Daily British Whig (1850), 17 Feb 1911, p. 4

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La a t pea i W Ee e THE WHIG, 78th YEAR PAIL: WHIG, Jublished at at 3% Der year, Editions at 530 as KLY BRITISH WHI ; 18 sscccssccesssscoesdoy =} WE ARE SPECIALISTS IN STAR WORK SHOW. CASES INTERIOR Fi "INWOOD, 32" 4 Daily Wiha. FAVORED WBFIPROCITY. Sir John A. Macdonald was in favor pol reciprocity with United States. His famous m. of 1891 con tains this statement : "We said to the Americans : "We are perfectly willing fo trade with 'you on equal terms. We are desirous of having a fair -veciprocity treaty, but | we will not consent to open aur mars kets to you while, yours remain closed to us.' ®t . It is a fair reciprocity arrangement that the Laurier &dministration is trying to make for the pedple of Can- ada--an arrangemént 'that Sjr. John A. Macdonald and his colleagues were willing to make twenty years ago had the United States been disposed to negotiations for a fair S0000000000000000 000 PRR RORE : | i : 0000000000000 0000000 THE STOLEN HORSE, An Old Proverb With a New Ape y plication, «The 'woods are full of "so remedies for Baldness, You may call 'anything in creation a remedy, but to use them is like ldeking the stable after the horse is stolen. * Baldnéss and Dandruff are caused a gerow--if you don't kill the germ erm will kill the hair. mtists, have labored with the lem "of a preventative for Bald- yew for many years, Newhro's Hewpicide is the product "of a modern dea, and will cure Dan- druff and: prevent Baldness beeause germs cannot exist when you apply e. Herpicide is « valuable Bair dress ing and scalp disinfectant as well as a care for Dandruff -called". enter into agreement; I ---------------- T IS THIS FAIR? A young girl in Toronto a few weeks ago was accused and convicted | of stealing $1.50 and received a sen- Sold by leading druggists. Send 10¢. tenlp of twenty days, which is at the in stamps for sample to the Herpicide | rate of one day « fag each seven and Co., Detroit, Mick, bre dollar bottles | bne-half cents] says the Paris Review. glarantéed. J. B. Mcleod, special {At this rate to secure a gix-vear sen- agent, Kingston, Ont. gen gston, Q { tence, such as a certain ex-bank man- . . | ager received, she would' have to have OVERCOATS {stolen $164.15. Travers was convicted § Ky * At REDUCED PRICES {of stealing $40,000, not from one but many persons, and received a six-year £5 Wram bow. oh we will clear sentence, which figures out to 318.26} out 'big= Stock. aty slaughter a day. Had hé gotten the 7} cent "Prices. raté, 'he would - have-to serve 533,333 Ousflonts at $0.09, $7.50, 90, $12.50. days, or 1461 years and sixty-eight Haunl to the best tailor-made goods. M days, The ratio of 7} against $18.26} Hoots aud Shoes, Rubbers, ete, at Re- means the sentence for stealing $1.50 duced Prices. ISAAC ZACK'S i® 245) times greater than that for stealing $40,000, 271 PRINCESS STREET, HEISEI E STAY IN KINGSTON We would rather BE stay, but if you are bound to go we will 4 all or any part of Your Household Effects that yo Lo pell--or ¢ start ng TouseReept J fit you out to perfeetion, i Wo carey a full line of Stoves, , Ferniture, Carpets, Oilcloth, ete, at very low prices. E _Al Wa have the grandest lot of UR FURNIT JRE in this g t anada. C rop a postal. » Ln LESSES, Princess and Chatham Sts. AN INVENTOR'S FATE. Jon Needham Longdon, a well known civil and, mining engineer | and fellow of ' the Society .of Engineers,' died in New York, recently, from star- vation, while seeking. for .the secret of generating cheap electricity, says the Montreal Star. At present, only a tri- fle over ten per cent. of the actual power of .eoal, when converted into electricity, is delivered to the busbar, the wire carrying all the current pro- duced by the source of electrical ener gy. In other words, nearly ninety per cent. of the power is lost in various forms of leakage, in the processes of converting coal into' heat, heat into steam, steam into ! elestricity, jand in delivering! - the current: The Edisons antl the Kelvins are scarcely more re- markable for the importance and mul- titude of their inventions than they are for the fact that they made money out of them. The men who make mon- bls ey out of inventions, as a rule, are mea who reap where they have mot sown, and gather where they have not strewed. ; ENGLAND'S WEALTH ABROAD. Acgprding to available d tary evidence the amount af capital invest- ed by Great Britain: in India, the col- onies and foreign countries at present Wgpregates £3,192,000,000(815,960,- 000.000), of which £1,354,000,008 is in- ¥ vested in the colonies and Yadia, and 1 £1,638,000,000 in foreign vountries. Of the £1,554,000,000, £1,100,000,000 "ia placed in Canada, Agstralia and { | | 4 ou would 76. . 341-3 Princess Street. Prompt Delivery. NG'S CAFE ING'S Lunch Counter ING'S Private Dining This Disiny ING: (James) Prop. (ING ST. Nos. 338-342 Placed fn Conds, INGSTON. | Outside the British empire and the * . {United Stales, the investments are Now open, i . {largely confined to the greater nations Catering Contracts Tak: ge * 4 ge 'of South America. o Relepbute No. a others. It British investments in Japan, includ wo don't please you, please tell us. ing the war loan of £30,000,000, Ls : : t to £54,000,000, with £7,000, 000 to municipalities and nearly £9. 000,000, for chilways. : The amount supplied to China is about £37,000,000, while about £620: 0dh,000 is invested in. miscullaneous foreign countries. : Of the foreign investments (£1,638, {00 00m, locty three gue cent. is in the tion by visiting plares of a size which is comparable with Kingston. The Whig has been conducting an in- Jepersdent enquiry om its own account, and it finds in Progressive Age sn ar- ticle which ie very suggestive, In this paper it is learned the garbage system of many small places is defective, be cause it has been simply removed from one place-tq aupther. A nuisance is still a muisancé when displaced and exposed. The. household incinerator, which in many cases is 'the kitchen range, is not doing its work well. There is, however, a new appliance in which the fuel is gas, applied in a oer- tain way. "This is "in use in Boston, and may be operated for public or private pur poses. It is a furnade which performs in the centre of w» big city so success- fully that neighbors do not know of its existence, A study of its comstruc- tion reveals several important princi ples. The furnace has two chambers witha horizontal floor extending to wear one end; the burners are at one ead of the lower chamber, the hot gases pass to the other end, consum- ing any dry material 'in its course, pass to the "upper chamber and over the amimials, and thence through a checker brick chamber, which breaks up any odorous pgwses before they reach the chimney. terial requires a long combustion chamber to prevent smoke. Wet ma- terial must be drained, dried, and burned at a less high temperature and the gases of combustion broken up by high temperature afterward, for the checker-brick chamber reaches a high heat in 'a short time. This installa- tion will assist in solving the small mcimerator problem. Jt is 'a matter that can be followed up in Kingston as wall as in other places. EDITORIAL NOTES: A Chinese valgutine would natural ly have Queuepids on it, remarks the. Toronto Star. And tales inside, we suppose. : If property is to be taxed for si walks, roads, garbage, water, ; i this will be a good place for tems but a poor place for landlo With such a fine surplus Yor the municipal lighting plant, could not the city council arrange to cut a slice off its charges for the benefit of com sumers ? ' : The number of consumptive patients . pital for the last per year. Should the council have a care in when it can be overcome ? . The head of a large lumber company In British Columbia writes to market, whereas they may gain very considerably by reason of the opening | to them of the markets of the United States." A great many people Wave | shouted in this matter before they were ' hurt. The truth is clear that it is not the' emigration of teachers to the west, that is causing the scarcity in Ontar-| io, says the London Advertiser, bat D. Pyne and his adviser. Neither of' them had any experience with rural | school conditions. If the Hydro-Elec- tric Commission had selected a pair of | train dispatchers fo engineer the alec. | trical construction works, it would have but beem imitating Sir James Whitney's method of administering the provindal school system. ¢' It is laughable to read about George BE. Foster shouting loyalty. Has he forgotten how "loyal" he was to Can- ada in 1896 when he and the other members of "the nest of traitors" de serted Pfemier Bowell 7 By the way, here it" a little problem for George E. to solve : If it has taken 100 years for Bi.e ils {i from the The principles are plain. Dry ma- |; | brutal, gave ample promise of treated: in the Kingston General' Hos- | "We were much touched, my ten years was 102, an average of 16.2 per year. For the oq same period in the Hotel Dieu the 'and crowded number was 202, an average of 202. stopping this loss of life, - generously honor to-day, was a mis- the press of Victoria to say that "British | trade of the Cape, throughout t of Hon. ip, POPE. "Open and Secret Ehemies of Holy See" at Bottom of Rome's Coming Celebration, - Says Archbishop Farley. New York, Feb. 16.--Declaring that the celebration in Rome in commemoration of the fortieth anni- versary of the taki of that sity of pope is an ine sult to the tiff and every member of the Catholic church, Archbishop , in a letter read in all , the ch i as the pope is in i need a help this year, he ' "63 Peter's Pence collection 10 be taken up 1911 promises most painful to him : tificate of our intent of this is hd and most poignant pain on the vicas of Christ 'under his own eyes. "Only a few weeks ago the heads of the secret societies so bitterly hostile to the church, who arg to take , a part in this demonstration, in- structed their followers throughout the world to-do everything in their power to make the coming festivity as anti- papal a= possible. "The insult thus offered to the holv gee, it need not be said, is directed uot less against every r of the Satholic church. The public speech of the present mayor of Rome, uttered a few months ago and stigmatized by his own co-religionists of London as what may be expected at the coming de monstration in Rome. "We cannot remain silent in presence of this indignity which men- aca the supreme father of the faith- tr ; A SOLDIER OF PEACE. Duke. of. Connaught. Speaks ' About South Africa. In the coi of his address i reply to the official welcome extended by the city of London to mark return from' bis fuission to Sowth Africa, the Duke of Consdught said : lord mayor, by the receipt of your invita: : iq, visit this sneient hall, filled, it is, with g _of the memories of peace and' war, and sithough I am a sol- dier to the heart's core 1 am genuine! ly" thankful to feel that the mission, the happy conclusion of which you so sion not of arms, but the' commemo- ration of a great movement in cele bration of peace thoroughly founded on the sure and certain basis of full Columbia merchants will be under no TePresentative government. greater disadvantages in the Canadian 0 and union have come, you will "1 do. earnestly trust: that, now leave no stone unturned to make the Rho- desia, and of the whole of South Africa, British and your very own, and that you will thus help not only yourselves but also that great conti: uent to develop her immense and at present practically untouched resources of minerals, agriculture and general commerce, * we "At Capr Town, Bloemfontein, Pot. chefstroom, Pretoria, Johannesburg, Maritfburg and Durban it was ever same--georgeous decorations, dense crowds and the heartiest of welcomes from every class of the community. "I say deliberately 'every class' be cause. British and Dutch knew no dis- tinctions ' with me, 1 recognized none' with them. In union they are at one with 'us, and through union they are owrs, in thé great co- partnership of i I do earnestly trust thai any talk of Dutch and English will be. no more, and that the unhappy word 'raciglism' will be al toget eradicated from the vocabu- lary." In a Different Role. Le Temps, Ottawa, says editorial: hear of Bishop Fallon, © af rumors be orrect, « # Again we but" this time, the be past, Lo NAT man HOw won Hat THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1011. A SPECIAL PRAYER . A z THIS IS A YEAR OF PAIN TO f=) tarnished 10 1 I are iO San a Aud » DRS.SOPER& WHITE , 38 Toronto Bireet, Toronte, Out, Peterson Lake and Little ipissing at present prices CORRESPONDENCE INVITED 14 King St. East. 'Phone Main 4228, Toronto, Oat. W. P. O'BRIEN, 87 St. Francois Xavier St., MONTREAL, Membe MONTREAL STOCK EXGHANGE Long Distance Telephone Main 6938 CORRESPONDENCE = SOLICITED, TO BE EXAMINED IN INTERESTS OF SCIENCE. | Liquor Never Had Any Effect Upon a Philadelphia Man--He Drank AH His Life--Was Seventy-six Years Old. Philadelphia, Pa., Feb. 17.--Science has been mnsked to solve a problem which Jules Rosendale carried with him unanswered to the grave. Friend of many prominent Philadelphians, sociological student, linguist and man of letters, Rosendale ed, yesterday morning, at the Samaritan hospital, of uraenfa. The riddle that! he could not read and which he left.as a legacy to sei- ence is this: "How was it that he, seventy-six 'wears old, had wever iu all his life felt the least effect from drink, altho he was a regular user of io liquors and couhi drink at ome time more than enough to stagger drink how much he might, his bréin was always clear, his pulse steady and his faculties alert 7' To make sure that these quéstions would be answered if science could do it after hig death, Rosendale left a will. In it he names William Klopfer, a manufacturer, as executor, with in- structions to turn over his modest es- tate to his daughter, Margaret Dale, an actress, and to follow the instruec- tions of this clause : "I hereby direct my executor to no- tify the Wistar Institute of Anatomy of the University of Pennsylvania to examine my brain and stomach before cremation for scientific investigation, espycially to learn why aleGholie drink, no matter how, strong, never had any effect on my brain." zr NEWSPAPER PUBLICITY, Business Reliance of To-day, Says Theatrical Manager. Editor and Publigher. "There is nating to equal the ad- vantage of the judictous use of news paper spate as an appeal for public attention to the wares you offer," says Frank Howe, Jr., manager of the Walnut Street Theatre. Phila- delphia. i "Prior to the opening of 'The Coun: try Bey' at the Walnut Street Thea- tre, we used approximately 2,000 agate lines vf newspaper space. An audience large in quantity and five in quality was attracted to the first performance, the third night the house was filled. The heavy rain probably kept away a few intending patrons on Thursday, the fourth night.: Friday night we were sold out, and Saturday wight hundreds were turned away as we were unable to Jima places for hem. 'Fm willing to w Jarge sums the receipts of fhe Walnut for lasc ceeded those of any other i } a Christy's Eaglish $ Hats, $2. Feb . BIBBY'S oan a. CORSE - 39¢. --_ Workingmen's Shirt Sale ¢ Splendidly made goods, large, roomy Shirts, light J and dark colors; heavy cotton drill, Oxfords, etc. Regular 50c. and 75¢" qualities, for 39c. Overcoat Sale $10.00 The Great Coat Event of the Season. The biggest overcoat to investigate, jo! values yet. We ask you : New College Ulsters, Chamberlains and Chesterfields with velvet eollar. q . Regular $14, $15, $16.50 ualities. : Bibby's Special, $10 00 Boys" Soft Shirts * 50c., and 75. Qualities, 39¢. | Men's Roll Neck Sweaters The workingman's delight. ang The H.D.B "The Big Store With Cad) TIDINGS FROM NAPANEE. Death of an Italian Boy--The Late RW. Miles. Napanee, Feb. 17.--~Mr. "and Mrs. Mark Pizzariello, lost by death their eleven-year-old son, "Danny." About three weeks ago he was stricken with typhoid fever and slowly grew worse, when death ended his sufiering on Monday morning. He was a general favorite with his playmates in the West Ward school. The funeral took place on Thursday morning, and as is the custom in Italy, the band was in attendance and 'played appropriate selections al church and cemetery. The Rev. Father O'Connor celebrated high mass. The remains were placed in the Roman Catholic vault. R. W. Miles, a former well-known re sident of Napanee, died at Richmond, Cal., on Febriary 4th, aged about fortydive vears. Deceased leit here ut eight years ago for a warmer climate as he was then in poor health. He leaves one son, Jay, also a wife, ({ormerly Ide Chattérson), and one brother, William Miles, of Erpestiown, 4 this week for " marriage of Mise Ruby M. Barnhardi, of North Freder- 4 icksbirg, to Harald G. Storms, son of Ji W, Storms, of Emerson, Man., took in Winn on. February lst. " 2 § son - { self ramst fall --ANGN. S38 oi») HH : © y imalgamate, as in Little Prices. ADVOCATE RESOLUTIONS Township Coantils Favoring Reciprocity. Wolfe 1sland, Feb. 15-~(To the Edi. tor)3-The proposed reciprocity tween Canada and the Unfted States is being discussed largely by the farmers, Kberals and conservative alike. All voice the ofie opinion that if the bill becomes law it would cer: tainly be in the farmers? interest. Is landers to a man should be united on this point, as they could haul their produce as easily to Cape Vincent as to-Kingstomy and if such does oveur; the city through its. officials * would then perhaps, be, anxious to offer some anducemenit bo the islander by the way. of a free wharf for our ferry, al- sa an eléetric light in the near vieini- ty, which they, through the "township council, sought aftet some time agh, but were refused, Would it sot be a step in the nght direction for dur township council and other townships favoring the f{arm- ers bill to pass the following resolu. tion and forward te Ottaws. "That we approve of the agreement made with the United States government for free trade in natural products and express our thanks to Hon, Mr. Field ing for bis services in negolisting the same." In the writer's opifiién now is the opportiine time for the farmer to unity there is strength, and as the farmers are over seventy-five per eént., it is easy that a house divided against ny to it ig

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