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Daily British Whig (1850), 4 Jun 1910, p. 1

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The Daily B YEAR 77-NO, 129 pr s KINGSTON, ONTARIO, SATURDAY; JUNE 4 1910. tish Whig LAST EDITION WL iF COME NATURALLY PREACHERS URGED TO ONLY "7 PREACH CERTAINTIES. Rev. Dr. Carman Addressing the Members of the Montreal Method- ist Conference----A Résolution of Congratulation to King George V. Adopted on His Natal Day. Special to the Whig. Brockville, June 3.--The ministerial and lay members of the Montreal con- ference assembled in annual session, Friday morning. Rev. Dr. Carman, general superintendent, togk the chair and addressed the conference. He re' forred to the fact that the Montreal conference is a large nnd a "very strong conference. He said that there £ are men within the bounds who would fill with honor his oflice of general su- perintendent of the whole church, He reforved to the sorrowful fact that De. Sutherland, the great missionary secretary, is in a very low condition, with not much hope of his final re- covery, Personally, the superinten- dent is not anxious re the church union question, HM the union can be BOC! shed according to the will of God, is ready for it, but he does not want to push it forward unless events point that it is clearly the will of It the signe of the times plainly point out that' the union is the will .of God, then let it come and come speedily. The question, before it can be settled, must be gubnhitted in a vongtitutionn] way to the people « all the churches. The proposed basis of union will be placed in the hands of the laymen, and time given for study, Me is zealous that no ng be tolerated in our.churches or colleges that affects the honor of Josie Christ; he is jealous shat wealthy churches take the powes of securing men to fill their pulpite by 4 sper church authority; ay Amen any teaching tolerated that lowers the word of God, He urged the preachers to in- noe thirty year has been the thirty-six, ) of it students and 31 t students were in attend- and their income L000, The college is pre-eminently a home college, a It was moved Dr. Ryckman; sec onded by 3. 'KF. Johnston, and re- solved : "That the ministers and re- presentative laymen of conference of the M ot Jane 1919. having in memory t 'this day is the bi y of our sovereign lord, King George, we 'desire to express, while profoundly 1a the decease of the late king, : VII, our joy in the ppy accession of his majesty to the of the British dominions. The p, and the ehurch it repre sents, extend to his majesty, George heh Shey xogorded i fopal osoer roy: ather, King Ed and his grandmother, Queen Victoria. The confer- the unquestioning con- a» re of right. igh morality which per- I pal in ¥ ¥ reign also. in The Sonfureoes ajeuty may see many returns of his natal day, and ough the providential favor of High God, the King of kings, ation 'of the afairs of § under "Jthur M. Lee's pr and King. The large immigration was noted and it was told that the period of naturalization should be extended. The care, by the government, of the incbriate and the feeble-minded should also be urged. WONDERFUL FLIGHT, French Aviator Telegraphed Congra- tulations to Rolls. June 4~Count de Lesseps, one of the three men who have flown across the English channel in an aeroplane, 'telegraphed his congratuls- tions to Charles Stewart! Rolls, the Euglish aviator who made a round- trip flight over the channel. "Rolls made s wonderful flight," de Lesseps declared. "I am almost en- vious of him for { had set my heart on being the first to make the round trip without stopping, and feel that I wculd have wor the honor had the wind been more favorabl: om day I flew from Sangzatte to Dover. 'Rolls is the first man to fy ior an hour and a half over the sea, and the first man, too, to cross the channel in a bi-plane. The ease with which he ac- complished the flight is a great tri bute both to his aviation skill and to the Wright machine that he used. "Therel is nothing léft now in the way of channel aviation, and I wonder what will be the next thing attempt- ed. They will probably try a flight across the North sea froln England to Germany. + Such a feat is altogether feasible, and I look to seedits accomp- lishment within the present year." CAUSED DEATH. Grain of Rice in Ear From Wedding Day. New York, June 4.--A grain of rice which lodged in her ear the day of her wedding, ten years ago; is belleved to have caused the death, yesterday, « of Mrs. Asa Cummings at the post grad- uate hospital. According to the phy- sicians, fruitless operations to remove the kernel of grain were performed se- veral times during Mrs. Cummings' wedded life. The rice grain finally brought about inflammation of the brain. PEELE P PEPPER PEEP LPP P04 bd 3 TRIPLETS GRADUATED, Upper Sandusky, Ohio, June 4,-Triplets were gradu- ated from the North Balti- more high school on the same day. They are Rose, Violet and Lillian Breétain, and the? event is believed to be the first of its kind. Paris, Loe : PEPE P eet ee tet ie ti Ca SK va [H 3 he N be Attended Dinner Given by Proprietor of Spectator. London, June 4.~~Lord Cremer, Brit- ish agent and consul-general in Egypt from 1883 to 1907, and 1 re Roosevelt were guests at a dinner given, Thursday night, by John St. Loe Strachey, proprietor of the Speec- tator, in honor of Mr. Roosevelt. They sat on either hand of their host, Col. Roosevelt and Lord Cromer are be lieved to be perfectly agreed on Egyp- tian policies, and the complaints of sentimental tendencies which the form- or ident voiced at the Guild Hall all arisen since Lord Cromer's ad- ministration, Col. Roosevelt is now at Col. Ar. country Jlaee, where Sir Henry Hamilton Johnston, who has written much on Africa; John Burns, president of the local govern- ment board, and Capt. Robert F. Scott, the Antarctic explorer, also are guests. He will spend Sunday at the home of Sir George Trevelyan, where he will meet Viscount Morley, of Blackburn. THE ALBANIAN REVOLT. Two Score of Men Are Under Ar. rest. Constantinople, June 3.--Nearly two scare members of the' 'committee' that ebgineered the recent Albanian revolt vottoniay hn fity; Salonike, Mon. yes! ay, in oily, ika, Mon- antir, and other "Purkish $3, The government professes to have » positive proof of their guilt, and their peed, oral and execution are expep he r arrests are imminent, as it is known that the "committed" had umembers scattoved all over Turkey. o Push Reforms. June 4.--Rudolph San Francisco pope to organize monastries of 1 Louig Guuguet, LATEST NEWS Dispatches From Near And Distant Places THE WORLD'S TIDINGS GIVEN IN THE BRIEFEST POS SIBLE FORM. Matters That Interest Everybody---- Notes From All Over--Little of Everything Easily Read and Re- membered. An anti-dynasty revolution is looked for in China. : ; Guelph will have a Y.M.C.A. build- eampaigh next year. : ogan's {annery near Pictou, N.S, was gutted by fire on Friday morning. Prince Fushimi, Japan, reached New York on Friday on a sight-seeing tour. A disappointed homesteader from Hemmingford, Ont.,, hanged himself near lrma, Sask. : Some thirty thousand Jews are suffering as a result of the expulsions from Russian cities. The Ontario division of the Canada Defence League was organized #a To- ronto on Friday night. r A lawsuit arising out of the domin- ion election of 1904 was commenced at Lunenburg, N.S., on Friday, It is reported the C.P.R's tender of 1 $800,000 for Government House pro- perty, at Toronto, has been accepted. Permission to export power from { Fort Frances to the United States side will be granted under certain condi: tions, ' Dr. George FE. Armstrong, Montreal, {was elected president of the Canadian | Medical Association, meeting in To- ronto, Plans for the immediate construction {of the Canadian navy have been alter- ed and tenders for ten ships instead of four will he immediately called for, A Turkish soldier hanged himseli in the prison where he had been incar- cerated because he refused to help exe- cute his father, who had been cap- tured among the Albanian insurgents. Rev, Father Jules Livernois, of Calabria, Italy, died on the way to Canada, on a commission from the the in in late" reporter on Montsdéal La Pairie, had planned to lead from the parish church the bells of Se. Blaise, as Mrs. Gauguet, but he was arrested in St. Jerome on a charge of forgery. At Edmonton, politics are again stirred by the resignation of E. H. Riley, one of the prominent liberal in- surgents, in which he declares that the motive of. the legislature in appoint. ing the waterways commission hag been frustrated by a combination of the chief justice and the lieutenant- ul stead near here. She claimed that he KINDNESS PIQUES REFORMER. Masquerades as Ex-Convict and is Offered Aid. Bi. Louis, Juwe 4.--The intolerable humanity of the St. Louis police has driven Alexander Seymour, volunteer shumpion of ex-eonvicts and amateur sociologist, from the city. said he read in a magazine recently that ex-conviets, after their: by ware driven from pillar to post by the police of all big cities. He started out to look into the matter. He came west from New York and got deen- meuts from Paroon Attorney Cham- bere of Missouri to show he had served in the penitentiary. He also carried other papers, authenticated by Chambers, stating the bearer never hid: heen in prison. On arrival in St. Louis he visited James Smith, chief of ives. "Chief,"" said he, tossing his parole on the desk, "I'm an ex-convict sent up for burglary. Drink is to blame for my downfall." "Seymour," the chief replied, "you need spiritual 'and moral support. I want you to start over again. I'm going to help you." "Won't you drive me out of town," Sevmour inquired. "Not at all," was the reply, "lf you get in trouble, come to me any time." Seymour feigned drunkenness and confessed to a downtown pohevman he was about £0 commit q burglary. The patrolman Snstead of arresting him, offered to take him to.q ying house and sym- pathized with him) 2 et -- + TO KEEP "SWELL" LOOKS, 8t. Louis, June 4.-Beauty or a job? A dozen waitresses in Union station restaurant chose the former, gathered up their puffs and powder, gave contemptuous sniffs at the manager and "walked ont" because he insisted that thev step into the kitchen and polish the silverware. Steam in the kitchen, the girls argue, destroys the marcelle wave and plays havoe with face lotions, Here is their argu- ment: "If we remain, we lose our beauty and will be dis- charged. We can't get an- other job if we lose these swell looks, so let's vamoose." Other waitresses were put to work temporarily in their placed: - FEESPEPP CGF PP POPES IS S40 CONFESSES TO MURDER. Mrs, Dillon Admits She Killed Her Vis ia; x 3 ng, Minn, Juve 4.--Mrs. Jos eph Dillon confessed to the chief of polics, Peter -Wring, that she shot and killed her husband at their home- SLFPPRFPIPRE SPF EPP P EDF SEP R PPP EPRPP PFEIFER ROO G tried to force her into a life of shame. When Mrs, Dillon first reported his death she claimed he was killed by some stranger who stopped at their place snd tried to 'assault her, Three suspects were arrested, but under rigid cross examination to-day the woman broke . down.and confessed. Bhe is twenty-dight vears old and her hus band was forty-five. They had been governor, Cambridge, Mass., June 4.--~Earl V. M. Long, Harvard's economical stu- dent, who lives on a dollar a * week, has a close rival in Karl Friedrich Brill, who received his A. B. in 1908 from Harvard and who is now study- ing for the degree of bachelor of [science at the same university. ; Brill is one of the best and strong- est nathletes Harvard has ever turned {out, playing left tackle on the 'Var- sity eleven during 1904 and 05 and was ote of the all-American tackles on Walter Camp's 1900 eleven. Brill save he plans to live to be about 125 years old or thereabouts, and that his system of living will help him to that ripe old age if any- thing will. He says: 'Most mem gorge then . They sit down and eat until they ave full, without any CITY POLK SHUN CHURCH.S. Hier iels Ah PURPOSE Brill, Hero of Gridiron, Plans to Live for the Next 125 Years. married three years. Sansideration of what they are eating or. "The primary function of eating is not to please the palate or to pro- duce the sensation of being full, but to nourish the body. "About one-fifth of the food a per son consumes is amply sufficient to support him. The remaining four-fifths are a dead weight on the digestive system, The main reason Cm git not tell when they have sufficient food is on account unnatural seasoning hich deceives the palate." rill has experiomented with various articles of diet, eating nothing but a single article for about two weeks and observing the effects. First he lived on potatoes exclusively 'for a fort- night and found that they were not fattening as is commonly 2 m-- TRIBE OF PYGMIES. Discovered by Explorers in Great June 4.~The Times an: British "fare vet to be heard from Belgium. THERE'S ROW Over Charges Made By The Bystander THAT LIBERAL PARTY WAS RESPONSIBLE FOR THE KING'S DEATH. Tory and Radical are at Each Other's Throat Because of the Accusations ~The Writer Reviews the History of the Past Few Months. London, June 4.--~Tory and rad¥®al are at each other's throats as & re sult of the direct charge, made in this weak's Bystander, that the liberal min- istry killed King Edward. Liberal newspapers everywhere are denouncing the sensational accusation, while the un onists are aiding to make the cir culation of the weekly periodical as widespread as possible in the various oconstithencies. The Bystanders charges, in, brief, are that certain nowspapers, "tlassified as the "cocoa combine," because they are controlled bv a prominent firm of ccvoa dealers, whose methods of gathering the fruit were recently challenged in a libel suit in the courts, first introduced the crown into the lords versus commons controversy, aided by the nationalists forced Premier Asquith into a course spurned by his better judgment, The writer contends that the actual con spiracy was started back in Novem ber, 1909, and that the introduction of the name of the king into the con troversy was first made by the Daily News through an interview with Ar thur Chamberlain, brother of the no ted unionist leader, in which the for mer was quoted as saying: "Ag tc the promised action of the peers «it seems to me the way to meet it is tc g0 to tlie king and ask the king to treate a sufficient number of peers." The object being to force the lords into such a political complexion as to, be unable to east aside the de mands of the commons. The Daily News later contended that the next move lay with the king, while, on Dec, 4th, it headed its pe wort of the coming speech with "I'he ings regret at action of the lords,' when the speech was quite the con trary.. "From that time onward,' the article continues, Ring "s game. After the fgoneral election, i which the parties were too busy villi fying each other to be voncerned with public policy, it was moved anothe square forward, "Mr. Asquith hac gone to Cannes, oxousing himself from obeying the roval command to ge to Windsor. In his absence there be gan almost simultaneously in the Daily News, the Morning Leader anc the Star, all controlled by the coco tombins, the famous guarantee agita tion which finally overwhelmed th government." After summarizing the steps In which it says the government was lot to: take its fateful decision the By: stander points out (hat King Edware at this time was convalesing at Biar ritz, from a-serious, even dangerous, bronchial attack. Instead, however, of enjoying absolute quiet as required by his eondition King Edward, th paper says, was, in the words of the official reports of five physicians, ear nestly concerned with the present strained condition of political affairs He failed to make complete recovery from the attack as hoped. On his advisors' the respousibility is fixed. It resis with the British electorate te apportion the penalty. Mackay Pleased Berlin. Berlin, Ont., June 4--~Hon. A. GG, MucKay 'was dined bv the Laurier Club Thursday night. He scored the govern ment on its policy of centralization of educational administration and gener: al programme of legislation, benefiting the few rather than the many. He traced the ineremsed revenues under different headings to the previous lih eral government; showed up the weak points of the government's method of carrying out the Niagara power scheme in this case worked out to hurt the farmer; told of the deal with thé de partmental store: as regards school hooks contracts, and concluded with 5 stirring refersnce to the awakening of the rank and file of liberalism in On- tario, and the attitude of independent men, by whom the alternative plat. forms of ne Pastion would hence Jorth be w ot their merits, Mr. MacKay was paying his visit and made a great impression. s . Kossuth Walloped at Polis. Pudapest, June h--FEighty districts government has received a majority of more than 100 seats in the next ament. The parties headed rancis Kowuth and Julia Justh fave thus been overwhelmingly defeated. 1 is alleged that the sweeping victory «' the government epndidates was due 10 official pressure in the various coni. - tuene es, ' A ----------L Le The General Explosive eompany, of Mon bas donated $13.000 to the telief of the families of the eleven 'vie of the explosion id Hull on May is expected that Premier Murray be able io leave the Halifax kes. in two weeks and i at North Syd ah wants by - . & - U. 8. international and to visit all The | Councils, and. about p | Trade. LOSSES REACHED MILLIONS. | Market Gets One of the Hardest Cracks Yet. New York, June 6.--There was ano ther. sensational break in the stock market this afternoon, prices giving way in most of the standard issues. Umon Pacific was the leader on the decline, selling off to 171, gnd its ex- wmnple was followed by Reading, Am- algamated Copper, Smelters, and Steel Common. The drop came without! warning, with the result that many | margin accounts were caught, and had to citar out. This liqudation brought large blocks of stock from ev- ory quarter, and the bull element were caught napping, Ti Was no reason assigned for the pressure other tham the ral feeling of unrest, and the belief that the railroads were almost certain to lose their sult to maintain the jn- creased freight rates. As the afternoon advanced, condi- tions assumed a completely demoraliz- ed state. The commission houses were admittedly bought up, and sales of 260 share lots caused a drop from a quarter 10 half a point. Reading fell Six points, and there was not a single stock on the list that was not of at least two points. Industrials suffer- od with the railroads, and the losses reached into the millions. There was a moderate recovery just at the close of the market, and pric- es closed a trifle above' the lowest for the day, but the market was nervous and unsettled. i ------------------ Fell Off Fast Train. Thousand Island Junction, Jane 4. #=Shortly after the departu-e of jas senger train No. 7 from Montreal on Friday morning, Shipman, of Mallory- town, walked into the station with his face and hands bleeding profusely, The night operator not accustomed to such visitations, was thoroughly a- larmed on first sight of the | stranger, but upon taking in the situation ev- ery effort was made to give the man relief from his cuffering. He had fal- len off the train. It is not thought he is seriously injured, but his face and hands are badly bruised and cut. SRP G FLERE GPP R PEP CARRIED TO SAFETY, Alton, 111, June 4 George Long, a civil war veteran, met the woman who as a girl he carried off a battlefild on ~ horseback o a place of safety. He was riding on a street car and overheard Mrs. J. A. Os borne of Alton relating the incident to a companion "Are you the woman who was the little girl that strayed on the battlefield near Palmyra? Mo.?" inquired Long. "Yes, I am, sir, but who are you?" Mrs. A. J. Osborne asked. "I'm the fellow that rode out, picked you up and hustled you out of the range of the bullets," answered Long. PEIEPEIIPROIIIIIOR SSRI Or ------------ $3,000,000 FOR NEW LINE. Extension of System to Providence Planned. Boston, June 4.--A survey by Grand Trunk railway engineers hag eorivinced the management that the connecting link, which it hopes to build across the south-western corner of Massachu- setts to effect an entrance into Provi- dence, will cost 83,500,000, With this estitnate as a"baSis the Grand Trunk has formed the requisite association, calling its proposed Mas sachusetts line the Southern New Eng- land railroad, and has decided upon a capitalization of $1,000,000. The G.T.R. has asked the Massachusetts railroad commission for a certificate of exigency, which shall give it the right to cross the state. Of the 10,000 shares into which the capital stock has been divided, the Grand Trunk Railway company of Canada keeps 9.560 shares, and 140 shares are divided among fourteen « i ficials. MANITOBA COMMISSION. Appointed to Report on Techaical Education. Winnipeg, June 4.-The Manitoba government has decided to appoint a commission on technical education, and has invited representatives from the various institutions and interests of the province to sit in the body. Following is the commission as out lined by Hon. G. R. Coldwell, minis- ter of education: chairman and sit | perintendent, D. Melutre, of Winni peg' school board; one representative pach from Brandon and Portage la Prairie school beards; and ove from Dauphin; one representative of the manufacturers' association, one from the agricultural college, ome represen. tative each from the Brandon amd Portage la Prairie Trades and Labor six from the Winnipeg Trades and Labor Council, and one from the Winnipeg Board of td int A NUMBER OF CHARGES. S00 Veterinary Arrested for Serious, Offences, Sault Ste. Marie Mich, June 1} Dr. E. 8. Nogers, a prominent voters : was are] rested and Jocked up on the serious | charge of indecent ascault on a nam! of litte girls ranging from twelve | to fifteen years in age. The charge was laid by the parents of chil dren. About fourteen charges are! pending against the man, all of the most serious nature. The accusnd! bolds i prominence in this} aty, i Te~~Table Plpeapples--ic. : nt dan preserving The, J. Oram | who was sewi WEATHER PROBABILITIES, o, Ont, June 4 10 am---Ot- ey and Upper St. Lawrenoe ay and on Sunday. stationary or a little higher temparsigre. To-night SPECIAL PURCHASE Sale OF - LADIES' and CHILDREN'S Cotton Hose * FastBlack Hose all ages. Good, ribbed cotton hose, 5 to 10. Priced ac- Any size in the lot more than will ask * @ For children of strong, 1 and 1 in all sizes from cording to size. worth S¢ to 10e you. SPECIAL PRICES, 10¢, 15¢, 18¢, and 20¢. * Embroidered Hose For Ladies, very fine quality, in Tans and Black, neatly embroidered with colors, 35¢ quality, SPECIAL PRICE, @5¢. + 9 * & J Extraordinary Values IN Gauze Lisle Hose Rich, Black, embroidered with colors. VERY SPECIAL AT 45¢ and 50c, CALL TONIGHT AND SEE THEM. + % Steacy's ROLBON-In Kingston, on June 2rd, 1910, to Mr. and Mrs. W, Rolson, a daughter > ROBERT J, REID, The Leading Undertaker. "Phone 577. 280 Princess Street. JAMES REID The Old Firm of Undertaker, 4 and 258 PRINCESS STREET, "Phooe 147 for Ambulance, "FROM THIS OUT" I could use some pretty good Fural- ture and Cook Btoves, for which I will 2 reasonable prices. J. 'Phone F FEE Our Java and Mocha Is roasted and ground by ourselves, thus ensuring perfect freshness. The price Is 40 cents the pound. The value cannot be expressed in figures. We would like you to try ib * ye C Jas. Redden & Co. Importers of Fine Groceries. A PIN IN HER THROAT. Taken Out at General Hospital in Toronto, Torohto, June 1.---For two days Mrs. La Moundin, Byng Inlet, had a pin stuck in her throat, and after several ansuccessial attempts had bean made to recover it at the general howpital, Toronto, Dr. fiitbert Bryon anpennded in reaching il. The pin was an ordin- ary steel one, and Mrs, La Mondin, , winck ns row of them in her mouth. She swallowed the one and must have suffered agony before it was exiracted. WAS A BRIGHT YOUTH. Man Whe Earned $16,000 a Year is Dead, Chicago, June 4.<Willier D. Oliver, one of the leading tel estate brokers of Chicags, is from Beart fail- wee, following An operation. An evi dence of his early business ability is | the fact that at the age of dightesn years, il is id, he was receiving a of $10.00 from a board oats em eer TT 28 8 boa

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