YEAR 78 -NO. 63 ~The Baily B KINGSTON, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1911. th Whig LAST EDITION Em-- -------- ---- ADE DORAL Of Charge By Member From Halton. IT 15 UNNECESSARY SOUTH AFRICAN CORN. | Commissioner Will Inspect Grain Elevators at Montreal, Washington, March 16.--~South Africa { is desirous of entering the markets of J the world with its surplus corn, and | to that end Sir Thomas missioner of railways, and harbors the South African government, called upopi, Secretary of Agriculture Wilson, to-day, to obtain information as te the methods employed by the Uniteds States in the handling of that grain for the export trade, | For the past four years, according to i Sir Thomas, South Africa has produc- ered Away. Wand Position--Hon, Mr. Fielding De- treal and other grain marts. vlares That the Government is in Se --E----------------. No Way Responsible, i Bpecial to the Whig Uttawa, March 16. ~The now defunct - Farmers: Bank and its convicted man- | Porta. ager, W. R. Travers, got another | Cleveland, March 16. This morving lengthy airing in the house of {nothing was ween or heard of the miss- MISSING BOATS. Diligent Search. Hillier, March | There is Considerable Alarm at Lake Ont., { the heavy seas still raging other tugs [place Wednesday. | are preparing to go out in the search. | When the wife returned home about {Other vessels are missing, as several [three o'clock she was informed by Ler were out when the cold storm hjew up, | thirtcen-year-old daughter that he had the effect, "that in the opinion of this house a royal commission should be appointed forthwith power to with enquire into and investig $ + i ar ha Shin ing het = yesterday afternoon and last night. [some away. Mrs. Alexander hurrieily said Farmers' Bank of Canada } il The steamer Effie B., misving since ves- [called her two sons, Charlie and How- A» ana | » + 3 | : : the {terday morning, came in just before lard, who immediately set out in of a. certificate board permitting Issue notes granting the treasury said bank by | daylight, this morning, a mass of ice, Us land the erew terribly frost-bitten. oul | 'There is great anxiety here and all | search. They arrived home about five clock, huving traced their father for a distance of about two miles. to and mance: business | his election in the state legislature. At pane pm. {Otiawa, the home of Lee O'Neil | awed but without result. » | Browne, who was twice tried | For some time the missing man had charges of being Lorimer's go-between, {been very forgetful, and several times | members to LaSalle County Ministerial {had been unable to find his way home. { Association, denounced Mr. Lorimer | That he was out of his mind on this , rim homes would be mortgaged in to meet -thiir obligations, and . are too far advanced in vears to ever think of being able such mortgages. on to remove or lifi {the house asked him where he lived, a I but he could not tell them, nor could {be say what his name was. cous holocaust would naturally reflect | upon the govérnment He pointed out that the finance Je Dublin, March 16.---Angustine Roche, ia Redmondite, was elected to the se [far the north division of South, made partment had been warned no less vacant by the court's dedision thag| Sunday morning another party or than' six times that there was some [Richard Hazleton's election at the last [kanized, numberixg abou forty, and thing decidedly wrong in the applica | parliamentary pollings was secured by [made a thorough search of all the tion for the charter and he believed Sieh The election was unopposed, [country surrounding. All day they that the minister and his assistasts | Timothy Healy refusing to contest the [tramped through water and mud knee were deréleU in hair duty in rot |seat from which he was ousted ion, in the swamps and woods. The making further investigations. le | Hazelton. {line extended for more than a mile] : said he had warned Mr, Fielding {from the lake shor? north. The »ke personally that a bank of this kind | shore war searched most carefully, would be unsafe, and that Mr. Field G ]1] D B | The search continued Monday anl ing told him he would hold back th | Fuesday, when, about B pm., the certificate as long as he could, and {body was found in the bush, on Me-| that Mr. Fielding added "he would |KING AND QUEEN TO TAKE | Dowell's farm, east of Picton, death pat it up to Travers." FULL RE@ALIA having resulted from exposure , ard Mr. Fielding interrupted and said j exhaustion. this conversation never took place. M Henderson, however, declared that it had, "It was only verbal, but my memory is just as correct as that of the minister's" he declared Hon. Mr, Fielding, in rising to reply To India to be Crowned There--For | FAVORED-NATION CLAUSES. First Time Symbols of British] ------ Sovereignty to be Seen in India. | Attributes Difficulties to Absence of Imperial Machinery. March 16.--The London; March 16.--Plans. are prac- | tically complete for the visit of the | London London, said that he could sympathize with | king 'and queen in India. The occasion | mes, referring to the statement that those who were unfortunate to lose lig eed and will furnish | Sir Wilfrid Laurier intends to ask at their money, but the government wa: {some of the most gorgeous spectacles | the imperial conference for the re not responsible and, therefore, could | (hat ever India has witnessed. | vision of the most-favored-nation not reimburse them in any way. The One million pounds sterling is to bi [ treaties, says that "such a move, ii ac on spent on the coronation durbar at contemplated, is a significant trend 4 § we { Delhi by the Indian government, and of Canadian opinion. Canada de it was not necessary to appoint one hundred thousand troops will be | rives no particular benefit from the Soya] commission as suggested by N/ mobilized for dutv and inspection | most favored-nation clauses , neither that when application for the incorpor The actual date of the durbar has [do we. It opens, however, Iirge On of i El we made in 190, not yet been announced, but it will [Husstions concerning the Empire us there was no objection, nor in 1905, probably be about the middle of De. |8 whole, and leads to the sorrowful OE a I CL 1206 th, cemiber. | recognition that there is no imperial AR i. akin The striking moment will be when | machinery at all adequate to deul " ! the king and queen place the érowns | With imperial questions. In its absence committee was by myself. 1 thought that owing to their slowness to or | PO their own heads. The crowng ithe different portions of the empire ganize, it indented a weakness and ave those which will be used at West. | are in danger of heing driven by : » minster abbey, and the king will take force of circumstances tora partial further 1 did not like the name Farm ers' Bank, However, the committee al lowed it and therefore it is the parlia ment of Canada that is responsible and not the government. | solution which may be found diffieuit with hime all the regalia with which y reconcile with. one another, he will be decorated at the coronation | © in London. For the first time all the symbols of DISLOCATED LEGS DANCING. {been given a rousing reception when a House Quarantined | the accident occurred. Surgeons were | hurried to the theatre from the Mid { dlesex hospital, and the bones were soon replaced. Miss Clayton will be compelled to rest some time. did he not put his objections in writ ing and send them to me® That is the bhsiness way of doing things." Quite a wrangle ensued between M: Henderson and Mr. Fielding, over this technicality, when finally the minister of finance said: "HU the honorable Escape From for Smallpox. Montreal, March 16.~While endeav: oring to engage a horse and rig at a livery stable in Lachine with which to drive to Montreal, Mr. and Mis ------ Plague in False Hair. gentleman will not accept my word, | Alfred C. Hafstaid, who escaped from Germs and I do not intend to aceef * his, We |y house in Ninth avenue, where thers! Toronto, March 16.-C. JJ. 0. Has will have to leave the matter as it | gas a case of smallpox, were appre- tings, medical health officer, admits stands. hended. e |there is some danger of the spread of Mr. Fielding said that the first time he had met Mr. Travers, that gentle man assured him that every dollar re gird by law had been paid in cash. At that time he was a man ose word was as as any honorable gentleman in this house. course, to- day, he is a conviet, a discredited man and a thief, but the way in which bis application was .made, supported by many highly table men in Ontario the depariment could not do otherwise than grant the charter. The house from which the man and | the plague which has visited China, to woman escaped is one in which n young | Canada, owing to the demand for false man was found to be suffering from {hair, and be is having his men make smallpox. There are fourteen persons j diligent inquiry to determine the ex- under quarantine in the house, 'and | ont © which the trade in false hair extra precautions will be taken to see |\0M China is carried on in Canada, that io one Jeaves. the place until the | 24 Toronto in particular, and to find out, if possible, if any of this comes health officers lift the bau. Lirom 'the stricken distaicts. Mother Wrung Daughter's Neck. Now Zealand's Teleph Problem: | Auckland, N.7., March 16.-On the Clinton, Conn., March 16.--The mys- tery surrounding the burning of the | rou oo nth objects the | talepwhorie girls emploved by the fede: ry home of Alred Faltrappi, in Killing Are Given Safe Seats.' worth, y ay, and the disappear I ! Lond March 16.--Lord A. ( lance of his wife and three-year-old ui authority are objecting oh Sun a ork Mesiona] | daughter, was clearsd by the fud-| go ob >in dy + io ton, M.P., for Brentford, has resigned. ghter, wa J {transfer the conscientious objectors to ing, last night, of Mrs. Faltrappi snd | county districts, where they will have He bad a majority of 1075 in the Bee: . fo 8 app tion last December. is makingz | her confession 0, al ex- firtle Sunday * way for Joynson Hicks, who will be |aminer that she had wrung the 'meek |gicla refuse to go, profer at the the unionist vandidate in the bye-clec- {of her daughter and locked her in the |main in cities. A deadlock has con tion. {house. . She did not remember, sbe sequently arisen. Bonar Law, the Canadian, was! said, anything about setting the house! -- adopted as unionist candidate inion fire. After killing her child she! Reporter Shielding Informant. Boothe, Lancashire, whete Col. Sandys said she attempted to kill herself | : tl Ga., ¥ 3 va ul in the general |The woman is boing hor Sa Atlanta, Ga., March 16.--Because T. IF. Hamilton, a reporter for the Au- "election, has resigoed in his favor. tion. sta Butaiel, refused to give Je po a i W----S------------_------ 100 board the n of 1 ar Shamrocks, 108 Brock street. Ns. Crippen Este jhe ge Bit Sp or > Rs ---- ---- London, March 16.~ re. | story, must re! to jail and fin DAILY MEMORANDUM. (Dr.) Crippen, who was murdered * by | #h serving a sentence of five days, 14ih Band at the covered rink to- night. her husband in February, 1908, left an pay a fine of 350, imposed for con to Madame Sherry," Grand Opera House, pm. ¥e : - | eetater ui $875, which the court has tempt. This was the decision handed granted to her sister, ; Fdown by the supreme court. 1 i | 1 i . Russian Refugee Is Now in | California, | \ { Wignipeg, March 16.--H the Russian! i. prc. com | Venerable Resident Had FOUND IN THE its activities to « TO APPOINT A ROYAL COMMIS- ed more carn of a fine grade than is {AND HIS BODY SION. needed for home consumption, but his y country lacks modern facilities for its BUSH. To . . shipment abroad. In carrying out his : Enquire Into Farmers Bank mission, Sir Thomas will visit Mon- {James Alexanders, Aged 71, of Hillier Township, Left Home Fri. day--The Neighbors Kept Up a 16.--Having | wandered away from home on Friday ing a restaurant on Cherry street, | afternoon, search parties, which were three hold up men strangled organized that evening, found the body Who is responsible for the wresk of this bank ? asked Mr. Henderson | and Senator Cullom and called on {last occasion is proved by the fact Did the finance minister know what | them to resign. {that a mun supposed to have been | he was doing when he granted suc | p-------------- {Alexander called at a house and said a charter * If 50, then this outrag-| Redmondite Gets Seat. {I want to go home." The owner of «party is in power, the "As Pe o- innuing: of + corti- | British sovereignty will be deen in . ae ficate, ae a ging ot the ob India. One of the Orient com {Bessie Clayton's Experiesiee in Lon. he says he had warned me sgainst |Pany's liners will be hired for the don Music Hall. granting it, and | pever said 'I | VOVage, and there will be an escort London, March 16.--Rossic Clay would put it up to Travers." If this [of battleships and cruisers, {lon, whe appeared here in the ballat matter was such a grave one as Mr LARA IER] jin "The Mad Pierro,' is juecated be Henderson thought at the time, why CAUGHT THEM. hip while dancing last night. She had FEDORENKO GOES SOUTH. Lower | government wants Savva Fedorenko it will have to look for him elsewhere than in Winnipeg. It was announced | some time ago that an appeal is to be taken to the privy couneil, from | ! the 'decision of Justice Robson, which | {resulted in the freeing of the Russian | ' refugee. ! Should this result in a decision on the part of the Russian government to again attempt to get Fedoreako back to Russia it will have to transfer California, where Fe- | renko is now, in search of health. | He left Winnipeg last week for - California. ---- STRANGLED THE COOK. | Rebbed Restaurant and Left Chef in - Bad Condition. New York, N.Y. March 16. --Enter- Diego ] Lacala, the evok, strumg him up by com a » mony yesterday. 'The matter was ing tug Silver Spray, of Frie, Penn, of James Alexander, aged seventy-one, | the neck with a noose which they at- | brought up by David Henderson, Hai. | nod little hope is entertained for the late on Tuesday, some sixteen miles tached to n meat hook, and slashed | ton, who introduced a resolution (.,|11ves of her eight of a crew. Despite from his home. The funeral took! bis face with a kuife as they went | {through his packets and robbed him of 8136. After robbing the cash draw- | er of $10, the men fled, and Lacala | nearly strangled to death before he | managed to free himselt. He was tak- en to a hospital in & serious condition | from loss of blood. | WINTERED IN A CEMETERY. i Tramps Stored Food in Coffins and! 1 | storehouse for their food.. ROCHESTER INFAVOR LO¥ RECIPROCITY, AS BENEFI TO CHARLOTTE. | The Latter Would be Made a Great | Shipping Point -- A Pulp Mill Would be Erected Near Rochester. Montreal, March 16.-- '1 know around Rochestir, N.Y., at least, that ! the people are in favor of reciprocity with | Canada, and they believe that it means | annexation to the United States," says | George Osborne Kerr, who is in Mon- i treal. Mr. Kerr has extensive interests at Charlotte, N.Y., the port of Roches ter, being idemtified with the shipping interests there. "The fruit growers on the southern +shore of Lake Ontario," he says, "are simply waiting for the international doors to open, because the Canadian | market has been denied them and they | {realize that now they will be able to compete with the Niagara fruit grow. | ars on their own ground. "I also know that there is a wealth, corporation waiting for the passage of | the reciprocity agreement in order to | erect a large pulp mill near Rochester, Ii it should happen that reciprocity is killed they will build the mill in On i taro. | "From a business standpoint, I na- | turally hope that the agreement goes through, just as everybody hopes around Rochester, No matter what public opinion of the United States will insist on the ratification of the agreement because they realize that it is decidedly to their best interest. There is no joke | about it. W reciprocity goes through, | it will make a great shipping point of the port of Charlotte, N.Y, ICE BRIDGE GIVES WAY, | Horses and Driver Plunged Into the! | St. Lawrence. | | Ogdensburg, N.Y., March 16.--Napo- | | leon Lovette lost a valuable team oi ! horses in the St. Lawrence river and! | narrowly escaped losing his life. He | {had been engaged hy Thomas Skelly, {who had purchased a farm on the | Canadian site of the river, to cart a {load of furnitpre over the ice bridge | | to Prescott. | | Lovette was accompanied by his son, | { Joseph. When out in the channel the | | horses broke through the ice at a point where the water is over 100] { fect" deep. Napoleon Lovetie gas in| ithe front sent of the sleigh, driving, | | and was thrown into the water. The! | son succeeded iu pulling his father lout onto firm ice, but the horses and | front bob of the sleigh soon disappear- | ed under the ice J Loveite was following she regular road and was but a short distance be- | hind a Prescot: rig, which satel | passed across to the Canadian side. | SCORES KILLED [In Italian Seaport by Storm and Tidal Wave. Rome, March 16---Scores of peoples | are reported to have been killed in the destruction of a large section of the | town of Viareggio, in Tuscany by «| storm and tidal wave. ont ing to} i reports, a evelope struc the town demolishing many buildings. During | the height of the tempest a tidal wave rolled in from the sea, devastat. | ing practically the entice harbor | front. No bodies have been recovered | | at latest accounts. ! |' The seaport of Viareggio is twelve | miles west of Lucca and has a popu- {lation of approximately 15000 Killed in the Mine 1+ Cobalt, March ib " 5 vad | of Killaloe, Ont.. a drill ranuer in the . od whe 1 j clear It is Jee wid br | |dian Pacific, not less, and the president { Lake Superior Corporation says ther It {walres annaally, ILED GUARD Insane Man Escaped From an Asylum. BEAT OUT BRAINS OF THE MAN WHO TRIED TO CAPTURE HIM. Liberated Another Patient--Both Men Escaped--His Insanity Takes Form of Intemse Hatred of Par ents. : Montreal, March 16. Left by his keepers tightly strapped to his bed with his hands' manacled, Auguste Paaneton, twenty-five years of age, an inmate in St. Point Joseph asy- Jum, at Longue Pointe, managed to escape on Tuesday night by tearing a- way the iron bars in a small win dow, over the door of his cell. Out. side he killed Francois D. Haine, a guard, who tried to capture him, beating out his brains with a length of lead pipe. He then liberated an- other patient, Raphael Gabdois, and both escaped from the asylum. Neith er had been captured up to moon to- and all circumstan es | slong the south coast of ke Erie | > connected therewith, aud to generally i he a Ro, const of Take Fri bog A general alarm was waised th on U i ™ nd 2 «hquire into and investigate the opera- | ------ : {and by means of the telephone--apar- Slept Urns, ; 1 giun'monks, who gonduet She - wons and ficiency of the Hoy St. DEMAND RESIGNATION. [ty of about thirty men gathered just! Nyack, N.Y., March 16.-Two men |stitution, tried to keep the affair a {after sundown, and made a thorousn describing themselves as tramp print- | secret, but it leaked out to-day. It ! feared that a second tragedy may in relation to the affairs and trance | seen | tions of said bank." {Many Ministers Join Movement | "earch of the marsh, swamp and wood ©'S are under arrest here, charged by |is Ir rc seid that the 'totais Agaimat Lotimer. | close by. : the police with haviag made them [follow if the men are mot speedily Ch gnentistogiin adn Chiaaa ET : > Several times foot prints resembling home for the greater part of the win- recaptured. Panneton is a son ofa $461,981, and as this was one of thelr oe" 4 a Washi deanhs -» he |those of the missing man were found, '¢f 1 a vault in the Rockland ceme | prominent banker of Three Rivers, alent oh tt Ay Sas one oy a, i, gt aonb i, a ave jand in each case followed up unsue- Jory The men are said to have lived !Que., and his insanity seems to have Prove most disastrous Yhe | counts a sie ganis of 1 Ten Ar. | cessfully i wo: nearly three months in the dark, taken the form of an intense hatred would be paralyzed by the loss ni signation of William E. Lorimer from On Saturday word was received that or a a, 5 7, Rwaive of ng pares. the savings of a life-time would be {the United States seriate, because of | Alexander had been seen in Wellin r- Toot, Sher impoverished hed of straw | -- BELT 1 3 | i 4 . 3 8 ) d upo N gone forever. Many of the farmers' tthe charges of bribery, which marred jon, seve ules Sistem hewtes iy ue coffins, and Ratreral ra afforded ™ STINTS OA : Thomas J. Drummond Enthusiatic as » Future. Montreal, March 16.--Thomas J. Drummond, president of the Lake Su- perior Corporation, has returned from the plant at Sault Ste. Marie, and is full of the subject of the rapid settle ment of that great domain known as the Ontario clay belt traversed by the Canadian Northern and the Grand Trank Pacific for four hundred miles; and crossed north and south by the Algoma Central. The company have explorers out in all directions, and Mr. Drummons gays that country, ca pable of giviag homes to two million peo will be the surprise of the centuly, as it is really a timbered prairie, and will be settled up of quickly as the western provinces. But he says Ontario should be astir, fo the French-Canadians are especially adapted for such colonization, and all know what they have done along the line of the C.P.R Although the two other roads have the advantage of traversing this clay belt, the Canta with its usual energy, will tap the country in various di rections from the main line as a bas and get its share of the great traffic which is sure to come out of this im mense domain Mr. Drummond confirms the stats ment made yesterday that the Cana dian Northern will rush their rails through this country in two years, i of the are at least sixteen million acres her of the very best land in the dominion is understood that by theend of the year the Lake Superior Corpoga tion will have spent twenty millions in two years, and the development is just begun. THREE YEARS IN PRISON. The Fate of a Stock Promoter ir New York. New York, March 16. George H Munroe, formerly of Toronto, where he promoted taxicab and mining re positions of various kinds, which stocks were widely sold throughout (Ontario, was sentenced this morning | to three years in the federal prison a: | Atlanta for fraudulent use of the mails in connection with the selling of wire less stocks. He operated here "as a broker and is said to have cleaned uy half a million in Canada. Triple-- Hurled. . i ------ YOUNG MAN KILLED By the Caving in of a Barn Roof at Dions Mills. Sherbrooke. Que., March 16.--Joseph | Rentor, aged thirty, was instantly kill- ed at Dions Mills, Thetford Mines, ves terday afternoon, while in a barn with his father, trviug to stay a roof which caving in through weight of snow. He was crushed beneath a heavy beam His father escaped with slight injrry. Boulder Struck Train. Vancouver, Murch 16.--4A boulder falling dowar the mountain side, ves. { terday, struck a Canadian Pacific rail: way work train near Cisco. Three see tionmen, foreigners, were hurt, and Foreman Kjug was throws against a car and his back broken. He is still living. The damage to rolling stock was small, ---- Reflections of Flames. Erie, Pa., March 16.--During last night there were vivid reflections of flames out in the lake sad rescuin tugs started out in the direction of them, but were driven back by seas. It is thought it may have been the Silver Spray on five, ------------ Will Arrest American Poachers. ® \"openhagen, March 16.--~The govern rent is sending warships to Greenland with instructions So arrest walms hunters, chi Americans, wre reported to be ki thousands of MUST STOP WHEN FLAGGED. Contract. Cornwall, Ont., March 16.--An iuier esting case was tried before Judge Liddell and a jury in the . divisson which Duncau court at Cernwall, in Monroé, of Cornwall, was awarded damages against the Grand Tom railway. Mr. Monroe purchased a ti ket at Cornwall for Lansdowne, Unt. on October 11th. In the early hours of October 12th he went to Mallory town, a flag station, for one of the Eaming trains and asked to have the train flagged. The night operator complied with the request but the engiveer failed to stop and Mr. Menroe was detained an entire day. the public and that the refusal of the en gineer to stop when signalled was a breach of that contract. The jury agreed on a verdict Mr. Monroe for 830. So far as the public legal records show, this is the first time that an action of this sort has ever been tried in the province of Ontario. A RIOTOUS SESSION Held by Russian Pouma~--Had to Extinguish Lights, St. Petersburg, March 16.--Only when servants of the house of the douma ex tinguished the lights of the chamber, was ended the most riotous session ever_held of Russia's parliament. De piifies almost fought with their fists on the floor of the house. A discus gion arose in the first place over the declaration of one deputy that women students during the revolutionary period consorted with drunken sailors in order to spread their revolutionary propaganda. | FEAR CATTLE PLAGUE. Canada Places Embargo on British | Live Stock. | Ottawa, March 16.~The government | has placed an embargo on the impor- | tation of cattle and all live stock from | British ports, save horses, owing to | an outbreak of foot and mouth dis} ease at Cobham, Surrey. This will keep out cattle intended for breeding purposes until the disease is stamped out. 1 | | Philistines at "The Hub." Boston, March 16.--Because of their objections to the nude statues in Dos | ton museum of fine arts, Bishop Wil lard F. Mallalieu, of the Methodist Episcopal church, and a number of | ther clergymen of Boston and vicin- | ity, have sent out a circular in oppo sition to a bill pending in the legisla ture to permit the city of Boston to! appropriate $50,000 nearly for main tenance of the museum. THE WORLD'S TIDINGS GIVEN IN THE BRIEFEST POS | SIBLE FORM. | Notes From All Over--Little of Everybody Easily Lead and Re- | membered. | The death is hourly expected of aged Justice (rirouard, of the supre court, Ottawa, thrown out of a riage two weeks ago Canadian Pacific officials have given out that a suspension of work is pos sible in the Crow's Nest coal ywing to a labor dispute. This will involve three thousand men. An American named Decou, who wa a member of an archaeological expedi tion to the site of the ancient (it f Cyrene, in Africa, was shot and killed last Saturday by an Arab work man, At North Bay, Ont., George Cauch ery, aged twenty-four, a Canadian Pacific brakeman, was mysterious! struck by an engine, sustaining a fra tare of the skull and other i . from which he died, Thursday morning He leaves a widow. -------- | Matters That Interest Kverybody-- | 1 1 ne ar mines, Strips Rubbers for Beggar. Boston, Mass., March 16.<Ma William P'. Connery, of Lynn, close to obeying the scriptural jnjun tion concerning charity to the letter when he took off a pair of ov shoes and gave them to an aged ma The mavor was hurrving home luncheon when the man asked him eam fifty conts. The mayor said haven't it. What do you want for ?" "1 need a pair of rubbers," was the repky. The mayor saw that the mm shoss were full of holes. "Here, take mine," said he, res ing the footgear. They werw a cellent fit, and the beggard departs, loud in hw praises. Charge of Murder. Asbury Park, N.J., March 16 Frank E. Heidemann was arrest charged with the murder of Smith, the ten-year-old girl whe Nhe assaulted and murdered on the skirts of Asbury Park last Novembe Several previous arrests h made in the case, including that negro, who was held in jml for weve ral weeks before he established bs of her. Marie nocence. Heidemann is a Gern borer, and, according to t} yl iw has made a full confession of the mur der. He had been trailed tor fou months by a private detectic being a German, gained hi and became his room mate An Epidemic of Measies. St. Thomas, Omi, March 16.-T} city is im the grip of a measles spid mic. Between 30 and 400 crses y suid to exist here at presen'. Med Health Officer Dy. McKillop has 4 clared the ailment eoidemic and ha ordered that the children in all the infected families be kept at home fo 3% lags Shwe Necks Hom She origls of disease. Up to date, warning been general] i has mot iy 1 There are quite a number of adults ill aned these are the most severe cose | Time-Table of Railway Hald to be Dependable Fabrics | WEATHER Ont Mar 18 PROBABILITIES. 18 am--Ot- Lawrence Mow | For Tailored Suits It developed that as a matter of law time table is a contract with the Fabrics of worth----style and greit value. England. Ireland, sented im our great array. Every wanted new Weave is here, nothing else to $1.75 YOU WILL NOTICE In Our Msplay STRIPED WORSTEDS, STRIPED TWEEDS, DONEGALL TWEEDS, IRISH HOMBESPUNS, SCOTCH TWEEDS, FRENCH WORSTEDS, ENCH CHEVIOTS, ETC. SEE OUR EXCLUSIVE SUIT PATTERNS At $6.75 and $7.50, FR Some very pretty one of each STEACY'S ESTABLISHED 1881. BORN MATHESON » ia BOY Mar " > 1 y ' i suey CURL In Kingstor 1 Hospital, on March 15th, Jehn Curly aged 65 years Funeral from a late residence Glen- : ¥ day roi 0 r a are nd, inte ngs March ot resid Tierney), a solemn ---- ROBERT J. REID, Ti+ Leading Undertaker, 'Phone 577. st -- JAMES 'REID The Old Firm of 234 amd 208 PRINCESS 'Phone 147 for Ambulance. 1 ndertakers STREET, Scotland, i for | France and Germany are all repre- weaves and only 18th, f the late Owen ence of her 17 morning, t Mary's re be sung for Lhe 230 Princess Street. TAKE NOTIC ® : Five 1 Manogel Chalrs, ane has ais two nice alot Parior fas These are a f lot. 0 Phone At Turk's : Are the' safest pow. We have in stock RADNOR. WHITE ROCK. SUN RAY. CALEDONIA. VICHY. POLAND. GINGER ALE. SODA WATER. Jas. Redden & Co. to drink just IMPORTERS OF FING GROCERIES. _ The residence of Rev. Hugh Cowen, Preshiy terian, in pletely destroyed by fire on Thursday, of the family escaped Harwich, was g. Most only in their night clothes morning Theres will be no extension of the loronto suburban railway to Hamil ton. G , Preston, and Galt. ' = =i A woman can about havin be very glad she did it. See Abernethy's advt., page two, com- be most mistaken' married a man and yet I