Daily British Whig (1850), 6 Dec 1910, p. 1

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Che Da YEAR 77-NO, 282 KINGSTON, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1910. LAST EDITION It is Distressing Res- idents of Kansas RAISED WITHOUT WATER. | te i Broom Corn is Profitable in Far, West. i 8 Wash pokane, Dec. 6-W. D. Chapman, a farmer in the Walla Walla | valley, south-west of Spokane, hid a | small tract of broom corn, without a drop of water from Lhe time | of planting until he harvested it, which! he sold for 8140 a ton. Other farmers have tried the experiment of growing | BAD DROUGHT i raised But Not as Numerous as, Expected Has Some Strange Re-! lationship. { Lebanon, Ohio, Dec. 6.--Claiming to | : his own grandfather and a brother | Richard Connell ar- | ! GRANDFATHER TO HIMSELF. i GAINS I Ye , 10 his own son, friends. "] will tell you hpw it js," said { Connell, in explaining his relationship. {*"You see, 1 met a young widow in Minm WHEAT NOT STARTED nn The State Has Been Without a Heavy Rain Since September Sth, and the Streams are Rune ning Dry. Topeka, Kan., Dee. 6.--Mote than two months without rpin is causing much anxiety to the cities of Kansas and to the stockmen of the western and central parts of the stale, The wreat wheat growing farmers are hop- ing for good raine or heavy smows soon, to get the wheat started." Thou sands of acres of wheat, sown late in September and the first two weeks in October, have not sprouted. Much of this seed is sure to rot unless * rain comes SOOB. There has been no heavy rain in Kansas since September 8th, and only a few local showers of very little ben efit, Last Sunday there was a light shower in Topeka and the surrounding country, but it was only enough te lay the dust. Topeka gets its water supply wells near the Kaw river. These are going dry and the fiest of this week the water commissioners gave warning that unless there were heavy rains within a few days it would be necessary to pump water directly from the Kaw river into the maine. The Kaw is lower at, this time than hae ever been known. Less than ome fourth of the bed is covered now, and the water is only from six to fifteer inches deep. The Arkansas river is absolutely dry from Wichita to the Colorado line Many stngll streams throughout the state that have never heen known t« go dry before are absolutely dry. In "the eattls sountry, through the Flint Hills, apd in the extremg west@n part of the state, the cattlemen are ship ping their stock as fast as possible. ose who cannot ship their cattle inatalling gasolene engines g deep wells to get wate for the stock. All the creeks and oe he tai, hers theaughout then ¥ throughout thes sections ic sind fron well GOES THROUGH SHOW WINDOW. Farmer's Mistake May Cost Hin His Life. Burlington, N.J., Dee. 6,80 clear and transparent were the huge glass panes in a show window in Broad street, that Charles McMame, a farm. er, did not see the glass at.al, and walking right through it caused a 8500 crash. Falling glass cut the elothes of the bewildered farmer, and one twen- ty-pound sliver falling across his wrist nearly severed his hand, McMame al most bled to death before a physiciar arrived. His condition is critical. "1 thought 1 was about to walk Shuongth the front door, which had been open, and when the glas crashed around me 1 thought I had been shot," McMame said. The window was on the level witl the sidewalk. ONE YEAR IN CENTRAL. Sentence Imposed by Judge for As sault, : Brockville, Dec. 6.~Roy Halladay, who pleaded guilty before Judge Me Donald, on a charge of indecent as sault committed at Phillipsville, wa brought up, on Monday morning, for sentence. His honor stated the detail: of the case made it impossible to ex tend leniency for which numerous peti tions were made. I was pointed out that the maximum penalty for such an offence was two years in the pwni- tentiary with the lash. He then mad sentence one year in the Centra prison without whipping. -------------- Girl of 12 is Mother. Pi t 5 2 2 7 | b3 L § gif fF il ¢ iff rt 7 I s re F i ih Bp T g # : iis Ai b i i 1 well «2.022 £21.100 +} Baltimore broom corn and find hat it gives good returns. Accordingly, they are planning on larger planting for the coming season. Several farmers will tey it for the cleaning crop of summer fallow, and believe that it will make good returns. "Broom corn will do well in this section," said A. MM. Butler, superintendent of the College Place broom factory, located in the Walla Walla valley. 'There is no res; son why it cannot be grown as well here as anywhere, and with irriga tion would be the best produced any- where, That grown here this summer was a trifle too brittle, but with more moisture it would be as jgood as any. -------- DIED AT CLAYTON. iit Well-known Retired Farmer Passes Away. Clayton, N.Y., Dec. 6.--Anthony Bonaparte Polter, a well-known re tired farmer of this village, died at his home, last night, following a long illness of * tuberculosis. Had he lived until December 17th he would have been fifty-one years of age. Mr. Potter was born in i Worth, His grandfather, Anthony Potter, was a» soldier of the French army under Napoleon Bosaparte, and the boy was named after the famous general, When he was but an infant bis mother died and he was adopted by an unele, Augustus Potter, of this village, and had spent practic ally his entire life in this section.' On January 10th, 1885, he was united in marriage to Miss Mary E. Thrasher, Desides his widow he is survived by two sons and one daughter, he town of WILL BE NO SUCCESSOR. The Church Managed by Board of Directors. Boston, Dee. 6.~The statement ol lication committee of New York, that Christian Scientists never supposes that Mrs. Eddy would not die, is ac cepted here as an official utterance, gion of the church. The church will continue to be man aged by a board of directors, which, at present consists of A. B. Stewart, Archibald B. McLellan, Stephen BH. Chase, John V. Dittemore, and Adam church provide for the filling of any vacancies by the hoard itself. There will be no successor to Eddy. Real Murderer Turns Up. Columbus, 0., Dee. 6.~Charles Jones of Miami, has conbessed that he murdered Tasmanio, a Syrian peddler, for which Steve Scott was to have been electrocuted on) December 31st. FIVE LARGE CITIES RETAIN THEIR RANK IN UNIT. ED STATES. Mrs. Cleveland Displaces Baltimore, However, and Pittsburg Goes In to Eighth Place. Washington, Dee. 6.--The count of the 1910 census has progressed sufb ciently to cortainty the eight largest cities the United States and to show Mm tha exceeding 500,000, During the ast docade there has been no change in the rank of the first five of these. Tune figures follow: Population Popuiation in 1910 in 1900 4.766888 3,137,202 2,185,283 1,693,575 1,549,008 1,503,697 . 687,029 575,235 670,685 560,509 . 560,663 981.768 Baltimore . BRASS bs, Y67 Pittsburg 533,905 $2007 In the last decade Cleveland and Have exe places t » latter dropping from sixth lo sev: enth rank, and Pittsburg has jumped from eleventh to eighth place. A list of the: ten largest cities of the world, according io the latest census includes three American namely, New York, 1 hioage Philadelphia. The population these ten citics follows: City Now York ... (hieago .... Philadelphi St. Louis Boston... Cleveland Paris . Chicago Rerlin oon Vienna yaaiveds Eugene KR. Cox, chairman of the pub- | and an accurate statement of the posi- | H. Dickey. These men were all chosen | by Mrs. Eddy, but the by-laws of the | determine with practical | each of these cities has a population | : {lowa by the name of Sarah land we were married. She had a BAKER AND MARTIN waza My father met out step- f i daughter and married her. That made : jmy, wile (She other in-law of her ; % ather-in-law and made my stepdaungh, CANADIANS, WHO HAVE RE- tor my stepmother and my father my i TAINED THEIR SEATS. | stepson. i "Then my stepmother, the stepdaagh | E---- a {ter and my wife had o son. He was 'John Burns is Very Hopeful Over my father's son, but he was also the : the Results--8cotland and Ire. 500 of my wife's stepdaughter end | land Will Help the Ministerial | thereiore her Jrahdecn. Tot tnady | Cfuse--Globe Cablegram Bays! "Then miy Wile had a son. My |. Eiberals Will be Sustained. { mother-in-law, the stepsister of my ! London, Eng., Dec. 6.--Barly this | S08, i* also his grandmother, besnise | afternoon the state of 'the, parties was | he is her stepson's child. My father is ! brother-in-law of my child, * be las follows : " i the bi # » ) I Government coalition--Liberals, 89; | cause his stepsister is his wile. i 1 who | Irish Nationalists, 20; labor members, | 8™ the brother of my own son, 16: total, 125. {is also the child of my grandmother. Opposition--Unionists, 129. {1 am my mother's arother-in-law, my | wife is her own child's aunt, my son {is my father's nephew and I'm mv town grandfather. So there vou arc" 1 { ondon, Lec. 6.--With sixty-nine | distFiets heard from the polling rhows a unionist gein of four, and liberal | gain of one. The standing of tee {unionists is 32; liverals, 31, 1aborites, 5; nationalists, 1. In East Finsbury J. Allen Bav¥er, a {Canadian liberal, was elected vith a {majority of 500, | "Fighting Joe" Martin, ex-premier oh British Columbia retains his seat | in Bast St, Pancras with a fair ma- jority. His speech in favor of the suf Aragettes helped his cause. } i "Joe" Martin wrote to the Times, explaining that the famale =ufirarsts | misrepresented his attitude, on the { question. He is ready to vote for the eniranchisement of women on the same | terios. as men. He does not support | {the conciliation Lill, because it gives voles to rich women, not poor. He | {save his supporters believe Jacobs is a | | nominal women's suffrage candilie | running in the mnterests of the toy | ! party. | Jurns at Battersea, yesterdawosaid: | "What about London, which was so- | ing to he swept hay the unjonists? Lon. | dun ix solid. A solid Ireland had to | coms yet; Scotland had to put in Fer . n 0 ; $02 mi ¢ appearance, and Scotland had a OY - La n Gravesend, ung: by Sv majority. whelming majoaty in favor of the! | government. They hoped to make TRIBUTE OF NAPANEE Wales practically solid for the gov: ! 'ernment, The first round results have | i fveen firktratés In the second round || po THE MEMORY OF LATE REV. hive fot the least doubt things 'will | improve." F. T. DIBB, A CANADIAN ELECTED, { | STH THLBERT TANKER MT. Liberals Will Win, | ! Toronto, Dec. 6.--A Globe cablegram | {says a liberal victory in Britain is Crowded--Those Who Took Part | assured, unionist gains being few. A] jn the Service. Mail and Empire cable says Ballowr's| . followers are again disappointed with | Special to the whig. yesterday's results. Napanee, Dec, 6.--The funeral of the ---- { tate Rural Dean Dibb took place, yes- Changed Their Tone. | terday afternoon, and was one of the London, Dec. 6.--The unionist papers, | t 4 x a this morning, have changed tone con. | remains were Yikes, is Se May Mag- siderabfy, and most of them agree that dalene"s at eight. o clock in the Morn, : : ing and lay in state until two o'- the results of the elections, so far, clock in the afternoon: when the re. give little ground for hope ° Tigo mains were hHrought to Trinity Metho- ing the Asquith ministry. They are! poo ooh where a public funeral | beginning AG seek reasons for the im-| Cor held. Although the church seats { pending victory of J gaverninert: | over one thousand it could not begin which they seem to admit now to be to hold all those who wished to pay pretty well assured. They amuse the last tribute to one they loved, aud | government of ulterior motives In yhoge sudden death had shocked the | forcing the election on the registration', ive community. {of eighteen months ago. However,! The Methodists had placed their {they are urging unionist followers 10! odifics at the disp sal of the members {a neversay-die campaign, and point of the Church of England, on ac { out that they can still gain enough 10 count ok the church of the latter under- { at least put the government into the going removation, an act much ap- { hands of the Irish nalionahsts, whose preciated by the friends of the de- ceased. Over forty of the clergy of the diocese were present. The bishop of On tario officiated. The opening service way taken by Rev. Canon Starr. The Stores Closed During the Hours--Trinity Methodist Church | power must militate against the gov- | ernment. The Daily Telegraph makes a rabid | denunciation = of the Asquith-Redmond | conlition and says that they have | formed a plot to destroy the British | constitution. It talks of Asquith and | his government as pharlatans of in | sincerity. | All the liberal papers, on the other | hand, are congratulating their fol {lowers on their victories in the elections, assuming that uothing can | now give the Unionists the upper hand las the great majority of 'the constitu- { encies still to be voted in are held | by Asquith's supporters. Nothing | short " a miracle can now defeat the | government. ; son and Ven. Archdeacon Carey preached the funeral sermon, and made mention of the kindness of the Metho- dists in offering their edifice for the service. Concluding prayers were said by Revs. F. W. Armstrong and W. F. Fitzgerald and the bishop pronounced the ction, As the cortege moved away sireels {were lined with titizens and the izreat number of floral offerings spoke of the regard in which the deceased was held by all Slates in the town. The Boy | Scouts, Napanee, were presen | - At Burnley, last night, Asquith made 'carried the y Wea from the nd a very optimistic speech in which be the trityutes filling a large van, {anid : "The veto of the crown, al-| A service of holy communion was | though still s technical part of the held in the basement of St. May's law, is as dead as Queen Anne, and | church, hy Canon Starr and Rev. Mr. { nobody laments it or is worse for its Woodeoek, for the members of the : co. Still the crown stands congregation, where the body of the on a much firmer foundation in the late priest lay in state, and was view- and loyalty of the Ted for the last time by ls sorrowing the veto power existed. We parishioners. 2 sl that the lords veto shall fols | The stores and business places clos X ed from two to fouriout respect to I -------- SEPARATION BILL. Y A memorial service was held on Sun. vicar, The sor- decreased Decree Dividing Church and State non wis preached 'by Rev. Caoon : Portugal. | Starr, who had kbown Mr. Dibb in- Lisbon, Dec. 6.--~The Portuguese gov. timately and spoke of the faithful and preparing a hill for the devoted labours of the doceassd and of church and state, and the sad loss he would he hot to the has resulted in collisions between congregation of Sti Mary's and to clericals in various the diatese of Ontario. = Funeral i largest ever witnessed wm Napanee. The | dean of Ontario read the eripture bes: ial sho : {ngw such % magnificent rig "of stock. The attend. tried co in good, © ; 8 OF KINGSTON, Preston--Dutch Company Not Invest. Special to the W hig. Ottawa, Dec. urged' by the which has an appointment with minister of railways and canals Thureday. Certain seasons there | a8 early as September some boats dams along the Rideau lakes to back explained William Harty, the water for the dry sea MP. 6.--onsgervation water along the Rideau canal will be Kingston deputation, overflows while in the latter part | the numer the water is very low and SWANTED rived here to spend several weeks with | Along Rideau Lakes to Hold Back Water WHATMR HARTY SAID IN REGARD a PEMANDS Who Was Knocking the North-West --Complaint Made by W. T. R win of the for is an of have | had to lay up. "We, want a system of hold son," for Kingston. "This will not only benefit navization and tunsure its permanence | fromy veginning to end of the season, | but wili résult also in developing good | water powers at several points," { decidedly interesting turn has been { given to the trades and commerce de- | partment inquiry into allegations that scme one has been "knocking" | west conditions when a Dutch company wanted te North loan invest capital there, The premier, yesterday, referred {to this in the house, and said Sir Charles Fitzpatrick denied tl {had given the information alleged that hat he to have been given, Mr. Monk, who call ed for the enquiry, quest withdrew bad had time to read the corres ence, | Aagus Claude MacDonald, M.P | ternoon, an amendment | mimion elections act. The principa his motion until at Sir Wilfrid's re he pond- .» will | \likely introduce in the house, this af- to the do- 1 sug- {posted change i to have polis--open-at | Contrary to {still gets more immigrants than other province. Of 208,00 last 16,000 stayed in this i to a return cording made i province, Unionist, who was returned to repre- elections from 6 a.m. until 8 pm. general belief Ontario any year ac mn the House of Commons this afternoon. Mrs. John Cascarseau, aged forty-four, bed, here, this morning. bushand "and two children. PITH OF THE NEWS. Over the World. The Duke of "Chartres, a has died. A bronze late Sir Henry Irving, veiled in London, Eng. weather is treking east. has sent a seventh remittance of 000 to John E. Redmond, / St. Catharines city council wil a large deputation the deepening of the Welland ea Roy Green was sentenced, at ham, to for drugging Handsor, Mrs. Mary Baker G. Eddy will and robbing expected, but in Mount Auburn tery, Cambridge, Mass. | "Eddie" Ontario professions] last winter, playing Ont., has: been club this year. At Toronto, in the course heating of the partnership suit fecting Turners, limited, hockey |} with Wat liquor was shipped as hardware. At cleven o'clock, in the six-day bieyele grind, ahead of the record for this They are still sticking. Because Melville White, New forgot the marriage license, his within Frank wedding of and hours married White's rival. Lk. So as to Get Goods in Duty. attempt duty on goods purchased the retent rigorous enforcement can smi way of Canadian frontier, at treal, Kingston, Niaghra = Falls, bec and other ports of entry. Positive information to this having reached Colleclor passed it along to the treasury that many arrests are examination of {irom mow om it is intended (baggage will be carefully Guelph Fat Stock Show. ter live stock exhibition, and of whom were at the i in of impending inspectors have made but from Europe by way of Canada, that all naut, examined tal, after having received rites say they collection ar German was found deat She leaves a in The Very Latest Culled From All Ju grand- son of King Louis Philippe of France, statue in memory of the has been un- It was twenty-six degrees below zero in Winnipeg bm Tuesday morning. The The United Irish League of America $10,- 1/ pend to Ottawa ufging nal, Chat- four years in peniténtiary George not be buried under the mother church, a= ceron Oatman, star player of the league erloo, signed for the Quebec n al- : \ wholesale druggists, it was sworn that a case of Tuesday, leaders n at New York, were one mile and several laps time. York, bride to-be, Miss Lucy Daniels, declared the twenty-four Williams, TAKING OTHER ROUTES Without | New York, Dec. 6.--Balked iv their, to evade the payment abroad of the est resi by law at the port of New York, Ameri- are now operating by Mon- Que- effect Loeb," he © ment, with the result that a wide net wisters. has been spread and it is understood t t Fand actual seizures will be the rule. Guelph, Dec. 6.~Judging is in pro- every department at the wip- never 20 of son, { GREENWOOD GOES BACK. He Will Again be in House of Com- mons, London, Dec. 6.~The prominent fea- tures in today's early returns in the parliamentary election was the ap ture of Sunderland by coalition par ties. T. Hamar Greenwood, the Cau adian liberal, who returns to the House of Commons after an absence of less than a year, and Frank Glad- stone, laborite, turned out two umion- ist members, The majorities, last Jan- wary, were 741 and 1,212. The polling took place in Sunderland, vesterdav, hut the results were not announced up- til to-day. Greenwood received .a Ta- jority of 1,697 and Gladstone tad a margin of 9! votes. The turnover is attributed mn part at least to the hit terness of the boileranakers 'in the Sunderland district, who were locked out some mon'hs back. ie tesults in Newcpwtle-Oz Tvne were also made known for the first time to-day. They show no change, tne liberal and laborite candidates Leings retmned by sliz: tly reduced majori- ties, Unoprosed returns. however, placed the umionists again in the front, to day, with a total of 129 seats against 125 secured by the coalition. ln some instances, tc-Fay, there: were thie cornered cortes's of special terest, those including the fizht in the Bat tersea division of Battersea and (.ap- ham, where John Burns, labor mem. ber, was pitted against Col. Sir John Harrington, unionist, and socialist candidate, C. 1, H. Shaw. The complete standing of the tides at four pm. was Unionists 126: government coalition, Liberals, 90; Nationalists, 25; Labor- bites, 16. Total 131. Net unionists gains, 3; rain, 1. That the unionists have made only three gains where they expected to make twenty-five ia the admission of the leaders this afternoon. They Lave advised their followers, by telegraph and letter, to make the strongest con- centrated efforts in the remaining seats in order to prevent losses to the cause, There were pollings to-day for forty. one seats. "Follow Sunderland." This is the new war cry being sounded, to-night, in liberal meetings throughout Great Britain. The vistory of Hamar Green- wood, Canadian, and his running mate, in Sunderland, is being enthusi- astieally acclaimed -as the gieutest in the campaign. Both of these seats were regarded as thoroughly unionist. ' par- net labor Were Nearly Drowned. Belleville, Ont., Dec. 6.--Two lads, named A. Arnest aid W. Vallance, nar- nowly escaped drowning here by break- ing through thin ice on the harbor, where they were skating. Both were much exhausted when rescued. Archbishop Langevin TI. Montreal, Dec. 6.--Archbishop Lange- vin, of St. Boniface, is seriously fi, in Hotel Dieu hospital, here. Sister Leduc states he is. in a very weak con- dition; no one is allowed to speak to him. SEVEN THE RIVER. Almonte Pleasure Seekers Five Minutes in Water Before Rescued --Had a Nery Close Call. Almonte, Dec. 6.--A skating acd- dent that might have resulted fatally took place on the river, here, Satur- day afternoon. About twenty people ! were skating and playing hockey on the bay below the town, when sudden: ly the ice gave way and precipitated Miss Mary Little and B. Guan into twelve feet of water. Immediately there was a rush to help those in the water, when the ice broke once more, throwing five otherp into the river. Mr, Gunn was having the boys with hoc key sticks were doing their best to rescue the skaters. After about five minutes, when all parties in the water were about peris with the cold, a ladder was secured and the two wo- men who got in and Mr. Gunn weve rescued. One boy named Leclaire was sulled out with the aid of a chain of ockey sticks when be was about all the water, while in. Outside of a thorough ducking in the joy water, the skaters are none the worse of their adventure. The river is still unsafe for skaters, and the accident will be 8 warning to this. Generous Old Bachelor Dead. Hastings, Ont., Dec, 6.--Henry John- aged eighty-four years, passed away Sunday. was ono of the old- residents of this place, having lived {here for fiftymine years, and was born 'in Prince Fdward county. The de |consed was very charitable, i | siven sums of money to the English church, of which he was an active } member. He also gave $8,000 to the House of Refuge. He was un- jod, and has neither brothers nor Quebec, Dec. 6.--~Thers sensation here wi it became that Jacques Faure, the Fremch who died in Jefirey Hale | Roman Catholic church, wos really in : his, who was siquit of Mrs. Lowry, here, i before ' for OUT ON UNSAFE ICE SKATERS PLUNGE INTO a hard time keeping Miss Little above "tof age. He was 15 iis Montroni WEATHER PROBACILITIES Toronto, Ont Dec. 6 10 am On. tawa Valley and Upper St. lawrence - Northerly winds: falr and very cold Wednesday. north-west winds with continued low lemperature. New Ideas As you look through our Holiday Stock. It is a practical demonstra- tion of possibilities in gathering under one roof nearly everything to make people happy at Christmas time. PRESENTS TO PLEASE EVERY. BODY. HANDKERCHIEFS, of different kinds choose. from. For Children ... 2 12¢ to 30¢ For Ladies ... .. Bc to $2.70%¢ For Men ... Hundreds to Many of of them boxes or booklet. SEE OUR CHILDREN'S KERCHIEFS, Hémmed Edges, 6 for 18¢. LADIES' HANDKERCHIEFS Of Maltese Lace, in Deautiful gift HAND. Irish Orochet Lace, Embroidered, Cluney Lace, Cross Bar Linen, White with Colored Borders, Apron Handkerchiefs, Kimono Handkerchiefs, Plain Irish Linen Goods, Rte. SEE OUR SPECIAL EMBROIDERED HANDKERCHIEFS Beautiful patterns, 12 1-2 each. \ COME TO THE STORE WHERE YOU GET r PRESENTS TO PLEASE. PRICES TO PLEASE. And Discount Stamps with all Cash Sales. % 9 STEACY'S BORN. TAYLOR--In Kingston, Dec 3rd "1910 to r. and rs. Oaberns Taylor, King Street West, a daughter DIED. D---In Kingston, Nam own Juns 2nd. 18383 at Warwickshire, England private . MAIN--In Kingston. on Dee 6th, 1918 Helen Main, eldest daughter of the date Adam Main Funeral (private) from Ner late re. sidence, 430 Princess St, Thurs day morning, at 10 am, to Cata- ragqui Cemetery ROBERT J. REID, Undertaker, 280 Princess Strect Dec. 6th nd. Born samington Funeral TOWNSEN 1910, The "Phone 577. JAMES The Old J lrm of re, 204 STREET. and 234 PRINCESS PF asne 147 for "TWO HAIR MATTRESSES One 8 ft. Gin, one 4 FI. Meth r» made in good, new ticking These are certainly a snap. Al TUHRK'S 'Phone 705. ALL NE == Taragona Almonds. Grenoble Walnuts. Sicily Filberts. ~ Brasil Nuts, Shelled Walnuts. Shelled Filberts. Table Raisins. Table Figs in Glass, Table Prunes in Glass Jas. Redden & Co. P.B.--Cadbury's New Christ- mas Chocolates are here. Death of B. A. Boas. Montreal, Dec. 6.--B. A. Boma, found- wr of Relormed Judsiss, m Catada, died, Monday, after » brief illness. He was stricken with bronchitis om Sat widay and death followed from heart disease. Mr. Boas wes 8 native of Germany. He wes sevemty two years taken to New York { years old, and came to forty-two years ago, sagag dng in the importing 'business, nt which be made an unqualified success. Two sons and » daughier survive. Because they were not transferred to 2 new school building, seventy-five Fersey City boys have gone of 8 strike and refuse to go to school. The an thorities say v will bresk the strike hy arresting the boys and send ing them to truant schools. ar "Froxh caramels," Hibeon's.

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