Daily British Whig (1850), 18 Apr 1911, p. 1

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YEAR 78 -NO, 90 hj, even Sea oh be Daily British KINGSTON, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1911. ng ' LAST EDITION TORY TACICS To Waste Time of the Commons. CONTINUE T0 BLOCK RECIPROCITY THE PASSING OF PROPOSALS. Liberals Feel the Campaign of Edu. cation Has Been Effective--Hope Sir Wilfrid Will be Able to Leave on May 123th, Ottawa, April 18. When parliament reassenibles, on Wednesday, it ia pro- bnble that the burden of continuing the reciprocity debate, and thereby de- laying a vote om the issue, will re main for the most part with the op position members. So confident is the government that the reciprocity < pro- posals have the hearty endorsement of - the great majority of the people of Canada that it is wot thought neces sary for the liberal members of the Commons to consume much further time in vindication of the agreement The educational campaign of the past two months has been effective iy, | overcoming the to it worked up press and in the thusiasm of the party caucus. It is felt that any sincere or serions op position" to the pact is now subsiding, and even conservative members admit that their stubborn resistence to the agreement is not proving politieally expedient. They will, however, keep up the fight in the commons pending - developments at Washington. Onee it is made clear that the United States senate will ratify the agreement it is generally expected here that the de te in the commons will, speedily close and the agreement be promptly ratified, Sir Wilfrid Laurier is hopeful that the situation may be defined sufficient ly hy May 12th to enable him to leave for the imperial conference with the assurance that the final ratification of the agreement is only a matter of few days. Otherwise he will not leave Ottawa, but will wntrust Canada's re Proton mtion at the conlerence to Sie 'rederick Borden and Hom, 1. p Brodeur. ' strenuous opposition in the conservative manufactured on STOLE TO FOLLOW GIRL, ------ Eibployee Took $970 and Went to New York. Montreal, April 18. Picking $970 out of a drawer of the Stanford market, St. Catherine street, an employen of the establishment, oy, Saturday mory ing, eocaped through the rear door with the money, took a train for New York, and started in pursuit of a girl with whom he was madly in love. This was on Saturday morning, but so far neither Mr. Stanford nor the ectives working on the case have learned the fugitive's whereabouts ip New York, nor whether the young man found the girl, SHOT DOWN BY BANDITS. Chicago Saloon Man and Bartender Battled With Armed Robbers. Chicago, April 18.--Samuel Mayers, proprietor of a saloon at 488 Blue Island avenue, was probably fatally" wounded, and his porter was killed, in a desperate battle with three ban dits, who entered the place for the purpose of robbery, early Monday. The bandits were heavily armed, and when thoy met with resistance they opened fire. The robbers, who wore described as resembling Italians made their essape. + ------------------------ Montana Gold Craze. Butte, Mont., April }48.--The new gold discoveries made jin the George town district, west of Anscomla, have caused a stampede to that coun- try from Butte and other parts of Montana, and every means of convey- ance in Anaconda has been brought into use. In the George mine two hundred dollar rock is being mined, and the owners of the Oro Fino are clearing up about two thousand dol lars a day mow. It is estimated that five hundred thousand tons of ore are in sight in the different mines al ready, and Butte capitalists are lay ing out. a right-of way From Anacen- da. = A ------ Mail Service to Jamaica, Ottawa; April 18. ~The department of trade and commerce has called for tenders for a mail service between Canada and Jamaica, the servis to | OP be from Halifax, N.S, with a eall at St. John, NB. each trip, to King- stan, Jumaica, the stea. ers fo put in on each trip at Bermuda and Turks Islands. The tenders may be for either fourteen, ten or seven days. | CANADA FRUIT INSPECTION. The Crop in ( Small, | 18, Ottawa, April The Domimion led their work for the season 1910-11. They report that, though the apple crop in Ontario and Nova Scotia was very small and the "tree run" nol by {any means a good sample, the grad. (img and marking have been the best {in the history of the fruit division. | Inspector P. J; Carey, who has been {attending a series of meetings in On- { tario, reports the interést in orchard- {ing as being especially great. Many {new co-operative apple selling associa tions are being formed. This season j there were thirty-eight active co-oper- {ative associations in Ontario, ten in | Nova Scotia, fourteen in British Co- lumbla and one in Prines Edward Ts- land. | Recently y this branch shipped 1,209 boxes of apples, 113 boxes of cheese and 25 boxes of butter to London for the Festival of Empire exhibition. The apples, which were selected and packed by-members of my staff last fall amd ave since been held in cold storage, vere a partiedlarly fine lot and were in first class condition for shipment, Spies, Baldwins and Ben Davis com- prised the bulk of the shipment, with a fair representation of Canada Red, Wageners, Kings, ete. One ecarload was obtained In British Columbia, while the balance was secured in the eastern provinces. 3 LET HIM OFF LIGHTLY. Captain Helped Put Out Revenue Cutter Fire. Dunkirk, N.Y., April 18.--Capt. E i. Tuttle, of Dunkirk, owner of the fishing tug Fagle, who was placed un- der arrest last week by Canadian reve- nue officers, and his boat, valued at 131,500, and $200 worth of nets were confiscated when Tuttle was caught fishing on the Canadian side of the ne on Lake Erie, opposite Lorrain, Ohio, was fined 8650 in Windsor, Ont., and his boat and nes retlirned to him. The Canadians were thus lenient because of the circumstances of the Canadian cutter taking fire while chasing the American boat, and Capt. Futtle, instead of escaping at that time, as he easily could, while his boat was in custody, stayed by and helped put out the fire. Capt. Tuttle has gone to Windsor for his boat and nets, EX-KING HOPEFUL OF AGAIN SITTING ON THRONE OF PORTUGAL, North Portugal! and the Army Has the Royalist Spirit--Manue] En- Joys Society of Actresses in Lone don, London, April 18.~Almost every day guarded reports of the feehleness of the repmblican government of Portu- gal and of the activity of the Portu- guese monarchists find their way into the papers, but of far greater gravity are the private and uncensored ad- vices that are received in London. One of the latest of these examples of this persgnal information is that brought by a merchant of Oporto, now visiting in London. He has in- formed the International News ser- vice correspondent' that the situation in North Portugal is undoubtedly ser- ios. The whole oi the north, he says, appears eager for the restora- tion of the monarchy, while a great part of the army is affected with the same royalist spirit. According to this informant, an outhreak against the Tovernment will stirely occur at the first opportunity. That ex-king Manuel is kept inform- vd of the royalist activity in Portu- gal there can be no doubt. He and are living dn quiet seclusion at Rich- mond, one of London's charming su- burbs. 'he. young king in exile goes about life in an easy, nonchalent way, ap- parently well assured of Wis future, His pleasures ane as democratic as his place of residence. He is fre- quently to be seen upon the Strand in London, and still enjoys the so- ciety of actresses as well as before his downfall in Lisbon. HARRISON "ON THE JOB» Was: Inaugurated Monday Night With Great Celebration. Chicago, April 18. <Victor H. Har- rison to-day is "on the job" as mayor of Chicago. He was inaugura- ted at a giant celebration of the united democracy last night, It is certain Mayor Harrison will complete: ly clean out the city hall and in- stal new offiters in every important The ceremony last niffht was uni- que. One thousand democrats es corted the mayor from his home to the city hall where he formally en- tered upon his fifth term as mayor. Want Long Distance Connections. Ottawa, 17.--~The railway com- mission iebale "a list of "twenty-one cases to be heard at To- ronto on the 24th inst, and comcern- Toronto, G , Hamilton, Lon his mother, the former Queen Amelia, ! = ATES MEWS {fruit inspectors have practically clos {Despatches From Near! | And Distant Places THE WORLD'S TIDIN GIVEN IN THE BRIEFEST POS SIBLE FORM. \ Everybody Easily Read and Re- membered. A. J. Small will erect a Berlin to seat 1,600, Hon. A. G. MacKay will, this week, {tour Western Ontario. | Tribesmen surround Fez, and the {situation is becoming desperate. | An East Middlesex farmers' meeting | unanimously favored reciprocity. | The 57th Regiment, Peterboro, m {spend Dominion day at Brockville. | The Eoglish press generally takes a grave view of the Mexican situation, | John Gait, of Winnipeg, may be 'mext lisutenaunt-governor of Manitobm. The Methodist conference will protest |aguinst granting club licenses any- whete in Ontario. The prevalence of typhoid fever in {Ottawa may force an early proroga- {tion of the commons. i A man who suprised burglars at Col- [acne was bound and gagged, after which the town was set oy fire, The New York American says : "The {Cited States senate is irreparably di- vided on reciprocity, and the bill can theatre in ay ] {not pass Inspector Frank Fitzgerald and three fother North-West mounted police, of | Edmonton, lost their lives on the Dawson trail. | The grand jury holds the proprietors Ba York Triangle waist fac | | BANS FEATHERS FROM HATS. i | © e New tory for manslaughter in {with the recent holocaust. i a citizens connection | Seven United States were {shot by stray bullets during Monday's fighting, and United States interven- tion is probable any time. Members of the British association of head school mistresses announce the formation in the near futare of | colonial intelligence league. I MW. Kryzheisky, the landscape painter and member of the Russian Academy, committed suicide, by hanging, during a fit of despondency, at St. Peters burg. | Word has been received at the Rus [sian foreign office that the second divi- sion of the United States Atlantic fleet will visit Russia during the coming summer. Premier Botha, of United South Africa, will at the imperial conference, move for concerted action by all the governments in the empire to deal with the shipping rings. Roseneath House, the property of the Duke of Argyll, and the Scottish home of the Princess Louise, Duchess and was badly damaged. CANADA LEA®S AUSTRALIA. Australia Says the Dominion fs Far in Advance. Ottawa, April 18, --"Australia is not | progressing in population or achieve- {ment at the same rate as Canada." ter, of Parkstone, Eng., who has spent two years in Australia developing some fou mining! properties, and is now on his way home to England for flota tion purposes. "Australia's system of government owned and controlled utilities does not succeed," said the visitor. "With an organization like the C.P.R., tralia womnld be away ahead of where it is now. "Besides the lands are not properly controlled. While the cities are con- gested, there is a vast unpopulated country. This is largely the result of a condition that the present labor gov- ernment are endeavoring to remedy. Single owners possess vast tracts of land, and legislation that will make this practically impossible has been introduced." TRACE PHOT BOAT That Had Been Missing Twenty-two Years, Lewes, Del, April 18. After twenty- {two years the mystery of the disap- | pearance of the pilot boat Enoch Tur- ley, with five Delaware Bay pilots aboard, will now be cleared. The pilots, all of whom lived in Lewes, were Harry Parker, James Charles Schel , Morgan Saunders and Jobm Kelly. Arthur Ashley, ap aged , arrived (here, yesterday, from C Island, and stated that while guiding a party of gunners re cently they took refuge in a shanty Sat ad been the cabin of the Enoch i Tarley. : | The cabin had been washed ashore. Capt. W. E. Tumell, government light- house inspector, in his ammual spring inspection of Cobbs Island, will en- deaver to learn whether the pilots' Matters That Interest Everybody-- 'Notes From All Over--Little of increase in butter for a of Argyll, caught fire a few days ago! This was' the statement of E. B. Car- | Aus | Orton, | AUSTRALIAN TRADE. 1 } | Figures Given by the Canadian Com- | niissioner, Ottawa, April 18.-The trade co | missioner for Canada im Australia, D. H. Ross, reports that 1910 was a record year for the commonweal as shown by figures of imports and ex- iyear was $651,015,783, of which the | imports were §258,957,316 and the ex- [trade was $445,366,391, and in 1910 it | was-2651.905.510, being an increase in | The sucrease of 1910 over 1909 was | $7,543,635 in butter, of $16,026,615 in {lamb preserved by cold process, of $3,- 211,543 in tallow, and of $16,039,003 1910 over 1909 {was 30,225 894 pounds, of wheat, 10,- 'tals, and of wool 62,661.055 pounds. { The increase in the number of frozen {was 1,499.345, of lamb carcasses 467 ,- 1411, and of beef quarters 249.365. for the vear ended March 3ist, 1910, jwas 8693,211,221. being $391,852,602 ithe previous year the total trade was 1 8571,268,767 and for the current vear ' exceed . £500,000,000, : NOT TILL THURSDAY, Be -- + ports. The total oversea trade in the {ports $362,008,467. In 1901 the total the' period of $203,541,919, i wheat, of $4,528,565 in mutton and {in wool. Compared for quantities, the [013,561 centals, of flour $185,455 een- Imutton earcasses fromi 1900 to 1010 The total foreign trade of Canada | imporis and $301,238.52 exports. In jending March 31st it is expected to ---------- + <* Washington, April 18 --- This was scheduled to be the closing day of the debate on the Canadian reciprocity bill, but Chairman Underwood has announced that as so many on both sides gf the house want to be heard, it's impossible to lay the mat- ter before the senate till Thursday morning The situation in Mexico, too, is somewhat overshadowing the Canadian matter, + [% * * + + + + [+ : ; : ; New Law in New York State Will | " Revolutionize Styles. New York, April 15.--Fine feathers , will not make fine women in this state next Easter, Before that time the mew "plamage 'bill," passed at the ' earnest salicita- tion of the Audubon Societies, will go into effect. The bill, if successinlly en- forced, will leave milady's headgear barren of pigrettes and feathers. | The big milliners declare that they jwill suffer heavy loss, as the time is too short to dispose of their contract} or cancel standing orders. Incidental tly, more than ten thousand girls and women will be thrown out of work by ithe law. 'AS SHE DREW ROYAL FLUSH IN POKER. |A Chicago Stenographer Was Over. come by Excitement Over Her | Success During a Game. | Chicago, April 1%. --~Laura Cotton, | daughter of Henry E. Cotton, of the Deering Harvester Co., while employed as a stenographer by the Equity Fi- | vince company, became engaged to a young man. One day he told her he was in a serious predicament and {naxded money. Miss Cotton took $100 from the company's safe and gave it to him. A few days later her fianos | disappeared and Miss Cotton borrowed { money from her father to make good | the shortage. Miss Cotton, her father and mother jand J. Mann played poker Saturday night and she was the winner. | Finally Miss Cotton told her father if {she won again she would be able to { wipe out her indebtedness. She drew {a royal flush and as she took the | winnings fell off her chair dead. READER ASKS QUESTIONS On Reciprocity Article in "Canadian Century." i _ Rusholimg, Manchester, Eng., April {5.~(To the Editor): Your weekly is | sue of March 23rd [ notice contains an {article reprinted from the Canadian Century . on reciprocity. I am glad to note that the Whig does not sa {dorse the views of the said article, {also that the Whig incidentally threw {a flood of light on the tactics of the | "flag wavers" by proclaiming it to he fan advertisement. It would, however, be most interest {ing to know whether the person re. 'sponsible for that advertisement and iwho appears to take such an intense {interest jn the welfare of the farming community, is himself a farmer. Tf not, is he a philanthropist? Hf neither, he may be a member of the Canadian Manufacturers' Aksociation. The Whig, however, | think, has re moved the veneer of benevolence, and Ihas effectively exposed the real aims land objects of that acticle, When the whales suddenly take am interest in the little fishes, the little fish have 0 , Verb s to the article itself, it really dogs ' oriticisn. | ven ondorse it. ~Yours very truly, A. W. HAYOOCK. Taken of Intervention ee. oh 4 in Mexico {IF THERE COMES TO BE INTER- FERENCE, Landing of British Marines Raises a Point in Monroe Doctrine----Ex- pansion Policy Feared---Necessity of Protecting British Interests in Republic, London, April 15.--The Morning FOUR OF PARTY DROWNED. New York, April 15--A tiny 'row boat, filled with a party of eight Ita- lians, capsized in the swirl of the tide through the narrow neck of Long Island Sound, separating Forts Tot ten and Schuyler, yesterday afternoon, and of its human burden three bodies have been recovered, one is missing and four were rescued. A six months. old infant, torn from its mother's breast, was held atop the waves by its swaddling clothes, rescued, and rushed to Flushing hospital, where it will recover. The mother, Mrs. Rose Labata, of Lopg lsland City, and her three-year old daughter went to the bottom. Their bodies and that of Luigi Leo- ldi were found, and the eddies are lieved still to hide the remains of Vieto Labata, aged six. Nicholas La bata, husband, and father of all drowned, but ome, was saved. CHARGES OF GRAFT Post, commenting on a statement of its Washington correspondent, that no! one in the United States desires the] agnexation of Mexican tefritory, says : | "No doubt such disclaimers were, made. before the late Mexican war, ! which added more than five hundred | thousand square miles to the terri tory of the United States, just as they were made before the Spanish | war, which ended in the American flag | being hoisted over the Philippines and | Puerto Rico, and which made Cuba a dependency. Peace loving republic Am- erica may disclaim any desire for territorial expansion, but whether in Liberia, the Far East or Central Am- erica, they seem prepared cheerfully {to embark on. courses of policy lead: ing directly to consequences for which they profess such distaste. The Daily Graphic points out that the question of foreign intervention in | Mexico is raised by the landing of! i British bluejackets at Quentin and ladds: "It is a precedent which cannot but caus: some apprehension in the United States. The Monroe doctrine in modern form is held to disapprove of such action by any European power, and if there is a likelihood of other powers imitating it we may not have long to wait be fore the United States army definitely takes in hand the restoration of a normal situation in Mexico." The Standard argues that if lic opinion in the United States not in favor of more than half or even smaller measure being taken in Mexico it is all the more necessary that the British government insist on the protection of the lives and property of British subjects. DROWNED IN RED DEER, One Man Perished While Fording the Stream. Alix, Alta., April 18. --Fording the Red Deer river near the G.T.P. bridge, about seven miles south of here, Philip Bourgois was thrown by his plunging horses into the rapidly running stream, yesterday, and was drowned, Bourgois, together with Joseph Mac- Namara and James Roddan, was tak- ing a string of eighteen horses across the ford and had almost reached mid- stream, when the ice jam hall a mile up the river gave way and the swift ly rising water terrified the horses, who became unmanageable by their frenzied struggle, and the men were shaken imto the water. MacNamara and Rodden managed to cling to some of the animals oy were carried ashore, but Bourgois was swept down the stream, and, after makin superhuman efforts to breast the flood, sunk in full 'sight of the hundred of his fellow-workers in the comstruction gang. DIED FROM EXPOSURE pub- is Istand--Dairy Farmers at Ottawa. i Ottawa, April 18. --In addition to the loss of Inspector Fitzgerald's ill-fated party, Uol. White, comptroller of the North-West Mounted Police, officiall announces the death at Hershel land, in January, from expésure, of | Sergt. Selig y | Dairy farmers are here in forve, to- day, asking for an order by the rail way commissioners that railways carry cream in baggage cars as they now carry milk. At present, cream has to be shipped by express. Judgment was reserved, At Hershel | Price of Gas in Ohicago. Chicago, April 18. A fair rate for gas in Chicago is» a flat charge of 77 ents per 1,000 feet, in the j ent of the city's expert, William J. Hagenan, in his report made, yesterday, to the city council. r. Hagenan reached his conclusion after examining the People's Gas, Light and Coke company's fmancial reports for the last several years. Gas in Chicago now sells for 85 cents per 1,990 font. Carfew Bell for Ottawa. Ottawa, April IS.~A movement with the object of having a curfew bell in Ottawa which would call ohil- dren the age of sixteem from the streets to their homes before nine o'clock in the evening, is being start {ed by the Mtawa Woman. 's Sovial Ke {form Association. movement will 'he organized on broad lines and ali Protestant and Roman Catholic church in the city will be asked 10 { ep-operate. Baseball on Monday. Brooklyn, 1. ) x Boston, 8; Chicago, 5: St. Lows, 0." To be Heard Against Oxford County Officials, St. Thomas, April 18.--The trial will commence at the assizes here this al- ternoon, before Justice Middleton, of M. T. Buchanan, formerly warden of Oxford county, and B. B. McCarty, formerly reeve of Fast Nissouri, charg- ed with graft in connpetion with the sale of county roads. George Tate Blackstock is erown prosecutor. W, T, McMulley and J, GG. Wallace, of Wood stock, are defending. The cases expected to last all week are KING ALFONSO IN FRANCE, Nose Operated Upon by Professor Moure, Bordeaux, April 18.~King Alonso arrived here, vesterday, for the pur- rose of consulting Prof. Moure, who Jen on several occasions performed operations on the king's nose. The king was closeted with the physician for two hours, and it is reported that a polypus was removed from his nose. Afterwards the king took an automo bile ride about the environs of the vty. ' Prussian Deputy Killed, Marburg, April 18.---Max Von Ne gelein, a well-known conservative depu- tydn the Prussian diet, was killed, yesterday, in an automobile collision. His wife and three others were seri- oualy injured STARVED AND FROZE ON. THE TERRIBLE TRAIL TO DAWSON, Bodies of the Three Dead North West Mounted Police Brought to Fort Macpherson. Dawson, Yukon Territory, April 18, ~The bodies of Inspector Fitzgerald and Constables Carter, Kiney and Taylor, who perished on the terrible Dawson trail, have been brought into Fort Macpherson. Later details indi- cate that the unfortunate party lost their supplies, apd practically starved or froze on the alr of the Peel riv- er after they had eaten their dogs. They left on December 22nd, from Fort Macpherson, Dawson, but dog train glipped into. the river. In spector Fitzgerald was in Toronto and other Ontario cities last fall, recruit) ing for the force. He had a long and brilliant career in the police, and serv ed with distinction in South Africa. J / Five Horses Perished, London, Ont., April I8 belonging to Mamager Laurason, of the Sylvester Harvesting company, London branch, were burned to death | mn fire which destroyed a frame sta ble in the rear of the Columbia hotel, last might. The fire was in a congested portion of the city and for a time threatened to spread. Not Swallow, His Tale. Leslie Burke, Did Colborne, April 18. soung printer, who claims to discovered burglars in his office) Sun day, and who was found bou gogged outside the back door of building, which was burnsd, was, day, arrested and bros bedore local magistrate and fémanded one week, Admiral Togo Accepts, Washington, April 15. Admiral Togo, naval hero of the Russo-Jap anes war, has accepted the invitation of the United States government to be the nation's guest in July, while returning to Japan from his mission as a monther of the special embassy to the eoromation of King George V in London. High Court at Belleville. Belleville, April 18. ~The spring sit ting of the high court opened here, this afternotm, before Hou. Sir Wil Ham Mullock, chief justice of ex cheruer. Owing to the fact that there was no eriminal case upon the docket, fiw lordehip was presented with » pair of white kid gloves. The civic docket is als & light one Steamer Sinks: 21 Drowsi. Oporto, Portugal, April 18 The Spawish steamer Syn Fernando, bound from Huelva for Liverpool, sank off Firduterre, the westernmost hendiand of in, yesterday. Twenty-ome per. - drowned. Four survivors were landed here by the steamer Portimao. Homored Sheffield Choir. Colutabus, Obio, April 18. --A signal honor was given the touring A the to fo ave all "Cod Rave the ' Rowboat Capsized in the Swirl of thet: Tide Five horses | thickly | have | and | the | ET WEATHER PROBABILITIES. April 18, 3 am Upper St. Lawrence milder Wednesday showers by night, Mne. a itd tale at first SAVE MONEY WHILE YOU - SPEND IT DISCOUNT - STAMPS And save five per cent. on all your cash purchases at this store Mis 15 OUR 30TH ANNIVERGARY There must be some merit in an enterprise which can serve the people for thirty years, and at the end of that time find itself com- manding a greater share of the con- fidence and business of its customers than at any time in its history. THERE 15 MERIT And this is it: To give consistent value To give a square deal customer To have the goods the customers want at the right time. To give good service in the broad- est sense. X i SPECIALATTENTION There is just such merit in our DISCOUNT STAMPS which are published, given out and will be positively redeemed by us. | | STEAGY MND STEACY ESTABLISHED 1881, to every intending to make evidently part of their | | FISHER | Funeral SONt C 1 | ROBERT J. REID, The Leading Undertaker. | "Phone 577. 230 Princess Street, JAMES REID The Oid Firm of Undertakers 284 and 236 PRINCESS STREET, "Phone 147 for Ambulance. i FURNITURE, | m Sets \¢ has marble of Old-fashioned small Very reasonable, TURKS, WALNET Two Bed top. also {Parlor Cha © t re | New Maple Syrup { RURE and GOOD. as. Redden; & Co. i i | The Public Invited. The Davis fry Dock AnpAnY exe tends. 0 the geterad publ A hearty myitation visit ther dry dock Wednesday, ut 3 pan. fo witness tha launching of the pew YR Vista." The Fd wtern first. ¢ te mn 3 @ wleamer, ta erst will i riven Parse of Gold. P Ag Ottaws despatch rave © The con gregation of Welcome Zion Comgrege- tional church, on Monday night, pre sented of purse of gold to Rev. H. L Horsey. He bas bow their pastor 'or fifteen years, | A little venom added | to religions zeal produces an dement that be discouraged. i Joseph Hipsdn, of Crumley Bros' staf, is confined to his home through illness. ~ mt " i Chiver's marmalade and jelly. Kirk's grooery. "Phoge 443.

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