~ THREE DROW Toroute Man and Wile and 1/.1 YVIAUV ‘ â€"â€" Bridge and L'arrk%% mm _ Were Wituessed by Thousands . _« > _ Kingara FSRs, N. Y,, Fob. 4. The . .zl between the , | the r steet arch bridge h:uu:' “Mlam just at hoon its a ï¬â€˜q‘.udmm- river, takâ€" ing wi it to their death a man and woman said to be Mr. and Mrs. L1dâ€" ridge Stanton, of ‘Toronto, and Burrell Heacock, 17 years old, of East, 117th street, Cleveland, Oblo. Four.â€" other persons were on the ice at the time, but managed to get‘ashore in‘ salety . e nzkomnwmfm thick, and ler the influence of zero _ weather the great mass had become‘ firmly anchored to the shore. ‘The jam .was uwbout 1,000 feet in length _ andâ€" in »w’hcuuqurtaro(umlb‘h breadth, For two weeks it had offerâ€" ed safe passage to the hardy, and toâ€" dayan immense crowd of excurgionâ€" . came to view the winter wonder the river. _ Had the accident Bapâ€" pened an hour later in the day . bunâ€" dreds of persons would have lost their w for the crowd was moving down into Prospect Park in the elevators . run down the clif for the. purâ€" ~of venturing out upon the ice. . â€" Somewhere deep in the great whirlâ€" >ol toâ€"night sleeps the man partialâ€" 3 tified _ as Mt. Stanton, . who ge put aside chances ol rescug in to ~remain with his _ terrorâ€" â€"wife, and who, in the shadow "deathâ€"just as the break :in . the &, spurned assistance for . hbimâ€" and attempted to bind _ about woman‘s body a rope dnr{uu the lower steel arch _ bridge. And the lad, Burrell Heacock, . was cast in the same mould. Had he not ‘Aurned back on the ice to give as wigtance to the man, he too, _ might have made th6 shore. On the bridge at the time it tore free from the sho 1besides these three were Monroe (Gilbert, of No. 1108 firove avenuc, this city; â€" Ignatius Roth, of No. 2111 Fulton _ road, Cleveland, Heacock‘s companion; Wm. Hil, an old riverman, who had _ a shack on the ice; Wm. Lablond, a riverman, and an unidentified Italian, Hill‘s shack was nearest . to _ the American shore. When he heard the ‘grinding and crashing of the ice he ran at top speed towards the Canaâ€" dian shore, calling to the others to follow him. Lablond gave them warnâ€" ing that saicty lay in that direction. Gilbert and the Italian followed their lead, but the others became alarmed. By time they had regained their o , the bridge was _ moving M down the river. * The man and woman started _ first "towards the American shore, but they were stopped by a lane of open watâ€" ~er.: Back they ran"towards the Caâ€" nadiau shore, turned about and made Afor the American side. When hardly "amore than five yards from the rocky â€" shore, the woman fell on her face, utâ€" "torly exbausted. ‘"I can‘t go on; . I ~can‘t go on," ske cried. "Let us die here,"‘ and all the time the great fic.d of iee driven onward by a southward ~gale and pressed by a jam _ broken i,&i from its anchorage near the base _f~the Horseshoe Falls, went _ on Breasting the terrible outrush of the _ Niagara Falls Power Company‘s tunâ€" _mel overfiow, the mightiest current in ‘nilâ€"the river, without being broken. THEY DID JUST ~~ WHATâ€"You sAlD CIK PLLS WOULO 90 Quxnuc, P.Q. _# geceived the sample of Cin Pills and have taken them. vnnyhonlou ihe so much good. They do jnst what ‘y‘?hcï¬dmhtu will ¢an but congratulate that .“{:\huflo. n"l‘ 4 & at ydn?u N & w â€J:dï¬m. a ver be | them antil I au ?-.t«xu do me any ‘n 1 h Marai® Mrvici® Deon®: r‘u -plo and a free ~ # C h!flhq'hx. Lerit T Eoc ' n 4w Uh k. atimam, Several . 4 To¢ $.3p." Tut wihe Hight feet they Bridge beneft you, ICE«BRIDGB GAVE AWAY, CERUTC Pei. n Bt d Atter ‘yho: : the ‘BAFC @5 *" °0 inaw â€" Added . mwm.w the falls is time of a thaw, Added er. three on the 46e ~But. â€"at lh*&~hï¬tt&tsâ€y_g nlnmnt-z@t C mmuna-mm" i steel arch the ise field brok! hl-qnbmnmm~m-' oi e uen se oi | es ins B e en aed ols went tow . I C anchored on a <great ‘rock neat " Irge %0 to the action of the ! Hydraulic power house . The A * tA i e nge, floe with the three helpless . beings | ilar passage out of "an â€" ico passed slowly: down the riverss" > bFidge took place on January. 22N4, | _ Meantime the . fire headquartére‘ | 1890, when .three persons were caught ‘ truck had been ‘called out and & gen‘ on the ice, but all escaped. Had the aeal alarm of fire on the â€" Canddian Lu‘mt happened in midâ€"afternoon FZ Eesme cCO CAEOLL swamld haveâ€"been #acâ€" ried, bail dragged the boy asD0P Word that the ise bridge had out Dashed theough the sity. lik fire. ‘and "wi â€"short © time and 17. Yeat old Cleveland Boy Dropp the . fire o trude bad hece cdlited out med & eral alarm of fire on. the side called out the men there. took station with ropes along,‘ € shore, but the floe was far beyond their reach. The Niagara avenue fifeâ€" EEUEF EVRTTCACUST CV wl men were sent to the lower . steel arch bridge and there took _station with a rope. The Canadian ‘lflg‘l had two ropes down from the CanHâ€" lever bridge which is about 300 y above the other. structure. landing a quarter of a mile from the Whirlpool Rapids, the floe on ~which the three were borne broke into +wo sections, each about 200 feet _ square T day eftemte Eh NERCTIARR : /00 0000 on the other.© »Heacock waved his hand to hisâ€" companions in . distress as his fNoe moved clear: of the. other and, caught in a current, raced â€"down the river. . The other floe then shot towards the American shore and was caught in an eddyand whirled there for about five minutes. This was within sltht of the tumbling waters that marked the beginning . of _ the rapids and death. =â€" Heacock saw the ropes . dangling from the bridge and made ready . to catch one.© Very coolly he took . off catch one. Very coolly he took. off his overcoat and poised: himsel{. . On the tossing floe. in his course thete dangled one rope, and a second was moved toward him. He caught | that held ‘by Officer Patrick Kelly, of the Ontario Police force} and a company of about 20 railroad memâ€"caught it and jumped free of ‘the ice. The sag of the rope at that great drop, 200 feet, let him into the chilly water up to his waist, and before he was free ol it he was [rightfully battéred by three successive floes of jutting ice. Not content with the efforts of the men above to draw him up he #tied to assist himself hand over hand. The time was 1.10 o‘clock and the (hour or more that the boy had been . on the ice and the effects of the icy ducking had sapped his strength. He stopped trying to pull himself up and hung limp on the rope, which _ spun him around like a~top. Kelly _ and his men pulled steadily. _ ‘Ten feot, 20, 25, 30 feet, up he came. The great crowd on the bridge cheered‘ â€" those that were mot weeping. Grimly the boy hung on, trying always . to get his leg wound about the ., ro;le. Then his _ hands began to slip. e sought to get hold of the wope with his teeth, but could not. As the couple swung . under . the cantilever bridge the man grasped .A rope and tried to put 4t about the woman‘s. waist. ‘The force of, the ourâ€" rent was foo much for the rope. It parted and the man wayed the “2 end towards the crowd. _ ‘There w still another chansoâ€"the â€"rope â€" that w';;‘ llmflwd‘~B 'fmm the lowaer :M & be y the Ningar® ~a hremgn. As the foc went nto li.:m Dtilt the man caught it and ‘grimly hung on.‘Fie way given slack and he tried to wind the rope around ~ the woman‘s walst. â€" Ho fumbled in his agony of effortng it his hands yrm Prroms, ns cverpoeninge fities "he stream, was g. 0 woman he let it go. â€" T was no thought of himself. h ad the waman to her feet, ki# T was dropped {1 arch bridge by hremen. Asâ€" th Drilt <the man hung on.‘ FHe 1 tried to wind woman‘s walst agony of effott numb. . The rus stream, was 0d could not . tis woman he let i ed the woman to her 1e@4, and clasped her in his arr woman made as i to cros then saunk to her knees. knolt betide ber, ms arms close about her. c Kalla The Big Floe Breaks thes igh the city Mke MMOhE ore of the river was s of people who _ stood cathlessly the tragedy beâ€" in m"-o ravine below Cold in the ‘Then the Fall t in his arms,> is i to cross 1 her> knées. The I To eile the : doa th. Â¥ t lm.“:: HM; & s wanian ~* at hopuadt clasped must have, beell SCn they reached the p< reseue, lor they we! nearly gn bout. Ab : be / expected w C uy,_-!th K::h was composed of s) the <hard lake ice thal COMO® !""" the falls in time of a thaw, Added to this is the fact that a brisk wind had driven the water down over. the falls until the lower river was â€" 86Yâ€" .nnu:‘wm usgual. ... This simply ‘*inhlll‘“"' trte to respoud to the action. of the â€" â€" EV JP snn AL L lan many. more 1!v06 tificed, lorâ€"the | bridge. crowd is « Pro{. Dorenwend, of LOPORMS, .M g. annc that. he will <be_ at ... t House Hotel on Friday, Ft 16th, . with a complete display ‘of t newest London, Paris and New Yo ereations in hair goods. You are 1 vited to call and inspect his goods NEW APPLICATIONS Toronto, Jan. 31.â€"Applications for legislation that‘is to be discusscd at the: coming session of the legislaâ€" ture still continue to arrive at the parli ament bnlldiggs. ..7 f ; > PE P O C UBe iLX The Town. of North Toromto wants power to extend its waterworks sy§â€" tem and lay all new mains as local im;rovements. ‘Legislation is also asked for _ ~80 that the act~regarding the assesement cf farm lands in towns and villages Le ho longer applicable to the ‘Town :C North Toronto. 2 ber: M OBE POVE The Township of Oliver asks for legâ€" islation to validate the sales of . land held for atrears of taxes, prior to Dec. 31, 1911. 4 ‘Cufl-câ€"wn ‘Plate wants debentures 10 raise $150,000 for a new waterworks and sewage system. . 3 e > ‘The County of Wentworth wants to have * the byâ€"law confirmed mflns of the expenditure of $271,658,88 for rounty. toads under the rwmim of the Toll Roads Expropriation Act of 1901.~ The county also wants $60,000 extra to complete the qock. x Legislation is asked / bonds guaranteed for 8t land _ Cement â€" Compa to $10,000. aithe t th The City of. . London wants a byâ€" law _ approving ol the expenditure of $37,000 for the extension of . gideâ€" wel‘s, sewers, pavements and an inâ€" cineration phn;,u?nd o $90,000 for cxtending the el c <~power system. ‘The city has also made application to raise $67,000 by: debentures to extend the _ waterworks system, and $90,000 for the hydroâ€"electric a;jstem. Application ~hasâ€" been ~made. to Inâ€" corporate the . Glengarty and Storâ€" mont â€" Railway Compaby, to. . con= struct a liife from the C.P.R: tracks §n the ‘Township of Lancaster, (Glenâ€" garry County, south and west x a roint at or â€" near the St. La River, Township of . Charlottenbutg, and weet . thru the _ Township of Stormont to Cormwall. < _~ _ _ > . The City of Toronto‘s bill for the legislature is advertised in this week‘s Ontario Garette. A FREAK CALF. * Messts. Pennington Bros., of â€" trey have a curiosity in the of a two headed call. . The calf mention had two heads, two tails fosr front legs aud only two hind â€" legs. The m of the animal is y & .. & one and : the most patt of it is . that it Nas four front tegs, while thepe are only two hind I¢ UTTAWA~Hon, ~ ‘P. W. (Nl.{o'i iÂ¥nistér of labor, hasy been appoin chairman of the poard of ddneiligtion in the dispute between the malates mnte of© waymen ‘ard the Pere: Matâ€" quette Railway. Walla U.,â€" represents the con‘ 4. O‘Donoghue the me IMPORTANT MJ CcROTH] ApPpPeRCE 2 PA T0 aal lives would haveâ€"been #acâ€" the Sunday afternoon. . 100 d is always tremendous. Th FOR LEGISLATURE rend, of Toronto, begs at he will be_ at .. the Hotel on Friday, Feb. is asked to have _ the ded tor &t, Mary‘s Portâ€" t Company, amounting were Arifting About the last was ‘that . the e out on such us that TO LADIES o 9 t «‘ Jan." M Iwo * ‘o‘u“ "%‘u"‘::z?hum South %-; w ~ cancy . were . progihiod tou PafllM}:0" lee Lo aan o.A company display ‘of the and New York the and bridge \ TRMAN of â€" Hawâ€"» sili tt and ?. to inâ€" Storâ€" ‘con= tracks (Glenâ€" to a in to CGovern mebt Rk chikln Sergais that the Ontati left the N 'l:d“f Ho added t cent ] on hat e )-u“:' h.:lï¬icdu at was give of ‘a ~revision of t somf 25th the . remarks : of the Cabincts MINIS® ters that_the etection . will Bo hell soms time in Maveh, probably on the Tho . House . witnessed an @nusual , s;ectacle. The member® for .South Esâ€"| sex charged the Minister of Customs,; on the authority of the Ministerial | of @outh Ren{rewâ€" and â€" _to the people there a "zmx' ualled tor: reckless. rd of truth"" On the same authority he accused . the Minister of rechleso and barefaced briâ€" beryâ€" in taking.the â€" position: *‘Vore for Maloney, and the Borden â€"Governâ€" ment will then s5read mOney in this district for good roads." ‘â€" =~ Of Dr. Reid‘s statements in _ â€"this connection the â€", Renfrew Ministcrial organ l:ad Said, urder the caption of fress reports, with visiting the riding P "Low Appeal .From (a Clb'a Minâ€" ister": "‘The bold way in wh he handled this topic disgusted all (eâ€" cent mon." â€" wote silent Mr. Clarke‘s _ arraignment was .A ; séathing one. He .moved the adjournâ€" . ment of the Houséâ€"in order to bring to the attention of the Government to 4 the matter of the continued vacancy . in South . ?mkew. now â€" of nearly two months‘~. duration. â€" He charged ] that this "was a direct violation not only "of. the ppirit of the law but of its .; very lettor. ‘The uet required â€" the Speakor to forthwith issue nis _ warâ€") rant to the Clerk of: the Crown _ in : Chancery and decreed that the writ thereupon . _should issue lor the eletâ€" | tion. â€" The Speaker acted upon . theâ€" law wi%woollmdlhle promptness, but the etnni‘nt had refused to determine ~ the .. date. and appoint the. returning . officer. __ Forâ€"this â€" breath of theâ€"law (the Minister â€" of . Customs: "had undertaken to _ give a reason or pretext. 6 was â€" & ‘stetement u:g’alled for reckless distegard of truth." He had resortâ€" . led to.fiction, and invented a condiâ€" tion of affairs Whon had hesever posed before as the thampion of, common decency . and light in such inaltors. . He hbad, sat gilent when his own leader had denied ’\u city of (Optawa representation by ~hotding â€" two seats for .ong. segsion. ; ‘"What docs bep:-y, to: thgse mr:r 18""* Yoclargd . Premicr, procepding ho read a |lq‘ ol vacarp‘es‘ extending There was no reply from ‘Dr. Reid. Promi t den. rose with some warnith ï¬m Mr. Clarte of indulging in ‘‘excellent fooling, as the girl gaid: of the show." He had sat in the House when periods four times as long as that which had elapsed in South Renfrew had occurred, and he had ‘been as dumb as the antinl â€"he described, *the dumb â€"animal â€"which lflpfl in the road." Mr. Low _ had drawn his sessional indemnity until ipl u& December 31 Does the Proetnier mean to say that the Spéaker‘s warrant was not issued on December 7?" queried Mr. Clarke. ‘‘Does the member mean to say That Mr. Low did not draw bis indemmity to the end of the month?"‘ Mr. Botâ€" ten retortedsevasively. . 3 ~ "‘Answer his question,‘"‘ shouted the Liberals, but Mr. Borden hurried on. Who was Mr. Clarke that he should protest thatâ€"South Renfrew was beâ€" ba Scathing Arraignment ther . â€" ~MLC, BOHK thas the Pedetal Bribory Charged Prepmier‘s Reply 1899 O he / © wu te 2000 3t â€""It 1 was wrong in ‘the past 1 have been chastised," replicd Sit Wilfrid; smiling. 8 k 9A the writ. Why was hé . not now touch the matter putting i~to â€" practice vihat he proâ€" 7 posed in ‘Oppositiont â€" â€" 4 ~ _ March 25 Pro "Would you support it""‘ questipned the Premjer. * & | The inference "II 1 was wrong in ‘the past 1 have Premierâ€" Borden‘ Mr. Borden and his colleagues had made great promises. They pledge} themsel ©sâ€"to do better than the forâ€" mer ‘Go:ernment, and instead â€" they were doing m;~ch worse. They â€" were mwa‘ ing a sorry spectacle of: . the‘t attempt: at go‘ etnment. > "I am sorry, very sotry, â€" for. my Right Hon.{riend," continued t4e I ib= eral leader. "I am confident .. that had he the courage to follow his own irolinations and better judgment these things would not be. But be is inâ€" spired from ‘tehind; he follows whece he is led, and the result is not credâ€" itable to him or his Government,. His own party friends in the riding hate waâ€"ned againgt the sinister and 6Vjl influence} â€" But I fear my Right Hon, friend has not courage to â€" do what his | own better judgment tolls him. â€" He has listened to the voice of the serpent and ‘boen lured or led by it. € f ‘There was all the difference in the world between the South Renfrew vaâ€" cancy ~and the others Mr. Borden had alluded to. This vacancy was mado for ‘ â€"a purpose, and it never happenâ€" ed before that a / Can@dian Governâ€" ment had refused theâ€"way for an bpâ€" whnant . ta camaints‘the House. ‘‘We | ~**The Government is not what â€" it was in the days of> Sir John ~Macâ€" donald. I have becen in the House a ‘~long time. I have sat in ‘this . scat .when Sir John Macdogald sat where the Right Hon. gentleman now Sits. 11 tell him his Government falls fat ‘short of. the Government of Sir Join â€" Macdonald. It does not follow the exâ€" ample of his predecessor. When Mr. John â€" McMilian fresigned in . South Huron to grovide a seat for Sit Richard Cartwright, within ten days of the issue of the Speaker‘s warrant Sir Richard was clected by acclamy tion. But times are : chaogod. Sir John Macdoneld iz ~no longer at t head of the Conservative party.. is traditions are â€"not: the {raditions _ of The Governinent of toâ€"day, and he has been sutceeded by mes and methods unfamiliar but for the fact that they call themselÂ¥es by his party." â€"â€" _ ponentâ€"to ‘compinto the House. We ask no â€"favors," observed Sir Wilâ€" frid. _ "If the Government wants‘to oppos> Mr. Grattam let it do a. But we ask fair play." ‘Wecask it . to play the game> fairly. We ask it to give ~ him what is his right, the clanceâ€"of election at the hands of the electors. But "members of this Government refuse> Mrâ€" Grabham that fohnoe. den ‘ *‘What about the election of ; _ Mr Kogter in 1893?" questioned Mr. Bor hica" Ki Wittria.""Mo ons resignta pli¢ Sir Wiltrid. ‘"‘No one . for "Mr. Woster= There was a vaâ€" ecarey, ‘and he becaine a candidate. My Right iion. friend m»st not . cloud the: issue. . . Let him fight Mr. Graham it . he chor ses. 1t. would. be . mote gracoful and in accord with precedent to do otherwise, but we â€" are .. not as‘ing . corptesy or expecting lavor, We call for rights." what the other fellow had done. Ee thought, howe‘ or, that the ;sopleâ€"of Canada wouldâ€"soon be Mm {ot. the :.lxloor; uq‘u::lo‘:-dd h‘: . l6 . » ren® lagghter, that .A cortain . day .should be set apart in which the Government covld .get‘ rid of . al. its. references he .. to hear that. . it had done itseifâ€" ded it as. able and if that although t Hon. Mr. . Murphy ite. â€" He ‘wes ..anmt t‘s . defence that hat the other féell Listened to Serpent‘s clty Sir John A.‘s Example o Y« tunng on WM&'{@ can sell your proper: y;g‘n&‘ % dividends in convenience the farm remains your 0 Aren‘t you interested in the subject of permanent, modern farm improvements ? s } f o e Then write for the book that describes WM flel"" "WHAT THE FARMER CAN DO WITH CONCRETE" Aren‘t you farm. improveé Then write ~ At lan‘t a Catafogue. one of: iIts m‘n? @ l01 m "HPal o duanes, o or ce farge bae rap enget Your name‘ and addréss on a postal will bring this book * " *‘ _ I M sed he closed | <by. the Voice as long as the ve xperts to build the re than for infer h!u:urlnm.. ’w‘““‘l The book will comeâ€"to yG CANADA CEMENT CO, Led NATIONAL BANK BUILDING . _ â€". _ <+ f iothow ing y eat up your profits M Wheth on de | ‘The inference . to be drawn â€" from. Premier â€" Borden‘s miï¬'t that the: Government wished to the (clec= tion on the revisedâ€"listy in that the. date of ‘polling will be delayed until some time in March at the earliest. The last reviged lists received by the Ulerk of the Crown in hancery were ~ for ‘the December tevision in a numâ€" ter of the South Renfrew municipaliâ€" ties. . If sixty days has to be allowâ€" ¢d, according to the law, subsequent to réeceiving â€"these lists, the election cannot be held until wellâ€"on in March. ‘The day now said to be in view by the Government for polling is March 35. By that time Dr. Reid‘s "mwyn in the woods‘" will have returned, and the ‘support‘ from Ottawa will be uged to the best advantage. i nOWET TO YOU ABSOLUTELY FREE should call and inspect the â€"famous Sanitary Patent Toupces, as> shown by Prof. Dotenwend, of Toronto, &t the Walper Hoyse Hotel on Friday, Feb. 16th. 5. t Guelph bas‘another centenarian, Mrs. Ifaley, Bay street, is considerably ovâ€" er 400 years of age, and expects Ao live sereral years yet. Ske came to this country from Ireland many years wgo, and has led a strenugus life,havâ€" ing at one time broken stonme for the corporation for pin money. & ‘These Toupees are not only perfect in ponstruction, but are the â€" only Sanitary and Patented substitutes of one‘s own hair. *% SUIT FOR $14,500 Following the â€"somewhat prolonged litigation, in connection with The Walâ€" rer â€" Mouse, of" this town, Edward Hoilinger ~bas instituted an action Against Jcs. Zuber for $14,523. This inclades the award oi $14,000 awardâ€" c by the arbitratcrs, ~P. J. Mulâ€" queen and _ W. Hassird, of Toronto._ ANOTHER ~CENTENARIAN is ds accountant in the navy yard at Halifax, tâ€"e salatyâ€" being $1,800. The other is as technicalsolficer in ‘the wiretess : © telegraphy tranch. The iniâ€" tial salery is $1,800. OTTAWA.â€"Theâ€"Civil. Service Comâ€" on is advertising two appoint :ï¬ in the naval service. One LONDON.â€"Mr«Nelson ~Stuith; who Medina wil} ent was for thirty: years on‘ the local; poâ€" \~‘The royal child tiee force, ndvholmmm or ‘Alexandra. } wl fire: :months ago, divd at C r&aill. and 4t Neb., â€" this afternoon. \â€" Me: was sixty> adméralty ‘arrive cight years ol age, and~ lived: for _ a ‘The Medina s number ~ of ~years in Patkbill, where January: 10 and he was constable. 7 on Jamwary 30. Â¥ * ï¬tï¬m&i&.& wirrer bemifer and Dandrelt Glorious Hairfor W omen Trv it Jadies on Phat i periment m":o-‘:-'-' tonics, when .. a}arge â€" I8IAN SAGE my{: There 4s â€"aâ€" re@soh Jor remover yoyr over saw it was Arst_intt all records. March 25 Probable Debate And _ the A RISIN N ad | 6t tisgly NELSON. SMITH: DEAD e, sightiine ‘wn. OFFICES IN me AltZe BALD MEN t PAHISIAN ng n# d ned ies M Ns B C Hos l > Ds c Ad :m ...:. : 5:".‘ "’....."'""u:.vm‘ "pean § ‘The gicl Hhit i e ons softh tho Avpotn ._.E NAVY At WiL AN why "What we can do is to tell "the British authorities that we are not prepared to enter into any '%‘: Â¥ ment with any organizaiion which is | ‘at solutely useless.‘ _ _ _ __ °_ (~ "Why, â€" seeing that theâ€" Lauriok® How: to cure a cold ‘is> a ~question in wmmmw,fl_ï¬ now. : Chamberlain‘s: \~Remedy has won its great reputation and imâ€" muwmmmï¬ cold. â€" It can â€"always be~depended upon.~ For sale by all dealers, $ Montreal, _ Feo. 2.â€"Henri‘ »Bouras sa in Le Devoir today makes son rather â€" strong statements, followinlg: the publication of â€" excerpts . frotm. Lord : : Charles: Beresford‘sâ€"book,. "The Betrayal.‘"" He says: ce i 2 ‘‘The. publication of _ : Lord Beresâ€" ford‘s pook. gives much for reflection." Has Canada reached _ the Apogec. g its â€" power in regard to c‘!flli& the seas? _ Mr. McKenna, whom Be ford practicatly chased out of office, was the man who gate us the Labrs iet navy. â€" 5 ous hi‘ HENRL BOURASSA WANTS â€" _ _ oied +/ un?}m&t ~ *"The only ‘ones who have any right to demand ‘an inquiry into the Bercsâ€" ford charges are the electors of tho United Kingdoni, our "brothers‘‘ and our ‘"‘equals‘‘ theoretically, but _ our ‘‘masters" in fact. * * countEy." Government â€" was. overthrown on 1:8 naval question, fust as miith asâ€" on reciprocity, should not â€" the <paval law be â€" repealed?â€" Ther the . . new Government? could . ; ropose â€"any s tre it saw fit for the defence ozâ€& Portsmouth, Fes. 4. â€"King . George and Queen Mary, who loft Portsmouth on Novembet 11, on‘%e steamshipn Medina bound for â€"‘India, â€"refurned from their â€" derbarâ€" trip toâ€"day. <=â€" KING AND RETURKN nge ‘TROM DURBAR ‘The Medina atrivei.at s‘ï¬w wb 10 o‘clock this mormrg, 14 hours in advance of scbeduled _ time. _ was conveyed by the . cruisers â€" | + Argyll, Defénce and ~Natal,) is command of Sit ‘Colin‘~ r‘ companied â€" theit : t Eant. es A heavy snowstorm obscured _ _ t‘s view ~ from shore and the Medina slipred in without deremonial or â€" saâ€" Iute from shore. / Sho went «direct to hert â€" regularly appointed mootings. Their â€" majesties will remain‘ aboard until tomorrow _imorning, when â€" the Medina wil} enter the: harboÂ¥.. _ < ‘The royal children,; the Â¥MSt or ‘Alezandra.~ Hon. W .Spone U t&:ill: and the other Jords of Albe admwralty ‘arrived hereâ€"during the day . ‘The Medina sailed from Bombay of sees into iuxuriani, and T80 bvtendd in a short time: lim:wt the country‘ over. ate usifig. it and it by rep: tamt wig> ached : Gibraltar on 410 as> on paval new