Daily British Whig (1850), 23 Jun 1902, p. 6

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COOK BOOKS! 25c., 50c., 75c. ' $1, $2. See Our Window of Cook 'Books. MRS. BEETON'S COOK BOOK, 25¢. R, UGLOW & CO, Hook: eliers, 141 Princess Biress. Springs for Screen Doors This is the SPRING we give with all our BORBEN DOORS for $1. Aoy sive. _ Mitchell's Hardware. Auction Sales. Save Money A byiEmploying ALLEN & BROWN, Auctioneers. a oh d 1ET. hy, 5 street, rom June REAL ESTATE. GEO. CLF us SEFEIING, GREAT BAR % COMMERCIAL. MONTREAL PRODUCE, MARKWTS. ¥ 23. Flour receipts, 1.100 BU 28353 E35EEey 2 | sezazest PN. EDT: SECOND EDITION NEWS ALSC ON PAGE FIVE. COMMERCIAL MATTERS. What Is Going On !n the Business World--The Market News, Two new bemks were 'opened +. Chiengo on Toewday. One is known as the National bauk of North America, and the other will be lmown us the Colonial trust back. "Ihe Colonial Typewriter Co., Limited." is a new industry to be lorsted in Peterboro, The company will manulasture Svpewriters and typewriter supplies. The capital stock in HON Re I i The amount of trade. betwen Great Bri tain "and Caonnds during the cast ten woniks was over §26,000000. The amount for. trade during the conservative regime did not amount to one-third thet sum. Just now the outlook for the wheat crop in Oklahoma is very good. Helinble reports coming in from various semions of the ter ritory indicate that the erop will ram cichty per cent. of low veawr's phemomenal erop. which was the largest ever known in Okla homa. ---- New York Money Market. Henry Clews reports on June 21st: Crop nows is geeerally favorable, IHoin has fallen aver large sections of the country and the condition of com is exenilent, whest iv im proviog and cotton holds its own well. The outlook is for a good esport demand, cou siderivg the less favorable mecounts from abroad. The short crop bas been felt dar ing the last year, distinctly In our export trode, which dechned over $92,000,000, while our trade balance was $167.800,000 loss than a wear aco The principal cloud in the business situa tion is the labor outlook. Costs of mane facturing have riws so high and mlling is #0 often dome at a high gure, threatening to Jeswn that intelligent busi ness oem contracts owltg to new competition, and there is » general fooling that high prices have reached their limit, that verv soon pecossions will Ge mecessary 10 keep capacity well em loved. This expectation acts as a restraint upon eneral business. The effect of African develovment will I» most potiocabls @ increased gold supplies John Have Hammond has estimated har within one your alter the resumption of in the Witwatemsrand (which contributed twentv-five per cont. © the workl's product prior to the war) th production of gold in that district woul' rise to uvearly $100,000,000 per anbum, mw' within three years it may reach £120,000, 000. . Such heavy' additions to the gol supplies are sure to play an important part m the international exchanges. The owtlool continues for a good trading merket will otdency of prices of dedrable railroad vhare wenerally wpwordw. These are all well held ond with good earnings and various deals i prospect it is easier to Kit them than depress them. The industrials are compare tively neglected and offer no speculative in ducements. consumption, exercising caution in makin ranidiv increasing are Production is and minke operations Clergy Have No "Snap."' Toronto Mail and Empire, Strongly did archdeacon Cares penk before the Kingston synod on» he subject of clerical stipends. With incomes as low as $300 and averaging no higher than $300, the clergy in the rural districts have no "snap." Car it he wondered at that there is ar indisposition on the part of the young men to enter the church? If there were a union it might be different but a clerical strike would be ont of the question, Surely this christian country ought to begin to think that the laborer is worthy of his hire. Will Conduct The Parade. 1 On the 28th inst. Col. Montizambert, DOC, will go to Belleville to con duet an inspection of the 57th regi ment. On coronation day the genial colonel will command a parade of the 20th regiment, Hasting Rifles, the 15th regiment, Argyll Light Infantry. Belleville, and the 57th regiment. Peterboro Rangers. These corps will spend the day in Belleville. Death From Chickens. That eats can spread both scarlet fever amd diphtheria among human nas been a well-settled fact for some time, and now it is thought thal chickens are often responsible for the presence of diphtheria. In Nort) Wales, Eng., several outbreaks of thai disease immediately followed an epi demic of "roup," which is a fata chicken disease. Flower Sunday In Cooke's, Flower Sunday was observed in Cooke's church, yesterday. At morn ing service. the. Sunday school pupils assembled in the body of the church, and were Luuressed by Rev. Mr. Laird and James Craig, superintendent Special music was given, including a solo hy Mrs. Neisan. The church was prettily arranged with flowers, "5 A violent os shook of earthquake, ac ap by subterranean rumbli is ried from Cassano Al Jonio, in the ment of Calabria. No dam- age was done. OFFERED TO AID IN PROTECT- ING TORONTO LINES, ansam------ The Arrival of the Forces From London and Niagara--Happily the Militia Will Not Be Re- quired at All Toronto, Jume 23--The company made no attempt to operate cars this morning, the civie authorities having uotifiexd the officials that no protec tion coukl be given until the cavalry arrived from* Niagara. The men of the city infantry regi- ments mustersd at seven o'clock, some 670 strong. They were held in the armouries. as 8 reserve forte. The cavalry began to arrive at 5:20 o'clock the first train bearing the London Hussars, 166 strong. They were de trained at the cattle market and murched to the armouries. The se cond rain, with the 2nd Dragoons got in mbout nine o'clock, and took a considerable time to detrain, the us- loading facilities for the horses being poor, The third train, with the gov: ernor-general's body guard, and mounted rifles, on board, had not heen reported in at 12.30, The intention was to move the cavalry at one o'clock to the Yorkville barns and prepare to guard the cars if no set tlement had been made. Mr. Amos, at 12:45, announced that the statement that a definite settlement had been reached was premature, and that the agreement was not in such a com- plete form as at first announced. Col. Buchan announced that the Ottawa authorities had endorsed bis arrangement, and had offered, if ne cessary, toisend the Kingston field battery, T! use of artillery, how- ever, would ihe a last resort. } ---- A Hitch 8did To Have Occurred. Toronto, June 23. (1:45 p.m.). It is now said that a hitch bas oecurred in the strike negotiations and that D. Dilworth, representing the internation: al union, opposes the settlement be cause it does not recognize the union. Dilworth is asking for instructions from the union headquarters and meanwhile, it is understood, nothing will be done to precipitate a conflict between the troops and the mob by operating the cars, AN IOWA TRAGEDY. U.S. Marshal Shot While Making An Arrest. Jefferson, Towa, June 23.--One of the worst shooting aflairs ever witnessed in this part of Iowa, took place on Saturday, resulting from an attempt to arrest Horace Shipman on a peace warrant. For some breach of the peace last evening a warrant was sworn out for Shipman and placed in the hands of marshall John Swearin- gen for service. Dr. G. H. Grinnell, sShipman's family physician, went ahead of the marshall to attempt to have Shipman surrender peaceably. Shipman agreed to this, but hen Swearingen and deputy sheriff Fred Kendall appeared at the door he warn- ed them not to come in under penalty of death. Swearingen, undaunted, started to pull his revolver for the purpose of entering and Shipman fired a load of shot striking the marshal in the lower part of the face and kill ing him instantly. Dr. Grinnell and the deputy beat a retreat, iemviag the body of the marshall upon the porch. Sheriff Anderson went to the seene of the shooting, deputizing a dozen citi zens to assist him. Hundreds of peo ale gathered near Shipman's home and for three hours watched the battle. Five hundred shots were poured into the large two-storey house, Shipman replying from windows, cellarway and door. The fire company was called out and James May volunteered to put a hose in+ the cellar and drown Shipman out. May accomplished his work, but Shipman fired upon Kim from the cellar, causing him to re treat, About ten o'clock Shipman appeared at a window and fifty shots were fired at him, It then became quiet inside and Shipman's body was found on the floor, full of bullets Only a high wind from a direction that wonld have carried the flames down, prevented the building from being fired. A GRAND FETE In Honor Of Founding Of St. Jean Baptiste Society. Quebec, Que., June 24,--The grand: est and most impressive French-Cana dian national demonstration ever held on the American continent took place this morning bere, in honor of the sixtieth anniversaxy of the founding of the local St. Jean Baptiste society, The most important French-Canadian associations of Montreal, Ottawa and other Canadian ~~ and New England points were present. » were about seven thousand people in the ranks, and the parade Insted over an hour, to pass a given point. "After the parade, mass was velebrated in the open air in the his torical spot where the Champlain monument is erected The papal dele gate, Mgr. Fahonio, was, present, with fifteen other prelates. Lieut. Gov, Jette was also in attendance. "Peleral authorities were represented by Hon. Charles Fitzpatrick and Hon. . Isrnel Tarte. The or of St. Pierre and Miquelon, M. Julien, was nbn, | then they THE DAILY WHIG, MONDAY, JUNE 23 AA BE ASIEN -------------- A Grateful Mother Tells How Her Little Boy Was Cured. Mrs. A. Ssuve, Rowanton, Que. is another happy! mother who thanks Baby's Own Tablets for the health of her boy. The little fellow became the prey of worms--that curse of child- hood. His rosy cheeks lost their col or; his little lege and arms became skinny; his eyes lost their sparkle and he became sickly and peevish. sleep was restless and jeverish, and his food seemed to do him no good His anxious mother almost dispaired of. seeing him back again to good health, However, she heard of Baby's Own Tablets, and gave them to her child, gnd now she says' "The Tab lets made a wonderful change in my little boy. All signs of worms ve disappeared, and he is now in the best of bealth. 1 can honestly say that Baby's Own Tablets have no eyual as a cure for worms." Baby's Own Tablets are a certain cure for all the minor ailments of lit- tle ones, such as constipation, colic, sour stomach, indigestion, diarrhoea, simple fever and the irritation accom- panving the cutting of teeth. Guaran- teed to contain none of the poisonous opiates found in the so-called "sooth- ing" medicines, They are for children of all ages, and dissolved in water can be given with absolute safety to a new-born babe. Sold by druggists at 25 cents a hox, or sent postpaid on receipt of price, by addressing the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. OBJECT TO ACT AS POLICE. Colonial Troops Want Place in Coronation Procession. London, June 23.--From colonial contingents, angry protests are being registered. It appears that the war office arranged that all troops speci- ally sent to the coronation shall, with the exception of the cavalry, be utilized to line the route of the pro- cession instead of actually partaking in it. As the major portion of the visiting contingents comsists of in fantry there has been repeated disap- poinument. The governor-general of Canada, lord Stratheona, and Col. Pellatt, in command of the Canadians, are doing their utmost to induce the war office to allow the colonial troops to take part in 'the procession as units, re- gardless of the arm of the service to which they may belong. Besides the complaints of the col onials, several of the leading dailies are vehemently protesting against the special war coronation contingent, hurriedly sent by lord Kitchener from South Africa, at the government's re- quest, being detailed to guard the rotite instead of marching through the streets, With all these protests the war of- fie may perhape relent and allow the colonial and the war contingent to take part in the coronation proces sion. GERMAN ACTION IN AFRICA. J ohannesburgers Prepare To Cele- brate Coronation. Johmunesburg, Transtaal, June 23. ~~Considerable significance is attached to the action of the German communi ty herve in electing a committee, com-~ posed of prominent Germans, to as- sist in preparation for the celebra- tion of the coronation. The Germans have published a' declaration to the effect that they are determived to dispel any unfaworable impression which might have been created among their British fellow-citizens by the "exaggerstion of the misguided and misinformed press of Germany," and also acknowledging British sovereign- ty, which '"'means personal freedom for ev yt WATER CURE FOR LABORERS. Were Rounded Up And Dumped Into River. Studenville, 0., June 23.--~The eciti- zens of Mingo Junction usea: the Phil- ippine * water cure " Friday, to rid the town of about fifty Wabash rail- road laborers, who came here on pay day aml spent their money. Since ave heen terrorizing house- wives and many citizens have been held up and robbed by them. Citic zens rounded them up in squads and rushed them to the river. They pushed them in and held them under water until they promised to leave, Several, including one negro, nearly lost their lives in the * water cure." WILL RESELL HORSES Which Had Been Purchased For South Africa. Montreal, Juné' 3. --Majsr Dent, the British army vemount officer, who spent some time in this country during the South African war is here on his return to England, the pur chase of horses having been stopped by the war office and the remount staff recalled. In fact there are 1,662 horses which bave been purchased and which will not be peeded, and it is the intention to sell them at the most convenient places such as Toronto, Montreal and St, John, N.B THE KING IN LONDON. He Was Given a Warm Reception ---- -- re-- His wisn OF THE WORLD. TELEGRAMS FROM THE FOUR QUARTERS OF THE EARTH. Matters That Interest kverybody ~Notes From All Over--Little of Everything Easily Read And Remembered by the Dear Public. < A score of people were injured in a trolley car accident at Philadelphia. The B. & W. railway has leased the Delta park on Beverley Lake as a picnic ground. Colombian gunboats have captured the town of Agua Dulce. The revolu- tionists fled. J. Walter Rowdin, Trenton, N.Y. a groom of a few days, is missing. The bride is heartbroken. Anarchists in Paterson, N.J., plot to | kill the proprietors of the mills now closed by the strike there. A Dawson, Y.T., despatch says a big rate war is on among steamship com- panies in the Alaskan trade. { In New York om Saturday the Hon treal Shamrocks defeated the Ores- cents, champions of the United States, by fifteen to seven. Dawson is going to organize a civie police force, and the mounted police ave been requested to withdraw at the end of the present month. A blaze in Portland, Ore, burned for four hours on Saturday night, destroyed six blocks and did $600,000 damage. Insurance, about $200,000. John Herons was found dead on the prairie five miles from Virden, Man. He was subject to fits and it is sup sed he died during an attack. He Po a wile and family who are in England. H. Joyce, Toronto, a railway fire man, was found dead on the C.P.R, track near Tyndall, Man., on Sundav. He was travelling on a pass to Medi- cine Hat amd it is believed he fell off the train. Standing timber to the amount, of 550.000 000 feet has been burned in the districts along the line of «the Northern Pacifie railroad, Washington state, U.S.A. The loss is estimated at $1,100,000. A fifteen-months-old daughter of Wiliam Kirk, York street, Hamilton, Ont., while playing alone in the yard on Sunday, in some way got the rope offi a swing around her neck and was strangled to death. J. 8S. Breadner, aged twenty-three, a carpenter, employed on the construc tion of an elevator at Balmoral, Man., was killed by falling forty-six feet from the top of the building to the floor of a grain bin. A passenger train on the Sioux City branch of the Chicago, St. Paul, Min neapolis & Omaba railroad jumped the track neat Ashton, Iowa, because of a misplaced switch. Two trainmen were killed and five others severely in- jared. Dr. George H. Croft, who disappear- ed from Newark, N.Y., on April 19th, has been located in a hospital at San Francisco, Cal., suffering from an at- tack of typhoid fever. He does not know how he reached the coast nor what happened after he left home. Attornev-general Eberts, Victoria, D.C., is leaving for England, in re- sponse to a telegram which he has re- ceived from Christopher Robinson, X. C., who is in London representing British Columbia in the famous Tomy Homa case before the privy council, which involves whether naturalized Mongolians have the same rights to the franchise as other British = sub- jects. AND NO ONE HURT. The Collapse of an Hotel in Dal- las, Texas. Dallas, Tex., June 28.--At 2:05 o'clock this morning the centre sec. tion of the St. James hotel, a three storey building, collapsed without warning and thirteen men were carri ed down with the debris without a single fatality, Three men who were on the third floor are thought to be the most seriously injured. Are To Be Pardoned. John Reginald Heoper, John Bap- tite, Narbonne; David Prevost, Thomas Renton, and Michael Ken: nedy, will be release from the peni- tentinry. They ave either long term or life prisoners, Hooper and Narhonne are the only prisoners in the Kingston penitentiary. Hooper is an Ottawa man, sentenced to twenty-five years' imprisonment for attempting to drown his wife. Pre vious to that he was tried for poison: ing Mrs. Hooper, but was aoquitted. He has spt fourteen years in the penitentiary. At the time of the trial Hooper's case aroused keen public in- terest. Since his conviction he hax written many letters to the press and to his friends in the hope of arousing public sympathy. Narbonne was ¢on victed in 1381 of murdering a hrother The erime was committed at the in stigation of his parents; beth of whom subsequently died in the penitentiary in view of eatenualing circunistames Narbonne's sentence was commuted to imprisonment for life, Narbonne has served twenty-one years; not counting Yemissions, and is now forty-six years of age. His conduct during incarcers: tion has been extremely good. Race For Cycling Championship. Berlin, June 23.--In the race for the cycling championship of the world 100 ki , to-day, Robert, of Mun: ich, won; time 1 hour 2% minutes, 18 seconde. © Bovhoure, of Paris, was second and Taylor, of Paris, third. Tom Linton, the English bievelist, lost touch with his pace maker several | times wid withdrew. Avenged By His Son. El Paso, Texas, June 3 Indians on the Mescairo reservation murdered Thomes Page, a rancher. Hin twelve year-old son concealed himsell among the rocks and off the Indians with u rifle until he shot vix He'then surrendered to the reservation autho 8 EDUCING housekeeping expenses Is not difficult. Always remember that three out of four persons care fittle about breakfast so long as they have 'good coffee. That makes the meal. 'Chase & Sanborn's high grade coffee is the cheap- est to use because it takes so much less for the required strength. It is grown on the richest plantations. They take every pound produced. You can reduce your coffes i ¢ ANNOUNCEMENT To-morrow Night. We have just recciyed an answer ac- cepting an offer we made for a large lot of SEASONABLE GOODS and as they are a decided bargain at the prices we will offer then. Read Our Advertisement To-Morrow Night, J. LAIDLAW & SON. : Jo PAPAS ALN PPI Grand Truk Announcement Holiday Season. Make your plans now. Arrange your trips carly, The train service this season on the railroads will sur- pass anything hitherto known in this country. All TRUNKS AND VALISES purchased at the LOCKETT SHOE STORE, Kingston, will be car. ried free if checked on cither fitst or second class tickets. BY ORDER OF THE LOCKETT SHOE STORE

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