YEAR 77-NO, 122 KINGSTON, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, MAY 27, 1910. Tie Daily British W LAST EDITION LIKELY LOST Aged Mining Engineer Cannot Be Located OUT SINCE MAY 17 NOT POSSIBLE THAT HE CAN BE ALIVE At the Bottom of Shaft--Mine Shafts Probed and Trails Reblaz- ed, But to No Avail. Port Arthur, Ont, W. White, civil engineer, last trip, as assistant surveyor, returned to Port Arthur. does not think it possible for Roland to be alive. an expert guide, who was with pasty. Bonathan and Nymark, now the district very well, ave searching for Roland, and have auth- ority to obtain more men to assist if any clues are found. White Roland has fallen into a disused shaft, several of which are in the lo cality, and possibly drowned at the bottom of the shaft in four or five feet of stagnant water. Roland was thirty-five Gold Rock, near a wming locality known as N. T. 27, in the Wablzoun district. Gold . Rock is fifty miles south of Wabigoon. Fron Tu «lay, May IStn, to Tuesday, May 24th, White and the two guides, and four men from Wabigoon scoured the dis trict, blazing afresh: all trails, and sounding every noglected mine shalt with spedally made poles. The body may never be found unil elaborate arrangements are ma lo for the personal jnvestigiion of old whafts, Roland was just 'recovering from a severe rheumatic clack TO DEVISE A PLAN. mine wiles from Granting Franchise to Women on : A Men's Terms. London, May 27.--A number of members of parlisment, of all parties, have constituted themselves a commil tee for woman suffrage, aiming at settling the question on a plan ae ceptable to all shades of suffragettes. As a practicable minimum a bill ~ will be introduced enfranchising women holding such house property as would _ qualify. them if. they were men - to vote. Recovers Money From Deal Woodstock, Ont., May 27.-Donald Guthrie, West Oxford, sued J. B. Jackson, the politician, - formerly of In il, and now Canadian agent in China; for $2,325. Jackson induced Guthrie to put the money into a wheat deal in Chicago, in the agree ment that they should share losses and profits. The sum raised was $4, 500 and Jackson informed Guthrie that this had all been lost. Judgment was given Guthrie for the full amount of the claim with interest. Claims to. be King. Now York, May 27~--John R. ie suelph of No. 108 Mohtague street, Brooklyn, has declared himseli king of Great Britain and Ireland and as- sumed the title of King John George Fdward. The Biookivn man dalls Kmg Edward VII. his "revered fath- er.' This is not the first time the Brooklyn man.las made such claims, - but never before did he make them un- der the title of "Rex." Fenian Veteran Dead. Brockville, May 27.--The curred on Wednesday of Alexander Hume, a leading railway clerk, for many years in local offices. For the past ten years he lived a retired lifg and died at the age of seventy-seven, Deceased figured in the Fenian raid ae captain of the Brockville and Ottawa Rifle company. He leaves three chil- dren, death oc 3 A Slander Sait. London, May 27.--Charles A. Ham- mett, a blind musician, obtained £150 damages agtinst Canon Plumptre, of Toronto, for stander, gt the Wiltshire assizes. A stay of execution was granted. Thousand Islands--Rochester StrOaapian leaves Sundays at 10.15 a.m, for 1,000 Island points and at 5 p.m. 'Rochester. J. P. Hanley, : i ceed » Eat and Enjoy Best's Ice Cream. No finer ice credm made nor no more comfortable place to eat it than Best's, Samuel Comor, one of Brockville's oldest and best citizens, died, on ; . Ho wis the owner and pro- prietor of the Revere and one of the best know: hotelmen in East ern ' : DAILY MEMORANDA. yr ge glad i's the best he over had Board of Trade, § p.m. Inspection of 1#h Regiment, 7.30 Li ouse, 2.39, Saturday bin band concert in we Sheriff at "A Strenuous May 27.--Fred graduate of the Royal Military College, Kingston, who accompanied Capt. Holand on his i has He says he He was last seen on Tues- day May 17th, by William Bonathan, the who still believes Tom's Cabin matinee. Grand pam, louse, 1.30 Saturday, pm. cial sale of wash sult a Waltons Saturday morning. | See Former Beltboy From Ogdensburg Ogdensburg, N.Y., May 27.+Johnnie Conners, who for several yemrs was a bellboy at the Seymour house this city, and who Inter became bantamweight ' champion ow country, is credited with being first fight promoter who saw "Jack" Johmson the making of champion, and who with George Siler | secured for Johnson his first fights in | Springfield, 111. Johnson was hungry and broke when | de arrived in Springfield, and Con-| ners arranged a "battle royal" which twelve negroes took part. John- son mowed them down with killing the the ---- minutes, Johnson was acclaimed the winner by Siler and received $5 from the | promoter. | "I sure am obliged to vou," he] said as he took the money, "for 1} sure am in need of the eatings right | now, i NEW COINAGE FOR CHINA. | Universal Decimal System to Fulfil Pledge. Pekin, May 27.--An edict establishes national decimal coinage throughout | China and orders the cessation of ai coinage 'by provincial mints, | The new currency is to consist o coins of the following denomination : | Dollar, fifty cents, twenty-five cents and ten cents in silvek, five cents jin! nickel and copper cash in copper. } The establishment of pational deei- | mal coinage in China is in compliance | with the treaty signed following the Boxer troubles and according to the terms of which the Chinese govern ment pledged itself to adopt universal | decimal currency, | "HX PREMIER RUTHERPORD. Who hag retired from the leadership of Alberta Government, A $3,000,000 BRIDGE. Lachine, Montreal, May 27.--~The Canadian Pacific, it is announced, has decided to reconstruct the Lachine bridge, which was completed in 1884 at a cost of nearly three million dollars, The increasing trafic has necessitated the enlargement of the bridge. The piers of the present structure will be widened and a double track made. WILLING TO WORK STAR IN WAITER. FOOTBALL ROL. OF Takes up a Position as a Strike Breaker in Spokane--His Strange Mix-up With Fortine, Spokane, Wash., May 27. -Henry Wheeler, a full-blooded Siwash, centre | star of the Carlisle Indian school | team in 1908 and 1909, and linguist | and scholar, has become a strike- breaker in a local restaurant, reduced from his high place, he says, by stress of ecircumstantes, following the denth of his vounger brother on the Nez Perce Indian reservation, in Northern Idaho. Wheeler is educated und refined, and though probably more at home on the gridiron, in the class room, and in an office, he has mastered the art of servicing a luncheon or a dinner and is not afraid to work. When recognized by a party of eastern college men he admitted his identity und talked freely of his strange make-up with fortune. He came to the North-West from New York a short time ago, being sums moned by the illness of his brother. The brother died, and after the funeral Wheeler came to Spokane, arriving here the day 600 waiters and kitchen helpers went on strike on five mine utes' motice. He was pressed into the service and will remain until the end of the strike. BY WATER ROUTE. To Survey Between Winnipeg and Edmonton. May 27.--The government as ' to make an immediate survey, with the idea of ascertaining the possibility of establishing a navi gable water route between Winnipeg and Edmonton and the North Saskat- chewan River and Lake Winnipeg. « It is believetl that a six or eight foot route can be establighed at a mode rate cost. 1. R. Bolighy, one of the sub-chiefs on the Georgian Bay canal survey, will be in charge of the survey, which will be made this summer by five par- ties, t0 be seni out from Ottawa, Knockabout Hats, 50c Up. Straw hats, Be up, at Campbell os"., Kingston's hat store, Oitawn, | Started Johnson. i blows in a battle which lasted ou Adopted -** it C.ERR. Will Replace Structure ml! in| Twenty-Five Men THROUGH COLLISION al Bey . In IN THE ENGLISH CHANNEL ON! THURSDAY. The Packet Steamer Hit Something Which Was, at First, Supposed to be a Submerged Wreck, But it Was Soon Found Out to be a Submarine ~--Was Fine Type of Boat. Paris, May 27.--1It is officially stated there were three officers and twenty- five men on board the French sub- marine boat, Pluviose, sunk by the eamer Pas De Calais, on the Calais o Dover ling, yesterday afternoon, | and that Capt. Frat, commanding the Calais, submarine fleet, was on board the Pluviose. All were drowned. The Pluvioss wns the latest type of. sub- { marine boat of the Labeu system. She was 163 feet long and 450 tons bur den. The Pas De Calais had just sail- ed from Calais. When one of her pad dle wheels stuck something violently, the steamer stopped at once. Her captain thought, at first, they had hit a submerged wreck, but a short time later part of the Pluviese appeared rising from the water behind the Pas Pe Calais. The latter's captain imme- diately ordered a boat tw be lowered to go to the aid of the submarine. The sailors who manned the actually stepped on the small deck of the Pluviose and knocked loudly on the iron plating. They received no re sponse, however, from the men inside and in a few seconds the Pluviose made a second plinge and disappear- ed. The sailors from the Pas De Calais had scarcely time to regain their boat before the submarine sank. The Pluviose had left Calais half hour before the Pas De Ualais, plunging exercise and it was at the moment it was commg to the surface that dt collided with a paddie wheel of the Pas De Calais. The latter was carrying the morning mail to Eng- land and had a large number of pas sengers on board. She immediately put back to Calais, where her mail | and passengers were transferred to an- other steamer which left an hour later. It is regarded as strange that the submarine was manoeuvring directly in the path of the cross channel steamer. The news of the accident caused gn enormous sensation in Cilais and in saris, where it had been hoped the long series of disasters to Freach sub marine boats was at last ended. PUSHED HIS REVOLVER Against Man Who Was With His Wife. New York, May 27.--An angry hus- band, who testified he had followed John Byron Taylor from Watertown to New York and confronted him with 4 drawn revolver in the cafe of the Waldorf-Astoria, was one of the sixty witnesses who have been giving sonsational testimony before Referee ¢, W. Andrews in the suit of Mus. Emma Flower Taylor for absolute di- vorce. Mrs. Taylor is the only daugh- ter of the late Governor Roswell Flo- wer. : James Harbuttel, a Watertawn plumber, was the hero of the episode at the Warldori. He testified he married a Watertown | girl who had been employed by Tay. lor as a stenographer in 1906. Mrs. Harbuttel, the wiiness said, began to absent herself from home for weeks at a time within a year after her mar- raiage. She told him she was visiting relatives. Finally gossip, which had linked the voumg woman's name with that of Taylor, reached Harbuttel's ears, He learned that his wife had been seen with Taylor at times when ghe was supposed to be in the homes of relatives. A year ago he heard his wife was in New York with Tay- lar. He followed and found Taylor in the cafe of the Waldorf-Astoria. Ho said he pushed his revolver against Taylor's body and threatened to kill him, whereupon Taylor sank to his knees and pleaded for mercy. Har- buttel said he was deliberating as to whether to end his foe at once, when two defectives seized him and threw him out of the hotel. Another witness was Miss Tuttle, of Watertown, who almost collapsed on the stand while detailing her experiences - with Taylor. Fight women have been mientioned in the testimony given by barbers, bell-boys, clerks and attendants in New York ho. James Farrell, who was at one time chauffeur for Mr. Taylor at Water town, had lively testimony to give. An automobile, as the evidence thus far taken shows, figured in most of the alleged indiréretions of "Jack" Taylor, upon which his wife bases her action. Farrell told of many trips to hotels apd road houses in towns and vil in in the vicinity of Watertown tanen by Mr. Taylor in his sutomo- pile in the company of young women of the community. road house, in which a girl well known in Watertown figured with Tay- lor, was recited by Farrell at : The girl sneaked away early in the morning, according to F 1,. hired a horse and carriage, and started to Watertown. Taylor, DROWNED 'Three Officers And the i boat { an 5 for | One session at a : . {produced his register and gave im j portant testimony for Mrs. Taylor. + "MODEL" LICENSE LAW. -- U.S. Wholesale Liquor Dealers Make an Appeal Cincinnati, Obio, May 27.--Declar- ing that prohibition does not prohibit and appealing for "model license" as a means of regulating the sale of liquor at retail, the National Whole sale Liquor Dealers' Association adopted resolutions endorsing pro posed drastic laws regarding the quali [cations of applicants for saloon Ii censes, I'he resolutions urge that the char- acter of the person making the appli- cation for license be made the "para mount issue' in the adoption of the { "model licenses" law, which was the slogan of the day's meeting, The re solutions declare that the saloon {would thus be eliminated from pol tics, and the mumber of saloons could be reduced to the point of public | necessity. DISASTROUS FIRE IN JAPAN. | 1One Hundred Persons Burned Death at Aomori. i Victoria, RB.C., May 27.-Details of {the disastrous fire at Aomori, North { Japan, in which one hundred persons | were burned to death, amd S000 of ithe town's 11,500 buildings were razed, {with a loss of $2,000,000, were receiv ed by the steamer Inaba Maru. The {burned area covered one and three sevenths miles long and a mile broad. Thirty thousand less were gathered in refuge camps. {Great suffering followed the five supplies of rice brought in teaten raw by the ravenous people. A {store of powder exploded and shook ithe whole area soon alter the was extinguished. to quarter home and were fire JOHN DALZELL. Denounces Provision Sundry Civil Ball, Bitterly in JOHN DALZELL. Washington. May 27.--Representative John Dalzell, of Pennsylvania, who has been in congress twenty-three years, broke a long record for regu- larity when he jumped the reservation and "insurged" against the provision in the sundry civil bill enlarging the powers of the tarifi board. He bit- terly denounced. this provision in a speech. JUDSON HARMON BELIEVES GOVERNOR WILL BE NOMINATED AND ELECTED. Chairman of Big Four Railroad Fig- ures Out the Sitaation--rinds Many Republicans Admire Mr. Harmon. New York, May 27.--That Judson Harmon, governor of ~ Ohio, will be nominated for president, in 1912" by {the democrats and olected, is a pro- phecy made by Melville E. Ingalls, chairman of the Big Four railroad. My. Ingalls' name has been mention ed to succeed Senator Dick, of Ohio, in case that siate should go demo cratic the coming fall. "The situation in Ohio," said Mr. Ingalls, 'is really very simple. There will be a state convention next month, but it will be practically unanimous. Harmon has made a splendid gover- nor and he has the confidence of the people. He has 'more friends, to-day, than when he took office, and even the republicans admire » him. Then, of course, the republicans are hopelessly {disrupted and are still looking for a { candidate. . : { "Harmon will walk into the gover- {norship. I hardly think that a very { great effort will be made to elect the republican candidate, and, of course, that will mean that Ohio will be un animous for him for president in wR" DISLIKES SANDRINGHAM. Will Probably no Longer be a Royal Residence. - London, May 27.--Now that King Edward is no more it is highly pro- bable that Sandri am House will fade out of the public molice as a royal residence as completely as did Osborne House, in the Isle of Wight, after the. death of Queen Vie- toria. Sandringham House and es tate, it may be rpcalled, were the personal property of the late king. The place is not a state residence. In court circles it is an open secret that the new queen is not very fond ough House became available for her as a i she not spent a great deal of time in Norfolk. For one thing, York Cottage, which {is the present king's on the jgstate is not a really commodious those, and it is hinted that Queen dislike of Sandri i of Sandringham, and since Marlbor- {all VERYBADMAN He Lured A Canadian Girl-Te Chicago MADE A BIG FIGHT AGAINST THOSE WHO PLANNED HER RUIN. Police Awuthoriies Are Preparing t Arrest Wealthy Man in the Case-- Vile Purposes of the Parties Con cerned. Chicago, May 27.--Plans for the ar rest of a wealthy Chicago man have beet: made by the police in the cas of Anme Singer, a Canadian girl nineteen years oll. who was lure from Montreal to this eity and place in a resort in the southside red-lighi district, from which she was rescued While the police were gathering evi dence on whiclp to base the arrest, At torney CC. G. Roe was preparing t« prosecute a woman as an alleged traf ficket in "white slaves." He hoped send her to state's prison for many years. , Ing identity of the man in the cas wm enid to be knowr to the police. De tectives have him under surveillance A number of women who will be ques tioned are expected to give the infor mation desired as a basis for his ar test Miss Singer was a beautiful girl whe had passed nine vears in a Canadiar onvent school wher she was lured Chicago by false: promises. When . she awoke to the realities she made a sue eecsful struggle against becoming white slave. The girl was living with her unch in Montreal whea she met a woman ¢ few weeks after had left the com vemt. The woman posed as a -wealthy aml lonely woman. She requested th girl to come to Chicago to live wit} her, it i= said. Contrary to the. wishes of the uncle the girl came to this city. Two cousins accompanied her. The 'three went wit) the woman. Everything appeared as represented. After a week the two cou gins returned home. Later Miss Singer was taken.io a resort at 2002 Wabasi avenue, GOING TO HUDSON BAY. Earl Grey Has Pefinitely Arrange T . rip. Spvelal tothe W RL Ottawa, May 27.--Tt is definitely stated that Karl Grey will make trip to Hudson Bay and district befor returning to England. The part will be small owing to Mr difficulties and he will be accompanied by one arde-de-camp. The Royal North West Mounted Police will provide an evort The boat which will meet his excel lency will be fitted out by the de partment of public works. The party will go by cance a considerable part of the journey, where roads are im passable. MAY BE A LEPER. Lorain, O., Man is Detained on Sus picion. New York, May 27.-Suspected being a leper, Saverio Marvelli, eigh teen vears old, of Lorain, 0, is de tained at the Hudson Street hospital under close observation, The lad tried to board a ship for Messina, Italy, vesterday, but the ship's geon turnéd him back. A Hudson street hospital physician was sammon ed and the Italian's skin: examined. The physicians and a specialist from the board of health decided that the on Marvelli's body had all the appearance of leprosy. 0 sur eruption Present Flag to Church. Quebec, May 27. Fraser and Cameron Highlanders have been presefited Andrew's church. The flag is the one cacried at the tercentenary celebration and replica of the colors rarried at battle of the Plains of Abrabam. The colors of the 10 ot, 1 he Seriously Injured. London, May 27.--William Sugar man, proprietor of a sporting gallery, is in a serious condition as a result of the discharge of a rifle into his chest while showing an amatear how to use it. Ungallant Policeman Fined. Chicago, May 27.--Charles B. Car ney, a policeman, was fined fifteen days' pay by the police trial board for failing to give up his seat in a street car to a woman. 23c=--Rutter--205c, Prints, finest farmers' butter, 260, J Crawford. James A. Patten, the most daring operator the Chicago board of trade hae ever known, has fought his lu: battle in the worldjs greatest whet pit, and has gone down to defent ! fore J. Ogden Armour Pate» losses, on the September deal, to< +, were estimated at $500.00. Armour's winnings are said to be agout 82. 000,000, James A. Patten retires from the board of trade, Tuesday rixt, for tame. Floyd Denning, aged twenty-three of Phillipsville, Ont., had his right foot crushed in the machinery of the gov ernment dredge in Toronto bay. Sale to-day, 31 Corset, for @c., al, steel filled. Dutton's, 309 Princess St. Nearly all of the Fall River, Mass. cotton mills will be shut down, Sa- turday, until June 6th to curigil the iv \ IN LOCAL OPTION BELT. Frontenac Will Close for Two Years, Clayton, N.Y., May 27.- town of Clayton went "dry" in 'the fait election, there has been much dis to just what the Hotel Frontenac would make next sea- Since the TUSSION as move and the general opinion was that some effort would be made to trafhe in fiquors through a "club license," by some other methods, but to-day it was learned from one of the York city patrons of the hotel that| ietters had been sent out by the man aging board to many patrons stat ing that when th» hotel is closed this fali it will be for a period of two] years. The Murray Hill hotel will, it is believed do likewise. The prin: | cipal hotels in the village will keep | yen, with the bar trade eliminated, | except that soft drinks may be | handled. Some ol the places occupied | by saloons have already been leasad | or other purposes, the term to begin! it the expiration of this season's Ii-| censes. 2 of Laden With Destructive Insects, Vancouver, B.C. May 27. The vitcial fruit pest inspector held a bon re destroying thirty thousand | insect-laden trees from Ontario, maritime provinces the United States, France, Belgium, Germany and Hol land being part one millior tr shipped to British Columbia this ter. Fhere were enough germs to) orticulturally infected the whole pre vinee nro here the | of w Making First Trip. idlad, Ont, Mav William Pitt, | Midland man who went down with | | MN he the va a7 "i. steamer Goodyear, in Lake Huron making his first trip on the boat A mother and Pitt thder of F recident of six brothers v member. of ( He had Mediand only a SUrVive hir wm was wnadian | weston been hort time af WILL F ¥ TO VIENNA. Count Zeppelin to Visit the Anstrian Emperor, May 27. Count -Zeppelin's Vier the Zep a 5 to Fm peror Francis Joseph will begin the night of June 9th. He will re turn via Breslau, Chemnitz, Nurem burg and Friederichshafen. The round trip will a distance of 1.500 miles, THOUGHT THE COMET WOULD END THE WORLD. Berlin, voyage to pelin V. for on hokrd cial visit on cover Captured by ing Towsers Were Means of Lassos Tongs. onstantinople, t of birden charms to - London, May 27.~In ( a city where every bes and children wear guard against the evil eye, astrologers still ply the gainful trade, and where an eclipse 13 watched with terror by a goodly proportion of the people, Is small wonder, writes # of the London comet was regarded that the tale of how astrologers had foretold that it womld destroy the earth found credence among most people. With the fall of the night on which the catastropl expected the timid came out on ihe roofs in night clothes A hundred souls passed the night there: watch the comet, others to encourage the fearful, others out of a natura! desire to meet the terrors of the last day iu the of friends neighbors, Some praved, others sought to cheer the ordeal of their fellows w th and music. When dawn had and the natural order of the ea and the heavens was seem not to suffered the watchers cheered and cli ped their Lands lustily, to the anno; ance of such as wished to sleep. Meanwhile the municipal authorities, undeterred by celestial signs and por tents, at least [fulfilled their threat and marshalled all their levies against the famous street. dogs of Constant nople. Al through the night, in more than halt the quarters of Pera and Stamboul, detachments of policemen and sweepers, armed with lasmocs and huge wooden tongs, and followed moss w hors 8 a very corresponder Times, that Halle with atid certain awe, and curious their all thousand was sowie to company SOT come rih and familiar lassond, others gw and haisted wand yelpings, in wd the unerspect beasts, Some they gripped with t for all their squeals to the dusy carts.' A few were spared at the sion of soft-hearted inhabitants, who their protéges and to swear to pro vide them with collars bearing names and addrésses and to pay the dog tax when the moncipalite should The captives were drives way, to where 1s uncertain, Some person say they will share the fate of other "ro actionaries'" ana be marooned on a more or less desolate island. others say they will be comverted into gloves: pr, oy shomed and live out their lives ain, that they will he per concentrated ramips on municipal ra tious, ¥ I : : & Hotel at End of Season! son in régard to opening for husiness, | New | sf Is Big Raid on Street Dogs--1Unsuspect« { French | and; bv i aN imposter array of dusrt-enrte rand intention | are, however, compelled to go bail for} deere, | WEATHER PROBABILITIES, »M 27. 16 am-Ot- wr St LAawrente--- wosiorly winds; a. bul mostly fair westerly winds; Verandah | Shades That Are Pretty and Useful + * tion from to make the that time what you the sun, rain, most of your cool, restful, cosy and in and every- A protec and wind piazza y impart ang at viting the same look one strive for THE WALDO-WOODWESB id Screen give all this, and for years * Our Por Shades are woven in manuer that while mosquito nit enough air to keep They come Deep Green Stripes up and them i | Shade { they will last | such a proof t cool Li nfortable n neat Gres and with We have in Shades, down | 1, 6, 8 and 10 FT, WIDE, | PRICE PER FOOT, $1. | 1 && y superior both in quality to anything on the | rance ALL AND SEE THEM AT + +» | 5 teacy's BORN. Wooden | 268th, Cars ner Aifred at 2.30 init aRces od tg mis Pr Ma ve Hurst, aged 81 y ROBERT J. REID, The Leading Undertaker, "Phone, 577 227 Princess Stree. JAMES REID The Otd Firm of Undertaken 204 and 206 PIRLINCESS STREW "Phone M7 Tor mmbulnees. macnn a "FROM THIS OUT 1 could nee soma pretty good Faral- ture and Cink Stoves, for which I FEN pay reakonkilé priges. J. Park. J pp 108 ! COFFEE ava and locha Is roasted and ground by ourselves, | ring perfect freshness. The 49 cents the pound. The « eafinot be expressed in figures. We would like you to try it + + 9» 'Jas. Redden & Co. Importers of Fine Groceries, ; Terrific Speed in Drop. do n, Okie, May 27 -Orville 12 five aeroplane fli x dow hotirs, in ope which ched an: altiveds of 3,700 . fest, vail n which beight he landed at | terrific speed, reaching the earth in | ome minute and twenty-wight seconds, for at a rate of over iwenly miles ag | hour, thus establishing & world's re- (ord for descent, The machine deop- { ped under porfedt control. Fashion's Latest 3: da men's bats, at Camviell Brow', Our ong {priv val withis he ree