Daily British Whig (1850), 27 Nov 1908, p. 1

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- YEAR 76-NO. 279. KINGSTON, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, (ANS ARE "Province Holds the Millions Belong to Them. CONTESTS THE 15S0F DOMINIONS RIGHTS TO LANDS IN RAILWAY BELT. Bodwell's Qontention--Declares Federal Goverpment Must Give An Accounting 'of Moneys Re- ceived and Expended. 2 Vvendomer 486, Nov, 27.--The con- © tention. that the Dominion govern- ment is but' the trustée and not the owner 'of. the milion of deres in the railway belt of twenty miles on each side of the C.P.R. from the tidewater to Albert, and of the three million acres in the Peace River distriet, ana that the province is still owner of these linds, never having parted with its title, was raised for the first time in a Breitish Columbia cour It formed one of the chief branches of argtmént of E. V.. Bodwell, K.C., representing the provincial govern- ment in the stated case in the long standin dispute between the local and fotleral governments over Tudian lands; he ease in which the province asserts its title to a reversionary- in: terest in the abandoned or sold Indian lands, the domiinion having in these lanas no beneficial interest but merely the right to administer them as guar- dians of the Indians in this province. The srgument went beyond the In: dian lands and included the millions of acres of land conveyed to the do- minion hy the provincial act of 1884 Mr. Bodwell read that act which makes vse of the words "in. trust' and added in effect that the province contends that these lands were grant- ed to the dominion merely in trustin aid of the construction of the C. I. R., making the dominion government trustees: and leaving the province still the owners. That the federal govern ment has never rendered an account of its trustdbship and the province, as owner, has a right to demand it, that the account must show any surpluses and revenues derived by the dominion since 1884, in these lands in which the dominion has hy mistake, regarded itself owner. The court reserved its decision upon this as upon all phases of the stated case. The Dominion government wis "not represented. by the counsel al- presented, by. ug DAILY MEMORANDA. For 4 Furs of quality " It's Campbell Bros'. always. Exhibition of Water Color Kirkpatrick's Art Gallery. Some real Bargalhs in the 'For Sale' advts,, on pdge 3, tosnight. You hear it all over Wherever you go That the very best Are from Gadbrge Paintings nt Furs Mills & Co. Nov. 27th, In Canadian History. 1816~The Hon. Lewis (*Wallbridge, Chief Justice of Manitoba, was born in Belleville, catario. wied in Winnipeg, October 20, 18R7, : 1849--The Hon. James H. Cumsiskey Commissioner of Public Works of Prince IBdward Island, 'was born at Fort Augustus, Prince Edward Island, 18564--Railway, communication was established petween Montreal and Point Levis, Que. 1868--8ir John Governor-General. 1885--Eight Indian executed at Batteford. 1808--8evere earthquake felt in Montreal. Young was appointed murderers were shoeks were Decorative |. Dining-room Crockery with dining "plate The modern room its continious shells' affords ample opportunity for the display of odd and quaint Jugs, Tankards, Plates, etc, We carry specially chosen purpose. of this line for an extensive articles Robertson Bros, The physician has a sigron Nig doer. That is an advertisement t the passersby. Comparatively few. people soe the sign however. Why net garry your sign into ail the]best homeslinitown ? You 'oan do so by a Classified Want' Ad. and without _loss_of_ professional i 4 Crag 90 45 BN Notice. Legal forms, customs entry blanks ote,, for 'saie at Whig office, cheapest and best place to buy print. me the | | though = the. questions were sent to | Ottawa a month ago, and the Domin- ion government invited to take part. in view of Mr. Bodwell's stand the railway belt lands branch of the ar- gument raises one of the largest ques- fons ever brought before tne Cana- dian court for if the province is ul timately) successful the Dominion must not only now relinquish its trusteeship to millions of aeres in british Columbia and © reconvey the trust lands to the province, but it must render an account and full ac- count of the revenues derived for the more than twenty years during which it has aaministered these lands as if it were owner, The surplus over the actual "cost of the railway within the boundaries of the province might be in the millions of dollars and must be handed over to thé province, SUES J. GORDON BENNETT. ' = -- Woman Seeks Right to Use His Name. Paris, Nov. 27.--Saturday, in first civil tribunal 'at the Palais De Justice, will come up the snit of Juliette Jacqueline | Shettler against James Gordon Bemnctt. This is an notion for recognition of paternity, a rare proceeding under the French law. Miss Shettler demands that Mr, Ben- nett shall publicly recognize her as his daughter and make suitable pro- vision for her. The action brings to tight a most extraordinary romance of cosmopolitan life. She was educated school in Tondon. scientific dairy the ranch of the nt the Colonial She was taught work, and is now on Mrs. Herefoot Cochrane, in. Alberta, Canada. She now nearly thirly years of age and a brave, inideorndent woman, quite ca pable of taking eare of herseli. She brings (he suit not for money inder- ests, but to force the recognition she dels is due from a father. Is WHAT IS PREDICTED. - - No Children in a Century and a Half. Ithaca, N.Y., Nov. 27.--Pointing out that in the last fifty vears there has been a decrease of 152"t0 a thousand, or about thirty a year, in the propor- tion of children born to every thou- sind women of child-bearing age, Dr. Walter 1. Wilcox, head of the depart ment of statistics at Cornell Univer- sity, told a class of Cornell students, yesterday : : "These figures indicat® that if changes like those effected in this country during the past half century were to continue for a eentury and a half more there wduld he no children left." 3 GIS BUOYS. REPLAGED ON RIVER FROM MONTREAL TO QUEBEC. Have Been Accidents This Year Been Minor--There Has No Heavy Damage to 'the Ocean Shipping. #uchee, Nov. 27.--The lacing the gas buoys which mark the St. Lawrence route between Mon- treal and Quebec with spar buoys is progressing rapidly and 1t is expected that it will be completed by to-mor- row. Navigation by the St. Law- rence route now officially closed, the last steamer having gone out last wee but a »pumber of &Emall cargo vessels which ply between Mon- treal and Quebec and maritime pro- vineeports will continue to make the trip as long as the river remains un- frozen. It is for the benefit of these vessels that the department of ma- rine is placing' the spar buoys in the c¢hannel. They will be left out long conditions petmit. Naviga- tionp.on the great lakes does not close until the middle of next month and the work of removing the budys which mark the lake routes will not [be commenced until December 10th. #Though accidents on the St. "Law- rence route have been more numerous during the which has just closed than during the prévious sea- son, they have all been 'minor and there has been no very heavy damage to ocean shipping. In spite of the fact that the channel has heen better lighted or marked out a num- ber of vessels ran aground. Farl in the season the Innishowen Head. of the Head line, went ashore the channel. She was delayed some time and some difficulty was experienced in floating her but the damage to her hull was very slight: The Marina was also aground for several days but when 'she was float ed it was found that she. had been but slightly -damaged.. There were several collisions during the season. I'he Corinthian, of the Allan line, ran into a freight boat in the chan- nel and the steamers Quebec and Throld collided in a for near Batis- can. In neither case was the dam- age 'heavy. There were a number of minor accidents also which resnlfed only in a féw hours delay and slight damage. Not for- years has fog and so' interfered with the St. Lawrence route "shipping as during the past hit was due largely to the fires during the latter part of summer Several times for threo our davs at a stretch the whole Lawrence channel was en- veloped in a dense pall of fog which tied up the shipping. © Steamers which were inward or outward bound were compelled to anchor in the chan- rel wherever they happened to when the foo descended and others that were scheduled to sail from Cnebee and' Montreal were big up at | their moorings. The™ last, and by no means the lightest of these fogs, hung over the river during the early | part of this week. The last of the | steamers had departed but © there {were a number of small freight boats | that were held up. Lennox Kidney & Liver Pils | lar price, Be. two 'lor 25c., "Wade's drug store: work of re is as as geason ones fog smoke Regu: patriot nam boarding be fr at] ID NT HAN ---- Two Montreal Murderers Necks Saved. SENTENCE COMMUTED WILL LIVE PRISONERS TILL THEY DIE. 'Crooked Neck" Smith and Vito Men They Xilled--Only Eleven Hangings in Montreal in the Past Fifty Years. Montreal, Nov. 27.--Had not dominion cabinét commuted the -- sen- ténces of 'Crooked Neck! Smithy and Vito Micoli, the pair would have paid the penalty for murder on the gallows in the yard of the Montreal jail, this morning. Smith and Miooli were con- demmed to death by Justice Trenhohne during the September term of the court of king's bench, Smith was found guilty of the murder of a mem- ber of a gang to which both helong- ad in an opium joint in Chinatown. The crime arouSed particular interest at the timé on account of the cirenm- stances connected with it. Smith had been threatened "hy his victim, ** Mike" Malone, alias "Jimmie" Enright, fol- lowing a fight one night in the opium den in which Enright was stabbed with a knife. On the following morn- ing, Smith returned tothe den and when Enright witored he shot him down in cold blood. "Crooked Neck" then made his escape and succeeded in getting to New York. Both Smith and his victim were well-known to the police, as hoth were members of a well-known gang of pickpockets, "The police lost all trace' of the murderer, though he ran through some of the principal streets of the city imme: diately after the murder, called at a companion's house to raisé money, and succeeded in evading capture on the New. York train. After a week's abstnee he returned to the city fo give himself up. He wandered about the Bonaventare station for the great- er part of the morning without being captured, though police and detectives were supposed to be on the lookout for him and finally went to the St, James hotel, where: he gave himself up. He pleaded sélf-defence, but was found guilty: of murder in the" first legree and was condemned to -death. Micoli was condemned to death for Stabbing. ahd, fatally. wounding a com- : Antonio de Lucca in a houds 'in Cadieux 'street. Micoli and de Lucca were born in the same town in Italy and had been friends from childhood. They came to Canada together and lived together here. The "murder resulted from a rivial quarrel, This was the first time in the his tory of the Mentreal courts that two murderers © were condemned to die on the samg date. Had the sentences heen carried out this would have been the first execution in Montreal in seven years. The last. man to die on the scaffold here was Tharwald Hanson, a Dane, who foully murdered a iittle hoy in Westmount, a suburb of the city, in order to get a fow cents which the little lad had in his pocket. ' There were only seven' hangings in Montreal in the last fifty years. the Great Fire At Oollingwood. Collingwoed, Ont., Nov. 27.--With a high north-westerly' gale blowing the GT.R. lumber docks are on fire and there are grave doubts as to the saving of the élevatér and other pro- pertv. The firemen are fichting the conflagration | with their best efforts and are pouring streams on the grain elevator in efforts to save it. They are also dumping the lumber piles in- to the bay, Died Of Fever. Amhérstburg, Ond., Nov. & Ernest Jackdon, aged forty-three years, and single, president of the West Steam Shovel - and Dredgemen's Union, and an expert. drillmen and dredgeman, having been employed for years on the fleet of Dithbar & Sullivan, is dead of typhoid fever. He came to Amherst. burg from Sault Ste. Marie about six- teen years ago. y= ¥ King Very IN. London, Nov. 27.--A despatch to the Express, from Belgrade, says that King Peter's recent <ndisposition, which was ascribed to influenza, was really an apoplectic stroke, partly due to the strain his majesty has un- dergone during the -past fow "days The king's condition is so precarious, say® the correspondent, that his abdi- cation would cause no surprise. Will Be Represented. Berlin, Nov. 27.--It is semi-officially announc®l that though the chancellor wiil not be present at the debate in the reichstag, early next week, he will be represented hy an official of * the government, cerning the motions introduced by the socialists and radicals for '4 more close defining of the responsibilities of the ministers of the empire to the reichstag. Furs For Christmas Presents. Any article selected now will placed aside until wanted at Gamp- bell Bros.', the busy fur store... 'Legal forms, sustoms entry blanks, ete., for sale -at Whig office, the cheapest und best plage to buy print- ing. Ii comverteds into batter] créam of society would make a mighty poor quality. New Christmas ston's. nr neckwear. Living- - the, Murderers==Thet The debate will be con | 15] sone of thd Malley." He Senna - ------ : SCANTY LIQUID DIET. Fewer Die * Foods. Syracuse, N.Y., Nov. tice of feeding. typhoid well on solid foods ing only a scanty lig vocated by Dr. LL Says er," given at a meet demy of Medicine last Custard, creamed chicken were sorge 'of § Levy said he gave pal poid fever, hut only wh food. The results, he bel erally, better, the lo strength less and the covery period' shorter. Individual cased, he consider- ed should be handled as the character- istics of each case requires: Dr. Levy gave numerous statistigh to show the percentage of deaths where liquid diet and solid diet weee giv He regard- ed that fewer patie died when solids are used and they have the additional advan of being in better physical condi when the disease is donquered, mis with ty- they craved MRS. MALDWIN DRUMMOND. The marriage of Mrs. Marshall Field, Jr., and Maldwin Drummond, in Eng- land recently, caused a profound sensa- tion in the social cireles of Purope and American. Mrs. Lrummond, who before her marriage to Marshali Field, Jr. was Miss Albertine Huch, of Chicago, in- herited « vast fortune from her first husband, and her two sons by this anion are looked upon as the two richest youths in the world, Me. Drum- mond has no' fortune, but is popular in England's most exclusive circles, A GREAT PAPER. The Whig, on Saturday, will be. a sixteen pager, with all the latest news, both of the world and of Kingston. It will lalso abound in advertisements of interest to all. [The Tigers-"Varsity game in Toronto will be bulletined ¥ on Saturday afternoon. : 1S BUILT GLIDERS HE WAS INVITED TO MAKE TEST. FERRE 7 HK HEF Hw He Tried it in New York and Came Out With a Fractured Leg--Is at College in Montreal' Montreal, Nov. 27.--A message rc ceived from New York states ihat Laurence J. Lesh, the young Gm dian aeéronaut who fell while operating a "glider" at the Morris Park track, gn November 4th, and sustained a fractured leg, is doing well and will soon be able to return to his home in Montreal. Young Lesh, who is only seventeen years of age, has aonstruct- ed several gliders here and bas made successful flights, one in particular made over the River St. Lawrence, his machine being towed by a fait motor boat having brought him" to the no: tice of acronauts in New York... He was invited to make several tests in American machines in New York and travelled. to the American metropolis for that purpose" several times, al- ways meeting with success.' It was at a big meeting of acronauts wlich was attended by an immense crowd, anxious to 'see the trials that Lesh met with his aecident. The glider, which he was operating turned over when: he was about forty feet from the ground, and he fell. the machine coming down en top of him. His leg was fractured: above the ankle. He was removed to ;, a hospital, where he has been ever since the accident. Laurence Lesh is.still attending col- lege and he works on his flying ma- chine: models and gliders out of study hours. He has. aequired qhite a - re- | putation "as an aeronafit and a bril- hant future is predicted for him. His | father Ira B. Lesh, a well-known business man. FIRST IN THIRTY YEARS. | Hears From Brother After ' Long | 'Silence. , {| Richmond, Que., Nov. 27. Mrs. Ed- | ward Flynn, whd © lives about three i miles from here, has received a letter : m her voungest™ brother, Waltér, t first news she has had from him | for Athirty-thyee years. He is now a | mémber of the Oklahoma legislature {and one of the 'earliest settlers of | that territory, and. has become a | prominedt man. {| Anothet brother is a 'member of the Commonwealth House of Commons, i Melbouriie, Austtalis, ana 8 known | throsghout the colony as "Ring 0'- has not been home for, | twenty years: . BrocRville's . municipal light plant 'has had a very profitable year. VEMBER 27, 1908. a ee | ¥ Dispatches From Near And GIVEN IN THE BRIEFEST POS- SIBLE FORM. Matters That Interest "Everybody ~Notes From All Over--Little of Evexything Easily _ Read and, Remembered. : Storm warnings are displayed on the great fakes and on the Atlantic coast. The new steamer Hammonic was launched at Collingwood on Thursday afternoon, " Thirty Servians were slain in a fight. with Austrians on the frontier of erzegovina. Brantford public school teachers vis- itea Toronto in a body to-day to in- spect the schools. There are more railroads built just now in ~ Canada any other country. There is airevolution in Thibet, in which the Lama has taken the field against the Chinese, American chickens, according to Prescott customs officials, cone under the terms of the quarantine, = The steambarge Donelin, of Port Arthur, stranded pear Belleville and knocked a large hole in her hull. Prof. J. H. Sheppard, Victoria Col- lege, Toronto, died suddenly on Thurs- day night, folowing an operation. William Mackenzie, it is definitely announced, has secured control of the Toronto Eleetrie Light company. Col. Matheson, proJecial treasurer, has returned from hig vacation in the Bermuda Islands. His health is im- proved. 4 Four persons were downed when the steamer _ Finance was sunk ®fi Sandy Hook in collision with the White Star «toamer Georgie, . At St. John, N.B., John Kelly, in- spector of lighthouses, has been sus- pended pending the result of the ma- rine department inquiry. t Lieut.-Col. Hamilton = Merritt is about to retire from the command of the governor-general's bodyguard, To- tonto, his term having expired. There is "every indication that the action' for $10,000, instituted by Sir Frederick: Borden against the Cow- angville Observer will go to trial, It is reported that Premier MoBride will invite the other provincial pre: miers to British Columbia for a ' econ- ference on the subsidy question. The Emperor of Germany's indie position is following a normal cours and it is believed his majesty will have entirély recovered in a lew days. I'he mast recent church census of the United States shows forty defiom- inations, with 161,731 ministers, 210 - 199 churches and 32,883,156 members. The Russian committee on naval de- fence has refused the $3,00,000 for new battleships until the 'naval ministry, shows satisfactory signs of reform. There will be no protest against the election of Lloyd Harris, liberal, in Brantford. Conservatives have talked of action but have decided, not to take it, . A number of vessel owners have raised the rate for carrying grain from the head of the lakes to Georgian Bay ports from two to three cents a bushel. : All the partigs ih the reichstag, it is said, have decided there shall be no more attacks on the kaiser or re- newal of oratory against the kaise: ime. . burg telegrams give an ae- count of scovery of an alleged plot upon the life of the dowager gm- press of Russia, during her journey Arom Copenhagen. Trouble simmering in the 34th Regi: ment of Chatham, Ont., since the Quebec. tercentenary is, according to rimor, likely to 'end in the disband- ing of the regiment. Samuel B.' Donnelly, Brooklyn, for- mer president of the International Typographical Union has been ap- pointed public printer by President Roosevelt to succeed John 8S. Leech. The Windsor, Essex and Lake Shove RR. is being supd for killing cattle. The owner maintains that the com: pany did not keep the fences and gates along its right-of-way in proper condition. r APE being than in Panet, a Windsor lawyer, sued W. J. Douglas, merchant, for damsge to his automobile sustained in a collision with a horse and rig | belonging to the plaintiff. He cotlect- od $14. : Sir Edward Grey, questioned in the Bsitish House of Commons, said the Jritish consul-generhl, at Port 'An Prince, hall reported that British ine terests and subjects in Hayti were not in danger. Phe Canadian has obtained the States government de ick seow, at Amherstburg, and the work of re- moving all big boulders in front of the docks is under way. " In London, at 'the colonial fruit exhibition. gold medals were awarded to British Columbia apples, to the Nova Scotia government's collection of fruit, and the government of On- 4ario's collection of fruit; ete. Rev. J. Graham Clark, pastor of Mulville church, Westmount, * will shortly return to the ministry of the Unitea Free Chureh of Scotland.. He will take up the duties of pastor at the Arthur Rea church, Barrhead, near Glasgow, Scotland, at the open- ing of the year, A Jacob A. Jacobs, marine depariment use of the United aluable piece of St. 'Catharine street real 'estate, in - the heart of the retail shopping district of Montreal. i purchase price for the same was 000, and upon. this Mr. Jacobs [erect a" block of fine stores. The at KL ranked, among the 7 . de 'obalt millionaires, has purchased "E\v. One of the largest and oldest health [Ww b of $10 to $50 ne I. A0.H. Leeds County Board Elect Gananoque, Nov. 27-%he hoard of the AO.H. for Leeds these officers : Philip nanodque, Representati Ves from the various courts eof the toun- ty were present and a large turnout of the local court also. x ¢ Gananoque council, No, 284, RT. of T., held an entertainment in their council rooms in Britton's Block "last evening. Ex-Mayor Robert Sheppard | acted as chairman. Following the programme an initiation © ceremony was pul on." The coal sehooner Britton, . which cleared from here for Oswego on Tuesday morning, was back with her cargo on Thursday morning, making her record trip for the season. The many friends fT. M. Cor sett, Church street, injured by falling from a scaffold 'at C. BE. Britton's Island, '"Mudlunta," where he was working at a new house boat, will be pleased to learn that his injuries, | while serious, are not dangerous and he will likely be around in a few days. Hugh Wilsgn, Pine. stréet, senior 'member of the firm of H. Wilson & Sons, agricultural implement, car riage and pismo dealers, King street, an ex-reeve and councillor of this municipality, was taken to Toronto general hospital on Wednesday, se- tiousty ill. -- He was accompanied by Mrs. Wilson. ; Ex-Mayor W. J. Wilson is moving into his handsome and spacious new residence on Pine street, lately com. pleted. ae James A. Thomson, wife of the editor of the Gananoque Journal who has been in Brock general hospital Jor the past few weeks, where she underwent a serious opera- tion, has returned home much bet- ter. George W, Thornley, Stone 'street, has returned to town after spending the past two weeks with relatives in Greenfield, Mass: Mrs. David Whit ney, Lethbridge, Alta., spent the past week in town. the guest of Mr. and Mrs. F. J, Henderson, Broek street, Dr. Bull Abandons Hope. New York, Nov. 27.--<Dr. William Bull, the well-known surgédon, who has been suffering for several months with cancer, has at last given up hope. Up till a few days ago hel clung to the opinion that the course of treatment he was undergoing wonld be successful against the dread 3 : : i R ENDOWMENT COMMENDS PROJECT TO HONOR LINCOLN. Committee Hopes to Raise $500,- 000 to Erect Suitable Mouu- ment to Martyred President: New York, Nov, 27.-A committee was organized 'here to forward the maVement: for the ondowwent of the Lincoln Memorial University as a na- tional monumént to the memory of Abraham Lincoln. : Geh. Oliver Otis Howard, to whom in their last interview, President Lin- toln expressed his desire that some- thing be done for the benefit of 'the mountaineers of the borderland he- tween 'Tennessee, Kentucky and: Vie- ginia, among which Lincoln was born Land whom he loved, was active in the forwarding of the movement which re- sulted in the chartering on February 12th, 1897, of : the Lincsln Memorial University. situated near Cumbesland Gap in Claiborne county, Tenn., and with other friends of the institution has 1abored these eleven years im aid of the institution, The committee organized, of which he is a member, intends to take ad- vantage of the Lincoln centenary, Fel- ruary 12t 1909, to raise $500,000 to be known as the "Lincoln Centennial Endowment Fund," for the benefits of the university, which now has 600 acres of land, bhildings: worth 8150 - 000 and an endowment of $100,000. NO LOW-CUT GOWNS, Ladies |All Wore Hats, Too, at Bishop's Request. Dmnha, Neb., Nov. 27.<In obed- ience 16 the edict of Bishop Williams every woman who attended the wed- ding of Barton Millard and Miss Na- thalie Merriam, at Trinity" Episcopal cathedral, wore a hat. Not only this but, contrary to the practies at many recent church weddings, there were no low-cut gowns. Bishop Williams' request was mere ly a reminder of the 'immemorial rule of the church," which requires women to have their heads covered, accompanied by an explanation that he had "nd desire to prescribe what the women should wear on their heads - bevond wha TE ements of Christian' courtesy and eonsidera- tion for other people demand as "to sight and hearing.' «There was a further request, "that all right-minded women shall observe the rule of the church, rat than the behests of fashion, as to seomly and modest apparel "im the house of God." . . . Notice. You c¢an only buy. Swift's cecal and wood at the company's offices. We have no store agencies. and accident companies in the warld offers IoAnity Dpnihal. Sloss from sama if q Uh 1 reasonable, apply at once to a sa : BRINTNELL.- Remains Funeral "Phone, 577. Without a doubt' the hand. y somest assortment of Neck. : wear ever imported to this | ) Christmas buying. Don't de- ° beautiful ! Neckwear if you igtend gift . giving, 85e., 86c., 40c. and 50e. : : lay seeing this : New Novelty Bolts the latest New York Ideas. Men's Neckwear We have just 'opemed and ready for selling a consignment of the latest and smartest English Neck. . wear for Men: Reversible + Silk and Satin Four-In-Hand Ties, in both plain and fancy effects, EVERY ONE PRETTY, EVERY ONE CHEAP 50c. anywhere, but here. Our Price, 950, {Call and see them at _ ' heer rede Er 4 EEF EE ESE DIED. In Kingston, Hospital, on Nov, wife of H, I. will be Worrow noon. at Brintnell, taken ito Belleville, LEB --~In Kingston, of Nov-27th, 1908, Clemence (Wilson) beloved Ross Lee. aged ninetéen nine months. from her Wellington S¢., wife years late residence, to 81; p.m. Friends andgacquaintances respectiully invited to attend. "(Watertown papers please copy). ROBERT J. REID, The Leading Undertaker. 227 Princess street, OLIVES - JUST OLIVES Large Olives and Small Olives. OLIVES Big Bottles and Little Bottles. tuffed and Plain. 10c., 15c., 20c., 26c., 8Ce., 40c. 50¢:, 75c., 86e., 00c., $1.25, Jas. Redden & Co.. Importers Of Fine Groceries. at a good "reduction TURK'S Second-Hand Store, "Phone, 705 timber is Fry low around here, and is liabl Still: The great forest fires that TO CLEAR ODT Not me, but all Bs. a WHY TIMBER IS LOW. - biiibiond Forest Fires Actually Mave Re- duced the Prices. Havelock, Nov. #. ~The price at the present i ie 5. be low General 27th, 1908, Fmma, and 231 Mary's Cathe- Jdral, 'on, Sunday, Nav, $0th, at 2 20 I wiil sell

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