z YEAR 78.-NO. 157 GETTING READY For A Ottawa A TON OF ICE DAILY TO COOL" THE AIR IN THE CHAMBER. SN The Session is Likelj to be a Long One--A Closure ule May be Brought in by the Government, Ottawa, July 7.-Officials of the House of Commons are preparing to make the members as comfortable as sible durin: the heated term. Ele Aric fans are wing installed in the chamber of the house and through the parliament buildings. ps A ton of ice will be used daily mn cooling the currents of air that fur- mish ventilation to the chamber. The first roof of the new wing pro bably will be covered by mings anal Foi w fitted ups --a--rool--garden-- members can resort for a Lengthy Session At ! Over 1,000 ¥t. Long. {informed quarters | tract for the construction of the ships to potent constitutional existence _as breath of | { pany, |GOMPERS PREFERS JAIL TO APOLOGY TO COURT. {Labor Leader Says it is Better to Let Murderers Escape Than Kidnap Accused Men. St. Louis, July 7.-- Samuel Gompers, [president of the American Federation {of Labor, in addressing a McNamara protest meeting hero last night, said Lit would be better for murderers to go uncaught than to allow accused men {to be kidnapped in order to remove {them from the jurisdiction of one istate to another. He also referred to {his own expenences in the courts. | "Who knows where | shall be in a Mow weeks 7' he asked, adding "lor 1 lgo to Washington, where. 1 am not to [be called upon to answer for contempt, {but to be given an opportunity of | apologizing to the court Well, if it tis to be a choice between an apology {and jail, | expect 1 shall have to go {to jail." - a {CANADIAN FIRM TO BUILD OUR FLEET. | Pellatt Syndicaie Lands Big Con. tract--Will Build Dock It js stated in well Ottawa, July 7 here that the con- of the Canadian navy has been de and Tok Shipbuilding headquartérs which has it an at air from time to time. ASydney, N.S R. L. Borden's announcement, at promises to make the adjourned wes sion a long one, even though recipro- city should not be pressed ta a vote. There is also the likelihood that a Closure Rule be brought in by the government. Such a. rile would be considered by the house without bein sent to commitlee of the whole and, therefore, could be passed in spite of any obstruction. Its | passage, however, would be stubborn { may eventually Iv remeted, and would mean prolong: | ed sittings day and night NEIGHBORS SOUGHT HIS CAgH. ambien : of Man's Death Looters to House, Pittsburg, Pa., July 7.--A few min utes after it became known (that Frederick Prager had been found dead in bed at his home, 265 High street, | Northside, neighbors rushed to the house and began ransacking for $11, 000, alleged to be hidden somewhere about the premises. ! It took a wiund of police to clear | Sends ! | i i Report the house of fortune hunters and save | the building from being wrecked. | Prager succumbing duting the | to the heat. Thee weeks -ngo hi of , x Strat, comnutted " . thy ago John violent death in. a mill. he three deaths wiped out the Strana- Prager families, and hors e1i- deavored to get the rumored fortune. S----r-------- GRIST OF CASUALTIES, Piryecighi-Ton a, 1.217 Tijured by Fourth Celebration. Chicago, July T7.--Latest RY reports on the numbsr of casualties | the United States due to the celebra- | tien of the Fourth of July show that | thirty«ight lives were sacrificed and | 1,247 were injured, as compared with | forty-four «+ killed and 2,455 last year, and sixty-two killed and 3, | {governor of Ontario jeare of Penjamin Lely" may is: lymembered dimly find muttered Melville, that/ the opposition favors re | a rompany includes amongst its distribution before a general election ! ; Sir Henry Pellatt, of To Hon. J. M. Gibson, lieutenant Sir Charles Ellis, of the John Brown com jank, Seotland, which constructed the Lusitania, and the Mauretania and others prominent in Fritish shipbuilding circle FEVER BRINGS BACK THE MIND OF A MAN ronto; chairman hany, of Clyde Benjamin Leeds, Who Had Forgotten Past, is Mow Recovering His Memory. A City, 'Nb auly 7.«""The become Atlantic famous among pavchologists. Tt would soem that of a sudden Leed's brain, he forgot his" identity; he forgot his always taken tender care; he forgot the past. Ihen,. after six vears, leeds fell ill in Cleveland, and fever stimulated his dormant mind. In his delirium he re words that gave to the swgeons will restore him to his In response to a telegram from these surgeons, Mes, 1 s went to Cleveland to-day. She said she would {nurse her husband back to mental and | between Frame physical home. health, and then bring him WARNED BY BLACK HAND. 'Hermit of Bronx" Found Mortail Wounded, New York, July 7.-The police a net over the city fo catch the mur- derers of August Marcion, known as the "Hermit of the Bronx," who was injured | roputed to have a fortune hidden away | in' the ramshackle building in which drew | aily % LAURIER WAI For Result Of The Coming Reo NON-COMMITTAL STAND AT IMPERIAL CONFERENCE EXPLAINED, 1s iMay Prove to be Stateman's Patience ~--London Financial News Fore- casts Western Canada as Counter balancing East After Census, London, July 7.--The Financial |News, discussing the imperial situa- tion attributes Sir Wilind Laurier's {non-committal attitude at the unpéri- lal conference to the coming redis- trivution. As to the result of the {Canadian census, it says i-- } "Western Canada will 'be called in: {a counterbalance to the eastern pro- to the British Lana vines, When that takes place, Sir COm- Wilfrid Laurier will probably be much | ms non-committal and much more imperialistic. His non-commital policy will doubtless exhibit itself as 'the patience of * statesmanship which can wait in quiet confidence for the un- folding of what ils prescience dis- cerns." The newspapers publish pictures ol Sir Frederick Borden as the successo. Lord Strathcona. His adniimistra tion af the militia departmegt .is com mended for its freedom From party po- litics, to [BRITAIN INTERESTED | IN MOROCCAN CRISIS, Premier Asquith Takes a Serious View of the Situation in Speech on Thursday. | London, July 7.-That the British Provernment takes a serions view of the Moroccan situation, was the admission made in the House of Commons, ves terday, by Premver Asquith. "1 wish it to be clearly understood," {apparently normal, became blank, and sid he, "that the situation which has artsen in Moroeeo, and possible future Hw ife and children, of whom he --had Hdevelopments, may affect British inter losts mor: directly than has been the tease heretofore." {| Mr. Asquith repeated the hope Inegotintions bow in progress would the successful in bringing about an {amicable solution, but he intimated that a Sg. dant that Great Brituin was determined to protect her own inlerddfi and at the same time uphold the French | obligations. It is reported that by a seeret treaty and Moroceo, France {has confirmed the sultan in his posi- Hion and will. aid him with men and { money. treaty PHOTOGRAPHERS. PIGEONS AS | Supplied With Cameras--Trained to ; Take Pictures. Paris, July S.--Iateresting ments ire being made with pigeons as photographers. | De. Neubronner has devised a small lea'mera which is attached to the breast experi- carrier 346 inured in 1909. Fireworks Haim- the lived. "The old man was found at lof the pizeon; and by the action of a cd eighteen victims, five arms twelve, | gunpowder five, and toy pistols three, ategrding to the reports received by Chicago newspapers. HAD HE RED MAIR? » Air From Electric Fan Singes Hair of Printer. Tarrstown, 'N.Y., July 7.--Yesterday | was the hottest day ever vecorded | here, the thermometer in [font of | Russel & lLowrie's store vegisteted 115) | : at three o'clock. It was so. hot that | angs on the railroad had to } put homes. Billington, a printer in a local office, while standing in front of an electric fan, was scorched and his {was pleased 10 an early hour mortally wounded a stiletto, A blood-stained revolver chamber empty showed with one the hermit {had put up a fight before he succumb | ed to his antagonists Marcion had heen frequently ened in black hand letters. threat GIVEN FREEDOM OF GLASGOW. Kitchener and Premiers Ward, Botha and Fisher Honored. July London, TaAt Glasgow, Lord i : Kitchener, Sir Joseph Ward, Sir Louis Botha and Premier Fraser received the freedom of the city. Kitchener said ho meot the ' Australian hair singed, the air being so hot that {und New Zealand premiers. He recently he was burned before he could jump away. ------------------ Captured After Seven Years. * Watertown, N.Y. July seven years of freedom, Martin Burke, of Cape Vincent, who, in 1904, made a getaway at the county "jail under the regime ofe Sherif E. 1 Tallman, after serving sixteen days of u ninety day sentence for trouble with his wile, return to his old home at the Cape, Monday night, and almost immediately was under arrest. Burke wns brought here, Tuesday, and must serve: out the balance of his term After his escape he went to Canada, where, ex cept for some time spent in Ogden: burg and four months at the Cape has been working since. Y Grand Stand Burned, Winnipeg, July 7. Fire destroved the a at the Other buildings were dam: hy ile the fire was still burning = Exhibition Assotiation board an council met and decided to re » temporary grand stand imme ately. The opening of the fair was oned from the 12th to Bh of uly . . Tour of the Ixlanis, vr America, and Canadian channels find hats of every Kind g of Rducation, § pm. Civic finance committee. § pm. acht race, 1.30 pm. Saturday Vaudeville. lake Ontarie Pa Aa Shhh nnual school {oa hi + | their governments a scheme of mlitary {recorganization, which was being ca iried out with the thoroughness mark 6.--After Ling all the undertakings of these gov- hay 4 exhibition | Baturday, 2.30, the little fellow's had the pleasure of submitting to ernments. i | » - Tragedy Marks a Marriage in Quebec hoy | Province Where Bride's Bro- ther is Stricken Quebee, July T.--Another death has to be credited to Monday's storm. HHottors from St. Agnes, Beauce; de- 'scribe the fatality which occurred at marriage feast. A hundred guests wore enjoying the evening meal after 'the marriage of J. B. Vachon to Miss Marie Anne Turnel, when the bride's mother sent one of hes young sons to the cellar for more bread. The boy having failed to return, one of the guests went in search of him, and carried his dead body up into the banquet hall. 'Ihe electric fluid had done its dead- Iv work, and had carbonized one of bones. Several women of the party faint, THE WHARF COLLAPSED. Ottawa, July 7.<The wharf at Queen's Par! steamer. the vimer, collapsed while with excursionists, waiting Fifty people were nto the water. 'Mwo Otfawa | rescue Woodlawn, was by | rabber batt, which inflates and -deflates | automatically during the flight a suc cession of snapshots can be taken. | Although the device is not perfected a successful future is predicted for t is proposed to adopt \~ vet, the invention. it in the army. { ag it Safe for: Thirty Days. ~pokane, Wash, July 7.--Timber owners and rangers in Washington, Idaho, Oretron, Montana and the poo vince of British Columbia declare that the 'forests are safe from fires for at least thirty davs, as a result of the recent rains, and annobnee that plans {have been completed to prevent a re {petition of last year's destruction of life and property in the government re serve find private holdings. Alleged White Slaver. Fredericton, N.B., July 7.<An oper ator in the white slave traffic from S Bostoii was in Fredericton, yesterday. | Conclusive evidence to that effect hag heen. secured, and it seems certain that white slave traders are working be 'tween Boston asd New. Brunswick points Defeated the Pirates. Vancouver, July 7.--The cteamer Protestilauy reports that the agent of { the Pacific mail line aided by a Chi {nese gunboat, defeated pirates that stripped the wreck of their liner Asia, and recovered a large quantity of stolen silk. ' Sent for Investment. Seattle, July 7.--Atcording to Uhi ness papers some thirty million dol lars in gold bars, acenmulated by the late Emprese of China, has been for warded to the Brussels Bank for in- vestment. : Ottawa Eight Defeated. Henley, Eng., July 7.~The Ottawa eight were defeated in the Grand Chal lenge cup somi-fnal, by Magdalon College jerew, the present holders of the trofhy. -------------- Left for Ireland. London, July 7.~The king, quesn, Prince of Wales and Princess Mary left, to-day, for Ireland, where they {will aerive to-morrow. § ------------ Spend Sunday in Watertown. Good turning , $1.65 return. [---------------- 3 Saturday or Sunday, re « 5X Fitish OFFICER KILLS MAN i , JUST OUT OF PEN. {William Moss Tries to' Make Con- stable Fat Revolver--Gets Bullets Instead, ! | Charleston, W. Va), July 7. William i Moss, but recently released from the |penitentiary after a long term, was killed by Special Constable Henry | Nichols, when the ex-convict declared | he would make the constable eat his own revolver. 3 i * The killing occurred on a train on | the Campbell Creek branch between Patney and Duna. Moss received three bullets and died within a few minutes. Nichols was held to the'grand = jury under a $5,000 bond. Both men are married and have families. ! HONOR FOR STRATHCONA. City of Bath Will Confer its Free- dom on Hi } { | | + } LORD STRATHCONA i ~The freedom of the | to be conferred. on | The only two living | are Lord Roberts London, July 7 City of Bath is Lord Strathcona freemen of the city and Lord Rosebe ry. { { ! to be Genuine. loronto, July 7.~The famous Kee ley mine, which to seven hundred shareholders of the Farmers' bank is a forlorn hope; has suddenly loomed | up as a genuine gold mine and will be | developed to the fullest extent in the interest of the sharvholders. Engineers sent by the curator, G, T Clarkson, to Lorraine township, in the Cobalt district, have reported most favorably on the mine. If no disa potntiem intervenes the share- holders may be relieved of at least a An official, intimately econnecped with the property, definitely stated that the | bank curator will proceed with the | work of development in the interest of | the shareholders and will not sell the] mine unless a large price is offered. | That price will have to be over a ance, which "would mean that the! shareholders would have an asset over hali the amount invested in the p » 1 mine by their convicted general mana- | HOUSE OF LORDS | ASSERTS ITSELF Amends The Veto Bill by an Over: whelming Majority--Referen- | y i tum Provided. London, Jaly 7. by a vote of 253 to 46 passed Lansdowne's amendment to the bill, which provides that no bill affect- | ing the existence of the crown or Pro | testant succession, or the establishing tof a national parliament or a body with legislative powers in any portion | {of the kingdom, or which in the judg- | jiment of a joint committee of the two | i | i | The House of Lords | Lord | velo houses, raises an issue of great gravity [shall receive roval assent amtil it has | been submitted to the vofemdndum. i War Secretary Haldane again made | iit_clear that the government would re fuse to accept the amendment. Al x PALL Damaged by Lightning. { Brockville, Ont. July 7.-Duking Thursday's storm lightning struck three cottages close to the fown, but | fortunately no owe was injured The | summer home of Frederick B. Stacey, | at Fernbank, was the scene of one of | the attacks, and considerable damage | {to the building resulted The hght-! ning struck the roof tearing a hole | through and 'twisting the rafters as though they were matches. IL made its. way through the interior down stairs, ripping up floors and wood- work to such an extent that an insur | ance adjuster has been called to de términe the loss, In the cottage at the time were Mrs. Steacy, her sister in-law, Mes. Walter Bell, of Toromto, Master Boyd Steacy and servant, all of whom escaped injury. The unoccupied 'chttage owned by Lieut Col. Cole, on the eastern side of | Oriental Isle, was also struck, but sus- | thined little damage. Fire was seen to fssne from the roof after the current had passed of, but the heavy rain was the means of extinguishing it. ' Hanged Himself. Belleville, Ont., July T.--Jerome Cronk, an inmate of the County House of Refuge, termindted his ox- istence, on v, by hanging him- . The rtutiate man, who was fifty-six sears of age, 'had i { the first Vagreement. signed August {eology Forlorn Hope of Shareholders Seems and the Fiji Islands. | schedule of claims will now machinery believed to be legitimate and worthy derstood that the question wall be. arhitrated by a commission portion of their liability, | oie. {settled by the quarter of a million to ensure accept: | summer. [IRELAND'S WELCOME: TO KING. KINGSTON, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, JULY 7, 191. The Arbitration Treaty is About Ready ARRANGEMENT IS GIVEN IN WASHINGTON, TO Pecuniary Claims to be Decided-- They Will: Go to Arbitration Under a Special Agreement. Washington, July 7.--The principle of armitration of international dis- putes, in so far as ils application to the tnited States and Great "Brita is concerned, received a pronounced impetus to-day. Secretary of State nnox and Ambassador Bryce signed schedule of certain pecuniary claims existing between the United States and Great Britain, and the ters' of their submission to 'arbitra- tion in accordance with "the special A 15th last, Not satished with this actor ment for one day, the secretary and ambassador then further lent ° their energies in the cause of international peace by conlerring for an hour . on the proposed general arbitration treaty, which is to supplant, by broad- inmng its scope, the very convention under which the pecuniary claims witl be arbitrategd. I'he conference was devoted to questicns relating primarily to phras- It is gdmitted'in otticial ppuar- ters that the treaty is all but com- pleted, and the administration is con- fident it wil be finished in time for submission to the senate for ratifica- tion at the present session. The pecuniary claime to be arbitra- ted aggregate several million dollars. Some of them are of long standing, even ante-dating the war cf 1512 while many grew out of she war in the Philippines. Others relate to fisheries Both the special agreement and the 8 be sub mitted to the senate for ratification. tion. The special agreement commits the two governments to the arbitra- tion of the claims, and provides the of the arbitral tribumal, while the: schedule is a list of claims of consideration. It is generally un- of representatives of the United rd tates end Great Britdin, and & disinterested This arbitration will be the second under the general arbitration treaty of 1908 between America and Britain, the first subject undertaken under that convention being the North At- lantic fisheries dispute, which was Hague tribunal last & lish- [God q hd DESCENDANT OF DAVID. The King Sits Upon Throne of Israel. Boston, July 7.--Rev. Willlam Hyde, rettor of the Trinity Episcopal chhreh of Weymouth, behev(; not only that the British are direct descendants the lgraelites, but that bing George ¥. is a lineal descendant of a cousin of the house of David, Ea "The yoval house of Britain," says Mr. Hyde, "traces ifs apcestry back to the line of David, and of Judah. To be specific, Tea Tephi, daughter of Zpdekiab, the last king of David's line, married Eochaide, the young Xing of the Duanites, in the north of Ireland, in 583 B.C. They were married by the Prophet Jeremiah and crowned on the Bethel stone. Hochaide himsel! was of the royal tine of Juduh, since he woe a descen- dant of one of the twin sons of Judah; David being a descendant of the other twin son. "This marriage was the beginning of the poyal house of Scots.and this line in 'time through the Bruces and Starts became the royal line of the British eropire. "George V., therefore, is a descen- dant of David and belongs to a dynasty which can never cease to exist for it has the promise of God that it will never cease to have a descendant to n' over his people of Israel. The English and American people are this race; hence they are the people "Further, we can trace the lineage of the British rulers back even ax far as Adam. Anna, a cousin of Mary, the mother of Christ, married a, prince of the royal house of righ and hence became an ancestor of that house. "God said that He would establish the throne of David forever and that David would never cease to have a descendant. George V. ix a fulfilment of these words, for he is a descendant of David and he sits upon the throne of Israel." ¢ STANDARD OI Company Will be-Spiit Into Fifteen or Twenty Different Parts. New York, July 7.--1It is reported here this afternoon that within a short time plans for reorganizing Yhe Standard Oil Co., of New Jersey, will be announced. The company, it is said, will undergo completo disin- tegration, and all sabdidiaries that ate charged with haviog combined and conspired to aionopolize the oil trade will operate separately. The company ! ba split into fifteen or twenty a amd each will operate in its own territory independent of other companies. The control, however, will continue to be the same, It was report: ed that under the reorganization plan the earnings of the Standard 0il vompany will not be affected. A Eively Market. Brockville, July 7.--A lively market developed at the meeting of the Cheese A ------ i Dublin is Preparing an Irish Wels come for Saturday. Dublin, July 7.--The eity is filling | up with provincial visitors, ready to! welcome the king and queen, who make their state entry: on Saturday, | and every indication is that they will receive a loyal and warm welcome, Workmen are busy putting the finishing touches the decorations along the line of the route. Seven thousand men took part inn hearsal at Phoenix Park,» for Tuesday's military review on re- | next trp Secretly Weds Rich Clubman. Mew York, July 7.~Married this afternoon, at 5.30 o'clock, to I. Ed- ward Emerson, of Baltimore. (Signed) "Mrs. McCormack." That personal message to a friend in New York revealed -/hat all so- ciety has been standing upon tiptoes to hear for months--that the charm- ing and vivacious young widow, Mrs. Anne Prestop McCormack, of Irving. ton-on-the-Hudson, had at last con- ferted to become the bride of the multi-millionairp Baltimore-New York clubman, Capt. I. Edward Emerson. The marriage is supposed to have been performed at Tarrytown War on Grasshoppers in Kansas. July 7--A war on been starled in estern, Kansas. The ravages of the insects, especially in alfalfa fields, have caused the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe railroad to inaugurate a campaign of extermination along its lines. Topeva, Kan, rasshoppers has Martial Law in Paraguay. Washington, July 7.--Presidlent Jara, of. Paraguay, who a few months ago | gwized the presidemcy through a blood- less revolution, has now assumed « dictatorship and declared 'martial law throughout the republic, according to a report to the sthte department To Ascend Mount McKinley. Seaftle, Wash., July 7.--Prol. Her- | seliell Parke, of New York, has sailed for Valdez on the steamship Admiral Simpson. Whie in Alaska x make arra ents for an expedition to astend Mount McKinley next Feb ruary. pane ---- Posse Killed Jail Breaker. Syracuse, N.Y, July T--In a revel ver fight between ih county sher- i's officers and escaped burglurs at Cicero, morth of here, yesterday, Wal ter Parker, one of the fugitives, was killed. AY Hove just the hat you want. i ----------_------ : "Buy Froig Salt." Ofbwon's.. wo total Board 'yesterday, with a total offgr. ing of 4,325 boxes, colored predomin- ating. Goods began to chaoge hands t' Hie, but llc. was soon a this was the prevailing cool cured lots, however, securing 11§c On the street 11je. also ruled, and the transactions, curb and board, reached a total of about 7,000 boxes Hear Wave Reaches England. London, July 7.--Eogland is experi encing a heat wave also, which, how- {ever, according to weteorologists, has no connection with the American heat wave: The temperature in Loudon yes terday was sighty-threa in the shade, the hottest in two years, and the high temperature is driving the peopl by wholesale to the seashore ---- © Torontp Strikers Fined, ) ) Toronto, July 7.--Nite striking gar ment makers, arrested when acting as gistrate to-day, $10 each for disorder ly conduct Detectives = said they stood in a group at a door and said "You had better not go up there to work," y HOW THE 1 WAS DESTROYED Sen, Willian W. Bihy Says Explosion I Washington, July 7.-The loss of the battleship Matos in Havana harbor was caused by the explosion of her three magazines. No such' #fect "as {that produced upon the vessel could have been caused by an explosion from without. ~ Such is the opinion of General Wm H. Bixby, chief of engineers, USA, who has returned frum a personal inspection of the work of raising the Maine. : { General Bixby sawl that a. portion of the deck over the maghiines was blown upward and laid backward, and he will there were numerous conditions of the | {bulk as it lies in Havana harbor which | proved this. No explosion fromm tie out (side, said the general, could have cand the same results, | "What the primary chuse ) fon was," said General | ave will he learned." General Bisby doer not believe that the bodies of those their of the Bishy who lost fives will be found on the Maine. He! 'muy they are probably two hundred {lot or moge Arom the wreck in the 5, 1 25 $1 and $1.25 shirts, at Bibby's for '68, : ala : of | of | offered, { figure, | pickets, were fined by the police ma | LAST EDITION ---- | WEATHER PROBABILITIES. { Toronto, Ont. July 7. 10 am --Ot- tawa Valley and Upper St. Lawrence Moderate easterly winds: fine and comparatively coal to-day and on Sat- urday 4 3 ' [0000000000000 000000000 THIS STORE Will close at 6 p. m. During July & August-- Saturdays excepted. 000000000000000000000 Great Clearing Sale OF » i © 0000000000 A Great Wash Silk Absolutely frée from dressing. Guaranteed to wash like linen. Es- pecially adapted to the making of cool summer gowns, waists or lin ings. It comes in Ivory White only 1 Yard Wide. Sale Price 55c NEW ARRIVALS FOR SATURDAY SHELLING SHIRTWAISTS, JABOTS, FRILLINGS, sao wo SERRAND, MIDDY TIES, WASH BELTS, ETO, BYRON COLLARS, Embroidered at 35c. . STEACY'S -- i -------------- BORN, GIBSON---In Kingston, on July 6th, 191), at 252 Queen Street, (0 Mr. and Mra: A, 8. Gibson, of Kingston, a daughter apne DIED. THOMSON--In Kingston, Fm Hu asbBUL, late Adam Thomson Fufieral from his mother's residence » Lolburne street, 2.30 pm. Satur- day on June 6Lh, son of the I0BERT 7. REID, Phong ii JAMES REID Tr i te PRINCESS TREE, 308 Be hone 147 for Ambuinnce. BRASS BEDS, Fl sf them that we will clear at a (fice TURK'S "Phone 708, ( acfifice price GENUINE French Perrier | Natural Spring Water JAMES REDDEN '& (9. Cured at the Shrine. July 7.-Mids Arcind, of i (Mtawa, Hull, a charming young woman, {twentyitwo, who has for Past "three years been a cripple, and has had to nse crotches as her legs wer {bent al the knees, left for St. Anne de Beaupre on Monday night last, an {retired to her home, y morn ing, perfectly cured. Weds King's Chaplain. London; July '7.--Rev. Frederick Der cival Farrar, rector of Sandringhar fand domestic chaplain to. the ing Land Miss Nora Devise, of Philadelph | vere iin at St. Apdrew's, West 'minster, on. Thursday. The bride is lvister of Wichard Harding Davis. i Women Journslists Honored |" Lowdoa, Juls 7.~The earl marshal, the Duke of Norfolk, himself allotted a #at in Weriminster Al to the | Rociety of Women Journalists st She joenntion, The reg ah Iafre sen ity presiden mt, Mrs. Pediond Faves? J : 6 - Morrow . Se ------