BIG PROBLEN Exercising the Minds of the War Experts. AN EFFECTNE WEAPON REQUIRED AGAINST RIA 3 WARSHIPS, German Authorities Have Had De- signed An Armoured Automo- bile--The British Authorities Will Also Carry Out Experi- ments. London, April 13.--A problem at present exercising the minds of mili tary and naval experts is that of find ing an effective weapon of defence against aerial warships, . In Germany the subject has been under considera tion for many months and dispatches already have deseribed the new how iter invented by Messrs. Krupp solely for use against an werial Whip. nizing the fact that a rapslly moving airship could easily get heyoud the range of this gun the Gdrman autho rities have had designed an armoured automobile fitted with a special gun which ean give chase to a dirigible, and shéll it on the wing. The sibilities of this airship destroyer are to be tested against the Zeppelin at the manoeuvres in Wurtenburg in the autumn, Kollowing the example set by Germany the British military au thorities /will carry out experiments on Salisbliry Plains with the object of testing the power-of modern artillery in resisting an aerial invasion, They will use the new eighteen-pounder shell against captive balloons. i, i WAR OFFICE ADVISES GIRLS. Recog pose Tells Its Feminine Employes How to Preserve Health. London, April 13.--The British war oftico has found time to investigate the question of proper diet for its girl "typists." The war oflice cam plains that the sick leave takin by girls compares unfavorably with that taken by men. It declares ther¢ can he no lavelling up of the sexes as ro gards romuneration until the girls have learned to consider their health. At the samo timo the war office has sent circulars to all ite girl employees warning them against teq drinking, cspecially between meals arid with their luneh. It enjoins them to wear warm - clothing and points oul that short sleeves and transparent lace fronts are ' 'dangerous traps with- out adequate safeguards." In regard to food it' recommonds potatoes, reals, fruits and vegetables in profer- ence to meat, as these will make the girls better able to resist cold; in tflienza and headaches! oxeessive New 'Steamers For Upper Lakes. Montreal, April 13.--The pew steam- or Kaministiquia, built™or the Westorn Navigation company, limited, of Fort William, Ont., has-been chartered, through T. R. McCarthy, of this city, to load in April a cargo of pig iron at Middlesbro' -on-Tees, England, for Fort Wiliam and Montreal. . This steamer is of full canal dimensions, and is intended for trade on the upper lakes. Mr. McCarthy has also chartered new. steamer, now building at Sunder land, England, for . the Matthews Steamship company, limited, of To ronto, to load a full cargo of pig iron at Midulesbro'-on-Tecs, England, fo Fort William in July next. This steamer algo of full canal dimen sions, and is intended for the trado heiween Montreal and the upper lakes. a 18 "In dry shady places' Kentucky lawn. grass seed will grow. Sold in Kingston only at Gibson's Red Cross drug store, DAILY MEMORANDA. Board of Trade Council, 8 p.m. "The Land Of Nod," Grand House, 8 p.m. "For Hats at Geo. Mills & Auction Sale West street, Allen Opera or Three vays suit me Dollar, § Co. can a a 23 by Furniture, to-morrow, Household 10 am. ------ April 18th, In Canadian History. 1645--Charnisay attack Fort La Tour. 1868--"Twenty-thousand people took part in the fimeral procession" of the Hon. Phos. D'Arcy McGee jun Montreal 184 Sir John Schultz former Lieu overnor Manitoba died at Mexico New Brunswick resolution favoring began his on tenant of Monten 1899--~The rejected suffrage. 1904-Navigation gpened Harbor 1908--The sentations the seizure vessels. i -------------------------- Toilet Sets legislature woman in Toronto United States made repre to Great Britain regarding by Newfoundland of {ishing Special new' shades variety. colors and old ns A large lines. All Quaint Pretty sets fashioned low as $1.45 MAKE YOUR SELECTION EARLY. shapes can Robertson Bros. ¢ Da TT AALTCALED Put a Stop to Old Time _ Gayety. MAY SPANK DAUGHTER. Judge Says Girl of Seventeen Not Too Old. April 13.--In the police Justice Jeffreys upheld the right of a father to administer the old-fashioned spanking to his teen-year-old daughter, even if her dignity suffered. Margaret Granzin had her fathir arrested for disturbing the peace. Granzin told the justice the puntiliment was to keep his dangh- ter awny from cheap theatres, 'The justice decided that spanking young ladies gb-soventeen years is permissible Detroit, cours, hers seven. ~~ ROYAL DECREE OUT MUSIC HALLS AND CAFES CLOSED AT 12.30 A.M. FORCED TO KILL HERSELF. Black Hand Direct Cause of Marica Delicia's Suicide. Rochester, » N.Y., April 13. --Coroner Klcindienst has received a letter sign- ed "George Williams," saying that an unknown woman suicide fished out of the river mill race a few days ago, was "Marcia A. Delicia,, of New York, who was once wealthy." The lotter added that "she com- pelled by the Black Hand her- self.' King Alfonso Thinks Bohemian Life is Demoralising the Young Spaniards--Looking After Wo- men of the Stage. Madrid, April 13.--The old night life of Spain, the music and dancing that has heen such an attractive fea- ture to foreign tourists to Madrid and the southern cities of Seville, Cadiz and Barcelona, is a thing of the past, A) few years ago the government. de- cided that Bohemianism was demoral- izing the youth of the country, and King Alfonso issued a royal decree closing music halls, cafes and other places of amusement at 12.30 am. Formerly these places never closed their doors. Night serenading parties of cloaked and turbaned students, who marched through the streets like troubadburs, strumming their guitars that the par and singing love songs at their sweet msent mnlest 1) ir] | hearts windows until daylight, also thar fifteen Pho | Were prohibited alter midught. I'he \ ¢ i sanity IGF giving alie. information: orders aroused mi h hostility » but penally of 8 Ba : . «| were strictly emforced, with the result performing such marriage is a fine of i he of the 1d-tinie in not more than $1,000 sr imprisonment that mue 's ol . ae lors ne gayely ifthe state penitentiary for not more Whit h the a paniards oved disappear- than three years. both. ad The Spanish music halls" became ; as lifeless as afternoon tea parties. ut even this change has not satis fied the king and the government, and a new decree, designed to raise | the tone of the music halls, Has been issu- od. The women of the stage are pro hibited hereafter from entering that part of the building intended for the public or from addressing or otherwise coming in contact with the audience They are not allowed to lodge in the same or adjoining buildings, and pri- vate rooms are forbidden. The fines for infractions are heavy, and three offences forfeit the proprietor's license. Genocsee was to kill w A New Marriage Law. Spokane, Wash., April 13.That they are physically-and morally. ft to wed what prospective Liffde® and bride the state of Washington show by .physicians' cer affidavit after June lst, county auditor can issue license, The new law 'also that women must be of legal at eighteen years, and men is grooms 'in will have to tificate and hefore an) marriage provide age, lived twenty also One Years, ent cant save is more years of 'or is CZARINA AND CZAREWITCH. Attended Reviews of Boy Cadets ~Empress' Health. 8t. Petersburg, April 13.--The czar- ina and the little czarewiich were pre. sent at three inspections by the czar at the parade grounds at Tsarskoe Selo last week, The reviews were of the boys' cadet corps, pages eorfis, and national cadets. The czarina and her son sat in an open carriage for an | hour, She showed no signs of the ill- health from which she has been re- {ported to be suffering. These recur- | vent stories are doubless due to the fact that tho empress now receives {practically nobody outside the families of her ladies-in-waiting. She did not SI'ES FOR BREACH OF PROMISE. Mrs Lilian Green known on the stage as Lilian © Durham . has brought civil and criminal action against William Ammear, ew York, an oil merchant, for breach of promise. Ammear is marriéd man in che TWO MEN DROWNED. Goose Bay, John's Island. participate in the reception to for- eign personages at Grand Duke Vladi- { question: of health, although the czarina always retires at ten o'clock, | society has steadily increased. Nobody : Es in St. Petersburg 'expects to hear of FARMS FOR SPINSTERS imperial court, ~ With her nervous | | troubles she suffers distinctly from an D | projected summer voyage to the Modi- terranean unccrtain. Only when she IN MASSACHUSETTS. -- ial yacht will the voyage be certain. Yet aaring the Easter reviews of the 100,000 Women Who Must Sup- inforost and pleasure at the comments port Themselves With Small' f per son, who was tireless in his cn- Boston, Mass., April 13.--Small_su- | parades. burban farms will be supplied by the setts if the plans of three score busi- ness and professional women of Bos-! Upset mir's funeral. It is not altogether a but in recent years her distaste for her again fixing a date for holding an . intractable' tcmper. This makes her TOOFEW MEN TOGO ROUN , thas been induced to board the 'imper- A Fla to Have the State Susply boy soldiers she displayed animated Plots of Land Near Cities. joyment manoeuvres of ithe state to 100,000 spinsters in Mazsachu the in Near St. ton are carried: out. Because of = scarcity of men in the stgte it Gananoque, © April 13.--A serious cognized that something must bet growning fatality occurred, last night, done to aid this army ol women, and i, the north channel near Goose Bay, an organization ims been formed forts St--John's Island. Three Ganano- the, purpose of winning 'state aid in| ueans trapping at Big Bay hrought securing small of land near [ their skins here and received- $48 cash. large citics where women can age | They left in a skiff, about 10.30 in profitable icultural enterprises. | g'clock, and the wind being high, up- The Women's Massachusetts "Home- {set the boat. In the boat were Wil- stead Association plans to enconrage |jiam Gauthier, Francis McCabe and the many thousands of women of all Flhert Wheeler. Gauthier. swam ashore ages who are forced to struggle to and gave the alarm at Cook's, on the livelihood to flowers, island, who notified Wheeler's parents mushrooms, strawber- | the main shore. Grappling parties suabs; chickens, | pave gone up to drag for the bodies, {hut so far the bodies have not been | recovered. is re traeis Mm gain a raise herbs, plants, ries, vegetables, hees and pi aig 200,000 SEAL CATCH. wand ; A telephone message recived in the Newfound- city; this afternoon, from Capt. :Lee- ki, at Gananofjue, stated that Me Cabe"s body had been: found, but that Wheeler's bad not yet been located, al- was still being con- Report of Success of land Fleet. &t. John's, NAd., Appil 13 catch of approximately 200,000 ws reported from the sealing fleet, first of the steam Florizel, : arrivid bast. night. The Florizel | ' a heave eatch of 31,000 | DID HER UTMOST breayuht in { ; SO She reporied that other vessels | ---- ; of the fleet have hes which will | To Promote the Strengthening of Je the total about 200,000, slightly Alliance. last London, April 13.--Baron' Kato, the Japanese ambassador, here, says there {is not a word of truth-in the mis | chievous fumor that Japan is anxious to sever the Anglo-Japanese alliance. from boing alarmed at Great i \ total | seals | the [though a search which, tinued. here my below season's catel | Keeping Wile Out; Too. % Washington, April 13.--Mrs. Castro, wife-of the former president of Vene- suela, also.is being kept out of = that {So far 1 a ! colntry Despatehes from the Amen | Britains understandings with Russia representative in Ven aielar anand the United States, Japan, it is nounced that the steamship Guade- declared; here, did her utmost to pro- loupe, on which she left Fort de | mote them, being convinced they would France, arrived at La Guayra, on Qa- Lstrengthen the Anglo-Japanese Al- turday.! but she was not permitted to |liance. . : land or communicate 'with shore. The | Guadeloupe was not even docked there! Col! but proceeded to -her mext stop, a Co- cer, Toronto, lombian port. [take charge .of RE team, which leaves Elizabeth: Vanowpan, aged June. { ventv-six diced, in Belleville, Six bars Satiuday? She came from Sidney. Gilbert's... Yetram, Dundas, and Maj. Mer- have been appointed to the Canadian Bisley for England in a Soe \ is VY on Surprise soap, 205¢., at Fe ® 1 Wilkesbarre, ily KINGSTON, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, APRIL 13, 1900. WAS HE BURIED ALIVE ? Taken Terrible Revenge on Super- intendent. Pittsburg, Pa., April 13 --Edward Joyce, superintendent of the Carnegie Coal company's mines at Camphill, who has been missing since last Mon- day, is believed to have been buried alive Ly negro miners who were dis- charged by the superintendent 'some tame ago. Joyce was seen to have entered one of the shafts on Monday afternoon and soon afterwards several of the negroes, who had been loiter- ing around the mine all day, were noticed hurrying away from the shaft. They have not been seen since, William Joyce, & brother of the midsing superintendent, arrived here severalsdays ago from his home in and has been personally searching for his brother there in the abandoned ledges of the mine aver since. He was provided with a hel: met by the government experimental station' here, which makes it possible to enter gaseous mines without dan- ger. Sundea-- afternoon William Joyce heard tappings which aksured "him that his bwother is in one of the Jad- ges. and that he is still alive, When this fact became known he was joined in the starch by several hundred miners and by Miss Grace Joyee, the eighteen-year-old danghter of the missing miner. far the searchers have heen unable to locate the: exaet spot from which the tappings came. Work Of Tramps, Carlton Place, Ont, April 13.--The store of Joseph Kdwards, Franktown village, was entered by burglars, who changed (heir old boots for three pairs, and took a articles, "including cigars. glars tramps, So new ones, number of The bur- are supposed to have heen A GANANOQUE COUPLE CAME TO KINGSTON TO BE MARRIED. Additions to Be Made Gananoque Inn--Coal Run Short--Accident Employee. td the Dealers to An Gananoque,. April 13.--Mise Powley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J, Powley, Garden sireet, and Matthew Tomkins, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Tomkins, King street, went up to the Limestone City on Monday aiterngon and wero quietly married. Mr, and Mrs. Tomkine returned at 8:20 p.m, and a recwplion was held at homo of the bride's parenis, The young couple will start. housekeeping at once at their new home on strect. Gananoipuo Canoe Club held, a large ly attended ascembly in Turner's hall, last evening. John A. Webster, Brock street, has disposed of the Springfield cheese factory at South Lake, to R. Wright, of Elgin. The price recived was $1,850. J. J. Dier has purchased from Thom- as B. Reid the farm in the rear of the fair grounds, 'and also the Legge pro- perty on the opposite side of the road and will open up a milk and cream dairy. Rumors are in circulation to the ef- fect that A. A, Walsh, owner of Gan- anogque Inn, has disposed of the "Cri- terion Cafe," in Montreal, and pur- poses making exicnsive additions to the Jnn this season, as prospects for the season are looking excellent, Phe majority of the local coal deal ers have run out of coal and have found it necessary to have their stock increased by s carloads. Some has already ar , and move is ex- pected this week. The executive.committoe of the Gan- anoque Ice Yacht Association gave the order for the handing over of the cups, suitably inscribed, first to John Mallotte's Blizzard; second to N. R. Gardner's Cyclone, as winners in the scries of races held here during the winter, Capt. Barrington, of Picton, arrived here during the past few days and has got busy preparing the coal schooner Britton for the opening of the season. The Royal "Purple degree team, of Gananoque Encampment, No. 89, 1.0. 0.F., went up to Cingston, last even- ing, for & fraternal visit with the Kingston Encampment. y Herbery Cole, an dmployee of the D. F. Jones Manufacturing company, met with a painful mishap on Mon- day mornings A large bar of steel fell on his left hand, acushing * it. seversly and necessitating the removal of part of the thumb. The following are visiting out of town : Mrs. N. M. Wright, and daugh- ter, Miss. Annie, in Belleville and Tren- ton: Mrs. and Mrs. George Il, Moore, of Hay Island, house, in. Wanpoos; Mrs. J.-E. Mills, Miss Ada and Mas ter Thomas, in Lyndhurst; Gerald Mills: Hickory . street, has left for Montreal; Mrs. (Dr.) B. H. Bird, Pina street, and daughter, Mrs. Joseph Bel- fie, in Toronto Mrs. William Petch and son, Grant, Main street, with re latives if Carleton Place; Mr. and Mrs J, T. Green, of Ceda¥ Knoll, in Rochester, . guests of 'their daughter, Mrs, William DeGrafl; Miss Ewing, of the staff of Gamenoque High School, at her home in Carleton Place; Misg Florence * Taylor, , Church street, "in Montreal: Mrs. (Dr) C. H. Tird, Pine street, in Toronto; Miss Stella John- ston, Stone street, at her home in De- seronto:. Mrs. F. Parmenter, King stent, in Toronto; Mr. and Mrs. Heney Muir, ioag street, with their son, A. H. Muir, Kingston: Henry Kegworth, Osborne street. in Kingston, with friends: James Laitimore, Stone street Cora in Kingston, Miss Shields, Svdenham st¥bet, has returned from a short visit with King- ston friepds. Miss: Fullerton, Main street, hak returned from an extended visit in Brockville, Montreal and Ot- tawa. Rineston Dairy School butter at rilberl's LATEST NEWS Dispatches From Near And Distant Places | GIVEN IN THE BRIEFEST POS- © SIBLE FORM. : Matters That Interest Everybody ~--Notes From All Over--Little of Everything Easily Read and Remembered. : The 43rd D.C.@. Rifles, Ottawa, will visit Burlington, Vt., on July 9th An earthquake in ern was attended by fog and clouds of dust, There wore no casualties, Sir Gilbert Parker has been suffering from an attack of influenza, at his re- sidence in London. eh George McKay, wanted in Calgary, was, arrested in London, Eng. He was remanded for extradition. Hon. Dr. Mills, of the railway com- Mission, is convalescent, after a criti- cal operation 'as Wednesday. The Canadian Northern railway has two million dollars worth of cars of varions kinds under construction. Striking buttonmakars have brought about a reign of terror in the towns of Crepin, Lormaison and Meru, Frana:. 3 Japan is considering tion of a smaller with double the now has. H. H. Bicknell, of the law firm of Bicknell, Bain and Sirathy, Toronto, dicd on Monday alter an illness of ten days, of pneumonia. Dr. Mitchell, who accompanied the British, Antarctic expedition, com- manded by Licut. Shackleton, is a na- tive of Perth, Ont. A deputation from Montreal has gone {0 wait on Premier Gouin with tho object of eecuring roforms in the civic administration. The sealing steamer Decapo is thought to have been lost, with her crow, of thirty men, between Nova Scotia and Newfoundland. Winnipeg street railway employees have refused an increase in pay offcr- el by the company in lieu of their de mands for shorter, hours. A ' Mme. Modjeska, in happy contradic- tion to the faté of many great artists, did not die poor. Her estate, it is said, will amount to about. $120,000, The traffic carnings of the Grand Trunk railway for the week ending Ap- ril 7th show an increase of $53,840 over the corresponding waek of 1908. Thomas Cote, director of La Presse and Arthur Ecrement, M.P.,, for | Berthice, are mentioned for the posi- tion of deputy minister of marine and fisheries. Premier "Whitney denies the report that an order<in-council setting aside 1,000,000 acres in the Rainy River district as a forest and game pre- serve has been passed. Queen Alexandra #is -enjoying a charmingly quiet time in London in company with her sister, the Dowager Empress of Russia. They go about to- gether, carefully concealing the signs of they royal state, paying quiet visits to personal friends aud charii- able institutions. the construe- type of submarine, speed of those she LUXURIES TO BE DEARER. "Breakfast Table' Provender te | Be Cheaper. Washington, April -13.--The Payne tariff bill, as amended by the senate | committee om finance, {s ready for pre- sentation to the full committee. Senator Aldrich asserted that seven- ty-five per cent. of articles' used by all the people had been reduced, and that the free lisiis had been lengthened to an extent that would he surprising to everybody. > In placing a large number of arti- cles on the free list and in: reducing duties . on many. others, it has been found necessary to materially increase the duties on many. luxuries in order to produce necessary revenues. The Payne bill increased materially the rates on brandy, alcohol, gin, grain spirits, cordials and liquors, but made practically no increase on champague and still 'wines. The senate committen has decided upon an increase amount ing to about twenty-five per cent. above existing rates on wines of all kinds and has made increases above the Payne, bill on other spirits. A number of other articles, regarded as luxuries, have been increased and the tariff experts feel confident that the bill will produce as much revenue as is needed. i A special effort was made to reduce rates on the so-called ~ bréakiast le ble" articles of commerce. 2] HAS LOTS OF _UMBER On Eastern and Western Sides of | Mountains. Ted Spokane, Wash., April 13.--There is enough timber standing .in the state of Washington to build 5000000 six- room houses, sufficicnt to shelter one third of the population of the United States, or furnish tics for 1,803,939 miles of railway track, or construct a plank road three inches thick and 500 feet wide twice around the world. Cut into lumber these trees would load 10,000,000 forty-five foot cars of 20,- 000 feet cupacity, equal to 85,227 miles of trains, or one train reaching threo and a half times around the globe at the equator. This timber is contained in areas aggregating 35,000 square miles on the eastern and west orn sides of the Cascade mountains, and expert cruisers say that the den- sity 'is not equailed anywhere on the S------------------------------------ | "is naturally tall. Thus a decline ENGLISHMEN GROW SHORTER. Decline . in Stature--Rapidly In- London April 13.--Some atereatl ng remarks were made this week by John | Gray, the scacetacy of the metrical Sommitien of the British A: sociation, upon the cabled report that American college studen: an Tr Tih dent fe i i ture a ing proving in sta it dimi in number. The artisan class is holding. its own in height and numbers. The laboring class--the term. includes the 'unskilled millions of the people in the slums, oven the ta--is percep. tibly declining in stature while it in- creases more rapidly in numbers than either of the other two. These con ditions apply not only to this coun- try, but practically to all Europe." Some of the mtercsting facts men- tioned by Mr. Gray may be summar- ized : Scotsmen are the tallest © in Europe (average height, 5 feet 8 in.) then come Seandmavian and English (5 feet 6 in), and German, Fronch and: Italian. Thiough the conditions obi life in the valley of the Nile, the physical type of the Egyptian peasan- try has not varied in 1,000 years. "Tho English race,"' said Mr. Gray, in stature for u= might reasonably be said to spell a decline also in physi- cal_and mental energy. Tho staturcof our manufacturing classcs has been reduccd far below the average of the country. The shortest people I have measured are those in the great towns of Yorkshire and Lancashire, have, through new conditions of lite, become, quite a different type from the dwellerS in the country. COUNTESS MOXNTARSOLO DI CARIG- NANIO; She is a Princess of the Bourbon line, the old Royal ilouse of France, and is the widow of the Princely House of oy. She is at present visiting America. STIFF GALE ON LAKE AND VESSELS HAD TO KEEP IN HARBOR. The Schooner Tradewind Damaged By Fire, Will Undergc Repairs at Once--Notes Gathered Along the Water Front. The tug Frontenac made two trips from Garden Island to-day. . The steamer Islander is undergoing' repairs at the government dry dock. The steamer Aletha left Monday for Picton, She was expected back to- av. Capt: Smith has arrived in the city to fit 'out his steambarge Kinir ving. : Gordon Boyle arrived from BeHevill to join the steamer Simla at Garden Island, ; Thé steamer Bickerdike, of the Mer- chants' line, will leave shortly for uprer lake ports. ~The work of repawing the schooner Fradewind, damaged by fire, will com mence at once. There was a heavy gale of wind ali' last night and this morring the water came up over the wharves. 3 The sloop Maggie L. loaded grain at Richardson's elevator and wil clear for Picton, when the weather is favorable, The tugs Reserve and Scout intend ed making & trip out to the Brother: to-day but were beld in the harbor br the wind. The old steambarge Melbourne i undergoing répairs at Davis' dry dock and will be turned into a steam er for use at Burlington Beach. i. Owing to the heavy gale the schoon er Clara was unable fo cléar but will make a toip across the lake as soon as the weather is favorable. §. Fredette, Belleville, has joined ithe crew of the schooner New' Domin jon, and William Smith, of the sam« place, will ship on a schooner. out of ningston, ri "Steamer Stranger, of the People's Line, Kingston to Gananoque," is the announcement of Capt. George Ham mond, who intends to 'make regular trips to Gananoque this season. The steamer Edmonton did not clear 'from Toronto for Richardson's. Wore was received that she would not clear wntil the 15th inst. as the insurance does not go into effect until that date, ? i Harsh purgative remedies are fact giting way to the gentle action and mild effects of Carter's Little Liver Pills. ¥ you try them they will cer taller Mr. Gray said of the conditions in| THE WORLD'S TGS == Americarf continent. 5 tiiply please you. . The unprecedented Tailor-made suit selling that has come to this *store proves beyond a doubt that women approve and appreciate exclusivenes A distinctive an inimitable portra of eur- rent styles, superior materials and & the very highest type of work manship possible to bestow non Tailor-made Suits, These Buits are designed in a manner which bring out the lang graceful lines, without heing in the extreme. RY RUN FROM $12.00 to 37 ) ) The feature of fashion so m= perative now easily produced hy the very modish : ; $i. el or FP. Corsets ae . For which we are agents for Kingston. you to call and let our Corset espert tell you about these cele- brated models. You'll likely need them with your new suit. PRICED FROM $1.35 to $5.00. Book our the sole We advise Summer Quarterly Style Ready. VINCE. --In Kingston, on April 10th] 1909. to*Mr, and Mrs. Robert Vines, 46 Colborne Su., a son. ENOX.--In Kelowna, B.C., on 11th April, 1909, to Mr. W. J. Knox, a daughter, DIED. ROGERS. --In Kingston, on 1909 Edith Lazier, aged seven years, eldest daughter X. Rogers, Bank of Montreal. Funeral notice later, WARTMAN .--In Kingston, on April 12th, 1909, Ida Helena, second daughter of the late B. A. Wartman, Funeral: private, on Wednesday afternoon from the residence of her brother-in- law, James Craig, 450 Princess St. DAVIES. --In Kingston, on April 13th, 1909, Gertrude Louise, dwehter of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick- Davies, 383. Barrie street, aged three months, thirteen days,' ! Funeral Wednesday, at 9 o'clock. ROBERT J. REID, The Leading Undertaker. "Phone, 577. 227 Privcess street Sunday, and Mrs, April 138th, twenty of Thos, TAKE NOTICE. - If you have decent Furnjture, Stoves or Carpets for sale, let RK w. Hatig- factory prices paid. TURK'S, "Phone, 705. * LOTS OF New Maple Syria, Pure and Good, Jas. Redden & Co. The Home of Good Groceries Spring Importations Of 1909. Prevost, ' Brock street, has received three cases of imported goods for his order clothing department, including Scotch and English weed, serge, ete. "A good way to make rich red tlood." Take a genuine Blaud's lr Jonic Pill after each meal. 100 g for 25¢., at Gibion's Red Cross y store. It pays to go there. a The ice in the Lower Niagara rivee ie still fiom. : ;