Daily British Whig (1850), 10 Sep 1915, p. 8

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Our Better Clothes Our Clothes are Clothes. THEY'RE FAR BETTER CLOTHES The models are radically different, astonishingly greater than ever. way out of the ordinary $12, $15, $18 up to $22 Fall Overcoats $12, $15, $18 Just walk right in--look around all you please --and go out when vou get ready. - We're proud to show our Suits and Overcoats to any man who comes a looking. Livingston's, Brack St. A little out of the way, but it will pay you to walk. adian rut of fabries are i rich and béautiful--while values are § always We have been very fortunate in obtaining our early purchases of Navy Blue and Black Serges. ) Scotch Tweedsand English Cloakings At old prices. These we are now offering at fully 30 per cent. less than to-day's price. I IEA on ANN Magnificent Showing of New Fall Coats Over 500 to select from. New Fall Suits Qver 300 new ideas. i A pleasare t have you fuses these ow ? and Londen styles. % 1 on September 1st, 4 the southern portion of eur front." A NENA S105 . THE DAILY BRITISE u. -GOL, PERREAU BACK ae WAS AT THE THE FRONT FOR A SHORT TIME, Royal Military College 'Commandant Was With the Staff Of the Cane adian Division In France, Jeut.-C8l, C. N. Perreau, Acting andant of the Royal Military », who has spent the past two ,mcnths in England and on the firing lice in France and Belgium, return- ed to the city on Friday by way of Cape Vincent. Col. Perreau sailed from England on the American steamship New York, and arrived at New York City, cn Thursday. When asked if he had seen any submarines on the trip from England, the cologel rep ied thas, the trip had been uneventful. While attached to the staff of the Canadian Divisicn in France, Col, Perreau had a splendid opportunity to see what was going on. He met Major Burstall, formerly of the R,C. H.A. Everyone in England and Franca is loud in their praise of the Can- Division, "Col. Perreau said. The Germans. he says, are determin- ed to win, but in "the course short time tyey will find out that the British and Frenc h wean busi- ness. Before leaving England for Can | ada, Col. Perreau visited the Can adian division at Shoracliffe. He | speaks of it consisting of the finest lot of men he had the opportunity. to inspect. Conditions are greatly changed in| England since Col. Perreau was last there, Kvery person is determined] { | that Germany will be brought to he: | knees, and for that reason they are exerting themselves. The great need in Britain is more ofiicers and men, said the colonel. Col. Perreau declared the Allies] are more optimistic than ever. | "Phere are ready in Britain. to-| day 2,000,000 well trained men wait | ing for their chance to fight," he said, Mand in France there are a million men in reserve. When the! Allies' drive begins the German hosts | will find themselves greatly outnum- bered.' The end is certain. The Al-| lies are bound to wia. "Of the destructiveness of the various shells used in battle, the six- inch she.l loaded with lyddite is by far the deadliest, contrary to the general belief' that the larger shelly are the most potént factors in bom-! bardments. The lyddite shell puts out of action every soldier within one hundred yards of its exploding | point. I have reason Tor adaing that | there is a plan for passing the "Dar-| danelles soon to be put into effect! which promises complete success Although it is not stated, it is be HHeved that the mission of Col. Per-| reau to the firing line was to get some idea of conditions that exist, so that the professors at the Royal Military College can instruct the cadets in the latest methods of war- fare. .While in England Col. Perreau had} an opportunity to meet Col. L. Carleton, Commandant of the Rot ilitary College, who was val.ed home by the War Office for service! at the front. Although Col, Carle | ton has been in Efgland for some time, his regiment has not yet left! for the front. Col. Perreau was accompanied by! his wife and two children: { § | NO ACTIVE OPERATIONS On "British Front, Sir John Feench) sg ROPOrg, London, Sept. 10.--Fieid Marshal} Sir John French, Commander-in-| Chief of the British Army in the! field, has sent the following report) on recent operations: "There has been no change in the! fituation since my last comimunica-| tion. There has been mining activ- ity on both sides without important result. Our own artillery and that of the 'enemy has been active east of Ypres. On our front ¢anditions are normal. "A German aeroplane was Hught down by rifle and machine n fire falling close be: hind. the German lines southeast of Hooge. A! second German aeroplane on Septemovern, 5th was brought down by one of our fighti e enemy's lines opposite Change Of Time. s America will ledve for Cape Vincent at 1.30 p. m. instead of 3.30. After | Sopteminr 18th the 7 a. m. trip wilt be discontinned. * Films, Film Packs and Kodaks at approximately "quently. {its patriotic | German wai | tries, an otlicial connected with the { | Embassy admitted. | tion stone of the new (ager of the Canadian a | handsome silver trowell in a glass | case suitably inscribed, bearing the {arms of the city of Toronto and the 000 Jewish soldiers are here on leave { behalf of the Canadian Pacific Rail- {he found that the deer was on Mill-| Ville. yesterday, a skeleton was un- | er's shoylders and the shot had gone| earthed. i shoulder blade. On and after September 13th, SS.) g; Gibson's Drug Store, WHIG. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10. 1915. rons STRUCK BY AN AUTO Despatches From Near And Distant Places, Vaneouver is month to the ove ada. i An attempt was made upon tim life of 'Sir W. H. Manning, Governor: General of Jamaica. This years' ronto SOLDIER LAID D UNC NCONSCIOUS ON ving 500 men a ONTARIO STREET. as forces of Can- -- He Was Taken To General Hospital --Auto Driver Who Knocked Him Down Did Not Stop. years' attendance at the To- Pte. Herbert McAdoo, a member of Exhibition so far aggregates' the 59th Overseas Battalion, when 120, 0. PAID 8 1t 8.50 o'cloe _ Machado, leader of the Conserva-" Returning rd Rho id Se k tives in Brazil, and known as a po- speeding automobile on Onfaric| litical boss, was assassinated. street near Queen and received se | Officials of the Conservation Com- vere injuries to his head and left leg | mission have discovered deposits of Whoever the driver®of the auto was| phosphates of lime in Banff National he drove on and never slackened his | Park, in the Rocky Mountains. | speed. Up until noon Friday hi: | Hon: Gecrge P- Graham, thinks Té- name had not been secured. | cruiting would be better in rural dis- The injured soldier when seen by thicts if the troops in these places 5 Ww hig reporter in the General Hos were seen on the march more fre- pital on Friday morning, stated that 'he was crossing the railroad track when he was struck. The force of the blow knocked him ten feet in.the! air and after alighting he found him self lying on the tracks. Realizing his precarious position. with the little strength he had left, Pte. McAdoc pulled himself to the side .of the road and then dropped off Ite un consciousness. The injured soldier enlist in the forces. tons ous be must have lain there] The Davidson 'Royal Commis sion | half an hour before he regained con-| will go west about the middle of next scipusness. When ®he revived he| month to investigate the British sub- saw a young fellow riding past on a| marine purchases, as well as trans- bicycle and he called to him. The| actions in horses, hay, and oz boy stopped and came over but was! Bruce County Council increased unable to do anything for him. "The grant from $1,000 a young fellow secured more help, and month to $4,000 a menth so long as R. J. Reid's ambulance conveyed | the war lasts, Reeve Joynt announc- Pte. McAdoo to the General Hospital ing his intention of giving $1,000 a The soldier told the reporter that| vear during fhe wars he was suffering with a severe pain! "There are Fany in his head. His left side was alsc| kon who would be lad to enlist were bothering him considerably. | it not necessary to pay their own Pte. MeAdoo is the nephew of ex-! transportation charges to Vancouver Policeman Alexander McAdoo who is! in, order to be able to do so," -said a guard at the Montreal Transporta- | B shop I. ©. Stringer of the Yukon tion Company's elevator. The for- territory, who is in Toronto. mer's home is in Picton and he came | . The New York Times says that the to the city to enlist for overseas duty. | German summer e asSy at Cedar- Two months previous to this -aeci-| hurst, Long Island, is used as the dent Pte. McAdoo had'his nose bro-! clearing house for the German over- ken Seas news service, which disseminates ! i---------- l news to neutral coun-| TRUSTEES FILE CLAIMS. | Col. Frank S. Meigheny of Mont- real, who commanded the 13th Bat- talion at St. Julien, has been pro- moted to the rank of Brigadier-Gen- eral. Dr. 'D. B. Neely, M. P. for Hum- boldt, Sask., has joined the 78th Regiment as medical officer, making the eighth member of Parliament to oe men in the Yu- YOUVE VOVVVIVYV Commission Was Illegally And Justly Appointed. Ottawa, Sept. ¥9.--Apother step! 'in the Ottawa Separate School con- Lot the New North Toronto Railway |troversy was taken yesterday when Station. the old Board of Trustees filed its, (Special to the Whig.) statement of claims in the injunc Toronto, Sept. 10.--The founda- | tion. proceedings against the new North Toronto Commission. It claims that the ap station was laid yesterday afternoon pointment was made illegally. un- by Thomas L. Church, Mayor of To- justly and to the great detriment of ronto ,in the presence of a 'large the schools, that it was outside th: and representative gathering, over jurisdiction-and power of the Lieu which A. D. MacTier, General Man- tenant-Governor-in-Counvil, and - in Pacific Rail- violation of the British North Am- way, presided and introduced the erica Act and the several acts gov- mayor in a few appropriate remarks. erning Roman Catholie schools | The mayor was presented with a LClaim CORNER STONE LAID, | Jews Given New Year Leave. London, Sept. 10.--More than 2,- Canadian Pacific. - | from the front to celebrate the Jew- | A. D. MacTier said:--*I desire on!ish New Year's Day in London, | among them being several Cana-| way Company to not only warmly |dians. Though they will be back in |- welcome you here to-day, but tel the trenches on the Day of Atone-| Jani you for honoring the company | ment, they will rigorously observe | I represent by being present-and see/dhe great fast. Khaki was largely | ling your worthy maybr lay the cor. Worn in the great synagogue at Ald- | ne: stone of this new station which, ate yesterday, when the chief rabbi | when erected, will be worthy of the conducted the services. northern t of this beautiful eitv.| i : I may safi say that its erection Rev. Dr. J. K. Fraser Called prcves that this company has the Galt, Sept. 10.--At a larpely at; same abiding faith, as' I am sure you | tended meeting of the congregation have, in-the future growth of Torom-| of Knox Presbyterian Church a to." Mayor Church and Chief Justice unanimous call was extended to Rev. Mulock a'so delivered addresses, ey |J. Keir Fraser, D.D., of Alberton. pressing «the public's appreciations] Prince Edward Istand. "The pulpit the enterprise of the C.P.R. | kas been vacant for several months | following the resignation of Rev, R. FARMER ACCIDENTALLY SHor | © Knowles. By Young Lad, And Died Soon! Rifles For Russia. i Afterwards. | Cleveland, O., Sept. -10.--Cleve Sault Ste. Marie, Ont; Sept. 1 1and_and Canton, OI, ir Pallets Willis M Miller, a farmer, ing just! orb Sontract Jestaday Tor Jal : s 0 supply i" fut of Thestaion 8 fatally Sh 000,000 rifles. Final details of the! hands of Russel Hagen, a lad thirteen Contact were "completed - in New years of age, who resides with his T parents in Thessalon. Hagen had been invited by 'Miller to go with him inte his oat field, some distance from Miller's house, | to shoot a deer which had been vis-| iting his fields in the early morning and was destroying his crops. ~On his arrival at Miller's home yesterday morning young Hagen found every- | thing quiet and supposed Miller was | not up, so decided he would go into the fields. , On his arrival there he| Brockville, Sept.10.--While work- saw the head of a deer in the open- Men were excavating for a sewer on ing and fired, To his amazement ©Ne of the leading streets of Brock- Her Last Trip. a Yesterday George.Mills & Co., the local 'hatters, passed through customs from England, a shipment of hats, | delayed at Montreal, that cime out on the last trip of the steamer Hes- perian, torpedoed by the Germans a fey days ago. Dug Up Skeleton. It is thought to be the re- into the deer and through Miller's) Mains of an Indian. Help ' was summoned and the, - Kingston Dogs Won Prizes, wounded man removed to his home,| H. C. Nickle, A. McMahon and W.|. where he died a few hours later, | Twigg had dogs entered at the Toron- | leaving a wife and four small chil-| the Exhibition. and every one of them ren. {-won prizes. Coroner Sproule empanelled a jury ---- which returned a verdict of death by) Page & Shaw Sweets fresh to-day. accidental shooting: A charge of | Gibson's. Drug Store, manslaughter is being made against young Russell, but bail is being ar- | ---- | ranged for his appearance at the As-| r Ny vow | sizes, which apen here next week. i WASHINGTON DISAPPOINTED | Over Germany's No Note Regarding the | Arabic. { Washington, Sept. 10.--Superf-! cial reading of Germany's note to fhe United States on the' Sinking of the White Stir liner Arabic has created | keen disappointmedt among the offl- i cials who have seen it: There is a growing feeling in responsible quar- ters that Germany is playing fast and loose with the United States. Of- ficials were guar in their private comments andl refused absolutely to indicate what the corse of the Unit- ed States would be. But there is evidence of suspicion thai the Ber- lin Goverpment was not speaking al- 2 » together in guod faith when it assurances recently that it would ! conduct its submarine warfare there- | od Her with scrupulous gard for the | ves of American ¢itizens. REGALS en § en ea nits _ Neilson's Tee Cfeam Bricks, all fla' : { looking boots ee SABO, $5.00 $6.00 FOR SATURDAY MORNING Hosiery & Glove Specials In order to make room for Fall goods now arriving, we have placed the following odd lines of Gloves and Stoek- ings on sale to-morrow :-- 38 Pairs Ladies' Long Silk * loves Black and White; best makes, ularly sold at $1.25 and $1.35. To- mortow, pair re g- 63 Pairs long Black Silk Gloves Different sizes, worth 50¢ or more, Yours to-morrow 120 Pairs White & Cream Washable Chamoisette domes; worth 40¢.pair larly. Special 108 Pairs Women's White Silk Stockings Fibre Silk that is heavier than the usual make: seamless feet, properly shaped ankle. The regular 75 {oe make. Yours to-morrow, pair . 49c 200 Pairs Women's Sample Stockings Many 'different makes. be sold to-morrow at Gloves, regu- + These will 13 OFF J John Laidlaw & Son NEW MADE IN CANADA : Regal Shoes For The finest lot of Rega Shoes we have ever vors, at Gibson's Red Cross Drug | tore. An auto and a buggy met in col- lision on the Front Road near Eller- beck street Wednesday night at 7.45 o'clock, and as a result the two men in the rig reseived a bad shaking, 'while the buggy and harness suffer- ed much damag THE LOCKETT SHOE STORE

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