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Durham Review (1897), 19 Aug 1897, p. 7

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tory. f Sash, Lonest mitor® going apedy 80080 differâ€" eting. a@ll orders t. _ My all of always them, of the PRIâ€" vel= t of ST. prepared "Ad «aAl Ry Neb., on Saturday. _ Es Seven persons were killed by Friday‘s cyclone at San Jose, ..l. In the House of Commons on Monâ€" day evening the Government grant of «ighty thoumand pounds towards the jubilena celebration was opposed by some of the Irish members, but was carried by a vote of one hundred and sixtyâ€"two to twelve. Right Hon. Joseph _ Chamberlain stated in the House of Commons that the denunciation of the German and Bt;lglan treaties was the unanimous wish of the selfâ€"governing colonies, wish of the selfâ€"governing colonies, who desired to deal with {ht United hkingdom on preferential terms. UNITED STATES. _It was 104 in the shade in Lincoln, Neb., on Saturday. day with Lord Lansdowne, with referâ€" mc« to the Georgian Bay and Cttawa Cinal, and he was promised ali the asâ€" «stince in the power of the Secretary of State for War. The King of Siam arrived on Wednesâ€" day at Portsmouth, where bhe was reâ€" ceived by the Prince of Wales. He had un â€"heon with the Queen at Osborne house, and tea with the Prince and Primcess of Wales on board the royal yacut Osborne. The Imfer'ml Government has deâ€" cided to build a harbour and graving deck at Simonstown, in Cape Colony. add Britain The Chicf Justice of Canada, Sir saumuel Henry Strong, is now sitting daily as a member of the Judicial Comâ€" mittee of the Imperial Privy Council. Regulations respecting the issue of ases to drods for minerals in the submerged beds of rivers in Maniâ€" oba and the Northâ€"west Territories 11re been made by Orderâ€"inâ€"Council. Mr. J. B. Riley, the retiring United States Consqy! at Ottawa, was presentâ€" ed with a valuable silver dinner serâ€" vise _ and a _ goldâ€"headed _ walkingâ€" cane, and a diamond ring for Mrs. Riley. The address was read by Senaâ€" tor Scott. Judge 'l‘ulehy decided on Friday that the Chicago ordinance establishing a vehicle tax. including bicycles, is void. Thieves entered Garland‘s general store at Portage la Prairie, and Mr. Mr. McLeod Stewart, the ex-Mai:r ol Ottawa, had am interview the other she is afraid of sumstroke this warm weather after her long incarceration. Sir Wilfrid Laurier will sail for Canâ€" adra on the Labrador on the 19th inst. Sir Logyis Davies will leave Liverpool on the 26th inst. 6 .nY Egypt ;’ &.'°°“ fileld for the deâ€" valopment nadian trade. Mr. Joseph Lavergnoe, who representâ€" ad Dr ond and Arthabaska in the House q t‘ommou has been appointâ€" ced aJudge of the Superior Court of (Quebec for the Ottawa district. A company has been organized in \Iontm for the purpose of sending .n expedition to the Yukon district upâ€" »» the coâ€"operative plan. The miners ingaged are to have a share of the proâ€" titw. seriously ill. It is stated that a site has been seâ€" lected in Killarney for a Royal resiâ€" dence in Ireland. Qiemier Greenway, who has been in Bouthwesiern Manitoba, reports that the crops have decidedly improved, and are looking better than they did at t his time last year. Montreal‘s reoelptlon to Sir Wilfrid Laurier will likely take the form of a Laurier day at the Exposition, to be followed b&‘ a banquet given by the Board of Trade. Mr. E. A. Wells, of Alexandria, E%: rpt, wriites to the Dominion Depar nent of ’l'x.'ado and Commerce suggestâ€" Vizscount Garnet Wolsw!:‘. Commandâ€" erâ€"inâ€"Chief of the British army, is ) d, the caretaker, fired on them. Ome 3% retwrned the fire,â€" woundâ€" ag the caretaker in| the laft shoulder. The Imperial Parliament was proroâ€" gued with the usual speech from the throne. »rung the question of opening a route nto the Yukon via Edinonton. Thomas Telford, of Kingston, who reâ€" ently diuxpoarod in London, Eng., has been found in a hospital there. He had been sandbagged and robbed. A war map of the Dominion of Canâ€" ada is in process of greparation. It will show all the roads, bridges, towns, vilâ€" lages, farms, blacksmith shops and storesa. Manitoba millers have advanced the C:l“ of flour in Montreal 25 cents a rrel, the third raise within the past few weeks, largely due to the increasâ€" ad cost of wheat. i Referring to the mission of Mr. E. E. | Sheppard, of Toronto, to open up trade : between Canada and Mexico, a City of | Mexico despatch says Canadian lumber will ind a market, as well as various lines of manufactured goods, if properâ€" | ly introduced. | The Countess of Craven, nee Carnelia Martin, of New York, has given birth to a som. An order has been issued liberating Mrs. ler, of Gatineau Point, who was rled for uurtering her husband, but the refumed to leave on the ground that A despatch from Winnipeg says that there will be no difficulty in placing farm bands in Manitoba as soon as they arrive. A reorganlis:tion of the Militia Deâ€" sartment which will effect a saving u{.cuumy thousand _ dollars will take » @. John Flack, a resident of St. Catharâ€" nes, was on Saturday morning run avez' :)lid a rumaway team, and instantâ€" y ki 7 mg to a interesting Items About Our Gwn The Dominion Minister of Militia has ruthorlzed the holding of the usual n%tunn camps of instruction for the aailitia. CR 00 Cemin) sCemeecg‘t Great Britain, the United States, and All Parts of the (iobe, Condensed and Asserted for Easy Reading. CANADA. Rev. Alexander Grant, of Winnipeg was drowned in the Nepigon River. Two new cases of smallpox have deâ€" ‘sloped in Westmount, a suburb of Montreal. By a majority of 15 a local option byâ€" aw was carried in Wainfleet Township, Welland County. Steamship rates on grain from Montâ€" real and Livotpoo]k have nearly doubled within a comparatively short time. It is expected that the telegraph line from the head of Lynn canal to the Kiondyke can e buiit before the winâ€" ter THE VERY &QE??PROM ALL THE GREAT BRITAIN +pimpal S CAMCOH REUIL E) innipeg dispatch, is maat mm â€"af ananine« considâ€" | _ Owing to the expected bad harvest ’the Russian Government intends to prohibit the exportation of grain this year. ' The Emperor and Empress of Gerâ€" \many arrived at Cronstadt on Saturâ€" dCay. and were cordially received by the zar. | Capt.â€"General Weyler has signed an order expelling from Cuba two New | York newspaper correspondents. \ _ The Carlists expect that Don Carlos | will be at the head of his forces in ‘Spain before the end of February next. According to reports from Madrid, received at London, the Portuguese CGovernment is setting the constituâ€" tion at defiance, and adopting the most stringent repressive measures. Grave charges are being formu a.ed against the Boers. It is said they supâ€" A Chinese pirate captured the Britâ€" tish steamer Pogu on July 14, murâ€" dered the captain and seven of â€" his crew and plundered the ship. decl: Eliahj Boulde Glonm of Newark, N.J., cglabraied his one hundred and third birthday on Friday, and hoges to live to cast a vote for Bryan a the next United States Presidential election. Mr. A. Booth, of Duluth, Minn., has protested agaimst the duty of a quarter cent a poumnd levied on fish caught in Canadian waters and brought into the United States. He will make of the colâ€" lector‘s levy a test case. Charles W. Sgaulding, exâ€"treasurer of the Illinois State University, and former president of the Globe Savings Bank, has been found gnilt{ at Chiâ€" cago by a jury in the third trial. The charge was hypothecating $25,000 in Macupin County bonds. Prof. Elliott, of Cleveland, thinks that Mr. Foster, who was sent to Engâ€" land in regard to the seal question, is a_ diplomatic failure. He has _ seâ€" cured nothing from the Salisbury Govâ€" ernment. The Canadians are in conâ€" trol of the situation, and at the comâ€" ing conference they will skin Mr. Fosâ€" Nearly 100 persons have been drownâ€" ed in Silesia. The Japanese Government has orderâ€" ed from Germany a nine thousand ton battleship. The Vatican, including the Pope himâ€" self, is actively engaged â€" in a _ camâ€" i))aign to stimulate the revenue from eter‘s pence. The Cologne Gazette says that the proposal of Germany _ for European control of Greek finances has been acâ€" cepted by the powers. It is reported that a reign of terror exists in Portugal. It is reported that Belgium will enâ€" deavor to arrange a commercial treaty with Canada. Trouble bas arisen on the Turkoâ€"Perâ€" sian border, and both Governments are despatching troops. ter as they ‘"skinned" him before at the Paris tribunal. _ The reports of the commercial agenâ€" cres as to the condition of trade in the United Atates, are of a more encouragâ€" ing nature, and state that the moveâ€" ment of general merchandise throughâ€" out the country has increased, as inâ€" dirated by the expansion in bank clearâ€" mgas. _ The export trade for the 231'05- ent fiscal year shows a gain of per cent. _ Iron, cotton, and wool indusâ€" tries are in an improved condition. There has been a sharp increase in the export of wheat and flowr, and wheat is in a stronger position than for years. The retwrns of 40 railway companies show a net gain of 8 per cent., as comâ€" pared with July, Yellow fever is ravishing the Spanish troops, and is proving the best friend of the insurgents. Floods at Johannisbad, Bohemia, have caused great loss of life and destrucâ€" tion to property. There has been a‘veritable epidemic of suicide in Paris for some weeks past, the heat adding to the number of cases. The cloudbursts and inundations which have devagtated the eastern part of Germany have caused a serious loss of life. General Weyler commander of the Spanish force in Cuba, will grant amnesty to 1500 exiles. In the recent fighting hefore Fort Chakdara, two thousand seven hundred of the tribesmen were killed. The steamship Mariposa sailed from Sydney, N.S.W., for San Francisco on Tuesday with 450,000 sovereigns. t inree thousand men engaged in the l;uilgiu trades went on st:'&o in New ork. New York postâ€"office inspectors asâ€" sert that the foreign mails are being systematically robbed. The Prince of Wales will attend the sutumn military manoeuvres at Hamâ€" burg September 3rd. Erastus Wiman has taken out his final papers in New York, which makes him an American citizen. It is reported from Pen:{, 0. *%., that outlaws have kille Quannah fprkor, chief of the Commanche Inâ€" The Washington authorities admit that beyond any ible doubt the Klondike gold (ielg‘:re in British terâ€" Dr. Fred W. Evelyn, of San Francisâ€" co, claims that he has discovered a perâ€" :’Olcoiddrmk cure in injections of horses‘ The Glucose Sugar Refining Comâ€" ny, with a .capital stock of $40,000,â€" 0, has been incorporated at Trenton, Ruite CR y Loughead of Sarnia won (he GENERAL. d c mCs u aled main independent. iedA Japan threatensits make a naval deâ€" monstration, in Hawaiian waters, and will insist that the United States asâ€" sume & contingent_ responsibility in the matter of arbitration of her differences with Hawaii on the subject of immigraâ€" tion and the tariff. . for "making an absolute police reguâ€" lation do duty as a secret assassin.‘ Acoord.'m?' to a Tokio paper, the Forâ€" mosa rebels seem to have an underâ€" standing with the high officials of China, and their plan is to attack forâ€" The Japanese Minister to the City of Mexico, in an interview, says that Japan, while having no desirs to anâ€" nex the Hawniian islands is opposed to their abs:':?tion by the United States. Jrnan would prefer the islands to reâ€" ;ia:xr&ffige] and residences, and otherâ€" wisd molest foreigners, so as to start international trouwble. . Senor Calbajer, a Cuban refugee, who arrived at Tampa, Fla., on Sunday, says that the insurgents attacked the village of Marnano, killed 49 Spanish soldiers, wounded 120 and took possesâ€" sion of the place. Owing to the amendments to the peace agreements introduced by Tewâ€" lik Pasha. the discussion of which would occupy a couEle of weeks, it is exâ€" pected that the powers will send anâ€" other ultimatum to expedite the Porte. A n;ews#)aper in Bombay prints a bhighly\ inflammatory article, attacking the â€"Indian Government for " the prosecution of obscure persons," and A despatch from Athens ua'ys that a sharp engagement took place beâ€" tween 2,000 Turkish troops and the armed, population of the villages lying between Rdetsovo, Trikala and Kolarâ€" rytes. The report that Mr. Cecil Rhodes and Mr. Alfred Beit has personally paid two hundred and fi{ty tgousand pounds to the Transvaal Government in inâ€" demnity for the Jameson raid is officiâ€" ally denied. The great volcano of Mayon, on the island of Luzon, one of the Philippine group, has been in wviolent eruption since June 24, and it is estimated that thousands of the inhabitants have lost their lives. plied the Matabele witharms, and exâ€" acted very heavy bribes from the South African Chartered Company. Much interest is taken in French naval circles at the discovery of a composition which is alleged to have the marvellous property of renderin vessels invisible beneath the rays o% electric searchlights. The Japanese Government is said to be seriously embarrassed financially, arising out of the increased demands in every direction on account of Japâ€" an taking her place as.a civilized mnaâ€" tion. FROM JUNEAU TO THE KLONDIKE. Being a Pictorial Map, Showing the Route of the Journey, the Distances and how the Trip is Accomplished. TORONTO advance of the Dongola expedition, have shown every kind of rejoicing at their deliverance from dervish oppresâ€" S1GB. . io 6 h A lnrg: nutnber of prisoners, arms standards, camels, tmf horses, with other propert;y .was taken. The Nile at Merawi is in a uflpp poâ€" pleaant state from corpses floaling aovhk. The innabllknisa as during the The dervishers repeatedly charged through the narrow streets. Finally their cavalry, having lost more than balf their number fled precipitately, followed by about 100 infantry. These were all that escaped. The dervish commander, Mohammed Zein, was captured. Another wellâ€"known Emir stubboraly defended himself with his followers in a strongly fortified house, and was only killed at last when the house was destroyed by the artillery. After carrying the high ground overâ€" looking the town, the Angloâ€"Egyptain troops nmdvanred to the attack upon the village. A stuwbborn houseâ€"toâ€"house fight ensued, and Col. Hunter was obliged to bring up the artillery before it was possible to carry the position. The total loss was 21 killed and 61 wounded, of whom thse Tenth Soudanâ€" es> Battalion lost 14 killed, among them two British officers, and 34 wounded. Major H. M. Sidney fell mortally wounded while leading his men to the attack, and died in five minutes. Lt. Fitzclarence was shot almost at the same moment through the heart. Three Egyptian officers received severe gunshot wounds. Col. Hunter, in his despatches, bhighiy praises the steadiâ€" mess and dash of’ the troops throughâ€" out the emgagement. The village is a network otp:;rowdsed bouses and twistâ€" ing, narrow alleys, so that most of the fighting was done at the point of the Stubborn Resistance of the Dervishes â€" Stceadiness and Dash of the Angloâ€"Egypâ€" tian Troops â€" Severe MHouseâ€"to House Fighting. Offirial despatches from Assouan, on the Nile, near the first cataract, give details of the capture of Atbu Hamed on August 7, by the Angloâ€"Egyptain troops under Col. Huinter; after an 18â€" houwrs‘ march from Merawi. Col. Humter kept all his preparations for the attack a strict secret in order to prevent the spies of the Khalifa in the Soulan from getting wind of his plans. _ He declined to allow any newsâ€" paper correspondents to accompany ths columns to the front. The garrison at Abu Hamed had THE ABU HAMED FIGHT. The India Rubber Company of Mexâ€"‘ fco, an English corporation with a‘ paid up a:g&l of $2,000,000 is going inâ€"| to the rubber industry in Mexico on an extensive scale. This company is now | lanting 5,000,000 rubber trees on their r:nds in the district of Pocbutia, this Etate. They have 400 men at work on‘ the land now. A Money Lender and ftis Sister Killed by Burglarsâ€"Their Residence Ransacked _ A despatch from North Adams, Mass., says:â€"A borrible double murder was discovered in this city on Saturday, when the bodies of Henry J. Reed, a money lender, and his sister, Blanche M. Reed were found in their home, on Webster avenue, having heen killed by burglars. The house dad evidently been entered during the night, and the burglars discovered by Miss Reed, who was killed before she could make a disâ€" turbance, and then the brother was beaten to death because he refused to disclosq the hiding place ol his money. Everything was in confusion; the body of Miss Reed, battered and almost unâ€" recognizable, lay across the threshold of her bedroom, door, while in his room on: the bed, concealed by the covering, lay the body of Henry Reed, gagged and also covered with blood. f: the man‘s head was a wound which looked as if it had been made by a bullet, but from other marks it was apparent that a heavy implement of some sort had been used to beat the head almost to a pulp. The affair has created the greatest excitement here. Of the passengers, forty were tourâ€" ists and others were coming south from different Alaskan ports. Includâ€" ed in the latter were a party of naturâ€" alists, .who had spent the summer in Western Alaska collecting specimens for the Columbian museum. Their speâ€" cimens and notes went down with the steamer. Many of her passengers were returning from the gold fields, loaded down with fortunes in the yellow metal. This is now at the bottom of the sea, but there will be little difâ€" ficulty in raising it. The Mexico was valued at shout 0100,(Pl)0.t Sh‘? wu;:wnedh ln((’/ run by the Pacific sgl Steamship Company, and was fielfinown on ptbo %?Junfl. She was built in San Francisco in 1892. Her glt:ss tonnage was 1,797; net, 1,840. She was 275 feet in length, 86â€"{foot beam, and had a nominal horseâ€" power of 1,500. © _ Dixon‘s Entrance, separates the Graâ€" ham Island of the Queen Charlotte group from, the Prince of Wales is lands. It is a broad channel and conâ€" stitutes the dividing line _ between Canadian and American Alaska. The Mexico was on ber way from Dyea, from which city the City of Topeka has just arrived, and bhad crossed the boundary line. Devil‘s Rock is in American waâ€" ters, and the vessel sank just off Cape Muxon. been much increased since the Khaliâ€" fa‘s defeat of the Jaalin tribe and the capture of Metemuch by his forces. On the other hand, Col. Hunter‘s troops were assisted in capturing the town by some of the friendly Arabs from Murad. The loss of Major Sidney and Liout. Fitzclarence is deeply deplored. They were very popular men in the army. merself on a Sunken Kock â€" Had on Board Treasures From the Xulon. A _ greturning Alaska steamship brought the startling news to Victoria, B.C., on Tuesday that a steamer havyâ€" ing aboard a lange party of Klondike gold seekers, had gone to the botâ€" tom in Dixon‘s Entrance on August steamer is the Mexico, one of the finest oi the Pacific coast fleet. She was mauking her way from Dyea to Seattle. About 150 prospectors, miners, and forâ€" tuneâ€"bunters were aboard with their The City of Topeka, which arrived later, brought further information reâ€" garding the illâ€"{ated _ vessel. (The HORRIBLE DOUBLE MURDER. with all their gathere&i lreaâ€" THE STEAMER. &;&}bié-lxou. lE ts PCOR A â€"method of transporting fnin t.h.rou?h irom pipes, by means o‘ sucâ€" tion. from «listant farms to the seaâ€" board. has been devised by an inventor A fashionable New York tailor, some of whose patrons are extravagant but rather tir‘ly in payment. has his bills embeliished with a floral Lorder of forâ€" The cause of the explosion is not known, though it is attributed to careâ€" lessness on the part of one ol the workâ€" men in bandiing the explosives. Inâ€" tense excitement prevails in the city. such was the force of the explosion that wipdows were . shattered in Giurgevo on the other side of the river. Of the 200 boys and girls employed in the factory 56 are known to have been killed, the bodies of that number baving been recovered, while 25b are so badly injured that their recovery is umpossille, and 83 0thers, leâ€"s seriously hurt, are now in the hospitals. A maâ€" jority of the remainder of the employes suffered minor injuries the number of those whoescaped unburt being very small. Most of those who lost their lives were either blown to pieces of drowned in the Danube. A second powder depot, situated near the buildâ€" ing in which the explosion occurred, escaped destruction. Rustchuk is a city on the soulth hank of the Danube, forty miles from Bucharest. It has 20,000 inbabitants, and the cartridge depot is one of the largest in â€" Buigaria. Prince Ferdinand of Bulgaria on reâ€" ceipt of the news of the disaster, visitâ€" ed the sufferers from the explosion at the bospital and caused money to ‘hae distributed to the families of the vice tims. Cartridge Factory Explodes in Ruilgariaâ€"A Â¥Very Large Loss of Litfe, A despatch from Sofia saysâ€"There was an explosion on Friday t the cartridge factory of Rusichuk, one bundred and thirtyâ€"nine miles northâ€" west â€" of Varna. Fortyâ€"six _ persons were killed outright, and many othâ€" ers were injured. The lives of sixty of the latter are despaired of. At N N. S., the c are all rq)ortfl as looking well ana makâ€" ing rapid prcxteu. Owing to the cold and backward spring the early outâ€" look was not encouraging, but with the advent of warm weather growth has been very mTid and everything now promises well. Most of the hay crop has been harvested in good conâ€" dition and the yield has been hbetter than anticipated. GOOD CROPS BEING HAKVESTED AT ALL OF THEK. At Agassiz, BC., the grain crops promise well. The barley harvest is now about over, while the oats were being cut at the time the last advices were received. The fruit crop is turnâ€" ing out better than expected. Some of the early plums and pears have already ripened, with a few sorts of early peaches. Plums are ripening two weeks earlier thain last season and some varietiese mre bearing _ very bheavily. _ Apples and pears are also turning out well. _ _ _ _ EXPERIMENTAL STATIONS. Bright Prospects in Manitoba, the North west Territories, British Columbia and Nova Scotia, At the Central Farm, Ottawa, barâ€" vest operations are now being briskly pushed forward. Most of the varieties of barley have been cut and many of them have been safely bhoused, and a number of different sorts of oats are now being daily harvested. The succes sive and frequent rains which have fall« en during the last three weeks have lessened the prospects for heavy crops, which were very good prior to the set» ting in of this unfavorable weather. During the damp period rust has made rapid progress. While some varieties are expected to yield well, the yields of the greater number wil} be materiâ€" ally lessened from this cause. Rust has prevailed to a very considerable extent on all the varieties of wheat, barley and oats, those claiming to be rustâ€" proof suffering about as much as the other sorts. The oats and wheat have suffered more than the barley. Corn has grown wonderfully well during the past three or four weeks and promises a very heavy yield. The same may be said of turnips, mangels and carrots. Potatoes are also making strong growth and are expected to give good results. At Indian Head. NWT.. the crops of barley are said to be in fine condition and on Augsust 1 the ficlds woere @xâ€" pected tobefit to cut in a week. The dry weather in the spring and early summer prevented the wheat from gerâ€" minating evenly, and in many sections this unevenness may militate against a uniform sample of grain but wherâ€" ever the ground has been thoroughly From Brandon, Manitoba the reports up to the middle of July were not very favorable owing to the injury done early in the season by spring frosts and lack of rainfall, but since then the genâ€" eral condition of the ‘Xropo has very much improved and with reasonably‘ good weather from this time forward the wheat is expected to be an average yield and in some districts may run above the average. As the prioeoftlut grain is now eighteen cents per bushe more than it was a year ago a good crop will insure a large return to the farmers. â€" Oats in Manito‘a which were more injured by wind and frosts than the wheat, have not yet fully reâ€" covered, and while the conditions vary much in different parts of the Province the general impression is that the oat crop will be below the average. At present the prospects are that the harâ€" vest will be early, ___ _ § prepared _ hy summerâ€"fallowins the moisture in the soil has been conseryâ€" ed and the crops are said to be in m very good condition. | C THE USUES OF CLOVES TERRIBLE DISASTER. city on the south bank the #

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