Daily British Whig (1850), 3 Mar 1914, p. 6

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» in & i W ARE LAZY 1% PUHERG SCHOOLS, DRCY ApS = BISHOP SCOLLARD. Aap Sinha, y, In Opening Now Woman Catholic _Behool at Smult Ste. Marie, He _ Bays "Sisters" Have Consclence.-- - No God in Public School. Saat Ste. Marie, Ofit., Miven 13-=| #9 With im g ceremony the Right : of Scollard, fioman, Cathelie orth Bay, open & dew t. Mary's School in Sault Ag Matle sterday afternoon. the opening prayer, his p gave a forceful address An the Italian Catholic church, in Which he very pointedly explained 'the school was a Catholic one, that it was the duty of all Cath- ts to send their children to hool and to support it to the « A 1 was all the most signifi- t because of tHe Incident which ! the that their children 'ware compelled to cross three sets of rallway tracks in order to attend a separate .- The property was B the town of Steelton, and because of the alleged neglect on the part of the Separate sghool board of Sault Ste. Marie to provide the foreign sec- tion in the west end of the Soo with . two hundred Italian families last LE 6d 'the city . council (0 erect a public school in their ward, declaring they would support it. They preferred to have their children taught in the public schools. On the Strength of this petition a public school was erected and is now being attended by one hundred and twelve Halian children. Immediately upon the work being started on the public school, the separate school board decided to erect a 4-roomed school on the opposite side of 'the tracks on the same street. Hishop Scellard was very emphatic Jn his declaration that it was their duty as Catholics to take their chil- dren out of the public school and . Bend them to the separate school. In support of his contention, he stated that the separite schools throughout Oatario would compare [favorably with the public schools, the differ ance between the public school teachers and the sisters being that the Sisters had a conscience and Worked every minute of their time, while the public school teachers only thought of putting in their time as easily as possible and drawing their pay. NEW FRENCH EXPLOSIVE More Powerful and Cheaper Than Melinite, Says Inventor Paris, March 3---Eugene Turpin, the inventor of Melinite, so long used in the French army and navy, has came forward with a new explosive which he declares is not only more powerful than melinite, but. is cheap- CANADA'S TRADE IN CHINA i -- h Foster's Successful Efforts Borne Out by U.S. Officials Ottawa, Mareh 3.--Farther confirma: tion from the mouths of United States trade officials that the efforts of Hom. George E. Foster to develop the flour trade Between Canadu and Ching have heen eminently successful is afforded by a report made by the United States consul at Hong Kong, China, to his 3 which hax A Multitude of Wonders Are Assems!] & unique, interesting, and fascinating show as (hat which bas been installed utider the spacious roof of the Olyni- pin, at South K~wingion, by the two enterprising sons of thé late Mr. Carl Hagenback, the famous dealer in wild MARE ANIMALS. | bled In the Londna Zoo, Never bas London, Eng., seen such noted," he says, conditions noted in this offies, the Unit t considerable trade to Canadian mills as a result of dii- ferences in quality in American flour during the past. year as compared wit previous $8acs and of the increasing [ e predictions as to this inefease in Canadifn trade, it is Sell to note that trans now maka it possi of the extensive 6 Tor the products wheat fields around Calgary to find its way into the Ori- instead of into Europe There is apparently no reason 13 competition should not crease in intensity in future. On the other hand, the hopes expressed in the United States the opening of the Panama canal will ehable mills within reach of the wheat supply of the great Inkes transporta- tion lines to enter this market are likely to be fulfilled." SNOW MELTING ON MARS ---- Dr. Lowell Finds Canals Darkening Near North Polar Cap 8.~~The so-called canals of Mars are now exhibiting striking seasonal developments, ae- cording to Dr. Percival Lowell, the Flagstaff, Ariz., observatory. In a déspatch received here Dr. of the planet is melting near the edge of the cap." with Dr. Lowell's theory that the melting of snow at the Martian pole produces floods that sweep southward and produce color changes in the canals. NO USE FOR PEERAGE Munro-Ferguson cepted Gov.-Generalshin London, March 3.-The new ernor-general of the Australian com- monwealth, Sir Ronald Munro-Fergu- son, i8 said to have made it a con- dition of his taking the office he be not asked to accept a peerage. He will, therefore, be the firtt gover- nor-general of any dominion main a commoner. It sis expected that Sir Sidney Dux ton will be elevated to the peerage before shiling for South Africa. Alberta. New Railway Lines Edmonton, Alta., March pilations from reliable sources made Altogether, some 2,000 living creatiires have taken up their abode in this great bho. e of amusement. # are no fewer than twenty fulls grown llons, fittee (igers, ten leaps ards, thirty-eight Polar bears, over 300 monkeys of various species, 500 Birds, 100, flamingoes, twenty-five cranes, ten pelicans, twenty large ser- pents, including: a python 28 feet long, said to be the longest in cap- tivity, 100 snakes of various kinds, deer and antelope by tho score, ten zebras, six ostriches, fifteen ele- phaats, four hippopotami, and a heist of other creatures gathered from every quarter of the globe. . Indeed, the aninials alone, excly- sive of the principal performing groups, are valuéd at $250,000, and have been actually insured for $185, 00). The transportation of these creatures from Hamburg, which is only twenty odd hours' journey from London, cost $5,000. They were brought over in 180 specially-design- ed traveling cages, attended, en route, by over a score of keepers. Every week the food bill at Olympia amounts (0 nearly $1.500. Before! the doors were thrown open on Box- ing Day the promoters had spent $100,000 on the show. Among the animals there are some exceedingly rare species, creatures which cannot -éven be seen in the Zoological Gardéns. There are three specimens of the seal elephant from the Antarctic regions, an animal that fs almost extinct, Full grown this] creature measures 25 feet in length, | Las a girth of 15 feet, and weighs | fore than an ordinary elephant. They | are valued at $7,500 apiece. 'Then == there is a specimen of the pigmy hip- | popotSmu# from Liberia, which could! not be purchased under a check for $5,000. It was obtained some eigh=| {een months ago with four others! from the interior of Liberia by a dar-| ing hunter. To secure these coveted | specimens of the African fauna the! trapper had to declare war against] one of the native kings, who refused | to allow him to brinz the animals out of his territory. 'n One of the principal features of the! exhibition i= the display of wild life in natural surroundings without iron tors' view. it is a model in minja-| ture of Hagenbeck's famous Zoo Hamburg, where wild beasts are their respective quattcrs by ditches, and other cunnmingly-concealed de-j; vices, i and here, 'twice a day, performing 4 Whose Nie is fast chbing aw, ---- HON. «. GIRLS! JUST TRY IT, BEAUIIFY YOUR HAIR Make it Thick, Glossy, Wavy, Lu. |FOE8 0 ues uriane and Remove Dandruff-- Real Surprise For You. Your i I't shown in dens and caves, confined 10] grt W i Besides Almost in the centre of the great), .. Rt building a huge circus has been ereet- |i. 0 of ed capable of seating 5,000 Persons, lan inyj Ail Ww > {carefully n;,. Jus: ith draw it through. your haip, | Usually kept/in the Moy one eX moments 3 auty of your bain beg hair b ally, abundant g {lustrons and beg 1 as a |Birl's after a jcleanse." bars or cages obstructing the speeta-|., \\ ~" 'comes light, wavy, Ppears as sof, Danderine ¥ this-- 1 la Danderine anf i | London, | W. ROSS. | ay in the General Hosplal, Toronto. | SYSTEM OF DOG GUARDS | {To Keep OF Militants -- Usual Pre caution Adopted. Marche 3. --ecent pl the suffragettes . in activities their. cam: wevrve propaganda mn tland are being met by remnark- {able precautions The Maelntosh of Maclnt wh jimtiated a system of dog guards hair |, moisten a | "Pt. { his home, young | RES Moy Hall, Inve some of the finest Jacobite relics are The large number of sporting dogs Hall ken- If strand at a time. ne! bave been distributed around the e the hair of dus: { mansion, and they raise the ive oil and in just "on have doubled the wiring the 'hair Danderine dissoives every p dandruft; cleanses, purifies gorates the scalp, forever ailing hair. alarm dur- Mac- dog have on the approach of . any person ing day or night. Since the intogh began this system of ard other owners of houses déd to do the very Highland fmansion same, and almost and *shoot- ng lodge has its dog guard. ral policy agitating tors in Queen's Park, the report oi the liquor license hranch of the pro- vinclal secretary's departmeiit,- just is- for the license year ended and shop licenses for this respect it §s significant to serve the rediietion in the number of which present . ime. censes of all classes issued was 6.- These figures do not include issued for six months. at resorts and similar places, hence the slight difference quoted. £37,433, ,of which 814.764 was local option mumicipalities. + against local option by-laws for Bod srin 9% i FIFTY-FIVE P. GC. OF MUN CTD AL. ITLIS WETAOL LICENSE Total Number isi 1901. « iiiy we \ ue for the Year Was $9075. -- Convictions 'for Dnonkentess ta the Year 8,363, Toronto, March' 3.--Wikle the Kbe- of Yabolish the bar" is the mints of the legisla- sued, presents some interesting sta- tistics of the movement to redhce the number of bars in the province. The report notes at the outset that April 30th. 1913, there was a reduction in tavern licenses of 79, and a fur- ther reduction of for the year 1913-1914. The' total number of all 1913-1914 is 1,799, * In oh- licenses since 1874, the first year for statistics are given, to the In 1874 the total Mi- 185, white in 1919 it was 1,774. licenses summer in- the two figures The fines colletted dmounted to from The ex- pendituré - for the service, which in- cludes the work oi the license inspec- tors charged it the aet, was $31,100, the enforvement of For the year there was an increase of L750 in the number of commit- ments for drunkenness over 1912, the figures in each case being" 8,368 and 6.613. There "wefé 353 conviétiona the year, and 761 convictions for infrac- tions of the liguor license act exclu- | sive of those 'against the local option by-laws, There wore 842 organized = muniei- palities in the province at the time of making the report, and of these 330 are under local option. In addi- tion there are 162 other municipali- ties in'which no licenseh are issued, leaving 350 under license, Thus it will be seen that more than half the municipalities in Ontario are without licensed hotels. : The amount' paid for expenses of commissioners, salaries of inspectors, legral expenses and other * incidentals was $98,393. The total receipts for licenses, fines and transfers was $859,- 075, which was distributed as follows : To the municipalities, 3339,459: to the province, £341,977; expenses' as riven, 398.393, leaving a halance of 26,406 in the account.' A DISAPPROVED CONDUCT i A---------- We believe Rexall Olive 0il Emulsion is the best remedy made for toning the nerves, enriching the blood, bnild- ing up wasted tissues, renewing health, strength and efiergy--the best medicine you cun use if you are run-down, tired out, nervous and debilitated, no mat- ter what the cause. It doesn't depend for its good effect upon alcohol or habit-forming drugs, becatise it con. tains none, It may not make you foel 'better in a few hours, but it will make you feel better, we ure sure, just jag soon as the tonio afd food pro- perties it contains have a chance to get into the blood and, through the blood, into. the rest of .t system. Pure Olive Oil 'and the Hypophosphites have long been endorsed By suckessful physicians, but here, for the first time, they are combined into one preparation which, as a nerve-food and a builder of strength and health, we believe, has no equal. If you don't feel well, begin taking Rexall Olive Oil Emulsion to-day nnd build your health and strengthen your system against more serious illness, T'o convalescents, old people, puny child. ren and all others who are weak, run- down (or ailing, we offer Rexall Olive Oil Emulsion' with our personal pro- mise that, if it doesi't make you well and strong again, it. will cost you no- thing, If we didn't have the utmost faith in it we wouldn't offer it with this guarantée, nor even recommend %¢ to you, Wo are sure that once you have used it you 'will recommend it to your friends, dnd thank us for having rocofmended it to you. Sold only ' at the more than 7,000 Nexall Stores, and in this town only by us. $1. Mahood's drug store, Kingstan, Ont. 'PHONE 117 Kingston Automobile Co. Queen 'nd Bagot Streets Storage, Repairing, Acces- sories, We guarantee satisfaction : : stopping itehing and ax Ww as Too Fatherly in Dealing With er and will stand a temperature of |by the Edmonton Iudustrial associa-| animals appear. Tere ic a group of| |» i 188 degrees F. without ignition. "The war office has already appoint- ed a commission to experiment with the new explosive which is in the form of a grey powder--a. precipitate ~=whose combustion may be regulat- ed '50 as to be serviceable in various arms by having it compressed in masses of various shapes and sizes-- cubes, spheres, cones, enc. In an Interview with a representa- tive of Le Petit Parisien the inven- tor would only say that it contained uo. nitro-cellulose, left no deposit in the bore of rifle or cannon, and could not be spontaneously exploded at leas than a temperature of 632 de- grees F. . "© While conversing with the reporter the inventor placed a pinch of the powder in a saucer and attempted to ignite it by gradually bringing a +mnatch near it. Only when the flame actually reached it was it ignited when it burned with a bright, white light, without any smoke, and leav- ing just a trade of fine white powder as the result of the combustion. + ------------ Will Visit England St. Petersburg; March 3.--An in- teresting bit of gosdip concerning the teh is current in court circles. It is to the effect that the little prince Is to bé taken to England this summer, when he will be under the care of his great-aunt, Queen Alexan- dra. 3 Fad Fiiat S00 WY . Saves Money PN tion, headed by William J. Magrath, show that at least 3,000 miles of be built in the province of Alberta before the close of 1915. Work is now under way. Was Dragged to Death Burks Falls, Ont., James Totten was killed near Sprucedale. He was, taking a load of bark to the railway station when his team took fright and ran away, upsetting the load on the unfortunate man. He was drag- ged some distance and his life crush- ed out. Mr. Totten was a married man with a family. Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days Druggists refund money if PAZO OINTMENT {ails "to eure Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles. Kirst application gives relief. 50c. Hon. Jofeph Martin, M.P., in. New York hospital, is suffering from "walk- ing typhoid," und it will ba. sopie time before he will be able to leave. Cardinal John Catzehaler, archbisli- op of Zalsburg, died on Saturday. He was 'born in 1892, and created a cat- dinal in 1903. White Rose flour stocked by all the trade. Western members demand the excly- sion of all Asiatics from Canada. twenty performing Polar bears, in- teresting in that they were tamed and ain Ae ailway lines will] trained by the late Carl Hagenbeck main and 'branch railway lines will inthe bope that It would induce Captain Amundsen to use these ani- mals for dragging the sleighs in his Polar expeditions instead of dogs. ty lite, Dean Hole tells of an occasion when there was some doubt as to the locality of a city mentioned Greek text, and the lecturer address- ed a-youth who had just come up from the famous Shrewsbury school.| of our great geographer, Dr. Butler, the Atlas of our age, who carried the world not on his shoulders, but in his head, and you can probably enlighten u$ as to: the position of this ancient! own." ply, 'that modern travelers are of the opinion that the city ought to be placed about ten miles to the south- edst of the spot which it now occu- au tom 1 ples on our map." Lg My Fis 9 A Question of Honor. try Among other anecdotes of Universi-| 'Now, Mr. Bentley, you are a pupil {ed 'I believe, sir,"' was the prompt re- After receiving respectful thanks| ut what will please You most will | er a few weeks' use when yon | it. Dean Hole as they left the lecture-| Lo1Y) room that hie had never heard of the! 5 venerable city before, but that for the | cradle, honor of Shrewsbury and the reputa-|* i : tion of Dr. Butler he felt himself | tracks and his bloed will he npon us vizier of Tarkey, is dead. Powder F090 von bound to say something. Father of Fox Hunting. = John Warde of Westerham is gen- erally believed to have been the father |, the hounds for more thah half a cen- tury, and then he sold his pack for thé record price of 2,000 guineas. ""Phis mighty hunter," writes Gibbon p'hompson, "died in 1838 at the ripe old age of 86 years at his house on Charles stréet, Berkeley square. One y of the portraits of him at Squerries court, that by James Green, is in the dibing room. His faverite hounds were (wo, Glory and Beauty; the picture shows him with but one, and he is suppostd to be soliloquizing, 'My Beauty hath departed, but my | Clery remains'.'"---London Chronicle. Explosive Diamonds. A curious fact about diamonds is|of that it is vot 'ncolmmon for the crys- tals to explode a8 soom as they are Brought up from the mines. Some- times they have burst in the pockets or the warm hands of miners, due (o the effect of increased temperature. Large stones are more likely to do this than small ones. Valuable stones | bave been destroyed in this way. To safeguard them some dealers place larze diamonds in raw potatoes for safe transport from South Africa. India's Liquor Bill. i The total vdlue of liquors imported | 1912-13 (excluding methylated and | perfumed spirit and spirit present in |, drugs) amounted in value to $6,072 - | 000, a gain of $569,000 over thé pre- i ceding year. bs A few years ago'the value of musi on cal instruments made in the United , More than 100 00g trinns and | > vehicles pass over London ' bridge daily. "- lex artory, rt j unless pla ROrvice church, [the pastor, made for the information, the informer told | [ather wa or toilet CONGREGATION 2 ine Toronto Globe. moss ce at at: How '} ¥ a Evanturel lotter incident, whic of NX. W lectrified the a degre led 1 resous every bre hat Ting to tl and 1 w declared ing al rem tary, iny will actually see new hair--fine and downy at first hair grow If you care for pretty@soft hair ana lots of it surely get a.25 cent bottle of Knowlton's druggist yes--but really new over the scalp. Danderiae from any counter and jus PPLAUDED Mr. Rowell arkable 'demonstration the Sunday ard Park Rev. I. B. morpng Methodist Lanceley, a reference to the bh caus the legislature last Rowell, K.( congregation that spontaneous throughout the as a tory, my grand brother ther-in-law was a I have is tory "Yet . 1 18 rocked in a I the pastor Mr. Rowell will die in his fourageous stand for ial vous of fox Hunting. He was master of; , peoplé are >, party we Uhristian people get be thind him and support him in his righteousness {The leader of the opposition in parliament is bearing len, which Christ- their prejudice and cold action oi the ob on in barring one of their mem ON apostles detrimental to members offered 1 the es said : wicus, Rev. Mr. Lance "This individual, by his not onl failed to do right himself to fgrces, acknowl edged to be 1 of rig st antagonistic to all hteongmess and most the weal of the peo vice a lgrge number of sirrounded the pastor their congratulations for his outspoken remarks, elared, had raised and they de a point which, them to unrest paified 'enthusiasm. Washington, D. clamoring for fares. «ihurhanifes are Jower "street railway When wdmeh domb th Be Voters into India during the official year |" Hall mire States amoutited to $90,000,000, |e re Paton. will they tell the truth about "hoe | o enlisted in @ "clean teeth" campaign v their lefested propos 1 fovernment Idren are Sheing How's This ? ne Hundred 'ase of Ca Aeting v old by ret Familiy rites Toledn, JO, n internal. Plooed a tem. T Pils "for con | In a Conld Not Restrain Feelings Heard. | | auctioneer. Good Selling Label. | Much amusey t wus caused at! Masterton, New South Wales, at the way in which a Chinese named Ah Fong overreached himself in his greed. Ah Fong was watching the removal Ir a lorry of a consign- | ment of miscellaneous cles destin- | ed for an auction room, when, point- | ing to £ wooden case which was be- | ing carried inside, he inquired, in an excited tone; "How much : "1 sell him to-morrow," replied the i wer Ah secured "No time to-molier," ani Fong. "Me buy now," and he the ease for sixteen pounds. In half an 'hour the Celestial re- turned. For a time he was unable to | speak for agitation. The outcome was ! ludicrous. It appears that the case bore an inscription in Chinese stating that it contained a false bottom con-* cealing a hundred pounds' worth of apium. When Ah Fong opened the | case he found 'another label at the | battom, which read Jetter luck | aext time," > -- | A Freak of Nature. While cutting up an :* h-tree, eight feet in circumference, at Embleten ' Sawm#l; 'Cumberland, Eng: the sawyers observed a dark object in the céntre of the trunk. It was found to be a sparrow's nest containing the feathers and skeleton of a dead bird and four eggs. 'The egg-shells were exceedingly well preserved, but in the attempt to extricate them some were broken, and it was found that their contents had been entirely absorbed. It is assumed that the bird built its nest in the hollow of the tree and died while sitting on the eggs, the hole becoming sealed up as thé tree grew. The nest had probably been built a century ago, the tree being over a hundred years old. le Ns Have Invisible Audience, So that concert artists may not be discouraged: by thé' indiffgrence of audiences, Chevalier Arrigo-Boechi has planned a néw scheme of lighting at St. James' Hall, Great: Portland street, London. Lights will be focus 4d on the stage, the auditoriuta being in a state of semi-darkness which will shut out the .audience from the sight of the. performer. Home For Old Cows. : An asylum for aged cows is am fastitution at Sodpur, India, which Has for its abjett the welfare of de- erepid apimals. Every year the wari festival known as the Gorakhini Sova Gosto Mela is celebrated, and in order to save cows from, Joy starvation or the Slaughter they are pirchased &s gifts and maintained for the rest of their-natural lives. Mohammedans In Landon. There .are nearly 2,000 Mobam- medans resident. in London itself, the majority, of course, being nati of. India, who are merchants or law students, though some are Britons, and: it is intended ito erect a new and splendid mosque, modelled on that of Delhi, which will cost not Tess than $500,000. Two Philadelphia missions plan eree: {iva of large cheap lodging houses. of modern irsproof construction. . The calamity howler may not be | sticks. Girls Ithaca, N, Y., March 3,--A report | reached here that the judges appoint- 'ed by a committee of the National | Association of Junior. Republics, to investigate charges that William R. George was guilty of improper con- duct toward several girl citizens of thé George Junior Republic at Free- ville, N. Y., have rendered a decis- ion acquitting him, but disapproving the parental attitude he assumed as head of the institution. The judges are Joseph J. Choate, Supreme Court Justice Samuel Sea- bury, of New York and Miss Lillian Wald, a social worker. World's Supply of Lacross Sticks Cornwall, Ont., March * 3.--Q. Russell Taggart, American consul at Cornwall, has sent a report to his government, of which the following is a summary: "The only lacrosse stick factory in the world is located at Cornwall, On- tario. The game originated. in this region, and the Indians have special skill in whittling the. handles of the The' factory employs, ten Indians besides several white men. Thres-fourths of the product is con- sumed in Canada, the rest goiag to the United Kingdom, Australia' and Néw Zealand, except one per cent. which is sent to thé United Stites, principally to the Carlisle: Indian school and Ithaca, N. Y. About $2,000 worth of hickory wood, of which the sticks are made, is annual- ly imported from thé United States, while the gut comes from England." White 'Rose flour for all purposes. In Peel' county' the "dry" majority was increased. in the re- slightly ' =o ST The Bell TORNIRT Compity ot Canada is soon to print a new issue of its Official Di for the District of Eastern Ontario, including KINGSTON Parties who contemplate becom- ing 'subscribers, or those who wish changes in their present entry should place their orders with the Local Manager at once to insure insertion in this issue. \ . Connecting Companies Should also réport additions and changes in their list of su bers, either to the Local Manager, or di- rect to the Special Agent's Depart- ment, Montreal. SRI a taxpayer, Pena SAGE AND SULPHUR DARKENS GRAY HAIR It's Grandmother's Recipe to Restore Color, Gloss and Thickness. Hair that loses its calor and lustre, or when it fades, turns gray, dull and lifeless, is caused by a lack of sulphur In the hair. Our grandhio- ther made up a mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur to keep her locks dark and beautiful, and thousands of wo- men and men who value that even color, that 'beautiful dark shade of hair which is so attractive use only this old-time recipe. ' Nowadays we got this famous mix- ture by asking at any drug store for a G0-cent bottle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Halr Remedy" Which darkens the hair go naturally, so ev- enly, that nobody can possibly tell it has been applied. Besides it takes oft dandruff, stops scalp itching and fali- Ing hair. You just dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. By morning th» gray hair disappears. But what de- lights the ladies with Wyeth's Sage and sulphur is that, besides beauti- fully darkening the hair after a few applications, it also brings back the gloss and lustre and gives it an ap- pearance of abundance. Agent, Geo. W. Mahood. Baby Carriages & Go Oarts "1912 Line" $10.50 to $35.00 cies $3.50 to $18.00 +1 $2.00; $3.00 - $3.50 Cribs, white ennthel, drop sidé ++.$5.00, $6.00. $5.00 up -' Mattresses to fit. Cradles, High Chairs, Baby Walkers

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