants on the many royal person- ages, including the British, German and Russian Emperors gathered here for the ceremony; The day started with rain, which abated somewhat, but the crowds per- sistently lined the streets, Every school throughout the empire ,had been closed in honor of the occasion, and the school chiidreli of the capital in charge of their teachers paraded the streets, or took tip their positions at advantageous points waiting pa- tiently to see tho various royal pro- cessions, Tile wedding functions themselves began rather late in the afternoon with the robing of the young bride, at which her mother, the German Empress, presided. The bride wore to awonderfully work- ed : gown of silver brocade, with. a court train of the same material, tlin- broiclered with a myrtle and orange flower design and lined with ermine. ,The last act in the robing of the' bride was performed by the Empress when she placed on her daughter's head the historic crown worn by Prus- sign princesses et their weddings. A state banquet was given at the castle in the evening, followed by the historic "torch dance" and the dis- tribution to the guests of souvenir "garters" in the form of silk ribbons bearing the bride's initials, and the date in gold letters, which modern delicacy has substituted for the pieces of the bride's garter formerly out up and distributed by the princes of the royal family on the points of their swords, Canadian News Barred, CALGARY Alta. ,May 2G.—Ex-Md. Whaley, who returned yesterday from California, Stated ghat he had it the authority of prominent Lo Angeles newspapeyawn that an unwritten ner emon't existed between the news- papers of that state to put an embargo on Canadian news. Mn. Whaley said his informant claimed the California' papers £elft that the only way to stop the lush of U S. residents to Canada was by suppresine any mention of the north west, Wooed ticrou.gle old age the bodily 1, functions becot ne sluggish; Na -D 'au -Co La - OM:GS give gentle, ' tilnely and effeetia'e aid, without elva d': yco mfort or distress, a b .l: at ot•' 5 tl Y. Druggist's. • 173 Natienel Plrsgana Chemical fo. et Canada, Limited, -'xx-rJt. lir cr �lre,uwan NI McCarty Killed. by Pelkey; Calgary Arena Burned Down ,_;serge T. Bell Pror,sted, TORONTO, :-'lay G.—Geoege '1'. Bell of Montreal this been appointed Passenger ti•aille manager ref t Grand Trunk and Gen lid Trunk onk Pati• die Railway in sucecssi•ui to the late G..\1 , Davis. Announcemei:t to this effect has leen sent out by Vice. President J. P. Dalrymple. Mr. 'hell, who is 52 years of age, has. been in i-ailroading all lois iffe, starting iu with the Great Western railway at Toronto. Ile commence=d els eemese." tion with the Granit Trunk in 1_T_. What Beautiful ul Hair! Row oftendo wee hear that ex- , elamatian about a certain woman's or nean s hail•. A' prominent scientist and hair speci!alist.emphaticaliy states, and has proven, that' any man or ivo- lEan can have luxuriant, lustrous Bair, by using the famous prescrip tion called .PARISIAN ' SAGE, PARISIAN Sage is now macre and sold in Canada, W. S.R. Holmes the druggist, is the ,agent in Clinton and the readers of tbe New Era can buy from him for only 50 emits a large bottle. W. S. R. Holmes knows that PAR- ISIAN Sage will. beautify the hair cure dandruff and !stopfalling hair, and for that reason hsells under a guarantee to cure or motley back. Price 50 cents. The R. T. Booth, Co., Ltd., Kort. Erie. Ont.. Canadian Makers. Confesses to Murder. RICHMOND, Incl., May 26.—Seta Lucas, 't fanner, has confessed that he murdered his wife with a "billy,' poured kerosene over the building and set fire to hie home near Williamsburg last September, acenrding to an an- uouneement by Pollee Chief German Here Saturday. Lucas is in jail here, Lucas' daughter, Mrs. Grover De- camp, nnysteriously disappeared last Friday, following a dispute with her father over the disposition of an es• tate valued et $1,600 left by her mo• ther. WELL SATISFIED V'I'I•II BABY'S OWN 'TABLETS Mrs. John Bonny.,' St, 'sorbet, Man., says ; ((I have used Hahy's Own Tablets and am: well satisfied with them," Thousands of other mothers say the same* thing simply because there is no medicine for lit- tle ones to equal, the tablets. They ,act as a gentle laxative, regulate the bowels 'and stomach,. break up colds, expel. worms and make teeth iing easy. The Tablets aro sold by medicine dealers or by malt' at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine C'o., Brockville., Ont. HEAD STILL VISIBLE. Escaped ,Negro Prisoner Neglected To Hide It In Mud. GUELPH, letay 2G. -Charles Ander- sons idea was all right, , t inatten- tion to details marred execution of it. Hence he is back in the provincial prison farm after a brief season of liberty. Anderson, who is a negro, was given an eight months' sentence at Hamil- ton for theft. This happened a month ago, He didn't find life on the Hanna farm Utopian, as the schedule there includes " work. Saturda;• afternoon the census of population at the farm showed a shrinkage of one. It was .1relerson, When the fugitive buried himself in the mud of a swamp half a rnile away, he was guilty of a fatal lark of thoroughness. He aliowed his head. to. protrude from the mud. Following up this slender clue tine searches decided 17 excavate. With slicvels a complete oapture was effected, Anderson says it appears to him that the judgment, the ostrich shows when it '"ries its head in the sand is much underrated. sesingasmommoina THE PERFECT SHOE for SUMMERSPORTS , Made In Smart Styles, Suitable. For Every Outdoor Occasion YOUR DEALER HAS THEM You Might As Well Get THE BEST CANADIAN CONSOLIDATED RUBBER CO„ LIMITED, 2 MONTREAL, Calgary, M:ay 26.—The prizefight arena where in Saturday, Luthler, 112eCrarty got the blow which Mlle ed hien, was completely de:sleoyed by fire here .thief' morning, The caretaker's family, sleeping in -the building, had a narrow escape, and incendrarism is suspected, An in e estiga!t on is in progress, Dr Mosln:els; whys eondireted thH autopsy. on 1YIeC'arfty, wilt testify at the inquest that the blows given by Aetllul' P:elkey en &lie, j tl, ju:7:t after the 'opening of the contest re- Suited in as hemorrhage which caus- ed death. T•olnmy Burns has taken charge of the body and will. send it td McDarty's parents. A. tremen- dous agitation hasbegun ail. over the', province to prevent furthe. Pugilistic encounters. Condemna- tory r•eferenoe was made beall the pulpits yesterday to lnthCaety's "murder." 1THE MARKETS CHICAGO, May 24.--Inereasingly unfavorable prospects in southern' and western Kansascarried the wheat mariner tip torlay. Closing prices were flan at a. n advance o,F le to 11/2o aver as. reeht. Cora finished unchanged to 1 -Se higher, oats varying from a sha(1eoil. to 1' e.provisions up, an d strung out from 15c decline to an up- turn of 6e: TORONTO GRAIN NIARKET. Wheat, fall, bushel: 00 95 to 00 93 }Vheat, goose, bushel,0 90 0 32 !Parley, bushel 0 58 0 G • Peas, bushel 100 130 Oats, 'bushel 0 39. 0 40 Rye, yushc 0 65 Buckwheat, bushel ,,,, 0 51 0.52 Champion Luther McCarty Has Neer, Broken In Calgary Fight. CALGARY. May ' 21—Luther Mc- Carty, heavyweight champion of the world, died in the ring from a broken. neck caused by a blow in tie jaw and the end of the battle came after one minute and 45 seconds of fighting. There had been one or two mix -apes of inconsequential character, then came a clinch. Referee Eddie Smith separated the men, Both squared off in pugilistic attitude. Suddenly Mc- Carty was seen to double up in a crouching attitude. To the spectators it looked as though his crouch was simply a fighting pose. But he con - tinned to go over, his eyes rolling in his head, 'then he collapsed and felt full length on the floor of the rine. The referee, assuming that he had been knocked out, stood over him to count off the fatal seconds, It was the final count for the serene champion. Arthur Pelk;; , winner of the heavyiicr_rht championship at such heavy cost, stood at one side et hos fallen adversary. He eo..ld scarce- ly realize what hail happened. Br this time the referee had beenme alarms]. He called for a doctor, .sec- er'al responding. The N.\B.M,P. were called in to clear the ring of the er wd, whielt had swarmed `over the ropes. Physi- cians worked river the stricken rutin fol' 10 minutes tether they pronounced him dt'ai'l. In discuesin-' the rase laet nit*lit the crown prosecutor filimnled that in addition to a elegem, acai ne Perky, other chanes would be placed ei;eeie-t Tommy linitis a< premeler; 11. Smith of GhIea .i as referee, endo Cali ale - Carney, hang er air ll C',rrla lh hnivever, are net ex far "1 tr aen a time. Calgary. ales, 20—A coroners jury to night exonerated l7etkew the prize fighter, ivhosi blow kP',ed Luther McCarty in the prize ring here on Saturday. W W SUNK BY A MINE. P _ Steamer Nevada Goes Down With a Loss of ,50 Lives. SMYRNA, Alay 26.—'11,1 steamer Nevada with 200 pacecancra on board, Arnett three mines in succession Sat- urday in the Gulf of Smyrna and sank. Only PO of the passengers and Cres; are reported saved. The mines were strewn in the coast waters of Asia Minor by the Turks to prevent an attack by the Greek fleet on the coast towns during the Balkan ware The Nevada struck three mines and each exploded in quick succession. Vie last was followed by an .explosion on the ship which imnteoiataly sank. Of the $00 passengers on the steam- er, 80 were rescued by boats which put ell from tate French cruiser 13ruix, which was anchored in the harbor. 'The Nevada, though owned by a Turkish company, was flying the Am• 'r:eaui flag. She belonged to a fleet of eight steamers of which seven were renamed in 1010 and were transferred to the American flag, he Nevada is the second pa,sen tier steamer to he sunk Ly mines in the Gulf of Smyrna within a week, end the fourth vessel to he destroyed in this manner since the gulf was rniucal at the outbreak of the Terce- 1 Lai i a n urco-Mahan war. The Texas a vessel of Ord tons, be- longing to this fleet, was nock through striking lie m' , in Smyrnrt Gulf in April 1912,.with a loss of lit poach' per, mostly Oriental t4l riiva. On W'ednesdsa last the French liner Senegal struck a mine as she was leaving port and was rule ashore lt,v lee Capt 'n to prevent her foun• cloning. Five were killed In January, 1913,.the Thendnros, a Tu wasrkbloish wn sailintip.g vessel of 650 tons, France • has about 40,000 acres l planted in almond trees. Nine experimenters fn X-ray, week have died from its effects, Telephones are. used to 'teach par. sloes (10 balk in a London. bird. school. The United States he now the grreatesft photographic materials tg piloducin„ country. , The port 01 Genoa. is to be en- iargect and imprloved at a cosh of nearly, $7,000,000. A eorekser esv has boon specially designed '20,r lifting paper . caps flora mill: bottles. New Zealand wild make, winetests equipment compulsory for passen- ger carrying vessels, ' The United States is officially,es- timalted toha,ve 20,507,000 Horses and 1,386,000 nukes. l - The Germlan• city of Hamburg has conap letetl plans fol' amunieipal uni versify on a large scale, A headlight built in,iiotiie front £roams, just above the radiator, Beat. tures li n,ew automobile, The Russian governmen'l wilt' thloloughly'rtest the possibility of making paper from flax refuse, TORONTO DAIRY MARKET. Butter, .creamery, lb, rolls 0 27 0 30 Butter separator, dairy„ 0 26 0 27 • Butter, creamery; solids.. 0 17. 0 28 Butter, store lots 0 22. 0 24 Eggs, new -laid '0 21. 0 22 Cheese, new, Ib 0 14 - 0 15 troney, extracted, Ib .-,0.13% Honeycombs, dozen 2 75 8 00 LIVERPOOL MARKET. ravtrepOOL, May:34,—Closing—nishcat —spot steady; No, 2 issanitotia, :say 61kd; No, 3 >e1anitoba, 7s 4d. Sutures eesy; May- 7s 01/40, duly 7s :i' d, Oct. Ti 3405, Coen—Spot steady; Amo"lean maxed, new, 5s 0145; de), kiln -dried, Os i'4d, Fu- tures quiet; :old, 5s 46f,d; 0,. via. G•tives- 105s.ton, 5s 50:. July, La Plata, 4s 110%d, • flour-Wtnt>_r Patents 29s Flops—in Loralliu (Pacific Coast), £4 lOs- to 45 10s, Beef—Extra India niees. 141s 3d. Pork—Prime Int, a, western, nominal, Hams—Short cut, 14 to 10 lbs,, 73s, Bacon—Cumberland cut, 26 to "e lbs„ G8s; clear bellies, 14 to 16 lbs., 60s Gd; long clear middles, light, 28 to 34 lbs.; 72s; long clear middies, heavy, 35 to 40 lbs., 71s 6d; short (rear hacks, 10 to 20 lbs., 065 6d; shoulders, square, 11 t0 13 lbs„ 57s, MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN MARKET. MINNEAPOLIS. May 24,—Close: Wheat —May, 90c; July. 0100,; Sept., 914,tc; No. 3hard, winter, 94%c; No.'1 northern, 921/% to. 93%c; No. 2 do., 901jsc to 91%c. Corn—No. 3 yellow, 61e to 611,0. Oats—No, 3 white, 331%c to 34c. nye—No. 2, 57e. Flour and .bran—Unchanged. DULUTH GRAIN MARKET. DULUTH, May 24,—Close; Wheat— N0. 1, hard, 3914c; No. 1. no:'the•h, 9260; No. 2 do,, 890% to 95;r0; May, 91.6l0; July, 5214o asked; Sept., 921;,e asked. CHEESE MARKETS. WATERTOWN, N.Y., May 24, Cheese sales were 7000, at 125fie, official price, with curb at 13%c to 14c. 'ST., HYACINTHIE, Que., May 24.- Four hundred packages butter sold at 26 Ko. forty boxes cheese boarded sold at 11140. BELLEVILLIO, May 24,—At Belleville cheese boast! today 1710 white and 150 colored were offered; 1710 white sold at 117-160; 75 colored at 11%c; the balance was unsold. CATTLE MARKETS EAST BUFFALO LIVE STOCK. EAST BUFFALO, FFALO, May 24.—Cattle Be- Celpte, heastoady. weals L ee'd;Ipn,, -0 head; active and 25e higher; 96 to $11, - I2ogs I1ecelpte 3090; active, steady to strong; heavy, Sass to $8.90; infixed, 98.35 to 91,90; yorkers, Sa80 to $9; Pigs, .95.90;'• rcughs, $7.75 to 97.05; stags, $6.50 to 07; dairies, 98.09 to 01.9U. CHICAGO LIVE STOCK. CHICAGO, May 24.—Cattle-12eceipts 400. Market slow. Beeves, $7.10 to 08.08;. Texas steers, 90.03 to $7.70; stockers and feeders, 67.80 to $8; cows and heifers, $3 50 to $1.90; calves, 57.25 to $10. Hogs—Receipts 12,000. Market steady. Light, $8.40 to $8.026i; mored, $8.33 to $5.0248 heavy, $8.05 to $8.57%; •; rough, . 6 to .220; i 5 .8 bulk 0 $8 pigs, $6, 0 to $S 0, b !k of sales, $8.11 to 08.60. Sheep Receipts 1000. Market slow and steady. Native, 06.25 to $0; year- lings, 90 to $0.09; lambs, native, $5.75 to 91.65. H A D. I L S ON FACE AND !; ODY WAS TROUBLED FOR 8 YEARS. Boils in themselves are not a dangerous trouble, but still, at the same time are very painful. They are caused entirely by had blood, and to get rid of them it is absolutely necessary to put the blood into good cone dition. For this purpose there is nothing to equal that old and well known blood medicine, Burdock Blood Bitters. ?airs. James., Mageean, Floral, Sasic., writes;—"I was troubled for eight years with boils on my face and body, and I tried everything I could think of. My neighbors told me to drink water off of sour corn meal, but I kept getting worse until one clay a woman in town asked me why T'didn try Burdock Blood Bitters. My husband got me two bottles, and before one was gone my boils had all dis- appeared, and I feel like a different woman. I can't tell you how thankful I am for your medicine. I will recommend it to all suffering women." Manufactured only by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. Gompers Wants New Deal. WASTIINGTON May SG Attorneys for Samuel Gompers, John Mitchell and. Frank illorucon ap1'lied to the supreme court Saturday for a review of their sentences for virI nli 1e a court. injunction in the Buck Steve asd Range case, Thu tour- is to recess. Amundsen For North Pole, CALGARY, May 2l.—(apt, Roald Amuinclsrn, discoverer of the South Pole, in it lecture Friday night: an- nouneed that be hoped to reach the North: Pole es his next undertaking; and expected to attrinnt.the trip some time in the near. futarc,; Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S , CASTORIA