Daily British Whig (1850), 12 Mar 1903, p. 5

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Yes they are faying all over en that on stock of Spring Clothi Haberdashery 40d Hats \is the finest display of the kind tver made in King- ston, Our elegant Raincoats, our Spring Topcoats n the diffsrent styles, our Swag- ger Suits § H cuts, Smart Fur- nishings and our ny way. | Spring newness. re. a d every price 10 you. - Lord Quex" is an example ry. It teaches no moral and save whatever can be ex ma self-confessed rome be sentant for the reward of » ooent girl's hand. via Lynden, as Sophy Full manicurist, the foster-sister Eden. the fiancee of Lord worl ed incéssantiy to pre arriage, until folly convince " lordship's reformation, fu! requirement of the difficult don Hurst, as Lord Quex, o in of fashion, with a con eloped. in middle. life, pos: the nonchalance jand re sary to mive it disting- ertainly carried off the kon evening, and Miss Ann 's Duchess of Strood wa: anything but a desirable other members of the cast to do. Wl mp-- ¢ er Marriage Vow." raction at the Gru , to Her Marriage R ord. sen- ymedy 'drama, which is said elaborate in scenic effects. tells an interesting and ory of railroad life as seen owed Boston, The piece is wif the hest of the sensa ma order, the tragic and wing equally balanced by ons features, l vote was taken through- Hampshire on Tuesday on od amindnicnts to the con- Woman suffrage was de- » anti-trust amendment. was « was that placing an edu- uglification on suffrage. erdeen pretided at a mect- y Roval Col mial Tnititute, ator. Matheson, Australia, per.on tie rolstion of the naval defence. 2 VOLE LINE! FAMILY BY O-PHATES. v amd from" that to eon-! theve is but ore step. Avoid wine bv tating "Worin's phates," which will cure h, catamh, colds, tendency on, gere.al weakness, jeou- hemorrhage. blood: i Bite ia, ste. "Worin's vs Bates" acts further as a disinfectant. Nealless to scek only his y1e aration can of your throat or lung dis- 8 known ieveiyuhbere os a g resedy. Tale it 'oom: |p serine; it will end has cured so many others ! line Creio-(hats™ is plea be, its digestion is easy and: oe very low. If your stow § vol kesp it, write us at #5 Mrs. 114th St., N.Y. City, adds her tes- timony to the hundreds of thou- sands on Mrs. Pinkham's files. 'When Lydia E. Pinkham's Reme- dies were first introduced skeptics all over the country frowned upnn their curative ¢ but as year after year has rolled by and the little group of Women who had been cured by the new discovery has since grown into a vast army of dreds of thousands, doubts and hup skepticisms have been swept away until to-day and her other medici ( among women of America is attracting the attention of many of our scientists, physi and thinking people. - Merit alone could win such fame; wise, therefore, is the woman who for a cure relies upon Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. AMENDMENT DEFEATED. Reasons For Removal Of Kinloch. London, March 12. ~The debate on Hon, 1. C. Guest's amendment to the estimates, proposing a reduction of the army by 27,000, mvolved a: vote of confidence without exposing the government to serious risks off defeat, their majority being ninety-one. Mr Prodrick made a strong plea agains: disturbing tke new svstem which had barely got into working order. Capt, Pirie moved a resolution de- manding that the offic removed, or placed on hali pay. should have the right of being tried by court-martial, Mentioning the case of Lieut.-Col. Kinloch, who was retired as ac result of the Guards' scandal, he suggested that Lord Roberts had been actuated by feclings that ought not to have actuated him. = Mr. Brodrick made a siirited reply, giving the reasons for Licut.-Col. 'Kinloch's r¢tivement, an he was loudly applauded by the Irish members. . Good Institute Meetings' Verona, March 12.--The address giv- en by Mr. Sthlonhoker, in the interest of Dairvman's Association, was high- ly appreciated by the large number present. Asselstine's hall-was packed to suffocation and it is understood a similar one is to be held 'at Piccadilly on the 23th inst. Miss Jennie Grant, of the post office is convalescent. Sa muel Asselsting, of the Union House, is the proud possessor of a very hand- some carriage team. W. D. I i Kingston to-day on business; H. B. Wurtelsky. E. Albertson is not ex- peated to recover. The funetal of the late Laura Snider was held on Sun day last in the Methodist church. W. D. Perry is making some noticeable improvements to his residence. A Do Your Kidneys Perform Their Funes ? PAINE'S CELERY COMPOUND Is the World's Spring Remedy for All Kidney and Bladder Troubles, r-- Unless your kidneys properly and re- gularly perform their functions, the ac cumulations of morbid materials in your blood will act like a poison upon the nervous system. Have 'you head ache, vertigo, puffiness under the eyes or dropsical tendencies ? Have you fever sometimes with chills," and 'a dry skin ? Is the urine high colored, some- times scanty in quantity, sometimes bloody and foul ? 'Any of these symp: toms are true warnings of kidney di Fidst Montreal Buwrned--The De- STEAMER BURNED. struction of This Vessel Was Attended With Great Loss of Life--Incidents of Burning of the Corinthian. £ T. J. Criag, a former captain for 'the' Richelieu & "Ontario Navigation' company, who has seen one of his ships burn, spoke to a Syracuse, N. Y., Herald representative-in an inter esting manner of fires of St. Lawrence river craft, relative to the last and most disastrous of these conflagrations the burning of the Montreal, Satur- day night, at her dock at Montreal, Capt. Craig said : "Those superstitiously inclined to remars ill-fated names will note with emphasis the burning of the R. & 0, steamer at Montreal on-- Saturlav- The steamer Montreal (No. 1), Capt. Dreyeau, -was burned to the water's edge at Cape Roque, nine miles west of Quebec city in 1866, and nearly 200 people were either burned or drowned. "The . steamer Montreal (No. 2), Capt. St, Louis, built of iron in I%8, was hamed Beaupre last vear in anti" cipation of placing her on the Mont- real-Ste. . Aone de Beaupre route car rying pilgrims together * with the steamer Three Rivers to the famous shrine of Ste. Anne de Beaupre. Her place 'on the Montreal-Quebec routd was, to have been taken by the steam- er Montreal (No. 3), and it is more than likely 'that the Montreal (No. 2) will continue to ply on the route: be tween Montreal and Quebec till such time- as another steamer is built to take her place. "The other loss which the R. & O. company sustained by fire are : "Steamer. Bavarian, Captain Carnii chael, burned off Whitby on Lake On- tario in 1573. The captain died from exposure, his body was found floating in mid-lake, support by a life belt, the following day. Chief Engineer Funican and three passengers were burned to death. . "The steamer Corinthian, Capt. T. J. Craig, of Kingston, burned in 1892, while shooting the Coteau Rapids, St. Lawrence river... The - steamer was beached at the foot of the rapids and , crew and baggage safely e passengers were driven in farmers' rigs such as the famous cal- eche, Go-by-golly and lumber waggons with hay rack, the whole forming a picturesque and amusing procession, to St. Dominic, the nearest Grand Trunk ' railway station. The flyer end express trains closely following each other were stopped and all passengers loaded and landed in Montreal on steamboat schedule time none the worse for the mishap excepting a very slight shock at the first alarm of fire. The captain and other officers and crew. lost everything excepting the steamer's papers and the clothing they stood in." Jn connection with the loss of the Corinthian Captain Craig told this incident : * "There had been a newly married couple on board, who pex- sisted in asking every little while if there was any danger of anything hap- pening on the trip. It was necessary to reassure them every little while. FIRES IN FLEET] CAPTAIN. CRAIG TELLS OF] They were from England. On the morning of this day they were on deck early with the others enjoying to the utmost the beautiful scenery of the St. Lawrence and the Thousand Is. | lands. Capt. Edward Ouellette, the | chief pilot in the rapids, was on} board and I felt safe in informing the | pair that there was no likelihood of a mishap, but at 4 p.m. fire was dis- covertd in the crank pit and the flames shot high above the walking beam. Fire 'appliances' were in opera tion and the flames held in check till | the steamer was beached and the pas sengers were safely landed, except the bridal couple, who undertook to leap from the promenade 'deck to the shore. They miscalculated the distance and fell in three feet of water, but were rescued by an inhabitant who was at tracted to the scene. The efforts' of the crew to save the burning steamer were now redoubled, but the flames had gained too much headway. The crew was continually breaking through the fire-eaten deck and fearing a loss of life the steamer was abandoned and she was quickly consumed. "At dinner that night at the St. Lawrence Hall, Montreal, I congratu lated the young couple on their nar row escape and they were surprised to think that I remembered them in the midst of so many other passengers. But I seemed to think that perhaps thev had a presentiment of something to happen, and could not forget their presistent questioning." : -------- Rideau Almost Clear Of Ice. Point Road, Maich 11.--Jhe rexnt heavy thaw has made, the country look once more like spring. Should it continue so for a few days the farmers wouk® commence seceding. The ite is nearly all out of the Rideau, and the river is thickly settied with the feathered tribe. 1t makes our young. sports' blood boil when they think they have to live. within the pounds of the game law. Mesas Bane't, Bailey and Ruttan ae hat- ing sawing bees, cutting up their sum of firewood. James Bax sease, 'Fi mer sup 3 To-day » multitude of men and wo- } ler and E. C. Barrett bave token in men suffering from varibus forms of all the horse races wih their mate hed kidiey: aliéctions, enduring. pains. and pai. of colts, which are unequalled in mind agony, are, through the use of Paine's Celery Compound eliminating morbid and poisonous materials from the blood. Wise ad able physicians are prescribing Paine's Celery Ee pound for their patients. No other medicing in the world is so stronwly indorsed by the best people of the land: Mrs. E. O. Clairmont, Vancouv- er, B.C., writes about her blessed ex- perience with = Paine's Celery Com pound; she says : "For. five years kidney and urinary troubles made life a misery for me Before, 'coming I was treated by two doctors; both failed to cure me, and mv sufferings increased. | was ad- vised by a friend fo try Paine's Cel- all dvmptoms of the old troubles, feel that 1 am a new: medicine was doing its work well. Ab ter using eight bottles I am Sree input} parson. Painc's Compound ney Plensing: | anos en to the the townghip. They intond exhibiting them at the fall fair. A number from here will attend the delivery of the Massey Harris Co. in the city'on the 12th, under the management of their agent, T. Hughes. W. Ruttan, after spending some time visiting relatives in Welland county, has returner. Miss N. Moreiand, Sunbury, it the guest of Miss Gladys Ruttap, G. Tuer, spending the winter in the Old Cocn try, has returned, looking much. ro A jreshed giter the voyage oter the salt water. Mrs. Davis, Livingston avenue, | city, is the guest of: Mrs. J. Baxter. Miss A. Feford is visiting Miss M. Mclean. 'RH. Muriay is spending a few weeks with Josep! Fowler, Glenbur W. McLean bas enwaged G. Med: as foreman for a few months. wig. ley ------r Miss Blanche Walsh's engagement in "Resurrection," at the Victoria tes- tre, New York, is proving one of the most successful of the entire season. Gamey must now either prove his 3 bush from { children looked 1 re to play he' Victoria Day celebration in Kihg in, on May 25th. ! The newly formed local sscociation of masters und mates is mow over sizty stiong, and gpplications are be ing rechived wiexly for admission. At noon to-day, just when traffic eaviest, street car No. 19 jumped | a #11 on Princess street, near King street, delaying traffic for about half an hour. Jean Woodhouse, a pupil in the sen: ior third: class at' Vidtoria school, is déad from peeumonia and fever. Her schoolmates are very sad. They will send flowers for hep casket. J. K. Sparling, who has given a gold claim in the Rlondyke to the king is a son of Principal Sparling, Winnipeg, and a former pastor of Sy: denham Street Methodist church. Tha sergeants of the 14th Regiment conducted an-.enjoyable card party in their pleasant mess quarters, Sin the armouries, Jast evening: Refreshments were served and a very happy svening spent. : Rome time 'ago a farm hand left the employment of William Weods, of Storrington township, and went to work for a Wolfe leland favmer, tak ing along with him an overcoat. This morning the cont «was returned, through: the police. A Pible school is being formed at enham street church, unddr the te rship of Prof. Walter Pike I is intended to be open fo mén and wo men of all denciinations. There wall be an inaugural meeting on Sunday next 'at three tek, in the church, when further arrangements will h made. Mrs. Gordon, of Ottawa, will sing and speak. Seasonable Styles In Millinery. From The Delineator for April, Althorgh the turban was worn dur ing the winter, it bas come forth in straws and in all of the dainty mater- ia!s belonging to spring and summer A rival to the turban is the sailor hat. The fower toques were never so at tractive, and nothing more appro priate can be chosen for present wear Burnt Tuscan and black is a favor ite combinstion for the hat that is intended for actual service, and black end-white hats are always in good style. That the crowns of hats will remain low and flat is assured, and the square box crown characterizes many of the smartest shapes in straw, both small 'ard large. Soft, highly £nished satin ribbons are a feature of way of the new hats though in less exaggerated effects than were used in the past season; flowers are also conspicuous on the latest mode's, and the sweeping ostrich plume has rot yet lost favor The aigrette it a very fashionable ornament. In adjus.ing it on the hat. it is important that it slant over the top of the hat from the back. to the front. There are all sorts of arrange ments for securing it, one of the most unique and pleasing of which is tbe jot arrowhead. -- ---------- Sunday School Domestic Science. From an Exchange . Facts learned from observation make a deeper impression than infor: mation acquired from books or hear say. Undoubtedly the entire, pictur esque story of Elijah's contest with the priest of Baal had been read and explained to the class, but the more vivid mental image in the nifnd of the youngster was his mother put: ting a roast of beef into the oven, says an' exchange. A scripture examination was beine held recently in an English school where the Jsson was Elijah offering sacrifice on Mount Carmel. As the like good: scholars, the inspector gave them a question : "Now, vou have told me that El: jah put the bullock on the altar, Why did he put water around the al: tar ?" The children looked amazed except one little: boy, who stood up and said : "Please, sir; fo wake the gravy." -------------- The Atmosphere Of Dwellings. Under the head of Child Training, in the April Delineator, are a number of valuable suggestions for keeping the air of the house pure. Améng them are the following : The use of stained floors and rugs in preference to parpets. A thorough daily airing of room. Shaking and brushing clothing out of-doors. Removal night of day. paily airing' and occasional beating of mattresses and blankets. Open war against the feather dust: er. A dry cellar at all seasons. Frequent inspection of plumbing. Little furniture and no uncovered vessels containing soiled water, in the bedroom. Opening rwindows at night; diseard- ing weather strips. Plenty of sunlight. edch from the bedroom at clothing worn during the High Art. Harvard Lampoon . Prof. Briggs tells a story about a western. gentleman who had a son graduated at the seat of leaning at Cambridge. The western gentleman was showing a visitor his pictures, which were many and costly. At last be took him to the place where the young man's Harvard diploma hung upon the wall in its frame. "This," said the western man. "'is the most expensive picture I have in my entire gallery." BE Praying Aad Packing. f San' Fraociseo NewsLetter. : The sultan's expressed desire for peace while he buys more guns re- minds one of the story of the preach- er who had been called to anether pulpit at a bigher salary. His small son, when questioned. whether his fa- - NEVER FADE AWAY Tail EP ------ Even 'Though Canadian Territory Was Violated by fnvasion-- ~The Episode of Twenty-Eight | Years Ago. - . How many Oknadians realize the anxiety the British possessions on this continent have at one time dnd another 'the diplomats of the States and Great Britain? The trou ble over boundary lines is traditions al, 'but that and the Fenian raid is not the only source of diplomatic tually ; cavalry from the States, and strange to relate 'there Wis no call to arms irom Her Majesty's warriors, and therein les a decidedly interesting story, a story of warfare, bloodshed and massacre, defeat i States soldiers and a wild desire for revenge which carried them into Can- adian lands in search of their enciny. it was the of the great bats tie the Sioux and Cheyenne Indians had with General Custer, and the redsking fled into Canada to avold the infuriated troops who -were dé | termined to kill everything with wu copporeeolored skin they could find. Ihdecd, the Indians appeared to have Leen so frightened by the magnitude of their bloogy victory that they never auased running until they pass. ed over the border and away in British territory, where the wily old Sitting Bull, theip chief, understood thut he could mot be pursued exvept after co ce with Washing ton. i It 'was the spring of 1876, July 25, that General George Custer and his 252 men were slaughtered by Sitting Bull and his red warriors on the plains of 'the Little Big Horn Riven in Wyoming. 'The battle created sensation. Custer commanded 258 troopers of the Ninth Cavalry when he went into battle and there were just 952 dead white men found oh the knoll "where they made their stand. In other words none escaped. These 'were superbly mounted, Had they broke ranks and fled for their lives, many would haved' escap- ed. It is a singular comment on their courage that not one attempt el to ride away. To-day there isa tiny © monument marking the spot where each soldier fell und 'a big white-shaft marks the apex of the hill; the high-water mark of the bat- tle which that day. The white stones' are beaytifully uligned there} The bodies were not found for many days. 'Then decomposition was: too far advanced for removal, Bach body was. rolled into a grave dug by the side of where {it was found. Custer's force was a part of a big force, neafly two thousand soldiers, under Gemeral Crook, sent out. to vation. Custer was separated by the main body and sent on a scouting expedition. Here he still further di- vided his force, sending 'half of his wen away under General Reno. Thi smaller force was near emough 10 hear the reports of Custer's guns, hut could render no réliel because of the presence of some fifteen thousand Indians. The Sioux are magnificent horse soldiers and 'brave in battle They overwhelmed « Custer, though soveral who took part in the fight said Custer's troops killed hundreds of their braves before they were '""wiped out." One of the sub-chiefs, Rain-in-the- Face, who had a grievance against Captain Thomas Custer, a brother of the general. cut out the still quivers ing heart of his and ate it raw during the conflict. The Indians horribly. mutilated every victim but the body of Custer, the chief. . They afterwards explained that he was "much heap bLrave man" end they would neither scalp him nor others wise mutilate the body. When found he was fully dresséd, with his sword ing on his breast. One single bul- ig wound in the forehead told how died. All the other dead were stripped of théid clothes and cit to pieces, : » The next day the whole Sioux na- tion started northward on ihe run, As soon as General QOrook discovers ed the disaster that had overtaken Custer, he sent his whole force after the Indians. The warriors abandor- ed their families, knowing they would not be injured by the troopers, in or< der that they could move faster. The pursuil was stubborn. Up through the. Bear Paw Mountain of Montana fled the frightened Indiana and then on across the, Milk River and. into Assiniboia. The troopers of Crook never came in sight of the Indians, but kept steadily on. Sitting Bull halted' fifty miles over the border, only to find the soldiers were still after him. Then his force swept on into the! Wood Mountains, In the meantime Oeneral Crook discovered that he had exceeded his agthority:] and had invaded Canada. ¥ very promptly retreated; though he after- wards asserted that he would have fought a battle with the Indians had he caught up with them, if he had teen on foreign soil or in h----. Only the chief men of the tribe, however, remained for any Jeni of time on British soil. Sitting Bull himself re- migined in Canada for a year, the Government refusing 'to expel him as long as he was peaceful. The cun- ning olf fellow them went back to the States and was finally shot to death by the Indian scouts at Standing Rock during the Pine Ridge Indian uprising of ¥ 1 while they were trying to arrest him for com- plicity in the "ghost dance' craze, Shun the Heof Burner. That odor of buried hoofs which ong gets in passing a blacksmith shop is an offense" to the nostrils, and the cause of it should be an of- fensé to any one Who has respect for the. horse. 'This "burning of the hoofs every time the animal is shod is u lazy or incompetent man's make- shift for fitting the shoes, and the practice is on a par with the use of) ahalmning fluid In milk to «void thorough washing of the cans. Now and 'then a blacksmith may be found with enough ComImnon sense and me~ chanical genius to fit a several wiles out which he has just emerged. ¢ : 8 damages. i ther had - reached a decision, 'replied, "Well, pa's praying for light, but ma's packifg up." * I ---------- \ Thomas Dowling, o Tyendi far: mer, struck by: a GTR ain oat Neseronto, bas been awarded 275 go have work done by of United | L Fe is not quite sure whether he pro- drive the Sioux back to their reser |i shoe Jroperly without burning the hoof. - We would |' way to Peon Sketch of Anthony Hope. .M.A.P. bas the following pea sketch of Anthony Hope--He is a ing, halt-scornful remark: * ) a little thin on the top, sir"; large, almost prominent, grey-blue eyes) benutiful teeth, and a singularly charming smile, which lights up « fage in repose gomewhat severe, , almost ascetic, ally, one is tempted to think that when he drew that famous imperson- ator, Mr. Rudolf Rassendyll, he uns conscious) drew 'himself. = This mds dark saying, for what can the quiet, stydious, stay-at-hoine au thor have in common with the roam ing, daring, love-making, man-killing impostor? Much. The same mas tery of self, the same knowledge of mon and affairs, the same well-bred coolness and reserve, the same, indol- ent, detached oujlook on lite; till occasion calls for ection, and then, one would say, the same capacity to rise ond take his part. Ome cannot imagine Mr. Hope getting excited ; one can understand that he - t very readily ' become "dangerous." Dat this far his life, so he will tell you, has been entirely uneventful. He has no especial hobbies, 'though he 'is not averse from picking up a rare piece. of old silver, and, is a pretty constant first-nighter. "Walking is his only outdoor recreation. As re- gards methods: of work, h have nought of dictating, typing, phono~ graphing, or any other of the mod- ern author's devices for decreasing his manual labor and increasing his output. He writes every tine himself in. a neat; upright hand: is « bad starter; and revises to a fair ekteni. fers novel or play writing. Perhaps the latter, because "it is such a gam- ble." Surely there is some of the Rassendyll leaven in that remark. Would Not Wed for Love. The sale of a batch of letters of Disraeli to his sister, writtén before the days of his fame, brought to light some interesting passages in which "Dizzy," as he always was to his sister, was very candid. : in describing a visit to Wyndham Lewis', he writes! + "By-the-bye, would you like Lady Z for a sister- indaw? She is very clever, has $250,000, and is domestic. As for love, al! my friends who martied for or . beauty either beat thelr wives or live apart from them. This is literally the cake. 1 commit many follies in life, but 1 never in- tend to marry for love, which, I am sure, is a guarantee of infelicity."" Within four years Disracli married Wyndham Lewis' prosperous widow. In a letter written four years be- fore he became a mbmber of Parlia- ment, Disraeli thus described a de bate in the House of Commons: *'It was one of the finest we have had in years. Bulwer spoke, but is physical- ly disqualified, and in spite of all his exertions can never succeed. I heard Macdulay's best speeches and Shell and (Charles Grant. Macauley was " admirable, but between our- selves, I could floor them all. This is entre nous. 1 have never been more confident of. anything than that 1 could carry everything before me in the House. The time will come." lava ¥ < Meaconsfleld's Breeches. "Ave may conclude from an anecdote in Sir Edward Hertslet's "Recollec- tions of the Old Foreign Office' that master's clothes by sight. Lord Beaconsfield was one of the and as such owned a special official uniform. One day he was about to attend a levee at St. James's Pal- ace, and his valet laid out his clothes for the occasion. Having implicit confidence in. 'his valet, Beaconsfield dressed and went to the levee. On appearing before the Prince--now Edward VIL the diplomatist and minister made his bow and, to his surprise, was greet~ ed with an amused smile. "It won't do,' His Royal High- ness jocularly remarked, 'You're found out!" "In what, ir?" demanded Beacons said the Prince, still smil- ing, "you've got the wrong trousers on!" And, to his horror, on looking dows, Beaconsfield found that he had got his diplomatic uniform coat on with his Trinity House trousers-- 3% sartoriad sin which inclnded omission and commission. Divided into $50,000 it is a wise valet that knows all his | Eider Brethren of the Trinity House, | MINION OIL Sit Sb 4 Sf 8 CAPITAL - Shares hares, Par Value TREASURY STOCK-WORKING J > The recent acquisition by this com Wheatley District and 100 acres val of0\l lands now aver 2,000 acres hh a corresponding increase in the: : additions were also wade without wi ing treasury evidences intent the com] g ti of the Dominion Company wor he expects to increase the 00 barrels a Jhis_ produce prove: iY Jor te he development or Wa or mn a nigh grade quality of pig he beer found. In-view of these facts, as well as by the company, directors have Seturd pany § 3 character and lead At the customary oil fleld portion Close at 35¢. anil that the Advance to 50¢, The company is now per share, fully paid and no practically 86 per cent. per anpum he payable A to subscribe by earnestly advise now and Lis by the ad We wonder if you know we manufs Tin Pipe, Half and Half Solder, Babbit M Lead and Antimony ? fcr THE CANADA METAL CO. Breck & Halliday, Subject of a Punch The death occurred recently at Mo- ruya, in New South' Wales, of a Crimean veteran who once attracted a good deal of attention. Mr. George Solly had for many years been a prosperous settler at Moruya, and | was a popular figure in the district. He was otie of the bluejackets landed . from the British warship Rodney in the Crimea, and had the clasps for lvkerman, Balaclava, the Alma, and Sebastopol. Whils Sebastopol was on, he rades by dancing a horupipe on the ramparts, and the incident was af- terwards made the subject of a car toon in Punch, ¥ - ------------------------ Ask For Tarol From your dmggist ar grocer. They Yorker, ve tin Tay: NOTICE Is bersby given the public that we purpose making it warm for winter. Your order is solicited. Pp. WALSH, IE

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