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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1910-01-14, Page 6;EVENTY-ONE BARS CLOSED. .latest Figures Show More Temper - once Victories. inti -Saloon Men Want Recount in in Brantford, ° lorrtests .. , e' hurled .. ..... ,ost through three-fifths clause .. hfeated .. ....... 'laces still to hear front "According to the returns from nttnioipalities," said Mr. Beu H. a"1en1o, Secretary of the Dominion Al- Eianoe, "the people of this Province vot- e sd 530 bars to close, 83 to stay open. The three-fifths requirement steps in '4ind saves for the liquormen in 83 nrurni- 'sipalities 237 licenses; so that only 1£3 will be closed, and 300 will stay open, 'sot by the will of the people, but by the arbitrary dictum of the Legisla- ture." Rev. Dr. J. G, Shearer felt .that the next step should be a by-law for the rebolition of bars, utterly dissociated 'from retail liquor stores; and this, Le ° felt, wound receive the support of many non -professing temperance peo- o ple. "The fact that large towns like r Galt have abolished all legalized sale t of drink after May 1 next by a vote s, well over 60 per cent.," concluded Dr. r, Shearer, "may well cause the liquor lords and beer barons some uncom- fortable nights." 161 71 54 _2 17 140 MUST BE ON TOP. ' Railway Commission Deals With Brakemen and Bridges. s Ottawa, Jan. 10.—The Railway Com- e mission this morning decided not to for- bid the presence of brakemen on the top of moving trains. The proposal was made for the purpose of allowing of the reduction of the height of bridges and overhead crossings of railways. At pres- ent there has to be 22 feet 6 inches be- tween the rails and the bridge, so filial ' there will be room for brakemen to starve on the top of the cars without e{. danger. If the height of the bridge could be reduced by keeping brakemen xr off the tons of freight trains the cost of overhead crossings would be greatly re- duced. The proposal to remove brake- men was opposed as impracticable by representatives of the aCnadian Pacific, the Canadian Northern and other lines. A .They declared that even with air k 'akes• ne on all freight trains tihere was need for men on the tops of tars to give signals and to supplement the air on grades. The board decided not to interfere with present conditions. 't MAYOR'S THREAT. " Montreal Annexation Question Evi- dently a Live One. t 1. t 4 Montreal, Jan. 10.—At a heated meeting of the Notre Dame de Graee C'ounc'il this afternoon fisticuffs were on the point of being exchanged be- tween tine _Alayor and an octogenarian member of the Council. The question of the annexation of the town to Montreal came up, and Councillor Dugald _11cDouald moved that the pro- posal be laid on the table. He accused the Council of rushing recklessly into the annexation proposition, and Was called. to order by Mayor Trenholme. ,The uproar arose When Mr.. Me - Donald accused the. Mayor of having his own son appointed assessor. "Stop right there," shouted the Mayor, shaking his fist. "'This is not the first time you have insulted inc.You are worse than a villain, and if you'were a younger roan and outside these walls you would soon know it,. You are look- ing for trouble and will gtsmita" • The other councillors poured oil on the troubled waters, and the exchange of blows was prevented, TO FREE FLYNN. Such is Latest Sensation in. Exsress Robbery Case. Niagara Falls, Ont. despatch—Becauraa tale Canadian authorities would not al- low William Dobson and Purls Whistler, held in Welland County jail for robibng the Canadian Express Company here of $14,160; to be taken to Lockport, N. Y., to appear against Charles J. Flynn, pro- prietor of a Main street saloon in Niag- ara Falls, .N. Y., who was arrested over the river •for complicity in the crime, the latter Will be a free man to -night. District Attorney Fred M. Ackerson ap- peared before County Judge Charles Hickey at Lockport. and asked that Flynn be released without his case be- ing brought before the grand jury, as he could secure no evidence against him, the Canadian officials fearing that if they allowed the two men arrested here to be taken to Lockport they would take advantage of the extradition laws and not return to Canada without a fight. Judge Hickey decided .to liberate Flynn on these grounds, and a special from Lockport says he will leave the jail a free man to -night. Divisional Superintendent William H. \tains, of the Provincial Police here, was skeptical when told of what had been done in Lockport. "If 1 were you I would not say emphatically that Flynn would get off scott free," was all that he would say to -day on the matter. According to the story from Lockport Flynn made a full confession of his con- nection with the ease and returned the :$0,000 he received as his share of the spoils of the robbery- last November, when Dobson was rendered unconscious. Dobson and Whistler will appear before Magistrate Fraser here Friday morning for the preliminary hearing. JUSTICE OF PEACE Resigns Because of Nothing to Do Under Option. Hillsdale, ris�J Justice of' the Peace Frfsbfe restbe- cause local option has m de it so good that there is nothing Igrlas jus- tice of the peace to do. The justice's let- ter of resignation follows: "To the honorable mayor and common council of the City of Hillsdale: `Gentlemen,—I hereby most respect- fully tender my resignation as justice of the peace of the City of Hillsdale, to take effect on. March 1, 1910. Cause: County prohibition, local option, no drinks, no vagrants, no disorderlies, no business to further make the office de- sirable or in any way profitable. Really there is no use for more than one jus- tice of the peace in the City of Bu s - dale under present conditions. "With kindest salutations to all our good citizens, I am John D. Prisbie." e • The wind storm of Monday evening, wrecked the new Racer Dips causing over $15,000 damage, and the work of four weeks to be strewn in a chaotic mass. eleeleeeetaseeeei FANCY ENGRAVED WATCH DECORATED TEA SET This elegant watch, ladies' or gents' size, stem wind and set,fat,ty enggraved cases FULLY GUARANTEED, will be sent to you AB- SOLUTELY FREE, If you will sell only - -- $3.00 worth of high a� ? grade collar buttons at 10c. per card ls buttons on each card). These ) e . �. are very fast "°' i.=, °rr -✓ sellers. Write to -day and we will send yone�package; ! this IRAN 1) the WATCH. You can also win a lovely TEA SET FREE if you will help us enlarge 017 business by getting only 0 other :igen: 3 and without having to scil any more roc':a. Only $a(0 worth—no r more, no less, ci:d you can win both these splendid premiums FREE. COBALT GOLD PCN CO., Eutton Dept 19 Toronto, Ont. ?(•n7T,'7ATF,�:. •...i, _. - •:amu. ra..,.xv.�•r... ,._.,.._.. ----- -0,61#1*AnSal +cc" il+' itf14, SHIP TO US YOUR S CDED Our advice is to ship at once because we have many orders to fill, and are ready for your shipments, for which we can pay you thk e ihighest prices. We do not know how long the demand willP up. We remit same uay sh ipment is received, In any form you request. If you so desire we will hold shipment separate until we hear whether our price is satisfactory, If not, we will re. turn goods, express charges paid both ways. Write for price list and shipping tags, which will be cheer- fully furnished. Raise enoeai, Dominion Conk, Montreal 500 & 507 St. Peei street, few—areal si: 00000000.00xC0C0000 Nuys in Brief 0OOOQOOOOc00000000 l,clmoutort proposes to ]told. an Inter- provincial Exposition in 1012. Mi. W. J. Ga e has offered several valuable sr'holersii:ps to the University of Toronto, Port Dover carried the by-law granting ten thousand. dollars and a free site to the Widespread Inplennent Coni'pany. In a wreck last night on the Brandon - Regina line of the Canadian Northern Railway, four. nidus south of CthFberry, Man., Conductor J,.: W. Bulger, of Win- nipeg, was killed. M. Fairbairn, ae Englishman, attempt- ed suicide at Winnipeg on Tuesday. He is at present in the General .Hospital, and it is probable" dist waren he is suffi- ciently.reeovered he will be placed tender arrest. . Alleimum tariff rates tothe various ports on the Atlantic seaboard of go- th America will come into effe;it very soon as a result of prolonged nen*ititt.anns between the freight managers of tire steamship lines. Williaan E. Knowles M. P., of Moose .Taw, Sask., was married in Omaha, deb., on Tuesday to Miss Jean M. Lauie, of Omaha, as the result of a romance wilieh had its beginning in Ottawa several years ago. Mrs. George McDowell and five child- ren, of, Syracuse, are dangerously ill from ptomaine poisoning, after eating chocolate eclairs purchased at a bakery, and canned beans. The children range in age from 8 to 21 years. A despatch from Brussels tb Dalziel's Landon . news agency says the religious marriage of the late King Leopold and the Countess Vaughan was announced from the pulpits of all the Roman Cath- olic churches throughout Belgium. The announcement is made of the ap- pointment of Mr. George Drummond, senior partner of Drummond, McCall .& Company, Montreal, and vice-president of the Canada Iron Corporation, Limit- ed, to the position of Consul -General for Denmark in Canada. Copies of an Italian and two French papers which printed the plot and some of the verses of Edmond Rostand's new play, have been seized at the instance of L'IlIustration, which had purchased the rights of publication. Suit will be instituted in Rostand's name. Dr. J. W. Robertson, C. 11. G., princi- pal of Macdonald Cott'esee, Ste. Anne de Bellevue, Que., has see ' d his or nection with that hot'. ' • his time c sion f he ery, A Ori Tu - ger the loss of his '+.sitio *" aee(.i of the prohibition laws. He w es not related to the Milwaukee Pabsts, The Brussels Le Soir asserts that the marriage of King Albert and Queen Elizabeth, who was the Princess of Ba- varia, was sanctioned neither by the late King Leopold nor Parliament, as is re- quired by hte constitution. The paper insists that sanction of the marriage by Parliament is imperative. According to advices received at Mont- real, the coal strike which has been on at the Cape Breton and Springhill ]nines for the past several months will be de- clared off by the United Mine Workers' Association after the annual convention of the order, to be held at Indianapolis on the 18th of this month. '_ d( spateh from The Magee to the Paris Eclair says that while the Prince C'oflsort was driving to the pal- ace on Tuesday the horses bolted. A nen-commissioned Grenadier seized them by'tbe bridle and succeeded in checking the runaways.' Piince Henry warmly thanked the soldier for his bravery. In a fire which destroyed the home of Mr. John Woods, at Dalmeny, Carle- ton county, an infant boy three months old was burned to death, Tour other young children were saved by Mr. Harry Hoe ey, who rescued them at the rick of his life. The father and mother were out of the house whe lithe fire occurred. Conductor McCarty, on stepping off a Powell street ear nt Cedar Cove, Van- couver, late on ,Monday night, vas stet by revolvers in the hands of two unasked men, o'lered to throw up his hands, and coed of money, change and ticket -box.. Tile Motorman and a solitary passenger Itnetr nothing of the occurrence till it wise over. The composition of the London, Ont., City Couneil-elect is believed to be such as to warrant the,ietnpernnce League in stating that a license reduction by-law will he introduced here next year, it is proposed to cut off at least six of the twcnty.slz ]!cense, at present exrst]ng-- possible more, the city Tenipera.nee League feel snuguirte regar'd'ing the suc- cess of the propose(l.rednetion. The ec minittee rf grain growers w"ae are in session at Winnipeg formulating a scheme for inaugurating theGovernment owned elevators have decided to also re 51,211 Inencl that the Dominion Govern- ment assume control of terminal eleva- tors at the head of navigation., and oper- ate them. "1 ani not going to glee him two years, but 1 ant pies; t•.o e umait him to jail for sixty (lays with hard labor." With this remark from Magistrate Denison at Toronto on Tuesday, Frederick E. ].gain, 't'( dent of the Frederick I. Karn Com- pany, drupelets. Queen and Victoria stteelee wile was rrenntly eonvietc(1 of oft(r(''s nr (f:•rrrd be taco young w union. lenined hat fate aftrr having failed in n's •^.:l:irai,to rimer the conviction, T a That is !way "SALADA" is gro?vn in the finest tea gardens of the Island of Ceylon, picked every day and reaches you not later than fifteen weeks after being gather- ed. Its native purity and fine flavour are preserved in air -tight sealed; "SALADA" packets. You: are guaranteed tea of unvarying good quality, Ask your grocer for a package today. You'll like It. S2dd land is very good for almost all crops if the season is seasonably wet and other conditions are favorable. One of the worst troubles• with corn in rod land is that the cutworms living in the sod destroy much of theyoung corn. By plowing sod land for corn in late fall or early wiuter many of the cutworms will be destroyed. Also, when the land is plowed at this time the sod will have more time to settle and decay, and the corn next season will stand dry weath- er better. If the sad must be plowed again next spring, no harm, but much good, will be done. Plowing any laud twice for a crop, or discing well after plowing is labor well spent. The cellar or other similar room in which vegetables and fruits, either green or canned, are stored for winter should have the windows open on mild days for ventilation and for lowering the temperature of the room for chilling the store. The cooler they are held, with- out freezing, the better they will keep. Bacteria which cause fermentation and decay cannot grow and multiply in low temperature, Dry cold will always hold them in check. New plants of named varieties can be started in winter from cuttings of a number of hardwood trees, shrubs and vines, such as the grape, pear, hydran- gea, privet, rose, poplar and willow. The cuttings however, must be made before the buds have been injured by freezing. Salt is necessary to the health and thrift of dom s •.imals; and they hould e ' er - as in oba�, -me ulent feed, bile ;rima -system sre- quires more or leit all the time. A good plan is to keep salt in sheltered boxes where the stock can get at it at will. This is a safeguard against neglect, and, being accustomed to it at pleasure, there is no danger that too much will be taken., A sudden change from green foods to those which contain a small percentage of water frequently results in a derange- ment of the bladder or kidneys. Many times the urine becomes thick and tur- bid, and it is very difficult for the ani- mal to urinate. If the trouble is allowed to -continue for a very long period death may result. Any of the following rem- edies may be administered with excellent results: Juniper berries, four ounces; boiling water, one gallon. Let stand in a covered vessel for an hour and then strain. Give one pint three times each day till the animal is relieved. Another remedy may be provided without the aid of drugs. Mix one part of slippery elm bark with two parts poplar bark and make astrong tea from the mixture. Sweeten with sugar or molasses and give a pint .every five hours. The quieter and more comfortable a young animal can be kept, with good feed, the faster it will grow. Calves like to lie and sleep in a warm, sunny place. By providing them with such quarters they will sleep and turn their feeds to -more profit than when confined in cold and uncomfortable quarters. While the rnilch cows are on dry feed the digestive organs do not work so freely as when they are on green feed. To keep their digestive organs in good tone and the bowels normally loose,' feed some oil meal daily. The oil meal not only maintains the digestive organs in even in a very small way, and the ex- pounds trade in live cattle would receive horse a body blow. Immediately C'an(tdian else in good t m producing feeds, being , but it is one ohigf $ y ni- trogenous. Musty and bad feeds of any kind. are not good cow feeds. They are not only poor in nutrients, but are dan- gerous to health. Trees and shrubs heeled in for -winter should be heavily mulched and com- pletely covered with straw or conrstalks• during the coldest part of win15t to pre- vent then from drying out. • The soil about the roots should not be allowed to freeze deeply. Cows, above all other animals, are averse to drinking cold water, Many cows will go without water for two or three days before drinking out of a pond, stream or vessel containing ice. The drinking of plenty of water is necessary to a full flow of milk, and it pays to furnish cows with water warm enough so that they will drink all they need. It will pay to heat the water on the kitchen range and carry it to them, ra- ther than have them go without. CHILLED MEAT TRADE. (From The Farm.) There never was a better time for Canada to get into the chilled meat trade than right now. The past season's trad- ing has shown that good cattle can be produced in this country. The high quality of many of the cattle marketed at Toronto and elsewhere has been s surprise to the several big American firms wlio have entered. the Canadian market the past season for the first time. The export market has been ac- tive, prices have ruled high, and the cat- tle raiser, who has had good cattle to sell, has made big money. Phis will stimulate others to get root the cattle - raising business. But the business can- not ]11..ct,ended on a large scale en an ex '• in live caftle lone. .There m... steady " - th ` hat something is a chilled ntea , w stabl'shed on a large enough seals to make it worth while. No part of the country would be benefited more than the West. Rltat Dr. Rutherford had to say in last week's issue on this point has much force. Let some ecu. tagious disease break out in Canada. rattle would be shut out of Great Brit- ain altogether. While such a disaetet Wray never come our way, yet it is well to be prepared. But this is not the only or chief reason for'a chilled meat trade. It would steady the market and afford an outlet, more particularly for Western cattle, that would make beef raising in the West a profitable businr-t.; INCREASE THE SIZE OF TIIE DRAFT HORSE. The showing trade by Canadair -brad draft horses, at Guelph, indicates that out breeders are getting the quality side of their business down to a s0leuee What they should turn their attention to now is size. Keep up the quality, but get more size. If there is one fault more than another to be found with the average draft horse in Canada, it is that it is lacking in size. It is the big horse that tops the commercial horse market at the present time. If Ire has size and weight the buyer will overlook many other faults. But there is no reason ;shy size and quality cannot be had in one and the same animal. The aim of Can- adian horsemen should be to secure both. They know the quality side of the busi- ness pretty well. Let, them note get to work on increasing the size. It will pay. The demand for breeding stock will be increased and the draft horse, when Sold in a eommercial way-, will bring more money. Add a couple more hundred s to the average Canadian draft and he cannot be beaten anywhere the world. A.w "-+:i..!h .14 i1 M;!t('u�„"!� Oka 'i.: • ` .+t T„7:�.,1+ : 'u?Y t�nl. Every time you cough h it means that Nature is dislodging phlegm from the delicate membranes of the throat or lungs. In doing so that membrane becomes inflamed, strained—maybe broken. There's the danger point ! Broken tissue means letting down the body's defences against disease—germs await just such an entrance—Consumption itself starts that way. Don't take that chance. Shiloli's Cure loosens coughs—removes phlegm— allays all inflammation in the breathing tract builds up and heals damaged tissue — puts the throat and lungs in a state of robust health. Get Shiloh's Cure quickly and cure that Cough 1 ALL DRUGGISTS 100 uIv A FAMILY FR.I + ND FOP., EOKTY YEARS