A PECULIAR MOVEMENT Che Daily KINGSTON, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, JULY IS, 1911, THE VETO BILL YEAR 78 -NO. 106 Pir FE AS A CURE : ; [A_MAN BEAT HIS WI " 5 [Husband at Inquest Testifies That Physicians Prescribed Blows for Dying Woman. il Cedartown, (a, July IS {quest held at Esom, Ga., by {1 (). Crabb to ascertain the cause of the of Mrs J. " { Maynor, the hyshand of lwoman testified that, acting the instructions of physicians, had tied his wife's bands and slapped her on the and body. with a I hoard, "The denied that he in {tended bodily harm and appeared to CHANCE be 'grief strickes | Physicians | testified that ( At an in For Missing Prospectors pi Northern Ontario. death he mun OF FIRE GAVE EASY FOR LIFE Mrs. May Yhe died mry deci led from natural for several weeks To Many Who Escaped--All Whiskey | that the worming Is Being Scizged----The Relief Com. | causes. mittee is in Need of Money at Once. : phd ' | Porcupine, July 18.<Cyril 7. Young, {Transatlantic steamship Lines Add chairman of the general committer, | $2.50 (no Price of Passage. says: "The dead numbers sixty three, | London, Jul I'he transatlantic and there may be twenty more in the | steamship lines embraced in the At lake. One man positively asserts that {antiexeonference have decided to in he was the only one saved from alcreave the saloon and second ° cabin raft which was overturned, all the oe | passgnger rates for both east-bound ~ | PASSENGER RATES INCREASED, Tr - pr #Sig-to--the--bottom -huthimetand---wmtsbomnd-- traf hy 8250, tie self. The balance up to one hundred, | advanee to take effect at once. The yor. reports are bei each a their own criticism of original article, ' i at which figure 1 estimate the num- steerage. rates will not be changed. of dead, may poksibly be in the | The advanee ix made in order woods. There ix quite a large sec | offset the increase in wages which they tion yet from which reports are to he | were obliged to grant the strikers. It received. a {is possible that there will be some in "Search parties are out all the way [crease in freight rates. to Flying Post, on the Canadian Northern, seventy-five miles away, and the committee have covered an area | of 500 miles square already in their | searches y | "Four of our own parties and at S------ least #ix others passing through the Oriple Creek Hiserin on their way Lad Getting 9 Per Week is Presi- into Pore e, SOVETE arge | 1 . section of this district They repos | G6NE Of Pennsylvania Concern that the fires, while fierce enough, only snept narrow sections of the district and the prospectors in the vicinity had Philadelphia, July 18:-According to { Daniel" F Hunihan, of the Pennsyl the | vania stale insurance department, the an easy chance to escape. "Fires oveurred all through townships of Macklem, Carmen, Cody, | officers of the fourteen fire insurance Whitney, Shaw, Langmuir, Eldorado, companies which raided in this Ieloro, Tisdale, Ogden, Mountjoy, leity Thursday were clerks, office boys J Amsan, Robb, Godfrey, Furnbull, | 1nd stenographe rs. The official stated Bristol, Thornloe, Keefer and twénty | (hat a boy nineteen years old, miles further west into the unsurvey- | was paid $5 a week, was president of el. These townships are being cov- one of the concerns. ered by volunteer search parties whose! Phree of the officers of the concerns, ng turned in daily, As | which were all operated from one of Party arrives our fies, were given a further hearing yes hopes are growing brighter, but the | terday, and each was held in 85,000 final summary of the death list cannot | bail for trial. They are David Bo- be had before twelve days. laity, Charles Weinberg and Jacob L. "Sufficient supplies have come in, | Malschic. and 'after the first day there was real: ly no danger of anyone starving. We have plenly of provisions pow and the question of housing the homeless is really the worst problem to he faced t the present moment, . "The time has arrived where the volunteer parties will be deserting us. Prospectors sre only poor men, as a rule, and cannot afford to neglect work, Paid parties will have to be sent. outs from this time forth and we'll have to complete the work with their aid in the next ten days. "We have asked for $10,000 in pro visions and equipment, including to OFFICE BOY HEAD were was an officer of the company, but that he had been asked by his em. ployers to sign bis name t® papers, It is charged that the companies were started as a fraudulent conspira- ey to deceive state officials and the public. Tt is stated that the fourteen companies had clients in all parts of the Uhited States, and their total re ceipts were $27,000 a month, practical ly all of which was squandered by the officials, according to the insurance department authorities, LOVER WINS HIS SUIT AFTER TWO SCORE YEARS. Sweetheart - Finally Relents and Weds Persistent Saitor After First Husband Dies. years aga the eouple were there came the part Loflow, wha married blankets and tents, but we need mon- ay, and need it badly also." I Is OF 7! Laporte, Ind., July 18~ Waiting for A NEUTRAL COLONY { ltwo. score years and hoping lute would a--r-- finally decree that his love making the Ti would win, John Patrick, wealthy Questions Asked by business © man of . Hamlet, mes married at Grand Island, Neb., yestor Replying to Cape Town day "to Mrs. Flora L. Leflew, of that ity. or. Forty London, Jaly I8~The Cape Town sweethearts, Hut Volksstem, replying to the wsevers ing of the ways, and Mrs. / t Cape Times on its was then Miss Flora Peeler, urging that. South lanother suitor. Africa might remain neutral if Brit- | They lived happilystogether until Mr ain were at war, says: "John Pall flew dial, and after the convention to-day, boasts that for practical pur- iy] time had elapsed Mr. Patrick re poses the colonies are absolutely inde- |, od his suit and was accepted and peodent, and only for considerations y, narriagn of the couple took place of personal interest hound to the em: [1 "4 0 Nobracka town. pire. The argument that the British | colonies are capable of remaining nou gy ; tral in the event of a world-war has 'ALLIGATOR MAKES MEAL not elicited serious criticism from the jurists, and was npt a new doetrine."" | OFF ™WO SMALL BOY. The Times describes the reply of | The Yolkesstem to critics as uncon vineing. To. ask whether in ime of 4 i ---- war the neutrality of any dominion t Was Caught in Fishing Seine and would be useful either to Englan | Seized Children When Hauled d jor the dominion is in reglity to 7% whether it is an advantage to site Ashore. for the dominion in question to be = : "wr Little Axk., July 185.-Two rt. ofsthe empire at any time, Phat] kite of Ainos: Smith, 4 fisherman, who was helping seriously ask | small i hogro igtate officials haul a seine in Lake Chicano, were killed by a large alliga- Ator on Saturday. The alligator was in the seine. It was at sundown, abd the party had finished their week's duties, which consisted of hauling iu an immense net from the middle of the lake in search of fish, The fishermen knew they had big game, but were not prepared for the alligator when he was hauled in shore. When the 'monster swished its tail they fled. "The two negro children, who were standing by fooking on, wore left 10 the mercy of the alligs- tor, which afterwards escaped to the water, ' : 1 i Rock, children con. she PRIEST WEDS DIVORCED MAN. First Wife Not Baptized----Marriage © Was Invalid! Lexing » July 18.--Through the failure ub first wife to be bap: i Forbese. Perkins, of Mass, a vew bride, of the fact that the latter is bei: Bu of the Catholic church and a divoreod man. Mr. Perkins, aman of forty-five, fell in love tweniy-yer gitl here, who to be married by any save a her chuteh. The bishop re dispensation, and Perkios his lawyer s help. The latter sn found out that the former Mrs. kine had never been baptised. Pro- i $ » - Reports Fron Verona. Yeroas, July 17.~The lawn - social given under auspices of the Ladies' Aid and choir was a ei oo. Fa I were very sorry for n ald s Tose under 8 law of the Roman by fire dt Inverars. He was a former ohureh, which regards nom | Cident here and much esteemed. J. a8 an inpediment to Snare. frown, Carmel Station, Sask, was a succeeded in: getting & dis | ger here lately. Dr, W. Wilkins, bishop on the : tt marr was in- po -- for di the ever of the Kingston, is spending» brief vacation at his divorce; all ob oH i i i E i E home here. . Yarker baseball seam will play a return match with Verona bere next Saturday. . : 1 3335 jit ii other people's you the | under i nor had been suffering from 'pelagra | OF INSURANCE CO. who | was | T0 MAKE READ For 2 General Election at An' Early Date. WILL SEEK A DELAY THE PLAN OF THE OPPOSITION --IN A DILEMMA, Pass Reciprocity or Face People-- West Wants Reciprocity Prices For. This Year's Wheat--Redistri- tion Means a Year's Delay. I¥.~From three of the Mtnwa, July to and [sin weeks more segsion a gemral election with _recipro ! city as the issue seems to be { cepted programme "for the Cavadiag lawmakers, who are to-day retursing | to the capital for the resumption oi} ; hE Sas dropped an 19th, when the adjournment took then the ie I May | place. i There has been no great rush of par Hiamentarians yet, and it {that there will be full houses be | hore next week However, men are tin from the east and and centre, | represent, ng both polifieal parties, and all seem to feel tnt dissolution take place in three weeks {must take place within six woeks. i Fhe wants an jand the opposition have {iar toward forcing one i is expected | not west they {may and | government election gone Loo to buck dow n now, 3 | The journey of Me. Borden through {the west dispelled some of the which influenced the conduct of conservative party in opposing {procity There has been a change of | {sentiment reported among the fruit | ideas | the § reci- | {growers of Untario and some of the i manufacturing, financial and railroad | opponents of reciprocity ure said to be! {getting cold feet "and receding from | | their portion, | [There will be and at the session caucuses of both sides | at once each the programme | for will be discussed. The | { government will doubtless pat forward | | the reciprocity measure at once and | | the opposition' will seek delay by mov-| ling adjournment to enable them to! | discuss the proceedings at the recent | #mperial conference, and a number of The latter is nineteen, and | ther general questions: i his parenis declare he never knew he | There will not be heavy pressure in forwarding the business of the house until the United States senate has| passed the reciprocity measure and un- | til the Canathan senate has returned | for the resumption of business 'on | August 9th, io : Entil this time the opposition. is [likely to have reciprocity held steadily {up to it in order that the country may | see some of its obstruetion tricks and { become thoroughly seized of the fact [that the conservatives have establish- Fak wn blockade- : As the vest will. soon have some | wheat 'to well, and as it ean get ten loemts a bushel more for it in Chicago than Winnipeg, there is likely to be a how! go up which will go a long way toward offsetting the demand that an election be deferred until after rédis- tribution. | The west, with its elevators full, will idistover that it wants reciprocity en ough to put up with under represen tation for a few years, There ix not much chance of getting | an election this year if it is to be { preceded by, redistribution Ihe cen {sus figue.e will not be ready until] { October, 80 un bill cannot be prepared] thefore that time. The last redistribu- | {tion was in 1903, and it took just six | | months for the bill to pass the house. | 1 1t was presented March 31st, referred | to a sperial committee, April 15th, re i ported" baek from the committee July { 24th, and debated 'in the house until | | September 25th, when it Was passed | | and sent to the senate, which disposed | f it within a short time. Under pres i lent pressing circumstances, the pass tage of a measure would nol likely oe cupy long a time, but it would take a couple of months at least: { I Tt. is possible that as a solace for | under-representation in the commons, {the west 'may be given another repre | sentative in Lhe government, and the! vacancy occasioned by the retirement | of Sir Frederick Borden to the Cava- | dinn high commissionership, may be | filled by the 'appointment of Hon. Wali ter Seott, premier of Saskatchewan. | This' is a matter which has been con- | sidered in some quarters though there has been no decision upon it as yet It is understood that Mr. Scott | willing to come to Ottawa and believes | Mr. Calder can run the government, Mr. Lake, the conservative reprdsenta- tive of Qu'Appelle, is likely to have Promier Scott for an opponent. rn --_ { | i SO is Gave Life for Chum's. Toronto, July 18. Hugh Mevhas, of Sudbury, and John McDonald, Egan- ville, both lost their lives when Me Donald made an attempt to save Meehan. Both bodies were recovers together late Friday afternoon near | their 'cabin in Shaw, a nile and a half south of Goose Lake. The fire swooped down on their camp and they an attempt to save it. $ Meehan was suffocated in the a bor Metin al. be {baek. He i's out, {both Pe death. McDonald leaves a wile and four Brodeur Buys Another Boat. Ottawa, July 13.--The departasent of i and fisheries is having plans ve St. Lawrpnoe waters. The evaft 'will be 175 feet long; snd 900 tons burden. The the vessel is estimated at $225, Y torotected {hourd !fountant, -- MORE PAY FOR M.P$ 4 cient by Mr. Asquith's Critics, 7" London, July 18.-- Premier Awfuith's proposal that members of parliament shall receive $2000 a vear for their rvices as legislators is criticized in socialist and labor union circles as wot being sufficient. Mr, critics draw attention to the fact that members of congress in the United States receive $7,000 per annum, to- gether with their travelling expenses, and they maintain that the same pro- portion as obtains between the presi- dent's salary and expenses of $100,000 per annum should be observed between the M.P's. salary and King George's civil list of aboual B2L000.60, which would make the M.'s. coun siderably lower, salary , MANUER ENRIQUE ARAUJO preci@ent of "Sd RAILWAYS ORDERED T0 PROTECT LIVES At Crossings Where Fatalities Have Occurred--The Deadly Ashpans. Ottawa, July IS.--~The railway com- mission has issued two orders, one de- signed for the protection of employees and the other for the protection of the public. The first requires all rail ways to file with the board, within sixty days, a #tatement showing the number, elas gud weight of each! loco- motive not equipped with dump pant to avoid the necessity of going beneath the locomotive. second circular orders that where accident has happened subsequent January 1st, 1905, or hereafter Salvador \ The men The an to hap pens at a highway crossing by a mov- | ing train, causing bodily injury or death to a persom using the crossing, crossing by such shall immediately be watchman until the the accident investigated and the erossing examined. This states the order, will be considered satisfac- tory by the board. AERONAUT NEAR DEATH AS HE a has i Swims More Than a Mile in 'Rough Water----Exhausted When Found, Asbury Park, July A. J the aeronant who started in his diri gible balloon from New York for Phil welphia Saturday afternoon, found in an exhausted condition Deal near" hove this morn am Ix. was on the beach at ing, having been compelld mage than a mile in a rough sea to to shore Roberts after being in the air sever al hours discovered that he was being He immediately pulled the rip cord of his gas bay By the time the craft descended, however, Roberts eafried more than a_mile to sex and was compelled to swim that distanee to shore He was found. at daylight by Jimmy De Forest, a pugilist promoter, who + run along the beach. be carried out to wf. nr was wens taking Forest summoned ail and Roberts was given stimulants, but it was several hours before he had recovered suffici ently to tell his story Roberts attributes the faihece of bis trip to: anfavorable air ¢urrents and lack of gasoline. The dirigible was not recovered, Rolrts i= an Australian and has mniade a reputation as an aerial pilot in England. : ------------ i ---- ---- Government Agents Recover $750.- 000 From Men Who Took Pauper's Oaths to Escape. Washington, July 18.-It is that FE. I. Johnson, "an expert ac and United States District Attorney Martin Fewin, of Savannah, Ga. have recovered STHO000 from the concealed © assets of Gaynor and Greene, who wire convicted of defraud. ing the goveroment owt of $2.000,000 in the Savannah harbor dredging con- tract in 1897. > Both Gaynor and Greene took the pauper's oath and escaped the pay- levied on terms in the v. and Erwin had beem searching for these assets for twelve years. Most of the funds recoversd were in stocks and bond, but $200,000 was in cash. -------------- Ossining, N.Y. prison broke its elactroeution record tiary [Emr when one minute $2,000 a Year Not Deemed Saffi-f Asquith's | ash- 1 DROPS INTO SEA. Roberts | said | ments of the half million dollar fire i f | May Be Rejected in Its En- ily Lor. " UNEXPECTED TURN {IN THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. ! ARY SITUATION. Premier Asquith Would Then Pro- bably Advise the King to Create a Large Block of New Peers--Con- servatives in Conference. i | bd July 18.--An entirely un: expected contangency confronts the leareer of the veto bill. It is a possibility that the house of lords, linstead of passing the third reading {of the bill with their amendments on { Thursday, thus sending it back to the jp a deb 1 for London, lmay reject it, even with amendments, {lock, stock and barrel: In that event Premicr Asquith announce, as he probably would, that the had gdvised the king to create a larze block of new peers. The libel party Ie wd at t sity 8, satel ves are, but will not talk he creation of 'pervs if the neces- is forced upon it. The parliamén- tary programme of the liberals is as the Kt. Hon. Walter Runciman, presi- dent of the board of education, said in a speech on Saturday, "the hill, the whole bill and nothivg but the bill." Two moves in the lords' game yes terday excited great speculation. Ope a conference of the conservative lenders, the Marquis of Lansdowne, the Earl of-Relborne, Baron Middleton, the Maryuis of Salisbury and others. The second was a strong appeal by Lord Morley of Blackburn to, the liberal followers in the house of lords. Lord Morley in 'aq circular [letter said: "It is possible that a certain number of opposition peers may force division on the third reading of the parliamentary bill. The momentous results at stake both immediate and in the future make it in the highest degree desirable that no supporter of the bill should be absent from his place. T earnestly trust therefore that your lordship will not fail to give his majesty's govern- ment the advantage of your presence on what may prove so truly eritical an oceasion." , The rejection of the bill has been part of the programme. of conservative leaders, around yesterday, however, that they. wonld assume the attitude that the bill, even with the amendments, was so dangergus and revolutionary that they ---- refuse to have any hand in tis passage, but would compel the tHiberal lords to take all the responsi- thitity for voting its third reading. was 1 the The report went | {insurgent peers might be found leafy a notion to kill the bill out- right instead, as Lord Lansdowne de {tres, of permitting the bil to. go te its third reading as amended + A group of extreme peers, estimated at from between fifty to eighty, are sworn to fight to the last ditch and il it. came to a fight between them and the Liberals the former would have a chance of winning. 'The best opinion last night is that the lords will return the amended bill to the Thursday and give Premier Asquith an opportunity to show his hand when the house takes it np -on Monday, and that the premier will aindunce that the government refuses to accept the amfndments and will, if necessary, eall on the king to create peers : Then a final struggle will come be the two factions of the conser- lords--the standpatters and those who belive that the lesser o the will be to swallow the bill with the expressed declaration that the {conservatives will repeal it when they Treturn to power. Py accepting the hill they can stave off home role for | vears; by rejecting it they put the liberals in a position to adopt all the schemes of legislation with- house on new t vative ween evils extremist out delay ! In the meantime there i» no doubt that the government has made up its list of possible peers, the number them according to the latest belief, be- ing 350, Mourned as Dead Five Years. Woodstock, July. 18. --~After an semoe of over thirty yeacs, and alter having been mourned for as demd for five years past, Amos Carter, son "of Amos Carter of Innevkip, returned to his home a few days ago. He came in unexpectedly and wal not recogniz- ed by his futher for some time. When Mr. Carter finally became convinced that the stranger was his long lost son he broke down and pearly collapsed. Manitohs Wants 20,000 Men. Ottawa, July 18. ~Hon. Robert Rog- ers, of the Manitoba government, is {in Uttawn to establish a labor bureau there for the employment of harvesters Land other labor for his province. "The {demand for labor in Manitoba this |Your, is twice as great Bs in any pre vious yer. We will require at leust | 20,000 men in Manitoba alone." F i | Smallpox on Steamer Rosemouat. Montreal, July 15.--A new case of 'emall-pox has been discovered, | the [victim being a wailor named Maloney, {nineteen years of age, a native {Port Colborne, Ont., who arrived on {the grainjaden steamer Rosemount, } -------- ; ! Baseball game, Victorias va, C.L.Cs, | @ivie holiday, Lake Ontatio . J 3st. | The Cape boat had f ntge Sela of passengers on board oii is fully expected to] never | of | ab- | of | ritish Whig JAPANESE VIEWS Government Press Thinks Plan Good--Minority Dis. satisfied. Tokio, July I8.-- Newspapers here continue to discuss the revised Anglo Japanese treaty; and while the major ity of the papers favor tne new alli ance, still there are a few which strongly condemn it The government press is quietly congratulating the government on the insertion into the treaty of article four, which practically excludes the possibility of war between Japan and America. This article was inserted in lorder to remove the last difficulty Fwhich stood in the way of the ratific- {ation of a Anglo-American arbitration {trenfy, and the old treaty provided {that in case of war Great Writain | thould lend aid to Japan. By the new 'alliance, Great 'Biitain, by its general {arbitration treaty with the United States, is precluded from supporting {Japan in a confet with the Laited | States, and it is held in most quart fers that by this the mectre of war he ftween Japan amd America is removed The new situation, some of the. pa pers. state, practically ameuats a ftriple auiance between Great Diitain, {Japan and the United States The minority press, on the {hand, severely oriticizes the 'ment as being one-sided and weakening the position of Japan i i faa other agree secured its politics, | States has greatly posi ition in international < Crashed into Denver Motor- ' . man's Vestibule. Denver, Col, July - Ix. --Dropping from a height estimated at 4,000 feet bott, a Denver aeronaui, landed the front end of a streot car, his smashing the glass oi vestibule. Forty passengers were badly fright ened. were bruised in a cape from the ear. Abbott was severely {the head and shoulders narrow escape | himself from on wid rush to He had from death, striking an 11,000-volt an electric wire only by frantic struggles | which swerved him over the which he had not seen until he car, {it HON. WILLIAM HARTY WAS ELECTED PRESIDENT | mer-- {Of the New Canadian Company = J. J. Harty Secretary and J. H, Birkett Treasurer, A meeting of the new icomotive Works company was held I'hat aroused the fear that sufficient | to | lo Canadian Hou. William president; Pr, land John H Harty was re-elected J. J. Harty, Birkett, treasurer, vice-president a general was not appointed 'n the meantime For the present, Mr. Harty wi'l tinue to manage the works staff will remain here, moved to Toronto. | {From a Sore Throat as a Result of | Speech-making. { Edinburgh, July, 15 {sufléring from a severely sore throat, {caused by the many speeches he has imade recently, combined with bad teold, caught while travelling How jever, he filed a number of emgage ments, today, including a levee A HUSBAND REMOVES or con and nt be KING GEORGE SUFFERING a two! [And Then Carries Her 200 Miles 10 Hospital---She Will Likely Recover A Remarkable Trip. { Port Arthur, 'mt, July 15% On the {banks of Rainy river, 200 miles direct Iv north of {trading station of the Hudson Bay leompany, Fort Hope. The BEaropeans who lve in that district are cut off from civilization. the whol yesr { round. | Two weeks ago the wife of iMcPherson, resident of Fort Hope, {was taken iif, and fier hmaband was satisfied it wane a case of appendicitis The illness became so atte that the husband decided ns a last recourse to perform an operation With but » slight knowledge of surgery, and armed with the few nrticles supplied in a small "first. aid' ense, he sue cessfully carried out the operation The next matter was to peach some place where good nursing and oare could be obtained, and a start was made immediately for ihe south, {Indians being hired to make the 24 {mile journey to Nepigon, Day alter day the journey was sontinued At one portage it Was Leoessary to carry the woman thirteen miles, but she bore the trial bravely and now rests in McKellar hospital { i | Henry i London Church Trouble Settled. London, "Opt. July 15-The eon gregation of the Chureh of St, Joba ithe Evangelist met lust evening and tagreed to Bishop Williams" proposal Fé settle the trouble of the past yesr. Canon Craig, of Petrolea, will come bere as rector, and Rural Dean Hill will to Petrolen as rector of Christ i ¥ Eg OF TREATY CHANGE. New thus | The | is no more an- isolation of Japan, say this section of T xious for an inflated peerage than the {the press, is complete and the United | ON A STREET CAR" Parachutist, Avoiding Power Wire, bruicad 'about | saving | struck | Locomotive | in | Toronto, on Monday for organization. | Fhe office ! king (iebrge ia | HIS WIFE'S APPENDIX Nepigon, lies a solitary | ta | - -- -- 5 5 LAST EDITION WEATHER PROBABILITIES. Torcdhivte. Ont, July 18, 19 am. ---¥ {to-day and on Wednesday. Wed: {day. a litle warmer. REA } A 10 MORROW ' July Clearing Goods Have 'you been waiting for this MIDSUMMER CLEARANCE Well, here. they for you. -lu the lot age {of Wash Geods COLORED CREPES, CREPONS, INDIAN. HEADS, ENGLISH REPPS, CRINKLE CLOTHS, STIIPED CHAMBRAYS, CRASH LINENS, ETC. {in a parachute, yesterday, Wayne Ab- | feet | the motorman's | The regular prices were from 17¢ 15¢c SALE STARTS AT 8.30 AM. STRICTLY CASH SALES. REMEMBER THE PLACE. to One woman fainted and several i es- | SALE PRICE TO-MORROW, ! i { | | | Steacys IT A POINT TO OOM} EARLY. A STORE FOR ALL PEOPLE MAKE secretary, / A) manager | BORN. MILLS--On. July 17th, 1811, at 64 Ne gon Btreet. Kingston, to Capt and Mrs F. GG, Mills (nee Lewis) a daughter . ; MARRIED | RUDD--CUNNINGHAM---In Kingston { on July 17th, 1811, by Rev. Fairies Miss Alburta Agnes Sehniagham of this city, to Geo, E W udd, Toronto, Ont | Guelph. Toronto, and Winnipeg papers | please copy {OBERT J. REID, The Undertaker. | "Phone B77. 280 Princess Street. pf Nones STREWH ne ane N he 'hone 147 for Ambulance. ANTIQUE TABLES. gon, Bquare, Round and in Mahogany and Walnut Reagouahia offers not refused. Turk's 'Phone 705 TURK'S. Summer Goods Calves Tongues in Glass. Ox Torgue in glassy Brisket of Peel in glass Galantine CRicken in glass Ch'cken and Tongue in glass. Bliced Dried Bef in glass lanana Butter Lemon Butter. Orange Butter, Vineapple Butter, Everithung for the Camping, Picnic and Fishing Party. | | | WOMEN AND ARBITRATION. Their Voices Heard for Proposals. 4 London, Jule 18.~The women of 'England are arranging fo make their voices heard t wide Of arbitra tion proposals. They hold that ties of kinship and questions of peace and war affect them as closely as they de men, and purpose to hold a great ' Anglo-American meeting ih October as a complement to the historic Guidhall | Are Making on demonstration Thiv women's moverbent 'is receiving support from all sestions of the community, and the lord mayor has granted the use of Maasion house for ithe meeting. Ad Bein, Out, a new will 8 200,000 gallon espacity "Hi led to the city's water supply, Wak