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RUSSIANS DEFEATED.
RUSSIANS DEFEATED. JAPANESE ARMY ADVANCING, THE SITUATION. The relative of the Russian and Jr.pr.n03? loops in the Üaotung Peninsula and in Southern lallchuria have not changed appreciably, though it IS clear that General Kuroki has made movements Which portend an early advance of his whole line. The re-occupation cf Sainiatse and Siu-yun be taken as an indication of this intention. General Kuropatkin's policy is not revealed in any of the telegrams from the front. That lie has received "cry large reinforcements during the last few Weeks there is no doubt, and if the various accounts be true his available army should be larger than that of the Japanese. The Russians Jiave, too, the advantage of acting on interior lines The presence of a Russian force near For; Adams lias been known for some time, and it has at last "been caught in a trap by the Japanese Exactly the strength of this force and its intentions not known, but Us instructions are probably to harry the rear of the army besieging Port Arthur. The Japanese have made some progress against the fortress, and are engaged in defences, from none* of ° f'P™ Up to the outcr *av, succoccW n <,7rP"U> Tim I uriving the Russians. There is I r 0pfatioils not been startling, ceeded that Admiral Skrydloff lias sue- SX sot K Pott Jr;hur "'i:h tPnf ?CK C1'Uiser S(luadro». but he did not Tin T attempt to penetrate Admiral Togo's nes.^ How he managed to elude Admiral Kamimura Js noo explained, and indeed the whole report is rather vague.
ANOTHER RUSSIAN DISASTER.
ANOTHER RUSSIAN DISASTER. OVER 800 CASUALTIES. The Daily "llail correspondent atXiuchwang sends particulars of another Russian defeat: On the afternoon of June 11th there was a sharp encounter between Russian and Japanese forces to the south- cast of the Siungyo range. The Japanese appeared in the morning in considerable force before the entrenched Russian position, made a feint, and then retreated. The ruse was successful, and 5,000 troops pursued the Japanese to the Yaotung Pass, ere the Japanese re-formed, and, assisted by rein- cements that had remained hidden, attacked the jursuingiorce, which, after a loss of 8CO killed and wounded, retreated in disorder. some of the defeated Russians arrived I l IUchwang with 235 transport carts. They deenp«i *ar.os <?f terrible fatigue, and exhibited the faces ion. Many had bad cuts on their In tho an l-nuni^er o1 their horses bore wounds, covpr *ievpi"no a strong detachment was sent to insnp ? Prfitreatof the remainder, who, alter being entrJ j b* General Kondratovitch at Tashihchao, j„ ln°" to-day *r01n that place for Liao-yang. The I'n-inese.' *f' is stated, marched to Siungtai from thp (Port Adams), their object being to clear 7in;~uuStr\ct preparatory to an advance on this neighbourhood. ADMIRAL SKRYDLOFF AT WORK. The special correspondent of the Standard at St. etersburg says that a telegram has been received "om Admiral Skrydloff, stating that on Tuesday last he moved with the Vladivostok: Squadrou owards Port Arthur, and arrived within thirty nllles of that place. There he ran into a fog, and und several Japanese torpedo-boats and two battle- ips confronting him. The Japanese attacked him rcely and inflicted some damage. The Russians returned the fire, but as none of the Port Arthur fimps appeared, as Admiral Skrydloff had hoped and Expected, they returned to Vladivostock,which they reached at eight o'clock on Friday morning. JAPANESE ADVANCE BEGUN. The general advance of the Japahese First Army ■under General Kuroki, which has been resting at Feng-whang-cheng since its victory at the Yalu, appears now to ha.ve begun, and General Kuropatkin is said to be falling back before it on Liao-yang. Sainiatse to the north-east and Siu-yen on the south-east of the position have been occupied, and the Japanese front extends about eighty miles. Siu-yen is of great strategic importance. It is about forty miles from Kaiping and forty-five miles trom Haicheng, and absolutely controls the roads to those places. Sainiatse controls the road :to Liao-yang ani Mukden. By this road the Mo-tien-ling Mountains, ^hich are strongly fortified, and which constitute ■fcn almost impregnable Russian stronghold, will 08 oided by the Japanese on their advance north. ———— RUSSIANS TRYING TO ESCAPE. The Japanese at Shanghai report that the Russians are steadily trying to escape from Port Arthur oversea, owing to the paucity of provisions. The Japanese Fleet is fully occupied on various duties round the Liaotung Peninsula, including the destruction of mines, but there have been no casualties since the affair of the Koshino. It is reported that 3.000 Russians, with twenty -«<uns, have evacuated Yin-kow. THE BATTLE OF NAN-SHAN. The Russian losses in the battle of Nan-shan have now been ascertained at least approximately. totl* Japanese War Office that ine gendarmes bunerl « men round Nan-shan, boMde?Utf"P a"Cl 66, near their camps. C.^„Stin?,^hcr8 in{med portions as between killed and T'i IT"" V AAld glve the total Kussian losses V 2,000 nnd 4,000, or about the same THE BELEAGUERED TOWN. An interesting account of the condition of Port -Arthur is supplied by the special correspondent of the Standard at Chifu. It is from the testimony of a Mechanic who has been engaged in the Govern- ment docks at the Russian pori. He says that the 0 cs» the workshops, and the town itself have practically sustained no damage from the repeated ombardTtcnts. All the Russian men-of-war have nished their repairs, with the exception of the visan, the Czarevitch, and another vessel, tha name of which my informant did not know. These three are lying in the inner basin. The docks are not as present able to accommodate them, but ar9 oeing enlarged. The work, however, would take six months to complete. Several torpedo-boats are aiso undergoing repair., in the docks. Besides a. considerable number of torpedo-boats, the Russians beeu deep, 6urm'ountedUby h"avl entr.eachm™ts 15ft. The outlying districtsarIy^wV £ ima"y P,1:lce*- the Chinese wpn> nnt f ">• 11 thickly mined. As £ y f. famihar with the making of entrenchments, the whole of the work has had to b» done by the Russians themselves. A large number of Chinese are still left in Port Arthur. The Russian officials issued orders, on Monday, that all who wished to leave were free to do so'during the following three days, but that afterwards no departures would be permitted. The Chinese workmen in the docks are receiving 50 per cent. extra pay, and are allowed three pounds of rice daily. For the first two months of the war the ration was free, nut latterly they have had to pay for it. Food supplies are stated to be plentiful, but the coal supply is running short. All the junks conveying the Chinese refugees were searched by the Japanese off Wan-ching-tao and the Miau-tao group, where the torpedo-boats Were cruising. They were supplied with provisions in all cases where the stores were insufficient, and were allowed to proceed. RUSSIAN GENERAL WOUNDED. A telegram from St. Petersburg says that the Czar received news that a battle began at noon on .1\1t¡e 14th round a Russian position six kilometres *° the south of the station of Wafanhoon ( ? Wa- tang-kau), the enemy making repeated vigorous attempts to dislodge the Russian left llank. The attack was repelled, and the Russians claim to •have retained their position. The 1st Regiment, occupying the left flank of the Position, sustained severe losses. Its commander, Colonel Khvastunoff, and the adjutant, Sub-Lieu- tenant DragosIafINadochinsky. were killed. General ^erngross, b who commands the 1st. East Siberian brigade, was wounded, a shrapnel bullet shattering the right side of his lower jaw, but he remained on the Held. Talienwan Bay is not yet entirely clear of mines, and the work of removing them is proceeding tinder Admiral Katoara, who has a special fleet ot IIInall vessels for the purpose. Sixteen mines wera T>loded on the 9th and 10th without Three fast gw'ii'Oais have s<-nt. to t lie Scii|( ,s\vi--lJo's':• coast. t.i «?<»;> J:s i: Mi I'am 'rawlcis lulling v ilhin the iSwe-ir.iiv limit. 1;um fchure. At the T!runes 1 <• i.-e-eoiir* La/. irv.s (> vent it/, niiiicral v.an r us-ij*.i;t r-r, of 1^0, <rcial- ^ca* was lined £ 7 a;l «•< sts for .••< liing aeratrd ^~ters to which a f.;isc trii.de detciiption had li;eu affixed.
j GHASTLY TRAGEDY IN SPAIN,…
GHASTLY TRAGEDY IN SPAIN, In the south of Spain a teamster was known to remain irequentlv at an isolated wayside inn between Sevilla and Cordoba. Ilia long mule team stopped one night at about twelve o'clock at the inn as had been their custom, says a Madrid corre- spondent. The proprietor came'out, and thinking that the teamster was lagging on the road behind, ordered the cart and the beasts into the stables. Hours passed and the teamster did not appear. At last it was suggested that the apparently lost indi- vidual might have fallen asleep—either" drunk or tin d inside the cart, and a search was accordingly made. Three headless bodies, dripping in blood, and three severed heads were discovered. One of ihs .leads and bodies was that of the teamster, the otners belonged to two women.
L MURDERER TRACED BY A DOG.
L MURDERER TRACED BY A DOG. By means of a bloodhound the police of Bruns- wick have succeeded in discovering the murderer of a girl of eleven named Bebcnroth. The dog was taken to the room in a farmhouse where the crime was committed, and all the farm servants were sent for, when the animal at once attacked a labourer named Durve. As the man protested his innocence lie was made to change his clothes, but the blood- hound again picked him out without hesitation, and he confessed his guilt.
A SISTER'S SACRIFICE.
A SISTER'S SACRIFICE. Margaret Atkinson, the thirteen-vear-old (laughter of a Portadown man, sacrificed her life on Saturday night in an unavailing attempt to save her brother, aged twelve. Tiie two children had gone out for a walk, and had occasion to cross the Great Northern of Ireland Railway near Portadown. When half- way across the line the little girl saw the Dublin to Belfast mail approach. She ran forward to pull her brother into a place of safety, but she was too late, and both were killed.
~ TINPLATE DISPUTE SETTLED.
TINPLATE DISPUTE SETTLED. Mr. Askwith, the arbitrator appointed by the Board of Trade on the matters in dispute between the workmen at Pontardawe Tinplate Works, near Swans"a, and their employers, has delivered his award. He gives, bar the cutters, an advance of a halfpenny per ton, making the price 8Xd. Mr. Askwith finds that, the men committed a breach of contract by refusing to work, and orders them to pay the employers the nominal damages ( £ 10) claimed by them.
RAID ON SUNDAY GAMBLERS.
RAID ON SUNDAY GAMBLERS. A sensational raid on a school of gamblers was made at Crosland Hill, near Huddersfield, on Sun- day morning. In an old quarry at the place named gamblers have met Sunday after Sunday, and "scouts" were posted in several elevated positions. Plans for the operations had bl'en carefully laid by the Iiuddersfield borough police, in conjunction with the county police, and the raid was made with th? utmost precision. A large posse of officers in plain clothes were stationed at various points surrounding the gambling resort, and a couple of officers, disguised as "pigeon-flvers"— carrying baskets and throwing up birds close to the law- breakers—gave the signal at the appointed time, between eleven nnd twelve o'clock. A great rush then ensued in all directions, there being at least fifty or sixty of the fraternity present. Walls, Judges, and ditehes v.ere cleared with the utmost celerity, but. several of the olVenders were captured by the oflicers lying in ambush. Hundreds of people left their domestic duties to witness the stampede, and the usual quietude of the Sabbath was rudely disturbed. A temporary police station had been arranged at Milnsbridge, and thither the captives were taken and placed in charge of other cfticers, whilst many others were recognised by the constables.
ROYAL BRITISH BANK CASE.
ROYAL BRITISH BANK CASE. The lloyal British Bank v. Jones case came up again on Satur.lay, in Mr. Justice Bigham's Court. On behalf of the defendant, Mr. A. F. Wootton moved for judgment on the counter-claim, the plaintiffs having failed to put in a reply. Counsel said the action was brought by the Koyal British liank, which was run by Mr. Cochrane and another person who called himself Lord De Morley, against; ilif- defendant to recover certain calls on shares. The defendant counter-claimed to have the register rectified by the removal of his name therefrom, and for a declaration that he was not liable for any shares registered in his name. The plaintiffs failed to comply with an order to deliver a further and better affidavit of documents and give security for costs, and the action was dismissed. On the j counter-claim counsel said four certificates of j shares were handed to the defendant by a person named Ward on the representation that they were fovr £ 50 fully-paid shares in the bonk. It subse- quently turned out that instead of being the cer- tificates of four fully-paid £50 shares they were the certificates of shares in respect of which there was a liability of Y,49 each. The allegation was that Ward was the agent of the bank. Mr. Justice Bigham entered judgment for the defendant on his counter-claim, with costs.
DECAPITATED AND BURNT.
DECAPITATED AND BURNT. At a Rendex farmhouse, near Courtrai, there was recently a fire, and a brother and sister, named Mergen, both old people, were apparently burnt to death. The Morning Advertistr Brussels correspond- ent states that as strange rumours concerning the fire began to circulate the authorities caused doctors to examine the bodies. The doctors, after their examination, stated that the couple had been decapitated before being burnt. An inquiry was -I instituted, suspicion having. fallen upon certain persons, whose arrest is imminent.
ENTERED UP WAGES FALSELY.
ENTERED UP WAGES FALSELY. Councillor William ISarratt, forty, of Abersychan, once office boy, and lately secretary and traveller at Messrs. Witchcll and Co.'s boot manufactory at Abersychan, has been sentenced at Pontypool to six months" imprisonment with d 'p"1^_Jor embezzling the money of his emp< } ■ • er j. 3 -ii /i ami the pa\ment of was entrusted wi l ■)(• w j company's the employees, and in t lor books h<> £ ave credit on one paiticu.iu .1. in five cases. There were other cases tiient and falsification of accounts 10 against the prisoner which were not entered 1
ITAMPERING WITH SIGNALS.
TAMPERING WITH SIGNALS. A boy, named Arthur White, has been sen- tenced at Birmingham to twenty-one days' Im- prisonment for interfering with signals on the Great Western Railway. On Sunday night WhIte and another boy got on the line, and were seen to pull the wires and lower a signal which was standing at "danger." The result was that an express from Warwick to Birmingham ran past, but fortunately the road in front was cleared in time, and no accident happened.
"RIPPER". CRIMES IN BERLIN.
"RIPPER". CRIMES IN BERLIN. The horrors of the Whitechapel murders some years ago have been revived in Berlin by another "Jack the Ripper," whose gruesome crimes are shrouded in mystery. A" week ago, says a Berlin correspondent, the headless trunk of a young girl was found in the River Spree, near Cliarlottenburg. The limbs had been severed, and the way the knife had been used indicated some knowledge of anatomy. There was nothing to reveal the woman's identity, but, judging from the appearance of the remains, the doctors conjecture that the victim was about twenty years of age. A few days after- wards the arms and legs, partly burnt, were dis- covered on a mud heap, but the head was still missing. The public were very much excited over this ghastly crime, and the police exerted them- selves to the utmost to discover the perpetrator, lJut despite the oiler of a large reward no trace has been found. On Saturday another body mutilated in exactly the same fashion, and wrapped in some clothing, was taken out of the Spree in the heart of Berlin. This time the victim was a mere child. The whole police force were at once put on the alert, and the parents of a number of mis-in" girls were asked to try to identify the body. Franx Berliui, a cigar-maker, was among and nearly went ma i with grief when, by the clothing, he recognised it as his nine- I year-old daughter Lucie. The limbs and head of the poor girl were missing.
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The turbine yacht, Lorena has arrived at New York, after calling at Halifax for coal. The engines gave the greatest satisfaction on the voyage, but owing to the rough weather it was impossible to drive them hard. Arthur Ferris, of Falmouth, was washed overboard in mid-ocean and drowned. Mr. llenrv Spencer, J.P., of Retford, one of tho four bondsmen for the apptarance of Mr. George Marshall, solicitor, at Xous Assizes next month, In connection with the famous banknote case, died on Sunday after an operation. The report that, Alfred Weeks, who was gored by a bullock at Robertsbridge ?»Javket last week, died in Tunbridge Wells Hospital, is said to be incorrect. The man is going Oil as well as can ba expected, and is likelv to recover.
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MAJOR SEELY A LIBERAL.I
MAJOR SEELY A LIBERAL. I Speaking at Margate on Saturday, Major Seely, M.P., said he had no hesitation in declaring that, unless seme strange and marvellous change came over the face of parties, his vote and influence would in future be found on the Liberal side. That was not because he had changed his mind, but because the Government had changed theirs, and chosen to abandon the principles of freedom which .Englishmen thought would never be abandoned by any British Government.
CLERGYMAN FINED FOR ASSAULT.
CLERGYMAN FINED FOR ASSAULT. At Ongar the Rev. George Proctor, a retired clergyman, has been fined, with costs, £3 7s. 6d. for assaulting Harold Thomas, assistant overseer of leauchamp Roothin. Thomas called at Mr. Proctor's house to collect the poor-rate, and was, it was stated, fiercely attacked and his shoulder dislocated. A medical man said it would be dangerous to Ir. Proctor to attend the court.
OPERATION ON THE AMEER.
OPERATION ON THE AMEER. A telegram from Simla states that it is under- stood that the operation recently performed by Major Bird, the Viceroy's surgeon, on the Ameer's hand was only just in time to save his arm and indeed his life. Dr Bird was most rigorously puarded during his residence in Cabul. The opera- tion oil the Ameer was performed in presence of the principal officers of State. His Highness refused chloroform and bore the operation with the utmost lortitude.
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-)0(- ngeons new trom liranvme, rrance, to the Midlands, a distance of from 250 to 280 miles, on Monday in record time. The fastest bird reached Worcester after flying at the rate of 1,708 yards per minute, or fifty-eight miles an hour. Long-continued tight lacing was shewn at an inquest to be largely responsible for the death of Evelyn Webb, aged twenty-four, a parlourmaid, who "died suddenly after supper in the house where she was employed in Holland Park. To the revised edition of the King's Regulations 5s to be added: "Foals of Government mares are the property of the State. A birth must be imme- diately reported to the War Office, when instruc- tions will be given as to the disposal of the foal." Ar-, the Bucks Assizes Frank Percy Ayres, William James Chinnery, and William Charles Enstone were acquitted of the charge of manslaughter of Ann Salisbury, schoolmistress, who was shot while un- packing her boxes in a cottage at Chackmore. At Frodsham, David Hulse, a Wesleyan local preacher, was sentenced to fourteen days' hard labour for indecent behaviour. Notice of appeal was given, but prisoner's sureties refused to become bound over, and lie went to gaol. Mr. Simon Lake, the inventor of the submarine boat, Protector, which is said to have been sold to Japan, has sailed from Xew York. It is reported that he is on his way to Japan to supervise sub- marine manoeuvres. The Bishop of London has issued a warning against theosophy or the doctrine of reincarnation as a danger to the Christian faith. It. has been proposed by the Semi-Teetotal Pledge Association that the Church of England Temperance Society should take over its organisation. Mr. Andrew K. Fillans, now- a horse-dealer in Yorkshire, has obtained a decree nisi against his wife Annie, on the ground of her misconduct with the cc-respondent, Mr. James Joseph Campbell, of Manchester. Two young men named Carrvell and Guy were drowned while bathing near VVareham, Dorset; and by the upsetting of a boat at Dawlish a youth named Wilkinson lost his life. Mr. Pretyman has informed Mr. R. Lucas, M.P., that the full amount of pension will be awarded to the widows of the men who lost their lives in the disaster to Submarine Al. Authenticated relics of the first Napoleon, a portion of his hair, the key of the room in which he was born, a fragment of wood from his coffin, &c., have been sold at Sotheby's for £20. Under a bill introduced in the House of Lords by Lord Donoughmore, any person wearing a colour- able imitation of a war medal or decoration, with intent to deceive, is liable to a fine of 420. Messrs. ff. IV. Martin and R. X. Cochrane left Liverpool on Saturday for Lai>os with the intention of starting a model fain> of 15,000 acres on behalf oftlw British Cotton tirowcrs' Association. In the battle of Colenso part of Jeremiah O'Leary's head was blown away. l'ut he lived to be charge! on Saturday at the South-Western Police-court with drunkenness, and was fined 20s.
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American tobacco exporters report a great decrease in the quantity of cigarettes and tobacco imported by England last month owing to the increased British duty, which, they say, is practi- cally killing the trade. As King Alfonso was driving in Madrid an accident occurred to a passing motor-car. His Majesty at once stopped, and the injured passen- gers were driven away in the Royal carriage. Thirty-three members of the French Chamber have been appointed a committee to investigate the alleged otter of a bribe of P-80,000 to M. Combes, the Premier, to bring ina bill favourable to the Chartreuse monks. Post-Office action with reference to lottery circulars has resulted in the printer of a journal advertising one being fiDed £ 10 at Clerkenwell Police-court. The death took place on Tuesday of the Rev. Charles Wolley-Dod, of Malpas, at the age of seventy-eight. For twenty-three years Mr. Wolley- Dod was an assistant master at Eton. He was a keen horticulturist. A Brigstock butcher was lined Ll and costs for cutting ofI a pig's tail, tlwreby causing the animal to bleed to death two days later. Defendant pleaded that he was in drink at the time. The Millwall Football Club wish to contradict the report that several hundred pounds' worth of alleged stolen property was found buried in their ground. The property was found in an old iron yard opposite. At the inquest on Sidney George Bull, twenty- four, of the Royal Engineers' band, who cut his throat in a wood at Darland, a letter was read in which he told his mother that he had been depressed of late. Yarmouth's municipal electric light, on a turn- over for the past twelve months of £ 13.868. has made a net profit of over £100 per month for the ratepayers. After a burglary at Bromley, the police found finger marks, with a blur in the centre of where the little finger had b^en placed. A man arrested was found to have a scar on his little finger that fitted the blur exactly. 0 Ludwig Brier, forty-five, a Hungarian, pleaded guilty at Clerkenwell Sessions to stealing a diamond ring, value £ 25. It was stated that he made periodical visits to England for the purpose of com- mitting jewellery theits and then levanted to the Continent. He was sentenced to eighteen months' hard labour. Aden is declared to be plague infected. It has been decided by the Bristol City Council to open the new art gallery on alternate Sundays for three years as an experiment. In a bath containing only Sin. of water, the three-year-old son of a Rathmines woman was found drowned after the child had been left for only a few minutes. Mr. George Abbott, district superintendent and stat ionmaster at Charing Cross, retires at the end of this month aftEr a record service of over fifty- eight years with the London and Chatham Com- pany. As a motor-waggon was passing along King- street, Co vent Garden, a man about thirty-three years of age tell directly under the engine and was crushed to death. Xo clue to identification was found on the body. Some hundreds of schoolchildren, 1,000 colliers, and a choir of 500 joined in the funeral procession of Griffith Rees Morgan, the Aberanian bov whose disappearance caused so mizck stir in the Rhondda .istrict. day from Liverpool. lie cotton mills, and took a lively interest iu the variolls machines working. The body of a well-dressed man was found in Richmond Park, near Sheen-gate, on Saturday even- ing. Upon the clothes were found visiting cards with the name F. Fuller, East Sheen. Birds nest freely in the rafters of the ancient parish church at Ivychurch, Kent. During the services the birds flit to and fro from pew to pew, find are often fed by breadcrumbs brought in the pockets of the worshippers. A verdict of found drowned was returned in the :ase of Samuel Harrison. a painter, who was dis- covered standing dead in the middle of the Ashton canal at Clayton with his hat on his head and a walking-stick in his hand. Eight thousand Thibetans are holding strong positions to oppose the advance of the British tnission. Three supposed Anarchists have been arrested in the Transvaal on suspicion of plotting against the life of Lord Milner. The Senior Wrangler in the Cambridge mathe- matical tripos is Mr. R. S. Eddington, of Trinity, who, by the aid of a scholarship. made his way from an elementary school to the university. Five hundred fisher-girls, who assembled at Stornoway to go to Shetland for the summer fish- ing, struck against being herded together on the steamer Elm. When they viewed the vessel that had been put at their disposal 200 of them decided to stay behind. The physicians at Post Graduate Hospital, New York, are convinced that a four-year-old girl suffering from lockjaw communicated the germs of tetanus to her brother, aged six. Before she died she kissed him, and three days later the infant expired from tetanus. Mr. John Lund, of Blackburn, who died on Tues- day at the age of eighty, claimed that his father whs the first cotton manufacturer in Lancashire to illuminate his mills with coal gas, which was brought in large bladders from Manchester. A young man, named Leon Van Praagl), has been admitted to the London Hospital with a bullet wound in his leg. It is stated he was shot by one of a gang of hooligans in Burdett-road, Mile-End, and that the outrage is the outcome of a dispute between members of the band. The body of Mr. Harold Hornby, who had been missing since Tuesday last week, was found in the Thames on Tuesday morning at Alderman-Stairs. On the body was a gold watch and chain with silver match-box attached. Mr. Hornby had been engaged as a violinist at the Lyric Theatre. Because he protested at being robbed of a penny a weak-minded youth of seventeen, living at Havre, was pushed into the river and drowned by a boy of eight. Armed with a tomahawk, and offering violent resistance, a Chinese leper who recently escaped from the Sydney lazaretto was twice shot by a policeman, but is expected to recover. After being twice put up for sale without finding a purchaser, the Paris mansion of the late Princess Mathilde Bonaparte in the Hue de Berri ks been sold to the Belgian Minister to France. Mr. Marconi has left Xew York in the Xorth German Lloyd steamer Kaiser Wilhelm II. for the purpose of making experiments in sending long- distance messages from on board ship. Piling up chairs and benches in the ancient church of Suresnes, near Paris, on Monday night, a band of malefactors set them alight, destroying !IP pulpit and nart of tlw- ronf
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/yirrrinnrOTnnrg^ A. NUTRITIVE substance is NOT |9 always a DIGESTIVE ONE. 0 E MELLIN'S FOOD 1 however is both, and has become the I STANDARD 1 jjeyfr because it is a REAL food — A food THAT FEEDS- 111 /6urK your COUGH) VoTti am- ps I A 0 Refuse Substitute* i HATWOOD'S H AIRDRESSING SALOON, QUEEN STREET, RH\2. TROUT FISHING SEASON, 1S02. For FLY RODS, LINES, FLIES, CASTS, REELS, BASKETS. &c., &c. We have the best TROUT FLIES cn drawn Gut, Is. per doz. Guaranteed finest quahty. FISHING LICENSES FOR CLWYD AND ELWY. THE FINEST AND MOST UP-TO-DATE HAIRDRESSING SALOON IN WALES. PRIVATE ROOM FOR LADIES' AND CHIL- DREN'S HAIRDRESSING. ESTABLISHED OVER 40 YEARS. Good for Colds. ■ The foundations of Consumptions are laid H ■ upon a simple Cough. I ■ It behoves everyone to pay the greatest heed H I to even so simple a malady as a Cold. B S Your life is worth a good deal more to you H fl than the price of a few bottles of H 1 "Francis's Balsam" I 9 more than the little trouble it takes at the time ■ H to give proper attention. B ■ "FRANCIS'S BALSAM" is an antiseptic B B healing preparation that is soothing in its B B qualities and immediate in its action. B "ø-J.¡,J'¿.r'J'fJ fl Read what Mr. ROBERT ROBERTS, of I 1 B Brymbo, says about FRANCIS'S J B BALSAM. B Gentlemen—I feel it my bounden duty to B B inform 3'ou of the wonderful effic-acy of B B FRANCIS'S BALSAM." I had for a length B ot time a most severe Cough which no medicine B H would relieve. So firm a grip had this cough on H my system that mv wife feared I was becoming B consumptive. I am thankful, however, to de- B H clare that the first dose of FRANCIS'S H BALSAM" gave relief, and a few more doses H completely eradicated the Cough. B Yours gratefully B R. ROBERTS. B PRICE 9d Is '-d & 25 9d, Post Free. B I FRANCIS && I I The NorfhVTales Pbarmacy., I I WREXHAM. | :ø: TELEPHONE 0194. wwfmm 9% allow FE1 ROBERTS I CO., HOUSE FURNISHERS ESTIMATES FREE FOR REMOVALS Come and Inspec our New Department for Lowest Prices and Newest Designs in b Linoleums Taue: B^es and Floorcloths Special Lines in Satin T BEDROOM SUITES zEF7 IS O Window BlindLs of all kinds. Inside and Out estimated for, and orders executed on Shortest Notice. < a- 3, Russell Buildings, Russell Road, Rhyl. CAMERAS LENSES Dry Plates, Films, P.P.O. BROMIDE, and other Papers. fllll, Wetl"Selected Stock of Mounts and Albums STANDARD BOOKS ON PHOTOGRAPHY { For Beginners and Advanced Photographers. I 1 If B AMATEURS' SOLUTIONS Carefully Prepared with in m tPT Pore Chemicals. I DARK ROOM for Changing & Developing ——— m G. R. Lawrence, M.P.S. ha aceu,, r rt., Pharmaceutical Chemist & Photographic Dealer 20, High Street, RHYL. t I I AMOS BOIHIIS UP-TO-DATE Library 13, Sussex Street RHYL. L. Y. Ieade, ..l.{oset:mry.' Robert Barr, 'A Prince of Good Fe..cvrs. \Y. R. Hodder, 'The Daughter of the.Dawn.' R. Orombie and T. Wilscn, -The Romance of Poisons.' t Perrington Primm, Ivy Carden. J{. Norman Silver, The Goiden Dwarf.' ^e^.cie Reuss, Distant Lamps. Lilian S. Arnold, Liege Ladv. \V. J. Crosbie, 'David Maxwell.' Blarney Stone and H. Field, My Friend— Bilhooley.' R. Andom, 'The Identity Exchange.' Curtis Yorke, Because of the Child.' Fred. Whishaw, 'Near the Tsar-Near Death.' \Y. Clark Russell, Overdue.' Walter Besant, 'No Other Way.' Fmile Zola, 'Truth.' Geo. Manville Fenn, 'Black Shadows.' < Herbert Compton, 'The Wilful Way.' Lionel L. Pflkington, Mallendev's Mistake. W7. Westall, 'The Sacred Crescents.^ Ernest A. Treeton, 'The Instigator. Florence Warden, The Heart of a Gir Owen Hall, 'Hernando.' W. Carter'Plans, 'The Cnckletcn Chrcnxle,. Maurus Jokai, The Slaves ot the Paci.hah. W. Murray Graydon, 'With Cc^sack *n-a C^n- vict len Raine, A Welsh Witch.' TERMS—I'er Vol., or .nD. per Week TERIS- Per Vol., cr per Week and -s" ^D. per Month. Books exchanged per Month. Bocks exchanged .hpc deslced. "THOMAS BOYLE I (LATE P. P. JONES) THE OLDEST SHOP IX RHYL. Established over 50 years. FISH, GAME. POULTRY, RABBITS ENGLISH AND FOREIGN FRUIT AND FLOWER S. » The far-famed depot for Vale of (% j Clwyd Poultry.Chickens from & I each. NEW LAID EGGS ALWAYS IN STOCK. {LATE P. P. JONES) THE OLDEST SHOP IN £ EYL. Established over 50 years. FISH, GAME, POULTRY, RABBITS ENGLISH AND FOREIGN FRUIT AND FLOWER S. » The far-famed depot for Vale of (% j Clwyd Poultry.Chickens from & I each. XEW LAID EGGS ALWAYS IN STOCK. ICE ALWAYS ON HAND St. Assph Visited Tuesdays and Fridays. Sole Proprietor— T. BOTLS 6, WATER STREET, & 22, MARKET HALL. Notice of Removal. JOS. WILLIAMS AUCTIONEER AXD VALUER, ACCOUNTANT, PROPERTY AD INSURANCE AGENT GENERAL CERTIFICATE HOLDER Appointed by His Honour Judge Horatio Lloya. Knight. HAS REMOVED TO HIS NEW OFFICES AND SALEROOM. No. 4, Queen Street SALES BY PUBLIC AUCTION Personally conducted on reasonable terms with immediate Cash Settlement. VALUATIONS & INVENTORIES prepared for Mortgag3, Prol>a:e, Partnership, Transfer of Tenancy and other purposes, REPRESENTATIVE of the leading Life Fire, Accident, Fidelity, Plate Glaa*, Employers Liability, Burglary, Linsesee and Live Stock Coivtpauiec. ESTATE AGENT in all it branches. MORTGAGES PROCURED. REGISTRAR OF MARRIAGES. OFFICES: COUNTY CHAMBERS, 51, Kinmel Street, RHYL. It is Only Fair -0- that Advertisers and the Public gener. ally should know that the 'RECORD AND ADVERTISER' has by far THE LARGEST SALE cf any Newspaper in the Rhyl district. COLEMAN'S L | THE FINEST IONIC IN THE WORLD. received from 6 0"0 TestimonIal. 6 000 V B Men. W 1 NORWICH & LONDON.