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Durham Review (1897), 5 Jul 1906, p. 7

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ti PILLS syrup You Go met? ”sum. m on" no" . Mb: 'Q’ I diroetieiraa E0t ROV'S ES m Trip?" 7. 1906 ARA - not nto Aunt. TH. I] r. " JiiGGiii' in low tones for quite . while. The visit hated about In" u no his wife. The latter kissed him " feetionatelr through the but Josiah Thaw sho’ok his brpther warmly by the hand. He talked only a few minutes with him, and than Thaw Old My wife -riaruriast coma had: from his union with the docton when hit wife and brother called, He oggmeq trlnd ty The first thing young Thaw did to. day was to go to the Lorraine and get bis sister-in-hor, and together they drove down in a cab to Mr. Oleott’s of. rue, where they got pun! from the lat. ter to no Thaw. - _ - So far as it could be ascertained to- day no evidence has been found to show that Mr. White had been pursu- ing the girl with his attentions re. cently, though the Tenderloin has been cetty well sifted for stories. It will weeks before every one of these stor- ies can be run dowr. Family Comes to Aid. That the Traw family has come to the aid of their rockin- relative, and that they are. in a war, standing by the girl, there in no doubt. Josiah Thnw. a younger brother of Hurry’s, who lives with his mother in Pittsburg. ruched here this morning. He noted a escort to Thur”: wife in tlb visit whieh also made to the Tombs and to his lawyers, and seemed, in . way, to he tolling more or In. att of her. Mrs. Thaw has turned our to Mr. Gleam. a hunch of letters which she had received from White, according to her lawyers. But these letters. it would so far appear, are letters which White wrote to the Nesbit girl him. no became Mm. Thaw. All evidence so mr secured concern- ing events leading up to the tragedy and the relations of the three princi- pal characters in it, Thaw, his wife, and the victim. will be reserved for the trial. and every attempt is to bt gnndet to keep it out of the hands of “I": lawyers. The belief if the prosecution is that the insanity theory will be abandoned or that it will be and simply as a peg on which to hang a mass of testimony coneerning White's past life and cwnts in Thaw's lite which might bring out sympathy Arr him. that. he said, he might submit to tN examination of the District Attorney': experts. Dr. Hamilton was retains only to-day as the expert for the de fence. Ho had not had a chance to I91 Thaw until the examination. Witt Abandon Insane Theory. All evidence so fur secured concern EVELYN TEAW, Formerly Evelyn Nesbit, the Show Girl for whom Harry Thaw Killed White. It the examination. was that he want- ed to first describe his condition to Dr. Allen Mohme Hanrilton. After that. he said. he might submit to the Peoples-arm Paid the Wages letters Written The ex through J cording to can be produced at his triel concern- ing his post. life and escapades suffi- cient to make u PT believe him in. one use the conviction formed to-day by those engaged in the prosecution of the case. This conviction In the re- salt of what happened this morning " what was the opening round of the legal battle, when Thaw was taken over to the Criminal Court’s building to be examined by the District Attorney's ex- pens. “'bn Thaw faced the experts he sat down easily in a chair and an- nounced in a determined way that he was not going to answer any of their questions put to him on the subject of his mental condition. Me could not be induced to 'hattge his mind, although his counsel tried to make it appear that Thaw had his consent to submit to the examination. But Thaw did not close his mouth. He asked some re- markable questions of the doctora himself, made comments creditable to a man of normd intelligence, and talked in an easy and natural way. Though tho session was fruitless, so far as getting Thaw’s answers to cer- tain questions the doctors wanted to ask him, it seemed to remove every bit of doubt on the side of the prosecution that the insanity plea, it made for Thaw, would save him. TbeThmrraatitrtetest.thmier. er‘saill New York, July 2.-- That Barry Thaw we. perfectly lane when he murdered Stanford White on Monday night and that no amount of evidence HARRY Ttihty NOT INSANE. excuse which Thaw made Judge Oleott, his counsel, ac- to the statement of the latter Before Marriage. “ions .1 - 7”"-" :I/i Henry Kendall Thaw has figured i. mnny sensational eseapades which hue brought him before the public. ptr. hupc the most sensational was " - rhp to Evelyn Flam Nah". tho During the time that White' body by in the undertaking establishment it '3. remarked that the number of persons, who have been friends or busineu Ino- ciates who called there were coup“.- dnly few." "ht his own town how, on Gunmen-y Ptuk, he is said to have been persona non gnu. Many times had it been stated that " the brilliant functions given by Mrs. White the one most conspicuous absentee to be counted upon would be Stanford White. “The case was in preparation for the grand jury when it was permitted to drop. -. _ -- L. I., his retreat in the tower of Medi- aon-square Garden was being watched by detectives of the Society for the Pre- vention of Cruelty to Children, complaint having been made against White by the enraged father of a girl bat " years of age. _ _ - _ "While maintaining a private town maidence, magnificently furnished and splendidly appointed, with everything marking n. refined home, and I country residence on the same plane at St. Junies, loin, and he it credited with some of the liveliest escapades in the memory of the founders. White and his boon companions. Perhaps he mun-053ml many letters to Evelyn Neshit Thaw in the afternoon of his life, despite her expressed abhorrence of the man, and there is strong evidence that it was these letters that enraged Thaw pant endurance. Watched by Detectives "When Stanford White fell on the Madison-square roof his reputation fell with him. That is, the reputation with which he was credited by the great pub- lie. For, among the devoteos of New York’s gay side he was known as a WP luptuary, a libertine and a man who for years had pursued with avidity the muse and darker pleasures of the city. "White had a private room for months --until he was asked to vacate it-ina popular restaurant building. "He was the leading spirit in a 'club whose objects were doubtful and whose membership was composed of men. "For years his attentions to women had attracted attention in the Tender. "He was president' and ardent pro- moter of "The Chorus Girls' Club," hav. ing for its primary object late suppers behind closed doors, and for its ultimate object, only what the 'members' chose to reveal. relations with Miss Nesbit, and bandied in." name about as tho sport of idle gos- sip. -- _ _ * " . , Stanford White boasted of his former It is unwanted that Assistant District Attorney Garun to-day discovered a witness who Illegal that he overheard White mike derogatory remarks mn- nrning Mrs. Thaw before he was shot. The witness says he heard the remarks of White. who was seated two or three tablps away, and evidently was not whispering. "Never has it been more firmly es- tablished that the wages of sin is death, Not once, but twice, thrice, twenty, times, according to reliable statements, At that time Mr. and Mrs. Thaw were in the cafe dining. It is believed that this witness will not appoint before the coroner. but that he will be reserved for the trial. Important Witness. The Ameriran to-day says: "That Harry Kendall Thaw was gond- ed into slaying Stanford White, the nrchitect, elubman and chorus connois- wur, by repeated insults visited by the latter upon Evelyn Nesbit Thaw, the bride of IR months, developed as com- pelling evidence amid a maze of con- flicting stories. , STANFORD WHITE. The Architect, Who Wu Shot. Like a Joke to Thaw. BARRY THAW, The Murderer. Two weeks ago Hornt deserted his wife. The latter went to the Stock- yards nation. where the obtains! I mtrrattt for the arrest of her husband, clinging him with abandonment. Borvat, who in; employed" in the Imukynrds a a butcher, is thought to have learned of gm.“ angered, it.is helieveq, went to th'lmuo to'uoei'tnin the truth' com- When the police finally forced an en- trance into the house they found the wife lying dead on the bed, while on the floor nev by lay her murderer, cut about the throat. The wall: and nearly any article of furniture in the mom were covered. with blood. Chicago, July 2.--While three police officers were vainly seeking to obtain an entrance into his home Frank Hor- vat, " you: old, living " 4,716 Loom) street, murdered his wife and attempted to end bin own life by cutting his throat. Chicago Man Murders Wife and Then Cuts His Own Throat. The entrance of Mrs. Harry Thaw into Pittsburg society was signalized by a revolt on the part of the women, which threatened for a time to create a lasting break. Mrs. Thaw, the mother, was in, sistent, a reception was planned, and the SlAYS AS POLICE KNOCK AT DOOR. Pittsburg gossips toil how the er. chorus girl, made sister-in-law to the Earl of Yarmouth, diligently undertook to study German and French, as well as music, at one time. . The trip to Europe envied in the whirl. wind love affair with Harry Thaw, the subsequent return to New York under circumstances of peculiar interest and the remarringe in Pittsburg under the maternal blessing- eireumstancos made familiar by recent recounting. Then fol- lowed the brave effort of the newly- wedded Mrs, Thaw to fit herself for her new place in society. V anything unoful for whieh he eouldehtim the slightest reward. The money that was poured into his lap was to him pure- ly the means for tho pursuit of guilty pleasure. He is reaping M he sowed.” Big Actress Wife, Popular chorus girls who number wealthy men among their admirers do not lack for chances. Miss Neshit, among whose early patrons Stanford White was said to have been the most loyal and beneficent, suddenly found the means to go to Europe for a Illusion! tylueption, chorus girl, whom he met in London. After forming an acquaintanee with Miss Nosbit the two took a trip through Eu. rope, and it was said that they had been secretly married, although Thaw's rela. tives in Pittsburg denied the story. While travelling in Europe with Miss Nesbit, Thaw gave a $20,000 dinner to chorus girls in Paris, and figured in many other sensational escapades there and in New York. Mrs. Thaw threat. ened to have a guardian appointed for her son. and shortly after this threat was made the couple dropped front the public eye and were married quietly in Pittsburgh only Mrs. Thaw and her son Joseph being present at the cere- many. Mrs. Kearns came here a month ago and at once wrote a letter to Eader tell- ing him that she had fallen in love wiht him through reading his stories contri- buted to the Red Book. a Chicago publi- cation of which her husband is one of the editors. Eader ignored the note. Wife of a Chicago Magazine Editor Tries to Kill Denver Man. Denver, Col., July 2.--The love of Mrs. During the next three weeks the wo- Tudor Kearns, of Chicago, came near man schomvd to :notft him a dozen times causing her to become a murderess to. oth.the stun-t near his home and agar the ' F . .. . oftice of the Denver Post, on which he d3) when she fired a shot at William H. is "mployed as an engraver. Eader, who had repeatedly spurned her. lie has a wife and twb children and WOMAN Hill IN [OVE WITH MAN . THROUGH READING HIS STORIES. The shot imbedded Itself in a watch in Eader's pocket. St. Petersburg, July 2.-The cam- paign which the oppositional elements in Parliament are waging to compel Em. peror Nicholas to dismiss the Goremykin Cabinet and necept the principle of s responsible ministry, promises soon to be crowned with success. But the Emperor and the court are being frightened into surrender less by the violent attacks made on the Government in the Lower House than the alarming spread of revo- lutionary disaffection among the troops. When the Probrejettsky regiment, "His Majesty's Own" pronounced its solidar. ity with Parlianwnt and its agrarian pro- gramme in the big camp of the guard CZAR or RUSSIA HAS SEEN}. THE CAT. When "His Majesty's Own" Pronounced in Favor of Parliament His Eyes Were Opened. t I .‘ Cak TORONTO Lieutenant Hunkett m the tint " enter the room. Burnt, who wu un- _eonteioyA was taken to the Phmamt As the police went to the front door they saw Horvat appear at one of the windows and I moment later disappear. Lieutenant Plunkett went to the rear of the house, leaving two detectives at the front entranee, and attempted to gain admittance. The door leading into the basement was securely locked and he returned to the front. He upped m- eml time. Ind when he received no ree- ponse, forced the door. In the meantime Homt ttrg','),',,? understood the mu. aion of t a police and, hurrying to the room occu led by his wife, cut her throat map then attempted to commit suicide. of seeking revenge ltd then endin¥ his own life. He was in the basement o the house when the police arrived. Several of the college men who are bent on 'r.11.'g, the old world, at little coat, a]? grueling under assumed names, but among those 33%? gave their right names are Frank Ba el, who will man- age Williams College Football eleven next fall; "Shorty" Ellsworth, a former University of Chicago football captain; Henry Whitney, of Chicago University, formerly an end on the all America foot- ball eleven; R. W. Bailey, 9. football n from the University of Wisconsin, {grid J. O. Inglehardt, a full blood Indian lad from Deiauw University. U. S. COLLEGE STUDENTS SAIL Ori ' r' CATTLE BOATS. ‘ Boston, July 2,--The Leyland Line Steamer Winifredian sailed for Liver- pool yesterday with a crew of cattle feeders, recruited especially front Ameri. can colleges, more than two score tttttde en? making the trip: At the session of yesterday the teat. ure was the proposed solution by A. H. Hoover, President of the Sovereign Life, of the “gating pyil problem, Mr. Hoover, unlike the other insurance nu- thorities called in the present investi- cation, said that the companies them- selves wore to blame for the fact that rebating is rife throughout Canada. Pittsburg svtial set was whipped into line by that determined lady. Though there were a few insurgents, most of the smart people bowed to the mandate of Harry Thaw’s mother. Sovereign Life’s President Gives Drastic Remedy. Mr. Hoover suggested a very stringent cure for this evil. He would fine the companies heavily for the first offence, take away their license for the second, fine the insurance agent who negotiated the rebate, and cancel the policy on which such rebate had been given. The evidence yesterday dealt in a large measure with the methods em- ployed in the organization of the Sovereign Life Company. During the forenoon, three witnnssos were on the stand-Mr. Addison H. Hoover, Presi- dent and Managing Director; W. H. Gould. actuary, and Mr. Thomas Allen, A Toronto dospntch: The examination of the Sovereign Life Assurance Com- pany was completed yesterday. At the conclusion of the investigation into the affairs of this company the Insurance Commission, adjourned to London, where it will sit toulay and to-morrow, look. ing into the manageeinnt of the London and the Western Companies. Next work there will be an adjournmcnt until July 9, when the commission will again meet in Toronto. Secretary lt transpired'to-day that all three bat. talions of the Probrejensky regiment joined in the resolutions, but when they were surrounded by grenadiers, sharp- shooter»; and a brigade of artillery, two of the battalions weakened. The other, however, faced the music, was disarm- ed, and last night, with six officers, IX 'ts 59m undor escort to Medvid, Province of Novgorol where the Japanese whom-u were Jmhniii, to undergo trial by camb- martial. _.. "'"t"'".'e'"' w, W: V. lie has a wife and two children and repeatedly declined to enter her automo- bile and receive her attentions. To his qumNt to "pass him up" the woman would reply: "Never; you know my love, and 1 will nevvr give you up." To-day he again spurned her, when in an insane rage she whipped out a revol- ver and fired the shot. He fell and, sup- posing she had killed him, she fled. The pilice have not found her. regiments at Krasnoe-Selo less than a dozen miles from iriiiiia, the Emper or’s eyes opened and the court began re- alizing that there was only a step from that to declaring allegiance to Parlia- ment as against the Government, AS CATTLE fEEDfRS. T0 PENALIZE REBATING. Buffalo, July 2.-Grisothe Legault, 24 years old, who said he iivod at Belleville, Ont., was discharged to-day from the Emergency Hospital, Buffalo, where he had been th patient since San. day night. He had A miraculous escape from death. He was struck try 3 Pean, nylnnia. plunger train at Emilie and North Division streets, hurled several feet, and VII able to get up a few mo- ment. afterwards, complaining of only I “In“ .- _-_.r.__ ---- Belleville Man nu Miraculous Escape in Burma. St. Andrew’s, N. B., July 2.-- When Sir William Van Horne's summer rest dence on Minigter's Island was opened yesterday it was found that the linen and silver closets had been rifled of their contents by burglars. When the robbery occurred no one knows. The house was visited every day by the gardener, Ind he never saw anything disturbed. About $1.000 worth of goods was taken. Linen and Silver Closets of Summer Residence 1tifled. Halifax, N. s, July 2.--iiix members at the crew of the American fishing schooner Paragon, who lo-t their wa- sel while fishin?t 1“ dorirs on tho Grand Banks on June" 1.r, “"19 brought in here by the steamer ”Sylvia. Eight men were blown out of sight of their Vessel by a severe nortlwast storm. Ihree of the dories came together, and the glx men decided thear only hope for life ms to get into one dory. All the food ”as placed in the strongest Mrr and ilk aix mgr: then began a battle for life. For two days at!!! tttghts they drifted, cold. wet, and half-famiqhed, until within 30 miles of land they “We Picked up by the schooner Vera at c, ctclook in the morning. A few hours later the remain. ing two men were pieked up, and all were taken to St. John’s. Later the suffrugcttes held a meet- ing in Hyde Park. where. Mrs. Dorm Montefiore, the hereine of the Ham- morsmith siege, was arrested. Tho charge against her was distrilmrhw, handbills. which is not allowed in Hyde Park. Mrs. Montefiore was taken to the polioo station, but sub. sequently was allowed to go. LAUGHABLE INCIDENT IN TORONTO POLICE COURT. A Toronto special 1lesipafch says: A rather amusing inoidmit. in whieh a pair of trousers played a part came up in po. lice Court this morning. Benjamin Sei- gle, a young man, was committed in jail this morning for thirty days for sit-Ming a pair of trousers. When he came up he- fore the Magistrate this morning His Worship said: "Where are the trous- erst" “He is wearing thed,' responded Crown Attorney Carley. "Well, we ean't very well take them off him," laughiugly remarkvd the Magis- trate. The plaintiff then sail the yrmng was welcome to trousers, since he tainly had to wear a pair. Fishermen in Duties Picked Up and Taken to St, John. -- Bold Meeting in Hyde Park After Ad. 'ournment-Leaiier Arrested. London. July '2.--The three suffra- gottes who were arrested on June 21, for attempting to make a demon. situation in front of the residence of Mr. Asquith. the Chancellor of the Exchoquor, in Cavendish Square, and resisting the poliee, appeared in the Marylebone Poliee Court to-day and tho vase was adjourned to July 4th. PROVINCIAL CONSTABLES TO BE AP- POINTED TO WATCH THEM. A Toronto, Ont., special despatch says: The Onur'io Government announced thin morning that it intended to appoint six or seven special Provincial constables to enforce the automobile speed laws. During last session $3,000 was set aside for this purpose. Une constable will be in Toronto, York county, from which several complaints have come, one in the western part of the Province, and one or two in the eastern section of Utt. turio. V seetion"two prohibits the introduc- tion into any State or my foreign country or the shipment to any foreign country of any article tululterated or miabranded, under Funky not exceed- itfg a fine of $200 or the first offence and $300 or one year's imprisonment, a both, for each subsequent offence. Concerning shipment; to a foreign country it is provided that no article shall be deemed misbranded or adul- tented when no substance is used in conflict of the laws of the foreign country for which it is intended. Bin 1. Agreed on by Senate and Home of Representatives. The bill. as agreed upon, nukes it s misdemeanor to trttutufrteture, sell or offer for sale any uticie of food, drugs, medieinm, or liquors which is adulterat. ed or misbnnded or which contains any poisonous or deleterious substance. It prescribes for each offence a fine not to exceed $500, one year's imp:risonment, or both, and for each subsequent offence 3 fine of not less than $1,000 or one year's imprisonment. _ A Hon. Dr. Resume, Minister of Public Works, is sufficiently improved in health to resume his Ministerial duties next week. Wptrttitttrtou, July S.-- The Pure Food Bill was agreed upon by the confereel for the Saute and Home to-day, and wu reported to the Beat. ate just before adjournment. VAN HORNE'S HOUSE ROBERT}, SUFFRAGETTES ARRAIGNED, AFTER THE AUTO. HIT BY TRAIN, LIVES. HAD THEM ON. A BATTLE FOR LIFE. F03 PURE FOOD. man cer- Devonian V“ at 'work with I num- her of others imitating the. engine-r5 home, Ind while the Jun-ah tiaa m tamed "eat his lucky. m val serving six month! tor mb. hing his brother, and had served H1 Run: for It Prohi. Ctntrat While Gull Wu Not Looking. Toronto despatch) Maxime Dm' n convict nt the Centrll million, '.'1CQ yesterday Afternoon; and it yet " freedom. Bakesman Amer, cu bidly hurt on the head. “13109, roadmuter, was also cut. on them“, but not seriously. Brakmmart Hugh MeLean, who van in the' fan, was crushed to death. J. Mercia, t.tteman, was badly nodded up to the thigh. He is not ”read to live. Conductor Taylor was a most un- recogninble.’ his flee being crushed. Accident Neat Sherbrooke-One Killed, Four Wounded. A Montreal despateh: One man we killed and four injured Ieriously in I collision between I. ballast train and I hind-car on the C. P,. R. It McLeod'l Landing, 50 miles from Sherbrooke. The mm" on the hnnd on were returning frorit work. The impart was so great that the engine and van were derailed. LAWYERS SAY THEY BELIEVE HACKETT INNOCENT. CPI', A Mont Ronda-nu. yers who cvntly H-l mnnt. “ill , tlt. Catharina, July 2.-Other you" hare Ieen bountiful fruit and grain crops in the Niagara peninsula, but by present indientiona this you will out- do all the rent. Peachea Ire looking exceptionally promising and the product to the my: will perhaps exceed any previous year, fruitirroweis "r. A tt crop in now almost assured, II the poi of danger in about past. While rd". will be a good crop, the yield o plums will be comparatively small, thin being the off-year for plums. The Japanue variety are almost I complete failure, while the blue and all other varietiu In scarce. Apples will be I very good ero‘ from present indication, & at ded better than last year. m a pl. trees, comparatively speaking, In Bl around here now became of the mug: of the San Jose scale. Strawberr Ire an immense crop, mainly due to the Wet weather we have had of Into, which also caused the fruit to fl',",', of un- usual size. The flavor is . so good and never were better strawberries grown in the fruit belt than this yeIr. If the weather continues fairly mom the rup- berries will also be abundant, us they one full of promise just now. Dry, hot weather would Ihrivel up the fruit and prevent growth. Goooeberriea, currents, etc, will be lantiful. Cherries "I also a very good) crop. Winnipeg Plumbers Preparing a Vigor. ous Programme iy Next Mgnth. FMS " NIAGARA DISTRICT IN LUCK. With the Inception of Plums, Every- thing Promises an Abundant Yield--. Strawberries Big tad Pine Flnvorel --rteeertt lulu Rave Helped Things Valdez-Mb. Expert Who Toured United State! San Invasion Need Not Be Feared. London, July 2.--Mr. Smyslmd, I shoe trade expert, who made I tour of the United titatvs on behalf of tin Northampton shoe industry, report. that, English shoomakors need not be frightened by In Invasion of Ameriun shoes. The American makers have no direct advantage over their English eompi'titors. while, thoy were seriously handicapped by the fact that the cout of produvtion in America was tr per cont. more than in England. The Annual Hair Fair Held at Limoges, France. Nevertheless, Mr. b'wa.voland says, hi found the Amorimns far superior in push. sharpness. and organization, while the operative have I whole-hearted be livf in the suporiority of their workman- ship and system. 1W " rs i' WANT NEW TRIAL PLENTY or fRUIT. BRITISH SHOE TRADE SAFE. TDAIN HIT HAND-CAR. ATTACK OPEN SHOPS. PART WITH TRESSES. CONVICT ESCAPES. '11 special (inspatvh says: w. Numb-nu & Sullivan, the law. fvtuled James T. Hackett, re. 'm'ml to 25 years' Imprison- sk for a nr-w trial in Septem- aim is made that the owner of gloves found near the The market pure " led yva'tordny with " the sale of their ' porimlioal hair fair, i the “Pit tress" In girls stood demurely t Paris, Berlin, Lon. olwwhern criticnlly ir, and, a prion being 'Y accompanied the ntml pincos to hive if. The priees varied arms a pound. Ono trtod with 86 pounds if it over 4.500 francs s been loestrd. 'T Brake“ muo- tttteh-Wanted Anarchist Captured in Spanish Province. Madrid. July 2.-An Anrehic. who is believed to be Pam: Avinn. wanted in connection with the attempt to kill King Alfonso and 1PretqiaPrqt Louth in Patio. was arm-ted to-day at (Theda, Province of Jun. Re wan hiding in a rat in the garden of a well known _ f,t,'lut The man ha been going a t flrtgd as a tslb grim, so!“ image. aha. Over Two mmdred of Them in Win- ona. Pro-sin. Berlin, July 2.-The regnt" of the Prussian income tax dt-partmu-m how: that relatively the tit-hut town in Prus. Ilia is Wiesbaden, where 208 millionaires live. Mrty of these are worth more than ”MM”. Frankfurt. Clxurlunen- burg. Bond and Duneldorf follow Wit-s- buden in the order unload. It nhould It. noted aunt the million; are eounted in marks. one of which is worth " tents in American money. [lumen-e vain. u- eording to the American ltlldnrd. i. run in Germany. Total.... ... ..... ..... ...I The sum of 16,350 set out alum the "rake-oft' shown to date to been paid mutt-owns “a londom were not awarded the work, by firms who would the work tor the ing of the St. lawrence Market an huaufturturetu' and Art Buildin; the Exhibition grounds. In! “no a pipe ctiraet, it! the Cigy Hall. _ KA’SHALL FIELD? DAUGHTER IAN AND WIFE. Chiesgo, July 2.--hirs. Ethel Field Beanie, daughter of the late Muslin" Field, will reach" docks and bonds to lhe value of WWII) by a docum- entered ycuterdny hy Judge Wills" in the Super- " (curt. In the mutant mode by Mrs. Bennie, It was shown that come mouth- befoo. his death Mr. Field told hit daughter that he intended to turn the stock over to her. When he deposited the securities with the United Stun Trust Company, of New York, he left with them a memorandum that they be. Wheeler & Ruin .. .. . A. B. Urmsby, Limited A. Mathews .. .. .... W. G. Hatton & Sons . wor thie Huck over to her. When he the tserurities with the Unite [rust (Company. of New York with them n memorandum that hinged to his daughter. tht THOUSANDS WERE: ' , PAID IN “RAKE Off." . Latest Civic tkagtdal--Fr Imus; Roofing Comply “Eliminated Co.- petition." innu TORONTO WAS HELD UP BY zool- ERS ON SEVERAL CONTRACTS. . " SENTENCED FOR ABUSING SELXIRK GIRL IN BUFFALO. Mm TI A TOWN OF MILLIONAXRES In outsider. who '0 mmpolition tl ik GOT NINE YEARS. sum lit-r ans $857,000. Large Sum Wu Divided um of .te.2N “up divide 591110110 RIDING IN A VAT Rake-off to Roofers. t or (on firmn. but the m 1erer did not libido by th Mr. A. B. Ornwby "rot'" the f was a matter of yum-mm; to 20 [wr cent. ll. "ilsla, the list of Market {Pinion-m sider, who put in his tond, petition that had to ho oh: (Toronto Globe.) It Inst dollar that A nice-off of #1 l clearing house loofers' Supply l Jnty " not ot . but I T1 Smut-no Mu Ethel Field ate Marsh]! Ind bonds to Atme entered Mi vi, If 61 409 30 ll

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