Daily British Whig (1850), 26 Apr 1902, p. 11

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Fragrant and Cleans BABY'S OWN SOAP SHE PATIENTLY BORE DISGRACE A Sad Letter From a Lady Whese Husband Was Dissipated. How ia Grd Bm Wi Sr ear- yar marvelous remedy forthe cure utinest whith 1 could give | secretly, I decided to try it. and mized is in his ood and coffees, Ad, a8 3 the a was odor' and tasteless, not lorie was that so Hien relieved his craving for liquor, He soon n to pick u his te for solid food return. oa he stuck to his work regularly, and now have a dome. Afver he completely ¢ mw done, when he acknowledged that it been his savi as he had not the Au to break off of his own accord. rtily advise all women afflicted as 1 was 10 give your remedy a trial." FREE SAMPLE 3 ving was ' oo poverty. ab an opposing espierre, Mireabeau nd a---- fe A Word of Advice to People Who Are Easily Gulled By Cheap Shares of Stock--How Profits Are Made By Contractors For Municipal Work. (Rg surrespundencs, ella do. LU ASW A0ER, APH sor Lie UpeTiag spring of she your 190% wil be remem: bered JOf cuptisies LO Cle Bs the year plouumat beyond ail otbeds, lor more relngiasoie aud disastrous chon ges that Dave Lasen piace han auy year in the pundied just passed. LR I Anca » bubning shores savage urns confront each otaer, wheie Victory and defesl tremble in the balance, and woat wii be the hoal settiement no man vig cen wriell. i bousands of lives have been' sacrinced and mal Hons Ol pounds have been expended for a possession u which won way still be 01 yuestionable value. ine cyclone thal swept over China has upperently passed 10F the time. ibe sacred | ruulg deuly, cowmunglig of arty Stock, Bre sgn 1B posses son ol the sacted aly rom whence go orth the edicts "of life wail dedth 10 more than three hundred wuibons ot the hues rece. Lhe armies ul rurope and Jepah are leaving the celestial shore and hurrying to ther homes to meet the shreatened rebel: lion of their countrymen, gaunt, huu- gry and savage, upon whose blood- ted nag ave emblaconed the words: 'Starvation and give us bread. This fearful threat of fwminue und its coliseguences in this calamiious bour are conuned 10 Bo special quarter ol the earth. All through Brith india, from Uplcutta to Detni, the highways are lined with the living and the dead. Millions upon millions bave been © expended in the endeavor of checking this terrible evil, but man's sliorts to alleviate the sufferings of his nd are all in vain Thousands of miles away, surround ed by all the great centres of civil zation, the smallest of the kuropean kingdoms is in a wtste of rebellion such as it never knew before. Bel i the most industrious fis in 'the world, is now bat- for food, and the echoes of wmid- night sre awakened by the ary of hungry millions calling for bread, bread, bread, for their wives al children are starving, and they wee no way out of their trouble, but by the destruction of those who wow [0s woss the wealth of the land, while those who produced it are dying of want. There is a fearful meaning in this cry whieh will not be dseiphered and understood that the red torch of the incendiary has lighted the way. 'the whole interior of lands to the south is alive with insurrection, and thete is no mistake in this single fact that want is felt by millions beyond the ken of human charity. The sup ply is not equal to the demand. Pov- erty looks with envious eyes upop the accumulation of Midas and unless its distress is relieved it may illustrate with the murderous rifle and destroy- ing torch the potency of the proverb, "To have ot to hold." This week the advance in the necessaries of life has doubled, increasing by millions the profits of the rich erushing down deeper in distress and to addi tional bondage the sufferings of the poor. The rise in butter alone, and bread, which is the stafi of life, and meat, which is mimong the absolute necessities of the poor, has increased in cost of millions. By this change thie rich have grown richer and the poor have grown poor: er, and the question arises of fearful import, what dre you going to do about it? The -anewer is one. of threatening despair. want and agony untold as they look into the hungry eves of their wives and children, no such has taken place in, the memory of living men as that which has occurred dur- ing the week just past. In the coun he Png SHI hardly be felt, for a fle armer may rejoice increased value of everything he pro , but in all the great centres of i , where millions are ga together, the cry of starvation near at hand is felt at once; snd what then! Vengeance, dire certain, wicked and unreasoning, looking upon wealth as an immortal sin and virtue. Dantes may i and ii esommend- an our advanced civilization a | tiane {day in the week { share {and though they never saw or ' "1 Lyon they want you to share in this t golden the | him. We shall wa thered | of justice SL THR DAILY ll. Wb AA. GI WHIG, SATURDAY, APRIL 36. to, the dest' Thela are desirous of givi "public "a dollat in gold for 50 cents in ' and they are willing to con that charitable donation every Belore me is a pa- per advertising 'a trust for 50 cents & and they inform you in confl- that next week it will be 60, knew silver, dence opportunity without trouhle or cost. 1 this thing i so good and so profitable why do they not keep it themselves, There is a proverb as old as the hills, 'Beware of the Greek when he comes with gifts." Now listen to 'he voice of a tenderfoot who bas had some experience, who has been tempted, shipwrecked a hun- dred times while in search of fortune, and who has sounded most of the depths and shoals of human jolly, that tine after time has brought with it punishment and repentance. When sny man comes to you and offers to give you a valuable cousid: eration for nothing, beware of him, he is a Yar, pure and simple; leave him severely alone. This is not altogether a charitable world that we live in. There are in it good men and bad men; good trusts and bad trusts, und in the present condition of affairs wy advice would be to the inexperienced culator, let others get vieh on t You will see how they have fared one year from to-day and you will find that to one that has gained, ninety-nine have lost; so keep your | hard earned savings in the old stock- | ing of the savings bank, but don't specuthte iu trusts. To people of small or ordinary means, a careful in- | vestigation will show you that the orpsmental part of your housekeeping and living is far greater than is pee- essary for the support of a decent life. The unnecessary expenses slip away in small sams, but the clothing, house rent and the food are the points wher | with rigid economy. in a few years a' respectable fortune for a poor man can be accumulated and in the present time, ves, in this very hour, is the proper timé to begii. 1 don't mean! that a man or woman should be mean ; or penurious; it is only a single sep from generosity to penury. 1 believe | in a decent, generous home, with a) bi¥ of bright carpet on the floor, a; picture on the wall, with some instru- ment of niusic if you can afford it, so that the children as they grow up may remember home as the happiest spot on earth they ever knew. 1 have had frequent occasions to reier to some of the questionable practices of our po- lice, but it seems as if the monster bas the heads of hydra. A dew. weeks ago a policeman who was acting as wardman for a police captain of prominence was convicted Of lasing a bribe trom a woman of questionable churgeter who kept a house of prostitution. No one in his sense sijjposes that a bribe of Fou was pul wn the wardman's pocket. He was merely the retrieving dog who wakes the game his master shot und lays it at his feet. No vue saw the seco transaction, but two at least Kuew, the urst was the wardman who wok the bribe and the soiled dove who paid it. This wandman was tried und on the testimony of an other policeman named McAuliffe he was convicted and sent to state pris on. A few nights after McAulifie was found in the street dead, the, mortal blow being a large contusion made with some blunt instrument with suf- ficient force to kill. Now there are all sorts of conflicting stories as to now McAuliffe died. Une is that being intoxicated he fell down stairs gud so received the injury which caused his death. Another gnd more fearful sus picion is that he was murdered in his own precinct by two policemen and the body was carried away and de posited mn the streel where it was found. What 5 fearful condition does this suspicion carry with it, that a body of sight hundred men, maintain ed at acost of millions of dollars annually and honestly acknowledged to be ome of the most splendid or gonizations of police supported by any country im the world harbors in ite midst thugs and desassine who are ready to obey their commander's mandate, though a brutal assassina tion is the consequence. if the men who carried this murder out are not hunted dowm as wild beasts and enemies to society, then goodby honor, goodby honesty, for advancement is the reward of infamy and crime. Our district attorbey is' to do his dug other reformers are with the greatest anxiety amd hope the Almighty may assist the ministers n hunting assassins down. To give the world gn idea of how profits' are made by contractors who are lucky enough to get the city's work, we are now building 4 bri that crosses the East river at kwell's island. A call was for bids on a caisson on the east side of the river and the lowest hid offer' od was 350.000. The in of the work for the city hap- honest man, . One of the : $850,000 of 7 pe hoe Atlantic Pulp and Paper Company, Limited 4 HEAD OFFICE: TORONTO, CANADA + © AUTHORIZED CAPITAL, $3,000,000 in Shares of $100 sach, divided into 15,000 7 per cent. Cumulative Preference Shares, $1,600,000; i5,000 Common Shares, $1,800,000 recent. Cumulative Preference Stock is now offered to the Public for Sale at par PAYABLE: 10 per cent. on application, 20 per cent, 'on allotment, 20 per cent. two months alter allotshent, 25 per cent. four months ment, and 25 per cent. six months after allotment, DIRECTORS of W. C. Edwards & Co., Limited, Lumber Manufacturers, Ottawa. Manufacturing Jewelers, Toronto. The New Richmond Lumber Co., Limited, PRESIDENT-W. C. EDWARDS, M.P,, VICE-PRESIDENT -R. Y. ELLIS, Vice-President of P, W. Ellis & Co., Limited, CHAS. H WATEROUS, President of Waterous Engine Works Oo., Limit- | J. 'W. WARDROPE, Director Brantford. Montreal. CHARLES LYMAN; President the Lyman-Knok Co., Limited, Montreal. |W. R. P. PARKER, Barrister-at-law, Toronto. ,. - " Bankers--THE OANADIAN BANK OF OOMMERCE. 'Solicitors PARKER & BICKFORD, Toronto, Ofnade. Brokers SUTHERLAND & CAMERON, Ottawa, Canada. Registrars of Stock and Transfer Agents: NATIONAL TRUST COMPANY, Limited, Toronto, Montreal, and Winnipeg. R, H. THOMPSON, Wholesale Paper Merchant, Buffalo. A. J. H BOKARDT, Manufacturer, Toronto. d (about the First of April), offers fon the purchase of its entire output are from es whose standing is such as to guarantee the performance of any contract undertake. One of these offers covers the first year of prod on, and the other covers the first three years. Either offer, if acorpted, would be profitable io assure the payment of the full dividend on the Breferret, SUIT provide the amount required by the Charter for a e Fund, and leave & sufficient to pay a large dividend on the Common Stock, if no unforeseen contingencies should arise. This does not include profits estimated from the sale of sulphite pulp or from the saw mill, which, it seems to suppose, would be sufficient to cover all unexpected contingencies. PROSPECTUS OBJECTS OF THE COMPANY Fhe. follawing Ja du axttect gg ot Bevepurts: oh The Paul Company has been organived in ve been working e lumber woods aly order Ata Pulp 4nd ened Sha mon the EE erature ot and have traveled and examined limits in the State of Maine, New pulp and paper at New Richmond, on the Bale des Chaleurs, and by its ick. sua Suthers, nd. wwrked In Wisconsin ani Minaos, And lam charter, has powers of the fullest description. It is confidently believed that e pulp evar seen . mically manufactured than On the basis of any one of these reports a conservative estimate Bulp and papel can be TY: So y there ad pwood mow on the limits to supply the proposed mills for more than 65 years. As spruce wood will replace itself in from The essentials to the success of such & concern are: twenty-four to thirty years, it will be seen that there is sufficient wood on Cheap and unlimited pulp wood; the limits to afford & perpetusl supply to a mill double the capacity of that Adequate water power cheaply developed; now contemplated. Pure water for the manufacturer; The freehold consists of twenty acres where the Saw mill, Cheap labor; property Awellings, and office are situated, and 35614 acres on the bank of the Little Low transportation charges; Cascapedia River, where it is propceed to build the Pulp and Paper Milla Bfficlent management. THE PULP AND PAPER MILLS R = proposed to erect-- eh A Pa Mill with daily sapaniy of 54 tons. -- lo M SHR 8 Sally capacity of 80 sons, and A Ground Wood P: A Sulphite Pulp Mill with a daily sapacity of 40 tons. has estimited the cost of erecting the Pulp and the water power at $950,000. The balanes from the sale of the Preferred Stock will be sufficient to complete the pay- 0 for the limits, water power, saw mill, ete, provide working sapital, and leave & substantial balance for contingencies. THE SAW MILL the Company has received two N.B.~Since the Prosp of the OC y was i of . These offers are entirely unsolicited, and al ah ad The Little flows from end to end througlf the center of the limits, and the large of tributary streams does away with the greater part of th ing usually entailed In getting out pulp wood, thereby greatly decreasing the cost. . 2. WATER POWER~~Mr. George F., Hardy of New York, the foremost American authority on this subject, has made a thorough examination of the iSitoated aa the mills will be on the seaboard, paper water power that can be developed on the Little Cascapedia River at a point arpool id, at such a price immediately adjoining the proposed mill wite, and his report shows that In Livirpool and New York. duty pa "se a - sufficient power can be developed to run mills of even greater capacity. oan be Been at the offices of the National Trust This report can be seen at the office of the undersigned, or at aay ESTIMATE OF BUSINESS AND PROFITS office of the National Trust Company, Limited. 8: WATER.SUPPLY.~Pure and clean water is one of the most im- The bed of the Estimating the cost of pulp wood at $3.36 a cord, careful estimates made Lor the Company show that the ground wood pulp should not cost over $5.59 & ton, and sulphite pulp not over $16.00 a ton. The actual cost ot newspaper from pulp, estimated at these prices, should not be over $16.94 a ton, This after makisg all necessary allowance for depreciation and renewal of plant, and all charges of management and selling The following estimate of the annual output of the mills has been pre- pared by Mr, Wm. M. Mcintyre, a practical pulp and paper manufacturer, and is believed to be conservative and well within the mark, and iociudes The markets will be chiefly foreign, including the Eastern States and of the expected advances in the price of paper in 18 probable that the greater part of the output will be at other mills. COST OF LABOR.~The labor employed in the mills and woods cost less than probably any other American mill, as far as known, as competent men in this section of the country, on account of the cheapness of living. HII. Showing s profit of .. HESATI.AS 106,000.00 7 per cent on $1500,000 Preference Stock .. .. .. -- F Avaliable for Reserve Fund and further Dividends ... $360,177.13 The ground wood pulp and the balance of sulphite pulp Will be eon- ISSUE OF STOC the said , equipment of 'the and paper mills, the development of the water power, building iding to the mills, and the of sufficient of the For every two shares of Seven per cent. Cumulative Preference Stock subscribed and paid for, allotted by way of bonus one share of fully pald Common Stock. Bis oX og Tie Son. Br Kam, Preferred Stock is Cumulative, carries yearly dividends, and has priority over the Cogmon Stock as 10 bath divide er the payment of the dividend on the Preferred Stock, and before 48% payinést of dividend on the Common Stock. 4 ¢ Lh Application Made in due cours for the ling of ihe shares of the Company on the Torouts and Montreal Stock : for Preferred Shares should be forwarded to the NATIONAL TRUST COMPANY, Limited, Tor TIONAL TRUST COMPANY, Limited. * ; sit will be ited towards the sum dae on allotment. Where CAMERON, 48 SPARKS STREET, OTTAWA, "Brokers For the acquiring of there will 5 8 ¢ ahd ald way

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