Daily British Whig (1850), 1 Jun 1910, p. 8

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Figg | Stopping Stones That Lead to Wealth Rvyery Deposit you make in this strong, progressive Bank is % a stepping stone to greater financial prosperity. YOU will be surprised to see how much moby you ean gccumulate by making regular deposits in ~~PHE-- BANK OF TORONTO "One Dollar opens an account in our SAVINGS DEPART- MENT. ! INTEREST 18 ADDED to all balances every six months. Steamboat and Yacht Supplies AWNINGS AND TENTS, " All sizes, Manilla sud Cotton Rope. FLAGS AND LIFE BELTS. BRASS COHOOKS AND CLEATS, STEERING WHEELS. Byerythiing fn Stock for a complete Outfit in Brass or Galvanized, BULL WHITE PAINT, : BOAT VARNISH, Al of the very best the markets can : produce. WA. Michel's Hardware, 85 and 87 Princess St. a -~ the only Jap-a-lac | § p@! FOLLOWS ACQUIPTAY OF GYPSY AT SHAWVILLE. Now Denles He Fired Shot--Wife In- dicted, Produces Affidavit to This Effect, and Judge Orders Him Into Custody. Bryson, Que., June 1.--A peculiar situlition arisen in connection with the Shawville murder case, in which Michael! Murphy, a gypsy, was accused of shooting twg young men, pamed Howes and Dale, who had been pestering him. At the trial {wo weeks ago tie ey which saequitted Murphy of the charge was severely nsured by Judge Weir. when Murphy's wife, also i the same charge, came up for trial her lawyers submitted an affidavit from Murphy, in which he declared he had not fired the shots bwhich killed Howes and Dale. Immediately on this affidavit being read Judge Weir order ed Crown Prosecutor Perry to indict Murphy for perjury. DIED AT PORTSMOUTH. Late Charles Wickham, Aged Forty: | Four. The death occurred, on Wed , of Charles Wickham, at bis home Portsmouth. Deceased had been poor health for some time. - He wis ap Auvglican in religion and-leaves Ja wife and several 'children. 'He was employed as a laborer. Died in Hote? Dieu. Veter Chambly, s Pittsburg [farmex repiding at ci, died in the He te, Dieu on Tuesday, aged sixty-nine yearr. Ha'bad been ill lor weveral weeks, He is survived by a wife and two sols and two daughters. The mains will be uiterred at Cushendall. Shook Hands With French. Px-Sergt. James Cooke, pensioner, hook hands with Genegal ir 'John Presich a8 the G.T.R. station on' his arrival here this afternoon. He is an army and pavy veteran, the uti form and medal of which association be wore, "He told the gemeral that the goverment would not give the old' veterans a chance: ox sergeant presented the general with a letter he had received from Lord Knollys, in reply to one he had sent to the late King Edward last Decemi- ber, and further jutimated that he had served under Lord Wolseley. Calgary church jople are up in arms' againat a oor: Advertisement on the city street car tickets. ; The C.P.R. has purchased offices in «Hicks says June will be stormy. Bhar Si ns as 1 % ! Halifax. oy Be A splendid range of the vary latest styles in long and medium lengths. All sizes. $1.50 to 6.00 each | MEN'S BALBRIGGAN ha "UNDERWEAR in white and natural shades. Long and short sleeves, Bizes 32 to 48 inches. 50c¢., 60c., 5c ) x 1 seer varus IN HEMSTITCHED Squares Tray Cloths and Doylies & Sizeg) 9x9 in., 12x12 in., 15x15 in., 18x18 '16x34 in, 18x27 in., 20x30 in. 32x32 30x36 in, 45x45 in,, 54x54 in, ko TALKS ON TEETH--(No. 4): | Written For Whig by Dr. 8. A. Aky- royd, DD.S., LD.8., Kingston. Dr. White, Philadelphia, writing in| bh: Dental * Cosmos, pays --"It will | wot, I think be dented by ang observ- | ni practitioner: whose observation en- | races representatives of r or 'our ations, that from the great- mrand-parents to their children and their children's children, there is a eteral continuous deterioration in the | quality of the dental outfit, through | "he siceutsive paberal. os. All the facts recently closed at Glace Bay, was this of professional experience, which have' been jahered, all i ' Jract which the t heads and! warts have thus far developed have! aot sufficed to stem the tide which Seems 3 to render the human ace edempulous---that is,--toothless." Surely thie is an alarming state of sffairs. How is it that this terrible af- lictioti has been forced upon us = dur- ng the last hundred years? Is it not shout time we sel oursejves seriously 0 enguire ipty the causes of the rouble ? First, sve may be certain that ome laws of nature have been Violat- «d. Then our enquiries to be fruitful aust be Ielentaiie, ed . known aws chennstry bio ¢, Physiology, athology and hyitigne, ny | have already pointed out some of 'he causes of poor tedth, or what' | onsidered to be causes, and that hildhood is the importgnt time to oof after the teeth. This cannot be oved modes of | ' negotiating with the THE DAILY WHIG, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1. 1910. -- UPON THE CHARGE OF CRIMINAL LIBEL Preferred Against Him During the Strike of the Dominion Coal Min- evs at Glace Bay--Nrsgotiations Montreal, June 1.--Dan McDougall, Jabor leader in the long coal strike mo: ning, found not guilty of a charge of criminal libel preferred agsingt him during strike by Dominion Coal com- pany. It was trensferred from frevions sessions and McDougall was ught before a petit jury to-day, when the | verdict was declared in a few miputes. Thire was no prosecdtion. © Leprcsentatives of both the gom- mercial and railway telegraphers® of | tbe Canadian Vacific railway have hewn ts both branches of the service looking to better terms. They were broken off last night, so far us the men are con- cerned, and the return to the city of high officials 1» now awaited for the taking of further steps. PITH OF THE NEWS. The Very Latest Culled From All Over The World. Cheese sold at Stirling, at 10 9-16e. mphasized too strongly for as before affected in anyway dur- wid. a food n. childhood, is affected for life. Oth- | x parts of the body may recover, or mirove in after life, but not so teeth. If the health of a child is Jmyway distr lentition, which may be said to extend from birth to the twelfth year, the teeth will be more or less permanently affected. Any 'expert defitist can tell it p glance by the condition of the eeth of any boy or girl whether and vhen there was" sickness in childhood. Fhere is a class of gkin diseases called ymotics, due to a process of ferment- in ation, caused by unsanitary conditions | such as gpearlating mensles, mumps, nickempox; ete, which give ride to de- ective places in the enamel or dentine, wel may result in the final destrue- tion of the tooth A teething child should have more than usual hygienic are, more than usual freedom from il avoidable disturbance. It is pernic- ious nonecnse to sdy that children must go through certain complaints. 'eer. them healthy all the time, the | bed during the period of | at- | Alberta has 1,582973 acres under ¢rop. The C.P.k. will build a six-storey hotel at Brandon. Jews are refused permission to re- side at Russian health resorts in the Caucusus. | There are now 'small-pox in the i Toronto. | Momtreal is to raise the sum of $50,- 000 to erect a monument to the late King Edward. ' | A. W. Cooper, a Saskatoon mer 'chant, was sentenced to eighteen 'months for fraud. Miss Robina Stewart has heen ap- pointed superintendent of the Toron- to General Hospital Training School. It is reported that women detec tives have been employed in Hamilton 'stores to secure evidence of till-tap- ping. : { One hundred and one persons were {killed on the steam and electric rail- roads of Pennsylvania in the month of April. The Derby, Wednesday, was won by sixteen cases of isolation haspital, ini to their environments, and you Lemberg. Green Back was second and need not reckon oa the nuisance of Lege infantile disorders so injurious to the teeth, you have' remembered that the ;mamel and denture of a tooth belong | to the skin tissue of the body will more readily understand why these skin diseases affect the teoth luring their development stage. There is another disease of our civi- lization belonging to this class of gymotics, or skin diseases, which in- fants and children have been regular- | ly inflicted with for more than a | hundred years now, known as "vac cinja."" Tt is the opinion of some den- tal curators, who have given this Question some thought, that the prac- tide of vaccination is most destructive, if not a primary factor in the loss of | children's teeth. Dr. Carter Suggests | that vaccination may be at the! bottom of the defective den tal organizations so prevalent where- ever it is practiced, and nowhere else. Dr. Carter, of London, Eng., travelled you al over the world and made it his [90° business to investigate this subject. Dr. Fox says : "Individually the harm | may be small, but multiplied by the millions of civilized infants subjected to the disease process, (everyone ad- mits il is a disease process) and con- contin over generation after gene- ration, I consider it does lower the re- {sisting power of the teeth in this and other countries," Dr. Peacock says: "In considering the effects of vaccination on the teeth no fact is better established by phy- siologisls than that severe constitu- tional derangement in early childhood eaves its indellible mark upon the teeth, and the child's health is affect ad bv vaccination just when the germs of the permanent teeth are undergoing their earliest formation." Nutrition, the basis of creative function, is in- terrupted. Therefore, we may feel 'oertain that a great cause of the de- cay of the teeth may be referred to the disease 'vaccinia.' We must go back to the cause of physical deterioration and stop , the mischief at its root. Medical and den- tal inspection or treatment will not ' is an absolute 4. do. What is néeded revolution in personal habits civilized vages. and al the environment and practices of DIED IN THE HOSPITAL. A rather sudden death occurred the general hospitat, on Wednesda h | og and was conveyed to ospi- tal in the ambulance andsarrived there EM HH ; let peut afin: ii Charles Omalley third, Neil Gav, rid- den by Maher, did not show up. Most of the Toronto employing builders yielded when presen with an agreement to pay not less than twenty-eight cents an hour; over-time 10 be puid at the rate of time and a half. A record was reached in April in immigration returns and although not fully. completed it is estima the figures will easily reach 50,000. 20,- of these came over from the Uni- ted States. With the mercury registering two de grees below the freezing point on the porth shore of Lake Superior, Tues- dry, the temperature at Yuma, Ari- gona, was 120 degrees in the shade, government tho Co ABT gn Sly i 'o-operative reau orma- tion in a building at Church and Ade- lnide greets, oro, fed guilty to 'a charge ol lor sale racing information, and was fined $50 oy ts. In Hamilton, official announcement is made of the consummation of the merger of the Montreal Rolling Mills company, the Canada Bolt and Nut company, the Hamilton Steel aod Iron company, and the Canada Screw com- pany. The Norwegian bank Borghild, bound from Frederickstadt, for Port Jeddore, N.S., was w on Castor ledges off Port Bickerton, to-day. Two of the crew were drowned and the remainder niue men, were rescued in an exhaust ad condition. » Toronto's building operations con- tinue to grow in a satisfactary man- der. The value of tne buildings for which permits were issued by the city architect in the first five months of this year totalled $7,515,008, an in- crease of $690,268. : At Bluefields the army of Madriz be- assault upon the Fo sity BATTERSEA SADDENED By the Deaths of Two Young People, Battersea, June l.--Never in the bis and sorrow reigned in two homes, and! more real sympathetic sorrow vin every other home, t was evident last Thursday night," when within a short distance of each other there lay cold and coffined all that wee mortal of tw: young people, cut of in the Prime of voung manhood and woman- On May 22nd, N. H. Williams re veived g teldiram from Brandon, Man., stating that his son. John, who = had been ill in hospital there, for a gouple of ; had passed away the dov hefore. He immediatedly wired back to have the body sent home. It arrived on Thursday. sed burial took place the next day in the family ceme- 'y. 'Service was conducted at the bouse by Rev. W. K. Shortt. A large concourse of friends was in attendance. The deceased was twenty vears of age, tid well liked by those who knew him. e attended the public school here, and later took a course at the King- ston Business College. Three years ago be went to the west and later filed on a homedead in Saskatoon, which he vontinned to look after up) to the time. of his death. Besides his father, be leaves three sisters amd one broth- er. The doctor im attendance stated that he died of an acute attack of a pervous disease, to which he was sub- jet. On the 25th insi. there passed peace fully away, al her home in the village, Mrs George Kirkpatrick, (formerly Miss Jennie Bosl, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. R. J. Boal, of Keelerville), after an illness extending over five weeks following the birth of ber kaby boy, which with her husband and two little girls survive her. All that two physicians and trained nurses and friends' help could do was done for her, but could not stay the pro- gress of the disease. Bhe was a favor: ite with all who knew her both old awl young, end a loving and tender wife and mother, in her home; a con- sistont member of the Sunbury Pres- byterian church. and when in health a constant attendant at the church ser- vices here. Her genial and emiable presence will be greatly missed in the circles in which she moved, The funer- al was conducted on Friday, to the Sand Hill cemetery, service being con- ducted previously in the Methodist church, by Robert Laird, of Kingston, assisted by Rew. Mr, Shortt. The funeral of the late John Suth- erland, who died at his home near Seeley's Bay, took place to the Sand Hill cemetery, on May 23rd. The de censed was well and favorably known here, being born and raised "on the farm now owned by Robert. Dixon, about one mile north of the village. After leaving here he moved to the farm, which he purchased on the canal between Brewer's Mills and = Seeley's Bay. William, of this place is a broth- er, and Mrs. James Clark, a sister. Several others brothers and sisters re- side in the west. i---- FINED SMUGGLERS. Practiced' Ingenious Plan to Evade i Alien Law. Buffalo, June i~~Frank Zemba of this city, a section hand employed on the Grand Trunk Railway, was fined £5) by Magistrate Rathian, Bridge- hurg, Ont., for smuggling men into Canada. Jacob rowski, charged with eluding examination by an im- migration inspector, was fined $20 and costs. Zemba, dressed the men he wanted to pass; in the garb of track laborers, and in groups of two or three, the men would walk the international bridge and enter Canada without be in: molested. Death of Mrs. Robert Hendry. An old resident of the city, passed away, on Tuesday afternoon, in the person of Mrs, Hendry, 122 Johnson street, wife of Robert Hendry. Deteas- ed died at the general hospital, about 4.30 o'clock, aftér an illness extending over five weeks. Heart trouble was the cause of death. For some few days, Mrs. Hendry showed great improve ment, and i was that she would get better. However, she could not strvive oti attacks which fol- Jowed. ised had lived in this city, all her Tile, and wis Jdcved by oll her asquaintances. was of a kind- Iy @& ition, and was especially fond of and very kind to them, P , of this ar One son, Jobs, is in the west. Mrs. J. J. Lin'on, Kingston, and Mrs. John Grist, Utta- wa, are sisters. Mrs, Grist was in the for several days, but as Mrs. © was mich better, she had re- to her home. Can't Please Everybody. The manager of ha ioe mill conceived a no 5 an nouncements. He bad them printed on this asbestos and inclosed in envel- same material. As he was of the correct addresses of rr t-- So ---- ------------ tory of this village has more sadness She was a daughter of the late Samuel Our Whitewes:r Department Has Bec ope the Acknowledged Centre of § Whitewear Selling in Kingston. What we offer has been made to our special order, Each garment has been cut from a pattern, both generous and shapely and we have pro- vided for all. The Woman who Stays at Home, The Mother of the Family The Bride, The Young Girl And the Wee Children And special sizes have been provided for large women, Underskirts 24 different styles to select from at prices that at cence prove our claim for your consideration. Underskints from 75¢ to $7 Nightgowns Made of good English Cottons and fine Nainsook, also of the finer makes of Lons- dale Cambrics. New Embroideries and Laces for trim- mings. ol The assortments are large and the price at once convincing of our ability to suit you ; 50c¢ to $5.00 with all the prices between Corset Covers in all the season's newest designs, daintily trimmed with laces and new embroideries Infants' White Underclothing Blips 49¢, 69¢, 75¢, 99¢ on up to $1.75. Barricoats 49¢, 69c, 99c¢. Long Dresses from 69c to $1.75. Children's Nightgowns all sizes, | year to 10 years. White Skirts, all sizes, 1 year to 16 years, Drawers, all sizes, 2 years to 14 years. Ah, fir Pn nn ns ------------------ ® ALL have style --some MORE than others @& some special patterns, VERY much style indeed.

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