The Clinton News Record, 1912-11-21, Page 10i
771..11111111.,11.1111111
FEAR EAI OF CHOLER _ p' rj �-4 IiidheyaeY3Wro�t,4
El �G LIST 1031912-13 L 1\A �A V l �ji IE they are yon arc in dame " ?^•r PRICES OF M n
weakness r• When � ARM PR011O�TS
kidneys fail fi s� the it u
Kinn' Ferdinand Will Stop at the Gates of the
wEEK Ins
1`6`x[1 and, Mail nnd,Empiro. $1.60 Turkish
'w8 -.a^,,1 and (lobo Capital.
`,A,s- ei;oNI and Pamily 1Lcrald anti :
'�t': with Premium �'
ews-ktraowi ,•....., 1.75 - A Massaer '
ews-lt or[I and''. {y[tn0es 4 Is
rotes -ftp ox i .i d St it .,, i:7s A despatch" from Sofia ss.- s ::
rte P•
ens -!record and roes. 1.76 + rerdinand has decided. not �oentelg•.
eevt,•ItOcard and lo[ar<tie e.P,atnldyy..1.76 ConStantine 11e i
Night • 1. f he takes , the
ews lic,cold a*d. in , 0,20 Tat., , Aja lines, because. ofs a will
ows-Ieeor d anti j�'zl rn .,eier3 br tlz 3'Lto..1.75 -
ews-leccrd 1,,(,d that at nzassaere of Christiane will
Nowa, YO.cn.uli+ul Paa•m.,, .1.75 fro] before he cane secu
Itecnl•d and Ynnth'8 Companion .3.26
Nows•Itucortt. and U1tna<tiari 1e full eon
man . .,;. Conntuy, fro] of 'the cit3� and feel -stirs of
' . . 1.25 keeping: order. Fear of a cholera
DAILi%S. plague aided him in this decision.
owe -Record and, iFlail and ,76mpire,: 4 l� er inand's Government..f;
revs -Record and tide 26 tivargar-
ows-[record and Nowa 425 deer- . M. Natehoviteh, Bulge
°wad:nanl and Star 2.70 ian Foreign. Ministel', in an inter-
owo-Record anid. ... td 2.30 view with the correspondent. of the
eam-Record and •• - 3,25
ege-R9eof• Limn'ng Frio Press 3.25. Nene Freie Presse,
But -
ell's -Record anis: Evening: Preo Press 2.75 said that B.
and, Advertiser 3.00 garia Wantsmade free hies, an and.
Salo
ale
a
i<
tofi' r
1IiLx.free cities, and that
Newe•Record and 'Poultry theBulgarianarrny willhaltbefore
Newn•ROeord anti y Revlo . gates of • Constantino. le
Ne `Sae Lippilleott's Magga. 'f.2, leak and
ws-Reroi•fl 1 leave the fate of .the Turkish ca
Winans aud•'Oaartda. h ..... 340
r Pita]
g P to
th '
e Power
••.., 1:40'
P s.
xr
what The
you Balkan
u want is not In (th10 70 lot a•n allies at Salon'
<3 know about It, ; We can sup enc y1<e11
lees than it would cost roll to. send, direct.
d
u remitting please do
r so
do b
r Y Po
Postal st
qt offir
al a
Note. Order, !otter and ii:ddreSeeB Order or ]tog -
Six 'Theitsalnl.➢iassacred.
A despati;h from Athens sa •s :
Six
ho
li
5
t sant
d
women en
and
children,
25 men and two priests have been
massacred in the neighborhood of
Janina by e750 men of the Turkish
infantry and 300 Bashi-Bazoplts,
who pillaged and set fire to the vil.
Ieges.
Ritz:dcrOus Lighting.
A despatch from Bulgarian head
quarters says : After four days'
murderous fighting, the Bulgarian
army bas succeeded in , breaking
through the Turkish position at.
Tchatalja in the centre of the lines
and eompletaly rolling up the Turk-
ish defence. The Bulgarian ad' -
vane is being pushed' forward with
are displaying a fine cropof petty
rite greatest energy with ,the view
ett of forcing the Turkish ,troops away
jealousies: The Bulgarians who from Constantinople,
followed the Greeks '
e
into to
that
i
w'•
at
v
1
1
ed
Kiel
Fe erdi I
g ns.'
city was now undernd that rhe
b , stirring his rule, there-
by in: the breasts of the
Greeks a feeling ;that •dne credit
had
not -
been '
given g to'.
them.
Wounded Left to Die.
A despatch from London says:
From the accounts of correspon-
dents on the Bulgarian side, their
wounded are in. just ae bad condi-
tion as the Turks. One correspon-
dent in describing the poor ambu-
lance service of the Bulgarians,
whose wounded are driven for miles
in jolting oxen carts, says'thl�e is not
the
worst
part of their .,sufferings.
He continues :---
"After
-
"After ,several battles the worm
ded were left lying on the bare
fields where they had fallen for two
or three hot
da
ye
and, bitterly 1•
hot
,t
e
xl
cold
Y
nights, and the wrier sights in the
h •
W. MITCHELL
Pul>ttlsitar Nevere-Re r
CLINTON,rd
ONTARIO -
Synopsis of Canadian . 11'oethweost
s
h
�u
s
1
Land Regulations.
of Any person , who is the sole head
family, or any male over 18
years Y s
old,
er section;'' may homestead a quart-
er
in tof available Dominion
nitoba, -Saskatchewan or
Alberta. The applicant must ap-
pear P in
nporson c, the Dominion
the Agency Or Sub -Agency for
district. Entry by proxy
may be made at any agency, on cer-
tain conditions by father. mother,
on,' daughter, brother or sister of
intending homesteader.
Duties. -Six months residence
upon and cultivation of the land in
each of three years. A homestead-
er may live within nine miles of.
is homestead on a farm of at
least 80 acres. solely' owned and oe-
pied by him er by his father,
other, son, 'daughter, brother or
Li certain districts
a home t d
in good standing may pre-empt
quarter -section alongside his
znestead. Price, 3.00 per acre.
uties,-Must reside upon the
estead or pre-emption six
tbs in each of six years from
e of homestead entry (including
time required to earn.home-
patent) and cultivate • : fifty
s extra.
homesteader who .has exhausted
homestead right and cannot ob
a pre-emption may' enter for
nrehased homestead in certain
riots. Price, $3.00.
uties.-Must reside six months
itch of three years, °titivate
acres and erect a house worth
.CO.
W. W. CORY,
sty of the Minister- of the' In-
terior.
.B, --Unauthorized •• publication
is advertisement will not be
for. .
rano 'iga.naolq
eatrdna nem 5u1<uaa.1
A:H 135treitese l0
0,ry aaelosa[O odOA
U10n 'nn. date5a at•0e 'en
0(835.,7, .4nob 30
.g p�!g 4pnaaa
paru7tt ta43.4 !J• •;1er.(4;
SYa5 7,3 o1L.oaSl� Ntr
gap(op4 onnd(,1aso eresieeftini 't3V-
cgs eorioe ns. o p,eo; R79od1U pua5 •rttasy
;es firpq; m. 0;'0q�gmnt pull ttaapittp al onsets:op 8anin
i390ne01110J9L"e(811Ua04;StIO;a pass l31i0aq oaas`04;
.0814
47008
8.'.0400 Se(4;00;14 sa1(4lu '4ipa,I4 .3.;ana q;1m
'.70004 O(id343;U 1(; /MIAMI .40 O
w Vag 't44ad 341itit /es 'ns 4;M+ pas0 s0n.ep
0.44 .1oy3uo tfupop ano4;tni '00(10.4 (up(0
raoary enpoaeo pug 8300 ' 0(5(8(11 V
0317 Qaft91•ra11jel
S0103 5412003 SI1IUSI1OH0
0113 31a0WSVds SH0003 0tnd00iib1
ev.Y.$'g;. 'ervsgssv
0 KILLED AND 15 INJURED.
aln Crashed Into Freight at 40
Miles an Hour.
despatch from Indianapolis,
Pana, says : At least twenty per -
s were killed and fifteen serious-
njured at 3 o'clock Wednesday
'ping, when an inbound Cincin-
y Hamilton [b Dayton passenger
n ran into an open switch and
Med head-on into a freight
a at -Arlington avenue, Irving -
a suburb. The train was core -
from :Cincinnati at the rate of
riles an :hour. '
ata
Cholera Stops Ilulgaria, d
A despatch from London
Cholera at Tchataldja and Constan-
tinople 1 '
)e
I is doing more than all. the
men under Nazim Pasha to stop the
march of the Bulgars. -Eye-witness-
es tell of horrible scenes in the be-
leaguered forts, where hundreds of
bodies of victims of the disease are
piled into shallow trenches.
It is doubtful if King Ferdinand
will risk the 'lives of any more of
his 'men by marching them into a
plague -stricken city, and there is a
report that already many of the
Bulgarian troops havebeen strick-
en
' with cholera, which they caught
in positions from which they - had
routed the diseased Turks,
A
Constantinople '
nti.
no
le d
es
P despatch P to
the
�logne• Gazette declares that: Bul-
ospita25 are the rows of nor fel- ` gam,has
abandoned her intentions
lows swollen and p f l Constantinople, being thus
limbs withgangrened advised by Russia and Great Bri-
tain.'whom Altogether, although the re -
of recovery, port that an armistice already has
The correspondent adds that been arranged has not been oon-
many are dyi tg from exposure and filmed, all indications point in that
not from wounds. direction, and it may be supposed
that" the terrible conditions of
rn-
ins and destitution prevailing
among the refugees in the neighbor.
!load of Constantinople, which are
calculated to provide a hotbed' for
the ep.read of cholera, may have had
something to do with Bulgaria's de -
Constantinople still waits her fate
in the calm of despair. So far, in
spite of alarmist reports, there; has
been no .great disorder there,
Grim Toll at Yenidje.
A despatch from Athens. says:
It is announced that 35,000 Turks
were engaged in the battle against
the Greeks at Yenidje. They had
42 heavy gums. '. The Turkish losses
numbered 2,000 killed, 600„ made
prisoners and 22 guns captured.
The Greek losses.' were 500 killed
and wounded, including fifteen of-
ficers.
THE E
AAAA �A� TOLLS
aLiS
Merchant Vessel Rate To Bei
$ .2o Per Net Ton
Carrying Capacity.
A despatch from Washington transports,
says; President Taft on Wednesda colli, 5, cents hospital ships
night issued a proclamation fixing and supplyeships, 50 ceiSts per dig-
the rates that the foreign shippingg placement tan,
of the world shall gsse 4. Upon army and navy trans:
pay for passage porta, colliers, hospital ships and
through the Pauama Canal. The supply shipei $1.20 per net ton, the
proclamation, made under author- vessels to be measured by . the same
ity of the penal act passed by Con- rules' as are employed in determin
grecs in August, establishes' a mer -
1.2Q ing thels. net' tonnage of merchant
chant vessel rate of
per set vessels.
ton of actual carrying capacity, "The Secretary of War will pre -
with
a reduction of 40 per neat. on pare and
ships in ballast, re entbe,such rules for
The provisions of the a the regulations 1 vessels and
tion are as follows: ploclama- such regulations. as' may be neves-
T, On as o liows:vessels carryingsary and proper to carry this pro-
1,
or caro rnet feeeh:t." n into full force and of-'
g', $1.20 per net foci."
vessel ton -each 300 cubic foot -of American. coastwise shi in
actual earning capacity. PP g was
2. On vessels in ballast without exempted from toll payment oby
n
passengers or cargo 40Congress. It was to this provision
cargo, per: -cent. of the act that Great Britain diplo_
less than the rate of tolls for vessels matieally protested,' but nb ref* -
wi3thsssengers or cargo, encs to'the incident isx
Uponnaval vessels, other than President's proclamationade in th,
MILLIONS IN BLACK FOXES. 1 '
1'.'E. Islandon Prosper Also in
Agricultural Products.:
A despatch from Charlottetown,
P. E, I., says: "Prince Edward
Islanders at home - never before
Spade 80' much money in a single
year as this year," said Publicity
Agent McCready in an interview.
"The farmers had bountiful crops
and are getting top prices. , But-
ter, cheese, eggs and poultry will
this year bring in more than be-
fore, Of 187 lobster canneries the
product will be somewhat less in
quantity than in some former
years.btit better prices will make
this good. In black foxes alone the
gain has run"into millions. Of say
400 old foxes, the increase has been
at least $2,000 each, making $800,-
000, while as many more young ones-
littered last spring, sold easily fo'r''
$5,000 each, making $2,000,000
more. There is already quite brisk
bidding for optionsto purchase the.
coming crop of young, due to ar-
rive in April, 1913, at $5,000 to $6,-
000 each."
-- -•I
MONTREAL. ) MORMON PROPAGANDA:
Great Mission in Southern Alberta
Is Planned. •
A despatcI1 From Raymond, Uta.,
says : Threb hundred Mormon min,
ao3rho most expensive Cn aionarie5 from the Mormon town
krav- south of Lethbridge are to engage
promuring the photographs from in whatwill be the greatest, mis
:r tho world. cion propaganda ever inaugurat--
rticlas,are carefully selected and ed in southern Alberta. The work.
terial policy is thoroughly is to be conducted during the win
1den1, ter months, and all the territory
south of the main line of the Ca -
ubscrtetton to The Standard dian Pacificu willPo Railway ns.
2.00 pert year to any address lit ed'. toueli-
The mission is cinder President
or Great 13rttain. Grandley, former President of the
Swiss Mission, and he will' have as -
Ry IT FOR 1912! listing bini business
men acct farm-
' :of the `.best ebilit ro
9a1 Standard Publishing Y P r006ntly
0 Csrs The plan is one which has recon 1
Limited, Publishers, been adopted i tit
n Utah, where i
was'
f
t
found d
to
be.
ver
I' successful.
cessl'ul,
STANDARD Is' the National
Iy Nowsnaper or the Domluion
nada. It Is national 1n all Ito
Occasionally we
run -across a man
who i
s frank It e
Hough to admit that
he 'likes to wear his dress suit.
County judge Reade has upheld
the decision of Magistrate Blake of
Galt that breweries may not adver-
tise in local option districts, it 'be-
ing a form of soliciting business,
CITY CIRCULATION
AGENT
Of Leading Montreal Daily
Endorses GIN 1PILLS
IVE long years of
stiff from
Kidney Trouble --
two boxes of GIN
- and it's
all gone. That has
been the experience
of Mr. Eugene
Quesnel, Chief City
Circulation Agent
of. La. Petrie, of
Montreal. 23e.
descr•ibes`it
feelingly :
Montreal,
ni have been etaffering iron Kidney
Trouble for over five long years, 1+
bad also Rheumatism 0i all my bones
and muscles, could.uot sleep nights and
on some occasions coal(1 hardly walk.
I had been treated by soars of our best
Physicians but without relief and I lost
oneovemet
r og fifteen our leading hottelkeepers who
bad 'been ,cured by your famous GIN
PILLS, and he advised me to try theca.
So 1 bought two boxes at my druggist's
and before 1 had used one box I felt a.
big change. Before I finished the
second ane I was completely cured,
1 can assure you 1 eau hardly believe
1t for if ]' had only known what I know
now
would not have spent over One
I-Inndred Dollars for nothing when two
Boxes of GIN PILLS cured me,"
EUG Na QUI±SNg-r,,
GTN PILLS are gaining a world-wide
reputation, by fie way they conquer the
roost obstinate cases of Rheumatism
and -
1 kinds r s
d ofKr'
istrey Trouble,
500. a box, 6 for
ree
if you write NationaDx ganlChemample ical
Co, of Canada, Limited, Toronto. !49
through
ai to lte
from the blood,ttou
Backache, Rheums
Gravel, Diabetes, G
deadly Bright's Disc
the results of neglect
release's ae B
Indian n
Roo
a most effective
strengthens and s
kidneys so that they
thoroughly and well.
Dar.. lvi o
Indian Ro
or di ea
r the impurities
ole conies at once.
tism, Sciatica,
Ga
deadly
the
ase are 501TIe of
ed kidneys, Dr.
ti
Y ps
contain
•
diuretic n
which
timulates the
do their work
Try
rs& s �4
ot`Pills
IIIE MEWS 111__A_
HAPPENINGS FRO
THE GL0I3id
NU
TbiIEI.
PARAGRAPH
M ALLL OVER
IN A
L.
•
Canada, the Empire a
In General ni.rut Belo
Eves, •
Canada.
Sir James Whitney
Britain on amonth's v
A 1ti1'ge-sized bust of
aegis for the new Ham
building has arrived.
The
.Hamilton police
will prosecute autoists
their earsto emit a tra
Mr, E. A. Lancaster
tends to fight to the las
meat on his Parliamen
ance.
Radical changes are
upon in Pacific Coast' fi
give white men prefers
panes
The Hamilton Club f
appeal to the' Court of
against a $10,000 burin
ment.
The. Minister of Railer
ises $50,000 from the G
towards a high-level brid
Catharines.
Real estate men say tha will be increased
ten to fifteen per cent
spring.
?+. Harwood of London has been
made agent for the G.T.R. car ser-
vice department with headquarters
at Detroit.
Employees of the G.T.R. car
shops at London will protest over
short working hours and Tate ar-
rival of the pay car. .
London ratepayers will be called
upon to vote on by-laws calling for
the expenditure of over $1,560,000
on the first of January.
Navigation will probably be kept
open on the lakes till December 20.
Norfolk county: won thirty-five
per cent. of the prizes at the Horti-
cultural .Exhibition at Toronto.
tughe Douglasi H. Thomas was Coal e run
down by the City of Sydney as the
two were steaming down Halifax
harbor, and four men were drown- i
tt
dh
t C
World
re Inert
neveRTs FROM THE LEAOINO TRADE
CENTRES OF tib ME6lic,.
"COB of .Cattle, Crain, Cheeaa end otnnt
Pr'
ad
us.
• at
H.,
m. and Abroad.
nroadstuffs..,
Toronto, - Nov. 19, ialour—Ninety per.
cont. p5L4131 , 14. to 54.10, Mani t:obae, N5;•
50 for iiret patents, $5 for seoends,. and
60.80 for strong bakers'.
.63341)33 Ln Wheat --No. 1 Northern, 93 1..2c,
Bay l;or.s; No. 2 at 51c; and No. v at 8N3,
Bay porta. Peed wheat, 66 10 010, Bag
ports.
Ontario. Wheat -No. 2 new white and red'
wheat, 95 to 97c, outside, and sprouted,
00 to 55c, outside.
Oats -No 3 Ontario, 35 to 37e, outside,
and CiangdaUoats34noteon ll at 42 1..2c cash ori Nor.
2 and 411:20 for No. 3.
Peas -No, 2_ at 11.10 to 60,16.
Barley--Forty-eight-lb: barley of good
n
ualit
Y .65
to7
Oc, outside.
t IAO,
Orin --No: 2 old American, .651-2o, .11 -
rail, Torocto, and No. 3 at 641-2*, all -rail,.
No 3, Bay ports; 01..1'2e. New corn, De
comber delivery,. 56e,_ Toronto.
BuckItye-wheat-02 to 25o, outside. tsie.
of t
Bran -Manitoba r al
de.
nn-Lfahitoba bran, $22.50 to $23, In
bags, Toronto freight Shorts, 522,60. to
$26.
Coin r
tyProduce.
�liButter --Rolls, choice, 26 to 27o• bakers'
nferio
inferior,
2 31 to. 2 to e; for
dairy tubs, 26d';
LaLokn, for solids: o rolls, and. 8 to 290
Andrew Car-
iltori library
chief says he
who> allow
it of smoke,
, M.P., lin-
t the esaess-
tary allow
determined
sheeies, to
Hoe over:I'a-,
ail
ed in its
Revision
eSs assess -
aye Pram-
overnment
ge at St.
at rents in
by from
• in the
Two huge power schemes are be-
fore the Government, the Long
Sault and Eastern Canada Com-
panies both wanting permission 1
dam the St. Lawrence above *Mont•
real. -
GREAT BRITAIN.
Unionists condemn the payment
of members of Parliament,
United States.
Wm.' Bennett, a Chicago real .es-
tate, salesman, left. that city,; Octo-
ber 5, with $12,000 cash to use is
buying land in Canada, and has not
been heard from since.
Disappointed becaes.: their ten
days -old baby was a boy where they
wanted a girl, Mr, and 'Mrs; Fred
Kipp of dincinatti, each 22 years
old, wrapped the child in ashawl
and tossed him into the Ohio River.
General.
The federated Malay States have
offered Britain a Dreadnought.
A
n Bred
g by taunts of strikers,
strike -breaking gold miners at Wei -
hi, New Zealand, 'attacked 'Union.
teal. In the rioting a policeman
and a citizen we 'e Itilled.
Eggs--Oaeo lots of fresh, 320,per dozen,
IBand of cold storage, 26 to 280;;striotly
new.laid, 40 to 45c per dozen,
twine se -141.2c for: large, and 14 3-4e for
eaus —
Hand-
rcked $3 pot' bnahalprimes, $2.90, in a jobbing y;
Roney -Extracted, in tiffs, 32' to 121.2o
per lb. for No. 1, wholesale; combs, $2 50
to $3, wholesale,
Pon/try-Well-fatted, *lean, dry.pia1ed
stock was :quoted as fonowe:--Ohieltene,
14 to ibo per lb; fowl,. 11 to 130; ducks, 19
to 16o; geese, 13 to 140; turkeys, 22 to 24e.
Live poultry, about 2,3 lower than the
above.
Potatoes -aced' etool euotea at 80 te.
90e per 65S.on,traok,
Provisions,
Bacon ---Long clear, 101.4 to 16 1-7.0 per
ib., in ease lots.. Pork -Short cut, 526 to.
$27; do., mess, $21,60 to $23. . Hams -33543,
um to light, g 17 to 19 e.•20 • hewn,. .10 a2 0,
15e;''-baee, 121.2• to. 16ol breakfast bacon,
15e; b
, Hak '
s 2 .
, 11
ibLard-Tierces, 41.20; tubs,. 143.4o; pane,
name Hay and straw.
Baled Hay -No. 1 at 514 ,to 614.60 on
track, Toronto; No. 2, $12 to $12.50. Mixed
hay, $10 to $11 a ton, on track,
Baled Straw -$10, on track, Toronto.
mant
- Montreal, Novena Markets.
19.-005(7 - Canadian
Weetorn, No. 2, 463-2 to 47c: extra No, 1
61 to
5 6 to 461.2a. Barley- dean. feed,
610. o O/ mm5lting, 78 to Oeo.. Buckwheat--
No.
firsts, $5 60; seconds. spring1s rong
bakers', 54.90;. winter patents, ohol*e, K.
35; straight rollers, 64.98 to $500; straight
rollers, bags, 52.30. to $2.40.. Roiled oats,..
barrels, $6.05; do., bags, 90 lbs., $2.40• Bran,
$23. Shorts, $26 to $27. Middlings, $28 to
830, Moutine, $30 to 535. Hay, No 2 per
ton, ear lots, 13 to 131.2o. Cheese, finest
westerns, 127.8 to 130; finest easterns, 121.2
to 12 3-4o, Butler, choicest ereamory, 301.4
to 301.2c• .seconds, 283.4 to 295, Eggs, ae.
Looted, 31 to 3201 No. 2 stock, 21 to 220.
Potatoes, per bag, oar lots, 80 to 85c,"
United States Markets,
Kinnenpolls, Nos, 19.-4Theat-December;,
841.4o; May, 803.40; No 1 Northern, 871.4o,
No. 2
da
83
to 84•
34
n.
t hire,
No
69 . 3
to 60 ' rollout,
o,
On -
EB
No. 3
white, 29
o -N t0 291.2 •
a t.
4, Z
57
to t 600 4.35 to 14. ; 818 50.
Plow' --.Chet patents $4.35 to $4.65; se0oetd
5abonte, $4.20 to $4.45, Drato2ents, $3.20 to
second clears, 92.40 to $2.78.
Duluth, Nov. IL -Wheat -No. 1 hard,
863.8o; No. 1 Northern, 866 -Be; No. 2 do.
835.80; December, 843.8e; May, 093-8o bid.
Linseed -On track and to arrive, $1.403.4;
November, $1.391.4 bid; Deoomber, $1.33
bid;
Mar, $1,36 1.2 asked; ay, $1,39
asked.
Live Stook Markets..
Montreal, Nov, 19, 5toers, 93.75 to - 66
per tun. 203/10 ohoi<o cows brought $4.50,
and thecommon.' sold at $3 to. $4,while
tbo bulls, which wore principally eannorr'
Lamins sold at
56 to$2 $6.2 ant per t
84 per. owe, while .calves- brought from
$3 to $12 each, as to size and quality:,
Ifees-28.60 to $2,65 per cwt,; sveighed .off ,
Cara
Toronto, Nov. 19. -Good to ohoioe hutch•
ere brought from. $0.26 to $5,90, modinm at
from $4.60 to 06.00. Gond hutclror 0owe
ranged from $4.76 to. $5013, with common
mediumsto 3.50
ners ntfrom 52from3o 53.00 rair to and
UM bulls wont at from $335 to $4.25. Milk.
era and springers, $50 to 900, Light stock-
ers went at 55.75 to $4.00 per, hundred.
weight,.. Lambs ramrod from 96.15 to 56.40:
tight owes from 54.09. to $5.50; bucks and
cane from $2.00 to $3,ls: good calves from.
$7 00 to - 59,00, with > roughs at from $3.-
371.2 to $6.00. Hogg, $8.10; 50.00 was paid
for the 'mod Dart, on the ted: and water-
ed basis,.:
BRITISH NAVAL GUN'IIURS'1':
Some of the Fragments Were
Blown Three Miles. •
A despatch from London eays:
While the new naval 13.5 inch gun
was being tested on Friday at Shoe-
buryness it burst, some of the frag-
ments being blown three miles.
Thirteen persons were injured,
NLNE PERSONS DROWFNED
Old Mayflower Springs Leak In Madawaska River
Near Barry's Bay, and Sinks.
A despatch from Ottawa saps: little, a little more and then ter -
ins lives are believed •
N to have rib(
been last in the Y, when the old coal -oil lamps
was in darkness the boat keeled
v
Madawaska River went out by being crashed to the
on Tuesday night soon after 7
1
Hoer, and in a few minutes when
o'clock, when the old wheel steam- all
et, .Mayflower, a small 50 -foot boat over bloadslde and sank suddenly,
capsized and genie three miles.. � ' throwing passeng
of• Barry's B
leak, Of the twelvet people speluboa
ten of_whom . we're ssnaboard
two, passengers an
members of the crew, Thr
passengers, namely, Gordon
Peverley, 3. S. Imlach and M. J
Harper, all of Ottawa, and con
menial travelere, are alive to tel
the story el the terrible disaster.
They were found by a sea.rell party
tvho rowed out feria Barry's Bay
to ae island abo'nt three miles down
the river, in a'very exhausted con-
dition.
From the brief story of the dis-
aster that could be obtained 'from
the three survivors, they say that
the Mayflower sprang a least soon
after she left Barry's Bay. nor
hold rapidly filled with water, and
those on board quickly realized shat
deta,tit was imminent, There• was
hardly s, moment to decide on how
their
t
live
s could Lld
b
e
slaved. e
V .f
1.
A
h
• otvl-
ing wind x020 sweeping down over
the river, which ,is nearly a mile
wide et the point where he- boat
sp>•ang a !talc, and the'warer way
lathing the sides of the ill-fated, t
boat with a vengeance. A11 around 1
was black.
Not a light could be seen an,y- f
whore, The boat began to lurch a
ut 01.1, crew, freight
and all, of which there was a good.
a. deai aboard, and machinery, into
the icy water. The wooded shores
d threw back the echoes of the cries'
ee of the drowning souls. The three
C survivors wereable to discern seam3
spars of timber floating near. to
11 where they had been hurled intro
the water. Bach tried to cheer' the
1
other with words f
o encouragement,
and'half perished in water that was
clogged with ice, and almost numb-
ed to the point of uncenacl0usnese
they drifted ashore, but more`deaci
than »•live. .
Words, they say, coilld not de-
scribe those hours of suffering on
,the'island up to the time they were
found: They were too exhausted'
to walk, or even to get to their
feet. Tlxroughaut the long, cold
night, and terrible, even colder day,
in i
a blinding nem
snow'
g
etorm,
elle
waited a;td prayer! that help would.
cords to them. Death -seemed in-
eviteble until at last, when hope
seemed practically gone; they heard
the quiet swish of oars and the
sound of human voices, and from
that
moment from sitter joy they
"emembered nothing more until
they awoke in a house with kind
aces around 'them and kie;d hands
to attend to their wants,
LkstS.
T'he Clothes Last.
Its -ii'rjell els Last.
A. SANI'I.'AItte CLUB. -
For Charitable Work Al
Consumptive Poor
Toronto has a modest an
chaxi '
t
organization
Y
Sa
I
know
w
Samaritan azit
an
Club b, rho me
ing ladies who h:2v
e banded
for work among the
has left for
Hong the
d
unique
LORD S'TRAT$ICONA HONOR
ooie
Presented 'With the Royal 6
Albert t Modal.
A despatch from Condom
n as the At the Eta al ss.
mbdxs be- Frida y Society of Arte
Y 8vening Lar
d Sand
er
to so
Lt n
together g bah„elf of •the Duke oaf Cannaug
ive
who ie president of the society,
meted Lord Stretheona wip
eoeiety's Albert medal, for nerve
in improving- railway communis
tion nand
developing p I
ng the reseuri
of Canada, and for services to t
Empire in general,
ansutnpt
poor. The main idea is one which
might be adopted in every town end
village throughout Canada, while
even in the tiniest settlement any
Christian to
n womanwho feels a call
to help less fortunate sisters can
constitute herself a Samaritan Club.
of one, and find • effective work to
do in her neighborhood, The To-
ronto ladies have formed the fol-
lowing committees: ' The Supply
Committee, to provide clothing for
consumptive and their families, The
Nourishment Committee, to pro-
vide milk, eggs,• -and other neces-
sities
s.
nd
delicacies
fo
r atients at
their homes; and soup for weak and
hungry patients at the free dispen-
sary, The Welfare Committee, . for
delivering twenty minute talks on
the cure a11d avoidance of consump-
tion at places where ten or more
girls are employed, thus spreading
a knowledge of the disease and its
prevention.
ENGINE BOILER EXPLODES.
IIt'i9'anuan Fatally Hurt and Engineer
Critieally Injured,
A despatch from Hamilton sacs:
Two men were injured, Ono fatally
and the other critically, and several
Per's'ons were shaken un early on
Friday, when the engine of G.T.R.
train No, 11, an accommodation
running between Niagara Falls and
Windsor, exploded at the."Y".near
the .I?esjardins Canal. The victims
were :-George B, Cook, engineer,
Niagara
,
aI'al1
ed 55
badly scalded a� ut the brest ears;faceand hands, lacerated about 'the
shoulders, and suffered from shook,
will probably recover; 'Sanas!
Sault, fireman, Niagara Falls, N.
Y., aged 38, right leg crushed, had
to be amputated at the knee; skull
fracoure,d; terribly scalded about
the upper portion of the body.
Taken to City: Hospital, where he
died at 1.30 in the afternoon.
I BTJSI
su.®R°HAN.2
Subjects taught at bythexpert instructors
e
EJ,.•d'
d%�� i!
LO'L DON, O1VT
Students assisted to positions. College
in
sEn. from Sept, 3rd. Cate/ague
free.Enter anytime.
J. W. Westervelt J. W. Westervelt Jr.
Principal Cl screed Aeoountsnt
l6. ViOe-P11aWpn!
TIER Banker, the Business
Man and. Shrewd Ieves-
tor tc-Any places his eurpl,s
in Bonds.
Bonds have the security
behind thein : which alm.
lately assures payment hof
principal and interest.
Pl4s.
y'„
p'ty a high rate of
interest and are easily eons
verted into cash.
Me are in the market to
buy ,and still Bonds. Write
els.
J. A. MACKAY t COMPAa
Guardian Olde, Royal Sank Sldg,
MOW/ REAL, TORONTO
IT, B. Ii0USS1:R, .Toronto Manager.
Surely you can spare a dollar or two
from
your pay envelope this week.
rOpen a savings account and get3� v
interest, payable half yearly.
rs' Keep up the savinghabit t and, you will
soon have Sum er more, when you can
buy our debentures and get 4% on
your money. Issued for $100 and
- upwards. Terms one to five years.
Do this with a safe and well-known
cr1
mpany-...,.with the ootliyfo01t1 COM -
pally is Canada !laving a reserve
'fund, equal to its paid-up capital.
Nati, rrpora0e4l 4554,
asai1
)ver 13
'kali Assets
k._
6
PURE — PALATABLE ---- NUTRITI
OU -
5 -
'BEVERAGES
FOR SALE
BY WINE AND SPIRIT MERCHANTS EVERYWHERE
LOCAL OPTION -Residents illthe local option districts
can legally order from this brew
require for personal or family . Write whatever they
I
12 se. ,
t0
JOHN LABATT; LIMITEn, CANADALONDON,