Waterloo Public Library Digital Collections

The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 14 Mar 1912, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

BHFY 44 8. Yer Â¥h COLAd M Aributary to the geady access and ” this: rapidl Ceatic" > > « The construction of these two radâ€" dal lines will mean a big addition to Soeal transportation‘ facilities. Tnâ€" ' t _of two railways competing . for Aheéir business the manufacturers © of Jerlinâ€"and Waterloo will have three, is Jlikely to © prove spocially we in councetion with shipments @j"qinm Canada. â€"Passenger traffic Q‘” s wilt gltw be: improved . The sople of a largt:and thickly populat: ,:' iral séection and several neighborâ€" towns and villages, more or â€" fess v ih!‘rl* of â€" which is ~ naturaite ~FC â€" The passing of the Berlin & North, ern Railway Bill by the Railway Way,.Committee practically ~<a@sâ€" sures its passage in the â€" House, which will, _ according to President } t, mean‘ the ‘early construc tion of aâ€"radial road to Elora and â€""We are well acquainted with © the .~;&tflll growihâ€"of Borlin and the Wide range of its inanufacturing esâ€" â€"t@blishments and the Canadian Northâ€" @fD is anxious to extend its lines. to your prosperous city. If your citizens and municipal bodics can secure for u$s a right of way in the vicinfty of factory district whereby we can ; the town and get out again. "I can tell you frankly, gentlemen, that proposed ‘highâ€"speed radial ~Jine we propose constructing this ‘sUummer will be extended to Berlin this â€"‘I want it thoroughly ~understood that the C. N. R. is not after any c bonus, ~but merely the franchise ©¥er.some streets you may select.‘" «This announcement is 8f the utmost â€" S Amportance It means that the high specd radial railway project MpoOnwhich the People‘s Railway Wid * valuable work, and which has been at a standstill for some time,;. is to be taken hold of by a powerful €orporation and pushed to carly comâ€" pletion.. It is also important in #Bat it will relieve the municipalities mlong: the route of any financial obliâ€" gations as to the taking of stock or ©thetwise, the only conditions being w secyring . of a . right of way through the municipalities. a 2 lying to the Berlin dqmtqtlon Sir. Wiliiam is reported to have spokâ€" en as follows:â€" . ‘The one was the: favorable ér of Sitr William Mackenzie to f uest .. _of a Berlinâ€"deputation t waited upon him to â€"urge: the | on of the Canadian ~Northern : ay to Berlin. ~‘The other was I passing by the Railway Commitâ€" *ee of the Legislature of the bill for . extension of the present â€" Berlin & Bridgeportrailway to Elora and the changing of the name to â€"â€" the Berlin & Northern Railway. v t0 announcements of first . imâ€" Portarice to the trangportation interâ€" of the towns of Beriin and Watâ€" g,{m made simultancously â€" this RAILWAY OEYELOPEMENT druggists. & qui up$ Zamâ€"Buk is best for ch dren‘s injuries and skin troubles; because : Mi kely. to © prove â€"spocially conncetion with shipments Canada. â€"Passenger traffic It also. be: improved . The Targc:and thickly populat: tion and several neighborâ€" the tfi bu thi c with tho Presiâ€" an <Northern, 1913 banner year in the rallway â€" construcâ€" he G.P. & H.for e Preston .& Berâ€" sod for : crownâ€" OW LAWYER th . the it ime nged naturally , will have munication has beef CURES revents ino the business as sat a~‘+ |@SCAPED THIS TIME with a Mn GRIMEBY . explosion, W sexton® of t Construction © of T vlevators. x No public Jand for Improved methods timbet waste. A minimunt wage and an day for Government and C aided work; ® instantly killed last hlown through ‘ the r whore the plant was ::: ng:e‘-“:ifi.:. the nh: .3"'«2 Extension â€" of â€" the ~ scope" "of â€" the Woum:‘:v."uomn;% . Act : to cover ardous | e 74 : ‘Compiéle ‘Probibition â€"of . Oricntai labor a . policy.>. The ucmog w ‘tion has not so completel the ground as to preclude tmaâ€" tion of a splendid platform by the Pacificâ€"coast province opposition:© A glance at the following plattorm will suffice to show ‘that there is noné of the _ "skimpy Chicken‘" _ appearance about it: Abolitionâ€"<of the poll tax. Exemption of improvements on all lands paying taxes to the Provincial Government. i % Reâ€"adjustment of taxation. The raising of the oxemption of : inâ€" comes limit to $3,000. â€"_ .. _ â€" ; Provincial department of Jabor and free labor bureau, f e o Thorough inspection of all â€" ‘indusâ€" ttial premises. ; A comprehensive system of .indus> trial insurance. h The Libérals otf Hritish m are Sot ghing i9. we peopee Oioile An Ambitious Platform The Journhl editor does not â€" beâ€" lieve in teserving its woras of apâ€" préeciation of a pohtical opponent _ for a postâ€"mortem deliverance, comments the Brantford Expositor, but in disâ€" tributing them while they â€"may cheeér the beart and the courage of the livâ€" ing. That its tribute to Sir ‘Wilirid Laurier will be reâ€"echoed by the great mass of Canadians, inrespective g party,~there: is no question. The Li eral leader has W . invaluable services to Canada to the Emâ€" pire, and there is cause for congratitâ€" lation that :instead of being brokenâ€" hearted over his ‘romiul revetrse . he is in better bealth und more buoyant in spirit than when he possessed the prestige and power of the premierâ€" ship, & e !wht ‘they regard as ‘the calamity . of last September 21st, it should be the effect of change of governments upon Sir Wilfrid‘s ‘heaith and > spirits, Whatever be the explanation, whether reliel. from.the onerous â€"responsibiliâ€" ties of â€"the premiership, or pleasure in watching the dificulties of his unâ€" tried successors, or merely that . deâ€" feat acted like a tonic, certain it is that the old chieftain Jlooks ten years younger and acts twenty years young~ ¢r.. His spirits are buoyant, > almost boyish. That he may long be spared in such health and spirits will be the sincere wish of us ‘all; Egfi l_l“'fl,. e on Shik _ ar ustt ds t â€" Mr. BHis‘ pill to allow municipflâ€" itles â€" to tear down or" repai owner‘s astu{ rot --_" > buildings, t repoy ted e diserssica. " Two ‘introduced . by Mr."R. H: lemr?;.”d ‘Carieton; to allow townships _ to raise °* money for good ° roads and other special purâ€" poses, ‘in excess of "the present limft of â€" $20.000, were also: reported. . The Charity "Aid Act, a hardy amâ€" wial, introduced zux K: B;"] van, : of escaped s1 death â€" by . ‘a ngp‘duihi it, be ferred to a subâ€"committee. Te § r w ties in is ""hane stool dents~ ‘in~city and:â€" town W‘l’; and 't‘r-ddlg' so â€" alimg . _to stori‘the rurgt stricts unloading their sick poor gn the cities. NP * Y 1 rency na‘s Cu All this may as well be acknowâ€" ledged while the subject still moves among us. Not since the zenith of Sir John A. Macdonald‘s career _ has any Canadian leader gained ~such ‘a Wilfrid. If there is any one . thing devoted personal following as has Sir which mightreconcile Liberals to Canadians of every politic&l ‘creed freely concede that the "Old <Chief" is one of Canada‘s miost distinguished sons. ~Without ‘question, too, is teâ€" tirement or removal would not only cripple the Liberal party, but would impoverish the. public life of ~this country and rob parliament of its most picturesque figure. The Ottawa Journal, an independâ€" ent newspaper with strongConservaâ€" tive leaning, pays < the followinig tribute . toâ€"Sit Wilfrid â€" Lautier as leader of the Liberal party: â€" / _ C _milght ay well a s wl ho w aee M oL h :':gm. A m: a-bfl LAURIER AS cA LEADER iovernment and (overnment XTON Barner fr as kept t spectulators Governimentâ€" LLED of preventing eightâ€"hous he H Oriental wned sh to forbid a book."" Sympathetic ‘direcâ€" tion: of reading, : he holds, _ requirck rufl.n of the books hq:-uot,e: wmebt on. them so hn o in e one t ‘ .. Rates â€" i shmitldâ€"do . more . th ;The ordinary boy loves stoties . of action, and . his taste for Diamond Dick and Nick Carter may be improvâ€" od, Mtr. Bates says, by giving him tales (full of stitring | life b& such anthors .io goih. Mwmt ipling , k. f at, Â¥ frae t talciin. C :n &nuugucb, «Julék â€"Vorne fi%&fim are dozens of teach ors i E-dl-h"m â€"have ..3.'. heard :‘é." 1‘:Ftl" taste for Laura Libbey is lhlludn‘t:_-un A plea for better â€"gurdance of boys and girls in the choice of . fiction is made by Herbert Bates in a recert number of the English Journal... It relates directly â€" to the reading done by high .school :.pn-. but what. Mr. Bates says mpplies to all direction of the young !:‘thh respect, and the adâ€" vice svn of value to parents . as well as teachets. ‘ A Plea dor Good Books On December 17 everything was in OIdO® on the wpot: . We fastened to the ground a littlk tent we had brought along, & Norwegian flag, and tho Fram pennant on the top of it.© *4 it§ â€"* The Norwegian home at the Southk Pole vhihéd ‘*Polheim.‘* ‘The distance from our wifiter quarters ‘to the â€"Pole was about 1,400 kilometers _ The average nnfig'z; was 25 kilometers. This muth is certain, that we ob served ‘the pole as humanâ€"power to do it with the instr uments we hadâ€"a artificial horizon. Sikh tee S In the fine weather we spent the following: day taking a _ series ~ of observations from 8"a. m. to 7 p. m. : The result gave us 89 degrees 55 minutes. is i0 enenths scti td 5y ¢ In ordet to observe the pole as close as possible we ‘traveled as | near south as possible the remaining 9 kilometers. hane o ue . on . dn to se On December 16 there we camped. It was an‘ excellent | of There was a brilliant sun. Four of us took observations every the day‘s‘ twentyâ€"four ‘hours. The exact res":t will~be the mail Professional â€"private réport. o K t Aecording to our réckoning we ha us mi:&nound the colorsâ€"a bea pt it and planting it. .. ; _ _ The vast plateau on which the pole is standing got the name of â€" the ‘"King Haakon VIL. Plateau." 1t is a vast plain, alike in all directions mile afterâ€"mile; during the night we c ircled around" the camp. & Local No. 56, . composed~ of an;‘t ginc.u ‘hmm ‘and a passenzer car rham :; 4or . â€", Pailmerston shortly before three o‘clock, mr:;tl:g, about 35 passengers, most. of them commetcial travelers. Just before \ arâ€" That. way was a beautitulâ€"oneâ€"a light breeze from the southeast, the temperature minus 233 celstus (9.4 de grees below Zero, Fahrenheit), . And the ground and sleighing were perfect . The day went along as usual and at 3 p.m. we made x halt. ; ‘ â€" Â¥ Four ~ of the: seriously injured wese ta en to the.Strathconaâ€"rloswital=â€"â€"at Mount‘ Forest on ~the taz,ag> car, which did ~not leave the rais, while the otiers were Varhey: At a late ho r gn?wmd at â€"â€"the hospital tafat all the ‘njured Were doing fairly well, with .. ie exception of ~Stevens, who is 2 travelâ€" ler khrr the Wm. Paterson Comjany, of antford. He.was married only two wueks ago, and his young bride was notified at once of che accid nt. She wasâ€"overcome by ‘the shock, ‘but left.as soon as â€"possible for <â€"Mount Forest. < s rz.:ut ul:n:n‘.‘u“.vw 'p‘:-nub io fiin 'i-ubl 5 l Sufeting from miaot mhornk + R. B. BUTLER, traveller, ‘Joroat E. W. PLKE, ‘Ohinese wares tra e3 GILBERT, travellet, Toror E. H. HILLHOUSE, merchant, C « ford. 52 416 :m 22 5. A. COSFORD, traveller,. Bertin OHN 'gooucon. 4 f 4. WAIN; & + 3 * i# # %* + CHAS.*SAUNDERS,. Iaboter® T _ ham, face i a 4 x M. P. Ll)ua? Toronto, traveller, ior White & Company, gip ani back injured, â€" will‘ recover. ‘J. A.~COLE, London, cut. acout face and hands. » DurBan,â€" Ont., / March 8. .. .. Sterers, ‘otStratifroy, is injuréd i~â€" ternally and may die, three . uther. men are seriously wounded, sc7:a mote ¢r less serfously hurt, fi many oubâ€" ¢rs tadly shaken up as resi‘.t 0: a day coach rolling over â€" the cn.bankâ€" ment. owing to a broken rail, on the Grand~Trun‘k Railway at. Vatiy, 1¢; tweer Durham and~Palnicrst, this afternoon at"3.05 o‘clock: â€" MRS . L. STEVENS, Strathroy, travel ler for Paterson & Compauy, Brant ford, spine hurt, ribs brok»a and in ternal injuries, mot likely to r:cover neerial Broken W 1M ull THE â€"POLE AT LAST ordbanly fretund o n Rail Causes Leave Et C . Deep ’ From Amundsen‘s Narrative PMBy< 0. critical W WV R J __| f ot s o 4 T.R. NEAR DOR dAM NC Hart Dur Als lif Damed. LA limbs were stiff !Mlhnz‘d'tgmli:mo Gin fl. . J met him again in a fow days he told me he coud Hft his arms, which he had not been able to do d reached our. destination. All:‘ of utiful. silk flagâ€"all hands taking hold To: ths Omlanotxna.c.!. a¢ or 1 ‘ I '““"‘ld‘x‘lh‘mmm m I read in prntlut GIN PIL mnldmfiy cure . thenmatism, wrote for a free sample to try. I cgdmmn;ymnw awfui ie feemeer ind was om put it on &bpd-yh.‘. + _ The â€"Toronto * wrecking | : auxiliary enmel?; from Toronto, and reached the â€"s7ot â€"at :§.45 p.m., andâ€" . is now ehyo:" ~in. clearing the track for toâ€"morrow‘s. traffic, under t‘es1â€" lflfhfiuh%‘- direction. _ _ _‘ COULD NOT RAISE MY RIGHT ARM Genéral .Supcrintendent U. E. Gillen at Toronto, was notified of the wreék as.soon as engine and baggage car had wnwy&e the news from. the scene of . the accident, from â€" Varney to Palmerston. Mr. Gillen immeCiate: 1y had a gfeq::h train sent up i:] brimz on the unhurt passerigers, . & Siowolt® "10f€ for ‘the stene in 2n6 ther Spedinl, : Arcz n dn# murinr > ie the .w P * élw the dact â€" that m‘m to be: ta‘ through the : win ‘A" number ie men escaped, ant, together sfi ®" & was sont to th B‘n&'.coqa Hos;Fial in Mourt Forest, and a sy¢ cial train was sent out from Palmer ston â€".to convey the wounded. to .t hogpital, eleven miles distant. : Wilson, of Holstein and Pr. Perry, 0 Mourt â€"Forest, were taken to _ th seene," and on theâ€"way back.Dr. Scan lon. cf Palmerston, was taken aboard * The cause of the aceideit was ~â€" ‘a broken ‘section of ~rail, over a yar in length, . which nisde.a cleary break. The poirt had ‘been passed by a at 10.30 .in â€" the morning and‘a . s°¢â€" tion. man, who t«nt over ‘the track just: keforenocn, <zeported the line 4n good condition» What produced _ tls defect wil nm?_ be . w by . the _ comeay.; 3 cat o{cr‘ whichk tl.l;-:y hrm;?r * $ was ~five foct in hright, and it ra®. along "the ‘ties for: 175 fret belore: ing so0. Nevertheless, toth car and rightâ€"ofâ€"way were Yery â€" slightly dug- aged | . > S se sone 5e + Cl and ~s0f t landed in‘ t & :n quu“ nd injured _/ [ T lie lat Yard <of Rail Broke efl t CA 4 excellent _ opportunity nd wfi:l ming fror rasseagers lying on . ting â€" t1 geting â€" is every â€" hour of the matter ‘of a close as it is in sextant whd / an ch to in Lilian Whiting, author of _ ‘‘The Brownings: .. Their Life and Art," has been bonored by an . invitavion from the Browning Centenary Celebrâ€" ation to join the committes of some m_Lmnhtin men and .. women "who understand the greatness of the world‘"s debt to the genius of Brownâ€" ing,‘‘ for the meeting to be beld in London in Westm 'li\:iet" Ix\‘zbey ‘gn the centenary day,. May 7. rd â€" Crewe will preside and among the speakers expected are the Archbishop of . Canâ€" terbury, Prof. Edward Dowdon, Sir Oliver Lodge, Arthur C. Benson, Wilâ€" Ham Watson, and the Bishop of Ripon. . _ * . t ‘‘Orr â€"baby. cries for Chamberiain‘s Cough .Remedy," ~writes Mrs. T. â€"B. Kendrick, Rasaca, Ga. : "It is â€"the best ‘cough remedy on the market for coughs colds, and croup. <For,© sale by all dealers. R ite ies m esns sh go THE F. Â¥. The w gh 1" Sho¢ Polish the bigwest on work g paste in 37 2d #7; N 12 Opp Ottawa, March 8.â€"The Ottawas are said to be about $6,000 behind _ last year‘s receipts. . Homeâ€"andâ€"home gamâ€" v«, with Quebée, would have left Otâ€" taws on ; street. Jt is t ctm'%’-rm‘m‘! g g 3 nlombers of the present team . next vyear udst wome new blood. "‘We‘ll play seven men hookey â€" next yéer or ‘we‘ ‘will not play at all," said" Skene Ronan.~ Nearly all of the Robert . W. . Chambers : leads. the" March issue of CANADA MOXTHLY ) with the first > instalment of a nchl} entitled THE DREAM GIRL in which a pretty girl) a roving fisherman and . a scarlet‘ ibis named Eb.l and im ported from _ Egypt play the leading parts, â€" and get thoroughly entangled , in t net of ciréum@â€"ance. Mr. Chamâ€" bers} stories are on the top of ‘the tide. â€" just now, . ani this is one o7 the best of them. ‘}%%%C~ e f FEWER PLAYERS, LESS MONEY 1J o Pit 2s n stntncd (he oliow® sach year as a standard, the follow‘ ing ‘statistics ‘for 1910 and 1911 have been compiled:â€" * 3. Port Arthur‘s appa w. Tate trom*t 1s. do g:-‘ due in part %o t.heyég‘ i%o( wfilm treated there. ‘In fact, the lumber and minigy camps, where infection is at a maximuwm, sometimes show _ a law rate, as ‘pati¢nts are hurried. off wth_nuxutemldr treatment. St. Catharines mortality from t phoid in 1911 can be thus explained "" * in ] on _ * 3 7 ce soold m > 1910 ba becoine avail ':é ?'%W corie Hgures . for were Tor trom. the varioug. ci clorm shows that. Berlin M‘: i en en nane & 8 rom @r, ‘The u‘:f.'-]u Includes all Ontario cities, plus treal and the: towa of s-:m.uwmuydml. It had only 4 per bundred in 1910 and _ 17 MARCH CANADA (MONTHLY W Chatham .~.... Woodstock â€"..;;. Berlin®.......}. . Toronto‘%..}..... Windsor ®.;:::. Belleville *........ St. Eflnflh Kingston ....... Oftawa 4 Port Arthur _ it t hike isewhereâ€"at summer re #a 94 ol this way and ar SÂ¥ NHOOL _ REPORT. I f / LCl , foanl { se . 1.; >. . 12 Avilinot. * 1 “, 2 N s 200 awei" aâ€"Will om;,rxenl ‘ A BB MA // 5 & s 1% martsâ€"Ada Ramseyâ€" , J )\ Khib\ie 70â€" Ctanlov ~ Wali 4 al The Table lour . were. quigid; patients ‘are t e contracted the sixâ€"men rule th outen : Re thig. abstish . dancruft and ndq, p, 0 Walter Lat: . money hact. s s ie lik, > ass . â€" 1 Mol"lo S Rip h is oo in mente. 6 J B is Typhoid ~rate D YEAR|â€" strongl y disca se 69 16 78 83 89 19 20 20 20 21 21 23 26 26 21 37 28 39 239 3s 33 34 J 40 41 44 45 3 "',Vn en ‘-‘, dress, | Lwil sell you ow co care your ; tceatment ; and will aiso ipend i f ‘home treatment d ‘;"?‘N u" 'it‘ ~':‘,<’.--‘.’": from your own: localit fl experisnce _ with the Merehants Cank of (‘ndd;fi'_grnn Latet m . ;_ transferted ‘to ‘Toronto, Montreal ami Quehec. Coming to Deiroit in 1890 be entered mflndfie_ Prig. ton Naticnal , ‘beginning as >a discount clerk. Mr. mm& in " a few years to be the of: the â€" in stitution, atterwards..going toâ€"the ol 1 ; Detroit National when the $wo : inâ€" It‘s the Little: Dandrut Germs That are Causing : Your® _ Hair to Thin Out 4* Sm#Il Boyâ€"Yes, sir. They Ute the sins ‘we ought to have done, .fi haven‘t.â€"Black and White. :~"" _ _ BEWARE YOUNG MAN The Clergymanâ€"Now, can any one tell ‘me" what are the sing‘ m1 a »«PAie stitutions â€": â€"were incorporated Windsor, March 8.â€"Ifvike B. M Viceâ€"President ~ of the old ~ Detroit Nationai Bank, Mrdw i ly . at his home in "‘ ate . night. Deatl ‘was ‘due to ‘Feartâ€" fabs ".I'emidu&dbyhhfi digns"igi" : Unger>was fortyâ€"eight years old, and came to.Detroit about 4 two yeats ago. ~. Bomn in W y Ont., he obtgined ‘, his early. bank T he * FALLING HaAIRY * 16:MaynardAve., ‘ Back in th olden dar Through Traifs Torente to olonist.Cars on all Trains Winnipeg and West Adk any C.P.R. Agent for copy of * Settlars sATH OF 1, B. MANITOBA, ALBERTA sA 5 KA TCH EWAN The only through fine d 29cA SETTLERE MARCH and APRIL Will leave Toronto Solomon Kauftman Special Trains fnlhwef:jrt 4 s oog NATIVE HERBSte Eigfi" C ienfarstes 1 / â€" un For. setdlers travelling widklivesock and Each TUESDAY 1# ‘you suller from t takeâ€"any Ayman . w? 10.20 PA; LOW COLONIST RATESs RAUWAY Bapk, Detroit, died suddetâ€" his home in that city cat ‘was due‘ to ‘Geartâ€" falm IFIG FORSALE BY VNGER OFâ€"ODETROIT Young w h TRAIN § cce on Ieging ho baldheaded at 30 d is placed at a sooking. eniploy» and Tourtst Sieopore ( L6 AGH 1 ASK THE BL1Sé AGENT 19.20 P.M. Daily AIT dro att bai tes dar E: f Setlers and fnmilies Loaving Toroate : ta â€"TQâ€" It otllw;;‘: â€"day to. 4 hm Whginor, Mikgg Berlin. have an

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy