Daily British Whig (1850), 14 Jul 1914, p. 1

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"YEAR 81 NO. __YEAR 81 NO. 161 ULSTER'S 12TH PEACEFULLY OBSERVED Resistance ot tha Rule Was| THERE - NO RIOTS, | NATIONALIST FORCES RESTED } ON THEIR ARMS, Premier Asquith Says Would Prorogue About the End of August--New Sission in Decem- ber. London, July 14 The Fecognition of the danger inherent in the istence of two armed volunteer bod ies seems to have imbued Irishmen with a sense of added Yespoas sibility and the battle of the Boyne was com memorated yesterday in Irel . with | tremendous enthusiasm But there was no more sence of disorder than casions of this kind. Following the custom, cession marched from Belfast Drumbeg, where Sir Edward Carson, the Ulster unionist leader, made his now famitar speech® defying government either totally to e etude Ulster from home rule or come oul and fight. Lord Londonderry, at Enniskillen and Walter Hume Long, unionist Parliament ex notable ab on past oc member of parliament for Strand at! Garvagh, made speeches in a similar vein to other large demonstrations of Ulster men, but no disorder wa: reported at any point. Rival nationalist and Orange pro cessions at Glendermot reached thé stage of jeering at each other and for a few moments it looked like trouble, but the police succeeded in keeping them apart until the danger was over. One feature of seems to be that while Sir Edward Carson and the other leaders are using unrestrained language, both Ulstermen and nationalists are show ing admirable self-control Another feature Is that the more defiant the Ulster leader's speeches become, the more pronounced becomes the. feel ing among the members of parlia ment on both sides that a satisfac- tory compromise eventually will he Asquith" ibmoynesd Tr the NOE of comnions yesterday that the present session of parliament woyld come to an end about the close of August, and that the new session would begin in early winter, which is thought to mean In December Before the present session ends the government will introduce its propo: als for the reform of the house of lobds. the situation or Under this arrangement home rule | will au- the end and Welsh disestablishment tomatically pass into law by of August. WOLVES OVERRUNN:NG COUNIY OF RENFREW Farmers Apply To The Government For Aid In Exterminating ~~ Them Ottawa, July 14 overrunning Renfrew stroying the farmers' district the word government here, which is asked take steps by the ofiering of baunty by some other means 1 "stop the Hepredations and exterminaty the marauders. It is stated that Jur ing the month of May deventy five sheep were destroyed in the coun ty by the wolves, which are supp« 1} to have wandered down from the vi cinity of Algonquin Park Large bers of deer have also been des .in the same manner. ° Farmers, it. is said, raising sheep. in the district as a re sult of the inroads of the wolves I'hey have not been bothered with them for thirty years, and their pres ence has. only commenced To be ticed during the past three years present bounty iz small especially, 1s stated, as the hide is reckoned by the provincial government. . hat county sheep in by wolves and de that the 10 are is received some alone num troved have stopped no th "9 dozen jar rings," Sc. pints, Gib ' son 8. DAILY MEMORANDA See top of page 8, right hand gorner for probability v Styles Change In a Flash F Styles change with such sud- den flashes these days that it pays to lay in things a few ut a time " said a wise woman __~ With fashion fluttering from one extreme to the other it keeps one busy to be up to date. The safest guide to fashion's kaleidoscope are the advertis- ing columns of The The merchants are the inter- preters of style to the women + of America, their advertising is their mouth<piece. The modern woman finds as much real news and useful in- formation in the advertising columns as she does in any part of the paper. was bora November 34th, 1874, OF JULY | B g I | | { -1 | | | | a great pro- | RICHARD CROKER ure New York from Ireland leader rom the | are | tender age. | Utica state hospital 3 | and one of the sons has been confin- | fed in' that institution, CAPT, CRAIG REBUKED. i ------------ He Was Foolish Happenings. July 14._The Birming- | ham Post, (Unionist), says: -- "We 'are not altogether surprised that thé visit of Sir Edward Carson | to Ulster, and announcements made on behalf of the unionist council are being represented as constituting an { impudent attempt to intimidate the [ government Truth to tell, the de- monstrations seem tb have been very strangely .maifaged if there no thought of exhibiting the mailed list. Captain Craig; on Thursday, acted with singular ineptnes and lack of diseretion. We can understand that there may have been good and suf- ficient reasons for letting Ulster people know that the provisional government is actually in being, al- though it has not yet done anything by way of governing, but it is ex- tremely difficult to understand why Captain Craig, giving publeity to these matters, should have gone out of his way to throw dark hints at terrible happenings to follow. Sen-' tences like these are not. precisely of the happiest at a moment when the fate of the amending bill, with its amendments, hanging in the balance." to Hint at Dire [ London, is is COCHRANE AN OPTIMIST, in Manitoba Nothing, He Tory Reverse Says. July 14 The Dorden is not dt all worffed™ by just met by Premier Rol) according Hon Frank Cdchrane, minister rail ways and canals, who is visiting thi city to-day, enroute for an inspection of the Welland canal In his esti mation, favorable expression opinion of Ontario electors will mors than counterbalance the by Sir I. P. Roblin | I'he results . of the provincial elections do not have any particula bearing or influence upon us stated Torento, government the reverse in in Manitoba, to of the of hock met h HAS REACHED LONDON | And is K ady for His Fight on Thugs. | day Night. { July '14--George Charpen ? { accompanied by a retinue of | French sporting men and women, | arrived here, to-day, being a five to | four favorite for his fight with Gun- | boat Smith on Thursday night. The | gate receipts, it expected, will reach ong hundred thousand dollars The winner will challenge "Jack™ | Johnson for the . world's pugilistic honors London, tier, Lynched nn Negress, Orangeburg, S5.( July 4.» Catting | down the bullet-riddled body of Rosa | Carson, the negress who was hanged | at 'Eloree, by a mob of wo men, officials yesterday be investigation Some of the! most prominent. men are de have heen members of the mob, tut it is not believed by the ol- ficials that their complicity. in the lynching ean be confirmesly Fhe negress is said to have confess ed, a few minutes before she was hanged, to the murder of the twelve year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. U Fo Bell the child was beaten to death with a stick. to a tree hundred gan an town's clared to H. E. Whitienberger Better Toronto, July 14.--Afte? two months' absence Yrom his office, due to a critical operation, H. E. Whitten- berger, \ general superintendent of | the Grand Trunk in Ontario, resumed | his duties this JyoFming: Away or In the Air. Leipsic, Germany, July 14.-- The world's altitude record was again broken, to-day, when Heinrich Gele- rick ascended twenty-five thousand feet in his biplane. Earl of Ellesmere Dead. Londoa, July 13.--The Earl of Ellesmere died at the age of sixty- seven. He succeeded his father in the title in 1862 and his heir is his eldest son, Viscount Sprackley, who loners were : magne! ' "len cron beicke," Gibson's: | M1 ROE RS WIFE IN NIG Wr | And Shoots Mince Murderer suf. tered From Cancer. July 14. Mr. wa Edgett were founa Utica, N. Y., Mrs, Charles R. inflicted, by Ed- gett, in a jealous rage. (died in hospital and her cannot live | The scene of the tragedy wits | their---home at Yorkville, a-suburb| Edgett, a watchmaker, 55 years oud, had suffered long from cancer. For several weeks he had been unable to leave his room and was about to un- dergo a fourth operation. He removed to his bed from a about eight o'clock last evening. Mrs. Edgett retired at 11.30. | About 4.830 am. her daughier, LeOna, the sound of sopeone crying. | went to her parents room but found | {the door locked. Calling a younger the police believe, husband oldest sister she aided the latter to climb through the window of the bedroom. ! Mr. and Mrs. {ing upon the bed, lated with blood. Beside the dresser was a bloodstained sledge hammer. Under the bed was a .32 calibre re- jvolver. It was evident that Edgett {arose during the night, procured the sledge hammer and boTered in his wife's head, fracturing the skull in three places. | through the head .with a bullet from {the revolver. Both were removed to to St: Luk hospital where Mrs. Edgett died at 8 o'clock + Mr. Edgett is alive with tin his brain. The physicians (cannot live. Mrs. Edgett wa mother of 13 children, 11 of whom living Four of these are of Edgett's father died in } months Edgettl were both ly- which was satur- e's the CANADIANS FORCED TO PAY INCOME TW For Work In United States While Yankees Are"Exempt In + Canada July 14.--A live nal importance w ntion' oi Oliver It conting question ol as brought tobert Bor Wilcox, MP to the re into for imposed by the Un the Unde: who lve Ottawa mternatio to the afte fen, vesterday, by for North Fssex ent imposition ol an meome tax ited States government by wood tariff upon Canadians on the Canadian side of the boundary but work in the United States. IL amounts to one per cent. of their to- tal income, while the American escapes with an exemption up to 3,000 2,500 people Mr. Wil ave thousands of oth We in ( though Sir relates affects declar "This regulation Windsor alone," "and there along the in cox, ers border investi Am impose no such tax gation has proven that far more five at work the Un eticans who home Canada than do Canadi ited States." Mr. Wilcox with the retaliatory action if about it It is probable teg will be taken up ington authorities through ish embass) ins mn desires a protest lodg American government nothing done that the the at Wash Prit the n with MAES, LOCKWOOD EJECTED in Which Fifty Years. Taly 11 ejected by from the in which she lity and international From Home She Lived Washingt Lockwood Mrs order on, was of th ha sh and home vears court lived flor where ed Woman work for pence campaign for States ran her United rratulation® sulirage, of the the cong the the and re of her president ceived hr Loman United friends as the bar of States suprem ; court the trunks and back hall ord torn down offi ood superintended Mrs movir Lockw } furniture ' the littl which all she can Lockwood home will be for a modern many roém I'he to make building HELD ON CHARGE OF now room KIDNAPPING BAKER'S an: {Nine Men, 'One Woman, Under Bail, Aggregating $133,000--Boy Guides Police York, July 14.--Nine all foreigners Y wert bail totaling =~ RI33000 kidnapers of eight year-old Longo, son of a prosperous haker men and a held under alleged rank who New woman, as {was stolen fom his home last spring {held prisoner for weeks and released {alter an unsuccessful effort by his cap- | (tors to obtain $700 ransom. The pris arrested recently upon di rectidns 'given the police by the who! guided them to a house which he said had been his jail Nicola Ratola, one of the nine men was held in $10,000 additional bail on the charge of kitnaping another of six years, boy, boy Search for the Ferry Bessemer. Windsor, Ont., July 14---The bhot- tom of Lake Erie wili be practically combed by a syndicate of Detroit and Windsor business men, who, have taken a six months' "option on the car ferry Marquette and Besse- mer. No. 2 lost during a gale on De- cember 9th, 1909, If they are able | to locate and raise the sunk vessel they estimate the project will them $35,000. E. L. White, of St. Thomas, an engipeer, will manage the seargh, and will use electric and needles to find the ship. ow rine sma mn in bed yesterday dying from wounds Mrs. Edgett | was | chair was awakened by She | He then shot himself | a bullet | ay he | ago | anada | wed ) x ) pany delva | I admitted to | net | JULY 14, "PITH OF NEWS Despatches from Near And Distant PI Places. |THE LATEST TIDINGS PRESENTED IN THE BRIEFEST POSSIBLE FORM, |The Whig's Daily Condensation of the News of the World From Tele- graph Service and Newspaper KEx- changes. ko @iPwas slick at a depth feet in Sandwich township. Clarence Montgomery, township was struck by li | Argument on some thirty ballots will take place in connection with the South Oxford recount Thousands attended the Jilly celebration yesterday out the province. Basil Stewart, Harry Pearson, drowned | Hon. Frank Cochrane, m "railways, will inspect the new land canal. [ Arthur Morse, 16 Bartlett, to, attempted suicide by tion. | The Board of Education, paid $72,000 for school Todmorden. Hon. Rebert Rogers will not turn. to Ottawa for some weeks; cording to present plans. { The experts working on the {erica have decided to turn the fro into a gigantic '"'sea sled McClinton Irvine, Hamilton, ac cidentally shot and killed himself w Hie playing with a revolver is likely | for Dr of public | Nipissing i New York | Alexander ind have | the city | Rev of sixty. Dover 'ning 12th of through- and were Bracebridge, Hamilton, aister of Wel- Toron- asphyxia- Toronto, a site in re- ac- Am air a seat will be found the defeated works in the that Reaume, minister north country is suggested detectives Berkman, not watching anarchist leave are the order let to him Dr. William , B. Palmot { Louis Christian Advocate, before his jdeath, waived his property rights to v $10,000,000 estate and gave it tc Lthe poor Seven St bundred United States ma | rines, were 'ordered assembled at Guan | tanamo, Cuba, to be held in readiness | for service in revolutionstory Haiti and Santo Domingo. J | Grand Trunk railway traffic earn jmgs, July lst to Tth, were $1,045, 1006, compared with &1,087463 {oO {the same week of 1913, Decrease 834,457 Her while | Miss had stolen from a locker was bathihg at Pelham Bay Lichtenthal, New York iain in the water while her went more clothes» the four new (nited superdreadnaughts now build authorized will be the Ari California, Idaho and Mississippi arlin, aged seventy Watertown, N.Y died at the Sisters' Monday morning celebration one in clothing she Ros to re home for of brother Lhe names tes ling or ron Lame { SiN, esident of fifty tal on I'he Orange vas the only sand the crowd in attendaficr | mated 3,000 I At Budalo, N.Y. Judge "Hazel appointed receivers for the tited States Light and Heating / a $17,500,000 corporation {gaged in the manufacture {ing and heating apparatus. i Ceza Dofler, cashier, of the Buda | pest branch of the Mutual Life As- | surance company of New York, hg disappeared. He is alleged to have | defrauded the company of $18,000 Harry Hitkirk, worker, Shar fon, Pa., couldn't becs his right eye, injured in an explosion wouldn't close He had surgeons make him a new eyelid from his right leg Cheese nearly year hospi at Prescott Eastern Ontario, was es R Un com John night' sleep Ause sales 12 3-6e.; 3ke.; Cornwall, Vankleek Hill, 12 5-16¢.; to 12 3-16¢. Ottges, 128¢. to 12 7-16¢. en Gouverneur, , boys, old Kinney, son gi Mr. and Mrs. Sines and Ward Dalton, son of Mr and James FE. Dalton, have been jane yn scholarships to Cornell Uni | versity | It would rank injustice, wn the {opinion of Theodore Roosevelt, for ! women to be unrepresented at the con titutional convention to be held in | New York next year, : { Louis Kalman, seventy, of Chicago, who boasted ge had smoked cigarettes for sixty years without harm, will no more. His beforebreakiast J "pill ignited the bedclothing, on { Monday, and he was intaily burned. At least one hundred farmers' sons | are booked to enter the Ontario London, 2{c:; Bel Watertown, N.Y. 2f¢ t Pe rih, 121c to Ha B. O Irs be | smoke | Agricultural College at Guelph some | {time next winter for free courses \the expense of the Ontario {ment For the week ended July 7th, | tirst week of the new fiscal year, vu earnings on at govern- the Y the Canadian Paci { railway were JU 3,000, a decrease of | 8357,000, or 13. per cent., as com- { pared with the corresponding week a | vear agbd. Billy Baxter, "old time minstrel, who had played. with nearly all the lead- {and who had appeared béfore the roy- {ing minstrel companies of America, lalty of Europe with his banjo, died lat a Chicago hospital of cirrhosis of {the liver, aged fifty-three yeats. { tie Peru will be given an > 'aviation school by private subscription to a fovernment fund. Pe extensive deposit of asphalt of bry high quality has been discovered in e 3 Phifivpines, out remedy. "explosion came early and five hund- of ear lighig i al. in the. world with: 1914 STABBED FAMOUS MONK. Women Did So Because Hé Prophe- sied Falsely. Petersburg,' July 14 Details reached here in a despatch to the Courier of a probably fatal attack on the mystic lay monk, Ciregory Ras wutin, whose influence over the em peror is said to be very great Rasputin, who has been one of the most prominent figures in Russia in recent years, was-visiling--his--native village, Pokrovsvy, in, Siberia, when a woman, a stranger to the locality, approached him pretending to be a beggar....After accosting: him - she stabbed him in the abdomen with a long military di Nt. § waited {wo weeks for the opportunity. She said she had decided to kill the monk be cause he was a [alse proph@ and avas leading everybody in Russia astray. has Die of Slow Poisoning. Pa., July 14- Wagner, who last week gave Susan 'Thornton the alternative drinking slow poison with him or be to death, died, yesterday, 1s a South hospital. Mrs. Thorn ton, with whom Wagner was infatuat- ed, but could not marry, chose the poison, believing her chances were bet ter than if she killed at onge She died, Sunday, the hospi tal Charles Mrs ol Pittsburgh, ing shot Side were in same Falls From Dirigible. Italy, July 14.--While ten sol holding a dirigible balloon a sudden gust swept it from Nine of the soldiers let tenth was carried up of the dirigible-made every but he fell and was Udine, diers were by ropes, the ground. but the I'he Crew eliort to haul him aboard from of 500 feet killed IT WAS BLACK HANDERS ENGINEEREQ THE J0B And Hundreds Were Panic Stricke And Fled In Their Night "Clothes N.Y., July 14--Matteo Or- wedlthy Italian, and his daughter, were both seriously injur- ed this morning, and thousands of dollars damage done in an explosion at their saloon home here, engineer- ed, the police suspect, by blackhand- ers, who have sent many threaten-\ ing letters to Orlando lately. The go, a height Buffalo, lando, a red panic-strigken people of the neighborhood of Trenton avenue fled in their night clothing. ARMY IN OHIO. Milliofis Have Invaded Eastern Part of State. Ohio, of seventeen-year loct Eastern Ohio I'he pests was foretold by officials the agricultural commission recent l Every mail brings reports to N I. Shaw, head. of - the nursery and orchard division of the commission, telling ot the coming of the locusts. Inspector Shaw advising farmers to spray trees with lime-sulphur wash as n means of protection against the Millions e invaded coming of these Cleveland, of state inroads of the locusts CG. Walliams, agricultural locusts of the state reported he Wooster member commission Ww as far north .as st week TRIED TO LAND HINDUS faunches Slip Out to Komagata Maru in Morning. Vancouver, B. C., July 14. Be- tween 1 and 2 o'clock Sunday morn- ing half a dozen powerful gasoline launches put out from shore to va ds the Komagata Maru with the evid- ent intention of carrying the Hindus ashore. The immigration depart- ment guards in a launch close to the vessel armed with rifles drove the Hindus in their lanuches back to the shore. CARSON GIVES NOTICE | TO THE GOVERNMENT That Ulster Must Be Given A Clean| Cut Out Of Home Rule Drumbeg, Ireland, "July 19.--The Urangemen's demonstration here yes- terday culminated In a scene of im- mense enthusiasm around the tiny platiorm where Sir Fdward Carson, ible in hand, pledged the covenan- ters, never to surrender to coercion, to remain loyal to the thromé and never to waver in their support théir leaders in the fight against home rule. Sir Edward, in a speech . which evoked tremendous enthusiasm, sery- ed notice on the British governmént that unless it was prepared to leave Ulster alone it would very shortly find the. Ulstermen recognizing no government except the provisional government of Ulster. He said he. had been given ior ity to act, if necessary; that meant he was to exercise his powers with out regard to consequences to him- self. ET * The Ulstermen, he added, were not going to give way, and were bound to win, because God would defend the right. Sir\ Edward Carson offered the 'government the alternative of giv- mg Ulster a clean cut out of home rule or of coming to fight the Uls- termen. These, he said, were the only, possible alternatives. Ulster, he was only justi government would take it for it xd it it did not get it from the od tight (sas City, .4 of | LAST EDITION HON TW. CROTHERS TO BE LIEUTENANT-GOVERNOR * HON, T. W. CROTHERS MAKES OWN TOURNIQUET. Binds Leg After Freight Train Sev- ered Left Foot. Spring, --X.Y., July 14 scious and plucky with his foot oll, George M. Payson, of West Pat- near here, made his own tourniquet, checked the flow< of blood and his life after being run over a train at Bethel. His left ley went under the wheels and was severed above the ankle. First ban daging' the limb with a garter, a knife and_cut his shirt making a tourniquet, which with pencils. It an hour before John Trimble him and summoned Df. Pomroy, attended him and removed him to his parents' home PEPE Cold Con cut terson, saved by into he strips, { Lugst was nearly found who A SPECTACULAR RAID. July and women and 14 F'wenty fashionably their e Chicago, prominent gowned - three were ar- this raid corts, members slumming' partie rested at o'clock mornmg Jn a spe tac Ar on Jordan's cafe in the red- light district They, were bundled into patrol wagons despite the hysterical protests and most of them gave fieti- tious names at the police sta- tion. Women detectives and police woinen were largely re- sponsible for the raid FREER E IAI BER E bbb be RECORD. two PREPRINT RRP RRS Shr BASEBALL The: Result of the Games Played on Monday. National league--Chicago, 4; New | York, 2 Boston, Bt. Louis, 7. American league---Chicago, 2-1; New Forks 0-3. Boston, 2; Clevel- | and, Washington, 3; Detroit, ( Federal league Kansas City, 3. Louis, 0-5. Buffalo, 5-8. International Toronto, 1 more, 0 Brooklyn, 1-1; St 1-2; Baltimore, Rochester, 3; Balti- league-- Providence, standing of Leagues, league--New 38, St. Louis , Cincinnati Pittsburgh York .589, 506, Phila- 7, Brook- Boston | National Chicago .5 delphia lyn, .471, .446 American 584, Washington Chicago .538, St. Louis .525, 325, New York .387, Cleveland Federal league Chicago, Indianapolis, .562; Buffalo, .529;Bal- timore, 521; Brooklyn, .514; Kan- 36; St. Louis, .436; Pitts- burgh, .417. International league-- 628; Rochester, .584; Buffalo, .571; Providence, .566; Newark, .493; To. {ronto, .480; Montreal, .351; Jersey City, .325 020, league 551, Detroit 338 a9: Baltimore, Duffy to Race at Quebec. "Jimmy" Duffy, of Canadian winner of the Boston mav rathon this year, will make his pro- fessional debut in Quebec City dur- ing the festival th@t will take place there on July 23rd, 24th and 206th 1* Eduard Fabre tan be upon to turn professional aiso, Daffv he took. This ' Announced On Good . Authority HANNA 1S MENTIONED AS HIS SU CCPSSOR | AS Ns - OF LABOR. / Hon. Frank Cochrane Inspecting ers Are Hiding After the Manitoba Knockout. Ottawa, July 14.°The appointment of Hon. IT. W. Crothers to the lieu- tenant-governorship of Ontario is said to be practically' decided upon. Mr, Crothers' wants to leave the govern- ment, On good authority it is wun- derstood 'here that Hon. Mr. Crothers will be appointed lieutenant-governoy land Hon. W. J. Hanna will be brought into the Borden government. and given the labor portfolio. It is believed hére that as minister of labor Mr. Hanna would achieve considerabla Success. Ministers in Hiding. July 14.--Hon Frank minister of railways, left l'oronto last night and 'to-day purposes starting a» tour of inspec- tion of the work on the new Welland canal ? Western ministers, who took part in the Manitoba election, have noty yet shown. their faces at the capital' The (Canadian Northern trepresentatives are anxiously awaiting the return of Hon. Arthur Meighen, owing to whose ab- sence campaigning, it is-stated, the delay in. the execution of the trust deed is due. Mr. Meighen is expected back shortly. Hon. Robert Rogers, it is said, will spend some weeks at the Lake of the Woods to recuperate after his heavy reverses in Winnipeg during the lection, WILL LAND TROOPS T0 ESTABL'SH ORDER in Hayti And San Domingo 1f These Countries' Gover nments Ottawa, Cochrane, fort Philadelphia | July 14, -- escorted by Washington, D. C., Transport Hancock, | cruisers, sailed from Vera Cruz this | morning with four hundred marines { for Hayti and San Domingo, where {the United States proposes to land | troops to establish order, unless the | governments of those places are {able to stop the present reign of Indianapolis, 5; | 'THEDAILY BRITISH WHIG |I2 CN SALE AT THE FOLLOW | | | 543, | Boston | { i | | | | Hamilton, | DAVIS prevatied | will change the agreement from five ! Lasse runners ran in tke ord of June. Kiaziton Sir Conan Doyle Buys Land. Fort William, July 14.--S8ir Ar- on ! | i turn trip across Canada, visited Fort | i William, and during his stay in this 'city made an investment in Fort William real estate. The property secured by Sir Arthur is centrally located. for which he paid a cash payment of approximately $20,000. Policeman Died of Wounds. 8t. John, N. B.,, July 14.--Police- man Frank E. O'Leary. who was shot by John Braman, seventen years old, while he was arresting him as a burglary suspect, died on Monday. Oldest Barrister Dead. London, July 14--Willlam Augus- tus Gordon Hake, the oldest barris- ter in England, died at Brighton Yesterday. He was born in 1811, and was called to the Bar in, 1835. May Metcalf, Marlboro, aveaue Ta ronto, aged nine, was crushed t- 'the wheels of an auto miles to a fifteen mile race. Both of | "Phone B77 | bloodshed in the meantime It is reported Harry More! mar resign his Nipissing seat in favor of Hon. Dr. Reaume. ING CITY STORES Buckaell's News Depot ..200 King B®. iarke, J. W. & Co....... 808 Princess College Book Store ,.....1600 Princess Coulter's Grocery ... +. 000 Princess Cullew's Grocery, Cor, Princess & Alfred Frontenac Hotel cesar Ontarie Bt. Gibson's Diug Store , Market Square McAuley's Rook Store ....08 Princess | MeGall's Cigar Store Cor, Prin. & King McLeod's Grocery ... Union St. WW, Mediey's Drug Store 360 University Ave 's Clgar Store . Prouse's Drug Stove Valleaw's Grocery Lowe's Grocery ..... BORN. Kingston, on to Mr. and Mrs, T 230 University avenue, a RESCORLA-+In 14th, 1914 Rescorla, Jul ¥ son ( Watertown papers please copy.) Iu Winnipeg, June 28th, 1914, to Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Davie, 197 Furby street, a son, Robert Abernethy POTTER--In Kingston, ont July 11th, 1914, to Mr. and Mra. Truman Pot- t Frontenac street, a daughter. ROBERT J. REID. the leading Undertaker 280 Princess stron J . JAMES 254 and 296 FRiNCes VTRETC, an | 'Phone 147 for thur Conan Doyle, while on his re- | A Real Tg he ident Kind or $130 at Phone 705. The Season for Iced T Has arrived: Our own special blend is a perfect tea for this purpose. Price 35 cents JAMES REDDEN & Welland Canal--Meighen and Rog-" $

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