Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 12 May 1909, p. 1

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Ww YEAR 76-N 111, KINGSTON, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, MAY 12, LAST EDITION WERE (AUGHT Were Engaged In Making Bogus Colin. TWO COUNTERRETERS IN BUSINESS IN A TENT AT LATCHFORD. Men + Posed As Prospectors--Made Desperate' Struggle to Get Away From the Police--Re- manded For Trial. Latchford, May 12.--Two Montreal men, posing as prospectors and giving their names as Adelard Dion and Bomas Gascon, were arrested after ohe' of them had tried to pass a false filly-cent piece at Duncan McGregor's store. In a tent they were occupying on the shore of Bay Lake were found moulds, dies, blow pipes, crucibles and} a complete counterfeiters' plant. They made a desperate struggle to get away from Constables Jerry and Fred Lefebvre, but they were even taally overcome and their goods seiz Only a small quantity of false coins weve found, but the camp . fire haa been. lighted, and one of the orucibles was standing over jt when the seizure was made, The men were fully equipped for a trip Gp the river and had in their possession $500 of xbod money. They account for the possession of the moulds, ete, by stating that they were intending to niake tests of different ores up the river at the shaft head. The spurious coins, while excellent in désign, could easily be detected as they rang false and were rough to the touch, One man said the other had a min- ing school in Montreal and that they had chummed together for a pecting trip. He knew that. money was being made but it was for a pastime. The men were remanded for trial at North Bay. pros HAINS CONVICTED. Jury' Find Manslaughter in First Degree. Flushing, N.Y., May, 12.--In the case of Captain Peter C, Hains, jun- ef shaad with the murder of Wil- ! Uo Annis, €n August last, the jury brought in a veraiet of "guilty of manslanghter in the first degree." The defendant was removed in the custody of the sheriff for sentence Monday morning. Captain Hains' conviction is the sequel to the sensational. shooting of W. E. Annis, the clubman. Captain Hains fired the fatal shot, because of Annis' supposed attentions to Mrs Hains, but as his {Hains') brother, the writer, was there, too, and, it was said, kept Annis' friends from interfering, both brothers were charg el with murder. The brother wa tried fivst, and an' acquittal resulted Now that the captain has been found guilty, insanity may be again urged, though, so far, his counsel have not said #80, expecting, it is believed, an acquittal, or at least, a disagree ment. Manslaughter in the first de: grée means, presumably, imprison ment for life. A Veteran Tanner, Southampton, Ont., May 12.--Henr) N. Zeinkan, of the firm of H. N. Zein kan & Sons," and formerly of Bow man & Zeinkan, of Southampton, died at the family residence, yesterday, at the age of seventy-two ycars, after-an illness of two weeks, He was the old est tanner in Canada; having been en gaged in thig business for about fifty five years, He leaves 'a wile, three sons and six daughters. setae i ---------- Grant-Duff, British minis ter resident to the republic of Cuba, has been appointed minister to Dres He will be succeaded at Havana Stephen Leeeh, counselor to -the ¢ ssy at Pekin. x Arthur C. DAILY MEMORANDA. Cheese Board, 1.80 p.m., Thursday "Parsifal," Grand Opera p.m. Hote! Dieu afternoon. Remember Linen Hospital; Thursday. May All cordially invited. House, 7.40 Lihen Shower, to-morrow ' ~~ Shower, Hotel Dieu 13th, 3 to 10 May 18th, In Canadian History. 1846--Sir William G Falconbridge Chief Justice of the High Court of Ontario, was born. 1875--The Prince Edward Island Rail way was opened for traffic. 1880--Battle of Batoche, the rebels. 1887--The Quebec porated the Seciety of Jesu 1906~The steamship Britain' arrived at Quebec trip from Liwerpool After stock-taking we find about a dozen dinner sets, short a few small pieces, and for your use, as goods as a complete we offer them all at 30 to 40 per reduction, every set a snap and Government is "Empress on her incor- own set, cent From $4.90t0 11.50 Robertsor Bros. VILLAG E MOURNS FOR HAROLD Popular Ball Player and Manager of Séed Company Dies. Cape Vincent, N.Y., May 10.--At nhout six o'clock Saturday evening, at his home in Real street, occurred the death of Harold Blum, after an illness of several weeks. "Glassy," as he savas commonly eall- el, was a young man who had the confidence and respect of all the vil- lage:--AB a member of the local base- ball team for years he gained an ex- tensive acquaintance with the fans of Northern New York and along the frontier towns of Canada. He was able to make good at any position on the diamond. He was also well known to the farmers of this section, having been in the employ of the Cleveland Seed company, when it did business in this village, as manager. He was a member of the Cape Vin- cent Camp, M.W. of A.; St. Vincent's branch, C.M.B.A., and the Cape Vin- cent fice department. Besides his widow, formerly Miss Estelle Dunlap, and a little daughter, he "is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Blum, and six sisters, Mrs. Charles Mance, of East Rochester; Mrs. Wil liam Kelly, of Rome; Mrs. Bert. J Kelper and Mrs. Cleveland Stage, of | Watertown, and the Misses Rose and Emily Blum, of this village. STRIKE 1S ON Troubles Break Out in Parls. THE ORDER TO STRIKE IMMEDIATELY OBEYED BY THOUSANDS. Postal WAS A Mass Meeting of Postal Em- ployees Endorsed the Commit+ tee's Strike Order--Mail Clerks Deserted Their Offices At Once. Paris, May 12.--The federal commit- tee of the various postal organizations had determined to await the vote of the Chamber of Deputies on Satur- day's interpellation on the postal troubles, but launched an order to strike last evening. The committee's decision was unanimously endorsed by a mass, mecting held in the Hippo- drome, which wag crowded by 3,000 postal emplovees, whose right to be present was rigorously examined on entry. The strike order obeved, aceording to messages which kept reaching the mceting, stating that the railway 'mail sorters had not leit the Paris stations with the night's mail, and that various offices had been deserted by their staffs, including most of the letter and printed matter sort- from the head The Central I'elograph station was anhounced still working, but only to strike orders through the provinces It will stop to-day. SEEKING HER MOTHER. | Daughter Was . Kidnapped--Does i Not Know Name. Berlin, May, 12 Mrs. Lucy Hoff man, Wichita, Kan., has arrived in Berlin, She seeking her mother, | whose name she does not know. She has been looking for her mother for twenty-nine years and now asks the aid of the Berlin police. Mrs. Hoffman relates that abducted forty vears ago by a man and a woman named Barnes, who never allowed her family name to be mentioned, so she finally forgot it She thinks the name is Wirth, Worth or Werth, She says her parents liv ed in the vicinity of Berlin. Mrs. Hiofiman that a son { the Barnes couple told her last | tober that his father had brought a | lawsuit against hegg father, and that | afterwards, actuated by hatred, haa | carried her away. When she demand ed the reason why, when her father haa offered reward for her recov- | he never found her, the of | the Barnes' said that her father had | | died a few days after offering the re- Alexandria, Indiana. - . ward | It appears that a man living in | Hamilton received a couple of letters from a person living in the same house with the Warburtons. Finally was immediately is she was [ers office. as convey MISS ELLIOTT LOCATED. | | of Oc says She Resides it is Said in Indiana. Hamilton, Ont., May 12.--The po ¢ believe they have located Col. and the lic Mrs. Warburton, the latter being mysterious Miss Elliott often ve ferred to in tha Kinrade ctse. They are said to be living under the names Churchill street, 80 a ory, son given, in a house on CLAIM ADMITTED. defeat of first | Appeal May Be Takon Ontario Bank. Toronto, May 12.= Referees "Georg Kappele has decided to formally admit the claim of the Bank of Montreal for 21,576,000 for the purpose of seitling a list of contributorics of the defunct Ontario Bank. On the application for an order compelling the Royal Trust company, the liquidator, to contest the Bank of Montreal's claim, he rg served judgment. If his judgmont is against the sharcholders who made the application, an appeal witl he entered An By The Manager Murdered. Petersburg, May 12.--Mr Pard ham. an Englishman, manager of the Phoenix factory, was murdered with an in a dark corridor of the factory, . oD axe yesterday: A BOAT SWAMPED AND MANY WORKMEN ON| IT DROWNED. Too Big a Crowd Got Upon the Launch and in Crossing the River it Swamped and Sank: Pittsburg, Pa., May 12.--A evn | ! | launch used as a ferry for conveying mill 'workers from the Pressed Steel! Car company's works" to their homes on the opposite side of the Ohio riv was swamped, near McKee's Rock and | | er, last night, and between' twenty twenty-five men were drowned. I'he Graham is a launch about twen- | feet long, and six feet bedm | was owned by Charles Albert ( yam, and was used to ferry work-| men from the north side to McKee! Rocks, across the Ohio river. The workmen all lived in the Wood's | Run district of Alleghany, and a ma iority of them were Americans, own- | Hare their own homes | "Albert Graham was in charge of the | bisat. He permitted thirty or thirty] ive men to crowd aboard the launch, | | although it was intended to carry not} 1 and | { over twenty. - { CALLED THEM SCABS. | to | What Moses Brantford Said | Non-Union Crew. | $ Ont... May 12. Moses | { Brantford, a marine cook, and al staunch union "man, received the telograms,, from Cleveland, asking him the Princeton's crew when the | {boat went by here. "Will ship," | { Brantford responded, but he never in- | tonded to set foot ithe vessel long as she shipped with a nou-union Late last night when the Prince- ton slowed down in the river, Brant ford paddled out in a row boat with! A ladder was lowered for his friends | with of a Amherstburg, join [to sO on Crew two friends him. Then Brantford and | stood off and regaled the crew remarks as to what they thought Brantford alleges that of the crew fired three shots hig head. 'scabs.' mean be Death Of A Postmaster. Deseronto;, May 13--A. H Me Gaughev, postmaster, of Deseronto. 1903. dicd las# night, after be ill nearly four months, at the sixty years. Before being ap- pointed postmaster Me. MeGaughey was formany years head lumber sales- Iman for the Rathbun =company. leaves a widow, three daughters and since ing of | rade' ! steaming coal equal to the Welsh, He | he was sent a photo of Mrs. Warbur- ton, and thie, with the letters, is said to be now in the possession of the au- thorities, who swore the recipient io secrecy. Curiougly enough, Alexandria, which is a town of 8,000 people, is between Anderson and a place named Marion, and Miss Kinrade says Miss Elliott wanted to be called Aunt Marion, Albert Newport is' the man who sup plied the police with the information Three years ago, while in Toronto, he met a girl who now resides in Alexan- dria, Shortly before the murder she wrote him a letter telling about a Col. Warburton and his wife, who were staying. at the house where she board ed. When Newport read Florence Kin- evidence, he became curious, to the girl in Alexandria if Col. Warbugon"s wife The Nov came and wrote to find out was a Miss: Elliott. back that she was. The letter was ac companied by a photograph. It was a snapshot and a rear view, taken with- ont the Warburtons knowing it, Newport told friends about these let ters. They regarded it as a joke, and bel money that he could not produce them. When he did, someone gave the police a tip, and . Detective Bleakley secured the letters, He swore New port and his friends to secrecy. The information was sent to the proviiciai department and will be investigated. DRAW COLOR LINE. One of Imperial Journalists Gives Striking Interview. Vancouver, B.C., May 12.--The Aus tralian journalists have left for the least. They will spend two days in the Rocky Mountains. Mark Cohen, editor of the Evening Star, of Dunedin, N.Z., said in an in terview : "We draw the color line in the Antipodes. Both "Australia and New Zealand exclude the people of the yellow races unless they pay a tax of 2500, which is. practically prohibitive, and besides public sentiment is against the settlement of these people amongst 8 : 'We realize that if England ever lost command of the sea, these people would swoop down upon our coasts, "In Western New Zealand we have at least on the northern coast, and the vellow man is well aware of this fact " "1 cannot understand how you ever allowed Asiatics to obtain so strong a foothold on the Pacific coast. Sure lv Duperial consideration cannot be urged. ~With us domestic policy comes first, &nd- imperial interesté next. Of course, 'we are loyal to the empire. but we know local Conditions better than Downing street. We showed. ow real sentiments in the recent offer of a Disadnought, and another one or two if needed." Men McMaster Will Honor. Toronto, May 12.~To-day McMaster University conferred honorary degries at the annual convocation in Castle Memorial Hall : Doctor of liws--Lieut.-Gov. Gibson, Charles John Holman, Frank Sander son, 0. C. 8. Wallace, . Doctor of divinity--Rev. Henry Fran- cis Frey. Rev. X. L. Therrien. Mavor Oliver, g Coady, by tion, lunched with the lord mayor London, Eng.. at the Mansion house Mr, Oliver hopes to sail on the Maure- tania next Saturday. Don't lose sight of the fact that you always have help on the road to City invita- of and special Toronto, Treasurer GIVEN FIRST RANK. McGill Medical College Van. Montreal, May 12. Canadian and American authorities have unit in awarding the first place in standing of universities on this continent in the department of hygiene and science. The Montreal seat of learning is on a par with Harvard and 'Johns Hop- kins in most respects, and their su perice as regards the laboratory of hygiene. 2 . McGill is bracketed with Harvard and Johns Hopkins as having the finest scientific equipment on the Ame- rican éontinent. Having examined the hygiene laboratory the inspectors made ihe statement that this depart- ment was the very finest of its kind in North America. The object of the recent investiga tion is to appropriate a donation from Andrew Carnegie for the purpose of in- augurating a peasion fund for univer- sity professors. is in the Another Jolt For Castro. Venezuela, May 10, via Willemstad, Curacoa, May 12.--Cipri- ano Castro, the deposed president of the republic, has been condemned hy the to pay six rs' rental and heavy damages for the arbitrary occupation of the Miraflores palace in this city. This building the pro perty | « Scuora Crespo, widow © (Caracas, wurts is of Josquim if a former president. THE BOARD OF SRADE FR 3 Mme TON AF . HOBERT CRAWFORD, Chairman of the Entertainment tee, Conmit- AMBUSHED AND SLAIN. Lieut. Van Rennen and Twelve Policemen Killed. Lagos, British West Africa, May Lieut. PD. A. Van Rennen, assistant resident administrator of a distriel ini Northern Nigeria, three other Eng- lishmen, and thirty-five native police, were ambushed récently by natives at a point fifty miles north-east of Zun- geru. Tho liomtenant and twelve of the policemen were killed. A British force has ben despatched to the locality to punish the natives. [0 BUILD CANAL SIR R.. PERKS TALKS ON GEORGIAN BAY PROJECT. 2 Government Must Guarantee Three Per Cent. on Bonds and Half Per Cent. For Sinking Fund. Montreal, May 12.- Sir Robert Perks, Bart, M.P., i« on his way to Ottawa, to lay before 'the dominion ment proposals for the building of the Georgian Bay canal. He said in an interview that. if the proposals accepted work would be startcd on the canal next spring, and that the canal would be completed in five years. His friends in London hgd offered to find the whole of the momty necessary for the work, on condition that the gov- ernment guaranteed interest at the rate of three per cent. on and an additional half pec cent. provide for were preparcd to carry out the tion from Georgian Bay {o North Bay first, or io do from North Bay lo tancously. The company to carry this work would be a poration, and the work would be done by a board ¢n Which the government would have representatives. The pro fits would be divided equally between the government and the company. to "ec- out DIED IN CHURCH. Sudden Call to Renfrew Woman at Devotions. Renfrew. Ont., May 12 --=Tuesday morning, Mrs. Timothy Hanrahan. at devotions-in St. Francis Xavier church fell dead while seated in one of th pews. She expired. without uttering a word. ~The cause gf death was ° acute indigestion from which Mrs. han had been a sufferer for some lime was about sixty-five years of age, survived by a family of sons and' Her husband. who died a number of years ago, had an equally sudden summons. Deceased, who daughicrs, Cause Of The Fire. San uFraneiwo. Cal : May 12.--The United States circuit eourt of appeals, esterday, decided that the earth- audke of -~ April. 1906, was not the cause of the fire that occurred the carthquake. The decision suite pending agdinst companies losses suffered in the great fire. for The czar is to visit President Fal: PROTECT LE NR. GRAHAM EXPLAINS HOUSE OF COMMONS CUSSES PROBLEM, DIS- Proposed to Put Fifteen Cents a $100 on Foreign Insarance Policy--Bill is Unlikely to Pass Both Houses This Session. Ottawa, May 12.--The commons con- sidered the protection of life at level crossings, Hon. Mr. Graham's bill to amend the railway act being up for discussion. Mr. Graham explained that he had added an amendment making the provisions of the act ap- ply to railway companies incorporated outside of Canada, but runping trains in Canada, and also to railway com- panies running trains from the United States to any point in Canada. With respect to the railway cross- ings section, he proposed to add a section founded on Mr. Lancaster's bill, with one or two stringent provi- sons He desired to provide that at any crossing where life has been lost or serious injury caused, ho train should run over that crossing at a greater speed than ten miles an hour until protection is provided according to the railway commission's plgns, and that when the commission Jit made an order for protection of 'a crossing, trains should not run over that eross- ing at a greater speed than ten miles an hour until the board's order has been complied with. Mr. Lennox objected to: the commis- sion having a free hand in assessing municipalities, and urged. the inclusion of a provision in the bill limiting the contributions by municipalities. He also suggested that the coun- try's contribution should be devoted only to the separation of railway and highway, and that in every case indi cative for redress shonld be taken by the railway board Mr. Lancaster complained that the elimination of crossings was to be ac- PITH OF THE NEWS. The Very Latest Culled From All 'Over The World, Premier Stolypin, of Russia, remain at the head of the cabinet. Sir Edward Morris probably will have a majority of sixteen in the Newfoundland parliament. The Unitarian church, Montreal, has ivon a unanimous call to Rev. F. R. wriffin, All Saints' church, Braintree, Mass, Last night brought the close, for at least a year, of all twenty-five saloons in Lincoln, Neb,, for the first time in its history' The Missouri senate committee on constitutional amendments killed the women's suffrage resolution by report- ing it adversely. Vancouver has refused to vote mon- ey to entertain the crews of the Jap- anese cruisers at present visiting the Pacifi¢ const states. Messrs, Shaer and FEliasoph, cloak manufacturers, of Montreal, who as- signed, Saturday, were arrested on a charge of fraud. J. A. Bilodeau. Sherbrooke, Que., is suing W. H. Wiggett for $5,000 for the loss of an cye through the bursting of a bottle in a bottling establishment. The irial of M. Lopukine, a former director of police, on a charge of be- ing a member of a revolutionary or- ganization, has opened in St. Peters- burg. . -» Rain has fallen over a great part of the western provinces, and it is hoped extinguished many of the prairie fires that have been raging in Saskatche Ww will an. Fifteen hundred students of the com- mercial high school in Tokio left ina body, because the government refused to raise the school to the rank of a university. An unrepealed but forgotten law in England cals 'actors 'rogues and vagabonds," and by ipvoking this law in London, an actor was enabled to escape serving on a jury. The latest internatigual sclieme to | be diseussed is a perhoanent commit | tee to take charge of international | funds subscribed for victims of dis | asters such as that at Messina | Sir Richard Cartwright informed Senator Lougheed that Canada would | be represented at the imperial defence by P London, probably | conference, in Borden and Hon. L | Sir Frederick | Brodeur: To Evangelize Sydenham, | Sydenham, May 12.-Owing to the | ve ry wet weathor very fow are able to get in their garden seed. Among the vigitors last wedk was Miss 'E. N complished mate st the expense of the Clow, Odessa, at home over Sunday. people; than of the railway companies. |) Mrs. An (iness, ont Sun- He submitted. that the. cost. should be. -. a Hee: A Ne pe i open apt borne by the railwhy com band {uot Saturday with friends at Wilton. the dominion exchequer. | Arrangements have ben made to The debate was adjourned. | have -a well-known evangelist of To- The insurance bill as_ amended 4 by | to hold: evangelistic services in the the sub-committee of the banking and | Methodist, church during June. Wil commeres SommiLiee So the commons | ia Trousdale is hustling his new was presented to the latter committee CR a by Hom. Mr. Fielding. While Tate] Dake shop_along. elasticity is given by the suetdments in respect to investments and the in-| a oR iit of the companies' busi-| Eastern Jeagve-- Rechest Ci ness, the sub-committee, at the same | BEX; ds Foronto. 4; «ersey Ly, time believes that the interests of the | Hufialo, 4; i Ee a i i6: policy-hotders all are adequately safe- | ye erlomty eague egeoit, 5 : guarded. Mr. Fielding stated that] York, Ov Philedel I roe ra Ts while it was doubtful whether both | Louis, 3 iladelphia, 0. NCago, 2; Baseball On Tuesday. 8; New- 92 "New St. / govern- | wero | the bonds, | the. sinking fund: They | this and the section | Montreal simul | Canadian cor- | Haova- | after aficets several hundred | PLANS HIS OWN FUNERAL. jo TO | Wealthy Parisian Will Have Most houses would pass the bill this ses. | Washington, 3. oi : ns sion, it was important that the bill | National, Jou grie=--< ingtnngtt, oo bos should at Jeust get through the com- ton. 8. Bt. dour, 0; rookiyn, « phd F g | Philadelphia, 1; Pittsburg, 7. Chi: oe l "New Yi 9 There is a new clanse to allow aj C889 4; New York, 3. Canadian to insure property in a for- | eign mutual company if the superin- | tendent of insurance is notified and Hy 3 the insured pays to the department ] fifteen per cent. of the total net cost, | --h-- not to exceed filteen Cents .an hundred | ' dollars. ~~ There is" a clause added MINISTER'S DAUGHTER IS which declares that this act shall not | VICTIM OF A STRANGER. affect legislation specially enacted re-| specting the C.M.B.A., Canadian irl Woodmen amd supreme court 'of Por. | Arrest of Man Who Lured Girl at esters. n { London Will Be Asked--Saved | By Immigration. Agent. yet. Huron, Mich., May 12.--The [focal United" States immigration office at the Grand Trunk station never al Gorgeous One. | forded mote striking evidence of the i . | pitfalls that await inexperienced girls t Paris, May 12--Paul Chauchard, the | P A : as | wealthy Paris merchant, who is lying i travelling slone than, oh Ne Doub | dangerously ill at his home, has sign- je sixteen-year > es n Eo . ? : a ed a will in which he makes provis- | in, Ont., > mituster, who ran awe jon for the most magnificent specta- | from home to go to Detroit, where {cle in the wav of a funeral that Paris { the girl has relatives. aT : {has ever scen. The girl's futher Bs ae at re ues ' {mi tors © erlin. cause of M. Chauchard long ago began a | minent pas £ 2 | mausoleum in which he intends to |®" Witescation with nig, or ed | sleep his last sleep." This sumptuous | * trivial mat i the gar oy g 0 de monument is completed except for | eave home. od nt 0 al an --, bust of the expect, inhabitant, which | There she waited while her train hn is not vet in pl _ The coffin _is | being made up, fearful to leave = the made. It is a work of art, of amar- | vicinity of the station lest she mies anthine colored | her: train. She was approached by a wood, wrobght hy Non & tags i % ? { (i . ted artistic hands jn cunning design, | Grand Trunk brakesman, who mice It only remains to put these gor- | that she was 'alone and apparently { weous but gloomy receptacles to their unacquainted with the «ty. ] he use in the ceremony for which M. | girl's story, as told to the Fort | Chauchard has set apart 200,000 iranes | Huron immigration officers, was that { and has arranged to the nicest de- | the young man asked her to accom- tail. After lying in state two days | pany him into one of the coaches. | during which the shop will be closed, | She went in, she said, and learning the body will be placed in a magni- | the amount? of money she had, the ficent car, preceded by '.000 employet | brakesman told her the sum was insuf in haltts of mourning mid a guard of | ficient to pay her way to Detroit. He hatsemen, and borne to the Madeleine {promised her one dollar if she would Tre mourning coaches provided for | permit him to kiss her ten times. The the invitea ghests wre all'in the style f girl thought she needed the money and | of Louis XV., with clean-shaven | consented. | conchmen and footmen if gala eos-| Af Port Huron she was questioned tume impressively trimmed in gold | closely and detained until her par nts llace in a specially lavish design, and | arrived Then the girl told a far more in knee breeches, wigs and cocked |seridus story to her mother than she hats | had to the 'officials, with the result Much attention has been given to | that the young man was ompelled to ihe costumes of the pallbearers, which | resign his position. A warrant will | will present almost complete artistic be issued for the voung man. mourning effect. The clergy of two | parishes will join in giving. adéquate | solemnity to the sery we, for which! Néw York, May 12. According io a also an orchestra of eminent soloists | joepatch from Tacoma, Washingion, {of the opera has been retained From {Mrs Edna Reed, divorced wily of R. the Madeleine the cortege will pro-lp Reed, a wealthy real estatd man of ceed to Pere la Chaise, the portal of | pover, created interest when «Bg ap- which will be draped in black. { peared on the streei. with her ine : c IVdar-old daughter, Inez, handeiifiad to Cabinet Took No Actign. Ror. Twice since the divorce was oh- May 12-Premiee Whitney | tained, Mrs. Reed says, attempts have ¢ kat the cabinet | boon' made to kidnap the child. Sh ad not. taken any action in the Kin-| believes that the silver handenfis will | oat case, which will be a subject for | guaranten the child's safety. Mrs. Reed | discussion at ihe- next meeting of thelis on het to the of cab su Thutsd Lug , 4 Afraid Of Kidnappers. Toronto, tated lgst eoveming 1 PROBABILITIES. 7 Toronto, Ont., May 12.--Ottawa Valley and Upper St. Lawrence : {10 a.m) Fine to-day and on Thu y and =» little warmer. > A SHOWING P- or * LADIES TAILORED SUITS UNSURPASSED. ec ill There i§ no doubt about it. We are offering the most com- plete display of Ladies' Suits ever shown in this City. Suits that have the New York character and the tailored simplicity. ad will interest any Women who would be well dressed. {Come and See Our : Special $12 Suils Made of fine English Coat- J ing Serge in Plain, Navy and 7 Black. Stylish § Coat, well £3 lined throughout and trim- gg med with satin buttons and Ia silk sutache braid. ® gored j skirt with satin buttons. fa) | Another Great Model Made of good quality British Suiping Panama, in Brown, Myrtle, Navy and Black, with hair lime stripes. Smart § 'Coat, tut on directoire lines. ® gored skirt with bias self folds. Coat and Skirt trimmed with pretty buttons SPECIAL SALE PRICE, $17.50. The values we are giving in HIGH-CLASS FRENCH Suits are the best ever, $20 . . DIED. WHITEHEAD. --At $i. Paul, Mion. May 4th, 1909, Anna C., wife of William G. Whitehead, formerly of Kingston. GILBERT .--~In Kingston, May 11th, 1909, at his father's residence, 347 Barrie streey, Carles GarBeld Gilbert, aged twenty-two vears, Funeral private, Thursday ROBERT J. REID, The Leading Undertaker. "Phone, 577. 287 Priccess street TAKE NOTICE. 11 you have deéent Furniture, StoVes or Carpets for sale, let us know. Satis factory prices paid. TURK'S, 'Phooe, "Hous Cato Sls Fibre Pails, Fibre Tubs, Brooms, Whisks, Scrubbing Stove Brushes, Shoe Brushes, Clothes Lines, Clothes Pins, -- Pearline; Clothes Baskets, Ammonia. Jas. Redden & Co. P.8.--Try "Dusthane," for Sweep- ing- -- Three More Brick Dwellings. Permits for 'the erection of three more brick dwelling houses. They will be erected by J. Kingy who Will put ap a single brick dwelling on the west side of Division street, and a double brick dwelling on the sonth side of York street. There has certainly not bean such building activity in' Kings: toni in twenty years. There must be about forty . buildings in course of erection, and sbout tb be started. Probably ten more will bei started be- for " the auicmn. morning Sapolis, Bon A: i, Dutch Cleanser, X Ray. BrushesStove Polish, Shoe Polish, Silver Polish, Silver Soap, | ------ The Travel Magazine, New York, always beautifully ilustrated - and full of travel. advice and' lot, sojourfis this month at Constantinople, on the Volga, at Florence, jiu Treland, pk hat a bright session »of the T 4 Club ' 3 ; IN The "policomen i the vards tho eity Monday. 8 a And PC. Davies heen detailed for this duty... « ag The fair grounds fence razed by {he onth ago, is abouy will start in big wind storm a_mont

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