Daily British Whig (1850), 19 Apr 1915, p. 1

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SEE 8 PAGES YEAR 82 NO OI GERMANY TO ABANDON OFFENSIVE IN THE WEST *+--ouip LD EV AC UATE BELGIUM No Hope of Be Being Able t0 ,, vu 1. ome Penetrate | Further. NOW MOVING TROOPS T0 ye EARPATHIANS TO CHECK r Demands" Are Met By Allies, Portland, Maine, many is prepared te evaounte gium if "all the other German mands aré fully complied with." intimaticn to this effect was given in a letter from 'Dr. Bernhard Dern burg, the German Government's mouthpiece in the United States, made public here last night. Chief among the "other German demands," as set forth in Dr. Dern- Communications That the Defen- hutg's Finigment, Beit What he des- A eribes as a "'guaranteed free sea, sive Will Be Maintained On the |. a the throwing open French and Belgian Front. of the high seas to the unrestricted oetaY to tha "hi 23 commerce of all nations under an Rome, rei 19. Olicint communi international covenant that shipping cations received by the Italian Cab shall not be molested in any oops inet and statements made by Ger Cumstances, and that telegraphic and mansion official circles have given the mail communications shall be kept impression here that the German Gen- ©oPen at all times between all "coun- eral Stafi has abandoned plans for a | tries. Growing out of this "de- general offensive the mand" is another, that preferential French front and has decided simply to maintain the defensive tariffs shall be abolished. It appears This information has caused a deep that Germany has no objection to any nation maintaining a high pro impression here because it is believed to signify that Germany has no hope tection tarifi, but such tarifis Dr. Dernburg contends, should bear equal of pefietrating further into French ter ly on all other nations, that éac! eh ritory and is rapidly may have thé same opportunity and guns fo the add D.( (er- Bel de- An April 19. THE RUSSIANS, The Italian Cabinet Hears In Official movement on 80 moving troops Carpathians front. . Germany the markets. In the particular c of Belgium, he hints that the man relinquishment of that depends on the formation of gian-German trade treaty of to Berlin. case CGier- country a Bel terms British Successes, (Special to the April 19 Whig.) (Official). troops yesterday eaptured gum, near Zwartalen, two hundred yards of German trenches. These they have retained in spite of several coun ter attacks. "We have been successful on both banks on the River Fecht, in Alsace, and our advance is being pressed for ward on the porth bank and the sauth bank. In this district we made an important gain with the occupa tion of a series of elevation, the northernmost height of which com mands the course of the Fecht in front of Burgkorpfeld. "In the course of this action we eap- tured a division of mountain artil- lory; two eannon of: seventy -four-mil limeters calibre and two - machine guns, "The German aeroplanes which Hew over Belfort recently dropped bombs. These did two hangars and Paris, suitable Iritish in Bel ISSUES CHART Conditions #* Sun Moon Till May 14th, Whig.) April 19.-- to-day is- the conditions from to-day covers expected London and GERMANY Showing ial to the derlin (via Amsterdam), The German general sued a chart of the. sun and until May 11th. conditions over Warsaw, and was generally accepted as indicating an announcement of general aerial attacks against the Al- lies. Guns For Kaiser In Sealed Car cheue""of pow. No comniien | Seized ed by Swiss done." | | ET Lt ts Bpecial to. the Whiz) . {- Geneva, April 19.--As the result of a BODY UNIDENTIFIED. | raiirond. gocudent, Swiss. customs off ------ | cera discovered yesterday that a seal- Though To Be That Of a Woman ed car marked "Vegetables, * shipped | Crossing From Canada, enon to Germany," was loaded with . laxim guns, Watertown, April 19.--Little pro- | eral cars of gress has been made by the county | shells, All officials in solving the mystery sur rounding the finding of the headless body of w woman on the shores of Lake Ontario, near Sacket Harbor, Friday night. Coroner Smith said that the opin- ion appears to be that the body that of a woman drowned crossing "from Canada last It is said that a man, child were crossing from Canada, and that an accident occurred in which the man and child were saved and the woman was drowned. Tt is regarded as probable that the body is that of the woman. "On the morning of the ninth we| No means of identification have | firad a mine at Le Touquet (Le Tou- been found. It is apparently that of | guel,) two miles from Atrmentieres, | a woman of rather slight buil. The greater part of the village was | Both hands and one foot were miss- | in our hands, ing, and it apparently had been in the | on the outskirts ran through houses | walgr for months. connected by loop-holed garden| a, | walls, eu 8 &: 4 : . - was driven, despite the culty o y TO INSPECT KRON PRINZ, underground excavation through the L waterlogged areas close to the river. | pairs | The operation was crowned with] complete success. By the explosion | 19. The debris was hurled two hundred feet | (Spec staff showing moon It Paris, four some damage to sot fire to four for confiscated. chemicals wero making HURL GERMANS IN AIR, Armentieres, London, April 19.--News of an important mining operation by the] British near Armentieres, in north- i ern France, by which a hole was blown in the Gerrian line, is contain- ed in an tive dated April 15th, and issued by ! the Government Press Bureau. It follows: is while winter. woman and Time Limit Will Be Set For Re to German Cruiser. Newport News, April German auxiliary cruiser Kron Prinz inthe air, some falling 250 yards, Wilhelm now occupies the sanie berth | behind our trenches, When the; at the Newport News shipyard, in| smoke cleared away the wall had dis- which' Prinz Eitel Friedrich was| appeared, and its place was taken oy moored during her 30-days stay. The an enormous crater, which had been big sea-raider heaved up anchor Sat-! blasted in the middle of the German | urday and was towed to the yards. line. How many Germans were kili-{ She will be drydocked Monday, when | ed it is impossible to say; but their | examination of her hull below the casualties must haye been consider- water line will be made by the same able, since the trenches were fully _ naval board which surveyed the Eit- manned. Twenty-nine wounded were el, and recommend the time Nmit for afterwards carried across the river." her repairs. TR Captain Thierfelder has asked for CANADIAN SHOVEL SHIELD an armed guard, and the stay of the | ge Wilhelm here will see repeated the Have Been In Use In France With tactics employed by United States | Success. s naval and army authorities before| Ottawa, April 19.--That 800 sho- the Eitel interned. | vels of the type patented by Miss --- | Eva' McAdam, of the Militia Hepat. E ININ ne | ment, and purchased for the Canad- EXAMINING OFFICERS. | ian overseas forces, have been in use A at the front in France, and have gi- For the Coast Service--Vesscls To| vor every satisfaction, is stated in Carry War Supplies. (Special to the Wh | #hovels, which are provided with an Vhig.) Ottawa, April 19.--As announced | to permit of a rifle barrel being pas- sometime -ago, the Canadian Steam- | sed through, are being used instead ship Lines doing business on the of sandbags by -the Canadian sol- Great Lakes is expected to supply | diers, and have been found to furnish fiftden vessels for ocean service a splendid means of protection. So! while other vi will also be se- far none have been perforated by cured. Officers of these boats are rifle bullets. 'being examined for new certificates! An order for 200,000 of the sho- which will be required. The Ad-|vels has, it is learned, been given in miralty has set apart a number of Canada by the Russian Government vessels to carry war supplies and! and will be distributed here. several additional vessels will be as<| - . signed to the Canadian trade. SUNK WITH ALL HANDS, English Trawler Which Went To Res- : cue Driven OF, peciv to he Whig.) Hull, Fre. April ¥ 9.~The Grimsh: Vanilla an "When fortune begins to smile on a to sit down and bask. Maybe a young man loses sleep nights wondering how he can win the only girl, when all he would have | to do is ask her. Lieut.-Col, Lacey Jolnec, recent trawler +4 sunk' with all Paves 1 by a German sub- | marine on Sunday. The trawler Fer mo tried to rescue the crew of the Vanilla, but dri Ye was ven off by the Society Is human nature in foll - And} {eles here | Japanese | troops from pursuing bands of and that there were sov-| Mining Operation of the British Near | | Is official Eyewitness narra-| but the enemy's lines | Under this position a gallery | | hada | aperture in the centre large enough foolish man he thinks it is up to him | KINGSTON TWENTY-FOUR DROW NED Off the British Transport Manitou In| Aegean, London, April 19.--An official state ment from the British Admiralty Sun day night the substance of a further report concerning the loss of life aboard the transport Manitou, which was attacked by a Turkish tor- pedo boat in the Aegean Nea. The report shows that twenty-four men were drowned instead of one hundred as first reported, and that twenty-seven others are missing. The transport itself was not damaged, The loss of life was dué to the cap sizing of one boat in the water and another while being lowered, owing to the breaking ol a davit. gives Tidings. Admiralty, Sunday ! War The Britigh ment issued nounced. that the ashyre Saturday m a state afternoon, an submarine E-13 ran on Kephez Point in the Dardanelles while attempting a diflicult reconnoisance of the Kephez mine field. berlin: learns from ( tiny has occurred lian troops caused that, like the were forced to "ing lines, while were held back. SUN YAT SEN PLOTS OVER RISING IN CHINA * The Chinese Government Lodged Another Protest With Tekio on Saturday. Pekin, April 19.--Congsidering the fact that the Japanese gave assist- ance to Dr. Sun Yat Sen in his re- bellion againgt President Yuan Shi Kai and that Dr. Sun retired to To- kio after the revolt was put down, the report is credited in official cir- that Hung-Hutze bands from South Manchuria, led by Japan- ese, are now marauding on the Shan- # tung peninsula in the vicinity of I'sing-Tau, with banners inscribed "Vanguard of the army against Yuan Shi Kai." The Chinese other protest airo that among the Austry by: «the complaint Indian troops, they occupy the first fight the Fnglish troops a mu Government lodged an- with Tokio Saturday regarding the reported movement of troops in Shantung, and it is understood, alleging that Japanese troops prevented Chinese bri- gands near Tsimo, in neutral terri- tory north of Tsing-Tau. Chinese Government reports to confirm the newspaper accounts of an alleged agreement between Dr. Sun and Japanese agents for Japan- ese suppbrt with modey, arms and men for another revolution. Numerous executions in several cen- tres, including Pekin, of emissaries {of Dr. Sun are now taking place, the law in China not-being suffi: ciently advanced to give these men fair trials. Little beyond the de also, are said { nunciation of alleged offenders by de tectives is necessary to bring about | an. execution. SOLDIERS' VOTE BILL Sent To Premier At Once, (Special to the Ottawa, April 19 { Vote Bill as finally amended by the | Commons and the Senate will be {sent to Premier Asquith to- / ol ing by Canadian soldiers in tape land in the Bermudas cannot go on | without the King's approval. While it is not believed that the British | Government will undertake to vote | the Canadian measure it is fully ex- pected Lord Kitchener will be coun- sulted &s to ygeether voting in' the | trenches "would be to the best in- terests of w'litary discipline and Jditary efliciency. To Be Asquith Whig.) The Soldiers Sug (THE EDITOR'S VIEWS - BEFORE SELECTION Not Wise to Give to Commission s0 Much Power as is | Proposed. (Special to the Whig.) Stratford, April 19.--The Herald | which is published by W 8. Ding-| man, one of the appointees announ-| +ced for the new P + Commission, said editorially: "The | proposal of the substitution of a; Provincial Licensé Commission for] Local Omissions for every riding we believe-is & good ome, but is it wise to deliver over to such a comnfission so. much power as is proprsed? "The license law so intimately touches the life of the people that we question the wisdom of deliver- ing over to a provincial commission anything savoring of legislative paw- er or other than purely administra- tive power. But extensive powers of the cancellation of liconses, dif- | ferentiating of hours in various lo- calities for cessation of sale and transfer to new commission of pret- ty much of the powers now exercised by License Department, are propos- led if we understand the proposition | aright. We doubt if it is wise to | hand over so much power to any ap- pointed body, not directly respon- sible to the people. "The Legislature should continue to make the laws and a new commis- sion do only the administering." DUTCH STEAMER SANK tn North Sea After Striking A Mine. {Special y? the Whig.) Sd, April 1 - 'Despatches From Near And PRESENTED | istrate | warships. detention camp 7 | ected honerary members of the In-| FIRST CANADIAN TO GET MILITARY ; CROSS. fis 8 ? ONTARIO. MON 0, PITH 0 DAY, APRIL NEWS 1915 REFUGEES' SAD RETURN. Woman Outraged By Their Brutal German Captors, Belleville, April 19.--A: letter from a Canadian, at present in Gen- eva, just received by a resident of this city, paints a picture of terrible ghts witnessed in Switzerland along the route taken by refugees from Germany. He rays: "Prisoners are exchanged route of Geneva, and thousands of prisoners, who were driven off into Germany, are now being allowed to return on account of shortage of food. We see hundreds of them ev-| ery day, and they ate the most aw-| ful objects we ever saw. The suffer-| that these unfortunates have) been subjected to cannot-be-dederib- ed by words..One must;see them to] appreciate what it is to be taken pri- soner by the Germans. Families have been separated, people more than half-starved, many have been mur- dered, the women have been outrag- ed, and all have been knocked about and beaten by thei brutal captors. "So far as we can see there is no- thing too bad for Ge rmans to do with Jritish prisoners, and if what we hear is true, after the war is over and they are able to make some in- vestigations, they will find that many have been murdered or starved to death after being subjected to awful hrutalities." The letter tells of the arrival of a trainload of five hundred young French women in Geneva from Ger- many, many of them nuns, Sisters of Charity and Red Cross workers, all in a sad state owing to German out- rag They are at present in. Savoy, whe every care is given the unror- tunates, TURKISH TORPEDO BOAT CHASED AND DESTROYED It Had Tried to Sink the British: Transport Maniteu in Aegean. London, April, 19.--The Briti h | Admiralty in a statement issued Sat- urday night, announced that a Tur- { kish torpedo boat had been sunk in| the Aegean Sea. 3 ! The text of the admiralty state-| ment was as follows: "Phe-transport Manitou, carrying! British troops, was attacked by a Turkish torpedo boat in the Aegean this morning. "The Turkish boat fired three tor- pedoes at the transport, all of which | missed their mark. The torpedo boat | | thelr made off, but was chased by the | British cruiser Minerva and British torpedo boat destroyers, and was fin- | ally run ashore and destroyed on the | coast of Chios in Kalammuti Bay. "The members of the crew of tha] Turkish warship were made prison-| | Is, "It ie reported that about one hun- | Distant Places. THE LATEST TIDINGS IN THE BRIEVE POSSIBLE FORM. by T +he Whig's Daily Condensation Of |; 5 The News Of the World From Te'e- graph Service and Newspaper Ex- changes. The late Rothschild 500,000, estimate sworn to Li insurance claims paid in re spect to British cflicers killed in the war amount to nine and one-half mil lion dollars pr. J Yogi selec Ba left according ron Nathan Mayer estate of £12.- to a provisional fe was unanimous- eral candidate by berals. rston, land, ly the North Perth I John M Li Court C1 t We ixty year I Board of cent Division erk a died in his seventh British by fifty easmer Trade will the insur gainst war risks, the Toronto em- sent 400 men tario. Jell 'homas, red unee pe per ploym to the t bureau farms of On ice Faleener of illnes Police Mag- died after a lengthy age of fifty- three. The ( tiovernment has re- ceived notification that the overseas Demini will be consulted' in the negotiations cn peace terms. Edmonton reports twenty per rent. of crops in, while Regina district re- ports fifty per coat: seeding accoms plished Three hundred Americans and ot her foreigners who desire to Mexico, are to be provided special train le Mexico Cr Irolo, on the 2 The ste John, muda with war. 'anadian ons ving 3rd. amship St. George reached N.B., Saturday from Ber- 300 German prisoners of They are chiefly sailors from They were taken to the Amherst; NS: Ray, Guelph, a' lad charged with murder of an- Italian named. John Barr, was discharged | from custody at the Assizes, owing to the weakness of the evidence against him. Col. George W. St. Gladstone Goethals, the Am- | erican engineer, who constructed the Panama Canal, and Sir Thomas Shaughnessy, President of the Cana- dian Pacific Railway, hawe been el-| stitution of Civil Engineers, Eng. The Ontario Government has struck upon a novel méthoi for pro-| viding in part for the maintenance | t0e€:r lives through drowning. of 'roads which may he huilt under S-- the new 'act. It- deals with the re-| n { gulation of signs and signhoards er-| War Tidings. ected along the roads or at varying A Belgian aeroplane brought down distances back in the fields, and pow-| a German aeroplane near Roulers. | er is taken to apply any license fees | A French battleship, with hydro-| imposed on advertisers, to the up-| planes, bombarded and destroyed | keep of highways. Turkish fortifications and encamp- | ment at Elariah, on Turkish Egypt-| | tian boundary. | | The C.P.R., liner Missanabie ar-| Pah dit hb dtd ddd fb i dd rived at Halifax Saturday with 700 | | pastengers. The captain reports he | LO IEasION. 3 was chased by, a German submarine | Toronto, April | off the north coast of Ireland. 19. «<Pre- #| mier Hearst has named the fol- 4 A French aviator bombarded | | Strassburg, doing some damage. lowing as the Provincial Li- Bi Constantinople - official. - report, | | cense Commission: J, BD. Fla: & | port says British sunmarine E-15 was | Yelle, Lindsay, (chairman); Ww, Five in the Dardanelles. 'Three' offi- | cers and a crew of, twenty-one were | *| rcecued by the Turks. 3 In desperate fighting between Tels: | 3 potch and Zuella, Te Russians vaok { 1,140 prisoners, forty oflicers anc FEEREPELE SPEER IRR ; tures machine guns. In the direction | q of Stry they 'repulsed attacks. | The Turkish force, defeated by the | British Indians Friday night, is still] lin flight, and British troops have oc- cupled" Manhkaltah, taking many pri: soners, machine guns, 700,000 rounds of ammunition antl a large supply of Krupp shells. A Greek steamer was torpedonh] in the North Sea. The crew of twen-| ty was rescued. s A Vienna official despatch says that owing to a possibly lengthy war, untrained landsturm the ages of eighteen and fifty here- after are liable for military service. The French brought down a Gers man aeroplane near Flanders. French aviators bombarded an avia- tion shed at Freiburg. The French have made appreciable progress on Fecht River in the Vos- ges. A Constantinople despatch says that the British battleship Majestic and Swiftsure bombarded the Tur- kish advanced batteries without re- sult and were forced to retire. A French battleship destroyed the railway bridge on the line which joins. the interior regions of Syria with the city of St. Jean d'Acre." The Cologne Gazette reports the trial of a Geramn at Weimar on a charge of having given three cigaret- tes to a French prisoner passing | through the town. The court sen- tenced the man to one day's impri-. sonment for "a lack of feeling for his nationality. » The Sportage of rubber in Ger- many i¥ so. acute that the Govern ment is arranging for next week a J special campaign to collect rubber | hout-the- Empire. ° How astounding German ties of '| the. defeat of England were Sed to cause the attempted rebellion in South Africa is exposed in official reports just rece! here gnail. London, | nd Dane, Toronto; John Aye- arst, Toronto; George T, Smith, Haileybury. > | db rm ts me PH TE atin SES tr rte. #5.) - -------- a r---- iv mas Ba Can: trade com- alien. W. G. Colyghoun, at Hamilton. | testo was published by the rebel lea- pH : SLATE which declared that London and Paris had both been Ventirely | Tutely ling which | sold. | fore their congregations Lhe felt sure { trains. 1 The Daily British Whig [= LAST EDITION ANGLICANS ARE ASKED NOT TO DRINK LIQUOR As a Beverage During the Present War. BISHOP OF F KINGSTON SPEAKS ABOUT THE ARMY SCAN- DALS IN CANADA. Only Way To Stop Such Practices Is To Threaten to End Political And Social Careers of Culprits. At a meeting of the House of Bishops of the Church of Ingland in Canada held at Fort William, on April 14th, the following resolution was adopted : "Nhe Bishops! of the Church of England in Canada strongly recom. mend the members of the Church throughout the Dominion to abstain from the use of alcoholic li- quors as a beverage during the pre- sent war, and also to refrain abso- from treating others. "And, further, they - urge the Pro- vincial Governments to take steps to shorten considerably the hours dur- liquor gnay at present be "Fach Bishop is nish his clergy with a copy of above resolution, together with an instruction' to them to place it be- in as public a manner gs possible. (Signed) 8. P. Rupert's Land (Primate). requested to furs the comment George's said that The Bishop of Kingston, ing on the resolution at St. ("athedral Sunday morning, 'What Berlin Has to Say About War Berlin, via wirgless, April 19, -- The British attempted to destroy, through mining operations, strong German positions southeast of Ypres has failed, the German war office said to-day. "The English, after some blasting | last night rushed a German position | on the heights southeast of - Ypres. | They were at once repulsed in a counter attack. Fighting here cun- tinues. "In Champegne the French hare on "April 16th by the tween Meuse and Moselle. *<Artillery duels are dn in the Vosges. Southwest of Stoss- weir the Germans took French po-| | sitions. Southwest of Motzeral the Germans carried outposts but fell back before the superior force of the enemy. "The situation on front is unchanged." the MOVING GERMAN TROOPS. Three Hundred Thousand Sent To| Assist Austrians. Zurich, Switzerland, April 19. | Travelers from Germany are reach-| ing Zurich after extraordinary de- | lays resulting from the congestion of | German railroad lines with troop] ger traffic stopped. German troops, according | to the travellers, are being moved in | ROBLIN.- At several directions, part of them to-| ward Austria. that it would carry very { dred men on board 'the transport lost | blasted a trench ina position taken | LLOYD-==Az Bloomfield, Germans be | Progress | eastern | BAVE PheTon | Private despatches received nn from Vienna say that no fewer than 350,000. German are actually fight-, WOODCOCK---In_ Kingston, ing with the Austrians against the Russians in the Carpathians. BERLIN ADMISSIONS | Of German Reverses Near Arras and In Loretta Hills. Berlin, (via wireless) April 19.-- Hot fighting is going on at four dis- tinct points in the battle line. in [ France, according fo despatches re- ceived here. The War Office official- ly adimtted & German reverse north- west of Arras. The French have resumed their offensive against the German wedge between the Meuse and Moselle. They have concentrated their forces in an attack on the German positions near Flirey, west of Pont-a-Mousson. Northwest of Arras, in the Lorette Hills, the Germans were forced to evacuate a small position at Appui. A Butter Substitute. London, April 19.--The produc- tion of margarine from sunflowers is the latest device attributed to the German Government to meet the ex- pécted scarcity of butter, according to a despatch to the Exch Tele graph Company from Amsterdam. he message says that the Prussian Ministry of Railroads has ordered all station masters to plant sunflowers in every bit of available ground around the depots. Sunflowers, it is claimed, yield an oil that can be used in the manufac- ture of substitutes for butter. I ----------------" - A Port Arthur, Ont., Mrs. William Leithenen. was found not guilty of conspiracy in connection with the death of her husband, who was mur- dered last fall by a young Italian, now under sentence of death tor the missioner {or South Africa. A mani-| crime. At Montreal Lady Ddvidson, wife of Sir Charles Davidson, iri Flr ge ewe in 34 ! i | } | Himmediate | matically 1 WOLSTENHOLNE~In great weight, not only with their own people, but with those outside their communion, because the Anglican Church had always steadfastly a | to bo drawn into any movement | wheroby the cause of temperance was turned into a political or party issue. But now that a really critical situa- tion. had ariden, the bishops, in the {name of the church, confidently ap- pealed to their people to show that they were ready to make a sacrifice for the that appeal would vain. not be made Here was an opportunity in to | show by their example that they real- ized the value of the splendid sacrifice made by those who were cheerfully giving their lives for their country. Unless we seized on the opportunities this critical time presented of bring- ing about a great national uplift in righteousness in every direction, po- litical, social, and moral, our last state would he worse than our first. The Army Supplies Scandals, Recent disclosures in the newspapers would make one think that the eighth commandment had been expunged from the Decalogue. It was no sort of de- fence to charge the other side with similar conduct, as two blacks can never make a white. The Bishop said he had no political bins at all, but he was sure of this, that such scan- dals as had madg the cheek of every honorable Canadian blush with shame would only cease if and when it was clearly known beforchand that inevit- ably and without fail the commercial or political or social career of anyone detected in such practices would then and there be at an end. When the peo- ple made up their minds that such punishment should auto- follow, the evil would be rooted out, but not till then. FABRE WON MARATHON At Boston This Afternoon--Winner Belongs To Montreal. (Special to the Wnig.) Joston, April 19.--Fdouard Fabre, Montreal, won the twenty-mile Mara- thon here this afternoon. The race was the famous Boston Athletic As- sociation Marathon. DAILY MEMORANDUM. Vaudeville, Grand Opera House, 2.30 and 7.30 p.m. See top of page 3, right hand corner, { for probabilities a BORN. HARPHLL--At Hotel Dieu, on _ April 10th, 1915, too Mr. and Mrs. George Harpell (nee Miss Mary Breault), a daughter. WE~--At Quebec, Rev. A. T. and on April Mrs. Love, 2a4, a son on April 10th, to to Mr. ter MARRIED. OGILVY--CARVER -- At April 10th, Alfred Ogilvy Lucy Carver, of Hillier Picton, on to Edith DIED. K-In Athol, April 12th, Baverstock, aged 54 years. cot in Milford, April 9th, Esther Cook, aged 84 years. _ | DE NISON--At North Fredericksburgh, on April 11th, Mrs. Phoebe Deni son, relict of the late Datus Deni- son, aged ih years HARK NEB Kingston, on Sunday, April 18th, 1915, Rebecca, fourth daughter of the late Samuel Hark- ness, aged 26 years. Funeral (private) from the residence of her brother-in-law, Harry Coyle, 480 Johnson street, on Tues. day afternoon at 2.30 o'clock. Ordinary freight and passen-| Toronto papers please copy in Germany has almost] RB BR---In North Marysburgh, April 11th, Mary Keller, aged' 76 years. Adolphustown, on April th, Jacob H. Roblin, aged 177 years, | VANALSTIN E--1n on Apr 10th, aged 83 years, South Marysburgh, John Vanalstine, on Mone day, April 19th, 1915, Marjory Helen, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Woodcock, 119 Ordnance street Funeral at (private) Tuesday afternoon 2 o'clock Kingston on April 17th, 19815, Bephia M. Wol~ stenhoine, aged 82 years. Funeral will take place frém the resi- dence of her daughter, Mrs. Wil- liam Cunpingham, 110 Victoria street, at 9 o'clock on Tuesda to St. Mary's Cathedral, where a solemn requiem mass will be sung Friends an acquaintances are re- spectfully invited to attend. ROBERT J. REID : Undertaker, hone oy 577. For House Cleanin ~ Ronuk Ficor . Polish, Veneer, Cobra Purniture Polish, Brasso, 8ilve, Lux, Wool Wash, 8a- pollo, Bon Dustless and Mrs. R. Lloyd, a daugh: good of their country, and , 1 - or the repose of her soul. | zg.

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