- The Daily British KINGSTON, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, APRIL 11, 1911. ig ON LAST EDITI .H up prp)-Qn"rpan De YEAR 78 -NO. 85 HAVE. AGREED - S-------- -- GANANOQUE THINGS. {The Town May be Sued Over Run. i away Accident, { \ | Gananorue, April 11 ~The {of Grace church held its annual {ness meeting at the To Prorogue on May 18th 5% "men Yin So 'Tis Said. WMS busi parsonage, yes- Alice Timber- vears engaged | > Vin mission work in Tokio, Japan, a . {former member of the auxiliary here, -------- gave an excellent address on. the mis {sion work among the girls and wo- A SLIM ATTENDANCE of Japan. Mrs. C. B. Rogers, 'an ex-president of the society and life | member, who is leaving shortly for i Macklin, Sask., was presented with an | address, accompanied by a handsome {leather handbag, as a slight token of jesteem. The election of officers result. : . {ed : President, Miss Winona Pitcher; Col. Rani Hughes 'Had a Little yicipresident, Mrs. Robert McCul- Wrangle With the Premier--The | lough: recording secretary, Mrs. B. 0. Finance Minister = Corrects Hon. | Peitton; corresponding Bosrgtary Mrs. - - . id. Jackson; treasurer, rs. James George FE. Foster. {Domevan; superintendent systematic Special to the Whig : { | giving, Mr=. William Carpenter; super Ottawa, April 1] -- Yesterday: was intendent mission hand, Mrs. Thomas ah exceedingly Jamie dny - She hous leq; superintendent outlook, Mrs of commons ere was John E. Cook. tendancy SL meaihers, inst of thre | Arthur Latimer, son of Orlando Lati ving returne yp ne mer, who has been undergoing tread spend the Faster holidays with their | one i the Kingston general hospital families. ths reciprocity debate WAS jor the past mine months, including continued, the first speaker being C. gor operations, fas returned home, | JA. Thornton, Durham, for the cone improved. ! A large number of the officers yoarvatives. Before the orders of members of Harmony lodge, No. 15, called a little wrangle took place be if) of R., including their degree team, | tween Col. Sum Hughes and the prime went to Brockville, yesterday, for n | minister over the appointment o fraternal visit with the sister lodge of additional clerk to the house stall, lihat town. Their team exemplified the as translator The appointed: Fs gree work of the order. A banquet retool by the sacalier an hal tendergsl in their honor the Col. nghes 1s a member ol the lelose of the husiness sessvon debat's' cammittee, he thought that Hi There are persistent rumors afloat to should first have come. before that {the effect that the town will be called committer. In' face of this he thought upon to defend itself the courts, that the debates Lom ee was only! ggainst an for damages insti an ornamental body if they tuted by a resident of have no say ii appointments {recently injured within the town lim | The prime minister assured the gal fits in a runaway accident lant colonel that the committee Mra. William V. Bulloch and daugh very useful, inasmuch it had the ter, Mizs Dora Bulloch, Charles street, power to investigate th' work of the I different clerks | was found they should recommend dis-1 SWAL. IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS ON MONDAY. the aay were at m action were to the township, | wns | as were in Kingston yesterday and when inelliciency missal and endeavor ta secure belter 'DROPPED IN A officials, ' | Rir Wilfrid Lanrier, jor Mr. Oliver, | introduoced bill amend the In [KANSAS FARMER'S HOG dian aot, LOWS His $2,700. He explained that the amendments | : were for the purpose of giving to the governarrin-conneil power to pass upon any suggestion made in respect to Indian rederves by provincial legis Intures and also that when it is deem od advisable to Gispossess and trans for Indians irom any reserve within » distance of ten miles from a grow ing town the matter should be referred to the court of exchequer far cone sideration. Hon. Mr. Fielding ealled 'the atten, tion of Mr. Paster to a statement he had made during the budget debate, that all Canadian duties levied in 1896 were low ir than those levied in 1010. Mr. Fielding pointed ont that the situation was just the reverse, and that Mr. Foster must have in terpreted the figures wrongly, beeanse the duties were much lower in 1910 than they were 1896, Mr. Foster--"1f I am willing to acknowledge it A great number of private bills ve cotved their second reading, and then the house went into committee of ways and means to discuss recipro ity It is understood from liable source that the two leaders parliament have agreed that proroga- tion will take place on the 18th of May. If this be true it means that hiarning question of reciprocity be laid over until next session The government, it is understood, will say to Mr. Taft "We are ready and can pass this agreement at any time but as we have been in session six months and as important Mn gagements in London during the lat ter part of May and June require the presence of several of the ministers we deam it advisable to prorogue without concluding the debate on re ciprocity. When we meel again in the fall the matter will be taken up im: mediately and passed, prov iding that your house have been gnocessful in getting it through at Washington." n to | Jeremiah Quinn, of Coffeyville, | Wants Uncle Sam to Reimburse Him for Loss of Bankroll, Washington, D.( April 11.----A Karisa® hog that "on the hoof' was worth more than #270, but dressed was valued only at its weight as pork, brought to this city Jeremiah Quinn, a farmer residing near . Cofiey ville Quinn had with him a mass that one might mistake for a handful of break- fast food, but which, he says, was once his bankroll. Quinn says he cun prove that his hog pounced upon and devoured ¥2,700 when he dropped it in the pen while feeding the animal. If he can do this to" the satisfaction of the treasury de partment he will be reimbursed. | i Child Burned to Death. Halifax, N.8,, April 11.--George lee Ryan, the four-year-old son of Chief Steward Ryan, of the steamer Boston, was burned to death, vesterday. The Boston was due to arrive to-day, but was detained by the weather, so that the father is vet unaware of the ter- rile affair. The mother of the child went out to purchase groceries. Dur- ing her absence the child's clothing became: - ignited at the kitchen stove and so badly was he burned that he died in an hour. wrong | am a most re in the w i - SE _------ - Victim of Hydrophobia. New York, April 11.--Abraham Na hon, aged forty-two, former secretary of the New York American Baseball Club, died from hydrophobia in the Neurological Institute. He contracted the disease from a pet bulldog, last November, 'which licked his hand while he was attending the animal, which later developed rabies. MUST FIGHT AGAIN AGAINST LONG SAULT DAM PRO- JECT, 5,000 Homes Burned. Tokio, April 11.---The notorious "red light" quarter of Tokio was destroy wl hy fire Saturdny. Many of these haotises were almost palatinl in appear ance, and a thousand of them were burned in a Httle more than three pours. Six thousand female inmates were ws. Four or five ave reported dead, and about 100 slightly injured. The district is conducted under gov: ernment licenses, which provides for the establishment of hospitals, snd sev eral of these wow also Bumed. Alto- gether it is estimated that 5,000 houses are in rains, covering an area of fowr square miles. The loss is placed at $3,000,000, with 2350,000 insurance. Sik Hats for Easter. The now styles in Christy's and oth- er leading anakes, at Camphell Bros'. The Opposition is Costly, and Assists ance Should be Given J. W. Allie son, of Mervisburg, in His Fight. . Montreal, April 11.--Although Long Sault dam scheme received a setback at the hands of the last Unj- ted States congress there is naw no doubt that ° asother bill will be brought up at the present extra ses sion at Washmgton and another d termined effort made to railroad the measure through at the American capital. J. Wesley Allison, Morrisburg, who, with his counsel, Hon. Charles BE. Littlefield, of New York, efidtively blocked the passage of the scheme the ot city vesterday en route to Washington ! before the extra congress. While Montreal Mr. Allison consulted with the several interests opposed. to the damming of the St. Lawrence, and a meeting has been called for to-mor row asiternoon to outline a definite and concerted plan of fighting the m Dallidills, tulips. "Pardy." The home of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley 410 look after the opposition interests! FIVE TINES 'The Royal Pair to Be Seen in London. WILL DRIVE ABOUT PROGRAMME FOR THE CORONATION, THE Ceremony in the Abbey--Accommo- dation Only for Officially From . Countries, Personages Sent the Several { London, April 11.--- These are days for foreign and colonial sentatives in London, particularly repre th | American and Canadian officials, Thou sands of people are coming from Ame | the caronation, and from the of embassy rica for appearance want something done for them. The majority of the requests reasonable, many are difficult to com ply with, and a few, to ing the conditions, are ridiculous. Une writer, for example, asked that sents be reserved for him in minster Abbey on the day of the coro pation; hardfy realizing perfiaps few outside official circles will secure a glimpse of that historic ceremony, and! not many thousands will even get a view of the procession from Bucking ham palace to the Abbey, the being =u short : 4 There will be many oceasions during | the summer, however, of seeing the {royal couple and witnessing ceremon than times majesties interesting the coronation Five during May and their will drive through the streets of Lon don.. Un May 12th they go to Crystal palace to open the festival of empire; on June 22nd, there is the coronation processions on the day following the royal progress through London when several miles of streets will be tea versed, on June 29th the visit to the | Guildhall and the véturn through | North London; and on June 30th second drive to Crystal Palace, where the king and queen are giving a coro nation fete for 100,000 children from the elementary schools of London. On May 16th the Queen Victoria me morial will be unveiled and the Ger man emperor and empress will attend Ihe following evening a gala perform ance will be given at Urary Lane in honor of the German sovereigns. Dur ing the coronation week there will be gala performances at both Covent! {iarden Opera House, and Hix Ma jesty's theatre, Other events of the season are: May 22--Imperial conference opens May 24--Empire day. May 27--Celebration birthday. June 17--Arrival and reception foreign representatives attending coro nation. June 24--Roval ut Spithead. July %-12---Roval visit Ireland. July 13--Investiture of the Prince of Wales at Carnarvon castle, July 14-The king opens University College, Bangor. July 15~The stone of Welsh Aberystwyth I'he visit to Scotland is reserved for the autumn, when the roval family take up their residence at Balmoral castle. Whitelaw Reid, the American am- hassador, has received the following note for an official of the foreign of fice, "I regret to sav that owing to the limitation of space in the abbey, it is quite impossible to provide accom maodation for personages of distinction other than those who are officially sent from the several countries, a little less itaeli. June es only " of the King's | of review of the #eet to king lays foundation National Library at GIVEN HEAVY SHOCK, 2.200 Volts Passed Through Man's Body. Niagara Falls, Ont, April 11 ert Cornelius, a city lineman, is in the Niagara Falls General Hospital, suffer ing from terrible burns, 2,200 volts of electricity having passed through his body while at work on Victoria avenue on Monday morning. John Thomas, who was on a pole some distance away, heard Cornelius yell, and him dangling in the air, suspended from the arm of the pole. After hav ing the power shut off he climbed up the pole to Cornelius' resend, and was just about to get him down when the weight of the two men pulled the arm off the pole on which they were resting. Thomas, however, reached to the other arm of the pole in time, 0 both men wankd have been dashed to the pavement. Saw as' CONVICTED BY HOOF MARKS. through the two houses, was in the peeyliar Traces Near Body of Woe man Murdered. Danville, IL, Apcil 11. Frederick €. Garner was fonnd guilty of killing Mrs. Elsie Cochrane, and his sentence was lived at teweoty years in the peni tentinry. Some months ago the body Wf the woman was found several miles from her home. Evidence of peculiar ity of the shoes on Garner's horse, \. i bosy | and consulate | mail bags, a large proportion of them | are | those know- | four i West, | that ! route from AN Rob- | FATHER SHOT SON. About to Stab Him, it is 1k. leged, Halifax, N:3., April 1l.--A shooting end in tragedy in the who now - SCORE DROWN By Sinking of Vessel in ( the Pacific, STEAMER CAPSIZED HEAVY SEAS (AUSED CARGO TO SHIFT. ---- fr Captain Tried to Reach Shore With Her, But Failed--He amd Some of Crew Left Sinking Vessel to Get Help. Vietoria, B.C., April 11.--The steam- er Iroquois, Capt. Sears, which phes {between Sydmey and the Gull Islands, { { § fe faffair that ma) oc curred at Truro, M Jackson, « with Wer Dome ol in jail, som, At vears of age, wavs bevn considered | 4 Arthur, who is in the' a bullet hole in his neck, v from Truro for ten returned some days ago and then has been Hving at His Hather's Ihe trouble started over washing the breakfast dishes, as the men were keeping bachelor quar- Words on blows, and it is said, struck the Hid man, The father drew the sop grabbed 5 knife and sprang at 'his father, who turned thé revolver on him and the bullet em- tered his neck ichael is a shooting his { thur sevent and | peaceful n hospital » been: | He dince } nas has w i | years. OSE ters brought the son, knocking him down a, revolver; WOMEN LOST LIVES" They Were Aboard Ferry ' Tha Turned Turtle. tails of the wreck of the ferry steam lives. in the cabin when the craft foundered and the waves broke in. Their bodies were washed ashore, this morning, with the wrockage. It is stated thal the members of the crew did ther best possible to. save them, but they were: panic-stricken. Eighteey, bodies have been recovered so far . MAY BE CALLED ON To Ad im the Pacification Mexico. Tex., April 11.<Fresh in- surrection and bandit activities are reported, including raiding of one town and the assassination of judges and others in authority. United States troops here are getting restless and think it quite possible they may El Paso, {was wrecked shortly after pine o'clock | Momiay morning, and a large number | {of passengers and members of the crew ! were drowned, estimales vary ing from twenty Lo twenty-five, The kuowa! drowned of the are : A, Olsen, | | Robert Hornbull, Climete cook, I). N. | | Davidson, A. G Munro, purser, and Dryden. One man's body has been re jeoneremd. He was wearing a ring bear- ing the imitials "P.M." Eight women are reported missing. Their pumes are unobtainable. Capt. Sears eawe ashore with un number others who were saved on a raft, which was part of {the wreck. The accudent ooturred in {the chamnel near Mary ldland, op [posite Capt. Curtis' house, which has them turned into a morgue and hos pital Capt. Curtis put off in bis { launct number of lives {George and Clifford Rrethour, of Bid: put ont and did » work fudians alse Crew i i ot aud saved a launches Many ney, ISO wood res if In canoes, | Wher Irormois foundered part lof the upper works were left above waier aml people ashore could wee the | survivors chnging om the portion of | the wreck. The swirl of the waters soon tore Off the housework, the sea being covered with wreckage and peo ple struggling for their lives, Of the holies which drifted ashore, many Jwere equipped with lifebelts. A num ber of launches put off for the scene bat were imable to get near the wreek The first of the survivers to be landed was Capt. Sears, of the wrecked boat, who, with the mate, Isbister, and two Indians, belonging to the crew, ware towed ashore. The boat is believed to have foundered in comparatively shal low water, her boilers blowing up and pact of her housework remainidy un submerged. Capt. Sears said : "We left dock at Syduey at the re gular hour this morning with & heavy load of general freight, including con siderable hay, fertilizer, and iron. The wind was blowing rather 'strong from the south-east, 1 have gone in far worse storms than the one this morning. When we we about to make the entrance to Cance channel the wind struck us on the beam, and, together with the seas, gave the vessel Her cargo then shifted to the lee side, and when an officer informed me of - this | sent the first {mate with deck hands below te try and right her "While they were below I put her to the wind, but soon it was found that would not right bersell. 1 imme put on the MISS Whose ANNA DOUGLASS GRAHAM engagement Jay Gould recently announced to was WILL CARRY From London to New York Without a Mishap. Berbin, April 11 An for trans-Atlantic hore, and a cor 2,006 0 ha 300 PERSONS abvship tend travel prov pany capital bevy formed to Fhe proposed eight times larger Dewtseliland. The 770 feet long, It wall 200 passengers in addi of 160 od jected ized 1s at finance the scheme dirigible will be than Zeppelin's new plans call driven by able ta cary tion to a crew Boerner, claims that London mishap for a vessel thirty motors be desiguesi the ship, will' be nble to travel to New York without who it FORCE WIPED OUT AMERICAN OFFER BEATEN. A Federal Force of Ninety Men Was Almost Annihilated--A\ United States Man's Defeated, RADLY a shght list, Force Atlixeo, Pueblo, Mexico, April 11 Trapped in canyon, six kilometres | from Atlixeo, a force of ninety fede [ghe rals were almost aunibilated, on Sa- [diately headed her for Robert's Bay, turday night, by a band of rebels, in {with the hope that we might reach whose pursuit they had been engaged shore before she went down, We had | inot gone far, however, before she com received hereYmenced to settle rapidly. When I saw the | that it was impossible to make shore, 1 ordered one of the lifeboats launch ed, and in this I put the three ladies i wore aboard, and six of the men | the | passengy They, however, seemed to {be unable to manage the craft, and] | as she swung in the trough of the sea she swamped "Most of those who were aboard of her were able to regain a hold on the | jhoat As the lroquois settled, her up perdeck broke away, and many of "the passengers got on this, as well as Vi lather pisces of wreckage, which were floating in the immediate vicinity "The other lifeboat came to the surface about twenty feet from where 1 was the upper deck, We soon pares! it, but 1 disovered that a con siderable portion of it had been stove | Lin. 1 then called for volunteers to {leave the upper deck of the ship, which | twas almost laden with people, and in! response the chief engineer and three | Hudians came with me in the badly | emnshed lifeboat. 1 did not leave the | {wreckage until twenty minutes after | {the vessel sank, and I decided that 1 would attempt to make shore and seek assistance for those who were imperil {led in the icy waters of the gulf. Our Lemall craft was well filled with water | land it was necessary to keep baling it | lout in order to keep afloat | "When I left in the boat there was ia large number of passengers on the! {upperdeck, but most of them had on} life belts and I did not think thet! they wee in any immediate danger. fT told thes they would be as safe lin the wre kage as we would be, and | 1ihat i= this reason that Trealled for {volunteers fo man the boast and go ashore for assistance, 1 did not know | at that time whether the news of our] foundering Tad been received in Syd- | ney, and was, therefore, very anxious] When | was nearing the I noticed that prepar-, for twenty-four hours Reports of the battle state that almost every detachment either wounded. The rebel i man in Killed or t was loss 1s said have been small {who nrder rs, Siew by feder he assaulting force was command of Antonio ware driven from ti bat not until or Lhree houses ollicers, robbed Larncias Mace } had belonging the 1 burned | tol village als, hey two (municipal archiv and At the order charge of the state Forreblanca rebels poured bullets into ranks from three F'orreblanca was wounded te fight burned the treasury ern! Valle, Crew the federal of Pueblo, Lieut. Aol was sent mo pursuant I¥ the federal Col } | } directions on wee | tinued lead in the i ) U.S. Man's Force Beaten. Mexicali, Mex, Williams, Stat army, tthe battalion - of rebels against Mi enol Mayot's 500 Mexican regulars on the Mesa, five miles south of Mexicali, Eighty went twenty from April 11.--General | Stanley a deserter from the ns Lo United ou hurled msurrectos an Sunday, returned into the feht, the battlefield Williams wounded, fatatl be was beng torn fragment from exploded shell With half a dozen fugitives of his ficeing command he was overtaken * by 1a federal shell that exploded in their | midst, sending up os geyser of Hamme smoke and fragments of human bo dies His waggon trains were eap- tured, with nearly all of the and live stoek which he took in rail yesterday of several ranches. Nurs itors straggling into Mexicali declare tit the fpderals took no prisoners. All thoke not killed fv the fire of the fedexal rifles; machine guns and artillery, were, it is alleged, tered mercilessly by bayonets in himself head an " his { i stores his 16 get help shore, however, i be called upon to wdvance and take a fiand in pacilying Mexico any day now SHOT THROUGH HEART. Tragedy Enacted Rochester, N.Y, Rochester, N.Y, April I1.--" That's a pretty toy," said Nicholas Lappettt, last night, when his twelve-year-old son handed him a revolver he found under a porch of their home. Then the lad accidentally pulled the trigger antl the fathe: fell dead, shat through the heart A Dreadful at » Whe Will Get It? Montreal, April 11. There much guessing as to who will succeed the late L.: P. Forget in the senate. Rob ert Bickerdike, Vietor Geoffrion Marcellin Wilson, all promiment als, are spoken of and Fiber A LANDSLIDE FOUND ON GATINEAU BRANCH OF THE C.P.R, Railway Track Covered, and Pass- engers Had to Tramp Through Blue Clay--Took Two Days to Res move, Ottawa, April 1H .--A landslide oe curred on Sunday between Ironsides and Chelsea, on the Gatineau branch of the Canadian Pacific railway I'he landslide was discovered Mon- day by tile outward bound train, which had to back down to Hull. A gang of men were sent up, but i was found that the whole hillside would have to be removed, the water had undermined it. Word was sent to Chelsea for the down train to transfer passengers Ihis was a difficull® task, as the country around is of blue clay, and the passengers had trouble wading through it. The track was covered for quite a distance, and it is feared that more of the mountain is in dang of sliding. 'This is a very dangerous spot, the track runmog through a deep cut. The company have an embankment built to pre vent a slide, but it to weakened, The company have the track clearat by noon. as sec aypect tha FROM HOME, William Ryan, of Odessa, Cannot Be Located, Where is William Ryan, about fifteen vears of age, whose bome is in Odes "a ' I'he youlh has been missing his hame for a couple of weeks and up to the present no trace has been found as regards his whereabouts. To- day the polis wire asked 10 keep a look out for him, snd were given =a description of the missing iad BUY AT ITS PRICE ELECTRIC LIGHTING IN TORONTO. MISSING from THE The City Company Has Likely a Per- | petual Franchise--A Big Merger | of Bread Makers of Ontario is Pro- bable. Toronto, April 11 mto hydro-electric amd public ship circles, today, when it was nounced thst the Toromto Light company, of which Sir Mackenzie has secured waciically a perpetnal When the present OWT an William control, has franchise from the city term fran chise rims out in 1919, the city must | renew 3 buy it out at for twenty years perpetual and bitter competition tween Sir William Mackenzie's com panies anid the Ohta-io Hydro Flettric Commission for a good many vears Frederick Glover, stableman, was jured, probebly fatally, and two oth or men badly injured, this morning, when un new horse, which they were ex eroising on Yonge street, took fright at § sireet ear amd ran away, Unset them on to the payement. ia OWA price or This looks like Tw Victorra, B.C, April 11. --Further de- er Iroguois, yesterday, show that near- ly all the women on board lost their Apparently they were penned up of ISSUE A bomb dropped | Flectric | a WEATHER Toronto, . Ont, tawa Valley Easterly winds: Wednesday, with temperature CONCERNING YOU: NEW SUIT Whatever ideas or ideals oi dress you have pictured in your mind for this spring, permit us to comfident- ly venture the opinion that you will find your expectations gratifyingly, realized. : HERE AND NOW VY ! April 11, 10 am --#it. and Upper Bi Lawrence -- fle today and on stationary er Righer t 0010 $30 Easter Gloves All fresh, fashionable and moder ately priced No time like now to buy them FASCINATING WAISTS For Easter The daintiness and charm of these crisp Walsts will appeal to you first. The advantage of saving money second. EASTER NECKWEAR AND VEIL. INGS, PRTTICOATS FOR EASTER, EASTER HOSIERY, Bee. AT PRICES PLEASING TO ALL. STEACY'S ESTABLISHED 1881. MARRIED. GREER-MURPHY -~in March ist, 1811, #t age Sayde Kingston, eon Zion Parson ! Hoyd, to Grayf@ion Greer y Re Murph) DIED, arriefleld Maria on April 11th a Rickey, ages will take place from residence ofi Thursday at twa o'clock, to Cats ery ral her afternoon raqui Cer ORRIGAN 191 M i 11 s April aged on n Kingstor I i i lchae Corri i years | Funers residence of his Nicholson), and Omtiario , ou Good Fri Mary's Cath. solemn bers will in-law carner of Sipects t | mo day edral 4 Kant ROBERT J. REID, The Leading Undertaker. 'Phone 877. 230 Princess Street. JAMES REID ry rn TYREE, Old Firm apd 254 PRINC 'Phone 147 for Ambulanes. B rmsmnes The 04 | ! { ! | | WALNET FURNITURE, Bedroom Bets, one has marble ot of Old-fashioned small Very reasonable, TURK", | Two itop: also Varior Chairs 05 "Phone New Maple Syrup PURE and GOOD. J edden & Co. The board of railway commission: | as. R en ors has arranged so important session | in Tovento for April 24th, to take up | Granted a New Trial the general matter of telegraph tolls | Kansas City, Kas, April 11. Dr B. nd other matters aflagting the {Clark Hyde, who was convicted afte howe graph companies. saac hiado, |, smsationn] trial, of murdering Col. a hus LW Winaipey, W. SB. Buell, Swope, and sentenced to life imprison { Brockville, hate been appointed by the | ment, has been granted a new trial {| Dominion government to receive and | went complamis, That prospects of a big merger of y Hillier, was the scene of a pleasaiit gathering, the marriage of their second daughter, Allie Maud, to "he wedding took on the i inst. The cradle in which Julin Du. pugue, the founder of Dubuque, lowa, was rocked, has been unearthed at Jolistte, Que. It is of oak and well . An historieal society in purchase ations had been made and that they VP were despatching a vessel to our assis ance.' | The Iroque L of 120 tons, ten years ago, and manded by Capt. Sears, prt was Sydney, fifteen m Lictoria, and whe did a heavy paseen- slpugh the ha latter also, : hospital ten | aceompaniad t {eld . : { Pr. W. B. Larkins, the sargeon in charge, and his assistants, who reach exicali with the survivors, ap- to the United States authori- measure. Ltallving with hoof marks near where Hitherto the brunt of the battle| the body was foitnd, wat. a feature of with the Alwminem Trust of Am (he trial. arica, the promoters of the project, | ---------------- Loses His Hat and Drowned. has fallen on Mr. Allison, and the strain lias, Deen a severe one. The | Somerville, Mass, April 61.--In try. Morrisburg man has spent the greats "0 16 catch his ts iach had blown pact of the last six months in Wash- fon his head, William I. Bowman, ington with Hon. Mr. Littlefield, and yoqlthy, of Arlington, stumbled and od M it is felt - by the Montreal opponents ful head foremost into Alewive Brook pealed - A iger business and freight trade along of the measure that some assistance und was drowned. Mr. an was [ties to send Red Cross aid to the io ands north of Sydner. She was! should be rendered Mr. Allison if the on his way fo his howe, walking on scene of the battle and save those! "4 ye and less top-heavy bout than | navigation of the St. Lawrence river the bank of the brook. He was fifty (they could of the wounded. 'Rechelt, which turned turtle off Beeches | t : wi and its power ibillties are to be years of age snd unmarried. i Head last month, and went down with tion of $7.500,000, was agsim being William when the canal , proba- saved to Canada. F Rev. Dr. E. C. Laker, pastor of Clin- {talked of was admitted, this bly at the end of the . A record Nesbitt is said to have ton Street Methodist church, Toronto, twenty si hy Dr. Beattie oe [ow prominent bread manufacturers. It (business is expected this year. 4 heen ween in J has accepted @ call to Port Hope' Anything in Sowers. Thome 96" would seek to comtral the bresd-mak-| Men's $4 leather lined boots, $2.75, | Sad Purdy, Brock St. Methodist nds of federal soldiers. hes t is declared, ficed on the and' ambulance, which he rebels to the battle was 8 wooden steamer ilt in British Columbia owned and com © Half a doten gfeal grain carriers, tied up in Welland canal afl winter, the Toromto bakers, with a capitalire- | will be released and go buck to Fort Brow'. $2 and $200 dorlaes are just eight. » "Fresh How: church, in July nasty. 4 "Buy gacdon seeds' my wihson's wg of all Ostanie, 'Dutton's, 29 Princess street, ¢ .