GABLE NEWS.
By Eleotrio Telegraph. — Copyright • |PKR UNITKD PRK9S ASSOCIATION. ( ■-.•; : ;■•; LoNDdN, May 81. 1 The Manchester Unity Order of Oddfellows have promised to impower colonial Lodges to increase the initiation fee. The Wolseley shearing machine has been successfully tried throughout England. .-■■ • . ■ . New Zealand mutton is quoted at 4d to 4}d. New South Wales mutton 4d, lamb «di-»^ -.;.- ■ --•: : " •■■ V- - •.-■ :: It is proposed that Switzerland shall mediate, in the Delagpa Bay, Railway dispute. --•••-- An uncle of Searle, the latechampion sculler; write! to the Sportsman attacking the Postmaster-General of New South Wales for alleged tampering with the Searle memorial forwarded to the colony by the English admirers of Searle. It is hoped that H.M.S. Emerald, on the North American station, will restrain the action of Frenchmen forbidding the fishermen tolnh in St George's Bay. - V |; SanTbancisco, May 31. Aii; excursion train dashed through a raised drawbridge at Oakland and 13 persons were drowned and a number of others Seriously injured. . . : ' ; Sofia, May 31. Major Panitza was recommended to mercy. During the trial it was proved that there had been a conspiracy with foreign assistance to upset : the Bulgarian .Government, though the personal complicity of the Czar and M. Hitrovo was not proved. .. i Major Panitza will appeal against the decision of the Court. It is probable that the suggestion of the Court that the sentence passed on Major Panitza be commuted to 15 years' imprisonment will ba adopted. • It is expected that the demand that Kalopkoff, thei Russian merchant who was sentenced to 9 years' imprisonment, be handed over to Russia, will be complied iwith;; ;■■ i; . : ' / ;; ' n "•■.; Boda PKBTa,May 31. The Kossuth Citizenship Bill, by which it was proposed to abrogate the mw that expatriated Louis Kossuth and declared him a Hungarian citizen on his merits, has been <rejected. . ' .}-•■"•.':-■ WASHINOTOUi Msj 30^ The monument erected in memory cA President Qarfield has been dedicated by President Cleveland. : Montbeal, May 80. At the inquest on the fire at Longue 'Point Asylum*, a verdict was returned thatnob'ody was to blame. There were 91 deaths in all. " !; >% \ Bebmn, May;§o., --; ;<ln the coarse of an interview Bismarck said the horizon was peaceful and cloudless. : Germany would not attack France.
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Bibliographic details
Feilding Star, Volume XI, Issue 146, 3 June 1890, Page 2
Word Count
361GABLE NEWS. Feilding Star, Volume XI, Issue 146, 3 June 1890, Page 2
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