Daily British Whig (1850), 7 Jun 1902, p. 5

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Paine's Celery Compound The Medicine That Saves Lite "and Restores Lost Health. -------- A-mereiful- Providence still kepps the spark of life in thousands of wasted and feeble Bodies. The fitful, flicker: ing spark will burn with decreased power as the hot days of simmer ap- Prunch a bets in wtill for even those who are now estch Ti AL Sh hn, fle Celery Compound during the month of June will at one arrest the progress of wasting disease. It will strenothen the wenk and inflamed nerves, rid the Fody of id waste material, make the blood pure and give bealthy act tion to the stomach, liver and kid noys. Nervousness, sleeplessioss, thou wiatism, neuralgia, Ver and kidney troubles uickly vanish when « Dr, . Phelps marvellous prescription in used, . Perry, Port Maitland, N.S. nays : "For two years my system was all run-down and | suffered more than | can describe from nervous prostesdion and insomnia; at times | almow' lost my reason from severe pain at base of the brain. My"Woshind advised moto) try Paine's Ce smpouned, which | did, and the were wonderful. 1 woon began to sleep well, the pain left my head, my whole system as strengthened, and | am vow enjoving very goodihenitn' 4 - AtictionnSales. Save Money by Employing BROWN, Auctioneers. CR ALLEN & "Elephant" : BE9t READY. MI PAINT on PAINT on irket, , You. get it at Sin Wa mci Was, Tos Much or "Prisoner. fork Jour nal. 8 Ruowles, of the Delancey ation, bb" thinking of. dofhiug going info panto John Brown, of tnd dumb wan, be aun, in Essex mar go if you tell him he to New York and get said the magistrate. Bok his prisoner in a side Mrote out his lecturey : ink booze agmih here or get pinched again. Ruoze any mad, and don't was beyond him. en had an inspira whiskey bottle' gave an miter dry rk " # dk prom * OR TEER 0 EVADE LY. gas Been Peduced Rapidly Since POLICE WILL ENFORCE SUN. DAY CLOSING. The Smaller Candy Places to Be Left For the Fresent--A Threatened Strike of Iron Moulders. Montreal, June 7.---The Allan line steamer Austrian, from Boston for Glasgow, arrived out Friday after- noon. The Allan live steamer Montevidian, from London, passed Matané, inward, at 10.30 a.m., on Friday. It is expected a strike of iron moul- ders; involving 'the calling out of 400 men in this city, will be ingugurated on Monday. The officials of the iron moulders are to decide the matter in view of the failure of the committee of the iron founders and iron moul- ders to come to an agreement regard- ing the claim of the men for a rate of £2.50 per day. The police have been instructed to take action regarding Sunday closing of stores to-morrow, the understand- ing being that.only the large stores are to be proceeded against, the small variety of candy stores being left. In consequence all the large cigar stores in the west end are fitting up candy departments to their places to-day in the hope of being able to evade the law. Church Liberality. When the Free Church general. as sembly met in Glasgow twenty-four years ago, the most impbriant busi wegy libel against Dir, 5 and pow when the assembly thasget, in St. Mungo again the other day, the piece' de resistance was a heresy libel case against Prof. George Adam Smith, for opinions ex- pressed regarding the bible in a book ab come time afo. The general opinidp #s, that what Prof. Smith has writtérnds tem fitnes Worse than any: thing Dk. | tgon @ver said. | T latter "Ww: ended and expelled from the church; so the fate of she formey might well have been.rege a a vi i i haion. Iipstead of that Prof. Smith has in a sense been vine od, and that by a vote of po Tess than 534 to 263. Assuredly fimes and the views of men have changed Able addresses were delivered two weeks since by Dr. James Kidd, prin cipm! Rainy, Prof. Lev, Dr. dost He Ew . John § rofl. McEw- Fant Ripe de Smid i I. '0'he yg oWon- rg toty of the ithie, amy process aguinst Prof. Smith-was moved by principal Rainy and seconded by Prof, Orr. The extraordinagy Mberality can nol entirely be attributed to the union of the Free and the United Preshy- terian churches. a---------- . What The Story Showed. New York Tribune. A man who was called on to ad drese a Sunday school in a Pennsyl vania town took the familiar theme of the children who mocked Elijah on his journey to Bethel--how the young- stors taunted the poor old prophet, and how they were punished when the two whe hears came ont of the wood and ate forty-two of them, "And now, children," said the speaker, wishing to learn if hisg talk had produced any moral effect, "what does this story show ?"" "Ploase, sir," came from a little girl well down in front, "it shows how many children two she bears can hold 1" a-------- The Influence Of A Word. iti rl," said the medita- tive man, 'how one small word, in significant in' itself, may induce = an endless thain of 'thought, speaking vol- umes in fact." ' "Yes," replied. the caustic man. "Take the word "but for ifslance, when a woman says' course, it's nope of my business, but' Sufferers. Krom Whe Found Quick Relief and Lasting €sire in| fhe Use of ie i you comld read a few of the let: ters which come to these offices from persons: who heave been froed from the miseries of, itehing, bledding or pro truding piles, you would seon realize the marvellous power of this wonder ful preparation. Here are two sample letters which show the, heartielt gua- tude of cured ones ' John Tutths, expressman; 107; Ste wart street, Kingston, . Ont., states : men whe do much driv. a t , and ofien Hn , I have been a % from piles. As a mat ter of inet. I had piles for a number 23 yihi "Han stle a 5 ymanent cure, | am grateful for the vam from suffer and desire elit. oh co ChIP] } DAILY ARMY IN THE PHILIPPINES. February, 1901. Boston. Teasweviph. Probably few persons realize how steadily, not to say rapidly, the gov: ernment bas reduced our army in Philippines, yet it is a fact that we have in those islands to-day only ab out sixty per cent. of the force we maintained there at this time in 1901, The process of reduction began in Fehmary, 1901, In Jannary, 190i, we had 6793 officers ail men on duty in the islands. By Jenmary, 192, par forces had been reduped to 36.944; in February, still further reductions has carried the strength of our troops down to 33,50, and now Gen. Chaf fee has under his command about 32, 0 American troop=, exclusive of na tive scouts, ete. Senngor Burrows the other day said in the senate that by the time con ress next met in regular session he peliewed that the foree of American troops in the Philippines would be re- duced to 18,000, or possibly 15000 men. The wedition of our forces has been accomplished by sending home whole regiments, those returning fol lowing as closely as possible the or der of their arrival in the Philippines. The regiments return, too, in very good physical condishon, not living skeletons, but real flesh and blood sol diers, fit for duty. As our government would not re duce our military force, if it were not persumsled that the reduction was consistent with the mmintenance of our amthority, this eonstant hom com ing of soldiers marks the extemsion of tranquility in the Philippines and the belief of president Roosevelt and his advisers that, with a moderate num- ber of regulars to back them up, the Philippine constabulary will be equal to pregerving ovder and enforeing the ordinary laws. ENTERED INTO REST. Death of Mrs. McIver, at the Age of Eighty-three Years. The death occurred on Friday after noon of lsghella Butterworth, relict of the late William Meiver, at the home of her son, J. B. Mclver, corner of Barrie and Ubion streets. The de cessed had "been ill for a year, and was confinel to houde for'six months The late Mrs. Melver was barn in Kingston eighty-three years ago, and was probably its oldest resident. She was the daughter of the late John Butterworth, a native of the north of Scotland, who at one time kept a hat manufactory where Mor ton's old distillery is, and who died dering the cholera epidemic in Kings ton in the early thirties. Mrs. Melver, in her voung days, liv ed where the present Dominion ex press office is situated, at the corner of King and Clarence street, and when the late Sir John Macdonald's father came to Kingston, he lived next door, where Theobald's barber shop is now She kuew the late Sir John from his béyhood. In 1849, the deceased married Wil liam Melver, who died in 1568. One son, J. B., treasurer of Queen's unit versity, and one daughter, Miss Mc Iver, survive. The funeral was pri vate this afternoon, to Cataraqui cemptery. Service as the house was eonducted by Rev. James Wallace, M. A., acting minister of St. Andrew's chureh, of which decensed was a mem- ber for aver half a century. i ---------- May She Ride Flying Machine. i an. Ber in ia. Dunham, whose home is in a village near Boston, counts her age by the successive type of vehicles she has seen perfected. She was horn in 1800. At five years of age she rod in a stage coach, at forty-nine she boarded a railway train for the first time, at ninety-nine she rode on an electric car, and at 100 she enjoyed an outing in an automobile. At the age of 102 years she still attends to her household duties, works in her little garden and reads an hour every day. The Claims Discredited. Meterbo Examiner. ' Whe result of the Lennox recount dis credits the wild claims of the opposi- tion that the recounts would result in placing Mr. Whitney in a majority. The lennox recount shows that there is nothing in the opposition conten tion that the recounts would favor the. opposition from the alleged fact that the deputy returning officers would naturally favor the government can: didate, and give him the benefit of the doubt in the ease of the doubtiul marking of a ballot making a decis- ion dificult. The Barber And His Victim. Julian Ralph, Ni ¥. Mail ast Express 1 seldom think of barbers without recalling a joke which 1 regard as the funniest of American witticisms.. For wit, for -unexpectednies, for condensa- tion, and incisiveness, and for the moral it conveys, I hold it to be the funniest of the many funny = things which the late Phil Welch invented. It is this : Bar! er--Shall 1 go agin ? : Customer--Na, please don't. 1 think I can remember all that you have said, : over the chin Militia Orders. To be district staff adjutant, mili- tary distriet. No. 2.--Major J. Gallo- way, ir., from the lith regiment, to complete the district stall, June lst, WHIG, SATURDAY. [N 00D 0£D DAYS CONE BY THE CONNECTING LINKS WITH THE PAST. "Rude Forefathers™ Where the Old Trail Led--Early Set- tiers' Homes--Birth of the Vil- lage. Purled in the wilderness, between two" steep and thickiy-wooded hills, dense with second growth and under- #vush, with bere and there a charred pine standing silent and forlorn, close to the natural clearing of a beaver meadow, and fromting the old trail from Sudbury to Wahnapitae, stands the ruin of a log cabin, Moss cover- ed, askew, windowless and with one frreguiar doorway, not one straight line or right angle in its whole com- position, grown over and into and through hy the encroaghing, uncheck- ed. bush, the shack remains, forgot- ten and unknown. Built before Sud- bury: and. the railway and situate two miles east of the town the casu- al passer-by on the trall would pot notice it at all. No doubt it was built and inbabit- ed by some wandering trapper, long since moved further north in pur- suit of the vanishing game and now gathered to bis fathers, Possibly later a settler lived here, though no signs of cultivation are to be found in the patural clearing. Now it is doubly lost, for the road and rail- wat pass two miles to the south, and the old trail is seldom tramped save by a wandering sportsman. Good eyesight he must possess who would follow it now, wandering at its own sweet will 'along the stream from Sudbury between the hills, always between, and iu the easy places, curv- ing sharply round a knoll, stopped short by a windfall, and. all to guide tho traveler, a few bent blades of grass, a scraped rock, a "blazed" tree, a broken branch, until the shack is reached. Then, plungi down wu hill it disappears, further Have never followed it, The hut itself is en interesting study--logs notched together at the ends, and doubtless chinked with moss und wud in. years gone by. form the walls; the roof of pine slabs rests on. poles, aud the floor is terra firma. Yet this. was the class of 'home' of the first settlers, the U.E.L.'s, and others earlier. And our great grandfathers lived like their houses-- not pnly three score years, but on in- to de sere and yellow till centenari- dns were mot curiosities as at the present day. When a sottlar prospers ed--and many did--physical degenera- tion straightway followed, a larger hotiss was built by his sons, clap- boarded and of two storeys, the floors were laid and other seeming comforts, the old stome hearth and swinging crane, the iron dogs and spit--synenymous with comfort and hospitality--disappeared, and modern ugly box stoves--dead things with never @ blaze to brighten--took their place. ~The "Dutch oven," an iron box buried in hot ashes, was super- seded by the - "elevated" abomina- tions of modern times. But the houses suffered most. Al- ter the log shack (to the prosperous) came the rambling homestead, end thén high, marrow, comfortiess struc- tures, verandahs, became "stoops," and. long French windows--open wide in. sumner. to avery vagrant breeze were done away, and in their pince appeared the "sliding" windows of to-day, which "slide" or not, re- gardless of one's will. Then came the furnace-lurking in the cellar and fill- ing ull the house with dust and heat- ing it until the present generation loathes a draught of pure air from open windows like the plague. Clusters of huts bécame villages, a high, square, false front, backed by a single gable ridge assumed the dig- nity of a store, and can still be seen tn any vilinge, though why the ne- cessity of the "front" now nobody can explain, and , this collection, growing, was called a town. Here row on row close packed together, like huge square boxes (and as pic turesque), comfortless, unsanitary, stand the 'modern' houses. Some tried "colonial style," where there wus room, and out in front built up tall fluted wooden columns, With rambling foows, and halls behind, and this was not so bad. But soon the ever shrinking lots became sc small that as they nar rowed $0 the houses rose Wntil re plete with all the modern "com- forts' of furnace, ga, electric light, and airtight rooms, with here and there a microscopic "grate" with ar- titeial blaze, and every luxury the heart could wish--but air, a perfect palace from within, but outwardly a glaring eye sore of chopped-off gable ends, of tiuy balconies, of jumbled towers, chinmeys, doors and steps, and surrounded by the poisonous murk of factory fues and steaming sewer ventilators! A place for mon ey-grubbing ereatures, this, for stunt. ed young and fecble babes, but sure- ly not a habitation for a Man ! And our grim old rugged forefa- thers would smile again to see us BOW---OUr hau shoulders, crooked backs, and bt in spectacles, 'This your 'twemticth century civiliza~ tion?" they would say; "live as we lived and die as we died in the days of long ago--ihe good old days of lusty youths and. strapping lassies, of grey-haired laborers, who, at six- ty, were in their prime, and lived to see their children's children grow up around them, and bless' them when died In white old age. thle ty, ninety winters o'er. In ghey he. wheel, the Our G spinning | 1 cradle and the flail.' --Hal, in Toron- to Mall and Empice. Ci Can RANT, The Great countries in 'generally, JUNE 7. WHY HE DIDN'T JUNP. --r-- ¥ A Good Story Told By Railway- : Man. Here is one that a young man who knows a good story when he hears it heard one rallrodd man tell another in a depot up the line the other day: "We picked up a new Ivishman somewhere up country an' set him to work brakin' em a construction train at 3 cents a mile for wages. One day when him an' me was on the train she got away on one of them mountain grades, an' the first thing we knowed she was fiyIn' down the track at abaut ninety miles an hour, with nothin' in sight but the ditch an' the happy hunt- in' grounds, when we come to the end. I twisted em down as hard as I eould all along the tops, an' then of a sudden 1 see Mike crawlin' along toward the end of one of the cars on all fours, with his face the color of milk, 1 thought he was gettin' ready to jump, an' I see his finish If be did. "Mike," I says, 'Tor heaven's sake don't jump! "He clamps his fingers on the run- pin' board to give him a chance 'to turn round an' lookin' at me con- temptuous, answers: " 'Jump, is it? Do yes think I'd be afther jumpin' an" me makin' money as fast as I am? i # A Boston Translation, Little Emerson--Mamma, I find no marginal note in elucidation of this éx- pression, which I observe frequently to occur in my volume of "Fairy Tale Classics," "With bated breath." What is the proper Interpretation of the phrase? Mamma--"With bated breath" my son, commonly occurs in fairy tales. Your father often returns from pisca- torial excursions with bated breath. The phrase in such instances, however, bas no significance as applying to the balt employed to allure the fish, but is merely an elastic term of dubious meaning and suspicious origin, utilized, as I have already intimated, simply be cause of the sanction which it has gain- ed by customary usage in fairy tales Do you comprehend, Emer. son? \ Little Emersoni-- Perfectly, mamma.-- Judge. Coincidences of Dates. Attention has often been called to the curious fact of the date Sept. 8 fig. uring so largely in the history of Oliver Cromwell. That very dominating man was born on Sept. 8, 1509; he won the battle of Dunbar Sept, 3, 1650; that of Worcester Sept. 8, 1651, and he died Sept. 8, 1658. But we have lately come Across some coincidences of dates which, so far as we know, have not been noticed before. The number 88 seems to have had fatal Influence 'on the Stuarts. Robert 11, the first Stu. art king, died in 1388; James IL was killed at the slege of Roxburghe Cas tle, 1488; Mary, queen of Scots, was bebraded in Fotheringay, 1588 (new styl); James VIL (II. of England) was dethroned in 1688; Bonny Prince Charlie died in Rome, 1788, and with him died the last hopes of the Jacob ites. Feline Depravity. "Oh, Horace," wailed his young wife, "I have just found out that Ajax, our beautiful Angora cat, bas been leading a double life!" "That makes eighteen, I suppose" sald Horace. "What has he been do ing? "Yon know I Jet him out every morn. ing, because he seems to want to go and play out of doors. Well, I have discovered that he goes over to the Robinsons and lets them feed him and pet him." The Betel Nut. Betel nuts, the produce of the areca palm, are chiefly used as a masticatory by the natives of the east. They dare too small to be applied to many orna- mental uses, but are occasionally em- ployed by the turner and wrought into beads for bracelets, small rosary eases and other little fancy articles. In the Museum of Economic Dotany at Kew there is a walking stick made of these nuts, sliced, mounted or supported on an iron center, A Too Discussion, "You know," sald the orang outang, "that man is descended from a moun- key." "Yes," answered the chimpanzee, "apd his descent has been very grent But let us set it down to his eredit that be tiles to rise again. Every now and then you hear of some man who is do- ing his bost to make & monkey of him- sel" Quick Work. "That editor is terribly slow at read: ing manuscript." "Think so? - Why, I know the time he went through twelve stories in less than a minute." "Gracious! When was that?" "Whea the 'elevator broke™ ETH Thomas S. Reath, President Detroit Travellers' Club, Says Warner's Safe Cure Perm anently Cured Him of Kidney Disease, Malaria and Indigestion. 8 A Trial Bettie of this Great Kidney and Bladder Cure Seat Abs solutely Free to Every Reader of this Paper Whe Suffers From Kitats Liver, : ladder or Blood Disease. 3 Bg ! : Y ; S tow, Bright's diseass, doupey, * ote, torpid Tver, Sualifiag pains when yo urbe ud 3 aria, which affected my kideevsin fact mv = viaung pains in the back; 1 loss my appetite, ahtend to wy duties one whos 1 to ry it fully I kept called bad 8 bottle of Warner's 5 1 felis the effects immediglely ame on improving, sud before though oew life nd strength hed been retired, As did my appetite manity, ond bettgy than any other meligine | REATH, President Dotroit Traveller's Chat ares > been given of letters like r. Roath's § 2 . H you have pains in the beck, rhemmihtisns Mheimatic com, fr My doctors edtikd do nothing for um. Fortunately for me, 'a the thind Hou wli Yotfr Safd Cure NEYS wee wy Poison, ation of the blo, sfoge th . or, #f a woman, tafe spells, patetul y ri of socallid femile vour Kidoove are You should lose no A we for a frea thal bottle of Warner's Sale £ Oure. 11 von de mol wish so wail for the Tee trinl, oot a Se. Bode ab. vor drag It will mlivve wou at once apd fleck 4° permasent ely 4 This Test Will Tell. Put some mwlnice urips in @ whos cof bolt: ef i staal for oe done Bours, H then Tt is smithy or olowiy OF Gonttaim a pekdinh, brick. mw, or if particles [I 2 vrickls Shuts unsataral Sweet, Dee No. 0384 Propelle 3 het doligue, Novem ter 21. 100) vlemen A year ago I a Pal. pptack of ma CURE wire svetems. | T wad trootiled with exorw became irritable, nervous and unelie 10 od ale Care in the house dial give 'le Adis 1 orderad a largg botsle and took is faith wos asad Lowes well ind bey ne ofl' Vigor and enthusiasm bad friomd to suffering hu gratefully, THOMAS S me. v is indeed a tru know of Yours are received daily from grateful patients who permanently cured by Warner's Safe Cure CURES KIDNEY DISEASE Warner's Sale Cure is purely vegeighle end is free from sedMpent and ix pleasant able and effective' tonto, and is un stisitilabt to putting the patitnt mtv she the kudneve It prepares the the enfecbled organs and heals at the =a strength and restores the energy that is or ha of kidney disease; it kills the, disease gens. W loading doctors for. 25 years, and usd Ju all Sado Shustion, SOL "ust a sumtan There . is none Substitutes Nefuse subwtitutos ine, which always cures take, very - best paeplive state Pills foken with Warner's Sak Core move the bowels g WARNER'S SAFE CURE is wild By all drogeists, or direct contains wb narcotic or harmbal drwed it #1 does nov constipiie; iC by o most vale digestion and awakens the torpkd River r the work of the rosteser of mn awd irritation, stimolatos ap the body. gives it » Dom wast winder the bmedul suffering armer's Safe Cire has boon proseribed by prominent hospitals exclusively. Warner's iy sued ab! a spemdy care at $1.00 A BOTTLE a good" as Warner's. losis oo the yen barolul drues which injure the syvslem "TRIAL BOTTLE FREE: The mamlastuvers so firmly believe nd prrroanently any will send postpaid, without atv fost to vou, a Safe Cure C¢ 44 Lombard St fer in the Ki diagnosis ane disomsed condition n Whig, Write the analysis, which will be wart ve SARCASM THAT FAILED, | The Englishman Did Not The Idea. a certain Euglishman by birth who is an. American by force of cirenm- stances Las been In this country long enough to absorb the American idea of humor. Last summer he 'was in London on a visit and happening to have business with a man on an up- per floor of a tall bullding took the "lift" to reach his office. The elevator was one of those excessively deliber- ate British affairs, and its snall-like progress annoyed the Americanized Briton, The only other occupant of the car was a middie aged English- man, with a manner of peculiarly' English seriousness. The man from America ventured to address him, "I think I could make a great {m. provement in this lift." he said. The Englishman looked seriously in- terested. "How 7" he asked. "Why," the other man went on, "I'd make it go faster by a situple little arn rangement. I'd stop the lift altogeth- er and move the buliding up and down." The Englishman looked slightly more interested, ; "How?" he asked, Grasp Sponges. Sponges grow in odd, fantastic shapes. Some of them have an over- growth resembling huge warts, There Are some suggesting hands, hats and figures of idols. These are-cnriosities and not marketable for practical use, In trimmiag them into shape many small sponges are made which are used for children's slates, for black ing shoes and in making paper. The uses vary according to size, One 'of the largest sponges known is in New York city. It is fan shape and some three feet in diameter. For practical use it is worthless, but as an exHibit it Is valued at $100. - §AiT, Hi that WARNER'S h weston! department SAFE OQURE will ghawivialy Lislnpen, tive, blair or Giood they trig! hott, # vou write Warner of the large miter, aed Wention bey ig see tee liborsl of for 'advice, methieal Booklet, un free of chary POOR SINNER'S BELL. Tower of a Breslau Church. The poor sinner's bell is a bell In the eity of Breslau, fo the province of Silesia, Prussia, and bangs in the tower of ope of the city churches. It was cast July 17, 1886, according to historic records. It is sald that a great bell founder of the place ball undertaken to muke the finest church bell he had ever made: 9 When the metal was melted, the founder withdrew for a few moments, leaving a boy to 'Watth the furnace and enjoining Lim not to meddle with the catch that held the molten metal, but the bay disobeyed the caution, and when lie saw the metal flowing lute the mold be called the founder, The latter rushed In and, seéing i» he thought his work of 'weeks undone and his masterpiece ruined, struck the boy a blow that caused his immediate death. 'When the metal cooled and the mold was opened, the bell was found to be not enly perfect, but of marvelous sweetness of tone. Hangs in tend church and offer a Fa. unhappy man's soul, a obtained the name of "the poor sinner's day of the month on which be was born was strangely interwoven with | the days of birth and marriage of his wife and some of his children and thei wives. Dut James was an old fool wha wha

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