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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1911-03-31, Page 6EWS boat; the Gerona; the Jertiiiriii, ane. the Cairnron The dairy itiepett•rre foe Enetern ()n• nt raa.J1 sgain.;:make it. hot for farmers pate rife their lull.: end teed t.t ,, t a'atox u' The FraeLeett Pins n'Y,• A+1. Tera' 011 EClc'li- irue1-ec1 its leap•eclii9. to *10p. 'five et all r'tasts• 1 Toronto Motorman Found Not Guilty of Gross Negligence, Niagara Falls Georges Get Busy With King's Fund. Kingston SQldler Gets One Year For Forgery. Gant.le spt•.ittg was ushered in at Mont• real with one of the wire, loliwrcartie nt the year. Oharlets Etienne .Lutaud, Prere t of th.. ]Rhone 1)itlrartarieet• has been appointee'. «overrnor-(seneral of Algeria. isrovitionttl emote returne eetimate the i,opu]ation' of Austria at -2h,:50i,895 an nnereeseof 2,417,I9O in ten year . Over Oft Toronto teachers •hue al. .ready eignified their intention of 'taking advantage of the In:tater excitation to New York. A breuteh ur the D n tinOu'i Yank will soon be opened iu \lelland Opera Houle binek, which will make five banks in 1Veliis.nd, Major J. A. Gerrie, M. C. for North 8imeoe. who has been ill for Several ,says hast, is much better, tud hi,; epeedy re- covery ie anticipated. Mr. George Everallam has finished seeding sixty aa -res of Awing almat at Cayley, Alta. Tide is the first big acre- age in the Province to be sawn. M.. Brcget, in a monoplane at Douai, France, carried. a weight of 1,.362 pounds ata deed, of sixty-two miles an hnu.r, und'at a heig%1ft. of about sixty-five feet., The first spe:iaf train from Toronto to Edmonton. via (°hieago, will be rust by the Grand Trunk lkalluay from the Union Station on April 4 at 1) ''c•t•:irk at, nixht. 'rhe proposal to erect, Circ Sir ,Oliver Mowat •Meutor:al LiOtitxitat for Tubetcu- losle on the Kingston General )3o delta. �,*totruds is being Severely cidtit'ieled by' the cit;zette. U:aroldf Fraser, a boy or six years was (true.: by a light engine at the 's fi w e re. Perth tree,. crossing, Brockville. aecived injuries which, it is feared, will prove fatal, A.erailiun Jarvis & Co., Toronto, in eon - junction with Messrs. Brown, Shepley & Co,, of London, England, bave pureliseed from l'arsoouver ;S00,Oo0 four per cent. hands at var. A. further sea of eleven thousand n] d .-lirs was cabled to China yestei•<lay from Toronto to aid the famine sufferere in .that country. This brings up the total Bent to $17,00O, The IVAN Star liner Oceania arrived at New Iron` with her foremast einint •' Bred at. the top, and the fore truck car- ried away. The Oceania was etrtaek by bolt of lightning. The "bee industry" is beectnting im- portant in Mienouri. There are 226,000 eoleniea of 'bees in the State, and their annual product of 8,000,000 pound); is worth nasty $1,000,000. Peter Lawson, a member 'of the first Parliament". of Canada after Confedera- tion, died at Port Dover, Ont. Tie wars over GO years of age, and in hie younger days ran a tannery there. One o4 Berlin's best known ex -entre offiotabi dried ' there its the pertaon ef•Mr.Frederick Bornhold. at the age o1 63. Be was a member of the Town Council in 1463 and 1010. At :the annual meeting of the Oobourg Board of '..'rade the following oflfieers were elected; President, A, R. Dundas; Vice -President, Alex. Pratt; Seeretary- 'PreaeltTer, E. W. H•argraft. llt e. ,Rogers, wife of neva Anderson Rogers, Presbyterian, died at Amherst, N, B. She was a deter of Mr, Horace lt'lsmadng, Manager of the Bank of Nova Scotia in Toronto, and of Rev. David Fleming, of Dauphin, Man. Sexgt. Harrison, of the A. an. C, who was recently tried by court martial at Itingeton, for. forgery,;has ben sentenced to one year in the Central Prison, and to bo +rllmimed from the aservioe. The case againet George Simmons, the Toronto motorman, charged with groes neg'ligettee in operating a College street ea; which colild.eti with, a Belt Line car eevernl weeks ago, wets di snibised by Magistrate fenieon in the 'Police Court. Tam death occurred at Montreal of Dr. Wm. Inglis Bradley, one of Ottawa's best knotvn phyeielans. 17r. Bradley's health broke down Taut fail, and be went to Montreal in the tope that the change would afford him relief. A writ asking for an injunction. to re. strain the corporation of Brockville from operating ate water and ligbt tle- ipareenents in ouch it, manner as to be a nuisance by emitting smoke -wos issued by Mrs. G. L. Pulford and Mr. A. C. 'foray. At elm call of Mayor Doren seoree of Georges met at the 'Square. .Valls Ciiry ; fan, to start the loeel subscription, to be merged with an -niter funds from ouster, cities in the Dominion to e ,iii George a Coronation gift fraxt tkeetSeno'' aili;tn Georges. W. ;r. Gear, who Ices tis Monti-eaal from iab leltdYtt t e9 f'unarcl people hare,:ihdt t` Thoneson Ilne. 't'hetger bonen three o4»e, pt r + The ntenthera of the Ontario Agi'icul- tural and l.xperinrental anion are nieased to state that for 3911 they are areuareal to distribute Into every town- shio in Ontario material of Nisi, duality for experiments with grains. . fodder adder (:rope. roots, grasses and clovers. ae follow.; No. kixp,-+tnteirt, • PIots 1 -Testing alireea,tarieties of 'Oats... 3 2a-Tetsin;; three 'it tittles of six - rowed -barley 3 2b -'testing two. varieties ef iwo.-row- ed 3 -Testing 'two , varieties 01 hullers Iwo ,.. ..,o 4a-Teising two 'varieties of spring wheat.... 4b -'resting tau varieties of :spring rye..E-Testing two vai'leties of bucltwhead; 2 6—Tet;ting two varieties of field peas 7 -Testing Emmet. and Speit.... 3 -Testing two'varieties of Soy, Soia, or Japanese beans.... 9-•7'islina three varieties of ltnsking corn., ,. .. .... . 3 i0—Testing three varieties of majw..els 3 11 --Testing two varieties of sugar beets :soy feeding purposes .. 2 1= --Testing three varieties of Swedish turnips....2 13 -Testing two varieties of Sall turnips 2 14 -Testing two varieties ot''carrots . 3,3—Testing three varieties of fodder and silage eorn.... 3 36 -Testing three varieties of millet 3 17 -Testing two varieties of sorghum 2 Iii-Tesrrng voxes peas and two var- ieties of vetches .... ., . 14 -Testing rape, Irate and field cab- bage 20 -Testing three t'e: r reties of plover' 3 21 -Testing two varieties of clover (Luoerne) 2 22 -Testing two varieties of grasses4 24, -Testing three varieties of field beans .. 3 24-Teetnxg three varieties of sweet corn• • , 2 23n—Testing tiro varieties or early po- tatoes 27h -Testing two :-arieties of medium ripening potatoes : 29a. -Testing two varieties of late pota- toes' - .. .. .. 1-Teseinfi three grain mixtures for grain production 3 30 -Testing three grain mixtures for fodder uroduction.. g weir plot is to be two rods long by one rod wide, except No. 273, width is to be one roll square. Any nerecti in tentage may einem* any ONT..' of the experiments for 1911 and ap- ale for the same. Tho material will be furnished in the order in ',rich the ari- plfea:tienk aro received, while the supply lasts. Et tnlght be well for each appli- cant to melte SeCO d choicet for fear tirrtt could not be granted. All ma- terial will be furxtfebed entirely. free of charge to each applicant. and the pro- duce a'lll. of coarse. become the property of the neraotr who conducts the experi- ment. • r'. A. 2AS't:Tne Director. C .tnrto Agricultural College, Guetpe, 2 2 n MORTGAGE BONDS O.T.R. Western' Division Extending and improving To Purchase P.,0.8c11,--Will Install a Block Signal System. Detroit, Manch `27.• --.lit a bearing before the State Railroad Commis- {Joon at Lansing to -day the Western Division of the (rand Txten)c liaolt 3itd wan authorized to issue mortgage bands of $130,000;006:far bl)ie purpose of extending and improving the setrice .tnd to permit the evest.ertt division to nur- chase the Pontiac, Orford n Northern branch. One of the prineipal fee:tus'es in eonnsection with this bond issue is the fact that the Grand Trunk isplanning to install a bock signal nystenr at a coat of 7i800,000. This will extend over all the company's linty in this fttate, and baa the unqualified approval of the State. Railroad. O<nntnisehm, If the 0. T. R. pu.rehaises the P., 0. & N., the curt now pending in the 't;ltt- prenae Court will b• dropped. About a year ago the Rattroad Coinnr.ir.3itita endeavored to ascertain the ownership of the road, in order that the two -scut fare law night be enforecd, hat at it hearing held a.t Pontiass it was doelar- ed that the majority of the e(;ock Ida* held by fbarlea M. Hays as trusted for Loudon tcapitatists. , The absorp. tion of the 1'ontiaae, Oxford & North- ern by Lite Grand Trunk enable the Comenissron to.;,l,itfo'i' e; thelate,. and the only thl ee-eeitle lili ,'in the .tower part of the State ll i-ninre a Luing of the haat. •. The State Re.i rpetd Commission for day also granted the Mineapoles. St. Pahl & Sanit lite. Marie Railway Com- pany perm:.aston to issue •stook to the extent of $8,562,006 for the purpose, of extending end improving the. ;pxiporty. A DAD PALL. Z,ondtixt` Ont„ , do:patch--; . P Grahaioe of (1•rixhaart .Bros.; hrib• . etltl;7lret's, h41 forty feet tibrntt "it a ancylight,eitehie etre early thio .Morning: }'lo lt';as sere $d?}x ly stoit arid. injured internally" and toy trot ret°ot*et', 1t9r. Gtnlrttm. at au exe. ol,terette i and chairman of the Borrel of Dalai • Nora e- marry for love, some for Tillgrs split the. diffarenee piareeliig tet love of ruosaey, 4 J4RflIE CRAZY? his Counsel Refuses to .Discuss His Alleged Confession. Bible Glass Members Told .Elm,' Make Clean Breast Olt. p. (oderieli deepatolt - A'1lietii;4tt ,the Eisb-nenof Edward Jatd]ne, ajlettlyd nilly- .beret of. "f8-yesti-old. Lizzie thilete7ftnn,,. will ell pi ntl 'i n the sanity of the pt'iso- nee- or not, is still .unknawu, L. .1?,. i7 ert:ev ,(rune's counsel, refuses: to dire OLIO; time alleged confession, nor wilt he say anything . inbout Jardine's `tn iital eonclitioxt..bee report itself that 1iieeial- isre found the prisoner's mind its a state of weakness, is .ti yet unc'onfirtned. Jar- d.inc's friends repud ate the idea. Some time before -the inquest last fall, ;Igraine sustained severe lupe -ries to his beet-. by falling from a hoist, a cunaider- abie distam oa; to the ground. About Sep- tember lost he be ati a,n asetlon for $i,- QQO.da.xntiges butnritit,it is at stand still, pending the a:attio:ne of the pre- set) t rtsent• !lithe time Coroner W. .1. 11. Ifolmet was to be the defendant in the ease. and ,Tardlne was always eloquent in explaining the cause of his injuries If) the jurymen and others. Some week* ago a yormg' nten'.i Bible class* paid tie prisoner a visit in the' jail here. and althooch no one was ever allowedprivate interviews with Jardine at any time in his ecll, at that time, it is said.tiro' of the eottng men privately spoke to Jardine, advising hint to make a clean breitet of the affair„ to the au, • thoratiee. 1tfre. Jardine still refuse( to believe Unit Ed. has made a t+a:tfewsion- She• sat-',- tber keep on talkiny like that I will be is ray- grave before the month is out." MISSING AT FALLS Police Fear Donald K. Macdonald, of Toronto, Ended lois Life. Toronto, March 27. --Donald Kennedy Macdonald, 27 years of<l. is missing and everything points to the man' having ended 'his life at Niagara Palls, N.Y. 'Cite police there say he riiaa.ppeared front the Hotel Imperial March 14. Ile was registered as A. C. Kenneth, New York, but letters found in his trunk give ,hie right name and address of the grandmother iu Toronto. Bit disappear- ed after taking lunch and a diligent learc1t mate eines lists failed to locate the man. 9 a= not (mill yesterday, however. 1 hat the b1'ia.gara Palls police were called in and the friends here noti- fied. The man's grip, m•enording to a de- epateh, contained :a number of !letters, one being froth a' Guelph firm of law- yors, saying that „it a cheque cashed' in that city some time ago were not made good. he: would be proseented, as it was said to bee worthless, Maasdonald is also said to have passed certain cheques upon friends in Toronto, and many. of these were ttrgi:ng payment. Otte or more bad been ,plaoed in the hands of the pollee, but no,prooeeution took place. Maedonalct was in Toronto thxee weeks° ago. ire formerly had apartments at` 1,244 King ,street west. 'Firs wife died soave time ago and a child is now with relatives in ?arkdale. - • Macdonald was formerly traveller for a Toronto:houtee and hada wide business:' tonnee'tion.• • D DN'T LIKE IT. Ottawa Y. M. G. At Boys Sang 't)J Anybody Seen Kelly ?" Ottawa, dcapatnit-•• On 4ntnday ',laot dnriaa ' the progress of the Hiber iia'n parade here it le alleged by some of the local Irish men that ;yoaing fellows sta- tioned in the windows of the Y. M. C. A. building sang 'Hag Anybody Here Seen „Kelly?" and other songs to. which objection has been takers by the ITlbern- fans. The incident was looked upon as trivial :at float, the Y. M. O. A. offie als declaring the ennoyranee to have been caused by bone on the, roof. The matter is going bo be aired however for to -day, the county board of Biberniana ,wane out with the direct charge that Y, M. C. A, members were responsible and CM - Intend alt investigation and formal a.poi= ogy. The L M. C. A. has promised to Molal an ingeiry, RECORD FLIGHT,. Frenchman Carried Twelve Persons in His Monoplane, • Dral, .Prance, March 27.--..x.Vidor Louis Brogttetzniade, a•.reeord petferm• ante to -day %ellen he •carried eleven pas- sengers ill his •titortopla.ne a clietneneraof two miledd. The flight tree inatle at height vary-' ing froth 50 to 70 feet. The total'weight of the twelve persons free 1,815`pdunds and the combined Weight of the machine and its eeeintente Was 2,802 pounds The Hetet pre,' ous erformanee of the kind.in io t+tas mine. p. Tie' -Mast w ate b M. , , Y tin iioc. 22, took up Steven pitssarngetis on feee•itt 1tute trip, .Before putting the itetv'vhatebed ehieks into the brood coop, dust them with some good insect powder and grease the tope 01 their heads ;with lard as ,t protection against lice, Do not apply greaten to any other part of the body, however, The hen, ton, ,should be dusted With the ineeet powder, l"or the first 36 or 45 hours feed only the hen, as nature hes already provided for the chicks for that length of tithe. • Then their fit•at• fetal may be some bread crumbse or finely broker, +riackcrs. Feed 'them .rightly= and erten, and be` sure that: they* have all the 01.b1AN, .fresh Nates they can drink. After the first fen days • feed the chicks fotar times a day antil they aro a month old. then three trine; a day ie suit fleient. •. Prepared thick feed. which yon ran. buy cheaply, is to be advised,• but a. Moine ration cart be prep:eed by cam'bhe ing cera] parts of pin -head oa ttueal, let, finely cracked corn and cracked Wheat,: with a little finely broker.. char- coal and, fine grit added. • Crit --ground up hal•ct stone—must be given e]nekens, or they will starve. as they bave no teeth. Be sure to remem- ber that. Give diem home jobnnreeke' erneabs, finely ground ,,Veen bone. and green food. Everything must be finely cut ]lp. Af. ter a month they will eat whole; wheat, eraeked corn, and any other grain that is handy, also they ca.n then begin to, help themselves to fable serape. Give the ebielcs plenty or shade. keep that CLEAN, l;'RJiSH water near then). and let them run about where the older ebiekerui cannot bother them. Keep then, out of wet grass ani rlsnmp places. ','irate), for rats and eats. Both tare (Continued Nex fond of young ehiekens. Let the mother hen out for a little while each evening, aoo be given access to a good dust been. 11 they cauit;ot get to. run about fa grasp. you ;must fees. them green foorf:, mit up lettuce is good. Try to scatter their food over the ground, raking it irk t:, lay. they must get Iota of exercise. .Remember this, .if you want your hens to Jay ,they trust get lots of exercise, and tench them to start early in life. • If possible, givo growing chicks a daily feast of milk, either- aweet, seimm• d or emir,' but not eoUrinn intik, - Keep an eye open for lice. Dust their once a week with the insect powder When the chicks are from a month to +,ix Weeks old the hen. will show a dispo •citron to Lel: them shift for themselvese, Send her back to the ehieken houie, and let her begin laying. peep the ohicka in their brood .coop until they get crowd-. et]. There is little difference in the treat- ment of hen -hatched chicks and artifi• eially incubated ones. Remove the latter from the machine about "8 Hours after hatching and plane them in the broader, whk'ln of coarse, you got at the time , you bought the incubator. Brooders arc easily made, .rind are intended to keep the little chicks waren during the trying period of their lives. nen they are about six weeks old, take them from the brooder:( and thee tieey oue-ht to be large enough for the colony house. After you once get the: chicks past the first four or six weeks, you have erossed the, danger line. Their care from then until they moo out of existence wilt be discuesod in neat week's issue. t. Week.) VIOLENT DEATHS Toronto Had 29 Suicides, 51 People ;Found Demi and 22 Drowned. Police Statistics of Grime and Ac- • cidents For the Year. Toronto, March 27. — Police depart- ment atatisties of last year show foliow- iiig record of erirne and misfortune: There 'were 29 suicides. Fifty-one peo- ple found dead' in bed. `Twenty-two were drowned. Two pennons were burned to death. Three were suffocated by illumin- ating gas, three by coai gas and four more in some other way. Thirteen peo- ple were killed by street ears, while tea more were killed by railway trains and eight by vehicles on the street. Oth- er' miscellaneous violent deaths totalled 92,, besides three murders. • •T%e number of eommittmonts in the pcliee,r eourt to jail for one „month or legs Was 342; .between "one month and two years, 487; while 17 persons were eenteneed to from 3 to 12 years and 279 Weeet Bent up for trial in the bighcr emits. , There were 24,826 persons against *hone eharges were trade, and 8,971 of tileso were tither fined or irnprisoned. The number. of people committed as lunatics during the year was • 138, of whom 95 were men and 43 were women. Suspended •senteneess totaled 3,468. ECHOOL HOLIDAYS Rural Pupils Will Get Same Privileges as Those. in Cities. Toranto March e 1 Several amend- ments to the Public and High School Acte weee passed by the Legislature yesterday. One of these makes a uniform school term for rural as well as Own and city sehoole, gi`tring the former the last two weeks. of August as atdditiottal holidays. In future all schools will open on Sep- tember 1. The difficulty which some districts have bee+a under after the larger por- tion ]ladbeen annexed to a town or city, and it was found to necessitate a heavy burden to maintain a school, probably suggested a ;,ehangee by, which tied 'kity•tend;,.cottutry-boards•may erect and mititttAbi rte school for the joint• use of the, .touritr.' •seetion:.and a, portion of of the city, t;he• Minister oC; Editeation must agree to titian' ' e Abaenee ofolio Tedi o "I its; r,h_tidars a. y eneu be sedteeeat ,.ti .. . tory° coiadrtro#tti as well5 e mat i1hteas, f A new Ole the Haigh Ookottl' iur'se 'At'ptesent pups who have taken a couple of years' work and prove into another school hare no certificate as to the work they hove done. The Minister was authorized to estab- lish "an examination for entrattee to the, Middle School," to be called the "Senior High S.ohool Entrance," while the present one will be called the `junior" Boards in unorganized districts' are. allowed to i appoint truant offieers, The Minister of Education wag givett authority to determine from time to time the number of inspectors to be ap pointed by -a municipal board'in'any city' . or separate town. No municipal board of education can be formed except by a vote of the rate- payers. In unorganized districts the exe'nt a ,:ions from school taxes no longer wilt apply to non-residents and married peal. lace without children. THE SEXES. Toronto School Trustee Believes it1 Separation. Toronto, March 27.—Dr, P. J .Contsup,, eharranau of the management committee of the Board of ltdueation, is convinced that sex reparation. in the higher grade would be an improvement in the Toron- to school system, and will mor,* to that effect. "Already a test ]ran been made to the theory, end it is working out very wenn said Tyr. Couboy. "In Kent •subool, ever since it was organized last September, the senior boys and girl's Isave heert taught in separate schools, and j tinder - stand that the results are quite satisfon. tory." I•• MURDERS MAiN. iloKer Attacks Men From Lumbar- Camp and Steals Time Checks. Pert Arthur despatch To get poasea- ralor. of three woodsmen's time checks, it man. whose name is not yet ]mown to the authorities, held up a party of three woodsmen. all Finlanders, on their way out from the Pigeon $.ver Lumber Cent- oany's camp near Silver ittountain, kitt- ing one of thein and very seriously wounding the others. using it. revolver ia.a a weapon. The men Were on a road leading from the- camp to a roadway, intending to take the train to Port Arthur, when. theY were met by a stranger, who offer- ed to direct them by a short cut, Ilse offer was accepted, and at a convenient moment the stranger opened fire on the three. killing one and incapacitating the others,. took their .time checks, 'which are of 00 value to him, becamte' Ere eandot et'lx them, The revolver' was not his only weapon. The murderer also used a hunting knife freely. One man bas nine cola about his body. Leaving like victims to their sufferings, the as- sailant made oft', The two lay out, evouneriinal and bleeding, beside the dead. body of their companion all night, and. to '3xty. one managed to rea.oh the railway riind'ixet the news sent to Silver Mountain, wasforwarded aidedto Yvfiehet+ it tYsr Port Arthur. Prrt'vinclal Constable Simone left for the'r+cene this afternoon, but will not to foe erase lbw. able to get on the treek oe he 'tt .eeler 'tnsurder'er before to-morroatr. Thr, intattal nl.n Ara Wile. cearsdi for.