Daily British Whig (1850), 30 Mar 1916, p. 5

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. 30, 1916. THE WORK IN WHICH BISHOP LUCAS 18 ENGAGED, For Quarter Of Century He Has 1A. . bored Among The Indians and Es. quimax--Description Of the Dio- | Right Rev. Dr. Lucas, Bishop MacKenzie River Diocese, who prea- ched in Kingston on Sunday, and who was the guest of Dean Starr left for Toronto on Monday . afternoon, and later on wil} start on his long journey home. His Lordship who made the journey from his far-off field of labor to Kingston, came es- TE bid good-bye to a couple PROPERLY HARVESTED. | Mild Weather Early In Season Caus. ed Much Anxiety, But Icemen Are Well Satisfied. \ Kingston's big ice crop has been harvested. The ice houses of the Kingston Ice Company have been filled to overflowing, and in addition to this several merchants who get in a supply of ice for cooling pur- poses have also filled up their ice houses. In spite of the fact that there was such mild weather the fore part of the winter, the supply of lee is of the very best quality. The Jee Company had a long time to wait, but when OldMan Winter final- ly settled down to work, shere was very aopn good ice, and lots of it. There a large staff of men-and horses on the job, and the crop was secured in record time. "We have lots of ice, and it is of fine quality," remarked one mai, when asked by the Whig. "There need be no worrying about the sup- i ply during the warm weather." * The weather was so unsettled the first part of the winter that it was feared that the ice crop would be rather small. However, there was a severe cold snap all February, and nearly all March, and for this season there were no further complaipts re- garding the Weather Man. Some of the ice was harvested in { exceedingly cold weather; in fact, | the weather was so cold one day the {| men had to quit work. : | In view of the fact that the hotels {are to be cut off from selling liquor { this fall, they will not néed as large a supply.as usual. However, all the | ice 'which could be cut in the time | offered was hauled to the shore and - properly stored. The mild wea- | ther of this week has been hard on | the ice bridge, and a dreak-up is now / 8; . A Gooll Time. Sergt. and Mrs. D. O. Edgar enter- pamphlet. | tained a number of their friends at THE COOK MEDICINE C4. | their home, 17 Ellis street, on Wéd- - TORONTO. ON" (rurmeris Windwe! | nesday evening. ~~ Music and games AAA Ar _-- | were indulged #¥. George Brennan H EAR | rendered a couple of greatly appreeci- The Piano Player | ated solos.: Those present "were and Piano| Misses Manign, L. Lyons, K. Derry, WEESE'S | P. Richardson, L. McDonnell, a. Now on Sale. | Cook, and Messrs. V. Farley, E. Van- {order, R. Grimshaw, G. Brennan, | Dainty refershments were served, Picture Framing Neatly Done. Prices Reasonable. % , Weese at it again' {the table being prettily decorated 168 PRINCESS. Smart Looking Footwear for Women With our new footwear your feet will look: neat and trim. 'We are showing some good looks ing values in patent and Jha "kid, -button or Stanley Trotter, president of the City N League, is planning to call a mdeting of the league about the second' week in April. At this meeting the ef the year will tal hy When speaking to the Whig, the president stated that he was looking forward to one of the biggest years in the history of the league. Vie- tovias, the old reliables, will have a team and it is expected that Athlet- ics and Ponies will also enter. There appears, however, to be some doubt about Athletics having a team on ac- count of so many of their players enlisting for overseas service, or be- ing out of the city. Victorias and Ponjes have also contributed men to the cause, On account of. there being a sum- mer session at Queen's, the chances are that the students will put a team in the City Lehgue. If they apply for admission the league will grant their request. tion of officers for \ of his Sgns who are leaving for the front ly with the 53rd Battery, to do their "bit" at the front, For a quarter of a century, Bishop Lucas has been engaged on the Mac- Kenzie River Diocese, and he is now a veteran in missionary work among the Indians and Esguimaux, He loves his work, is a most entertaining speaker and has a most interesting story to tell. Bishop Lucas was consecrated in Holy Trinity Church, Winnipeg, in 1913, by the Arehbishop of Rupert's Land. He is located at St. Paul's Mission, Chipewyau, Alberta, The Bishop's wife is an active worker in the diocese, and during the absence of the Bishop conducts the services for the Indians. How would you like to he 250 miles away from your nearest neigh- bor? Port Simpson is the nearest]: mission station to the Bishop, and the travelling he has to do, by canoe | in summer time, and by dog sleds, | can well be imagined. : That the work is progressing nice- ly, is the encouraging statement Bis- hop Lucas has to make, in speaking of the diocese. A discriptive of the Diocese of MacKenzie River will be of interest. This diocese was separa- ted from the Diocese of Rupert's Land, in 1873, and from Athabasca in 1884, and divided in 1890, portion west of Ruskins forming the | Diocese of Selkirk (now Yukon but | it still remains one of the largest colonial dioceses. The Mackenzie Dio~ cese covers 600,000 re miles, and | has a populdtion-ef6,000, "Just 100 | square iniles for every inhabitant," remarked the Bishop. The Indians in the Mackenzie Ri- ver are few in number, and are scat- tered over a vast country. In the spring and fall they bring their furs | to the forts of the Hudson Bay Com- pany, Several different tribes of Indians Jace... ieee h of hs White Kid Lace Boots to order, only $9.00 i deserves -- theBest & gets it. ro» In 35,1 and 2 pound cans. Whole -- ground -- pulverized -- also Fine Ground for Perco- lators. Sporting Notes. It is an open questicn whether the Toronto professionals will play la- crosse this summer, according to Charles Querries. There was no mo- ney in the game a year ago, he con- tinues, and the players who were in the habit of drawing down from $25 to $100 a week just went out and took 'little or nothing, but had quite a lot of fun. If was rumor- ed that there would be only one team in Toronto and they would play in the N. L. U, with Cornwall, Sham- rocks, Nationals and the M. A. A. A. No salaries would be paid, and all the boys would get would be the ex- ercise and a few trips to the east. The American National Hockey | Association is as yet in the air, but is 'apparently going to be profess- sional organization under an am- ateur guise. President Fitzgerald of Chicago (where there is no team or hockey) says: 'The principal object of the movement now under way is to organize all the hockey interests in the United States, so that we will | have some power when we act, and that one club will stand back of the others. An American hockey team, the St. Paul team, won thg Art Rosy Cup fairly and squarely. The Can- adian hockey authorities have refus-| ed to turn it over. If we were ll | are located in this Diocese, Chipewyn allied together it would not take| Dog Rib, Nehaney, Mountain, Hare, long to bring them to their senses." | Tene, Tukudh, each tribe speaking | Though Ottawa will not have any |a dialect differing more or less from league baseball this summer, it is|its neighbor. The Diocesan school at likely that a series of semi-profes-| Hay River made great progress un- sional] games will be arranged for|der Rev. A. J. Vale, and has now Lansdowne Park and Dupius Park. |about forty" boarders besides day Manager Shaughnessy has several | scholars. The expenses are heavy, and offers under consideration, the War-| in order to meet the requirements of ren, Pa. c¢lub being after him day | the Government, which gives a per and night, but the Ottawa pilot has | capita grant, new buildings must be built up an 'insurance business ing erected at once, involving a very the Capital -and may decide to re-| heavy expenditure. The Mission isin majn. He stated yesterday that he | need of financial assistance. had under consideration the plan An interesting and an encourag- to. have a number of - exhibition | ing work is being carried on among matches here, He and Cozy. Dolan | the Esquimaux on the Arctic Coast, of last year's Ottawas, will be avail-| and a station bas been established on able and in addition there are a| Herschel Island, and at Kittigagzooit number of crack ball players in the | opposite the eastern end of Richard's Capital and Hull island. Many are showing a desire Commenting on the Willard-Mor-| for instruction and the prospects are an fight the New York Times says: | of the brightest, --Boxing has never before held the It is of interest to note that forty * high place in public estimation that! years ago, there were only three mis- | ts & S t it does at the present time. The Wil-| gionaries and two Stations in this dis- | coa ul 8 lard-Moran bout attracted & crowd | trict, one at Fort Simpson, the other | OUR STOCK OF ROTH.1S LARGE AND the nature of which, especially in|at Fort Yukon, more than a thous-|.. . o _ Co RIED character, has never before witness-| and miles apart. MacKenzie River, Up-to-date Sults ..87. ed a glove contest. When conduct-| with Athabasca and Selkirk, formed ed by a capable governing body and | part of Rupert's Land, now all three held within reasonable bounds, box-| have each a Bishop, clergy, churches ing is a sport which appeals to al-|and schools, and five of the Trikudh most all men. It never has been, | Indians have been ordained deacons. and perhaps never will be, a pastime Just a short time ago, a new tribe | {for which women Can have much |of Eskimo were discovered east of | { fondness. It is a man's game, for | the Mackenzie River, north of Great Bear Lake, in the Coppermine River 271 PRINCESS STREET. {men to look at and acclaim. Con- | ducted as Saturday night's bout was | district. It is dificult to form any es- timate of their number, but it is said | at Madison Square Garden, boxing i ¥ "to be between 1,000 and 1,500. becomes a sport which 'commands | INPERFERES WITH THE the support of those who are meed\| Phe following statistics are given | INTER To wie iE od to keep aM kinds of sport clean | of the dipcese: i and square. Clergy, 9: lay agents, 5; motive| boarding schools, 1; day schools, 4; Vessels Often scholars, 90; communicants, 260; church population, 1,200. ------ BEEP PEP RPP ERR PR REPT Home-Made Candy and Chocolates Fresh Made Every Day - SAKELL'S . Phone 640 Next Opera House. "SPRING FURNITURE | ---- THE PARLOR wook's Cotton Root Compound, A TIMELY TALK ON HATS FOR MEN Campbell's, the " big hat dealers, are receiv- ing new sfock from the leading hat factories of the world almost daily, and are: showing very many nobby styles, par- ticularly in soft hats, which promise to be even mare populap than ever this season. Select Yours Now, $2.00, $2.50, $3.00, $4.00. Campbell Bros. For new styles in Men's Hats. 84 Princess 8%. Fe | with pink and white carnations. | Toasts were proposed to the bride | and groom, which were well respond- ted to. The party broke up at a lates hour, all voting a pleasant even- | ing spent. nde Four handsome pieces -- Settee, Rocker and Arm- chair and pedestal in mahog- any finish, all for ...$32.50 Went Through Ice, It was reported to the Whig Wed- | nesday afternoon, that 'two teams @| ha® gone through the ice crossing | to Barriefieldy from the slip near i came to grief just before moon and the other early in the 'afternoon. | one of the animals is suffering from , Pneumonia, as a result of the cold {longed to Mr. Gillespie, of Pitts- | burgh township. "There shoujd be | warn the people of the danger' said a citizen to the Whig, ED or Try Cooke's for Photos 159 Wellington Bt. Opp. Golden Lion Gro- cery DINING ROOM Complete, eight pieces, fumed oak, for \ Consisting of Buffet, with cane panels, 6 leather seated chairs, including one large Arm-chair, also round pedes- Spring Over- tal base Extension Table. . g Repairing promptly and neatly { Tete de Pon{ Barracks. One team Both were rescued, but it is stated " | ducking it got. One of the teams be- {some sign there night and day to A Am bam Ru tient Fresh haddock, 8c 1b, bert's. at Gil EN attended to. James Reid, The Leading Undertaker. Phone 147 for personal services . : ° ® | The Allies Will Shine ALL THIS WEEK AND CONTINUE TO SHINE AT 320,PRINCESS STREET. FIRST CLASS TOBACCO STORE. Call and give us a trial. Our $18 and $22 Suits Are Superior to a $35 Teller-made Swit. BOOTS, SHOES, RUBBERS, ETC. Spring stock of Fine Hats just in. ISAAC ZACKS, / : | good running order, self starter, electric lights and | good tires; to be sold cheap. Also Ford body, with Letters To The Editor] Hot Water for ~~ Sick Headaches . Don't Burn Your Waste Paper. Kingston, March 29.--(To the { Editor): The season for "spring cleaning"" is approaching, when housekeepers begin to groan over the winter's accumulation of old ; newspapers, etc. Just now we are! fl : } frequently reminded that it is a pa-| Heidache of any kind, is caused by triotic duty to make the most of all |auto-intoxication--which means self- we have, and though in Canada we; poisoning. J WORK Tells why everyone should drink hot water with phosphate In it before breakfast. Meet With Trouble Coming Into the Kingston Harbor --Incorrect Findings Are Register. ed. °| It may not be generally known, but the fact that there is iron in the For Sale Cadillac Automobile Chassis, 1912 Model, in In after years a man rejoices be- cause of the failure of youthful am- bitions. « As long as a man does his leve best he isn't going down hill, | | i i QUEEN'S top, in first class condition, at reasonable price. WELLINGTON STREET Porritt Garage Co, - Limited 7 Had Terrible Pains in Kidneys and Back. Dear My. Editor--I want to write ® Anuric." 1 was very sick, could be up; I was in bed most of the ing in my kidneys had to i d Had terrible 'back, Ef so that iH 2 wo git Hi BL « "Parlors are giving way. fo Living Rooms, . furnished with big easy chairs and a Chesterfield --_there is so much solid comfort you never re- _gret the purchase. oo. a Rugs that stay regardless of wear -- AX- minster, Wilton, Oriental effects, ete. Repair and uphiojstesing promptly done. Phone/90, - Yours = you [ i | | i i i g 3 £ g F EF f i : : E : i HOSPITAL GOES TO FRANCE. > rocks along the short of Macdonald Park, and other parts of the water- Lieut.-J. C, Connell received % front in and around Kingston, have oi: 3 "| given marine men some trouble, + a communication from the Brit %* Thewiron 'n the rocks has-been # ish War Office on Wednesday to *| 0 1 oang of affecting the compass & 'the effect that No. 7 General &| 4 Hospital is being removed from % on board a vessel, and as a result # Cairo, Egypt, to France, and +| captains have been a mile and some- # that the Queen's reinforcements do not feel the scarcity of paper as they do in Britain, where many news- papers have had to reduce their size, and in some cases to suspend publi- cation, yet we are often warned hy the wasiage of our pulpwood gnd the increasing price of paper, that it certainly should not be wasted. Even our old papers need not be altogeth- | times a mile and a balf out in their ings. & which left here recently will #| find A report has been going the : Join the hospital in France, 2 rounds to the effect that trouble of +o this kind had been experienced, and CEE + HEEL E EE idee the Whig asked a prominent marine London Druggists man about it, At a meeting of London, Ont, "Yes, that is the case," was his druggists, a resolution, following a reply. "Iron in the rocks has been short discussion, was sent to J. A. the cause of putting a compass Roberts, of Parkhill, district repre-|¥ sentative of the Ontario College of Pharmacy; to Andrew Johnston, pre- sident-0f the Ontario Uollege of Pharmacy, and to Sir Adam Beck, expressing the view that the sale of liquor should be handled exclusive- ly by the Government, and not by the druggists. * Mr. Johnston is Working im con- junction with Hon. W. J. Hanpa on the prohibition issue, while Sir Ad- am will be asked to put the matter 'before the House. . rong. . On a dark or foggy. night the com- pass hag to pe relied upon entirely by a captain bringing his vessel into Kingston.- Of course on a clear night, a compass is not required. LOSS OF APPETITE Most Successfully Treated by Taking + Hood's o Loss of appetite is accompanied by ~ --_-- loss of vitality, which is serious. . Are Very Grateful. J. Gilbert and -Ex-Mayor Dan Couper have received a courteous letter I Major Craig, 59th Bit- talion, kville, asking them to again thank the subscribers for the $300 Gurney Field Kitchen on be- aalf of Lieut-Col. Dawson and mem- bers of thg 69th. He writes: "The kitchen has been of valuable source to us ufter long marches and as we are eating the warm meals feelings of gratitude goes out to the. good- hearted subscribers of the old Lime- stone City and to J. Gilbert and Ex: Mayor Dan their ef- at this time the blood is impure and impoverished and fails: to give the digestive organs what is absolutely necessary for the proper perform- ance of their functions, Hood's Sarsaparilla, the old able all-the-year-round medicine, is especially useful in the spring. Get it from your druggist to-day. . By purifying and enriching the blood and giving vitality, viger and tone, it is wonderfully successful in the treatment of loss of appetite and the other ailments prevalent at this time. It is not simply a spring 'that - Some hair is prematurely gray and some is prematurely dyed. It is common in the spring because her "waste paper," as they caw be turned to good uses by the firms that buy them in large quantities. It is hoped that many will remember that the Y. W. C. Association is hoping to get some assistance in paying for necessary repairs by sending a car- load of old papers, pamphlets, etc., to Toronto, to be turned to good ac- 'count, This is better than burning them, and less dangerous! \ WASTE NOT, WANT NOT. None From St. Andrew's. Kingston, March 29.--(To the Editor): Om reading over the list of delegates appointed by the King- ston Presbytery to the meeting of the General Assembly in Winnipeg next June, one is struck by the fact that not one member of old St. An- drew's church was chosen, The other bad three city churches are represented, along with Queen's College. Why was the mother Presbyterian church of}! Kingston thus ignored. It would ap-] pear that a strong band of church unionists was desired for the Assem- bly. Chalmers, Cooke's and Zion churches vote union, while St. An- drew's went strongly against it. The Presbytery's selection of delegates is unfair and a Tefiaction on St. An- drew's. --P] YTERIAN Real Estato Transfer. E. W. Mullin and Son report the etached brick dwelling, No. ¥83, on the east side of Alfred street, gene >» J. F. Singleton, to Capt. . AG, ; Liver and bowel poisons called 4oxins, sucked into the blood, through the lymph ducts, excite the heart which pumps the blood so fast that it congests in the smaller arter- tes and veins of the head producing violent, throbbing pain and distress, called headache. . You become ner- vous, despondent, sick, feverish and mjserable, your meals sous and al- most gauseate you. Then you re- sort 'to acetanilide, aspirin or the bromides which temporarily relieve but do mot rid the blood of these: ir- ritating. toxins. t A glass of hot water with a teas spoonful of limestone' phosphate in it, «drank before breakfast for awhile, will not only "wash these poisons from your system and cums you of headache but will cleanse, purify and freshen the entire alimentary camal. . Ask your pharmacist for a quarter pound of limestone 2 SRE is inexpensive, - harmless as sugar, and "almost tasteless, except for a Soutish twings which is pot unplea- = san 3 i _If you aren't feeling your best, tongue is coated or you wake up taste, foul or have

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