Daily British Whig (1850), 16 Sep 1905, p. 1

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To-morrow st few days we have retty good things, and I share with you two ds Scotch Tweed Suitings s wide, imported for Ladies' nd Suits, light and dark grey stylish designs, regular values yard. Morning; 37¢c. Yard. uitings is particularly well school wear as well as for Ja- i lot isa small one and we. times as much more if we ee ee ---- ee ' TOWELS TOW es, from the owels of pure ality Huck-* the ordinary > from 1oc., s» Up to Soc, b Off. vo lots at 9:30. vite 'Y | most up-to-date collection reen Montreal and Toronto. \VE SOLD lngston people who visited with the idea of buying a ut deferred buyin owing to . them for the Long rs have found our coats from ice than Similar Coats in p- 3 ows ' ie =~ DLAWESON nt Colt Button i Top, heavy extension YEAR 72, NO. 216 Creat Removal Sale | ee QF -- FURNITURE Rather than remove the stocks contained in two store- houses which we are com- pelled to vacate before 1st Nov.; we are offering the| goods at 15 T0-20% REDUCTION $26 Solid Oak Bideboards for $20. Others for $6.50 to $75. Extension Tables, $6.50 to $85. Robt. J. Reid. Two Doors Above Opera House. Telephone 577, T0 CONTRACTORS. TENDERS ARE INVITED Ur TO 5 p.m. on THURSDAY, 21st inst., for the differént trades work required in. re- modelling two houses on Bagot street. Plans * and specifications may be seen at my office. o- HENRY P. SMIDH, Architect Anchor Building. * Brock street STOVES GALORE THE BEST CHINA iri i chino. 30 square Hall Heaters, large stock of Cook Ranges, Pugs, Jox and Von Stoves, also large stock of Carpets and Furnitire, Always ready to trade, buy or sell, TURK'S SECUND-HAND STORE 308 PRINCESS STREET. WANTED. TWO WAITRESSES. APPLY ager British American Hotel, MAN- 0- BOY. APPLY HENDERSON'S PHOT graph Studio, 70 Princess street N BOYS, ONLY THOSE WHO CAN work every day need apply. J. A. Gould & Co. A GENERAL SERVANT the evening to Mrs, Brock street, A YOUNG GIRL FOR GENERAL housework. Mrs Chas F. Maund, 45 William St. A MAID FOR GENERAL work in. Small. family. Johnston street, APPLY IN Carvey, 282 HOUSE- Apuvly 182 FIFTY GIRLS TO SPLIT MICA. AP- ply Kent Bros., Mica Works, foot of Lrinvess street. -- A COOK AND HOUSEMAID APPLY at Mrs. Bruce Carruthers', Sydenhan street, after seven o'clock in the evening. BOYS, TO LEARN THE CIGAR making; good opportunity for a few bright boys. McGowan Cigar Mig. Co., Limited. WANT TWO GOOD SMART CAN vassers, for Monday morning. Ladies or Gentlemen. Big money. Apply Box" 36, Whig office BY ocT 1ST, A HOUSE, CENT rally located modern conveniences rent not to exceed $19 per month Apply Box 81, Whig office Se -------------- A GOOD GIRL FOR GENERAL housework family of thre highest wages. Apply Mrs. J. S. Turner at present with Mrs. Henderson, 196 Johnston street PRIVATE PUPELS, oR es in French, German, Classics ete, to begin work in October. Mod ern and effective methods. Apply Prof. Lanos, 212 King street A HOUSEMAID NOW IN COUNTRY, | who is recommended by Kingston lady, wants situation, where she may have evenings for study 3 o'clock, Adress H, L., Whig o ---------------------------------------- GENTLEMEN TO GET THEIR FALL Overcoats and Suits made at Thomas Galloway's, 131 Brock St Also bring your old ones and have them repaired. Style, fit and price guaranteed to please A YOUN WOMAN AT. ONCE; EX perienced in book-keeping and stenography, capable of taking charge of office. Apply in writing. with re ferences to The Hedley Shaw Milling Co., Frontenac Mills, City -- BY CHICAGO WHOLESALE HOUSE. Special representative for each Pro- vince in Canada. Salary $20 and ex- penses paid. weekly Expense money advanced. Business successful posi tion permanent Address Manager 132 Luke St Chicago DAILY MEMORANDA, Bananas, 10c. doz. Crawford McDermott Bros'. clearing sale of Music is on. The sun rises Sunday at 540 am and sets at 6.08 p.m. Faint heart ne'er got mixed breach of promise suit. With the coming of autumn the ther- mometer isn't so stuck up Bascball, Brantford vs Kingston Lake Ontario Park, Monday, 8 p.m. up in a it takes a good cook to turn out a first- | class roast This day in history Fahrenheit died, 1786 ;: Louis 18th, died, 1824 ; James II of England, died, 1701 Battle of An- tietam, 1862 The regular Monthly Meeting of the Woman's Home Mission Presbyterian churches day, Sept. 18th, 4 C.A. rooms. M. L. Auxiliary of the will be held. Mon o'clock in the YW. Macdonnell, Sec'v The choicest and most beautiful is | found in our selection. 'There is a wide | | range in style and price. So much de- pends should 'sce | selection. | our .ROBERTSON BROS... Important 'Auction Sale Furniture, Chickering Upright Piano, ete. BY JOHN H. MILLS I have received instructions from Mrs | Li B. Speocer to sell at the residence, | Bagot St., near City Park, on nish, Sept. 18:19 | | JAIL of the valuable effects (--Chickering L Upright "Piano, - Brussels, Wilton and | other Carpets and Rugs, Marble Top | { Walnut and other Cen Tables, Black Walnut Parlor Suite, fing Sofas, Couches Silk Brockatelle Touches, Brocka Silk and other Chairs, Lace Tapes- try. and other Curtains, Cushins, Black Walnut Sic ard, Handsome Silver Tea Service, large Silver Salver, Puddine Dish, Cutlery, Knives, Forks; Spoons Black Walnut Extension Table, Dining Room Set, Pictures, Easy. Reclindng and other Chairs, Ottoman, Fine Screen, Walnut and Oak Bed Room Bets, Springs Hair and other Mattresses Bedding Table Linen, Chambier 3 | Cupboards, Happy Th Range, | Kitchen Utensils Refrigrator, Letter Press, Sewing Machine, Dressers and Stands. Inlaid Card Table, Dinner Gong Linoleum, Parlor Lawps, Grate Stove, Dinner Set, Fancy China, Glassware, etc Ice Cream Freezer Black Walnut Hat Rack, Wood Cook Stove and other Fur niture. Piano at 1.30 p.m., Monday Sale at 10,30 a.m. Terms cas v h JOHN HH. MILLS Auctioneer Auction Sale at residence of Mrs. L B. Spencer. TUESDAY i the Drive Shed effects at 10.30 am, viz Phaeton. Two Seated Surrey. Double Seated Sleigh, Doiler. Coal Oil Tank, Iron Furnace Lawn Mower, Furnace 'ipes, Hose and other goods JOHN H. MILLS Auctioneer | Good housekeopers like to show, with pride, their home-made Pickles and Catsup. and these good housekeepers know that it is the truest cconomy to {use only PURE 'Spices and Vinegars We have provided for the pickling sea- I'spn a complete stock of the finest whole and ground Spices; also Cider, White Wine and English Malt Videgars. All guaranteed pure, 'Jas. Redden @ Co. MEN AND BOYS' TO LFARN PLUMB- | ing trade; great demand for gradu- ates $4-85 day; many complete course Lwo months ; graduates ad- mitted to Union and Master Plumb- ers' Association. Coyne Bros. 3 Plumbing Schools, York, cinnati and St. (Day Co Cin- and New Louis. Night class.) For free catalogue ad- dress 239 10th Ave., New York. TO-LET. Emm" rrr THE SHOP ON DIVISION STREET, near Garrett street, occupied by Miss | Stands, My Boon, milliner. Apply at Whig office. | Importers of Fine Groceries BY JOHN H. MILLS... . AUCTION SALE OF FURNITURE FRIDAY, At Residence of R. Wales | William Street Hair Cloth Parlor Suite Black Wal nut Sidehosr Bed Roow Sots, Beds tresses, Curtains, Blinds her Beds, Carpets, Chamber | s, Sleigh Robes, Cutlery Cook Stove, Wringer. Ch DWELLINGS FURNISHED AND UN. | Kitchen Utensils and other furnished, stores, offices, etc., at Me- | HATTRINY a TT hak vd Ep Sn Bier Ese; A 3 - : JOHN H. MILLS, Auctioneer. ii | YOU WILL SOON Aprece--eT---------- | A GUN METAL WATCH, WITH | leather (strap. Reward for its ve- | turn to Whig offi NEED YOUR A HLAGK POCKET BOOK. CONTAIN. | ing. calilng cards Finder kindly return to Whig office. A GOLD LOCKET AND CHAIN, ON | Friday morning, between Willian: and WwW "All 'e?? Prigeess Sts. Finder please return | car en Ss to Whig office A LADY'S DIAMOND RING, SATUR day morning, in or Market Square, or Rideau street. Finder wil be prompily sane to Whig office around FOUND. ONE HOUND. by applying at this Office. "We won't «do a Brantfords on haney. thing with those Monday. Billy Ik and snap shots. i | rewarded Ly returning | i { OWNER CAN HAVE IT | FALL FOOTWEAR Military Bootmakers, 84 Brock St. CALL FOR A Face corr S0pL. Bulletin Properiy Snaps Therein Mean Dollars to You. SWIFT" REAL RSTATE AND INSURANCE AGENCY | Auction Sale by. Mills, at Mrs. LL. B. | Spencer's, Bagot street, 10.30 a.m, Monday. Any gossip can say mean things, but upon ' the right service that you! stock before making a | Kitchen ho SEPTEMBER 22 | on there is becoming Sign of Golden Boot. | | { | | | ALL ADMIRE . ---- President Roosevelt Says Marquis Ito. THE PRESS QUIETER | JAPANESE HAVE, FIFTY MIL | LION YEN SURPLUS. { Ozar and Kasier to Meet Before Reaching Darmstadt -- Burn- ing Christian Churches Due Simply to Excitement. Special to the Whig. Tokio, Sept. 16.- The powerful prin- | cos, Nijo and Shimadzu, and eight | prominent nobles, have memorialized | Prime Minister Katsura, in connection | with the recent disturbances. They | hold the government responsible, and ge the authorities to clear them- { | | { | | | | | | | { | s. They think, that the voluntary | resignation of the chief of police has | been misunderstood, and declare that | the minister of the interior, his su- | perior, ought to be dismissed. | Rev. Mr. Soper, reporting his inves- | tigation into the burning of church {by the mobs, the opiiiion that the attacks on the churches were simply incidental to expresses the excitement, All Admire Roosevelt. London, Sept. 16.--The Standard's Tokio correspondent says that in an | interview Marquis Ito, formerly prime | minister, and now one of the elder | statesmen, emphatically denied that | the disorders = there were directed | against Americans; Japanese | were undoubtedly dissatisfied with the terms of the pesce treaty, but there was only ope sentiment regarding President Roosevelt, namely, sincere appreciation of his noble and disinter- ested exertion on behalf of peace and humanity, Some Gear And Kaiser To Meet. Cologne, Sept. 16.---The St. wrg correspondent of the Gazette, says the ozar will meet the emperor | of Germany before he reaches Darm- stadt, to which place he and his fa mily have been ordered by their physi- | cians. The meeting, says the correspon- | dent, will occur at the end of next week, but the place of it is unknown. Petors- ! 50 Million Yen Surplus. | London, Sept. '16. The Times cor | | respondent at Tokio cables : LG counts for the year ended March 31st, 1905, published in the Official Gazette show a surplus of fifty million yen, sultine fro administrative economies, and the growth of revenue. This sur- plus will be employed in war, and other extraordinary expenditures, The Japanese press is now abandon ing the resentful tones in reference to peace terms, and discusses the | situation very hopefully Several journals, however, insist on the resignation of the ministry, as the only effective way of plete national unity. economic restoring com- | METHODISTS AND DIVORCE. | Never Known to Re-Marry Divore- ed Persons. Toronto, Sept. 16 tyv-five years' "In all piy-thir experience as pastor and travelling in the interests of the Methodist church in Canada, | have never heard of a Methodist minister { marrving persons except I one case, and then the clergyman was divoresd misled by the man who was mar ried," said Rev. Dr. Henderson, of the Methodist mission rooms, when asked if the Methodist church had taken any formal action against the re-marryving of divorced people, asx the Anglican <vnod had recently done. "No, the church has not taken any | definite action in the matter, but every ordinary minister i= taught that it is against the teaching of Christ and will not marry people who are divorced," he added. He instanced an exceptional case, where the parties were closely related at the time of their marriage and did not know it. He considered a divorce justified ip such a case A PANIC CAUSED Tarters Contemplate Onslaught on Armenians 8 Whig, London, Sept. 16,-The Mail's cor respondent, at Baku, says the situa- critical again. | Five murders were éommitted on the | busiest streets on Thursday. The po- | lice, who are mainly Tartare, are in- | different. It is rumored that the Tar | tars contemplate a general onslaught on the Armenians, This and the mur- ders have caused a panic among the public. Shops were closed, and the people deserted the streets, Fossil Monster For Chicago. Special to the Whig. { ander, Wyo, Sept. 16-The frst in stalment «¥ the fossil bones of 4 gi gantie dinosaur, which Prof, Williston of the niversity of Cmiongo, unearth ed about six miles from here, has been wnt to Chicago today. The enormous hones have heen carefully collected and hoxed and will De put together at their destination, to form part of the palacontogical exhibit of the Musenm. The. rest of the skeleton will be shipped in a few days. Prof. Willis ton is continuing his explorations and hopes to be able to make another im portant find before he has to rotumn tn Chicago to resume his duties gt the university. Spices, jar rings and corks at Gib son's Red Cross drag store Brantiords ve Kingston, ' grounds, Manday day | Watts, | porations and { aster and threw it Field | fuir | Do not forget the Lig game at th PITH OF THE NEWS. -- The Very Latest Culled From All Over the World. Count de Brazza, the French explor- or, died In French West Africa. Real estate dealers in New York state have formed an association to influence Jegislation.) Commerciat-Cable company has increased its capital from twelve t fifteen' million dollars. Hon. F. W. GG. Haultain has ac copted the nomination of the South Qu'Appelle conservatives. 'Job printers in the union offices of Winnipeg go out con strike at noon, to-day, for an eight hour day. The Commercial Cable company has ogured the neocvssary concessions to on Yokohama and Shanghai. Trish cattle traders want something done to diminish the imports of Can- adian bacon into the old country. A motion protesting against the =o licitation of "tainted money," was introduced at the session of the Am- erican Foreign Mission Board of the | Congregational church. Prof. Frederick Starr, the University of Chicago, anthropologist, has been granted a leave of absence of more thai a vear, which time he will spend among the savage tribes of /Central Africa. The government has abolished, under certain conditions, the royalty of twe and one-half per cont. on gold pro duced from quartz, also 'the royalty on the gross output of copper mining lo cations in the Yukon. Fdward Francis Blake, second of Hon. Fdward Blake, in Toronto, aged years, Deceased had only been confin ed to bed for a short while. Anaemia was the cause, He graduated in law in 1887. . Three storms, which attained the velocity of. a typhoon, have swept Korea. The town of Gensan is flooded, and at Seoul many people have been drowned and many buildings destroy ed. The train service has been inter rupted. After a varied carcer minister of the gospel to two denomi son died on Fri nations, writer of roligious works, and | chaplain in the army during the Span ish wat, Rev. John Bell Rico, Louis vill, Ky., killed himself with a pistol | because of sufferings from a. cancer which had afflicted him for three years, JAILED FOR FORGERIES Alleged to Have Secured $50,000 ~ from Victims. Boston, Sept. 16. Harry Clifford Brown, a stock broker of this eity, and a well-known resident of Brook ne, was arrested by inspectors from the Boston burvan of criminal investi: gation on a forgery. Ac cording to Chief Inspector William B. trust companies, other cor inthividuals claim to have last a total of 250,000 through transactions with Brown. The char ges upon which the broker was taken to custody were the raising of two che cach representing one share of & Albany railroad com the Boston pany stocks to twenty shares and using the certificates as security on notes upon which he is alleged to [ have obtained $8,000 from the Wash ington Trust company, of this city Further developments are expected brown is forty-five years old and re ides at No. 30 Naples road in the fashionable section of Brookline. He is a member of several clubs MORE HOPEFUL, The Outlook in Norway and Sweden. Special to the Whig. London, Sept. 16.-Although the strain continues and reports of mili tary movements in both Norway and Sweden persist, the outlook is gener ally believed to be more hopeful in view of the readjournment of the Karlstarldt conference vesternday, It j= alleged the difioalty eontivs in Swed en's demand that the modern addi tions to the ancient fortifientions of Fredericksten and Kongsvirger he de molished. 'The Norwegians and Swedes acouse cach other of making warlike preparations, which each side die avow Nevertheless, it seems that the movements of troops are actually curring, although probably in each case the movements are defensive ra ther than offensive. The report that Lord Lanslowne had bwen requested to act a= arbitrator between the two countries is semi-officially denied AFLOAT OVER sti YEARS 'ravels 1 ADO Miles With Tals of Liner's Destruction. Montreal, Sept. 16. When the Do minion liner Labrador was wrecked off the coast of Scotland on March Ist, 1800, George B. Blanford, a cattle man, wrote a letter telling of the dis overboard in a bottle, The letter was addressed to a Montreal newspaper. The bottle was mcked up on August 17th at New Harbor on Hermitage bay, Newfound land, by Ried Dumford, a fisherman, and has been brought to Montreal. It took the bottle six and one-half years to drift 1,600 miles across the Atlan te "AS YE Sow." Over a Thousand Clergymen Wit- ness Performance. Chioago, Sept. 16.-A clergymen' matinee was held at McVicker's thea tre on the invitation of Messrs, Wil liam A. Brady and Joseph R. Gris clergymen at given exc ; being closed to the paying play was well received. he theatre fair grounds on Monday. thirty-nine | as a lawyer, | which was blie. The KINGSTON, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1905; SAD STORY Identity OF The New York Suicide. n-- HER FOOLISH ACT THOUGHT THE NEWSPAPERS WERE HOUNDING HER, She Grew Morose for She Always Was Afraid of Being Pointed at as Having Done a Disgrace- ful Act--She 'Suicided in a New York Hotel. New York, Sept. 16.--Lorenzo D. | Berry, a carpenter, of West Medford, Mass, identitied as that of his daugh- | ter Ella, the body of the young. wo- man who committed suicide, on Wed: | nesday, in the Hotel Manhattan. A | brother recognized the body, The fue [ ther and son sought the coroner to got a permit to take the girl's Hody back to West Medford for burial. "The newspapers have done all this," sid the father, when he was able to con- trol his grief. "My daughter, who was a pure, modest girl, was a stenogra- | pher in her home town. A year ago a | Boston newspaper published a story | that she had run away with a mar- ried man. The next day it turned out that she had merely gome on a vaca- tion alone, and that she had nothing to do with the married man named in the story, who had disappeared. "The newspaper printed a réteac: tion, but that did not help my daugh- ter's feelings. The injury done to hoe | was great, 'and she never recovered | from it. She grew more and more down-hearted . and morose and this | (pointing to the coffin in which her body lay) is what that cruel, false, malicious story has brought her to, | "Wherever my daughter would go," said Mr. Berry, "it would seem as il somebody was ready to point at her as a girl who had been mixed up in a disgraceful affair. Then she went away | from home to seck employment in other cities. She would be a short time in a place when the story would | reach the ears of her employers and | she would be told that she could not { remain, This happensd several times until my child could not bear it 'any longer." Mr. Berry said his danghter left her home in West Medford on Tuesday last, coming to New on a Fall River Tine steamboat. "We wid | that he received a telegram from her Wednesday morning, but he refused to say what were its contents. She was registered at the Manhattan Hotel, Wednesday afternoon, under the name of "A, W. Wildey, Washington, D.C." and that night killed hersell with roison and pistol, leaving a note to the effect that her body would be eall- ed for, that | MAYOR McCLELLAN'S BOAST Couldn't Carry Out His Good Intentions, Special to the Whig New York; Sept. 16.-When Mayor McClellan became chief magistrate of Greater New York, he jade the boast- ful assertion that he would see to it that under his administration enough school houses would be built to ac commGiate the large nitmber of school children unable. to receive proper schooling owing to the lack of school accommodations. His intentions may have been perfectly serious, but he nas proved himself just as incapable of coping with the school house problem as his predecessors in office. According to a careful estimate fully 50,000 tq 70,000 school children will be deprived of a full duy's tuition at the begin- ning of the school term. By next spring the situation will be somewhat what better, but it is safe to say that even then thousands of children will be compelled to remain on the hall time schedule. Strange to say néw school houses have been built ip | sparsely settled districts, where there was no need for them while the thick- ly settled districts where the number of children is particularly j great, have been neglected. For The Benefit Of | Special to the Whig ew Orleans, La. Sept. 16. Many thousantis of tickets have been sold for the hasehall game between the Parker: Flake baseball club and the Glycozone baseball club, which will be played this afternoon at the ball park, The pro oondls of the game are to go to the vollow fever fund. The game had been arranged between the managers of the two clubs and the propowtion to play the game for the benefit of the yvellw fover fund was submitted to the mayor, who approved of the plan. The merchants and the public in gen ernl, willingly supported the plan and a handsome wim will be realized from the wale of tickets. Fever Fund. James J. Hill's Speci] to the Whig St. Paul, Minn. Birthday. Sept. 16. James J. Hill, the great western financier, is oclabrating his fifty seventh birthday today, This evening he will be the gest of honor at a birthday banquet which the busi n of Mi polis will give in hix honor. Mr. Hill came to Bt. Paul, from Guelph, Ont, forty one vears ago and was mer, for preachers of all denomina on a small steamboat plying on the tione, to see a performance of "Ax Ye | Mississippi, Minnesota and Hed Rive Sow," by the Rev. John Snyder, the ers. He sectired soveral freight con first play written 4 lergyvman to tracts and Jutér obtained an interest { be presentsd on Am\rican stage. in the steamboat line for which he | There were mo thousand | worked, That gave him his start in life, "Chaucer" Elliott's aggrogetion of { ball players play here on Monday next, Buy your shaving soap at Gibson's d Uross drug store. Fresh there. "mud clerk" | RUN OUT OF NAMES. A Man After President Roose i velt's Own Heart. Howard City, Mich, t. 16.-- Peter Voss, a Pierson township farm- er, is the father of so many children that he has rin out of names for the youngest, which is now eighteen months old. Eight of the children live at home. They are Ferdinand, Hubbard, Lily, Amelia, Clara, Alton, Beulah and the unnamed baby. The married children are: Charles Voss, Maple Hill; Hattie, Mrs, William Loper, and Tina, Mrs. Frank Punches, yward City; Peter Voss, Strathroy, " Ont.; Andrew Voss, Luther; Liszio, Mrs. Robert Blow, Mayville; Nora, Mrs. John Van Bree, Grand Rapids; Mary, Mrs. Ray Durham, Lakewood; re bara, Mrs. A. Young, Maple Hill, Mr. Voss was born in Germany six- ty-one years ago. He has been twice married and eight of his children are by his second wife. In early days Voss lived in Wiseon- sin, where in his first year he chopped and cleared five acres of land, prepar- ing the soil that fall for wheat with nothing but a hoe. That winter his family suffered greatly from priva tions, and on one occasion was foroed to walk! twenty-three miles through the woods for a sack of corn meal to keep them from starving. On his Pierson farm he has made a mark: ed success. POINTER FOR MR, WHITNEY. Gloomy View. of Enforcement of Law, Toronto, Sept. 19.--~Rev, Dr. Chown, Methodist temperance secrotary, is perturbed over the moral conditions of New Ontario. He has personally in vestigated the situation there and -------- that the Ontario government must take some special provisions for the enforcement of law and order, Speaking this morning Dr, Chown re frained from going into the matter fully as he is seeking an opportunity to place it personally before Premier Whitney and his colleagues. A diffienl- ty seems to he that the rowdy element are sufficiently supplied with money to pay fines of $26 for assaults, and to regard this as unimportant, The con sequence is that it is hard to get con stables to remain in office, ON VERGE OF COLLAPSE, Go to Darmstadt Next Week for Needed Rest. Berlin, Sept, 16,--Crzar Nicholas, ac companied by the cmrina and ther children, will arrive at Darmstadt, capital of the Grand Duchy of Hesse, next week and they will remain until the lat t of Ni as' the nd Duk of Hedse, I'he trip is essentially one for fhe henefit of the health of the Russian monarch and his wife, The czar's physicians urged him to make the trip as both the ezar and czarina are on the verge of a nervous collapse owing to the strain under which they have lived during 'the last eighteen months, Kaiser Wittiam will visit the czar at Darmstadt in October, SECTION MAN KILLED. Flagging One Train, He Did Not Notice Another. Woodstock, Ont., Sept. 16.--Charles Boxom, section fareman on the Grand Trunk railway west of this city, was struck by the Atlantic express at Eastwood, last night, and instantly killed. He was out flagging trains on a section of new track which was be- ing laid, and in observing the ap- proach of 'a train from the east did not notice one coming toward him on the other track from the west, This latter train ran him down. He was forty years of age. PIERCED HIS HEART. Peculiar Accident Befalls Leonard Sweeris. MoBain, Mich., Sept. 16.+A peculiar and fatal accident happened to Leon ard Sweeris, the fourteen year-old son of Leonard Sweeris, a well-to-do farm | or living one mile west of this village. The boy was oarrying an open jack- knife while crossing a field. Heo stum bled, fell on the knife, and the blade entered his breast, piercing the lining of his heart, He cannot recover: Judge Fortier Will Judge, Montreal, Sept. 16.---Ag a result of the new federal law debarring judges from any outside occupation, me Fortier, of the superior court, has resigned as professor of civil and municipal law at McGill. He will pro- bagly be succeeded by Aime Geoffrion, K.C. Hen Fruit For Her. Freehold, N.J., Sept. 14.--Nan Pat terwom appeared in this town as the star attrastion of the Empire show. The town's people gathered in foreo and a number of rotten eggs were thrown at her. Nine Burn To Death. Caenstochowa, Russia, Sept. 16.-A eolluloid factory was destroyed hy lire here, and nine persons were barned to death and several injured, 1 Bacon Sale. 150 wides breakiast bacon, whole or part side, 13e. 1b., at Davies'. Practical Optical Work Prescriptions for glasses ' carefully FILLED. All styles of mounts and frames al- ways in stock, with repairs. Eyes canvully examined AND GLASS. ES FITTED, Prices for above work moderate; 850 King Street. Phone 666 « Marriage Licenses Issued " SMITH BROS. Be sufe and get the count Stamps, on your cash chases. 3 " TEACY 'EVERYBODYS ST pn, suo RN, GRAY. ~At Du nt, on S 10th, to Rev. 8, Ha and Mrs. Of a son. ] DAY ~in Kingston, on Sept. 15th, to Mr. 'Whit Ms. H. H. Day, Johnston street, a son. DIED. HEWPON ~On Saturday morning o'dlock, at har You deriv. 14 Ave. Mr. obert Hewton, seventy vears. 3 Funeral private. : PARR --~Saddenty, at 302 Queen Dey bakit Nop. Ja, Hannah w Aged sXLy-wiX yours and four Funeral private, on Monday at 3 p. i A A i EE A 'Phone 877. 222 Princess St. MONDAY, Sept. 18 The Great Musical Hit Ti Has Broken All Records "FLORODORA" GREAT CAST. } ENLARGED OROWESTRA. 3 Pri : : 8. he any. $1, The. Galley, zoe, . Seats now on Sale at box ol TUESDAY, Sept. : WO, Limé in Prima Dona atrallo With Srohestiu of Metropolitan ' ol he d floor, 12 Rews rou 2 1 Hows S ho 5 7 i Gallery PERSONAL, YOUR FORTUNE TOLD FRO cradle to the ve: matters of , love ade te and ou Mont FORTUNE TOLD : s YOUR most.

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