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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1910-01-21, Page 2Theirs Leaped From Bridge at Toronto. Feared Imaginary Pursuit by Police, Made Attempt at SSu:cide. Toronto despatch: After first at- tempting to give himself up to the po- [ .ever4t�' Measures Carried With Zips, apparently laboring under the hal- 1 Every Place Beard From. II Iucination that he was being followed by detectives, Arthur Ase11, a man of Toronto, .lazy, 17, ---The he complete re. 36 years and a enachinist by trade, took a dose of 'Rough on Rats" last night, turns of the local option cantp:ugn and shortly afterwards jumped over the throughout the Province were received York street bridge. He was picked up to day, and total up as follows; P. C. Hunt and hurried to St. Mi -I Local option iron in 12 towns, having G ael's Hopeital in the polies smbu- , 61 licenses, in 13 villages with slit li- lance, and there it was found that he Bosses, and 52 townships with 111 li- was in a serious condition. His left ; menses. ]local option was held up by the leg was broken, both above and below + three-fifths clause in two cities with 43 the knee, and his left heel was terribly crushed, the result of the impact on licenses, 14 towns with Si licenses. in 18 Tillages with 43 lieenses. and 21 town - the frozen ground. He also has a com- Thi s with 5S lic•ences. Pound fracture of the right leg below 'rhe liquor men had a majority in eight the knee, and is suffering from internal to having 60 license;, eight villa -Reg be the result of which could not with 16 licenses, and tan townittips hay - Aboutdetermined ]art night. ?„S licenses. About 7 o'clock last night the man log - , o Station into the Courter Street Police DIGNITARIES MEET Station and askod the sergeant on duty what he wanted him for. The sergeant asked him what his name was and he said it was Wood. He To was then informed that no man by the name of Wood was being looked for, and he then departed. The police thought no more of it, as such cases happen day after day when men ;m- agine that they are being followed by the police. Shortly before 10, however, a report came into the Court Street Station that a man had jumped off the York street bridge, and the constable who reported it gave a description of the man. It tallied exactly with that of Wood, who had been in the station at 7 o'clock. Enquiries were made by the au- thorities at the hospital as to whether he had any friends in town, but he would give no satisfaction as to that, In fact, he said, "Don't talk about my friends; they didn't want me, and 1 just had to do it." Axe11 further stated that he had a wife, but would not say where she was, declaring that she and his friends as well would find out what happened to him soon enough. As soon as he was admitted to the hos: pital the doctors discovered symp- toms of poisoning, and asked him what he had taken. He frankly ad- mitted that it was• rat poison, and that they would find the box in his overcoat pocket. LOCAL OPTION. Consider Decrees of Quebec Plenary Council. Q00000c tat.l(�„ 00000c� boggoigo.reetera,.,„:,,,,,e. News .� :li f ms's, M Ville report iw til:tilt cl dull 'Rin ',ai- ivad and Etitpe1 llilttattl will ,;1 to Ostend to meet ;;g ,Albert of Belgium. After se.ringt t,, years as ,fudge of the Sessions,. th• 1%t;n. Alexander Chen- veau, of QuebeP trill red hie reelgnttinn, , lee has again b'�ecme jammed: hi the Detroit River jn:il. 1>c�ioty 5tinilwich Point, and the car fereiee are experiencing much trouble. Toronto received •85 7,327,44) from the Toronto Raitw t• Company in percent- ages ry cent ages last year The company's gr ceipts for the \tilt were $3:)03,2.57.•0. :Bishop Farthing, of Montreal. iii a mis- sionary address a: Kingston, suggested to increase giti Bee some men might do with one cigar lea: per clay, while ladies might reduce the mice of their hats. The Osservatere Romano prints a des- patch front. Ha.rntr, southeastern Abys- sinia, saying_ it i> reported that King '1lenelik died Pea n,ber 23, and that the news leas eonrealt>d to avoid internal troubles. Ottawa, ()ny., despatch: A meeting of a number of the bishops and archbishops of Canada took place at the Archbishop's palace this morning, and was presided over by Mgr. Sbaretti. Those present were: Archbishop Bruchesi, of Montreal, Mgr. McEvoy, Archbishop of Toronto, Archbishop Gauthier of Kingston, Bishop Archambault of Joliette, and Bishop Rol administrator of Quebec.' The purpose of the meeting was to deal with the decrees of the 'Quebec Plenary Council before they are finally sent to Rome. In this connection it has been learned that Mgr. Sbaretti, who is to present the decrees in person to the Pope, will leave probably on February. first to de so. trli SId.de MEAT HIGH. People Advised to Use the Cheaper Cuts For Food. Denver, Col., ,Tan. 17.---.Ilarold Swift, of Swift & Oo., in dieeussina.the cert of 1''hg, said': Left Employee on Roadside to Perish in the Cold. Winnipeg, .pan. 17.A coroner's jury has found that Andrew (Coleman died as a result o: exposure. and that death was due to gross c•areieseness on the part of John C. C'omlins, who was hi charge of a party of laborer:+, en route to Oomlins' lumber camp. The evidence showed that the laborers arrived with a number under the inf]u- enee of liquor, and started on an eight - mile march to the camp from Darwin. The deceased strayed at dusk, falling a few fee. from the road, where he was found Irt- •.'n stiff in the morning by volunteer -• archers, It did not appear that Comlin- made any effort to find the missing man. Cl'•nlins was the last wit- ness and got a bad grilling in the box. Fifteen minutes after the inquest Com- lins was arrested on the coroner's war- rant, whir i eberg'�d him with man- slaughter. Minnie- 1 'hear ..he's been engaged ten times. Esther --I hate to see a girl get in a rut like that.- Milwaukee Evening '4�'iscorsin. •-r . Pleading guilty to the charge of e- fraliding a Stratford second -,Band store said also figuring inmany other petty thefts, David Bute• of that city, was sentenced by ranee Magistrate O'I.one to five years in the Kingston Peniten- tiary. \\n } `4 n °gainer tuberculosis, generally.. '1 l:BJJ�.GLIAIS.ts 11v VAlil'r'•r j their vett to thwart it. � greater ;,asryiw-a,euY•• �.�era� .-�+xmseaVaww• l,ise it for eczema, ulcera, cold sores, chap pe 'l hands, poisoned wounde, piles, scarp sores, and all skin iniueles and diseases, Best balm for baby' s Purely herbal. All drug- gists and stores 50c boz;. 1 gi•t'at weight throughout America„ anti ' may, the hope, be not without e et 11 Can - here; Pure bred herds 'are the prince/ea • t di5aenrin•rting disease' in c tri - Probably il>e same truth pp agents 111 1 lh a tiee l ads. 1^ ' here. In Canada, also the owne*s, ,af: • 1 pit e stuck, fat frolu assisting the 4W11. - - c' enera'ty dYir ,he rya %eniela. to n. view of tire. recent appoatl{ntent of against tuberculosis lase nethc pgreate In ee the international vineutubvl' to l sisaituthe I oener tlanitoiIlia average farmer; and the ed Sia es bovine tubsz f.. United Slates and Canada, the following 1 the selfish opposition of a f extract from a late issue of the Velar- . egrieul.turis lstilo has in hitherto ntreve,y. to l nary Record of London, Eng., is of 1 fet'tin ' le eign buyers are [til?idly rowlg:iin,Y considerable interest to Canadian ,tock 1 the conditiou of our English herds, and owners: I before long the pedigree breeders, their "Tuberculosis. SitJ tiro elmarket for diseased Battle gone, wail cry "Sit eaten agriet tOrie adCheag an ' for legislation. But its the meantime the, avoided of question hi ('on, a d 1 disease continue, its ravages amdng'st avoided the question x legislation, and !. cattle practically unchecked, annu lly confined himself to Pxplaittnl; the die- causing an enormous waste, and the loss, ease itself, and advising the individual is i of not afew human lives. Surely the owner haw best to combat it. It is { Government will look a little ahead, rtrt f needles; to say that this tact: was ail take action before pedigree breeders jn theinly e rfos.anddmany tulcre,wtlotihear j l in asking for it" ---From the Office of clic Veterinary Director -General. t the report of it, must have wouderc,l ; Ni how y elan y of those receiving suc1, ad - "Prices- of meat are very high now, but there is every indication that they 'Will go still higher. This is attributable to the high price of corn and the conse- quent scarcity of feed for our stock. As long as this condition continues it is well to educate people to use cheaper cuts of meat. These cheaper cuts are just as good and more wholesome if pro- perly cooked,' Mr. Swift admitted that the retail dealer is making a larger gross profit on meat. oro Mr. Thomas Tucker, of Port Hope, made a gruesome find at the harbor there. Imbedded in ice and snow, un- derneath the east pier, he discovered a left ''human foot, encased in a rough boot. Thefont was badly chewed by rats. The bodies of two young men who died on Thufsday are in the morgue. Elk Lake, awai ng instructions front their friends awe! down in Gaspe. One, Jos- eph Langlois; died from typhoid in the hospital, and the ot!ier, Ludger Cure - Beau, was killed by a falling tree, READY-MADE E.ARMS C.P.R. Scheme to Attract British Settlers Ezperinlented in London. London, Jan. 17. --.The Canadian Pa- cific scheme of ready-made firms for British settler, east of Calgary was ex- pounded by ,\1r. C. \V. Peterson at the Royal Colonial ln,titute tonight. Sir Thomas Shaughnessy, who preeided, said that women settlers would be wcicained. vice even front so high an authority -- A. Turkish millionaire has donated $500,000 for the creation of a Turkish Academy it .itnilar lines to the Aca- demy of Tet nee. The academy will have 25 mem•>ers. The membership ~sill be limited to utstieguished Hien of Arab - Wee T k' • end Fenian rationality. i\4emb s f't'fhe "p'eople's Mutual Pro- tective :Association and League, of Sy- racuse, the affairs of which are being in - vestige -feel by the State Superintendent of Inseranee, started a movement yes- terday to organize and resist any at- tempt to put the association out of busi- ness. • Boston on Tuesday in the first party - less election held under her new charter, elected former, Mayor John F. Fitzger- ald to fill the mayor's chair again, this time for a four-year term, giving him 46,364 votes, and a plurality of 1,225 over his nearest opponent, James J. Storrow. are likely to seriously attempt its } in a Few A SIMPLE MILL TES's. adoption. An answeranswerr to dtai query it, t Anybody Can Determine . likely to be found in the paper by br. 1 Minutes the Quality of the Fluid. J. G. Rutherford, the veterinary director- The following process for the delete - general of Canada, read at the Interna- tion of added water or of skimmed milk tional Congress on Tuberculosis at 1 in ordinary milk is more accurate than. Washington. Two pqints stand out t the simple use of a lactodensimeter•wi;th•. clearly, and will he endorsed by all pram- out the creamometer chec. The whale. tical men. A national campaign against test, says the Scientific American, eau. bovine tuberculosis, aided by compulsory 1 be m dresalt ive esi ones tes. whether the legislation --whatever its provisions add— will ]1e a inuel, entre T1s fficttit undertak I � ulterater ati in nco sisesedtincthe of t tion of ing than many theorists even Yet sup- pose. But no effective control of the j biti int a rule tthis t matters rs liiotle. ehe disease is possible to the present genera- 1 onsuine . 'Hoat heh gote w what he know- paids tion. without eontpulsory legislation, whether "Undoubtedly such. leetures as that for. 'u-' delivered by Sir :John McFadyee n The suspected milk is stirred with a spent in order to diseminate into the, . do much good by enlightening the really • sensible and honest stock owners. They stimulate a few men to more or less earnest voluntary effort; but, for a long time to clime, they can only influence the minority of agriculturists. Their effect upon the ignorance and indiffer- ence of the majority is very slow, and they cannot influence the not uncon- siderable section capable of wilfully con- cealing contagious disease. Compulsion is necessary for the two latter classes. When compulsion is adopted, the ignor- ant and careless owner will learn some- thing of the disease, and the law regard- ing it, for his own protection, while the unserupulows one can be dealt with as he deserves. "Legislation against tuberculosis, when it does commence, is not likelyto ba very drastic at first, but we now know so much about the disease that our first steps, if slow, should be sure. When notification of clinical tuberculo- sis is made compulsory, the first real advance will have been made. That step wouldenable the most dangerous ani- mals to be dealth with at once, while giving' the veterinary inspector a foot- ing upon farms where such animals had existed. Its actual effect upon the spread of the disease would be great; its educational effect neon farmers would. be still greater. And the legal powers for the step exist already—the advance could be made at once. Ly the simple scheduling of clinical tuberculosis by the Board of Agriculture.. "0f course, the opposition to schedul- ing comes front the owners of pedigree stock. and it is noteworthy that these men form the chief obstacle to progress in Canada also. Dr. Rutherford's out- spoken references to breeders of pure stock in his own country should carry The emigration of 100.000 English would not deplete the ag rieultutal popttletine. as their places would soon be taken. The scheme is attracting great interest, EVERY PART PERFECT THE secret of the perfection of our newly designed No. 1317 Type Telephone Set lies in the fact that every part of it --every individual piece --is itself abso- lutely perfect. The perfection of the whole is attained through. perfection in the parts, Examine the transmitter, for example—standard long-distance type you will find it, --or the receiver, with its construction that bars out all local noises to spoil transmission. Or look into the generator -the ringers ' and gongs,—the switch hook -- or any part yolx like. You won't find a better rural telephone than this made anywhere. FREELet 'us tell you the story of this tele- phone—it will cost yon one cent (for a j g�, post card) to know'it—all the details of i��ff theinstrnmetttitselfaswell asfull par- ticulars of every step necessary in the organization of a rural telephone company, Write and ask for Bulletin o, 313t—it's Free. „jilt 14 R1 ,aa AidalidAiiingifinttS ce iatserrla Manufacturers and suppliers of ell apparatus sari cnaipment 1 used in tite construction, operftien and eialcteaence of voyfr' I U10110110 anti Power Nutt, Address your nearest office, gps i s td0NTREA1.•-ConliolteDame & Gei $h. TO . NTO-e0 Fr• , St REGINA _ CALe Alleging that Thomas J. Eansor, F. H. Howell, and J. J. Lonnee, three newly - elected members of the Windsor City Council, are riot eligible to hold office, on the ground of not having been properly naturalized British subjects, quo wa- ranto proceedings have been started, and the ease will be heard by Judge Mc- I-Iugh in a few days. Engineer Shelford, who has been sur- veying the proposed railway which will join the Uganda Railway with Lake Magadi, deseribes the remarkable fut- ures of the lake. It lies at the bottom of a valley 3,000 feet deep and looter at a distance like an ordinary sheet of water, but the water is only a few inches deep above a hard surface like pink marble. This is actually an im- mense deposit of soda, covering twenty square miles. It is of considerable depth. Some, weeks ago a wealthy merchant at Oak Point, Man,, named Antlrose Brunt, died very suddenly, and was bur- ied without a doetor's certificate or without mush ceremony, Investigation has been carried on quietly recently by a private detective, engaged by inter- ested parties, .and as the result of his reports the Coroner has been instructed to have the body exhufned and, the death fully investigated. .• WINS HER SUIT. Royal Arcanum Forced to Pay In- surance on Life of Expelled Man. •Syracuse, ay. Y„ Jan. 17,—After a fight for more than three years in the courts, Mrs. Drank Z. Wilco% has won her suit against the Supreme Council of the Royal Arcanum. Justice Wm. S. An. Brews of -day directed a verdict in her favor for the full amount of the Insur- ance policies carried upon the life of her deceased husband, with interest. The outcome is of interest to thousands of members of the order., Mr. Wilcox was expelled from the or- ganization because of his attaeks upon supreme officers for the increaseit rates of insurance. He instituted proceeamgs for relnstat5 meat, but died before the termination of the action. The suit was continued his widow, Mary C. Wilcox; wh irivery,y.atardie , whole liquid the cream which may have come to the surface. Then one volume of milk is poured into fifty volumes of water --one fluid ounce to two and a half pints. A. candle is lighted in a dark r'zone. The experimenter takes an ordinary drinking glass with a flat and even bot- tom and holds it immediately above the candle at a distance of about one feat from it so as to be able to see the flame of the candle through the bottom of the glass. He then pours slowly the diluted milk into the glass. The flame becomes less and less bright a °the level of the liquid rises into the glass. The flame is soon reduced to a. dull white spot. A. title more liquid slow- ly added so as to avoid pouring an ex- cess and the flame becomes absolutely invisible. 9.11 that remains to be done is to measure the height of the liquid in the glass, this being most conveni- ently ascertained by dipping into it a strip of pasteboard and then measuring the wet part. It should measure not over an inch if the milk is pure. With good quality milk diluted and tested as stated the depth will be about seven -eights of an inch before the flame is lost to view. A mixture of one volume of milk and half a volume of water should show a depth of one and Otte - half inches. A depth of two inches in &- cotes either partially skimmed milk or a mixture of one volume of good milk with one of water. Wife ---Don't you think you can get him a job? Husband—Are you really blind? Blind Man ---Yes, sir; can't We a thing. Husband --All right, then; I'll get you a job on the polies.— Kansas, City journal. st:,t;'vitt! SHIP TO US leo Our advice is to ship nt once because to fill, and are ready for your shipments, you the highest pricey,. Wo do mg know will keep up. We remit same day shipment 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. OToi w Rele�noea,001110011119111011 011 Bank, Montreal ank,Montreal 7��yyo WMPRECM c.14" 500 & 507 St. Paul Street, Montreal we have many orders for which we can pay how long the demand �jt.e 1 swefaev sks Wa iseNa;;.9 ve., , •,0914 i) ti, , a,rik atl.!t�. VkIN1: !i71-;,arklv:?,4141Z is:w•`,i! liT•ff1 FANCY ENGRAVE TAttlTFfk',C ECORA.TED TEA. SET This elegant watch ladies' or gents' size stem wind and set, fancy engraved cases FULLY GUAANTEED, will be sent to you AB- SOLUTELY F'1REE if you will sell only , a•, x �°y�'li r' � , ; { a,attl . $3,00 worth of high grade collar buttons at 10e. per card (4 buttons on each xt+. Fiyd r card), These but- tons ,� ,..�"et�tr� � � • 'ty}r �� 't. +e-�e;q��,i`' i tons aro very fast sellers. 'Write t0•day and we will send t •:NF �5� a rax. �,.. you a package; sell diem and return the money and win this HANDSOMEI T1 u t t y u TLE WATCH. You canDalso win a lovely TEA. aka FREE if you will,help us Wargo our business by getting only ; t .. '►+,�? 6 other agents and without having to sell any more;cods. Only $3.50 worth—no Li • •, and you can win botitthese splendid premiums EIIEE. .COBALT GOLD PEN GO., Mutton Dept. Steta eeieleieserafeeit