Daily British Whig (1850), 28 Apr 1902, p. 3

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-- --_---- -- THE SCHOONER FOUNDERED THREE OF THE CREW WERE Stnmm-- "1 Fatal Wreck in the Storm on Lake .. Have you & Backschet If you eae it is the fiost sign that the dneys are not. § They cure: all kinds of Kidney / im Backa ight's Troubles frye B to Brigh 5 © 0 YO OW, lf duos 7 The Doan Ki REPIN Co, And in submitting the prices it is desired that you remember that Aly ¥ aif fi rms a Erie, Near Putin Bay--A Man Asleep in Rigging. Cleveland, Ohio, April 28.-A spe- cial to the Plain Dealer from San disky says © "The schooner Barklow from Marine City foundered in lake Erie ball a mile from Put-in-Bay late Satarday afternoon snd three were drowned. The dead are Sapte. Robert Pardy, Marine City, his wife and step- son, Alexander ris; aged sixteen years, Dick Burke, s sailor of Port Huron, survived and was brought to Sandusky by the life saving orew from that port. : "According to Burke's story, when the boat seemed hopelessly in the pow- er of the fearful storm, the party got into the rigging. The boat soon filled with water fell avr onto. ber , throwing the captain, his wife stepson ito the water. "Burke retained his position jn the rigging, having fallen from ex- haustion, and was found by the life saving crew." INCIDENTS OF THE DAY. 3 3 pher, Bos ton, is visiting tives in Kingwton. The management committee of the board of education will wet this evehing, CAR Bh Those intetested in lacrosse will meet at the Whig hall this evening to elect officers ana get the team under way. The bishop of Ontario has appoint: ol Rev. Francis M. Dean, of Parry Sound, to the mission of Westport. Fe will take charge June let. Archdenpon 'Carey, ' thro illness, was uliable fo officiate in St. Paul's church yesterday. Canon Grout Sud Rev. Mr. Bavary took the services, The little two-year-old chila of Mrs. Jomes Stewart, Wellington street, die red this mérping, and after a couple of hours! ansians search she was founa in Dr, Bell's office, whither she had wandered, ' Police constable Craig left this morning for Watertown, N.X:, where he will secure the person 6F Albert Gallagher, and bring him back to the city to stand trial for © the theft of Robert Vait's horse, * Bishop Mills has leit for Philadel- vhia "to take part in a consecration. is lordship will retum toy take eon firuations at Brockville and Prescott on Sunday next, and 10 nv the rural deanery meeting of and Grenville next week. Come and see our wall GR large variety from to select. Ingrains, emboued and all latest a signe, Orders | 'kalsoming, Paint and paper haniing receive apt at- tentibn at W. N. Lemmon's, 78 Wil- liam street, telephone 378; successor to Sauvage Bros. ¢ Immortality Of The Soul. Rev. Prod. Clark, of Trinity uni versity, "Toronto, preached an able sermon in St. George's cathedral last evening. Many present declaved it was the best sermon they ever heard, Hix text as found in Aete iii, 20.30. "They took Him down from cross and laid Him in the sepulchive, but God raised Him | the dead." The speaker dwelt on 'sn: inherent belief in immortality, explaining how ind popes ow SpA oa ull opés and aspirations, that these alone could he realized Ly a resurrection. He showed how, in the last few Years, the old doubts and difficulties 'and the grosser belief had d away. T6- one "could hard- intelligent Beings, a person inbelieves in God. Christ was not the only one who taught t immortality of the "soul. Plato an contemporary tlosophers all con- tributed that ideal suggestion. Bat in. Chrigt alone was régurrection life. made. manifest. The resurroction of the body was the key teaching of Shristianiiy nos the same flesh und , but the same person: ality, Prof, Clark is of Beotch origin, and a graduate of both Aberdeen and Ox- Jord universities, He is also a D..C. L. of Oxford, as well as 'of Trinity, pees ogo gen phi ity, is an au- thor and writer of much repute. "The Evil Eye." Miss Mayme Mayo, the prinia donna soubrette, has been ree by Charles H. Yale and 8 Ellis to appear in the pei role of their big spectacle, * vil Eye." Miss Mayo ie a very clever artist and Postesses a most at Ve. appear- AM ns tt ats fe taining ing, : act, a pomecsingia of attractiveness seldom attained in the average soubsetie of the present day, "The RKwil Eye' will Tuesday. bung «t the Royal Join. exhibi- THE DAILY WHIG, MONDAY. APRIL 28. THE CAMPAIGN OPENS. + {Colstidiied from page one). to the people who earn it. There is only one other tax that as all ap proaches direct taxation-<ihe liquor license fees. But the municipalities get more pow out of each license (8c cording to the number granted, which hae greatly decreased) than they did when the municipalities controlled the licenses. MH we didn't get this money front licenses how would we pay $750, 000 a year to the schools ? By direct tax. No man ever paid a cent toward provincial faxes apart from sticeession duties, snd liquor licenses, A direst tax is devied in every state in the United States, oe hte an onitp tional advantage in Ontario, it is becatise of these things that the people have retained in power vo long the 'government that defended the rights of the province and husbanded its resources. We have no peed to be afraid of the bogey of direct taxation, "The conservatives charge 4s with being too economical. That is a charge they could never Bring against their friends at Ottawa. ot even Our enemies chatge extravagance against us. Pleavane politics: is char: acteristic of Whit, and his follow- ere. We bave an unparalleled record for honesty. The grant of land to the Algoma Central railway was an enor mous steal, so the tories said. The railway-is opening up a country where Bo one ever lived before except the trapper and the Indian. One of the conditions of the grant is that the ompany met put in a thousand set- 4 year. tds being , and Clétgue" rags be will pat g doe: sot. tlers thay they agreed to. Then take the sew rai from Manitoulin Tsl- atids to Owen and Meniosd. . Jt was more expensive, and received a larger 'grant' 'of land. Yet Whitney voted for it and supported the goy- ernment. He didn't call it 'a gigantic steal. Doden't that mean that we were right in the first deal ? eden Ontario's Surplus. "The commission which investigated the financal affairs of the provinoe found the Sactaal' surplus to be $2,- 263,494.44, vot intluding public build ings. The cash in the bank at pres ent is over 1.800000. Ontario is the only provinee in the dominidn that hes a surplus. Quebee, which started equal with us &t tonfederation, now ys over a million dollars, annually, interest on its debt, Do you won: der the people Have kept the Hberals in power in Ontario ? "1 am not hers," said Wr. Latch ford," to wake any promises. That is the lal function of the opposi: tion candidate. IT believe that we will bo retdrned on the 20th of May theory), aid we will continue to act y ly and progressively. 1 do not intérd to make promises, but this I will say, that the petition Mr. Fawcett presented to me has engaged my deop attention. It ie of rn t to the people of this 4 ferry is your road tw market. I ted to Messrs, Faw and Shibley that we might be ble to meet the difficulty by an am ount from the roads' appropris mn. Yon a better service. We helieve it is open to us to aid it and Lwill do my utmost to assist the peo. of Wolle Inland to have a better service (cheers). I believe you will be dealt with justly. In closing let me say that you eannot send a better man to to than this gounty of Frontenas boy, Mr. Shih ley." 'The minister wos given a splint did ovition as he took his seat. Is A Surplus Wanted ? J Langiord Haycoek, the erst: while leader of the patrons of indus try, was called upon for an address. He was received with vodiferous ap plavse. In paying a compliment to the ladies, he stated that some peo de were for giving the ladies a vote, Bue as for him he believed in giving wach lady an able-bodied voter. Mr. Heoyeock declared he was © an inde pendent, and: claimed that, in the present pmign, it was the duty of the independents to support the ; government. 'He characterized Whitney as "the-beet; the most energetio and the most. aecomplished scold" he ever knew. "He could criticise, tear down and destroy anything the government proposed, but he had no faculty to build wp and plan things: himsell, On: tario had a surplus, we want § larger ome? We could have it by let- ting the - people pay for their own schools, whereas today they don't pay a cent. In ten years, the 8750; ex each year for schools would, if hoarded up, give a swrplos of $7,500,000. This would necessitat: the closing of the schools or a direct a A ined "H gonk Or aie that ? i r. Haw v se the government could send home or alrift the world the patients is her asylumek and charitable instite tions; and; saving the money expend: od on these. amass a surplus. Ontario was the only province, state or ne tionality on the face of this earth that was not in debt. Was that not a proof of the bevefit and ex of liberal rule. Is it time for a +1 Decidedly not. ied Aodh, 1 wa. mar irty years ago, when Ta ion just started. 1 went home tonight aid to my wife: 'I'm 1 t's time for & THE NEW BLACK Rop. MOLYNEUX ST. JOHN IS A HUGE SUC CESS IN THE ROLE. Casts His Predecessor, Done Kimber, Far Inte the Shade-dctad With All the Digaity asd Mere Than the Acumen of the Former Flexible Servant of the Dominion in a Usnigne Pesifies, There is no doubt in the world that the opening of the second ses sion of the ninth Parliament of Can ada was really a matinee perform- - John in his great act of three bows and a recitelion in two languages. His office by y tions for the opening before he re- ctived his Warrant from the avi y getting the dinky-dink y who ought to know bet! Wha t 3d Sinjun do? Did 'he vex the uous politician fails to learn in a whole lifetime. Molyneux St. John waited stoically until the Stats real- ized it could not get along without him, that he was an indispensable cog in the machine, and that he niust get the right motor impulse, Offielal circles were charmed, fashionable Ot- tawa was enraptured. Here was a Black Rod that knew his book -- a true successor of the illustrious Kim- ber! Society was saved again. But would he carry off the actual duties of the position with grace and unc- tion? Would his bows have the same distinction as Kimber's, the pame admixture of Oriental obeisance with Anglo-Saxon rederve? Expectation was at fever height. . It is not too much to say that Molyneux St. John justified the high- est hopes, says the brilliant Ottawa correspondent of The Toronto Star. From the time his gavel sounded on the door of the Commons to the time he backed out amidst' the fran- tic cheers of the members of Parlia- ment, he pleased the eye and satis- fied the senses. How well he looked in his swallowtdil and black smalls, his hose and slippers with silver buckles! What a fire front of chest! What a poise to those shoulders! What a suave swell to those calves! Put a powdered wig on that dome of thought and you find a gentleman of the eighteenth century! Gallagher of Dritish Columbia, who stands six feet four in his Boots, swore audibly that every man with a figure ought to wear knickerbodkers. Ft was. the general opinion of the House of Com- mots that, take Molyneux St, John as he stood and he was a direct. re futation of the slander that modern men wear long pants because they hive spindle shavks. It was also freely stated that for a good appear- #nce in the shafts and a fine high stepping action, the new Usher of the Dlack Rod had Rene Kimber faded so as to look like twenty-eight ceiits and two cents over. Then the gallant way he bore that black rod! Jt was truly a pleasure to 866 him. Rene Kimber was a small man, and the clothes that went with the black rod always seemed to be bigger than the man himself, in this way the rod suffered an abatement of digrity. It reminded irreverent 'peo ple of a poker. But Molyneux St. John bas all that. In his tase he adorns and fills out the costume, 8nd the costume, worn bravely, gives the rod new import- ance. Tt was thus and so, we fwa- fine. that Charlemagne toyed with is good sword Joyeuse, Orldndo with his Durandal, and King Arthur with his Excalibur. No meaningless symbol this black rod now. Dut the bow! We must get to that. The bow is the best card. It reminds one of Kimber, and yet it is dis tinetly original. ed, amplified, and generally improv- od; fust as if Bach should take a rag-time melody, enrich it with con trapunital skill, and make some thing Jofty and nobie of if. St. John i 1 ance to introduge one Molyneux St. | of pL asories in not good ert, for nothing is good " which makes the spectator un- easy. Sinjun concentrated his ingens dity on the "recover." As be Works it out it is a stately uprising, the back straight, the meck rigid. At the Proper moment up goes the chin sad there stands the Usher of the Black Rod, as staunch apd stalwart as & Roman sentinel. This is the move ment which hes made St. John's name, and which provoked uproari- ous applause from a critical = Come mons. Of Sinjun's French the less said the better. It is the French of | Toronto Junction, and the Jlack Rod has evidently taken kis lesson in a Turner Verein But. 'twill serve. And why should we pick flaws in a | a man whose surname reminds us of the gorgeous revelations in the Is land of Palms, end whose Christian name recalls the chivalry and der ring<do of the Crusaders! " RALPH CONNOR." London Chronicle Says Canadian Novelist Newds Larger Outiosk en Life The London Chronicle sits down to reading of Ralph Conner' book, 'The Men from Glengerry," with an unbiased mind, and this is the result: There are now two Canadian no velists who have attained large cir culabions. One of them is Mr, Gil- bert Parker, the oiler is the author who writes under the pem-name of "Ralph Conmor."" Of the latter's novels, "The Sky Pilot" is in its sixth. Engitsh edition, his 'Black Rock" in its fifth. Mr. Parker has found splendid back-groonds for his -Freneh Ceonnds, while Mr. Conlior's canvases reflect certain as- pects of English: Canada. But as literary artists the two men are not in the saine class. Long ago Mr. Parker moved into the front rank, but what one sees in Mr. Connor's work is promise rather than per formance. in places "The Man from Glengarry' is good, and holds out the promise of better things in the future, but there are in it long and dreary flats, so to speak, that are devoid of any vital interest whatsoever, The first two chap ters are far the best in the book, depicting with vigor and effect the primitive passions of an Ottawa lumber camp. "The Man from Glengarry' is de soribed on the title page as a "Tale of Western Canada," put, as as mat- ter of fact, only the last eighty pages of the book, which contains in all 440, have anything to say re garding Western Canada~--and by that term Mr. Connor means British Columbia. The main interest of the story lies in the pictures given us of Qlengarry itself. Glengarry is a strip of country running back from the St. Lawrence, and was known as the "Indian Lands'; it was once an Indian reservation, and it was settled by men of Highland blood in the early years of last cen~ tury. The hero of the story is a certain Rarald Macdonald, the son ol one of the Glengarry men. His in~ stincts are not unnaturally of the Pagan sort (the hard, ruthless, un lovely Berserker kind of Pagan, but he is captured and tamed by the wife of the Presbyterian minister of the small eommunityf He under- goes various relidious "experiences," by the ald of which he conquers a blood feud. He falls in love with hia employer's daughter--by whom in the end he is jilted, but he finds compensation in a girl friend of hers. The story, as a story, is bald enough, but, as has already been suggested, it is not Without some redeeming featires. When Mr. Con- nor has reached 4 wider outlook, on fife he will undoubtedly write a bet- ter book. Effect of Lord Dufferin's Mission Lord Differin's mission to Canada was distinguished by the inculeation of respect and admiration for Canada by Canadians. His Excellency fitted the public mind with an idea of thie country both as to its present great ness and to its splendid future that until his arpival had not been enter tained, Along with this valuable leadership Casada received from him oa new view of the Imperial relations, He showed that servility and inde- pendence were not our part in the union, but on the contrary, We Were destined to be an independent asso cinté nation, claiming and enjoying equal rights with other British com- munities, Lord Dufferin spefit six and a hall years with us and trav- ersed Canada from end to end, des lighting the people with his genius and inspiring them by his oratory. His farewell speech was delivered at the Industrial Exhibition grounds in Toronto on Septetnber 24, 1878. The parting words were a consideration of the duty of Canadians to their on "believe in her, honor her, work for her, live for her, § "Love your country,' hel A Corset that Cannot Break a the Waist line. It matters not what the st of a corsets; br whatiti of, if it breks st the Waist line, it is rendered uncomfor- , | as it cannot Break at the Waist, $8 is the cheapest comet 4 lady ¥y. "BRPRIGRRATORS ! Iceland, Excelsior, Glacier, Polaris, Dry Cold Air Principle. Thoroughly reliable and satis~ factory. Prices From $7.50 Up McKELVEY & BIRCH, 69 and-71 Brock Street. -------- \ Store io Kingston § Can Sell You A Quoon Quality Shoe A Packard Shoe. THEY ARE SOLD ONLY BY J. H. Sutherland & Bro., THE SHOE MEN. THEY ARE THE WORLD'S BEST GOODS. Ev BY A. ABERNETHY [1 wer Springs, Sanitary Mattresses, at Actually Half-Price.

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