Daily British Whig (1850), 27 Jul 1911, p. 7

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Eo JULY 31st. Round trip tickets will be issued at SINGLE FIRST CLASS FARE, Good going P.M. trains July 20th, all tra'ns July 30th and 31st.' good to return until August 1st. SEASIDE EXCURSIONS AUGUST 6th, 7th, Sth and 9th. Good to retard until August 31st at . the foliowing rates: -- Campbellton, NB... Charlottetown, PE Halifax, NS. .. .. Kennebunkport, M Little Metis, Que. Monto, MB ve vv rine wns Wid Orchard, Me, .... .. Pletou, NB... .. .. ..covives an ortland, Me. .... .. .. Ji.nniin . iydney. MB... .. ou. iain 3500 And, to other points at rates in pro- portion For berth reservations and fur- ther information, apply to : J. P. HANLEY. ! Cor. Ontario and Johnson Sts. KINGSTON I°EM BROKE RAILWAY IN CONNECTION WITH CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY. CIVIC HOLIDAY, Monday, July 31st «Dentists advise: "Keep the TEMPOR. + ARY teeth in the mouth just as a Nature will permit, so ax to inwdre later the regular, even, besithy PERMANENT Educate iy of to the twies use SANITOL TOOTH PASTE. Its active antiseptic properties will affects. ally preserve ttle" teeth and keep in of ig heght condition the tender gums, 25% ents at your druggist's ¢ the youngsters Van's Female Pills French regulator ; never fails. These riul in regu Dr. de J rable For sale at Mahood's Drug Store. edesseacecsvscesscescs ° CE CREAM AND FRUITS, © ® ALL KINDS OF CALIFORNIA & 8 . Our Jee Cream Parlor is the ¢ * finest and coolest in the city. It may be hot outside, but in ° @® our Parlor it is always cool. ° M. PF. PAPPAS & CO, . : 184 Princess Street, » 0000000000000 00000000 supply the AT accept a , send stamp tov luv rated oo tkmsenled. 11 give. full . wars aad direction inva Patan: Our | ee Round trip tickets wil! be | d at Single Fare Good going Saturday and Monday, July 29th, and 31st, good to return untill August 1st. ' . Full particulars at K. & P. and C, P. R. Ticket Office, Ontario Street. F. CONWAY, Gen. Pass. Agent, BAY OF QUINTE RAILWAY, Train leaves Union Station, Ontario Street, 4 p.m. dally (Sunday excepted), for Tweed, Sydenham, Napanee, Deser- ont. Bannockburn an all points nort To secure quick despatch to Bannockburn, Maynooth, and points on , ir ta Houta Sour shipments / uinte Raftwy x ARTY ars, a y e her Beene ia 'Walon ¢ Pass Ag ALLAN LINE pa Wl Dams PICTURESQUE ST. LAWRENCE ROUTE. MONTREAL TO LIVERPOOL. Victorian, Fri, June 23; Fr), July 21. Corsican, Fri, June 30; Fri', July 28 Virginian, Fri, July 7: ¥ri., Aug. 4. Tunisian, Fri, July 14; Fri, Aug. 11 MONTREAL TO GLASGOW, Hesperian, Sat, June 24; Sat. July 22. Amana hails pale 32 | Beotian. Sat, July is; Bat, Aug. 12. MONTREL TO HAVRE AND LONDON. This service is composed of one class, second cabin steamers, salling from Montreal every Saturday. Rates moderate. Full information on application to J. P, HANLEY, C. B. KIRKPATRICK, 5 G.T.Ry. Clarence Bt. Agents, Kingston. 7 THE ALLAN LINE, 77 Yeage Street, Toreats, Stes Sali Sop River and Gulf of St. Lawrence Summer Cruises in Cool Latitudes, 8.8 hORneAnedia," 1,900 tons, re- cently fitL out on the Clyde, speci. ally For thir s+ lve, with all modern comforts SAILS IKK of MONTREAL ON THURSDAY, at ¢ pm, 5rd, 17th and 31st August, 14th and 28th September, and from Quebec the followl day at noon for Picetew, NS, 'eal °K at Gaspe, Mal Bay, Pérce, Grand River, Summerside, © PEL, and Charlotte town, PEL New York From Quebec ils 1 ir oa rom Que at § pm, t uly, 11th and 35th August, and Sti Sept. Summer ursions, $10 and up, b: the Twin Serow. 58. "Bermudiart $7 $00 tons, sailing from New York at 3 pom, 38th July, 19th and 30th ugust, and every .10 days thereafter. u Fooled Sen breeses ve KINGSTON . BUSINESS COLLEGE (Limitea' "Mighest Education at Lowest Cost" fwenty-sixih jonr. Fall Term begins August h. Courses In Baokkes in Ber graphy, Vv rvice an Our graduates get the beet positions. Within a short 1 over sixty secured [positions th ons of the largest railway cor. porations in Canada, Enter any time. Call or write for Informa« tion. H. F. Metcalfe, Principal, Kingston. Canada. 0000000000000 000000000 CHOCOLATES 2 Ganong's, G. B. THE FINEST IN THE LAND A. J. REES 'Phone BS, 166 PRINCESS STREET, ©000000000000000000000 hibasniashbhbibbbibiinates Don't Persecute your 'Bowels CARTER'S LITTLE LEVER BLE ete fo 5 8 Husdeche and on allies fuse. Small Pill, Small Dossy Small Price Genujne wut bee Signature rool LAKE ONTARIO AND BAY QUINTE STEAMBOAT CO, LTD, STEAMERS North King & Caspian 1000 ISLANDS AND ROCHESTER, N.Y dally 3 Thay ue or Steamer leaves Kingvton al 10.15 em, for 1,000 Islands, calling at Alexandria Bay, Rockport and Ganan- oque Returning leaves at 5 p.m. for Charlotte, N.Y. (Port of Rochester), calling at Bay of Quinte ports For full information, apply J. FF, HANLEY, Ticket Agent. JAS. SWIFT & CO, Freight Agent. Best Summer Trip te el STR turday Balling every | down the Lawrence John's, than Fa es own, i LEE, NS, b ts and iver to St ue " and Danes. and Bonavista, sent free upon GF. 8 PA, Montreal. - Ch Fad ated Booklet ion, AT. WELDO rw James S tare, $30.00 and up, Intlud. | THE DAILY RRITISW WHIG, THURSDAY, JULY 27. 1911. A COUNCIL OF SEVEN SOMETHING ABOUT THE BIG MEN AT SCOTLAND YARD. Greet Detective Establishment Which London the Police Machinery Which Is a Terror to Crooks, Is Ruled by Sir Melville MacNaghten, .. Aided by Six Specialists In Crime. In the great, rather grim, red-brick building which, like a medieval fort ress, dominates the Thames within a #tone's throw of the Houses of Par- liament, there is a large, barely-furn- ished room which Loldg more secrets than any othér in London, with the ssible exception of the room of cabinet mysteries, It is the nerve centre of our great and complex de- tective system, which controls the eur- rents radiating all the world over for the discovery of erime; and it is in this secret chamber that the myster- ious Couneil of Seven hold their meet ings to unravel the tangled skeins of tragedy. This council has not long been in existence; in fact, it is practically un- known to the outside world. It ® only a short time Since it occurred to the authorities: of New Beotland - Yard that, in place sof casual conferences between detectives engaged in the so- lution of some problem of crime, it would be weil to appoint a body of their ¢cleverest dotectives -- men of acute and astute brains, with long experience ol crime and criminals-- to combine their efforts in solving the principal mystéries; and, ae might he expected, the plan has worked admir- ably. The greatest care has naturally been taken in choosing men for this re- sponsible work. It was important that the council should, as far as possible, cover the whole range of crime. The detective who has specialized in mur- der or burglary may know little of, say, coiners and begging-letters im- osters, and thus the leading expert nm tach of the principal branches of erime was chosen -- men who know practically all that is to be known about their own branch and its pro- fesgors, and whose names even are a terfor to evil-doers the whole world over, . Bat let us see how this council works. Suppose that a mysterious murder has taken place in London, Within a few minutes after it has been reported to the nearest police station the detective inspector and his assistants are on the spot making in: vestigations, Meanwhile the news has been flashed to New Scotland Yard; and almost before the local men have well commenced their inquiries a member of the council--the man whose special province it is--appears on the scene and takes charges of the oper- wtions. It th i i i e problems is a fairly simple i oe iccks Ane, as it often is, and the murderer . speedily run to earth, the services of the council are naturally not re- quired. But if there is no sufficient clue to the assassin, or he has made his escape good, the council is at once sugimoned, and takes the case in hand. . And who are the members of the se. crel council? Naturally, they vary from time to t.mé, due to retirements apd other éauses, but the principal members have so far remained the same. The head of the council is, by virtue of his office, Bir Melville Maec- naghten, chief of the Crimigal Inves. tigation Department -- a man who probably knows more about erime than any other in the United King: dom. Few men look less like a catcher of criminkls than Sir Melville, who suggests rather a yrosperous and gen- isl stotkbroker than a Sherlock Holmes; but, all the same, he is an expert in orig to the ths of his fingers. Apa BOR om his Ae experi- ence of erime and its professors, he is a born detective, if ever there was one. So intuitively clever is he that it is said he can teil, after a few min- utes' conversation with a er'minal, of what particular branch he is a spe- cialist, and hig r*source and tenacity are Just a3 wonsisriul as his instinet for discovering clues, After Sir Melvii.e, who econtvols the council. its rrira'pal mamber is Sup- etintendenit' Forest, whose fame and Pruwess ag a de «ctive ars world-wids As a slstthhoved of has won inuvels in every pert of the 'world ~f{rom North Aaxeriea to Australia, and from Califarnia to Epain. ,Theré ia scarcely & er minal in Bure does rot kuow oe and dreaf hin. Another valusble member eounc I, enticed, perhans, 14 rank next ta this terrer io criminals, who, by the way, is one of the most am.able and genial of men, with a ready smile snd laughing bv» eyes Js Caiei In- spector Dew, who 'uas figured so prom- inently in the Crippen caso. Amoag otiier recent and present members of the eounei! is Chief In. spector Drew, tall, debonair, gentle. maply, and a nast-master of disguises --~who has mal: a special study of the sharpers of all kinds of Europe and America; and who, in a varety ust.ca ha of gharactors, ronging from a milkman ta a Piccadilly lounger, has' made many notable castures oi criminals. Others are Chiaf Insgector Collins, an expert in the lower waiks of crime. to whom the slums of London ate an open book; Chie! Inspector Kane, Juish mannered, bu' "sharp as a nee- le" and as tenacious as a bulldog-- when once his "teeth are in" he ngver lets go; and Chief Inspector Scott a man widest knowledge of crime, who is not- ed for eartying out successiully any task he undertakes, x Booth's Rules. General Booth gives the following as his rules for life: eat little, drink water, take exercise, have a system, take p ures wisely, avoid "jexcess of nN Diode, 'aim high. ; of rare organizing talent and the "Blood Crystals" are the latest sei- entifie discovery, likely to have a distinet and important bearing in cfiminal trials of the future. It is now possi¥ie to state definitely, thanks { to the crystallization process, to. what Operates From a Gloomy Office In | species of living creature any speci- wen of blood may, belong; a full ac- cvunt of the piarvels of this discovery is contained In an article in Pear- son's Magazine, from which we quote: "Probably work in biology since the time of Darwin. ' That 1s how scientific men i® various parts of the world regard the newest discovery in relation to blood. With as much certainty as you and I can say of a series of colprs 'that is, white, black, blue, ted, yellow, and green'--it is now possible to identify any number of specimens as the blood of a man, a horse, a dog, a whale, a sheep, a wolf, a fox, an orang-outang, a baboon, a seal, a sea- lion, ete., merely by eqnsidering the crystals which the coloring matter forms. -More--and- the fact is pres: gant with meaning--it is possible to say whethe# the blood is of a white man ér a negro. How the discovery affects our knowl. edge of natural history may be told in two sentences. In the old method of classilying animals according to taeir tribes, the bear was always placed in the same family as the dog, the wolf, and the fox. By the new method of comparing the blood crys. tals of these animals it has been proved conclusively that the bear is closely related to the sea-lions and the seals, and is not related to the dog, the wolf, or the fox. I have al- I roady stated that, by reason of thess crystals it is possible to distinguish tie blood of a negro so clearly from that of the.white man that the expert could make no mistake one from the other. The inference to. be drawn from this fact--and it is one which involves no illogical optimism--is that experts will 'soon be able to distinguish the blood of the American from that of the Chinaman, the blood of the Italian from that of the Englishman, the blood of the German from thet of the Frenchman, and so on." Built In a Day. What probably constitutes a record {in the building of churches has re- ccntly taken place at Preston, a small town in the West of Australia. From foundation to weathercock the whole building was completed hours. : At six o'clock 'on the Saturday morning all that had been done was to set in the ground the four corner blocks on which the building was to stand. By seven o'clock sixty-five carpenters were hard at work, Bhort- ly after half-past ten the floor was laid, and the four frames of the build. ing were being hoisted into -position. Now the skeleton of the church--66 1-2 feet long and 31 feet wide--was stand- [eantime dozens of painters were busy; and other helpers gathered from all parts were working with might and main to complete the outside, which was done during the afternoon. All the forces were then concentrated on the inside. By "ten o'clock the seats had been installed, the matting lrid, the platform and vestries carpet. ed, the preacher's desk pub in, and gas and water laid on. Midnight on Saturday saw the church, capable of holding 300 people, fully complete, and on the following day three services were held there, at each of which the "record" church was crowded to overflowing. Rasp Got the. Pig. Surely one of the hardest tests of a sheep dog is to be put in charge of a pig. That, according to one of the contributors to "Shepherds of Bri- tain," is what happened to Rasp; a famous Midlothian collie. The owner found on his return home one 'day | that the pig had escaped and sent the dog to fetch it. "Bo off went Rasp in quest of what proved one of the nrost stubborn of the members of the bucolie family she ever encountered. Having been absent about twenty-five minutes, she at last appeared with a few sheep in front of her. But in the centre of the sheep was the pig, experience having taught her that the little rebel could not be driven alone." Genesis. of Life Insurance. Lif« insurance originated in 1708 in London. In that year there was form- ed the first life insurance company. It was called the Amicable Boeiety For a Perpetual Assurance Office. It was a mutual benefit concern. Eath mem. ber, without reference to age, paid a fixed admission fee and a fixed an- nual charge per share on from one to three shares, and at the end of the year a portion of the fund aceumulat- | ed was divided among the heirs of those who had died in accordance: with the number of shares each dead per- son had held. Out of this company, with its crude and imperfect methods, life insurance as it exists to-day has grown. Wasted Sympathy.' A kindly old lady who attended a performance at the Haymarket thea. fre in London was much impressed by the singing of a nightingale and a lark, which forme an interesting fea. ture of the p*iionmanes. In fact, she was so much impressed that she sent an agent of the Society For the: Pro- tection of Animals to see if the Lirde were properly fed and cared tor, He found. that both AiFhiingale and lark wers purely mechanical, in' appear- ance only a small wooden box and key to wind the machinery. Grand Advice. A shoemaker came to the minister asking his advice becsuse that sweep, his landlord, had given him notice to quit and he would have nowhere 14 lay his head. The minister could only advise him to lay his ease before the Lord. A week later the minister returned and found the shoeniaker busy and merry. "That was gran' ad- vice ye gied me, minister," said the "I laid my case before the Lord, tell"t me, an' noo the sweeps i "--Geikie's "Beoteh Reminis- Not by vears but by disposition is iy | wisdom Count that day lost whose low de § the most epoch- i Rae making. Lo. sister, Mrs. John in sixteen Jeon to adjournment will then Views feom thy hand ws worthy, Poughkeeps's, N.Y., July 27 Lillian 'Graham, r indictment and al i: {berty on $10,000 bail, standing = trial tor the shooting of W, E Stokes, a wealthy Sew York hotel proprietor, and who disappeared last Saturday night, was located at un hotel by Chief of Police McCabe. She claimed she had been kidnapped. re According to Miss Graham's story to Chief McCall, she left the home ot Singleton, No. {100 West One Hundredth and Tenth street, Saturday hight, at 1030 o'- clock, to go to a stord at Amsterdam and One Hundred and Tenth street, for some butter and headache pow- "When I got to the corner," she is said to have told the police, *'a man approached and threw over my head a cloth that smelled like tar. 1 strug gled and tried to make an outcry, but was unable to do so. | was pulled along into a motor vehicle and remembered getting inside, where | heard a man and woman talking and saying something about throat. "That was the last [| remembered ugtil 1 was shaken by the shoulder. afd looking up heard a eoudueto say, Poughkeepsie, last stop." 1 poi off the train, walked outside ane heard a taxi driver say House." 1 entered tne taii eab went to. the hotel, where 1 since been." \ A At the hotel Miss Graham begistered as Lillian Cldei, é LYNCHED AT CHURCH DOOR. Morgan and have Negro Farmer Had Shot Four White Planters. Shreveport, La., July Miles Taylor, a negro farmer, was hanged, yesterday, in front of the negro church here.. A mob of 100 white citizens swung him from 'a 'tree. Taylor shot four well-known white planters, one of whom is dying. The shooting occurred near the Arkansas line. Taylor -Thompson, a young mar ried man, has two bullets through the abdomen and cannot live Robert Thurman, B. D. Harold, and Newton Tanner are the other wounded. The are badly hurt, but will recover. ' Miles Taylor had heen to a grist mill with a sack of | grain, which he exchanged for meal. Coming out, he passid a group of eight well-known residents of the community, Calmly and deliberately, Taylor laid down his sack, drew a revolver; and: opened fire He did not say a word before the shooting. Only one man in the part. was armed, and his revolver missed fire. : Hurrying from the scene, the negro went to the home of his father and y= armed Then he went to the church and hid. When the posse .came upon him he fired upon them, but missed. When the negro's last bullet was expended he stopped in his tracks and waited his pursuers, When captured he merely said he had a grouch against the whites and wanted to kill as many as possible There was no doubt of his guilt or his identity, FAKE MEDICAL INSTITUTE. Three of Guiding Spirits Sent (0 Penitentiary. New York, July 27.--~Thres spirits of the recently raided Medical Institute, which advertised and vecruited patients in Canada as well as in the United States, re ceived sentences of one and two years imprisonment and fines in the United States Circuit Court this afternoon for fraudulent use of the mails William H. Rudolph, the manager, and Samuel F. Hyndman, the medical head, will {serve two years sentences in the fed {eral prison at Atlanta, Ga., and pay {fimes of $500 each: Julius Jelisk, a salaried emploves, was sentenced to a year's imprison ment in the New York penitentiary. and to pay $100 fine and of the costs. guiding Collins one-tind ---- ---------- WILL RENEW HER ATTEMPTS To Frée Harry Thaw, Murderer of Stanford White. Fishkill Landing, N.Y, July Determined to make another effort to secure the release of her Harry, Mrs. Mary Copley Thaw, of Pittsburg, mother of Stanford White's slayer has resumed her residence here. Another superintendent of the Matteawan asy lum for the eriminal insane to replace Dr. Lamb, resigned, is to be during the next week. As soon as he assumes his duties Mrs { for another examination of her son as she believes he is now sane She will offer, if he is released her custody, to engage a guard to ac company him at all times. yor "i. son, named Thaw will sek m COTTON MANUFACTURERS, Democrats Approve Bill Puities in Half. Washifigton, D.C, July Pema eratic members of the house in eau cas approved. by a two-third majority the bill reducing the duties on eotton manufacturers nearly one half Pro longed discussion as to whether the house should remain ip session to re vise other schedules of the tanfi bill resulted in a decision to await action in the senate. Another eau be Cutting wi. Nothing Doing. Alexandria Bay, NY. July 20. Customs officials at points' along the river state that there *x practically no attempt to smuggle articles across. the border thie season. In former seasons several attempts were 'made to get articles, principally diamonds and fury, isto this country free of duty through the river ports. A no a' lew years ago. Rochester Editor Dies. TENTS FOR MA SOFTENING WATER, REMOVING PAINT, | DISINFECTING SINKS. | CLOSETS,DRAINS,ETC.| SOLD EVERYWHERE REFUSE SUBSTITUTES A a -with-a- Winchester rifle LIPTON'S TEA OVER 2 MILLION PACKAGES SOLD WEEKLY sn - -- - EE ---- A @vvcsssssssssestsssessass rrr sssssssasssscsscsacsl PRESERVING TEST FOR NEARLY 60 YEARS. / EXTRA GRANULATED SUGAR preserving time, This. is only ~ VV LRLRVLRLVL LCV ON has stood the searching test o possible because of ft col tent high qual! | <4 oe FROM YOUR GRO R. The Canada Sugar Refining Co., Limited, Montreal Established in 18054 by Jolin Redpath s TELAT TRV ALTLL TTL L TTL BLES CTS sessstsesssassssesseseessasssrsssvassssavesl @rrcsssrsrsssassssassssssas@rrssnassscsssssasnasesl LADIES' PATENT LEATHER FOR $200 @ -an We are giving exception ally good value in Patent Oxford Siraj ' ' * ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ¢ { ' ' oath 2 Leath ee Js ' a ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ¢ : ¢ ? ' ' ' ' ' Shoes or Fanps For $2.00 This Week TERA ATL RAL RARE RDS ERCRERLERTRRS H. Jen ssssssssssssassessaBPrrcssacssassnscsssnsanid nings, - King 5t. 9 table seizure of diamonds was made Rochester, N.Y.. July 27. Samuel {H. J owe, who was the first editor of | the Rochester Herald, and vietually ic! founder, died, vesterday. For ithe, past twelve or 'more years Mr. Lowe! won an elitorial writer on ihe Rock © Democrat and Chotmicle, i Dr J.Collis Browne's THE ORIGINAL AND ONLY GENUINE. Acts like a Charm in DIARRHOEA .... smeeiic «(CHOLERA ... DYSENTERY. Checks and arrésis those too often fatal diseases ~ FEVER. CROUP, AGUE. The best Remedy known for COUGHS, COLDS, ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS J Effectually cuts short all attacks of SPASMS. Is the only pallmtive in NEURALGIA, RHEUMATISM, TOOTHACHE Chilorodyne i: a ligwid faker in drops. graduated according bu the malady 1 invuciably relieves pain of shatever kind - creates a cadm refrashsng sie # alleys srritatson of the mervons sysiem when all other vemedsen fail, beats no bad chests: and can be Laken wins no olhnr medicine van ba tolerated. CONVINCING MEDICAL TESTIMONY WITH EACH BOTTLE. Sold by als Chemists, Prices in Eagland: Vii 19, 48. Sole Manulscturers: 1 1. DAVENPORT, LONDON, Wholesale Agen ts, Lyman save, Coy Limited, Torout a

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