". mons Grand. YEAR 76-Y0. 93. TIL OUTS Constitutional Army Draw- Ing Closer. WHY THEY HOLD OF 80 LARGE THAT RESISTANCE 1S IMPOSSIBLE. , S---- The Troops Are Marching in Light Order--Divine Approval is Thought to Accompany Acts-- Whom the Committee Will Punish. Constantinople, April 21.--The situ- otion has not developed materially so far as is discernable, The constitu- tional army is continually, but with military precaution, drawing closer its investing lines from San Stefano around the western and northern sides of the city, to the shore of the Bos- phorus, but it has not yet entered the capital, /The only reason for de- laying the advance is that the com- - manders 'are waiting until their forecs . are so overwhelmingly large that mili- tary resistance will be hopeless, and a mob will be powerless to create disor- der. The troops ave marching in the light est order, carrying only their over- coats, water bottles and 200 rounds of ammunition apiece. The weather is magnificently fine and consequently the soldiers are undergoing the minimum of discomfort, a fact which they re gard as proof of divine approval, The Committee of Union and Pro- gress is still silent regarding its jn- tention for the Tuture, and the only official word from the commanders contained in proclamations addressed to the inhabitants and the garrison In his address to the citizens, General Husslein Husni Pasha explains - that' the army's purpose is to restore the constitution, 'which is with the Sheriat, and to punish trai- tors, including those who, disguised as Ulemas, committed evil acts for per- sonal ends. Innocent citizens, the am- bassadors and foreigners, are assured of the safety of themselves and their property. Meanwhile the sultan remains at the Yildiz Kiosk, apparently determined to await events unresistingly. He is cre- dited with having ordered the guards at Yildiz Kiosk and the' city garrison not to fire a single shot against the advancing . He constantly sum: izier Tewfik Pasha. His majesty"s position is the chief topic of conversation in the city. It is regard: ed as certain that he must abdicate or suffer a worse fate. is Protect Interests. Waslington, April 21.--Two armour- ed cruisers, the North Carolina and the Montana, are to be sent to the Mediterranean to protect United States interests in Turkey, They will report to the consul at Alexandretta. The vessels are now in the West In dies. They arm directed to proceed with all despatchy | ll Fur Storage, Save time, annoyance and probably loss by moths by sending your furs to Campbell Bros." up-to-date storage department, The cost is trifling. Phone 74. "King's 25¢. a only at store. Plate Condition Powders," package. Sold in Kingston Gibson's Red Cross drug Good for horses and cattle. DAILY MEMORANDA, About Campbell's Hats, men like to tell Of the values and styles so swell Board of Works, 4 p.m., Thursday: Cheese Board, 1.80 p.m. - Thursday. "The World And His Wife," Grand Opera House, 8.15 "p.m, Limestone Lodge, No. 91, A. O.U.W. meets Thursday evening. at 8 o'clock. Hear Prof. Orr, of Glasgow, "lcotland, on 'Biblical and Critical Theories of 1srael's Religion," Church, Thursday, 8 p.m. George Mills & Set the pace In stylish Hats That suit each face. Hear Bagpipes, Piano Solos tions, see the Sword Dance, Highland Fling and other attractions at the Scotch Concert, €ity Hall, Thursday, 8 pam. Bijou Theatrve--The Fish Pirate's Daughter, (drama) ; 'The Waxman and the Girl": '"The Professor and the Student Who Traded Souls," Illustrated Song. Chalmers Company Recita- pitts April 21st, In Canadian History, 1705~Father -Aulneau, the first mis wionary and martyr of the Northwest, was born in the Vendee, France, 1821--The Bank of Upper Canada was incorporated. 1881--Great banquet in Toronto honor of the Hon. Fdward Blake 1906--~--Fifteen persons perished in the burning of the Convent of the Sister of St. Anne at Genevieve; Quebec, 1908--8ir- Wilfrid Laurier appointed Mr. W. Mackenzie as' secretary for ime perial and foreigh correspondence. ad Toilat Sets A A large variety. Special Iines. All colors and shades' Quaint old fashioned Pretty sets as low as $1.45 MAKE YOUR SELECTION EARLY. Robertson Bros. now shapes. in accordance |, CANADIANS WANT IT. rnin te Claim Straits As Ground. Ottawa, April 21.-The question as to jurisdiction*over Hecate straits on the Pagific coast of Canada between Queen Charlotte islands and British Columbia is likely to become an ac- tive issue within a short tipe. As these waters lie between two Ca- nadian stretches of territory the do- minion claims that they are as much her exclusive property as Long Island Sound is the property of the United States. The Hecate straits are valuable as halibut fisheries. and are resorted by both American fishermen from Seat- tle and Canadian fishermen from Van- couver, It is estimated that there were 55,- 000,000 pounds of halibut taken in the Hecate straits last year, and that of this amount 48,000,000 were takes by fishermen from the United States. The Canadian fishermen 'have made an appeal to- the Canadian govern- ment to have these waters closed to the American fishermen. r There is a delegation is Ottawa at the present time urging this on the government, It is understood that some steps will shortly be taken which will bring the Washington and Ottawa authorities to a serious discussion of this: ques tion of jurisdiction over valuable fish- ing waters, Own Fishing MUSIC WINS HIS PARDON. Governor Releases Convict Who Played the Banjo. Atlanta, Ga., April 21.--Owing his liberty to the fact that he loved mu- sic and was constantly playing a ban- jo when not breaking stone, A. Frierson, a white convict, was par- doned hy Governor Smith after serv- ing four years of a ten year sentence for manslaughter, > The convict's banjo. picking attract- »l the attention of Rev. J. W. Lee, on a visit to the camp at Valdosta. 'No man with that much music in his sonl,"" said Dr. Lee, *'could be a erim- wal." Come To Agreeable Terms. The Hague; April <2]. --Under settlement reached between the ernments of Holland and Venezuela in the matter of the disputes between the two countries, the latter agrees. . .to give the same fiscal treatment to the islands of the Dutch Antilles as is ac orded the West Indian islands, and to pay the sum of $4,000 damages on account of Dutch vessels captured in the spring of 1908, The Netherlands engages to prohibit the importation of arms into Venezue- la and to return the captured Vene- zuplan coast guard vessels, the Qov- Trouble Over Sites. Ottawa, April 21.<There is trouble in Ottawa between the congregations of Knox and Bank Street Presbyterian churches over the question of sites. Each iy about to erect: a new church building and it has been discovered that the respective sites agreed upoa are quite close to each other. A moot ing was held to arrange for a com- promise with sites farther apart, but it broke up without any agriement, and the matter will go to the presby- tery for decision. 5 T0 BE ORDAINED PRESBYTERY WILL RESTORE REV. DR. H. G. FURBAY. He Was Reduced to a Common Tramp Through Drunkenness, But Was Reformed Through Efforts of McAuley Missioner. New York, . April 2] --After being barred from pulpits for fen years Rev Dr. Harvey Graeme Furbay, ence a brilliant pregeher, but later reduced to a common tramp through drunken- ness, swill be restored to the ministry on Monday by the New York presby- tery. Dr. Furbay, who is thus honored, was at one time pastor of a Philadel phia. church, receiving a salary of $8,000, at the time the largest in that city. After the death of his wife Dr. Fur- bay began to drink, was soon forced to leave his church and then became a tramp, wandering all over the coun- try. In June, 1905, he was arrested for drunkenness and was sent to Black- well's Island. Two weeks after his re- lease he wandered into McAuley Wa- ter street mission and was persuaded by the superintendent, S. H. Hadley, to-go to the altar for prayers. While Mr. Hadley lived he used ev- erv endeavor. to bring about Dr. Fur- restoration to the ministry, and largely to this influence is due the present action of the presbytery. For more than three years Dr. Fur- bav has been telling the story of a re- made" life. 'Two years ago he was placed in charge of the Industrial Christian Alliance in this city. May Ask Removal Of Duty. New York, April 21.--To discuss tho advisgbility of asking for the removal of the import duty on Canadian wheat coming into ihe United States, a meet. ing of the members of the flour trade, of the New York Produce Exchange has been called for to-morrow by the president of the exchange. The pre gent scarcity of wheat and the extremely high prices prevailing for it are given as the rcason for the calling of the meeting. Flirted With Bobby's Wife. London, Ont, April 21i Charles Hemy, a would-be #masher, the victim of a huge joke, when he stop: ped the wife of Policeman Powell Mrs. Powell was waiting for Powell to come off duty and let Henry mash to his heart's. content, and then turned him over to her six-faot-four 'hushand Henry was fined $5 and - costs in was cont, pH ech top KINGSTON, BIG DECREASE In Canada's Revenue For 'The Past Year. THe BUDGET - SPEECH IN THE COMMONS BY HON. W. S. FIELDING. Surplus For the Year Was a Mill- ion and a Hali--No Changes in the Tariff--World-Wide Money Stringency Affected Revenue. Ottawa, April 21.--In the House - of Commons, yesterday afternoon, Hon. W. 8. Fielding introduced the budget. His chief announcements were that there was a surplus of a million and a half dollars and thai no tariff changes would be made. : Mr. Fielding began by reviewing the two fiscal years just closed and the current year. In 1908 he had counted on an actual revenue of $96,500,000 and an expenditure of $77,500,000. The actual revenue was $445,000 less than the estimate, but the acinal expendi- ture was $838,000 less than the esti- mate. The net result was, that where as the anticipated surplus was nine teen millions, the aciunal surplus was $19,113,000. In addition there was capital and special expenditure of $30,429,000, of which, $18,910,000 and other special ex- penditure of $5,500,000, making a to- tal capital and special expenditure of $35,937,000. If the surplus and sink: ing fund, and a small refund be dedue- ted from thiw capital expenditure, of leaves a total net increase in tho debt of $14288 000, or if the NT.R. had not becn built, there would have been a decrease in the debt of over four million dollars. Analyzing the revenuo for IPOS, the customs contributed $57,500,000, which is the largest customs revenue in the history of the dominion, while the rate of taxation is lower than existed in former times. Calculated on dutiable goods only thé average rate of duty charged in 1896 was $29971; 1908 26.532. In eluding dutiable and free goode the average rate of duty in 1896 was 19.129; in 1908, it was 16.49. For the fiscal year, 1908-09, which closed a few days ago, it has not been possible to close up- the accounts, The revenue of the year was affected by a world-wide stringedey. As reveived: up to April 10th, it was $84,352,000, ° His estimate was that the complete revenue will be eighty-four and a half millions of dollars; eleven and a half millions less than the previous year or a shrinkage of twalve per cent. In the face of such a falling of revenue a con- siderable deficit would not have been surprising, but his fears were not to be realived, and he estimated a surplus of $1,500,000 on consolidated revenue account. Tho expenditure up to April 10th had been $72,939,000. and he: es- timated the total expenditure will be $93,000,000, which will leave a surplus of $1,500,000. Of capital and special expenditure we estimate it will tak: $25,500,000 for the N.T.R., during the past year; taking over the Quebec bridge adds $6,424,000; other special charges of $17,300,000, bringing the aggregate to $49,224,000. Deducting from this, the surplus and a sinking fund of 81,675,000, there would be a balance of $46,029,000 to be added to the debt. This is a very large in cease but it w to be noted that $32,. 000,000 of that amount is accounted for by the N.T.R., and the Quebec bridge which to be deemed heraf- ter a part of the N R. Our trade statistics for the past year will necessarily be unfavorable, but they will not be more unfavorable than the statistics of other countries. The year 1907 was only a partial year, a period of nine months, and, there fore, it is impossible to make compari- sons. The total trade for the fiscal year 1908 reached a very high figure being one hundred million more than 1906. In 1906, our exports amounted to $256,586,630, and in 1908 they had increased to $280,006,000. The imports in 1906 amounted to $294,286,015, and in 1908 they amounted to $370,786,825. Our total trade in 1906 was $550, 872,000, and in 1908 was $650,793,000. Now for the fiscal year 1909 we have no final returns, but from the best in- formation we can obtain our exports amounted to $861,379.304. Our im- ports amounted to $292358.021. Our total "tiade amounted to $553,737,000. 'The exports have fallen slightly but there is a considerable decline in the imports, .In this r@spect-we are able to make a very satisfactory comparison with the United States. The decline in imports fgr the year has been about the same in both countries, but tak- ing the figures of the calendar year, the exports of Canada have decreased only to" a small "extent, Whereas the exports of the United States increased very largely. Coming now to the fiscal year which lies before us, the year 1909-10, jt" i only fair to assume that" abundant resources and widely recog- nized energy of the Canadian people, we shall be speedily 'able to overtake declines of the past year, It is only reasonable to suppose that the con- ditions of the past year were due to special circumstances, and that these will be sufficiently ameliorated during the current vear to enable us to re- ceive a very. considerable increase in revenue. 1 do not think we would : be justified in expecting to reach the very high revenue of '1907-8, but we .do think that the revenue of 1909-10 will capsiderably exceed that of the past vear. The vear just closed we are es- timating to give a revenue of eighty- four and a hali million dollars. Our net debt on March 31st, 1908, was $277,960,000. The increase in 1909 would be $46,000,000, making our es- 18 {enue of ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, APRIL $323,960,000. Our nef increase since 1896 is , $65,463,000, and the average per year, $3,134,000. Of this net in crease the N.T.R. was responsible for £52,574,000. So that apart from the N.T.R. the average annual increase would be $1,010,000. Per capita in 1896 the net debt was $30.82 per head, and on March 31st last it was $15.72. This is based on an estimated popula- tion of 7,085,219, which is the PE Ltion of the census department. Anoth- er calculation of the of the debt is the amount of interest to be paid. In 1806 the net amount per capita was $1.79, and:at the close of the last fiscal year it was $1.35. | Mr, Fielding said that it was not proposed to make extensive changes in the tariff. Any changes that were to be made would not affect the rev- the country, but were rather in the way of regulation of the exist ing tariff with respect to sugar. The supplementary estimates to be brought down would be light, as it was the determination of the govern. ment to exercise the strictest eco- nomy. The revenues to be collected would probably meet all ordinary ex- penditure and a portion of the dapi- tal expenditure. It was quite possi- ble that the government would be able to keep the borrowing for the vear down to the amounts required for the construction of the, National Transcontinental railway. Any bor- rowings beyond this, at any rate, would not be large. No Two-Cent-A-Mile Fare. Ottawa, April 21.--At the railway ommittee of the commons Dr. Reid. Grenville, withdrew his two-cents-a- mile railway tickets bill, his reason wing that he understood the govern ment intended to oppose it, and. he would rather withdraw it than have it slaughtered. The bill provided for the sale of mileage books at two ents a mile. WESTMORLAND. Rosslyn, London COUNTESS OF Daughter of late Lady joys country more than suits, who pur- + Found At Malone. Malone, N.Y., April 21 --William Houlé, brother-in-law of Domina Pel- letier, the murdered {farmer of St. Etienne, has been seen in Malone, and is understood to be under surveillance by Detective Lapointe, of the Quebec provincial force. made to induce .Houle to return to Beauharnois. Should he refuse, it is highly probable that he will be arrest ed on suspicion. \ King To Honor Regiment. Halifax, N.S., April 21.--Intimation has been. received that King Edward will present the Royal Canadian Regi- ment 'with a large autograph picture f himsel and has intimated through his 'private secretary.that the presen- tation will: give 'him a great deal of sleasure because of his admiration for the Canadian soldiery. : BAGK T0 OLD S00 "IRELAND FOR THE IRISH," HOME GOERS SLOGAN. {reland Reviving Society Wants Not Less Than 50,000 Sons and /Daughters to Return in 1910. Washington, D.C, land for the Irish, Kilkenny." : red 'With this as their slogan. the friends of the proposed 'Irish Home-going' movement in 1910 want not less than 50,000 of the sons and daughters o Erin to make the pilgrimage to Ire and, then for an industrial revival of that country. The occasion promises to be the greatest epoch-making event n the hifory of Ireland. Backed, as' it is, by the encourage ment and support of prominent mem- bers of the Irish race both in this country and in Ireland, the projected homeé-going movement to Ireland has assumed such proportions that confi dence is expressed in the success of the undertaking and a great influx visitors to the old land on that occa sion is expected. Among those who have pledged themselves and are lend ing their aid to the movément, is Richard Croker, the former Tammany chieftain The home-going will be held daring July, August and September, 1910. April 21.-- Ire- 1910--méet me at ol Be Good To Teddy. Mombasa. Beitish East Adrica. April 21. --King Fdward has sent a personal cablegram to F. J. Jackson, the act: ing governor of thé protectorate'. in structing hin: to meet Theodore Reose- velt upon his artival here and show him every consideration and care. The British eruisen Panddra is in port and will take part in the welcome to extended to the former président the United States. * of J week, has Endeavor is being | 21, 1909. ATES TEM GIVEN IN THE BRIEFEST POS- SIBLE FORM. Mdétters That Interest Everybody --~--Notes From All Over--Little of Everything Easily Read and Remembered. Dr. "Blow is erecting a $30,000 warehouse in Calgary. A $20,000 opera house is being erect ed at Raymond, Alta. Prince Albert streets this year with macadam. C. B. Frost, vice-president of the Frost & Wood company, died suddenty at Smith's Falls, Public feeling in New Zealand is sai to be growing in favor of compulsory military training. The contract for the néw Ontario public school readers was awarded to the T. Eaton Co., Toronto. Five sailors wore drowned in Lake Michigan, when tho steamer Ebor Ward struck an ice floe and sank. ; An American namcd Baskerville was killed while leading a sortie of Persian nationalists outside of Tabriz. The land grant to tbe Algoma Cen- tral and Hudson Bay railway ' has beon thrown open to settlement. The Prince Albert Board of Trade is thoving to secure a branch of the G.T. P. and to develop power ai Coal Falls. An ice crusher has been sent from Cobourg to Niagara to seve the pro- perty of the Niagara Navigation com pany. = The United States government has lost $6,000,000 on Paris gowns smug. the country during) the last will be paved gled into ten years, The taxidermist at Banfi is engaged in mointing the head of Sir Donald which is all that could be saved of the carcass after the herd had finished with him. The Prince of Samos had been mur- lered. Samos is a Greek island in the Aegean sea, under the protectorate of the powers, but paying tribute to Tue: of the anthracite key: The meetin coal Wich. was to have been ursday of this operators, held in New York on Th n until next Tuesday, April 27th. Fi Coal has been discovered at Ross- port, on the north shore of Lake Sus serior. Samples have' reached Port Arthur, some of a lignite and others of anthracite ndture. One of the lawyers for P. C. Hains; r., indicted for the killing of W, E. Annis, predicts that the case will nev- er reach the jury but will be settled by a commission in lunacy. Building' permits at Fort Willlam this year are expecied to show a iotal of $5,000,000: the G.T.P. clevator is one of $300,000, and the C.P.R. sta- tion and imgrovements will go $1, 000,000, The special committee of Toronto university wants a separate college for women, President Falconer, however, thinks there is no likelihood of get- ting one, There are, he says, too many other tilings to be done, The Vancouver sealers who, sixteen years ago, were captured by a Russian gunboat and their ship confiscated, are at last to receive justice. The Rus- sian government has paid their wages for the whole sixteen years, with in: terest at six per cent. per annum, RUSSIAN WOMAN BETRAYED. A Revolutionist, She Shot Dead a Soldjer. o Philadelphia, April 21.--Betrayed by a fellow countryman, Felicia Kckier, a Russian woman, forty-three years old, was arrested last night on the charge of killing a scrgeant of army six monthd ago in St. Peters burg.. At the city hall, the detectives say, she told a remarkable story of the crime and her escape froin Russia. Through an interpreter she told how her husband had become affiliated with a political party which advocated a "hange in the form of government, by force if necessary. In anticipation of an uprising of the poople he had stockd his homé with rifles and am- munition until it wa® a veritable ar) The police, learning of this, squad of soldiers to scize Kekicr. His wife seized a rifle and shot the sergeant, three times... She then escaped from the honse and sue- ceeded in reacking Canada, and later came to, this city. Her hvsband® also succeeded in eluding the poliec, and joinod her here. Yesterday a senal. sent a Russian + uméd Theo dora Buzziki came into (he office of Captain of Detectives Gallagher, in the city hall, and said, "There is 'a woman in this city who is wanted by the czar." de accompanied iwo detectives to the house where Mrs. Kekior and her husband were living, and the woman was arrosted. WILLARD KIRKBY KILLED. Stick Was Hurled By Wheel | ' Against His Body. Brockville, Ont.. April 21. --Monday evening. Willard 8S. Kirkby, a' young married man, employed at the factory of J, Briggs & Son, met with an ace- dent which resulted fatally, He was using a stick to adjust a belt oo the wheel of 'a sand 3, The st k got eatight in the spokes of the wheel, one end of it was hurled with great the liver timated net debt on 3lst, 1909, Expert dyers, XN thors, found that inktead of soap, improper letters through the the Russian [of Dobbs Ferry, N.Y, :lieves that mare women should occupy - ' DID NOT LOCATE THEM. i Elliott. Hamilton, Ont., April 21.-The rade murder inquest week not furnish the sensati some ps ¢, as who it was hosts wigh the most remarkable duced vill not be eo kerton d Lorney-gener, : for three hours. At the end they cluded that he knew nothing ever. = Ar The Pinkerton officers adnfit that al- though they van down every possible | clue and covered tory the ! trace of Col. Warburton or his Marion Elliott, A thirty-two calibre revolver was found, this - morning, under a. slat walk, leading to the residence of Mrs. Abbott, 111 Herkimer street,' two doors west of the Kinrade home, by William Robson and George Anderson, brick layers, who were going to work. The general impression is that the re-| volver is not the hbo of Ethel Kinrade was com- mitted but that it was placed under the walk, recently, as a huge hoax on the police and public. Last night at Bennett's theatre, Mrs. Eva Fay, the celebrated thau- aturgist, announced that a revolver would be found under the sidewalk on Herkimer _ street near the Kinvadé house. Robson was one of those pre- sent and, this morning, as he, in com- pany with Andetson, passed Mrs. Ab- bott's house he noticed something shiny under the slat walk immediate ly next to the cement sidewalk. His companion thought it was a piece of tin but Robson stooped down and} putting his = hand ° under the slats found it' was a revolver. He put the weapon back again and. the police were notified. . The revolver is a sel cocker, thirty-two calibre, six cham: bered and is of the stocky bull-dog variety with a short barrel. The end of the barrel was encrusted with soft dirt, each chamber was choked up and the mechanism was gritty. There was not a speck of rust on the weapon, showing the weapon was placed there recently. wife, BURGLAR"S SAD MISTAKE. Took Parcel of Soap in Mistake For Jewelry. London, April 21. There dramatic little incident in a bus a couple of days ago. A working woman, who was carrying a brown paper parcel, sat next to a man. sim- ilarly equipped. The woman 'left the bus, and on arriving home and open- | ing the parcel that she thought' was it | contained jew, and. othot articles worth bvée 82, She took her find at once to Scotland Yard. The police are now anxiously scarch- ing for the loser, whose omission to confe forward is explained by the fact that the jowclty was immediately re cognized by the police. as the pro- ceds of a recent burglary. The feel- ings of the burglar when he got home, and opening his parcel, found it to contain only soap may be lift to the imagination. was a London Woman Doctor Suicides. Atlanta, Ga., Apul 21.--Dr, Rosa F. Monnish, sentenced to the federal prison dor sending threatening and mails; drank prussic® acid at her home and died within a few minutes. WIDOW'S BIG FEE GOT WHAT BELONGED TO HER HUSBAND. Hy Sought the Completion of a Con- tract--Col. Ingersoll Had Ac- cepted a Large Amount in An Effort to Break a Will. Boston, April 21.--The lengthy litiga- tion against relatives of the late An- drew J. Davis, the wealthy Montana mine owner, by Mrs. Eva A. Ingersoll, widow of the late Col. Robert G. Ingersoll, ended when Judge Wiliam I. Putman, in the United States circuii court, hand- »> big area of tern- | had been unable to find any | Dstectives Unable to Find Miss one with which the 5 Attractive and well fish- [ 'ioned models. All goods in | stock are imported. Latest creations in the tailoring art, New York and Paris' Styles. Exclusive designs. - Wedding and Recaption Gowns a Specialty. Should be fitted on our celebrated " American Lady," "Kab" or "FP." Corse ---- rd SPECIAL Diresoire Corsets af $1 Made of fine French Cotil, garters, 'long straight effect to give the new slender figure, All sizes, 18 to 30. Special Price, $1. Make a special effort to see these New Corset Models. It's worth your while. .«" MARRIED. CARSWELL---€OULD.~In April 21st, 1909, St. Mary's Cathedral by the Rev. Father Hanley, Martha Gould, Allen Carswell, both of this city. Kingston, m to DIED. Collin's Bay, Wednesday, April 21st, 1909, Daniel Everitt Grass, aged ninefy-four years, one month and seven. days. Funéral from residence of Lewis A Wartman, Collin"s Bay, Thursday, at 2 p.m. Friends and acquaintances re- spectfully invited to attend. ROBERT J. REID, The Leading Undertaker. 'Phone, 577." 227 Prircess street TAKE NOTICE. If you have decent Furniture, Stoves or Carpets for sale, let ws know. Satis factory prices paid. TURK'S, 'Phobe, GRASS. <At ed down a final decree rewarding Mrs. Ingereoll $138,810 with intervets -and costs. Following the death of Mr. Davis, certain of his relatives engaged Col, Ingersoll as counsel in an offiort to break Mr. Davis' will, making a con- aot oY 'which hey wire {0 pay him $100,000; Afters Uol. higersoll dind Mrs. Ingersoll brought suit in the Uni- ted States circuit court to recover $100,000 from Henry A. Root, of Lo- well; Joseph A. Coram, of Bokton, and othets who made the contract with her husband. This was the suit de termined finally to-day. 3 2 MRS. CHANCE ON BASEBALL. She Urges Women to Patrénize the Game. Chicago, April '21.--At of the baseball season Mrs. Francis | Chance, wife of the leader' of "the world's champions, is out on an inter view declaring that it is upon women --not the fhghty, volatile kind, but the steady, home variety--that the fu- ture of the national game depends. To prevent the game from becoming a rowdy pastime, "one only for bleachers full of men to watch, she be- the opening seats in the grand stand. pgs "If more women would forsake bridge whizt and pink teas, sofa cush- ions ang kimonos and turn out te natch the cleanest sport in the world. Shire, Nould be more tobustness and air-nii Among otr sex... & h Soe women would Ts, come out and expand their lungs to team wi force against Kirkby's body. The im- pact caused hemorrhage. of the fresh ai rooting for hers would Retin CRAPE Just received direct from Cuba, a-large consignment of this de licious fruit, which we will sell as follows :-- ; J Sc Each 7c Each 10c Each Jas. Redden & Co, Importers Of Fine Groceries. WOULD CAUSE PANIC. Lord Beresford Stirs People of Britain. London, April 21.="1i the country knew the real present condition of thé navy, there would be a panic," i a Striking sen- tence in a. a fron Admiral ® Low Charles Beresford, read at a meeting of the Navy League, beld at Bourne: mouth, laxt night. To this Lord Charles added : % "J wish you every Adniiral FRUIT truth regarding the