Daily British Whig (1850), 21 Feb 1910, p. 8

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x PAGE EIGHT. MONEY MELTS if stored in your pocket. It Is much less apt to be spent npecdlessly if kept In a Savings Account AT THE BANK OF TORONTO It wili be safe there, too, and futerest is added to all balances twice a year. GROUND FLOOR OF HOUSE DROPS TWO FEET, A Panic Created at the Funeral of Miss Gladys Pennington, an Ks- timable Young Windsor Girl--No Person Seriously Hurt, Windsor, Feb. 21.--During the fun eral services over gthe body of Miss | Gladys Peonington, an estimable young Windsor girl, at the parents' residence, on Karl place, Sunday af- ternoon the floor of the entire lower fortion of 'the house gave way, and ell a distapce of two feet. Women ® and several fainted. The casket tottered and would have fallen, but was savéd by the pail-bearers, The house was crowded with friends of the family, and the ual weight caused the joists to give way. No one was hurt, but the services of a physi- cian were required to ealm the nerves of the excited women. ------ PATIENT STOLE RADIUM. $120 Worth Had Been Placed on His Nose. of oe London, Feb. 21.--A man named ) Maurice Benedict was under treatment at St. Louis hospital. He was suffer- Toronto A ing from a disease of the nose and to Geo. B. McKay, cure it the doctors had recourse to a Manager. composition containing radium. t They did not tell him that he car ried on his nose about $120 worth of ; 5 8 ' Gost of Living High radium, but he found it out for him. Not if you use one of our Ne once dh Sterling Orange Slicers on his nose. Accordingly one day the doctors discovered that the bit ° of And Make Marmalade our way you will save dollars. radium had vanished. They questioned the patient, but he 1 Doz Oranges. .........50¢ (get the best) 0 at firs feigned stupidity, then indig- nation that they should suspect him 8 1bs Bugar .. 24 Pints Water, . of tho theft. The treatment was be- gun over again with fresh radium, and before long he was pronounced cured Will make 30 Glasses Marma- lade at 20c each $6.00 Saving on Season's Supply $5.10 and left the hospital. And the only outlay is for our Slicer, The police kept an eye on him, and when he trieg to sell the stolen trea- which is a pleasure to work with at $1.75, sure he arrested ahd the radium, Sold only at which s "carefully removed from the Bank BRANCH, 107 PRINCESS STREET lining of his coat, was sent back to the hospital. THREE SUICIDES IN DAY. iis German and Frenchman Ended Lives. ' Winnipeg, Feb, 21.--Last year Win- nipeg averaged a tragic death a day, and the record has been kept up this year, so far. Sunday night three sui- cides were reported to the police. One was 8 Galician named H, Swenzki, who hanged himself in a shack on Higgins avehue. The second was a German laborer named Roberev, who cut his throat with a razor in a small house in North Winnipeg. The third was a young Parisian named George Ledoux, who has been eight years out from France, and eight months in Winnipeg. He was a fancy y | skater by profession, "but could not ot work of a paying kind, and shot Rimoelt in his roomy at 162 Carlton street. GOING TO VANCOUVER. Well Known Halifax Pastor Ree signs His Charge. Halifax, Feb. 21.--Rev, H. F, ing, who for seven years has {pastor of the Halifax, surprised the congregation last night by anmouncing his resigna- | tion, to take effect at the end of May. He stated that he had accepted a call to a church in Vancouver, S---- ST. THOMAS Y.M.C.A. Citizens Will Contribute $3,000 to New Building. St. Thomas, Ont., Feb. 21.--Citizens y tof Bt. Thomas have offered $5,000 to- d {wards the erection of a new Y.M.C.A. 4 W. H. Garnoveky, S| building, on «condition that the com- (mittee rise $40,000. Arrangements On the Corner * 90c Galician, for A Fruit Salad | Strawberries, Pine Apples, Bananas, Grapes, Tangerines, : Spy Apples, Grape Fruit, Sun! ist Oranges. Ware You can buy them all : from : have been madé to canvass the city to raise the funds. The railroad men of this city will co-operate. ---------- Plaster Fell in Theatre. Brockville, Feb. 21.--<A section of plaster about twenty feet square foll from the ceiling in a moving picture theatre here Saturday night. The place was filled at the time but fortunately the injuries sustained were of a minor ature, the most devious bei Mre, Will Build: New Temple. Vancouver unions intend building new a & oe 1g, present build i a fow Jone ago for the neighborhood of 1,700 had ihe te at present is val- ued at $65,000, showing the value of rea! estate in that city. mer being picked unconscious with up wi William H. Vantassel, one of the in her head, witle Thom- son was cut belind the right ear. known and most respected i rr ri---- Sat. Gol. Roosevelt will deliver the Ro: manes lecture at Oxford University, on morning, passed away, on, Sat. ) i eo: . {May 8th. This is the only engage well known in Kings. | ment tely arr for his visit x "Lo Eng os ed ised o busy Mr. and Mes. J: K. McDonald, Corn. | time if he accepts all of the invita- all, Ont., anfigunce the engagement | tions extended. their daughter, Mary Frances, At Lawrence, Kas., Pre Norn Jacobs, Brookville, Byron Sowuon, Sry years od ae. pro nartisge' earl lessor of ma atics in t niversi- ka Saks. pines. ently 1 ty of Kansas, dropped dead. FUNERAL ACCIDENT] 'Manager Estimates Tonnage at 50,- 000, h First Baptist church, urd A. Sawyer and Bert Thomson; the for? Prof. Henry | {learn that , COAL WEALTH OF ALASKA. Washington, D.C., Feb. 21. --For few hours territories Birch, of the G wheim-Morgan Alaska syndicate, off figures con- cerning the value of the coal in the Cunningham and other Alaska coal snd copper' mines that were quite members of the committee to swim. 1 Placing the tonnage in the Cunning- ham mines at fifty millions, he said that the cosl could probably be tak- ef out 80 as to net amet profit of #25,000,000, This statement, taken in confection 2h the fact that ~ the syndicate agreed to ay on 256,000 for half of the : 4 aroused much interest. Mr. Birch ced the probable output of entire Byng River coal district, which the Cunni group 'is a part, at five huodred million tons, with a net value of $200,000,000 and a gross value of $900 000,000. Testifying concerning the Guggen- heimer-Morgan ontiors an the ( un. vingham mines Mr, Birch paid hey covered only half interest, the ua ningham people retaining the rest. The syndicate had agreed to pay $250,000 and to furnish traveportation. The company was to ° be capitalized for $5,000,000, » He estimated that it would cost $1.75 per tom to mine the coal and that it could be marketed at a profit of fifty cents a ton. TURMOIL IN PHILADELPHIA Over the Rapid Transit Company-- Several Fatally Hurt, Philadelphia, Pa., Feb. 21.--Phila- delphia, to-day, is in a turmoil, and riots are still in progress. When dawn came to-day, thousands of men were on the streets, and ths first time the Philadelphia Rapid Transit promised to give first hour service was met in a score of districts with opposition which brought on conflicts duplicating those of yesterday, in which more than 100 persons were hurt. The injured ip- clude many women and girls. A thir- teen-year-old girl is dying from a bul- let fired by a policeman. A boy and a fireman lie at the point of death with fractured skulls. Another fireman was fatally burt by being stabbed. The hospitals are filled. FIRE ON ELEVATED TRAIN. Passengers Were Taken Out Ladders. New York, Feb. 21. --Speeding alonz on a level with the house tops a northbound train on the Third Ave- nue railway, crashed into the rear of another crowded train, to-day, in the rush bour. The wrecka caught fire and the passengers had to be tak- en from the cars by the firemen and eailway employees working on ladders reaching from the street. The acdi- dent occurred near Seventeenth street. of by pany, in an official statement, declar- ed only one passenger and a motor- man were injured. 'BANK PRESIDENT ARRESTED. Head of United States Banking Co. In Custody. Mexico City, Feb. 21.--George I. Ham, who was president of the Uni- ted States Banking company, which went into the hands of a receiver several weeks ago, was arrested, Sa: ay, at a sanitarium, on a charge of breach of trust. It is charged that mining stock given as security for loans is missing. Paris Flood at the Bijou. The pletures of the t inundation which cost the French capital $200, 000,000, will be shown at the Bijou to-morrow and Wednesday. To-day and to-morrow a splendid drama of the east and west will be shown. It is entitled "The Tenderfoot and the Bar Man," or "Jane and the Stran- ger," the part of Jane" being taken by Miss Florence Lawrence, the fore- most motion-picture actress' in' Am- erica, who fs known the world over as "the original Biograph girl." To- day "Dooley's Holiday," a comedy, and *Thé Imposter," a drama, will accompany "The Tenderfoot," Colonel Strange to Return. Col. F. Strange, C.0.C., senior ordnance officer at ordnance hesdquar- ters station, Ottawa, will shortly appointed senior ordnance officer at ingston, and Major A. Anderson, C.O.C.,, will succeed him as senior ordnance officer at Ottawa. Capt, Wynne, in command here, id to go to Halifax. i A New Motor Boat. Watertown, N.Y., Feb. 21.--The ma- hogany hull of a beautiful motor boat for Mrs. Julia Burke, Cleveland, Ohio, whose surhmer homé is at the Thou sand Islands, is now at the shops of the Morristown engine works, fitted with power equipment. The hul is valued at $7,500. It is forty-eight feet long. Havana Police Chief Resigns, - Havana, Feb. 21.--Col. Piedra, chief the police, has resigned, owing to dismissal of a captain, who testi- at his own trial that he had obeyed the chief's orders '0 i k ab gambling in a certain politi- Richard Irving. The many friends of Richard Jr- ving, evangelist, will be pleased to he is to give an to-morrow (Tuesday) and Bagot streets. i» o'vlock, in mary whine THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, MONDAY a the senate committee on heard Manager Stephen calculated to cause the heads of the the the Interborough Rapid Transit com-' be i Hweek. Miss Genevieve THE COMMITTEE LIKELY DIVID- ED ON REPORT. House May Not Take up Bill This Subjects for Committee's Enquiry. Ottawa, Feb. 21.--The Lumsden en- quiry will ppen to-morrow. The liber- al members will take the stand that any matters that are a subject of ar. bitration should not be gome into. A Toronto delegation, Mayor Geary, Controller H. H. Dew around the House of Com- mons is to the effect that the special committee on the Miller anti-racing is divided and that three members will report for its adoption, without amendment, and the other four will compromise, limiting the race meeting. There is an open chance that the house may not reach the bill this ses- sion, A motion was made fn the su- preme court, to-day, for special leave to appeal from a ju t of the court of for Ontario in the case of the White Mig. Co. vs. Pringle and the city of Stratford. After argument the motion was ordered to stand until the formal judgment of tie const below was obtaimed an filed. THE HALLS OF QUEEN'S. Preliminary Events in Boxing and Wrestling Tournament. From Our Queen's Correspondent. In the preliminary events in boxing and wrestling tournament Queen's, the following were run Saturday afternoon : Wrestling, 135 Ibs. and urdler Gar- vock defeated Clark; McIntosh defeat- ed Ferguson; Mitchell defeated Craig; Hughes defeated Gilleman, Alyea de- feated Barrie. Wrestling, 145 pounds and under, Mosers. Wells and Perry went the time limit without either of the combat- ants securing a fall. The bout was postponed until the early part of the week. In the heavyweight boxing, Mackay obtained a decision over Bothwell. Dixon defeated Earle in this series. In ths middleweight wrestling, Buch- anien won from Kirpatrick. Dr. A. W. Richawdson acted as fores and Prof. Matheson amd Etherington as judges. the at off re- Dr, Pro'. Welsh, D.D., Presbyterian Col- leze, Montreal, preached at Queen's | Sunday afternoon. He delivered 'en j interesting discourse on vocation aryl i pereonality, taking his text from Ephesians 1V,.7, 11, 12. INCIDENTS OF THE DAY. Newsy Paragraphs Picked Up By Re- porters On Their Rounds. Song services are a feature of Sin- day worship at the Protestant chapel of the penitentiary. The choir is forty strong and contains several fine solo- iste. x On Saturday, the Davis & Lawrence company advertisement, on page 14, bore the signatures of IL. T. Best and T. J. Hoag. The latter name should be F. J. Hoag, the popular druggist at the corner of Princess and Barrie streets. United States Consul Johnson is in the city and has been shown about by Vice-Consul Folger. He is a man of aflability and fine presence. He and his family will be an acquisition to the business and social life of Kingston. "Closeburn," the beautiful residence of F, W. Albree, on Emily stréet, has been sold to John Campbell, the form- er electric king of Kingston, for $16, 000, His return to the city, with his family, will be ome of the welcome notes of the year. Camden East News. Camden East, Feb. 10. William i an aged, resident, who is visit: ing his son, David Saul, of this place, has been seriously il. Mrs. Clarence Milligan and young son were guests at Joshua Switzer's, Switzerville, for a few days last week. Mr. and Mrs. J. Melean, of the B. of QQ. RR. station, here, entertained their iriends at an oyster 'supper recently. Mrs. Carroll is spending' a month with her daugh- | ter, Jennie, of Blackstock. Mrs. Wel- lington Perry has returned from visit- ing her three sons at Winnipeg. Mrs. Archibald Alcombrack and children visited Westbrook and vicinity last Taylor visited ber friend, Miss Violet Perry, on Sun- day. Miss Edna Bicknell and friend, Miss Sloane, Conway, were on Satur- day and Sunday at W. Bicknell's. H. McGuinness has men engaged Jetting out ice for the cheese factory. Mrs. L, D. Williams is visiting in Napanee. Doings at Bethel. Bethal, Feb, 19.~Mr. and Mrs. Levi Sa'soury visited friends n Yarker on Sunday. Mr. Shetter, assessor, has been through these parts. The path masters have been on duty looking af- ter the Aoki and south roads. FE. Freeburn is making improvements on his barns. Miss Wagar t Saturday and Sunday at home. Mr. and Mrs. T. MoWilkams visited D. Stuart, Yark- er, on Sunday. Mrs. A. Shair and will leave soon for their home in Al berta. Mr. and Mrs. J. Stwart and Mr. and Mrs. B. Sutton, at J. B. Alkinbrack's. FEBRUARY 21, 1010. MAY NOT REACH IT! Matters Not Srente oa| LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. The City Council Should Oppose i Razing of Naval Cottages. Kingston, Feb. 21.--(To the Edit- or): The city council should at once take action to restrain the dominion goveriment from the act of vandalism involved in the destruction of the old 'naval cottages on Point Frederick, | These buildings are almost a com> tury old, and they have the simple | {dignity of construction which éharac. teri our architecture before the period when our national culture came {to be typified by the mansard roof jand the corner grocery. It is such busklings as these which give to Kingston so much of distine- {tion as our pational vulgarity and commercialism have permitted it to retain. { It is buildings such --awthese that ! constitute the source of interest which {draws tourists to the Limestone City, {a consideration which should: appeal jto the very utilitarianism which is inow urging their destiuction; for with the disappearance of thése and other {ancient landmarks, Kingston will pos- sess no more of interest than Ganan. oque or Bath. Tourists will certainly not stop to look at such edifices as the Hank of Montreal, and the Clari- fied milk building. The government has already injured Kingston in this regard by erecting at Point Frederick a group of buildings which resemble the plant of a strug- gling boot and shoe factory rather than a seat of military education. They should not be allowed to de- stroy edifices which are in far better taste than any of which the architec- turel spirit of Ottawa is likely to replace them with, and the disappear- ance of which would be a great loss to the city.--~L'HOMME FACHE, Ways of Escape Needed. Parham, Feb. 19.--(To the Edit or) : Alter reading the facts in con- nection with the dreadiul railroad dis- aster which took place not long ago, I was impressed with the need of some plan by which passengers could ob- tain exits when a car became over- turned and the thought struck ime, why not make the roof of. railway coaches of some light material such as tin, only more brittle in nature so a man or woman could with a kick of the foot, make a hole large enough to admit of people getting out. Some have suggested a door to slide on the roof, but as anyone can easily under- stand when a car is derailed and thrown on its side, every door frame is twisted and will not allow: the door to slide or open. Therefore, if the top of the coach was made of some com- position of metal so thin aud hrittle that by a blow from the knee or foot the man or woman could make. a passage out without trouble, all would be able to escape. As it is railroad coaches are only death traps--A. W. STEWART, Pastor Methodist church, Parham. ! . Leeds Farmer Hits Out, Mallorytown, Feb. 18.--(To the Edi- tor) : From time to time there have been several articles in the papers in regard to the good roads' move ment, and I, as a farmer, am eur prised to see that it is nweeting with tition Surely good roads not a enhance the value of farm pro- perty in the locality, but are far more economical to travel on then half crushed stone or mud six or eight inches deep. Besides, the old system of statute labor is a back number, My time, and that of every up-to-date farmer, is worth $2 per day on our own farms at the time statute la- bor is being done. 1 am of the opin- ion that any farmer who would kick against a movement of such great im- portance would lean on his shovel under a shade tree and expect the pathmaster to return him full time. Surely it is not a very good feeling to have an automobile party tell you that they have travelled all over the United States and that we have the | worst roads they have i. er seem | Really, T have tried to give eight full hows of faithful work at road mak- ing, and am sure .other farmers do the same as a rule, pnd why the far- mers are kicking is more than I can understand. I would like to have will hold up both for them explain. I see that there is to be a bi convention in Toronto in March, i movement, and hope thet the heads will 'adopt some road legisia- tion, and, together with what we al- in ood roads' movement.~D. F, ARM- STRONG. ik « fIESEE i ¥ New Arrival a b A -- Women's New Spring Suits Now Ready. Come Tomorrow Correct fashion marks every new tai- lored suit for women now ready. Suppose your purse is limited and your taste discriminating. THE BEST SUITS that moderate prices can buy are here. SUPPOSE you have a mind and a pocket book ready for a real fine Tai- lored suif, the BEST produced of an up-to-date maker is here. Women's New Spring Suits, $11.50, 14.95, 15.75 # New Spring Suits $18.75, 19.95, 21.50 and up These prices convey little as to the . style and real worth of these New Suits So we ask you to come and see them. Even if not prepared to buy come-- you will be most welcome, . - ay The only style of boot that will keep their feet warm and dry. The very best quality, nicely made, with nice warm wool lining, be Size 7 to 10}, $2; Size 11, 12, 15, $2.25; Size 1, 2, $2.50; Size, 2} to 7, $3.00.

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