Daily British Whig (1850), 26 Nov 1907, p. 1

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a Goat P "hoose From Our Showing To~Morrow: A old-fashioned Canadian win- ter is just around the corner and will remain with us un- til 15th March at least. You will surely need a Coat. Sty- lish, dressy : Black Coats Are here, and at prices that will mean a saving for you if you buy now, as there is no possibility of our-havinglany more at present prices. $7.50, 8.75, 9.50, 10.00, 11.75. 12.75 and up. thing You Need VES AND MITTS ARE HERE. name something mighty unusual e unable to show you this week ves or. Mitts for men or women, We mention just a few out of MITTS or Kid wns or ), 1.49. GLOVES AND MITTS FOR MEN. Men's Mocha Gloves, $1 and 1,25. | Men's English Dog Skin Gloves. Knitted Gloves, - for autumn , 45¢. wear, tan shades, $1.00. Knitted Cash- perfect Kid, only able. ns, tans, 9c. Knitted variety. Men's Scotch Knitted Gloves, in greys,browns and black, 39¢, 45c¢. Men's. Lined Kid Gloves, special English make, $1.00. Men's Lined Mocha Gloves, Perrin's make, $1.25, 1.49. ~ ~ t Guarantee t TRADE MARK 1 BURROJAPS WARRANTED FOR SALE ONLY BY~ KETT SHOE STORE. __Stoves. YEAR 74--NO. 276, ROBBED POOR PEOPLE Italy's Xie Tricked Thieves. Funds Contributed for Sufferers Scandalously Misappro- priated. Rome, Nov. 26.--Disgraceful respecting the maladministra- ] tions Calabrian of 1903, are made through a leakage of public, to-day, the facts con- tained in the report of the parliamen- |ing eagerness thropic work, threw open their vacant | king and even more recently hajled properties to the homeless, coutriving to get their premises stock- tary commission appointed last. year to inquire into the matter. Only 6i- teen copies have so far been printed for private circulation in cabinet cir- fed government feared | these under lock and key, and on the report [plea of the of | their buildings came cles, because the that the publication of the would seriously afiect the inflow subscriptions for the victims of the latest upheaval. Lengthy extracts from the printed in the responsible organs of the press attribute some of the worst abuses to the confusion which reigned at the moment, as well as to the pri- | mitive isolation of many of the affect- | ed hamlets over the vast earthquake ; region, i In many places, while the genuine | stupefied and weeping be- where their families dead or dying, the | needy sat side the ruins, and friends lay official storehouses were literally sack- ed by savage throngs of well to-do in- | dividuals utterly unaffected by the | catastrophe, who bore off all the | clothes and bed coverings. In other | places, with the guilty. connivance of | the local mayors and municipalities, | the constructors of shelters, who were | to be paid at the rate of £100 per | FORCE BANK OFFICIALS TO GIVE UP MONEY. Robbers Were Counting Loot, in Hotel, When Police Disturbed Them, and They Escaped With Only $700. Bloomington, Il., Nov after closing tune, yest v, when two men appeared in the State bank at Clinton, and, with drawn revolvers, forced President William Figo, Cashier Murphy, and Bookkeeper Ypung to cu- ter the big vault, which they locked Two thousand two hundred dollars in gold and silver were on the counter, and the robbers shovelled this into a bag and took it with them to an ho- tel, where they were about arranging the money in rolls: Police disturbed them before they were through, how- ever, and the robbers jumped from a window on to the adjoining roof and escaped, taking only $700, and leav- ing $1,600 in silver. It was DAILY MEMORANDA. Wonderland Theatre, afternood and evening. City Properly Committee, ¢ p.m. Wednesday. "Mrs Temple's Telegram," Grand Opera House, 8.15 p.m Ontario , Diocesan Committees this evening and to-morrow. Remember Entertainment in Kpox Church, on y evening. This day in history --French retook Acadia, 1691 U.S. general Rensallaer surrendered to Canada, 1812. "The Veiled Bijou Theatre--Comedy Beamty," or "A Copey Island Flirta ton." Pathetic Drama "A Soldier's Dream." Companion Court, 1.0 F. Concert und Social, Ohosen Friends' Hall, tonight at 8 o'clock. Admission, 15¢. At The Princess--King Edward VII. on flig Majesty Ship, The Dreadnought, also a Comedy Film by Pathe Freres, of Pressing Paris, "A Letter." Song, 'My Dear." -- WHIG TELEPHONES. 243--Business Office. 229--FEdilorial Rooms. 292--J obbing Department. Legel Forms, sil kinds, at Whig. The Daily is always on sale at Gibson's Drug tore, Market Square-- Open till late each evening. ---------------------------- , Turkey and Game | Setts rr Just opened some very pretty DOVHPON SETS, and very chtal theap from $3.50 to $15.00 Quaint old odd shapes and pretty designs. A very appropriate pres ent ut this time of the year. See Them At Robertson Bros. oI ' GREAT BARGAINS IN HEATERS. "hirty Square Hall Healers, everyone periect! und. Fifteen Cook Stoves. also a lot ¥{ Sheet ron and Pog All those must be sold this . , come and see us. as we to revela- | shelter for the accommodation of five families, charged as having provic : ) : for twenty families tion of charitable donations to the {really only built for two, so that in earthquake sufferers' fund [gl] such cases eighteen families went | absolutely destitute. {day for wretched rooms of an actual report | rent value of twenty francs a month. lion for the purpose | kings sudden change of purpose after Hail | NEVER FELT SO WELL. | what Pope Told His Niece Who | Visited Him. Rome, Nov. 26.--The pope received | Ihis piece, Gilda #arolin, who came] from Riose, where she keeps a gene- | ral store, fearing that her uncle was] not well. The pope, who cherishes her { jamong his bther relations, although | {he has never done anything to raise | {her from her humble station, entirely | {reassured his niece. He said he bad | never felt so well in his life. The air | R li f f rth ak of Rome seemed to be excellent for) Ea ithe gout and his attacks here were! elie 0 qu e Jess frequent and weaker than in Ven-| {ice, where the dampness evidently con- tributed to aggravate the disease. | Hins holiness added jokingly that the {only thing he regretted was the im-| | possibility of returning to Venice to |see his friends, but he was happy to! say that many of them came to see led | him in Rowe. ! by Officia where they had | | But Ability Soon Put Him at the salthy landlords, pretend- | Top. . to join in the philan- | Charles Wyman Morse, once the ice Again, and after | the king of the coastwise tre steamship combine was born a poor goods, sequestered | ad and in early youth sold ¢andy on board the little steamers that uséd to ply in Maine waters. He is just a year or two over fifty years of age, now and has had a most rgmantic | with public imaginary damage to upon the funds to the tune of ten francs apiece per Extraordinary tricks were resorted to by local bumbledom to work upon the feelings of King Victor Emmanuel | so as to obtain larger grants. Sham subjects were hired over large areas | to come to pack to their utmost ca- | pacity those hospitals which the gene- | rous-hearted monarch was to bel taken to visit, while at the entrance | of a certain town a huge factory was | actually demolished in fantastic fash of arresting the attention of the royal visitor These and similar frauds brought to his knowledge inst after the late dis- | asters, in proof sheets of the renort, | are said to be the true secret of the | announced his inten STABBED IN THE TARK Charles W. Morse he had already tion to visit. | in Mysterious - Assailed in Street career." The Manner. : : : ah . one of the most sensat al ever Paris, Nov. 26.--Walking in an emp- » nsational ever jut before the American public. Morse at- ty street Jas night, M Nold, a busi- tended Bowdoin College. and then ness man, heard quick steps behind | i hi Beiore b uld: turn around he went to Maine where he cut ice end sfiore he © aro p : . x : Y im. oO! h 0 A shipped it to New-York and Souths was stabbed twice in the back. He crawled to a hotel close by and faint- ed on the doorstep. When his wounds had been dressed he recovered slightly, and declared that Jean Hurstel, a boy of fifteen, and an acquaintance, had struck him . down. Hurstel was brought from his . house, to which he had just returned, THIS MAN A CUR. and brought before M. Nold The wounded man, who it is declared, will not recover, pointed to him, saying, "Murderer ! It is you who have kill- ed me!" and relapsed into delirium. | mer ifully beating his wife and abus Hurstel appeared utterly astonished: |itg his children, Frederick Borrell of at the accusation, but was Hampton was sentenced to two vears No trace of blood or a weapon was in the penitentiary with hard labor by fond upon him. M. Nold was not Judge Wedderburn robbed by his ailant. : *% The woman. who belongs to a pro- : cme ene minent Westfield family, could stand DIAMOND JUBILEE AMNESTY. his treatment no. longer: and sought the protection of the authorities, fear- For- ing her life was in danger. Evidence showed | that Borrell had Vienna, Nov. 26.~The first act of dragged his wife from bed out of the Emperor Francis Joseph's diamond house. Jocking the door against her, jubilee, on December 2nd, will be the Whe e e temperature Nas at. zero. granting of full amnesty to deserters wen found by neighbors she was 3 from military service, able condition. Borrell coriduc and \ other military culprits. The defence and spoke in abu- amnesty will continue operative for He had to be two years, so as to enable Austriuns who, hn a and Hungarians abroad, who wish to passed sentence. The take advantage of it. to restore their with names at the consulate HIERN ® BE ern Ports, gradually accumulating a comfortable fortune, He came to New York in 1890 and seven years later he had made such progress that Le or ganized the American lee compary with himseli at its head. Beat Wife Unmercifully--To Prison For Two Years. St. John, N.B., Nov. 26.--For un- arrested. Culprits to Be given. Military pit ed his own sive terms of his wife stopped by the jscathing address, prisoner pleaded for no effect. and fugitives judge, mercy, hut $20,000 FOR LOST BEAUTY. * College of Physicians and Surgeons, and 1% a dermatologist of internation: al reputation. Whether Mrs. Levy is entitled to 820,000 darhages for having her beauty will be decid Justice Seabury and twenty-two others in- jured. x%¥ DECAPITATED AFTER DEATH. | damaged ds she alleges, ed by a jury and of Famous Painter! Tuesday. Carried Out By Son. 3 Hee. Levy refused to say just, how Paris, Nov. 26.--The famous Bre- het Scinjiegion wus marred while un- ton painter, Yan Dargent, who died | dee fate nt Dr. Jiobinsch says he eight years ago at Roscoff, left - in- | "*Phis suit ny a a _--r ment. * structions that his body was 10 be | 0d". Robinson yesterday. ~K did embalmed. He also left with ome of {1 I conld for ig Levy Ty. i his sons a letter, which was to be op- | git o Pros idence ok am ho a ened on the first anniversary of Ms op gies hig best. 1 will fight Mrs, death. letter instructed the son to | Levy's suit, and feel confident: a jury Br Shruche 80! . 0 re " : oo have his father's body taken out of | will return a verdict in my favor. the ground and de apitated. The | head was to be placed beside the head | of the dead man's wife, which was cut off in a railway accident and was | buried in another pert of Brittany. | The son carried out his father's in- | Cincinnati, Nov. 26 Jobe McRean, structions under the eyes of the wil- | Monaghan county, Ireland, me mber of lage priest, but the daughter of the the British House of Commons, was dead man is now taking action [shown a "river regulator," a device against her brother and the priest. | for "regulating cwrents od the Ohio e---------- river," in the basement of the union To check a cold quickly get from | depot here, yesterday. As he descend ggist some Littie Candy Cold ed the stairs witht the "mventors'" called Preventics. Druggists McKean pictured in his mind's eye all w dispensing Pre-| Ireland salaaming to him after he had "regu Instructions ROBBED IRISH M.P. Member For Monaghan Re-Victim of Thugs. your dru Tablets everywhere are no ventics, for they are not only safe, introduced a bill to apply the but decidedly certain and prompt. Pre-| lator" to the River Thames, but at ventics contain no quinine, no Jaxa- {the bottom of the stairs his dream tive, nothing' barsh nor sickening. | was instantly interrupted. The "in- Taken at the "sneeze stage" Preven- | ventors" tics will prevent Pneumonia, Bronchit-! pushed him into a corner, robhed him ie, La Grippe, etc. Hepce the name, of a thick wad of five-pound Denk of | Preventics, ood for feverish child-| Fagland notes, and then locked him O5c. Trial voxes, | in. MeBean reported his experience to are ocil them. TURK'S Secomd-Hand 398 Princess St. Telephopt, 705, ren. 48 Preventics 25c. 5c. Sold by all druggists. | the police, BORN A POOR LAD, [tion, is critically ill at h i | summer will see a direct line of fruit | | grievances Morse diveive case was | ¥ FELL FROM BRIDGE. #% Woman Wants Big Sum From ® w Dermatologist. % Barcelona," Nov. 26.--An ¥| New York, Nov. 26.--A $20,000 suit ¥ express train from Valencia, 3 for loss of beauty has been entered by ¥ with many passengers on %| Mrs. Blanche Levy, No. 14 W, 70th | % board, fbll1 from a bridge # | street, against Dr. Andrew Robinson, ¥ into the water below, on No. 159 W. 40th street. ¥ the outskirts of this city. #! Dr. Robinson has been a lecturer for ¥ Sixteen persons were killed 3 twenty years on skin troubles at the * * ¥ a physician | grabbed him by the collar, | KINGSTON, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1907. an wo PITH OF THE NEWS. Over The World. A safe in the court house at Mont: | real was robbed of $1,700. | Britain is planning a wireless tele: | graph service to the South Sea Is lands. | The prohibitionists of New York | state are planning a state prohibition | crusade, ! Sic Willi Vanhorne thinks the stringency : Canada is only tem: poraty. 3 | Ge. Christian Dewitt has been ap- poinfhd minster of agriculture in the | new @rangs River ministry, ! Mair-General Sir Heory Colville met his death in London on Sunday as a | wma ian A LETTER SENT OUT Filled Women's Heads With Nonsense,| i i { | i | result of an automobile accident, The bye-elections in Centre York | and Ottawa will be held on Dec. | 2rd, nominations one week onrl 1 ussioner-gen- | | naturaliza Frank P. Sargent, com eral of immigration a i home in| Washington. There is hope in Ottawa that next | steamers between the Mediterranean and Canada. | The lrish Nationalists have decided | to drop their quarrels and concentrate their strength in an attempt to se cure home rule. A lot of pamphlets attacking Cana dian banks and Finance Minister | Fielding were seized by County Crown | Attorney MeKillop. The nil for the ann Congo Independent state, by Belgium, | stipulates that cession will take place on January lst, According to reports received in New | " i sation of the] | | York, former President Grover Cleve landy is again seriously, ill in his home in Princeton. The Britusa admiralty will equip a fleet of tank steamers to bring the oil used as fuel by torpedo boats di rect from the shipping ports. The Banque De ¥ , 1,000,000 in gol promised to send $1,000,000 w ts vaults, ha kly to | America as long as this is necessary. DP. J. O'Donoghue has been appoint ed to represent the urand Trunk tele- | giod us the result of the explosion of graphers in the investigation of their against the railway com- pany. The C.P.R. stgamers Athenian have 'been sold to the Ja Tartar and | panese Navigation company and will {go on the route between Calcutta and Yokohama. There are between forty and fifty cases of small-pox in Goderich. The {schools are closed; only one church {was open on Sunday, anu the cite zens are rushing to be vaccinated. Word came_to Mrs, George Hastings, of Toronto, on' Saturday, of the death | on Oct. 13th, of her daughter, Miss Louisa Hastings, a missionary at Tsen-i, in the province of Knei-Cheo, China. John W. Murray, Dundee, refutes the | allegation that whalers are responsible {for the extermination {in Ungava. He spent nine years there and says the great cause of death is u' disease resembling cholera, which {does not affect the white men. The British colonial secretary nounced that the family of a » who dies as a result of injuries sus tained in the South African war, may i Es a pension if the death should | not occur until seven years after wards. The limit, hitherto, has been two years. Intending emigrants in Fngland are being warned by Bruce Walker, assist 'anada, that in Canadian cities arc already hundreds of men unable to obtain work, and that men who come to Canada at this time of year make a "profound mistake." The Men's League for Woman Suf frage are to hold a mass meeting in | London next mouth to be addressed {by such prominent men as Willonghby IH. Dickenson, M.P., Earl Russell {Canon Hicks, the Rev. Reginald J | Campbell, and Israel Zangwill, the { novelist. It has been decided definitely to hold the next secret consistory in Rome on Dee. 16th, when Mgr. Pietro Gasparri, | secretary of the congregation of extra tio {ordinary eccle sinstival affairs; Mgr i Lmcon, archbishon of Rheims, and gr. Andrin, Archbishop of Marseilles will be appointed ecardinalk. At The Hat Store. Another shipment of the popular $3 hats was passed through the yesterday for George Mills & Co., the {Princess strect hat specialist. This {lot contains the very newest of the customs Inew in American shapes of stiff hats | See them. |FERCE FHT FOUGHT | |BETWEEN FRENCH AND | BENIS NASSEN TRIBESMEN. {French Lost Eight | Arabs 1,200--Tribesmen Utter- ly Careless of Their Lives-- Paris, Nov. 26.--A Lalla, Mughnia, thousand of the fiercest Bens Nassen | tribesmen down on the | French camp on Sunday, and were {beaten off with a loss of 1,200 killed {The fighting continued for a | time, and was conducted op the part | of the tribesmen apparently with total disregard for their lives. { At times the , French infantry were lin danger of being surrounded, but { they! finally disengngred themselves from their perilous position, by a | most brilliant charge of the Spahis The route of the Arabs was completed despatch from swooped by, vigorous shelling by the artillery. | The French Joss was eight killed. The Arabs were not discouraged by | this severe repulse, but reformed their {fortes and continued the fighting, lepstorday but the result was not known, when the . despatch was pent, { despatch larrest at the central station here on letters, all holding out encouragement | sirous of being | will be good enough to advise me if! which poe} MANY KILLED IN SHIP. MAYO R | | Fifteen Have Died As Result of of the Eskimo | wnt superintendent of immigration for | | Men, the | | Artillery Completed the Rout. | Algeria, says ten! long | Said Millionaire. An Englishman Has Been Arrested at Pitisburg|™; for Offering to Introduce Ladies to Eng- lish Society or Court. New York, Nov, 26.--Aeccording to 8, When Spaulding's rooms were search. \ | from Pittsburg, Reginald {by the police, last night, they say Spaulding, an Englishman, is under | they found almost 200 answers to the a charge of trying to swindle Pitts: [of some sort. The wile of a promin- burg society women hy offering to in- [ent steel manufacturer, it is said, troduce them inte London society. It | wrote that her heart was set upon be is charged that he mailed the follow: | ing presented at court and having her ing letter to more than 200 Pittsburg daughter married to a titled foreigner, women If the writer of the letter could ar "Dear Madam,--1 bog to inform you range it, she would pay him £10,000 that 1 am making a tour of the coun- | on the day of the marriage. try, arranging with those who are de- A letter from a Pittsburg millionaire introduced into Lon: declared that if Spaulding did not don society or at court. 1 am also | cease Hlling the heads of the women thoroughly versed with all matters of [in his family with nonsense he would finance in England and on the contin® thrash him. This man called the at ent. 1 shall it a favor if you! tention of the police to the matter, Several letters were found, addressed vou are ihterested ih any of the above to Spaulding, at the Iroquois hotel, mentioned matters. If so, 1 shall be Baffalo, and the police have sent in pleased to call and convey any par |guiries there, ticulars you may desire. 1 make no{ Spaulding had a large amoun. of remuneration {money when arrested and offered to demands [put up $5,000 cash bail, but this was refused. He will be given a bearing to- morrow. IS ACCUSED OF DABBLING IN HIGH FINANCE. Accused of Watering Street Rail- way Stock to Extent of Six Millions--Wrong Thing to Do. New York, Nov, 26.--~William M. Ivs ins, while investigating the affnirs of the Brooklyn Rapid 'Iransit company for the public wervice- commission, -de- clared that Mayor Tom L. Johnson, Cleveland and his friends who form- erly owned the Nussau Electric Rail way company, of Brooklyn, had wat ered its stock to the extent of $6, 250,000, and then sold it to the Brooklyn Rapid Transit company. This was alleged to have taken place in a reorganization of the Nassau company in January, 1599. Questioning 'Timothy 8. Williams, deem chapge in any way, my to be determined hy the made upon my influence "Reginald Spaulding." Explosion. Kiel. Nov. 26.--Already fifteen have the port boiler of the German train- ing ship Blucher at Murwik, on the {Little Belt. Of twenty:nine injured, | eighteen are, in a critical condition | The engine room staff were being { exercised when the disaster EE ToT | the other 400 of the crew being on I hoard other vessels for sea practice. | Eye-witnesses saw the victims hurled {high in the air. The boiler burst through several decks, and the whole | midship was wrecked. The dead w fearfully: mutilated, - and pathetic scenes took place when their relatives at Murwik heard of the disaster. The vessel was old, built in S77, jand the boiler was only a law-pres | sure one used for electric light and | heating. A strict inquiry has been or | dered, antl the kaiser has telegraphed {for information. But as the whole stoking staff has been killed, the real | vice-president of the Brooklyn Rapid | cause will probably never be known. | Transit company, about the re-or- -- m---- ganization of the Nassau company, VESUVIUS AGAIN ACTIVE. |Mr. Ivins said: "On that reorganiza- tion, I find that they increased their bond issue, which had heretofore been $5,300,000, by an additional $3,946, 960. They marde an entirely new issue of preferred stock of $6,000,000, they therefore having no preferred stock, and that to the theretofore existin $6,000,000 of common stock they add. od $2,800,000, making a total of new issues of $17,946,960, and your acqui- quakes in Calabria. It is recalled that fn was 'after this increase of capi- alization. Can you tell me what the great eruption of April followed | 3 CO meh hy the Calabrian earthquake of 1905. ese new securities were issued for ¥ on " Mr. Williams contended that the Brooklyn Rapid Transit company, if it had bought 88.250 000 of water, had Windsor, Ont., Nov. 26.- Alter one | subsequently squeezed it out, of the most notable fights ever wit "1 cnnnot agree with you," said | in the vity council, the gas by- | Mr. Ivins. "It looks to me like 4 Plain law d its required three readings at | case of stork watering, and the com Causes Fear in View of Calabrian " Earthquake. Naples, Nov, 206. Mount Vesuvius, after two months inactivity, is emit ting dense clouds of smoke, accom- panied by considerable roaring, from | three fissures around the old crater | Some alarm is felt in the surround {ing towns, in view of the recent earth Tied Up For 15 Years. DETERMINED | EXGLUSIVENESS This determination has be- come interwoven in our very existences to seé to it that § you will always find in our DRESS GOODS SECTION The latest and most stylish § Fabrics as worn in all large fashionable centres, and lest you forget our persist. § ency of purpose, we want to tell you of our latest im- portations. EYCLUSIVE WEAVES IN 3 Chiffon Ninons, Marquisettes, Batistes, Chiffon Broches, Eoliennes, French Voiles, § Fellot Nets, Cord-de-Chines, 1 Ninon-de-Chines, Ninon Volles, Novelty Eoliennes, Chiffon Velvets, ete. Distinctive Dress No two persons are alike. No two dresses should be. It follows that only the store, which holds to strict ex- clusiveness can prosper. Our Dress-Making Dept. Affords to every Woman her rights in the matter, and her joy in the selection of a distinctive gown. We make § a specialty of Wedding and § Reception Gowns, Evening J Gowns, Wraps, also Tailored Suits. Madame Richard Modiste. ahecinl session, last night, The gas | pany that ympany, under the new by law, is to 186.000 000 in its books to the cost | reduce the price of lighting and fuel: and enipment of the road It was ras yearly, until it reaches one dollar F wrong in principle, and if it was not per thousand cubic feet, within three | then against law, the Jaw ought to « extend its mains four miles in Lhe amended so as to make such a ity and charge no metre rent, as § ¢rananction impossible." : at present. In return the city -------- ---- itsell to make no move look: IIE a had no right to charge municipal ownership of the * i during the remaining fifteen k [years of the company's franchise. CRUSHED TO DEATH. x | ------r-- -- k { : Syracuse N.Y. Nov Distress. yra , » . onl di Booth, 26.--Ella and Jennie, aged * Lintorviewed here, said he firmly be 33 sud 8 years respective- lieved that emigration to Canada was Xr ughters of Vernon Williams, of Blackman distress in the home was now occupied with a scheme for sending fifty struggling [men to occupy as many vacant farms The men would {the remedy for {land. He Corners, were killed by a New York Central passen- ger train near Greenway, on Monday. The girls were on their way to school. {in Eastern Canada maintained until sell-supporting, land thus receive a serious condition The crossing gate was ALL H RE there. General Booth says he could down for a freight train | . louly say "yes" to the proposal of a and the girls went under | Canadian provincial minister that the the bars and were struck by i New Raisi {Salvation Army should control the a passenger train on ~an- i New Raisins. | provincial jails. other track. The older ¥| New Currants. | BE girl was killed instantly, { New Peels. i A New Tribunal Formed. and the younger lived but i New Prunes. | Lisbon, Dec. 26--The a few minutes. proclaimed the establish- ment of a special tribunal elected summarily to try political offenders | Such offences will now be considered in the category, ne anarchist crimes The magistrate appointed to preside { over this court resigned as soon as he was named, gover nment, FEE EERE RARE FEE RHEE "TaN * FAA yesterday % "Three Swallows." Sir John Power & Sons, "Three Swallows" Irish Whiskey, Famous for over a century, Of highest standard of purity, et ee sei Distillers to His Majesty the King. Fall Information. Prevost, Brock street, has received three cases imported goods; great var Died From Injuries. Alma, Ont:, Nov. 26.--While on his way home, after attending the funeral of the late J. E. Trask, George Miller, joty. a stock buyer of this place, was) jo.te anything of |thrown from his buggy, by running | Wear and t guarart into another rig, owing to the dark - night, and died, this morning, from the effects of the injuries received, Walter Christie, the automobilist, | SR "1 intend to keep on racing. It is al Piles Cured 6 To 14 Days. fascinating business, though it may Pazo Ointment is guaranteed kill me in the end." We smiled. "I it | {eure any case of itching, blind, bleed- | does kill me," he said, "tell them to ing or protruding piies in six to carve on my tomb R.LP.-- Rest in fourteen days or money refunded. S0e. | Pioeen. " -------------- See the window of reliable: tooth "GR. chocolates. 'The, Red Star Edwards & Jeukios EEREREXREREFRRERR His $18 suiting made to order | vious years. § tion. shortly after 'his recent aecident: said: | F urhes at Gibson's Red Cross drug Red: Cross FERRIER. --At Kingston, Nov 25th, i 1907, to Mr. and Mrs. N. A. Ferrier, | a son. ' [ina -------------------------------- | { MARRIED. | {1cQUOWN-FOK ES. --At- Ogdensiicg, on Nov, 18th, 1907, at the =» et | Mra, A. 8S. Gay, 10 Plensant He. by the Rev. 8. T. Dibble, Mis | ia { Lenburne, (Dhisy,) eldest davghter of i Mrs. EB. J. Fokes, of Perth Rood, to 1 Wayne MeQuown, of Massona, N.¥ v | DIED. HORNE «At "he Ridge '* Wolie Island, om Nov. 25th, 1907, Jane loved wife of James Horna, agod seventy-four years. New Figs. i New Canned Tomatoss. New Canned Coen. New Canned Peas. New Canned Beans. New Sweet Cider, Jas. Redden & Co. The Home of Good Groceries, ie ---------------- SE ---- { Choige Prick Residence, Barrie street; all improvements, grand loos Double Stone Dwelling, Earl street. bath, ges, etc. Frame Dwelling, Albert street, barn, Tot amd others. shed, large nd many SWIFT'S Real Estate and lusurance ney, } | { Don't complain to. the neighbors about your chi . Their opirion about them is to stack 2, tract," fresh at Gibson's 230.

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