Daily British Whig (1850), 10 May 1909, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

YEAR 76-NO. 109. Li KINGSTON, ONTARIO, MONDAY, MAY LAST EDITION a QUITE GRAY THE GRUGIAL TEST WILL LIKELY BE PROVIDED THIS WEEK. The French Government is Ready to Meet the Struggle--It is Largely Responsible For the Situation--May Meet the Emer- ' gency. May 10,--There exists, at the important divi sions of labor, ' including the public services, 'a situation so serious that it would be difficult to exaggerate its gravity. The government is largely responsible for this. Having dealt with the postal and telegraph revolt in March, it made concession in spirit, if mot in form, which convinced the rank and file of the public servants that they possessed practical control of these important services-and could dictate terms at will Premier Clemenceau however, that temposary meant only the postponement of the keal struggle, now at hand, and the government has been preparing for it every hour since the strikers réturned to work, Their preparations are by no means completed, but the authori tied believe that they can meet an em ergency to-day with a less serious col lapse of public functions than occurred in March. This lweek promises to pro vitle the crucial test. Paris, present in all realizing, concessions 8 25,000 ACRES OF LAND. Claimed It May Wipe Deficit. Toronto, May 10.-- This is a case where Ktigation very defensikl:, said one of the lawyers representing a number of shareholders of the defunct Ontano bank. "One of ine assets of that defunct institution is 25,000 acres of land near Feet William, which any day now may command a big sum. If we can hold out long enough this land will be sold, and instead their being a delivitsto the Bank of Montreal there will be a balance on the other side." Which fact gives the reason for all the: protracted litigation that has been going on now: fortwo or three ¥ antl a half, and of which thege 18 still no end in sight. : Out Any 18 Diamonds Torn From Ears. Chicago, May 10.--Mrs, Margaret Riordan was robbed of two diamond carviges valued at $500. After cho inf his victim the robber took a pair of pinchers and tore the jewels fom her ears. Neighbors found her lying on the pavement, her and neck covered -with blood. The Chinese government has invited Sit. Robert Hart, former director Chinese customs, roturn to China Sir Robert has reached no-decision. "Blaud's Iron Tonic Pills," 'Red Cross Brand, 100 for 25c.. Sold only at Gibson's Red Cross Drug Store "Phone 230. The date for holding the conferénc on imperial defence will" be extended to allow time for" theAustralian delegates to attend. : A. T. pointed Garman consul at B.C. cars ol to Yon Etlingen hag been ap Yancouvor, DAILY MEMORANDA, City Council, 8 p.m. Kyle Vaudevill® Co. House, 7.45 p.m. Mrs. Hyslop, Y.M.C o'clock At The Princess Theatre Great Colbie Sistersi in ville ; B. Hater, of New York City, in Ilustratéd Song; Fine Pictures Don't miss Programme To-Night Bijou Theatre--'"'British Soldiers Redskins' "A Fatal Flirtation Dynamite Waistcoat "School Flirtation."' Vocalists: All Davis, every show ; Miss Bruton. evening only. ; 'Grand Opera A. to-night, at 8 To=Night I'he Refined Vaude Daisy May 10th, In Canadian History 1584--Jacques Cartier reached thé coast of Newfoundland. 1763--The possession of confirmed to Great Britain of Paris. 179R--Capt. George Vancouver the English explorer, for whom the island of Vancouver was named, died near Lon dow: Born in Kngland about 1758 1878--The "Seott Act," Canada Temperance Act, for the purpose of reg ulating the liquor traflic by local option passed by Parliament and received the roval assent 18983--Queey) Victoria Imperial Institute of the India. " 1908----Two were destroyed 1907-4, F. the Conservative at the age of 6F TUMBLERS! i -------- Canada was by the treaty or inaugurated Colonies the and hundred houses Ott by fire. Marter party years in awa formerly leader in Ontario, died Good enough for every day use. x . INVADED BY C. P. R. Lake and Road Route Will Be Opened Up. Montreal, May 10.--So optimistic does the PR. feel as to the imme- diate future of Gowganda that they will almost at once establish a wa- goh and launch route all the way from Pisco, on their main line, a distance of eighty miles, seventy per cent. of the combined transit being by water aml thirty by wagon. L. 0. Armstrong announced that the canoe service will be eliminated as much as possible during the coming summer. The launches. will be large freight carrirrs and the wagons similar to the big Ontario farm wagon and with this combined service the company express the belief that they will be able to cope with the very large traffic promised from all quarters as goon as the rush begins a few weeks hence. STATES UNDER THE BA Importation of Hay and Other Things Stopped. Ottawa, May 10.--A new order is issued regarding the importation of cattle and other articles from several of the United States The importation of hay, straw or other fodder from the ktates of New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Mi chigan, Maryland and Delaware, ex cept as packing material for break is prohibited, and hay, straw or other fodder imported from the above named states as above provided shall be burned by the eon- signee immediately on anfval at tinatior. able goods, des- GIRL GAGGED ; JEWELS GONE conscious. York, May 10.--Freda nineteen-year-old servant in the family of Lahey, a Jersey City merchant, found gagged and unconscious in the cellar of her employer's home Several hundred dollars worth of jew- ellery and silverware were missing There is clue to the identity her assailants and because of the girl's serious condition it impos sible to question her. It that two men entered the the guise of employees of a pany. New ner, employed War a girl, was hound, no was is house i gas con NEARLY GOT A MILLION. Men and Woman Dug Tunnel 350 Feet Long. Gori, Russia, May 10.--A daring plan to rob the treasury of Gori, in which $1,000,000 is kept, was discov ered yesterday evening. The scheme of the criminals, five men and a wp man, was to dig a tunnel to the building from outside. They had pro gressed a distance of 350 feet and had reached a point directly below the cel lar, when a bookkeeper heard sounds of excavating and summoned the po lice to investigate, With the result that all six were captured. This was the second similar attempt ta rob this treasury. NEWS OF THE WORLD OO BRIEF RECOUNTED Matters That Interest Everybody --~Notes From All Over--Little of Everything Easily Reac and Remembered. The shah of Pe political amnesty. In a rot at Stanley Park. to, several policemen were injured, I'he maintenance of Victoria pital London, Ont.; last a 1,321 The egirding of the sword Mo hamed V takes place, at Constantino- le, Ww and lowed ia has declared 1 Toron hos cost year, o ) on to-day. B. Calder, robbed by a highwayman, the thief and securdd his vest. with the did of a policeman. Byron Taylor, three old, grandson of fobert Wiseland, directo of public safety, St. John, N.B., fatally burned while. playing Beamsville, stopped fol ar vears was with matches, nia Miss Vivian Talbot, aged nine year and._Rufus Snell, aged ten, were both drowned in a creek near Dresden. The body of the little boy has not been found yet. - The motion restraining the Canada Life association from the prosecution of its bill, during the present of parliament, was refused at Toronto on Saturday. Justice Camgron, of court Of kings bench, has formal word from Ottawa of pointment to the Manitoba appeal bench. At Hamilton; Ont., fire completel, destroved the large basset manufac turing and wood praning mill of Mer ritt Bros., Woodburn, The is estimated at SIS 000, Kraft, who shot two policemen and the caretaker of the city hall, Wind sor, Ont., was remanded for nine days. He said he didn't shoot to kill, but to get his liberty At Norwich, N.X nineteen, hrst session the Manitoba received his court ap of loss Earl B. Hill, aged of murder in the was sentenced to be elec onvicte d degree trotted week beg Sir ning June 20th Robert Perks, real. He has come across the sea in connection with the Georgian Bay which it commonly reported. nal, 25¢. Doz. Try a few. Robertson Bros. able to do so has conferred the | degree doctor of laws Baro |'Kogoro Takahir the ambassador of Japan. in connection with exorcises in ledication of the it of \Joseph hes is abundantly Amhe 4 olleg: Sc oF on por: Neesima, a Japanese graduatd™ in who attained « th Phisha, a Christian university, {failed a large part tion of Japan, IR70, founder of the Dos which. 1 FOUND BOMBS alk Found in Cellar Bound Amd Un- | Joseph | of | believed | Auburn prison during the M.P..-is in Mont- oi» he is prepared to finance himself. And The Roman Police Have Been Busy ONE OF THEMSELVES HAS BEEN FOUND OUT AS THE DASTARD. He Manufactured' and Hidl Them in Hope of Reward--His Credi- tors, About to Be Arrested, Caused Disclogure of the Plot. ° 10.--The discovery of iwo highly cxplosive bombs in the Aurclian walls, at the end of March, | bas engaged the Roman police for a month. The imminent visits of King { Edward. and President Roosevelt caus ed the most careful watching of anar chistes. The police of Berlin, London, land Si. Pétersburg, were consulted. It | has been now discovered that the po- licomen who found the bombs also | manufactured and hid them, with the { help of a friend, for the sako of tl {reward the ill-paid. police get on the discovery of anarchist plots. The po- {licoman, who is a Sicilian, was just on the peint of getting his reward and, promotion, but having denounced, as | dangerous anarchists, all his®ereditors their arrest ledrto the discovery of the | plot. Rome, May SUCCEEDED AS MAN, Yotrng Negro in Trousers a School Teacher. May 10.--After rading as a» man for eight cavse she thought it bet- ter chance to make the world, Maud Allen, alias James Allen a bright young negro woman, has been arrested for wearing male attire That her theoric may been correct is attested the that as a girl in her "teens she passed at jhe head of her class in a boys' high school and as a young woman in | trousers she became a teacher in the | public schools of Baltimore. She was { an 'netive worker in the Ebenezer Bap- | tist church. and taught a class oi mon in fhe Sunday school. She ch her head and grew a beard. now twenty-four years old, and heen wearing men's clothes since was sixteen. Baltimore, masque- years he her a progress in gave have bw faci shav- She is has she EXPORT COAL. Britain Shipped 62,547,175 Tons Last Yéar. London, Eng., May 10.--According {to a parliamentary return 62,547,17 tons of coal were exported from the United Kingdom _ Inst year, of which 10,749,429 tons Were at prices exceed- ing 16s. a ton, 9,173,642 at figures be- | tween 10s, and ls. per tom; 5,210,610 between 12¢. and 13s., and 7,551,235 between 11s. and 12s Of the various groups of ports into | which the country is divided, the Bris | tol Channel ports sent out the largest | quantity--namely, 25.17 | diff alone exporting 16,7745: The north-eastern group comes with 20,779,925 tons, the largest | vidual exporter being Newcastle, | 7,228,121 tons. tons next indi- with MILLIONS OF TREES. | - -- I' New York State is /Reforesting Itself. | 10. trees l a I be planted | owners, May Over millio spruce will this' year by private land | thee result of the plan of | Whipple, of the state forest, fish game department, to furnish trees, io planting at cos! | Under Mr. Whipple's administration more trees have planted in New | Yordo than in any state in the | union. Tn fortv-cight counties citizens will plant A.034,050 hees, and ments will beginin the next few day Mr. Whipple day, that | one-half of the applications for youny | | 4 tie ck | {rees equlsd Jw filled Albany, | pine and | | | James oN 4 and | { | heen olther a stap aid, 1 not | CONMEE'S BILL PASSED. Prime Minister Supports Measure As. Amended. . Ottawa, May 10.--The Ontario Michigan Power Co. promoted by James Conmee, was given its third | reading in the commons Saturdan morning by a straight government {majority of twenty-seven. The fight had all along been over the expropria tion clause, against which the Ontario government fought determinedly, Sit | Wired Laurier voted for the bill | amended | and Girls Are Wrathy. Hamilton, Ont., May 10.--In ing the use of the gymnasium te | Collegiate Institute girls' basketball | team for-a match with the Catl arines' girls, Principal Thompson said | they must no\ wear bloomers if mixed crowd wad to bg present. nternal gral St appealed to the management committee of the | which, upheld the principal. | threaten to strike education The gil yoard of The Cost Of Justice Brockville, Ont, May' 10 {will pay to the. United Counties Leeds and Grenville for the next five vears the sum of 32.400 ar madly its share fer the administration of ju tice, jail maintenance, ete. This amount was ed upo confer ence of tho counties and sep latives, | dia Brockvill ol at a town ay rope To Abolish Considtories. Rowe, May 10.--It is reported pope contemplates the abolition consistories f the appointment for of of the regenera- |cardinals, appointing them by brief or, shull, as in the case of bishops, tand | providing They | DELIVERED SERMON. Told What He Found in Other World. ; Wash., May 10.--Charles Frisby, who died in Spokane a fow days ago, delivered his own fuperal wrmon through Mrs. Corg Kincannon Smith, a medium, in Spiritualists' hall, 810} Riverside avenue, who said that the words were those the spirit put into her mouth, After felling his relatives not to sorrow over his de parture, the spirit of Frisby said through the medium: : "I cannot tell you of pearly gates or streets of gold, because everything here is much as it was on the other sphere, only more beautiful. Every- thing is tangible and, better {han that, it is everlasting, We have books here to read, musi¢, paintings al everything that we enjoyed on earth. "Over here vou: can have whatever you desire. If you are fond of house 'work, here you will have a little house to take care of. Hf music was your pleasure, there will be heavenly music, can continve © your studies along any line you wisl d i | DR. Chairman which Spokane, you THE BOARD OF TRADE. EDWARD RYAN, the Railway Committee, doing excellent work for Kingston. of is To Hear Triffic Cases. Ottawa, May ID.--Nearly a dozen cases; relating to traflic affairs, will come hefore the railway commission on Tuesday, The! complaint of the Canadian Lumbermen's Association of alleged undue increase in the lumber rating, will be re-opened. = At April sitting the comp aint was argued and the railways ordéred to produce figures showing the effect of the new ratings: ns compgred with the old schedule, 10 TET THE LAWS WHICH WIFE SHALL AN IN DIAN SUPPORT. Government Recognizes -the Wife Living With the Indian in Making Allotments--The Court Has Held Otherwise. Spokane, Wash., May 10.--Marriage laws of the state of Idaho will be ¥ Mosgow, south of Spokane, at the term\beginning May 16th. 'kne pw pose WAoMrrive at a decision in -a complicajed question sto law the povernment should recognize in Indian allotment cases. A decision of the state supreme court the ettlement of the Indian estates out of the hands of the United States court. 'There are numerous instances Indians divorced their as takes have squaws by the red man's laws, taking third wives. Un the govern- living with allotments, the ground where second and the ruling recognizes the Indian in making this eombatted the courts have held that a man hound to support his first wife! provided she not remawied, for minor children. afterward der ment the but that present wile its It on js has also the HACISISIISIISIIASIOIIACININN SEVEN YEARS DEAD. rE A special despatch to the Whig from Ottawa says: It is recalled here that ex- actly seven years ago, to- day, Principal Grant died, and that tributes from the pens Hon. G. W. Ross, John Charlton, M.P, Rev. S. P. Rose, Hon. David Mills, Dr Landerkin, Dr. McCabe and others were published that day, here, arding the distinguished who did so much 's, Kingston and +H HA ot EEE Canada. WHOOPING COUGH 'PARTY, 1 Nime Little Ones Who Retovered. Had Just Chicago, Ma) party the ithe residence Wilmette, iClizabeth, from that malady. vears old : little and latest Mrs honor held at F.- R. Webber, in of Jher daughter, of "her recove Elizabeth is 1s mn because vv A] x one boy, sufferers Seven gir 1 cont i schoolmates the whooping cough, were the guests. i playing of children's games. Yhe chil- dren have all been absent from ! Wilmette public schools on account having the whooping cough, but turned to-day, the | which | 10.--A whooping cough | four all| from; The afterncon was given over to the the of and W. J. re- An Adventuress os 'Has Been Captured ee . . ii adds an oF Ag nin OUT OF THOUSANDS OF DOL- LARS' WORTH OF GOODS. Posed As a Princess--And Drove Fine Carriages--Lived Well on Procéeds of Sales. Paris, May 10.--The French police have just laid by the heels an advons | turess who has long heen wanted by { them. She is a woman of fine pro | «ence, and was known to her intimate friends as "Son Altesse Royale la Grosse Melic."' Emilie had set herself dupes and a fortune, am! when {drove down the Avenue du Bois do { Boulogne, arrayed in gorgeous cos | tumes and seated in a fine carriage {drawn by a pair of spanking horses, her coachman and footmen being in very correct livery, people {turned round to gaze at her in admiration, wondering who she might he She infyived. to impress the trades men whom she honored With a visit to {such an extent that they forwarded tall the coods which she condescended to order to her abode without hinting at very punctual payment, and' when they sent their bills round they found to their consternation that she had iflitted. The handsome carriage was simply hired, and each of her furnish- {ed flats was only taken for the brief space of a week, so that she experi enced no difficulty in moving ahout, Tradesmen were completely dazzled | When Emilie walked into their estab- {lishments with a dignified adr her, ser- | vants settled. her obsequiously in a chair, and as she inspecied jewelry, lace, furs and other luxurious articles she frequently exclaimed that they were very good, but were hardly suit iable to a person oi hor oxalted posit tion. Soi when at last she deigned to accept somothing which, afler all, as | she observed, was not toe inférior, the | luckiess shopkeoper was in High de- | light, and humbly escorted the prin- {tase, the marquise, or the millionaire | American, for such she gave herself | out in tun to be, to her carriage with a profusion of bows. % At last the complaints of her nume- vous dupes led to a warrant being ise sued for her arrest, whereupon "La { Grosse Melie" went off 'a little further I than a newly-furniched flat, and be | took herself to foreign parts. This | was in November, bul with the ap- {proach of springs and the scason, | Emilie felt a longing to return to the | gay city. "She accordingly came back { make she to | | to Baris, but took up her abode with a female friend, dwelling on a remote | boulevard, and omly sallied forth at I night, her face hidden by a thick veil | --anothie "veiled lady." | So, great was her surprise when the police, who had somehow discovered | her whereabouts, called in the carly |moming and took her into custody, but she soon.recovered her spirits, and when she was questioned by M. Ham- {ard, the chief of the criminal detective | department, she gave full vent to her { mirth. % "Ah!" she exclaimed, laughing un- | tested in -the United States. court at | il the fears ran-down her rosy checks, | "what. a beautiful country France is! {| Whatua country of dupes ! When they Nthought that they had a royal high- for a customer the tradesmen were ready to entrust --all their goods to me, and their shops into tho bar- gain. It true that I was stylish, and would have dazzled all the di plomatists at the European courts." Then sho wont on to relate that, al- though she was not a royal highness, she had lived royally with the money derived Lhe the goods sent to her hy too-confiding shopkeep Emilie had not much cash about but Hamard has ascertained that she pawned various valu able artigles in \London. She now the Saint Lazare prison, and under same i Mme. Steinheil | ness | from sale of ©eUs, har, at is t the roof as A Death At Eringville. Erinsville, May S.--~The death Cornelius Lynch occurred at his home, near here, on Monday, May 3rd. He born in Ireland, sixty-six years ago, but lived in this locality about forty-five years. Mr. Lynch was in ap- parent good health, until a month { previous to his death, when he re ceived a serious injury from a fall From that time he gradually declined. but his illness was not thought seri until he was seized with cardiac asthma. The funeral, v ich was large ly attended. took place on Wednesday, of was ous to the Church 'of the A«amption, and the Roman. Catholic ceme- to Rev, thence tery Father (inn, of Tweed, conducted the services, in the absence hic home, 756A Union street. vv. The deceased leaves five children, Patrick. of Belle-| {he movements of the pair in the four Estella, Nellie} pgnthe during which no He also leaves! ome from them, they have heen tour- Mrs, Bridget Doherty and|ie the country on funds supplied by of Rev. Father Cavey. Margaret, at and James, ville, and four Mrs Ellen home sisters, Ann Lynch, Dovle, of Belleville; Mrs. er, John Lynch, of Erinsville. The heavy rain on Sunday Wabi took the mind of many a fair lady off the sermon, and made her think of the | ployment since leaving home. soaking she was going. to get on her Ye way home An interceting article on Queen's ane the church will be found on page six. | Rev. Logie Macdonoell, Vernon, B.C. i9 the writer. © ag \ At Sunday hogs serviee in St Paul's church, Mre:--W. F. i [Thy Will Be Done." : ' appreciated by the congregations of Stoco; Mrs. Thomas! undertaking so romantica career as Keegan, of FErinsville, and one broth- Fitzgerald | Orr rendered a duct entitled, | It was greatly (by = criticism which 3® inspired -- by -- OBABILITIES. May 10.--Ottawa Valley Lawrence ; (10 aq )= clearing on AT MACDONALD PARK, Ground Towands the Shore Should The * Be Raised. he formal opening of Macdonald Park for the seasom ically took ace on Sunday a 'when undreds of strolled and sat about the shore. Sunday was the warm- est day of the spring, and bright in the afternoon. The park was looking its best, although a dressing of paint would. improve the pawilion. If Ald. Kent's | parks' committee hasn't money enough for that, it should at least give the pole on the pavilion a coat of white, . It has be suggested that next year, a lot of the street scrapings be used to fill in the gropnd from the track and tower hill to the shore. If this was done, the grass would not burn up as it does in the hot weather. The carth forms only a thin coat over the rock, and hence the grass has little chance after June, tinless the season is rainy. By raising the grouhd two feet, the park would be improved im- mensely. (A few loads of earth would also improve the tower hill, in which there are holes and hollows. DIVORCED AND WEDDED. A Michigan Woman Who Lost No Time. Menominee, Mich., May 10. Divorced and married on the same day is the record of Mre. Magy Longton, of Green Bay, Wis. At 9.30 o'clock in the morning, Judge Hastings handed the young woman a decree of divorce. At ten o'clock, with her decree in her hand, she was seated in a north- bound train with George M. Van Hoosen. x At twelve o'clock a marriage license from. County Clerk Hansen, at Meno- minee was secured, and the couple were: married at the Methodist parson- age by; Rev. Mr. Planette in time to take the 1.30 train for their home in Green Bay. TE Toronto, ont, We open our usual May Silk Sale with some of the' best Silk values we have ever been able to offer. Recent § 'purchases acquired under the most favorable circumstances enable us to offer absolutely the newest goods at decided reductions, Beautiful Styles In Silk and Satin Foulards pretty designs on! Creme Grounds, also Navy. VERY SPECIAL, AT 70c. TO $1. A PRINCE FOR INDIA. Government Considering Naming One As Viceroy. London, May 10. --A despatch to the Daily Mail from Calcutta asserts that the British government is riously condidering the question placing the vieeroy of: India in the hands of a prinee of the blood' and the suggestion that one of the younger sons of the Prince of Wales be trained for the post. Lord Mento is the present vice- roy. Rough Pongees The popular rough Pengen in Ivorie, Old 'Rose, Cépens i hagen, Taupe, Grey, Navy, § Brown, Green, also Black, 27 Bi inches wide and well worth $1. DRESS LENGTHS ONLY tAT 75¢. PER YARD. se of the royal is made : % b Natural Pongees In all the best weaves, nll the best qualities, 18 to 84 inches wide. 20c. to $1 per yard. The Designer Here. George Evans, designer for H. Vine berg & Co., Limited, manufacturers of Progress Brand Clothing, spent soveral days in the city. last week iu cotfsultation with 'C. Livitgston re garding the makg and styles for. fall suite, overcoats, ctel They went care fully into the 'matter and the up-to date 'dressers may expeed this fall the most stylish and well-made ready-to- woan © glothing ever shown in King- «tom. 14 is also Mr. Livingston's in- tention to take orders from samples and make Progrees Brand Clothing to measure at priecs ranging from §15 up. SHE JUST ELOPED THE MOTHER'S ANXIETY IS NOW AF REST News of Hazel Drew--She Has Married the Young Man of Her Choice. New York, May 10: Christmas morning, 1908, | Drew. Hall, of 272 | Brooklyn, has been wondering what {has become of her daughter, Hazel Drow, seventeen vears old, whose hai she dressed that moming so she could go to make a call. Now she has learned that Hazel is the wife of Walter McGreat, twenty years old: that when she failed | ome back home on Christmas day it i was because she had eloped, and tha: | she is now expecting io come back to | Brooklyn to live, and wants a kiss of | forgiveness from her mother Martin whether | forgive Hazel or not, Interment at cago | id Mrs, Hall, this morning, "de LASHER h ngs! | Pe ads on what she tells mo when we Kingtiar Lasher. oe meet. She hag not been very consider- | Fumeral took place {ate of my feelings in letting me worry dance a Henry Kel ¥ all this time over her safety. From gu u Lntatagul slery | detective I learned of hor marriage in Nhen Se Sao the pros aus Trenton, N.J., on the very day she | Budely taken from ofr { went away, for he brought me a cof | How are hearts almost of a marriage license which acgurate Jisund the. litle grave Ly deseribed her and-aleo a voung man | Ail our er peris thom she met in a theatre two months we have cheri wlore their elopement." The cove #mony had been: pepformed, the record | showed, by Justice of the Peace Near, | of Trenton. The return of the vounyg | couple Brooklyn. will bring no problems of reconcillation to the elo '| ping bridegroom's household Pp, J. Molireat, the hoy's father, was favor | able to the match from the start, and Lom the day that. his son disappeared ithe young woman was to have ealén { Clwistmas 'dinner with the family Our 60c Quality 32 inches wide. Is the best ever. Don't mrss seeing it. New Waist Patterns Only one in each color. Best Frenth Chiffon Taffeta Silk, 5 yard ends. SPECIAL PRICE, $6.25. HUTTON --At West, « Pitts und Woodburn burgh, May 10th, 1909, to JX Mgrs. Ernest Hutton, a daughter. hi ee mn Smee et DIED. Richmond, on aged about : N sinee Edith avenuco, Ever Mrs Sixth April 80th, fifty years. May - 6th, Mra. ed foriy-sevel CROUSE Mr, Crouse, PYBUS.--At Hannah years AIRHART.--At 29th, Adaw SIX "years FAIRBAIRN on M eight y-eight LASHER At on May 6th oad MARTIN. ~In at her | Mary -Lln Camden Jane Pybus on on April seve nty- Tyendinaga, Airhart age ) 1 Fredericksburgh South r Fairbairn, aged Mr w shurgh, Lasher, South Mursk three Frederick B seventy M; Oth, 87th John Kingston, Ont. 1908, St, L. Chicago idence beloved late Derry formerly 'h re 5 of ton al Rh wonth un the regis King St, General 19005 blossom carg, bosom, despair we linger, low falling, with the flower MOTHER. ROBERT J. REID, The Leading Undertaker. 'Phode, 577. 227 Prircess street FAKE NOTICE. you have decent Furaiture, or Carpets for sale, us know, factory prices paid. TURK'S, Fibre, Pails, Fibre Tubs, Brooms, Dutch Cleanser, Whisks, X Ray. Scrubbing BrushesStove Polish, Stove Brushes, Shoe Polish, Shoe Brurches, "Silver Polish, Clothes Lines, Silver Soap, Clothes Pins, Pearline, Clothes Baskets, Ammouzia. Jas. Redden & Co. P.S.--Try "Dustbane," for Sweep- ing. The schooner Cornéliny was towed in from Fisher's brewery {o Swiit's wharf bet tag Fronteuac, this after 'wnloading part of her caret, to it Stoves Hatin "Phone, let atl From what has béén learned about word has Sapolio, Bon Ami, | relatives, who admired the lads verve lan eloper. Recently they returned to | Trenton, and now they are planning {to take up a residence in Brooklyn, at peace with the households whence they came. The bridegroom has had no em- The bride will celebrate her ecigh- | teenth birthday next Monday. When | she disappearsd she was astudent of 'the Packer Institute on Brooklyn ,| Heights, and on attaining her major- {ity will receive $100,000 leit her by a | granduncle, : - vou and I are benefited Sometimes ida . hatred. Si i

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy