Daily British Whig (1850), 6 Jan 1911, p. 1

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

The YEAR 78-NO, 4. KINGSTON, ONTARIO, FRI DAY, JAN UARY 6, aily British 1911, ---- LA ST. EDITION ATHER. SHOE It is Found to pon Loaded With Glu- cose, 2000 KILLED In A Great t Eatthquske in Asiatic Russia Washington, Jan. 6.~Fraudulent "loading" of rather by the use of gla cose gnel other. materials is being prac ticed 10 an momense extent to the « detriment of the lower quality shoes, according to intoFmation laid before grest by Ih, Wiley, chemist of the department of agriculture. Dr, Wiley. has gathered a collection of Com 4 samples of this loaded leather and has pronounced the work "a simple fraud." *}] ally leather loaded," speci i= sole sail Dr. Wiley, "Glucose adds to the of the leather and, of course, when vou go out into the and the which is soluble, out and the water runs int, it There ought to be some law tg, the weight MANY SOLDIERS RUSHED IN TO DO RELIEF WORK. wet SNOW, glacare, runs place, prevent practice." WILL VISIT CANADA. Communication With Seat of Horror Not Yet Establisheida--Terrible Reports Come to the Front, Tashkend, Asiatic Russia, Jan. 6.-- Two thousand soldiers, neccontred for relief work, were rushed into the earth- quake stricken tarritory of Semirve chensk, Tarkestan, where Tully F000 . are now reported to" have been killed or wounded in the terrific and Jevast ating tremors which lasted all day Wednesday, Practically 1,000 square males of territory are said have hee: ravaged with whole town wiped aut. and wide fissures in hi: etoppes growing hourly. «= . Repgrts from towns and villages on the edge -of the death belt, whither refugees fled in greal noambers during the night, ted to-day that cond tions in the wilerior of the devastaigl gone are terrifying beyond deseription Awbig det whiment of troops was «or dered to hurry at all possible speed | fave been the frome the Tashkend barracks towards] the army surgeon Vyerny, on fortified town of 23,000 in| a a preventative against typhoid habitants, which is reported whotly in | fever that the chief of staff, Maj-Gen, ruins Wood has issued 4 general order look At Kopal, a ing to the vaccination of the eniire town hes in riins arty, if possible, with thiz virus. meagre reports, Gen, Wood says practically cut Bff and from the "The pdministration of terior of the earthquake zone no SErum., practiced, finite word came at all The protective value of this In the SBirke desert, cast of Kopal, | has been fully demonstrated, antl upon the vast steppes stretching | order that the army way have along between the mountains; hun- | benefit of the protection thus afford dreds of the members of Turkestan | ed, commanding officers ire enjoined tribes are said to have been swallow: | to use their hest endeavors to bring ed up hy the earth. about the voluntary acceptance Scores of persons perished in Lake | the prophylactic treatment by all of, Tssyk-kul. When the earth began i | fi and enlisted men, and by ali rock many fled into boats upon the | civilians resident st military posts." water, thinking themselves sale from : eee falling buildings or cracks in the ESCAPE President of English nedictines Will Make TS Rome, Jan. 6.---The pope has 're ceived in private audience the Right! Rev. Francis Aidan Gasquet, the abbot president of the English Pene The Abbot Uasquet is head of the commission appointed to revise the text of the Vulgate, and he re ported progress on this work. He also said that illness would pre. vent him from visiting the United States and Canada at the present time, but that he expected to make the trip nest summer, when he would deliver lectures in favor of revision dictines to Pricked With Typhoid Virus, Jun, 6.80 convincing experiments made hy with typhoid viris Washington, great section of the according to the Communication is m de antityphaoid ix harmless mensire and iy ns now f of earths However the surface of the luke became po violent that the boat were swamped and sunk. So great was the force of the trem ars that mountains in the Koongi Ala-tan range were split open, The force of the shocks was felt for hundreds of miles along the northery feontior of China, 'Toar 'that an epidemic-might iollow in the distriet, led the ancharition sand great caravans caviying medicsd supphlea into the striexea zone, Army medical men were commands | company the relitf corps; The fate of the soldiers in the bar racks at Vyernwv is amknow,. cot. The gasrigton there had been hat reconth strengthened, Fleet couriera wore ordes cood with all possible haste Vyerny, and long provision were started in that direction, HOLD-UP 'MEN FROM PRISON. FIVE Some Friend Passes Men Saws ad They Successfully Cut hele Way to Freedom. Atlanta; Ga., Tan. 6.--Alter knock: ing out and binding a guard, five des: perate "hold-up" men escaped at six o'clock last night from the Atlanta jail, which is considered strongest pris- an in Georgia. For three weeks the men road A Atlanta mightly by their hold-ups. . \ week ago they wgre captured and lodged in jail. Some friend succeeded in passing "them saws and they cut bars to windows of their cell on the " fourtu floor of the jail, made rope of their blankets, let themselves down and escaped. They were to a Ita pro towards trains Brazil. Reduces Duty. Washington, Jan, 6. <The new year in Brazil was born under auspices fn Farahle to the United States. During 1911 the duty on flour will be reduced discovered as they about to get away by a guard, hut they sandbagged and gagged him. 3 : Then they descended from the window. thirty per cent. instead 'of twenty per Bloodhounds are being used to trail cent, as previously wan the onse, the prisoners while on one or more articles of Ame | > His rican production a decrease of twenty Whiskey Kills Child, per cent, will be made. Chicago, Jan. 6.-Anna 0O'Hern, - DAILY MEMORANDA. threes years old, who drank a third of Annual a pint of whiskey, con Monday, while OF RE ale piel) Bros suffering from pneumonia, died, yes- 4 8. , . 14th Band, Palace Rink. to-night terday, at het parents residence. Skating at the covered rink to-night, | Coroners jury decided death was Ice good. to posumonia and convulsions, Matinee Saturday, 2.30 latter brought on hy the liquor, Eima." Grand Opera House Companion Court Frontenac No LOY. meets this evening wt 8 p.m Foresters welcome, were due the pm, "Bit . Perhaps you think vou know it but can you prove it? 437, Al all, Talks with the Advertising Man "Price or Service' The store that bases its appeal for patronage on prices and Prices alone is doing business on a ome-side policy. ; iy Price Is a consideration, it_is true, but service {8 equally fmportant, and the merchant who does not make it a feature in his advertising is Reing to lose = lot of business he otherwise would get 2 Because service is a greater consideration than price to a very large sectign of any community. 3 Some merchants have the faculty of selecting or tralulng a superior class of clerks: salespeople who intelligently anticipate a customer's wants, who give thelr undivided attention to the customer they are serv. ing, who do not earty on a conversation with a fellow clerk at the same Suge Swi and who are really anxious tu please ! 'Some stores deliver goods jist when they are promised; not at noon when they were promised for nine o'clock. : In some stores' goods are returnable, and (he price is refunded : without the necessity of going through a lot of red tape; "These are all phases' of store sefvice Which every customer appre. oRebadiv eirdie referred to in a store's afvertiving service will 'win the best chass t of a store's == (HURCH GONE - "; {Odessa Methodists Sut. the | BENEFIT T™ MINERS, Can Now OC onvert Gold Into Can- 'adian Cash. Ottawa, Jan. 6.~Dr. Haanel, direc tor -of mives, has returned from an Se spection of the new assay 'office at Vancouver, and says the completion of the refinery in connection with the Canadian branch of the royal mint will enable the iter of. the Yukon to convert his gold readily into Canadian cash, and not as heretofore, send it to Seattle. He does not think the plant now - established there will interfere with the work of the mint at Ottawa, except that the miner would be able to get value for his metal about four days scomer than if assay- ed at the capital. There is also a move to take off the assay charges there to encourage Canddian enter- prise, fered Big Loss ONLY WALLS REMAIN FIRE TOTALLY DESTROYED THE Be TLDING, It Could Not be Replaced hy $20, 000--Was Built in 1860--Revival Services Were Being Held in it) This Week. Bpecial to the Whig. Odessa, Jan. 6.--Fire totally de- | stroyed the Methodist church, corner Factory and Elgin streets, ()dessa, on Thursaay afternoon. The building was partially insured. Its pastor is Rev. H. Bell, rhe building was discovered on five about four o'clock, and -it is thought the blaze originated from a defective chimney. A bucket brigade was form- ed, hut all efforts were unavailing, as | the edifice soon became a mass of flames and the spire tumbled in. By six o'clock the fire had burned itseli out, and only the bare walls remain- pod. The church eonld _not be restored for legs than $20,000, . This edifice and iis predecessors were historic, and its destruction will carry rigrets to many widely scattered gene- The beautiful site was given Booth, =n pioneer U. Loyalist and the then struggling con- gregation built a comfortable white | wooden structure of the type of those | days, The ecommodions, comfortable | and pretty brick edifice burned, yes- terday, replaced its predecessor in 1569-70. Rev." Marmaduke L. Pear son wan pastor in charge and the building was dedicated by the famous divine, Rev, Morley Punshon, fully 1,500 people, being present on that occasion, among whom was the writer, A series of revival services began on Monday last, under most favorable conditions, and may be continued at the village hall, and suitable tempor ary arrangement will be effected to eave for the large congregation at present homeless. MEXICAN CAMPAIGN. FALLS INTO RIVER. Man Who Tries to Wear Hobble : Skirt Comes to Grief." Philadel hia, <Pa., Jan, 6.--Tripped by his "hobble skirt," in which he was, to. hop, past the reviewing stand at the city hall, Charles Croshy, of Woodbury ambled off a ferry boat in- to the Delaware river when the Co- lumbia €lub was crossing from Cam- den, The skirt rotated swimming, but he yas rescued by deck hands who threw half a dozen life Servers the cry of "woman Bae FOUND DEAD IN HOTEL. Busineis Manager of ° Seamen's Union Committed Sulcide: Detroit, Jan, 6.--Gerald TF. Peirce, business manager of the Lake Sea- men's Union, was found dead in bed at the Brunswick hotel, with a bullet wound in his head. He had been dead several hours, In a letter addressed to the coroner, Peirce explained the act by saying he had ' loaned - $400 to a "business man," and that hg eould not get it buck in 'time to make his aecounts balance. He did not name the person to whom he had loaned the money, TRAGEDY. OUT WEST MOTHER™MND SON DEATH Within Few Yards of Their Own Home During a Terrible Bliszard \ . ==(ioing From Stable to House. North Portal, Sask, Jan. 6.--An- other homestending tragedy is report. ed from a point twenly miles north of here, where Mrs, Samuel Turner and her twelve-year-old son were roam to death within a few yards of i ouse during a terrible blizzard at rations. hy Capt. FROZEN TG Rebels Take Town and Also Suffer © Defeat. Mexico City, Jan. 6.~Cusihuriachis, a town of 3,000 inhabitants, south of | hot San' Andres, in Chihishua, is reported their : Tuesday night. Their bodies were tor Hae falley into the hinds of ihe found buried in n depp drift, | the Joss Munez, its, iff politico, Whe is mother with her*eloak wrapped around credited with having saved Gen. Na- They were evidently returning from varro from disaster, in Mal Paseo can- the stable, where they had been. feed- yon hy slipping. past the insurgents ing the cattle, when caught and held and giving the warning of an ambush, by the terrible wind. Two younger prepared for him, is said to be sexy- | hildren were found alive but ~ near y ing as guide for Navarro on Bis |gymished in the house, The father march to Ciddad Guerrero, where the | \8 away at the time. 4 . rebels have been. gathering for somo } aT Ro time. It ie ledrned that Lieut. -Col, Julio Cervantes has recently had an encounter near the Mormon colony of Janos in Chihuahua, After a fight lasting two hotrs, the' rebels foul northward, and are believed fo have crossed the frontier. HERE'S A GIANT. Man Wants to Become United States Citizen. Rochester, N.Y., Jan. 6.--Robert Wil- liam James Dodson, twent®-nine years old, of London, England, declared his intention of becoming a citizen of the United States here. He is the tallest pan ever to apply for papers at the office in the court house. He mea- sures six feet eight and one-hall inches. The = official machine was in- sufficient to measure him. Clarence Roberts, the clerk, stood on a table and used a ruler. Dodson said he has a brother four- teen years old, who is . six feet four inches in height, and still growing. The Waterways Staff. Ottawa, Jan. 6.--The appoixitment of the International Waterways Coma mission under the new trealy will be considered shortly gud the announced as soon as the salaries are Soto i Lk is said that if he desires the Sir George (Gibbons will ie over the Canadian sec- he other present members are Louis Coste and W. J, Stewart. It is rumored that 'there may be some changes an® in that connection J. B. Hunter, deputy minister of* public works, is mentioned for one of the positions, Chagolate Cures Dope Habit. linghamton, N.Y, Jan. 6.--The dis- covery has been made at the County hospital that unsweetened chocolate is a cupe for the morphine habit. The attending physician and the - matron noticed that morphine patients became exceedingly fond of unsweetened choco- late. They trisl the expegiment of gradually | substituting the chocolate for the allowance of morphine, until now the patients are partaking of the purg_chocelate pills and sleeping in a natural manner, No morphine in any form is used. The credit of the discovery is due ta the matron, Mrs, E. D. Cook ! Five Children Cremated. Wilkesbarre, Pa., Jan. 6.--Five chil- dren were burned to death early, yes- terday morning, when the home of John Marksavge, of Minersville, near here, was 'burned to the ground with two adjoining houses, The father and mother were awaken- ed by 'the shouts of the néighbors and the smoke which filled their zggom and got out gafely, but were unable to rescue thy children, ! The father tried to rush in to rescus them, but was badly burned. An Aged Aged Apple. Cobourg, Ont., Jan. 6.--An apple of pen tion. Hustling Ahead. / Toronto, Jan. 6.--The Ontario rail way commission is building the rail- way intoqPorcupine. It has 500 men : working on the surveyed Tine, the tim- ber is being cleared from the land, ties are down, and the steel laid. the Stark variety, picked in George [Within six months the rails will be Orr's orchard im Hamilton township, {carrying freight into Porcupine, . on October 30th, 1909, was exhibited, . . " Tiere, yestorduy, i ina good state of pre- Shot Mail Clerk, » and appenring as if it might | Seattle, Jan. 6.~The mail car on be kept for some time yet, The apple i i was in the cellar under or- dinary conditions. It was wrapped separately in a piece of newspagiy. Réduction in Pullman Rates. Albany, N.¥., Jan, 6~The public jon granted permission to the * tariff Montreal, Jan. 6.--The year 1010 has increased the list of Montreal mil- Lionaires . ping gar New York. The result of this order rodiices the charges for upper hugthe from $1.56 to $1.35, from #2 pd from $2.50 10 £2. The! p in rates becomes ellactive eh. et, 191. Hom. Clifford Sifton, chairman of the Commission, Dominion Conservation will addriss the: Canadliaa Clob cash register. peisonnel | W. BR. Travers, late manager of the Regine {to buy furs 110 PAY DEBTS, The Misconduct of an Ohio Wesleyan Boy GOT THE DIAMONDS 'HOLDING UP GIRL . IN JEWELLERY STORE. i Br : oi Holds Up Crowd at Point of Gan, But" is Captured ' After Chase-- 'Son of Woman Evangelist. Marion, Ohio, Jan. 6.~Seizing a young. woman clerk, who was alone in the store, about noom, yesterday, Roy P. Cnst, nineteen years old, frechman at Wesleyan University, made her go to the show window and pro- cure' for him a small tray of twelve diamonds, valued at about $1,000, He them compelled the terrorized young woman to turn with the diamonds and walk back a dozen feet or more to the BY "Now get me # out of there quick," the young desperado commanded. Hor fingers trembling, Miss Krause pressed the "no sale" key and handed him two silver dollars. With the revolver still leveled at her, the diamond thief backed out of the front door with the | diamond tray. : Miss Krause came out screaming "thief ! thief ! thief !" us soon as he | had got outside the door. Calmly | pointing his gun at fhe little crowd in i the street and threatdling to shoot, the young man dashed street into an alley. - The heavy fall of snow impeded his | escape and he was overtaken by Sam: | uel Smith, a printer, who had been attracted by Miss Krause's eries, and a score of people pear the Commercial Clubhouse, a block away. He made no resistance and was at once taken to police headquarters and sweated.« Three Rings Missing. A search revealed that three of the | diamonds were missing, but they were | subsequently' found in a stairway into | which he had dodged in his wild flight. Crist wore a gold watch fob and gold | cuff battons, all marked "RPC" and a Phi Kappa Phi fraternity pin. | 'He was speedily recognized as an | O.W.U. boy and imquiry at the | try office at Delaware confirmed the | youth's identification made by a loeal man. Crist entersd at the university this fall, He is the son of Mrs. Rose Polter, a widow who is engaged in evangelistic work at Delaware. She moved there last fall from her home in Nicholeville, Kv., so that her son, might attend school. When Crist learned that his identity. was known and that his mother 'had arrived from Delaware, he | confessed. Crist, stated that he came to Marion last week. He said that he had some notes to meet January lst, but had until Monday to meet Ee He has | been receiving a comfortable allowance from his mother, who is said to he quite wealthy, but, nevertheless, he | was obliged to borrow from his class. mates and as he termed it, 'was driven to his daring act that he might raise money to meet "his debts of honor." He said he had a little ower 87 when he came here. He hoped to be able to | get in a poker game and win enough money to pay his notes, but, failing | in this, he decided to purchase a gun and secure something of value by the method which he followed. { ------------------ POLICEMAN SLAIN By Armed Bandits , Who Stepped on a Car. | Duluth, Minn., Jan. 6.--~This dis- trict is much © excited over several hold-ups of electric radial hy re- cently. : These culminated this maiming in the murder of Policeman Chesmore by | two armed bandits who entered the | car on which he was riding, retieved the passengers of ali their valuables | and cash and shot the policeman dead | when he showed fight. i! It developed later , that the bandiis were the bell boys and night porter of a local hotel, who had gagged the night clerk, and got away with, all the cash ont of the register. are still at large and a bi Form of automobiles and mounted ypolice is scouring country for them. ° | across the | > | i Whalers' Fine Harvest. Edinburgh, Jan. 6.--Dundee whalers | have just completed their most = suc- cessful senson for twenty years. They caught seventeen whales and © 1,447] walruses. Ome of the incidents of the season was the wreck of "the Tantina Agatha, the crew of which lived for | months with the Eskimos, . | A Young Man Killed: . | the | Osborne | Nobody READY FOR REVOLUTION. People are Satisfied; Others Predict s Trouble. Helsingfors, Finland, Jan, 6. While M.. Stolypin tells the world that on the whole Russian people are content- ed, the sound of a coming storm is drumming in his ears. Liberal aspira- tions, cowed last vear and sil enced, are sgain recovering from the frost of official repression, quently brutal Cossacks more been busy in St, Moscow, and other cities. As usual, the awakeming is coping through the Russian students, who are called "the political barometer of Rus- sia." factor in the liberal awaken- ing is the never-to-be-stifled indigna- tion about the excommunication of Tolstoi, whose gospel of freedom works like fiery yeast in thouSands of hearts. All over Russia there were great de- monstrations which i in one form and another continued some considerable time against the government that is trying to smother the best elements in the nation. Sigifilicant of the disquieting posi tion, $00, is the fact that the director of the police department told the bug- get committee of the douma that the expenses of the police could mot pos- sibly be cut, owing to the growing strength of the revolutionary move- ment. Careful observers in various parts of the country declare .that the condi: tions to-day are similar to those that led up to the Red Sunday in 1905. 'The government policy of repression is now just the same as it was then. Frequent arrests ocour, newspapers since an F Conse have Numce Petersburg, |are fined, exile aud imprisonment once, spicits fight andpeech More rew: ad the brave ing for liberty ol thougin. ip § EXPERTS E XPERIM ENTI NG. Bullet When Under Water, Washington, Jan. 6 lho board on naval ordnance has been con ducting experiments, the lasi week as to the course a "pre ojectile takes after it strikes the water. A, sefinite knowledge on this subject is sought that gunners can be instructed as to sffect of 5 shot, fired from above the watef, on a vessel below the water line. The experiments were conducted at Indian Head@y yd placing fish nets under wate: to determine the | course 5 projectile takes. QUIET CONVI NVICTION AMERICAN AIR IS ™me BEST FOR SPOOKS, Fired { Course of ep ecial a series of He amd Vico _Admiral of England Says Had Talk With Cleopatra Other Celebrities. London, Moore is speaks with a quiel conviction of the reality of the strange things he has seen, That was how he impressed a London audience, fashionable and at tentive, the other evening, when he told how he had ga i turn on the forms of Cleopatra and Sir Isaac New ton, and spoken with them, He has been a spivitualist for some years, and has held seances in boti America and England, but he sajd "It js in America that the best results are obtained, because the atmosphere is more pronouncedly electric there than m England. "It was in America that I saw the forms of Cleopatra and Hypatia, and the voice of Sir Isaac Newton spoke. Of course, they may havé been per- gonations,"' he naively added, "but in absence of evidence to the contrary 1 believe in what I saw and beard.' The admiral also had the remarkable j experience of attending a seance where ltwo separate voices spoke, one in each ear, and a third addressed him from the front, the medium also speaking at the same time. Occasionally the spirit voices would cease talking him and argue with one another. Admiral W, who Jan. 6.--Vice- a spiritualist, to FOUGHT TO FINISH. One Was Sutfocated; the Other Was Slain. London, Eng., Jan. 6.--The inguest this morning on the bodies of the two aparchists found in the ruins of the house besieged and burned Tuesday indicated that both fought till death, neither having come mitted suicide. One was suffocated and the other killed by a bullet through, his head, presumably from one of the Scots Guards' machine guns. Police officials state that lest than fifty constables were actually: engaged in the capture. Others were required to hold the crowds of spectators in check. seemed fo know who called the soldiers. Rigo Has New Wife, 3 Budapest, Hungary, Jan. 6.--Jancry Oy best known in America as "Gypsy" Rigo, an orchestra leader, {who was onve the hushand of Prin cess Chimay (formerly Clara Ward, of Detroit), appeared in public here this week with a beautifnl wor elegant on men Sherbrooke, Jan. 6---Arthur Joyce, fy attired. He introduced her to an a Canadian Pacific yardinan, was terribly mmngled while coupling cars here, last night, and died this morn- ing in the ital. His friends live in Ontario, their exact address mot |; being known. Again Goes Over. Toronto, Jan. 6. When the case of Farmers Rank, was called, this mofy. in the police court, on charges of | theft na Ialsification, the crown was not ready and the ease was adjourned for a week. Travers' bail was renewed, Bros'. Fur Sale. to-morrow, A great chance cheap. interviewer as his new wile, "formerly Katherine Hadley, the danghter of Prof. Hadley, of Yale, owming gold mines in Alaska and eXtensive prope Ty in Oregon." Rigo and his wife spent a wick in his gypsy wother's cottage at Pa koszt, where Katherive Rigo will build her mother-ii-law a new house, | ------ Asks Divorce From Spook, Kansas City, Jas. 61s applying here for 4 divorce, Marvio Minnear, o , allages be bas been hound od by his wife's spirit' and it is more he can stand. He sass his wile Anpa Minnear, declgres she posseswes power to separate ber spirit from ber body and send jt where she Yikes, Min hear on alleges she aceussd Him' of in | TIATHER PROBA ran "~ @ 19 5m rat flawre voder Lod ) -------- --------------------. HALF PRICE ~~ SALE FOR 7 DAYS ONLY ---- LADIES' WINTER COATS Beautifully made _of Tweeds, Broadcloths, Beavers, Caraculs, Sealettes, ete, We offer them in both colors and black. Just think of it! SSTEACYY STANDARD TAILORED WINTER COATS at small prices like these: ee The 810.00 Garments for £3.00 $7.50 $10.60 $15.00, Garments for $20.00 Garments for JUST HALF PRICE, FINE FURS FOR WOMEN, Muffs, Mink, Ruffs, of Sable, Throws and Collars Thiet and Mink Marmol: -- $10.00 'Qualities at $12.00 Qualities at EXACTLY HALF £3.00 . $8.00 PRICE. . FUR PLATES For Coat and Wrap Linings, in. cluding Grey Squivrel, Grey amd White Squirrel, and Siberian Leos pardy AT HALF PRICE, ---- CASH SALES--NO APPROVAL, STEACY'S MARRIED, 1.01 ENZ-MURRAY At the home of hride' 8 bother law (Dr. W. | win), Kingst Ontario, on J Sth, 1811, by Rev. Dr. Macgiliiveay Margaret ate oungest daughts of the late R Wm Murray, i amaica and harles Frederic « Fa z, Ph.D, of Cleveland, Ohl DIED. KEMP---In: Kingston 1811, Géorge Kemp, Funeral from his late Divisto: 1 Btreet o1 afternc . on Jar ih aged 85 yeu residence 60 SBaturda Friends sd respect fu ) attend Kingston Rarah, relic LY--In Kingston, on § , Mary MeKerna Daniel Guirey, aged 47 Faneral will | take p Morning, from #5 Raglan R Cathedral, a sulemn re th ited jo attend ROBERT J. REID, The Undertaker, "Phone 577. 230 Princess Street JAMES REID The Old Firm of Usdertakers, 254 and #58 PRINCESS STREYVT. "Phone 147 for Ambulance, TAKE NOTICE, Gas Heaters, Coal Heaters, alpen Happy Thoughts Oxfords and einer Cook Mtoves, Will sell these at a r+ duction now at TURKS. 'Phone i+. These cold mornings nothing tastes 80 good as a cup of our Java & Mocha Bler.d COFFEE it goés right to the spol. It is pure PRICE, 10 Cents. Jas. Redden & Co. IMPORTERS QF VIAL GROCERIES, Electrocuted in Prisgn. Dannesiora, N.¥ Jin. Bun soung * Black Hey Tenlinne, wha murdered 5 man Tho called Sor tlle wn werd deciro uted thiv mong, ig

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy