Daily British Whig (1850), 2 Dec 1914, p. 6

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"WHICH WILL WIN--VARSITY OR ARGONAUTS ? a Four Senior Teams Likely for Inter. - collegiate Senior Hockey Series-- ' Professional Charges Against Ham. flton, Players. Ramsay Hankin will not be with Mefill Eniversity hockey ténm "this season. Ramsay «did not have much speed, but when he started down the ite the ssiest place was close to the buards, Motion pictures of the annual gama hetween Harvard and Yale, jared in the mammoth new Yale bowl at New Haven, * before a crowd of over 70,000) persons on Saturday, November 21st, are now being shown. Francis Nelson and HD. Wettlanfer will be the O.1.A. representatives at the meeting to be held in Ottawa on Friday morning to form the new Ii minion of Canada Hockey Association. Trouble and' more of it will be spilled at the next meeting of the Ontario Rugby Union. Charges of professiondlism, it is. reported, will be laid against "Kid" Smith, Harper, Flanpery, Pigher and Mel 'afty, of the Hamilton Rowing Club champions, and also against .the club itseli. Regina Daily Province : Former hoe- key stars of the school of science, Queen's University, University of To- ronto and men who have attended any other Canadian college or univer- sity, or who were cdllegians or uni- versity students in the United States will meet shortly. The idea is to form a four-team league consisting of men who have formerly played ' on teams in those institutions. 'The fourth team will probably be known as the All-Stars, Montreal Herald : From all appear ances it is likely that there will be four teams in the Iuterc'leginte How key Club this year. The three clubs, Made in Kingston By Kingstonians SMOKE THE BEST Milo, 10c.: Peel 5¢ AT ALL DEALERS a, A. McGowan | Manufacturer Rideau Street Kingston Pein of the well-known hair Prof, Hoods Store, Toronto, will be in KING- TON, wt the Randolph Hotel, On Friday, Dec.4th with the flaest digplay of Halr Goods on the American continent for ladies. Transformatl Waves, Swite made from the i Pompadours, Bangs, ete, are perfection, finest European hair. For Bald Men The Pembher Tigh ¢ welghe Veutilated In the mont most aa- tural substitute for your hair that 'fand | again romp (ovate, wid: present compose ue, have written to Secretary Demuth, signi ing their desire that Ottawa College be ones more admitted to the Intercol- legiate. All that is now necessary for the college to do is to write to Pro. Mcleod, the president of the Intercol- legiate Athletic Union, stating their case to him and getting permission to re-enter, N - -- the young Pitts- pitcher, whom O¢- landed at Fort Wayne 1913, is right in the glare of a big scandal down in his home "own. dt appears Mamanux and his mother were in New York re- cently, and discovered Mamaux senior in a swell botd with a dashing De- troit widow. Mamaux junior, the baseball pitcher, promptly turned in and guve his father a thrashing, and Mamma Mamaux is suing for a di voree. +4 Albert Mamaux; burgh millionain tava almost the spring of - Ottawa Citizen : There is material at Ottawa College for a strong team and it is to be hoped the Intercoll:- ginte union sees its way clear to ad- mit Father Stanton's proteges. Af- ternoon games could be played here, a3 at Montreal and Toronto. "Lau- rie' Roberts, a well-known Ottawa boy, is president of the Intercolls- giate league, and is in favor of ad. mitting the Garnet and Grey. Inter collegiate. hockey did not come 3 for much patronage when Ottawa College were in the lead before, they were grouped with Laval but with MeGill, University of as only, undoubtedly make a success of {he game din Ottawa. Toronto Argos won the Big Four championship but it cost them deny- ly. Dr. Smirlie Lawson, the | huge hali-back, who went in, in the se- cond half and played such grand ball, fractured a bone in the socket of his ankle and is out of the game for the rest of the 'season. Lawson's grand plunging saved the day for Argos at Hamilton a week ago Saturday and paved the way few the winning of the Big Pour title. Saturday he had the grandstand on ite feet time with his plunging runs. His injury eame whén he tried to tackle Leckie in the dying moments the game. He wants to get into the dominion final against his old alma mater, Varsity, Saturday, if Argos beat H. I. C., but doctors who examined the ankle give him no hope for such luck. + -- > Montreal Gazette: Sinclair Me- Evenue, who refereed the final match between Mc@ill and 'Varsity at. To- rontc, was among the visitors at the army and navy game at Philadelphia on Saturday. McEvenue went over to see the game with a view to secur- ing ideas for his work as coach next season and the proposing of amend- ments at the annual meetings of the Intercollegiate and Interprovineial unions, which are scheduled to he held this month. McEvenue returned to Montreal Monday and in speaking of the game said that he had not seen anything worth adopting out- side of the snapback rule in the scrimmage, which has already been played by Canadian teams. Me- Evenue is of the opinton that snap- ping the ball back is the better way of pltting it into play. It elimin- ates the delays that at times make the present Canadian game tiresome, while it alse gives the team in p session a better opportunity of car- rying out their plays e did not fancy the forward passing, and would not like to see it adopted in the Can adian game, of an footbail {inal to be played at Varsity Stadium, Toronto, next Saturday, between Toronto University and presumably Argon- , will be contested under the playing rules of the O. R. F. U., the same as are in vogue in the Inter- provincial Union. This means Var- sity will have to alter their style of attack altogether, as they have been playing all season under the Inter- collegiate code which allows inter- ference two yards on the line of scrimmage: The college champions will have to be a wonderfully re sourceful team to hold Argos under these conditions, and as a result the oarsmen will toe the scratch two to one favorites. It was reported a week ago the Canadian Union would concede a point and have the final game played under both codes. lig Four rules to prevail in one half an Intercollegiate the other However, as the Intercollegiate broke away from the C. R. F. U. altogether and adopted its own rules, the Big Four on the other hand adopting the C R. F. U. code. MYSTERIOX WIRELESS Expert Sending Messages in British Naval Code. Hartford, Conn., Dee. 2.-- Tie government secret service detectives headed by Chief William Flynn, who have been investigating the mysterious wireless code messages being sent out dally from a station somewhere in this section, are work- ing to-day in the vicinity of New Haven, and are slowly drawing their net around the senders of the meos- sages. All the wireless operators in the state are co-operating with the Secret Service man in their attempt to locate the n, That the messages came from a Station in Long Island, that they ure intended for the tw British war. ships now lying off Long Island, is the theory or Hiram Percy Maxim, the foremost wireless expert of tie Btate, whose tower 1s in this city, He admits, however, that the Long Is- land station would be a bad one to send from, as it would be close to several wdvernment stations. 'There is no doubt that the seénd- er is a finished expert. ' He has been sending day and night, and I am satisfied that the code he is usine is without a doubt the Nritish nava) code," 'sald Mr. Maxim. - S-------------- Special Sale Ladies' Trimmed Hate 'We have to clear ont all trimmed hats and have de sell them at $1.98, £2.38 and 33 These hots ape worth as high $12.00. Corrigan's. ijed ad Pan't how White Rose if you want # cheap flour, - alg To- | ronto (and Queen's competing against | them, the Sandy Hill students would | our | * w= FRIPEF EER PP PHP PEF ETHER DFG bred ; n WAR BULLETINS. BY AN ELECTRIC SYSTEM IN ' British casuzlty list Tuesday + FRONT OF TRENCHES. night includes the names Lof + forty officers and eleven hun- dred men, including the Mar- quis of Northampton, wounded. The Ground in Front of Their Luxur. ious Trenches Was Wired in All direc " hy Directions Corps of French engineers organized at Montreal for over seas service bas been disbanded because English-speaking offi- cers were appointed over it. . London, Dec. 1.--The pondent in France of the Chronicle writes as follows: A wounded. French engineer (ells me that much of thé ground in front of the German trenches is min- ed, and that he stumbled across one of the éectric wires durtng a night attack, and then Spent three hours searching around and cutting any other wires he could: find and trac- ing the ends of them to batteries in the "trenches. While doing this he Bol shot in the neck, the bullet go- ing through the lobe of his left ear. He expressed great admiration - for the way in which the German en- gineers did their work, and gwvas in a high state of good humor because he had found what he called an "electrician's parlor" in one of the trefiches--quite a big room all lin- ed with timber baulks and full of engineering requisites, wireless tele graphic spare parts, etc. A well placed charge soon reduced this chamber of ruins, as the trench, though teniporarily evacuated by the Germans, was not in a good position to be held by the French. Stories come in from all sources of the marvellous preparations made by the Germans to make a long stay in those trenches, officers' quarters especially beinz quite luxurious. They evidently do not expect to be driven out just yet, Forty-two prisoners have just been brought in to the place there where I am temporarily located, and one of them, a man of about 45, who spent many years in London, and who 'up to about two weeks ago had Been ome of the guards at the Germany, told me about the Li weekly bulletin which was issued to prisoners at a price of five times , the proceeds being sup ed to go to the German Red C Fuad. Tt was printed in four lan guages, and recorded the fall and destruction of Paris, the Zeppelin ing of London, and "the = sudden death of the Czar of Rus in Po-| land. After the first few issues thel circulation dgopped to zero. corres- London Chancellor Von Betmann Hollweg speaking at Berlin on Tuesday said the German sita- ation on both fronts is satisfac- tory. German squadron off Plate river, Chili. British and Japanese 'squadrons are closing in on it from all sides. Canadian government is ar- ranging to raise thirty-two thousand men for the third Can- adian contingent, making ninety-six thousand in ail. Germans are making a deter- mined stand in Poland, but have suffered terrible losses. is at bay There are definite indications « that disease. is ravaging the = German army in" the west, < The French have occupied Vosges heights, and more ter- ritery in Alsace. ORIGIN OF THE WAR DEALT WITH IN ADDRESS BY DI. PETERSON. dee FP | | Principal of McGill University Gave Moembers of Canadian Club Fine Address at Noon-Day Lunchecn Wednesday--Action of Britain the Action of Entire Nation. "The action of the British, in en- tering this war was as much the ac- tion of the whole nation as it could be," said Dr. Peterson, principal of MuGill University, in an illumina ting address before the members of tiie hingston Canadian club, at their nocn-day luncheon, held in the Fron hotel on Wednesday.. There was a good attendance of members, the dining room being filled, and the aciress was listened to with keen cen 0 a WALKOUT AT GANANOQUE. Spring Grinders Refused to Accept | Cut In Wages. Gananoque, Dec. 2.--On an attempt on the part pany to make a heavy cut on I parts of their work, the spring grind : ers of the spring and axle department | | of the works oi the Ontario Stel Products company walked out in body. The class of work on whic the cut? was to he made was rush order for military trueks Clifiord Sine and Wilirid, 1 turned, on Monday, from Belleville, where they had been in attend the meeting of boy leuad account of the ol com . the absence of the president the club, J. L. Whiting, K.C chair was occupied by Prof. 1. ill, who introduced the speak od Principal Gordo ..-of Queen | University said grace. { br. Peterson spoke of the aw(u | tragedies of the war and stated that Britain did everything in her power to keep out of war. He traced various stages of the proceedings leading ug { to the conflict. He said that a pro S¢€ ir - ic ni sity Stafford, of Kingston, was in town | essor in Columbia University had f short time this week written him, stating that Germ OT 8 SOT tone 13 Weed. (had not ignored any treaty F. B. Peuse, of the subscription de | . Regi HH " A x 5 : i | meutrality with Belgium, and partment of the Kingston British argument was put forward tha. it Whig, is spending a few~dhys in town, | would have been better for Relgius in the interests of that publication. | ™¢ Hye B ar Lo SII Mrs Rosevedr of Kina i 1 to have quietly given acquiescence uest of Mr. and Mr r PARI to Germany, and allowed her trou: geal, o EC ne ogo to go through their country." ' Riri "This would be like letting bu The Young People's Association lars in at the back door." said St A re S } 4 held 4 . 1 i a 1 1 a aoor, S414 . ndrew church 1€ an Oy speaker Be Igium could uo + supper last evening, and drew out a | J without 2 Omnis good attend ) An Pro | rime and establishing her gramme 'was rendered enemy France Miss Nellie Lake, of the staff of {he And in doing this. Belgium wou. Victoria avenue public school, wl have made herself a slave to G has given excellent service in the | many. Germany net only wanted a ul schools for several years, has ten right of way through Belgium, hut dered her resignation, to - accept. alg, wanted to take Holland = a.d more lucrative position in the Delgium and to make a basa oi bury ta against Great Britain Wh John LaSha, Charles street, is con: |; proceedings were on fimed to his homé from the effects w= the speake r declared i an accident, he having been struck oh vdward Grey had tried to the forehead with a piece ron and neutral parties together for quite badly gashed, necessitating medi talk, and the responsibility cal attendance. upon those who had blocked A new steel flagpole similar to the for this conference. He one at the customs house has beer that there were many Ger. erected at the new armoury, day, who would be willing Wr and Mrs. Andrew Sword, 4 hing to have had this Charles -streat, were summoned t. ence Eresttown, on Sunday, by the seri- |: Dr. Peterson said that one of the ous illness of the latter's mother, who [best proofs that Germany was the passed away Monday. {one who had made the attack, and = {not the one who was attacked, was |in the fact that Italy had kept out of the conflict. Italy would have been compelled to have helped Germany had she been attacked. ol he Oi on son, ance at WW workers. ¥ o of the Webster, done this lance excellent Hi a 0 Sud school 1 hel ot h lan to sive oo ler on News From Westport. Westport, Dec. 1---A pretty wed ding took place on Tuesday evening last when Miss Meryl, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Gorsline, was Speaking about commerce, united in marriage to Robert Ww. speaker said it was folly for the Wing, of Westport. The ceremony Germans to say that Britain was was performed by Rev. C. D. Bald | fighting for trade; for instance, thal win at the parsonage. 'sh> was struggling over the question The cold snap made beautiful|as to who would get trade in the sheet of ice on the lake. Mr. and | Balkans. If great 'statesmen puz- Mr<. Willlam W. Russell are enjoy-izled over a question of this kind, ing © short holiday spent with friends | people would have laughed at them in New York City W. M, Ewart has| That Germany would have inter moved into his new residence on fered in the South African war if it Main street Arthur Charbonneau |had not been for the strength of the who recently enlisted with a French | British navy, was another statement Canadian regiment in Montreal, was|of the speaker. & week end vistor with friends in He also stated that the people of town, the United States were with us in this great fight. He was sure of this from his observations across the border. Just recently he had addressed a big university gathering in Prov idence, and he took oceasion to touch on the war.. He referred to the fact that our government was democrcatic--=that we not responsible to one man; it was by vote of the people. And in the present conflict the action of the British was but the action of the en tire nation. He also asked that God defend the right, and at this the au- dience gave his remarks the warmest greetings it was possible to give them. "This' is not a case of Canada help . 2 ing England," said the speaker, Must Save Prison Term "Hut it is a case of you and I fight- New Yor Dec. 2 A ng for our life." man, wining promoter. He added thal there was'a Meint 1c ohlation in the blue" books of fighiin land which stated * dominions desire ¢ fence of the mpi danger." "Of course they would want to as- ist," said the speaker, "and. they are assisting to-day," and his re. marky were greeted with thunderous applause. At the close Mr, the a -------------- Biz Maskinonge. e out trolling for pickerelvon the river Saturday, James Wilbur of "Rochester, accompanied by his brother, Charles, canght a maskin- onee, which weighed 17 1-2 pounds. The same day Stephen Leyare and Alexander Dowd caught another which weighed 35 pounds. Both fish were caught on Skinner baits and were fine spécimens of that kind of fish. It is not often that fishermen catch niaskinenge at this time of year, but the weather is favorahle thev are able to fish comfortably al- most every day. W were sti- Eng- should any of the assist in the de at a time of real re heen service of a p "0 in Atlanta Prison, his final appeal in the United supreme eourt Mr. Pree. n Was well known in Kingston. He WW fobp dt witty Yr connection with Ia © "of Hawtherne Silver ond Tron Mines. which held proper- (Hes in Temagami Reserves. fre vias p » has lost States yma - Peterson was ten- dered a vote of thanks jor his fine a » on motion of H. A. Calvin. He dealt with a timely subject in a masterly way, 7 \ ture © the outbreak of the war Ca- nedlan exports to Great Britain have Juereited by $22.00 as With the same | Small Employers in Many Lines Will EEETIEDT. SrrmreT---- IS THE ACT WORKABLE ? WHOLESALE EXCLUSIONS FROM | WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION. | London's Be Omitied From Operation of Act! --Belief That Labor Will Rebel. Simple By Olga Amsdall, A far-reaching measure has been | Rach week pasfed by the Ontario cabinet affect- | arin ciping ing. the ultimate operation of the | the London workmen's compensation act, whieh! wag placed upon the statute books of | the provinee during the last session: of the legislature. The aét, amongst: other powers, invested the commis-| on with the liberty of excluding cer ain classes of employers and wor) men from its scope | The order-in-council, which. was i barking made public yesterday, affects whole« with a heated sale exclusions from the act of whole a i He Nite 5 Bgevio fain eries of industries and of certain _° r botior Bd TOT lasting specified industries, -where less than result. "hair will have a delight «ix and four hands are employed, ful navy y Sietrance, matter in The position of these excluded in- ay apply a THe Ina, It ¥au dustries is now worse than at any with a eiean toosh brush, drawing time since 1885, when the old com- Jutough the hair pensation act was passed. The old caton or Ah act, under which certain rights Were sobner ir given to the excluded industrie is damp--th now repealed, and no substitute has ©34rries w heen provided. Previously, work men in most of the affected groups : Ww had a remedy where accidents may have been caused in "the ways, works or plant of the employer, or due to obedience to orders. of the employer." That remedy has now heen removed. Among the occupations now ex- éempted from the operations of the act are wholesale and retail mercan- tile businesses, hotel keeping and ] restaurant keeping, public garages, | livery stables, auction and sales stab le also making or repairing of men's and women's clothing, white- wear, -shirts, col 5, corsets, hats, aps, furs or robes, carried on as part help a of an exclusive retail business. Rub it inta the 3 Such operations as coffee grinding, outward Apply to meat-cuftin drug manufacturing, anh ang forefinger boot and shoe making and repairing, ria ae hair. watch, clock and jewellery making autifully, angl repairing, harne making and repairing, when carried on as part of and for the purpose of an exclusively retail business, are not 0 be considered Under the act. Two other regulations deal with exclus 8 where le than six mien wre usually employed. Under this heading are included manufacture of cheese or butter operations of creameries or dairi construction or operatiecn of telephone lines, power laundries, dyeing and cleaning estab- lishments, mining, except in the case beau beauty culture, storing beauty of face and figure, leading English publications. Any of talned from Canadian chemds hibits next week. 1 shall endeavor to 't Curl Hale With Hot ron! life oat if enrling iron, tead hair the 0 repeat: the rtaight----or » } be tnusually the droggi a long time " About Halr Tonics. cok almost one hears of samé Ib dis for npr the hair, and although this parag may seem a little superfinous, an fashioned recipe may come as.a wel- come change. | know of many instanc- 8 where it has stopped hair from fall- ing out and caus r to gro original yg Irariung, d one-fourth pin 1, allow t to stand 30 minutes, then add sumii- ient water to make half a pint u briskly into the s« alp wita tips and you will immediate that clean tingling which is a sure sigh of healthy acts Care of Eyebrows and Lashes, brows and lashes should be br 'ntly night and morning keey & them dust free, k roots Mennaline Rlossier and dar lengthen and curl with also Lustrous, Flufly Hair, Good Stallax not 'te ely only makes the best ladies' men are in the employ of the owner, operating of thrashing machines, Machine shops, repair shops, blacksmith shop up- when not incidental to an industry under the act, are ex cluded unless at least four men are usually employed therein. Forty-two se are devoted 1 reclassification of the industries in luded under the new act, and this action of the commission seems to ear out the contention of the em- ployers that the new act was unwork- able in the form passed. Last evening an authority on the subject remarked fo the Globe: "If labor only sees through this order-in-council and realizes a for . Muskrat for tin- smith shops, holstering, ete., tions to! of producing mines where the work- | | | | General Review of Country Distric t the wholesale exclusion from the application of the means, (there will be war." act Tr ---- SIMPLEWAY TO * END DANDRUFF Stop Falling #aif and Itching Scalp. | ------es nt ess | THE WHIG'S JUMBLE and Local News W. A. D. Baby | been ed collector of inlan@ rever Hamilton, to succeed W. F. who promoted. | It is said a serious mine disaster recurred in Hokkaido, the northern- most of the main islands of Japan. It is reported that 437 miners are dead. More than one million Bibles are being sent to France and Belgium 'Y the Bible society for the use of British, French and Belgian sol diers fighting against the Germans. The United States Metal Products 'ompany of New York to-day filed a petition in bankrupt tat liab- ilities $3,700,000, ascels about $1,- 000,000. The New York police are invest gating the assassination of "Little Patsy," Doyle, New York's latest street murder victim, to ascertain if it has any connection with the mur- der of Barnett Baff, the anti-trust] poultry man. They believe it pos- sible that the Gopher gang, of which Patsy was a member, may have kill- ed him to prevent him from squeal- ing. The Oklahoma "Jim Crow" ear There is one sure way that has never failed to remove dandruff at once, and that is to dissolve it, then you destroy it entirely. To do this, Just get about four ounces of plain, common liquid arvon from any drug store (this is all you "vill need), ap- ply it at night w Len retiring; us enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips By morning, most, if not all, of Your dandruff wil] be gone, and three or four more applications will com- pletely dissolve, and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it, no matter how much dandruff You may have. 4 You will find all itchi ging of the scalp wij] and your hair will pe glossy, silky and soft, feel a hundreq times If you value your get rid of dandruff at once, for noth- ing destroys the hair so quickly. It not only starves the hair and make (it fall out, but it makes it stringy, | Straggly, dull, dry, brittle and life- less, and everybody notices it, was & and dig- stop instantly fluffy, lustrous, and look and better. hair, you should Beauty Weekly Selections Experts Writing for the English Press. in this department 1 irom the London pap formed on. the Ly experts. mand most London new spapers and periwdicals are now devoting much space i nd instruct in methods most efficient for I append herewith 8 or drug gists, su 1 am told Fur-lin Muskrat lined, sable collar and reveres, regular $50 Sts Sg esate id | law, requiring railroads to segregate white and negro passengers by pro- viding separate coaches or compart-! ments of equal comfort, on trains and separate depot waiting rooms, was approved to-day by the United States supreme court. It affirmed a decree of Oklahoma federal courts holding the law valid, asserting that actual discrimination must take place before a case could be decided The Chicago police are on the | trail of the man who strangled Smili Emsheimer, hat manufacturer, in his} Writers from Noted Beauty and Effective Methods. Special Correspondent, London, Eng will endeavor, by rs, to Keep my Co- latest and best advice of Owing to the persistent de- to the gerious consideration of any of them now employ high salaried enhancing or. re. 4 few eolippings from the ingredients mentioned could be ob. out for move M keep right up to date possible shampoo, but has the peculiar brogeriy of leaving the hair with & pro. naunced natural "wave," un efféct tired by many ladies. = J staflax: granules; dissolved in a coup of hot wager, is aniple for a luxurious head wash, and leaves the hair with a peculiar lustre and flultiness obtainable as far as known. It *Clly harmless and can be ob tained from mhost druggists, although since it has bean but little used for this purpose it comes only in sealed original packages, enough to make up twenty or thirty indivifual shampoos * Better Than Face Powder. Instead of face powder 1 always a simple home-made lotdon. which I Mare usetul than the former for poses, with, none of its ob < lotion, wihich is made by olving one ounce of ordinary viem- In four tablespaonfuls of wa Y as a sort of 8, » Smuts and "Fr extraneous mat- resides being excellent for oily or 3 ¥ skin. Unlike powder, it does show," does not easily come oft with. out washing, and does not Interfere With 4he healthy 'action of, the pores Remove Superflugus Ha 4 simple matter Yo remove ga roawth of hair temporarily, but ve completely, without injury to v fver, 4 heavy moustache, is It is a pity it is 'n that powder. cessfully used His purpose. Apply it direbtly to the hair, The recommended treatment is designed not merely to instantly re- move the hair, but also to eventually kill the roots entirely. A friend of mine who had bought an ounce of Phem- nol told me it was worth its welght in gold to her, To PILENTA COMPLEXION SOAP, REAT ENGLISH COMPLEXION NSER. ALL DRUGGISTS ~--Advt, a ed Coats reveres, regular $50 and reveres, .. $25.00 reveres, collar ' collar 'and GOURDI BUILDERS !! Have You Tried GYPSUM WALL PLASTER? It Baves Time. P. WALSH, Zbar's Ice Cream Parlor Choice Candles of all kinds in brlk or fancy boxes. Also serve all kinds of hot drinks. Seasonable - Fruits. Phone 1128, 880 Princess St. I Overcoatings office Saturday night and expect to} land him. Detectives searched Em- sheimer's littie office on Lake street | for mgre fiinger prints. The piece of | hemp rope with which Emsheimer was strangled was the most tangible bit of evidence found by detectives; when the crime was discovered. Fall DIVORCED, THEY RE-WED, N. S,, Free For Year. Yarmouth N.S, Dec. 2--Rev. Dr! Hill officiated at a unique marriage yesterday, when R. L. Gray, American vice-consul here, was mar- | ried to his divorced wife, Frances W. Gray, of Knoxville, Tenn. About | a vear ago domestic difficulties arose : wlifch culminated in divorce, With- | in the last few days a reconciliation ' was effected, and Mrs. Gray, with the children, arrived on Saturday, '| i American Vice-Cotisul at Yarmouth, | the : Crawford di 1 Minnesota's Hunting Casualties. Dulath, Mian.,, Dec. 2. Eleven hunters dead and.twelve wonnded js Princess and the toll of this year's hunting sea- | son In Minnesota, ¥ ¥ 4 Suiting ~O~ & Walsh, . Civil and Military Tailors, Bagot Street

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