a THE DAILY WHIG. THURSULAY, MARCH 20. SSE ER RM Abo do hist de A { Easter! Easter Cards, Easter Books, Raster Pictares, Bibles, Prayer Books, Hymn Books. Beautiful Goods. BR. U6LOW & Co, Booksellers, 141 Princess Street. RAINY WEATHER WILL SOUN BE HERE. Bot it will have po effect on your house if you ues the paint we recommend, and that fs RAMSAY'S. All the wvewest shades. Ask for color sard. Only $1.60 per gallon. MITCHELL'S HARDWARE. *Market Opinions' | HUET in matters, ine the conrse of and Lx liling 4a conditions, than -- meso ba busines, | Jong Suds of the tin ty aren Letter," LER a ree, IS Fr Bandeoine, sloth bound. 400 peg, "Guide to Inverters" $oh an shactate Well Berger authors o pertainining to the business. "Huanr & Freese Main Office, 858 Bway, NX. oc, BONDS, an, COTTON. an... a HENRY P., SMITH, Avchitest, ote., Aucher Bullding Market Square. 'Phone 348 COMMERCIAL, ------ LIVERPOOL MARKETS. (12.30 pw.) March 20-Wheat « N Os. L; red winter, o Calilornia, 6s. 4; corn, L; oid, Ss. S4d.; peas, Bs Aik Hai bacon, long, + beay 3 clear, : igh v, Ad. 6d. ly To tadlow. A k is. mut 53s; nr white, 99%; MONTREAL PRODUCE MARKETS, tour to Bou ls of Trade, on wll pointe hear, ai k= 8254s a -- » oe iE £2. » [HE 5 PA. EDITION SECOND EDITION NEWS ALSO ON PAGE IVE, COMMERCIAL MATTERS, What is Going on in the Busines World--The Market News The Bell telephone company has the regular quarierly dividend of emt, Maryland's industry employing pumsber of persons is the cauming of fruits asd vegetables. Grand Trunk railway system earnings from March Sth to 14h, 1902, $099,168; 1901, $577,904; meres, $21,200. The United States poral pany soll apparatus during the last year to the amount of $74,000,000 There were in Cybm in 1899, 60,711 forms, with an average sive of 143 acres, average wiitivation of thirteen acres The improvements on Pennsylvania be burried as rapidly as possible, Th, entire road between Pittsburg avd New York is to be four-tracked, Nearly eighty million pounds of tobaceo Were raised in the North Atlantic states in the year 1000 There is no way. of telling bow much of that was sold under the Hay ana label . A company to promote Marconi's system of telegraphy will be Jersey, declared two por the greatest electric com and an are to wireless New meorporsted in with a capital of $10,000,000 Wie members of the company are oy the wenltbiowt and most influential men the United Stotex Mrs John E. Kane, ol a lemon pic for J sire stockholder, be wave her $100 shares of NP out for 83.000, brut had she held fit would have been over $8%.655 The capper company, bury, is 0 become wicks! trust, NJ a of Leroy, E bak Harris million She sokd it the pro Canadian at Sud embracing not only the Orford company, but also the great corporation Roown as "Le Nickie" of Paris, France, which works the mines of New Caledonia It is not omly the CPR. that contemplate mormous expenditure in betterments. It is estimated that the milway companies of the United States will expend during the coming year at least $500,000,000 on mow exguip went, ; bridges, rails and other improve ments, During the year the Burlington railroad expects to curtail its operating ex- Pensex twenty-five per by reducing grades and Thus far £3, 000,000 bas beon Ab out $4,000,000 more Com plete the work The New York Tribune "The cupitatine of this the destruction of the Society, as pow existing, carrent cent eliminating curves wxpenled fo this way will be pended ta of Tuesiay, country will cause American republic Kays volcano. God only kuows what a day will bring forth. Starvation on one side and gold on the other Domiion con! gave market some matertal for reflection by sdvencing to 121 at the opening of market. The price crestes a now high mn the market. Subwajuently there reaction ol 3 points Dumivion steel strong at fd tp 464, but the preferred jumped to 964, after closing at 93 yester day. The rise in to have thing to do with the dividend which day or so stock to-day the level the Montreal was a was some bas to supposed te aoted On in a Cases At The Assizes. The case of Emily Northmore Robert Abbott, both Kingston township, occupied most of Wednesday and put of this morning at the sizes. Flaintiff sued to have will Hannah E. ve ol as of Fenwick set aside, undue influence being alleged. A. B. Cun: ningham for plaintifi, and F. M. Brown and J. L. Whiting, K.C., for defendant. Fenwick had leit her money, amounting to over $5,000, to the de fendant, who up till 1396 had come to the city. and looked after the old lady. The money wes invested in the Fron tenac loan soc iety's office. The will was made in 1804, Witnesses for the oo | Wiek's gave evidence as to Mis. Fen wick"s mental condition, which they declared was not sound - in recent years, For the defence, evidence was offered to show that Mrs. Fenwick was quite capable of making the will. Judgment was reserved, The next case was that of Jacob dailey Ham vs. Francis Pillar, for ipecific performance of a conveyance of and, possession and damages, Judg- ment reserved, This afternoon the Grimshaw slander Case was up for hearing. The court concluded this afternoon. Judgment was reserved in the insur ance aise of Decker vs, Cliff and the Hutton-Grimshaw slander case was settled. rs. ---------- The Annual Meeting. The twenty-eighth annual meeting of the Ontario' building and savings so ciety was held on Wednesday. The re ports of the directors and anditors, with the financial statement for 1901. were submitted. After paving interest on deposits, provincial and municipal taxes, provincial registration fees, and cost of management, $2.95 had been placed to the credit of the contingent fund, now standing at $18,725, meeting unanimously adopted the reports and tendered thanks to the president, directors, and officers. The retiring directors, justice Britton and Messrs. L. Clements, R. Waldron and James MeAsthur, were re-elected for tug a At . ae meeting of the board, jue Price was re-elected Prgsident, and in Chown, vice-pre- 'HM - Death Of Richard John Hal which so plened him that | { i Mr | (Wentworth) RADCLIFFE WAS MOBBED| THE HANGMAN MALTREATED IN HULL. PITH OF THE NEWS. The Very Latest News Culled From All Over the World. The engagement is announced in | Montreal of Miss Beatrice Routh and | Wentworth Monk. He Had Been Drinking--His Cheek | Badly Cut and Swollen--A Policeman Rescues Him From The Mob. Ottawa, March hangman, was morning. He had been drinking 'ana was followed about by a large crowd. He talked freely and got into an al tercation with a man. and in a min | ute the hangman was being kicked | and beaten. After he escaped from the crowd by the aid of a constable, his cheek was cut and swollen, and he was otherwise marked. He was taken to an Ottawa drug store, brought up | town in the police patrol, and then took a cab back to Hull. He sobered | up in Ottawa. 20 --Rad« liffe, the Hull this mohbed in Dominion Parliament. Ottawa, March 20--The house yes terday threshed out the question 'of the Archibald smanmons, and after a somewhat heated debate sustained the | decision of the committee not to call | Archibald. The budget deBate was by Messrs. Heyd, Siaith and MeKinnon, The house rose at 11.16. p.m, The premier has given notice of the Faster recess. The house will rise on Wednesday evening next, and stand adjourned until the afternoon of Tues day, April Ist. continued a ONE ON TIM HEALEY. Impassioned Peroration Spoiled By Effective Retort. London, March 20.~In the house of « part of 'the world's | is standing on a | college official in the United States, twenty: ; usta i la 6. WET commons the Irish members have | lately been very aggressive in debate | upon all questions likely to embarrass the government. Timothy Healy re ceived an unexpected retort the other day, when, in an impassioned perora tion, he demanded. "What are we Ir ish members sent here for 7' In reply to which Mr. Jobnston, of Ballykillbeg, shouted from the minis terial benches, knows." Some amusement was caused by the appearance in the house of commons after the close of the debate just re ferred to of four men, who carried a mysterious-looking apparatus, an proceeded to 'take samplés of air in the house. One man blew air, by | means of bellows, into a large glass receptacle, while the others fixed ap paratus in various parts of the house in which a kind of jelly had been in troduced, for the purpose, it was said. of catching the microbes in the | air, Certain members suggested that the species caught on this occasion would be. particularly precocious, the Irish members had had a good inning ROYALTY BACK TO THE WAR. God only as Prince Francis Of Teck, Sails for South Africa London, March 20.--Prince Francis | Teck has sailed for South Africa to resume his duties with the remount | department of the army. Prince Francis of Teck is a brother of the princess of Wales and a brevet major of the lst Royal dragoons. The prince served in the remount depart ment in South Africa in 1899 and 1000. He was born in 15870, Khaki-Clad Boers Shot. March 20 Boers wearing British Brodrick said in the house of mons, al! civilized nations punished such action with death. Boers cap tured wearing British liable to be shot aiter trial by court martial. Lord - Kitchener, in eqrtain had alréady inflicted that\pén of the | Mr. | com ~Regarding uniforms, London, cased, alty. Russia And Manchuria. London, March 20.~Cabling from Pekin the correspondent of the Times says that the presentation of the American note and the Anglo Japanese protests, Russia's negotia tions with the Russo-Chinese bank have been suspended, but that nego tiations for the evacuation of Man churia continue under modified Rus sian demands, which point to an ulti mate settlement. These include ths withdrawal of Russia from between the great wall and Liao river, within six months, from the province of Muk- den within a year, and if the state of the country permits from Kirin and Heilung-Chiang within months after the signing of the con vention, since eighteen | Culminated In A Fight. Vienna, March 20.--The anti-German | crusade of the Ceeche culminated in a | fight at Prague to-day, A number of Crechs entered a church in that place, wrecked the pulpit and altar, and as- saultgl the priests, because the service was Wing conducted in German, The | congregation retaliated and a fight ensued in which ten persons were in- Ju Refused United States' Demands. London, March 20.--A despatch to | the Exchange telegraph company from Constantinople says the Turkish gov | ernment has flatly refused the demand | of the United States for the repay: ment of the sum of money ($72,000) | said to the brigands as a ransom for | Wiss Ellen M. Stone, and her compen: | ion, Madame Tsilka. | 68 Years A College Professor. | Oberlin, Ohio, March 20.~FEx-premior | they have seen, H. a, for 'thirty-three = Jenkins, James years t Oberlin college, vied last might." He was' conbected with Oberlin eollege for sixty-eight veurs, and had served longer than any Fell From A Window. | row to the {John ! office of i disabled Cunarder | suspended in the | to-day, | tary, | forenoon ! sible. | tia, | the | tant decay in morals or decline in the uniforms were | i mind as to what it ! hear to heed than just | | terday, | troops | The losses on the | bles are | The porte ha: ordered 35.000 men { says this paper, | be no doubt that the agitation is the {work of Boris Sarakoff. former presi | dent of | mint, of the Stanley cup The receipts games in Winnipeg, are said to have | been $15,000, The appointment of Hon. J. T. Gar court of appeal is well re ceived in legal circles in Toronto The steamer Corinthian, from St, and Halifax, for Liverpool, passed the Call of Man at 5:30 a.m on Thursday. 7. J. Campbell, Toronto, who is re moving to Montreal, has resigned the secretary of the lake yacht racing association. The steamer Eib arrived at South ampton, to-day, from the Azores, hav- ing on board the passengers of the . Etruria. Irish nationalist, was bouse of coannons, the colonial secre- Chamberlain, 'a lar." Clement, "EE" divi wounded at Wat March 15th. Tennells, John Dillon, for calling Joseph Trooper H. F sion, S.A.C., was fontein, near Vaal river, Next of kin, F Clement, PR. has decided to adopt o standard system of operating the | being mn op- trains and the men are now structed, The system will go into eration on July Ist. Cecil Rhodbs had 5 good sleep this His pljysicians have pro mised that, if possible, he shall sail for England' next week, Dr. Jameson does not consider this to be impos- S. Steacy, of the KR. Vvvian and F. Marconi wireless telegraphy company, have arrived at Sydney, N.S. to take wireless station in Cape Breton. Ogdens ( Limited), presentatives of the company, to-day, gave notice of their intention to give their entire net fit and $1,000,000 vearly for the four yeats as a bonus to their tomers. This is the ¥ American reply to the Imperial tobacco company's at- tempt to boyeett American goods: A man under arrest Everett, Mass, heen identified by detective Halifax, N.8S., as George Hughes, Halifax. Hughes was recently released from the penitentiary. He had been sentenced for twenty vears for shoot ing a man in Lunenberg, Nova Sco hut was reledsed after having served sixteen years telegraph as the London re pro next cus at Power, ol A PERTINENT QUESTION. | What Is The Matter With The | Churches. The Brooklyn Eagle puts this gues tion and in discussing it declares that though churches are more poorly at tended and supported to-day than in past, there has been no econcomi religious spirit, One says the falling away the loosening and lowering the stand ard of doctrine, that it is evolution and the higher criticism which are do ing the mischiel. Another the loss of progress is due to the too great rigidity and obscurantism of a church which refuses to acknowledge that the world does move and to ad is due to just itself to the world's progress, , | © None of these explanations go deep | | enough. | church | church has either If the world fails to hear the it can only be because the lost or misstated its message. Human nature the same as it was in the first century or the sixth. The apostolic the same in essence now is message 18 that it | then. its own and clear has to say so that "every in his' own tongue wherein he was born' it will find-that the world was never better disposed to hear and sre and now If the church will will say. it HAD A STERN FIGHT. Steamer. Mobile, Ala., March 20.--Capt. Biornes, of the Norwegian fruit steam- er, George Dumois, which arrived yes brought news of 5 fight be tween 1,000 government troops snd 1,100 rebels, eight dave ago, thirty five miles from Bocas Del Toro, Colombia, The rebels are said to have killed 300 of the government and woumded many others, rebel side could not the jearned: USING THE RANSOM. To Stir Up Troubles donia. Vienna, March 20.- The Neus Wie wer Abenblath savs that serious trou enticipated in Macedonia. to Macedonia and Albania, and there seems to be sent to the who if gsing Miss Stone's ransom his efforts. Macedonian committee, To Be Sure : Of having lettuce, celery, radishes, ete, for Easter, we would ad vise vou, owing to scarcity, to place your order at once with Carnovsky. Everybody. Remarks our display of boys' and men's caps, They say tls the best 25c., de. Toe, 8§L Finnan haddies that were smoked this week. Carnovsky's. man with two sows, well taken Toronto, Nash Lydia Swinson, 8 lomertic, » hile cleaning windows at 305 On street, this Jolt five feet to ne ford i or to the head that It it prove fatal. She was i Seared to Graee hospital. : Jesus. an Oxiord t FALLEN HEIR T0 MILLIOKS AN INTERESTING TALE COMES FROM BERLIN, Riches For Laborer's Wife--French Army Officer Rewards Devo- tion Shown By German Girl. March 20.--Frau Fhrenberg, the wile of a aay laborer, near Bonn, | has fallen heir to 82,000,000. When i she was a girl some French prisoners were quartered at her father's during the French war of 1870. Berlin, | charge of the construction work of the | American tobacco | for murdering a policeman, has | insists that { was | man may | | News Of It Brought To Mobile By | In Mace- | {of the Perth church next in { was a voung lieutenant of infantry | She and her elder sister, though very | poor, were handsome, and the young | Frenchman fell in love with the elder At the conclusion of peace, the offi ver left, and the elder girl, unable to | endure her lover's absence, followed {him to France, Touched with her de | votion, he married her in spite of the | opposition of his parents. His father {ent him off with a franc. His wife died in a few years, and the father, relenting and dying shortly afterward, | left his son his fortune. The other day | the officer also died. But he had re | membered the sister in Germany, and | having been unable to reward his | wife, and her sister, for the devotion to him, he left the sister, now Frau | Ebre berg, his entire fortune of $2. | 000,000, i BEHEE'S HAIRLESS HEAD. Bald At Birth--Same Way During Fifty Years. | Philadelphia. Times Wilkes-Barre, March 18 "Baldy" Behee is one | Barres unique characters. {born without any hair on his head, and at the age of fifty he is still { without any. His head has always been as smooth as a billiard ball | When a younger man Behee visited nearly all the prominent physicians in the country to see if they sould make hair grow, All the doctors said { it was a remarkable case A noted French specialist, while on {a visit to this country, heard of Be. { hee's ease from a New York doctor, | and came here to see him. He re mained for hall a day with the Wilkes Barggman, examining his head. Upon his return to Paris he wrote for | hee to come to France for an exam ination, promising to pay all expen but he declined. The latter had an idea that the French doctor want ed to place him in a museum, but that was not his purpose. He mer.ly wanted to exhibit him to the medical school of Paris. A trip was also con templated to Berlin and Vienna. A young man one time came losing his life on account of bald head. His name was Gough, a barber's apprentice in the shop of Alexander Schwartz, in this city. When Behee was a voung man he did not mind going around Wilkes Barre minus his hair, but vhen he went out of town he was very parti teular about his personal appearance He purchased 4 wig from a New York importer, who.got it from g house in London. Whenever Behee went out of town he always wore the wig This changed his appearance altogether (me day he was going to New York | and stenped into Schwartz's shop to get un shave. Young Gough's chair the only one empty. He had | never met Rehee before, having come | here from the country Behee thought he would have some | in with the young man. He 10ld him he wanted a hair cut. The young man turned to get 5 pair of scissors, | and as he thd 'Baldv" snatched the | wig from his head and threw it in the corner of the room. Gough turned around again and held Behee's bald head he fainted and fell to the floor. He was removed to his howe, where he remained for some months. At one time it was thought he would not recover. He seemed like la man in delirinm., He would be led with convulsions and erv out "Oh, see that man's head, he has hair." HAS LEFT MINISTRY. ~William, or of Wilkes- He was near Behoo's Michael | was 0 ° over When he seiz no Rev. Foster McAmmond, Perth, Has Left The Ministry. | Sinith's Falls News | 1The pulpit of the Methodist church jat Perth is now vacant. It was an | nounced a few weeks ago that Rey | Foster McAmmond had resigned from the ministry, giving as his reason the unpleasant and persistent rumors | that were constantly coming forward in connection with the Syracuse epi sode of last summer. Then imme diately afterwards it was announced {that Mr. McAmmiond had at the re quest of the church board, reconsider | ed the resignation and had to remain in Perth for another { It is unnecessary to speculate as {| the cause of the present action, no doubt Mr due consideration deemed it best iretire from the ministry. Arrange ments are now being made for a sup ply for the Perth od rence. Rev, Mr. the McLeod street year to but Timberlake, of church, Ottawa, decided | McAmmond bas after | to "church until after | | bas been invited to become the pastor | June. Policemen Are Positive. At last meeting of city council member a of the committee on water | works stated that a policeman who, i : «ih cunght. not freven. Cahareirs Beh mashes on | week had the four at Lennon investigation, had testified | { be had never seen Lennon intoxicat ed, had afterwards said in private | conversation that he had seen Len non the worse of hquor. The police commissioners at their meeting this | policemen before them, who had given testimony at | the investigation, and all four swore positively that they had never seen | Lennon jatoxicated, either on or off duty, and had never said, either vately or any other way, that =F had seen Prong drunk. Fit Reform. | For spring suits, better than ever, | better values, better styles, better | patterns. Jenkins. i n---- In the British Columbia legivlature Ne or A and gre ie we inwts mi roa | i ta of A A Martin | sttack®l the personnel of _-- commit: | tee. The goverment asked for a roy. | ol commission instoad of a committee, | and this was cared. The debate was Tn a ad Mek, haddock, Friday a. 3 s : : 5 eal Brand Col (1 ®.and 2 1b.cans) | IS PICKED PURITY howe | One | 'Strong in Purity. Fragrant in Strength. | MEATORS CHASE & SANBORN, | " NIONTREAL AND Bosrowsd We have heard this many times from people in a-position to know : $ "You Sell More Stockings Than Any Firm In King- ston." There is a good reason for this rapid in- crease. in our HOBIERY BUSINESS. Reliable : Stockings From some of the best Hosiery mimu- facturers in Leicester, England. Sold at... very close prices is the real reason, { i | | Ladies' Cashmere Stockings. 25¢., 35¢., 39¢., 45¢. and many others, . Ladies' Fine Cotton, With Cashmere feet, 25¢. a a Girls' Cashmere Stockings, Ribbed or plain, 20c, 2sc., 30c., 33¢., asc. 39c. and up. 6 qualities to choose rom. Boys Stockings. Boys' Scotch Yarn Knit Stockings. Boys' Ribbed Cashmere Stockings, double heels and knees. Men's Cashmere Sox, 25¢., 35C., 39¢. 3 special lines. Men' 8 Noring Sox. 10C., 12%4¢C., 15C., 20C. LAIDLAW & SON. [Zr TMP NA SPN SARA, | | 1 The Time Has : Come For Talking About Our New Stock. We could fill this paper telling about the merits of 'tie "NEW EMPRESS" and the "HAGAR SHOES" for ladies and the "SLATER SHOES" for men. 'When you see them you 'Il talk about them too." Sold *, # | only at 'THE LOCKETT SHOE STOR gasevryrY BEVEL THON covcsing $ SEE OUR WINDOW 5 And you will see samples of the finest stock of. Easter Goods frre =e fine assortment at i ALL PRICES. PR Ra 4 A $ i T 3 : $