Daily British Whig (1850), 28 Mar 1910, p. 1

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The Daily B YEAR 77-NO, 72 " MONDAY, MARCH 28, Ye tish 1910, Wh LAST EDITION AE BAS Has Been Reached At The ded after a lingering iliness, Washington Conference SECRETARY KNOX MADE THE ANNOUNCEMENT ON SATURDAY, Washington Says 'Tis a Canadian Victory--Payne-Aldrich Law Not Workable in Present Form. Washington, March 25.--For the pre- gent, at east, there will be no tarifi war with Canada. Following a con ference between President Taft, tary of Btute Knox, Secretary of the Treasurer MceVeagh, Prof. H. i Emory, of the tariff board, and Chas, W. Pepper, the commercial adviser of Reere the state department, representing the | Fielding, TTGeorge P. United States, and W_ minister of finance, and Graham, minister of railways, of the dominion of Canmda, Secretary Knot gave out this statement i § gotintions between the president the Canadian representatives, which were begun at Albany days ago, were resumed at Washington, yes terday, and were concluded. They have taken a form which gives assurance that a friendly understanding will be come to immediately. 1t is expected that the official announcement will made #multancously at Washington and Ottawa on Wednesday, the 30th inst." That was all that Mr. Knox others present at the conférence would sav. It was understood, that when Mr. Fielding and SOM he or however Mr. ham walked into the cabinet room to} moet the president they brought with them certain concessions. Just what American exports will receives the bone fit of Canada's best rate 1s not known, but it is believed that Can anda has conceded enough to make {it proper for Mr, Taft to find that she not "unduly digeriminating" again the United States imports, It asserted, im wes ciprocity treaty with Canada. "he basis of the forthcoming agrevment it was sald, 'will probably result in similar understandings being made under the maximum aod winieom 1107 visions of the Payns-Aldrich law. The president, by proclamation pro bably,- Wi declare that Canada not unduly discriminatory, wad in 1 goods will be admitted to the (nited| States with the minimum va'cs as sensed 'against them. ° It bas been a case of blull on the part of the United States and diplo- macy on the part of Canade, and the latter has won. It may be stated on good authority that a wodus vivendi has practically been established, with a view to wobsequent legislation that will substantially lower the existing tariff wall between friendly peoples whose mutaal prosperity would be promoted by leaving trade as untram melled across the border as it is be tween New York and Pennsylvania, It is now practically admitted in administration circles that the wa, in which 'matters have thus far been handled precludes the possibility of settling things with Canada upon the immediate basis held out hy the PayneAldrich law, T Lawn Grass Seed. Rapid growing variety, just received at Mcleod's Drug Stores. East Bi F. in liberals have nominated Miller, for the commons, , W. Wonnacott, Malahide, for the legislature, Tarine moth bags, all sizes. Me leod's Drug Store, corner Montreal and Princess streets and corner King and. Brook streets; Ruth Wheeler, a filteen-year-old stenographer; was murdered in a New York house to which she went seeking employment. : DAILY MEMORANDA. Clty Council, 8 pom. Tummage sale, April I5th and 16th "Fluffy Ruffles™ Grand Opera House, 3.15 pm, - ; Y.MOA. recéption Trimble this evening. Baster sales and concert St Tuesday, March 29th. Orpheum Theatre--Good daily, $30 and %18 pou i af UAliance Francalss this evening at eight io Secretary Paul's, vaudeville The mae will be he o'clock, Remember Ehakespedre readings, Prof. 1 Chakners church to-night at § a AR Western war dfama. "Compasy Dt the Rescue" ° i Burglar apd the Acie Foss" ar " e Note." of orks tH to-morrow, en good aathority, for the | present, at least, there will be no re Tenders * rentoval plumbing shop, rat street, received fl water- w ment i} PITH OF THE NEWS. The Very Latest Culled From AL Over The World. "Humber Heights," a Swansea resi dence, was destroyed by fire, John Akers, K.C., of Toronto, wy it Three men were captured in a police fraid on an alleged cockpit st Toron i Mrs. M. J. Land, Toronto, aged fifty-eight years, was found sitting in 'a chair dead, i Mice and matches ave blamed for a blaze in the customs building at Nia- lgarn Falls, N.Y. | George Prowse, for fiity vears lof Montreal's leading business { died on Saturday | Typhoid fever has lecome epidemic in Prescott. There are over fifty cases reported, man of them being chil dren. | Colin Genge, N.PP., of Macleod, Alta., operated on in Lethbridge hos pital for Kidney trouble, died two weeks later 2 Fdmonton A Turk, who had an arm apd leg ernshed by at Cleveland, bled to death rather than permit the injur ed limbs to be amputated. At Mexido City, Mrs. Robert Louis Stevenson, widow of the novelist, is ill at her apartments, due, it is be lieved, to the high altitude, At Sherbrooke, Que., a man named Laplante is accused of refusing to let a doctor use anti-toxine. His child had diphtheria and later died. The American Bible Society has suc ceeded in raising £500,000, and is entitled lay clai 3 the hall mil lion offered by Mre, Russell Sage. Just before leaving Pasadena, Cal, with her father, Miss Margaret Car negie gave £5,000 to endow a free bed in the children's ward of the hospital Frank W. Morse, 'dent and general Grand Trunk Pacific pointed president of the Buffalo Susquehanna railway. i Fire, which originated thotel, Jackson, N.Y., caused the in ry of several persons, n monetar loss of $100,000 and the destruction of an entire block of business structures, At Port Huron, Mich,, following his confession and subsequent arrest as a counterfeiter, Frank Mitts, former gineer at the city water works, killed himself by taking cyanide of potas #Fum. George (. Murray Tuck 'both of Toronto, are under arrest at Detrait, awaiting deportation. The United States inimigration authorities {there say the couple eloped from To Toronto, where MurFay deserted his { wife. William Brand, Pittsburg, Pa., com- imitted to the penitentiary because he trefused to make a satisfactory state ment about graft to the district attor: Ine, has broken down completely and is now a nervous wreck, under the eare of prison physicians, I Edourd - St. Onge, a farmer from | Mont Carmel, was ingtantly killed by Liha 1.OR. fast freight at St. Philippe ide Nervy, Que. The whole of the {train passed over his body, which was terushed beyond recognition. St. Onge {was the father of twelve children. lp MUCH PRIVATION LIVED TWHLVE DAYS ON TWO SQUIRRELS. one men, a tram to 10 former vice presi manager of the i., has been ap and ' in the Wyatt en and Olive } Finlander Lost in the Wilds North of the Ontario Spo----His Limbs Were Frozen. Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., March 28.-- Oue of the most terrible tales of suf ferns: andl endurance in the wilds Norwhern Ontario came to hand with the arrival here of a special train bearing the Finlander who was lost in the woods for nearly three wecks, It appears that kli Kankus, the un- fortunate, started up the Nile to ob- tain work at one of the many hunber {eamps in the district. At the first one the applied to he was told there was | no vacancy, but was assured that ii Ineiw ent on to the next he would find employment, He accordingly #it out, hut, had not gone far when he realized that he was lost, without any food to keep him, ami with little clothing to protect him from the elements. He { trudged on day after day, neder seeing ta sight of life, unless it was a terrified deer. At last, overcome by fatigue and hunger, he dropped. He had not rest. ed long when the terrible numbness of his hands ani feet told him that he was frosen. He tried to get up and walk, but be was too weak, While on his way on his hamds and knives he came across an Indian's trap with a dead and froven red squirrel in it. This he devoured, ahd continued his joumey, sti i for some habiiation. The crisp surface of the snow tore his wrists in a terrible manner, and as he went a trail of blood was left. The Indian who owns od the traps came along some daye later and found one of the tra of Newest Patterns Quaint Shapes = empiy, aud many blood stains in § vicinity. Realizing that some one had been lost in the bush, he set ont for Batchewana, a two days' journey, He obtained assistance, and with three others set off and followed the trail | Four days later they overtook the Finlander, almost dead from hunger, and exhaustion, but with great tenac: Hy dinging to hfe, Kankus had exist ed for twelve days in the bush on the two red squirrels. He was too weak to speak, but" the four, who in- cluded Pete Chidley, the Indian, Pete Jolen, another Finlander, and two men from Baker's camp, from which [bey were ten miles distant, fixed up = hey Matad | for Mile 81, ¥ EL soon down Jor eight miles the man bad 0 he _vatvied. He was shipped om the train which brought him to the Yering 18 causing w OF ACCIDENTS KINGSTON, ONTARIO, Will be Discovered and Remedy Ap- plied. ) i 0 : . Chicago, March 25.--~The CUhieago & INorthwestern railway has instituted a | new policy in Hs campaign for the ve- "duction of accidents. This is announce {ed in connection with 'the official istatement of a reorganization of the company's claim department, to. take teflect on April Tet. Under the new plan of organization, R. (. Richards, for many years claim agent, is to Act Of River { , observe the cause of accidents, me ; L ---- | thods of handling trains and freight, A MONTH AGO BARNEY WAS | Consigtments, asd by carrying on a = Sh {campaign o ueation in all de TWO MILES AWAY. ments' of the rondo ey "to. Dring -- . iabout the necossary co-operatic Now the Missouri River is Right in| a opin pray ny oe all the Town---The People Are Get- serve the safety of property and pas- ting Back to the Hills and are sengers. Taking Houses With Them. i Nebraske City, Neb. ® March The Missouri river has taken a 1O-iHe Ig Willing to Go to Aid of Suffer tion overwhelm the little town! ois Barney, Neb, tem miles down ers. : troam from thiz city, and to-day | March aing Vietor Em- practically the entire town is on manvel has expressed bis intention of he move, the property owners gev- €0ing into the territory threatened by ting their houses back to the hills the volcanic eruptions in the vicinity & fast as possible, of Moun{ Etna to direct the work of A manth ago Barney was |e sm ----------------. | piles from the river To-day stream is right in the town. i When the high waters came with| t2e breaking up of the ice in Feb-| 3iary, the current of the Missouri | vas thrown against the farms between | Jarmey. and the river. Those farms | have bedn cut away entirely and yes | erday the citiwens began moving their | jouses back to the hills. i An eighty-foot steel bridge over a ributary of the river was taken down | ast night piecemedl aod hauled to the | ills, To-day the river is flowing wher} esterday was the bridge. The schoolhouse was moved last ight, as was the big grain elevator | nd a number of houses. A new town) vill be built on the hill beyond the] ight of the Missouri. ! - WOLFE ISLAND NEWS. CAl Because Of The Menacing Br tn or --t---- i ITALY'S GALLANT KING. IN ww Rome, IR, two the | Belleville Young Man is Dying in the! Hotel Dieu. Wolfe laland/ March 28, Capt. Craw- ord is to be congratulated for taking | ithe frst steamer into the city ths | pring. The captain's friends are asxious 10 see him wear his new hat, o which his first trip to the cify en-| titles him. : Not for years has any che left the sland who has been 'so much missed 1s Andrew Ryan, not only as a Ci» izen but as a harness maker. Tv ix sported taac William Card will open Me repair shap, : uly 3 { Municipal Ownership Scheme Pays Mrs. Greenwood, sr. is seriously ii. | : leeve Fawcett's friends are glad tof : in Ontario Town. th carn that his two sons, who have! Brockville, Ont. ' Marek 20.2 o beens so seriously ill, are recovering. [light and power department, which Hodnoy ~ Yoit, won of John Yatt, lis the property sof the siguporution, lelloville, who came here during early | is asking the town voundil to guare oe winter and was then in the best. of [tee bonds. to "the 'value of gg health, was removed two weeks for necessary improvements ung . 0 rom Frank Greenwood's bome, maintenance of the plant, Which = ie had been visiting, to Hotel Ihe lis proposed to amalgamate with the ospital, Kingston, where, despite all|plant of the waterworks system, on hat kind nursing and medical skill the ground of economy in Spargtion. ould do, proved of no avail and dis- | The matter will be apie ® oe v solution is shortly expected. to the ratepayers. in the form of a The sum of $200 was collected for by-law. The interest amd' sinking Helville Daly, who recently lost ' his tunds will be met out of the re horses. A team has bein purchased venue of the department, which or Mm. One has been procured from | has already paid in this way np liver Hawkins the other from George | wards of 50,000 on the purchase Rattary. It is rumored that Richard [of the plant from a private ' com- dcRenldy will take over the Massoyipany some years ago. Hdarcis agency, made vacant by G.| iti Ha appointment as purser on| SNIDER GOES TO JAIL the steamés. i The high KING VIOTOR EMMANUEL wiecor, | encourage fhis subjects and «hare their danger, if the gravity of ithe eruptiofls continues. BROCKVILLE LIGHT PLANT. ago where this | Ex-Chief of Police Sentenced For Theft. Belleville, Ont., March Former hief of Police George Snider, Tren h : atunits, ton, who was tried on a charge of ob- who left a OF time rr Pl ti of | taining 845 under false pretences from west, Nie ome glowing a x « W. McMullen, insurance agent, this = pF & rita. | vie ¢ - 3 or savs that Richard MecRendy hin wt yensipged to two manthe in . b thi cohabit ifty | the co n jail. Si ; » Suntemplating Pe ha, mE Wa a surprise. The prisoner's wife al- dees - of. lane from Irs Oo he 'imost collapsed. Snider was formerly Measles aro very prevalent on ihe the Belleville - police force, and is xd. Arthu now thirty years of age. fe 4 rr price of musk rats the trappers to work | It is stated that as high | offered. Several | wsful , IO ith a vim, 81.00 has been mierprising and' sucos 3, as on Spankie is iil with Sp Distant Places. SIBLE FORM. membered. The British parlianient last long after March 20th, Parkdale Presbyterian church will not first time. Chinese infantry have mutified Twingkiang-pu. The S88. Cofinthian Havre, SS, Pretoria sailed from Glas gow on Sunday for Halifax. fen thousand serve men from over America will meet in Worcester, Muss., during the first week im April. While returning home on Sunday morning John Tewksbury, barber, Chatham, Ont, was waylald by foot pads. A Harwich farmer, named O'Neal, was hit on the head in the Tecumseh House yard at Chatham and $14 tak on. Alexander = Breckenridge, a farmer who livid near Napanee, died, on Sun day, aged 100 years and seventeen days. 'Jack" Johuson stump the Second ward, Chicago, fot his colored friend, Edward H. Wright, one of the aldermanie candidates. Mrs, © James Macdonald, wood, had one of hey legs cue off and was otherwise seriously mjured, at Davenport station, by a train, Charles W. Scott, Montreal, arrested at Niagara Falls, N.Y, Tor passing a false check for X15. He pleadad guil and was remanded for sentence. The steamer Maeassa, from Hamil ton, opened navigation in Toronto barbor. Captain Henderson sets the silk hat from the harbor master Mrs. Crossman, Hamilton, was sit: tng in Gore Park when a runaway horse jumped the fence and lghted on her. She was very seriously injured, Christopher Hanger, Toronto, plead- od guilty to charge of obtamimg fous hundred pounds of white lead from a London, Oud. merchant, by false pre: Lences, The operators and miners are re ried to have adjusted all their, dif premces al Cinotnnati, averting the threatened strike of more than 408, 000 soft coal workers. A shut down of the Tlnadis coal mines will take place April 1st unless some agreement is reached between the mines and operators. The wniners ask for an increase in wages. In Ottawa the prices of lumber are very much the sama as last year. The exception iz the best grades of pine which is 84 and 25 a thousand higher than last year. Tha wholesale price go as high as $65. John Capehart, the former United States navy Heutenant, wanted by the Hartfoud, Conn., police, ong, a charge of abduction and forgery, Phas waived extradition proceedings and left Montreal for Hartford. The body of Mrs. A. L. L Baltimore, Md., was found on Mon day morning, on the estate of Alay: ander Brown, a promin»mt Pastis os banker. The woman's throat was out from ear to ear. The police are search ing for the woman's husband. FIFTEE at is to Colling- Moarrick N GIRLS MISSING. dered. New York, March LATEST EWS Despatches From Near And THE WORLD'S TIDINGS Matters That Interest Everybody-- Notes From All Over--Little of Everything Kasily Read and Re- choir appeared in gawns cn Sunday for the Two battalions of modern trained has reached all it is Said That They Have Been Mur. 2% Police records = COURT FREES A GIRL. Cocktails Lead to Love, Marriage and Divorce. : New York, March 35 ---Suprenw Court Justice Giegerich handed down a judicial decision in which be defined a cocktail as "a compound of in toxicating liquor." He also decided that a girl of eigh- teen, who drinks three or four eock- tails late at night and finds herself a bride in the morning when she wakes up is entitled 10 have her marriage annulled. For this reason he signed the decra which annulled the marriage of pretty Elsie Madeline Hunne Ievice, af No. 01 West Forty-Second street, to Robert Irvine, Jr. Elsie was married when she was eighteen years and seven months old, on May 26th, 1907. She told the court she was on ber way to charch, about eight o'deck, on a Sunday night, when she met Irvine, who in duced her to go into the Marlborough Rathskeller to have a drink. She or dered soda, but was given several cocktails instead. She had never drunk any before that. The next thing she remembered was sign} a paper before a minister. Ir vine then took her home. She declared that she had no idea she was Irvine's wife until he came to her house and inquired for his bride. Her parents sent him away in a hurry. They had never lived together since. Irvine made no objection to the annulment, NOTHING MORE Than Has Been Conceded to Other Countries. Special to the Whig Ottawa, March ba an nou nCament house, Wednesday, ubout tarifi. There is nothing known, ly of the sitmation, but it in authoritative circrles, that Canada has not conced'! ansthing to tie Unite] States more than, has been concedell to other conntries 28, -- There mn local is claimed TOO BALD TO PREACH. Cannot Wear Hat in Pulpit--Catches Cold Without. New York, March Hafa, St. Trinitatis theran church, ten his congregation forces him to retire from try. He cannot wear his pulpit and he cannot bare headed without catching cold. He will preach his farewell sermon next Sun: ay. M.~Rev. R Evangelical Jersey Uity, A Lu has writ that baldnes the hat pre hn mans mn the iT. To a Cement Walk and Injuries be Fatal, May ard fell thirty feet from a pole while working at the new Hydro-Flesteie station, amd alighted ono a cement walk, sustaining injuries which i believed will prove fatal. Howard had worked all through the district of the Hydro-Electric fine, and wns an expert workman. Ww WHAT STRIKERS SAY THE FOREMAN WAS INSULTING AND ABUSIVE To the Women Who Were Employed In the Factory--An Hundred Hands are Out in the Semi-Ready Factory. Montreal, March The strike of the employees of the Semi-Ready tail oring factory has spread to other de partments and fhe sirikers now num- ber nesirly one hundred. The striker deny that the reason of the strike was because a foreman, put over them, was an Italian. Nationality did nat enter into the matter at all, 14 was becatise the foreman was insulting and abusive to the women employed in the factory that the employees struck. So 28. London, Ont., Match 2%--Jobn How: (FER PROBABILITIES, Ont NM Upper 5 Warm ATs 8 awl La wre 11m Tus Contente : 1810 145 THOUSANDS OF CONTENTED WOMEN VOUCH FOR THE SUPERIORITY OF OUR DRESS SILKS, They do not "believe" nor "presume" but actually "know the secret of our Dress Goods superiority and prove their loyalty by wenring no others. TO-DAY WE EMPHASIZE The New Foulards Genuine Freach Foulards in all the daintiest designs you could imagine in colors Rose du Barry, Mist Grey, Pull Ame. thyst, King Blur, Leach Green, Wistera, Navy asd Polona. Special Value at 75¢, $1.00, Sold in Dress Patterns only Chinese Shantungs These are not Japanese Silks that you ¢an buy for Hide to 76¢. They are the celebrated Houin,. Cl i d. Goods known the for their reliability ia color and finish, 81 Inches Wide. Call store. for dover weave, Price, $1.00, and them at this We ard the Bole Agents Kingston. SUMMER STYLE BOOK NOW READY. dee BORN, Mar I» h 24th ts, Beott son Won 1 Mra Sirpot MARRIED, N ¥ Bh, 1919 b ne Hires Peterbora of Thon preumonia, Michael Troy's condition | remaing about the same, his son is} here from Rochester, N.Y. Miss Sadie Xv Ardle arrived from Belleville today. Seeihing will shortly commence if ths weather continues. Rising of the Seine Has Brought On Paris, March 26.In the days when Sugeno Sue wrote his unevels of the underworld of Paris, the Rat«Cate- ore' Guild formed a highly remuner- ative and active - profession--+o ar- tive, in' fact; that the rodents grad- ually disappeared along the river front, and were rarely found in the cellars as high as those of martte, when the new system deal was instituted. With aver, oi the rising of the Seine, how: and the "hacking up' of the , the animals came. back to oli haunts and again teok up irs in collars and basements of houses, and at night could be seen woampering yat the streets Unlortunately, Farie was quite Ning prepared for the invasion. » Rat "atohers' Guild, whose members used ta receive a handsome price for rid. ¢ house of pests, and then their skin: to furriers, was no more. Ouly one rat catcher is leit, man nama Heart Dayve., whe je the municipal rat estcher of © the tty of Paris. He alone is eft, and he has no apprentices, for fhe call ing i8 no donger lucrative, and Wmselt suddenly - hited into Inatoriety by the new plague the' their an fat ia Pans. However, it seems that 'he is setting te work Jotve. but it ds something awful dor o kx ity to be attacked by. a Pied ported or from domestic THE PARIS RAT. i | Plague, ! Mont- | i IN GREAT DISTRESS THE CRUEL REVELATIONS WY RECRER HER HEALTH. Faure Under Paris. Widow of President surveillance at Villa Near She is Very Bad. i i Paris, March 25.--The famous Stein- Pheil case may have an unexpected and | pathetic epilogue. In thé course = of {ihe hearing of the case Mons. Felix {Favre was mentioned under circum- stances which are still in the public {memory. This. was. the: means of {bringing 'to. the knowledge of the widow of the erstwhile president of the {republic wach = cruel revelations that ifiret her hesith and then her mental faculties ape seriously affected. Her family, which lavished on ber Tihe tendesest aflection, took in her fragard special measires of precaution, fut in spite of a sojourn in the south of France, on which the family count ted for an improvement, Mme. Faure was brought "back in such a highly nervous condition as 10 Becessitate her teansiér ti a villa inthe enviroms of Paris, where she is the ohject of spe- vial surveillance. { mgs -- i How Germany Treats The Millers. { Commenting on the {act . that the Corman conmil at Winnipeg has re cently stated that Germany imports Fabout S90.000,000 worth lof whest an- mally, & Nostrealer Jargely interested Lin the Hous" business, explains that of | hile tiermany does import freely, she and feats, as being the only rat cateher { Jiroe exporter of flour. She is enabled to thus export bn reason of the fort that she gives the miller 'a vebis(e 'equal 15 the dirty dn the whest entering oto the four, whether the flour has been actually made from im- } words Germany imports i a» ¢ tafm mad rough | The revealing that fifteen voung girls ba. been missing since Jarmary, 1908; Lus sourted on the 'hatherities, today, in their attempt to wrest from Albert Wolter, nineteen vears old, a conf. sion that he murdered Ruth Wheeler, the fifteen vear old stesographer, vhose clarred borly was found Inte Saturday. Kate Mueller, who lived with Wolter as his wife, 48 under rest as a material witness and sho was sharply questioned to-day. She has already made two damaging statements against Wolter. they claim. AFTER LOVER'S BODY. Leavenworth Girl Bethrothed Fireman Bennington. Seattle Post-Intellinger The following * story reporter for the last Monday to Was given Lo Post Fntélligen at Wellington = fer Wash Miss Katharine Fisher amd hare after the body of Earl F. Beating ton, recently buried' in Calaraged {emetery, his home bring at Ghn vale. . § ¢ Tears streamed dowi the grizzled and weather-Beaten cheeks the men at work an the wick the foot of the avalanche whed thes witnessed the grieh. that came fram the broken heart of a pretty wl whe came to elaim her dead. Miss Katherine Fisher, faavenw orth whose swestheart, Fireman Foard F Bennington, was pinned °° beneath on locomotive, maths virym coed efforts 10 be wear the body of the man she loved 'when it shaald b taken down the snow trail on "logge ty the station at Neen She left Travenworth © several days age and reached Rode by Spokane and: Seatt oe. She trousers WG go over the trail and ercved at jwhile Bennington was ie locomotive ¥ Today the workpwen @ sured hy draulic inchs and released the bods Miss Fraser wae advised not to tas her strength by viewing the body, but she refused Her tears moved the body ore out of the indifference which they have loosed upon other offocts of the disaster. They turned away brushing their eyes with cout sleeves, Mise Fisher antl her fireman fawontbeart were to have been poss ried within: a few months, He. was on the passenger run and his visits to Lesvautonth werd the principle Guarding the Bank of France. Harper's Weekly. There are plenty lars in the world, have to he vixy lar indeed who should find a way to rob the Benk of France, The measures taken for guarding the mo- are of such a nature thas burg lary would seem to bt impossible Every day when the mondy is put into the vanlte in the cellar, and before the officers eax Wass ars in attendance whose duly HW is 1o wall up the doors of the vaults with hydraulic mortar. Water is then turned on, snd kept runnihg until | the cellar is flooded. A burglar would thas have io wink in a divingsuit., aad break down & cement wall before ha could even begin to break intn the vaults. When the officers arrive the next morning the water fs deawn off, the masonry torn down, and the vaults opened. Cashier Convicted, indianapelix, March 25. William H. Parker, former cnshior of the Firm Nations! Bask. of Tipton, ded.. wax found guilte of emberzling $100,006 of the Tande of the honk bya fury in the | United States district court, : Many evbark on the matrimonial wea without much of an outhr for ¢ wenther, intelligence of the Botse is inenited by the foolishness of ingenjons burg but he would ingenions burg of at nev of wav © put mountgia sill beneath hear wh pd on | Wellington remiemhrar wd inf Edwin © 196% # paic of Hit Hark, heio apd Mrs March, we Bl the Francis Is g IN MEMORIAM, 24th, 1910 and Mrs. nace. Bireel f Fraucis of My whe died ark ia hands Oo rest TRF VRE More more saljle or weep Movil sleep ROBERT J. "Phone, 577 17 REID, The Leading Undlertaker, JAMES REID The 1d Fy of 1 Be a aad me PRINCESS ATR 4 Phone for ambuils Pure and ily pretty, She bas and nu gracedal farm, hr plik, men at Wal lovely awl The wan & Woman, New Maple Syrup Good. Jas. Redden & Co., Importers of Fine Groceries, Hg brown eyes but that nppealed most to the Prigge sd ber staunch 4 ocean Hatter withotit overdoing it always makes 8 hit with

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