Daily British Whig (1850), 10 Mar 1911, p. 1

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Che Daily KINGSTON, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, MARCH 10, _¥EAR 78 -NO. 58 ADOPTS PLAN- For Better § Secondary Education in County. T0 ASK GOVERNMENT TO PERMIT A CONTINUATION | SCHOOL To be Established at Sharbot Lake-- | Sydenham High School to be Ene larged--Arrangement Sought for! Front Township Pupils, The county council has at last decid el upon a secondary educational poli cy to meet the needs of Frontenac. bas placed itself on record as ia favor of a continuation school at Sharbot Lake, to mest the ueeds of the north townships, and im favor of enlarging | Sydenham high school mm order tg | meet the needs of the centre and fromt | of the county. At the June session, the matter will be further dealt with. In the meantime, the Ontario govern- ment is to be petitioned, and plans amd estimates submitted. By a vote of 12 to 5, the council de- cided to try and make arrangements, wiley section 15 Mf the high school | for receiving of Frontenac pupils | ~ surrounding Sigh schools and col legiate institutes. Councillor Baiden | had originally named only the Kings tom Collegiate Institute, but changed | his resolution to cover other second: ary schoold" that ure attended by | Frontennc pupils. The arrangement is to be fox only one year, the council having in view the enlargement of the Sydenham higl school. The vote on the motion was Yeas--Councillors Salmond, Kennedy, Godkin, Calvin, Fole;, Hamilton, Rankin, Reid, Thomson, Rogers, Baden, Donaldson--12. Nays--Warden Miller and Councillor: Truscott, Cronk, Stewart, Taylor---5. Councillor Donaldson moved, second ed by Councillor Thomson, that the government be rialized to per mit the establi pnt of a continua Hou school in Fromtemac, and that, il She Ji ssramans approves of the plan, be granted for the emlargement = Sydenham high school and $5,000 for the erection of a conginudtion school at Sharbot Lake. Councillors . Hamilton thought ~ that money are mentioned, that estimates 'of the cost of the proposed erectioms, and also plans, be secured. Councillor Kennedy advocated leaving the matter over till the June session. In the meantime, plans and estimates could be secured. Councillor Donaldson changed his resolution to read that the grants were not to exceed $5,000 for each of the schools. Councillor Foley thought that $5, 000 'was far too much for a continua tioh school building. Pittsburg had erected a little brick school building, two years ago, for $700, Councillor Thomson pointed out that the eontinuation school was not for one township, but for six townships Councillor Hamilton moved, second ed by Councillor Rankin, that the On tario government be memorialized permit the establishment of a contin uation school al Sharbot Lake, and that plans be submitted for ratifiea tion; also that plans and estimates be submitted for the enlargement of the Sydenham high school, and that the council consider the plans and esti mates at its June session. This amend ment to Councillor Donaldson's mo tion was adopted. and Calvin any amounts of PITH OF THE NEWS, The Very Latest Culled From All Over the World. Borden will make a western going to the coro: Leader tour instead of nation. The naval department, Ottawa, de nies that a colored man was refused an appointment, because he was black Benjamin Comm, machinist, Toronto, fell into an ashpit on his way home from Massey Hall meeting and was killed I is officially announced that tie United States has decided that the revolution in Mexico must end forth: 'with, Ove man killed and several injured when the Dupont powder works ex ploded, practically demolishing the town of Pleasant Prairie. F. W. G. Haultain, leader of the conservative opposition in Saskatche- wan, came out strong in the legisla ture favorable to reciprocity. Four thousand people erowded into Massey Hall, Toronto, listened to the anti-reciprocity speeches and passed a resolution demanding that it be sub- mitted to the country. Wabash Grants Increased Wages. C , March 10.--A wage increase, APProx; ten per cent, was granted y trainmen and of the Wabash rail road in seftlement, vesterday, of a wage controversy. § Fro cam dor cut flowers. Purdy's. from i ow Fuervibiog in cups. Geo. "Mille & dae lier areamary, Ne. Ih, at new spring hats are Wn committea § pan L Market street, tod GAN ANOQU E TIDINGS. | = om 3 Lecture by Professor Morison-- Teacher Training Class. March 10. Prof. | wocison, of Queen's, gave ay | interesting lecture in the. high school assembly room, last evening, on "'Par- | linmentary _Humors ob the 15th Cen y tury" and was listened to with at- tention by a large audience, While in | town the professor was eutertained at {the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Sine, Pine street. i The recently organized Masonic So- cial club inaugurated a series of pro- gre ssive euchre jpastina at their rooms last evening. Henry La France, Brock is culfined to his home with ananogue, i | street, | grippe. A teacher's training class has organized among the Sunday school teachers, of Grace church, with J. A. Jackson as president and Clifford Sine as secretary. | Mer. and Mrs. Bert. J, Davis, recent {ly married in tt. are spending ! their honeymoon here with Mrs. Davis' | parents, r. and Mrs. Frank Eames, prior to leaving in the to locate at imi been { near future {B.C isa | Ottawa, Pense, of | Chapleau and E. are in town 5! a i days, {taking soundings for government { dredging. Frederick R. Tomkins, Fair | [rove Mich., arrived in town recent ly, to recuperate after a severe illness. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Keating are | spending a week in Lansdowne, with the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs, W { H. Wallis, prior to leaving te locate | in Winnipeg. i W. T. Sampson, Arthur street, yesterday, for England, he being one {of the heirs to an estate, which will {pan out some $16,000 cash for him. | John R. Thomson; spending the past | { few months in Guelph with his daugh- {ter; Mrs. Erpest Kendall, has return ed home. Mrs. George W. Scott, North Bay, is the guest of her sister, Mis, | Edward Parker, Victoria avenue. Miss O0"Toole, of the central telephone of | fice here, is ing a week at her | home in Kemptville, | left | VICTORIA'S STATUE LIKED. Royal Family Satisfied With Like. | ness Reproduced. London, March 10.--There is to be a very imposing function in the month | of May, when King George will unveil the national memorial to Queen Vig | toria, opposite Buckingham Palace, which has been in precess of erection for eight years. Already the statue of the queen, which is the "clou" of the whole struc- ture, is in position. It represents Queen Vietoria seated, and is said to be an excellent likeness. Several of the royal family, including the Duke of Connaught, have mounted the scai- folding that still hides the memorial, and have expressed themselves much pleased with the statue. The opening ceremony will be formed in full state, all the amily, who are in England at the time being present, as well as the German emperor, who has signified his wish to be present at the ceremony, and for whose sake mainly. the date, May 16th, is is being set. BANNSAREANNULLED CHILD-WIFE OF CLAYTON MAN GIVEN HER FREEDOM. per- royal Married "Just for Fun"-----As Soon as Ceremony Was Performed the | Saucy Young Bride Had a Change | of Heart. Ogdensburg, N.Y., March 10.--Sally Powell Laralge of this eity, whose marriage to Walter Larabee of Clay ton took place at Prescott in Sep tember, has had her narriage anunull ol. The case came bebore Justice CO, C. Van Kirk at Saratoga Springs. Application was made on the ground of fancy, the bride being but seven teen years of age at the time of the ceremony. Miss Powell, who was a popular and pretty young stenographer in 'he em- ploy of the Texas Oil company, ac companied Larabee to Prescott, and, Ww a spirit of fun, accepted his pro posal of marriage. He at once pro- cured a license and secured a minis ter. Five minates after the ceremony the bride arrived atthe conclusion that she had made a ke and ask. ed her husband to go his way and say nothing of the ceremony. The secret leaked out a few days lat. er, and when the girl's jamily sought to bring about a harmonious under- standing, the bride ran away from the house at three o'clock in the mwrn- ing. She induted a man to row her | to Prescott, but Ws she was unable to get an early morning train out of that er relatives caught up with and induced her to return. Larabee agreed to make no furth- er claims on his bride and the annul- -- of the marriage followed, : Charged With Grafting. Winnipeg, March 10.--In the M Jobe ba House, lon. ( Calin dt Set 3 Johnaon ton (gy Woe West Wes with ing. It is | had been using criminal i pat to hil" awn bene- fit and produced an affidavit of a former t of he provincial jail, to the thet had had a mt Shan chores at his private residence, cutting wood, shovelling snow, beating carpets, Se An investigation wae asked 'for, no steps were taken. -------- LL -------------- Died at Watertown. Watertown, N. Ya March 10. Jane Clayton, died tt night a * hospital, | German stated that he was taken by | that British songs | Canada, and only i Miss Anita Baldwin Turnbull, | share in the $11,000,000 estate left by ] DID YOTKAOW INFANTILE PARALYSIS. -- Not Far Distant, Physician. Albany, N.Y., March 10.-- We hav a already discovered how to prevent in Cure Says a cure | may comservatively say now not far distant, provided structive measupes are not thrown That Negroes Were Shut a the solu..on of this and other great problem..." said Pr. Simon Flexner, of the Rockefeller Institute, who, to-| gether with representatives of Out Of Navy the State Medical Society, came to Albany to appear at a joint hearing | before the senate judiciary and the as- WOULD HAVE YOTED FOR THE| embly health committees in opposi- AMENDMENT. j sion to the bill proposing varios re gulative Ineasutiy in connection' with the practice animal . Mr. Armstrong, of the Royal Com- ep SSperiments mission, a Private Citizen, and En- titled to His Opinions--Was Not. Holding Back Information, Special to the Whig Ottawa, Match 10.--In the House of | Commons, yesterday, William Manly surprise at Shy rly hour that a vote was taken W y night ou R. L. Borden's amendment for delay in the | discussion of reciprocity. Had he been present he said he would have voted {for the amendment. Dr. Daniels, St, John, queried Mr, Bfodeur over an item which appeared {in the newspapers stating that negroes | were to be excluded from serving in i the Canadian navy, whether or sat) they passed satisfactory examinations. The minister replied that he had | ino knowledge of the matter and was | not prepared to answer. He was too | | busy to read newspapers he added. | Col. Sam. Hughes asked the prime | minister if he thought Mr. Armstrong | of the royal commission on technical education. and industrial training in | public schools, was sincere in his | statement, made recently in the west, should not be schools throughout some of the Can. adian songs be allowed sung, if so! ---------- | had 'he been properly catechized by | COUNTS FOUGHT A DUEL. | the government. for so doing. { The premier replied that Mr. Arm- One Pinked in Sealp; Then Kissed strong was a private citizen and the | and Embraced. government had ne right to interfere. M. Mnedonald said he knew Mr, Armstrong very well and had asked | and Count Bastoni fought a duel wit him about the statement. Mr. Arm. SWOrds in ithe garden of a. sechude | strong denied that he had ever utter- villa on the outskirts of the citv. The ed or made any such remark, | encounter was the result of revelations know Nr. Blain, 'Peel, wanted to . Count Bastoni conecrning cen. | 1deut. upon whdse recommendation the he ar who Semmtly Sura sus enumerators were appointed 8 Countess Trigona 4 Mc, Fisher, minister of agriculture, { Sant Ella, and who was a tios: frien of Count Di Bruno. At the secon: said they were appointed on recom: Soni mendations to the minister, which | It_Bas was wounded in the | , whereupon antagonists an- or suitable, to him. nounced that their honor was appeas Grenville, said that he |e aud the men den kissed an and embraced. was now thoroughly éonvinced that . wm Ms. Fielding was. holding _ back A SANE REV REVISION formation in connection' with the re | ciprotity agreement, which parlia- ow THE UNITED STATES TARIFF IS PROMISED. i MAJOR-GENERAL WOOD, | Chief of the Staff of the United States rmy, who WHI direct the forces now gathering on the Mexican border from Washington. sung in public ment and the country should have. It! is quite evident, he declared that the minister of finance is trying to blind- fold the people in this matter, He | threatemed to block the progress of | Ratify Trade Agreement -- Then Schedule Involving Necessities of | Life Will Get Attention--Extra| Session Programme. Washington, March 10.--Responsible leaders in the senaié and house H. H. Miller, South Grey, resumed | made it plain that it is not the pur his speech on reciprocity, and in | pose of the democrasic party in very forcible manner attacked a extra session to "run amuck ' be termed useless and groundless ar- | yarifi question. guments against it made by the op position. He strongly urged its becom ing law as soon as possible, A. 8. Goodeve, Kootenay, B.C, fol- fowed and in a Vigorous terms de- nounced the agreement as an unwise and unsafe policy for the government | to adopt. the house until such information was | forthcoming. Mr. Fielding replied that he was only too willing to bring down any | information he had, and which he was doing from time to time as he re | ceived it. progressive democracy in the upper house, Sepators Bacon and Overman, conservatives, and Champ Clark, who is to be speaker, have declared that sanity and common sense will be the irule of action of their party They predict that republicans who! are 'expecting to see the democratic | pasty split on the tariff rock, will {find it emerge from the sixty-secopd | j congress united andy stronger than { ever. According to the programme HAMMOND'S MILITARY AIDE, He Will go to the Coronation of the! King. Washington, March 10.--Maj.-Gen. | Frederick DD. Grant, at present com- | representative men have talked manding the department of the east, [the reciprocity agreement is to be has been selected as military aide op ratified and those schedules that in the staff of Jobn Hays Hammond, the volve momopoly-controlled produets | special United States ambassador to and the necessities of life represent President Taft at the coro- | vised. The remainder of the nation of King George V. {will be left for the reguiar session There will be no wholesale revision Lucky's Baldwin's Will. {and no upsetting of business general: | Los AnQeles, March 10.-At the con- lly clusion of the arguments in the Bald. Y While the| reciprocity agreement is win will case Jutlge Rives announced under way 'in the senate the house; that as the evidence adduced "fell far | committee will work out its scheme of | short zg. making out a case for the [revision regarditg wool and cotton, plainti he would instruct the jury | woollen and cotton goods, flour, dress. to return a yerdict in favor ol the [ed meats and other necessities of life | defence. J | and probebly agricultural implements. brought by {The is not to be overlooked. the 17, | Whee action the democrats, may take it will compensate the farmer for 'the free admission of agricultural J. (Lucky) Baldwin. | prod from Canada and remove {from his shoulders the burden of car Will Not Sell Church. i rying the entire load of tariff Montreal, Murch 10.-St. James' (tion. In return for free farm Methodist church sold, notwithstanding the reports these | over This ends the contest year mid Boston girl, for a daughter's E. pro- of (he given either free or 3 greatly re- tempting offers. At a meeting of the duced rates the articles consumes Joy boards of the shuech, it -- the impifitats unanimously decided that although [raises his crops. they auld Slisposs of ihe present pr | The general business interests will petty at a that would enable | not suffer, unless it be the them to build a suitable church else- | al implement trust, an'! with this kind where, the mest aggressive work could [of a program mme before them the re be done in their present building. It | Jeaders believe that the ex-, is said that an Fl etter mem [ten session can be limited to about tioned tentatively $1,500 800 as a basic | three months, ion. i gmesaae------ Settlers for Canada. No "One Man, One Vote." Halifax, N.S., March 10--Five ocean Quebec, én Halifax this ready to adopt the who | man one vole. This was Eo The | ment made to-day in: the legislature by Premier Gorin when the resolution . jan section fantile paralysis. The achievement ol in | : the paths of men who are workiag for | Florence, March 10.--Count Di Bruno | have | on ho t } Senator Owen, the new leader of thy | will be re- | schedules | ty will not be | ducts from Canada the farmer is to Iar- 1911. THREAT MADE i {To Throw ow. Nationalist Members Bodily Out. A STORMY SESSION ls THE BRITISH COMMONS LAST The Unionists Became Irvilated at Nationalist Obstruction--Sir Wil- frid Laurier Praised by British Press. London, March 10.--One of the | stormiest sessions of the commons for | years, ended at ten o'slock, this morn- | ing, after nineteen hours' continuous | seston on the discussion of the land | clauses of the budget bill. Nationalist ! members proved obstreperous, and got bevond the control of Hon. Win- ston Churchill, who was goverriment leader in the absence Premier As- quith. On one occasion, a unionist member arose and said, with the chairman's permission, the apposition would get up and throw every nation alist member bodily out of the cham- ber. This caused a united stand by the nationalists, who rose up and look- ed like assaulting some of the urion- ists. Rioting looked imminent, anc | the sergeant-at-arms and the police were prepared for action, but even { tually Mr. Churchill and the chair man obtained order by brilliant strate gical rulings and advice. The gov- ernment's clause went through without notable amendment. Sir Wilfrid Laurier received high com- pliments from both 'the unionist' and radical press, yesterday, for his { speech, of which full reports are now published, but the unionist press ask, in view of the premier's reiterated offer of a mutual preference what will now became of the repeated assertions of Premier Asquith and Wimston Church- ill, on British platforms that Canada's offer is a myth, and also that the re- ciprocity agreement marked the obse quies of the cause of imperial prefer: ence which Mr. Asquith labell as the greatest political imposture of mo- dern times. "BROWN DOG" STATUE GOES. Erected to Commemorate Suffering of Dog. London, March 10.~The borough council of Battersea last night decreed {that the famous 'Brow n Bog" statue was erected several be destroyed. The statue Ba ago to commemorate the suffer lings of a little dog used for months in viviseetion oxperiments in a London | hospital. It was the cause of scores of | dgmonstrations on the part of medical students and finally was removed by order of the borough council. The donor of the"statue, however, recently | brought suit to compel the council to j restore it. HASN'T HAD CENT. | Was } i ---- [Nor Worn Hat Nor Left Parm in That Time. | Bridgeport, Cogn., March 10.--To Lprevent his tather selling the family real estate valued at $100,000, Wm. H Thorpe has brought suit to have a cpn. servator appointed for his mother whose consent is necessary to the sale. | The son alleges that for almost forty | vears his mother has not left the fam- iily tearm, and that during all that { time she lias never spent a cent or {worn a4 woman's hat. Though their farm is within a block of an electric | line, Mrs. Thorpe has never seen a | trolley ear. | CORDON AROUND PEACE. | | Said Toms of Powder Are Yet Un ! exploded. Pleasant Prairie, Wis.,, March 10.-- Fire, which developed from the ex- i plosion of the powder works, practi {cally destroying the whole town, °is {=till burning. Sheriff's officers have formed a cordon a mile square round the site of the town so that nobody jean approach. There is ptill thoughy to be tons of powder unexploded, | : Accused of Bigamy. | London, Ont, March 10 William { Herbert King, aged thirty, a pool imarker, pleaded pot guilty, this morn- ing, to a charge of bigamy laid by Mabel Nicholls, a twenty, who he married in St. mas, on October Jet last. His legal wile and child 'live in Toronto. He was remanded for Ca week. i i ------ ---- i Charged With Forgery. | Smith's Falls, March 10. --Alired J. Wentworth was arrested here by Chief {Bwitt, charged be Ht mpting je isgue two forged ues bea 1 {signature 5 J. 8. L, McNeely, bar- rister, of Carlton Place, in the Union | Bank, at that place, yesterday. ' The cheques ware for $300 and $I®) re "spectively. $3.85 Excursion to Toroato. Special train leaves G.T.R., on Sats ! arday, lpn Tickets good to re j turn uwesday night, except om Neato 2 and § Come "al and soe Frontenaes play the "All Stars.' nt die rs rt-- Cut in Two by Train. e Parry Sound, March 10.--An lial laborer named Dominion Poli fell lengthwise on the track in| rout of a hight engine and was split { Ross, valle, Purdy, florist, Rywing bate, Coorge Mills & Co, Orange Ss to pent, af { SUICIDE FELL FIVE STOREYS, | Take Their! York. Standing on Thrilling Way They Lives in New New York, March 10 the edge of the roof of a Broome street tenement, house, yesterday, an unidentified man sent two revolver bul lets into his head. His body crashed to the street five storeys below, and ambulance surgeons who examined it said death from the bullet wounds must have been instantaneous That the suickde has intended to make sure of dving i his revolver fail- ed him was indicated by the #nding on the roof of a bottle filled with a pow erful acid. In a memorandum book his clothing was written an incoherent note addressed to "My brother-in-law," telling of the writer's ill-health and poverty and asking that his body be cremated. The note was unsigned. ON HIS WAY TO KINGSTON. A Negro Perished From Cold at Farnham, Que. Sherbrooke, Que., March 10.--Jusé as an emigrant. train pulled into Farnham, from Halifax, a negro, who had been riding blind baggage, rolled on to the track. It was found that he was so badly frozen that he diad shortly afterwards. He sais he was going to Kingston. His name Is un- known. SELL CRYSTAL PALACE, Order Made for Disposal of Famous | Building. i London, March 10. --Judge Eady has issued an order fos the sale of the Crystal Palace, where the famous ex- hibition of 1851 was held, but gave to the defendants leave to appeal. Blind Men Broke Into Riot. Philadelphia, Pa., March 10.--A se rious case of Blind-Man's Buff oc curred, yesterday, when one hundred and thirty-five blind men swung brooms on each other's heads in a riot on the third floor of the Pen neylvania Working Home .for Blind Men. Two men were knocked uncon- scious and were taken to the hospital and it required ten policemen, sum- moned by a telephone call from the superintendent of the Home, to sub due them. An Indian's Strange Death. | Yuma, Ariz., March 10.--With wrists tied to the tail of a wild] horse, the body of a Papago Indian' was found, yesterday, by a detach- ment of the First United States Ca- valry, at the edge of the Gila River, near Mesa. In order to secure the body it was necessary to shoot the horse. It is believed that the young Indian had been condemned to die in this manner because of having vio. lated some law of the tribe, Workmen Were Killed. New York, March 10.--In all five bodies of workmen have been recover- ed from under the masses of concrete of a building + which collapsed last night. Faully cement mix g was the cause. CANADA'S RAILWAYS G. P. GRAHAM TO GIVE BUDGET SPEECH. HON. The Railway Mileage in Canada is Now 24,781The Immense Amount of Capital Invested. Ottawa, March 15.--It is expected that Hon, G. PP. Graham will deliver the railways and canals' budget speech in the house this afternoon Some of the figures show the progress the dominion is making in this line. The railway mileage in Canada this year has risen to 24,731, an increase over last year of 63 miles. Under con- struction, including the Transconti- nental, are 4.500 miles. The capital invested is now one billion and 410 million dollars, an increase over last! year of 101 millions. The total ex-| penditure on G.T.P. to date has bain ninety-four millions and the estimated amount for its completion is fifty millioms, I ---- ---- WHAT 8 NEXT MOVE? United States Has Backing of luropean Powers, } San Antonia, Texas, March 10.--Ths | United States army is nearly all here now, and everybody is asking what ite | next move to be. It is generally un derstood that Uncle Sam has the full | concurrence of all European powers in| making this move. [Naz is alive and active, 'tis said, to-day. Depends on Keely Mine. Toronto, March 10.--In the case of the Farmers' Badk against a loeal firm, for the amount of a cheque, to day, ex-Mavager Travers, ¥ho was a witness, said he depended on the Keeley mine to keep the bank afloat, and he still thought the mine was a great asset. Judge Winchester re. marked that it was hard to tell whether the mine was worth five han dred thousand dollars or five cents. St. Catharine's Tickled. : St. Catharines, Marbch 10.--This city is quite tickled with the way Dr. Jessop, its member in the legislature, Higped up the city of Hamilton, tried to push Suetagh De bill giving it power to grab afl the gas wells in the vicinity, including those which supply thiv city. This would] have put the St. Catharines gaw sup- | ply in the power of a rival city. Albany Murder Trial. Albany, NY. ¥arch 19. Mrs. Mel ber ° sat apparently undisconecerted | while ber relatives gave evidence | against her in the murder, a, fo | inet that the shoes found | on the Pog bg rw in the swamp were | the same as she to any former | pot on lad. She continues onfession., n the : | after {jam, 15c., or 4 for S0e., key that Pitish Whig J LAST EDITION WEATHER PROBABILITIES. Teronto, Mar 10, 10 Ottawa V ey and Upper $t Fair as moderate SUCH AN ARRAY SUITINGS Has never been seen in this city be- ro Lawrence fair and 4 i Hen Saturday, co fore Those who have seen our great assortment of foreign and domestic fabrics for the making of __ SMART SUITS for : WOMEN AND MISSES Are amazed at the unlimited variety exhibited: AND THE PRICES ARE SO REASON. SHEPHERD CHECKS, FRENCH WORSTEDS, BRITISH WORSTEDS, SCOTCH TWEEDS, IRISH HOMESPUNS, DOMESTIC HOMESPUNS, ENGLISH SERGES, : GRANITE CLOTHS, BROADCLOTH TWEEDS, ETC. IT IS AN EASY MATTER TO GET SUITED AT STEACY'S ESTABLISHED 1881. The Jesting Ulery ie ly "Phone 877 Princess Street. ~ JAMES REID The Old Firm of Undertak 354 and 308 PRINCESS STREET. 'Phone 47 for Ambulances. TAKE NOTICE. Five Solid Mahogany Chairs one has arms also two nlce Walnut Parlor Sofas These are a fresh lot At Turk's 'Phone 705. MINERAL WATERS Are the safest to drink just now, We have in stock RADNOR. WHITE ROCK. SUN RAY. CALEDONIA. VICHY. POLAND. GINGER ALE. SODA WATER. Jas. Redden & Co. IMPORTERS OF Five GROCPRIES Notes From Bath, Bath, March 9.~Joseph Cunningham has returned to his home in Toronto vigiting here. Joseph Nelson, who has been quite ill, with pneamonin is slowly improving: The carpetiters have finished their work on the new hos} and it will soon be ready for upation. Samuel Neleon and ir. w RK, Nelson, both of Toronto, visit od at Joseph Nelson's for a few dave. Mr. Croskery, of Perth, organizer for the Canadian Order ofl Foresters, ia here. Mr. and Mrs. James Aviesworth have returned from their visit with their son, Dr, F. A, Aylmworth, at i Roseeath Ready to Hat You. Our pew styles are im and they ine clude such celebrated makes ss Soott, Henth, Buskley, Christy, Imperial, ete, $2, oo, #3, 83.50, 4. Camp- bell Bros'. "Kingeton's only exclusive hat and fur \store Campbell's for the best 32 hats 500 large pote English strawberry at Gilbert's inside, remorse is never the will open the door of the Ones | prison, Campbell's for the best 32 hats 2 tins strawberries, 20c., or $1.00 a dowen, at GAlhert's. When you take time to be courteous you will, later on, find that thme well the | mpent. Whitby apple cider, 30. a galion, af 1Gilbert's,

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