*THE
WORKER*
BRISBANE,
JUNE 22, 1895.
General
News Summary.
FOR
THE WEEK ENDING JUNE 19.
Frost
at Stanthorpe and other places.
A
suicide club discovered at New York.
Export
of new season's sugar commences.
Barcaldine
boiling down works very busy.
Good
prices for Queensland beef in London.
Mrs.
M'Naught released from Toowoomba gaol.
Gladstone
receives a great ovation at Hamburg.
Parliamentary
buildings, Portugal, burned down.
Two
traders massacred at the Solomon Islands.
Dr.
Dobbin commits suicide at Narranders, N.S.W.
Solomon
Islanders reported busy at head hunting.
Tasmanian
Customs seize £500
of smuggled jewellery.
Commercial
treaty signed between Russia and Japan.
Terrible
outrage by Turkish police in Macedonia.
Grimes,
M.L.A., publicly sings a comic song at Lowood.
A.J.S.
Bank clerk gets five years at Sydney for forgery.
Help
the Children's Hospital during self denial week.
Big
petition for Enoggera railway in course of signature.
Successful
shipments of Australian chilled beef in London.
An
aboriginal leper on Fraser Island dies from exhaustion.
Great
Britain going to build a railway in Uganda, Africa.
Viscount
Hampden appointed Governor of New South Wales.
Jacob's
Theatre in New York burned down. Damages £50,000.
Wool
scouring works at Liverpool, N.S.W., destroyed by fire.
Colonel
Bell, U.S. Consul, visits the Queensland sugar districts.
Home
Ruler William O'Brien, M.P. For Cork, goes bankrupt.
Turkish
soldiers enter Bulgaria and seize the road to Phillipopolis.
Government
propose prospecting for coal on Central railway lines.
Japanese
Government firmly established in the island of Formosa.
Ferryboat
sunk in Sydney Harbour through collision. No lives lost.
Proposal
to form an electric lighting company in Charters Towers.
Kate
Herbert fined £5 at Bundaberg for supplying grog to kanakas.
The
Czar decorates the French President with the order of St. Andrew.
George
Boyce caught in the machinery of a flour mill in Sydney and killed.
A
squatter's son, named Pile, killed at Adelaide whilst riding after
hounds.
A
clever young wood carver and native of Brisbane, G. A. Ockleford,
dies.
Gladstone
denounces the insane strain put on the people by modern armaments.
Suspected
incendiarism at Warrnambool, Vic. Government offers a reward.
Dr.
Campbell, of Yass, 80 years of age, thrown out of his buggy and
killed.
Patrick
St. Lawrence sentenced to ten years at Sydney for robbery with
violence.
Spanish
Government sending 35,000 soldiers to Cuba to suppress revolution
there.
Threatened
disbanding of the Toowoomba Fire Brigade owing to want of funds.
New
Zealand Premier and Governor fall out over Legislative Council
appointments.
Terrible
boiler explosion at Yorkshire, Eng.; nine persons killed and twenty
injured.
Public
debate at Harrisville between Labour member Wilkinson and another
person.
Manager
of bus company robbed of £202 in Bridge-street, Sydney, in
broad daylight.
Tender
of Vallely and Bowser accepted for the construction of the Cordalba
railway.
Ex-manager
of the Union Bank, Gympie, convicted of forging and uttering a
cheque.
A
miner's body, horribly mutilated, is found in a railway tunnel near
Helensburg, N.S.W.
Michael
Glesson, a shearer, dies in a Sydney hospital from revolver wounds
self-inflicted.
Charles
Gibson attempts to cut his wife's and his own throat at Kangaroo
Point, Brisbane.
Tenders
to be called by Government for a refrigerating store at Roma-street,
Brisbane.
Charles
Seymour-Allan obtains a verdict of £1000 damages for libel
against Sydney Truth.
R.
Barr Smith presents the South Australian Government with a steam
lifeboat value £8500.
Mayor
of Brisbane withdraws permission for Salvation Army street-preaching
and procession.
A
sailor falls from aloft on the notorious ship Drumpark on a voyage
from Brisbane to Newcastle.
Two
sweep promoters committed for trial at Charters Towers on a charge of
keeping a lottery.
M'Ilwraith,
M'Eachern, and Co., shipowners, fined £1387
for defrauding Victorian Customs.
Sentence
of death confirmed against Arthur Buck by Executive at Melbourne for
murder of a woman.
Warrant
issued against a man named Jordan on a charge of firing two shots at
Dan Harris, Normanby.
Serious
subsidence of the ground on which Melbourne City Markets are built;
building endangered.
French
steamer arrives at Cooktown with a cargo of cheap labour from
Tonquin, en
route for
Noumea.
Mar
Lodge, in Scotland, the mansion of the Duke of Fife, burned to the
ground in presence of the Queen.
Buskley,
witness in a Townsville divorce case, arrested, by order of the
judge, on a charge of perjury.
New
Zealand Minister for Labour promises to bring in a Fair Wages Bill
during next session of Parliament.
A
woman at Thursday Island committed for trial on a charge of sending
naughty letters to residents of the island.
Japanese
Government inviting tenders in England and America for the
construction of £3,000,000
worth of warships.
A
Chinese gambling den in Melbourne raided by the police. Five Chinamen
and twenty-eight Europeans arrested.
England,
France, and Germany demands from Turkey an indemnity for outrage
committed on their Consuls at Jeddah.
Plans
of a bridge between New York and Jersey City, over the Hudson River,
approved of by the U.S. Government ; estimated cost £4,500,000.
Monster
petition, containing the signatures of 2,000,000 women to be
presented to the various governments for the suppression of the
liquor traffic.
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