Daily British Whig (1850), 19 Jun 1902, p. 3

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DAILY. BRITISH. WHIG, THURSDAY JUNE 19. JUNE 26th. DOMNON, DAY Ist. OLE RET CI ASS Ta at SINGLE FIRST-CLASS FARE. (tod gobo June 83th and 266k, returmng lestinatidn on or bodore June 27th, ano god going June #0 and July Ist valid for retSes weil Julv Zod, 1902 SINGLE FIRST-CLASS FARE AND ONE-THIRD. Good going June Meh to July Ist, in ' ' per 4 for swilion , on or before July d "Wut pastheslars at KX. & P. and CP Rt Ticket Of 0 Strost r. oa nr A FOLGER, 38 THE BAY OF QUINTE RAILWAY NEW SHORT LINE FUR Teed, Peageronio and' all local points Clty Hall Depot at 4 mR v CAS Telegraph Of CORONATION DAY JUNE 26th. ; DOMINION DAY crn AUEY. ste Return teksts will bo lesued between all Hues wiations fu Usnade; ali stations in Caneda : Fatablished ini, Does hm aalootdan of might Wada" to nied from Detroit aud Port Huros, Mich wd to but nes feom alo, 3 Blark Rock, N.Y., Bpaghrs Falls, N.Y, snd Sus pension Bridge, SINGLE FIRST-CLASS FARE (lood going June 25th and 26th, retorning from destingtion on or before June 27th, al wo good going June 30th and July lst, val i lor petuen ual July 28d, 1902 ' SINGLE FIRST - CLASS AND ONE-THIRD Good going June Mik te Julv Ist clusive, valid for return on or before ard J. P. HANLEY, Agent, City Passr. Depot. DOMINION LINE. RAIL STEANSHIRA, EIVERPOOL SERVICE. FROM PORTLAND, *Tursoman..... « ..oone Bet Colonia ou w Juoe 280K July Sth July 13 July 19th " July 26th do Dot SMITY Passeng- aod end wp ver NE Jdiv RATES OF PARGAGE Sor, 30 w servios. Saloon, $87.50 and " to steamer end vies. class, $26. A FROM MONTREAL. Dominion tt niga Sivnate meio: sau SUEDE. SINE i July Gh 1 BOSTON. a ve June 16th a June 25th SERVICE P30 it Frances. Cambromen, July 2nd, August 18th. spacious TP. Hanley, J.P, Gildersleeve, » "Fonte $55 0m. Arte. Bay of Quinte and Montreal Line. 8 _ leave "Bingeton, Wednesday asd SONG GOING Shar 4:30 11 50 P.M. O Jone Ish, wi hy servic will leave as above, Wednesdays, Fridays and Bundaye. FORONTO-MONTREAL LINE, (Simms Kae fut 4 0 J oe br From June A6sh, deily exocpt Mondave. Dur i iw sd 5 Anuar obs Pu from om tread » » 00. Agent. 4 ae Dl 4 4] of Ql Lake. Steamboat Co., Limited. Kingston Picton - Belleville Str » wu gents. , "Aletha" Monday th, will leave An Established Fal. © Malt Breakfast Food A Banisher of Dyspepsia and Stomach Troubles. A True Nourisher of the Whole Bystem. Malt Breakfast Food is now recom- mended by physicians amd food ex perts as & banisher of all digestive troubles, KR. V. Trent, Halifax, N.S., "For five years dyspepwia made life a wisery for me. After faithful dieting on Malt Breakfast Food for three weeks L am rid of dyspwpsia, | now relish my meals, thanks to Malt Breakfast Food." Grocers say it is the most popular food. Ask your deal er for a package. We Bovanre=Harr Sow apeculatives for either investment or mar- Ja brig ane Ralf the success ts sn sehcting the £ time and siock, in making one's purchase. 2 fe with tutltig ones and Ave " Maite Fa iperty are ane Belfon ehontele, wr ve itued or free distribu tion a , cloth bound, illustrated, 400 page "Guide to Investors," 5 to be the best and most complete Work upon trea, ihe earkets and wsecnritics ever issued. 'We sleo mail free, upod request, dur " Dally Market Letter," an unamally correct synopsis of the markets snd its paghable movements. 83 says; i a #00D PURN without 01 FOUR GOOD FURNISHED board, with all modern 191 University Avenue. oN Tae lu. OF MAY kg VERY re Ouse, corner ore, pear the Park. Large all modarn conveniences, water furnace, Apply Bagrot Street. ROOMS, WITH Of Quan sirent. HOOMS. WITH eonvenianoes, af Shaw, 11) MONEY AND BUSINESS. MONEY TO LOAN IN LARGE OR at, low rates of Interest aut on Mv ------------------------" a N OUSAND DOLLARS IE Wo HU DRED TH kd - oN Liverpool, London and Globe Fire Insurance Company. lable ' addi woes the ga eg ity the unlimited in 5 the stock ARN insured rE Dri Bmes. mauuing oh vind STRANGE Shan, Agents. ARCHITECTS, ERS 1 OFFICE IN rE 508. iii li -------------------- ------------------------------------------ ARTHUR h OHITEOT, OFFl New sores on ap Mle ' 8. 8. CORBETT, RAL Kinguton, hr pli, THE LEADING hin a POWER & lr A yes SRE Kiagston-- Rochester 1000 Islands " Str. "North King oe Sth, pra lave on a SEER Sunda: 017 i i * . 3 T. ¥, HARRISON CO, | 5 233.285. Princess Sr Quality and Whe best. Prices Wo lowest. > "Phones--Wasercoms, 90. ; oR FUNCTIONS PERFORMED AT THE CORONATION. The Homage Shortened Consider- ably--~The Lengthy Service of Old Discarded and Much of Its Beauty Lost--Who Will Of- ficiate. Special to the Whig A perfect forest of timber has, dur- ing the past few weeks been trans ported into Westminster abbey, and still more in all probability awaits the same destination. Within the great church, galleries; will be seen on the eventful June Mth, in every direction in which it is posdble to accommo- date spectators. Naturally enough the chief interest will centre round the eastern end of the abbey. Here in front of the high altar will be placed the ancient chair of king Edward, with the fateful stone of destiny be- neath it. In this chair the king will receive the sacred oil, and will be crowned hy the archbishop of Canter- bury. At the northern end of the high altar will stand a chair, together with a footstool of purple velvet, for the use of the primate. -These articles have @ special interest of their own attached to them, for from time im memorial if has been customary to assign them to the archbishop as his own peculiar fee. Behind him will be placed benches, on which will be ac commoduted the bishops of the Eng- lish chureh. On the south side of the sacrarvium will be placed the dean and canons of -*Westminster, arrayed in their splendid eriméon copes, also the four great officers of state and the noblemen whosé duty it is to carry the various articles of the regalia in the procession. Just behind the two chairs which are to be erected on the south side of the sacrarium, and in which their majesties will be seated during "the sermon, will stand the royal box. It has been customary to place members' of the royal family in this position for coronation after cor- onation. The royal box itself consists of a kind of gallery containing the re mains of queen Anne of Cleves. Some what to the westward, immediately beneath the Lantern tower of the ab hey, there will stand a curious square platform, technically known as "the theatre." Tt will be raised several steps from the groumd----almost, in fact to the level of the sacrarvium itself. On it there will be placed the two handsome thrones or chairs of state one raised on probably five steps for the king, the other somewhit lower for the queen. These two chairs will neither of them be occupied until the actual coronation of king Fdwawml VII. has been finally completed. When alj this over pnd done nod the great Te Deum Landamus has béen sung hy the choir, his majesty will be led from his position in the sacrarium hy the archbishops, bishops, and members of the nobility and placed in this chair. Here, then, he will sit in order to receive the homage of certain representative nobles. This last-named ceremony has un aergone considerable modification view of the coming coronation. It has hitherto been the for each member of the peerage, © meneing with the Episcopal order. to ascend the steps of the "theatre" in turn, and to render his own individ al homage in person by touching the king's crown, and so on. Ohviusly this must have been a very proceeding, to say the Even at queen Victoria's coronation it was calculated beforehand to. oceu- py no less a period of time than for tv minutes. In all probability it se tually extended, when the hour for performance arrived; to an even great. er length of time. Thus, dreary wait must have been interpos. ed into the main course of mony, particularly trying to persons Fell Exhausted and Uicornscious A Frightful Case of Exhausted Nerves and Debilitated System ~From a Mere Skeleton, Pale, Weak, Trembling and Almost Wild With Pain, Mrs. Ed- wards Was Made Strong and Well 'By Dr. Chase's Nerve Food. ore Mrs. RoW. Edwards, 33 McMurray street, Brantford, Ont., describes ber case' as follows : "For five years 1 have suffered more than words can tell from nervous headache, nervous dyspepsia, and ex haustion. pains in my head wotild at times almost drive me eragy, I could not sleep nights, but would walk the floor in agony until I fell ex- hausted and 'unconscious, and my hus band would have to carry me back to bed, "Sometimes 1 could take no food for four days as a time, and experienced terrible gnawing sensations in the sto: mach, had bad taste in the mouth and coated tongue. was paly, nervous, irritable, easily exhausted, was re- duced to a mere skeleton of skin and bone, and my heart would palpitate as it was about to stop beating: sullcring was caused by I paint in my head, neck and back, and all this was in rite of the best efforts of three ing Ldoctors ee ; wy. « #For the nine months J have leading ! "oj { invariable custom | lengthy | least of it | a somewhat | whose seats were piaced in pes ition that was not for thew to command a view of the bow- age going eon ia front of the throse. Attempts were made, it is true, 0 en liven this portion of the proceedings somewhat. Owe orf more anthems were rendered in due course by the choir: and a certain ceremony, whick sounds peculiarly odd and fantastic to modern ears, also took place at this moment, It consisted in the distribu- tion, or rather the wholesale throw: ing ghout, of coronation = medals among the crowd hy the treasurer of the household. who was furnished with a bag of handsome material ior this purpose, accompanied by the gen- tleman wher of the Black Rod. This ceremony, which was repeated at one coronation after another down ilo that of queen Victoria, inclusive, has gone overboard altogether for that of ber gon. The Homage itself is to be shortened in a manner which, though it may be expeditions, will, neverche- less, hardly be eonducive to thé an eval dignity of the service. Certain re presentative peers are to be told off to leave their respective seats and come forward in front of the throne. The duke of Noriolk, as premier duke, will, no doubt, represent his own or der. The marquis of Winchester, the earl of Sheewshury, viscount Here ford, and baron de Ras will also make their appearance no doubt, and perform 'the required service on behalf of their respective orders. So far so gooa. Hut we can hardly imagine that a very edifving spectacle will be presented by the sight of the remain ing marquisex, earls, Viscounts, or barons, a¢ the caxe may be, kneeling down in the "ecribbed, cabined, and confined" space allotted to them in theiv gallery, while the senior member of their ovdef performs the homage in the distance ! The dean and chapter of Westmin ster, with' the exception of the iirst named, to whom highly responsible duties have been assigned from time immemorial, take no actual part in the general proceedings save to stand in the sedilia on the south side of the altar. They will, nevertheless, attract a good deal of attention by reason of their magnificent apparel. It is gene rally known that Westminster abbey ix highly favored in that it is the pos sessor of some perfectly magnificent the majority of which 'were manufactured, or at any vate, pro cured, after the troubles of the great { Civil war aod the Commonwealth, in order to grace the coronation of Charles Il. it bas been conjectured, and with some show «of probability, that these truly glorious vestments in reality came from Spain. We can scarcely imagine any artist to have existed in England at the time of the restoration who was capable of de- signing and manufacturing these splandid fabrics: and as Charles 11 spent so large a portion of his wan- derings in the . Spanish Netherlands, as they wefe then termed, the conjec- ture is at Jeast possible. The copes in question seem to have been at one time twelve in number. They are composed of three distinet colors purple, crimson, amd cloth-of goldh | Those of the latter hue are, alas! | quite worn ont. They have lost all the brilliancy and shepn which once i was theirs, added to which the actual material composing them hax, to a great extent, become. decayed with sage. There still remain, however, several copes of purple and crimson. One of these was worn by archbishop Benson at the time of the jubilee ser vice of 1887; another by Dr. BDuck- worth, the present sub-dean of West minster abbey. None of these, how- { ever, will be worn at the forthcoming coronation. A number of other copes, uniform in enlor and design, have been. manufactured specially for this purpose, composed of a color which purports to be royal crimson. The hangings of the altar and also those within the chapel of St. Edward, the confessor will all be made of the same material and design Handsome though the new copes are, they can hardly be said to equal those of the seventeenth century : either in shape, in color, or in design. The latter un: doubtedly do possess a remarkable and peculiar gracefulness of their own which the copes of the twentieth cen: tury have altogether failed to attain The coronation service has now been published, and it is possible for peo ple to express their opinion upon it. It seems most unfortunate that the question of saving time should ap- parently have heen allowed to domi nate almost every other considera: tion. The service has heen mutilated in more than one particular, and al though previous coronation offices way well have demanded) a certain amoiint of judicious prupimg, vet it can hardly be said that the order compiled for the present auspicions oc cakion is in any sense of the word an improvement. It seems to be badly hong together, and in at least some place certain distinet portions of the cergmony do. not. appear to have beer satisfactorily divided off from one another by the introduction of an anthem or other break. It has always "been eastomary, moreover, for the ser vice of the eoromation to be elevated to the dignity of the church's greatest fonctions; those, for instance, which take place on Ei day and on Christmas day. This fact bas been em phasized b the introduction of =» proper nce which has been used i some shape or form for a very long period of time. Inthe coronation -or- der 'for King Edward VII. and queen Aletandra proper preface wholly disappeared, to the impover fshment of the entire rite. The com: mandments, too, have heen left ont ; and, what seéms almost more serious, the ceremony (a peculiarly beautiful on entitled the such = copes, THE NEWS: OF THE. WORLD. TELEGRAMS FROM THE FOUR QUARTERS OF THE EARTH, -- Matters That Interest Everybody ~Notes From All Over--Little of Everything Easily Read And Remembered by the Deas Public. ' Lord Salisbury is suffering from the afiects of a chill. The weather in Australia, which is pow the winter season, is bitterly cold. The ¥.M.C.A., of Denver, Col, bas pstablished a farm for young men suf fering from tuberculosis. President Palma, of Cuba, will re ceive a salary of $25,000 , year and the vicspresident 26,000 a vear. A hospital for convalescents is be- ing built in Chicago, Over $600,000 has heen subseribed for the purpose. Argentina has ordered six iron-clads in England. They aretobe of a su perior make and of the lutest pat tern The Ameliasburg stage. upset in Pellevitle on Tuesday. Mrs. John Bel nap, a passenger, had her right arm broken, Judge Alto Schoenrich, aged twenty years, 13 the voungest district judge in the Upited States. He resides at Baltimore. Foreigners will not be allowea to ride over the Siberian railway with out special authorization from = the Russian government. Fire broke out on Wednesday in a conl mine at Hungen, near Giessen, in the duchy of Hesse. It is believed that eight miners were trapped. A fire 'ocourred aboard the new At lantic liner Eclipse, at Greenock, on Wednesday... The stores were destroyed and her departure for Hew Yurk will be postponed. By an elevator acciaent in a build ing on Broome street, New York cit: on Tuesday, two persons wore killed There were twenty-five persons on the elevator at the time of the accident. Samuel Bernard, the celebrated co median, was married on Tuesday night in New York city to Florence Deatéch, the danghter of a wealthy capitalist, Her dowry was B500,000 The marriage of . Capt. J. N. Car ter, Picton, Miss Lilian Siuart Dickson, youngest daughter of Mr, and Mrs. M. C. Dickson, College street, Toronto, took place on Wed- nesday. Major Tra A. Shaler. the contractor who is building the Park avenne ra pid transit tunnel, New York, was fa tally injured on Tuesday by the fail of a 200-pound stone, which hit him on the head. The German emperor's new yacht Meteor, built ww the Downey ship building firm, of Shooter's Island, has completed her outfit at Southampton and left for Kiel in tow of a German torpedo boas. Prince Henry of Prussia has con- sented to act as godfather by proxy to the twins of ~ Mrs. Christopher Blume, 'of Newark, N.J. They born on the day emperor William's vacht was 'launched Richard Crdker, the of Tammany, save; "It is positive that 1 shall never. have anvthing more to do with New York politics." He intends to remain in England at Wantage for the remainder of his lie B. B. Lyons, aged fifty, a book salesman employed hy D. Appleton & (Co., New York city, committed sui cide by shooting himself in his room at the Globe hotel, on Tuesday night Il health was the cause of the rash act, \ \ Mrs. Louis. Westrop, a white wo man living near Jackson, Miss, kill ed five of her children on Tuesday by shooting them to death. The woman sscaped after setting fire to the build ing which contained the dead bodies of her children. In the suit of Amanaa Cox against the New York Central for damages for the death of her daughter, Aman da Florence . Howard, who, with her husband, was killed in the Park aye nue tunnel sceident, received a ver dict of $150,000 on Tuesday vessel's to were famous leader Kingston And Ottawa. 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