Daily British Whig (1850), 11 Nov 1909, p. 1

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

YEAR 76-NO. 263, BUSY SESSION Is Likely to Be Seen Ottawa. in i this PARLINNENT OPENS LIKELY LAST EARL WILL ATTEND. Several Measures That Promise Create Much Discussion--Can- ada's Relatjonship to Navy ? Bpecial to the Whig, Ottawa, Nov. 11.---The governor- usual elaborate the ceremonies being evidence and demand for seats from the "400"" of the capital and the | dominion generally being greater than | last I Will such a | ever before. It is probably the time Earl Gray will preside at In |preventorium, a l organized GREY i from {who have been affected with tubercul-| OSIS TO AID Gift of $700,000 For Tuberculosis Preventorium. York, . Nov. HUMANITY. 11.--Separate gift (OMPEL DRIL a for fighting disease of nearly a million! {dollars are announced in New York, Of | i | New | establishme ithe i dition to the he of Physicians a gum $700,000 is to be used nt of a nd Surgeons of Cc lumbia university. connection which New York and - reston with the movement has purposes to tenemerits childrer heey e them to norma for tubéreulosis preventorium for children, while $150, {000 was given by Mr. and Mrs. Wil {liam C. Sloane for a seven-storey ad- »epital of the' College » tuberculo:ts |The New Zealand Budget Proposals. i } 0 FULFIL OFFER ot | take | OF MUCH MONEY PROPOSED ' | EXPENDITURE 1 health before it is too late. The plan to Iwas formally orgamzed at {last evening in idence of Henry Phipps. the | United States+Will We Have a [than Straus includes a $500,000 Lakewood, N.J., A contribution {tage and estate wr ¢ { Canadian function as his term of office | as the king's ada ends this The much-discussed probable effects Canada's of the the session, and will, in all probabil ity, be the that will affect Umited: States most. Of course, erted that ate representative in Can yer bill on Canada, will Payne and it and proposed navy be issues to loom ones it Canada does discrimin the United States, is n against ington, drawn in a way dent Taft, and it is vonsidered that would mean Canada's retaliating The chances are that Uncle Sam will have no formal with ( ada. The big Sir Wilfrid that Canada with the building of a new there who it complications more' or Jess that it be traight £5,000,000 tariff war an- is to go ahead but will cause | mated navy, are those say better to make a annual contribution of from to £10,000 000 the imperial navy, and others disap- prove of any expenditure at all. ripans, would to DIED OF HER OWN ACT. Reporters Find Head of Fall River ' . Victim: Taunton, Mass, Nov. 11.--While the attorney for "Prof." Frank 1. the Fall River herb aoctor, { | two | and | winter and that the new tariff law was, at Wash- trips of any sort until next to hand oul {when punishment for it, but it appears' the |will spend the Christmas holidays in responsibility is to he left with Presi {the White House with his family. | summer {complete issue will be the new navy. {breakd ywwn of last. spring is certain in| field equipment. Laurier has plainly inti | the near future, | | | | | | occupied {land new by the institution the Fifth avenue > to the work by cot at late Grover Cleve just before his death. There the : its home. general opeaed parliament, to-day, the [Miss Dorothy Whitney contributed 1 2600,000 endowment fund. will have PRESIDENT FAGGED OUT. Take No Next Wilmington, 000 mile journey states and cluded, President wards at home at time on his long the {well fagged out Mr. Taft visiting the he hopes t better, began at has much which con NS. territories rgcovery More Trips Summer. Nov. 11. through thirty-three all but Taft is speeding to con Washington to spend the night the largest during | rcident has had a wonderfully White 'Ih House, trip, but is pretty all idea Panama has given Isthy will up of of take nus no more o visit Alaska. is improvement during steadily the Beverly tinued from GAVE LIFE FOR RABBIT. --Sydes Phoenixville, 1 a wall with Ame- | Man Climbed Down Well to Rescue! Gave Way. Nov. 11.--His 'enn, {pity for a rabbit that had fallen into cost Frank Rocbaugh, thirty | years old, an enginecr, his life. Roebaugh and a friend frightened a rabbit, which, iw plunged into a two men could ite efforts to escape, dexp well, where the hear it splashing about in the water, { While his friend ran Hill, Hower a bit of plank who | Roebaugh for a rope to to the rabbit started to climb down the pleaded guilty in the Pristol county jrouph stone lining of the well, which to connection mdictment with was superior court manslaughfecyin Tiverton suit ing a statement in the nature of \ confession, reporters in the neighbor ing city of Fall River found in a spot indicated the the head of the victim, which completed dismembered body of the an the mak case mystery, in confession young wo man, Hill's attorney, in his statement to the: court, said that the Ame lin St. Jean, of Woonsocket, died in Hill's office as a result of after the herb to give her which she sought, Pending the examination of the h and in of the statement of doctors they could not aceept Hill's confession, Judue vens the or victim, her own act, doctor = had refused surgical ad, View four that alleged postponed Hill was remanded to Sta sentence mn and jail. Weak women shoyld read my "Book No. 4- for Women." It tells of Dr. Shoop's Night Cure. Yells how these soothing, healing, aotiseptic, supposi ories, bring quick and certain help The book is free. Address Dr. Shoop, Racine, Wis. All dealers. Alice Paul and Amelia Brown, window-smashing suffragettes, of aon, Ene. Lon were sentenced each to ond month at hard labor. Both are mem- bors of tho Mrs. Emmaline Parkhwst | Sequel of His Island organization, If you are tired taking the old-fashioned griping pills try ter's Little Liver Pills and take comfort. A man can't stand thing, One pill a dose The retirement of Car- |OIme« every Dr Goldwin Smith, from active journalism, is an- [especially following the big steamboat | noamend in the Toronto Weekly which has, for of his utterances. Sun, DAILY MEMORANDA. Want a Fur Coat That looks real fine, So at Campbell's 1 ordered mine Board of Fdueation; 8 p.m "Septimus," Grand Opera p.m House 8.15 Pheatre--" "The Man With the or "A Change of Heart Hearts,' the story of Illustrated | Songs. ilou ney, ken I'wo Maud B Mo the time lamps add to ks These long evenings are reading and our perlect the pleasure of your boc Easy on the eyes, or Gas \ » have mapy prett metal and. china All Kituls of lamp trimmings Rebertson Bros. of | saved in, burying him L debris. Kaiser To Nov. 1 Berlin, { confided to Count the | fear that he w | the sensation of flying in the air, ursler tons of Stay On Land: 1.--Emperor William Zeppelin recently his : | ould never experience | He | said he had promised the empress that he would néver w lin a dirigible bal R.1., had | His majesty relief | | regarded all air Ou, added wake an ascent either loon or an aeroplane that -the craft as most peril empress Suit Dismissed. Justice Teetzel dismissed the action lof the Bav of (Quinte railroad against |eiaimed $2,911 damages for an a Sey | dent at in dismissing the suit, said that great | ! ) h both | wholly with the 'brute | neg | | | large | the C.P.R., in I'weed had igence partie NO DEFENGE PUT IN i |WAFE GIVEN A DIVORCE IN which the plaintifi Junction. The jue been shown by WATERTOWN COURT. ------ tua is the Watertown, N. in this « Islands, Man Y., Nov. 11l.--Hanry Try them. Appleton, well known at the Thousand | ity and in Syracuse | scrap at Alexandria Bay last summer years, botn an organ lin | Jr. | resulted in Appleton being held for |grand | was again in | himself {a way 1 a { j the {ant | wile, | husband's {ested | Attorney { Appleton d {other day which he Pp \ isger caused h me th in supreme court wry, | vordict was orde | pleton failed 'to put in an appearance, appears | McKin ing for Mrs It appears at that at a big an Ak keeper xandria strengthe and suspicions {was « 1 Of and river summer hompson arrated a number of things whic h id when he was not engaged lin soliciting for a line of boats along | unched Walter Visger in the eve with such force that | later | is arrest, which the licted and fined $50 e limelight here he became the defend in a divorcee action brought by his Clara. who told her story of her alleged misdoings in a way | that caused everyone to become inter- When the evidence was all inal that she ved for the wife. Ap ley, Clayton, Appleton. that thie islands last summer 1n | cauded his wife to become nicionus of the pleasures to be found Appleton enjoyed A talk with board Mrs. resort Bay ned the was on the sland Broke His Jawbone. ornwall, Nov hip \ He ¢ of ill y his buggy ked Flom s jawbone ki OMe Himes met with a peculiar Roches, 1 Fleming 4iower {a well-to-do farmer: of Cornwall town- accident th the villag alightec rove into and as he ther horse in the face, break will be laid Al ing He rest Xa: | Meet With a Until tannually, His 13,- good thes long summer, He The im- [president is especially glad in getting probable that he will take any course {home to know that Mrs. Taft The great the and | nervous (years, lge, Life--Apple- Who Was Re- cently Fined in Watertown For [education of her children Assaulting a Steamboat Man, when g-house Appleton s action for divorce | assed up a meeting | For Internal Defence--The Present System is to Be Reorganized to Views of Imperial =} Defence Committee--To Have | Local Option. Wellington, N.Z., Nov. 11.--The New { Zealand budget proposals include the {raising of a loan, not exceeding £2,- 000,000, at and one-half per cent., for the fulfilment of the Dread- nought offer. The naval proposals in- {volve a total expenditure of £25,000 £150,000 towards the and £100,000 three cost as to im- of the Dreadnought, {a contribution to the admiralty the difference between the {perial and local rates of pay. Regarding internal defence, it is pro- | posed to re-organize the present sys- {tem on lines approved by the imperial defence conference as applied to local All boys between the ages of twelve and eighteen will undergo an elementary progressive training in the cadet All men be- tween cighteen and: twenty-one will undergo two years' compulsory train- ing on stated evenings, hali days and whole days, and also fourteen days |annually in camp. A volunteer force {of 20,000 will be maintained -and rifle clubs will be encouraged. The cost of the estimated at £100,- {000. A further sum of £150,000 will be expended, in a period of three on additional armament and cover conditions. division. young is scheme of the budget speech, that an ar- reached between In the course | Premier Ward { rangement had { hotelkeepers and permitting national "No announced been prohibitionists = for and li {legislation local option on the basis oi cense, no liquor." | : | TO SHUN POLITICS. 'Stay at Home and Mind the Baby." London, Nov. 11.--Miss Marie relli, writing on "The Problem Of The i Suffragette, ' -in the current issue of | the London Magazine, says: |: 'My sympathies are with all women {who work; chiefly perhaps with the | brave and patient heroines among the | poarer who bring up their | children the midst of harrowing | difficulties, and 'who love their hus- | bands faithfully through all trial-and \emptation. These 1 look upon as 'the | weavers of the threads on the | which makes the fabric of the nation. i hey too divinely laborious: to look for 'rights than | they possess. "Next, | truly sympathize with wo | men in the arts and professions; that {is, if they really are in earnest about | their work and are not mere dabblers { To jollow art or literature adequately | nll for Co- classes mn loom are about other either man or woman a | taste of martyrdom, and 1 admire all { those irrespective of sex who clasp the cross to gain the crown. "But I have no sympathy whatever {with woman in politics, There she utterly of and 1 am man who; see such' a, tumult- j uous 'Stay at land mind the baby." For politics are no longer dignified; they have become { vulgar. And it is better to stay at { home and one life to possible | good issues than mix in a fray of con tradictory propositions concerning the {lives of millions, especially those {millions generally take their own way lin the end. "If = each woman honestly devoted | herseli to the proper bringing up and her training work all the the social laws is out her sphere ing her rushing into | vortex, cries: home rear as would needs in | 80 administered { : } | concerning her sex.' reforms she | CANADIAN GIRL BARONESS. * | Miss Steverman Weds After Four : Days Courtship. Halifax, N.S., Nov. 1l.--After a , | courtship lasting four days, Miss Ada Steverman, a young Luuenburg gicl, {has become Baroness Von David, hav- - ling secretly wedded the youthiul hold- i that German title in Boston {some time ago. A few of Miss Stever- {man's former classmates have received brief notes from her, infogming them Nad wedded Marion Pritchard - {Von David, a medical student of Bos- | ton, some time ago. It was at ® recital she first met Von David. The young German was so 1 { much taken by her beauty and musical talent that he' secured an introduc- rtion. After an ardent Teutonie court- |ship of four Miss Steverman \ | consented to share Von David's title and théy were quietly married in Pro- y idence As soon as er of days, | ted his medical studies he will return to Germany. Miss Steverman is a of the late €. E. Kaulbach, niece AMP. Fur-Linéd Coats For Ladies'. { 1i you investigate our styles, quality will find they are not We execute your own factory, and you shade of cloth, style pbell Bros'., the fur lists. { andvalues you , |surpassed ig Canada. forder in. own may pick your lining, ot Ca 1 | ined spe o coat ® Owing to a remarkable boom the Homestead an double time steel de, steel mills tra Wii run KINGSTON, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, Von David has comple | fi NOVEMBER 11, 1909, LATEST NEWS Nottoway county, who is totally blind Despatches From Near And in the day, but can see like a cat in : @ REMARKABLE YOUTH. Blind in Daytime, Sees Like Owl at Night. Richmond, Va., Nov. 11.--Medical experts are interested in the case of nineteen-year-old Audrey Wilson, of the dark. The young man can speed Distant Places. a bicycle when the might is so dark % that ordinary people have to walk iy THE WORLD'S TIDINGS with caution, but in the day he gropes about able only vaguely to distin: GIVEN IN THE BRIEFEST POS- SIBLE FORM. 3 guish. objects and with no discrimina- ---- tion as to colors. Because of his pe- culiar infirmity," the young man is Matters That Interest Everybody --Notes From All Over--Little noted as a 'possum hunter. He can distinguish the animals in the trees of Everything Easily Read and Remembered. in the dark as readily as a dog can follow the scent. Al his life Wilson has suffered from this defect. He says D. W. Hines, president of the Farm- ers' railway, at Prince Albert, Sask., has gone insane. it grows out of too much light en- tering the eye. It is calied the *'al- bino eve,"" he says. James Thielman, head waiter at Delmonico's, in New York, leit a for- tune of $500,000. Nine men lost their lives in an ex- plosion in a colliery at Nanticoke, Pa., on Wednesday. Over a $1,000 in strike pay has al ready been paid out to the Ottawa feather workers who are on strikes Honry Bosnell was shot through the stomach at a charivari at W. Me- Laughlin's near filendale, Man., and will die," President Taft, in a speech at Rich- mond, ¥a., oxilined the proposals he will make 14 congress in his annual message. J The Widdsor hotel, Montreal, is to have its main building improved and remodelled at an expense expected to total a million dollars. New Zealand will re-organize her system of internal defence in ageord- ance with the recommendations of the imperial defence committee. 'A Whitby jury found a verdict for the defendants, Mrs. and Fllen Bow- ler, charged with setting fire to the stables of Mrs. Wilson, a neighbor. Toronto's 150 "Indian listers" are being notified by registered [letter that they will be liable to fine and impris- onment if they seek to buy liquor or loiter around hotels. The bye-election in West Middlesex, on Wednesday, resulted in the return of Duncan €. Ross, government, by 155 majority over Mr. McLauchlin. Isaac N. Fulton, an aged and re spected resident of Chesterville, re- cently passed away, aged seventy- eight years. He was a devoul Metho- dist and a staunch liberal. The general stove, pest office, resi- dence, and workshop owned by Ar thur Barclay, at Dunceaef, in Lobo township, were totally destroyed by fire, Incendiarism is suspected. The stcamer Isaac L. Ellwood ram- med the upper gate of the Soo lock demolishing the south leaf of the gate and putting the | big American lock out of commission for the balance of the season. At Collingwood, the Canadian Paci- fic railway company has decided to add thirty feet to the Athabasca, which is in the dry-dock. The vessel will be cut in two and the new part placed in the centre. Toronto's treasurer the Toronto Railway company a clinque for $26,902.93 as its share of the gross receipts of that corporation for October. The amount received for October last year was $24,525.77. Two sons of George Uttick, a Rus- sian Jew, were burned -to death at Berlin, Ont., on Wednesday night, and a third was very seriously -burned, They were locked up in the house dur- ing their parents' absence and fire broke out. Miss Annie Pelley, Cairo, Ill, & clerk in a dry-goods store, was mur- dered, Monday. The erime was re- vealed when children found her strip- ped' and mutilated body in an alley. She had been gagged and choked to death and made the victim of a fiendish assault. IS PUZZLING EXPERTS To Know What to Charge Against An Hypnotist. Somerville, N.J.. Nov. 10.--An inter- esting legal question is a sequel, to- day, of the autopsy performed last night, on the body 'of Robert Simp- son, the hypnotist subject whom Ar- thur Everton, a hyppotist, failed to restore after placing him in a trance. The autopsy disclosed that Simpson's | death was due to a rupture of the | aorta. To just what measure of re-| sponsibility, if any, Everton will final- | ly be held, by the law, is a question which is puzzling the legal experts. The prosecutor of tha district, is cre dited with the intention of holding Everton on a techmical charge of manslaughter until his case can be passed upon by the grand jury, next month. CAUGHT BY BELT. James B. Denning of Strathroy Has a Remarkable Escape. Strathroy, Ont., Nov. 1l.--James B. Denning, an employee of the Ca- | meron & Dunn company, here, had a | miraculous escape from death. Den- ning had climbed up to turn down a pulley, but did not take the usual precaution to slacken the speed of the belt, and by some means he was thrown to the cement floor, seventeen feet below, head first. In falling, how ever, came in eontact with the belt, which turned his body, thus sav- ing his life. Strange to say, no bones were broken, although he is suffering great pain. He will recover. he GRAVE ROBBED. Valuable [Pieces of Jewellery Stolen From Body. Glen's Falls, N.Y., Nov. 11.--Grave- robbers have at work in this vicinity and the police of this city and neighboring towns are on the lookout for further depredations. The superintendent of the Union eemetery reported that the grave of J. Edward Howland, a Sandyhill millionaire, who died a few months ago, had been opened during the night and the body robbed of several valuable pieces of jewelry. NEW U.S. FIVE-CENT PIECES. Proposed Coin Will Bear Head of Washington. Philadelphia, Noy. 11.--Dies proposed five-cent piece bearing the head of George Washington, to take the place of the coin now in dircula- tion, have been prepared by the en- oravers of the United States mint in this city. IH the government "adopts this coin it will be the first in autho- vized circulation to bear the head of the first president of the republic. 10 PRAGTIGE LAW CAPTAIN SEALBY TAKES UP ANOTHER PROFESSION. reccivedd from for a Ambitious to Be A Lawyer--Sink- ing of His Steamship Leads Him to Devote Himself to Legal Studies. New York, Nov. 11.--Capt. Inman Sealby, of the White Star liner Repub- lie, which 'went down off Nantucket 1s- land last winter after passengers and crew had been rescued through the "0. QD." messages of "Jack" Binns, wireless operator, has been enrolled as a freshman in the law department of the University of Michigan. Years ago, long before he snuffed the salt sea breeze, the master of the Re- public had ambitions to take a course in admiralty law. Promotions came, the-diire of the ocean was strong, and Capt. Sealby would probably have gone down to the sea in ships all his days had not the Italian steamship rammed a hole in the Republic. Then came the drama of the sea that held the attention of whole nations for days. Six persons were killed, buf the rest of the human car: go of both crippled boats, 1,650 lives in all, were transferred to the steamer 3altic without mishap. Next day thé Republic went down, Capt. Sealby re- fusing to abandon his boat until the last vestige was under the waves. The White Star Liner' company brought suit against the owners Greenwich, Conn., Nov. 1k--A recep- the Florida. It may take ' years to tion to Mrs. Emmaline Pankhurst, the get it through the courts, and pend- | famous English suffragette, was held, ing the settlement Sealby, still under | yesterday afternoon, at Rosemary the employment of the White Star | Hall, one of the most fashionable line, will take . his long cherished |girle' boarding schools in the east course in admiralty law. As to |whose head, Miss Ruutzress, is vice whether he will hang out his shingle, |president of the Greenwich Equal that depends on how long the settle- | Franchise League. The largest gather- ment of the snit will take. > ling of Greenwich and New York so- SHOT AND KILLED. Smee - Was Mistaken For a Deer By a Chore Boy. Renfrew, Ont., Nov. 11.--A sad fatality has to be numbered to the ar too many cases of want of due precaution in shooting during deer hunting season. - James Price; a young man of Pakenham, a shantyman and employes of Messrs. Alexander Barnet & Company, lumbermen, Renfrew, was shot near the firm's shanty at Brule Lako, on Saturday, by a chore boy named Robert Huggett, just. recently ongaged. Price had left the shanty but a short time, when Huggett, go- ing 'out, noticed a movement in the ncarby bush. Hastily concluding it was eo deer, he took deadly aim, and Price was fatally shot through the neck, and died on Monday might. The body was brought to Renfrew by train and accompanied t- thew P. R. station by Mr. Barnel and his: two sons, Thomas 'and Harold, for trans- fr to the home of deceased, in Paken ham. Man high sn GREAT RECEPTION. Society Turns Out to Meet Eng- lish Suffragette. of | in the "I am a freshman," he said, "and if {ciety people the town has ever wit- | the other 'freshies," are ducked in a [nessed + was present. The . reception { pond or spanked up a tree or chased | took place in the parlors of the schoal lover the campus and 1 escape a like | which were prettily decorated with {fate I shall feel that I have been me- | palms, autumn leaves, ete., for the oe | glected and that I am missing some- | casion. The halls of Mrs. Pankhurst's thing from my college career." {lectnres in the evening were crowded, DIED AFTER SHORT ILLNESS, The Ladies of Church Gave a Fine Napanee, Nov. 11.~The ladies of the Western Methodist church held their annual King Edward supper on Tues- day evening, November 9th. The lad- ies spared no pains to make the church attractive with flags and bunt ing, and the supper was all that the most fastidious could wish, Fully 600 partook eof it. After the supper a splendid pro- gramme was rendered by local talent and patridtic addresses given by Rev. Mr. De Mille, D. L. Hill and Rev. W. H. Emsley. The musical part of the programme deserves especial mention. The vocal duet by the Misses Paul and and solos by Miss Myrtle Bell and Miss Lila Thompson and recitation by Miss Chrysler completed an evening of much enjoyment. Miss Minnie Miller is spending a holiday under the parental roof. She has spent the past six months in Paris, France, in the English hospital in that city, and returned to New York with a patient. She returns to her work in Paris after a short visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. S, R. Miller, John street. Very sad indeed was the death of Joseph McGee, "The Pines," on Tuesday morning, after but a few days' illness. Deceased took il} on Saturday night and when a doctor was summoned pronounced the trouble hemorrhage of the brain. He was forty-nine years of age and leaves a wife and three small children, About ten months ago the eldest son was drowned. Deceased was one of a family of six brothers, all residents of Fredericksburg. The funeral took place this afternoon. : Frederick Thompson left, yesterday, for Pasco, Wash, to spend the winter with his brother, Everett Thompson, in the hope that the milder climate will prove beneficial to his health. LOSS OF NICKEL Leads to a Suit to Recover $200 --Was Put Off Car. Ogdensburg, N.Y., Nov. 11.--A. Pray, of this city, wants $200 from the Ogdensburg street railway com- pany, for humiliation and other an- noyances, following the loss of a nickel which he claims he tried to in- sert in the slot of the fare box used by the conductor. The spring of the slot tossed the nickel back and it rolled on the floor. Pray and the conductor diligently searched for the coin, but were un- able to find it. Pray refused to hand over another fare, and he claims he was put off the car several blocks away from his destination. A. The Affair Is Off. Rome, Nov, 11.--"There i= no long- er any association betwesn Mies Katherine Elkins pnd myself." This statement, attributed to the Duke of tha Abruzzi and seid to have been mado in the presence of official pe:- sonages, is believed to close for good the reported match between the duke and the Ambrican heiress. It was re- ported by those who know the inside gossip oF the Italia royalty that the duke is soon to wed a Russian grand duchess. Does Not Plan Expedition. Washington, Nov. 11.--Commander Robert KE. Peary, the Arctic explorer, who has taken up his residence with his family in Washington for the winter, is not contemplating an expe- dition to the South Pole, While tha commander 'stands ready to furnish expert knowledge and advice to any explorer about to embark' on a {trip to the far south, as he thas previously stated, he is not preparing to make such trip himself. | [EST OF DISPOSITION SHE BLAMES CROQUET FOR ILL-HUMOR. Rector's Wife, Suing For Separa- tion Says Husband Quarrelled While Playing and Sulked. London, Nov. 11.--"l do not think there is any game which is so liable to put one out of humor as croquet," remarked Justice Bargrave Deane in the divorce court. The case 'in which the judge laid down this decision was the suit for judicial scparation which Mrs. Alice Mary Fearnley-Whittingstall brought against her husband, «Rev. Herbert Oakes Fearnely-Whittingstall, of Chal font St. Giles, on the geound of cruel ty. It was alleged that the rector fre quently lost his tempor, and his wife had stated that one one occasion when they were playing croquet he was so sunoyed because she raised a question as to whether his ball had quite gon through a hoop that be did not speak to her for days. Miss Gwendoline Lewis, a violin teacher, went into the witness box and stated that the rector had objected tc her stopping at the rectory on the ground that she supported his wil against him. She admitted that i another case she had been accused of causing the wife to bring a separation suit against her husband. The hearing was adjourned. : Damages In Jamaica. Kingston, Jamaica, Nov, 11.--All of the land lines are down, as a result of a storm that has swept this sec tion. Communication with the inter jor and neighboring islands is impos- sible. Floods followed the Wind storm and continue unabated. It is ul weak nerves that are erying out for help. them, «don't drug 'the 'stomach or stimulate .the heart or kidneys. That is wrong. Vitalize these weak inside nerves with Dr. Shoop's Restorative and see how fast good health will come. to you again. Test it and see. Sold by all 8. {dealer: mm r rpm---- - agin Hie Toronto, Ont., Nov. 11.--0Ott Valley and Upper St. Lawrence : 0 dn. ey fair and nite t Sho 0 Tatts , al o-day, localities on Friday. a. "a : SELLING LINES Doing things best has our Dress Goods reputa- from the very first. tell us repeatedly that have up-to-date reliable lines. We knew it in advance, but we like to be told ; and the more we're told the more we strive to do better. TO-MORROW WE OFFER Two very specigl lines tailored suits. (1) British Tweeds Tn half-tone stripes, Colors Blues, Greens, Browns,, etc. 44 inches wide and all wool. EXTRA SPECIAL, at Tbe. (2) A Great Line Of Homespun Tweeds, with Broadcloth finish, both Checks and Stripes, in all the new shades, 56 inches wide and all re wool. VERY SPECIAL, AT $1.15. for DON'T FAIL TO SEE THEM. EARI~BOWMAN,--~In Kingston, on Tuesday, Nov. 2nd, 1909, by tev. Douglas Laipg, William Frederick Earl, to Miss Flizabeth Bowman, hoth of this city. ROBERT J REID, The leading Undertaker. 'Phone, 577. R27 Princess street, New Goods } * . . Arriving Daily Valencia Raisins, Seeded Raisins, Sultana Raisins, Table Raisins, Cooking Figs, Table Figs, Dates, Sweet Cider. Jas. Redden & Co. P.S.--Hickory Nuts, 8c. per quart. "TAKE NOTICE." If you want any heating stoves, f have them fn all sorts and shes Prices reasonnble, at TURK'S, hese, FOB: TURGEON"S LAND DEAL. Quebec Government Submits Mat. ter to the Courts. Montreal, Nov. 11.--8ir Lower Gou- in made his first appearance in his old constituency of St, James, in the contest * between Ald. Robillard and Mr. Laflamme for the seat in the pro- vindial legislature. lying to the attacks made by Armand Lavergne up- on Hon. Adelard Turgeon, that the Iatter, while minister of lands and forests, had sold sixty-seven arpents of land, which was the property of the Quebec harbor commission, and Inter secured it for himself, Sir Lomer said that this had been done by Mr. Turgeon, but without the know of the other members of the cabinet. As soon as the facts became known, the jer stated, the government had submitted the matter to the courts, to decide whether Hon. * Mr. Turgeon's course was legal, or whethen the lands should still belong to "the province, \

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy