Daily British Whig (1850), 10 Nov 1902, p. 1

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THE DAI 69TH YEAR. NO. 262 RITISI KINGSTON, ONTARIO, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 10. 1902. Is Believing You see the garments completed, vou examine the WORKMANSHIP. The FIT is before your eyes; you can try the CLOTH, the WEIGHT, the COL- OR. You take no chances with Fit-Reform Overcoats $10, $12, $13.50, $15. Have a look. EY JENKINS 3 EXECUTORS SALE WEE, | HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE JOHN H. MILLS, I WILL SELL AT THE RESIDENCE OF the late Mrs. Ww. R. McRae, No. 182 Johnston street, on WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY, No 12th and 13th, the valuable effécts, viz.: Raw Silk Parlor Snke, Ebony, Plush, Parlor and other Easy Chairs, Organ, Piano, Marble Top Centre Tables, Fine B.P. Mirror, Raw Silk. Lace and other Curtains, Brussels and other Carpets, Oil and other Paintings, Hair Cloth Sofas, Hall Rack and Chair, Walnut Bedroom Sets, Walnut Marble Top Dressing Cases, Springs and Mattresses, Feather Beds, Chamber Ware, Fine Leather Easy Chairs, Walnut Diningroom Set, Black Walnut Sideboard, Ladv's Secretary, Writing Desk and Book Case, Walnut Ward- robe, Iron Beds, Very Fine, Hand Made Wal- nut,Swell Front, Old Fashioned Bureau, Bed Clothing, Clocks, Lamps, a quantity of Books, Gas Range, Two Fine Gas Stoves, Range, Silverware, viz. : Knives, Forks. Spoons, Tea Set, Fruit Dish and Fruit Stand, Napkin Rings, etc.. Glassware, - China. Table Linen, Bedding. Piano will be sold Wednesday at ons o'clogk. Sale at 10 a.m. JOHN H. MILLS, Auctioneer. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. NOTICE IS TIEREBY GIVEN THAT ALL creditors and other © persons having cla pealnst tue estate of the late R Mat® thews, Of the Township of Kingston, c or tv of Frontenac, are required to the i on «r the of November t AM V, MATTHEWS, GEORGINA MATTHEWS, Exceutrices of said 10th, 1902 ne to SrrUhDAY, estate Kings Nov THE DELICATESSEN 354 KING STREET. Table Board by the meal, day or week at very reasonable rates. Prepared to serve families at re- duced rates. MEALS AT ALL HOURS. W. J. STINSON, Proprietor. Boot and Shoe Store| JUST OPENED At 207 Princess Street, Opposite T. H Joeha"s Grocery, ton, With a full stock. Please call and inspect goods. line of up-to-date MATTHEW JOYCE DON'T WAIT TILL WINTER Before vou think of getting vour sleigh$ and cutters ready for the first sleigh drive ilave them- nade ready now. Winter will come with®a "rush shortly. Send them to"us for a mew coat of paint and varnish, We are also prepared to store throuvh the winter all kinds of carriages and vehicles Lots of room. Call! and us G. FROST, carriage painter, King street East 102 BOARD. GOOD ROOMS AND FIRST-CLASS BOARD: also table board. May be had at Mrs Breden's, 24 Stuart street. LARGE FRONT ROOM, ALSO TWO SINGLE rooms, with modern convenienc cen tral, not far from City and Macdonald Parks. Suitable for a party of from three to five, 195 Earl street WANTED. APPLY: TO MRS avenue, RAL SERVANT. 280 University A GEN Williams, SERVANT. APPLY TO MRS§ 134 King street A GENERAL Francis Kirkpatrick, WORK. APPLY oppo- WANT i's act S ory CADY "YS WHO ; with street, A YOU NG REAL net. J. Jo INVEST IN 7 to 12 per cent 51 Brock Street. IROCERY WAG- MAN To DRIVE AN ESPIOETIC MAN CAN EARN FROM 15 v 1 demand Tero r Fenwick, R. Fegan, AT ONCE, Aeallemy, hy: measure, Mme. Kider, 1¥ good, sewers HANDY MAN DESIRE furnaces i buildings, i able emploxmer t where Address. at' Whig office A | should se | JAMES 4 AT NEW YORK DRESSMAKRING | 300 Princess St, LOCAL MEMORANDA. The Daily Note Book For Whig Readers to Post Themselves By. of a stranger than fiction. Tues- Truth is more Civil service examinations begin day. Sun rises to-morrow at 6:50 a.m., and sets at 438 pm Tux sale" of Tuesday, 2 pm Tenders for jail November: 22nd. Cro:by & Thornton's Whig Hall tonight 'When Jobany Comes Grand Opera House, S pm of prohibition weetip, Hall, 8 goes out lark coms bark in an ambulance, on township lands, Court House, supplies will be received weekly assembly, Marching Home, Conference workers, Tuesday; 3 pm; When times mass City p.m. a man on. a he some- Succeds never comes who sits on an enpty dry-goods box and whistles for it to the man It desire for more, isn't the little a man has, but rather a that puts him in the pov- erty-stricken class It is all right lower fast horse but it for a to attempt when at- all history : to his record, tempts a similar feat This dav in the the died, 1759; Washington, 1897; 273 fourshored, Stanley Luther born, a man is Wrong. world's Schiller, seal conference H.M.S, 1890: poet, meets Serpent SS w Monticello 1900; 1671; people drowned, drowned, Africa, thir y-three people Livingstone in 1453. met THE DECORATION Of these daimy Royal at $12.50 is equal to that of the ordinary $20 kind Aud the quality oi the ware is equal to the style of the decoration. They genuine bargains--uncommon gains. ROBERTSON BROS. (CaRiND OPERA THIGSE. TO-NIGHT THE WHITNEY OPERA CO. In the New Spectacular Military Opera Comi- que, by Stange & Edwards (Au- thors of " Dolly -Varden.") "WHEN Burslem Dinner sets are bar- Comes JOHNN Marching HOME" A Musical Produetion, The Grandest Production The Faramount Lyric Organization + day. in years. of to Unanimously approved of and endorsed by Buffalo, Detroit and Toronto. 200 PEOPLE IN THE PRODUCTION Free list sus Spann for this engagement. 25¢., S0c., Tic, $1.50. Prices, seats, $2. Sdats on sale at Hanlev's Ticket Office. QUEEN'S FOOTBALL EXCURSION --T-- MONTR.EAL FRIDAY, Nov. 14th From G.TR Depot 'is good to return any train Monday, Novenwwer 17th _ FARE $3.63. Box City by on or COUNTY OF FRONTENAC. SE Al YD TENDERS WILL BE RECEIVED \ of the County Clerk, Court ston 'el a.m., «1903, jor : jail for otlice tite the King undermientic vear 1903 Bread, pepper, pout Milk, salt, per oatmeal, cornmeal, and mutton, at barley, beet pork moiasses and American coal oil, at pr bundle Straw, hated threshed, at----- 12 pounds Peas, bushel. Brown bars The good per of t potat arrots and at-- per family soap, at--------per box of 60 » of the above supplies to be delivered att to be subjear to the r, or some other nerson appointed ounty Ci, tenders will be above supplies v required for fulfilment of W. EDWARDS, W. W. PRINGLE. Comnty Clerk Chairman Com King=ton., Nov. 10th, kX Carriages Carriages EVERYBODY Who has rubber tires on .their carriages are well pleased with the ease and 'comfort they enjoy in driving, if you have not got received for parts contract c Prop them on your carriage you nd to LATURNEY and on and d&joy your LATURNEY. CARRIAGE MAKER, Kingstor have them drives. FURNISHED . ROOMS WITH OR Hour HOARD: ALSO "TABI E 1 168 King. street West, board near Ui ly 'ark. WERE MASSED Hard Work To Get Them Separated. OFF FOR HOME. THE CITIZENS HELPED: OUT THE POLICE. Fanatical DoukhoBors Are Now En route to Yorkton by Train--They Fought Hard and Many Mishaps Were the Re- sult. Winnipeg, Nov. 10.--The government officials having at length, by strategy. gained control of the wandering band of Doukhobor fanatics at Minnedosa, these latter are en route to their homes. The work of loading the Doukhobors on the trains, was of an exciting char- acter. Government Agent Speers en- tered the rink and asked them to go quietly to the train but one of their number, named Zebroff, who had been exhorting them ever since their arriv- al here to remain firm, again tried to hold them together. Specrs grabbed Zebroffi and in spite of his struggles ran him out of the rink and called to the police to bring the The Douk- hobors leit the rink quietly, but as soon as they were out they locked themselves together by every man hugging another making a solid body. Then the excitement commenced. The citizens turned in and helped the police but it was hard work for a while to get the Doukhobors apart, it takine four and five men to pull one Doukho- hor from this interlocked mass. They had to go, however. Some went quiet- lv when broken away. while the maj- oritv fought every inch of the hundred vards to the station. One citizen had an ear ofif a Doukhobor had an.ankle and there were many other minor haps. During the struggle at the the Doukhobhors army again formed for battle and here, bv far, thr stiffest fichting = occurred. The Doukhobors fought, kicked and clung to everv- thing thev could get hold of and the police had to nse clubs to eet them on board the train. Finally all were oot -nto -the coaches, when = the train moved off. The rest. nearly bitten broken mis- station What Broke His Mind. Madria, Nov. 10.--A few days ago, while at Alhama, in the south-west of Murcia, Gen. Toral received instruc- tions from the Spanish government to draw up a full account -of the surren- der of Santiago. From that time he showed great of agitation and was frequently heard repeating the words, "Surrender, surrender." . The news of hiss insanity has created a sensation in Madrid. signs To Retire Professors At 70. Ithaca, N.Y., Nov. 10.--After commencement in June, 1903, University will relieve all professors who reach the age of seventy in the calendar year. The retired professors will serve as special lecturers in their respective i for a period. of five vears. The _.s rv for the first vear will be that received gt 'the time of retirement, after that 81,500 a vear. the Cornell Figured In A Fight. Nov. 10.--There was a fight in the suburbs, on Saturday, during an election. The anti-Semites and cialists attacked the mounted police, who made a charge with drawn sa- Forty 'persons were woundeqg ana sevénty arrests made. The anti Semite candidate was elected. Vienna, A Sultan Routed A Pretender: Tangier, Nov. 10.--0On the approach of the sultans --troops to Tesa (thre® days' march east of Fez), where a pretender. had arisen, - and claimed the throne of Morocco as the sultans el brothers the pretender led and his followers dispersed. Morocco, Verdict, "Not Guilty." London, Ont Nov. 10.--The jury re- turned a verdict of 'not guilty' in the Sifton murder case. The prisoner discharged. was The ciation Canadian Manufacturers' Asso has completed arrangements for the banguet in Toronto to be ten dered the delegates of the London Chamber of Commerce, on November 21st. Among the invited guests are Sir Wilirid Laurier and the Hon. G. W. Ross. Rev. Charles M. Sheldon, author of "In His Steps," in, Massey Hall, Toronto, on Sundav afternoon and ev- enihg, at the opening of the Canadian Temperance League fourteenth annual 'wospel campaign. Mrs. Mauser, aged ninety-six, who lived near Sweaburg to the south of Woodstock, was burned to death, while alone in her house. How the ac- cident happened is not known The Canadian Clab, of Hamilton. has invited Hon. .J. Israel Tarte, to speak at it= annual banquet, which will take place about the beginning of December. John Kerner, for hotel business 1 Nundav « spoke® in ied arthing the { Or vears n. been manv Ham He had i vening Westminster Reserv [2 000 hell's Marie ed Cough re- A NEW PLAY. Dealing With The Life of Woffiington."*. | Peg MISS GRACE New York, Nov. 10.--At Newburch to-nicht Miss Grace will give the initial presentation of her new lav, "Pretty Peoov" The play deals with the hfe of Pee Woflington. and manv well-known literary personages of the day are introduced in the course of the drama. MOLASSES CURED CANCER. GEORGE. George and Wonderful Successful. Nov. 10.--A correspondent writes from Mackay, Queensland, cribing to a Sydney paper "'what believed to be a simple and wonderful cure for cancer." He states that a re- sident who had what had been diao- nosed as a cancer under his tongue casually applied some molasses to the affected part, and sufferéd intense pain for about "an hour. Then the pain ab- ated, and the spot in his mouth felt less troublesome than before. After a further dailv course of molasses he was "completely cured." Another resident whose had been diaonosed as internal cancer also claims to have been cured hv taking a dessert spoonful of raw molasses five times a dav for five weeks. Simple Remedy London, des- is case KING TO VISIT IRELAND. Expects Him, in Emerald Isle in Spring. 10.--The correspondent of the Irish' Independent, who, last week, assérted that Kine Edward would visit Ireland in April, repeats this statement and adds : "I am given 'to understand that Ire- land is at the dawn of a new era, and new spirit will be introduced into the administration of the country. Kine Edward is now disnlaving pers i terest in Trish affairs." Dublin, Nov. WOMAN CRIMES ACT VICTIM. Publisher Goes 'to Jail in Default of Bonds. Dublin, Nov. 10.--Mrs. Annie O'Ma- honv. the first woman imprisoned un- der the Crimes' Act during the present campaion, was arrested' at Waterford and sent to jail, under a tavo months' sentence. Mrs. O'Mahonv, proprietor of the Waterford Star, refused to furnish bail to cease the publication of bov- notices. H: P. Lyman, editor samg paper, was also arrested for a similar term. cotting of the and sent Hop Markets. Toronto, Nov.d0.--Lhe market for hops has been considerably excited in New York, where English buyers have purchased all the state hops they could secure at 35c., and woula buy more, but cannot get them at that fighre. It that buyers in Montreal missed their chance some time -ago when they refused a consid- erable quantity of new Eastern town- ships and Ontario hops offered them at lie. 1R¢. f.o.b. at shipping points, as the same hops to-day are said to be worth really choice bing quoted to 3dc. Toronto buyers snapped up. the above hops at I18e. to 19e. laid down in To ito. - choice ) seems to Butler's Case Called. Mo., Nov. 10.--The case of Butler, adjourned from October 15th, was called for tgial be- fore Judge Hockadav. Col. Butler is a prominent democratic leader of St. Louis and has to face the charge of attempted bribery in securing the garbage contract for that citv. Owing to the prominence of the aceused and the gigantic municipal scandals recent lv unearthed in St. Louis the trial of Col. Butler will attract widespread Columbia, Col. Edward attention. q Some Need Admissions. Paris, Nov. 10.--Prof. represented France at the tuberculosis congress in Berlin, has returned to Paris and says Prof. Koch no longer denies the possibility of communica tion of bovine tuberculosis to human beings. Koch also admitted, he savs, that milk fected with the disease might be injurious. Jouradel, who A New Industry. of Fl incor- Gin Nov. 1.--A number farmers have be the Chinese Untario Toronto. gin oo unity en ap New York City persons died from -tuberculosis and 9.- 165 from pneumonia, being the est causes of fatality Cunard line employs 10,000 men, rreat- w and | ton, KINGS HONOR Bestowed To Mark Edward's Birthday. PLEASE AN ALLY QUESTIONS MAY BE ASKED IN PARLIAMENT. Awkward to Have the Matter De- bated While the Kaiser is in the Country -- The Ratepayers Stand by the Birmingham City Council. London, Nov. 10.--It is expected that the differences between Great Bri- tain and Germany, regarding the eva- cuation of Shanghai, will be the sub- ject of a number of questions, this week, in the House of Commons, al- though possibly the government is not yet in a position to make a statement on the subject while it would be obviously awkward to have a debate on the subject when the kais- er himself is the guest of this coun- try. The London Daily Mail congratulates the people of Birmingham on the de- feat which they have infiicted upon the Jritish Electric Traction company,,an- other of Morgan's many concerns in this country. Bv a majority of 2,000 the ratepayers have decided to sup- port the city council's proposal to apt lv in parliament for the power to build and work tramways in Birming- ham. The list of birthday henors publish- ed this morning, shows that Great Britain is desirious of pleasing her al ly' in the far east, Prince Arisugawa, of Japan, is made a Knight Grand ('ross of the Order of the -Bath, and Count Matsumata, formerly the prime minister of Japan, is made an honoc- ary Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Saint Michael and Saint George. Sir James Mackay is made a Knight Grand of Saint Michael and Saint ( in return for his servic in drafting the recent commercial treaty with China. Sir Richard Cartwright, Canadian minister of trade and commerce, is made an imperial privy councillor and will now be addressed as the Right Honorable. No peers are on the list. Lora Revelstoke, chairman of the re- cent commission on London docks, and the retiring Jord mayor Lon- don, Sir Joseph C. Dimsdale, "are among the new privy councillors. The new baronetcies include Alexan- der H. Progn, M.P.. and Auguet Pre- vast, governor of the Bank of Eng- lana. Col. Muchado and Capt. Ferreira, of the Portuguese navy, who have both filled the post of governor of Mozam- bique, and Viscount Castro, governor of the Mozambique company, are made Knights Commander of St. Michael and St. George. Gen. Gorjao, the present governor. of Mozambique, is made Knight - Commander' of the Bath. Rear Admiral Lambton, R.N., is appointed extra equerry to his ma jesty, There was. an Cross worge, es a important gathering at Saudringham yesterday. Hitherto, the king has celebrated his birthday in very quiet fashion at his delightful Norfolk home, but it certain that Premier Balfour, Mr. Chamberlain and Mr. Brodrick were not present, vestei- day. merely to wish him many -happv returns of the day or to extend a wel- come to his imperial nephew. The of- ficial statements which are published protest that the kaiser's visit quite devoid of political signilicance, but few people here really beliéve that the German emperor has come merely to shoot peasants. London is anxious to greet him, for although there is no love lost hetween the British and Ger- man nations, the kaiser himself, is probably the most popular man in Bri- tain to-day. The imperial visitor will, however, remain at Sandringham for a week, and then go direct--to Low- ther Castle on a visit to the Earl of Lonsdale, for whom, He has an extra- ordinary attachment. A special medal has been struck recoghition of the extreme effic : with which the officers of the British mercantile marine conducted the trans- port of troops to South Afria and China. It is the intention of the king that a medal shall be granted jn fut- ure wars to the officers of the mercan- tile marine serving in troop transports whenever a war medal has been grant ed to the troops engaged. is is Hogs And Provisions. Montreal, Nov. 7.--Hogs--Receipts faivtv large and the demand and, while prices are steady, trade is active. Mixed stock ofi the cars is worth about Ge. Abattoir dressed hogs are quoted Sle. under fair demand. are 18 good. 7 short mess, heav v Shore SE ri=Tieat v Canada barre 225; long cut, light wrt clear, backs, S21; heavy flanks, Ham=--Large hams, 12¢.; extra sali, illed, lic; hams, 12e. . or cut medium with prenic Sie, bone on Made Strong .Protestr Nov. 10.--~The 1 y Ur (il ah oil 'alentta, Indian ¢ 1 int pers wd internatienal thats, 11 hds Has nil hest Ail al men' on ate Winnipeg, and one of the nown most 1onular commer road died suddenly Saturday night. on Country dvassed hogs are selling at. | | ne MASON MAKES DENIAL. wt -- Tells Sheriff: He Never Saw His Accuser Before. Boston, Nov. 10.--After having giv- en out the ¢ made young negro, LO. Perry, with reference to selling the watches taken from the murdered women, Miss Clara A. Morton amd Miss Agnes McPhee, the police admit that Perry declares that Alan (i. Mason is the man from whom he received these articles. This aamission of the police was made just before young Perry was taken to the jail in Fast Cambridge, where Mason, the prominent Boston man uncer arrest on the charge oi killing Miss Morton, is confined. In one of the jail corridors Perry posi: tively identitied Mason as the man who haa given him the two watches. Mason, by look or word, betrayed no knowledge of having. seen Perry be- fore. When questioned by Sheriff Fair- bairn, Mason merely said: *'1 do not know this man; 1 never saw him be- fore. . HIS HONOR RESTORED. Policeman is Re-instated Only , to be Found Dead. Ottawa, Nov. 10.--W. W. Watters, a member of the Dominion police torce, was found dead in Beechwood ceme- tery, yesterday, with a bul.et wound in we of tne heart. Wattes, forty-live years of age, was on the po- lice force for nineteen years. About three montis ago he was suspended for some irregularity, but was rein- stated yesterday. H. K. Smith, provindal game den, Belleville, twelve ¢ partridges, suipped from FE Barry's Bay, Wilno, Killaloe, and other points on the C.A.R. The birds were distributed amongst the hospit- als. It is contrary to Untario law to sell partridges. GOT A VERDICT. region war- seized A Maiden Lady and the Nova Scotia Assembly. Halifax, N.S., Nov. 10.--Miss Hau- bert, a maiden lady, of seventy years, who had the honor of dancing with the King of England, when he was here forty years ago as Prince of Wales, has secured verdict of $500 in a suit for damages for assault which she brought against the chief of the House of Assembly. Miss Hubert was ejected from the house, last win- ter, upon the order of the attorney- general, because she persisted in fre- quenting the legislature to watch the progress of a petition for redress for the loss of property which she alleg- ed had been wrongfully taken from her. She sued for $10,000. BELLEVILLE MAN'S PLIGHT. | A Railroader Said to be in Hands of Bandits. St. Paul, Minn., Nov. 10.--That Su- perintendent Egan, of the Great North. is u prisoner in the hands of bandits is a "theory advanced by scouts, who have returned to Belton from a search from a missing man. ern railway, was formerly trainmas- station, Bel eviile. It was thought he was lost in the woods at Kalispell, Montana, where he was hunting with some friends. E. EF. Egan, ter at the G.T.R. LIKELY PREFONTAINE. Made Minister of Marine and Fisheries. Nov. 10.--Raymond DPre- to Ottawa, this after- it is understood, for the pur minister Will be Montreal, fontaine goes noon, on a SUMMONS, from Sir Wilirid Laurier, pose of being sworn in as marine and fisheries. Richard 'Boon, the captain of the Montreal hockey team, has declined all the offers from Pittsburg and will play with the local team this winter, which will remain intact. of A GREAT FIRE. Is Devastating East London, South Africa. London, Nov. 10.--The Central News' Fast London (Sonth Afiica) corres pondent, wires that a great fire has devastated eight acres of buildings, trees and other growths in that vici- nity. A hurricane was blowing when the blaze started, he says, and the fire. spread with such -vapidity that alk efforts to stop it were unavailing. A Sunday Morning Murder. PRinghamton, N.Y., Nov. 10.---Mrs, Fnoch Hink shot and killed her hus- band at their home, about three miles Port Dickinson, Sunday morn ine. The act was done in seli defence, Hink at the time being engaged in a murderous assault on -his wife with .n kn Hink was fifty-three his wife is forty. They have married twenty-three vears For time Hink has been jealous of a nephew. above clasp old; been some open years A Lumberman. Nov. 10. --William Death Of Fort Ont. Russell, of Fort Erie's most re spected business men, died at his home vesterdav from the efi of 'a stroke of paralvsis, at the gee of venty-seven vears. He had been en gaged in the lumber and coal business for thirty five vears Erie, one over Look Out For It. Abernethyv's 2th. Women's No welt Wednesday, Goodyear sale, Men's Colonial vember slippers, SWOT vear 1h ar nd' didn't earnest, apparently. | wards ~tr HY 1 te ford athorna volu armory Keottizh ierpool, an Japanese shoot the Behring Japan not being 4 party to vivendi, . ves a seal the modus thw by the ; LAST EDITION WEATHER PROBABILITIES, Torcnto. Ont., Nov. 10.»Fresh to sirong westerly to northerly winds, generally fair, a hight scattered showers or snow flurries, torniag much gelder; Tuesday. fair and cold. Cloaks And Evenin Wraps. We possess unexcell- ed advantages in the making up of these garments. A magnificent range of the newest materials and colors; also the eading kinds of Furs for linings and trim- mings. Estimates furnished on application. SMITH--Suddenly, at Maple Cottage, Ardoch, William MH. Smith, 'in his sixty-sixth year. FLYNN--In Kingston, on the 10th November, 1902, Ellen, relivt A the late Michael , Fivni, aged eighty-two years. Funeral will leave' the resdence of in-law, (Ky Xo Therault, Division Tuesdat morniny! in time for the eight o'clock boat for Wolfe. Island, where a solemn requiem mass will be sung for the repose of her soul. her son- street, @ HE water is not sold that combines the purity, excellence © and beneficial qualities of the MAGI CAL- .EDONIA WATERS. Sold by best dealers everywhere. 4 For Stylish, Well Made. Well Trimmed, Up-to-Date Tailoring CALL ON * CRAWFORD & WALSH, OBO Ode0 Have Secured Rights. The + Hague, Nov. 10:--De * Scheid shipbuilding company, of Flushing, has obtained from the United States own- the right to build, in _Holland, submarine boats for the Netherlands ana Dutch East Indies for twenty-five vears, BARCAIN TABLE We have been trim- miag the prices of our China Ornaments, and show the centre table full f bargains. Every piece in group | reduccd, at least 20%. Some are at half their rexular price. It will be impossible to $ duplicate any of them and ¢ we advise immediate ¢ selection. ? - A C. JOHNSTON & BRO. -aw ' [4 o i

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