Daily British Whig (1850), 11 Apr 1902, p. 5

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

1] : i k g § i 33 : §% 3 THE CHILDREN, HEAVEN BULSS THEM ! Are They Frail, Restless Nervous ¢ Paine's' ( Celery Compound Will Make Them Vigorous, Healthy, Bright andHappy. As rls, pares ho to Blame if their children weak, nerv- ous and ieritable, %! wv, file ones may be well clothed and fed, yet still be milly nogloe tea from a physical point i hia be remembered that the inherit many of the wouhles that Tarente suffer from. Thousgnds of little are subjects of nerve lon, Eeondition inherited « from fa or matter. This hervous conai ? i x temper, ind ion, 'and stoniadh dersngemtents, Such children need the best and most intelligent care, or they will grow up in migery and disease, Give the. little ones Paine's Celery the nest few wooks; Cite fortifying effect on : fen; watch the growth of thaskful Tetiors have from glad fathers an) have haa their dear pes iored to health and Paine's Celery Compound. ampleton, Winnipeg, Man, 6 great pleasure in re Four Paine s Com ildren's. troubles. Our ery ick a short time to call in a doctor, be could not Rte any than your ompound. wo we id of the Maison du UP CONTINUAL CONFLICT. Over Thirty People Wounded Mob Pelts the Police With Cobblestones and a Bayonet Charge Results. Brussels, April 11-Berious conflicts between the rioters and the police, in which over thirty persons were wounded, including women and child ren, oceurred late last night in the uple, encounter took place in We k Rug des Minimes, where the mob ed the police with cobblestones. police them charged with fixed as a result three men . and several others fhtly wounded. be mob then prackeded to the Rue in front of the Maison du teévens, | Peuple, and & still more serious von oseurved. Over a hundred shots were fired from both sides. The wo- Ae and children were woonded here, and they, together with the men in- Jared, were taken into the Mgison du rd midnight' this district of Brussels had the appeartince of a city in revolt. yioters had torn up the { street dar rails, snd erected a sort of 1 barricade to fortify their positions at the Maison. By dint of streguous forts, the po- Hee managed to 'clear the Rue Stev- ens, But. the Maison du Peuple was left in possession of the rioters. . Militia In Sympathy. London, April 11.~The Brussels cor- Ketone the Daily Mail says in a despatch that the reservists who were called out in consequence of the vives 'atrived there yesterday singing revolutionary airs. At the 'station they were met by the socialists, who distributed leaflets to them in which it was said that the socialist women were confident the militia' would not fire on the socialists if the command to do so was gives. A non-commissioned officer who or dered the arrest of ome of the distri butors of these leaflets was loudly ped. One Antwerp firm alone, continues the correspondent, recently sold 17, 000 revolvers to the sociatists. FIVE MEN KILLED. Effort to Recapture Jim Wright, a Tennessee Murderer. Kaoxville, Tenn. April 11.--Meagre details of the bloody battle fought between a shorifi's ome and outlaws in Book Sountls Va., reached Knox- ville diving + night by long dis tance telephone message from Jones boro, Tenn, Five men, all members of the sheriff's posse, are reported fo have been killed, two other persons wounded and Jim Wright, who escap- ed from Hancock county, Tenn., where hie, was wanted upon the charge of mitrder; 'was shot wna captured. Wright was under a life sentence in the mitentiary for murder as oh from the state prifon at Brashy Mountain 'two yours. ago. He return: ed to Hancock county ceently and thes defied the officers. although there was & reward of 8500 for his arrest. Not long flat his return house, sheriff Lagets, Hancock, count; was shot from sh and killa. The crime was = charged to Jim Wright, Ain Templeto: another murderer; the Dateers tiothers, The motive : the alleged 'crime was said to be that aes had killed the th of the Te Recent re have been planning to ea Ng Wright in his home, and he," with John Templeton, and other assistants, ewe + state line into Virginian: ve ay a month: Yesterday the organized a strong posse ana attempted to arrest 2 eT he men had been no and a pitched battle resulted. The two deputy sher- ifs wounded are doe Moss and Sam ax, Made A Fine Job. Mndrew Mcluife;. one of 'the finest |. hat | artistic painters in. Oanads, bas just complet, two large artistic signs, 0x5 feet, for the steamer Islander and to be placed on the paddle boxes on cach wide. Eagles with outstretched Folger Bros work and have ( to _paint the © Wi ea Els 88 v large. ilighee 'of citigens who were loud in their praise of the artistic ability of the artist, iw A -------------- Will Lay Information. dekn Cafes. he ae ma Ra out a warrant fos Hille fails to do so ate likely to mormon. fi hy" ale Se eh bo i Fo Gre Sn Ree in Scott} THE 1 BURIED AMID FLOWERS. Any # pine: Funeral of Late Ernest Nevins Held To-day. The funeral of the late W. Ernest Nevins took place at 230 o'clock this afternoon from the residence of his father, Willis Npvine, Catarsegui street, to Cstardgui cemetery. 1 sequies were under the direction of Masonic order, which the 'deceased young man Wax a The rich and profuse floral oflringy e eloquently of the re gard in whieh he ar ei i by his noble 'qualities' that marked the oe of him whose casket théy almost hid from view 'with their rich laxuriance. Among the floral ings were: A pillow of lilies, with these words in the contre © + Fellow employees of the 3 LH &P ent flowers, Savire's Sroria ah lng Qos ais v class 1 wtreét MetBodist church ; the square and compass, worked in flowers, a beautifil design, Tom, Sussex, No. 5, and Slew, No. AF & AM, Brockville; floral oy Fred Sim: mons ; ent flowers, Mrs. Ostler, Mon- treal, a fierer), Miss Carrington, city and the Mi. v2 Valeria Patterson and Lilian Hall, Brockville; foral tri- butes from Ancient St, John's, 'A. F. & AF. lodge ; wreath from Robert Nevine, uncle of the déceaséd ; & bell of violets, Mr. Shelling, and staff, of the 'Bell telephone company. The funeral was very largely at tended, service Weing held at the house, of Died At Wellington. Wellington, Apel 10---W, P. Miles is again on a business trip. The sud- den - death of the late Mrs. David Hubbs, Bloomfield, has caused much sorrow, Thomas Stinson, Lindsay, was home for a' few days, owing to ill-health, i and Mrs, T. A. Rankin visited at West Lake on Sunday. Miss Kelly's millinery opening was a de- suCoRss On Saturday, Rankin Tostie, Montreal, vas in town -on Wednesday. The Misges Harvey, Pic ton, were guests of Mrs. T. Stinson, on Sunday. Mrs. Herb, Osterhout, Toronto, attended the funeral of her father, the late. Adami Garratt, who died on Saturday. The funeral took floss on on, Sunday at Rose Hill. Bev. s, Fickering, is holdhig a series meetings friends of Mrs. M. A. Snider, Roches ter, formerly a a of Napanee and Wellington, aud prominent in mu sical circles in the flower city, will be pleased to know of her success as a teacher, and the hearty congratula- tions extended 'to her through the press on her lar "series of ~veci tals. Mrs. Sni is related to some the leading families in this vieini- ty. Her portrait presented in the Uti- ca Globe is & good one, and will be vecognized by mmny of her friends here. Pleasant Sugar Social. Collins Bay, April 10.-Dr. Focessa, a native of Persia, preached a very interesting sermon Te the CM. chuteh on Sundd evening. The sugar social Methodist church on nes In -- 8 great success, iss Edna Asclitine and Mins Eva Marsh have retun Kingston after pending' on holidays at home. Wise Hanah Bell returned howe on Friday after a six weeks' visit with her sister, Mre. Hetherington, Deser- onto. © Victor Davison, Kingston, and Mise' Burs, Clamenit, were at Steward Smith's, Parrots Ray, on Sunday E. Marsh hind = Misses Eva ang Flor enos Marsh vigited Miss * Laura Cle: ments on Monday 'bvening. Burt Cle ment 'purchased a valuable horse at Deseronto last week, Mrs. McAuley has 'returned homie" to Railton, PE a Good Wishes For The King. Fredericton, NB, . April 1L.~The provincial legislature before pro- roguing, yesteraay. afternéon, . passed an_ address {othe king, assuring him on bebnli of "the legislators and fhe people, of thee devotion and onto t's and throne, * lind Yoncuding + "Ne with it your majesty 'may mio a long, and glorious reign until the "heavens, entying earth's good happi: ness, add i i has oA to your crown" ng t t passed by 'the legislature was one extending the 'fife 'of the legislature from four to five yedrs. ges Mand Good Aj. Yair, to- day yeeichaking ry first birthday, He is a sk tehman, who has been a pit of Kingston and vicinity for part Bixty vears, In early days he was a _steanihoat engineer, and then settled at Glenburnie, where farmed « ully for years. A do cade afd he a to kwon, Saking up residénce a Alfred » He 0 Sather of TR Vair, of Gle Ernie] 0 § The "venerable in highly hthought of by many ~ friends in ity, who to see him enjoy ho ere. The many Work > Suspended. E Elf John Milligan fot & nu Tk | a i fo: for whe ob ie for the old ict un, be won wid oy a Bi | that no Sa "the number a hae considering LY re un aN THEY ARE DOING | NOTHING TO HELP SAVE SINNERS. Work Ameng Millionaires -- There Are Many of the Croesuses, He Says, Who Need to be Converted. Now: York, April 11.<Warner Van Norden, president of the bank of North America, whose two daughters desertea the circles of the 400 to be come Salvation army laswies, appeals to the churches to save the souls of the millionaires. | He chided modern preachers at a meeting of she Preshy: terian union, and he is guoted in the same strain in an efternoon paper. He is weported as saying : "Whoever has heard of a sinner be ing converted im oie of our big churches ? I mean a real sitner -- some big millionsire, purseproud and bard-bearted, or some crime-tainted, haraened eriminal. Not one of you. What we ought to. strive for is to convert millionaires and take them ont of their wretched, selfish lives, and the women, those foolish butter flies; who ave wasting their lives. We speak of sin in the abstract, and Rus- sell. Suge smiles and rubs his hands and says ; "That's right." "It has become nothivg Jess than a scandal that so many millionaires leave their work for three or four motiths of the: year. There are many of the rich laity who take a vacation from church activities, not merely for three mouths. but for the w year, If pobr people comegto a fashionable church, among wi xsons, they are. made to feel ain rtable, and so they stay away. "Ceeed is mot. the all-important question conironting . the Presbyterian church. The problem is to find on way to cure the rich of their coldness and indifference." INCIDENTS. OF TH DAY. Newsy Paragraphs I Picked Up By Reporters On Their Hounds. Pine Apples, @8c., at Carnovsky's. Lady Minto left Ottawa for England on Thursday. This is no time for a change. Build up Ontario ! Ex-nlderman J. B, Cooke went east to#lay on a business trip. Major Lemmion, founder Brantford Courier, is dead. Joseph Pinsonneault, customs officer at Lacolle, has been dismissed. Fresh strawberries atriving daily at Carnovsky's, 18c. on Saturday. Cardwell conservatives have 'nomin- ated A. E. Little for the Tegistature. The Allan line steamer Carthagenian docked at New York ¥ morning. Four or five honorary degrees will be given at Queen's convocation on April 30th, Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Kent, wore ts at a tea given by Mrs. Bruce Vacdonald. Toronto, yesterday. Four packages of jolly powder, 25¢., to-morrow, at Mullin's grocery, corn of of 'Johnston and Division streets, At its last drill, No. company, Hith regiment, enrolled eleven recruits, This popular company is now over strength, The Winnipeg industrial exhibition will offer $6,000 in purses for two world 'ruces, one for pacers and one for trotters. The local woman's temperance union is circulating a petition, opposing the granting of a liquor license to the St. Lawrence inn. C. B. Perry has resigned the posi: tion of landing waiter in the Napanee customs, 'which he has filled for twen: ty-five years. Our glazed French fomite and nut teats are 'the talk of all who: buy them. Fresh for Saturday morning, W. J. Crothers. Rev. Prof. MeComb will address the graduates at the general hospital nurses' graduation ceremonies . on Monday evening. Be calm, Mr. Whitney, be calm; the province will. go right on growing and prospering, 'even if you should never betorde premier, Henry an, a well-known fish: erman,. of Hay Bay, is in Kingston general Rospital, suffering from a we vere attack of jaundice. The civic fire and Jight committee was called to meet at three o'clock this afternoon. Tenders for firemen's uniforms will be asked for. John Greenway, Camden; Bast, the Deseronto aph office for some time, has left for Winnipeg, where he has i satared a good position. dinner was given in Winni in ad of F.'W nn NDE a shortly for Montreal, by a number of Winnipeg' & most prominent citizens. Being the largest dealers in hats in Kingston, we have many exclusive styles not procurable at other stores. George Mille '& Co., hat specialists, Wellington street. ewier Haultain's motion, in the territorial legislature, regreiting pro- vineial autonomy had not been prant- oG to the territories, was carried by twinty two to sevep. A suitalile' monument ia memory of the late John W. Bell, WP, at Des mond, will be ha of Canadian red granite, over eight feet in height, with a base five feet by thrive. While Mr. Marter is i etry denounced he mar conservative : a8 a Ry of the in APRIL 4. 1A VENERABLE GENTLEMAN. lees use x Has Just Celebrated His Nine- tieth Birthday. Napanee, April. JL----Mre. Allan Pringle, John street, took dinner with her father, James Wi leod, Selby, on Mowday, April Tih, to celebrate his ninegieth bicthday. Although at this advanced age Mr. Mcleod is still re markably active, and drives to town quite regularly. He is as ervet and stately as many a maa of seventy- five and, with the exception of his bearing, he is bright and wonderfully well preserved for a man of his age. Mr. and Mrs. lrg Pri arvived Fhome this week 'after an we of ten months spent with their hildren. The summer -and ear part of the winter was spent with t daughter Mes. F. ALT in Melita, Man. itoba, and the past thoee months with their sons, Fred and Herbert, in Chicago. It is needless to say they thoroughly enjoyed every day of their stay, yet were plensod to be back again to the bome and amongst old friends who are pleased to welcome thew. A jury was emoanselled to look in- to the death of Everton Wagar, kill- ed on Monday afternoon, while en- gaged roisi William Ferguson's frame house, South Napanee, The jury, after viewing the body and the scene of the accident adjourned until Saturday, when it will be made known whether they think there was Srslestusse or ngs in the untimely ath of young ar, Wednesday was ey of wind and rain. The whole day long the rain came down and the wind howled a perfect hurricane, The sun did not make his appearance all day, but yesterday the air was so fresh and in vigorating that we enjoyed the day all the more after the preceding day's loom, The ladies of St. Mary Magdalene's . church held a very successful bazaar in the town hall yesterday afternoon and in the evening a concert and tea was conducted. The affair was wost enjovable, and very successful finan cially. On Tuesday night, W. J. McKim, who expects to leave next week for the coast, was banquetted in the LO.O.F. lodge, No. 86, and presented with an address. Mr. McKim was quite taken by surprise, but managed to make a suitable reply, expressing his regret at having to sever his re lations with the people of Napanee, which has been his home for so many years. Two new mail boxes have been put in, one at Grange's corner and the other at Hullman's corner. The old boxes have been removed and new ipeto: date boxes take their places, And quite a convenience they aro to the public, who would otherwise have to go to the post office with their let- ters, VERONA VIEWS. Varieties, Verona, April 10H. W. Bayookis is extending - the telephone line to bis factory. Rev, Mr. Perley, jv., Har- row mith, exchanged pulpite with Mr, Mill.r, of this place. Sidney Walroth bas made some good, improvements to his establishment this spring; be has added ten small buildings which will be utilized a8 meat stalls. H. W. Reynolds will soon have his lime kilns in running order; one at each end of the village. Miss E. Abrams spent Faster "at her home in River- side. There is quite an exodus from air village this spring. Neatly: all the young mon have left to hetter their condition elsewhere. "Billy * Buchannon, J, McMullen and M. Rev- ell have secured positions on the C.P. R. J. Asselstine bas gone to Manitoba. H, B. Percy spent Easter-tide gt Wolfe Island, On week death tered the home of Thomas and the spirit of old Amey was summoned to its bright home. She was. a. resident of Mill Haven for a number of years, but a year prior to her démise she had come to reside with her great nicve, Mrs. en~ Quinn, Mrs o. Tuesday, age of ninety-eight years. and, is survived' hy four daughters-- Mrs. Ev ans; Mrs. H. Humber, Goderich, Mrs. Mrs. Burnham, Port Hope, Mrs. Hen derson, Manitoba; and her nicce, Mes Thomas Rider, High Falls, The fun: eral was private. Rev. Mr. Richards officiated A New Recipe Book. Walter. Baker & Co., the oldest manufacturers of cocoa and chocolate peeparations, ave about to issue 8 greativ enlarged edition their book: let. of choice recipes, prepared by Miss Parloa. and other noted Yeacliers of crak . It has cighty pages, illustrat with half-tones. and colored litho oo and contains the most com: plete collection ever made of recipes in which cocoa or chocolate is used for enting and drinking. Vassar college } and. Smith college contribute Uheig States or ing this paper, Walter Baker & Co. Dorchester, Mass. Rheumatism What's the Cause? Death of an Aged Lady---Village a Quinn. She had attained the gdvanced | WHO WANTS 1 CARPET BARGAIN Many at this, the house-cleaning season, will take ad= vantage of the oflur announced in this adver-isement. We are giving up keeping carpets and want the space occupied by them as soon as possible... How shall we clean them out quickly 2 The anly way we know is to reduce the prices So down they go with a great big drop. £ NE ob ar 20% Or One Filth OF Each Doll yord - This new approved corset is tn- surpassed. It gives the "upright poise, sloping bust, extended waist line and graceful round hips so much sought after, D & A Corsets are approved by " society." Most, merchants sell them, if your dealer does not, send to us. - Price $1.00 - to $3.00 per pair--made in White, ] Grey and Black, Never before in Kingston has there been such a fine exhibit of New Spring Shoes as we are now showing o firm outside of Mon« treal or Toronto would dare 2 ut, in stock such horace - goods -- ry OTHER, LAND'S patrons appear fo des mand sweller styles each season, So we decided to outdo all coms petition and have now in ak the most wonderful line of 3 good Shoes ever shown in Cane ada, The prices ave just as" low. as you will pay elsewhere for ine ferior goods. JH. SUTHERLAND & BRO. «ii we HR SHOE MEN. 53350920 399999 399999 The Only Pure : And Wholesome Porter Labatt's Lonoon Prescribed by the Leading Physicians For all Convalescent, JAS. MCPARLAND, AGENT. Drain Pi pes, Flue Linings and Chimney Tops. We are Agents for the ('anadian Sewer Pipe Company and can furnish these in any quantity desired. We carry a large and well assorted stock and make a special discount to contractors and those in the

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy