Daily British Whig (1850), 27 Jan 1910, p. 1

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YEAR 77-NO, 22 he s 3 KINGSTON, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JANUARY 27, 1910. Daily British Whig LAST EDITIOX = FAIR A -Forger Robbed Her of y 3 Her Gems. TRAPPED BY WOMAN WHEN SOUGHT DEATH. A The Prisoner Mad He Had Cashed Bad Cheques at Various Hotels -- Had Suicide. New York, Jan. The resource fulness of 8 woman deceived by man she believed wus to marry effected the capture of Frank wanted in Chicago and New forgeries, just before he had time to blow out his brains. He had robbed Mis, Frieda Sommors of $10,000 worth of diamonds Geis spent with to take were Tuesday evening Mrs, Sommers. He induced her off her diamonds, saying they bright they made him) dizzy "Put them in this," drew a small pocket and tossed iy across 50 he said, and he bag from to chamois his her. Mra. Sommers placed the diamonds in} the bag and laid iw on table. It was ther¢ next one like it, but gone. In some way substitution. her dressing morning, diamonds or had Geis had effected a vhe HE SAW HIS PLIGHT HE 'onfession--'rolonse Frank A Gels, Baltimore, Admitted | dam. Planned '°° thet her | A. Geis, | York for ee |. HEROIC. WORK $a¥#5 Town, 4 I lin Danger of Being Wiped Out by i Flood. | Pa., J 7.~Heroic work disaster Austin, an. town fr which this that saved to {has {similar out Johnstown twenty m a Ost A | big concrete dam above this caty con |tawning a body of water fifty feet deep, hundred feet nearly a long, showed signs of giving and three hundred families the hills, where they re i ago, 18x wide, and i mile awa; wen mained, When the break was discovered a large gang of men employed by local volun teers, set to work blasting one end of ithe breast of the dam. Others, at the risk of their lives, worked. to reach a valve at the bottom of the They succeeded, with a great hole in the side of big con wall, the water released until all danger was past, ay, t. to authorities, assisted - by many and the was gradually | MAY CAUSE RATE WAR. Into Roads. to Come Agreement With Other Jan Refuses i | Grand that [he notice Chicago, 27 Trunk railway it will not agree to the elimination of the all-rail differential to ithe proposed increase of eight cents per hundred pounds 'in the lake and rail rail differential rates, { In this connection it is War threatened, and the Erie Delaware & Lackawanna have that if the Grand Trunk into the the class served has rates nor and ocean and said that a rate 18 and served notice agreement rates on an hundred tdoes not they average pounds come lower of will SIX cents per FAMOUS DR. WILEY ACCUSED. At the discovery of her loss she went | into hysterics, and the appearance of two detectives who had been shadow ing Geis did not ressuré her. At moment the telephone bell rang. "Hush," said the woman detectives, 'here's your then into the telephone : you Frank ?"' "Buying a $275 fur coat," said Geis, He had pawned one of the diamonds to get the money, Mrs. Somers whispered the address and while the detectives rushed to the shop, she kept the man at the other end of the wire until he was caught, When arrested Geis tried to himself, but the detectives were quick for him. They found another re- volver in his hotel room. "1 always kept ready to go," told them. "I knew it couldn't Jong, it did." The diamonds were recovers] and identified. Geis who comer from Baltimore, was recently employed by the Hurle, Ma. chine company, and confesses ¢! at las, October he forged the name of Nei ©. Hurley to a check for $2,900, whic was cashed for Wim by (he Bank of the Republic in that ctv Then he fled to San Francisco and later came here. Yhe Hotel Astor and the Waldorf bolt hae his bad checks for $150 and boun have ! lookin z for him. He was held in $10,00 bail. to man," and "Where ure shoot Geis last i h Nationa wen Big International Park Planned. Washington, D.C, Jan. 27.--The fact that Canada and the United States are engaged in A to-opergtive scheme for the establishment of an interna- tional park of about 50,000 square miles along the backbone of the con- tinent in the two countries was de- veloped in the senate yesterday. It eame to the surface in connection with the consideration of a bill look ing to the creation of the Glacier National Park in northern Montana. It was stated that negotiations were in progress looking to the establish- ment of a similar park on the Cana: dian side of the snternational line which it is intended shall connectiwith the proposed American reservatic n. The C.INR. at Smith's Falls poses safeguarding traflic by up five streets and putting a high level bridge across Montague' street in the north end. All trafic would be over this bridge, Get your Sunday supply of Choco- lates, at Best's, on Saturday, at hal price, : pur- cloning that | the| U- too | but it has been high flying wile | Alleged to Have Stolen Jewels From | a Patient. | Pittsburg, Pa., Jan Doctor C Wiley, the famous Thaw alienist, is He is his sani- Spanish for a bankrupt through that case known wide for camp exploits the | war. Tuesday he arrested leged larceny of jew the gift of a fiancee from woman patient The theft will probably stop the wedding as well, the country | tary in wi al n -------------- Priests Transferred. Wooler, Ont., Jan. Rev, Michael McGuire, Wooler, and BrightSn, been appointed to the charge of Douro, succeeding the late Father { Keilty. Rev. Father McGuire is a na- | tive Havelock. He has been in charge of the Wooler and Brighton parish for the past twelve years. Rev. Father Kellsy of Peterboro' has been appointed to Wooler. 27 Zi has ol Plenty of Herring. St. John's, NAd., Jan. 27.--Despite the fears of many fishing captains that Newfoundland west coast herring fisherier are becoming' depleted, the catch for the season now ended shows an dncrease of 20,000 barrels over last vear. The total catch amounts to 84, 000 barrels. Thrown Into Acid Bath. New York, Jan. 26.--Roman Tahir sky is dving in a hospital. During a {rough and-tumble fight ih a brass | foundry yesterday a fellow-employee { threw him into a tubful of - diluted { sulphuric acid. His asswilant escaped. SHE WORKED A PLOT QUADRUPLETS DECLARED TO PLEASE HUSBAND, Los Angeles Woman Confesses Brood She Pretended to Bear Are Really Counterfeits, Los Angeles, Jan. 27.--On the re fusal of Dr. Armstrong G. Pratt to | Bin birth certificates for the quadru plets, supposed to have been born last Friday evening, at the home of Mrs. W. W. Wilson of No. 201) South Magnolia avenue, Dr. IL. H. Powers, of the Los Angeles health department, decided to make an investigation in the case. Dr. Pratt declared that in his opinion DAILY MEMORANDA. Fire 11 Friday "The House and light committee, 4 "G fas 2 Hous AIF Ne Xt Door." Grand Opera |p, that the babies had been taken Joint AOU W. meeting, lodge rooms, § po Prof. Pember. the hair artist Davenport's, 10 Brock St, to-day and to-morrow . : Sale of unclaimed Customs goods at examining warehouse, Market street, 18 am, Friday Bijou Theatre, "The rrow" (Wild West), * Fun in a Girl's oarding School" "Ben All Bey's Danc- ing Drops From Africa" Grand entértainment given bert C. Treueor, assisted by artists, Bt. George's Hall, Feb. 1, 8 pm. Admission, 250, by Her- St. ay, Jan 38th evening, benefit Motel Dieu All are cordially invited. y pm, | Limestone at Miss Message of an two blind Tea and sale Miss Brown's, 84 Barrie 1d afternoon and Hospital. none of the infants had been born at {the Wilson residence and that all had been born previous to last Friday. He said that Mrs. Wilson confessed to to the house! by a woman who had as- sisted her in perpetrating the hoax and that one of the infants was six weeks old, another was. a week old, he said, and the other two were about twenty fou: hours old when he first saw them Mrs. Wilson according to Dr. Pratt, not only admitted that the gquadru- plets were not genuine, but that two sets of triplets, which arrived at the Wilson home in past vears, which, brought. a lptter of recommendation and a signéd photograph from Presi dent Roosevelt, were made up of in- fant waifs picked up in various in- stitutions. , | De. Pratt said that when he ques- tioned Mrs. Wilson she appealed to him to assist her in carrying out her Dinner Sets $480 2 Seine ne we are 1 for a short time. Also a Set n acini Tr %2 pion, and assured him that her ., motive was an ardent desire to have i children and to ease hor hushand | who desired a Jacger family. Accord- {ing to her story, Mrs. Wilson . began | the deception several months ago and {carried out the details so secretly and | successfully as to deceive everyone { with the exception of the woman who | assisted her. : i Wilson added, the doctor said, 3 : genuine child was an twenty-five véars wiped REACHED 343 Combined Strength of Lib- erals, Labor, Nationalists. ONLY SHORT LIFE IS EXPECTED FROM ERNMENT, ANY Organizers Urged to Keep Vigilant And be Ready for Another Appeal to the Country--All the Cabinet Ministers Have Been Re-elected. Jan. The strength of the liberal, nationalist coalition or more than half the bers of the House of Commons. A unronist government, therelore, is out of the question and the only point still undecided is the exact strength of the coalition majority But an inde pendent liberal majority is equally out of the question only be predic fod for the ment, I'he standing parties 1s Unionists a7 .~- combined labor and 3H number of mem- London, has reached as a short life can incoming of the political Liberals Lahoz dns Nationalists Net Unionists gains, US. I'he party organizers already heen tructed {9 maintain unceasing ance amd tole prepared for other appeal 0 the country at moment. As an example of the difliculties fac ng thé government ion, and have an- any at the coming ses apart from the House of Lords the budget, it the party will introduce its "right rk' bill which the government opposed last session. This might easi y. lead the defeat of the ind to another dissolution. With 'the return of Premier ind War Minister Haldane all the cab inet Ministers have been now ed. After the declaration of t poll, ot East File, a number of suffragettes made an attack on Mr, Asquith, but were driven off by the police with whom they had several personal en counters. Austen Uhamberiiun, at Selly Oak, declared the unionists would not yield jot of their determination to maintain the union even if all the Irish votes could be bad for the asking. He added that the Irish would be pro- tectionist U they had a separate par- liament. J) BORN is probable labor wi to ministry Asquith re-elect one NEAR KINGSTON. Died as a Result of Blood Poisoning His Head Wounded. Special to the Whig. North Bay, Ont., Jan. ~Thomas Hay, C.P.R. élaims agent, injured in Webbwood™wreck, last Friday, died at eight o'clock, this home, North Bay. in result of Mr. Hay was aud had morning, at his Blood poisoning set as sixty-four years: old, railroaded forty-five years, joining the CPR. in 188. le was born near Kingston, and served the Grand Trunk at Brockville for many years, y Killed Coasting. Syracuse, NYS Jan. Hough, eleven years old, was killed, Walter Snmuth, fifteen, was fatally hur and Marjorie Hough, fourteen, bad her lez broken, in a coasting accident at Theresa, A party of fourteen on a heavy bob sleigh steep hill glary with fee, was going at a terrific young Smith, who lost control, and the.sleigh ran? into a telephone pale. "The entire party was thrown violently into the air None escaped without bruises The Capacity of In the course of his prong last evening, in Bethel church, Evangelist Stephens, commenting upon the disk lief of some people in the story 'of Jonah, told of a man, who is still liv: ing in Liverpool, who had been several hours in the belly of a whale. He also cited the experience of Frank Buller, an author of some note, and employed by the English government as a leec- turér,.on nautical cubjects. Mr. Buller states that on one eocasion, in cut- ting up a large whale, he found in it a shark seventeen feet long. a7 i on The speed, was at a very sleigh when Whales. Annual Meeting. The anmml meeting of the King- ston Hosiery Co., Lid, was held on Wednesday evening. The statement resented was considered factory, the amount of wages paid for the year being about $70,000. The following directors were elected : H. W. Richardson, E. J. Dwyer, James Minnes, James Richardson, A B Cunningham, Dr. Clemenis and John Hewton, Bethel Charch Revival. Where are the dead? Is there a heaven ? Is there a hell ? These were the questions ably discussed by Evan gelist Stephens, last evening, in Beth- el church. "Most people believe in a heaven, but as a rule men," said the evangelist, "don't want to believe ing! hell, and yet it is in the same X book that & loving God tells us how to make sure of one and escape the oth- a." t 3 ' 1+ At the annual meeting of the Bank of Nova. Scotia, N. {\. Mcleod, gener: al manager, resi . Tt was decided to increase the capital from three to four millions. During vhe year the bank earned pearly twenty per cent. on its capital. GOV. govern wounds on his head. | --John wore | 1 the wheel, | very satis | Bove-feloiiiompn- hers pair Man in Detroit Had Made a Fire Escape. Detroit, Jan. ~Three union suits 'bought at a bargain sale, Monday, by George Sauve, a travelling 'salesman, {from Montreal, saved lum and his | wife fromi death when the lodging { house, where they had engaged rooms, took fire yesterday. Eecape by way jof the stairs was cut off by the blaze. iSauve knotted the union suits to gether, tied one end to the "bedpost, threw the other put of the and thus he 'and his wife | {to the ground. | SAVED BY UNDERWEAR. i window, scrambled | | LEMIEUX, M.P.P been appointed sheriff Died From a Fall. , Unt, J 7 George Ar who and from esteemed resident, wn apple tree last fall hip, has passed away his ident and 10 com plication A VEILED ATTACK IMADE ON GOVERNMENT BY HON. G. E. FOSTER. |But Hugh Guthrie Unmasked the | Mover--No Party More Steeped in | Belief That the Victors Must Have | Spoils Than Tory Party. Special to the Whig. | Ottawa, Jan. 27~That hardy pen- | conial, the opposttion attack on the evils of the patronage system, with a demand for the to abolition of the {system instanter, occupied the time of the commons yestieday, As usual | Mr. Foster made the onslaught, using las basis of resolution cunningly drawn as to constitute practically a {direct motion of censure upon the | government, yet ostensibly mercly a non-partizan appeal for higher ordeals in politics. The resolution declared that the prevailing system of patron- |age was an incentive to corruption {and a menace to honest and efficient | government and should be abolished forthwith. While sustaining from citing any specific instances of the abuse of patronage Mr. Foster in gen- leral terms condemned the government for allowing its widespread applica- tion. On general principles ho at %ed it as a thing "witch plagues + legislator and plunders the coun try," untold worries to the ministers and their supporters, takes pp in one form or the other ninety- {pine per cent. of their time and ulti- results in the defeat of every government: The member for North Toronto ad- mitted that when he was a member of the government patror the biggest trouble which he and his col leagues had to worry with Hugh Guthrie, Wellington, ing to Mr. Foster's polemic {that his resolution had been clothed {in his usual exaggerated statement {and was evidently designed as a veil ed. partisan attack on the govern iment. It was characteristic of Mr | Foster's practice apd temperament. Ho {pointed out the inconsistency of the i resolufion coming from Mr. Foster who, pravious to 1896, had apparent- ly seen pothing wrong with the spoils {system as it then prevailed. Prior to the administration of the present government 'there was an unblushing application of the principle that to ths victors belong the spoils and none knew it better than did the member {for North Toronto. But the Laurier i government had instituted a large eform in this vonmection and the pre- {sont system, declpredl Mr. Guthrie, was {undoubtedly the best which had pre eled since confederation. Mr. Guthrie declared that all the recommendations © of the civil service {commissioners, that were practicable 'had already been edrried out by 1 'government. There was now no pa- tronage list in any department 4 the government and purchasmg agents had bern appointed ir cach depart- ment to ensure the purchase of all isupplies at the cheapest Npossible price. In every case lowest tenders werp accepted and stvery opportunity was ghen to all firms to tender, ir respective of polities. 5 | In conclusion Mr. Guthrie moved {the following amendment : "That "this house approves of the rapid ad- varves made by the government to- {wards the elimination of the system lof party patronage which has been in {operation under every administration {new confederation. and views with | satisinetion the system pow in force 'of making all important purchases by {public competition and 504 I On motion of Mr. Birrell the debate was adjourned, * In reply to Mr. Crosby' Sir Wilirid Laurier stated that no appointment id vot been made to fll master at Halifax reared hat | go CRUSes {mately © Was in reply- noted | Ve LATEST NEWS Despatches From Near And Distant Places. THE WORLD'S TIDINGS GIVEN IN THE BRIEFEST POS- SIBLE FORM. -- Matters That :Interest Everybody-- Notes From All Over--Little of Everything Easily Read and Re- membered. The king will February 15th, The damage caused by floods about Paris is placed officially at $200,000, ono, Hockey Wednesday night : Ottawas, 8, Canadians, 4 . Walsh played with Uttawas again. William Hayes, Richmond, Que., died Wednesday night. He was one of Richmond's oldest and most highly re- spected citizens 1 he open, parliament on commons railway commission threw out the Toronto. Central Term inal bill, There was much opposition from Toronto. In Gaspe county, J. S Perron, K.C, Montreal, and Dr. Gauthier, Ste Ame Des Monts, were put in nomination today for the Quebec house. It. Col. William Wood, commandin, officer of the 8th Royal Rifles; Quebec has resigned command apd will be succeaded by Major-W. H. Davidson. Lewis JB. Taylor, Amherstburg, Ont., fifty four years old, @ prominent busi ness man, died, Wednesday, at Hote Dieu, Windsor, aft ter an. illness of near ly a vear, At the annual meeting. of the Crown Reserve Mining company it was stated that the.mine was earning $4,000 net per day, and paying $3,500 per day in dividends. : I'he widow of Alexander Stewart, killed & month age at the new G.T.R station, Ottawa, has sued Peter Lyall & Sons, contractors, of Montreal, for £10,000 damages. The Hull, Que., recorder took drasti action to prevent tha practice of slid ing 'on the public streets Eight boy: appeared hefore him and were , tented to ome week in jail. Montreal householders to the number of 130, were hauled before Recorder Dupuis, for having slippery sidewalks, They complained that they had not been notified. Cases dismissed. In Montreal, the ourlibg contest for the governor-general's trophy, was commenced earlier in the week, but was postponed, owing to the mild weather. It is in progress this after noon, . The funeral of Robert A, Booth, a victim of the C.P.R. wreck at Spanish River, took place, at Bobeay geon, on Wednesday, and was largely attended Mr. Booth leit there some fifteen years ago. : Cit Treasurer ILeckie, Hamilton, presented his annual statement shoe ing 'a surplus from last year of &m, 140. The taxes collected nmountad tc over §35,000 more than was estimat- od The Canadian Society of Civil Engi- neers appointed a committee to wait on the premier, respecting a higher standard for government engineers, and - an advisory board national engineering questions, Mrs. Wesley Fisher, Toronto, who pleaded guilty to aiding her hushand nan -aliduection and assault case, the victim being a thirteen-year-od girl, was sent to the Mercer reformatory for two years less one say. » Mr. Hanna, of the/Canads Northern Railway company, pas made arrange- ments with the Quibec Harbor oom mission, to meet them next week with regard to the dockage for the eom pany's ocean steamers at. Quebec. The death took place, Thursday morning, of Mrs. James McShane, wife of the hatbormaster of Montreal, some time mayor, member of the Quebec cabinet and member of parliament She was born fifty-eight years ago, at Plattsburg, N.Y. : Stewart Smith, a young man, twen ty-one years of age, and a son of G. C. Smith, Cornwall, disappeared, sud denly, on Wednesday. He was seen to enter the plant of the Toronto Paper Manufacturing company, and he has not been seen since. Sir Frederick Borden has given no- tice of a resolution in the commons authorizing the sale of the Baby Farm along the Humber river, near Toron to, acquired some years ago by the militia department as a site for the new Stanley barracks. The promoters of the Ottawa spring horse show have arranged with the Toronto association to revert 0 the old dates of the last week in April The Ottawa show will follow in the first week of May and will be cucceed ed by Montreal the nextowesk. ? A very sudden death occurred near fen on Gorrie, Ont., Thursday, Robert Deach. man, an almost life-long resident of Howick, being, found dead in his bed. Mr. Deachman, who was in his seven tyfifth year, in politics was 4 stannch liberal, and in religion, a Methodist. At Ottawa, Mr. Raney, counsel for the Miller antiracing bill, tried, ined. fectually, to introduce some newspaper clippings before the committee to-day. don. Sydoey Fisher . thought the speedy thoroughbreds of greatest in- terest to Canady, but did not think that the presence of bookmakers was necessary to the sport. Five drivers for Rutherford to be taken -- ' WOMAN DIEI ) TWICE. Assistant Got Weird Results From Hypnotisin. St. Paul, Mich, Jan. 27.- story is told about Mrs. Charlotia Willner, who, to all appearances, died in a dentist's chair. 'The body was taken to an undertaking establish ment. Just before the hour set for the funeral she was pronounced alive | by Isaac Deverman, undertaker's 'ns- sistant and amateur hypnotist, who said he had brought her 'back to life by massaging her heart wnd by direct: ing his will, He proved to assembled friends Mrs. Willner the reappearance of life by placing a mirror before the lips of the prostrate woman. The hearse and carriages were dismissed suddenly from the door of the undertaking establish- ment by the excited order of Mrs Wilfner's friends, who had been sum moned to see the signs of life. Physicians were sumgoned to undertaking establishment and by dint, of strenuous efforts for the wo- man's resuscitation, her lips were seen to mové and she muttered unintelligi- bly. Electrical instruments = were brought from hospitals and applied. Flushes were seen to form beneath the lectrodes, but this rapidly ceased and a few hours later assembled physicians announced that rigor mortis was set- ting in and that, the woman was dead. of the ATTEMPT TO SUICIDE. Found Unconscious in Room in Ro- chester. Rochester, N.Y., Jan The po lice are investigating what is believed to be an attempt at suicide at the house, 34 William street, where a man aid to be Thomas Higgins, of 667 Jarton street east, Hamilton, Ont. was discovered in an unconscious' con- ition in a room heavily laden with the fumes of illuminating gas. When ther roomers in the house broke open the door of Higgins' room they found im lying on the bed, gas flowed fram n open jet; and everything indicated », although Higgins left no note to explain his actions. He was re noved to Hahnemann hospital, where we is in & precatious condition. 27 "i. KILLED ON N. T. RAILWAY. pe Down 'the Return Accidents, a rings of Fatal A return tabled in by Hon. G. P. Graham, ith respect to fatal accidents on the ational Transcontinental , railway luring the past three years, shows that eleven persons were killed in dis rict "A," seventeen in district "B," nine in distriet "E," and seventy-seven in district' "F.,"" a total of one hun- dred and forty-four. The returns show that the cause of the accidents was careless and ignorant handling of explosives, and not the quality of the dynamite used by the contractors, ttawa, Jan * commons, Big Seizure of Furs, Ottawa, Jan. The Wiggest seiz ure of furs ever made in Ottawa took place at the union depot, when Dis trict Game Inspector T. FE. Loveday confiscated a bale of furs valued at 6,000, The bale contained furs of all lescriptions and was consigned to the Hudson's Bay company its head warters in Lendon. The shipment was on the Soo train. It was shipped in the north. WHAT IS SOUGHT NOTHING IS 7 fis at TOO GOOD FOR THE IRISH. And Only Complete Home Rule Will Satisfy Them-----Noted Anthor Tells of Emerald 181é's Troubles, York, Jan. 27.--Only home rule will satisfy the Irish, ae cording to Seumas McManus, the noted Irish . author, and he declares hat if Premier Asquith proposes half way measures they will be turned down by the new Irish representa tives.dn the British parhament Discussing *What's the Matter With roland ?" in the February number of 'The Travel Magazine, MacManus will declare that the real trouble is maladministration by the English oflicials which can only be remedied by permitting the island to rule it self, "1he New complete lord lieutenant draws twenty thousand pounds, or $100,000, annual iy, for crossing the chanvel with carpet bag and spending some some days dn Dublin Castle, signing bis name to decrees doing lreland to loath," declares tho noted author And the tens of thousands of othcials who spend their time putting these lecries into execution are salaried by the dying Irish 'nation with incomes that would make American grafters green with envy, ""Ihe Irish taxation at the time of ithe union with England was less than ten shillings a head. To-day, after forty years of parliamentary fighting for hame rule, it is forty four :Illings » head. If we compare Ireland's taxation to-day with that of the other little nations of karope, we find that this country, the poor vat of them all, pays per head ahnost double as much as most of them. "A sbri-making industry started in ihe north of Ireland was forced out of business because It would not pay tribute to the railways. Is it little wonder that tha short-sighted policy loaves most litsh railways in the plight of paying their dividends in postage stamps?' Mac Antje dedlares that instead of supports 4.80000, as at present, ireland," if properly governed, asd its Indusiries given a chance to expand, is capable of supporting in comfort ALOOO, 000 people, John Watson leving, Mirrickville, ye oviving treatment at Brockville, dled was twen- | A strange -- -- WEATHER PROBABILITIES. t Jan. 27 t Lave woe, 1 with light snow ¥ little lower temperatur vr Hiawa Valley 1 + st Real Irish} Linens Direct from the looms * of such celebrated mak- ers as "Brown & Co" Liddel also the famous "Old Bleach" linens of of which we are the; sole agents No words or picturecan do justice to the splendor of these fine cloths, the fire weaves--and hoautiful designs--the pe tals of the rose the shimrock --the fern--the fleur= de-lis, ete., woven with exquisite taste into these. Pure White Linens at prices like these, 50c to 8 $17), Very Special Din Bleached Damask a 50e. Bleached Irish Dam- ask, 72 inches wide at 75¢. Unbleached from 25¢ to 75¢. Table - Napkins from 60c to $6.00. Special lines at $2 and £3. Fancy Table Pieces, ® from 10c to $8 00. § Dress Linens, i0c to $1.90. : Very Special Make, 36 inches wide at 50c. J We invite compari- SON. | Linens from MARRIED. GEROW.At Picton on Stanley Brummel to Dora Cer both of Bophiasburgh GEROW----BRUMMEIL~At Pieton an jan 24th. Albert Hains Gerow to Brummel, both of Hoplas BRUMMEL Ja hth w ¥ earl burgh EVELEIGH BUTHERLAND -- In Watertown jn 6th ! F 18%4 nd, of Bealoy's Eveielgh, of GIBSON-LATI 3 Jan Dean Bidwe f Inverary, to ¥ daughter of Laturney. BRADLEY -RICHARDSB--At the dence of the brides mother, Bi, Kingston, Ont. on the January, 1910, by the Rev. B. Bhib- ley, assisted by the Rev N. B Top- pin Ph.D, Phillp Garret: Bradiey, of Milestone. Sask, to Mabel Mauds, daughter of the i'te Rev. T. H. Richards i Chariutte the late tieorge - real- Alfred 26th of ZS ROBERT J. REID, The Leading Undertaker, fhone, 577. 227 Princess street GRAPE FRUIT This delicious fruit is growing more popiilar every season. We have just received a large shipment from Cuba, and the prices are very reasonable. Grape Fruit at... . «os Be each, Grape Frult at «+ 4 for 28e¢. Grape Fruit at vos 8 for 38c, Grape Frult at. .... ..... 10c each. Grape Fruit at. ......... 3 for 25¢. Jas, Redden & wo. Importers of Fine Groceries. IN MY TRAVELS I HAVE COME ACROSS A RHIGH- rade Polished Brass Bed, tables in fie finest P at ssrprlig prices. urk's Store. 'Phona 108. 3 "Infant's foods." Wise mothers buy these at Gibson's Red Crows Drug Store, always fresh thers,

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