Daily British Whig (1850), 18 May 1914, p. 1

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Lp ® YEAR 81 NO. 116 ro. Mackenzie And Mam Will Be| Baek For More Sa ----------] .r- ! y DECLARES FORTY = FIVE MIL- LIONS NOT HALF ENOUGH, To Bring C. N. R. to N. T. Stan dard =A Thorough Enquiry Ask. od Before the Proposed Aid is Granted, Ottawa, May 18.-- Willlam Ger- man, of Welland, resumed the de- bate on the Canadian Northern re- solution in the commons this morn- ing. « "When the fifteen million dol- lar subsidy proposal was before parliament last year," declared Mr. German, "I was one of those who prophesied that it would be little more than a drop in the Canadian .. Northern bucket. 1 undertake to 'predict that this forty-five millions, which we are asked "by govern- mont to vote, will not be half enough to bring the Canadian Nor- thern up to the standard of the National Transcontinental. In two or three years anyway, Mackenzie and Mann will be back again for more. And their strongest argu- ment will be that the government is now in partnership with them and must, therefore, see them through." y There was, said Mr. German, no difference of opinion on the opposi- tion side that the road should be completed and placed upon an earn- ing basis so that people could get some of their money back as soon as possible. But they were united also in demand that a thorough en- quiry should be made. The great majority of the people were of the same opinion. "The people," de- clared the member for elland, "are becoming tired of being bled for railway enterprises upon the mere say so of promoters. J. BE. Armstrong, conservative Kast Lambton, declared that par- liament had no right to investigate the it thern, ha t on that was necessary or that could "Mackenzie and Mann," . Armstrong, "are men ng worth, sterling Canadi- ans, through whose backbone and integrity and stick-to-iveness inthis great national enterprise has brought it near completion. When the house resumed this mornin, J. A. M. Aikens, conserva- tive member for Brandon, rose to a question bf privilege in connection with certain personal remarks made about him by J. J. Carrick conserva- tive member for Thunder Bay. "The statement which the member for Thunder Bay Jaf." said Mr. Aikens, "Id absofutély untrue. It is equally 'silly. | This house is a deliberative assémbly, and syosy member: who spepks is expected by the people to ri k in truth and all ~ soberness. The statement of the member for Thusder Bay was devoid of either truth or soberness." Alkens and Carrick occupy seats in the same row. The latter was not present to-day. ino On Their Holidays. The steamer Rideau King cleared, to-day, for Ottawa. The steamer Brockville cleared, to day, from Swift's wharf, on her way to Picton. The schooner Julia B. Merrill clear vd, today, for Oswego. The st t Abbie L. Andrews tleared for Oswego, after unloading a cargo oi coal for Robert Crawford. Mrs. I G. Bogart and Miss Flossie Bogart have left for Montreal to vis- it Mrs, WF. Empey, , Westmount, for the next two weeks. J.B, ; manager of the Ston- oss, ih & Gilbert Mica Co., 1» the city to-day. Dr. 'Watson and wife, of Ottawa, this ¢ity on Sunday in their DAILY MEMORANDA Boardiot Works, 4 p.m, Tuesday. Y WEA annual meeting, 8 pm See 1 page 3, right hand corner, for pi obablilt] Wh Women Are : iF Shrewd Buyers "Any man will tel! you that his wife can get more out of a dollar he can. > Wi have the, natural value sSense--they kipow what their money's worth jeans, One reason for this is that women are great rs ofa" ¥ertiéing. No part of a news- paper is of greater interest to them than the advertising col- ums. 4 They study them daily and they as carefully through the : as they do when they go to the stores elves. th BewaRaDaIS, Wowie Jose. heif bt | ne wou 1 o Facts Woman rescence tnlato.. . tally, local merchants would than halt of their On Travelling Closed Block, Used His Fist A bit of excitement was caused on Princess street at the corner of Sydenham on Saturday at 9.38 p.m , when a mail carrier had a dispute wiih the man who had i pul on by city to maintain the closing of Princess street on this block. The mail man was due at the mail-box on the corner of Bagot street, at 9.40 p.m., and when he noticed the time he thought he would drive down the car track instead of go- ing around the block. The story as told to the Whig was that the man on the mail-wag- on took down the barrier, a piece of lumber with a red lantern on it, and started to drive down the track. The watchman as soon as he moti- ced what the mail man had done rushed out and stopped the horse as be feared it might fall into one of th excavations, The mail man jump- ed from the wagon and "landed on' the guard, by hitfing him one be tween the eyes. The mail drove on down the street to his box of mail at the- corner. A policeman sa episode but said he could do noth- ing as the man was carrying mail. and clear DIED VERY SUDDENLY The Late Mrs. Jane Irvine, of Wolfe Island, While seated in her family residence, Wolfe Jane Irvine, wife of vine had been around as usual Sunday afternoon, at 5.30 o'clock. ~ Mp. Ir vine had be'n around as usual Sunday afternoon, and was feeling in the best of health. When those in the howe saw thst ber condition was serious, they sum- moned a doctor, but Mrs. Irvine had passed away |efore medical attendance was at hand. The deceased was sev of age. She had from the foot many years. in religion. Three sisters, one brother, three daughters and ome son survive. The daughters are Misses Marie, Eva and Margaret, at home, and the son, John chair, at fier Island, Nps, the late John enty-four vears resided Seven miles of Wolle dsland for She was a Methodist Irvine, vind whi The collection at the sity league | baseball, game on Saturday afterngo: was $64.30, y So. The meeting of the executive of the S.8.A AA. for the purpose of draw ing up the baseball schedule will be held on Thursday evening, instead of Féiday eveting, as was announced. FOUR MORE SURVIVORS OF BURNED STEAMER Rescued At Sea After Being Adrift In Life Boats For Two Weeks Halifax, May A8.~Only four men survive of the third boatload that pulled away from the side of the Ley. land line steamship Columbian that was burned 150 miles south of Sable. Island on the night of May 3rd. These men were saved by the United States revenue cutter Semeca, which hasbeen on ice patrol duty in the trans-Atlantic steamship lanes' On May 5th one of the lifelioats from the Columbian and containing thirteen men were picked up by the Cunard liner Franeenia.; The Man- hattan picked up the second hoat with fourteen on board on May 6th. Constant search was proseciited for the third Boat, which has now been found. : When their short allowance of bis- cuits and water failed the survivors maintained life by chewing hoot leather and the few stray crumbs of hardtack. - Rain water served them when their water cask went dry. The' first two. days after drifting away théy saw three steamers, too far a- way to 'be signalled. These men died om Siflarent days, and the awful experience of the sux- vivors, who not only suffered from Yunger, thirst and exposure, but from the, terrifying scenes in 'the boat, almost drove them mad. They were exhausted and in a con state of collapse whem the § 's boat' canie to their assistance and con veyed them to the cutter. What sus- or the men tare in mo condition to tell their awful story of suffering duri the fifteen days that they were toss: od about by the angry waters of the Atlantic. : Not only were they face to face, with 'starvation, but their frail cralt was in more outs =: foundering. or Being crashed in ioe oes. © That they had bot Ween { driven mad is marvelous. On Their Holidays MH. Nicholson, G. '€. McGowan, clerks, P. Connors and A. F. Buck, letter carviers, of the post office, are on their holidays. : W. E. Bowman has been taken on the staff as tem: porary . Dr. Jos. B. A. Lanouetie, Man- chester, N/~#., one of the foremost physicians in New ire. died Saturday. He was,a surgeon in the Canadian militia from 1873 to 1881. Cheese 1 Belleville sales: 11. T-8¢ to 12 3-8¢; Watertown, NY. 13 7-8¢; London, #1 5-8c to 11 7-8¢. ' 0 ay jority for the statement that consider able oo] MAIL CARRIER INSISTED man ; on acieact FOR HIS STUMP SPEECH the whole! tained life has not been disclosed, at! . COOLNESS HAS RESULTED Between Queen Mary and Queen 3 Alexandra Over "Breach." Montreal, May 18.----The London cor- respondent of the Daily Muil is auth- ess . has arigen between | Queen: y and Dowager Queen Alex- fndra in consequence of the queen mother having had the comedian, Harry Tate, at Marlborough House on Thursday night to entertain her Dan ish. guests. | The court is mourning for the late Duke of Argyll and report has it that Queen Mary and the Duchess of Ar gy ave most indignant at this "breach" of the mourning regulation. Made a Professor. Winnipeg, May 18. -- Alexander Campbell, for many years a well known Hamilton druggist, who came to Winnipeg several years' ago, and i mE UIE] Ts The Whig's Daily Condensation of the News of the World From Tele- graph Service and Newspaper Ex- changes. removed to Saskatoon two years ago, has recently bden appoint®d profes-' sor of chemistry in the University of | Saskatchewan, at Saskatoon, 2 after becoming proprietor of two large | drug stores in that city. With Mrs. Campbell, he intends leaving next week 'for the old country to visit! argde universities in Britain and the! contient to secure ideas in connec- tion with his department in the university. ; | BITTER AT KIPLING | The London Chronicle Calls The' British Poet "A Little | Guttersnipe" London, May(18.--Rudyard Kip- ling's stump speach Saturday night in which he averred that the govern- ment was ready to provoke murder in Ulster to serve its own ends, has developed a storm of vitriolic eriti- cigm of the popular poet. The Daily Chronicle describes him as a little guttersnip Other lib- eral papers are"equally venomous in tfeir comment The Daily Mail (conservative) doesn't approve. very much of Kipling's assisting the unionist cause. It says, "we now know where we can, if we require him, get somebody to outline the house of Lloyd George. It is quite plain that all parties would be better satisfied if Kipling had confined his attention to poetry and left politics alone for the pres- ent. There is little change in the home rule situation. 2 p---- ¢ SOLD ABOVE PAR Hear Five Por Cent. for 18 and 20-] Year Terms. Guelph, May 18.--Despite the facet that some cities and towns in the country have had some difficulty in disposing of their debentures to ad. vantage, Guelph's credit was never better than at the present time. This was demonstrated by the sale of $125,307 debentures of Guelph, which has just been effected. 'They bear n- terest. at five Per cent., are for fifteen and twenty-year terms, and the rate offered by Wood, Gundy & Co., To- ronlo, is 100.32, slightly above par. Carson Delays Wedding London, May 18.--Sir Edward, Cay soft hos denied the report that" hie wn to be married next month, but you correspondent learns on reliable auth- ority that the Ulster champion will ré-marry' when the present - crisis is over. His denial evidently only re- lates to the time limit Bonar Law's Mother Dead London, May 18.---Mrs. James Law, of Glasgow, the widow of the late Rev. James Law, of New Bruns- wick, and the mother of Right Hon. Andrew Bonar Law, the leader of the unionist party in the house of com- mons, died at Bath on Saturday Vesuvius Crater May, Collapse Naples, May 18.--A large part of the top of the crater of Mount Vesuvius ix (threatening to collapse owing to the recent activity of the volcano. A party of visitors to-day were prevent- ed from approaching the crater be cause of the donger of an accident. MAY 'BE ABSENTEES WIEN VOTE OccuRs Bennett 'And Nickle May Not Be Aone Among The Tories Against C.N. R Bill v Ottawa, May 18.--While there now seems little doubt that the govern ment has been able to line upsufii- clent number of its inajority to pass the Mackenzie, Mann & Lash deal, it begins to look as though sonie inter- esting and not insignificant' compli- cations are likely to arise before the gharanteg is authorized by statute. There is no doubt that Messrs. Ben- néft and Nickle will not be alone in' Thiel, fight. . The six months" hoist 10. the whole deal, a polite methqd of kiek purifupentary 'doors, 'moved: - by' Messrs. E. M. Macdonald and Fred ¥. Pardee at Friday night's sitting speaks the earnest and futente con- vietion of a strong of liberai- isp which will "undoubtedly ' fight tho deal 10 the last diteh, It is not improbable, too, that the bin was at first confemplated in ing the full remaining comple-, are several members, spurred by the sentiments of their constituents, who Would welcome any opportunity to pe kiy ab stated that there may be dentees when the vote is polled. escape the party wiiip. [It is. | witnessed 8 the whole thing out of the}: go¥eérnment wiil have a bigger task the ment of its following in line. 'There tary Peterboro citizens will wntlertie to build a beautiful driveway. Governor G has' granted permis- sion to the | Regiment oi Canada to visit Bufialo, N.Y. from May 23rd to May 25th, : Hon. Mr. Hazen promised that ships obtained for the "government : here- after would be required tofbe built in Canada. Dr. Allan Barges, head of the phy- sical department of McGill univer sity, may go to the affiliated univer- sity at Vancouver, B.C. I. F.\Correy, an official of the cense: department, is said to have | counseled. St. Catharines hotelmen | how to stave off prohibition. | Wesley Lockhart, an Albion town- | ship farmer, was thrown over a fence and sustained serious injuries, when | his horse! shied gt an automobile | pear Bolton. At Kilron, Scotland, a large crowd the simple but impressive funeral ceremonies that preceded the burial of the Duke of Argyll in the ancient church yard of Holy Loch. i A stadium and campus to cost $60 - 000 will be built in connection with | McGill University, Montreal. [his is | in addition to the gymnasium to cost | $150,000 that will bo erected through | { Li ! the generosity of J. K. L. Ross. The Manitoba school question will | be the predominant; topic atthe an | nual convention of the Orange Grand | Lodge of ' Britich America, which | opens in Regina on' Wednesday, May | 27th. | Tomitaro Watanabel, a Korean has been sentenced 40 death for the murder, in March, of Dr. Edgar De | Mott Stryker, . formerly of Raritan, N.J., head of" the: howpital near Holkol, Norn 1 Great Nort! passenger train No. , the Oriental Finite, was held uj . -nbar Rest a vs : 2 "run four miles west 46 Ron. | do, where the ear was rifled. i SET FIRE TO A HOUSE GASOLINE TORCH TO i BURN OFF PAINT. { USING Damage of $375, at Home of Harry | Hembery, Pine Street Saturday | Afternoon ~=Another Small Blaze on Albert Street. A gasoline torch, used in burning off paint on the outside of the house, was the cause of a fire which broke out on Saturday afternoon, at 1.53 o'clock, in a two-storey frame dwell- | ing, owned and occupied by H. Hem- brey, 17 Pine street. The damage to the building will be about $300 and to the contents 875. The building was insured for and the contemts for $400. | Flames from the torch entered over | the bath room window and made | their way up between the studing in- to the attic. Smoke poured around the eaves, giving the first alarm. A portion of ihe rafters were destroyed, and it will be nées- sary to reshingle the roof. Water on the inside also did considernble damage and the ceiling also suffer ed: The firemen used two lines of $300 | out, hose, laid from the corner of Barrie ['# and . Pine streets. sent in from box 28. ° \ wooden box just near a frame shed at the home of (J. R.:C. Dobbs at No, 258 Albert = street. caught fire at 4.10 "o'clock on - Saturday aftérncon. An sop slide allowed the flames 40 enter The"shai. The damage will. amount to 850, coverad by insurance. This Tast call was th fifth the firemen' had 'inside of thirty hours. J The alarm was ees on | POLICEMAN A_BURGLAR { Alleged to Wave Eutered a House! on His Beat. Ottawa, May 18.--Peter Keith, policeman on the Ottawa force. glary tered al ap- in cowrt on a charge of bur- Itiis alleged that Keith en a, ing house on- his bout 'onfior poet. was 'in the of 'rifting the te of the pro- pristor's. cl , hanging on the bed, when the man's Wiig woke up, and the intruder, ram 'out. The woman identified hi ' "Macdonald Day," June 6thi will.be quite an ev- ent in Toronto. Sir {John on ald's monument in ark will neen's be decorated, ag usu 10 re-a anniversary of Jébn death, at the fdot of his mohument, seal @ to his coun- | covered later that the lowly Laity, Aylmer, Ont., week-end fi tre | Australia and New ub | for the first twenty - ASHAMED OF ITS NAME. Derbyshire Village Wants to Mod- ernize Its Name. Bugsworth, a little village in the Peak district, of Derbyshire, is as hamed of itself, says, the Boston Transcript. In England, you know, the word "bug" ean have but one meaning; it is not used indiscrimin- ately to describe any and all insects Hence Bugsworth's shame, and a re cent vote to change the village's name. Mr. Wells once wrote a story of a Mr. Snooks, who was refused by the lady of his afiections on ae count of his plebian name, and dis. word was identical with Sevenoaks or SepnoX. It is just such a trick that fate has played upon the little Der- byshire village, which really takes its title (like Buxton) from the bucks once hunted in its vicinity. A fine modern hypenation--Norfolk:-Ho- wardsworth--is suggested for the new cognomen, but how. much simpler the mere change to "Buxworth" would be, Travers Went Down, Sandwich, Fug., May goli enthusiasts got a distinct shook to-day when Jerome D:' Travers was eliminated from the international golf tournament, going down to de feat in the first round against Char- les Palmer, of Ireland. DISASTROUS FLOOD SWEPT DOWN YUKON "Water Rising A Foot A Minute" Said Message Received At Tacoma . Tacoma, May 18. --Fairbanks, Alas- ka, cables that Circle City, Eagle City and scores of woodchoppers and mining camps with many native vil- lages along the Yukon above Fort Yukon' have been destroyed by the worst flood in the history 'of the vorth, according to meagre reports received last night. Fears are enter tained that Fort Yukon has been swept away. 'fee jammed somewhere here and water rising at the rate of more than a foot per minute. Everybody taking to foothills." This was the brief message flasbed from the wireless station at Circle City and picked up at Fort Gibbon. Flood marks on the Yukon that water in the past rose than a hundred feet when ice jam- med. in the canyons. Cirele City and Eagle City are only thirty feel above | 18. American below show more ol the Yukon's normal level caDSR REE ae RUSHING THE WORK. One Track Is to be Laid by the 18th of June. Foley and Gleeson, contractors, who ave engaged in laying the new pavement on King and Princess streets, are making great headway. It is expected that the one track to be used by the street railroad com- pany will be laid by June 18th. The work of laying the second track will be rushed along In the course of a couple days, the contractors wil commence laying the concrete foun- dation for the new track on' King street, between Brock and Princess streets. There is a great deal of | excavation work necessary on King street where the track is to be laid. In one place at the corner of Prin- cess and King streets, the men have to remove two and one half feet of ground so as to get the track on a leyel. -- . Laborers In Demand The laboring men in Kingston in.greal demand. The supply does not seen to be sufficient.' At least the foreman of telephone construction claims that he could place several more if he could get them. At pres- ent many are engaged on the Bell Telephone company's conduits, while about as many more are employed re- newing the water and gas services. Aare v rrr mg Prizes at Harvard. The Harvard University Gazetie 're- ports the following 'oA Norma Miler, M.A "Queen's Univer Shattuck" scholar: Day, M.A. Kingston, Whiting ship in mathematics. Calvin. Wellington Queen's University, fellow in physics. RATE. GREATLY REDUCED (Fourteen Cents A Word For Wee: end Messages Is Dicided Ottawa, May 18.<A 'grea vedic: ed cable rats Fo derek uid Ww . subject to slight ay, Kas omar ranged between Canada and ratio and New Zealand. The a TY was made, Saturday, by Hon. LV, Pelletier, Be Ho ee has been negotiating' with' the i Australasian authorities Potal connection with the proposals or al cheaper week-end rate over the state Ww word. The regular cable points in Canuda |: Aust now fifty-eight cents per | t , 'but "the ent should be of materisl ud to business men: or obliére: : ge iter. Sparen or ly y {admiralty from 1903 to 1908, died = (Had Nothing To Say nol Newspaper Hen BAGGAGE WAS PASSED WITHOUT INSPECTION BY THE CANADIAN CUSTOMS. Two German Steamers, Presumably Carrying Arms for Huerta, Arve Under Surveillance at Vera Cruz by Admiral Badger. Niagara, Falls, N, Y. May 18.The first of the A B C peate mediators between United States and Mexico to arrive in Niagara Falls was Raoul 8 Nuon, minister from Argentine, who came in this morning at ten o'clock After a brief visit to points of inter est on the United States' side, Senor Non and party were driven across the border to the Canadian side to the Clifton hotel. From the seclu- sion of his room the Argentine min- ister sent word that he bad nothing to say to newspaper men. Canadian customs officials passed the baggage of the party without inspection. To Return Arms to Germany Washington, D. C., May 18.--Ad- miral Badger has notified the au- thorities that he has under surveil lance two more German steamers presumably carrying arms for Huerta's forces. They will not be permitted to land If they are landed, they will be seized 'and re turned to Germany. In the mean- time, however, Carranza's constitu- tionalists are receiving arms and am- munition at Tampico without hin- drance, Huerta to Investigate Washington, May 18.-The Brazilian ministef, to-day, notilied the state de- partment that General Huerta had promised to make complete investiga tion regarding the death of Pte. Parks, of the United States army, and when the guilty parties in the army are convicted, they will be sum- marily dealt with. Governor General's Welcome Niagara Falls, Ont, May 18.---"As governor-general I welconio you your arrival on Canadian soil, and ex press my fervent hope that the ef- forts of yourself and your colleagues to preserve péace may meet with speedy and lasting success. (Signed), Arthur." This telegram was received at the Clifton house ' yesterday afternoon from the governov-general by. Senor Ipanema Moreira, secretary to the Brazilian ambassador, and was at once forwarded by him to Ambassa- dor Da Gama at New York. "Bvi- dently his royal highness was under the impression that the ambassador would arrive to-day," said Senor Moreira. "His message will be greatly appreciated." It is regarded officially as highly probable that the mediators will be the guests of his royal highness at Ottawa after the conference. They will prabably all dine together short- Ty after"their arrival at Niagara. It is understood that Hon. George Perley, secretary of state in the Bor den cabinet, will represent the Can- adian government at the Falls. No official information has yet been re ceived to this effect. Mail Driver Summoned A driver of one of the rigs collect- ing the city's mail has been summon- ed to the poliee court on a charge of assaulting a man'employed.as watch- man on Princess street, while the ex- cavation work is going on. It is alleged that on Saturday night the driver, in spite of the request of the watchman not to do so, broke down a barrier at one of the street cor- ners, and deliberately drove down the street. When the watchman protested it is charged that the mail driver striftk him in the face. Motored Here from Ottawa Ligat.-Col. McLaren, of Ottawa,and Capt. H.- WillisO'Connor, of the militia department, arrived in the city = yesturday after motoring from the capital city over roads t. are in extellent condition. . The trip took about five hours: by the Smith's Falls-Chafley's Locks route, Had a Lively Tilt. As the result of an altercation on Princess street on Saturday night between two well-known citizens: it 'wus stated to-day that a charge of assault would likely be lodged. The row occurred near the corner >of Bagot and Princess streets and ieaused quite a sensation. In Once More. Michael McNally, who holds quite a record fof the number of times he {bas appeared before the police magis- to ltrate was rounded up Monday fore: noon on a charge of drunkenness. He will be arraigned on Tuesday moriing. ~~ Admiral Drury Dead London, May 18. --Admiral Sir Charles Carter Drury, G. C. B., who was second sea lord of the British He was born at ' | to-day. Rothsay, N. B., Canada, in 1846. ah a "Charcoal Tablets," 10c. bos. son's. : Citizen Asks That They be Kept in would it not be possible to have ple who keep fowl see that they ar kept within" their yards? would be no complaiut from nelgh- bers if they would keep them in their own yards, and not allow them to run all over front lawns, and scratch up flower beds and destroy walks and steps. I think also that owners of fowl should be made to keep them locked up till seven o'clock in the morning, as in home where there is sickness, people who are compelled to stay up: late at night, would like to sleep in the morning and not be awakened The citizen is anxious to through Mayor Shaw, if "an be done to remedy this nuisance: 800Y OF SBICIE FOUND IN A BARN left A Note Intimating That We Was Tired Of His: Condition Of Life Belleville, May 18.--Iu a barn near Shannonville, the: body of Richard Cornell, of Thurlow township, was found. Death was evidently the results of a poisbn he had taken. A note pear the body intimated that he was tired of living. The unfortunate man was upwards of fifty years of age, and 'know, leaves a widow and a son. Toronto, May 18.--Thomas Ward, a young Englishman, dissatisfied with conditions here, and who . smashed three lege plate glass windows with the avowed object of securi depor- tation to England, was, Td, give en two years' imprisonment for his ofieuce by Magistrate Denison to-day. Masonic trip te Alexandria Bay. Boat leaves Folger's wharf at two o'clock y afternoon, F. C. Fox, converted in a revival in Urichsville, Ohio, has: quit selling tobacca, IBCN AT THE , ING OITY STORES Bucknell's News Depot ..208 Clarke, J. W. & Co....... College Book Store | Coulter's Grocery .... Cullen's Grocery, Cor, Princess Frontenae Hotel ..........O«ntasle Gibson's Drug Store ..Market McAuley's Rook Store ....08 Princess MeGall's Cigar Store Cor. Prin. & Hing. McLeod's Grocery ....51 Unlen St. W. Medley's Drug Store 200 University Ave Paul's Cigar Stove ........70 Princess Vallean's Grocery .... Lowe's Grocery ...,.. euu0 BORN. ANDERSON---~At Napanee, on May 1st, to Mr. and Mrs. rold Anderson. a daughter. 3 MARRIED. 1014, at D., Be ie, Bo oa Shor = oy a A, dau J.C 4 Loughboro, to Bark, of rringtion. Ont DIED. BURLEY --At Melrose, on May 19th, Bh. sieges Burley, aged 75 years. BALDWIN---At' Roblin 4 'George S.. Baldwin, CATON---At Chicago, > Grace Martin, 3 Maurice Caton, anee. . FISHER--At Adolphustown, on May 11th, Jane Pigher, aged 37 years. GRAHAM --¢e, Kingston Mills, on Sun- a a0 Gen "ham Ra Funeral from hig td on aged 0 tormerly of Nap- residence, Tues- day morning, t Th Qiuirch pt t «diols Name, dall, re 4 solemn requiem mass win be sung for the repose of his = soul, Friends and Scanaintances fre respects fully invited to a x £ " ROSE--At Napanee, on y 12th, Wii "Ham Alfred Roses ed 15 youre, TRYAN--AL Ni on May 11th, Mrs. Tryan, aged 4 years. «3%

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