Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 1 Mar 1906, p. 6

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_______________________________________â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€"- MORE ONTARIO INSANITY FLASHES FROM THE WIRE LEADING “MARKETS BREADSTUFFS. Toronto, Feb. 27. â€" Wheat -â€" Ontario -â€"â€"No. 2 white and red 77%0, mixed .776, spring and goose 74c, at outside paints. Wheat â€" Manitoba â€" No. 1 hard 87c, No. 1 Northern 85%c, No. 2 northern $30, No. 3 northern 81%0, at lake ports; all-rail quotations, at North Bay, are 37c more than these prices. {dourâ€"Ontario â€" Best bid for export, $3.10, buyers’ bags, at outside points, for 90 per cent. patents; high patents, at Toronto, bags included, are quoted at $3.65; 90 per cent. patents, $3.50; Mani- toba prices are easier, $4.30 for first pat- ents, $4.40 for second patents and $3.90 for bakers'. Millfeed -â€" Ontario bran, $16.50 to $17, in bags, outside; shorts, $16 to $17.50; Manitoba bran, $19, shorts $20, at Toronto and equal points. Oatsâ€"1c lower, at 340 for No. 2 white and 33c for No. 2 mixed, at outside points. Barleyâ€"Quiet, 49c to 4934c for No. 2 46(- to 46%c for No. 3 extra, and 44c for No. 3. at outside points. Peas â€"â€" at 770 to 77%c, outside. Ryeâ€"At 69c to 70c, outside, Cornâ€"Canadianâ€"4lc to 42c, Chatham freights; American No. 3 yellow, 48c; mixed 47%c, at Toronto. ‘dliuckwheat â€" At 500 to 50%c, out- 81 COUNTRY PRODUCE. Butter~â€"Reccipts of Creamery continue light, while there is an active demand by reason of the scarcity of choice dairy Creamery .... .... 24ct0250 do solids . . . . . . . . . . . . 220 to 23c Dairy lb. rolls, good to choice 180 to 190 do large rolls 17ctolSc do medium ...... 16cto17c Cheese â€" Holds steady at 13%c for large and 13%0 for twins. Poultryâ€"Choice dry plucked are quot- ed:~â€"-Fat chickens, IOC to 110, thin 7c to Sc; fat hens 7340 to 8%c, thin tie to 7c; ducks 12c to 13c, thin Go to Sc; geese, 10c to 11¢; turkeys, 14c to 15c, for choice small lots. Potatoes â€" Ontario, 65c to '56 per bag on track here, 75c to 85c out of store; eastern, 70c to 80c on track, and 80c to 90¢ out of store. Dressed Hogs â€"â€" The market has taken on an easier tone, but practically none are coming here and it is impossible to quote figures. Baled Hayâ€"$8 per ton for No. 1 tim- ivthy 2on track here, and $5.50 to $6 for o. . Baled Strawâ€"$5.50 to $6 per ton for car lots on track here. ...o â€"_ MONTREAL MARKETS. Montreal, Feb. 27.â€"Tliere was an im- proved demand for Manitoba spring wheat this morning and a better feeling prevailed. 39Oats â€"- No. 2, 410; No. 3, 40c; No. 4 c. Peas â€" 7.90 Lab per bushel. Barley â€" Manitoba, No. 3, 4934c to 500; No. 4, 48%c. Cornâ€"American mixed, 52%c; No. yellow, 53c ex track. Flourâ€"Manitoba spring wheat patents, $4.50 to $4.60;,.strong bakers’ $4 to $4.- 10; winter wheat patents, $4.25 to $4.50; straight rollers, $4 to $4.10; do in bags, $1.85 to $1.95; extras $1.65 to $1.75. Millfeedâ€"Manitoba bran, in bagS. $19; shorts, $20 per ton; Ontario bran, in bulk $14.50 to $15; shorts, $20; milled mouille, $21 to $24; straight grain mouille, $25 to $27 per ton. Rolled Oats â€" Per bag, $190 to $1.95. Cornmea141.30 to $1.40 per bag. Hay â€"â€" No. 1, $8 to $8.50; No. 2, $7 to $7.50; clover, mixed, $6 to $6.50. Cheeseâ€"unchanged at 13c to 13%c. Butterâ€"Fair at 22c to 22%c for choice creamery, 21%c to 22 c for undergrades. Eggsâ€"New laid selling at 170 to 18c, fall stock at 14c and timed at 12c to 13c. Beansâ€"Choice primes, $1.65 to $1.70 per bushel; handpicked, $1.80. Peasâ€"Boiling, in car-load lots, 90c to $1.05 per bushel. “oPotatoesâ€"Per bag of 80 lbs, 65c to l C. ‘ Honeyâ€"White clover, in comb, 13c to 140 per pound section; extract, Sc to 90' buckwheat, 6%: to 7c. ‘ Provisions â€" Heavy Canadian short cut pork, $21; light short cut, $20; Am- erican short cut, $20; American cut clear fat back, $19 to $20; compound lard, 6%0 to 7Xc; Canadian pure lard, llxc to 12c; kettle rendered, 12%c to 13¢; hams, 120 to 13%0, according to Size; bacon, 14%c;-fresh killed abattoir dressed hogs, $10 to $10.25; country dressed, $8.75 to $9.50; alive, $7.75, and $7.50 for selects and mixed lots. 3 _ BUFFALO MARKETS. 'Buffalo, N. Y., Feb. 27. â€" Flour â€" Firm. Wheat â€" Spring, dull; No. 1 northern, 87%c, cartoads; Winter offer- ings light; No. 2 red, 89c, through billed. (.orn â€" Strong; No. 2 yellow, 45%0; No. 2 corn, 44%c. Oats â€" Firm; No. 2 white, 34c; No. 2 mixed, 32)“. Barley 4â€"Steady; Western in store quoted at gcto 550. Ryeâ€"Dull; No. 1 on track I . , NE\V YORK WHEAT MARKET. New York, Feb. 27. â€" Spot stead ' No. 2 red, scxc elevator; No. 2 red, ass/yr: f.o.b., afloat; No. 1 northern, 913:0 f‘o b. afloat. ' . LIVE STOCK MARKET. Toronto, Feb. 27.â€"An active demand permeated the Western Market today. Light exporters’ . butchers’ owing to the scarcity of the latter. Heavy exporters’ were in good demand. The following prices were quotedâ€"Good exporters’, $4.90 to $5.25 per cwt.; medium animals sold at $4 50 upwards. were bought up r51 CURE FOR CONSUMPTION. Even fair to good cows were firm. A few choice heifers sold at $4.50 to $5 per ch The following quotations obtained in the other clamsâ€"Good, $4.25 to $4.45; medium, $3.80 to $4.10; cows, S2.- 05 to $3.80. An improvement was noticeable in short-keep feeders, with the advance of the season and the mildness of the \vea- ther. Stockers were also in request. Good short-keeps sold at $4.30 to $4.50 per cwt. I Deliveries of hogs were a little larger tc-day, and prices were unchanged. ,_.â€"â€"â€"+â€"â€"~ ATTEMPTED MURDER. Farmer Shot Thrice While Returning Home From Owen Sound. Italian Physician Discovers Antiâ€"Tuber- culosis Serum. A despatch from Paris says: Professor Bouchard has informed a correspondent cf the Matin that a new method of treating consumption has been discov- ered and tested with some measure of success by Dr. Marigilano, of Genoa. The doctor has produced a tubcl'cline extracted from tuberculosis bacilli. An organism into which this tubercline is injected has its powers of resistance in- creased, and will withstand a second larger injection of the same poison which will kill an organism lhat had not been inoculated. Dr. Marigliano, in fact, claims to have discovered an anti- tubcrculous scrum, which he has used on men with satisfactory results. I‘m- lessor Bouchard himself has experiment- eo with the serum. His first subject was completely cured by it, but later tests were less conclusive. .__.__+_.__ MOTHER OF TWENTY-FIVE. A despaich from Owen Sound says. Wm. Morrison. a prosperous farmer living near Leith, six miles from here, was shot twice through the head and robbed of $145 while returning from Owen Sound on Wednesday night. He was found in an unconscious condition some time after. So far no trace has been found of the highwayman. Morrison came to town on Wednesday with a load of hogs, which be disposed of for about $145. He left for home about dusk, and took the shore road. At a lonely spot, where trees shelter the road on both sides, he was attacked, shot twice through the head, and robbed. When found he was taken to his home in Leith, and doctors were summoned from Owen Sound. Morrison‘s injuries will not prove fatal unless blood-poisoning sets in. He will, however, lose the sight of one eye. The event has stirred up the whole neighborhood, and is the first to have occurred in that section. AN ARREST MADE. The sensation arising out of the mur- derous attempt upon the life of James Morrison, the Sydenham farmer who was shot at by a young desperado to whom he was giving a ride on Wednes- day night, was increased on Friday by the arrest of Alfred Stewart, a young man about eighteen years of age, who has a police Court record and whose ap- pearance and actions coincide with those of the person described as connected with the shooting. He was arrested at the home of a farmer named Handley, who lives in Keppel township, near KembIe postcffice, twelve miles from "ad Six Pairs of Twins and “ins Sister to Twentyâ€"six. A despalch from Denver says: Mrs. Elizabeth Conway, the mother of twcn- tyâ€"tive children, nineteen boys and six girls, of whom there were six pairs of twins, (lied on Friday at the age of fifty-nine years from heart disease. Mrs. Conway was the youngest of a family of twenty-seven children. She was mar- ried at the age of fourteen. and her hus- band was the youngest of a family of thirty. She was the grandmother of twenty-five. llel' mothcr lived to be ninetyâ€"nine years old. and her husband‘s mother and father attained one hundred and one hundred and two respectively. ()1 the twentyâ€"five children three (laugh- terse and five sons survive Mrs. Con- way. â€"â€"â€"+ A BRAVE YOL‘TII. Drowning Man “'cllzlnd River. A despalch from Niagara Falls, (ml., says: Ernest l3. Webb, :1 17-year-old boy, was the hero of a brave rescue from drowning in the Welland River on Thursday. A man named Snyder at- tempted to cross the river on the ice {1001‘ Rescued From the this town. Stewart is an old country the Michigan Central pumping station waif who was raised by a farmer 'n at Montrosc, but broke through into Sullivan township. At the death a few deep water. Young Webb, who is the son of a pumping engineer, procured a skiff and dragged it out on the ice till it broke through. He then got in and made his way to where Snyder was struggling for his life. He was rescued in the nick of time. years ago of the latter. the young fellow drifted into town, where a friend so- cured him employment. He had not been long in town before he was given a threemonths sentence for stealing a pail of candies from the Grand Trunk freight department. On his release be filled positions around town in inter- mittent stages. going out to work as a farm hand with the farmers of the ad- jacent sections at times. Last winter he robbed the Hogg postoflice and got a six-months sentence. ._____+_.___ KING EDWARD’S HEALTH. Has Aged Very Much in the Last Few Months. A London despatch says: It is no longer possible to ignore the unsatisfac- tory condition of King Edward’s health. Reports of this nature always cause his Majesty annoyance, and usually produce emphatic denials from the palace offici- als. These rumors have been particul- arly numerous of late, and the denials likewise. The fact remains that for some time his Majesty‘s condition has given his medical advisers some anxiety. it is persistently said that he is suffering from an affection which entails, among other things, abstinence from the use of tobacco, which is a great deprivation lo a man who has been a lifelong smok- er A correspondent is unable to gain any confirmation of this report. To be sure, his voice, when delivering the speech from the throne, opening Parlia- ment, was husky and sometimes inaud- ible, but his general weakness, ' which is quite apparent, would account for this. He has aged rapidly during the last few months. His hair and heard are now as white as snow, and his ap- pearance is almost haggard. The best information is to the effect that his Majesty is suffering from phleâ€" bitis of the leg, following a hunting ac- cident, when he stepped into a rabbit hole. He is unable to walk even a few steps without a cane, and his general condition suffers from his long depriva- tion of exercise. Dr. Sir Frederick ’I‘reâ€" ves and Dr. Sir Felix Simon visit him almost daily, and they are hopeful that they will be able to reduce the malady. W RUSSIA RAISES $200,000,000. .___+__._._ DIED AFTER 107 OPERATIONS. Case of a Massachusetts Womanâ€"One of the Strangest on Record. A despa’tch from Springfield, Mass, says: Mrs. Hattie Cronin, wife of Alex- ander E. Cronin, of No. 90 Union Street, died on Wednesday morning, after hav- ing submitted to 107 operations. Physi- cians say her case is one of the strangest on record. Mrs. Cronin was 28 years old, and had been a sufferer from dropsy of the liver for three years. During the last year operations were necessary almost every week. __+___ COMPANION OF LIVINGSTONE. Man Who Accompanied Remains of Explorer Home Dead in Hawaii. A despatch from llonolulu says; James Arthur Laing died on Tuesday at Queen’s Hospital. Laing was a Scotch- man, 62 years old, and had been em- ployed here several years as a searcher of records. He is said to have been a Fellow of the Royal Geographical So- ciety, and to have conveyed the remains of Explorer Livingstone from Zanzibar to London, and is also said to have been a member of Henry Stanley‘s Niger ex- pedition. â€"â€"â€"â€"+ PIIOTOS 0F DISEASE GERMS. An Important New Discovery In Medical Science. A dcspatch from Boston says: A dis covery of great importance in medical science has bccn made by Prof. 11. C. Ernest, the bactei'iologist of the Harvard Medical School. The discovcl'y relates to the photography of disease germs, without the aid of chemicals coloration. Prof. Ernest, who has been ossishd in his three years’ experimentation by Prof. J. L. Morse and W. C. Sabine, has evolved a process of photographing the germs by means of the soâ€"callcd ultra- violet rays of the Spccll‘lllll, so that each germ stands out separate. Fcnmerly this process of discovering the size and shape of germs was carried on by chemiâ€" cal means. .____+____ SUSPICIOI‘S OF CANADA? Fill'lT. Exploitation of Russian Turkestan by American Syndicate. A despatch from Paris says: The Matin’s correspondent at St. Petersburg states the Government has decided the National Assembly shall meet May 1. Russia's want of money is so great that she is prepared, the correspondent says. to give commercial advantages to the United States for the exploitation A Russian Turkeslan for forty years an payment of $200,000,000. ___..+â€"__ BOMBS FOR THE SUL'I‘AN. British Importch Complain of our Apple Shippers. A despatch from Ottawa says: Not- withstanding the activity of the fruit in- spectors, it is charged that fl'dtlifllft’llf packing of apples still continues. .l. B. Jackson, commercial ngcnt at tolls, quotes a North England ll-adcr as saying that the frauds pel'pcil'uted in the pack. mg of Canadian applcs have created a deep feeling of suspicion which \\ill re- quire some time to be removed. \\'hcn satisfied that the fruit is honestly packed the dealer in question is pl'l‘pal'nll to lake from 200 to 300 barrels per week, The same agent suggest: that (7.1mm. Turkish Police Make Important Discov- eries at Scutari. A dcspatch from Constantinople says: The police have made some important discoveries at Sculal‘i. They found a number of bombs and weapons. and al- so inanifcstoes calling for the assassin- ation of the Sultan. Several Arineniansi lave been al‘rcslcd. and There are some I‘VE. indications that the alleged conspiratchill-lbw it more butter \vel’c exported in shave American connections. in: all povkogcs in place of bulk. lilidc. \vhcl‘c thc pcoplc at"? jam-put 1,) ‘71 particular brand of chemo that crum- INSPECTOR'S REPORT OF IDIOT AND LUNA'I‘IC ASYLUMS. Housekeepcrs, Laborers, Farmegs and Domestic Servants Suffer Most. The thirty-eighth annual report on the lunatic and idiot osylunis of Ontario shows that there were (3,213 pallcnts certificd insane on September 30, 1000, an increase of 032 for the year, dIlI‘lng which 1,130 patients were admitted. Oil September 30, 1005, the number of pa- tients was 4,613. The total cost of main- tenance for the year was $760.204a 3 weekly cost per patient of $2.32. Re“ euue from paying patients amounted to $111,011}. D1'. Forbes Winslow is quoted as so)" ing that “alcohol must be given the first place as a cause of insanity,” With to- bacco, especially cigarette-smoking, Ilsa potent factor in lunacy. In the British asylluns inlcmpcrancc is asigned as the cause of oneâ€"quarter of the cases of iii- sanily, while in Ontario only 614 per cent. of the cases are attributed to drink. ‘ Uniformity in the manual of service l.‘ rcconlmcnl’lcd for the different insti- futiwns which have shown a disposnion to live apart instead of working in sym- palliy. The itinerant system among .‘f- ficials~ is considered a helpful one. The appointment of a Provincial pathologist is i'ccmlzliicndcd. A strong protest is once more regis- tered against the commitment of insane persons to jail. It is pointed out that the word “asylum” in connection with the insane is becoming obsolete. Hospi- an cheeseâ€"makers gc' after the Yorkshire llc also SUL’JC'nfS that it would be- tal is the proper name for institutions devoted to their care. Next to York County, which furnished >150 lunatics last year, comes Middlcscx with 03; \Vcntworlh and Frontenac had 4o ouch; Carleton, 46; Leeds and (iron- Ville. Silicon, 41. and Northumbcr- land and Durham, 40. Of the total numbcr of patients 1.097 hail from York county, 351 from Middlcscx, 280 from \‘t‘enlworth, 253 from Sincoe, and ‘Z’i5 from Carleton. As many as 613 patients have been in residence twenty years and upwards. There were 315 discharged cured during 45: the year, one of these after twenty years. The number of deaths for the year were 343, a percentage of 5.97. Scn- next Tuberculosis was the cause of ‘13. ilc decay and epilepsy were the chief causes. Of the occupations of insane persons the great bulk of them come from four classes. Housekeepch head the list for the period under survey with 5.13-l cas- es: laborers follow with 4,080; farmers, with 4,368, and domestic servants. with 9.725. The enormous difference is ap- parent when it is noted that the next two classes are wives, with (350 cases, and carpenters, with 471. Patients are given employment in the asylum to the number of 4,431, with an average number of 298 days for each pa- tient. . . .__â€"â€"+._â€"â€"â€" FIRE 0N INTERCOLONIAL. Railway Shops at Moncton, Are Wiped Out. A dos-patch from Monoton, N.B., says: The most destructive fire in the history of this city and the worst calamity that has ever hefallen the lnlercolonial Rail- way took place on Saturday night. Nearly the whole group of lnlei'colonial workshops, giving employment to over a thousand men and representing with their contcnts an investment of about one million dollars, were destroyed in two hours. It is known that one life is lost. and it is feared that there are other victims. Abraham Jones, employed in the paint shop, aged 55, lost his life in the effort to save a little stock of tobacco that he had in the building. The fire started from a piece of oily waste in the imliolstcring department of the paint shop. Tilt‘l‘C was much iii- fllimlnable matter ill that building, which burned rapidly, and the RFC got such headway that nothing could check it, and it was impossible to haul out much of the valuable rolling stock. The buildings burned include the paint shop of wood, 500 feet by 70, built in 1875; secondâ€"class and freight cur rcâ€" pnii' shop, about the same sizc; electric light stution, boiler romn, the main car shop, which was a brick Stl'llcflll‘e, 400 feet by 75, two storeys high; boiler shop. the brass foundry and Line muster mechanic’s other. and half of the map chino shop. The locomotive erecting shop is saved. The curs burned included the diningr Cfll' Yamaska, valued at $17,000; the parlor cur Cascapediu, $18,000; gcncl'ul unitingch car, $15,000; three til-st»cl:‘lss passenger cars, $10,000 cuch; one second- cluk-s, two baggage. one postal and two COlulllsl, these six worth about 3413.000. About fifty trucks and platform cars lomlcd with coal und gcncral fl'cight \vcrc burmd in the yard. 'l‘hc tire was a great spectacle. lighting up lhc surrounding country, and bcing visible twenty mile away. , â€"â€"+â€"â€"â€"â€" SHOT HIMSELF DEAD IN BOAT. Tllc N.B., (humiioquc Man Meets Death Whit-- Trapping on the River. A dcspulcll from Gononoquc stirs. Ai-lllui' Chapman. while trapping 011‘th Gnuunoquc River on Friday. nccidcnllv shot llinlsf‘lf. As he did not return llmmi. search was made for him. Below filo Grand Trunk pump-house his bout was found with his cup and gun in it. l-‘ur- tllr-r search was made, grappling li'ull: used. and the body recovered. L'pon examination it was found that he had shot hlmsclf through the lift side. 'lln- gun must have Lu‘ll close when dis: Chfll’tlt'd, as his Cont \vns burnt-ll. llc- c-nscd was abount 35 years of now". will .lca‘ivcs a wife and thzw childl'cl.. The Very Latest Items From all Part! of the Globe. CANADA. Ottawa will establish a scavenging systcm under day labor. llon. ll. \\'. Scott celebrated his 815% birthday on Saturday. The Western Fair Board, of London, reports a surplus of $0,897. Calgary will spend $130,000 in waterâ€" works cxtcnsion and electric lighting. Members of the Qucbcc Legislature are said to be agitating for an increase of indr'mnity. The Ouccnsland Government have cabled for (loo bushels of seed wheat from Manitoba. The Manitoba Public. Works Depart ment will endeavor to make portions of the Red River navigable. The assessors’ roll of Guelph shows the population to be 12,744, and an assessment of $5,063,000. An unknown friend paid a $100 note held by the Bank of Commerce against Port Dalhousie Presbyterian Church. In St. Thomas there are 14,555 pcople, with 0,329 attending church and 3,179 attending Sunday school. The Government have purchased $25,- 000 worth of Hour to send to the famine sufferers in the nortln‘un part of Japan. A prison and a refol‘nlalory at some point in the Province north of Lake ‘Supcr ior is recommended by Inspector Smith. The Ottawa Governmcnt have ap- pointed a commission to invcsigatc the wcllole system of life insurance ill Can» a a. The mills and timber limits of N. & A. Dynlent, near Thessalon, have been pur- chased by a United States syndicate fo ’ $050,000. Dr. llcroult, the French expert. is re- ported to have made very successful ex- periments in smelting iron and nickel ores by electricity at Sault Ste Marie. The Minister of Railways has received! lcsignations from five engineers and iii- spcotors held responsible for faulty work! or the Petcrlmi'o’ and lill'kflcld lift locks; Receipts from the incorporation of] Companies at the Departman of the Secretary of State totalled $120,000 iast‘ your Thr- rr-cr-ipts paid the «Expenses of the doparhncnt and left a surplus of $60000. "_â€" / GREAT BRITAIN. The British export tax on coal is be« llcvcd to be slated for removal. ‘ Gl-ncrnl Booth at London stated that the Salvation Army would send 10.000 emigrants to Canada this year. Irish Unionists will draw the British Government out on the home rule ques- tion. The Government will go on record against protection. A measure was introduced in the Bri- tish House of Commons for the remova‘ of the embargo on Canadian cattle. The second reading was set for April 6. UNITED STATES. Tho Vice-President of the United Mim. Workers says there will be no strike on April 1st. A Nebraska man was released from prison after serving twelve years for stealing one cent. Three lives were lost in a fire in the Kenyon Military Academy at Gambler, Ohio, on Friday night. Tons of spurious creamcry butter were seized at Detroit on Saturday and sev- I, end arrests were made. lloch, the notorious wife tll‘dl‘tlé‘l‘f‘lw was hanged in Chicago at 1.3l on Friday afternoon. “1 die on innocent man,” he said. While Patrolman Al. Sufi, of Flint, Mich. \vos biting off the end of a cigar, he accidcntly swallowed $2 worth of gold which had been placed in a cavity ill his toulll. Fearing tlllil there will he an anthrax. cilc strike, resulting in long idleness, many parents at Wilkesbarl’e, Pa., are taking their boys from the mines, and boys and girls from the schools, and finding positions for them in factories and stores. Howard lihrhart is lying at the point of death at his home, at York, Pa., suf- fering from lockjaw, caused by a small splinter. which he ran under his finger nail. The wound was practically unâ€" noticed. Later the whole hand became affected with blood-poisoning. A “.liick-thc-Clippcr” was chased through the streets of Chicago after he cut thc braided il‘cSS(:S from the head of a‘123-ycur»old school girl. hilt got away. lie is lwlicvcd to be the “clipper” who has, within the last few urn-ks, slashed off the hair of nearly a score of young girls. The occupants at the home of Col. Nathan, Hartford, Conn. were awakened by the ringing of an automatic burglar alarm. The t‘ulllllt’] cullt‘d up the police and bud a man which the house, but no bin-glui- put in an appearance. It came out during the day that the alarm hat’ bccn sct off by a mouse. GENERAL. The French Government will be asked to build tln‘cc 18,000-ton battleships. M. llul'novo, lussian Minister of the interior. says that it is ncccssal'y to use cvci'y severity to chuck once for all the spread of revolt. BRITISH FORCE ()\T‘IR\V!IELI\IICD. Fol-re of I-‘almlics lluvc Owrrun Portion of Sohofo. .\ dispatch from Lagos. lh'ilish \\ est Africa. Sil)'\2 .\ fun-c of i'cligious fann~ HUS i,~; l-cpoi'icd to huvv l‘lVfifft‘d and lil‘t'll‘illl it lucll'lltlll Uf Siliullli. Nf‘ll’lhm'n Xigr‘llil, from lhc north. in imx‘l: destroy- i-ll ii l’rcnch post ncul‘ lbw fruriiicr, kill- ing livc Flt-lir‘ll infirm-.4 (and capturing two. and to han ovcru'liclzncd a British dehnrhncnt, whose casuulillc; are no' [.Arn. I l J E / /,

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