YEAR 76-NO. 70. SORE IRI = Will Increase The Cost Of Living. NO REAL REDUCTION CONSUMER WILL HAVE TO PAY THE TAX. * The Correct Remedy For a Grow- ing Deficiency in Revenue is to Carve the Expenses of Running the Government. Washington, March 24.--That the Payne tarifl bill will increase the cost of living; that it is erudé, indefinite, sectional and prohibitive; and that it is an open challenge to a trade war with every other pation on carth, are some of the criticisms of that made by the democratic members the ways and means committee in minority report submitted house by Mmorit Leader Clark. The report is a severe of the which the Pavne propo : ' The countervailing for collec and pe mum and minimum ban reciprocity glase, agricultural and sug are bitterly attacked. measuro of the the Champ to arraignment revision bill duty provisions ,the maxi- the woollen, rolcum foature the Cu clause ar schedules it to dominate and oxploit the Ameri can market and to levy tribute upon the public, thereby piling up millions of dollars of ill-gotten gains. Referring to the reduction of five one-hundredths of a cent in the duty |= on refined sugar provided by the Payne bill, the report declares oi heorctically, the trust receives "a blow between the eyes." In reality this infinitesimal reduetion of the Dingley rate will not reduce the priee of refined sugar--a prime necessary of life--to tha consumer in any degree whatsoever, A strong protest is made against the method by which the bill was framed and the manner in which the decisions of the republican sub-committee wore kept secrot, The report also declares that any | deday in enacting the bill will bo due to this secrecy, and the republicans should, thorefot , hold themselves re sponsible for any such delay. TRENT VALLEY CANAL. Work on Section to Begin About April 15th, Trenton, Ont., March 24.---1t ex- pected that work on the local section of the Trent canal will be resumed about the middle of April, or a little before. Walls and piers built last sum- mer firm, and the work far in with the canal seems unsatisfactory. The temporary bridge at Glen Miller, carried away by the heavy rain, has bggn removed ana re placed by a new stedl bridge, which js a fine piece of Contractors have just completed *about twenty new dumping and a great deal other mir work has been all winter. Work on. dam No firm, and appears if it is stand 80 connection work cars ol rey going on 2 stands would do TeaMs have as so for PARTY SIE Seeking It Out Of New. market Canal. CAPT. TOM WALLACE DECLARED IT A USELESS EX- PENDITURE OF MONEY. -~ Hon.-G. P. Graham Dissented-- The Cost of Construetion Has Greatly Increased--In; 1905 a Deputation Had Asked That the Canal Be Built. From Our Ottawa, Cominons, Own Correspondent March 24.--In the vesterda) House of , an attempt was made to make party - capital out of the Newmarket canal. On motion to go into supply Captain Thomas Wal- lace moved a resolution to the effect that the work on the Newmarket canal should be stopped on the grounds that it was "an absolute waste of punlic money," and "the canal would be absolutely less." The canal is to run Cooke™s Bay through the county York to Newmarket. has been expended upon it. Capt. Wallace said it was better to throw away $200,000 now than $2. 000,000. in the future, At a time in use- from | of 18 that | CROWN PRINCE SUED. Widows of Miners Want Heavy Damages. Beglin, March Ne on prince | and the governor alia ave, according Fo the Tagéblatt, to be made defendants in an aetion brought by the widows of the 377 miners kill- od in the Radbod disaster last Octo- ber, for the purpose of compelling the immediate distribution of $500,000 raised on behali of the survivors. The crown prince is the honorary pa tron of a special fund of ¥75,000 and the governor of the province is at the head of the national fund. So far, only a small proporion has been doled out to the widows and orphans as it was decided to defer the general distribution until the vietims were dis- interred and identified. The work will be begun next week. Fearing riots among the population the authorities have ordered it to be earried on at nig ght. STITCH uP STABBED HEART. Victim Kicks Assailant and Breaks His Leg. New York, March 24.--<doseph Proffe and James Murrey fought over a wo-| man at Atlantic City, vestérday, and {Profiet d¥ove a knife dato Murray's | heart. Murray is a powerful man and { hefore he fell he kicked Proffet hard en- ough to break the latter's ley At the hospital Murray still breath {ed and the ame azed surgeons opened his { chest took four stitches in his {still heart. "Half dozen ane bleeding a whether he will { operatiol HIS HUNDR EDTH VOYAGE. 1 tl North Ottawa, being {agreement with the dominion on | | | | About £200 000 surgeons are watching the man to see sutvive the delicate | regard | ATES] Despaiihes Fromiioss And ne. [HE WORLD'S TIDINGS ---- GIVEN IN THE BRIEFEST POS- SIBLE FORM. Matters That Interest Everybody --Notes From All Over--Little of Everything Easily Read and Remembered. Charles M. Burns, Foronto, died at a euchre party. Maurice Ryan was found guilty, Bay, of the murder of | brother, Francis Joseph. The Winnipeg ministers have unable to reach at his left an the boundary questions. Two trainmen wer plosion of a locomol Lehi gh Valley railway, killed by the ex- boiler on the near Buffalo, The dominion government will take no action at the present session in to the tarifi questions raised the revision in the Upited States. President Lewis, of the United Mine | Workers of Amerika, savs the anthra- ite miners have a fund of $5,000,000 by JUDGE JOINS CRUSADE. be He Attacks the Present System in i England. London, 'March 23.-It was the sarcasm of a great English judge which led in 1857 to the passing of the present English divorce law, and it is Jouday the serious advoeacy of another great judge which mises to lead to a Taether far-reach ng reform in' that law. Sir Gorell Barnes, who, is just retir- ing from the post of preswdent of the divorce court, after a quarter of a century's service, 'has placed himselt at the head of the Von for a reform of the law which he has had so much experience in administering, and his denunciation of it, of course, has added great weight to the grow- ing demand for. a change. Divorce in Engléhd to-day is a lux- ury reserved for the rich and moder- ately well-to-do. The poor man or woman who finds that the bonds ol matrimony are too heavy to bear cannot be relieved of them. All the relief that as to persons of this class is a 'police court separation, which ll not carey with it the right for either party to marry again. It is estimated that the bare of a suit for divorce in this country are $450, unless the suitor receives permission to sue "as a pauper," in which case the fees will amount to about S150. It is yery difficult, how- ever, to secure permission to sue "in forma pauperis," and the proceeding is almost unknown. The estimate of 2450 is for residents of London. If the suitor resides in the country the expense will be much greater,' for divorce suits are only tried in Lou- don, and the suitor must travel to London and bring all his witnesses there. Thus the average cost of di- costs a h 24. Ottawa Od It do Are you ready"? TO-MORROW and not your come shop- Canada when revenues were decreasing was the time to cut out all ex- penditures which were practically use- less. This one was, and the final cost of it could only be conjectured Hon. Graham, who tally remarked that there 1095 miles completed canals in Canada, agreed with Capt. Wallace that the Newmarket canal would cost a lot of money, but dissented from the view that it was useless. If it only reduces freight rates it will have i complished object and business | men of bad said that it} would increase trade with that city As regards increase of cost, it had to be remembered that the cost of con struction was from thirty to fifty per cent. greater than even two years ago. Samuel Sharpe said it was a politi- cal and not a commercial undertak- ing, meant simply to spend public moneys in North York to conserve the seat for the dominion liberals. Mr. Wright of Muskoka, Major Cur- vie and F. R: Lalor followed on the same lines, condemning the undertak- ing as a wasteful expenditure, Hon. A. B. Aylesworth denied that the construction of the canal was political undertaking. He himseli had a good many years been hauling stone from dam No: 1 to 2, getting ready to feed the big stone crusher. Messrs, Cameron and Murphy assistant - engineers, have up the line all winter and erything in good shape. The merchants of Trenton are looking forward to a very successful season. Indications are that trade will be brisk and the town avain a busy place. ping. Come in possible, We'll one the make it " morning T your visit I'he report says: There are many chang most part minor changes! ley rates, some some Most oi. the in a downward direction are reductions more apparent than real, the Fayno prohibitive in {heir the Dingley rates of the schedules exorbitant vorce suits in England is $1,000, The effect of this state of the law shown by the fact that the pro- portion of divorces in Fngland and Wales is 2.5 per 1,000 marriages, while in Scotland, where divorce is cheaper and easier to obtain, the pro- portion is 6 per- 1,000, In Belgium it is 145, in Denmark 21.5, France 23.9 and in Austria 24.1. the separation orders granted in Eng- land were to be reckoned as divorces, however, the proportion of dissolved marriages in, England and Wales would be 27.9 per thousand I Before the passage of the present law diveece was almost unknown in England. Under the old law the hus band of au unfaithful wife had to sue in the ecclesiastic courts and prove her misconduct, Having obtained a decree there he must then sue the adulterer in the civil courts for dam- ages, and having succeeded there, he was entitled to apply to the House of Lords for leave to prove his case again, and, having! done so, for the passage of an act of parliament an? nulling 'his marriage. in|to draw on in case of a strike, while is artily Congratulated ! He. is He ay gr $2,000,000 more can be raised. New York. for tl tha Ding down. pleasant REACHED SOUTH POLE. up and been busy changes report ev- Admire the Easter Gloves Which variety, Women's Neckwear Including Eton George inciden- were now | Touches New Zealand on Return Frog Antarctic. Invercargill, New Zealand, March 24. The barquentine Nimrod, which early {in 1908 took Lieut. E. H. Shackel- ton's Antaretic expedition to the | South, called here on her return. Lieut! Shackelton declined to make any statement regarding his explora- | tions. The Nimrod expedition to the South Pole left England in July, 1907, after Queen Alexandra had given the vessel a flag and King Edward had bestowed the Victorian Order on Lieut. Ernest H. Shackelton' of the British navy, leader of the party, who made a trip to the Antarctic regions of 1902-3 as a member of the Discovery expedition under Capt. K. T. Scott. The Nim- rod carried a 'motor sledge for wse of explorers and a number "of Siberian ponies and dogs. The crew numbered thirty-two men all told, including several scientists, and had provisions for two years af- we are showing in great rates being as in of result many Cases as In some tho most no changes giving lief the great Declaring by the contam there appreciable of that a tariff is a tax pa consumer, and = that th function of a tarili law is to revenue to supply the needs of the government, the minority members of the committee insist that instead of an increase of taxes or a new bonds, the correct remedy growing deficiency in the the cutting down of the running the . government. The report contends that the does not lift any burdens from shoulders of the southern farmer, al though the manufacturer of cotion goods is protected by a heavy tax, it claims. The the 'New 'Pulch Collars. and rates an body a4 A COUPLE TAKEN | And Woman Had Marked Bills Possession. March 24.--A woman, on the " of found $9,348 in bills, number to the the ransom of under arrest. Ontario o'clock, to consumers its New Waists . Women Toronto in or ont the jatest favcies, Shimmering Silks And mn ra se Cleveland, man and a whom were corresponding in bills paid, Monday, for William Whitla, are They were caplured on street, just before eleven last. night, by Capt. Shattuck and Detective Wood. Before the man and woman were landed in the police station, Capt. Shattuck was forced to fire a bullet at the man. Neither man nor woman would give their names, Satins for the new gowns, Smart Suitings exclusive issue for revenues the is In ings. Concerning Ladies' Tailor- ed Suits showing the greatest collection of New Spring Suits ever shown in Kingston. If this sounds boastful just make a com parison. You may find similar prices. You'll find no others weaves and color expenses bill the : ri York, March " --(aptain Paul commander of the Gwvai Wal of the Hamburg-American line, received friends on board his ship at New Frolich, dersee, a report comunues 0 Fv must heavily taxed table is exempt The schedule (agricultural' products) was evidently prepared the same mind which has dominated, this bill mind certainly not unfair trusts The Standard Oil company i handeomely cared for in the Payne as iw thé Dingley bill, apd by reas of the provision in paragraph 637, pularly known as the joker)' tinues to be protected by a tanfi duty "nine the laborer comfortably the salt ry article food have of live oven to on now by to the as bill of mnety per cent., which enables DAILY MEMORANDA, Campbell New Spring And they're If you really here is where Board of Works Vaudeville, Grand p.m Children's Ald Church, 8 pau Mi Lecture I:in Chalmer huret Hats ne want vi Ly Opera Meeting, sionary 84,8 | Limestone Lodge meots Thursday fnent hels om to-night Ladies' Musical irday, March 27th pened until Saturday Bijou--DBig Doubl Dra ged to Sea he lnauguration Pic Ww Sat pril 8rd ture of Splen de rs shingto March 24th, In Canadian 1617---Celebration first marriage in Canadé 1880---Banquet given honor of Sir Alexander first Canadian High ( London 1890--President Behring Sea tishing 1904--Sir $100,000 for University I'he History Quebec of the in Montreal Tilloch Galt, ommissioner in the in declared sed he Harr d to clos licen seal Willi am M student" ¢ Donald gives ib for MeGil Lakeside Dalho Montreal Halifax Steamer sank at Port Bank of Bank at sie purchased the People's of ARE YOU LOOKING Set, stund set For a Dinner ove that will We have a special a short time set o PIECES, with $6.40 Robertson Bros. to the we Con use every wear and are offerin only plete gold handles, Kidney Pills" back: acts like magic for ki bles. Sold in Kingston at Red Cross drug store, 'Bu Ju cure lame trou ihson's great | on | | of | teemed 1 val Wri DEATH AT GANANGQUE | OF FORMER ASSESSOR, N. M. WRIGHT. ' on Superintendent of Waterworks--Funeral of Child of Salvation Army Ensign Conducted By Adjutant Par- sons, Kingston March «© 24. of Gananoque's sidents occurred on when N. W. Wright at the family residence, in the fifty-fourth year a lingering illness of duration Deceased years superintendent for the town the pumping station for some years town compelled to resign account of ill-health. Mr a man of genial nature the town's employ earn- opijiions his strict at business and. upright char- widow and four children, and daughter, survive Charles and Regi- N.Y., and John leaves also Wright of "the Was Once The death old and es- Monday passed Jrock of his SeVe- Lananogue, another re evening, to rest street, a , alter months' was of in He as- wo several vaterworks at also but year rht while golden to \ © Sons and vas SESSOT, was thi on was and in by tention weter thre to mourn. his nald, in Watertown, ind Annie, at home. three brothers, F..P. Wricht Dry . Goods Co., CC. K Wri foreman in the Gananoque S Axle company's works, and Wright, located in Oshawa funeral place this after to church, where Rev. .J Serson will conduct the service funeral was in charge of No 201. AF. & AM, he had been a member vears one loss, ant, pring & George ihe noon takes Christ Leeds lodge, whwh of for funeral of Vietor Donald, infant som John McDonald, tion Army James Me- of Ensign and Mrs. of the local Salva- took place on Tues: day afternoon from the officers' quar- ters, Brock street, to the barracks, Gavden street, where Adjutant Par- of Kingston, was in charge of funeral Interment took at at Willow Bank corps, ons, t he services place the vault cemetery William Johnston, of school gnspector for in town this week in at the local schools Kingston, visited during the and Mrs, Fry Kingston, s the town Athens, this pub- district, official George his past nklin ent past few days Mr. Sunbary, ending some with his Edwards, ir is his capacity Sauve, of it My of re- latives town few during with in of relatives Que. 18 $ this week William in town daughter, Mrs. Ring street time Two New Planets. March 24. --The announces the Pari | Gaillot | tw | tay discovery of which is the outermost known [ta et of the solar He estimated that fapty-five times, times, the system of the planets and the other distance of the eartn 1,184,600 000 and 5,- WO 00.000 miles respectively. The slanet Neptune, it estimated, is 2, ca 000 miles from the sun, one | was | | sixty | rom the sun, 18 some astronomer | new planets situated beyond Nep- | had nothing to do with it, and he re- ferred to a report in the Mail and Empire in 1905, of the visit of a dele- gation to the government, asking for a canal. This delegation included con- servatives, among them being Hough- ton Lennox, M.P. Mr. Lennox saig that though he was with the delegation he had not dorsed the canal scheme. I'he resolution was lost, en CUT BABY'S SKULL. Sutures Cut, Give Child's Brain Chance to Expand. New York, March 24.--A weeks-old was resting comfort ably yesterday in the Cumberland street hospital, Brooklyn, after its skull had been cut around and across as one would cut the peel of an orange in order to rembve it. The child was born prematurely hardened; the cranial structure Dr. Herbert C. Allen, of No. 301 Clex mont avenue, told the child's parents that such children either die voung remain idiots, They consented to the experiment of cutting the bone | along the lines of the natural suture that the brain might bave chance te expand Dr. Allen performed the operation at the hospital clinic. 1t is said to be the first of its kind. Aside from the child is physically must elapse before operation will be three baby with its skull the sutures in had closed up. or we =O cranial defect normal, but the effects fully known. years of STRAPPED UP BY HEELS. Rural School Hazers. Indianapolis, Ind., March 24.--0Of- are, investigating the death by hazing of Chanles Stinson, a pupil at the = White school, in White county Stinston, itis alleged, was strung up bv the ankles to a sapling near the school and left hanging long that he died a few hours after was tak- en down Several been \ few days employed. than his several rebellious gated pupils "tattied,"' and miliation. cers he school unruly teacher of by teachers driven away ago new He was more predecessors, and whipped These casti that caused the had pupils a was boys. alleged thus their Mule Spinners Will Strike Montreal, March 24.--There strike of the mule Spinners Domipion Textile company weeks they get an ten per cent. Some weeks sent in a letter asking for which has not been granted. They now | demand it pain of strike. There 125 mule spinners. bat their strike 3.000 work will of in incréase De a the three of they increase unless ago an on are would put out. of Conférence Agreed Upon. March 24. Morning correspondent | condon, ~The Constantmople on. The date conference will the fixed which will and place be held at be next week, the | the e-- | str Charles Stintson Victim of Alleged | determined | Stinston | | hu- | | ro Post's says the holding of a European con- | ference has bee absolutely agreed up- the company's piers, in Hoboken. who came to congratulate him on his hundredth voyage from Hamburg his twenty-fifth voyage as master Hamburg-American ship. ; Captain Frohlich, who fifty-six vears old, began his seafaring life as boy on the G. C. Vorwork, a German bark, trading from Ham- burg to the Far East, and durmg the Franco-Prussian war the ship was captured by a French man-of-war and all on board made prisoners. When released he decided that sailing ships were too slow, entered the employ of the Hamburg-American line, and on | December 22nd, 1888, took eom- mand of the Silesia, of the line's ships Termed a ship. of his good seamanship he was by the German authorities when he brought the Patria with 300 passen- gers safely into port without loss life, after the ship had caught the North Sea, on November 1809, ARE BUSY BUILDING one and of a a cabin one lost and commended "lucky," he has Because never nerve ol fire in 15th, BY RAILWAYS. Active Construction Campaign Western Canada North-West--C.P.R. ington State. Spokane, Wash, | miles of railwas {ion in the inland empire of the Pacific North-West. taking in 15 miley of territory ton, Northern Idaho, Mon- | tana, Novth-eastern Oregon and South- | eastern British Columbia, similar areca this continent mileage in Washington alone the 2.500 mark, in and Pacific March 24. Westcrn on The is and the works in the | other three states and province {bring the total to 4,500 miles The Grand Trunk Pacific, the ( dian Pacific, the Canadian and the Great Northerw and its ana subsi- diary companies have also made plans for an active const riction campaign in | Western Canada, engineer estima ing that the new work will involve wn expenditure of more. than $90,000, 000. The first named expects to running trains from Edmonton, Ala, o the great lakes by next fall, and it is announced that the express service from the west to Winnipeg will start June The Canadian in the inland empire entranes Spokam International line, of Spokane. 1 a further will be obtained to Portland over. the Oregon Railroad & . Navigation com lines, and there are indications eventualls into Puget one in Pacific will be fac It already over the by a or has i Spokane (DL ( now built Corbin, and it is tated pany it Sound [ The will get torritery Creat Northern company build a Tine from-Wenatchee, Wash. thi British Columbia line, "and this [company and the Milwaukee are pro- | iecting lines in Cenical tapping. rich mineral and i belts, | |THE FAR WEST GRIDIRONED Te orate {ish | { in Wash. | | regarding his expedition. ~More | lines are under con- | ter leaving New Zealand: The landing party was 'to consist of twelve men. The Nimrod left the party in camp at the foot of Mount Erebus, a point which was reached with considerable difficulty on aceount of the ice, and she left New Zealand last December to bring the expedition home. His majesty presented the lieutenant witn a Union Jack, to which was at- tached a card bearing the message : 'May this Union Jack 'I entrust to vour keeping lead you safely to the South Pole." Nearly, But Not Quite. London, March 24 --A ecablegram was received here this afternoon dir- ect from Lieut. E. H. Shackelton, the Antarctic explorer, who earlier in the day was reported as having reached the South Pole. The contents of this message have not yet been given out, but it has been declared by a high authority that the explorer failed of success. I'he expedition was obliged to turn when within about miles of the Pole. The secretary of the Royal Geogra- phical Society said that he had no in- formation as to Lieut. Shackleton's but this does not disprove it known that Lieut. Shackle ton contracted to furn- the first news regarding his ex- plorations to thé London newspapers. It is considered significant "here that Lieut. Shackleton when he went ashore at Invercargill, N.Z., refused all information regarding the details He at once went to the cable offices and, despatch- ed a message. He looked the picture of health, and intimated that all his Ye- one hundred success, as is | comrades were well. in Eastern Washing- | Lieut. Shackleton's expedition bade | farewell to England at Cowes in July | of than in any | near | will | 1 Shackleton, | Daily Northern | | southerly be | | ments | dured | Pole: 1907. The last visitors to his ship, the Nimrod, were King Edward and Queen Alexandra Planted The Flag. March 24,--Lieut. Ernest H in long despatches to the Mail, tells the story of his mo- mentous' expedition which culminated in planting the British flay in latitude 88.23, longitude 162 111 niiles from the South Pole i< is the most point ever 'ached being an advance of HO miles on Scott's re- cord of December, 1902. The narra- tive of Lieut. Shackleton's achieve: show that the expedition en- the greatest trials and priva- The motor. which was useful in the preliminary expeditions, failed on the uneven surface of the ice. The re- sulte of the expedition are: Reaching a point within 111° miles of the South the magnetic pole was reached: London, east Ti tions. | mountain chains were discovered with extension | were located will | fo | {at Campbell Bros' {for men's Washington, | agricultural | 100 mountains; Mount Erebus, 18,120 feet in altitude was ascended by the party: new coast and high mountains running west from Vie- toria Land and coal mines were dis- covered in the Antarctic continent. Not Just One. But all the néw shapes "in fine hats the style centre hats Poverty of 'the mind is very often the cause of poverty of the SPLIT $407,000,000 HILL, STRATHCONA AND MOUNT STEPHEN. Story of the Financing and Re- building of the Great Northern Railroad Retold By Magacine Writers. New York, Hill, Lord March 24. James J Strathcona, Lord Mount Stephen and a few others associated in the dovelopment of the Hill. rail- roads of the NorthWest have divided among themselves * in about thirty years the sum of $407,000,000, exclu- sive of dividends and other emoluments according to Charles Edward Russell, in the April number of an eastern magazine. This stupendous fort says, has come from an sument of nothing. After {racing the genesis of what is now the Great Northern and allied lines, Russell declares that James J Hill thirty-five years ago was local freight agent at St. Paul of the old St. Paul and Pacific 'Securing the co-operation of Nor man W. Kittson, Stephen and Donald A. Smith, first "mortgages wore quictly obtained on wore than 500 miles of operated railroad and 2.580 - 606 acres of land,' Russell continues "on the understanding thet they should not be paid for until the road should be re-organized. This was done in 1879, the Canadian Brotherhood forming the St. Paul, Minneapolis & Manitoba Railway compan¥, of which George Stephen was president, Nor- man W. Kittson and Donald A. Smith, direciors, and Mr. Hill, general man- ager. "Whereupon there was. appointed a master in chancery, who on June lith 1879, sold all the property of the St Pamwl and Pacific to the St. Paul, | Minneapolis & Manitoba Railway com pany for $6,780,000, obviously one of the most romantic events in railroad history. and" too romantic for those who did not hare in it. for presently came the sale by the St. Paal, neapolis & Manitoba Railway pany of the greater for $13,608, 887, sworn testimony the property sold for worth at the time more Wr une, Russell original in Vit TeOrge com- part of the. land followed by tho of the receiver that $6,780,000 was than $13,000 - by St also issued the $15,000, 000 of Paul, Minneapolis & Manitoba stock, for whieh not one cent was ever. paid in to the company's treasury, being in fact ihe purest water that ever gushed and gurgled from financial rocks. Of this stock. Hill, Kittson and. Smith took 28823 shares each, being about one-fifth. Stephen took two-fifths. one of which he had in trust for somk or unknown.' Wore was brotherhood person persons Move Offices To Calgary. Calgary, Alta., March 24.--The Al berta Grain company, at present lo- cated" at Edmonton and operating a series of fourteen elevators through- out the provinces, have determined to transfer the executive offices from the gorthern city 10 this point, Min- good for the money, in workmanship or materials Come TO-MORROW thew and style, see DIED. --In Kingston, John Crowin Chicago, aged seventy Funeral will leave the brother-in-law, BD, St., on Friday for St Mary's solemn reguiem for the repose of and acquaintances to attend. (Chicago CRONIN 1909, on years. residence Fallon, 281 morning, Cathedral, wass will his soul respectfully papers. please March formerly of Alfred at 9 o'clock, w be here iny ROBERT J. REID, 'Phone, 577. The Leading Undertaker. 227 Prircess street Mixed Chowe Chow | White Onions, J Walnuts. Lea's Tid Bits Green Tomato, ) Ceylon Relish, Sweet Onions, Mustard, Chow-Chow. Jas, Redden & IMPGRTERS OF NE PICKLES! Crosse & Blackwell's | Lever Tops . 30e. Per Bottle | 25 Cents | Per Bottle. Go. GROCERIES, Six Mahogany Chairs, Anti jie Ma polished TURR'S, Dosany Sideboard. can only be Te 700. Companies. Montreal, March 24-4 mer, president of company, ha from tho hiz last declined 22 500 000 the balance tJaim to a however, that still open. H. comniunitation to aceept a the i negotiations of referee. the is "he difficulties between the two panies, And Still They Come. Apother lot of Malaga the best of the or By season, at Carnovs Faith may move 'mountdine, Las no effect og bill collectors, grapes" opened this TAKE ROVER and a beautiful These are be sold once, at NO SETTLEMENT YET | Between Dominion Steel and Coal Plum- the Dominion Steel not yet received a reply Dominion Coal company in which lump sum or thersabouts and' Plammer is back from Toronto a Yarther developments are xpeoted at any moment in connection with efiorte to obtain a settlement of com but i 24th, sung Friends leave steel company's understood," "and