Daily British Whig (1850), 13 Oct 1909, p. 1

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

YEAR 16-%o. 239. KINGSTON, ONTARIO, WEDRESDAY OCTOBER 13, 1909. . LAST EDITION ARE IN WEST Montrose Wright and wife. at Calgary. BEST NEWS HEARD MONTROSE IS HOPFFUL OF 175 TRUTH. "I Always Knew It Would Come Out at Last"--Will Be Worth While to Return East If the Mystery Can Be Thoroughly Unravelled. Calgary, Alta Oct. God for that, old man; prought us the best had for many long: days. Shake said Montrose Wright, husband of Florence Kinrade, to a reporter when shown the despatch stating that man named Bedfort, in london, Eng- | land, had confessed to the murder of | Ethel Kinrade. This was the first | intimation he had had of the fession, and. it almost unnerved n. "1 always knew it would come out at | last," he continued; "wait moment till I tell my wile' Mr. Wright went recom, from which ter came a little yuiet for a few - minutgs 1 Mr. Wright again emergec the message in his hand. "Do you think it true ?"' he eagerly, "Are absolutely there is no. chance of a mistake, My | God ! 1 only hope it is true." As he | spoke he alternately crumpled up the | despatch and smoothed it out agun | with shaking hand, while his face was| set in an effort to control the he showed so plainly. Asked if hig wife knew the man named he again saw his wile, and, said that although both had place him, they could not. 'Would Mis. Wright know derer again if she saw him ?' was a ked, and Mr. Wright answered : 'She has always maintained that she could" recognize him, and 1 believe she could) I suppose if the report is true,it means a trip back east again and the eninf? of the whole matter, but worth it. 1f wrong it will 'only serve | to revive interest in the affair again | without any good coming from it." Throughout the interview Mr Wright kept repeating, 'We will both [3 le awfully glad if it true. 1} knw it would come at last, we N 13.-- yoh we "Thank have news have con ft a adjoining la wat resently | carrying | into a few seconds cryr Then all asked | you certain | emotion he or Bediort | returning, | tried to the mur- | reop it 1s | hardly hoped it would come so soon." He dppoared very keen to news, and Asked that any patches I rought to him, ter at what hour they 'Don't worry about them right along," he said. Later in the evening the reporter | again called, and Mr, Wright eagerly | Mrs | aetl later no arrived. the time. more des mat- Bring | asked for more news. Although Wright was present at the second terview, she preferred to let her band do the talking, and never turned® to at the reporter, when questions regarding her put A. remark to the effect that seemed rather composed under the ci cumstances led Mr. Wright to reply | that she was a. very different girl to| what she was last **She has had a chance to recover, things better,". said the husband. Wright and wife are living Iv at the Victoria hotel here is about to law: firm student, in hus- even look even | were | she | spring. and can bear Mr quiet and he 0 ms enter a | { Poisoned By Mushrooms. Oct. 13. --Mr are at thei seriously - sick mushrooms. Two doctors | are attendance. The condition of | the woman is very eritical Mushrooms are very plentiful this year. "Saturday Mrs: Den purchased the 'market the couple then Khortly after Mrs Den-| taken violently ill and be arrival of a pliysiikan her was also seized with tar attack. The condition such that her paired of, to St. Catharines, Ont. Mrs, Denhe mn Queenston and John home from eating in there: abouts heiser some on had Yesterday. for breakfast, heiser was the husband fore a sim of life Mrs... Benheiser is. practically but her 'husband is eXpected recover. tt mnie | Gas and electric due; pay, at once cent - accounts and save are | *DAILY MEMORANDA. Cheese Board, 1 Orpheum Fenders tect Ellis, Limestone meets 30 p.m., Thursday: | Theatre Opening, received to- for two Lodge Thursday Bijou Theatre--Redskin ata of the Black Hills!' glers 'of New York,' : if the Sleeper Trunk.' | . Banki as. | STUDENTS! We have the finest || and most satisfactory STUDENTS' LAMP on the market. No smell or smoke. A clear, bright light. Hundreds of them in use by Queen's Men. Robertson Bros. thie eveni | morrow by Archi | houses, | 91, Fe | even | siderest ceffitest was a young man { him jak the home of this | marry | War | ment | ever lin a singular svhich | doy, { Italy, 4 usnadly | consists | of jewels | the | taken | report | tron | statistically | mained ditions | are FIANCEE EDUCATES , BROTHER Touching Romance of Spanizh- American War. Washington, C 13.--A touching bit of sentiment. bas been brought to attentioer" recently, which is an echo of the Spanish war. Among the bright | young men who went into that ill-con Te ently out of West Point. He was one-of the many poor young men who get. appointments to the military aca- demy and pass with creditable dis tinction- and who are on the way to make good army officers. At West Point he met a girl, quite a ' usual thing for cadets at the military aca- demy, as well as for midshipmen at the naval academy. But his meefing developod a very decp sentiment be tween the young officer and the girl He was poor, she was very rich. They hecame engaged and were to be mar- ried when ho returned from Cuba. But ho was killed in one of the fights on that island, and was brought home and buried. His mother did not know of his love affair and engagement until afitg the funeral, when the young lady appear- cd at the humble home of his parents and told the story. The officer had a younger brother, a mere boy, who looked very much like him The girl, who "would have been a wile, became | very much interested in the boy, and pers upded the parents lo allow her to take charge of his education. She sent to preparatory c=chools, and tablisltyd him at Harvard College, | os. {from wlwre he is soon to graduate The young man spends his summers | woman, who and made a man, also has provided amply his ly the Spanish wway, thc senti- who would have is lik mah a girl, who She this neve will in which she for the care has var of young in mother. Thoug eleven years of this woman, welded he ol 19 soldier, not any the on the the it allow and as strong v that to come young man banks of and will her over, is whi be she the ween met so long Hudson NAVAL OFFICER MISSING. | Swede Disappears From Haun.burg in Singular Way. Stockholm, Oct. 13.- dish naval officer, Menander, thirty-two years who has won distinction in several | Arctic expeditions, has disappeared way at Hamburg. in command of the. govern- fisheries cruiser Skagerack, on Saturday, September 11th, went into Esbjerg, Denmark, to coal. As the vessel was. lying there over Sunday, the lieutenant, with a com panion, decided to go to Hamburg. They spent the time together until 7 o'clock on the Sunday evening, when the lieutenant said he 'wished to call on a friend and would be at the sta- tion at 11 o'clock. He did not, however Skagerack waited in vain for him at { Esbjerg until the following Wednes- and'then proceeded to Stockholm to report his disappearance, A young Swe- Lieutenant Johan of age, He was ment appear. The BURGLARS BORE, TUNNEL. Thieves in South Italy Make Haul. 4 gang of Cammor- burglars 1s very <husy in southern where it carrving. out a series of raids upon jewelers' shops in the t&wns. The plan of campaign 'is the same in all cases, and in making extensive subter- excavations beneath the prem- be ransacked; using the main as tunnels for escape. At two | shops in Palermo they have carried | off goods worth $10,000 A third bur- lary, conducted noted Cammorrist esulted a haul 5,000. In this case continued for 325 and must have very long time Big | Milan, Oct. 15 {nist is ranean isos to SOWOrs in Nola. center, worth § tunneling. was underground, the men excavate, STARTLING Ri REPORT; THEY GRANT IT DIVORCES BY THE MILLION. WH in feet | To Be Exact, 945%25 Issued in United States in Twenty Years, Previous Decade 328,000. Washington, ~ Oct 13.--The { burcau has published a on marriage and divorce investication of the subject dertaken by direction of grew out of a conference between representatives of ligious denominations has extended arly live years, 'Apparently the the velocity of a falling stantly increasing," and census comprehensive The un and | 'was congress in this city various re- The investiga over a period of | n divorce rate, like body, & con says the report, it is available data would be if the rate particular time in other words, statistics bearing on this question of the of marriages terminated by from what the results reached at any re constant duration divorce curately represent any conditions particular- period, static, but or con for dy it the « nami The stat ISX? to the « number of R32,044 ditions are not {rovn total was 12, pe Ir od 1906 and the orded sties cover La nd of marriages I'he the re showed the was M45. from IN67 abe 328, ird of the twenty ach 1867 merease in investigation twenty vears. covered of the twenty number divorcees granted vears [RNG the was than oi mn ut wdly more led report number vears Ihe five-ye a the se that sinct avs sie has the CERRIVY ar period a markéd number of witness divorces, garrettes' Dry and Red "High « sold at fa ars Gibson s Cross Store ® lcome of 8 as | to | impossible to determine | just | no! have been obtained that ac- | Hearing Sermon. SHE, SEES THE LIGHT AND HAS ENTERED A CHRIST- IAN HOME. After a Strong Sermon By Baptist Minister a Woman Handed Him a Note and Quickly Left-«She Had Been , Aroused-As to Her Conaition. Utiea, N. Y., Oct. 13.--At the end of a sermon preached in the Baptist church, in Little Falls, by the pastor, the Rev Henry C. Cooper, on the subject : "Which, Business or Bot- tles ; Home or Hell 7' a young wo- | man stepped up to the minister, {harided him a note, . and quickly left the edific This is what the clergy man read in the note: "I thank you for your sermon. 1 do not know what ever made me {into your church, as 1 am the |prietor of a resort in Detroit, | After hearing you I cannot go back again. | don't know what will "be- me, but I cannot go back. (Oh, please warn the young girls from lsuch a life, as it really is only death in the end. I shall end my life to- day, as I have nothing to live for now, angd I have gone too far ever to {be saydd. Yes, my let, but I don't |girls to have to have. | \ a mother in Brattleboro, is her pastor. Ihave five: years. She {and it js better my sake." The minister promptly notified police, and after an. all-night | the young woman was found roaming the - streets of the city To-day she jas turned over to a Christian family jan wd later she will be to her mother's home in Jrattleboro," Vt {She gives the name of Mrs. Florence | Hunter, and she left Detroit a {few days ago for the XPress purpose lof killing herself when she reached the {East. © She is well supplied with money. go pro- Mich. sins are as scar- wish other voung go through what I lovely Vt. Mr not seen her thinks me Warn others for have Gow for over SO. thie sent says PEARY"S EVIDENCE To Show That Cook Was Pole. New York Oct. ~Commander Ro bert E. Peary, yest ay, backed up | his many ~ times repeated assertion | Dr. Frederick A. Cook did not Not at reach the pole, .with a detailed ac {count of the evidence which he says ihe and his men obtrined from the | Eskimos who accompanied Cook on his Arctic trip. Dr. Cook, according "to Commander Peary, never got further north than {Cape Thomas Huhbard, the northern- most part of Axel Heibergland, at 81 30 minutes north latitude. | this alleged *'farthest. north" Peary declares, turned south again, and spent the winter of 1908- 1909 on the northern. shore of Nortn i Devon, a little less than 76 -- degrees north, returning northward starting point, Anatok, in this year Peary furnishes a claims was Cook's also thé paints where, according jthe Eskimos, food kibled jon t incidents of the trip eceurred, | | degrees | From | Cook, { his | spring to the of : map of what he route which to! was and | | DETROIT'S GRE! VICTRY | : Fa ert Beat Pittsburg 5 to .0--Pittsburyg UsedffT wo Pitchers. Oct. 13.--The fourth championship baseball ames yesterday afternoon, by the X who whitewashed the by 5 to 0. Mullin pitcher He allowed and struck ten the Pittsburg pitcher lasted only four innings, 'being batted | for eight hits which scored Detroit's | [five runs Phillipi went into the box for Pittsburg in the fifth innings, and | held Detroit to two hits during the | rest of the came. Pittsburg was hope- | lessly beaten from the second innings. | Wagner failed te make a hit and field- | ed poorly. {in the fourth runs, Score Jeiroit, of the world's was 'won, Pe roit. "Tigers, Pittsburg Pirates |i the Detroit only four hits men. Leifield, out innings, scoring two by innings : ! R. H.E | Pittsbu 0000000000 4 4 | Detroit Io votox=5 10 1| Fach team has now won fwo games. The game this afternoon is in Pitts- | burg. ---- SHE BROKE DOWN. Complainant Created a Scene in! Court Hom. Oct. 13.--There the fall assizes her the young wife of a giving ey Le rt St. Catharines, a tragic scene atl { Mrs. Emma Goff, | ttamster Wat was on the stand against Henry Lowery, charging him with a seri ddonly, while being M. J. McCarron, the the woman oan dence | Robinson, ous offence | cross-examined by prise now's conned, vetid to a horrible scream. which could be heard on the street. Sir holme Falconbridge, presiding, hurcied- {1y "loft the beseh and into his {private room. while the unfortunate { woman, vent 10 "ream adler carried from the court P*rsoner sat St oluiy Lhe had to Gwen wont giv saroam, was room. Th thy in postpone 1. ouch at case In The: only til tiie Steam cured, soll sterilized, hot the 'Walpole.' only piece of made, will last a druiroist water bo i It's patented, fo, beautifully ime. Ask is one rub life- our TURNED AWAY From Her Evil Life After | al Christian | dead, | search | shows | : I \efrustus Ys | a of the little patients who 4 > < is. gue : 3 He iki naval Jord of the admiralty, | seven vears old, and up to six month Aly retire apo waf@ thought to be erippled Cobb made a two-baso hit | | JUMPED FROM TRAIN, t | A Negro, Shackled, Leaps: to Liberty. Tivoli, N.Y., Cet. 13. --Edward Davis, alias King, a negro convict, | jumped from a New York Central ex- press tra near here and disappear- He was discharged from Dane { mora, yesterday, and was being taken by a warden to a North Carola pris- on, from which he had escaped. The train slowed down and King, notwith- standing that bbth hands were hand cuffed, jumped from a platform of ¢ siceping car. He rolled over and over, but regained his feet and disgppeared in. the fog. The warden jumped off aiter him, but was too badly cut and bruised to give pursuit. A posse of citizens scarched the woods where the negro is supposed to bo hiding. 1d. CHARLES F:'CAMPBELL, | The greatest living authority on teaching of the blind, who is coming give a course of lectures. to | Canada to DOG CAPTURES APACHE { | {Then Foils a Desperate Attempt | ..to Escape. Oct The chief gang of apaches, who, was "Bamboula the Terror," | has been arrested by a police dog. To reward the dog, which is named Ballon, he was intrusted with the duty of keeping watch over the pris oner while he was being conveyed to the police station. The precaution {for the "Terror," the officers, would have bis escape had not Ballon pinned him down with his teeth firmly fixed in the agushe's § he's ear. NEW CALDT JACKET SURGEONS PUT LIFE "INTO | DEAD LIMBS. Pari rous of a dan- | known as was fully justified, made good Also Curing Spinal Curvature of Two Children in Hospital For| Crippled and Ruptured. New . York, Oct. I3.--~Two children {who had lost the 'use { through a tuberculous disease of the spine, which had also made hunch- {hacks of them, havé>segained the use | of their limbs and are in a fair way to have normal backs again, as result {of having -been eng ased in a new form | calot jacket, originated recently by [physicians of the Hospital for the Crippled and' Ruptured While the calot jacket being only a plaster of { ptaced around the trunk, a new of packing it has been adopted, The | physicians a plinth=a of ro padded with felt and fastened | against the spine so tightly { make it immovable. The greatest pos- | ible pressure is brought to bear | the curvature compatible with comfort! [for the patient. In the old form of icalot jacket, it was explained by one pol the physicians, perfect immov abil lity for the spine could not be. obtain- | ed, andythat is. the one thing" fequired {to cure the discase that causes the cur {vature and paralysis. David Peck, Lot R not 'new paris cast form is | uses piece as te on of Stepney !Conn., has benefited by the new device, lite. H®® legs were paralyzed and {spine had a pronounced curve. hat was last May. 'He was put in a plaster cast and kept in the hospi- {tal for a short time, He gradually recovered the of his legs and the | curvature of his spine was reduced one inch. Then "he was sat home, still |oneased in the jacket. 1t becami worn and recently it burst. Sister Re {becca brought him back to the hospi- tal on Monday for a new jacket. He was suspended his {around which braces had been fasten al, only the tips of his toes being | al owed to touch the floor, and then the hy sicians wound around him hirsdrod Yards of gauze bandage that] had been dipped in liquid plaster His larms and legs were free, but his torso use by ' lwas swathed like a mummy. | "I'he plinth was fixed in the back and held in, place by straps passing oved shoulders. When the gauze dried mado <heath in whieh his deform Spine not budge. He prob» will to wear it lwo years, but by that time the think his back will be Emi The other case ix that of a little girl brought to the hospital ten She way affected just | was the little boy. Both her legs were paralyze. She, too, was encased in a calot jacket, and now able walk." The physitians thik her more extraordinary than tha! of She is still in the hospital. has $18 oid ably could have ph wsicians {who was days ag is to cure | how Renfrew, 'has 'Barnet recover Cumming against the! company to alleged infringement of a patent, | Francis H entered action Manufactur: { ) {damages for refrigerator the tripping up one of | promptly of their legs | chin, | one 4 as | the ! T0S0UTH iE ---- A Fund to Be Raised For Purpose. SPEYER GIVES $5,000 A MONSTER SHIP WITH GREAT POWER. It Will Develop More Energy Than the Mauretania and Will Make Thirty Knots An Hour When Going at Top Speed. TOWN OF GANANOQUE. A Wedding on Tuesday--The Mac- Sosald Cadets. Sdnsnoue: '13.--A pleasant event tool a A 10:30 yésterday at the home of Waldron street, where his eldest daughter, Miss Edith Bews, was uni- ted in marriage to Charles Suaphian- gon, Rev. re ratey pastor o Andrew's church, performed the cere- mony before immediate relatives of the contracting parties. The young couple were unattended. The house was handsomely decorated. Mt. and Mrs. Stephenson leit for Orillia . to spend their honeymoon with relatives of the groom. On their return - 'they will rd de in Gananoque. The pald cadets met last ev- ening at their armory in the Ganano- que Ion annex to complete. their or- ganization, arrange details of drill, ete. William Kéleg is' captain of the corps ana Sidoey Abrams lieutenant, and they have sixty. names enrolled. London, Oct. 13.--At the Mansion house, over by a meeting yesterday, the 1ord mayor 'by a number of other prominent per- sons, it was unanimously agreed to support the fund recently "proposed for the * equipment of the South Pole ex pedition of Capt. Robert F. Scott. A subscription list was opened,) which i Sir Edgar Speyer headed with'/a con- | | tributich of $5,000. It stated, unoflicially, that the | construe tion of battleship cruiser | will be begun at Davenport in No- | Iramin r. The vessel will have engines | of 78,000 horsc-power, which is 4,000 i { at presided | | and attended | a horse-power greater than the engines lof the Mauretanian develop, and will | be capable of making thirty knots an [hour at top speed. PITH OF THE NEWS. | The Very Latest Culled From All Over The World, Hamilton will be divided | wads. Fhe Prince of Monaco g8 seriously il | {and his death is probable. Steelton is figuring on installing a| $30,000 electric light system. The czar of Rusia will - visit King | | Victor 'Emmanuel of ltaly this week. Last year 200,700 bushels: of grain were shipped from Halifax to Mexico. | Twelve bookmakers were arrested on | the Jumaica race track, at New York, on Tuesday. Amundson, on his next polar ney, will use trained polar bears haul his sleds. . The Textile and Cordage company will probably start up in Qwen Sound in the near future. . Ingram, of Culgary, jewelry worth $3,000 stolen irom = ; deposit vault. , Great difficulty ix being expericnced in the offoris 10 convict alloged im- moral women in Winnipeg. Premier McBride, of British' Colum- has ordercd an enquiry Gonoerning explosion in the Wellington col- into cight jour- Lo | had a bia, i | the | liery, The ,i|vivendi has | termination ceedings. | The United States state department | announces the resignation of Charles Crane, of Chicagoy'as minister to China. The Toronto police commissioners have decided henceforth refuse [licenses to restaurants employing fe- | males. An Italian, named Spanelli, was con- vieted. at North Bay assizes of the { murder of a Chinaman in a Haileybury { restaurant. | Parkdale have entered another team in the junior O.R.F.U. It will be de! Newfoundland © fisheries ;madus been renewed until - the of 'the arbitration pro- to '|signated Parkdale B, It will replace | the defunct Beach team. | The dissolution of the British parlia- | {ment this week, marking the opening of the fight for. the abolition of the {House of Lords, is believed to be pro { bable. {It is understood that the price paid tby the Niagara Navigation Co. -and Richelieu and Ontario Navigation Co. for Milloy's wharf, Toronto, was $280,- | 000 | The last * was driven in the | National Transcontinental railwaw be {tween Fort William "and Winnipeg, on | Tuesday, and the line now stretches from Fort William to Edmonton. | Admiral Sir John 'Fisher, sefiior will likes from the admiralty on Octo- {her 22nd, and he clevated to the peor- ape with the title of Baron Thetiord. I A "boiler: exploded in the electric | works at Aylmer, Ont, killing Harry the engineer, and causing a fire stoped the Brandon Shoe fac- The loss is about $200.6000. three thousand post cards, asking for the commutation of | sentence of Mrs. Robinson, were ceived at the department of justice | Tuesday. in addition to many ters ; F. H. Sherman, who for neacly five cars directed the policy of the Min- os' Union in the Crov's Nest Pass, land who was onc -of th: foremost la- | hor leaders in Canada, ied, on. Mon day, at Fernie, from Bi ight's disease | The board of Methodist missions bas adopted the report of the com- {mittee an the extension of the work lin Japan. This means that there will he considerable widening of the efforts of the Methodist churcn in the Flow- {erv Kingdom. rag ; F. G. Jemmett, trustee t he wharéholders of the defunct" Sovereign hank has bought for the sum of 3600 - {000 the Alaska Central railroad, which {runs fromr Seward, on.the Alaska coast, 460 miles north to the Tana- na river, | spike { that | tory. | Over re- on let- for ison, i streot, {spent { chester, |eon, | homes thim. the | They are waiting on the aotign of the |government to furnish them with rifles, etc., and expect to-settle down lio business early next week, The local branch of the W.C.T.U. met at 'the home of Mrs. Rorace Grii- fin, Garden street, last evening, when the report of Mrs. B. O. Britton, dele- gate to the district' convention, held few weeks ago, at Newboro, was given, Mrs. John LaRose, River for Toronto yesterday, jceived a telegram street, having stating that Charles ILaRose, in that city. spent with her Clayton, N.Y. Mr. and Mrs. the past parents, left re- her was seriously ill Mrs. Ida Lalonde, King a few days this . week brother, James Belleville, Scally, of Kingston, few days with the Mr. and Mrs. Whit- more, Garden street. Mr. and Mrs G. H. Moore, spending some time with Montreal relatives, have returned to town, prior to removing to Rochester for the winter. Miss Edith Bell, Ro- N.Y., is visting relatives in town, having been summoned to the {bedside of her! mother, who is se {riously ill. Mrs. R. B. Donevan, Eden Grove, who has been in Kingston gen: eral hospital for some time past; {reporteguio be rapidly improving The trustees of the Willow® Bank school have been compelled, by the powers that be, to let their teacher 'go, she not possessing the requisite qualifications. Mr. and Mrs. 'A. Richardson, {have returned from a short | Lensdowne friends. latter's 18 Leeds, visit with Mrs. Campbell and Ross, spending several weeks with friends in town, have leit for their in Hartford, Conn. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Coley, of M&ntreal, spent a short time here with relatives this week, on their way to locate at Erantford. | Dr. and-Mrs. J. P, Sinclair have returned from a short visit with re- 'atives in Hartford, Conn. Mrs. Frank Wallace, spencang the past few weeks with her parents, Mr. and Mrs J. J. Courtney, Church street, has leit to ioin her husband in Syracuse, N.Y. Mrs. J. Hoeckstra. and her mother, Mrs. Wiliam Bulloch, First street, have left to spend the winter in Chi Cago. i ------ Nearly Beaten To Death. Rochester, N.Y., ' Oet, 13.--Kkescued just in time to save him from 'being beaten to death, Lewis Olah, twenty- three years old, a Hungarian, is ly- ing at the Batavia hospital suffering from a fractured skull. Hé may die. Olah was arrested for an alleged at tempt ' to assault the two-year- -old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 'Stephen Antel, fellow countrymen, near ' La Roy. Olah, it is sala, was discovered carrying the child inte the woods. A posse was organized and when they located Olah he drew a knife irom this pocket and was about to use it on the leader of the men when on of the posse struck him over the head with a crowbar. Others severely The chidd was unhurt, WAS SEALED IN IT HAD LONG JOURNEY LOCK- ED IN BOX CAR. -------- Negro Travelled From Chicago to Coaticook Without Supplies-- He Was Almost Famished, Coaticook, Oct. 13.--A voung was taken out of va box car terday, under strange He was in some way sealed in a box ear at Chicago, and came through without anyone hearing him until near here without having any { thing to eat or drink. He was heard at some place between Sherbrooke and Richmond, but no one dared break the seal. He was released here by the customs' officers and agent and given into the care of Constable Adams, who gave him . the necessaries of life, al though not as much to eat and dripk as he wanted. He was about{ half dead when released. He was "sent back to Island Pond last evening beat negro here, yes- circumstances SCARES FARMER. Sight of Balloon Drives Minnescia Man Iusare. Cloud, Minn., Oct. 13.--Stanis laus. Somaviska, a bachelor, Afty-five years old," who hay been living the life of a reluse in a shack in the woods ten miles north-east of Gilman, in Benton county, was driven ansane by the sight ok the balloon St. Louis IHL He was leading h cow 'along the road when the balloon appeared. He spied the monster in the sky, and when it > im-------- | "Catspaw" rubber heels will shorten {distances for you by making the step safe, sure and springy. Try a pair. {Any shoe dealer or repaiper. A committee the Explorers' investigating assertion of { Cook, Moupt MEKinléy. | "i's 'old-fashionad"' bit good strong. The horehound candy sold at Gibson's Red Cross - Drug Store, in twisted sticks, of the Dr. Chala | that he reached the sumonit' of | the and grew larger and siemed. to be making {directly for him, he dropped the rope {attached to the cow, and fled in the direction of his home, screaming that vengenance was upon him and that he must now. dic. Somaviska ran into woods and bas not been seen | since. ! Snow, fell,. Tuesday, in. the Niagara district and over a large portion . of the west, 'reasonnble, st TURK'S, WEATHER PROBABILITIES Ont., Oct. 18. ~Ottawa Valley per St. bawrence : (10 aun Strong southwest and west winds, cloudy and cold, with local showers ar steel, Thursday, Jurdy Sloudy and cold, The Modish Figure KH You Wear the Begin with the Corset! Not the gown, build the founda- tion of the low bust, the long hip and back, the al- together slender effect of the present mode. You have never known the possibilities of your figure until you have worn these perfect garments, the new models are especially fa smart, nipping in just enough i at the waist line to the NEW WAIST CURVE. Come in, let us fit you just actly the right model fo your individual figure. Prices Range From $1.35 to $5.00. . MARRIED. WATSON--MUDIE.~In King Oct. 12th, 1969, by Res Muckie, Margaret Patton daughter of Mrs, John Mudie Edward Caird Watson, of De GILLIES --McCANN King Oct 12th, 1809 by the wrahile Archdeacon of Ontario, assisted hy the Reverend . Jpupes Rollins, B.A uncle of the bride, Jessi, Taoilwe McCann, only daughter of "Jam R. McCann, to Austin Hain only son of David Gillies, Kx-M for County of Pontiac, of ( Place. on ston : John br DIED. MANLY. --At Vancouver, on Oet:. 6th, 1909, Joseph. A. G. Manly aged evighteen years dnd seven months. Funeral private. Requiem mass will be celebrated at 8t. Mary's * Cathedral, Thursday morning, Oct 14th, at a.m. Friends invited #ttend mass. to tha ROBERT J REID, The leading Undertaker. "Phone, 577. 227 Princess street. Our Coffee Has that delicious fragrant aroma, and with its lovely. golden hrown color, it fairly makes your mouth water before drinking and your lips smack aftery Ask for Our Java Mocha Blend pure. PRICE, 40 CENTS!{. Jas, Redden & Go. IMPORTERS OF NE GROCE RIES; "TAKE NOTICE. If you want any belting stoves, I have them in all sorts and sizes: Prices ' Phope, T05: Guaranteed A Socialist Victory. Berlin, Oct. 13.--~The socialists cap< tured the Cobourg division in the by election, yesterday, polling 6, 185° votes against 3,460 polled by the na- tional liveral candidate and 3,041 polled by the radical candidate. = Tne largest socialistic vote in this divis- jon, heretofore, has been 3000. The febling 'against the new taxation is nelieved top have been. largely Xespais %ible for the socialist victory, pai ------ "Fhis is cough and cold wegther.™ Puy cough réntedies and aripp "akletd at Gibson's Bed Cross Dig Store,

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy