Ontario Community Newspapers

North Ontario Observer (Port Perry), 19 Jan 1911, p. 4

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26 Lona JRO Es 0 Ou SL dovior told we 3 und a fine remedy or (811 Enever forget to tell yiends what it has done for me." 804 Enst Long 8¢t., Women who aro passing thr h this critical period or hough this from any of oS 0 Ry - culiar to their sex should not Jose pets of tho fact that for thirty years Lydia XE. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, which is made from Tops hn and i the standard" remed: female ills. In almost every I iy 3 you will find ue 2% haye NEWS TOPICS OF WEEK Important Events Which Have | Ogeurred During tha Week. i | oa {he Busy World's Happinings Care | fully Compiled "and Put Inte Haridy and Attractive Shape for | the Readers of Our Paper--A Solid | Haur's Enjoyment. . WEDNESDAY. The Kaiser's speech at the opening lof thé Diet offended the Democrats {and Liberals. The' présbyteries of Montreal, Ot- tawa and Orangeville voted in favor lot church union. Hon. Byduey Fisher and Mr. C. C. {Jamed addressed the Ontario Agrieui- tural and Experimental Union meet- !ing at Guelph. bull dog kept a dozen London emen at bay when they tried to {enter the room in which its master {Bad committed suicide. | The qupstion of church union was | {decided by the Ottawa presbytery at a | IDeeting yesterday. The vote showed 186 im favor and 5 against union. Iestitution to the amount of $1,300, loos was made yesterday by men who were iudicted in connection with the en sia dra ropen ' tement on hg} 6. He will bi accompanied by the Queen, and | focre will be a full state ceremony. «i Dr. Trembley of the Quebec Board | ~ of Health, left for Alluemette Island, op the Ottawa River, where some two dozen cases of smallpox arte giving a great deal of trouble to the local authorities. | Agr ing to a report the Ontario Powiler Co. has gone into a merger, with. head office at Montreal. C. A. i MacPherson," interviewed im regard to the mstter, would neither confirm nor deny the report, THUHSDAY. A: J. "Balfour 3 the fiscal Gversy retaind its old place or . thew Unionist DISgram, + Cases of malicious demage to the Hydroelectric transmission line have been raported at Iondon. | | Hon. Bydney Fisher and other speakers at the Experimental Union at Guelph discussed the {ight against noxious weeds, | The American section of the Iater- | 'national Waterways Commission fay- ors Government eontrol of Leng Sault Rapids power development. | AW "fged woman was crushed bo- $ween: two cars in Toronto yesterday, i The Ontdris fruit growers in ses gion in Fovento Jecide do tend & de putation tor O Vice-Preside 'Whyte gf the CPR speaks in glowing terms of the pros | "pects of the west, which he says is | aitracti aplial. Hh ih As immigr grr 2 ritain. rie A ly moon: Dey Allidnes finds that woman's | and I . Whitehall. ored to b Ly Lydia E. | F's i egetably CAR ER | | | Bteike In Hollaway Jail, v 'to Canada--Miss Smith |. that if I were arrest Bo, as' a pro- Government and from eal motives, 1 threw: Zi Council windows em. ' | 'was immediate- |, i Mins Elsie V. MeReusie, nA militant sufiragetie and : pniger striker of | Mrs. army of sufitdgettes; 'sta veetnt fnterview in Toronto with : is sentenced 16 01 im sonmien in the bukit division for Yn ling the police in She was taken to Hollo- way Jail, and while there startled the suthorities Ly deegrating her ccll with Clause V. from the Bll of Hints also the words "Glorious Chriztobel' | end "Down with the Goverom-nt." During her incareeration, Miss Me- Kenrie had ben supplied with some one bearing ~the - title, "A hy Heme and How to Keep It," chapter on "How to Ventilate's Room "groatly appealed 16 her, The boo ied her, espe- saide 4 Bottom," but the | windiwe of her cell refused to open nt =i} During her meditation as to how bost t entilate the cell, the aio ited Miss MsKenzie the book with «the page "How to' Ventilate a ted out that the win- could not be opened ressed his regret, but ng te help her. The sed to do anything rte her cell, So N nzie tock the law in- to her 1 hands and delibera emashed the windows of her cell. The oflicials bacame alarmed and inform- ed her that she would be tried for mutiny the following morning. Miss BeBunnts then petitioned the Right Hoa. Gladstone, then Home Becre- tary. 2 anding "the rights of a tical prisoner rnd to be treated as such." The reply was that there were no grounds {or action. ug she was sentence | in golitary ccnfine- ring her sentence Miss ared that duri her confinement she would "take no At this threat the court sneer i5e knowing that they had to mon possessed of strong So ghe was led to the to undergo the great est trial of her life, edless to repeat the horror of and how Miss McKenzie pe oy the governor and alarmed the doctor by abstaining from food for eeven days. H ners con- soled themselves Sil ng the "wo: 'men's: Marseill Le How on the dow of her c The doctor could do noth governor also r to help 4 sixth day of fastin pail of water and bathbrick were brought into her cell, so that she might clean it. How she told the authorities tl.at she had no intention of cleaning Government property and fell into a semi-conscious state. How on the seventh day the -0fcials eolered her cell, and after 'exaniiving her, the doctor remarked, ou have tmd enough To which Mies McKenzie replied, "Don't you think 1 have dono well? Onc hundred and forty-eight hours without food." Tho stomach pump was then sng- So, but Miss McKenzie, being a ospital nurse, was able to inform them that forcible feeding on a sane 'person was ille al. After tho officials departed Mise McKenzie fell inte a peaceful sleep, from which she was awakened by the matron, who told her to dress. 8he was taken to the infirmary ward. Still she refused food, and shortly the gov- rncr entered and said to her, "The ome Secretary has ordered your re- Jerse and you must go." Miss Me- .Kenzie's friends came and took her away. And #0 she drove out of the doors that had closed so heavily on her only ejght days before, and bear- Jing the reputation of being the only wo an alive who has defied the prison Juiboriies, fot séven days refusing « On regaining her strength, Miss Me- Kenzie was appointed by Mrs. Pank- Jhurst organizer for the National Wo- men's jal end Political Union in South Wales, Misg Smith is one of the two la who. chained themselves to the front of Premier Asquith's house in Dowa- ing street. She is also the young wo- man who interrupted the opening of the Ontario" Legislature a year ago. Downing street is a cul de sac and Joe entranée is sacredly guarded to J Buffragettes. ah uk the hi hired ear d Bo 4 his fap ate hidin their rl ro Ey 80 =o to. shield ident promptly el lects with eve moved from the {ime ta Sa other dera: of} T1t misfortun should overtake chance to atta tle on the kid quickly by. eing an His son, Rioherd 1 Lis Heart, aia not Ho John 240: tha sows Lang. called himself. og of England Tod of Ireland, Rormaudy ani A gustan pitas, Richard III. iid the Duke of Nom Edward ITT, ed imact X "Ki 8 En, jasd and Frapes, and: Long rs n Joslan Fak {E elaod aad and Fre Naples; ng! 'rance em, and Ircland, Defenders 'of the Faith, Princes of Spain' and Sicily Archdukes of Austria, Dukes of Milan, Burgundy ,and Brabant. Queen Elizabeth called herself sim- ply "Queen of England, Frane Ireland, Defender of the Faith Queen Ann created the new title of | Great Britain by omitting Scotland. - | The first three Georges bore i it following title: "King of Great DBri- aA, tain, France, and Ireland, Duke of famous Redeiy Brunsw Toctor of Hanover, De-| every box fenders of the Faith," ep? In 1877 Queen Victoria added tol. wi i have Sig lek ber this be tor Clears the Sky. "A kind org fvolien is 8 dar as first proclaimed | yroken. } 'Lord of the Colonics' in his title. PECRAS GE AND STAGE. N RR H ASE There Have Been Twenty Alliances ie Jinss Since the Peerage Began. Canada. Apply Ottawa. Viscount Torrington, who married | === Miss Bouray tue other day, is nn Comic Sing 4 twentieth British peer to marry an actress since the beginning of the fined and Satrrning on aim bi Finny on nd fupoy S| peerage, says MAP. leven of these 3 "For terms Lvs i Ylephone Toe have taken ites 0 i the last twenty-six years, the x = - ing nine having End a S roma of EDDIE Piao one hundred and twenty-four years-- om STREET, BOR from 1724 to 1847. Either, therefore, | Long Disance Telephone, Goer the peerage is ip particulas Ey gt rere formerly, or the fatcinations of s! ed are less resistible. | las Roiaigd The fashion was set in the igh teenth century by the liarl of Peter borough, the Duke of Bolton, and the Earl of Derby, who matried, respec- | tively, Anastasin Robinson, el Fenton, and Elizabeth Farren. In more recent times, an operas | AAYS was given to such unions by the late | i§ Duke of Cambridge's marriage in 1847 |} to the actress, Louisa Fairbrother. | Then crme, in comparatively quick succession, the marriages of: | Baron Gardner and Julie Fortescue. The Murquis of Ailesbury and Dolly | Cold In Head. 12 Vaseline Remedies ini lester, . 2 ga Earl of Clancarty and Dene | Bilto The 'Earl of Orkney and Connie Gil- | christ, | Baron Haldon and Lavinia Maichle, | # The Marquis of Headfort and Rie | Boot, ] The Earl of Rosslyn and Anné Rob- inson, A, Baron de Clifford and Eva Coe ton, Baron Ashburton and Frances Don-| nelly, and | Earl Poulett and Sylvia Storey. Many of these unions were singular- ly happy: one of them, that of Lord Francis Hope and May Yohe, ended | tragically. Among the actresses' who | married near relatives of peers were Kate Vaughan. Miss Marie Tempest, 7A Miss Ellis Jeffreys, and Miss Isabel Bs A Jay. suid A a rule, stage-marrying peers Revd 2mo., 37% Pa; gone to the burlesque or the musica gs " comedy theatics for their wives, while | This interestin two footlight peeresses--Belle Bilton lof agriculture in a sei and May Yohe--were closely associat | The author has devo! ed with ihe music halls jagdenitasal conditio at any previous peri Satz a at His Own Funeral. | sands fiom the desk; We hear now and i of 2 fsa) + reading his owa obituary in the] papers, but it is a rare thing for a and wari dead man to sing at his own funeral. | | product ity decre Pietro Ficco, a shoemaker and ama tion, the hew trans teur 'musician, had a very great fond- | come i in for a share, ness for the phonograph. He purchased a "good many records | and CoRSSnAlY of into his own Dhictograph end kept records of the | agriculture. songs o was taken seriously. il He realized that be could not recover, The shagters and being a poor man and unable So us The | | A Popular Outline of Methods of 1 get up much of a funeral he request- ed that they use his EE furnish the music for the funeral ser. Chapter" 1 de | vices. a picked out the "Angel's Seren. end, Sounds 28 Maria," 20% imself, an ego were hi df thus the dead man took en important part at his own funeral service. e instructed that his phonograph and 72 records, a bein ip of them his own, should be sent to his mother in Italy. Chapter, 11% gives; the

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