West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 17 Jul 1913, p. 2

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un # tempt to assassiznate K so on April 13. A despatch from M Eancho Alegre was death on Wednesday King of Spain‘s Assailant enced to Death. United States Markets .\I.Annen_yul:s, July 15. â€"Whea: n WOoULDâ€"BE Assiassix. Manitoba Flourâ€"First patents, $5.50 in jute bage; strong bakers‘, $4.80 in jute bagse. In cotton bage tem cents more per B Prices otf Cattle, Crain, Cheese and Otns Produce at Home and Abroad. On REPORTS FROM THE LEADING TRADS CENTRES OF AMERICA. PRICES OF FARM PROOUGTS verbial fool‘s paradise in regard to health conditions is being â€"made manifest to the Provincial Health Department by the reports and sanitary surveys coming in from the seven district officers of health apâ€" pointed under the Provincial sysâ€" tem. The new procedure requires each of these officers to submit to the Provincial Department a deâ€" tailed sanitary survey of all the urban municipalities within his disâ€" ©. 3, Yc; feed Ontario Whea is outelde, rar Deplorably Unsanitary Conditions Reported to the Provincial Health Department UNCLEAN ONTARIO TOWNS oronto, July H H PY Baled Hay and Straw 1. patente iboard, in Montreal Markets July 15â€"Oats M Country Provisions and No lood st by am Breadstuffs. 15. ~Manitoba Wheatâ€"Lake rthern, $1.04; No. 2, $1.01; wheat, 65¢. t »lls, 16 to 161 weke, 24 to 2 ket is firm. Winter wheat @ is quoted a bulk. + 2, 38 to 606. Floup|°°~ ~~~"**Cnce eat patente, firsts,| the form of a 10; atrong bakers®‘,| J..usld i2 250 i0 imon. & :, @1 i@, _ ihe employment of dogs to draw imon, €} to $3.50 +o4 & a e«rs, 79 :o aggo Visitors up the Jungirau reminds ns ‘a choice heavy | that there are probably people still to $6.15. Sheep xi f n $1.% to $g459, living who recollect when dogs 1 M io 110; drew carts in England. These oriâ€" .50. > Hogs â€"$9.50, Sut £ + b.; and $975 of Zinal dog-c:u'.s.' which _ were supâ€" 60 each. | pressed by law in the middle of the hnd llast century, were largely used by | costermongers and the humbler ASspX, fmembers of the fancy for Sunday ?outings. The dogs employed were ailant Sent. large animals, of mongrel breed, with a strain of the old English ith. | s P h Yss | mastiff. A twenty to thirtyâ€"mile adrid _ says : | run in and out was nothing to them, sentenced to| and they kept up their strength on | for his atâ€"| the journey with a seanty | allowâ€"| King Alfonâ€"| ance of bread soaked in beer.â€"Lonâ€" ; don Chronicle. F Produce. case lots 2e t choice, "" 33.39; | duced to cinders the ‘t:mb“:;:- $2 40. | Alcocer, the inhab b"0'”]h,' in A "M‘m. 21 ; | toolgA refuge i ht it $8 e per 15, in 8: do.. mess, to 98¢ for car to T5¢ for poor break our, $4.10 $11.50 $8.25 Je to 3e to de Building and PI terrific detonations wer about the same time, and clear sky a violent temp« over Benavites and Cuar miles â€" away, accompanie shower of stones, the 1: which weighed twao nound. FHE MINT To 3t ENLARGED. | To Be Erected on Constitution Hiil | London, England, | A despatch from London says: A |colossal hotel, the eost of which, together with the value of the site, will approximate $6.250,000, is to be erected on the ground now occuâ€" pied by St. George‘s Hospital on Constitution Hill, opposite the enâ€" trance to Hyde Park. The magnifiâ€" eent site has been purchased by a syndicate, the Governors of the hospital at a meeting on Thursday afternoon agreeing to the sale, which has been the subject of neâ€" gotiations for years. "lmpc-riul Medal Awarded to Many ' Canadians. A _ despatch from London says : The _ Imperial _ Service Medal for long and meritorâ€" ious service has been awarded to Michael Berrigan, Bediford, P.E.I. ; Joseph Henry Berry, Halifax : Wilâ€" liam Burrown, Winnipeg ; George Cameron, Halifax ; Hazel Carter, Monecton ; James Ross Cumming, Truro ; James Currie, Albertou, P. E.I.; Frederitk Gas=.=. St. Simâ€" on; Char‘es Grani. ratrick Hup-‘ per, James «MeDermot. Moactont Alex. McDouga‘! Antigon‘sh : Hec-“ tor MceKinnon, Pictou; (Giéorge: Noiles, Pictou; Martin O‘Brien, | Halifax ; Charles Reeves, Toronto ;. Samuel Watson, Moncton; John | Yerxa, Fredericton. | Imperial Medal ']aying of the rails. It will be a valuable addition to the Ontario Government road in that it will run to the confluence of the Abitibi and Black Rivers, where are sitâ€" uated three water powers, capable of developing 50,000 horseâ€"power of electric energy, and where will be located a pulp and paper plant with a capacity of 150 tons a day. The mill is expected to be completed by February next. The industry will be of service to the settlers, as it will provide a market for their pulpwood. ‘ POR MERITORIOUS sERYVICE An Important Branch Now Ready for the Rails, A despatch from Toronto says : The Timiskaming and Northern Ontario Railway‘s branch from Iroâ€" quois Junction to Iroquois Falls is now ballasted and ready for the aespaitch from â€" Ottaw use the amount of C being submitted to th rocess at the Ottawa wous centres will be promptly grapâ€" pled with. From present indicaâ€" tions it looks as though a wholeâ€" sale campaign of general houseâ€" cleaning will have to be waged throughout urban Ontario, and more rigid amendments made to the public health act. °C THE T. & N. 0. RAILWAY. A $6,250,000 HOTEL. ‘€‘i0€s and Uuartil, some vay, accompanied by a of stones, the largest of ighed two pounds. f. RAIX OF Firk 1 Plant Will be Doubled at Ottawa. e the capac plant. â€" Ter the work i alue of go! ry Berry, Halifax : Wilâ€" wn, Winnipeg; George Talifax ; Hazel Carter, James Ross Cumming, time, and out of a ent tempest broke _ Cilawa ‘says: nt of Canadian ed to the refinâ€" Ottawa branch : increasing year nment is taking capacity of the ._ Tenders will work in a few of go‘!ld refined i l.ondon says: A ie cost of which, value of the site, $6,.250,000, is to ground now oceuâ€" arts. v ETT EMETITY ©GU TN n‘sh ; He(‘-l‘al‘(nlnd Elgin, Ill., Friday. & Géorge| Fire at Independence, La., renâ€" â€"O‘Brien, |dered a thousand people homeless, _ Toronto ;) while there were two deaths and six m ; John| persons are missing. Fox farms may become popular in Northern Ontario, | _A man wants credit for a lot of «things he can‘t pay for : als»> fOr a llot of things he can‘t do. 7 ‘ | Sydney, New sSydney, New South Wales, Has Serious Outbreak, A despatch from Sydney, N.S. W ., says: Smallpox, which has been prevalent here for some time, is spreading. â€" Fifty thousand persons have been vaccinated, and there are 61 cases in quarantine. | out on a case in the back country which lies between Wilkie and Macklin, searching for Alex. Anâ€" derson, who killed his wife and then attempted to commit suicide. When the shot he fired at himself had no effect he made his escape into the North Country. $ ‘ith Snli s bomb es aused little Man “N!l .\ph'«-m] Back is Improvâ€" d’z:ag:.!pluded, but caused little ing Wonderfully, nnsonn e .. ... A despatch fromt Kingston says:| FIRST STEP IN BIG sCHEME. Oliver Latand, of Madoc, who was | eeegearcie h_rnughr to the Hotel Dieu u.buut‘ M. P. Davis & Son Get New Levis six weeks ago with a broken back.J{ Dryâ€"Dock Contract. has improved gyonderfully. _ Docâ€" s tors have spliced the back. and | A despatch from ()ttfl“'a,‘ says : now the patient is able to sit up| The ('-)ntraf\t, for the new (“":""’ for a short time. Great hopes are:::f"t d',i-:i]'d"(;}; at l]"“:h“""“(f";’.“':‘l; hel { rompl reovery. | on ursday by e _ Cabinet M esf :’:li):‘tiifo\el.\ ‘('Olln('”'to M. P. Davis & Son. The + P q C Arppays eost is approximately £2,600,000. MURDERES HAS HIEE: " . clMTMY drsâ€"duck in e afe nof The 1 s 0e o en mmtde O fire which has swept the mountains for three days is reaching toward the plains and vineyards to the north and the Muir Woods National ty 2 1 ‘ Park on the eou.t,h Five Men Lose Their Lives in Dis« astrous Blaze, A despatch from San Francisco says: Five soldiers are reported burned to death, and a half dozen little hamlets and towns at the foot of Mount Tamalpais await their salvation or destruction, while the fire which has swept the mountains for three days is rearhine kAauwsued EPIDEMIC â€"« Count Tadasu Hayashi of Japan is dead. After a fortnight‘s desperate fighting the Bulgarians appealed to the powers to arrange peace, General Riva, the Cuban Nationâ€" al Police Chicf, was mortally wounded by Governor Asbert of Havana. Hazel of Hett thiest w a South TOROoNTO FATAL FIRE IX CALIFORNIA. Three men wers killed and proâ€" perty damage estimated at $50,000 was done by an electric storm around Elgin, Ill., Friday. Rev. Dr. G. Camphell Morgan, pastor of Westminster Congregaâ€" tional â€" Chapel, Buckingham Gate, London, has declined a call to the Madison Avenue Reformed Church, New York. Fifteen months ago 240 militant suffragettes â€" were undergoing or dodging prison sentences for variâ€" ous ountrages. At the present time there are only 21 of these cases and 12 of these are women who are out on license until they recover from the effects of hunger strikes. They are now paying fines, when that alternative is given. i REM ARK ABLE ()l’lllf\'l'l()\' Two professional coachmen were sentenced to six weeks in prison for "‘doping‘‘ horses at the Olympic show. An attempt to blow up the aque duct supplying Manchester with wa ter is ascribed to suffragettes. A proposal to nationalize British coal mines was introduced in the British Commons: The Welsh disestufllishment bill passed its third reading in the Briâ€" tish Commons. The Duke of Connaught may be the first Lordâ€"Lieutenant of Ireâ€" land under home rule. Chairman Leonard, of the N.T.R. Commission, who is going west over the line says: ‘"‘The road is being made ready for traffic this fall at the close of navigation, and the Grand Trunk Pacific should be able to put on a service about that time. The main work is now to finish balâ€" lasting.‘"‘ Sixtyâ€"two fatalities occurred in Ontario factories during the past year, according to pffigia} reports. Six men were injured in a dynaâ€" mite explosion on a Government scow near Gananoque. Fire did $65,000 damage to Good ay‘s lumber mills at Scott‘s June tion, Quebec. The Montreal Harbor Commis sion will extend all the piers at : eost of $7,000,000. * Three Montreal nuns have offered to go among the lepers of Canton, China. Senator John Brunswick is dead Canada, ths Emplire and the World to Gracral Before Youw Eres. Canada. THE NEWS IN A PARAGRAPH UAPPENTINCGS FROM ALL OVED TBE GLOB3 IN A KUTSHELL are missing, Warner, a wayward cousin Green, the »‘\'or]d'rs‘weal- man, committed suicide in Bend, Ind., roadhouse. General. Tadasu Hayashi of United States. 0F sMALLPOX. Great Britain. ~met, . was mortally Governor Asbert of Ellis of New | Parents Thought Her at Home of ! Her Employers, A despatch from Winnipeg says : The murdered body of Dora Evelyn | Inman, the 15â€"yearâ€"old daughter of | Alfred Inman, was found at Gunâ€" | ton, Man., a village on the C.P.R., | 85 miles north of here, on Wednesâ€" day night. The girl was employed on the farm of W, C. Ross, and on |Dominion Day went to visit her parents. â€" Towards evening she left the home of her parents to return to the farm and had not been seen since. Her disappearance was unâ€" known to either her parents or emâ€" ployers, the one believing she was «t the home of the other. '.\‘ays She Burned Down Sir Wil liam Lever‘s Residence. ‘ A despatch from Liverpool says : | A dramatic confession of incendiarâ€" ism was made by a wellâ€"known miliâ€" tant suffragette, Mrs. Edith Righy, 'wife of a physician at Preston, to ltvhe Magistrate sitting in the Police | Court here on Thursday. _ Mrs. ll{igb)’ declared it was she who had on Tuesday burned down the counâ€" try residence at Rivington, near Horwich, Lancashire, of Sir Wilâ€" liam H. Lever, causing damage estimated at $100,000. She further confessed to being the perpetrator of the outrage at the Liverpool Stock Exchange on July 5, when a bomb exploded, but caused little damage. We of the Legion had a good opâ€" portunity of seeing them in action, and we were much impressed with their dash and gallantry, GIRL FOUxD MURDERED. The uniform of these female warâ€" riOTs â€" WAS . «ty of kilted divided ‘ skirt '03 bIMH stuff. The garâ€" ment barely reached to the kneos. It was supported at the waist by a leather belt that carried the cartâ€" ridge pouches$. They wore little or nothing above the waist, but on their heads they wore a coquettish red fez, or tarboosh, ornamented with an eagle‘s feather. These woâ€" men were all exceedingly well doâ€" veloped, and some of them were handsome in their own way. The fought like unchained deâ€" mons, and if driven into a corner, did not disdain to use their teeth and nails. A marine infantryman seized and disarmed one of them in this fight, hut she was so far from being beaten that she turned on her captor and began to bite his nose off. SUFFRAGETTE CONFESsEsS ’}‘ought Like Unchained Demons Against the French,. An interesting account of the prowess of the Dahomey Amazons, the female furies who fought the French during their struggle with the refractory King Behanzin, is given by Mr. Frederic Martyn in his book, "Life in the Legion." The author, a former English officer, enlisted in the Foreign Legion of France, and saw sharp â€" fighting both in Tonkin and in Dahomey. _ His Cabinet has met the first emerâ€" fency in the Johannesburg riots with r-o'nsldmbls wisdom. The Depart.xmmt1 Of Defence U RMr in _ mastwst Construction will begin at and it is hoped to have the n operation for the season of {. MODERX AMAZONS. PREMIER BOTHA wisdom. The Departmen is now in control Posmth Sn pitelit tns valll" cigh > c3 90. s 2200 L There is a good deal of goesip to the effect that there will be an election in the apring of 1914, but so far this is unâ€" doubtedly based on nothing more thar D inAaaamawl +m.a _, 3 _i jDnIpeg Free Press, the one on the one side and the other on the other. The Star is urging Mr. Borden to at once develop his Nayy Policy to provide perâ€" manentlv for the eatablishment of _ a single Imperial Navy. The Free Preas on the other hand declares that the only policy which can prevail in this country is that which looks forward to the acâ€" quirement by Canada of full national status in permanent alliance with Great Britain and the other British nations. There is a good deal of goesip to the egoct t‘hn t)n::_o will be an election in dvn Sprcuwn ds 2 .l pOe T the most attention are }‘)‘I‘G"M and the Winnipeg Free Proas ’rrho ane side and the other o 176 One 1 € 1J the he esmmc c@1l n ctt ) C PPE AATNeRL Or on the stump have not as yet come to grips on this isaue, but it is one that is being ardently discussed in private and by some of the newspapers. Perhaps the papers which are giving it 1/ P mriaiirrndts o en Aels 4. 9. . Keen Contest Anproaching. While in Canadian political matters we are in the snmmer do‘drumes, there {4 ample evidemce that further keen p litical conteste are looming up for the near fu. ture. For example there is the issue of Imperial Federation as against the devel. opment of selfâ€"government. . The partioa and party leaders either in Parliament or on the stump have not as yet come to #rime" an ca%LL o FLL CE PS MCE, I l @65R prominent eitizens. T over to the Republican fold impossible feat. Moreover, sives now claim a superior lestic organization in every Union. Meanwhile the present nc White House i« sawing woo« election in the United States be one of the most intere hietory of the eanntre clons, are. now YI’lPVI;’M‘Ti of sive Partvy. Many of the«e less prominent citizens. T. Generally epeaking _ the Progreasives aceuse both the old line parties of being controlled by @pecial interests, while the Progressives represent a desire for Gav. ernment of the people by the people and for the people. Evidence that it wanld he impossille to merge with the Republicans i« fnrnished by the fact that a large number of for. moie es Pinestm ies 4 12 uenc se Sme mer Democrats, perh a pa 12 or 1 1 curncl lC D20 22 22â€" comen. | Woodrow Wilson and Grover Cleveland Ihnvo‘ been the only Democratic Presi. dents in all that time. } Whether the time for a disintegration of the Republican party has now _ arrived will be seen during the next two or three years. The Progressiver say that any merger between them and the Republiâ€" cans is abeolutely impossible. . The only argument in favor of such â€"a merger would be, they eay, to incresse theipr chance of winning at the next election, and they add the Progressivo Party was founded on certain principles and not for the immediate object of retting eontrol of the "pork barrel." Had they de@ired only to win anselection at any cost there would have been no split. ‘ Old Parties and the Interests. Generally epeaking _ the Progreasivea paie ie 12 LWO t PC onl w /A Whis Th w iscc c 2A c 1k io9b The fact is that according to Amer history the Republican Party has out! its allotted span of life. Parties a rule have not been long lived in United State«. The unusual period supremacy enjoyed by the Republ: Party is the result of the unusual eo: tione created by the Civil War, since wh event the Republic has been almoet « tinually coutrolled by the party . wh :l!i’il?! the elephant for an emhl 1z _ AREB In United States politics the question which continues to offer food for conâ€" troversy is as to whether the new Proâ€" gressive Party, under the leadership of Theodore Roogevelt, is to awallow the Reâ€" publican Party or whether the Republiâ€" can Party will ewallow it. According to the leaders of the Progressives there is no room for controversy. In their minds the Republican Party is dead and the funâ€" ern‘! ceremony is merely being delaved. 7 (uilinp sn c ds APW s T in _ mMe first term in Parliament, Mr.} Meighen made some stir as an advocate of legislation. How far Mr. Meighen wlll‘ proceed on the pathway of fame will de-i' pend largely on his sincerity and depth | of character. He is now off to a good | start. In his first term in Meighen made some sti of lt-ziglation_. How far P Moepaintrataipttt t d uid d L009R s a man for advancement. He cannot but find satisfaction in the fact that since the formation of the Borden Cabinet he is the first to have been chosen for fresh honore. It is worthy of comment that a young westerner with little experience has go soon eclipsed many of the older memâ€" bers of Parliament who until a year ago en‘ioy(:d‘ greater reputatione. d Mr. Bennett‘s Oratory. A contemporary of Mr. Meighen, anâ€" other young western member in the perâ€" «on of Mr. g{ B. Bennett, has perhaps exâ€" fm:ri(-nced this atmosphere. _ When Mr. Bennett makes a speech he indulges in a perfect whirlwind of oratory. His fluency, lchnic« of vocabulary and facility of exâ€" pression are nothing short of marvellous and cannot but fail to imprees most auâ€" diences. But in the House of Commons Mr. Bennett undoubtedly hae more than once felt that he was wasting his breath. Once he recognizes the gituation, and he probably has done so already, he, too, undoubtedly will emulate the Parliamenâ€" tary «tyle. As he has great ability he will catch it and will probably become a leading parliamentary figure. A Young C. E. Foster. "A voung George E. Foster," is the way Mr. Meighen as a debater is described. This is high praise in this country, beâ€" cause the skill, finesse and force of the lugs sds ns omemid no dearth of contenders for from the Eastern Provinces, Ontario. which had at least Uke 0 ODPCCMIZ T7 TB BUUUUBBUL IN ’the office of Canadian High Commissioner, Lord Strathcona, and the man whose for. _tunes have been intimately bound up with Canada‘s in her budding days, and who now has long since exceeded the Psalmist‘s allotted span. It is doubtful if any other country can duplicate such a pair of veterans in the pation‘s service. The New Soticitorâ€"General. The appointment of Hon. Arthur Meighâ€" en as Solicitorâ€"General in the Dominion Cabinet has been well received. A numâ€" ber of Liberal papere have referred to the promotion in complimentary terms, thougrh no doubt reserving the right to disagree with the new Cabinet Miniater‘a Few men have filled their lives with such multifarious ectivitiee over such a long period. Practically all his contemâ€" poraries have crossed the Great Divide and he remains almost alone. A notable ‘Ii‘vlnn_ contemporary is his succeesor in facts 1 am reminded of the incident by the fact that Sir Charles has just been celeâ€" brating his ninetyâ€"third birthday. It sceme impossible that the figure 1 recall should have been 45 years old at Confedâ€" eration, and 16 {eam old at the time of 'the‘ rebellion of ‘37, yet such are the corresponding to that of his body On the occasion of a recent visit to London, I was one day gitting in a room in that mecea of all Canadians in London, the Canadian High Commissioner‘s office, when, suddenly, without formality, the door was thrown open and an old gentleâ€" man bounced in with all the vigor of a youth of 2%. From photographs I immeâ€" diately recognized him as Sir Charles Tupper, himself formerly Canadian High Commissioner, a fact which explained his privileged entrance. On introduction he zrgpred my hand with a force that cerâ€" tainly did not suggest age, and for a few minutes be discussed affairs Canâ€". adian with a mentsgl alertnesa that nravad | adian with a mental alertness that proved that his _mind retained vigor at least [ COMMENT ON EVENTS , td mt y in the United States promises to of the most interesting in the f the country. spe WIll the Progressives Live? I y i4 Pm UeRten e old line parties of being special interests, while tha me Civil War, since which lic has been almoet eanâ€" ed by the party which phant for an "‘emblem. _ and Grover Cleveland only _ Democratic Presi. © whether the new Proâ€" under the leadership of elt, is to swallow the Reâ€" or whether the Republiâ€" t}_lefi )ff;v;_t;éa']‘"itar imugua l period of _ the _ Republican the unusual eondiâ€" ncecunant of tha wood. The next one or two mil carry these wonld be an the Progres. and enthium. State in the the Progresâ€" are more or ins delaved. to American has outlived gressiveg Way the Grogan â€" "She did : tore her off him." Hoganâ€""Diq a separation ?‘ once spurring his horse, he dashed into the river ard swam toward the fotilla. The Lazeros followed him with their lances in their hands, | now encouraging their horses by | swimming beside them and patu'ng,’ their necks, now shouting to scare | away the crocodiles, of which there | were hundreds in the river. At last they reached the other side, and | sprang from their horses‘ backs on . board the boats, headed by their| leader. To the astonishment â€" of everyone who beheld it, they actualâ€" j ly captured the entire flotilla. I once Cumttd y COd "1 would, give the world to have the Spanish flotilla; without it I can never cross the river." ‘‘It shall be yours in an hour,‘"‘ replied Paez, Belecting three hundred of his Llanero lancers, all distinguished for strength and bravery, he said, pointing to the gunboats, _ ‘‘We must have these fHlecheras or die. Let those follow who please." A; The Spanish flotilla the river at the poi the patriot forces. J despair, Turning to E90 w ie mt Jrinoco and Down the Magdale. na,‘"‘ Mr. H. J. Mozans tells of an occasion when it was necessary for Bolivar‘s army to cross the Apure, in order to engage Morillo. But| Bolivar had no boats, and the | Apure at this point was wide and | deep, | The Snanish Aniin. . C tss _ The Llanero of South lives on horseback ; â€" trad and sells on horseback ; a; the war with Spain, the contributed much toward the independence of both la and New Granada. Jn Orinoco and Down the na,‘"‘ Mr. H. J. Mozans t« occasion when it was nece BoliXÂ¥ 84 & BFME LA nunmes 4L How They the bullocks A number of cattle driven from a farm at Cloonbullig, near Ballyâ€" hannis, belonging to Mr. A. Blake, have been recovered, ~the horns bearing cardboards inscribed, "‘The land for the néeonla&â€"anst 41.1 _ . yiie It is stated in Newny crossâ€"channel railway have at present in conte scheme for the construe electric tramway to con renpoint with Newcastle boat races of ‘t-ilue lIR Yacht Club by the ca naval pinnace, C destroyed the flags, The death has occurred of Capâ€" tain George Anthony, of the whaler Catalper, Kilkenny, who took an active part in effecting the escape of the Fenian prisoners in 1876. While a motor car displaying Union Jacks was slowly proceeding along the Nationalist quarter in Belfast a crowd surrounded it and destroyed the flags. At the Dublin City Commission Patrick Joseph Kirwan, an exâ€"memâ€" ber of the Dublin Stock Exchange, was sentenced to three years‘ penal servitude for frand. John Clerke, of~ Lisnashielady, Newtownbutler, County Fermanâ€" agh, has received an intimation that he is heir to $10,000. He is 108 years of age. The Bin Urban Council has reâ€" fused permission to the local Soâ€" ciety for the prevention of cruelty to animals, to erect a drhfiiifié trough for animals at Bin. Constable Perryman, stationed at Mulgrave Barracks, near Killarâ€" ney, was instantly killed in a cycle accident while cycling into Killarâ€" ney. R. Clements, farm laborer, of Cleughmil!s, has died in Ballyâ€" money Infirmary from injuries inâ€" flicted by a young bull. The dead body of a man named Charles Fisher, aged 64 years, was found lying on the public road at Killybrack. TRUE The death is announced at the age of 105 of Thomas Farragher at Maas, Kildare. He was a smoker and drank moderately. The King has consented to preâ€" sent new colors to the Irish Guards, of which His Majesty is colonelâ€"inâ€" chief. At the Swinford Fair a pig purâ€" chased by Mr. P. Finan, Sligo, fetched the high price of $70. Leaving 66 grandchildren, Mrs. Hannah Forde, a centenarian, has died at Blarney, near Cork. Happenings in the Emerald Isle o% Interest to Irish» men,. The County Louth Horse and Flower Show will be held at Ardee on July 31st. FROM ERM‘S GREEN ISLf NEWS BY MAIL FROM IRE LAXD‘S SHORES. Torn From Him Captured Some Gunboats, HORSE MarmxrEs, ® eEX mment 420C people and the road for ent in contemplation the construction of ; Clancey‘s ho please." Aq horse, he dashed swam toward the ros fn”nwéd him point opposite to _ â€"Bolivar was in to Paez, he said. the Royal Ulster the capsizing of a Newny, that truction of an| The next step to prove that suâ€" connect Warâ€"| &ar is really composed of a long astle. row of acids, all crystallized. To : driven from a | do this the doetor amalyzes a sugar £, near Ba]ly_‘beet and finds only water, acids, Mr. A. Blake, some salts, cellulose, and nitrogen d, the horns|composition. Hence, he declares, nscribed, "‘The | the sugar juice can be nothing but nd the road for | acid, and this is very dangerous to the general welfare." â€"â€"â€"â€" Entirely New Discases. MariXE®S, "It is therefore no wonder,"" he says, ‘"‘that the modern manufacâ€" Some Spanish | turing of sugar has brought about S« entirely new discases and that more »wuth ‘\mer;m!of these new diseases have been trades, buys caused by the daily use of sugar. k; and during | The loss of energy through the conâ€" the Llaneros sumption of sugar in the last cenâ€" ‘ard achieving | tury anl the first decade of this both Venezueâ€" |century can never be made good, In "Up the |as it has left its marks on the difâ€" the Magdale. | ferent races and nations, ns tells of anl Thereare wolves in the field, necessary for | that Dr. Roessler has found wicked $ss the Apure, | men who preéy upon the weakness forillo. _ But | of little children for the awfu! suâ€" s, and the | gar and for their profit therein, vas wide and | N.q wonder," he says bitterly, | "‘that a certain candy manuflacturer was guarding | has spent $1,000.000 for the mamnsea our wife get a k tX company l sut heavier tax is proposed for corâ€" cops , porations by the Provincial Governâ€" | ment. ‘that ‘‘Wha‘ll ye pay?" asked 8i "I‘ll pay what you‘re worth,‘""‘ answered the farmer. Si scratched his head a minute, then announced decisiveâ€" ly, "I‘ll be durned if 1‘ll work for A farmer in great need of extra hands at haying time finally asked Si Warren, who was accounted the town fool, if he could help him out. ‘"Iveryone who wants to be an honest citizen and for the welfare of the race and for the progress of the country has to join to fight the lie that sugar is beneficial." nihieadi in isA stt c drs is S bears the elements of degeneration. Overâ€"civilization adopted the sugar for the significance of good taste, and it has done its work. Mealth, energy and power can only be acâ€" quired by partaking of proper food. Kugar is no food whatever :; thereâ€" fore sugar is an enemy to eivilizaâ€" tion. has spent $1,000,000 ¢ of temperance, since an increa‘se in the oor candv. nied,""‘ he says, ‘"‘any inj fects from the use of s only the good old publi advised against its con= Vegetarianism, take it_ Rocssler, is only a little be i sugarism. "If certain vege.ables," he goes on, "really have a high percentage of nutrition, we must not overlook the fact that there are only a few, and the rest of the vegetables have only a use as a fuel. Primarily, for this reason, the importance of suâ€" gar as a food has really been crimâ€" inally boosted." it the increasing number eases. 193 "It is therefore clear that a for mer medical remedy has been withâ€" in a century adopted as a food, and has become a great factor in the malnutrition of the people."‘ Vegetables LitUe Better, Coming down the centuries, Dr. Roessler traces the steadilyâ€"increasâ€" ing consumption of sugar and with The highest civilizatior as general nourishment or even as an ingredient. To the contrary, Theofrast, who about 350 B.C. had written a book about plants, statâ€" ed distinctly that sugar was only used for medical purposes. Bugar is neither mentioned in the teachâ€" ings or diet of Greek athletes nor by the Spartans, although the Greeks knew the sugar already . Dioskorides, a Greek physician, living in the year 50, mentioned the sugar as medicine in his Materia Medica. In the ninth century Arabâ€" ian physicians used sugar (Arabic sukhar) as medicine. ‘"It has been pw\';d," he says, ‘‘that any people or race, in their efforts to improyg, used the sugar This discovery has been made by Dr.â€" Robert Roessler, a German, graduate of the University of Berâ€" lin and a dentist by profession. He has drawn up an elaborate arguâ€" ment in support or his theory, goâ€" ing back to classic times for the foundation of his argument. Bugar is the cause of all the il!s to which flesh is heir. He Says Several Discases Can Directly Traced To It. SUGAR IS CAUSE OF Itts DECLARES DR. ROBT. RoEss. LER, A GERMAX. The Yery Independent, e medical science at first deâ€" ‘ he says, ‘"any injurious efâ€" from the use of sugar, and 0 for the cause ce he expected corsumption of its consumpt ike it Spne Dr. ittle better than already opmion oi 4 Be Bal €x ha fei th th lea1 ad i that BNC W ervan ts orbidder _ Wait NOTES a LLAR% To )K rL ol (4 Are As W my Ik rh

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