Daily British Whig (1850), 17 Oct 1925, p. 1

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CAPITOL NOW SHOWING REGINALD DENNY 1 ' "I'LL SHOW YOU THE TOWN" Maily B Ns e Pitish W 5 y 19 CAPITOL MON., TUES., WED, "Night Life in New Yor ------------ : » YEAR 92; No. 243. KINGSTON, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1025. LAST EDITION =; A High Tariff Wil Greatly Increase ee er ea Woman Fears For Family Market Basket This election is going to be decided by the women's vote, for there are more wo- nen than men voters' names on the Kingsston lists. see. fo it that the mistake of December, 1921, are going to make sure of the date, so that Kingston will have as its membe which is assured 8f being returned to power, according to over the country. "1 am going to vote for Mr. ( convinced that a high protection tariff would be very bad for Canada. it in any other way. There is not the slightest doubt in my mind that our industry would be given a black eye if high prote sure that the family market basket would suffer, high tariff in this country than dearer produce ? necessaries of life costing more. at Jeast remain at that and not go higher. now. { '" Another thing that I products of other countries would be that the an export duty on coal. ction was adopted. for what else could result from a We women 'dg not want to see the Prices now are reasonable all round, and let them A dollar can buy a fair amount of produce And the women are going to is not repeated in October, 1925. They election of Mr. John M. Campbell, the Liberal candi- r a supporter of the King Government, Here is what. one woman, who last time voted for Dr. Ross, says: jampbell in this election because I have become I cannot see agricultural ( { { | | | | { | i | reports coming in from all | And I am also | f { { ( ( | fear if Canada adopted a higher tariff and barred out the United States would retaliate and put We in Ontario have to depend largely upon American an- thracite coal to keep warm in winter, and it would be suicidal to take any chances of having the anthracite supply cut off. "You may 'have thought that I would vote for D cal traditions, but I do not like his leader' vote for Mr. Campbell." ad % Richardson Laboratory and Douglas Block of General Hospital Opened Dedication by Principal Taylor of Queen's to Mercy and Heal=- Ing----Addresses by Col. Kent, Dr. J. C. Connell, Chair= man- H. C. Nickle, Mayor Angrove and 3 Hon. W. F. Nickle. x Another great step forward in medical training and in the work of healing and ministering to the sick, was taken on Friday afternoon when the Richardson Laboratory and the Douglas Block of the Kingston Gen- eral Hospital were thrown opén to the public. A very large number of people' B the after: 'noon ahd made an inspection of the gs, which are complete in every way and will add very mater- fally to the equipment of the medical faculty of Queen's university and to the General Hospital. The front part of the building is the Richardson pathological labora- tory while the rear part is the clini- cal building. This building has di- A A At Nt Neh i line of the history of the Kingston General Hospital, Began Ten Years Ago. In part Dr. Connell said: "The movement which culminates to-day in this happy, function, bugan 'ten years ago. Dr, James Douglas, then ¢Haticellor of the university, was in- terested in medical education and Was paying the salaries of professors in Guy's Hospital in London, Eng- land, and in the Memorial Hospital of New York. It was he who pro- vided the first radium used in these hospitals. It was my good fortune to secure his interest in this hospital. I wish to-emphasize that this inter est was educational rather than com- passionate. Indeed, whatever has come to this hospital recently in the way of building, has come because of its association with Queen's Univer- sity, This association is not only of material valuie----it is a Retter hospi- tal in every way because of the teaching here. It is beyond ques- tion that it is to the general advant- age of the patients to be cared for in .|a teaching hospital. "H.C. NICKLE asalman, Board of Governors, King- . #ton General Hospital . Tett access to the main building of the hospital and will prove of in- ~ 'estimable value. Lt.-Col. R. B, Kent presided at the formal opening, and on the platform with him were: Mayor Angrove, Dr. R. Bruce Taylor, Hon, W. F. Nickle, K.0, Hugh C. Nickle, Dr. J. G. Fits Gerald (Toronto), Dr: J, C. Connell, 'Dr. "W. T. Connell and Mr. Elmer Davis, 5 -- Proud Day. : chairman said that it was a very d day for the hospital and id, ghd proud at presiding at the meeting to formally open the fine 'building which was the consumma- "Dr. Douglas made the scheme Possible by a generous subscription of $100,000," continued the speaker. "Before it could be spent $20,000 in- terest had accumulated. Acting upon his advice, hospital architects were (asked to make a survey and general plans, Messrs, Stevens & Lee, who Were then chosen, have been in charge throughout and have brought to us their long and varied experi- ence in hosptal construction. ' When the first survey was completed and presented to the Board, the Great War was at its height and it became necessary to postpone action. In 1920 the work was resumed and to- day we see around us the results achieved so far. Already in use are the service building, the heating plant, the laundry, the isolation unit and the addition of private rooms to the Empire wing." Heart of the Hospital, "These buildings open for inspec- tion to-day and ready for use are the heart of the hospital," Dr. Connell sald. "Here most of the teaching will be done. These public wards are for those unable, wholly or in part, to pay the cost of their care. Two floors are entirely for this pur- ¥ pose: -- On for the care of tuberculosis, igolated and arranged to take advantage of sun and fresh air. On the same floor r. Ross because of family politi- s protection policy, and that is why I must BURIED IN THE SAND FOR FIVE MINUTES Leon Currier Victim at Gorn wall--It Is Expected He Will Recover. Cornwall, Oct. 16.--To be buried under a platform for five minutes, with about three-quarters of a car of sand on top of him, and come out alive, was the experience today of Leon Currier, a young man employed by Mr. Dore, who is doing contract work for the Howard Smith Paper Mills here. The contractor was get~ ting ready for a clay pit near the beater room and the car of sand was being unloaded on a platform. Men were bracing it better to stand the weight, when the platform collapsed. Currier was at about the centre of the platform when it gave way, and got the full weight of the sand. The other workmen got out safely and worked with men from the mill in shovelling Currier out. He was given first ald by Thomas Williams, of the mill staff, while Dr. Hamilton and an ambulance were sent for. The man was hurried to the Hotel Dieu Hospital, where he received treatment, and it is expected he will recover. Urges Embargo on Nickel, Toronto, Oet.,17.--Declaring that the control of Canadian nickel has passed completely out of Canada, Norman McEachren, president of the Central Liberal Association here and one bf the two Liberal candidates contesting the riding of Toronto South, urges an embargo on nickel and other mineral products in order to stimulate their conversion into finished articles in Canada. ¢ ------ HIGHWAYNEN TRIED 10 HOLD UP ADO Mr. and Mrs. Lorne McAvany, Gananoque, Did Not Stop for Them. Gananoque, Oct. _17.--Mr. and Mrs. Lorne McAvany, when motor- ing down the road between here and owne, had quite an exciting experience whén two men attempted to hold them up. Jumping out in the middle of the road one of them pointed what was supposedly a gun, and demanded them to stop, but Mr. McAvany took the chance and step- ped on the gas instead forcing both of the men into the ditch. Mrs. Me- Avany was quite ill from the shock are four operating robms with the the Paris, Oct. 16.--Major W. J. Sus. , of Ottawa, Ont., in command of THE PREMIER TELLS ABOUT TARIFF To Further Greatest Good to the Greatest Number. THE GREAT QUESTION Of the Unity of the Country Is the fireatest of Al, Says Mr. King. London, Ont., Oct. 17.--*"We wish to work injury to nome," exclaimed Premier King last night, outlining the Government's policy on the tar- ifr. "We want to further as far as we can the greatest good of the greatest number." Mr. King described the working of the proposed tariff revision board. "We purpose as we take up the tariff, to take it up in light of the advice given to us by the board. That advice will be available to the Government. It will be available to Parliament. We feel that, guided by this experience and advice, we should be able to work out such a modification of the tariff as may be necessary, either in the way of rais- ing it in some places and lowering it in others, to give us what we need in the way of revenue and also to give our industries what they need in the way of safeguarding them against unfair competition from other parts of the world." "I have only one message to give, that is that beneath all policies more fundamental than all questions of administration, is the great question of the unity of the country, unity between all parts of the Dominion and how best that unity may be maintained." . | siRhe tariff issue, Me, might have been left altogether out of account in this contest. Conference Ended In Blaze of Glory Locarno, Oct. 17.~Europe's security conference ended early this morning, literally in a blaze of glory. Throughout the night there were fireworks, music and danc- ing to commemorate the initial. ling of the pacts which the Al- lied and German statesmen have formulated with the idea of a new Europe arising from the old slough of discord. ---- i ---- OSLERS TO PLAY. With the Cleveland Shale Brick Team on Saturday. Toronto, Oct. 17.--All arrange- ments have been completed by the Osler Baseball Club to bring the Col- lingwood Shale Brick team of Cleve- land here to-day for a contest to de- termine possession of the Barney Pennock Shield. The Cleveland team are amateur baseball cham- pions of the United States and are practically the same squad that re- presented the Bauer's of Cleveland here several seasons ago. It has been decided to play at Hampden Park. At _two o'clock the teams meet in an exhibition with "Irish" Rasson pitching for Oslers. At 3.30 the chafhplonship game takes place and it was likely that Spring would twirl for Oslers. ROBBERS SENTENCED i ----. To Eight Years and To Get Twenty Lashes, Nanaimo, B.C., Oct. 17..--Pleading guilty to the robbery of $42,000 from the Nanaimo branch of the Royal Bank of Canada on Dec. 12th last, Edward Gorman, T. H. Castro and T, H. Johnson were late yes- terday afternoon sentenced to terms of eight years in penitentiary and twenty lashes each by Magistrate H. Bever-Potts. . the Cost of Living in Canada PEPE PP EERIE ¥ EX EEE EE EE EERE * TWELVE KILLED BY * RAILWAY COLLISION, A GUARANTEE OF 75 ATIENTS FOR MOWAT Made By the Hon. Dr. S. H. Beland, Minister of DS.CR., to Jobn M. Campbell, Presi- dent of the Kingston Health Association. On Friday afternoon Mr. John M. Campbell, newly-elected president of the Kingston Health Association, received the following telegram from Hon. Dr. H. 8. Beland, Minister of Soldiers' Re-Establishment: Bressana, Italy, Oct. 17. -- Twelve persons were killed and twenty injured yesterday when a freight train crashed into a passenger train bound from Milan for Genoa. The victims were mostly peasants, 4 * # * * * * + * * * PFPA PEFR PIPPS Fifty Convicts Are Given a Three Weeks' Holiday London, Oct. 17.--Fifty con- victs at Maidstone jail were given three weeks' holiday in the Isle of Wight as a reward for good conduct. They were lodged at the Camp Hill penal establishment, where they did only light work 'durin their vacation, and where they were in the midst of the beauties of Parkhurst forest. They returned to Maidstone last night in an ordinary motor coach, attired in ordinary civil- fan dress, but they resumed their old positions as prisoners in the jail. BISHOP FALLON MAY BE HONORED BY POPE Claim Bishop of London Dio- cese Will Be Created Car- dinal if Two Named. "Quebec, Que., Oct. 16. " Am instructing D.M.8. to make arrangements for seve enty=five patients for Mowat Sanatorium. Lil (Signed) "H. 8. Beland." This means that the future of the Mowat Sanatorium is assured. It requires one hundred patients to adequately con= duct this institution, and now that the Minister of Soldiers' Re« | Establishment has guaranteed that the Dominion Government. will place seventy-five soldier patients in the Mowat, the Kingston Health Association has had a big burden lifted from! it. Enough other patients from the district can be secured to 3 make up one hundred at any time. 4 The Mowat Sanatorium means a great deal to Kingston, as $110,000 is expended there ea ch year. There is a large staff attached to the Institution, and the merchants of Kingston benefit greatly. tice a) sins, w London, Ont., Oct. 17.--Intima- tion from Quebec that Pope Pius XI. is likely to name two Canadian cardinals early in December, prompted Sir Philip Pocock, promi- nent member of St. Peter's Cathe- dral parish, Wednesday, to reiter- ate his opinion, expressed three months ago, following the death of Cardinal Begin, Quebec, that Rt. Rev. Michael F. Fallon, D.D., bishop of London, should be honored by the gift of the red hat. "Should two cardinals be ap- pointed," observed Mr, Pocock, "it is more than likely that one would be French-speaking, as have been all previous Canadian cardinals, Mr. Campbell, who was elected president of tlie Health Association on Wednesday, Immediately got in touch with Hon. Dr. Beland, and the above guarantee of patients was forthcoming within forty-eight hours, i ¥ FRONTENAC WARD PROMISES J. M. CAMPBELL A BIG VOTE Pere Wek 0 Pos Liberal Cas No. 15 Expeeted to Roll Up Record Majority The Liberals of Frontenac ward cheerfully of the local situation as held another of their enthusiastic Towed by those who were in a posi= oh to know and judge. There and syccesstul weekly. Weetines. on he stated, no a concerning. hr Friday evening. The ward head- Campbell's election. The Mowat Hoa quarters at the corner of Montreal pital poll would not this time be and John streets was overcrowded, closed before 3 p.m. as it was in the and many people assembled on the |last federal election, and the result walk outside to listen to the pro- would be a far different story. Dr. ceedings. The chair was occupied by Ross's control of the situation vase thing of the past, Mr, Guild touo! R. J. Allen, a sub-division chairman, who has done valiant service for the upon the tariff question, sh that a 'moderate customs tariff work: electors in this part of the city, He |®d for the benefit of the people introduced a number of- speakers, most of whom were workers in a whole, rather than for the favo! few who under high protection Frontenac ward, and they one and all testified to the growing popu- could enrich themselves at the larity of the Liberal cause and to Mr, pense of the workers. He expres the opinion that neither the praf J. M. Campbell's splendid chances of an overwhelming victory. provinces in the west nor the m time provinces in the east wou support the higher tariff platfo ofYHon. Arthur Meighen and . hi Among those who addressed the | party; they realized that tariff gathering were T. Doolan, of the| only another name for tax, : Canadian Locomotive Co. staff; Ald. | they were heartily behind Prem le King in his efforts to reduce Joyce, Ald. Dunphy, Norman Davy, J. McGuire, Ex-Ald. H. F. Norman, Mrs. C. Walker, Lenmian A. Guild, past president of the Liberal Associa tion, and others. Ald. Joyce reported tion, on the result of the canvass that had Chairman Allen, on being call upon by the meeting, told of a béen in progress in the ward, and was most optimistic In his con- conversation with a prominent clusions. This ward had done servative lawyer, 'who in the con splendidly in past elections, but there of a business ' discussion, rel that conditions in the rural dist cts was every indication that its record this year would be better still. No. were growing rapidly better. Mo 156 sub-division would roll up the money had come into his office dui ing the past two months, in paym of notes and mortgages, than he Seen in a long time, thus she conclusively that. the farmers biggest majority ever given to a|once mare enjoying a good n Liberal candidiate. 5 Mrs. Walker peported for the lad. fes, and the same note of healthy optimism pervaded her remarks. The ward had been thoroughly orgamiz- lish-speaking. Appointments of this nature would not be made in any competitive sense, but rather fol- lowing out the diplomatic policy of the Roman Catholic church, in do- ing its utmost to recognize out- standing services among the differ- ent groups which make up the en- tire body of the church. "And thus as the second of two cardinals," concluded Mr. Pocock, "no priest could be more deserving or more capable of discharging the duties of such an high office than Bishop Fallon, who as bishop of the diocese, of London, has rendered signal service to- the church, parti- cularly along educational lines." His. Grace Mgr. Emard, arch- bishop of Ottawa, is mentioned as a probable cardinal for the Domin- fon. REV. MR. FEE MAY NAME A SUBSTITUTE To Oonduct Service for Pres- byterlans In 8t. John's Church, Pittsburgh, Toronto, Oct. 17.--Mr. Justice Logie this morning, on motion of the non-concurrents of St. John's Pres- byterfan Church of Pittsburgh town- ship amended the order, which pend-, ing appeal as to the ownership ot chureh property, provided for the use of the church on alternate Sun- days by both sectiohs of the congre- gation. When this modus vivendi was originally arranged, it was pro- vided that non-conéurrent services should be conducted by Rev. W. M. Fee, minister of. the Continuing Presbyterian church, but on a re- cent Sunday Mr. Fee was unable to attend and the services were con- liquidate their debts is deserving of on the ground that the court order Mr. Guild brought greetings from | three rousing cheers for King Jets being conducted by the nom- inee Mr. F £3 , F dnb on the ground that Mr. Jus. : the support of the people. specifically provided for Mr. Fee to | the general association, and spoke | Campbell. Fee as well as by Mr. ® Liogle had/mo jurisdiction to| Lundar, Man, Oct. 11.--Right MeKeows Oliver order on : of prosperity. A government unde tenac Ward's weekly meeting ducted by his nominee, Objection ed, and the lady workers were well | brought to a close with the conduct the services 'and no one else. | = ii Mr. Justice Logle's "amendment |" Le Fee in person. = R. 8. Robertson, on behalf of the hr el maken Hot Hon. Arthar Meighen and Harr) When Mr. which the agricultural workers was taken to this by the unionists, | pleased with the prospects. of the national anthem, and provides for the non-concurrent ser- Mr. M . h "and His P essive 0 E trustees of the church opposed the [for the federal seat of Portage la:

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