*THE
WORKER*
BRISBANE,
JUNE 8, 1895.
General
News Summary.
FOR
THE WEEK ENDING JUNE 5.
West Australian Parliament opens.
Severe snowstorms in New Zealand.
Gold rush to Mullingnara near Albury.
Australian honey exported to England.
Japanese troops evacuating Chinese territory.
Flour mill at Temora, N.S.W., destroyed by fire.
Spanish gunboat wrecked near San Sebastian.
Violet Varley, operatic star, dies in Melbourne.
Patrick Donovan killed at Dalby by the fall of a tree.
Homebush sugar mill at Mackay commences crushing.
Unemployed meetings at the Queen's Statue in Sydney.
Secret society of incendiaries discovered at New York.
Michael Tobin found drowned in a waterhole near Dalby.
New Zealand calls tenders for a cable-repairing steamer.
New Zealand Government finds work for the unemployed.
Payable petroleum well discovered at New Plymouth, N.Z.
Government disqualifies Georgetown juries for twelve
months.
Engine at the Queensland mine, Etheridge, maliciously
damaged.
A French steamer founders off the coast of Spain; 103
lives lost.
Mikado of Japan makes a triumphant march through his
dominion.
Government of Cape Colony going to spend £1,000,000
on railways.
The Japanese
warships bombard the principal seaport in Formosa.
A N.S.W. mail
contractor exchanges shots with ambushed assailants.
A Hamburg petroleum store struck by lightning and
destroyed by fire.
John Simpson fined £100
at Caboolture for breach of the Customs Act.
The leader of the
British House of Commons declares against bimetallism.
A wife in N.S.W.
Obtains a divorce from her husband who is a clergyman.
Licensed victuallers
wait on Tozer and ask for a reduction of license fees.
Mayor of Charters
Towers lays an information against sweep promoters.
British squadron
ordered to Beyrout in consequence of Armenian troubles.
Dead body of an
unknown man found with stabs in his throat, near Mackay.
French passenger
steamer's boilers explode off Vigo and 80 persons drowned.
Three British
warships ordered to Jeddah in consequence of outrage on Consuls.
Jean Luie,
associated with the notorious Tichbourne claimant, exposes him.
Arthur Buck
sentenced to death at Melbourne for the murder of a woman.
Two thousand six
hundred travelling sheep eat blue bush at Wilcannia and die.
A Japanese
pearl-shell diver on the West Australian coast is eaten by sharks.
Fair draught horses
sold at Hamly Bridge, South Australia, for 1s. 3d. per head.
Thomas Goldsmith,
compositor, killed by a railway train at Petersham, N.S.W.
Ah Sue found dead
with his throat cut on the Gowie Road near Germantown.
Number of N.S.W.
Bank boodlers released from prison before expiry of sentence.
Bedouine at Jeddah
attack and wound the English, French, and Russian Consuls.
Mr. Erythropel, a
German citizen, wrongfully arrested by the police in Brisbane.
An explosion takes
place on board a gunboat at Guayaquil and 15 men are killed.
Active agitation in
Rockhampton against the proposed Hughenden-Winton railway.
A maniac sets fire
to the Wesleyan Church at Cudgena (Vic.) and then cuts his throat.
An American steamer
is wrecked on the coast of Mexico, and 170 persons are drowned.
N.S.W. Sugar-growers
deputationise the Labour Party re
sugar
duties in that province.
English Secretary of
state for the Colonies snubs the N.S.W. re-appointment of Governor.
N.S.W. Royal
Commission still sitting in Sydney inquiring into the Dean poisoning
case.
James Fawcett gets
six months at Townsville for stealing books from the local School of
Arts.
Governor of the Bank
of England praises the financial ability of the New Zealand
Treasurer.
M. Pasteur, great
French scientist, declines to accept the German Emperor's order of
merit.
Bullock teams
successfully competing against Railway Commissioners between Ipswich
and Dalby.
Central
Council of the Worker's Political Organisation interview Tozer re
disfranchising
voters.
W. Roberton,
ex-secretary Civil Service Board, is committed for trial on a charge
of larceny.
A railway porter is
caught between the buffers of a train at Toowoomba and seriously
injured.
Sultan of Turkey
apologies to the European Powers for the attacks made on their
consuls at Jeddah.
Timber raft swept
over the Ottawa River Falls, in Canada, and thirty-three persons
drowned.
The great American
humourist, Mark Twain, engaged to visit Australia on a lecturing
tour.
Disgraceful
corruption discovered amongst the directors of the privately-owned
French railways.
James
Dinan fined £1
at Parkes, N.S.W., for stealing sacramental wine from Church of
England.
Big petition against
the disestablishment of the Welsh Church presented in the British
Commons.
Reported in
Townsville that large American firms are about to open meat works in
North Queensland.
Reported
that a German warship is about to enforce a claim of £2000
against the Tongaur Government.
Members of the
Brisbane Boot Trade Union on strike march in procession through the
streets of Brisbane.
Thomas Daldry gets
seventeen months in gaol at Rockhampton for stealing gold from Mount
Usher mine.
Manager of the Q.N.
Bank resigns as head of the “milingtary,” and Colonel Gunter is
appointed in his place.
Great Powers demand
an apology from Turkey for insults offered to their representatives
inquiring into the Armenian atrocities.
Jos. Symes,
Freethought lecturer at Melbourne, defends himself in the Supreme
Court against a charge of defamatory libel and is acquitted.
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