Daily British Whig (1850), 27 Jan 1909, p. 1

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YEAR 76-NO. 224 KINGSTON, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27, 11909, i ay -- B-- mr es mi ---- ---- DEA TH + { known in the city gil sdstoutdivg HOUSE OF COMMONS. : nT PROBABILITIES, : country, was respec and henor- J Toron Jan. 2% 1 wd by all who knew him. He was the |The Making of Treaties--FPegula- l HE MAN Ol M S I ER : st apd horthiwest as son of the late William Spooner, who 3 ' oy . win i nt snow "alls: Thursday Rare : . tions Regarding T . § ls. y, Bor died at Glenburnie not many months | pron Our Own Bs nd infers west w nds, fair ahd moderately cold. § ago. He was about forty-three years | Ottawa, Jan. 27--Dwming a short i fled By a Grand ois ie ies ict oe "1 BAS | ; tf i ty © ogi Eis 5 Sd | SHI Deft Goes in Local at r an Son 1 y #" ran liam Craig, Glenburnie. Besides his | came u or discussion was a ich. es re--- m . wife; one child, Ada, aged five years, ly R. L Borden, that the terms of : j Trunk Train is left to mourn his loss. Little Wil-{}e watcrways' treaty between Great Sto a o frid, only ten years old, was, the 'joy | Britain and the United States should res. ! of the household. He was a bright, lhe laid before the Canadian parlia- : ; cloves Btls chap, and wes s | EFeat meni Thie ests yao sues be, sail en . . ' ) » and in which important Canadian interests h : . : - William Spooner, of Glenburnie, and His Ten- |i vio faow bin jos end cil: fie to 1 a, bm do He Was in the King Edward Theatorium Last| f ' 'he United Stales senate for some Year-Old Son the Victims---Mrs. Engine No. 244. Gime past, and under. these circum: Night---A Description Given of The engine No..244, was in charga |stances he could not see any reason S oner Badl Hurt of Engineer H. McEwan, and the train why Canadians also should not be Mr Raffl po y . in charge of Conduttor Young. Both made aware of it. . es. ie will he Jule for the inquest. As| Mr. Borden id he in. quite dwaro ar ae could Be learned at the station |that, under the Unit States consti The Dead. ed until the dead body of Mr. Spooner from those that were present at the tution, all treaties had to be ratified WILLIAM SPOONER, "aged forty-| Was found 'pinned in between the wheel | time of the accident, the engineer is|by the senate before they wereabind- three. * | and box of the waggon. free from all blame. ing on the republic. The British cus- Height 5 i 10 . WILFRID SPOONER, aged ten. : Had there been a watchman at the tom, on the other hand, had placed seen. whaeiRaen Ceane- Suen ssge. sued syle ede AVR * m ---- Finding Of The Bodies. stoning, as these i§ in tho daytime | the trealy-making power in the king's Weight : 154 Ibs. Seriously Injured. | An eye-witness at the: time of the | the accident might have heen avicted. |hands, but in certain commercial sess eens gses mesioasee vast. meas gaan ater segs leery SUN A a accident stated that an object, that There is 8 watchman there from six | treaties it was stipulated that, they . MRS. WILLIAM SPOONER. BR ich Tike & bufiato robe, o'lodk ih the morning uniil six |were not 0 bind tha colonics concern Hair. ...... 00a ceauavnss on. DOPK BrOWR and Wavy A fearful accident occurred at' the | was geen wedged in under the waggon o'clock in the evening, but none od until the approval had been obtain- railway crossing of the outer Grand wheel, and this, when removed, prov- through the night. It is at night [cd of the colonial parliaments. Mr. Trunk station, at 7.15 o'clock, Tues-| od to be the body of Mr. Spooner. As that one is most needed, especially | Borden was of opinion that the same 3 4 i i 4 day evening, causing the instant death soon as this was discovered, the men between seven and eight o'clock, as he principle might very well be "applied With excitement in the chase after | town,.in fact I wager that seven out | & of two persons, and the serious injuvy | quickly ran down the track, and would know the time all irains were (to treaties between Great Britain and | the Whig 8 ysterious Mr. Raffles so of every ten who read this are ac- of another. SW 3 found, first, the body of the boy, Wil- due, and could warn people of their [tho Unitol States, in which Canadian | 'M'enSe that excited "man-hunters = are quainted with her, at least by sight. Heavy Ribbed Hose The dead are William Spooner, 81 frid, lying in between the rails of approach. In the daytime, people |interests were affected; that is to say absolutely grabbing everybody, I saw Mr. O'Connor on the far side of All sizes, 17c. to 25¢ Jfosbttous farmer of Glenburnie, and | the track beyond the one the train | deiving by can see plainly up and that thoy should not come into eficet whether they resemble the missing 'the street, giving a bogus signal 5 to y s ten-year-old son, Wilirid Spooner. | came in on, and his mother lying not |down the track, but at night it isjuntil the approval had been obtained, onc's photos or not, we have decide down Princess street, that so attract- Ribbed Overst ck Mrs. Spooner was very badly injured | far away. It was thought that the almost impossible to do so, the head [not only of theyUnited, States senate, to add a further item on a distin- ed the crowd's attention that we|g OCK- and is now lying in the general hos: | hoy was alive, when the men got . to light on ihe train being the only warn- but of the~ Canadian parliament as guishing characteristic of Mr. Raffles, { passed into the theatre after buying ings pital- in a critical condition, but}him, but he had passed away before | ing one could have. well. namely his hair. Every day that he two tickets, without attracting un- | @ Hopes are held out for her recovery. |the doctors arrived, Mrs, Spooner em Sir Wilfrid Laurier had no objection |Tomains at liberty this description will due attention. In fact any who notic Scarlet and Black, 20c. to he accident happened at the outer | was conscious when the rescuers News Of The Accident. to take to the course which Mr. |be augmented until even the condition od ys at all, little suspected that 1 50e. station, at 7.16 o'clock, engine No. | reached her, and was able to tell her} The news of the sad accident was Borden had advised, At all events he of his teeth will be given. But surely vas the man of mystery, of course on 244, in charge of Engineer McEwan, ' name before she lost consciousness. carried away to Glenburnie by $ | caw no reason why the contents of Kingstonians, with the distinguishing [Very one expecting me to enter Woollen Toques drawing local train No. 13, from| { young mam; Who Was EC t uw such treaties should not be communi- markes here given, by carefully study- alone. We had to stand a few min- All colors, 25c. to 50c Brockville to Belleville, crashing into The Doctors Arrive 'Wi le hotel. He left © Ris. C | sated to the dominiom parliament as |'1€ his photos at George Mills & utes, so large was the crowd, while a ' ! Mr. Spooner's waggon as he went to * INCEOr hole. 8" Jett on NS ad soon ae they had been signed by his Co's hat and fur store, will be able to bent was procurable, We sat on the Gauntlet Mitts drive across the tracks, Mr. Spooner lor thi hl | Dr iah \ om tidi majesty. In the present case the do- bring the quarry io bay within the eft hand side of the left aisle about : was in the city all day attending the fhe ers Ing aoe, that three people )broug . to. tha ty. he sod tidings, | MOI ment was fully aware of [next twenty-four hours. six rows down. Remained for the full All sizes, 25¢. to 45¢. market. He left early in the evening hac you i ", sud ithe dead waggon | a8 gf He imagined, caused a great the contents of the waterways' treaty Remember, it is absolutely imma- performance and passed out with my 3 7 to drive home, and had reached the an y Sispatc aed te he sca aliog 2, the i tho but had not yet been furnished with a terial now when he is captured. We Eo and hi Erincess street, oollen Gloves : ¢ : % ' en as yand a mome e we de s Ia , ¥ 2 £ 4 : Ja J ye-by Syde station, when, without an instant's | boar Qoooner was Om a a ™ Re 1 ot a id » w 18 | opy of the treaty itself as agreed to. don't care. L. "Ilayden 0'Counor and ne wid gt Bye Oe Sydenham For Boys and Girls, 15c. to warning, he and his young son were | "oo Ha the Sass Ss ® 1 I penk ar Py + BI a5 | hr. Reid, of Grenville, had a resolu. | George Felix Green don't care. Neither | 5¥% | _ quite snjoyed ihe perforup 50c. : 4 : 8 se n » ance, and 1 own far anc nde. : X : 3 ha aR: i ott. The a ance, being ric ; 208 V sant into eternity, . : was soon on the scene, as were also In the city, tho fatality caused quite tion on the order Paper, regarding the foes. Nt. Raffles. The only TEARON Lthe "Whale Pe a) _-- w Fare are many wtogiea, as to justin. Ross (coroner) and Dr. Stanley|a stir, a large number of people go- method of handling tenders' received that be has so long evaded you all is | © ening a a arm Underwear 10 he ide ¢ 2 ho : a a , "he vari "tme p p : : 3 7 1. : 8 were § : oY ncoideny BE the Keyes. The injured woman was ating to the depot to seo what was the by the various departments of the the ae hat he . 0 Jomathably such theatres it would surely re- All siges, 25e. to Tbe. - By arrived 'at the. tracks, the once put in the ambulance and, ac-| matter. The deepest sympathy is felt governmens, so fs to make better pro- oe ke almoRt superngtucllv so. ak Be a Dl ood Tt was. » suburbhy «trait wal just pulling into companied by Dr. Keyes, was removed | for Mrs. Spooner, her little davghter, vision agai pt raud and vO Provent ir pa cans dont] ce a clean, wholesome show all round, one Quarterly Style Ri and ho: waited for it 10 to the general hospital. The coroner Ada, and all . relatives in this dark alk possibility of such tenders being 's 4 a i - ; on olf go of the best [ ever attended, and I Wh 2 : > d examined the scene of - the accident, | hour of trouble. tampered with. now, especially. when AC himseld 18 be- | ng dressed in dark short coat, wore Book pass. en it had gone by he, think : N Ab : a The minister of public works ex- ginning to admit that he doesn't ex-{, , . ip te ing he had a clear road ahead, drove questioned many of those about, and| Early this morning the hospital . au- . : } set to long evade capture. In fae a brown mustache, the first I've re- immediately in fo tof the't $i rash. then had the bodies removed to Cor-| thorities stated that Mrs. Spooner bad plained that the government had ree pe ong: evace capture. In fact | sorted to in Kingston, and wore a ing into A rd fom ot Ush- | bett's undertaking rooms, till the in:|passed a good night and was as. well coutly adopted general regulations on with the daring chances he proposes | dark felt hat. The Indy was dressed ye EO 8, ERs, quest is held. as could be expeeted. It was thought thie yuostion, which bo thought would Jung OR hg | he a seri bu that's enough ! She holds. my hat would pull through all right. mect the points raised. 15 18 now or-{, gek Lo Nngstopian sl ness | solemn word, as an old friend, that The Crash Occurs. Boy's Body Badly' Cut thats ghe Would pull. 1 V fei CT deréd that all tenders are to be sub: if somo one does noi land him soon. | I'll not reveal anything that would The engine hit the right hand side oN ini y ; vy Ne. Wobad Sens ee a00, whey on Wo: mitted under scal and to be addressed Remember this, too, that he mist ab- | lend publicity to what she did. vi the hageon. Just bebind the front the ne Toy a Sa hi man was killed at the same spot, and to the officer who is ordered to re- johkely. oe, captured by some on& A Enough that she made an admirable wheel, and just forwar 1 seat, p J y. yas badly ) ; 3 ive ooo , care not who. Yi may just as we ne jce. N i containing the three EIR, yoo broken in, the skull being fractured in |8% just about the same time of day. {"VC thom. On receipt they are to be ip o. You may just as well | hecomplice. Nothing, further of : mo- | " A hurry call was sent to Corbett's | errand as soon as the bodies were For spring now ready. 20c With Coupon for any 1Dec., pattern free. --AT--_ STEACY'S. ; : stamped: and dated and plaged under be the lucky one. The reward put up- | ment occurred and .1 met my w - they were practically hit, by the. en: yumerous Plaves His head looked asl... ai Took nd kes: until the tiie ues 16 | ont his head is the royal sum of $160. | gers by appointment at 11.30 hy ol gine &T tho same instant it hit the if he had hit or bedi Strick by some | Some Further Details. open them. "Tenders are 'o be opencd So that it behooves you, if a particle | they had a somewhat exciting cab waggon. The crash was heard 200 Sharp instrument, as there was 8] pliner details of the sad affair were before the minister and one of his of sporting blood runs theeugh your drive. yards away. The Wife and, child wewe oe Bole gompletely through thel 0 aq at the outer station early this principal officials or else before two | veins to gel in lino, take out a. sub-1 To-night J may take it into my head thrown offi to the side of the track, ront of the skull, another on the top, morning. Mr. Spoonek stopped at the | officials designated by the | minister scription for the Whig, be it for three, {to visit the hockey match, who but Mr. Spooner and the waggon were and another on the right side. Nol, idence of Mrs. McKay, an aged |and are to bo initialed as buon: as 5% OF twelve months and qualify for {knows ? Here's hoping the 14th may carried right up to a point directly in bones were broken in the lower parti qy who aied: on Monday evening, | they arc opened. * {tho other different. rewards. J. A. }win anyway.--R. C. S.--RAFFLES." front of the refreshment building at of the body, and, there, wore ne. seri and. his wife got out of the waggon | H. Lentiox asked whether the gov- Smith, the clover ('seventh son" is hot he the station, a distance of about 100 ous cuts. A few bruises were found | and entered the house. She remained a | aenment had taken any action io re | OW his trail since the ban was lifted FRONTENAC"S NEW WARDEN. yards. The Waggon must have been on the back and sides. fow moments and then returned to the |cover $39,933 from George MeAvittic [on him and by his ehrewdness has un- torn away from the horses at the in-|. When Mr. Spooner's body was exam- | waggon. When Mr. Spooner started to |and B. B. Maves. in connection: with | earthes several good clues. Likewise, A Short Sketch of Richard H. TT stant the engine came in contact with iyed a severe wound was found in the} gyive away, a young man employed by | their dredging 'contract: at St. John. [John Green. Raffles was right there Hamilton. we ARE 4 ) Lak LAT it, as the horses = galloped- on down head, -likely the one that caused death. | {he G.T.R. called to him to look out | This question was based on the state- | With his "kidding clothes," yesterday, | The grandiather of Frontenac coun PTE | OURNAL i | | ot rn ir the road uninjured. The train must Hie right arm yas ke broken above|for the train. The suburban passed | nents which were made by Contractor and experienced no real diffielty In} (y's new warden have been coming at quite a rate of e elbow, and. his body was badly | just after this on track No. 1, and a x5 i - cleoti : evading local Scotland Yarders. le | : / a % ENS a e x bruised Fr } tad o Mayes during tho recent clection cam- ading iia ¥ . the late Hon. Alexander MacKenzie ND " speed to travel that dar before it came ge i to the injuries, death|moment after, the local came through paign, in regard to sums of money |i® particularly pleased with the turn- premier of Canada with on he Q I ny! | H 3 ly b | LA i Thosa: } : mus 'e bee s aneous ln 9: Ther ag . » i | y ; mie, ; W y he : 2 [ to a standstill,' Those in the station |" \ave been instantaneous in both|on track No. 2. There are six tracks |1,.i4 to MecAvittio for his alleged in- |out procured from "phone 600 and | plainly heard the crash, but did not Cases, at the crossing where the accident wishes to especially compliment the worked at the. erection ol Ringston's ¢ MONTHLY STYLE BOOK FREE know what was the cause until the happened fluence with his government in obtain iv his or His letter eity buildings, in the early forties. j c s < > vite appened., : : ing the contract. driver on his cloverness. is letter, |Tpo warden's grandfather was a stone engine came to a stop, and they saw Mrs. Spooner's Injuries. The train ahead of No. 13, had plac- The minister of public works replicd descriptive of- lis movements oi yes | eutter, ad helped cut th Hy i the waggon jammed on the cowcatch Whe : Ss ol: arrive led two fog signals on the rails, down E + 4 rd 3 th i rad at: ' elped cu e stone lor : or oielX At they did t re lize ,e hen i pooner urvived al Us near the 8 Itoh and the reports of that the St. John dredging contract terday, follows, making very intercst- | the huge columns of the front of the BORN. that anyone 1 ~ orl it ni : gen D ospitel she % attenied to these were heard at the ation Men | 28 awarded to the lowest tenderer |!D€ reading indeed : buildings. PARK 1 In Bingston on Jan. 26th, € a een seriously mur y 8 a x. T SUL Se re PAT p § + Mel Cah . ; + pA ,e . . = : 909, Mr. i " > Par " i i Re vi " organ Ra Sugson a | ut the station and on the street car and that the proceedings were quite Dear People of Kingston : Richard H. Hamilton, the new wai J phter. and Mrs. E. R: Parkin, 'Ves, a Aas lounc to wo Vv ery wad he i > - was a comrade of DAILY MEMORANDA ly injured. She had a bad scelp also heard the whistle blow before the Topgular. apn ee St will 5 Se, hi Bre x he ownghie Me 3 . x J ; ir entered the yards. ) inchinbrooke, where he was born, in MARRIED Skatin t Royal Kk, to-night. wound, on - the leit side of the head, train eh 8 3 , : rou. a cer- LP) is ap i h Yor ur aly hi iris other: wound 'over the lift eve," and |' The tracks, from the crossing Lo A CLERGYMAN ILL. my last iter to you Yo oF joes. jibe fauher, Jahn Momilion, GLEESON--MURPHY At Napanee, on Good Skating, Zion Rink Lo-night her face and head were badly "serate he | the station show many traces of the : " 2 x ! 4 who still resides there, was ¢ or ol Jan. 18th, Allan J. Gleeson to Miss Torey eon, 1Mh Tegt- ws ed and torn. Her body was badly | accident." Splinters of the waggon, : E it 5 inbrooke, and has been reeve ever admit you've given a pretty fair go | since. THOMPSON .- i Angeles Col in . Cyrus Edgar, Camden, Elected As |energy. 3 have lost ome weight ana | the township for thirty-three years, Kathleen Murphy, both of Napanee ; icles iis p , are no small amount of sleep trying 10 |and therefore, the son had municipal | SNYDER--KELLEX '--At Newburgh, on Osgoode. bruised, especially around the legs pir los of floats Sa and Sanly The : i devise ways and means of fooling | records before him all his life. He pa Jan. 11th, Mrs. Mary Ann Snyder, Kingston Hosiery ©, Annual Meet and knees. Dr. Anglin stated, on plainly seen between the rails. ne Napanee, Jan. 27.--Rev. W. H. Ems: | you, And may be I'm not tucceeding | tered the Hinchinbrooke sonnei Harrowsmith, to James W. Kelley, ing, 8 p.m. : Tuesd: a 1 . | waggon was removed early this morn- | ley has been serionsly ill with 18 > ? p ( le Hinchinbrooke councl in Camden East. ; uesday evening, that he had hopes|. oh 1 y. y has : 3 vh an a bovs. Eh, what ? How much longer | 1905, 1 sading the Il at the election T A Bible Society Meeting, 8 pau, First] for : : ; -- ling. The engineer on the ill-fated en- | tack of appendicitis. To-day he is re- - : : 1900, heachng Lhe poi, a je election. | SMITH--PERRY.+At 'Newburgh, on.Jan Qongregational Churcl for the woman's recovery, but could} © iB : . a Appen tis. To-day he 1s re-{any way = are you going to let me | The next three years he was elected 19th, Miss Bila May, eldest daughter ARTEL Urol . ot say positively for a day or gine passed down this morning, on sorted to be improving aicely and al-| yn ? A rate VOR : ' "2 : : : a a hte x 1 A X EP ' n positively for a day or so. : 3 1 ) run ? At. the rate youre going Pll | hy acel { He came to the of Frederick Smith, to Regivald J imestone lodge o. OF A.ON.W Ti a : his regular run, but did not have aby- | most out of danger Garnet W. Cox is 1 > y acclamation. He came to the coun Perr fw oi woets Thursday evening, at 8 o'clock. woman was ungonscious when ato say about the accident 3 noe danger. (rg t . X, | he a skeleton when I'm finally nailed. {tv council in 1907, as reeve of Hinch ry. o innipeg. - . say » » weident., " % - rom : . v , s ' PR Remember High Tea, Y.W.C.A., Thurs- she arrived at the ho pital, and was | hes Ba) 3 rh junction is most Port Arthur, is Vi iting his parents, | However, all jokes aside, boys, Ill day, Jan, 28th, in aid of new building. suffering very much from shock. Her | he crossing A he Jupchon is most | My. and Mrs, George Cox, Enterprise, ? Nible 'Society Annual Meeting, First | sister, Mrs. Donald Hay, Clarence | decsiving at night, as there are =O |afier an absence of three years. and it will afford me quite a little re- Warden Hamil is Congregational Church, Wed., 8 pam. | tp a ; : many lights along the tracks. The | Cyrus Edgar, (amd was: eleet sof : : arden amilton 1s a young man 1 26th, 1909, Alexander 1D Rien (18 Deer ch | street, was notified of the sad eatas-| oF Di aches the tracks diagonal yrus ldgar, amden, was elected | lief when its all over. I tell you this "eine only in his thirty-seventh year ompson, second on . of George PB 8 clever chap p hes p s N " y . » n 3 Sf : : : - 5 . . in 9 J 5 , . i oii od trophe and went at once to the hos- 130 f Pl 8 warden by the county council in scs-|ijob of mine is a bigger one than | He' T rl: a. » Thompson, aged forty-three years And is having fun galore, A . ly. Although there may be trains on |. Yas week. Mr Mrs. W te fe'll make a good warden, for he's & : You tan see some of his photos pital. the tricks. the os ol tw Hireo sion here this week. Mr. and Mrs. W. l would appear on the surface. Figured well versed in county nhatters, and is KELLEY.--In Kingston Jan... 26th, In George Mills & Co's Fur Store." " | tracks, the pulling ot iWo or three n Qehell, leave tormorrow for their | one of vo con'd fee : : 4 . cr 1909, at his residence, 115 Bay St snoines makes drivers of horses un- . k wat, anyon vou how you el, popular with his associates in the will A. Kelle : a Bijou Theatfe--Dramatization of Sir The Wrecked Waggo dhines. Ma ces BO! horses A < jhome in Kelowna, B.C. H. S. Grange | one man trying to evade 20,000 peo- |. dl... He's Oddi How Funeral hivats rh ne Walter Scott's Famous Novel, '"The © ggon. certain as to whether the crossing i$ |) vog {o.day, for Winnipeg, Man. le. 'conceal his identity atid at. the council. He's an dddiellow, a con | 8 a! oni ate, hursdoy. ase omit Bride of Lammermoor" : "An Artist's| As soon as the bodies were removed | safe or not. Even experieticed dnvers | gpa Harrison draggist, leit : me time intermingling with them servative in politics, a Methodist 11 WiN.- in K J 27th, 1909 ra': EEE relar 5 . . 8S! » aust, PIL A PM Fr py : iz ' x X J 3 PR 27th, 9g Romance" ; The Burglar and the | from the station, 'the yard men and |have had close shaves at the crossing a g religion, and has a wife and family. t PIN Ringstop Jan. 27 v., J009, Child,' or The Repentance of Slippery i Fo : a Monday for Winnipeg, where he has|day in and day out. 1 guess you'll ad- ) ' ? Jim; 'The Hero of Paradise Alley." train crew started to remove 'the | at night, gometimes driving on the secured A ¥ 1 ati po : in aR 2 9 Yr J William Irwin, 5r. A de vor bE ) Ce 4 -- 5 ler Tk rea ut good position in a drug mit its some job, eh? But I'm econ Fue ry , 280 pe ida Will West in Illustrated Song. wrecked ean, ait ices of the tusks and Indi Hhmselve oY store in the Prairie City. James celtod enough to state that theres CLOSED UP A DEAL. : ero ner tote remmce; oy. 1 Tiday J 27 i tetoy iH -t k in ne Aaggon was had trai 2 ¥ | Woodham is very ill with but little | no one in this broad land of ours who . West and Beverly Sts, aa. 27th, In Canadian History. |ly wre ed. The right hand sido was] rain. hopes of recovery. He suffered a |is better fitted by nature and experi- | Mahogany and Cedar Te ame JHC: Ringston, on Tuesday, 1854--The main line of the Great crushed and broken to splinters by the stroke of paralysis a fow weeks ago | enée to carry out the work suco8ss- Purchased. Jan, goth, Joon, JVititam agers i . and continues to fail daily. fully. I'm trying to demonstrate the | EI Paso, Texas, Jan. 27.--To close | ~~ Wilirid, aged nihe. years, of Glen: An inquest will likely be held on} Jehial Aylesworth is quite ill with fact to you daily. How do you think {yp a deal with a Canadian syndicate] buruie, Ont. ke place from the resi- Friday at 2 pm. It will take some | glight. hopes of recovery. A. MeN. Um making out ? : for 500,000,000 feet of mahogany and To ®t nt a eh Glen- time to secure the needed witnesses, { owney, jailer, i« sinking rapidly. He "Well, getting down to business, 1 | cedar timber, in the stale of Chiapas, burnie. at 1 p.m., on Friday, to Cat- the Grand Trunk employees, and also {has been unconsciots for the past two set out to tell about my experiences | Mexico, C. H. Featherstone left Ei araqui Cemetery. Friends and ace i rf) for T T quaintances respecifully invited to night, for loronto. be attend. 1858--Quesn : i ad]: : Or re ot eficially named | ight hand side. wire broken ofl, and federated Province of British North the front one was smashed into many merica. sieces, even 'he tire being torn from 1879--John Morris, a noted oarsman, PE : k A iat was run over and killed by a railroad tho rim and the spokes and box of the thain near St. John, N.B | rig being: made into match wood. | Mrs. Spooner, who it is expected will | gays of yesterday and I'm afraid I'm get- | Paso, last 1887--Sir Charles Tupper resigned the! From the appearance of the bottom of | at . 5 v be able to be present. Her condi- i ting away . from the subject. In the inti Yeh - High Commissionership in London d andy : : ou : T x A : rion: g ¢ ae | negotiations are carried on through | emer Hie itor of Finance. "Ta | bone lar amount of Dre art Dr much improved today; it i grim TIDES ON PACIFIC. [morning Lilevoird mysell to a visit |F. A. Charlton, former speaker of th ROBERT J. REID. -- Western Ra AFAY, ae opened for trafic. | force of the blow. Both wheels of : Inquest To Be Held. 1901--Heavy loss by fire at La | home a large amount of provisions, | quity Jikely that no internal injury to. the. residential district in the vici- | jag 4 £8 et . Prairwe. { ote. Particlos of flour and sugar were rs received, ; I legislature, at Toronto, and, one of The Leading Undertaker. 1002--Cecil Hotel in Ottawa was partly Th deat. has d blic the largest timber 'men in the domin destroyed by fire. he acoiden has aroused pu Mic | 1905--The Hon. George W. Ross wos feeling over the need of protection ai selected to lead the Opposition in the | Later the sacks were found, showing Ontario Legislature, | 19008--The Canadian Tacific steamship | "Empress of Ireland' was Jaunched at | Govan on' the Clyde, i | The horses galloped away down the | road past the toll" gate and everyone | thought they would go home direct, nity of the college grounds. While Destroyed By met several men, evidently all stu- Water Flooding. dents, none of them were sufficiently Much Property "Phone, 877. 227 Princess gtreet., } con . . the" 'Ww | seen around the bottom of the wag- jon. - The timber land in question is fgon, and also a few pies of coal { : pi 9 : ; located on two rivers, the principal pe level, crossings. The Mon- Portland, Ore., Jan. 27.--Pheno- | shrewd to recognize the 'slouchy' 100k- | (16 being Rio Graialva Shih ipa | * s ¥ : A $ . : a4 + . > 0, ( > that somo bags of coal, flour and treal street erossing over the Grand |menally high tides, assumingiin places | ing individual with drty face and |; i (he Gulf of Campeachy, at the | i sugar were being carried. oe railway line has long been re- {proportions of tidal waves, are re-|navvy's costume, who «topped no less = 3 ps : 3 sort of Frontiea. | It can be towed | ; ' o 4 s all along the Pa: \ , : (pot . : i garded as a menace to life. This | ported froin woints ali along Pa- | than thtee of them, o = after anoth- |i oo (he river without saw mills or | § was one e mentione in ci ; British Columbia to niversity : And just a Tittle ore, against all spat was o of those mentioned in [cific coast from er, on University avenue, and asked railways to the port and from ther (CADd Justa 17 more, ag shipped to Liverpool and London, as the report of dangerous places pub- | Southern California. At Marshfield | for a match to light his clay pipe. | but luckily a man named Gallagher, lished in the . Whig last week the high tides have swept away the | Shame on you, Queen's ! Later on in + sl] as othe 2 y and was put first as the most dan: | dikes in the southern portion of the| Gay, I dropped into Jenkin's, McKel- | well as: other ports. i OouUR OWN SPECIAL living down near the first. schoolhouse i et : : hi fl . y a i | | heard their coming, galloping along, gerous hereabouts, chiefly. because of | ity, letting dn hg which oodéd vey & Birch's and Best s drug storés, p. J. Kieran, head of the Fidelity BLEND TEA and secured them. It would have been the street being = greatly traveled |scores of dwelling houses ana did | after of course changing my costume, |. oo mpany, was arrested ir | | a torriblo thing if the horses had been | up i damage which will reach into thou: |and made a few purchases. No doubt Now York _ a charge of larceny, bat | Jt. ds a pleasing CL i oi J - } a , , y i 8 's » di cler i yr 3 1 i= or "la iood 8 t leas Of Our China Sale the first to hreak the cad news to the | Mayor - Couper only learned of {sands of dollars. the different clerks will remember me, | Go C0 oo after on receipt of in Flavar, Good Strength sad Reasonabie relatives. From the appearance of the | the dreadiul accident this morning. | Carlos. Wittick, five years old, play-|if they brush up their thinking ap- rections from Pittsburg A 2 Sure > _ ite] rw f of North Bend, was ratus bit. Too bad thew werent horses, neither was touch®d by the He: was sure the w hole community jing on the whar ig paratus. a hit, 100 ha " s i rer for 'Oars ae, 'whe 25% Off ins One was slightly injured but | deplored ghe accident and sympath- | swept into the sea and drowned. A] in better working? order at the time. Women over forty years of age, wh C <c oun e {a : = : | ca : 2 i cannot - sleep or rest well at night : ; ured, DUS ized with the afflicted ones. He was | gasolene launch with eight passengers { had some fun at the Military . Col- ! f gs | nothing of any account. They WET | emphatic in his views that the A pourd was swamped, but reports say | lege in the afternoon, and the col- should take one teaspoonful of St | Summa Jirought inte tho city aud put into a | | g od | Regis Lumbago Cure. | livery stablc. at this particular crossing should bo | that all were rescued. lege boys were sure completely fooled. | a . ' K The engine must have hit the rig | constantly protected: night as well West of Astoria the tide reached . a | They suspected the wrong man entire | livo 2 ag Poet, ol warn i Fo with great force as the hugs ir | as day . flagmen should be on ditty. | ark three feet above any previous | ly while I took it all in. College edu- jdivaree in Dik ateiping Seep a 8 | with ag | 3 as 1 We Ton | What other heeds to protect life ware! government tide record. Dikes. and | cations evidently don't assist much in wife claims to have a soul mate in : i y p.ate that is placed in front: of = the | required he could not state but he |the railway. bed at Warrenton were | coralling a man like me. Lanother world. . Importers of Fine Groceries. . A was | would consult the city solicitor at washed out. "I had received instructions to vie} Let cus demohstrate - the Thomo broken, ata piece of china, by the | nce, though of course the city eor-|' ree it the King Edward Theatorium, in | bottle to you next time you ar dows | FORTY-FIVE STOVES force of tie Blow Other slight dam- |, rgtion was not legally concerned as | Representative Rainey, of Illinois, | the evening and looked forward to |town, at Gibson's Red Cross | drug | th ba age was also dope io the locomotive. 1 the vailway lines were outside ats |made.a demand in the House of Re- | having a somewhat difficult. job on my | store. Among them cock HO wih va This is an, exgetional chance to get. a genuine bargain. We are of- fering some goods at less than cost. engine carrying the number 244, The train was some minutes late leav-| jurisdiction... But for the sake of hu-|presentatives. on Tuesday, for an in- | hands. But listen to the way I fooled | Three men de ad at Fori Dupont, | Sihers. Very cheap, at TURK'S, 'Phone R b t B ing the city | manity the citizens, he was sure, vestigation by congress of the Panama the boys, and then say if it wasn't _. from drinking denatured alcohol, |705. 0 er son 10S. | : | were anxious thatthe utmost pro- canal' purchase. going some. At exactly 8.45; 1 came "Wild Cherry" cough cure. Regular -- . n i The Spooner Family. tection be afforded at all level cross-1 Offer your services to the committees | down Princess street. Now listen to |price 2c. each; 2 for 25¢c., af} A living liberal is better that a i= Thy late Mr. Spooner was well- ings. - : - 'in charge of the by-law, this--with a woman, well-known in | Wade's drug store, : dead Chineey, ~~ =

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