Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 12 Oct 1920, p. 11

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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1020. RAND TRUNK Sunday, October 3rd, train itreal dally at 7.3 Arrying through nto and Stratfor 1 eeping car from Mc eal yt Saturday, arriving King- n, 12.43 am. and Trentor 5.10 am. dally except Sunday Pas- sengers for Kingston may remain in sleeper until 6.15 am, Returning this + will leave Trenton 9.10 p.m. daily Sunday, arriving Kingston Junc- 1.15 pm, leaving Kingston Junc- 1.36 am, arriving Montreal 7.00 daily except Monday. Car will be [54 Bad open to receive passengers at King- | ston Junction from time of arrival at that point. For rail and Sleeping car tickets ap- /ply to J. P. Hanley, C. P. & T. A, G Ry., Kingston, Ont. ANCHOR HOR-DONALDSON ANC MONTREAL--GLASGOW Cassandra . Saturnia PORTLAND---GLASGOW (CHRISTMAS SAILING ? N. Y., GLASGOW, (via Moville) Nev. §/Dec. 11}Jan. 15 ........Columbia NEW YORK--LIVERPOOL = 23|Nov. 20|Dec. 18 ....... Carmania . §|Dec. 4/Jan. 1 K. Aug. Viet N. Y,, PLY, and CHER, Oet. 21{Nov. 25{Jan ravens JOBTONIR N.X., CHERBOURG & SOUTHAMP'N QOet. 12 | Nov. 2 | Nov. 23 Acquitania Oot. 23 Nov. 11|Dec. 9/Jan. 15 N. Y, PLY, CHER, HAMBURG . 30|Dec. § Dubrovnik and Trieste Calabria Pannonia For rates of passage, freight and fur- ther particulars apply to local agents or THE ROBERT REFORD CO., LTD. General Agents rus SALE AD eicelient farm oi AoV ~ acres, good building, splendid land. Another farm of 10V acres, seven miles from the city -- $4,600, . W. H. GODWIN & SON Real Fatate and Insurance 89 Brock St. Phone 434 SCOTT'S GARAGE Repairs, Washing and Storage. Ose 1915 McLapghlin Teur- fog cag for sale cheap for a quick' buyer. T | aturnia Sritareasavetiraves Mauretania | Imperator | 208 BAGOT STREET Phone 18%04w. 2 REPAIRS! REPAIRS ! Welding 1a not a side-line with us. We guarantees our workmanship. All broken parts made as strong As new, Water Jackets and Crank Cases weld- ed without heating. KINGSTON WELDING SHOP 43 PRINCESS STREET. ~-- DID YOU EVER TRY Wagstafl's Ginger Marmalade, Nagstafi's FVincapple Marmalade, Wagstafl"s Bramble Jellly. We also have .. full, line other reliable makes of lades, Jam and Jellisg for sale at: ot Bon Marche Grocery Cor. King and Earl Streets License No, 5-27149 Phone 1844. It Pays to Bay {owr Groceries And Meat R. J. Shales & Son 71 PINE ST. Phone 1088 and Get Prompt Delivery ' WOOD Sawed in Stove BOOTH & CO., Foot, West Street Phone 133 Kingston Cement Products Factory Makers of Hollow vawp- . Proof Cement Blocks, Bricks, Sills, Lintles, and Drain Tile, also Grave Vaults. And all kinds of Ornamental Cement work. Factory: cor. of Charles and Patrick streets. PHONE 730W. Mgr, H. F. NORMAN | You have a eold, or your child has a cold; a eough; a tight feel- ing across the chest; a soreness ia the breathing tubes. In the past how have you treated | such? You have bought some cough mixture, and swallowed this down into your stomach. Now, | why?! Your stomach was not ail- ing; and thers is no direct connee- tion between your chest (where ! the trouble is) and your stemach! { Then why swallow Into your stomach any mixture when the trouble is in your lungs and bron- chial tubes? It's a mistake; and Peps is the remedy provided ta cofrrect this un-commonsense * treatment. Peps are little tablets, which contain highly beneficial Pine essences, combined with other medicinal ex- tracts, These healing extracts are #0 prepared that as soon as you put a Pep into your meuth they are lib erated in the form of healing vap- ors. You breathe these vapors down to the throat and lungs, and thus treat the ergans that are |n- flamed, direct. In a way, it is ifke breathing from a vaporizer or bronchitis kettle, except that thers is no apparatus needed, the little Peps providing everything needful | for the treatment! The very small portion of Peps which you swallow hac a slightly tonic effect upon the stomach and does you good, but the use of Peps is not for stomach troubles, but for lung, throat and bronchial troubles. Peps relieve these 23 10 ordinary treatment ean. Children like Peps and they are best fer the little Snes because Peps contain mo morphine, lauda . nus or ether poison found in so many of the old cough mixtures. Druggists and stores everywhere sell Peps 50c. box or from Peps Co., Toronto, for price. Remember the | mame--four letters only: -- Peps CRANDMA USED SAGE TEA T0 DARKEN HAR She Mixed Sulphur With It To Re- store Color, Gloss, Youth- fulness. Comms sarden sage brewed into 2 heavy tea with sulphur added, will turn gray, streaked and faded hair beautifully dark and luxuriant. Just a few applications will prove a revela- tion if your hair is fading, streaked er gray. AMixitg the Sage les and Sulphur receipe at home, though, is troubleson:e. An easier way is to get a bottle of \\ yveth"s Sage and Sul- rhur Compound at any drug store all readv for (se. This is the old- time recipe tmproved 'by the addi- tion of other ingredients. While wispy, xray, faded hair is not sinful, we all desire to retain our southful appearance and attractive. ness. By darkening your hair with Wyetk's fape urd Sulphur Coa pound, no one can tell, hecause it does it go aat. ally, so evenly. Yoa just dan:pen o £ponge or soft brush with it and drew this through yoa* hair, taking one small strand at a tine; by 2.arning all gray hairs have disappeared, ard after another ap plication or two. your hair becomes Lnautifully dark, glossy, soft aud luxuriant, CUT THIS OUT OLD ENGLISH RECIPE FOR CA. TARRH, CATARRHAL DEAF- NESS AND HEAD . NOISES If you know of some one who is troubled with Catarrhal Deafness, head noises or ordinary catarrh, cut out this formula and hand it to them andgyou gay have been the means of saving some poor sufferer perhaps trom total deafness. In England sclentietss for a long time past have recognized that catarrh is a constitu- tional disease and necessarily requir- es constitutional treatment. I Sprays, inhalers and nose douches are liable to irritate the delicate air passages and force the disease into the middle ear, "which frequently means total deafness, or else the di- sease may be driven down. the alr passages towards the lungs which is equally as dangerous. The follow- ing formula which is used extensive- ily in the damp English climate is a | constitutional treatment and should | prove especially efficacious to suffer- | ers here who live under more favor- | able climate conditions. Secure from your druggist 1 ounce | of Parmint (Double strength). Take this home and add to it 3% pint of hot water and a little granulated | sugar; stir until dissolved. Take | one tablespoontul four times a day. | This will often bring quick relief | from distressing head noises. Clog- ged nostrils should open, breathing become easy and hearing improve as the inflammation in the eustachian tubes is reduced. Parmint used in this way acts directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system | and has a tonic action that helps to obtain the desired results. The pre- paration is easy to make, costs little and is pleasant to take. Every per- son who has catarrh or head noises | Ca! | or is hard of hearing should give this treatment a trial --Advt REMOVAL NOTICE Robinson & Wiltshire Auto Repair Shop is now located at GARAGE #0 CLERGY STREET All kinds of work promptly at- tended to. PHONE 1103w. mi EXCESSIVE ACIDITY is at the bottom of most digestive ills. 7 © . THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. sc sisi BEG VIEWS MRE SET FORTH outinued from Page 9.) "hila the engineering Investiga- re not yet sufficiently complete laying out of a definite e, it is certain that the econom- and efficient use of the waters St. Lawrence river in the in- s of both countries will involve the creation of a waterway to sea having the same navigable capacity as the new Welland ship canal; and second, the conservation of the last inch of available head be- tween lake Ontario and Montreal, so that the potential power of the waters may be developed to the full as oc- casion requires, Regulating Waters. P There is also the extremely im- | | portant matter of the possibility of | | regulating the waters of lake Ontarlo. | {If the immense storage capacity of | | lake Ontario can be so utilized as to | permanently increase the low water | flow of the St. Lawrence river, such | increase will be of inestimable value | not only to the navigation and power | interests in thg upper St. Lawrence, | but to the tide-water ship channe] at {and below Montreal, + ~ While international and federal co- | gperation is necessary in connection | Vth the development of the | Lawrence water-powers, on account {of navigation interests, and the fact that the St. Lawrence is a boundary stream, it should nevertheless be the laim of the people of Ontario to re- tain the most effective control pos- sible over their development and sub- | sequent utilization. - Apart altogether j from any question of ownership, such | control is necessary in order to re- gulate the sale and cost of power, and to properly and efficiently: co- ordinate the resulting transmission systems with the constantly expand- ing transmission systéms which now serve the municipalities of eastern, central and western Ontario. Such control will furthermore be vitally necessary in order to preserve an equitable balance between the amounts of power disposed to large power consuming industries, and the | amount of power required at pre- sent and in the future for general dis- tribution throughout the province. As a general rule the industrial cen- | ters immediately adjacent to the de- veloped power sites will be the first { to benefit, but the inevitable result mmm | {of healthy industrial expansion will | | be to include more and more of the surrounding territory within the zone | this zone should expand freely along economic lines and not be distorted by private interests or by the absorp- tion of too large a share of the avail- able power by large local industries. The developments of the St. Law- rence river in the joint interests of | navigation and power is one of the | outstanding economic problems be- | fore the people of Canada, and more ! particularly the people of Ontario at | the present time. It is necessary that | they should hava a full and complete understanding of the issues involved in order that they may insist upon a solution, satisfactory .not only to themselves, but one which will prove in the best interests of those who come after them. While, therefore, the immense im- portance of navigation on the St. Lawrence river must always be k clearly in view, it is the particular duty of the people of this province to see that the interests of power are not sacrificed. It must always be kept in mind that the sacrifice of one foot of head on the upper St. Lawr- ence means that the people of Ont- { arfo must for all time purchase 400,- | 000 tons of coal per annum to take the place of the power thereby wasted and that the maximum possible de- velopment-of these powers alone will be the fuel equivalent of a mine per- manently producing approximately 20,000,000 toms of coal per annum for the people of Ontario, + The above ideas were incorporat- ed in a resolution passed by a con- vention of the eastern municipalities held in Brockville in May, 1919. The Resolution Passed. This resolution, which was passed unanimously, and forwarded to every cabinet minister at Ottawa, read as follows: 'Whereas the sub-equeoud lands in the St. Lawrence river above lake St. Francig and north on the interna- tional boundary, are the property of the province of Ontario. And whereas the province has an exclusive right in the use of the waters flowing over the said lands limited only by such use as may re- quire to be made of these waters for navigation purposes. And whereas the economic and efficient use of these waters for power purposes will result in the production of power, which will rival Niagara #4 quantity and cheapness, and which will ultimately make eastern Ontario one of the most important industrial districts in the rid. And whereas the development of Ontario's share of the St. Lawren river power above St. Francis wi be the fuel equivalent of a mine pro- ducing not less than 15,000,000 tons of coal per annum for all time and at an annual saving of at least $76,- 000,000 which would otherwise be paid to coal é¢<rators in the United States. And whereas the Dominion govern- ment may in the near future take over the Grand Trunk railway as part of its national system, and may in the not distant future require large quantities of cheap power for elec- trification onal railway system, the only adequate source of power for the electrification of the trunk lines 'of the Canadian National railway sys tem, the only adequate source of power for the electrification of the castern lines being the St. Lawrence . river. And whereas the industrial wel- fare of the eastern municipalities has been disastrously affected for 'want of an adequate supply of power. And whereas the enormous de- velopment in the use of hydro-elec- tric power during the war has now demonstrated that a market = for power can be secured in eastern Ont- ario, the extent of which is so far ia axcess of the possibilities of the New 'ork and Ontario power company cheme that the development of the . St, Lawrence river as a whoie is now »international of Influence of these water-powers, | and it is supremely important that | the trunk lines of the! withig the range of commercial pos- ; sibility. And whereas the Dominion power board is preparing to undertake an exhaustive investigation of the tech- nical and economic features of the | St. Lawrence river problem, and with | whieh body the Hydro-Electric Power Commission is in close co-operation, insofar as the investigations in the portion of the river above Lake St. Francis are concerned. Be it therefore resolved: 1. That the strongest possible re- presentations be made to the govern. ment of Canada, pointing out the vital and immediate need of solving the economic and technical problems involved in making the best use of | the waters of the St. Lawrence in the joint interests of navigation and power, and the need of facilitating and promoting the activities of the Dominion power board to this end by every possible means, with the assurance that the results of the in- vestigation now being made by the Hydro-Electric Power Commission in { the upper St. Lawrence will be wholly available for the Information and assistance of the said board. 2. That in view of the ful power development and transmis- sion policy of the Hydro-Electrie Power Commission, as applied to the | situation at Niagara and elsewhere in wéstern and northern Ontario, the i sald commission should be entrusted | with the construction and operation | of power plants in the St. Lawrence | river above Lake St. Francis, su\h | construction and operation to be | made in accordance with a general | scheme to be worked out for the mu- | tual benefit and protection of federal, { provincial and international interests, {and for the benefit of eastern muni- | cipalitles. 3. That subsequent to the comple- | tion of any power development in the | upper St. Lawrence, the Dominion { government and the Hydfo-Electric | Power Commission shall enter into | an agreement whereby the commis- | sion will pay a fair annual rental for | the use of such navigation works as | are necessary in connection with the | development of power, and whereby | the Dominion government will pay | the commission a fair annual rental for the use of such portions of the power development works as are necessary for navigation purposes. 4. That the Dominion government co-operate with the province, the Hydro-Electric Power Commission {and the municipalities to the fullest { possible extent in connection with all | matters above referred to, and par- | ticularly in connection with the se- { curing of national and international co-operation and the facilitating of | negotiations with the various inter- | ests involved, whether public or pri- In conclusion, I wish to respect- | fully submit certain specific views re- lative to the navigation problem which appear to me to be justifiable on the basis of ordinary common sense: ' (a) That notwithstanding the re- presentations of certain interests, no policy involving the beneficial utiliza- tion of the waters of the St. Lawrence river can possibly be considered with- out giving full weight to the ques- tion of deep-draft navigation. (b) That even if deep-draft navi- gation between Lake Ontario and Montreal were not an economic ne- cessity, ordinary forethought would make it obligatory at least to go so far as to construct locks in connec- tion with power dams which would have no less depth aid capacity than those on the new Welland ship canal. (¢)-That subsequent to the cone struction of such locks, the connect- ing reaches and channels could be deepened at will to meet the require- ments of commerce. (d) That the provision of such a waterway is apparently justified in the interests of fresh water naviga- tion alone; and that any future pos- sible development of salt water com- merce the great lakes, will add proportionately to the value of the project, and to the benefits which would accrue to Canada and the United States. All of which is respectively sud- mitted on behalf of the province of Ontario, the interested municfpali- ties and the Hydro-Electric Power Commission of Ontario. Babe Ruth a Singer? Asked by Caruso Omaha, Neb., Oct. 11.--Enrico Caruso, famous tenor, never heard of Babe Ruth and his bat, thought Babe was an opera singer of the feminine gender, didn't know Cleve- land had won the American league pennant and was not even aware that a world series was in progress when questioned by a reporter this ffterioon as he was passing through: Omaha. ~"Cleveland has won again," the reporter informed the singer during the conversation. 4 "Won what?" asked Caruso. "I don't understand." "Why Cleveland won another game in the world series." "Are -you talking about base- ball?" asked Caruso. "I didn't know Cleveland was playing." "Well, what do you think of Ruth?" the reporter asked. "I will have to admit I never heard het sing," he answered. REPLY BY GRIFFITH Issues Cannot Bo Obscured by Dia. tortion, Dublin, Oct. 12.--Anthur Grif- fith, interviewed on Premier Lloyd 4 's speech, sald Lloyd George mill not succeed by and land's claim to national independ- ence, mination, status for their country by nich Lioga eorss tue of wi fice as Premier of England, 'Following a lingering filness ¢¢ many months, Mrs. Margaret Al relict of Paul Allen, passed away, Oct. 3rd, at the home of her Mrs. Agnes Siguett, w Feels Lost Without It a ul Ontario mother, Mrs, T. G. Miller, of Winona. * Whilst at play," she says, "my little two-year-old laddieran up againstacrese out saw and gushed bis nd badly. "As we happened to have a box of Zam-Buk in the house 1 ot ft down and applied a dressing to injury. It speedily soothed away the pain. PE En IN ITN i pt ee If you are nervous, if your nerves are weak, if you are run down, no lite, just try Vital Tablets, the French Remedy, your nerves will be made strong, and all nervousness will dis- appear. Price 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, at all drug stores. The Scobel Drug Company, Montreal, Que. Sold in Kiagston by Mahood's Drug Store. ANCHOR PLUG BAC 11 Stormteh } BE 2 Storm Sash Don't wait until January, give us your measurements now. Allan Lumber Co. Phone 1042. t Victoria Street : I 2 em TIRES COMING DOWN Put a MAXOTIRE (a that old the season out of It. "THE HOME OF THE MAXOTIRE" 284 Ontario Street casing and get the balance of Phone 2050. "NOTICE Cleveland, Hyslop and Humphrey Bicycles ~----At Reduced Prices---- Bicycle Tires and Auto Traction Tread Covers. Special prices. See window display. Carpet Cleaning and Laying. H. MILNE 272 BAGOT STREET Zo Blac far 25¢ "The BEST Chewing Tobacco 4 Best selected leaf-- Skillfully manufactured--Delicious flavor-- Ever fresh and lasting ANCHOR PLUG A thousand rumors do not make one single fact ww give dn dn oll siucoritgrete REE .

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