£ oS YEAR 78 -NO, 22 / ¢ 2 aily B ish INGSTON, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 1911. LAST EDITION blG FREE In the Proposed New! Tariff Announced. WHEAT TO BE FREE CHEERS GREETED MR. FIELD-|, ING'S SPATEMENTS. {a The Farmers of Ontario and the! North-West ~There WHI be No Treaty, But sSioply Mutual Legislation. { --- i ON THE LIST. | Wheat. Barley. { Potatoes, i Oats, Sawn lomber. Coke, Pulp and newspaper tional). Newspaper print. Wire rods, Fish, . | Fruit, Eggs and poultry. } Dalry products, 3 Vegetables. FREE print (condi- Ith Ig i REDUCED DUTIES, Duties on coal and flour reduced, i Some agricultural implements, in|" cluding mowers "and harvesters, re duerd from 7 1-2 to 15 per cent | and others from 20 per cent. to 135) per cent. The United States is making reciprocal concessions dp |; every ease. : i! Slight mutunl Hist i, manufactured slightly | * reductions on articles, Hon. e, made of William | his | Ottawa, Jan 27 Fielding, minister of finan long-anticipated pronouncement on the ! result of the re provity negotiations | with the United States, in the house, / yesterday afternoon. In view of the great objections rais wi, Mp, Fielding said he would take 1 little time to enter into the history of trade relations. Going back to the reciprocity treaty of 1551, he said this covered a great deal of natural "Pro duets. It had heen severely criticised [d at first, but later commended. Trade interests, when the treaty was | abrogated, were alarmed. From 1831, i to 1866 the treaty was in operation, bringing ug down to confederation The established poliey of all political | poly wnee then was for reciprocity. the treaty included n stand: g off of 'vetiprocity with the United ug 5 Tn 1869 and 1870 the stand ing off was again renewed, but chang- ed a little in substance. tight down tive and liberal governments this de: | » sire for reciprocity was found, said the minister. One of the strongest ar. | guments against it was the national policy. In 1879 many staple articles had been included in the treaty, The ll sonssrvative government had shown its desire through all the years down it No 1596, i f fx Furning to the change of adminis tration, Mr. Fielding said that rect procity was one of the main planks in the platiorm of the liberal party, I "In the light of that history would it not have been strange if this gov- | ernment had refused to accept the | friendly invitation of the States to negotinte 7' he said. * The new 'agreement, if sanctioned by | | both legislatures, would undoubtedly wark out fo thé good of Canada, Am bassador Bryce had thrned the nego tintions over to the Canadian dele: gates, but had displayed the greatest cordiality sand had given valued as sistance, Mr. Fielding admitted that President Taft never wanted to impose ihe Payne-Aldrich maximum tanfl against Canada, but congress had enacted the law. After the Albany. conference, Mr. {4 Fielding was convinced of the sincer-|; ity: of President Taft's desire to make a fair and just arrangement with Can- |; wi, ~The ronvessiony made by Cans adit fo avoid the imposition of the maximom tari, Mr. Fielding describ- od, pe "of no earthly importance." Me. Vostor aged fan undertaking !, that thae should be subsequent nego- 1 tiatiors was a condition the ar rangement nade last veur, Mr. Pielding--"As a matier of dition. No." 5 The mipister went on to justify the recent negotiations hy saying the Uni: ted States had seen the error of their wave, "We have held negotiations covering |, the whole sithiect of trade relations. We have made arrangements with the! United States, In the fast place, | am glad to sav that at an early stage |} months aro, we told the United States |; that while we desired friend! t in cont i = : 3 in ' ir : ¢ | mo {have {rate of duty, jand there {have had i but mover fet Lalso ure free, { the hiraber Wil. Benefit Greatly | States, er | tates figure of 45¢, washed coul go into the United States free, farmers ng reaping implements, mowers rant | vill go in States reduced to tle Mr ready | States ain privileges as to bait, turn for free fish. ratified, 10 be given, but the fishermn are ony u- dollar a year, through the conserva: | te {hut in some cases come below ours moderate, posed reciprocity United | da, for the improvement of commercial lations, 3s the logical sequence of all that has | heen accomplished in disposing of mat- ters of a diplomatic and controversial | sharacter. des linked together by race, wdvancement of our of English, wd ducts, with natural resources rela. | Wiige-earner rous I rate agreed there will be com- The United States | down to our and in some eases lower, haye come lower We make some reductions, | a moderate tariff « heirs high, they have had to make reductions There is a sms which impose i which of duty to at n come we 10 AS Ours was and in ent country duties, Fielding ann wh Wr. whent aking ia a duty of | to be 15c., atoes | Me. | duty per bushel Barles also anada's reduction being United States 0c. Pot Canada taking off Oats nd the United States 20c. also | to be free. flour, Canada re takes off 0c. and United States Te. Rough sawn to be free in the n reduction of 31.25. The coal duty is to be re coming down to the On ton, also will include and coke is to The United States in slack My anadian Fielding hope that manufacturers would benefit angemenis. Western | sl free farm imple expressed the rom the new had wa 1 he ar, but had Ihe 17% per cent tenis at § Le inelud- and wrvesters, would come down to 15 per Fie 20 per cent. list would be: edues] to 15 per cent. and the 2 . hist to 20 per cent. United States was 15 per ut made some ons fist 1 list, tariff an these but repair ent I6 per eent. The United tie other farm il 3010 45 per cent. would He 3 per 3 cent, , went in 15 per it du of ents cent. to the pulp and paper schad- wada felt Coming Fielding to campete per up to he United ates ha eciprocity this, but the stipulated that the estrictiong should be removed. The arrangement tha rades are to be free in th tates if there are export ions in regard to pulp wood, Canada gives nothing for this, Iti irther provided in the agreement that sand that ( common in pulp qd four eents per 1 be pound meqdy United provincial nt n for in in these @ no rostric- troublegome customs regulations are to {he removed. house He ised that he had re giving the United the consider told to | States free fishing privileges in Cana- ian waters, but Canadian fish is to go free into the United Statas. Under the Chamberlain-Bryand treat; pited States fishermen were given cor eto, In re The treaty was not Now the fishing licenses are to These, said Mr. a the special features, The form of the arrangement, as ex- lained by Nr. Gelding, begins with a ther to the secretary of state, pro osing concurrent: legislation. Loud applause greeted the announce: nent that the United States had not Canadian rates, it. As he United States tariff is high and Camada's reductions to tariff has been small, nly come down to vach an even { while those made by the United States have been large. President Taft's Washington, D.C, Statement. Jan. 27.--Presi- [dent Taft, in a special message to con- arose, yesterday, on the subject of pro- agreement with Can- said : "The path having been thus opened re- a reciprocal trade agreement "The identity of interest of two peo- language, litical institutions, and geographical woximity offers the foundation. "The contribution to the industrial own country 'hy ation across the boundary of ty amd industrious Canadian Scotch and French origin, the movement he migr: he theif s now repaid by the North-West of Canada, hus giving their labor, their means, thair experience - to the develop: went of thal section with its agricul: aral possibilities. "Farsighted policy requires that il we can enlarge our supply of natural exources, and especially of food pro- and the necessities of life; with- sat substantial injury to any of our woducing and manufacturing classes, we should take steps to do so now. "We have on the north of us a coun- try contiguous to ours for 3,000 miles, of the same haracter as ours, which have not been | 'pawn upon as ours have been, hut in he development. of which the condi- inns as to wages and character of the andl transportation to tions) we thoneht it could be brought ! market differ but little from those pre- about. by concurrent. lecialation, rather |v than by binding the United States or creator than ij rovinces of the domuiion of Canada. | Canad. by a treaty. "We have, therefore. made no bind: Sng aren cements. I favorable, it will continu, und if nol parliament is abe solutely free to change it. A Large Free List. hr o base Magne) that there shall rge free list. They are natural %, with some others included. sre already free in Canada, and on thesa the United States duty will "In another schedule we have anum- |; cofnmercial agreement with Canada, we ean, by which we shall have direet | soeess to her great supple of natural | ss like ou comanon pouwndry fine of 3.000 miles in itseli | Tmust take n° ration] distinction fwipn our commertinl treatment Conads and of any other country The domiwian has greatly prosper a ailing with us. The difference. is not it is between different then, to arrdnge 'a | "Ought we nol, if § products without au obstructing or robibitory tariff * "This is not a violation of the pro- | tective principle, as' that bas been aw || the titatively anpounead by id it beeause that principle does not eall fur 8 tariff between this coun © try aml one whose comlitions ns to 7 re duetion, population and wages are | and when owr be | ol Ti Dispatches From United | duced Se. United | government had not gone | 5 per Phese | | United | ean]? of | Targe numbers of "Hur own sturdy far mers to < LATEST NEWS ------ Near And Distant Places THE WORLD'S TIDINGS THE BRIEFEST POS-| SIBLE FORM. | GIVEN IN | Matters That Interest Everybody-- Notes From All Over--Little of | Everybody Easily Read and membered. { Brandon cheered the free wheat an- { pouncement, | Over 5,800 tobacco workers in Flori- {da on strike many mooths, have gone {hack to work. | Margaret Hayes, domestic, | bury, whose foot was erushed train, is dead. New Hampshire jegislature has abol lished the use in the state of public | drinking cups, i ¢ hicago's- city council lan expert to prepare | cheaper phone rates. he New York Central's bill of dam-] lages for the recent Batavia wreck "will total shout 200,000. | Taronte police had to wp people out of the evangelistic meetings, | Welland is purchasing more land Hor the market, and will build its Car- of Hailey- | by a | ordered for h AS figures be called Massey to} Hall fin the jee, but Manitoba farmers in convention " boG HOWED THE SPOT, | Ice. Halifax, Jan. 27.--Since Sunday near- ly every able-bodied man at Tangier, fiity miles east of Halifax, has been | engaged in a search, night and day, {for two brothers-in-law, Bain Mason {and Freeman Beaver, fishermen of i Tangier. They went out shooting for | hilo on Saturday morning. i {Two Men Had Fallen Through the i : { To-day - their boat was found on the shore, and the whole countryside was ar hed. Ad last attention was at tracked to tracks made on the ice by jrncke s dog, which seemed to circle | rou nd one spat. There was no break the searchers at last imade a hole in the enire of the tracks and dragged the bottom. There they found the bodies of the two men. | They had fallen through unobserved, ia cold snap epme and the ice froze over again, hiding all traces of the tragedy. negie library on part of it Win. Allen, machine runner i lemiskaming fractured his skull {by falling 100 jeet down the shaft. i i Mining prospects in the Congo Free | State are reported bright and the rub- ber crop is being i harves ted without | ver, of | trouble. { De. Frederick Ip If medical college, has animal hospital in at the | mine, professor surgery at Lorne lished 'a free York. sharlet Xan. to second-hand | Christmas. { Rev. lan { James', Neepawa, thi rectorship of St. Dundee, Scotland. Julius. Lorencen, New 1 x lem, epidemic at a Sa-| | orphanage. has been traced | sent there for fever toys Macdonald. vicar of St, Maa., has accepted Mary's church, a German farmer, was so terrified after, his first ride in a |New York subway, that he asked for immediate deportation. The remains of Alex. a great Scottish explorer, missing since 1823, have heen found in Tim buctoo. He was murdered. Earl MeCuaig, former Ottawa ning broker, js. under. arrest at I'roy, N.Y., charged with attempting to pass a worthless cheque. J. Pierpont Morgan made a' record run when his special train covered the 220.2 miles from Washington to New York in 3 hours and 48} minuges, : The Actors' Church Union is to be { established in Montreal, providing a {chaplain for each theatre. Edward Terry, the actor, has interested the bishop of Montreal in the work : Ralph Dengler, of Delray, Mich, is under arrest at Windsor, charged with smuggling aliess. Davpiel Ziedar held as having been smuggled in, af ter having been rejected by inspectors, The will of thé late Henry Abbott, of Chester; Pa., left instructions that hix body should be kept forty days in | a vault, with the hid off the coffin that it could be visited viewed daily Washington out the claims of the descendants | General Sevier, the revolutionary | dier who was granted 170,000 acres of | land now worth $180,000, | Gordon Laing, 1s SO and authorities have thrown of sol- | Tennessee 1 DOR), Monsignor Sbaretti, former papal | delegate Canada; and now secre-| tary for ths Congregation of Religions | lin the United States, will be a can- didate for the cardinalate at the next consistory, It is rumored in Montreal that Sir | Louis Jette will resign as chief justice {of the appeal court, the names of Sir | | Lomer Gouin, Hon. Mr. Brodeur, and | Honore Gervaise, as successor, he ing heard {slob B. Trotley i= in custode L) Sarvia, charged with offering to nt three | mrtios 325 to fire the harns of A. Mclean, township. A. 4. Trolley, is on bail, The barn was burned Chies Justice Barda de' Villiers, South Africa. has ordered that an Ine dian, aged sixteen, be given a regis tration certificate and not be deport | ted, holding the hberty of the subject {more important than the precaution of undesirable immigration, ; | of Brooke also imphoented; of | "Dy, Windsor, Jan. 21" James | Kelly, Montreal, arrested some time {ago for obtaining money under false I pretences, was sentenced. to sixty days' imprisonment in Sandwich jail. Reilly represented himself as a gov ernment liguor ¥ or, and man aged to obtain a lot of free drinks! before being captured. Grow Bananas in Hayti. Kingston, Jamaica, Jan. 27.-A party of Jamaican planters left here for Hayti to prospect for land for the | | caltivation of bananas' to supply American and Canadian markets he Other Jamaican planters areanging to follow, and indications ave That Hayti 'will become a power: | ful competitor of Jamaien, in the, Lhanaia trade, Death From Crushed Foot. Cobalt, Jen. 27. Margaret domestic,' injured 3 nights { Fpublic. {that the British government aims | The third centenary of Quebee was also {an occasion, {denounced i sentiments; threatening them with the Neil | Grey adjured Jans Hh { They | Kelly Sentenced. a } 1 OSCAR B. Governor-elect COLQUITT, of Texas. ROBES OF OFFICE. ho Asked Them. a7 =e Officials May to Wear Guelph, Jan. It is proposed by {local aldermen that the mayor, police : chief of police wear robes of office when on duty, It is also proposed that the mayor wear a gold chain as his insighia of office. The idea is to have a chain made with a link for each of the mayors who have presided since Guelph be- came a city, or as far back in history as it is thought advisable to go. Then . from this year on each man holding the office will likely be requir- od to buy his own link and have it added to the chain. BOURASSA'S ATTACK ON EARL APPEAL- ING TO PRELATES magistrate and GREY FOR Nationalism----The Nationalist Leader Says the Governor-General Made a Re- ligion of Imperialism. To Oppose Montreal, Jan. 26.--Henri Bourassa, in a second article headed 'The Navy and $he Clergy," supporting the theory at to the pro-naval policy, says that Lord Grey began, three years ago, . his propaganda amongst the religious authorities of {Canada: His excellency paid prolong: ed visits to Montreal and took in the i colleges of the city, where he maunifest- led the very greatest interest in their work. He invited to his own table the heads of several of these institutions, never losing an occasion to show them the -beauties of this imperial religion. their conversion and he took charge of the whole business as a great imperial | manifestation, Mr. Bourassa says that while the col- lege professors and priests were being for = harboring nationalist as those of Portugal, Lord at least two 'eminent Quebec prelates to place themselves at ithe head of the imperialistic reaction. also painted at Rome and at London under the blackest colors the nationalist movement. It was repre- | sented as a revolutiopary uprising, {when the church wight be dra {into a situstion in which the indigna- tion of the Anglo-Protestant majority might be showered upon the church in | Canada, and cause the good will of Great Britain to be withdrawn from the Catholic church. EAST FROM PORT ARTHUR. N. R. Will Begin New Line in Port Arther, Jan. 27.-City Selici- itor Keefer; who returned from To- 'ronto, reports that Sir Donald Mann 'told him that the Canadian North. {ern railway would commence to build | est from Port Arthur the first thing in the spring, and by Decem- ber wonld have trains romning as far as Nepigon. Postmaster Burned Ont. Cornwall, Jan. 27.-During the ab- sence in Ottawa of James Currig, the Cater at Crysler, and his wife, act | fhe odente (00k fre in some up- known manner, and the interior was {mown well gutted. The loss is 6ov- fered by $1,000 insurance. Warden of Three Counties. £ HI, Jan. 27 <At the opening ic of the counties couneil of the ounties of Stormont. same ewd lo I= KICK RESULIS Over Proposed Changes in the Tanff. IT IS NOT LIKELY THAT THE GOVERNMENT WILL CONSIDER THEM, As the Whole Question Had Been Carefully Considered Before Mr. Fielding and Mr. Paterson Went to Washington. Toronto, Jan. 27.--After a night's sleep on the far-reaching tariff changes announced by Hon. W. 8. Fielding in the commons yesterday, Canada, from the Pacific to the Atlantic, seems to be taking things more calmly this morning. For one thing there comes the\ realization that it is merely' a proposition anyway. Nothing is real ly settled. While there is little like- lihood of any effective blocking at Ottawa the situation in Ottawa: is altogether different. Nevertheless, members of both houses of parliament received many cem- munications by wire from interested people this morning, protesting that certain changes announced would re- sult disastronsly for them and sug- gesting that protests be made to the proper quarters, It is mot likely that Sir Wilfrid Laurier and his ea- binet would entertain any "proposi- tions of changes from this end, as they have carefully canvassed the si- tuation from all sides. What Changes Mean. Toronto, Jan. 27.--What the United States does for Canada is, she makes free seventy-six per cent of our ex- ports to her; reduces duties on four- teen per cent of our exports to~ her. What Canada does for United States is, she makes free sixteen per cent of her exports to us; lowers duty on nineteen per cent of her export to us. To Develop Trade. Brockville, Ont., Jan. 20.--Dairy- men at Brockville, the largest cheese producing district in the world, ex press great satisfaction over the tak: ing off of the duty on dairy products The past year there has been an ex- traordinary large volume of cream ship. ped to the United States, owing to a flaw in the United States tarifi schedule. Now that dairy goods are free a large trade, it js felt, will be speedily eloped. Will Help Alberta. Ottawa, Jan. 26.-W. H. White, of Fort Saskatchewan, Alberta, declares that the reciprocity pact will mean a great oat growing movement in North. ern Alberta. "The ground is a little too rich for wheat'! he said, "the tendency being to grow it so high it does not ripen. Now we'll grow oats and we will no longer have to ship them down to Ontario at a cost of fifteen or sixteen cents per bushel." BILINGUAL SYSTEM. Member Does Not Propose to Back Down. » Toronto, Jan. 27.--Unless the heavy hand of Sir James Whitney descends upon the energetic member for Gren- ville, GG. Howard Ferguson, and eom- pels the withdrawal of his resolution m favor of the doing away with the bi-lingual system, there promises to be one of the liveliest fights in the legis lature in years. The member for Gren- ville does not take kindly to- the sug- gestion that he will back down, and the French representatives are getting ready. G. H. Pharand, the dian member for Prescott, one of the silent members of the house. His voice has not been heard in debate for several sessions, but the attack on the bi-lingual system has roused him. "The matter will kave to be out, I guess," he said. Mr. Pharand declares that the bi-lingual system is the only one by which the French peo ple will ever learn to speak English. '1 don't know a Frenchman in Quebec or Outario . who does not want to learn English, but you cannot make them learn it by taking away the right of instruction in their mother tongue." Mr. Ferguson is determined to push his resolution. "It is not a matter of party," he said, "and 1 sefa bo reason why the resolution should not be put to a vote, or why the government should net give effect to the wishes of the province so" expressed.' BATTLE IN HONDURAS, Commandant and "and Thirty Soldiers Killed Near Ceiba, Tampa, Fla. Jan. 27.-Command- ant F. Guerrero and thirty oldjers were killed and filly olhers wourided ina battle which lasted two hous near Ceiba, Honduras, according scraps of a wireless message "ick up by the local station, Weather tions seriously interfered with Sondle mission of: the message. A NEW. INDUSTRY. Fremeh-Cana- is fought 8¢. Catharines, Jan. 27~By a ma- jority of 1,501 votes the city, Jester day, gave thirty-five acres of to the Stes] and Radiation, hrs doeh & Company, "Thompson, PASSENGERS ROBBED. Two Masked Bandits Collect Goods on Trolley Car. 08 Angeles, Jan, 27 --Yelling like Lidl warriors and firing promiscu- | ously from revolvers in both hands, | two masked bandits boarded an in bound Beach suburban car on the out- skirts of Santa Monica last night, rob bed twenty-two passengers, seriously wounded one of them, and were forced to flee by a single shot fired through the door-way by a ger, This shot wounded one of the rob bers, and later the injured bandit was captured when he attempted to board a car to come into the city for treat ment. He gave the name of Roy Fox, nineteen years old, NEW YORK TO MONTREAL. To Appropriate $2.200000 for Good Reads. : Albany, N.Y., Jan. 27.-Two bills carrying appropriations of $2,200,000 for good roads improvements were re- | ported favorably by the senate fin- : ance committee. One of the bills, by | Senator, Emerson, calls for $1,300, 0600 | for the improvement of ninety wiles | of highways with a view of making al connecting link of improved roads from New York to Rousa's Point, being understood that the Quebec gov- ernment will later provide for a good roads system from Rouse's Point to Montreal, thus establishing an im. proved highway system from New York to Montreal. HARRIMAN'S MIGHTY PROJECTS Railway Around World, ard Build. ing of FPavama Cansl, New York, Jan, Ii EE. H. Har riman had lived he would have had a railway around the world. This was one of his great "ambitions, Anoth er was to see the completion of the Panama canal. If the government had not taken up the task of construct- ing this waterway, he would have hut it himself, These two secrets were revealed last night by Otto H. Kuhn, of Kuhn, who was closely hs sociated with Harriman for more than ten vears, in 5 memorial address at the Finance Forum. Mauretania's New Speed Record. New York, Jan. 27.-The Maure tania, due here from Queenstown to- day, has smashed another speed record, according to a wireless mes sage received Ly Cunard line officials here. > The message states that the liner made 676 knots during the twenty four hours ending at noon yesterday The previous record, also the Maure tania's, was 673 knots, established June 7th, 1909. 97 -- -------- To Unseat Tillsonburg's Mayor, Toronto, Jan. 27.--Quo warranto proceedings have been entered at Os goode Hall to unseat Mayor Joseph of Tillsonburg, on repre sentations made by Leander Forbes, of that place. It is alleged that there were: irregularities convected with the voters' list supplied to the returning officer. It is also stated that the mayor is a bailiff and' so disqualified as a candidate. Vacancies in the Senate. Ottawa, Jan. 27.--8ir Richard Cart- wright stated in the senate that there are three vacancies in the senate, in the Prince sfidward Island represen- tation caused by the death of Senator Ferguson in September, 1909; one from Juebec, caused by the death of Sena: | tor Baker, and one from Nova Seotia, | caused by the appointment of Senator Macgregor to be lieuténant-governor of as province. ono Another Charge Against Betts. Ottawa, Jan. 27--Circulars have! heen sent out by the. local police for | Sam W. Betts, alias Lister, or Lester, | aged twenty-four, suspected of having pulled off a daring £500 robbery dur ing a dance at the home of a promin ent citizen a few nights since, Betts was sent to penitentiary twice | from Ottawa, and has served a dozen | terms for offences elsewhere. Puts Man's Shin Bone in Arm, Boston, Jan. 27.--Surgeons here gre much interested in the ofetation pet formed by Dr. Frederick J, Cotton at | the City hospital upon ie Favor of Malden, in whith he removed t part of Favor!s shin bone and grafted it into his arm. So far as known this, operation has never been per: | formed before in this country, though | it has been sucessful several times | in Europe, A Strange Disappearance, 'i New York. Jan. 27.--~Miss Dorothy | n tawa Valley and U 8 eet and rain tod {Saturday it! pant and sleeves well revers crochet room WEATHER PROBABILITIES. Toronto, Jan. 27 10 am-Of- Ont. ay and for part of turning colder Shturday night Great | Specials For Saturday and Monday LADIES" COATS of best English finished Beaver, lined, choice length, made Broadcloth, waist collar and of Western Sable, buttons. We have § only They are all black. The Reguar Price, $22. SALE PRICE, $10.50, nny BAe LAMB CPS For Children. $2.50 Qualities at $1.00. WHITE LAMB CAPS $2.00 Qualities at $1.00. SPECIAL PETTIGON SHE We offer the famous KABRO PETTICOATS, Well maflle, of good Sateen, with perfopt OIE TOY, without the use of draw strings. $2.00 Qualities at $1.15. Only a limited quantity. All black. CALL AND GET YOUR SHARE. rn pee STEACY'S ROBERT J. REID, Undertaker, The 'Phone 577. Princess Street, ~ JAMES REID a, 01 Firm of Undertahote, 'Phone 147 for Ambulance. A FRESH LOT. very expensive Golden Oak Bed. Suite; also a first-class Baby A snap for a cash buyer at 'Phone 708 A arriage {I TURK'S Health Foods From Battle Creek Sanitarium. Toasted Rice Biscuits Breakfast Toast Oatmeal Wafers. - Laxative Biscuits, Protose Vegqtable Meat, Meltose. Prune Marmalade, Fig Marmalade, Peanut Butter, Yogurt . Cheese. Jas. Redden & Co, IMPORTERS OF FING GROUERIES. H. C. Arnold, aged twenty-five, al daughtdr of Francis R. Arnold, of a perfumery importing firm, has | teen missing since she stepped out of | her father's home, in Fast Seventy- ninth street, bound ou a shopping ex- | pedition, on December 12th. i A Terrible Story. Cobalt, Jan. forty-five miles north of Gawgands |for $3,500,000 appear the true story of as trapper, | direfiate of the corporation, who iw COMES named Homer Wilson, being devoured | Directors Refuse fo GARDEN IS UP FOR SALE. Enterprise. Jan. 27. ~Madison Square horsa New York, savden, the wene of the yearly | show and a long list of other events is offered for sale. Advertisements of 27.~From a district | fering to well the big amusement hall to-day. The elude + « Pierpont Morgan, are repory- by wild wolves. and hit wife, who had | od as oh that they have omrrid insisted on accompany found so "padiy frost ition that she may die. > 120 Japanése Drowned. 1 Seattle, Wash, Jan. 27. ~The stesam- | er Seattle pn brings news that a of fish were lost in 5 guy ston wile pu vailed near Owarl Bay, Jansary "th. Twenty vessels were wrecked, men drowned The King Not Careful. Madrid, Spain, Jan. 29, That Queen Vietoris, of Spain will go Earland to op iory Sold bate red oi | Mens; § the sine £3 fh, Bs or Baptist aiinistey was | the property tweanly body of Mrs. founder of Christian Science, and 120 moved from ears, chiefly for the benefit. of the and that ine iv to go on other men enterprive [wil have to put their shoulders to Veg wheel. Mrs. Eddy's Remains Buried. Mass, Jan. 27.--The Mary Baker G, Eddy, was re hat C Haleyon Leke, Noust Auburn coma i » yesterday afternoon. of Hilliard Je lit dooms » of - No aties per St. Lawrence Carry om 3