Daily British Whig (1850), 16 Nov 1903, p. 5

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Let There Be No Mistake! @ risk in buying Consider Problems. e--it is made London, Nov. 16.--Sir Michael Hicks- without refep. Beach's Spek at Bristol has given rise to most contradic TAmors. - ar ] The Original On. tho one band, it is said that be render i. te PACKARD . Sn. aoe a -- best ency to go over to Mr. Chamberlain, Le 'hile on the other hand it is claimed Fats of the "Foot Form" @ | that Mr. Balfour has done the captur- posed to utlast at Re | A @ ing, and pat 'the te Food 3 least in losing its leader, will disappear. nary ranges Shoes Are matter will be decided on the. ith, Sold by @ | he TH Fpl . meeting, at. Ww von- ee, : y @ | tire will be. the. chuinoan, 'and Sir Only O Fi (@ | Michael Hicks-Beach and Lord Goschen other bi y One Birm. | "hn | perfectly and Te ol ; meeting at Cardifi next Friday. H nship. N In Kingston. is tod wich imviations to speak : 2 "| at every' it centre population, enough said. but ey thoy" After Ti oh PRICES, $3.50 and $4.50 This justly famous line has been imitated very closely, butno concern in 'Canada has ever been able to import 'Imitations" that 'prove as satisfagtory as the original Packard Shoe. ; OON JOE) speech early in the year he will devote his time to the mature consideration of the intricate lems which have arisen in connection with his policy. A post eard which has aroused con- siderable enthusiasm has been distri buted broadeast over the country. Tt contains a red picture of Mr. Chamber- lain, and the inscription, "What Saith the Scripture ?"' (Genesiv, chapter 41, verse 55). The verse referred to is as iollows : "And when all the land oi Egypt was famished the people cried to {irew is Thursday, Deceit J. H. SUTHERLAND & BRO. ®@ DOOD OCCOCODO ICO ICE ---- (GRAND OPERA WOUSE. |) ALL THIS WEEK .. MARKS BROS .. To-night, THE DUKE'S DAUGHTER. + The Montana Queen:" « Under Two Flags." A Mother's Heart.' ow His Sake." v Matinee--* Kathleen Mavour- THE MENDELSSOHN PIANO ¥ you pay an exorbitant price for vour Piano, part of your money is wast- ed; no matter how good the instrument is. and if you pay ever so small a price for a poor Piano, all your money is wasted. But if vou buy.a good Fiano vou must pay 'at least a fair price, and that is all you have to pay for The Mendelssohn Piano. This Plano has a most beautiful tone; which it retains for } a great number of years in constant use. | For nearly a quarter of a century these } Pianos have stood the test and our sat- » | isfied customers are our references. New Styles, just arrived at Kingston's up-to- dati Music Store, 286 Princess street. Style F., speciallv built for the exhibi- tion of 1908: Style E., a new and beau- een." A 4 Saturday Night--" The Little Minis- 1 or. Prices, 10c., 20c., 30¢ Seats on sale at Hank ful design, Chamberlain' Style H.. TO-LET. He onation. Concert Grand. T the cloth- ee | Singleton. oneprs vram i s OFFICES, OR DNELLINGS, | sree with years TO LE armed, ot Mo ry side. Cann's, 51 Brock Street. H (ei ~URNISHE s ITH OR | MYERS' CELEBRATED WOME- 1 d double FURNISHED oO nT No. | Mads Mince Meat, Pork Sausages, Ten- ! If some 196 Princess street, Vaughn Terrace. | derlo, Jiraws. of Head Checse. Al i y n | the truth _jmodery improvements, Hams, All to be found at 60 Brock of them -- HOUSE -- No. 27. JN BRICK St "Yaoms Oh = . versit; venue; Pp eC resent occupant leaving city MARKET REPORTS. Apply ou premises, or 295, mext door. | -------- ue Values WO LARGE SHOPS, 42 and 44 PRIN Live Stock Markets. - 8 S, d N- "=i : and our great 3 0.5L street, also two dwellings, and Chicago, Nov. 14. attle--Receipts, e clothin stone stable. = Rent low to a desir- |300 head; market nominal. Good to g able tenant. Apply 249 Brock street. prime steers, 85 to $5.70; poor to i 40 to $4.75; stockers and 1 medium, $3.40 4.75; t for their TRO LARGE OFFICE ROOMS et | feeders, 82 to $1.25 cows, $1.50 to Avply © Geo. CMfi, Real Estate| $4.10; heifers, $2 to $5.10; cammers, Agent, 95 Clarence street, or John |g] 50 to $2.40; bulls, $2 to $1.50; Judie. { calves, $2.25 to $7.50; Texas fed steers, | to £3.55; western steers, $3 to | 84.50, Hogs-- Receipts to-day, 13,000 head; Monday, 30,000 head; market steady at yesterday's close. ixed and" butchers, $4.50 to $4.95; good to choice, heavy, $4.60 to $4.85; rough, heavy, $4.30 to $4.65; light, $4.50 to $4.90. bulk of sales, $4.60 to $4.50, Sheep and lambs--Receipts, 2,000 head; i market steady. Good to choice wethers, $3.75 to $4.50; fair to choice mixed, 53 to $3.75; native lambs, 8.75 to $5.85. New York, Nov. 14.--Beeves-- re- ceipts. 19° head, consigned direct; no sales reported; . dressed beef steady; on what it Pharoah for bread, and Pharoah said unto all the Egyptians, "Go unto Jos eph; what he saith to you, do." The agent-general of New Brunswick has received a letter from Mr. Cham- berlain, acknowledging the receipt, with great pleasure, of the. resolution passed by the St. John board of trade, endorsing Mr. Chamberlain. Mr. Cham- berlain, in his reply, says that the support of the colonies is absolutely is occupied by the Map and School Supply company, apd is to be vacat ed by them on January lst, when Ryrie Bros., will thoroughly overhaul and add it to their present establish ment. This will give them some square feet for show-rooms, exactly doubling their present ground floor space, and is to be utilized largely for the extension of fime china, art goods, and optical departments: The first floor is to be added to their mail or der department, which has grown so rapidly as to make the incregsed space a necessity. The upper floor will be devoted to manufacturing. and will be furnished with the most improved appliances. This will make "Diamond Hall." with perhaps one New York ex- coption, the larsest and best-cquipped jewelry establishment oa the contin ent. 10,000 ¥ What The Hymn Did. Renfrew Mercury On Sunday evening, as the congrega- tion of St. Paul's church, Renfrew, were singing the recessional hywin, the electric lights suddenly went out, through the buffing out out of a fuse in the church connection with the gen eral lighting system. After a moment, Miss Carruth, who was at the organ, began playing 'Nearer My God to Thee," and this wellknown hymn seemed to be joined in with more than usual heartiness in the darkness by the congregation; while some 'of the gentlemen procured a lamp from a neighbor. And there was a co- incidence. For it has been learned that while the congregation of St, Matthias city dressed native sides, 6c. to 9c. per Ib.; Texas heef, Se. to 5jc, Calves --No receipts, 57 head on sale. A car of Western calves sold at 83. City dressed veals, $8 to $13. Sheep and lambs--Receipts 3,434 head; sheep rat ed about steady; lambs, slower, 10c. to 15c. Tower. About 4 cars of stock unsold. Sheep sold at $2.85 to $3.60 or 500 1bs.; culls at $2.; lambs at 25 to $5.85; one little bunch at $587; a car of Canadas at $5.50. Dressed mutton, BSc. to Te. per Ib; dressed lambs, general sales, Tic. to 10c. Hogs--Receipts, 2,504 head, all consigned direct. Buffalo, Nov. 14.--Cattle--Receipts, 250 head; market slow; steers, $3.60 to $4.75; others unchang- ed. Veals--Receipts, 100 head: msrket "WEATHER Is here--Winfer around the corner For the next four months your health and happiness Will depecd largely upon the kiud of fael you barn. We are the proud possess- ors of uearly thirty years ex- yerience in the fuel business, which means that our cus- tomers _ get coal which is carefully selected avd soreen- ed--absolutely free from slate and slag-- just pure coal. Every dollar's: worth means a dollar's worth of fire. Delivered promptly and carefully--no dust and dirt. Are you perfectly satirfied with the coat you get and the price you pay ? Af not, do-'t :hi.k that all coal and al! dealers are a ike. . Qive us a trisl. All kinds of fuel at lowist prices. is just Yorkers, Sc. to 10c. lower; $1.90 to stags, few 85.10; pigs, 24.40 to $4.60; sheep steady; lambs Sc. lower. Lambs £4.50 to £5.60; yearlings and mixed, 81.50 to $3.75. | Cheese Markets. Watertown, N.Y., Nov. a quiet ' cheese market Many of the factories have sold al their make and there is not over T, ac were: Tar c white! 4 lots 600 boaes, sold av 10fc.; large color Lions butchers' steady, $5.50 to $8.50. Hogs--Reccipts. | 11,100 head; market active, pigs and | others steady; heavy, $5.10 to $5.15; mixed, £5.05 to $5.10; Yorkers, $5 to $5.06. a | $5: roughs, | £3.50 to $4. Sheep and lambs-- Receipts, 8,400 head; 1 wethers, 81 to £1.25: ewes, $3.35 to £3.50; sheep | 15.--It was yesterday. 000 to 8,000 boxes left unsold. Lewis | county has about 12,000 boxes. Trans- of ed, 1 lot of 60 boxes at 10c.; small white, 9 lots of 890 boxes at 10 to church, Ottawa, were engaged at the same time in singing the same reces- sional hymn, the lights in that church also suddenly went out. 1 Canadian Sunshine. Toronto News {| Rev. Mark Guy Pearse, during the course of an eloquent address in Trin- ity Methodist church, on Friday after- noon said : "Canada is a wonderfully beautiful country. Never have T ex. perienced such a climate. I speak with. | out exaggeration, when I say that in | six weeks of beautiful fall weather I | have enjoyed here, I have seen more | sunshine than in any two vears in Fagland. You speak of the 'Lady of the Snows," why it's 'Lady of God's Sunshine," you should say." ------------ He Shot A Wolf. Peter Donoghue, one of a party of four deer hunters who returned to-day from Hastings county, was fortunate enough to shoot a woll, receiving 'a bounty cf £10. Only two wolves were | I hilled" while the party were in the { bush An Old Queen Dead. New York, Nov. 16--In her 101«t | year, Mary Piegrum Harrison, who | was in her childhood years, petted by George 111, king of England, and I | was one of the old queens of the cir - | cus is. dead in Brooklyn. Likely To Observe It. Students' night at the Grand Overa | House will likely be arranged for De- cember 11th when Margaret Anglin sud Henry Miller will present "Cyn. fo 104ec.; white twins, 32 lots of 1,994 so att . se CIvi R. CRAWFORD, boxes. at 10e. to 10}e. : this. a three-act comedy, hy Clyde od Shoe DEALER IN FUEL, KINGSTON. Canton. Nov. 15.~At Canton yes- ! | sold for 10c. -- : Alexandria, PRESSING AND REPAIRING | all but two factories sold at 10fc. for A SPECIALTY. YOUR OWN gi] white and colored. This sale closes the made into up-to-date suitg, Ss | board for the season. ® SALLOWAY, 181 Brock St. next Bib- | Belleville, Ont., Nov. 14.--There was ry. offered today 2,679 white and 290 roa vi Ragin Ar | Rufing price for Qotober ER SIDEN' J JR- 5-16¢. fc Nov geon of the Kingston Uemeral Hos | 10 5-16¢. for November. pital, Office aud residence, 188 Wel | ington 8t., Kingston, (nearly oppo- sitn Post Office). Twlephone 478 ! and and fifty boxes offered at chees market to-day. | from 10c. to 104e. STAMPS AND MARKERS. { RUBBER STAMPS OF ALL KINDS | Dates, | billed to appear in the Grand Oper Stump, ate. prompt | house all this week, reached the cit . WE ju noon, from Cape Vimcent, terday 1,410 boxes of twin cheese were | Ont., Nov. 14.--At the cheese hoard, 960 cheese were boarded colored. October and November make. 10fc. and | ployees were London, Ont., Nov. 14.--Four thous- No sales. Bidding | The Marks Bros. dramatic company Another Stock Company. The Summers' Stock company is booked to appear at the Grand Opera House' during the wick beginning No vember 30th. The company will pro duce modern drama Sanding The Walks. afternoon corporation em- put to work sanding as { phalt and granolithic 'walks, made | slippery by falling snow and sleet. e | This County Councillor Eli Ketchum and | famil-, Cherry Valley: will take up | their Yesi lence in JFiktoh Mr. Ket {chum having purchased the property formerly owned by Miss x Ice cream # 0 "At Homes," a v put up. on November 4th, at tiie home of the Ameliasburg. ville people were robbed on Thursday. Delta, and purchased the Darlington Union factory. residence on Trout Lake on Tuesday, was trict. He was born near Madoc sixty- two years ago suffered from cancer of the stomach. low township on Thursday last black hear walked through street in daylight and made himself at home. At one farm he killed a cali and two turkeys, and on another farm he killed a cow and séveral chickens. He was not captured ward county, had his leg broken the other day. While fixing a bag of grain on the waggon the horses started and the wheel ran over him to neatly hleed to death before as- die. Electricity In Ottawa hy a live wire, CL ------ News of the District on Both The date of the turkey fair at Ren- her drd The new steel bridge at Madoo has heen completed and is a splendid piece of work: A ing of the Prince Bdward has been called . for Sed of The metre system in Gananoque's electric lighting, is causing complaint, as bills are increasing. Ruttan died at Roches: county council Mrs. Alfred ter, N.Y, on last, The de ceased was an only. daughter of Wil. tiam Dulmage, South Bay. Cid A congregs' meeting ol Centre ngregatiang) toe church, Belle- ville, with a view to taking steps to renovate ilding, was held, John Mouck, Picton, while painting "is s 11 pac The name tells the quality. the smoke stack of the steamer Cart: or, at Togawanda, N.Y, fell to the ok, and broke three ribs, and sprain his . Samuel Ritchie, who leit Perth dis- trict fity-three years ago, and has not been heard from since, has been locat- 'ed by his brothers, John and James; in St. Joseph, Michigan. A man Simpson, Bannock: burh, while carelessly handling his rifle, ea it to go ofl. He lost his ear and the lower part of his cheek. He had a Barrow escape from death. John Cross, the oldest resident of Halstead Bay, is dead in his eighty second year. Of his family hut one son, George, and ene daughter, Sarah, sur- vive. He was a good Methodist. The A, C. Miller canning factory, Ficton, -has been supplied with 49,¢ 000 bushels of tomatoes, the present season. They have vet large quanti: ties of apples and pc rk and beans to An interesting event was celebrated bride's father, I. Way, when| tem, was in the city to-day. his daughter. 5 | he, was uni Rev. Father urray, Chicago. ted in marriage to Almon G. Hunt, | preached at high mass in St. Marv's The hen roosts of a number of Belle- | Fire supposed to have been caused a n i by tramps, destroyed two houses and | He killed the deer necessary for the success of his plans. | | shop mp Plainfield. Messrs, Dunving | and arrow. & RN a and Gould were the losers Catering to parties, "At Homes," To Enlarge " Diamond Hall. TP. A. Alford, Orono, Ont. formerly Pipi Ph oo best attention. T Ryrie Bros. have concluded a pur- | proprietor and maker of the Phillips- | HB, Ferguson, King street. chase of the property on Adelaide | ville cheese factory, has taken into A. Palmer. Miss M. Williams, aml street west, Toronto, in rear of their | partaérskip Stephen Stevens, for six | Master Willie McCartney, University store. The building on this property | years maker for P. W. Strong, at} avenue, spent Sunday with Mr. ond William H. Sweet, who died at 'his one of the pioneers of the dis and occupied many yrominent positions during his life. He of Halloway, Thur a large the only In the village James Carleton, Hillier, Prince Ed: his leg, causing sistance reached him. He will probably BEFORE COURT. In Chan- cery. Toronto, Nov. 16.~In the case of Randall vs. The Ottawa Electric com- pany. the court of appeal, to-day, gave judgment allowing the appeal by Ahearn and Soper, and dismissing the plaintifi's action. Randall was injured when putting up the decorations for the visit of the Dike of York. At the trial he recovered damages. Randall was an employee of the Ottawa Electric Light company and was shocked by a 'wire put up by Ahearn and Soper company, contract: ors for the civic decorations. The court holds no one lighle, as the pole from which he fell, belonged to the G.N.W., and Randall had no right on it. The court awarded costs against the plaintiff, but urged the de fendants not to claim them. R. Fleming, Toronto's assessment commissioner, has just returned from an interview with the managers of the Singer Sewing Machine company. The company is to erect a $700 plant in Canada, and this industry was sought for Toronto. It will be erect ed near Montreal, where the Canadian head offices are W. H. Callaghan, was remanded un- til Thursday in to-day's police court. He pleaded not guilty to a charge of stealing 8180 from the Crossin Piano compamy, and elected to be tried by a jury. Callaghan it was who made the latest affidavit in the matter of Gamey, Crossin and Stratton, alleg ing that the latter put up the money business, A Clerical Hero. Rev. James W died, was unique among English clergy was by birth an Irishman, He won hi Victoria Cross during the Afghan.cam paign of 1579, when he his famous march to troopers of the Ninth Lancers, their horses, had fallen into a ditch and were struggling in water with thei animals on top of them, T muscular strength, under a heavy fir from the enemy at short range. A Long Strain. New York Times "is Thomas Lipton, just before sailed for home, was telling friends about the progress of a trial The prisoner was called and the judge said : he your former crimes and convictions, "Your worship, if if you'd permit me to sit down." Arbitration Likely. arbitration in the strike of the Ch mote than hepeful than an amicabl Local Notes, and Also Things in Gener: an owner at the Whig office. d Emulsion, 75¢. and turned to-day from Wyoming, to com woue his studies at Queen's. tawa, reached the and is at the Bishop's maiden name was Nancy R. Day. | ent of the Grand Trunk railway sys Cathedral on Sunday bis friends by choice joints of venison to buy Gamey's interest in the piano Adams, who has just men in wearing the Victoria Cross. He was a chap juin with Lord Roberts' army during Kandahar. Two with men were rescued by Mr. Adams' gallantry and some to the bar "We will now have read a record of " you are. really going to do that, I'd he very grateful Chicago, Nov. 16.--The prospects for cago railway, to-day, are better than ever, before, and those interested are dispute can be INCIDENTS OF THE DAY. wl J. T. Hundington and wife, Water town, N.Y., are city visitors. : A child's leather mit (new) awaits Colds that settle on the lungs are ous. Take Gibsons Red Cross 40¢. F. W. Garvin, medical student, re Rev. Father Gray, ordained at Ot- ty on Saturday ) was for The late Mrs. timer. Her years a resident of U. E. Gillen, assistant superintend- He is very elo- | quent. John M. Theobald is remembering with his own bow Mrs. Samuel Williams, Battersea Rov. Dr. Philp filled the pulpit of Svdenham Street Methodist church on Supday morning for the first time since Mav last. In the evening Rev Thomas Prown, B.D., was the preach er, Mrs. Kennedy To Be Tried Again. Kansas City, Mo., Nov. 16. The case of Mrs. Lulu Prine Kennedy, charged with the murder of her husband, was called in court to-day and it is. ex pected that the second trial of the fa mous case will begin shortly. Believing that he would not be ahle to be im pustial in the trial, Judge John W. Wofford, who presjded at the frst hearing of the case, has sworn himself off, the bench and named Judge Joshua W. Alexander, of Gallatin, to try the case. Mrs. Kennedy shot and killed her husband, Philip H. Kennedy, contract ing agent of the Merchants' Dispatch company, in this city, January 10th, 1901, The shooting was the culmina tion of a sensational wedding, which Kennedy had brought suit to have set aside, asserting it had been forced. The couple had been married the preceding month, on which occasion the father and brother accompanied the bride, and Kennedy's actions indicated he was not a willing party to the coms tract. In his suit riage set aside Kennedy asserted that his life had been threatened if he refus ed to marry the woman. After the wedding he refused to live with his wife and the result was that Mrs. Ken nedy visited him at his office and af- ter a hoated argument shot.and killed him at his desk. The father and bro thers of the girl were indicted as' ac coniplices in the murder. At her first trial Mre. Kennedy was sentenced to ten years in the penitentiary. Gone To New York. John Carson will attend the New to have the mar | in} seme! Shades as Sewing A aiRoll, Braid. : Lead" Pipe; Babbit, Solder, Pig Lead. THE CANADA 'METAL CO., TORO! Girl Gets Ivory Arm. |. WOR BALE. Berlin, Nov, 16.--Dr. Vogel, of the = Boon hospi describes. in _an. issue of a German medical weekly the success. ful substitution of an ivory bone for one of the bones of the lower arm of a little girl. in by Roentgen rays T™ York horse show, whieh opened in Ma dison Square Gasden to-day. His r e eo by " t of the LY MEE ERLE A oa the healing process is the substitute bone in posi %

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