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Flesherton Advance, 20 Apr 1911, p. 6

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^i^or Tea You Can't Beat Upton's'* It is the Whole Truth Briefly Told. It Is the Reason for the Enormous Sales of UPTON'S TEA Over 2 Million Packages Sold Weekly. AN ITAL UM WAS BI DEBED Two Others Wounded in a Stabbing Affray at Toronto A despatch from Toronto Bays: Jealousy over a woman was the cause of a row on Friday night at the rear of 40 Agnes Street, which ended in one man being killed and three others badly wounded. The dead man is John Rusuello, labor- er, who lived at 40 Agnes Street. H« had his throat badly gashed with a large butcher knife, and the man who is under arrest charged with the murder is Donato Panzini, of 93 Elm Street. Vincent Aociaioli. who also lives at tha Agnes Street house, is under arrest on a cb»rge of carrying firearms. Andy Male, who had his head badly cut, is be- ing held aa a material witness. Vrank Ruiselio, the brother of the Surdered man, is in St. Michael'ts ospital. He has a bad cut in the hoAd and the thumb of bis left hand Ib almott severed. It appears that Panzini and the dead man were infatuated with ths same girl, a younj$ woman by the name of Fratorti, whose father has a boarding-house at 40 Agnes Street. A number of people had gathered at the Agnes Street house, and, according to the story told the police by Anthony Fra- torti, Panzini, with some others, canM to his place on Friday even- ing with the intention of making trouble. The question of their affections for the one lady naturally came up ; and it was decided to fight it out in the back yard. This is one «f the versions the police were able to obtain on Friday night, and they think it is c«rr«ct in many details. The Italians are loth to speak on the subject and it was a considerable time after the murder before the correct name of the dead man was found out. THE KEWS IN^ PARAGRAPH HAPPENINGS FROM ALL OTEB THE GLORE IN â-² NUTSHELL. Canada, the Empire and the World in Geaeral Bc(»re I'sur Eye*. CANADA. Th« Ontario Government may build a custodial institution Cor the care of the insane. Mr. David Wilson, a prominent contractor, of Uananoque, died from blood-poisoning on Friday. The Uovernnieut is permitting an American training ship to pass through the canals to Lake Michi- gan. The Government will not pay for dredging done without authority by the Loggie Company at Bath.irst, N. B. Sir Alan Aylesworth announced in the Commons that he may recon- sider his determination to retire from public life. The Quebec, Montreal & South I Shore Railway bridge at Yamaska, {Que., was damaged by ice and is 1 expected to fall into the river. J. Y. Murdock of Jarvis pleaded guilty to charges of forgery and theft and was remanded to the 25th. He promises to make such restitu- tion as lies in his power. Belleville Council has asked the County Judge to investigate the charge against ex-Mayor Marsh and City Treasurer Price in connection with the sale of tax lots. Three men dropped into the ca- nal at Iroquois when a scafiold on which they were working collapsed, on Friday. Elgin Servis was drown- ed, but the other two managed to get out. JARDIIE WILL BE HAMED Last Chapter in the Murder of Lizzie Anderson at Goderich A despatch from Goderich says : | Edward Jardine will be hanged on , Friday, June 16. He was found guilty by the jury on Friday after- noon of the murder of Lizzie An- derson, aft<>r a trial lasting two d^a and n half. Ixcept for a slightly heightened eolor, the prisoner displayed no aigns of agitation. He stood in a •louching attitude in the prisoner's Ikox during the passing of the sen- tence bv Chief Justice Falconbridge and afterwards walked from the oourtroom, uiifulleringly, ahead of and unsupported by the constable. Be was taken to the jail. The jury returned shortly before noon, and when the court met again at 1.15 they were ready with thoir verdict. The ftjteman simply announced that they Iiad found u verdict of guilty. Jardine, sitting in the box with George Vanstone, the other man to be tried for murder, was ordered to stand up. "It is not my practice, under these circumstances, to dwell upon the enormity of the crime. If you have not by this time realized the terrible nature of your offence, it is impossible that any words of mine could make you do so. In passing sentence on you," the Judge said to him, "I warn you not to have any hope of commutation of the extreme penalty of the law for the crime you have committed. I would, however, recommend you to spend the rest of your days on earth in prepara- tion for your entry into the world to come. On Friday, the 16th of June, you will be taken to the place of execution, there to be hanged by the neck until you arc dead. May God have mercy on your soul." 80LTUKUN TORNADO. Buildiogn Blown Down and Many Persons Injured. A despatch from Leavenworth, Kansas, says : A tornado which struck this city at half-past live o'clock on Tues<lay <lid thousands of dollars worth of damage to biiiid- ings and growing crops. Hail- atoncs, us large as pigeon eggs, firnctically ruined every gro<'nliouso n the city and broke out hundr«»ds of windows in residoncos. Scores of sheds and outhouses wer« ovor- turne^ and tolcplione wires blown down. Reports from west of the city ond from Platte County in- dicate that groat damage was d<>na to farm buiUlings and crops. The storm lasted alxiiit half an hour. At Whiting sixty houses wero blown down and thirty persons injured. SLAYER OP SON. George Yanntone Found Guilty nnd Sentenced for Life. A despatch from Goderich says : George Vanstone was on Friday night found guilty of manslaughter in connection with the death of his son, whom he boat to death with a stick because he was «ithcr slow or obstinate in making figuros on his slate when the father was seeking to instruct him. He was sentenced by Mr. JuBtic« Falconbridige to life imprisonment. The prisoner's wife burst into tears when she heard the sentence. The trial last- ed less than four hours, the defence l>eing insanity. The lawyers of the prosecution and defence left the ad- dress to the jury in thp hands of the judge. Transportation Enterprise to Operate From Niagara Falls to London. 'A despatch from London, Ont., •ays: Mr. Malcolm J. Kent, a dir- ector of the I^iniJon Flluctric Rail- way Company, on Wu^lnesday af- ternoon gave tlie first <Jefinite state- ment regarding a li.erger which may mean a change of manage- ment for tho Loudon Street Rail- way Company. Mr. Kent stated that an option had been given on the street railway. This has not been taken up aa yet, but the deal, be said, will likely be closed one ,way or tho other, within a week. Mr. Kent did not feel himself in a poKilion to state definitely the urposc uf tho proposed change, )ut he gavo this general idea :â€" The luovement bore is one of manj I which aim to bring street railways and radials under one management. When this is done the ilistrictH be- tween hero and Niagara, which are not already served by radials, will have such lines constructed. These and the street railways brought in will get their power from the main company. The merger, it is believed, is but the widening of tho movement which started in Toronto during tlie past few days. It will give the power companies, behind which are Mackenzie k Mann and a number of New York capitalists, a market for their power, and will enable the companies to serve the people along tho transmission lines which will bo erected. MADE IN CANADA^ ROYAL YMSr CAKES Used in Ca delicioua horn ply ia alwrays aad Campers' < all imitations, give satiaf nct>< aa much. E. W. CILLE Winnipeg Toront Award td flight Ka. lit ExpQi ^NOSr PERFECT MADE GREAT BRITAIN. The Liberal member for Exeter, England, has been unseated on a re-count. UNITED STATES. A cotton clearing house has been established in New York. Denman Thompson, the well- known actor, is dead. President "Taft has warned Mexi- can belligerents that border fight- ing must not jeopardize American citizens on U. S. territory. GENERAL. Aviator Pierre Frier made the ♦ 'ip from London to France, 200 miles, in a monoplane without a stop. nm OF FAjM PRODUCTS REPORTS FROM THE LEADING TRADE CENTRES OF AMERICA. Prices of Cattle, Grain, Cbeeae and Other Produce at Home aad Abroad. BREADSTUFF8. Toronto, April 18.â€" Flourâ€" Win- ter wheat 90 per cent, patents, $3.- 3fi to $3.40 at seaboard. Manitoba floursâ€" First patents, $5.40; second patents, $4.90, and strong bakers', $4.70, on track, Toronto. Manitoba Wheatâ€" No. 1 North- ern, 97c cash, and 95/aC May deliv- ery. Bay ports ; No. 2 Northern, 94%c cash, and 93c, May deliverj-, Bay ports. Ontario Wheat â€" No. 2 red and white 82 to 83c, outside. Barley â€" Malting qualities, 66 to 6Sc, and feed 53 to 57c, outside. Oatsâ€" Ontario, 32]^ to 33c, out- side, and 33 to 33%c, on track, To- ronto. No. 2 W. C. oats, 37c, and No. 3, 36c, Bay ports. Cornâ€" No. 3 American, 56 to 66j-aC, Toronto freight. Peasâ€" No. 2 at 80 to 81c outside. Buckwheatâ€" No. 1 at 49 to 50c out- side. Branâ€" Manitobas, $23, in bags, Toronto, and shorts, $24.50, in bags, "Toronto ; Ontario shorts, $-24.50 to $23. I Telegram From Im er G-ives MATTHEWS ACQUITTED. Not Guilty of the Murder of Jo- hanna Brimacouibe. A despatch from Cobourg says : Henry 1. Matthews, jun., was ac- quitted on Saturday night of the charge of murdering Mi.ss Jose- phine of Johanna Briniacombc. The Court assembled shortly before 11 o'clock, and the court room and tho halls leading to it were crowded. The jurymen almost noiselessly filed into their places, and they all looked haggard. One or two were visibly affected by emotion. The prisoner preserved a quiet demean- or and appeared unmoved in coun- tenance. Only the deeper lines about his face revealed tho ordeal of suspense which ho has undcr^ gone. He glanced at his counsel, the Crown Attorney, and tho repre- sentatives of tho press, and then looked straight at the foreman of the jury. "Gentlemen of tho jury, have you ngrtved on a verdict?" asked tho Clerk of tho Court. "Wo have," answered tho fore- man. "And it isr' "Not guilty," was tho answer. Tho throngs in tho rear of tho court room behind the prisoner's dock and at tho entrance broke in- to cheers that were whoed to the streets, and told the waiting crowds outside of the happy outcome of the trial for the accused. CUT OFF HI SBAND'S HEAD. Woman in Hospital for Months from Wounds He Inflicted. A despatch from Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., says: Peter Napoliti- na, an Italian, living near James street. Little Italy, known hero as Peter Naplesik, was killed on Sun- day evening by bis wife, Margery. The woman admits having commit- ted tho murder and is now in jail. Napolitina was employed on the night shift at the steel plant, and was asleep in bed when his wife at- tacked him with an axe. The first blow struck him on the forehead and nearly severed the crown of his head. Four blows followed, tho last one all but severing the head from the body. The woman then proceeded out on to tho street and told passers-by what she had done. The m\irder is the echo of the case last Fall, when Napolitina rcturn- <h1 home unexpectedly, and stabbed her several times. She was tor some months in the h'>spital. It seems she had awaited tho op|K>r- tunity to get even. COUNTRY VRODUCE. Applesâ€" Spys, $5 to $C ; Baldwins, $4 to $4.50; No. 2 assorted, $3.50 to $4.50 per barrtl. Beansâ€" Car lots, $1.75 to $1.30, and small lots, $1.90 to $2. Honey â€" Extracted, in tins, 10 to lie per lb. ; No. 1 comb, wholesale, $2 to $2.50 per dozen ; No. 2 comb, wholesale, $1.75 to $2 per dozen. Baled hayâ€" No. 1 at $11.50 t« $13 on track, and No. 2 at $9 to $10.50. Baled Strawâ€" $6.50 to $7, on track, Toronto. Potatoesâ€" Car lots, 90 to 95c per bag, aud New Brunswick, $1 to $1.05. Poultry â€" Wholesale prices of dressed poultry :â€" Chickens, 15 to ICc per lb. ; fowl, 11 to 13c per lb. ; turkeys, 19 to 21c per lb. Live, 1 to 2c less. A despatch from Ottawa say The following are extracts from telegram from Mr. J. Bruce W« ker, Commissioner of Immigratio Winnipeg, to the Superintendent Immigration at Ottawa :â€" "Seeding is general this wet throughout the whole of weste: Canada. The seed bed ia in fit condition, while the moisture everywhere abundant. "Five thousand overseas iron grants, most of them from Englan arrived in Winnipeg during tl first three days of this week. "The Canadian Northern Rai way is calling for tenders for tl construction of the mountain se tiontion in British Columbia, ru ning through the Fraser ai Thompson canyon, its cost approx mating fifteen million dollars. "During the year ending Man 31st last 33,833 head of live sto< entered Canada from the Unitt States. Of this number 12,853 we horses. During the first ten da; of April of this year one thousar cars of settlers' stock and effec passed through the gateway i North Portal, destined to Sa katchewan and Alberta. New se tiers are entering western Canac during March and April at the a' erage rate of fifteen hundred p< LOCAL DAIRY MARKETS. Butterâ€" Dairy prints, 19 to 20c ; inferior, 16 to 17c. Creamery quot- ed at 27 to 28c per lb. for rolls, 24 to 24><c for solids, and 22j-i to 23c for separator prints. Eggsâ€" C^ase lota 18c per dozen. Cheeseâ€" Large, 14c, and twins at HOG PRODUCTS. Baconâ€" Long clear, 11 to ll/»c per lb., in case lots; mess pork, $20 to $20.50; do., short cut, 23.50 to $24; pickled rolls, $20. Hams- Light to medium, 15c ; do., heavy, 12 to 13c; rolls, 11% to 12c; breakfast bacon, 16j^ to 17c ; backs, 18 to 18,',;;c. Lardâ€" Tierces, lie; tubs, llXcj jails, ll>aC. BUSINESS AT MONTREAL. Montreal, April 18.â€" Oatsâ€" Cana- dian Western, No. 2. 38% to 39c, car lots ox store ; extra No. 1 feed, 38X to 38%c; No. 3 C. W., 37% to 38c ; No. 2 local white, 36 to 36%c ; No. 3 local white, 36 to 35%c ; No. 4 local white, 34 to 34>^q. Flour- Manitoba Spring wheat patents, firsts, $5.30; seconds, $4.80; Win- ter wheat patents, $4.50; strong bakers', $4.60; straight rollers, $4 to $4,231 in bags, $1.75 to $1.85. Rolled oatsâ€" Per barrel, $4.15; bag of 90 lbs., $1.95. Corn-Ameri- can No. 3 yellow, 59 to h9%c. Mill- feedâ€" Bran, Ontario, $22 to $23j Manitoba, $21 to $23 ; middlings, Ontario, $24 to $25; shorts, Mani- toba, 23 to $25; mouillie, $85 to 30. Eggs -Fresh, 17 to 19c. Cheese â€"Westerns, 11% to U%c. Butter â€"Choicest, 25 to 25%c ; seconds, 23 to 24%c. UNITED ST.\TES MARKETS. Buffalo, April 1ftâ€" Wheatâ€" Spring No. 1 Northern, carloads store, $1.- 04 1-8; Winter scarce. Cornâ€" No. 3 yellow, 64 l-8c ; No. 4 yellow, 63c ; No. 3 corn, 59 to 52%c ; No. 4 corn, 50% to 50%c, all on track, through billed. Oatsâ€" No. 8 white, 36%o ; No. a white, 36>«c ; No. 4 white, 3&c. Barleyâ€" Malting, $1.06 to $1.10. Minneapolis, April 13.â€" Wheat - May, 94%c; July, 95 7-8c; Septen ber, 89 l-8c. Cashâ€" No. 1 han 9«%c; No. 1 Northern, 973< < 98%c ; No. 2 Northern, 94 to 96%< No. 3 wheat, 91% to 94%c. Bran- $21.50 to $22. Flourâ€" First patent $4.45 to $4.75; do., seconds, $4.; to $4.65 ; first clears, $2.95 to $3.4( do., seconds, $1.93 to $3.60. LIVE STOCK MARKETS. Montreal, April 18 â€" Choice stee: brought 6>jC ; good, 6 to 6%c ; fai ly good, 5% to 5%c; fair, 6 to 5% and the lower grades, i% to 4'-. per lb. Cows sold at from 3% ( 5).jC, and bulls at from 4 to by per Ib. Hogs scored a further d cline of 25c per 100 lbs. Calve $10 to $12, and the lower gradi from that down to $2 each. O sheep brought from $5 to $10 eac' and Spring lambs from $4 to i each. CHAMPAGSEI 7,000 Men March Charge W A despatch from Chalons-su Marne, France, says : The riotii in the wine district threatens to a sume the proportions of the wid spread disorders in the champagi districts four years ago which r suited in the proclamation of ma tial law. Wine presses and wii cellars in several towns have bet de. iolished, and hundreds of thoi sands of bottles of champagne d' strOyed. At Damery six wine houses wei wrecked, and the streets so litte ed with broken bottles and a rai: ture of mud and wine that trafl has been impeded. At Ventuil tHe rioters destroyc several large wino presses, and tl troops were forced to charge wil fixed bayonets bafore the mob coul be dispersed. Seven thousand wine-maker well organized, were marching o Epernay. the champagne entrepo from Damery with the intention ( destroying the Epernay wine ce lars. Several thousand troops ha> been concentrated at Epernay an at other threatened points in thi vicinity. The troops are awaitin the adrancing aaoitestanta an

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