,._. 'lhe llsuiil lleliialill" for uiur rxeiuurrs We have just received a splen. did assortment of Umbrellas price open a 'nice line of Ladieis’ and l\_/Ien’g I waterproof coats. CHANDLER turn ' DIN ISYS It The ll _f 'h ii, r 8 In hany ,er B ng _ last night and again the former pre- _. s_' _ - woasbeenatt P Te tre_ His voice is a siirolfgp clgar te; vailed. 'I‘he_l2i1_di<1_ Program of 'phvtqrlaysmtl-Methodist_ church in this city were eV°'““g_» -199" 8l\\l~~li\1€ Wfllf l>l`6B°H¥°d continued yesterday. Mr. Aikens de- ” then” Worth T€m8mb2l'1i1E. Sh0Wll\B livered strong and telling addresses “gli WBHY R homeless child scsi at 3.45 and 7.45 b.rn_ Much interest s_;1_rving_ for love and lifes D¢°d9» has been evidenced in these meetings “' ‘le a fa-V°l`it¢ (105 1185 them 811 in and that they are having a good ef- abundance. The Rustlers was a_ strong (wt is “gsm-ed_ The me¢t,;ng5_,wm be western picture. and Pigs is Piss was held today nt 2,45 and 1.45 nm. a .whole barrel of fun. H; Emery T. .__._..__.__..._ M 50C to $3-50. This Week we will ,,_?.f.°“..:;...s‘“;.:;'::;?_.':3:..i:s.1§ff;‘;:.§ ,ggwuyg e ~the»hearts of all his bearers] 'primar- ily with his splendid appearance,” add __ next ith hi in t ' . It "' is ,,,,w,,,,, B '€‘,°'g",°°“ "°;,'§;, he 'rhe Mechanics and ith Regiment B ggers on 0 sa , , » have fn b h- d o5;he,. in er bowlers met again-in Burke s Leagu- a No. 1/, 'rolling up a total of 826 or 77 more than the 4th. The next game 'P-' ' ___ with Moy” and in each of his num- Thi’ f°u°“'l°Z~“"° the 5°°\`¢S1 "j1"""`\ No time lost in getting to your favorite pastime inthe short summer evenings and on Saturday;nfteruoons_ No need to wait _for street cars in going home from the office, and in going to the ground. '1`he racquet can easily be fastened to the lmmllelmrs. E Miss Kelly’s music and accompan- iments we __ A. Bourke... 21Clean your blood! Everyone is the better of a good bottle of blood pur ii iifies taken in the_sprinZ months._Dur: 185 ____ IDE the winter the system becomes loaded with impurities. Springu; Sgr. t Sts drtf. CHINESE LOI\N_0F $5,000,000 PEK_IN, March 25-The government has accepted a loan of $5,000,000 from the Yokohama Special Bank in Yoko- hllmll. Japan, and will give in sec- urity live per cent. railway bonds. The loan, which will be used to meet a deficit of the railway board, is You will find the without a political significance. _ ‘”CIev‘eIand” _ Cushion Frame a very comfortable mount, with ii smooth ifiotioii and without vibration. It is built to give long and ready service. _ E. R I C E. I IIDJOIIRNS RUSSIIIN Dlllll ST. PETERSBURG, March 25-l_m- perial decrees adjourning the Duma and the Council of Empire for three days are publish-ed. _Mk Dido. CEREY-At Earnsclifle on March 24th, Patrick Carey, age 85 years. CAHILL-At Central Bedeque on the - zzird instant Patrick E 1, ' i t ` son of Geor e a d Mrs. tgrihilllii-aSrl ilfllllilll Canada Cycle (ll. il ll' “ll rin Motor Co, Lid., Write for Citalague. Toronto. . --_-.. ..._ . 1.. ,_.i..; iii..- _ t.`_': 24| _ ~ _ _ WHAT ABOUT YOUR slum” 'i'o-mil' You may be - very proud of the wonderful sight that you used to have. That does not enable you to see it hit bet- terfoday,how- » ever. You can- not live on "re- m e m b e r e d mil_es‘,’ o_r upon whatyou once possessed. lf.your eyes served you wall for many years, so much more reason why you should take proper care of them DOW. ir1,?3.l2f°ii3.l"i‘§'_‘€nl.'“d‘.§.i’.“i'$E not on. Come todhz' and see up or your own bsnefl . ‘Silverifon 'Q Epstein ' DRS. OF OPTICS iss green si. Chwnwn LEGISLATIVE PROCEEDINGS .-1- (Contlnu from a 1 ed _ii se l Hospital 'by the Trustees last year. THE PREMIER promised the in- formation tomorrow. He submitted -3, voluminous return of the expenses in l`€i€Hrd to boring for coal. I-IONVMR. GUMMISKEY ill feDly to Mr. Matbieson, promised a return of the rights of way purchased since 1898 for roads not opened yet. The road inspectors were instructed to furnish the information which would take ,_ little time. Further 'returns were submitted by the Premier, Mr. Cummlskey and Hon. Mr. Richards. THE RREMIER presented e. mes- Btlge from the Lieutenant Governor transmitting the report of the Minis- ter of Justice on certain bills passed by this Legislature. The bill to incorporate the Arena Rink Company was mad a second time and committed, Mr. Crosby in the chair. The incorporators are H. Stanhope; McLeod, W. B. Prowse. W. fl. Brshaut, J. A. Webster and L. B. McMillan. The capital' stock provid- ed for is 020,000. The bill was agreed to without amendments. M\'.,,M¢LEAN moved the,l-louse lu- to comniihtee ouithe blllto ‘amend the Bourls incorporation act, Mr. Kennedy-lnfhnslngton) in the chair. The blllirovides _lugoug other things f0l' a deposit of $2 each by candi- dates for"fCon'nclllor, for enabling bln CDUHUII to borrow money for town i“"`U°86l lip to 81,000 from any pri' vata individual, bank, or incorpora- UOD, amd; increases the power- of the' Chief of -Police and town conltables in 'mlklhflrreltl where resistance is tgei-ed. After some tlmedin commit- Dro __ reportb » The our Io' Iil:Ivrpoi'ste the Fanning Brook Hd!`y‘09mPnny was read A gvgonrl time and committed, Mr. Mc- ee ln,the cha r. The incorporntors, are David Birt, S. D. Gay, Cameron McLaughlan, Ernest Rogerson, John M. Birt, and J. Wilber Birt. The capital stock is $500 in $1 shares and may be increased to $1,000. The bill was reported agreed to without amendment. The bill to incorporate the Souris Citizens’ Band was read 9, second time and committed, Mr. McKinnon in the chair. It was agreed to and reported without amendments. THE PREMIER brought up the question of correspondence between the federal and provincial Govern- mlents with regard to conserving the oyster fisheries. Hc submitted th-e correspondence and invited the mem- bers on both sides to consider the matter impertially so as to be able to advise the best course to D\l1`Si-\€~ Mr. MATHIESON sal-d Mr. Bro- deur, Minister of Marine. had stated in the Commons that an agreement with the local Governments had been arrived at. It appeared now that this is hot quite correct. He and his colleagues were prepared to discuss the whole matter fronf the stand- point of the public interest. The House adiourned till tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock. .._-_- or vlcmls or Fumuiiiiw Your uolocllusr (Continued from page 1.l _ fatally injured had died in hosllliflli- Two more were found today. _ , Mothers, fathers and other relativ- es, iiternuy nina with grief. stormed the police lines at the morgue all night and today, shrieking, sobbing. and in some cases _fighting -with _the officers in their frenzy. HYBl1¢‘\‘i°f1l women fell writhlng in the streets and had to be carried away in the already overburdened ambulances. A- mong the bodies are more than fifty burned beyond all semblance of hu- man form and they will UUIIBPB hm/9 to share a common grave as un- known dead. The regular morgue was far too small to accommodate the _deed and the so-called charities pier bore the bulk of the charred burden. The bod- ies were ranged in long lines down both rides of the pier. web in 8 brown stained wooden coffin such as the city provides for its pnuper dead. Nearly all, if not all, the victims were employed by the Triangle Waist Company on the eighth, ninth and tenth floors of a ten story loft bulld- ing at za washington Place. on the western fringe oi the down-town wholesale clothing, fur and. milllnery district, the partners of the firm. Isaac H rries and Max .Blank eecap' ed unicrfthed from the office on the tenth floor, carrying with thsm OVGI' an adjoining roof B unk s two young daughters and a 80V°l’“°"~ - - glow' the -ure started ,i will perhalll ngvhr be known. *A corner on tim °|‘m._|, 59°,-_ about the point of i_ S il DARRACH--At Clyde River, March 28, 1911, Mrs. Alex. Darrach. aged 72 years. Funeral today (Wednes- day) at 2.30 p_m. to Clyde River Cemetery. _ e Ahhcyfs ‘__ ` _J _ _.Er , _ .- me fe* Salt ¢ Your stomach may =~~------» not suggest what it _needs when full of _ Q, distress, but common ,_ s e u s e su g ge s t s ihhrya sin. \‘“§‘3,‘“’1‘f/.‘/;-S 25C and 6Oc. Sold everywhere. bodies were found; sixty-three or more were crushed to death by jump- ing, and more than thirty clogged the elevator shafts. The loss to pro- perty will not exce'cd $60,000. Pedestrians going home through Washington Place to Washington square at ten minutes to five were startled by the whizz of something rushing through the air below- them; there was a horrible thud on the pavement, and a body flattened on the flags. Wayfarors on the opposite side of the street shaded their eyes against the setting sun and saw the windows of the three upper floors of the building black with girls crowd- ing to the sills. The only fire escape was in a small court yard ` of the building. "Don‘t jump! Don’t jump!" yel- led the crowd. But the girls had no choice. The pressure of the maddeneil hundreds behind them and the urging of their own fears were too strong. They began to rain on the sidewalk like peas from a hot skillet. Four alarms were rung in within fifteen minutes. Before the engines ,;__. -_ be stretched, or' the ladders raised, five girls had fallen from the eighth and ninth floors so heavily that they broke the glass and iron roofs of the sub-cellars and crashed through the streets into the vaults below. In an hour the fire was, out. Half an hour had done its work. Probably the death list was full in twenty minus tes. The building -stands on a corner with exposure on two sides. But the only fire escape was interior, opening on a light and air shaft. In all, there were seven exits-the single fire es- cape, two freight elevators at the rear, two passenger elevators in front, and two stairways. All ‘of them proved almost useless And practically all 'who escaped either climbed to the roof and scrambled thence to the roof of the adjoining building, or fled in the first rush for safety before ,the crush and the smoke grew too thick. . ~ Ill llnlf Eczema ' ...__- I’_d wash it away with that,mfld. soothing liquid, D.D.D. Relleves fall kinds of _skin trouble, cleansing away the impurities and 'clearing up the complexion as nothing else can. Yes. If 1 had nnykiud of skin trouble I’D USE D. D. D. Write the D. D. D. Laboratories, Dept. C. G., 49 Colborne Street, Tor- onto, and they will send you trial could respond, before the nets could. ‘ Chandler. also colored, and the house- . _ bers he was repeatedly recalled. He was a rare and enuine treat, and 4TH- REGIMENT- 1 173 108 142 141 2 3 154 134 134 174 L. Smith... D. A. McKinnon... 213-52 a'rt1 N. Currie... 161 J. _McInnis.._ 216 Strain... . 180 Jewers... _. 149 Mallett... ._ . 120 ici iso ns iaz _ 134 Totals... 764 Majority ‘for _._._.__.____._-_ lliilllflll ill-STIEIE llillllllllilll USES . NEW YORK, March 25--John J firm of Simmonds and Company, tes $50,000 if he would get possession o M. Scarborough, a special agent o forced to resign because he had an account with thc firm, was present at yesterday’s 'hearing but did not testify, “ ‘Red Letter' Sullivan came to my home,” ssid"the witness, “with 'Pete‘ Clark, wbo"had been introduc- ed to me as a reputable member of the Consolidated Stock Exchange. They told me that they represented McHie, the bucketshop that was closed in Chicago, Celia Brothers and Geo. Graham Rice. They told me if 1 would take the Scarborough cheque out of the office and give it to them, they would give me $50,000. I punch- ed Clark in tli'e"‘fnouth and hit ‘Red Letter' Sulliviin, telling them that 1 never did that' sort of business.”» Scarborough 'explained before the hearing. that he made no secret of his trading with the tlrm. "The account was in my *own name and I received no favors," he said. “Red Letterf' Sullivan was arrest- ed with George Graham Rice’s firm of Scheftels '&'Cornpan'y, by Scarbor- ough. _ Rice and Sullivan had been associated in wild cat flotations in Nevada and other parts of the coun- `name from the quality of the litera- ture which he prepared, and printed in red ink, for the various stock pro- positions which Rice and he sold the gullible public through lurid adver- tisements and letters. Rice is the son of a Hebrew immigrant. He was sent to jail from New York for forgery and took the name of Graham Rice, fellow convict who died. After run- ning a betting bureau for years, he branched out into selling stock in so- called mines. He is now awaiting trial. Scarborough conducted the in- vestigation which brought about the arrest of- all the known bucketshop men in the country, as well as of a number o`f get-rich-quick artists. _.l....1.--1-_-~ Mulnnstlni win iluslllil With jealousy -as the motive and a revolver as _-.the means, Reuben B. Trice, colored, formerly s private in the Tenth United States cavalry at 'Fort Ethan Allan, today killed his former sweetheart, Esther °Wood, probably fatally wounded Mrs. Anna keeper.; and frighten-ed another color- ‘dd Woman so badly that she jumped ‘from-fan upper story window, and then turned the revolver against bim- self with deadly effect. _ -mond, Na., and a discharged troop- er, had kept company with ihn.Wood girl,.until_. few weeltsngo, when she transferred her affections to- another man. ‘ ‘ Trice s;>oke,»of~ this to several of his friends urlng. the last f~ew.days, and this forenoon- he called at the Chand- ler house. llllss Wood opened the doori and the couple went upstairs. Within-n few mlnu-tes the girl came running into the room of Mrs. Chand- ler greatly frightened and crying bottle free. origin and three upper floors on y, were swept. On _tha ninth floor flftyn E. A. Foster, Central Drugstore. that Trice had threatened to shoot 125-367 174--|50 _ F . 153-F08 iiriii . r e 170-52s _- I"URNII`URE " _ ___ ' * I uiznnouh-areas ~ 820 840 24304 Mechanics . . . . .. 94 ~Plllllli BUI LUSI .lllll Roche, a. former employee of the de- funct' Consolidated Stock Exchange tifying in thebankruptcy proceedings yesterday afternoon, swore that the firm did a "crooked" bucket shop business and thatlhe had been offered the “Scarborough cheque.” George the Department of Justice, who was. try for years. Sullivan got his nick- " BURLINGTON, Vt., March »24-. Trioe, who was a native of Rich-_ ` " ‘rx _ ` Vt e invite 'everybo was won by the 4th by 5 pins. In the . _ final the Mechanics won onli hy 22 ~ - ~ - dtts_ __ was ___ lighter __e___ ______g under, the pi” The _above outfit_ consists of a 4 ft. _61n. x 6 it. brass bed, a spring, a J. Mclnnis made the highest scorn, mattress, pair sheets, pair blankets, pair pillows, pair shams, bedspread and retail 'value of five dollars 191-472 isa-411 _ 28, 191| C Money! $5.00 Given lo Some Send in_ your estimate of the ‘ _total werghtoyf the_ brass bed out- __ ' fit now on view m our wmdow. Everybody fry--lliere are -no ,Conditions _ y - . r . dy to join in this eventf 156.3215 Everybody in town and country should try and To make if equally fair lu all This coinpetition will not open until April ist (this is NOT an April ` Slwarilla is the beet bloodipurifier ws Totals... ... 749 709 818 2330 _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _i;_i;o_w gif. sic. n hottie 'rhn MacKinnon MECHANH ____ fool Joke) and all estimates received previous to that date will be placed e iu u ~ . ~ 1 _ ' E °" °'~ G” G°°- & K ~ - _ ' _ receptacle and drawn and numbered at random. 1 z Can You Guess ? Easy _ rn i -._ . , _ _ perfection hi handsome tl nly 2151 *md J- St'*`a‘“ and J- M°Kl1Y - ' _ __£ _________________e __s___ p___________e_gen_____e;n€_t___ tied ____ the aggregate with 52g_ comfoit, all of which have been selected from our regular stock. The first person sending in the nearest correct estimate of the combined weight of the above outfit will be given choice of any goods in our store to the ; _i-_-1 E -mi ' ' ww -_-ll 1 \ of 'all kinds. ' ‘ f f l wi l be compelled to endorse il. _ cures sruurs tunes sriivius eiunuci-:nears coucus coins , nisrrnrnn _ scanners rouuncu . _ , ' _A . orsemen Attention ! DR. I. _WOODBURY’S HORSE LINIMENT & DR. ]. WOODBURY’S CONDITION POWDERS will save and preserve the life of your horses. Their' use will cure and prevent the disease common to horses, such as, Cough, Colds, Disteinper, Glanders, Spavins, Pink Eye, Splints, C_urbs, Enlargements, _ Cracked Hoof, Kidney Trouble, Fevers, Cuts, Sores and will remove bunches » , :_ ,_ BEFORE USING ' AFTER USING Use this prrparation thoroughly for all and every disease ofthe horse for which it is recommended. _ Crificisc it closely. Carefully w.-itch, mark and note its effects, and, honestly judging if on its merits, you TRURO, N. S. HIE.-\R RIVER, N. S. Dear Sirs,-One of my liorscsliada bad cough,and DEAR SIRS,- I made a complete cure with three bottles of Dr. J. \Ve do not hesitate in recommending your Dr. _l. \Vocdl\ury's Ilorse linimenl. The cough was oflwclvc Woodbi:ry's Horse Linimenl. `Wc have used it in the months standing." In my large experience with horses, woods for coughs, colds, distemper and cuts, and I consider this liniiucnt to bi- the best made for all dis- would say that no luuibcrmnn should be without il. eases of the horse, and I recommend it to my friends. Yours iruly, li. J. ANDERSON. CLARKE BROS. I strongly recomm:rd Dr. _].\Voodb\|ry's Horse Liniment as tlic bcsi I-Iorsu Linimont on the market' :tn-.l advise all horse owners to try it. Very truly, RODIERICK Mcl{ENZlE. WIIOLESALER :-George E. llulhel, Chnrlollelown, PLE. I. _ i I _ Trice su-bstantiateil the girl's fears by following her into the room with the revolver in his hand. The girl tried to hide behind Mrs. Chandler, but Trice fired at once and the bullet struck the older woman in the sto-` mach. As soon 'as she had fi;vl_lcn Trice emptied his revolver at iss Wood, killing her instantly. Another colored woman, Miss Marie Johnson, heard the cries and the shots, but upon rushing into the room and find- ing Trice with the revolver in his hand, she did not stop to investi- gate, _but threw hers-elf out of the window and sustained severe injur- ies. Trice was reloading the revolver as she rushed through the room,- and a few minutes lateranother shot was heard and the police soon found that the final one had been thatof Trice againstfilhlmself. death coming in- stantly fromi a bullet in the brain. -Trice's army record, according to the officers at the fort, was a good one.. and he had stated his intention of re-enlisting. ~ IIILF 'l'lII.I.‘ION DOLLIR FIRE IN LIIIIBER PLIINT -MONTREAL, March- 24-rfi-s orig- inating in the,,saw-filers' room to- night destroyed the large sow mills and plant ‘of the Montreal Lumber Company at' Eros. Several hundred cars of lumber loaded and in dry kiln, were burned. The loss is $500,- 000, partly covered by insurance. ' WHEN EXERCISE IS HARMFUL.. ,_, - _ '-----1-‘ _ \‘ ‘ .‘0ff'lce workers should nottake ex- .nrclsc Attfdr thrill' dayfs' work] _Skid Dr E. A. .-Wmlker_,.of- Boston, whoris -at the Arlington. ' The root reason is that though beadwork ls not exercise ln the sense that it develops the bodv it most decidedly is exercise in that induces fag and physical laslturle_ So lt is almost pathetic for a man to expect any good to come from taking -more exercise when thc exercise invol- ved in the day's work has already her- _ _ _.___ .ammlllll tlreil him uut. ‘Une takes it that young people have had sufficient outdoor exercise reasonably to develop their frames be- fore beginning ohioe work. Sq when once they have started in the office in earnest it is much better for them to realize at once that their day of hard physical strain are over and that henceforth they must confine these efforts to week ends and holi- days. | _‘The body and system easily at- tunc themselves to circumstances even ,tu over civilized and consequently rather unnatural circumstances, and 'indoor lieadworkere will soon find that a good state of health can be _rnaintaincd with little or no exer- ‘csc.’ HOW -STARS ARE BORN. A new star for the new year is dis- covered by Mr Espin, an Oxford man, as Prof Turner notes with a touch of 'pritlc. All the old speculation is a- ‘gain raised. Astronomers aw general- ly agreed that these "new" stars are _ due to the collision of astral bodies; ithe dispute is as to their character and the way of their meeting. Certainly the most interesting let- iters drawn by the blazing up of the lnew star is that of Prof. Turner. In 1901, it~seems, light was caught in =the act `of travelling! In 1901 a new -star shot suddenly up in Perseus to ifirsf, mngnitude and then died away. ,But after the "flash" a nebulous ap- pearance was detected around the star, which was obscr,v`ed to be spreading outward. This was the "flash" travel- ling outward to "more and mom dis- tant parts of a_ vast diffuse body." ln fact, here was a light reverbera- tlng through clouds like a peal of thunder. The speed ob the journey al- one proved that the traveller was light and none other; for no other l velocity was cgmparable. The crowning proof that the haze of light observed to be moving in this way was that the reflection of thc "flash," and not independent of it, was that the spectrum of the "flash" and the spectrum of the nc- `bul\\us lm'/.e were identical. ANNOUNCEMENTS. _ "See ad re auction sale at Hugh McLean's, North River, on April ili at 2 p. m. 40 and 42lnoh Madopollan. for making .night drss»es wlth the new “peasant” sleeve. Two qual- ities 280 and 32c.a yard-Stanley Bros. _ 3-28d4l Two splendid llnesof fanoyslllee ln dainty oolorlngs suitable for evening or street wear 27 Inches wlde 390 450 yd. Patons. 3-Zldtf. New Chamois Gloves ln the natural -shade. pique -sowil-all sizes-890 a pair.--Stanldy-Bros. 3-28d4l "Note change of rates to Vancouv- er from Charlottetown, $01.45. See Rogers, the ticket agent. 3-25il5i. _Seo the wide braids. the new good effects. the Persian and Hold insertions and all overs and all thatls newest and best. in trlm- mings at Patons. 3~3 ldff New Cape tUogskln) Gloves In Tan,Sl.25-per-pair. as woll as Black. Grey and Vlhlte at $1.50- Stanloy Bros. 3-28d4l 1Our compute, line of dress goods and anltlngs are now ready for your inspection. -Sea the new hair line effects.-Paton s.3_-2 I def Blues predominate then prays and next sans-. .mars the color Idea ln dress goods for this-.Sim eon. Novelties black and and white and black. we _ bought oorrectlyand you wl|_/l bm nent.-Patons. ' 3-lldtf. AllSllk»'l`affota halrrlhh n 5_ l-2' lnohos wide ln ovary taalnlbh _Bros. 3-281141 , _.J .-'~_-ip ...gt _\' --.1-'v~ 4 , » ` » 1 ._...., __,_.f ,..(_ shade at \5o por yard.-Stanley,