Daily British Whig (1850), 3 Jun 1902, p. 4

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THE SHERWIN-WILLIAMS Varmisn Stam FOR FURNITURE AND WOODWORK Imitates the natural woods--stain- ing and varnishing at the same operation. , . . , . ,. There's no better article made for this purpose. It is easy to apply--works well under the brush. It wears well. It is right in CVETY WAY, + + a» Geta color card, . SOLD BY CURBEIT'S MNARDWAKE A Pleasing Dream. Wa all dream of that home of ou own. ow many are providing for it? Do yon 3 how eamily vou could own a home if yo started the right way? We want vou do start. Wo'll stand by vou to the end We'll gave vou nent and worry, awd in the ol save vou a house, D. A. CAYS, 346 King Street. A Toronto Gentleman's Happy Experience. Malt Breakfast Food Baaishes His Indigestion and Makes Him Feel Twenty Years Younger. . © Malt Breakfast Food, predigested, delicious, appetizing and strengthen: fog, is restoring digestive vigor, hap. pinoss and vontentment to thousands who suffer from indigestion and dys- pepsia, L. I. Brownlee, of Toronto, yo: "1 Rave used Malt Breakfast 7 Food for three months at breaklast and supper. This splendid food has completely banished my long-standing indigestion and nae i feel Jwenty 'years younger. My appetite and gene © val health have been ronewed by Natt Breakfast Food." Window Screens; Made to 8% your window. They are g "the test ed strobgest smd. If you cut the right kind. The kind of a figure you cut depends largely upon the clothes you wear. Tailor 'made is the only well made " Bre ar wakes wan oe ¥ It er Thay Attached is one of in Canada; work; nine improved beet Job Printing , stylish and cheap Prasses. EDW. J. B, PENSE, PROPRIETOR. {HE DAILY WHIG. Opiter per Orbem Dicor.' NORTH RENFREW RE-OPENED. The chief conservative organ thinks the law does not apply to the ease of Mr. Munro, in North Renfrew, and that be cannot be now declared the meinherelect. Why not? What is to prevent the returning officer to de clare, at the time specified, that in the election, which took place on a cer- tain day, the late Mr. Munro given a vertain vote and became the member-elect ? Having done this any two of the other members of the leg- islature can demand the issue of a writ and a new election forthwith. The Mail affects to believe that a liberal cannot be found of the peculi- ar stand ng and merit of Mr. Munro and so the conservatives will be able to carry their candidate. When good men go the feeling, is, sometimes, that they canfiot be replaced, and a man of Mr. Munro's virtue mav not be easily solected. But his successor is to be found somewhere in the riding, and he will be a liberal. The party in North Renfrew can carrv whom they will and whom they please, when they are united ypon him and put 'nto the campaign the life and vim which thar acterized their action in the late clec tion. way ARUSE DOES NOT PAY. According to the Winnipeg Press, an impartial enough and inde pendent Mr. Whitney and his political friends in Ontario of thanks to the chief conservative organ, the Toronto Mail and Empire, for the result of the Ontario elections. "That paper from the beginning of the campaign,' says our contemporary "poured out an unceasing stream of reckless and unscrupulous slander and detractions against Mr. Ross and his Such if encour aged and persisted in, would drive the best men out of public life; but the Canadian people arg too fair-minded to encourage them. Some idiosyncrasy of the Mail and Empire's prevented it from fighting with the wenpons of truthfulness and fairness, and condemned it to go down in dis honourable defeat." Bad as the Mail was, however, it wa decent whep compared with some other nameless papers. These did not andertake to discuss the issues of the day, and did not, therefore, undertake to reflect publie opinion. They made a huge mistake' in abandoning an edu- cational policy for a personal and abusive one, and they will not repeat it if they follow the usual course of retreat and meditation. The people in the recent campaign took no stock in personali- ties and abuse, and when it yas in- dulged in "defeat and de fol- lowed, The local conservative candi fate will recall the warning the Whig at the outset of the cafgpaign. He will have reason to lament™that he was not able to have it respe tod Free eritie, owe no sinall measure colleagues, tactics, perverse political bf WHAT THE BOERS GOT. The Boers do not seem to have fared so well, in the conditions of peace, as they would have done had they ac cepted the overtures which were made to them a year ago. The longer they delayed action, the worse it has been for them. They have suffered, as many others have done, by 'their stub- bornuness. They realized long - since that they were doing themselves an injury. If they did not invite exter mination it was not their fault. They ignored every - offer of peace. They abused every act of mercy. They car- ried on hostilities. that eould not be dignilied with the name of war. They were unwilling at the éid to admit they they were to blame for their mis fortunes. Only a Kitchener cotild have pinned them down to hard and fast lines, and made them ght er sur render. : . Perhaps the acceptance of the terms of peace was hurried by the serious illogss of Mr, Steyn, the president of the Orange Free State, who has re Event 5, w hick fa » 4 'facts, corrects the Montreal Gazette, { which insinuates that the government Mavesios ox "31% in a little late in selecting its coul | QUARTERS OF THE EARTH, { lands, mn March, while some clever gentlemen have been' operating in the | Crow's Nest Pass for the last three The Gazette bas it that the | is a second choice. "The years. government Crow's Nest coal company," says Events, cinev nade any selection first or second. They were in posses- | siun of thege coal lands and had made a bargain wigh the C.P.R. and when the dowinica government were asked to aid the building of the Crow's Nest ass railway they stipulated that 350, 000 acres of these coal lands should to the public. Under the bargain the C.P.R. had the right select six sections be given to of coal lands, but the government had the right to select first. That selection has now been made south of Morrissey Creek awd the government has got coal the equal of any in that territory apd it can to-morrow receive an amount for it equal to the subsidy of 811,000 a mile granted to the C.P.R. for the building of the Crow's Nest Pass rail- railway; that is, the government can put back in the treasury every dollar of the millions of subsidy and do it out of the four corners of the bar gain." -------------- EDITORIAL NOTES, The prize fighting and gambling at Fort Erie should be put down with a heavy band. It is a reflection upon the law of the land. The entire liberal vote was not poll- ed in Ontario. It appears that many liberals did not vote, because of the referendum, and they are repenting i now. ---------- Hon. Mr. Evanturel is spoken of as a prospective cabinet minister-in On- tario. He have the seat which Mr. Bronson occupied, without port- folio. can -- Mr. Murphy, the new member from Ottawa, is a surely for a public con" tractor of printing. In the opinion of some eminent jurists that will make his election void. Vertical writing in the public schools of New York state is being attacked. Nothing new in that. The best of things lose their glamour in time, and have to go. The heart of the average man pants for a change. By the death of Mr. Clemow, and the absence for two sessions of Mr, Masson, there are two vacancies in senate. Liberals being appointed to them the upper house will cease to be a machine for .the registration of con servative rule. What is there about the license com- mijssionership that conservatives in Kingston and London bad decided to ask for it--with a change of govern ment ? The office is an unremunerative one. What has suggested this mad scramble for its possession ? The people of Ontario appear to have made up their minds that the pre-eminent fitness of the liberal par ty in that province to govern is equalled only by the pre-eminent fit ness of the conservatives for the du- vies of opposition.--Exchange. A contemporary calls it an evil fate hich makes it necessary for the gov- gen to begin its fight in the bye- elections in North Renfrew, The liber- als have no quarrel with Providence, and do mot find fault with its mani festations. They must accept the issue and win, The Toronto World knows just how the recounts will turn out. An emin- ent jurist, 'who went over the evi dencey' gives Mr, Whitney a majority of three. This eminent jurist is Dr. Beattio-Neshitt, the chairman of the Ontarjo conservative association, and his information is as reliable as that of the average party man. Help To The Cheese Industry. A hitherto unknown element in milk, ferment, has been discovered at a station in the United States, called galactose, which is proving of value in the ripening of cheese. The proper ties of this ferment are similar to the secretion of the pancreatic organ in the human body. Old cheese is a pre- digested food, and the digestion is Jraught by the galactose. It was that the galactose would ge on working at 'very low temperatures, temperatures at which bacteria were practically inert. Cheese was put in- to refrigerators abd kept frozen' for months, Other cheese was kept just above the freezing point. It was found that the finest cheese is cured at from forty degrees to forty-five degrees F. Practical cheese manufacturers had maintained that fifty degrees was the lowest temperature at which cheese could be "worked without becoming bitter and is. familiar with the] TELEGRAMS FROM THE FOUR Matters That Interest Everybody ~Notes From All Over--Little of Everything Easily Read and Remembered. Gen. Botha cabled his wife, who is in Hrussels that he will start for Europe next month. Kegarding the date of the coronation conference, lord Strathcona states it will probably be early in July. Russell Sage is very ill at New York, and owing to his great age and feebleness his friends are anxious, A consignment of 250,000 pickerel fry has been placed in the south branch of the Thames at London. The dominion cabinet has sent a congratulatory message to the king upon the conclusion of peace in South Africa. Mrs. Steele will join her husband, Lieut.-Col. Stecle, in South Africa, go- ing out probably some time in Au gust. Cunard shares rose sharply on Mon day in London on renewed rumors of the absorption of the live by the ship ping combine. Boer leaders left Pretoria on Monday to bring in the commandoes which is expected to occupy about 4 fortnight. A bie-size bust of the late president Cleveland, a gift of the Italian resi dents, was unveiled at Schenectady on Saturday. Since the opening of the war in November, 189, Canada has contribu ted over 7,000 men towards the em pire's defence. Galt has carried three by-laws, one for a district park, a second for water works extension, and a third for Car negie's library site. A large brick building owned by Lyman C. Smith, Syracuse, valued at $100,000, was burned at Seattle, Wash., on Saturday. Lord Minto sails on the Parisian on June Tth, for England, to attend the coronation ceremonies. Sir Wilirid Laurier sails on the 14th. The Cunard line steamer Etruria has sailed from Liverpool! for New York, this being her first trans-Atlantic trip since her break-down last February Charles Cunderman, an eminent New York lawyer, was run down bv an un known hievele rider at Hornellaville, N.Y., on Saturday and instantly kill ed. The financial policy of the British {government is still undetermined, but is little reason to donbt the of the grain registeration there retention duty, The transport Cestrian, with Cana dian mounted rifles on board, has ar rived at Cape Town. A message has heen received that all are well on board, President Schwab, the steel trust, has appointed his brother "Joe president of the American steel foundries company, with a salary of 850.000 a year. Serious riots occurred in Chicago in connection, with the teamsters strike. The police attacked the mob, which was armed with stones and many per sons' were severely hurt. Lord Strathcona denies the alleged fast service agreement between the El der-Dempsters and the Canadien gov- ernment. Negotiations may be pro- ceeding, but nothing has yet Leen de finitely settled, At the opening of the gates at the cricket grounds at Bermingham on Saturday, 14,000 people engaged in a riotous rush for the gates, twelve peo ple being fatally injured and many others severely injured. Cholera is causing hundreds of deaths daily in the Philipnines and much alarm is felt in the leading orient cities. Every exertion is being made to prevent the spread of the terrible disease to America. The council of Montreal has passed a by-law to permit stores to keep open on Sunday, which sell fruit, candy, cigars and temperance drinks. but on condition that the stores sell all of the articles and not merely some of them. Ada Grav. the actress, who made her reputation in "Fast Lynne' years ago, was taken ta Fordham hospital, N.Y.. on Saturdav. suffering from a eancerous growth and from locomotor ataxia. Miss Gray starred in Canada some years ago and won great favor. The British June magazines have a series of articles on the proposals for an imperial zollverin, including one in the 19th Century by Col. Denison. The subject is attracting much attention and Col. Denison has been invited to soeak this week at Tunbridge, Wells, Glasgow, Grenock and Edinburgh. of Wants Right Of Way. Bloomfield, June 2.--Dr. Wilirid L. Cooper, a graduate of the Detroit me- dical college, is visiting here, previ- ous to settling down to his practice. Morley Branscombe is home from Queen's university. Bert Fraleigh is home from Trinity college, Toronto. W. A. Johnson and Charles: Purtelle have each lost a valuable horse. Planting of corn and tomatoes i® now general, Philip Demill has sold his driving horse for $200. Freeman Tal- eott, while taking down the frame of his barn, fell a distance of about fif- teen feet, sustaining a painful injory to his arm and shoulder. The council was again visited by a company seek. ine a right of way for an electric railway to run from Pictog to Wel lington, thewce to the Sand Banks, and return by another road to Pie ton. Mrs. Herman Hagadom away after a lingering illness with consumption. The funeral was held on Sunday. A husband survives her. Rev. J. Harris in viciting his daughter, Mrs. M. A. Christie. Death of the Oldest G. T. R. Em- oyee. Toronto, June 3.--J. P. Whitney, the opposition leader, has arrived in the city, and will remain bere for se veral "days. Mr. Whitney expressed himself as pleased with the way the fight has gone; as far as had been heard from. Toronto's rate of taxation for the year is 194 mills on the dollar. The strike of the eighty jewelers, formerly employed by Saunders, Lorie & Co, and T. W. Copp Co., Toronto, which has lasted eight weeks, is at an end and the men resumed work to day. The men have gained their de mands, namely, recognition of the union, and ffty-four hows a week. James F. Johnson, believed to be the oldest employee of the Grand Trunk in Canada, having been in the service of the company for close up on fifty years, is dead, aged sixty seven. Mr. Johnston was the engineer on the first train which ran from Montreal to Tgronto. Latterly he had been the agent of the railway at the Union station, Toronto. Mrs. Wallace, wife of Rev, Dr. 0. C S. Wallace, chancellor of McMaster university, died on Monday, after a linwer'ny illness. Mrs. Wallace was the danghter of Harris H. Croshy, He bron, N.S. She leaves two children. My Friends And I. Alired J. Waterhouse im Success. Ny bttle Jow room is five Rights And some migchs tink thas hare, But swowt communion my friends apd 1 Have often held in the silence there; Noble, exalted, they come 0 me, ; Fair as they were in the worth's bloom, Whispering bope for the time to & These wre my friends in the room ! igh, its wall are firs he little, low Shakespeare of Stratford, Bacon, Carlvle: Ferson drenwing ths jose. long dream Dickens, with sighs that are lost in a smile Miltom--unhlinded--the gods for his thoue Goldsmith, weary no mere, Chatterton, safe, though the high: Byron, wnto his heritage vrown-- Royal companionship here have 1 nor ove storm rides or, singing the song of strife , at rst by a sturkissed shove sgfellow, chanting the Psalm of Life Poe, who will leave me--ah, hever more wntle Hgwthorne, of Salem town These crowned the » shelves look Step to my side and talk to me. frve down, here in more livtle, iow room- golden stove clamor, the Kings in vour palaces Her in faith, in a Then regul state and The crowd's mad boom. Shades of the mighty come to me Sit and chat as the hour's mo bv Prophesy things that the soul shall see And so we are happy, mv friends and 1 ---------- First Drowning On River, George Davie, Bath, Ont. is the first vietim of the summer season on the St. Lawrence river. Davis, nine teen vears of age, wap knocked off the scow Uno hy the boom at four o'clock Monday afternoon, and was drowned in 100 feet of water, notwithstanding the effo.ts of Capt. Robbins to save him. The accident occurred off Blof Island. cammon ------ To Celebrate the 12th of July. The Orange lodges of the city will visit Pirtsburg, on July 12th, and at tend a picnic to be held in McCangh ertv"s Grove, hy Pittsburg lodge, No 1.269. The True Blues that day will run an excursion to Brockville, where the conmty Orange demonstration will be held this year, and in which the Orangemen, True Blues and "Prentice Boys will take part. -------- At The Police Court. John Brown, a good-looking sailor, stood up in the police court this morning, and pleaded guilty to a charge of drunkenness. He was fined 31 and costs or fourteen days in jail Don't forget first excursion of the season to Clayton, Friday, June 6th Boys' fancy shirts, S0c. and 75c. Bibby '«. 3 Au electrical storm visited the city last night but did no damage, Legs So Swelled He Couldn't Walk Kidaey aod Urinary Troubles Were Followed by Dropsy-- A Perfect Lure By Dr. Chase's Kidney- Liver Pills. This case of James Treneman, the well-known butcher, of 3536 Adelaids street, London, Ont. x another proof that Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills are effective in the most severe and complicated diseases of the kidneys. The double action which this fumous prescription. bas on both the kidneys and Jiver is in a large measure re sonsible for its wonderful curative effects, When there are backache, fre vent, dificult or painful urination, Srowsical swellings, biliousness, con stipation or stomach derangements, you may depend upon it that the kid neys are clogged and the liver shug- givh. a It is at such times that Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills prove themselves prompt to give relief and certain to efisct a cure. The evidence to prove this fact is simply overwhelming. James Trepeman states: "Two years ago | was laid up with Kidney disease and urinary troubles. . Besides the pain and inconvenience caused by these troubles | became dropwical, and my logs would swell up so that | eould scarcely go around at all. Hear: ing of Dr. Chase's Kidoey-Liver Reiki the Ye is Herethe Summer Month The month for preparations for summer heat and you'll find that you will be able to make selections to best advantage here. Shirt Waists, Negligie Shirts, Underwear, Hosiery, Gloves. Dress Materials for the hot spell can be selected from stock and made up to order in our Dress. making Department in a way to please you and give satisfaction. STARR & SUTCLIFFE'S, 118 and 120 Princess Street. Kingston, Ont: --- ---- "I'll look around a little." That's what four lookers said Say turday p.m. We were satisfled. Within an hour three of them were back and bought the garments they had tried on, and the univers al opinion was that, "our clothes fit better, have more style than any in the city, and prices no higher." It pleases us to have peo- ple make comparison. It's the only way to tell who has the best. WELL SUIT 3 $15. THE H. D. BIBBY CO. ONE PRICE CLOTHIERS, OAN HALL. Th H . - BALUNESS, Thia Haft. Die, Prof. Dorenwend Coming. He will be at British Ameri. can Hotel, Kingston, Thursday, June Sth. With samples of Hair Goods, Ladis' aud Gents Bangs, Wavy and Plain Fronts, Switches of every des He can improve your personal appearance. Plain features and disfivured beads satsed through ibe lose of hair Pu lon. fon looks to the skill of Pro Dorvewend Human beir Adorms asd Prowots the bead Bont fail 0 ses bis sew Patent Hair Swooturs, patented off First-elass out hair, especially grey and white balr, taken In a change. Private Apartments QORENWEADS WFEES JA - il Secured at Hotel. AIRS RE TT Wigs rip Toupees, on, ol, Remember For Only 1 DAY. BOARD. LARGE, FRONT ROOM, ALSO TWO SINGLE rooms, with modern conveniaiom, Sen tral, not far from City sod Meodovald parks. Suitable for a party of from hres to five. 195 Earl street. DR. C. E. O'CONNOR, Late resident Surgeon, New ork, Eye and Ear Infirmary Bywsialine, Fve, kar and Throat ce, . .. PRINCELY BEQUESTS. Charitable Institutions Provided For By Misses Wurtele. Montreal, June 3.---Miss Catherine Wurtele has willed the following sums to charitable institutions : To the Montreal Protestant orphan asylum, $20,000; to the Protestant hospital for the insane at Verdun, 210,000; to the Montreal general hospital, $5,000; to the boys' home, &5,000; to the Fraser institute, $5,000. The rest and residue of the estate, if any, was loft to the Protestamt orphan asylum. Where He Was Born Then Miss Mary Wurtele, passed away Pekin, June 3.-The and her bequests were to the Protes-| gang Chang has been tant hospital for the insane at Ver- | je temporary resting dun, $12,000; to the Montreal Pro | veyance to the pre testant house of industry ang refage, | whon it will bo interred $10,000: to the Montreal general hos i where Li Hune Chan pital, $5,000; to the boys' home, 84.' Gp military "oor 00; to the sailors netitute, $1,000; | length, accom edd th to the Mackay institute for the deaf he sity RC Lo i and dumb, $3,000 " Carry it twelve miles where it will be plac which will take it to Tak will be put on a steam Temples were along the route to Tungch the people worshipped the the dead statesman. MH were served to the Growl nlmbers were equal to th sembled upon the court's turn from its pilgrims; eastern tombs. 279 King LI HUNG'S BODY MOVED Anhul, to Taken From Pekin Li Charleston. Events. Charleston, June 1.~Mesars, and Patterson spent the 21th bere, the guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. Slack. My. and Mes. A. W. Johnson and children were in Brockville on Saturday. Mes J. McKenna, Athens, is the guest Miss M. A. Foster. Miss Olive Tay. lor, Harlem. is the guest of her sister, Mrs. W. Taylor. George Webster ia painting for Mise H. Green. Oak Leaf cheese factory turned out thirty-three cherse on Monday. Mr. and Mra. M, Hudson snd children and Miss M. Purnd, Smith's Falls, spent the 20th with friends here. William Perry, Wol vering, Mich, called on friends hers on his way to Long Point to visit bis mother and other relatives at the old home. It is twenty vears sinew Mr. Perre was in Cavada. He wax ac companied from Prockville hy bis brother, Harvey Jones erect ol en. Andy "her mnt sotto Charged With Killing W Evausville, Ind., June of former patrolman Wi well, who ia charged with of three women, was on in the circait ent crimes, which were November, were of the per' type, and arowsed horror, The present murder of Mrs. Guorgin | dead body wae found | thiv city Novembior 124 same. day. the body of was found in a ditch i of the town. Fannie But to hare lwen chobed 1 Sherwell in a stable Ma ler trind The lant Hip oor Brigands Secure $100,000 Duirango, Mex, June Jd Brigade attacked a mule pack train which was conveying silver bullion to the value of more than $100.00 from the mines of the Pieramide mining company sb San Jose de Gracin to Mazstlon. The mas driven off, one man being illed. and the bandits secured silver and fled into the mountains. was arrested and chars the three murders, During confinement in jail he has 'an air of indifierence. Enema syringes that were T5c., now Misawa sonal dealers have ol sold stand. Mitchell. selling for Me: $1 omes Jor Mc. Boeke' the price to $7.59 & toa,

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