Daily British Whig (1850), 19 Jan 1922, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

ALLEN NEXT WEEK The Queen of Sheba i Tie ily British Whi ALLEN The Way of a Maid ------ YEAR 80; No, 15. KINGSTON, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, JANUARY, 19, 1923. | PROBE INTO DARRY FIR 1 Provincial Fire-Marshal Hea- ton to Hear Evidence Next esday. E. P. Heaton, provincial fire mar- , Toronto, was in the city »>% a morning, and arranged for the holding of a probe into the cause Of "he fire which destroyed the East- Ontario Dairy Schqol, on Tues- y morning, and also to make an ir- ¥estigation into the methods of fight- tng the fire, the water supply and @verything in regard to the confia- gmtion. R. F. Bldott, chairman of the elvie utilities commisecion, other prominet citizens will be given an opportunity to verify charges made that tnere 'was a great leakage in some of tne hose. Experts will also be called to give evidence in regard to the watar pressure. The evidence will be taken under oath. The investigation will hé held mn the city council chamber on Wednas- day afternoon next at 2.30 o'clock. Mr. Heaton returned to Toron'o @t noon on Thursday, after making the preliminary arrangements for the probe. BRITAIN AND VU. 8. MAY MAKE TREATY, Towards Improving St. Law-| rence River Between Mont real and Kingston. Washington, Jan. 19.--Negotia- tion of a treaty between the United States and Great Britain looking to- ward improvement of the St. Law- rence river between Montreal and NEWS OFF THE WIRES IN CONDENSED FORM | Tidings From Places Far and IN Near Are Briefly Recounted. | Dublin cabinet share {government offices. A Winnipeg police clerk regains a {ten million dollar estate. | James Jackson, young C.P.R. em- ployee, was killed at. North Bay. None of the cabinet ministers {seeking re-election in Quebec con- stituencles are opposed. Unemployed men are to be given [two months' work by the Bathurst Lumber Co. in Bathurst, N.B. H. W. Wood was re-elected presi- dent for the seventh consecutive | time, of the United Farmers of Al- berta. Armed men raided the police bar- racks at Charlestown, county Mayo, | Ireland, and escaped with guns and ammunition, During 1921 tourists and climbers to the number of 107 were killed in the Central and Eastern Alps, most- ly from falls. 5 Sir Arthur Currie will be the uni- versity day orator at the Washing- ton birthday celebrating of the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania. Hon. James Murdock, minister of lapor, received am acclamation for Kent county at the nomination meet- ing held on Thursday. | Opposition to Hon. W. R. Mother- | well has not made itself manifest in | Regina, Sask., and it is considered {that he will get an acclamation. | Net fishing in Lake Nipissing is {to be discontinued for a period of | three years. Fish hatchery at North | Bay for this lake is under consider- | ation, | Comparative earnings of the !Grand Trunk Railway System for |the period ending Jan. 14, 1922, $1,- [666,694; 1921, $2,088,691; decrease [$421,907. | France's new ministry made its {official bow to the country on Thurs- {day with the reassembling of parlia- ministers {ment to hear the statement of policy rie 4% bv ramier Poars soto" ar the Atlantic ocean may be expected to be undertaken soon, it was said today at the White House. The arrangement. of such a treaty is recommended in the report of the international joint commission. President Harding, it was said at the White House, is much interested in the project and intends to lend his influence toward early diplomatic ef- FUNSY CARD OF CLs A PRL T0 THE RACE " A Scrawny Species of Women x ase Result of Foolish Dress. Chicago, Jan. 19.--Flimsy garb of girls spells peril to the race, Dr. Clara P. Seippel, eminent woman's ~ @pecialist, yesterday. The sturdy + type of ican womanhood is be- coming ext and a frail, scrawny species is in process of evolution, the Physician declared, "There is no doubt," sald Dr. ppel, "but that the girl of today not as well developed as the one * ot twenty years agb. Now we have the girl of etraight lines, not the well-proportioned girl of yeSteryear. "The girl of today, dressed in thin silk hose, short skirts and satin pumps, has no protaction against the cold. She may as well wear no- thing from the knee down: This causes the body to become frail, as the bodily heat, so necessary to pro- "per development, is dissipated. A ago girls were mutfied ears to feet, as men are today. - "The modern girl has an insati- able desire for candy. This is be- cause heat of the body is spent rap- ddly,' due to scant dress. It is nat- ure's way of trying to furnish more me for the tissues.' Dr. Seippel stated many of the ills of womankind are caused by con- _@tant exposure over a period of years. This condition is aggravated, &he said, by the present day tendency of young gins to stay out late at ight, thereby missing the rest so Mecessary to proper development. mt was reached by hinese and Japanese delegates the coal and {ron mines in isochow leasehold in Shantung bbe operated by a company to be ¢ under a special charter by @ Chinese government. eagues, i | It is expected that a decision in [the Bullock appeal will be handed {down Thursday afternoon by Hon. Senator Bostock, acting minister of | immigration, who is reviewing the documents. The Buffalo city council on Wed- nosday declined to entertain a re- solution by Mayor Schwab urging congress and the stace legislature to legalize the manufacture and sale of light wines and beer: The British motor schooner Ber- tha A. laden with 1,900 cases of liquor from the Bahamas, limped into port at New York: with her bow sinashed and two feet of water in ker hold. The London Times says that while Capadians In London united in bidding farewell to Sir George Per- ley, the Australians are uniting in welcome to Sir Joseph Cook, new high commissioner for Australia. Influenza is rapidly becoming epi- demic in Paris and the provinces. The disease appearéd in December, its ravages gaining from dey to day, the climax coming Monday when twenty-four deaths from it were re- ported in Paris, Charlie Chaplin, comedian, had a credit balardce of approximately $100,000 with the brokerage firm of E. W. Wagner and Company, New York, when the con- cern was forced into bankruptcy om December 30th last. THE "Assize jury at Toronto after short deliberation acquitted Arthur J. Claus of manslaughter by negli- gently driving the racing metor boat Leopard VI. so that it rammed the 1 | motion picture senger, on September 6th. LADY BING IS OPPOSED T0 WEDDING GET IE Will Write to Queen Mary Ex- plaining Canada's Unem- ployment Conditions. Ottawa, Jan. 19.-£Lady Byng has recently shown herself a woman of sound sense and independence of mind. On the announcment of the impending marriage of Princess: Mary, the acting president of the National Touncil of Women eet in motion efforts to raise funds for a &ift on behalf of the council. Lady Byog wag invited to lend her patron- age, but at an interview on Monday, with Mrs. Lydia Parsons, the secre- tary, she stated that after careful consideration her advice must be that in view of the extent of unem- {ployment throughout the dominion, {with the difficulties and sorrows I // which it brought in its train, the wite opens oil the bedroom on cold nights. Brrr-rrer Does Your Wife Do? LG. | Na al Council should not con- {template such a' step. | Her excellency further offered to | write personally to the queen fn- {forming her of the generous inten- {tions of the council and explaining | why it was deemed inadvisable jcarry them out. & In super-loyalist circles there may | be some criticism of this sepsible and | courageous stand, but it will win the commendation of all intelligent peo- ple and carry conviction that the present chatelaine of Rideau Hall is endowed with the invaluable gifts of real public courage and deep human sympathies. Clare III, killing J. A. Pike, a pas- DRASTIC ACTION ON PASSING OF | {Too Much Money and Too r | A PRELAT STUDENTS' CONDUCT Many Automobiles--Dis- graceful Conditions. some Chicago high schools are su that invesiigators employed by t _ board of education and paren 'Archbishop Gauthier, Former- | ly of Kingston, Dies at & | tollowing the students of both sexas Otta {after school hours, and have made | wa. | discoveries that are likely '0 result in | Ottaws, Jan.' 19.--Most Rev. | drastic action. {Charles Hugh Gauthier, archbishop | Autozobiles owned by students, or [of thé metropolitan province of Ot- | Which their parents permit them 'o {tawa, died at 2.20 o'clock this morn- |4riVe, provide the chief means for {ing, after a lengthy illness, The |®candalous performances, These are |cause of death was intestinal grippe. loaded with girle end boys and then {He was eeventy-eight years of age, | P°8!0s a round of cabarets, jazz re- |and was born in Alexandria, Glen- S0Tts, tea shops, shady flats and road es", as various ras | houses. "Lovers |garry county. His father was . y {French and his mother, Mary Mc-|9ark and deserted ts, or lone'y |Kinnon, was Scotch, roads, are called, are favorite haunts = of the students. : | The late Archbishop Gauthier was | Too much spending-money and the {educated at Regiqpolis College, ara i MISS MPHAIL AND CRERAR Chicago, Jan. 19.--Conditions in| <2 To Enter Grenville Election Campaign Against Hon. Arthur Meighen. Kemptville, Jan. 19.--A new in- terest is added to the Grenville by- election campaign by the announce- ment that both T. A. Crerar, Progres- sive leader, and Miss Agnes McPhail, M. P. for Southeast Grey, ere ex- pected in the riding to espouse the United Farmer cause. Final arrange- ments have not yet been made with Mr. Crerar, but Miss McPhail is ar- riving on Friday and will stay until the end of the fight on January 26. Thus far the Progressive opposition free use of auto: iles furnished the | Kingston. He was ordained {n 1867 {chief reason for ) scandalous {and appointed vicar-general of the | Performances. Recently two gilded | [Kingston diocese in 1891. He was | Youths were forced to drop out of [consecrated archbishop of Kingston | Nicholas high school, after the princi-| [on October 18th, 1898, end trans- |Pal had told their parents Sotue / {ferred to the Ottawa diocese on Sep- (amazing facts. Both youth were lib-! | tember 6th, 1910. Archbishop erally supplied with money and cost- {Gauthier was very, popular in both ly limousines. The boys were doing Kingston and Ottawa, and hig lov- | Pothing whatever in their classes, able disposition endeared him to [Dut were dierupting all discipline. members of all denominations. Some of the high schools have While in this city he took a special | MOre studenis than tha ordinary Eup interest in the life and welfare of |le8¢, averaging between 3,000 and [the community, and his passing' will | 4.000 pupils. It will readily be sean {be a decided loss, not only to his | Wha: a few boys, with unlimited mon- {large circle of friends, but to the |©Y and flashy automobiles can do in [district and the country at large. the way of harm. | {Wanted For Manslaughter William Alan Neilson, - president of Smith Coltege, in an address here, told of banishing limousines | Commits Suicide at Home | trom :hat institution, and said among | jother things: "The present-day girl | of college age, known as the 'Flap-| per' is a shrewd, keen, hard, worldly little thing." This goes for the present-day youth of high sehool age, who Is sub- | ject to no home discipline, and wha is a vicious influence in the public Toronto, Jan. 19.--Samuel Mizel, {who was wanted by the police in {connection with the death of Iraac | Matchett, committed eticffe by pois- {oning himself in the back yard of {his home at 191 Baldwin street, to- |day. . Matchett died a week ago as |the result of injuries sustained when struck on the head by a hammer. A Greek From Kingston : Held. at Ogdensburg Brockville, Jan, 19.--Gisilos Ker- tis, @ Greek, said to have come from Kingston, is being held by the Unit- od States immigration authorities at Ogdensburg, N'Y, on a charge of illegally entering that country snd of cashing a franduwlent bank draft for $667. When arrested Kertls was. carrying a revolver, : Respect For Treaties Is Poincare's Platform Paris, Jan. 19.--"Regpect for trea- Hes that fixed the peace terms," is the platform Premier Poincare de- cided upon to present to the cham- ber of deputies to-day. The declara- tion blames @ 'shameless' propa- ganda for the picture drawn abroad of France "as tainted with' imperial- istic madness." LATE ARCHBISHOP GAUTHIER Who died In Ottawa on Thursday morning, aged seventy-eight. 3 DIFFERS WITH PREACHERS. Education Board of London, Ont., Favors Dancing. London, Ont., Jan. 19.--The mem- Military Evacnation of Ireland. Dublin, Jan. 19.--British military evacuation of Ireland is proceeding quickly, and to-night three more battalions will leave for England. Of sixteen hundred Black and Tans about half have left. have taken up the gauntlet thrown by the preacher§ with reference to | dancing in the Collegiaty Institute, The trustees almost unanimously | expressed themselves as favorable to | allowing a dance under proper sup- ervision. They point out that they are not in favor of public dances but they look on this as a different af- fair. The dance will be staged in connection with the dpening exer- cises of the new collegiate, The preachers object on the ground that schools are public property end No Early General Election, many citizens are opposed to danc- London, Jan. 19.--It is-under- ing. Some of the trustees approve stood that the meeting of parliament [the dance because many children will be postponed for a week from | who pay school taxes are devotees January 31st to February 7th, which | of this sport. is another indication that there will | not be an early genera] election, | "Father of the Automobile." { Rochester, N.Y., Jan. 19.--George | Baldwin Selden, "father of the auto- mobile," the man wha held the orig- 1 ! Hung Crape For Own Death. | Malone, N.Y., Jan. 19--Allen Merritt, aged 45, a farmer living at Crooks Corners, near here, hung a ¢rape on the door of his home and then re-entered, went upstairs and committed suicide by hanging. | Span of Human Life - Seems Lengthening Washington, Jan. 19.--Women bers of the logal Board of Education | to ex-Premier Meighen has in some respects resembled a conspiracy ra- ther than a campaign, but the advent of these national figures should do much to lessen the over-confidence almost utiversally felt by logal Con- servatives. A further distributing element hag been injected into the campaign by the decision of North York Conser- vatives to oppose the re-election of the Liberal leader, Mackenzie King on Jaguary 26th. In Grenville it has been genemally conceded that the ma- jority of those Liberals who took the trouble of going to the polls would cast their vote.for Meighen, In view of the sersiopmivs in North York, much of this support will now be transferred 'to the Progressive can- didate. Even at that, however, lo- cal politicians are still picking Mr. Meighen as an easy winner. CROWDS HAD A THRILE Hornless Steer Ran About Shopping J)istrict, New York, Jan. 19.--A hornless steer gave crowds in the theatre ani shopping districts a new thrill yester- day when he escaped from a west sida slaughter house, and ran almos' to the East river, crossing Broadway and Fifth avenue, before being las-. soed. The Society for the Prevention of Cruelty "0 Animals provided an am- bulance to take the big fellow back to the slaughter house, and prefer- red charges of creulty against Ru- dolph Miller, who chased thd runa- way in a taxi, and lassoed him. Magis'rate McQuade released Miller, sayirg he had shown commendable resourcefulness, and had protected the public, Lady Byng's Uncle N. X. London, Jan. 19.--Canadians will the new Lord Ducie, who at the age to succeed his brother, Lord Ducie, who died at the age of ninety-fonr a few months ago. Tortworth Court in Gloucestershire is one of the great English country houses. Lord Ducie | has never returned to England since | eau has already 'publicly he left the country in 1855, " de-Elect Sails, Sixty Years of Age Bri old bride-to-be, Elizabeth Ann Free- man, of Birmingham, sailed by the Montcalm, the Canadian Pacific from Liverpool, She stated that she was going to Toronto to marry a man for whom she had been waiting for years, and who had made (good there after years of patient struggle. Heavy Increase in Idle Cars, Washington, Jan. 19.--Number of KILLED HER SISTER IN A FIT OF JEALOUSY | ! | | {Thought She Was Stealing | Her Husband's Love--Calm- i ly Makes Confession Long Branch, N.J., Jan. 19.--M Herminone Rentzmang 30, arrest {in her home in an isolatea section, {calmly confessed to the police 'hai she had shot and killed her sister, Gérnfne Wessels, 27, as she lay sleeping on Sunday morning because she feared the younger woman was | stealing the love of her husband, Frederick Rentzman, a chauffeur., "My sister tried to steal my hus- rs, ad police, simply, without a trace of emotion. : All day Sunday and Monday, Mrs Rentzman sat by ihe bed on which lay the body of her sister. Monday night she wrote her husband, who was in New York, telling him of the tragedy, and adding that she wis old child and herself. Rentzman at once returned with police detectives, who accompanied {him to the house. They found Mrs. {Rentzman in the kitchen, busied | with the evening meal. | On seeing the polick, she calmly motioned them to follow her, and {led the way to the bedroom. Her sii- {ter's body still lay on the bed. | Rentzman explained that Miss Wessels came from Germany twa months ago to make her home wi.h them. She had been there but a few days, he told the.police, when he no- | ticed his wife seemed extremely jeas | lous of her sister. | [No Consideration Given To 8chool Legislation ---- Toronto, Jan, 19.--Hon. Manning Doherty, provincial minister of agri- culture, stated yesterday, in answer to a question, that the Drury gov- ernment had given no consideration whatever as yet to proposed separ- ate school legislation, either in con- band and I killed her," she told the | about to kill their fourteen morths' | nection with corporation tax allot- | ment or separate secondary schools. | LAST EDITION DETALS ADD 70 MYSTERY No Clue to Origin of Beauty ' Powder Which Killed Student. Toronto, Jan, 19.--Details of the | little poison envelope which caused | the sudden death of Anderson Buch janan, 21-year-old law student terday, as given by Mrs. James Buch- anan, mother of Anderson, and Miss Marjorie, sister, add still further mystery to the tragedy. Pilling herself together in an ef- fort to tell all she knew of the deadly "beauty" powder and its origin, Mrs. Buchanan first noted that it was pe- |culiar that any mail order house or jadvertising firm should have her ad- ldress. So far as she could recall the | powder was delivered to her present {address at 228 Riverdale avenue or | Friday or Saturday last. It came in {a plain white envelope, her own |name being "typewritteff on it. | As to this detafl, Miss Marjorie, {who is a first form student at River- |dale collegiate, differs with her mother. So far as she can recall the envelope was a plain one, but came by mail. Mrs. Buchanan, however, thas some doubt in her mind as to whether or not there was a postage stamp on the envelope, | Both Anderson Buchanan and his | sister, Marjorie, saw the envelope {before their mother, Being address- |ed to Mrs. Anderson it was not open- ed by either of them and Miss Mar- {jorie recalls that young Anderson at |the moment remarked that it felt as though there wenré money in it. Ae cording to Miss Marjorie, also, the envelope arrived together with other | mail on Monday morning. | . Mother Opened Envelope. It was Mrs. Buchanan who opened be interested in the imminent arriv- | al in England of Lady Byng's uncle, | liner, which made its maiden trip | The minister's definite announce- ment that the government has not yet given the controversial matter consideration, however, does not ne- cessarily mean that the subject will not be introduced and debated on the floor og the Legislature. Hon. R. H, Grant, minister of edu- cation, has had sheafs of telegrams and lettérs from Ontario separate school supporters, urging what they deem fo be their rights In the mat- ter of separate schools. QUEBEC HOTEL KEEPERS WANT THE BAR RESTORED The New Lord Ducle Also That Wine and Cider Be Permitted in Beer f | Taverns. | | Quebec, Jan.. 19.--Amendments to | as Dossible this session, for it is felt | that' it would not be wise, nor is 1* | considered necessary, that the law {should be materially altered after {such a short 'rial. Premier Tdscher. expressed | the government's satisfaction however, "hat there will jamendments. A delegation ®f tha | Retail Merchants' Assoclation, ho el Hon, Jacob Nicol, the provincial treasurer, and laid down seven sepa- rate requests for consideration of the government. | The first requeét and the most im- | portant one, was that taverns should {be allowed to sell wine and cider. | The granting of this request means | the elimination of the difference | which now exists between the res'- | aurant, where wine and beer is sold with meals only, and the tavern, | with | [ the operations of the law, both mor- ! | ally and financially. It is recognized. | - be minor freight cars lying idle on January | Where beer only can be gold with. 8th was 646,673, according to fig- |OUt food restrictions, ures made pubMc by the American | The second request is that the old inal pat in this country covering live longer than men, and both the men and women of today are lMving the mechanism of a gasolne- pro- . pelied vehicle, js dead at his home | [ON8er than they did in the past. | This is proyed conclusively by fig- here, aged seventy-five yoers: | ures for the 1920 federal icensus, The Bank of Ireland loans a mil. 8de public heére. : lion pounds to the Irish provisional pee Phy a aioe SuverRment, increase of~712 in ten years, And, although the males outhumber the females in the population as a whole, there were 2,706 women jn the cen- tenarian class, compared with 1,561 WANT, SPECIAL FUND, | Tax Bachelors to Ald Rich [in ' © Children." J London, Jan. 19.--The Germen National League of "kinder Reich. en." that is the "rich in children, ned the government for Railway Association here. These | bar, or counter, ; be restored. 1t cars were not in usq because of busi- | Ws pointed ou' to the delegation ness conditions, and the number ex- | {hat this wesye matter over which ceeded by 26,000 that of any period | he Quebec liquor commission has during the past four year, it was stated. A new 17-room school to be erect- ed in West London, TT a STE A ar '| been "notoriously trafficked in | control, the law providing that the | commission: shall decide .on 'he {furnishing of establishments. Tas commission hds taken the decision that the old bar shall be abandoned The request, it is expec'ed, will not be pressed, A third demand is that in hotels beer and wine may be sold in rooms, At present they can be sold only iv the dining room with food, and in the case of beer only in specialiv set-aside rooms called taverns. This request, it is 'believed, will got very favorable camsideration. The gquest- fon will he to determine the status of a hotel. It has been suggesod 'that 26 room be fixed, but In other Quarters it is believed that the num- ber of rooms should be considerably more than 25. 'A fifth request is thet the trans? of licenses be permitted. This was eliminated in the new law because of the fact that licenses hal by those fortunate enough to get one Or fmore, and who sold them to those who fajled to secure licences from the for 1Hegalities, anew, 'It is. next asked that taverns 0% allowed to open on election days' al- Sor tho polls are cloged. and wanted to start NER old license commission, or lost them | {the envelope. She made a very has {ty examination of the contents. In- |side of the plain white envelope was a circular typewritten letier and be- {side it another small plain = white {tissue paper which contained the | powder, | She read the circular letter and Ithrew it, together with the envelope, [with the waste material in the kit- | chen. Twa points in the letter im- pressed her, One was that the pow- {ders sold at 6 for 1.50 or $2.50 per - |dozen; and that a representative of = |the company would call on her dure! jing the week, { Mrs. Buchanan placed the con» {tents of the tissue paper In a eup and placed the cup on a shelf. She in- | formed both her son and daughter {of the purported use of t' » powder, (and they both expressed a desire to {take it. The directions for use werd jcontained in the typed circulars, |namely: "Dissolve in water and {drink on retiring." Mrs. Buchanan of elghty-seven comes from Australia | the Quebec liquor law will be as tow | **'d She especially noticed the word drink. It was decided, after a few remarks between Miss Marjorie and' {Anderson that Anderson should have {the powder, his complexion not being {very clear, and so it was left on a shelf for him to take. Took the Powder, About 8 a.m. ygsterday Anderson jexpressed -a desire to take the pow~ {der at once. *'} told him he was not London, Jan. 19.--A sixty-year. | branch, waited on the premier, and |SUPPOSed to take it until retiring," {sald Mrs. Buchanan, "but he said it | wouldn't make much difference, Be- fore he took it, tough, I tasted it | myself, and it was awfully bitter, tand I told him so. I said, "You're welcome to that,' but he wanted to |take it right away. One of the things the letter sald was that a marked Improvement would be no- ticed within 24 hours, and I said to Anderson that that was a lot of non sense, because no powder could make any difference in 'any comj~ plexion in such a short time. : { + "Anyway, he took it, and the first' {thing I heard was him calling 'Moth- er, mother." When I came into the hall he was near the door, going out, and he said, 'I feel funny--as though I were drunk." He got very pale and began to shiver, but didn't make any {nolse. 1 was trying to think of {something to give him to make him { vomit, but I couldn't think of any- | thing. Then I opened the front door | and shouted to a man who WAS passe {ing to get a doctor quck, but ft was | half an hour before the first doctor (arrived, and Anderson had been {dead ten minutes. In the meantime the man next door brought ia some epicac, but Anderson couldn't swal (low it, though he tried. His throat | was choked up. | "His last words were, 'MotheF = hold me tight,' and | put my arms jaround him. He was shivering and {I held on to him as tight as I could jo he died in my arms." t { i Irish Free State Stamps, Dublin, Jan. 19. --Although it has been proposed here that the new Irish Free State have its own.post- age stamps, .minus the King's head, ithe new government , vith England to supply its stamps, on the back of which will be a Sham- | rock or Harp, with the word "Erin" jin Gaelic characters. | It is ; State will sdopt the

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy