Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star, 15 Jul 1914, p. 6

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tary correspondent 'writes startling: Shange may soon pected in the political situa- t will, after some de- wo crucial amend- s in the amending bill. The ppearance of the time limit has h 'the first point upon which the Government will, ultimately ac- second point is the question of the exclusion of Ulster, practically as * This is a much more contentious matter, and is indeed the crux of possible for Redmond and fhe Na- tionaliste to agree to this proposal, : Thay reason to believe that hg by the House of n recognized to be inevitable. the logic of the situation. The 8 whole, from the scope of the bill, the difficulty, It is, of course, im- although prominent members of the party now hold the view that, as ---------------------------------------------------- ee -- ANNOYING KING AND QUEEN. Suffragettes Howl at Them, Who Are Touring in Scotland. A despatch from Dumbarton, Beotland, says: Militant Suffrag- ettes made desparate efforts on Wednesday, to attract the atten- tion of King George and Queen Mary, who are making a tour through Scotland. At Balloch Bridge, at the foot of Loch Lomond, the women cut down all the decora- tions, and at Dalmuir, 10 miles from Glasgow, they managed to break out a huge banner bearing the words, "Your Majesty stop the forcible feeding and torturing of women,'"' across the route as the procession arrived. At the same time one woman armed with a meg- aphone howled denunciations of forcible feeding. Neither the King nor the Queen paid the slightest attention, but the crowd that had gathered to see their Majesties dis- played such a hostile attitude that the militant Suffragettes beat a hasty retreat. a FIVE DAUGHTERS AS BAIT. A Nebraska Farmer Will Give Them For Harvesters. A despatch from Giltner, Neb., says: Ambrose Huntingdon, a farm-+ er, residing west of this town, post- ed the following sign along a high- . way in front of his home: "I need five harvest hands for more than a month. Wages $3 a day; chicken once a day; washing, mending and a bed in the hay mow. Every worthy young man hired will have a chance to marry one of my pretty daughters. If he wins one of them, he gets 160 acres of land thrown in. But he's got to make good in more ways than one." Hunting- ton had more than fifty applicants. The five lucky ones are hard at work in the wheat fields. However, they are far from happy, for it has become known that the five daugh- ters, ranging from eighteen to twenty-six years, are planning to depart for an extended summer va- tation in New England. ret Wii DIED IN THE BUSH. Posses of Provincial Police Ex- change Shots With Him. _ A despatch from Quebec, says: Joseph Moraud, the demented ban- dit, who since he ran amuck with a gun shot three men on Thursday, July '2, has terrorized the village and district of Villeroy, in the County of Lotbiniere, was found dead in a hut in the woods, accord- ing to information received here by Provincial Police Chief Me- Carthy. <1 Minister, in personal communication 5 prominent member of the Opposi- Unionist. party, in order to save the country from civil war, 'recom- mend their followers to support the amending bill as -by the Lords. 2 that case, the Nation- alists will be out-voted, altho they will probably be supported by a certain section of the radical par- ty. What will follow remains to be seen, but I have good grounds for stating that, inspite of the line taken by the Lord Chancellor in the House of Lords to-day, the Gov- ernment will as a last resort, con- cede the vexed quesfion of area." Se in AA ll ll. HOMESTEAD DUTIES. Special Treatment Asked For Some Districts. A despatch from Ottawa, says: Representations have been made to the Interior Department from homesteaders in = Saskatchewan, asking for a relaxation of the home- stead laws in view of hard crops this year. The appeals received so far come from the Maple Creek district, which is usually dry land, and it is claimed that as a result of lack of rain the crops there will be very light. The request is there- fore made that the holders of home- steads be allowed to take two months off in the Fall to engage in outside threshing and other labor, and that these two months be ac- cepted as part of the homestead duties. Reports on the whole in- dicate, however, that the Western wheat crop will be a good one. yy KICKED BY A HORSE. Erasmosa Farmer Killed Within Sight of His Wife. A despatch from Guelph, says: James Patton, a farmer on the sixth line of Erasmosa, not far from Guelph, lost his life in an accident on Wednesday afternoon while at work with a hay rake. Just how the accident occurred probably will never be known. The deceased had taken the horse rake out and was working it in a field not far from the house. The horse became unman- ageable and was causing consider- able trouble. Mr. Patton, it is thought, had got off the rake and was about to unhitch the animal when he was kicked in the groin. His wife saw him pitch forward ard ran to him, but death must have been instantaneous, as he was dead when she reached him. PECAN ion NEC x HON. H. R. EMMERSON DEAD. Expired at His Home in Dorchester, After Long Illness, A despatch: from Dorchester, N.B.; says: The Hon. H. R. Em- ways in the Laurier Liberal Govern. ment and: at one time Premier of New Brunswick, died at his home here Thursday morning. Mr. Em- merson had been ill for some time and his death was not unexpected. The cause of Mr. Emmerson's death was heart failure.. All the members of Mr. Emmerson's fam- ily were present at his bedside when he died. Hon. Henry Robert Em- merson was of U. E. Loyalist des- cent and was born at Maugerville, N.B., September 23, 1853. He was educated at Amhurst Academy. MISSIN Eight Men G FROM THE KARLUK Bi tion during the last few days, and I| will cost am bin that the leaders of the |. fred B led suicide h| of Trade, now totals merson, former Minister of Rail- dered the receivers of tho Pours) ar. : by takin * Krafchenko, the Man: derer, was banged on Empress fund, opened by Mon The canadian Medical Association meeting in St. John, selected Van- couver for next year. A Chinese smuggling syndicate, with headquarters at Saginaw Mich,, is said to operate, with To- ronto as a clearing-house; through Sarnia, 'Windsor and Niagara. alls, Lord Seymour, son of the Mar- yous of Hereford, is in Ottawa with ady Seymour on his way to the Government ranch near icine Hat, where he will be in charge of the Militia Remount Department. The Dominion Government will not defray the expense of deport- ing the Komagata Maru's shipload of Hindus, now outside Vancouver Harbor, but soon to return to In- dia. Tt is up to the vessel owners. Mortgaging his farm in Rouman- ia and bidding good-bye to his wife and six children, Fontu Toder came to Canada in"April, landing at Thor- old. 'Since then he found just six days' work. He built a primitive shack, but had no food for a week until friends gave him mush and milk, and acute indegestion caused his death. The Government made an offer to the British Admiralty to send the Rainbow up to Behring Sea to carry on the British share of the interna- tional patrol, following the' sealing convention, and this will be done. The two Admiralty ships which would otherwise have taken part in the patrol, the Algerine and the Shearwater, have been gent to Mexico. 5 he Great Britain, A new arbitration treaty between Great Britain and the United States is about completed. Wd A "coroner's: jury inquiring io the death of Sir Denys Anson; who plunged into the Thames whilé on a midnight pleasure launch trip, and a bandsman who tried td save him, found that the party had been "sober but full of fun." : 'Rome has the. right name for Roosevelt,"" says A. Henry Savage- Landor the explorer. 'Th mans call him 'Pollonara," 'which means literally 'one who inflates toy balloons with gas." In reply, Roosevelt refers to his critic as "a perfectly preposterous absurdity, the buffdon of exploration." United States, : Fifteen - persons were injured, several probably fatally, when a trolley passenger car collided with a freight train near Fairibault, Minn. = Sixteen other passe: were badly shaken up. ane 1 United States Judge Tuttle or quette Railway to purchase no F eral license and to abolish immedi- ately the sale of liquor on all trains of the gystem. . Ae The Board of U. 8. General Ap- praisers has reversed tte decikion of the customs officials of. the port of Ogdenburk, 1. He effect be- ing to put al ber that ig plan- i] tongued, grooved and beaded on the free list. Sa The teaching of sex hygiene will never be delegated to the American teacher if it can be prevented by the National Education ation, This was evidenced at St when speaker after spes nounced such a course plause. me staay afiSrpoon aud negotiations. . flict with the United States. ferring to the protocal adjusted at Niagara Falls, the repont states there is no need to express ratifi- cation by the Senate. Ruiz mani- fests the willingness of the Mexican Government to treat with the re- volutionists for the restoration of the first time in Mexico expresses explicitly General Huerta's readi- ness: to resign the Presidency if thereby the Republic's political pac-. fications can be attained. ------ge on GIRL MOVED BY CRANZ. Huge Mechanism Deposits Child at Queen's Feet. A despatch from London, says: When the King and Queen were making a tour of the Beardmore works, at Parkhead, Glasgow, re- cently, a 120-ton crane began to move from the opposite end of the workshop. Great was the aston- ishment of their Majesties to find that instead of the usual huge gun a pretty little girl carrying a bouquet was the burden of the crane. She stepped off the plate at the feet of | the Queen, and with a curtsey ask- ed her Majesty to accept the flowers from the workmen with love and] their thanks for coming to Park- head. The Queen was delighted be- yond measure, Co dnc ¥ FEAR GRAFTING JUDGES MAY DIE. Chinese Consorate Urges Extreme Penalty for Two Magistrates; A despatch from Pekin, says: President Yuan Shi Kai issued a|*SX mandate recently fixing the death penalty for those officials who em- |, bezzle funds and take bribes. Now | the censorate. has impeached two Pekin magistrates for misappropri- ating funds and has recommended he d: i 2 ypison cl d with selling offices: If is evident that President Yuan intends to use the most string- ent methods in the suppression of « a Fit of 'heavy foods. This is a mi snjone can easily discover self. ; 3 A carpenter's exper my benefit others. i ae! I uged to be a ve breakfast eater but finally tion caused me such d: came afraid to eat a 'My wife ted SispeNuts 'a o! the conference of 'shock,"" the speaker said oa "f for No. 1, and {ager and 2 ns--Hand-pic g The report was| largely taken up with a rehearsal, of the events leading up to the on i 1 his audience] ib ¢ the- Association for the Prevention of Consumption on Wednesday. Let me give you a ! ,. by way of a warning. 'Tuberculosis be put into three groups. All of us who are here come in the first. If I had an instrument here with which I. could look into the chests or the abdomen of each of you, the pro- bability is that in ninety per cent. of you would be found somewhere a small area of tuberculosis. So wide- spread is the bacillus that practi- cally all humans by the time they become adults harbor the germ of the disease. 8 : "Why don't you die? Because we are not guinea pigs or rabbits, we PRICES OF FARM. PRODUCTS REPORTS FROM THE LEADING + SRADE CENTRES OF AMERICA. - Breadstuffs. to $3.50. $5; do., Sesnnds, 1 Nor- 2 nas, kera', ja jute bags, heat--Bay porte--! thern, 9 1-0, and No. 2, Ontario wheat--No. 2 at side, and new at 83 to 850, outside, Au- gust and September delivery. "Oate--No. 2 Ontario oats at 40 to dlc, ont wide, and at 42 to 430, on track, Toronto. Western Canada oats, 42 3-40 for No. 2 2 1-46 for No. 3, Bay ley--Good ting § to To, out ly nominal. : Gorp=%o, 2 American at 7F 1-2 on track, _ Bran--Manitoba,_bran, $23, in_ i, To | ronto freight, with good demand. ts, $25 to $26. Country Produce. a, Butter-- Choice dairy, 17 to 19; inferior, | : . ator ts, 19 to 160 armers' separ; peli, 33 '10. o4 ase lots 'of strictly n to nex dozen, had i Hones Eat per tin. 5A o 2 for No, don laid, 20 to 230 ted, in tine, 1012 32,25 to SLU per ohiese, 14 14 to 14 190 for |. to 14 34 for twins. ked, $2.20 to ushel; p Ra Provisions. 3 -. Bacon--Long clear, 14 to 14 1.2¢ per lb. hoe a til 6 By d6., heavy, -20; Tolls, 1 ioei: fast bacon, 18 to 19; backs, tor ; , 11 34 to 12¢; tubs, 12 1.40; oe, > ido.' 'Lard--Tierces, 11 "bails, 12 1%. ompound, 10 to 10 Baled Hay and straw. Tl Baled hay--No. 1 at $14.75 to $15 a ton "track hers No. 8 quoted at #13 to ale lots, $8.2 to $8.60, on 'other groups, poi i "1 8 1-2; tive, and with all 6f us the possibility of slipping int ey second g those in whom the tive enough to produ but in whom there i of arrest or cure, wi working health. Those ; group are doomed, the dises gresses week by week, month, year by year, year to five sees t "When ' workers have ges, when the house home, when the nation spend food what is spends on drink, instead of hundreds of thousa there will be millions in the group, with practically i The enemy has been traced very strong-hold, which is defend ed by the three allies, poverty, b housing and drink." Bie! ng. S Ci PE conan, Same 1 4 Montreal, July 14.--Prime heev: medium, 512 fo 71% TE fo %6: sheep 9 do de; 1am] : . TWO GIRLS DROWNED Unable to Swim and Waded B yond Their Depth, A despatch from Sarnia, says Word was received of the acciden drowning of two Sarnia young men at Tashmoo Park, on e Clair, where the annual picnic the Sarnia Baptist Churches was in progress. The girls were b and got beyond the channel bank the moment when a passing steamer, caused a surge of water. were unable to swim, and when Mi Lawson lost her footing, . ed her chum about. the

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