Daily British Whig (1850), 22 May 1911, p. 1

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A I YEAR 78 -NO, 119 NG NET His Foreign Ministers ' For First Time LEADERS OF EMPIRE IMPORTANT CONFER. ENCE IN LONDON, BEGIN The Most Important Politically in New Reign--The Question of Trade Preferonce sidetracked, The most import whole ' London, May 22. ant event, politically, in the three months that Fagland is devot- ing to the coronation festivities he- gan to-day, when the prime ministers of the Commonwealth of Australia, the Domipion of Cunadn, the Union of South Afriea, the Dominion of New Zealand and Newfoundland, the king and his cabinet. convened for the such-hernlded. Tmperial conference, which is to consider every topic. in which a world-wide empire is interested from national defence to the design of penny postage stamps, . : "This will Te the first official meeting of the new sovireign and his foreign niinisters, and it is expected that England's attitude towards her pos setimions will be materially changed as a result of the reforms advocated by the different dominions and tiveir pPramers Chief among many interesting ques tions raised by the detegutes' from England's colonies in their despatches to the home government, when the in swinl conference was hiest proposed, is resolution No. 4 from the Ubion of Bouth Africa relative to England's po- sition" on trade preference. This reso Jution reads : "That the desirability be considered of replacing the system of trade. pre- ference at-present granted by the over- seas dominions to Great Britain by s system of eontributions in money or services Lo imperial naval and local defense." This resolution, coming as it did at a time when the Canadian reciprocity agreement was pending hoth before the congress at Washington and the Do minion parfisment at Otlawn, raised « storm of protest among Euglish eit jens. The pegss of all political fa ons noted the resolution apd ecom mented strongly upon its introduction ab a time when so many important measures were before the Faoglish par liament. In fact so strong was the sressute brought to bear upon the min ey. of South Afeica by the home government that the governor: gener al, Lord Gladstone, submitted a let: ter recalling section No. 4 of the ten tative resolutions for discussion before the imperial conference stating that he had been advised by his ministry that they dvired to postpone the debate upon trade preference, but "that the Fight honorable, the prime minister hoped that he would have opportuni ty during fis stay in London to dis cuss the question raised with His Maj ty's government." This action on the part of Gladstone and the ministry of Tinioh' of South Africa eliminates a disendsion of this all-intexssting = fea ture from the official imperial vonfes ence, bnt at the same time strongly intimates that ii will be taken up hy "the visiting ministers and the umperi al government outside the meeting room. Nuch an action makes it elear that England's dominions, though they do not intend to coerce the im perinl government will insist upon thin important matter being threshed out at an early date--probably before the termination of the present confer ence. a Apart from the question of the pre- forencéd several subjects of the most vital importance to the. future of the empire are to be raided. Australia will move to rescind the objectionable features of the Declaration of London, and New Zealand has two equally im- portant rekolutions, one relating to the establishment of an imperial coun- cil and the other the reorganization of the colonial office. Vaccination All Round. " Montreal, May 22.~To-day the eigh- teen public vaccinators "will - begin their visits: to the factories and shops of the city, for the phrpose of vae pihating all who have: not been vae rinated within the last seven years. Dr. I. Laberge, city health officer, anodinces that he will carry out the instructions of the provincial board of health, which = has ordered public vaccinations in all parts of the priv vince of Quebec, where smallpox has assumed epidemic proportions in seve ral localities. ' Montreal has been remarkably free from the disease fora generation, but ns two cases have appeared within the city limits the Jaw will be en forced here as well. Lord the To Build a Refuge. Cornwall, May 22-After several "the House of Refuge com mittee of the vountios-eoimeil of Stop mont, Dundas and Glengarey this af ternoon awarded the. contract for the new house of refuge and industry to 'WAlewander Cameron, of Alexandria. The contract price, including. plumb. fing and heating, is $41,000, : ; Mistaken for Burglar. Clinton, Maine, May 22.--While -at- tempting to en ace Clifford, a neighbor, Orron Hayes, was thot and killed. According Clifford, Hayes became deranced tally a few dave ago and when attempted to en h ducing the night Clifford: J ned and fired at hind' with men: ter' the house of Hore to 1 he ter the Clifford hone bevsmie a London, May 22.---Fightéen hours aeross the Atlantie ocedn by aeroplane | is' the prediction for 1920, made by A. B. Hoe, an eminent serial expert of England, According to Me. Hoe, evol { ution of weroplapes fends towards | eraft Gf a construction whick will bel proved both air-worthy pe] worthy, thus enabling thein to glide] to the surface of the walter iy case of | i WILL CROSS THE OCEAN © |B R fi Lighteen Hours in Year 1920 is ? Predicted, 4 1 ; #\ Sens And Distant Places and aceident, ard rest "there while the necesss ry repairs are being mis "Already," says Mr, Roe, "aerial evolution id setling aeroplanc-bydroplane, and it is my belief that within' the next ten years regular asroplane lines will be estab- lished between New York and London, making the journey well within the eightoesi hour limit." | SIBLE FORM. membered, The Hollinger property and Hokkaido Over was gutted by fire at Porcupine, | The House of Lords promises Range of- Sixty Miles. i . stubborn fight over the veto bill. Mi George Dove, T Tokio, May 22.--Forest fires 1 ) Hokkaido, the porthernmost part of | onto, was "arrest lon charges of forfing marriage lines. loth sides are already preparing for the island of Jupan, are devastating vast territory of the land. - Xa1 ; : a vost territory of the land. A num-[, 0 holitical campaign in July at ber of villages already have been des- fp, 000 -- ' troyed, The froops bave been called | po, of the lat@t type of Dread out and everys available man is fight | youehie ape tobe built in England ing the flames. 'The fire line is alk for Chili. | : Naik 3 d . | most sixty miles in length. It is im | Edward Care telleville, tried possible estimate the number of choot, drown and hang himself, but still lives, : fatalities' or the amouiit of damage resulting: from the comflagration. | Arthur Young, somnambulist, walk- led two miles along. the railroad tracks, | sound asleep, in his night attire, was | The Canadian Northern railway is Mra, | planning to make North Toronto' the North centre of its Transcontinental system. the | - Perey Rouse, twenty-one, and Alexander nine, were drowned on' Sunday at "Phe Ontario edfonation trophy i Whitehall, FondGn, et "x the erected in STOP BULL FIGHTS ic of irr the Strand... The contract thas been let, Peni Hassen tribesmen attacked the WHAT MEXICO'S NEW ENT WILL DO. NN JAP IS AND DEVASTATED. -- plant Fires Raging in a i to Sudden Death at Brockvinte: Brockville, May 22.---As she about sit down to supper, Fhomas Dier, a resident of Crosby, expired Friday evening. sixty! vears of and . to he aged was nage, aves Eagleston, aged Toronto. will n- a grown-up family. French camp, in Morocco, hut were re | pulsed after a desperate engagement. A French colonial captain was killed. | Amiociate Supreme Court Justice i harles E. Hughes will likely be a {eandidate for the republican nomina- A tion for the United States presidency in 1912, he Knickerbocker and Loan 'company, of No Park Row, New York, closed its doors, following by Superintendent of PRESID- Racetrack Betting Will be Doomed, Too--Mexico May Yet Become Little More Civilized, Mexico, May Gambling | bull fighting are to be abolished | Mexico by 'the Maderists when they boi power, apd race track bet | an examination ting may be doomed tou, according | Bunks Cheney. . te Abraham Gonzales, who is slated ol th $50,000 mn bank he provisional governor of Chihuahua, th: ™ ver Sane ealed in Tony ha void: "Ax is our president Princess Schachavaskoi died of star wo am | agninst gambling and bull tot i fighting: All gumbling concessions Mcucdw, liar living a life of seclusion mate yiter November 20th, the date of fe hal Years. inter the revolution's. beginning, will be 1[ OMY 2 lertyputix, minister uf.war, : ib E> was instant] killed _and Premier cancelled, All concessions made before : od that time will be honoved b : bat | Lanis was seriously hurt, when a ut thelr' expiration a rs ail he Panoplane swooped: down into the arated Lo ARH ; both Sieh party uring an exhibition at ! . ' e Yo Parts on Monday. gnmbling and bull fighting. are | Daniel FP. Cohalan has Savings aR a Juarez, 20 and in get into , gold, room, the notes, her vation in her magnificent palace at We been nomina rights in Juarez." As Madero is against gambling in fof New York, The nomination uvery form, the national lottery and Cohalan hae vet to be confirmed 31 gambling rights eventually may b® the state legislature, nullified, Senor Ie La Bdrra Her of foYeign-- relations, i : the reins as president ad interim on June lst, when, it has , Presi dent Maz and Viee-president Corrall (will resign { of bv Mexican minis will take up of the Mexican government -------------- Rich Men in Britain, London, May 22.A fair idea of the great wealth of the united kingdom may he gathered from the statement by the chancellor, Lloyd tieorge, that 10.300 persons were liable to super-tay in 1909-10. In other they had more than £5,000 been" announced, the | words | SAYS SHE WAS HYPNOTIZED. n : a -- Phe total income of these persons | an She Followed in Boy's (Clothes was £130,000.708, an average of | Cast Spell. £12,621 each. This is the fiest indica-! Detroit, Miech,, May 22,-A strange tion that has ever been given of the ease in which hypnotisin plays. a pro upmber of rich men in this country, minent part has bein brought to the or their average income: attention of the Detroit police, and they are scouring the state for John HC. are! year, ---------------------- Bad Bush Fires. : Belleville, May 22.--Bush_firés very bad mn Monteagle townghip in this county, and are bukning a npm- her of fences. There was a large fire at Moscow, caused by a spark from the engine of a log train, burning up about five hundred telegraph poles be longing to McKenzie & Carr, Scare for the Sultan, 1. A fourteen-year-old girl, Jennie Mc Ginnis, whose home up to a year ago was in Sarma, i8 against Smith, The girl is an orphan rand claims that when she met Smith 'while on a visit to relatives in Port Huron, he "cast a spell over her," fwhic h she could not and be {lieved now she was hypnotized. As a jresult of the mysterious irfluence the igi says Smith commanded her to pT age Bang. Me Yip Jv follow gm and she: obeyed, going Friis aiiny Terkel ] intry attired #8 a tramp of boisterous 5 x hae he 4 i Hin boy's clothes, tans carriage to resent a petition! The AvEL : : to the ruler. The sultan was te, suuple fits 0 Detroit, Xe frightened that he fainted fwith' an givl, sought Shelier badly rig ainted. {with an aunt here, and the latter no I'he Kurds were arrested but libera- tified the police. ted Inter affer they had explained their | MUST VOTE OR SIT THROUGH THE DOG THE SUMMER. resist, Constantinople, May During the 80 YANKEES DID NOT OBJECT Representation of Battle Chateauguay. 22.--~The mystery sur- the reasons for the omis- on from the festival of the empire ageant of a representation of | buitie of Chateauguay has been made Ultimatum to the U.S. Senate by the more of a mystery by a so-called ex Democratic Teaders of the House | planation . from Beckles Wilson, of Representatives. 4 | Montread, a member of the Canadian y { committee, which has just been com: Washington, May -22.-What is prac-{munieated tthe newspapers. tically an ultimatum was served © on| Mr. Wilson admits that the senate Saturday, by the democra- 'Reid, the American ambassador, tie leaders of the house, that thers him that Americans would not must 'be a vote in the senate at this session on Canadian reciprocity, on the farmers' free list bill and on revised wool tariff. Provided these terms are met re { London, May {rounding | wi | i Whitelaw told abject levent, which happened before the bat- {tee reosived protests, and expostuls- the ticngfrone a source he declines to re- 1st to Ot. lst, otherwise the senate "mittee to will be held in coutinugus session | ject, throughout the dog days by the| house refusing to sdjourn. ~ . The demorrats do not expect decide to abandon the pro- Three Years for Horse Thief. that legidlation of the specini session, fas the man who ed, whether affirmative or negative, the three principal measures rcp. | dity, the free hist and the wool tar-| I enator Burton, of Ohio deta IE the Sean ae. it Aha {hats this word had heen, commusien- wr. En all - tid tile senate from the house side Jo Gos nevested. and' that, in his opinion, shoubd" the 4 Ne ices feidirs auliore to this puificy Hove. tha mew: hol cleancr, ie det the Fa of a recess: Seve Rob tor than soap. Removes pain, time ago, N. H. Williams was tenoed in Sarnia police court, Toledo id CR eB Mt nt KINGSTON, ONTARIO, Despatches From Near in towards the GIVEN IN THE BRIEFEST POS Matters That Interest Everybody-- Notes From All Over--Little of Everybody Easily Read and Re- to now investignting the keno and poker {jad hy Governor Dix to sueoved James | {O'Gorman on the supreme court bench Smith, aged forty, of Port Huron, the complainant | the of? to the represéntation of an historical' theitle of Waterloo, but saws the cognmit- | house will agree to a recess from July (veal, and that these caused the com- hy 4 ; Sarnia, NM 22. After being iden. the senate will ratify all their tariff! jc oe the Aberil of Niles, Mich, Ni stole a team of arrested on they want 8 record vote, it is declar- () roy from a Sarnia farmer some | ceny. sen- | 'o jand looked forwurd 16 this day, three years in pomitentiary. Williams told the judge Wind years is wasted it and where | and pleoni.. Pe wap sonal In the MONDAY, MAY ---- FOR INDIAN PAGANS The Sam of $1 250,000 1s Needed at Ones. 22. ~In the name of the detiveh an appeal y for one million two thousand dollars to deationnl plas of "the nd, othe evangelical Croat Boitaia and the Thureh of Seotinnth represented by the All-India conunities for work among the Mindu apd Mebammedan subjects of Great Pritmin in India, Acegrding the many eminent churchmen forming this committee, an appropriation of this is absolute tly essential to those whe would niake | headway inst paganism in Eng- land's Indian pos a5 Over a quarter of a onilioneluiare was sub geribed within half am Bour after a report of the com had been made public. Losidon, ™ 8S shion & has hundred au Further the Church ~f free churches heen 1 i to NS, CALGARY PATRICK : eof the Far West The Breat 1 GIVEN SEVEN YEARS in For a Crime of Eleven Years Ago-- Broke Into Bank at Danville, Sherbrooke, May 22.-<James Moore was sentenced to sevem years in the penitentiary -on a chasge of breaking {into the Bank of Halifax at Danville. The crime was committed eleven vears | ago, but Moore escaped from jail with | three others and was arrested in Montreal a few weeks ago. BORDEN T0 BE FACED [BY GRAIN GROWERS EXECU- TIVE OF MANITOBA. ~ Expression es Affecting 29 May 22.~The executive of the Manitoba Gram sociation, SNaturday, off cially to meet Hk tour, An expression of his views on tariff, { hip and operation of all terminal ele vators and of the Hudson Bay rai} the chilled and of having co again Which Will Demand of His Views on Pol the Great West, Winnipeg, commit {Urowers' oe @ declared they Borden -on-hie propose western the reciprocity, government ownes {way meat industry efficient 1 | Loe necessity toperation legislation enacteé lament will be demanded of says the executive report Brandon be the leentre, 'as it was with Laurier, though Borden will be at each pointi he stops by- the grain growers' committee. by par Borden, to-day: chief storm Wilfrid met local will LOS ANGELES CASE, | Asks Public Not to. Pass Judgment ba "Tatil Tried: Madisdn; Wisi; May 22. --I a plea { that the public should suspend judy ment util the case is heard against the McNamara brothers and Ortie Me- Manigal, charged with blowing up the office of the Los Angeles Times, Uni ted States Senator LaFgolletite, in the rent of LaFollette's Weekly, the Los if, indeed, Issue says : The dynamiting of Angeles Times last October it was dynamited--was crime. For such deed there can be no defence. Right minded people' do not tolerate violence | i ut right-minded of under any people, also, do not prejudge cases | this kind. Dar I'rade unignism is the only present name, of hope of the Américan workingmen for decent living' wages and tolerable eon- | i ditions of labor i countenance if com- piited inthe name of indusirial jus : > : : : tire. If there be anarchists within labor organizations they must be weeded out," jut "cannot Feen labor, erim#, is } TAKEN FOR | { PLEADS A CHANCE TO TRY HIS EXAMS. Theft Charge Prevented Colpmbia | University 'Student Finishing His | Law Course. Wow Yosk, Miy {HafTanmi, a senior in Law Sthool, pleaded in vain for per- mission to stay out of jail long {enough to take {mal examinations for adigission to the bar. Just as he was entering' the examination room hes was a charge of grand lar- worked " be "Now. that seven amd my future blast. 22. J Elwood w For seven years 1 have wrod . x The young student is eliarged with ealt cling on a: claim for Mu, sfior he hoof aseb ond @ the S ational + Nvramir wha Bb imaked the eon Tatnba ly RY » tix Ban's, Wa debida of BL the Colombia | a start from Paris to oo omy 1911. A Terrible Toll to Ar Aviation. t of . S-- 1 . . % MINISTER OF - WAR BERTEAUX : KILLED And Premier Mounis Seriously Injur- ed--Frightful Accident at Start of Paris-to-Madrid Race Sunday Morning. Paris, May 22.--France, on Sunday paid another terrible toll in her mag: niticent endeavor to atfain supremacy in the art of aviation, (glen a mono- plane, the driver of which had lost control, plunged into a group of mem- pers of thé cabinet who had gathered | in the morning to witness the start) of the Petit Parisien race from Paris | to Madrid, ¥iling the minister of war] and injuring the prime minister, his | son and Henri de la Meurthe, the well: known sportsman. : Tht accident occurred on the avia tion field at lssy les Molineux, ami was witnessed by two hundred 'thous- and people. M. Train was piloting the monoplane which caused the tragedy. With him in the car was M. Bouuier, a passenger. Neither of these men was injured. The machine was wrecked. Minister of War Berteaux was hor- wibly mangled. The swiftly revolving Lpropeller cut off cleanly his left arm, which was found ten feet away from the spot where he was struck; the Tack of his head was erushed in, his throat, gashed, and the whole of his left side cut and lacerated. Premier Monis was. buried beneath the wreckage of the monoplane, He was taken out as quickly as "possible and examined by military surgeons, who found he had sustained compound fractures of two bones in the right that his was broken, his face badly gontused,~and that there were bruises on the breast and abdo- men. M. Deutsch and M. Monis, jun., wera nol seriously hurt. The breeze had been steadily ening throughout the morning, and the meteorological observer in the Kiffel Tower telephoned that his gauge showed a velocity of eight meters a second, or close to thirty miles an hour. The members of the aviation cymmitied were discussing the adverse conditions. Train, however, left the ground. As- pending swiftly, he circled the great field, curving round to the starting line, and then flying down the course a fiftv-mile-an-hour gait, the nia- chine rocking in the gusty wind. [rain's monoplane swooped toward the earth under the impulse of an =if flurry, and it appeared as though the aviator were about to dash inte the The pilot's attention sedmid momentarily to have been diverted fram his course, and he madé a quick turn to the left, toward where the | purty of -officials - wera standing. Then | he lost colitrol of the craft altaglether, and it dashed violently into the mig isterial A scene of frightful confusion follow- ed the fall of the monoplane. From all parts of the aviation field arose cries of alarm and dismay, and tens of thousands of persons broke through the Mines and moved toward the scene of the accident, The eavalry, however, by repeated charges, managed to clear the field, and the injured men were given first aid by the field surgeons. Irom the first. it was seen that Berteanx was fatally hurt and that M. Moniz was seriously injured. After the ministers had been cared for -the "sur-| goons dressed the . wounds of those who had received minor bruises. M. Berteaux's body was placed in a closed automobile and escorted from the field by a squadron of dragoons with "words at salute. The tens of | thousands in that part of the field | throngh which the automobile passed | uneovered. i. The body of the late minister of war { lies at the ministry in the same room from which recently his predecessor, General Brini was bruied. =z / { = Premier Monis, while being take {from the field in an ambulance, re | peated over and over again jn a low | voice: "It is nothing; it is fhothing," | and' when he had somewhat regained a | | nose fresh at cavalry i i group. clearer consciousness said that his in- juries must not interfere -with the He did not know that Berteaux { was dead. . Doctors set the fractures = without {the aid'of anaesthetics, and as far as {it. was humanly possible the prem was made comfortable, Mme, Monis thad planned to give a children's party {at ier home. The rooms were full of { lowers, and the premier's wife was | arranging --thesd when the ambulance jarrived, . v5 {Premier Monis was & trifle better this mornjag and hoped are expressed for his recovery. The troops will go {into mourning for _abirty days. Sewer- tal aviatars in the rage which brought | aveident retired from contest having f mo hearf to continue. Pierre Vetring, undismayed by The catastrophe, mada Madrid, this morning, but got lost fa the thick {haze sputhwest of Paris. : i MENON TORONTO STREET. 4 FRSA {Aged Woman Succumbs to Heat Pro : Toronte, May 22. --An aged woman collapsed on sidewalk and died of the { excessive heat, on Yonge street, this morning. AL the present she has been anidentified * ! . There was terrible suffering from dhe heat in the eeungested parte ol | thes eed aned last Wight. | wath sores of prostrations, ried . race, i ! i i i vy sheridan np "Day jabem poses," Gibson's, « RANE PATS My -_ FRENCH With Pretty Governess on Steamer Qitebes, May 22 Travelling as Mr. and Mrs. Wie, the wealthy Count DD' Abbade D'Arras, of France, with a pretiy governess, Halena Benoit, who says she hgs position as teacher in Saskatchewan, ! were arrested on the the steamer Lake Manitoba, on its arrival here, this morning, and ar now in custody pending instructions from Franwe, where the vountess and family are mourning his loss, he having left a note that he had suicided, -------- NSANE. Miss arrival of FOUND TO "E James Elliott, Whe Told of Wreck. ing Buildings. Pittsburg, May 22.---James Elliott, who made an alleged confession n which he charged that officers of the National Erectors association and detectives employed by it were im- plicated in' the wrecking of buildings throughout the eountry, constructed by non-union labor, has been found to be mentally deranged and was sent to the Allegheny county home at Marshalsea, LAURIER TO DEMAND COUNT ARRESTED | Evreaux | LAST EDITION -- il s---------- WEATHER PROBABILITIES. Te 22.18 8m Ot wa Val St. Lawrence ia 2 mostly Tige to. Nerth.es and HERMSDORF Dyed Stockings and day T Recognition of Canadian Nationality: New York, May 22:<The New York Herald saves, this morming, that. Si Wilfrid Laurier has avowed his inten tion: of demanding full recognition from the imperial conference of Cana dian cigizenship and nationality, wand the appointment of Canadian consuls ati all ports. Six Negroes Lynched. Lake *City, Fla, May 22 ne- arrested on mere suspwion ol ore tak Full Six groes, the murder of a » hite man, Ww en a jail by a posse amd lynched, after grossky brutal treatment. ENDING THE BLOODY WAR MEX. The Document Was Signed on Cus- tom House Steps by the Light of Matches and Candles Sunday Night. of ») Juarez, May By the light matches and candles, the officially de atives of the Dia Madero insurgents, agreement the here, last the lead signated represent overnment aud signed: the pears steps of the custom house, rr: thus ending so far ers are cogeerned, the disastrous bloody rebellion waged agound Mexico for six months: 'The agreement stipu lates the resignation of President Dinz and the vice presiggot, and the cabinet immediately at work na tional reforms. on as and sets at -- 3 ri Sentence. 20 A fine of $3100 are ump Wonment Woman Gets Sma Quebec, Que., May nt mn and vost and ve was meted out vestenday, to one arraigned before charges, wonths' the weordes 8 court Mrs. who Judge the fire being $300 imprisonment in each Rov, Wis Very Berion 3 and wiv case Lhe door closed heard behind number In was large cam wind 3 jud reprimanded the severely, aul that he example of her, by to thet. pa Ximtin pent nesses were heard requiring ment, Justice Dory defendant would make an condemning nlty. and bier ie Physicians Down Ww ith Fever. Ottawa, Ont., May 22.« A durious situation has arisen al the aviv lation hospital here. Dr MacPherson me dieal superintendent, contracted scarlet fover, and Dr Sutherland employed to take his place. The ter also contracted the disease an third doctor had to be employed Fhe city auditor has weluned to pws two phiykicians who 180 lat i a yes the salaries of the are ill. A Whole Family Killed. Newark, Ohio, May 224+D Ww. Dod hin wife and two young daugh a whole family, were instantly vestorday when their thetr buggy in fromt of a swift ic ear. Ou, TAFT NOT WORRYING SERENELY ~ FOR ATE ACTION WAITING On the Reciprocity Bill--i is Chief Effort Will be to St engthen Sentiment for the, Bill. /4 over Presiden 1 Taft the dela 7 m Washington, May is not worrying the. senate's action on the Canysdien reciprocity bill, Gpdinarily, he a Oh to his summer home in M sxanehn wits this tame, but this year he is wil ting tight in the White House (ne reason why he can sit tight iw th at his office in immediately above the n frigerating plant in the executive man sion, and =, therefore, while the other public builings around Washington make their oo upanis won der. why thes ace alive, The president is prepared to swuib the senate's act jon when it comies, and do it iB some comfort compared with the temperature of the capitol. His chief Fort will be fo strengthen fhe smtiment for the 'ill, and to head off embarrassing amendments The Root ameumdmend to the paper clause, which was offered lost senion but: not acted upon, is raested for the bad example it seis, and from now lon the friends of the bil will be bas fighting insidious enmiam of this "sort. et i i. Sp-- Cheap Excursion to Cape §incent, Vietaria Day, Sir: Am bali bow there, Le. re Waloendas erics, 2 pan urn, 5 \ on two | was | horse | SEN-| } dedightiully enol i Is one of the strongest features of our Stere-- We--alm to carry every style of Stocking that is likely to be asked for. and keep our prices prun- ed down to the lowest possible penny or ABSOLUTELY DEPENDABLE GOODS. BEWARE OF" THE STOCKINGS THAT STAIN. fasiness and purity is a neeesglty Do your feet a wearing only Black Stock- you kpow positively afe Dye {hosiery favor by ings that fast and pure br YOU NEED NOT FEAR Dye dangers when you buy our Black Stockings, because they are HERMDORF DYED. We sell them under a steel-clad guarantee not to run or stain and we invite you to call and see them WE HAVE A SPECIAL WINDOW DISPLAY. HAVE YOU SEENgIT? STEACYS' \ BORN. > £ v May 156th, Fyner, a son tiehimond, on J MARRIED, EMUURY PILED. Mar Mich, on Farrell, father of the Hotel vette FARRELL May * 'Kingston arel ¥ Interment aftern Milis Hr --- 8 ¢ " "ROBERT J, REID, The Leading Undertaker, _. "Phone B77. 230 Princess Street. "JAMES REID The 01d Firm of 254 and 258 PRINCESS Phone 147 for Ambuindve. at | { { | i |= : | HOUSE CLEANING TIME. we have our beautifd]l Brussels cars { pets, also some Hguares, Al reasonable | prices, at Turk's Phone 706, The Weather is Warm and the Water is Bad--DRIN Gird's Ginger Ale. Guard's Soda Water. tmport=d Ginger Ale. Imported, Champagne Cyder, Radnor Water, Poland Water, White Rock. Lime Juice, Lime Juice Cordial. Grape Juice. 60. ASKER TO RESIGN, Lord Cromer is » Believer In Vivh section. 22. The members of forathe Prevention { { | i i i London, May | the Royal Soewty jof Cruelty to Animals, bave decided {to wk Lord Cromer to resign the | vice sguumideney of the organization be lenus Yhe npholds viviseetion Lack Peoder said thet the luct that Lord Crolser was ioe enuned {many pers ns to reluse to wentify theenuelVes «th the sorely, UH everthody. i ® hingsfon knew ihe vile of Tiger, (he new hind clegner, wie would he wrin) 8 10 supply the de 'med. Tiger w a thoroughly domes cated tordet hand posp. and is fast making tell xoows fo ed an Ask your grocer or devghidl. ; 3] : i 4 i

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