Daily British Whig (1850), 10 Jan 1912, p. 1

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a ------" "I. YEAR 79 -NO, cl ea KINGSTON, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1912, » bi - 7 mp LAS® EDITION STILL T0 WAR Trkey is Expected to Con- tinue the Struggle. IT'S UTTERLY UNTRUE THAT NEGOTIATIONS FOR PEACE HAVE BEEN BEGUN. Proposed Annexation of Tripoli by Italy to be Opposed to the End, Says Minister of Foreign Affairs, Constantinople, Jan. 10. --Assim Rey, the minister of foreign affairs is quoted as saying that the reports to the effect that negotiations for yeses had been malle by Turkey are Wtterly untrue, Neither have any uteps looking to that end been, taken] Turkey. It i& impossible to treat with Maly, the foreign mister said, while she continues her attitude . of annexation of Tripoli and rennsics, A gotice to the foreign diplomatists says the government is very unlikely vo make any move towards peace ums til the elections are over ad if agreed to anything short of complete Ital: ian evacuation of Tripali it would certainly be defeated at the polls. Friendly Natives Massacred. Rome, dap. 10.-News from 'I'ri poli is to ithe effect that a focce of 800, of which many are Ledouins, raided the oasis Gargares and magsacred the mative inhabitants in theiv sleep. The killed included wo- men and children. The people wero massicred because they wore friendly to the Itallans. The tribesmen fled when ricks of their victims aroused Ttalians. The number of persons killed is not repored. rn a ------ ELL INTO GET cH Says Ward Work Can Be Made 2 © Joy="Save- and Use What You Have." Las Angeles, Jan, = 18.~Frederick Weyernauser, the ST. Paal multi-mil- lionsite, who %s staying af Pasadena, an interview to-day, gave the a ! to vieh 1 solapthing h Dy orth Sp ork ad wi of w and work hard. y "I'he surest way to make money is to save money and to use what you have, "Don't be afraid of long hours constant attention to your work. "Work can be made a joy, an eco- nomy, a pleasure, you combine an object worth while with the .de- termined ambition to win. "Work, where the interest of the man who works is cintred, becomes o source of veal gratification of honest pleasure and accomplishment. Any young man can get rich, can muceved in busingss, il he saves, if he has a defiiite and honest purpose ard is 80 filled witn the purpose that work ceases to be a hardship and becomes a privilege. "Look at things with optimism in your hoart. "Go in somo small business work to make it a big one" or and Refused $100,000 For Horse. i Ky., Jan, 10.-1t is well anatase Y ateip here in horse circles that a party of visiting Min- nesota horsemen last week offered W. E. D. Stokes, proprietor of Pat: chen Wilkes Stock Farm, $100,000 for the famous sire, Peter the Great. The offer was turned down instantl by Mr. Stokes, and then, it is sai o same company of men made av for the entire farm 'and all stock thereon, which offer is under advisement at the present time. a pu---- from spinal OFFER TERMS What the Republicans Pat Up to the Manchus. T0 TREAT EMPEROR WITH ALL THE DIGNITY OF A FOREIGN SOVEREIGN. The Property of AH Will be Protect. ed--Restrictions om Liberty of Trade and Freedom of Residence Will be Removed. : Shanghai, Jan, 10.--The terms offer ed by the republicans to the Manchus as agreed upon at 'the last meeting of the peace conference are : The emperor. will be t=eated with all the dignity of a foreign sovereign on Chinese soil, shall have a residence at Jebol or at the summér palace, and a liberal allowance; all the ancestral tombs and temples will be secured in- tact to the Manchus, whose lives, pro- perty and wealth will also be protect- ed. The Manchus, Mohammedans, Mongols and Thibetans shall be treat- ed as private citizens and their pro perty protected. The banners will re osive the same pensions until a com- fortable living is found. Former re strictions on liberty of trade and free dom of residence will be removed. Im- perial princes will retain their titles and property. It is belidved the emperor's allow: ance has been fixed at about $6,500, 000 a year, LAUDS POISE OF WOMEN. Yankees More at Ease Than Their English Sisters. Boston, Mass., Jan. 10.--Lionel de Jerspy Harvard, descendant of John Harvard, founder of Harvard unis versity, just back at college from a trip to Omaha, declares that Eng- lish women are more reserved than American women. "Not that I would American women," he says, that's my impression. 1 have nothing bold in the deportment of your women, but I think thay are more at ease than their Fnglish sis ters. They possess a certain charm that comes of being natural.. "In extravagance of dress your Am efican' women out do the Englisn. This is in line with the general American polidy Lo pick up some Furopéan fad and run it to death." find fault with "but seen Rev, C. O. Johnston Challenged. Toronto, Ont, Jan. 10.~Rev, C. O. Johnston, Methodist clergyman of this city, prepared a Ne Temere ser- mon last Sunday in which he read what he alleged was the Jesuits oath. W. H. Blake, a Roman Catholic book- seller, is now offering 'to give $100 to charity if Lev. Mr. Johnston can prove hig claim that the oath read was the oath taken by Jesuits, ARE PREPARING TO RESIST HOME RULE Drllmaster Appointed at Belfast to Prepare Troops" For Action Belfast, Jan, 10.--At a secret meet- ing of unionists to-day diil-masters 'were appointed. for the purpose of preparing troops for forcibly resist- ing home rule in Ireland. Appeals were ent out to 4,300 Orange lodges urging the members to be in readiness for an armed cooflict in case their services are needed. The situation is regarded as most critical. ES FRIENDLY TO ENGLAND. The German Crown Prince Meant No Hostility. 10,--Crown 'Wilhelm is now credited with a de sire to emulate the example of his father in cultivating the fri ip of meningitis, in this city, Eity-five' deaths in twenty-five days, WAR 1S WAGED A Crusade in Order Against THE DANCE GOES ON IT DOES NOT BEGIN UNTIL VERY LATE. Society Frowns on Tripping Until Early Morning--The Experience of a Lady Whe Got Around at Too Early an Hour, Washington, Jan. 10.--Mrs. John B. Heoderson, for many years ome of the real leaders of Washington _ so- ciety, bas inaugurated a crusade a gainst "daylight dances," Tn which she has the support of many notable society wdnen here. The practice of starting to dance about midifght and keeping it up until the early hours of the morning has become prevalent in Washington, The whole trouble, according to Nrs. Henderson, lies in the fact that guests do met arrive at social functions un- til outrageous hours. As one hostess expresses it, 'If they keep up this pace they will anfive in time for breakfast next morning.™ One complaining witness agninst daylight dances told of her experience at the Draper bal masque during the holidays. ' She "and the debptante whom ghe was escorting arrived at the Drapers' shortly after 10.30 o'- clock, The butler told them that ne guests had yet arrived. To avoid being the "first guests" the party autced away, but returned at eleven o'clock and found only a few guests there. The dancing began at 11.30, stopped at twelve for supper, and at two o'clock only a small part of the dance programme had been complet CENTRAL FIGURES IN ° POISONED PIE MYSTERY of Trying to Kill Husband and Family. 'Allentown, Ta., Jan, 10.--Mrs. Han sak H. Kulp and her father, Thomas Sn . ave central figures i ie © pie™ mystery. Mrs. Rulp, accused Ja bride of three months, is of trying to poison her husband, his aged ts and sister. She is charged with having made two very temptipg grape pies, it was shown that about o quarter of the pies contents was ground glass and it was alleged that strychnine was mixed with the sugar sprinkled on them. Mrs. Kulp denied the accusation and offered to eat the pies. The motive ascribed to her is mewly acquired hatred of her husband and his pa- rents, Who objected to his marriage and with whom she quarrelled con- stantly. Kulp had his wife arrested; her fa- ther gave bail for her. The bitter enmity between the Kulps and the Sneyds and their friends was mani tested when young, Mrs. Kulp appear- od before Justice KichKne. Two Women With Same Husband Springfield, Mo., Jan. 10.--A friend told Mrs. Elsie Hall that not = only was her name similar to that of Mrs. Nora Hall, another Springfield wo- man, but that their husbands looked alike, judging from . the photo- graphs. . | An investigation convinced the two women that they were married to the same man, Walter W. Hall, whose resent whereabouts are unknown. Mrs. Nora Hall had already filed a suit for divorce agaimst her husband, alleging desertion. Mrs. Elsie Hall filed a suit for divorce to-day. Nora Hall was married in Kansas City, while Elsie Hall says she was married in 'an Oklahoma town. James Davie, of Thurlow, eighty-one years, died on aged y. ioe of of Ontario, to the city of is: "Go shend and give the of or reply given by Mr. Toes] MPP, who "Daylight Dances." + Father Champion of Bride Accused | ADDING FORTS To the Defences of Kingston, Jamaica. THE ARTILLERY FORCES OF THE ISLANDS TO STRENGTHENED. United States is Wondering--Is Great Britain Doing This in View of the Coming Opening of Panama Canal. Kingston, Jamaica, Jan. 10.--Pye- liminary work has been started lon the building of a reservoir to provide a permanent water supply for the gar- rison here on the same system as that at Gibraltar. One fort east of Kingston was fin- ished some time ago, and a proposal Lo erect other structures to guard the entrance to the harbor at Port Royal is being considered by the war office. 'The work is expected to start soon. A recommendation to stremgthen the artillery forces on the station in the next couple of years has heen, sent to England. United States Wondering. Londen, Jan. 10.--The Morning Post reports that the foreign commerce committee of the United States senate is exercised over the way Great Bri- tain is fortifying Jamaica, in view of the approaching opening of the Pana- ma canal, It is stated here that Great Britain's naval forces in the Caribbean have been reduced to a minimum. JAMES W. LONGLEY, Judge of the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia, who on Jan. 4th Observed his siXty-third birthday. Stunts Cost Him His Life, Ottawa, Jah, 10.--1 am forty-eight years old, and older than yon are, but I can do some stints you cannot do," said Patrick Reardon, employed on the aqueduct to some companions, yesterday. Then he did some prac tising on two hooks hanging in the water works pumping house, missed his hold, fell and fractured his skull, He is dead. THE PAINFUL PLIGHT OF A TELEGRAPH MAN Flung From Sleigh, Unconscious Awoke to Find Both Hands Frozen. Dawson, Jan. 10.--Telegraph Opera- tor McMillan, of Yukon Crossing, was thrown from his sleigh while driving his dogs on Yuko river, on Sunday, and rendered uhconscious. When he recovered his hands were severely frozen. The stage is rushing the patient to White Horse, 150 miles distant, while Superintendent Wheeler, of the White Pass service, and a doetor, are hurry- ing out with an automobile to meet him and endeavor to save his hands. Hon. Adam Beck, chasing the rights and the plants in Hydro-Electrie Com. the Trent district of the Seymour Electrical and Power company, with which the Kingston power committee has been dickering for the past two years. Mr. Beck thought it would take two months to complete the transfer in Toronto on Tues- {ij the | BODIES FOUND in Rains of Equitable Build ing, New York. ND ATTEMPT YET MABE :] TO GET AT THE BURIED SECURI- TIES. It is Feared the Bodies of Deputy Fire Chief and Others Were Con sumed in the Flames--130 Police Guard Ruins Against Looters. "New York, yan, 10.---With the aid of searchlights from neighboring sky- scrapers, the firemen played on the ruins of the Equitable building with 4 dozen lines of hose, all night, but still arts of the ruins are a hot fiery urnace, and no attémpt was possible to be made to get at a billion and a half dollars worth of securities in the vaults of the building. One hundred and fifty police officers guarded the ruins lest looters try to get' securi- ties, : As daylight came shooting across the scene this morning searchers saw the body of William Champion, cap- tain watchman of the Mercantile Trust company, dead at his post, inside the iron fence around the vaults, and also the remains of three men employed in the restaurant kitchen. It ig feared the .body of Deputy Chief Walsh and others were consumed in the flames. It is not yet decided whether the Equitable will build on the same site again or not, RE-OPENING OF PARLIAMENT. What the Chief Topies of Debate Will Be ; Ottawa, Jan. 10.--Early morning trains from the four quarters of Can- ada brought back to Ottawa to-day another big consighment of legisln- tors for the session which openedthis afternoon. Around the corridors it is predicted that the first serious piece of business will be the discussion of the proposed tarifi board. Aguninst the creation of this board the liberals will protest; in all probability. They ask why is it necessary to create it at all. This opens up a very wide field, and will be productive of much high vetsus law tarifi discussion. The estimates and supply, and the Manitoba boundary question are pick- led by others as about to i i 'on the bill 'of fare. than the usual amount of ment, but{the latter, if it really dose come, will the signal for one of the warmest fights in recent years, involv- ing as it does, the raking up of the whole contentious Manitoba question. Sir Wilfrid Laurier is in the best of health and spirits. Hon. R. I. Borden is 'also in good condition. WERE IN GRAVE DANGER When a Large House in Windsor Took Fire. Windsor, Jan. 10.--Sixteen persons in a double house on Aylmer avenue narrowly escaped death last ight, hen warned hy a passerby, that eir home was going up in flames: 'hey hurriedly rushed out into - the old street, clad only in night garb, while the temperature was below zero. The fire department quickly te. §) ed, only to find all hydrants in the neighborhood frozen, and they watched the house burn to the grewvnd. James Sharon, Herbert Naor and Joseph Muhelheiser were the families which suffered. CHINESE REPUBLIC. Formal and Official Bow to the Great Powers. Nankin, China, Jan. 10:~The Chin ese republic made her first formal and official bow to the other great pow- ers to-day, when Wang Shung Wei, who is president Sun's foreign minis ter, formally notified the foreign ambassadors, at Pekin, of the estab- lishment of the Chinese provisional republican government. Large num- bers of $npetal troops have" joined the republican forces within the last two days. Avoided Loss of Seat. Quebec, Jan. 10.~To avoid the loss of his seat in the Quebec legislative J conncil, Hon. Thomas Pelletier, father of the tmaster-general, came . to Guebec with his doctor and nurse, and attended the opening of the session of the legislature. The law provides that a legislative councillor loses his seat when he passes two years without occupying it. Mr. Pelletier is eighty- eight years old. » Salute for Col, Sam. Quebec, Jan. 10.--Col. Bam Hugh es, minister of militia and defence who arcived 'anadian Garrison artillery 'at the gtadel,. When leaving the chatean ote of fourteen guns was fired the fortress in his honor. He was 'tendered 8 bang at the gar- rison last evening, 4 county Jol a in the cil es Vs dined with the officers % Roi pr Ri Catholie diocese of As 2 Trans-Atiantic Port in | Ireland. ~~ - TO THE EMPIRE REVIEW THE ISSUE. ON He Vigorously Points Out That Route to America Would be Short. er Than Present Ones. London, Jan. 10.--Lord Killanin ad- vocates making Galway a trans-At- lantic port. In the coming issue of the Empire Review he predicts a revival of the trade at that Irish port, which once was second only to London asa port of the United Kingdom. The writer argites that many con- siderations, patriotic and sentimental, imperial, national and local, favor opening a port there, but its commer cial aspects are of primary import. ance. By starting from such a ter- minal port a "through Ireland" route to Newfoundland and Canada from England would greatly shorten pres- ent routes, while for travellers and mails 'to the United States, the time time would be eut considerably. Steamers leaving Galway could get underwity at full speed with the mini mum léss of time, efeaping the delay incident to fog and traffic in the Irish Sea. 'Trans-Atlantic ships built for high speed are able to observe present traflic regulations in the channel with the utmost danger and difficulty and these embarrassments are increasing every year, GIRLS ARE SAID TO BE SOLD INTO MARRIAGE Ritssian Religious Refugees on the Pacific Coast Defy the Laws of United States. Los Angeles, Cal., Jan. 10.-- Whether charges will be laid against members of the Molokane colony of Russian re ligious refugees here was the problem presetited to-day to Juvenile Judge Nitbur in the trial of Elsie Navikoff, charged with delinquency, who as Serted that she ran away from home 'when her parents tried to foree her in- furnish Jo Mottinge with a man who peid Fein fom Phe| the for ene oe fHormer of these will not provide mere| Philip Smith, elder of the colony, y nourish- | admitted that marringes were perform. ed without recognition laws : "We follow the customs of the old country," said Shubin. Emil Shubener testified that pretty of American 1 { Molokane girls brought from $100 to £300, Famous Church Closes. Boston, Jan.' 10.--Boston's church for the deaf, famous the country over is soon to be closed because of failure The pastor, Rev, E, Clayton Wyand, a deaf mite, will be compelled ito take up other work to earn .a living. SAW THEIR CHILDREN PERISH IN FLAMES Sacre Coeur, Que. Parents Quebee, Jun. W.wlurmed out of their burning house in a bitter cold that 'kept the mercury hovering below the zero mark, Mr. and Mrs. Josaphat Desrochers, of Batre Coeur, in the of Lotbiniere, were helpless witnesses of the death of their five children, who perished in the flames, The house was a wooden structure, where 'an overheated stove started a death in their slumber. The dead are Egide, aged twenty; Real, aged nine; Alphonse, aged four George, aged six, snd a child, age three months. Their charred remains were recovered, this morning, from the debris, while the father and mother are sheltered at the parish preshytery. A neighboring house was also destroy- ed, but a volunteer fire brigade saved the inmates and the rest of the town by courageous work. : The mother and father were frantic, and would have rushed into the flames to get their children had neighbors not detained them. -------------- Gave Workman New Eye. Paris, Jan. 10.-An portant Spr ation in eye sw y and the grafting human ra has been success- fully performed by the oecculist, Dr. Magitot. He showed before the Aca- demy of Sciences, yesterday a patient who had become blind by the wplash- ing of gquicklime in his eyes. A thick formed' over the cornea. Dr. Magitot cut a small window in the opaque mass and i a portion of cornea from the living subject A ence of the tissues was com: in a week, The patient's vision is about onetenth nosmal- sufficient to get about safely alone. Died From Fall. Deabltyue, Towa, 'Tan. 10. Monsignor Ryan, vicargeneral of the Dubuque, died here. His death was the result of a Jfall on an iey pavement several weeks ago, was seventy-five years old, and a native of Ireland. Bg wie; pester costs for men women find childrens at Duttew's ; Book-Binding _ *ruling at Whig Gio. Kin ol URGES GALWAY LORD KILLANIN WRITES to secure funds to keep up the work. |" blaze, and the deceased wore burned to] gg WEATHER. PROBABILITIES, Toronts, Ont, Jan. 0th, 10 am Ot. tawa Valley and Uppér St. Lawrence Fresh westeriy to north. westerly winds: fair and very cold to-day. and an Thursday Temperature much be- ow zero in nearly all places BEAR IN MIND THE | GREAT JANUARY CLEARING SALE i OF LADIES WINTER COATS FUR PIECES priete ARNTIEG cortmi FUR LININGS All of the above mentioned arti- cles to be sold at exactly HALF PRICE Just think of it--and just at a time when you want them most. Come tomérrow and see what values are here for ek STEACY'S THE PEOPLE'S STORE. aa) \ ih MARRIED. CORKEY--BRADY-In Westport, on Jan. Sth, 1812, by Rev Father Rourke, Annie, eldest daughter of John B y, Bedford Mills, 10 Fred Corey, of Collins Bay DIED. Kingston, Ont, Wellington Street, on. Jan 19 John MeNehon, aged years, Funeral! (private) Thursday morning, at ten o'cloek. ROBERT J. REID, The Leading Undertaker, 'Phone B77. 280 Princess Street. JAMES REID The Old Firm of Undert £56 PRINCESS '. 4 o 14 for Ambulases EE arr ade FAKE NOTIOR. We have the enoy of the Stoves." a pod Txind and wien prices; also lot of good heaters, se cond band, which we will sell st reduce prices, 't_walt ull they ate sll Phone 708. McMAHONIn 74 oth, 82 at gone. Turk's. "Table Waters RADNOR. WHITE ROCK. SUN RAY. PERRIER. VICHY CHLESTIN. VICHY BEMONADE. & Co. Miss Pelly, lady-in-waiting to the Duchess of Connaught, has been ap- pointed to the Victorian Order of Nurses for Canada, #s representative of the Montreal branch of the asso: ciation. Tungsten laps will lessen your lighting bill seventy per cent. Drop in.at the H. W, Newman Electric Con store and see how work. Thomas Reid, of Toronto, died in Hamilton on Monday from a blow on the head, struck by § gang of row diss. No clue to the erowd. In all probability, an endowment campaign. will be institoted by the board of governors on the Western University, London. Frank Halloway, Chicago, declares be robbed the Bank of Montreal! at New Westmiister. Two others are arrested in this case. i Two members of the French cabinet have resigned as o result of thy Moroccan émbroglio, §

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