Daily British Whig (1850), 28 Jul 1914, p. 3

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= Se spring. Values ap to le they Inst. 2 piece Suits ...$20.00 3 piece Suits ...$22.50 Ralph Spencer, THE TAILOR 520 Princess Street Opposite St. Andrew's, Page & Shaw Boston Chocolate * A fresh shipment of these excellent goods just received at BF Exclusive Kingston Agency, Order yours now at At Best's The Satisfactory Drug Store Sunday hours, 1.30 to 5; 630 to § ® ® EYES TESTED WITH : OUT CHARGE | NO DRUGS USED CASES REQUIRING MEDICAL ATTEN. TION WILL BE SO INFORMED ; | Keeley Jr., M.0.0.0. OPTOMETRIST AND OPTICIAN 226 Princess Street 8-doors above the Opera Houe ¢ Jenkins' Bargains For 4 Saturday FEESIPPAL IMIS) PANAMA HATS- $2.50 will buy any Pan- ama in the store from $4.50 to $6.50, * $5.00 will secure our very finest American blocks. STRAW HATS All at half the price, Eng- Jand's finest Sennets and split straws, high crown, in newest models. 50c/ Ties--20 dozen at 25c. WORSTED PANTS © $3.50 values for $1.95, all made with 5 pockets, side straps and belt loops. 50¢ SUMMER VESTS Vests worth $1.00. and $1.50. Some are slightly soiled. g $1.00 purchases the line from $2.00 to $2.50. extends estimated gels navigating thes Great Lakes and TYPHOID CENTRES, SAYS INTER- NATIONAL COMMISSION. They Pollute the Lakes--The Pollu- tion Could Be Avoided By the Treatment of Sewage. The -avoidaple pollution. of the waters of the great jakes system takes plice in contravention to the treaty of-January 11, 1909, between Great Britarn, acuiug for Canada, and the United States; fs the conclusion of the progiess report issued Satur- day of the international commission appointed to investigate the pollu- tion of the houndary waters. Sew- age trom the larger lake cities is held to be mainly responsible, though vessels are blamed, too. The popu- lation ted upon the boundary waters is placed seven million. The following sections of the bound- ary waters are specifically reported as avoidably polluted. All Rainy River, from Rainy Lake to Lake of the Woods. St. Mary's River, both above below the Sault. St. Clair River, extending enfire stream, polluted by Huron and Sarnia. Lake St. Clair, contaminated by the sewage from vessels. Detroit River, for its entire léngth polluted by sewage from Detroit, Windsor, Walkerville, Sandwich, Wyandotte, Trenton ,and Amherst- burg. Lake Erie, at west end, Niagara River, polluted by sewage from Bufl- fale, Niagara Falls, Ont. and Nia gara Falls, N.Y., Tonawanda, Bridge- burg, Lewiston, Chippewa Creek, Youngstown, and. Niagara-on-the- Lake. Lake, Ontario. St. Lawrence River, polluted by gewage from Brockville, Gananoque, Kingston, and Prescott, Ontario and Clayton Cape Vincent, and Ogdens- burg, N.Y., besides by vessels. al and across Fort ~ High Bacterial Count. jy far the largest part of this population is centred in the growing cities on both sides of the. line sit- natéd on the rivers connecting the Great Lakes system between the United States and Canada. As shown by the report of the sanitary experts herewith submitted, the use of these.waters for the purpose of Sewage disposal has at many places, and at all the large centres of popu- lation above referred to, espeeidlly those sitnated on the connecting rivers, resulted in gros pollution of these waters, and in some places it tro ore to shore, reach- as high%s 34,000 B. Coli per 100 ec.c. In addition to the pellu tion thus occasioned, twenty-six thousand vessels passed through the Detroit River alome in 1012. It is that these" and other wes « { ing their connecting rivers carried dur ing the season of navigation that year, a population of not less than{, fifteen million. The sewage of these, « vessels is discharged daund disposed of indis route, iminately along their sailing and in the hidrbors whéref, théy land, contributing very mater ially to the pollution found to exist, and complained of by the peoples in|, both countries. Buffalo Chief Offender. Buffalo city oe chief source of contamination for the Niagara River, but conditions at Detroit furnish a still more difficult problem. The commission points out that the Lake cities favored in ey ery way over cities of the same size in Europe. Yet in Kufope, a typh- oid death rate of 5 per 100,000 is the average in the latter cities, 'while on the Great Lakes system, where sew- age is poured into a water supply, by nature the finest in the world, the typhoid death rate in the last three years has regnstered over 300 Ashland, Wis, 109 in Marquette, Mich., 196 in Port Huron, Mich., 194 at Niagara Falls, 190 in Erie, Penn. 179 in Port Arthur, 330 in Sault Ste Marie, Ont., 134 in Sarnia, 235 'in Windsor, and 57 in Walkerville, 63 in Brockville. The remeédy suggested, is that all sewage should be treated before en- tering the lakes and rivers, and that vessels be regulated more strictly as to their sewage ' disposal arrange ments, are al A SUDDEN DEAT nl Canada's Cehsus Taker Began as 1 Journalist. July 28.~Archibald Blue, of census and. statistics, for Canada, died rather suddenly at his residence on Sunday morning. fhe had been ill for about two years, and his ceadition had been scious for the last three weeks, though death was not' expected, He was a na tive of Oxford, Ont., and in his sev enty-fourth year. Mainly owing to the fagt that was in charge of the last two suses of Canada, the late Mr. Blue was known throughout Canada, Or ginally a school teacher, he entered journalism on the staff of the St Thomas Journal (1867 to 1879), when he became an editorial writer on the Toronto Globe, and in 1880 went over to' the Toronto World, In 1882 he organized and became secretary of the Ontario bureau of industries and was appointed provincial deputy min- ister of agriculture in 1884. He. af terwards acted as sécretary of the commission of enquiry into the min eral resources of the province, and ofganized the bureau of mines, re maining at its head for nine years, until he cffme to Ottawa in 1900 as chief census commissioner for Can ada. On Oct. lst, 1905, he was ap pointed chief officer of census and statistics. . He was a Baptist. He was twice married, and his widow, who was Amelia Brabant, of Toronto, sur vives him, with "three children : Capt. W. A. Blue, Ottawa: Walter, inspect- ing engineer, and Wilson, managing editor of _the. Vancouver News-Adver- tiser. y Uttawa, chief officer he cen At Tall, Que., hall a million dol Jars worth of lomber was destroyed gression, otic greater taxation, ear II, and one of the Bernadotte dv nasty a refreshing and instav stevedore and spent with the king and is devoted to him Lav Connaught's of the lieves in woman sulfrage and has pre sented a ment, parliamentary elections. EDMONTON HAS MASS MEETING. Demands the Resignation of" May- or McNamara, Fdmenton, July 28.--A stormy mass meeting of citizens demandéd the im- | mediate resignation of Mayor MeNa- mara. A passage of the resolution stated that recent invesugations be- fore Justice Scott had revealed the fact that the mayor had been "either wholly remiss in the administration of the eity's afinirs, or incompetent to administer the same The meeting was presided over by Rev. Dr. McQueen, ex-moderator .of the Presbyterian encral assembly, and was largely attended. A resolution, moved hy ex-Mayor McDougall, asked that the police be-put in control of a commission. This was carried almost without opposition. Mayor McNamara was not present at the meeting, having declined to at- tend, as he said it was not called 'in the regular way, by a petition of eiti zens, addressed to him KING GUSTAV V., OF SWEDEN, And His Royal Consort, Queen Vie- toria. King Gustav, the fearless sovereign of the most educated common folks in Furope and the despair of his cabinet, has just been sustained at the nation al election. Aroused hy Russian Swedes made a of military ag- thousands of femonsatration in favor and naval armament reforms, a patrj demonstration bheeause it meant ~He is a son of Os. He irreproachable character, Furopean court circles, heartily in the mov * national defense. His leclarations along this line, without :onsuftation with his cabinet, evoked resentment from them and he has had abinet troubles ever since. Dr. Knut Hammerskjold has just formed a new 'abinet in sympathy with the king. i once disguised" himself as a hours carrying 80 as to directly common is fifty-six years old, has which 1s in has joined woal from a lighter, iscertain the views of his people of Stockholm and people,\ unlike her Pavlovna, who Wilhelm, the | he tond the . Swedish fanghter-in-law, recently ted queen is [aria Prince des queen's second son, because life at the swedish court funereal compared the dazzling. brilliancy of. P¢ Wilhelm married her years vounger than They have had three children, the others he tide Wilhelm being Crown Prince Gus Adoli, who married the Duke ot daughter, and Prince Eric When the king was suffering his attack ulceration was tershurg, where fhe queen is four wiginal serious of of the stomach and its more "Fécent re 'urrence, the queen insisted on stay ing at his bedside, along with other royal family. Her husband be sufirage bill to .the parlia women the franchise tor incidentally, expelled Mormon to give Sweden has recently missionaries HON. DR. ROCHE LOSES Kidney In Rochester, Minn, Rochester, Minn., Juli Hon. Dr Roche, of interior of Canada, has submitted to a serious operation at St. Mary' hospital, this eity which involved the removal of the left Dr Roache and the surgeons declire the operation ul, although it will be a num ber 3 before the patient is out of Miss May Roche, daughter, is at his bedside, His Left Operation at N minister kidney. is resting nicel SUCCPSE of da danger hr Money savers at Red Cross Drug Store. 25¢ Syrup Figs, 15e. * 2he kidney pills, 15¢ we, diver pills, 2 for 25¢ ve baby cough syrup, 15e gripp tablét, 20¢. 3 Kkovah health salt, 2c. 25¢ tooth paste for 15¢c. 25¢ foot powder for 15c. Six Canadians will shoot final stage of the bisley to-day. Senator T. O. Davis of Prince A! bert declares he will reintroduce his anti-tipping bill. Gibsons in the King's prize at | To Banish Wrinkles and Freshen Up Quickly After a #renuous day outdoors, h winds, heat and exhamstion have whined to take away one's freshness and caused the skin to wrinkle and sag---or after a tedious or fretful day Indoors--one often has urgent need for some quick rejuvenator. Maybe there's a tango pav¥ty on for the evening, or some other social event. How in the world can one make herself presem able, looking as she does? I's gyiie easy JdBt get an ounce of powdered sax Yite and a half pint witch hase! at t nearest drug store. mix the two Ph bathe the face in the solution for two or. three minutes. Then look into your mirror and behold the wonderful trans. format Wrinkles have vanished, loose, tired muscles have been rested and "firmed up." marks of fatigue have flown, and you ok so much brighter and yoynger ven can hardly bejleve your eves. No-one need hesitates to try 'The city was in peril. oodbury soap" at Gibson's. this. the witch hazel apd saxaolite be- ing so perfectly harmless. DROWNING ACCIDENT BARDOLPH, SUNDAY, OF AT Dedeased Was Twenty-four Years of Age--Lived With His Sister, Mrs. /H. Miller, Division Street. A particularly sad drowning oc- curred on Sunday afternoon, about 5 o'clock, in front of. Bardolph, near Huff's landing, a short distance from Napanee. Orrin Dean was the vic- tim. He has been living since he came to the city, two years ago, from To- ronto, with his sister, Mrs. Harold Miller;~212 Division street. He came originally from Hillsdale, near Bar- rie, He was 24 years old on the third f 'May. Dean and his brother-in-law, Harold Miller, left at 7 o'clock Saturday night to spend the holiday with Wil- liam Miller at Bardolph. Sunday af ternoon a t 4.40 o'clock, Dean, Harold Miller and theslatter's cousin, Overton Milter, decided to go in for a swim. Both of the Millers were good swimmers and Dean was fairly good. They had been in about twenty minutes when Dean remarked to Har old Miller about the depth of the water wheré he was, a little further out than the other two. After pass- ing this remark, he sank down in the water, presumably, to find the bottom, and . the next Harold Miller saw w his two hands up. Miller noticing the strange expression on his face, grab bed the arms and tried to move him, but the body could not be moved. He then dove three times trying to sce what was holding him under, but the third time the body fell over bhadk wards out' of sight. Miller, then, was so exhausted t he had to po aShbre. Overton Mille in the meantime had brought a hoat out and had then gone for help Grappling was started, first ith teeth from a horse rake and later with | grappling hooks obtained at the re sort. Two other men had ¢ome in the meanwhile, one of them an expert diver, and gave them help, but it tool an hour and a half to get the body Pr. T. W. Simpson, of Napanée, had, meanwhile, been Called to the scone Death had been due, in his opinion to either cramps, eavsed by rhéuma tism, to whi¢h the deceased was sub ject, or to the 'swallowing of a mouti ful of water that choked him. The survivors are, his father, Ste phen Dean, of Hillsdale, and five sisters, Mrs. 'H. Millér, of this city; | Mrs. Willis Spring, of Elmvale: Mi: Jona Dean, of Toronto; Miss Dean and Thelma Dean of Hills The body of. Orrin Dean was veved to the city on the eight o'clock | train The funeral will be at o'clock Wednesday morning from Division street Rev, G, 1. Campbell will conduct the services and funeral will be to Cataraqui terv, Ale con eleven 212 the ceme Se siosfesduofeddesdeddedosdealh fede frodedfeodedeofesded TO SEEK MEDIATION. % + London, July 28% Sir Ed ward Grey has invited the governments of Austria-Hun- gary, Servia and Russia, to suspend operations pending the result of his proposed medidatory conference in London. His suggestion in regard to the conference is that the Frenéh, German, and Italian ambassadors in Il.on- don should confer with him in the endeavor to find a means of solving the present difficulties. The German favorable principle as and Austria The Italian government in- formed Sir Edward Grey that it accepted his invitation to join in a mediation confer- ence dee de de ob Bo ob Eg - government to mediation between Russia is Bop de of oe Pr 2 Re PBIB ddd DR SD op -- | THE WHIG'S JUMBLE of Short Items Run gether. MeUonkey's \ Lot in To- 'Fresh sweets. (iby q0n's & Sulman,._ conservative, has been declared elected in West Kent Another Canadian home, rule fund + being raised to the ajnount of £20,000, Woodbury soap" at Gibson's. Ald. R. G. Spofiord, a pioneer Odd fellow of. Port Arthur, fell dead at a memorial decoration service. "masagra,"' 203c¢. and He (iiheon's Andrew Blais, North Day, lost beneath a train at Matheson An American antomatic telephone wystem has been establisned in Sim a, the summer eapital of India "Unbleached __ tooth. brushes." son 8. Irene Casey, Nottingham, Eng- land, a militant suffragette, was sentenced to fifteen months' impris- onment, 'Beautiful sponges' at Gibson's, The St, Petersburg strike, whieh threatened to develop into a revolt, is dying out and work mav soon he iesumed. "Mel onkey's son 8. 3 S'dney Drew, the actos, married Miss Lucille McVey, an actress in the Little Church Around the Cur- ner, New York. A. M. Todd, a printer, employed un- til' recently by the Maple Leaf news paper, Port Dover, was found drown- el in two feet of water. § "McConkey 's sweets" at Gibson's. With a population of over 2.400 'Pridgeburg will shortly apply to the Ontario Railway and Mnrnizipal 4card to be incorporated as a town. "Almond Cream" at Gibson's. A Toronto syndicate has purchas- ed for subdivision purposes the Davig James farm at Thosah'Y, lot 34, first concession for $39 009. "Chocolate covered. assorted nuts." fxibson 's. The khedive of Egypt was slightly wounded by a would-be assassin in Constantinople, and the 'assassin was shot dead by a membe: of the escort. * wit , Of thirty-five Hamiltonians who aubséribed for stock in BR. R. Gamey's "Flizabeth" mine, thirty-two had at ieorge bottle of fell a blacksmith, a leg when he Gilby bittersweets" at Gib LOALLL BOL OOS SESS DDL IS BDL Ls BEB DE He 0 0 ! [lis hand was thrown against the mm i Wednesday fine and moderately warm. : Of ------ \ [ f TO MORROW ) No Approval The Best Chan You'll 'Have 'Getting a Genuine Bargain in This Summer - we place on sale a dainty garments--well made of silk mulls, (loral crepes, pongeesilk ete, that were priced from $6.00 to $14.00. For Wednesday Your Choice . . full line of these $4.90 Sales (ash Don't. Miss Such An Opportunity Steacy's FINGER WAS SEVERED ACCIDENT TO A FACTORY EM PLOYEE AT GANANOQUE. Water Power Company Shuts Down Till August 15th--The Gananoque Civic, Holiday 19th. Fixed for August 28. --~David Beth street, emploved in of the Wheel limited, with a painful ind severe mishap while running a in that July Broek Gananoque, um, jr., of works the Ontario company, met AW establishment vesterday say severing the middle finger o hand at the middle joint I'he Gananoque ater Power com pany has arranged thi of the water supply 15th to allow of necessary dams and canals.! It will bis righ shutting August repairs to ig expected that for J) back on the work take about two-week or more I'he vacht elub, whom was delegated the privile setting the date of holiday by the mayor and has decided on Wednesday 19th, at which time the A.UA at Sugar Island be in full I'he G.Y.C. will on that day full day's programme sports at the river front. John -Murchie, Toronto, is short vacation in town his parents, Mr. and Mrs \lurchie Miss Kate Elder, ston, is spending a week in town guest Mr. and Mrs. - William Allen Charles strept. Oscer V. Keating, of Winnipeg, -a former resident of the town, joined Mrs. Keating here the latter part of the week and will spend weeks the guest of his mo ther, Mrs. Parker Orser, street. 'W. W. Stafford, of Kingston, a former agricultural implement dealer of the town, was renewing ac quaintances in town yesterday. Miss Helen Arockville, arrived last pend the guest Hurd, (vananoque Gananoque's counci August meet will Swing put aquati f 0 spend with Robert King ing a of ot a few Garden Earl, of to Lyla E. week ne King evening of Miss street, The home of high class sweet's," Drug store. t olborne, were unloaded at hours, (iibson's vt Port Mi ol the th two CAYZOPS bushels government elevator in' ten world 8 record. *"Nyal"s family remedies," son's Red Cross drug store. Premier Asquith says soldiers did not exceed duties in firing on a Dub- lin mob. "The Cream," store. I'he Canadian Northern loan gets » eold reception in London, owing Lo the war scare. THE WHOLE BODY NEEDS PURE BLOOD The bones, the museles, and all the organs of the body depend for at Gib lee drug home of Neilson's Gibson's Red Cross action on pure blood. Hood's Sarsaparilla makes pure blood. It is positively unequaled in the treatment of serofula, eatarrlh, rheumatism, dyspepsia, loss of ap- petite, that 'tired feeling. There 1s no other wiedieitte fike it. Be sure to get Hood's dnd get it today. It the time a direct or indirect con- » nection with fhe liquor trade. is sold by all druggists. t - A cc AA PAM ANNAN, SAA MINN © ANNAN We this celebrated maker have just opened a large consignment oft Hundreds of new 's woods. Ha faney pieces, the verv latest productions. Don't fail to see these, whether you wish to pur- chase or not, ROBERTSON"S, " Cut Glass, Etc. LIMITED 'Special Announcement 20% Discount Off AH Electric Fixtures Until August 1st Now is ur opportunity for bargains New desigh just received. y H. W. Newman Electric Co. Phone 441. Home 13876 79 Princess Street. their strength and tone and healthy: ry en and Boys' 'Shoe Store Keep cool, wear our Oxford Shoes. Price from $3.50 10... a three Been a vas Ema 5 We carry a stock of hand-made French Kip, long and-short boats, the KINGS of working boots. Bring your old boots for repairs. We lead in that ¥ l JOHNSTON | rasan sR CIETY AY iL a, Piha ke. oo Re EER ae A

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