Daily British Whig (1850), 9 Feb 1925, p. 3

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ALL COUGHS "AND COLDS Quickly yield to Dr. Hickey's Speedy Relief 25¢. and 50c. L. T. Best ~ Druggiet ~ Seaman FOR SALE ' $8,200 -- Frame dwelling, 6 rooms, electric light and tollet. Good lo- + cation. #8,500--Frame, 8 rooms, B. and T., electric lights and furnace. Good $7,500-- For three brick houses. 70 RENT several houses, $10 to $20. Bateman's Real Estate All} BROCK ST. KINGSION Telephone 1020F, DIAMONDS are always one of the most impor- tant items in the Jeweler's stock. For this reason we carry an ex- cellent selection, both LOOSE. _, AND MOUNTED IN RINGS, BAR PINS, eto. If interested we should be pleased to place our val- ues before you, WE CARRY ALL First Quality Stones Many people | have the wrong im- pression. that when our sale was over 5h not going to continue our This Is Not Our business is growing ht ger-- . we do all kinds of work. Our store is just the same, only we have not the small shelf hardware. The other hard- ware -- Stoves, Plumbing and Tin- snithing---is gone the same. - r~ ES --) iustrated catalogues and "full information regarding prices and terms of payment on either of these superb musical nsirementy say be obtained " ACTRESS ACQUITTED Beautiful Pole Shot Him at Own Request to End His Sufferings. Paris, Feb. 9.--Stanislawa Umin- ska, beautiful Polish actress, was ac- quitted late Saturday of a charge of murdering her sweetheart, 'whom she killed as he lay dying of cancer in a Paris hospital. The jury was out only three min- utes. "I.killed him because I loved him and wanted to end his suffering." was the agonized cry of Mademol- selle Uminska as she faced the jury. Her sweetheart, Jean Zynovski, a prominent novelist of Warsaw, had come to Paris for treatment last year. The actress cancelled her en- gagements and followed him. For days while he suffered untold agony, Mlle. Uminska remained by her flance's bedside. She submitted to a blood transfusion in a vain effort to save his life. Realizing he was doomed Zynovski pleaded with the girl to kill him with a revolver he had concealed beneath his pillow, Maitre Herni Robert, who was as- sisted 'at the trial by Marie Fournier, youngest woman lawyer of Paris, drew from the beautiful defendant her story of the murder. Day after day, Mlle, Uminski told the court, she had steadfastly refus- ed to kill'he r J6ver, making every effort to cheer him up. "I told him: 'You will soon be well'," she declared. Then came a day when the suffer er's agony was particularly great. A dose of morphine was administered and he slept. "Then 1 made up my mind to do it," the actress continued, "I took the revolver. I killed him. I loved him. I am glad T ended his suffer- ing." French authorities permitted Mlle, Uminska to accompany her flance's body to Poland for the funeral, after his murder. A NURSE KILLED + By & Patient in a Hospital at Trail, British Columbia. Vancouver, B.C., Feb, 9.--Because she refused his attentions, Miss Mil- dred Neilson, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Geowge Neilson, Vancouyer, formerly of Toronto, was shot to death in the Trail, M.C., Hospital, on Friday. Paul Hanley is charged with the murder. + Hanley, who, the polite say, never recovered from nervous shock caused by overseas service, had been a patient in the hospital and treated by the girl. He had come to Vancouver to find the | attitude of ithe parents and taken a fy [| parcel back to their daughter. After killing his nurse he attempted to kill himself. The Neilsons came here from Toronto twenty years ago. High Grade Wax Candles. The kind required by the church are on sale at The Goldem Lion Grocery, corner Brock and Welling- ton Sts. An attractive shoulder pin to be worn on a white satin_frock has three large circles of square cut sap phires outlined with small diamouds, FOR KILLING LOVER! which she returned to face trial for B The Inventor of the Sallless Craft--A New Type of Hero. Berlin, Feb. 9.--Almost overnight 2 mew national hero has been ac- claimed by Germany---Anton Flett- ner, inventor of the "rotor" or sails less sailing ship, the only craft'® its kind in the world, Gone is Germany's worships of war heroes. General Hindérburg al- though still enshrined in the hearts of his people, stands for a period of suffering and disaster that Germans are eager to blot from memory. Grim-faced Ludendorff, once a popu- lar idol, but now quarreling like a querulous old man with Prince Rup- precht at Munich, has become a laughing stock. Admiral von Tir- pitz's long white beard lends only venerability to the reichstag. Even the kalker himself, the be- loved "'war lori" of a decade ago, could scarcely muster a hundred "hochs" on the cccasion of his latest birthday. Formerly the emperor's birth anniversary was celebrated with the greatest rejoicing through- out the fatherland, but it passes now virtually unnoticed. The kind of hero the new genera- tion stands ready to laud is the man who is working to put Germany back on her feet and restore to her the honors of which the war stripped her. It's the day here of the scient- ist and technical man--men like Flettner and Dr. Hugo Eckener, who played the leading role in building the great dirigible, ZR-3, rechrist- ened the Los Angeles, and piloting her safely across the Atlantic to her new home in the United States. RIOTING IN JAP DIET. Blood Flowed Freely as Result of Recent Fight. Tokio, Feb, 9.--Nothing better {llustrates existing conditions in Japan than the early outbreaks and continued scenes of violence and rowdyism on the floor of the Lower ouse of Parliament. Previous ses- siong in the last twenty years have produced occasional free fights and similar diversions for the galleries, but the present session, as yet only a few days old, has already staged a number of personal assaults on jpeakers. ) A recent . inter-party free fight, however, broke Japan's--perhaps the world's--records for parliamen- tary pugilism. A group of members of the opposi- tion rushed howling on to the ros- trum and hammered the speaker un- mercifully. At one time it looked as if the whole floor was engaged in the physical and verbal encounter. Blood flowed freely. After a recess a mo- tion to punish the opposition rioters as passed, bg wk 3 Swindler Senteboed. New York, Feb. 9.--Noe Turman, 28-year-old "$2,000,000 swindler," will spend not less than five years and not more than ten years at Sing Sing. When he has finished his term it is recommended in the sent- ence that he be deported to Russia, Outside of the courtroom waited Mrs. Turman, who for three weeks has been straightening out the "boy financier's" accounts and pleading for leniency. When the sentence reached | her she fainted. FASHION SHOW OF FN \ Queen Dresses Tuesday Moming and Afternoon --Displayed by a Living Model -- We invite you to attend these fashion displays when special orders will be taken. In the morning from 10.30 to 12 o'clock. In the afternoon from 2.30 to 4 o'clock. THIS IS Home Sewing Week ! MCCALL PATTERNA Everything you need to make Smart Frocks for yourself or the ~ kiddies You will want to make a rw hak yourself, be- cause the new materials are so brilliant with colors, so fas- cinating with new weaves and new textures that you won't be able to resist them. No other Spring has ever offered such a diversity of color and richness of fabric. ' Stylés are simple (especially when you use McCall Printed Patterns). The new fabrics. are waiting. Come 'and see them now when they are newest. . 'Special Displays Wash Goods, Clnghie and Prints,

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