Daily British Whig (1850), 11 Aug 1902, p. 4

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THE DAILY WHIG, MONDAY. AUGUST 11 =~ Automatic Door Clasp FOR SCREEN DOORS, , STORM DOORS, ETC. . Try one on your Screen Door. Price - Only 25c. Corbett's Hardware. ABSOLUTE ~~ SECURITY. Genulne Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signavure of Sea Tred See Fac-Simlle Wrapper Below, Yory small end as casy 10 take as sugar. CARTERS FOR HEADACHE. - KR ITTLE FOR DIZZINESS. FOR BILIGUSKESS. FOR TORPID LIVER FOR CONSTIPATION. FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR THE COMPLEXION ~ CURE SICK HEADACHE. ™ The Toronto . General Trusts Corporation Office And Safe Deposit. Vaults 99 YONGE STREET, TORONTO $1,000,000 80,200. Capital, Reserve Fund Prosident : HOSKIN, Q.C., Vice- Presidents : C. WOOD, W. H. BEATTY, Ea. W. LANGMUIR, Managing Director. D. LANGMUIR, Assistant Manager. JAMES DAVEY, Sécretary. Authorized to act: as WExecutor, Ad- ministrator, Trustee, Receiver, Commit- tee of Lunatic, Guardian Liquidator, Assiznee, Ete. Deporit sales to rent. All gives and at reasonable prices. Parcels received for sale custody, Bonds. and other valuables Guaranteed amd Insured against loss. Solicitors bringing Estates, Administra- tions, etc, to the Corporation are continued in the professional. onre of the sama. For further information sce the Corpora tion's Manual. THE HEIGHT ~ OF ELEGANCE attained in JOHN LL.D. HON. S. J. 7" A. the We! | comfort is Not! Fnshion = and tailor made suit ne equals it can prexduce a utiiul than vou pav for best, ready-made, but there. is a worhl of difference in the wear amd ! sivle. JNO. R. JOHNSTON, TAILOR ee JUST RECEIVED. A fine lot of nice sound, hard Maple, cut last winter. ® Good long lengths. £S. ANGLIN & CO, BINDER .y ~~ I WINE Sisal, 500 feet to the pound, 11c., sold elsewhere for 121. Manilla, 600 feet, 12 elsewhere for 15c. Qtrachan' S nN ROOM: WELL FURNISHED ROOMS "TO Mra. Yates, o# William street § desis NUIBOSEWIGUS sold le 3CY H ardware LET AT suit for little mors with board } THE WHIG -- 68TH YEAR. DAILY BRITISH WHIG, sach evening, at 306-310 King Stree $6 year. Editions at 2:30 and oc 4 . WEEKLY BRITISH WHIG, 12 published every Thureday morning 'at Lo 4 pages, $1 eo Jffices in Canada; rapid. stylish and work; nine improved presses EDW.. J. B. PENSE. PROPRIETOR. I'HE DAILY WHIG. Opifer per Orbem Dicor.'{ SOMETHING TO LEARN. The Garnault experience in Paris, in- inoculation voluntarily undergoing with the virus of a cow suffering from tuberculosis, recalls what has been es- sayed and done to escape this conta- mination. Medical science as- ceitedd that consumption was an in- fectious direase and that it can be spread through the milkeand meat of diseased cattle. It was contended, fur some vears ago ther, that everv milch cows that could the should he destroyed. the experimental farm were killed. Se- veral animals comprising the herd of the asylum here were slaughtered. A fair commencement seemed to . have been the cleck upon con- sumption and its ravages. But the dairvmen in Toronto elsewhere. went into caucus and séem- ed to conclude that 'the best part the dairy cattle in the country would have to be, killed if the tuberculin test re to be generally applied, and cas- not stand tuberculin test Some of the cattle at made in. and ol W es _dispaired of according to the reac: tion which followed. The agricultural departments suspended the operations of the act, and that suspension con- tinues. Sooner or later thé tuberculin' test be applied. better will With cows not the flesh of sound beasts, and the iso jation which all medical men recom- mend, the rate of mortality from con- more particularly milk--milk diseased--and drawn from better meat sumption. will be very much reduced. It is called the great white plague. and yet it is not combated as it can and should be. { Consumption is in the blood of some families. The taint of it can be trac ol from gengration to generation. But it invades homes and circles which have been free of it for ages, and the inference is plain that it has been con- tracted. But how ? Sometimes by con: with "consumptives, but often- times through the use of diseased food. This last thought is being em- phasized by Dr. Garnault, the volun- tact tary martyr to the science of his pro- fession, LESSONS FROM THE WAR. Gens. Wess Cronje, and Steyn, who were among the eyrly captives in the South African war, and exiles for a year and a half, are now en route to their old home. At New York they were shown some attention, and Mr. Steyn (who was an attache of the pre- sident's -stafi) furnishedéCollier's Week- Jv with his idea of , what 'reconstruc- tion in the Transvaal implied. "Pict, as he is familiarly called, first dwelt upon the requirements of his" country. The land there in all its richness and fertility, but the 1 was houses and barns were gone, and would take milliops of feet of timber and lumber to replace them. The live stock was gone, through the exigen Hrs of a severe and-long-continued-wai To replace it, as it was when the war broke out, would involve the expendi ture of $150,000,000. It reported that 10,000 head of cattle had But "there ten thousand farms, varying in from five hundred to live thousand acres, and a cow apiece, was an in was beer sent into the vaal! Were Biz significant offering. Where are the cattle coming from ? Principally, said Mr. Steyn, from Aus- "wralia and New Zealand, and they will be selected by a deputation of eight Joers, especially with a view to their fitness for the work and cofditions of "The United States and Mr. Steyn, thou the country. however," says Canada, "will have a chance to supply as it' ix the opinion to sands of hotses, of. certain Boer officers who had fight the Canadian regiments that hor from these parts are best fitted for work in South Africa." This testi mony is not without its vahie; and it when the supply ¢ British for will be remembered oflicers are spending good money in the South Africa. Mr. Steyn says seasQn purchase of stock fit |feason, is the soil after that "for cropping without' fertilizing, but the Boers must agricultural implements, food stuffs, pending the : and harvesting of the crops. The plant I! from me have seed, eo io and raising and the food-stuffs are 'expecte The shillec great wage the United States. chanic can get a any- where, byt the Katlits furnish all the necessary cheap labour which will be wanted on the farm. The point of importancé is the ex «peopl to profit, indiisterally and financially, Sonth Af all Kinds of and rolling pectation of the United Sta by. the vreconstruction in rica, bread In wop and steel, in stufis. in bridging machinery, in oils, spirits, tobacco, 1t Unele hoped, tha Sam" oF t t A 1} stock, of uv he invest to the extent Dus Why th will do should British money United ment in what the mother country, lions sent States for and the colonies mav beable fargedy, 7 if The ta Ke active, year. . Attached is ome of the best Job Printimy Fo chesp intense, ~ aggressive agent of Uncle Sam may find a 'great friend in 'the conquered republic for the exploita- tion of his schemes, but he should be' given to understand that the nation : ives the treasures is able to which pro rive at least, the manufactured ducts' which the new subjects of his majesty the king demand. The United States government has been showing what it can do in the Philippines whose manilla is made sub- ject to American tariff, and for the benefit of United States turers; Britain has the opportunity of namely that manufac- teaching another lesson, in her dominions she spends her money among her own people, and prefer their products-when they, directly and indirectly, pay the cost of them. mii, EDITORIAL NOTES! no word of any old girls' and parades. Are there Not in Kingston. Next ! There is associations no old gir The the South . Afiican heroes, to to work, males the Montreal Gazette moralize a hit. The glories of the military hero ave sowe- what short-lived. : to wet advice the metiic system of weights and measures It or The College of Pharmacy wants studied in "the public schools. wants the federal government to der its use generally in trade and com' merce. The change is coming. e---- , Piet Cronje, in calculating upon the ebuilding of barns and farm houses in South Africa, overlooks the timber six thousand block- houses which Kitchener built." These will be available in the reconstruction ind lumber in {'rocgss. Ci The Spectator thinks Hon. Geo. Fos- ter would have as worthily as Sir Wilfrid Lauriey in of without a seat represented Canada England. Yes ? Foster's the ideal the party, then--and in parliament. He's getting rough en- ough usage. The blockhouses in South Africa have been sold to Lord Milner for $10 cach. They cost probably $400 apicce. There are six thousand of 'them, that what - cost $2,100,000 $210,000. idea of the fortunes of war. SO goes for In this way one 'gets some Austen Chamberlain is an able man, and a credit to his family, but it to say that but for his father and the Chamberlain influence, he would not be postmaster-general in is safe jaliour's government. It is in evid- ence that the Hon. has not been turned down. "Joe" Tracy, who murdered several per- sons ' in his. escape from the Oregon penitentiary, who slew several who his wounded and He 'did not value Iie without liberty. Ii the idea were properly appreciated there would be few men in prison. ---- The Weekly' Sun does#*not believe in subsidized fast Atlantic steamship Does it believe in fast steamers? arrest, suicided when ssayed about to be captured. 0 line. Ihey mean money to the exporter of perishable goods. Does it believe in the farmer, Truitdfer, and dairyman? Ii so it must change its a without the subsiay Canada cannot have the ocean greyhounds, In Pennsylvania the dairymen or farmer whose cattle are slaughtered by the state, because _they stand the tuberculin test, is compen- sated to the extent of two-thirds their a cannot value. Hence he does not' resist law whose aim is to rid the country of diseased stock. A pointer: to Can- ada worth remembering. RACINESS OF THE PRESS. Get 'A Wife, Then. Thomas Times. Anything that keeps young people from marrying is bad for business, if not for morals. St And Just For Two. Fvromto Star. What is wanted a resort at once cheap and salubrious. For in- stance, 'a hammock in the back yard. is summer - -- wv 2 Locating The Cloud. London Advertiser, The general election which" the 'con- servative party has been trying to locate for some time is now hovering over Manitoba. What He Is Missing. Brantford Expositor. J. P. Whitney got one month in jail for every time he libelled some' one, he would find himéelf putting in a term: of Life imprisonment. Simply Rushing Things. Hamilton Herald Miss Amy Wilson, of Copetown, has been masquerading as a man. Amy might have waited until after she was married before vielding to her ambition to wear the breeches. . That's What It Was. Montreal Star. Now the Czar and Kaiser are meet at Reyel. There something t' the nanre of the gathering place estive of a oxasswidpwers' re union when their ing Is abo wives are having vacation. a | SORONATION DAY PICNIC, A LARGE CROWD AT LAKE ONTARIO PARK. Military Tournament Unfortu- nately Cancelled--The Athletic Events--THose Who Were In Charge. The Coronation day picnic, conduct- .:d by the congregation of the Church »f the Good Thief, Portsmouth, on Saturday, was favored by weather and crowds," over 1,000 people being on Lake Ontario Park grounds in the ai- ternoon. Rev. Father McDonald, the esteemed and popular parish priest, had arranged an admirable programme consisting of a military tournament and other athletic events. Most un- fortunately, on the night previous, came a letter from Capt. Du Plessis, acting afticer in command of the R.C. F.A., stating 'that the militia de- partment would not permit the bat: terymen to participate at the picanic, owing to the chance of accident, and the injury of men and horses. Anoth- er reason was the fact that too fre- quent requests would be received for the batterymen's services, and if the tournament were allowed in this case, a precelent would be established. The crowd was disappointed, - but the church officials were not to blame. and no one regretted the matter more than they. Besides the baseball matches (noted in the sporting column) there were a number of races and other athletic events, the results of which were: ~ Girls race, 16 years and under--R. Kennedy, F. Gravell, B. McGeein. Girls, 13 years and under--M. Ken nedy, R. Burke, 1. Stonese. : Girls, 10 years and under--M. Bea pre, C. Beaupre, A. Smith. Girls, 6 years and under--J. Nicholson, R. Macdonald. Girls, little tots--E. Gravel, Beaupre, L. Wilson. Boys; 15 years and vell, C. McDonald, .J. McDonald. Boys, 10° years and under--B, Geein, M. Kennedy, L. Malen. Boys, 6 years and under--V. Nichol son, R. McDonald, J. McGee. It was too, late "to hold-the tug-of- war, jumping ani other sports. The 47th Regimental band furnished martial music during the afternoon. In the evening dancing took place in the pavilion. The committee in charge of the pic- nic consisted of M. J. Kennedy, P. MM. Beaupre, John Kennedy, 1. McGuire, R. McDonald and J. A. Mathewson. The various tables were presided over by a large number of the church ladies. Tho% 'directly in charge were : Supper table, Mrs. J. B. Mathewson: ice cream booths, Mrs. D. O'Leary and Mrs. John Hughes; candy table, Mrs. Robert Corby. v u- Gravell, E. under--C. Gra- Mec- Coronation «Of King Edward VII. (At London, Eng., Aug. 9th, 1902) "The Queen oi Sheba 'came to Jerusalem with a very great train."'--I Kings, chap. x, ver. 2. "What have they seen in thine house ¥"'-- Kings, chap. xx, ver. 15. "Crown Ilim'! crown Him! Lord of All!" crown llim ------ "GOD SAVE THE KING Hush ! bend the knee and lift the eve to Him who sits on leaven's high throne, And with a Nation's prayerful sigh, crown lim who reigns o'er all alone: "1 even 1 am He"--O hear! "1 pm that I * am" He saith again-- Exalt my mame, and" draw ve near! to crown me Lord ol Earth's Domain. Father of all! our homage. see, bowed souls beseech "God Save the Kin-" With humble heart we come tos Thee, trusting, one petition brine For sake of mother loved and lost--for sake of him, his wide realm's pride, Grant him restoring, peaceful rest, life prolonged to Eventide. anid and skilled Physicians crown Thy. power, as they Thy Blessing, kneeling crave-- with a thousand - tongues implore "King of Kings" this life to save: 1 will heal thee i Lord-- Hark to the whisper low and soft fnils--His promised -Wonl--vyet 80 soon--so oft. The And the 'And It hover we forget wav' '--the "to Prove." erown a mvsterions "Hall untold" trains came Crown him ve "lands beyond the sea! him anew with Faith and Love: Could e'er a Pageant grander seem ? Edward wish a worthier sirht ? Phan this of which he did pot drenm--l ' signed by" God for "purpose bright." "At his feet adoring fall, and crown him! crown him! crown him Lord of Al --Jarvis Flora Maclean, (Mrs. "God moves © irr Could a Browett.) A Lad Seriously Ill Conway Edward Dobbs, the young son of Kev. GE. Dobbs, of Mon- treal, has been seriously ill for ten days. On Wednesday last ~ he was operated upon for. appendicitis at the Western hospital, "by Doctors Hing- ston (Sir Wiiliam) Springle and Bur- rows, assisted by three other sur- geons. The critical stage 1s not at this writing vet passed, and sympathy with the invalid and his devoted moth- er is freely offered... Rev. Mr. Dobbs is unaware of the illness, being on a vacation tonr-in-Manitoba. As Ring- stonians the parents - will have the vety "best: wishes of many here for a happy recovery. To-night's Band Concert. This evening, at eight o'clock, the 14th P.W.0. Rifles band will give a concert in Macdonald Park, in honor of the coronation of their malesties, King. Fdward and Queen Alexaydra. There will also' be an aquatic carnival {oi 'the water front, and a display of | fireworks, 'ihe musical programme witl Consist of national and patriotic airs of the empire, Coronation march, the Boer national hymn, od Bless the Prince of Wales," "The * Maple leaf," "For King and Empire," an "God Save the King." -- = Is It Success ? ad B+ Susie M. Best. Is it success to climb to emincnee DIED IN THE KLONDYKE. Sudden Passing Away of Andrew Clark... John Clark, Glenval:, writes letter to the Whig den death of his Klondyke : rleas: give space for the following sad and startling news from the Klon- dyke, sad because my brother, An- drew, died ina .lonely. cabin, on the banks of the Indian river in that far ofi 1eziof; startling because, while one letter its way through with good news and saving all was well, the other followed in hot pursuit headed with those dreadful words: "Andrew is dead." The account is brief, in a short letter written by son Edwin, and reading in part as follows : "Andrew and I wint up river. When we got ready to come home Mr. Rombol started with | us a short distance to his cabin. On 'near- ing the place, Andrew stopped pad- dling, but said nothing until Mr. Rombol got out: Then 1 asked him what. was wrong. He replied 1 don't know." 1 saw that Something, was wrong, and sprang and caught him, calling for Mr. Rombol to help me. We carried lam into the cabin about seven o'clock. He never spoke again, and died at hali-past one o'clock. The Mounted Police took his remains to Dawson. had an examination held, aud found death caused by apoplexy. This 'was 'on July 15th. The remains will be laid in Dawson cemetery." "1 have stood by the bedside of a dying mother, oneewho taught my infant lips to lisp thei Maker's praisc. I saw when her fond lips ceased to quiver and her eyelids closed forever. I also have stood by an open grave and heard those solemn words, 'dust unto dust," prondunced over the re- mains of him who taught me the words of the wise :- 'My son hear the instruction oft thy father and forsake not the law of thy mother, for they shall an ornament of grace unto this gz thé sud- > hrowas in the Indian be .thy head and" chains about thy neck.' I too have beheld two brothers laid in 'the cold grave, brothers with whom I have sported in my boyhood days on water and on land, also four sisters. have gone. to that place irom which none can ere return; but to me it- scems saddest -of all to have my brother laia in that far off city of the north, there to remain until that fast great day when all that are in their graves shall hear the voice of the Son of God and they that hear shall live, Those latter words we can assuredly add 'in his behali--they that hear shall live." : , A Ghastly Story. Prescott Messenger, A unique and creepy story comes from South Augusta which, it true, only goes to show that many people arc buried alive. A man named Han- tinson died a week or so ago at the home of his niece. The man, whé was not more than fifty, died some- what suddenly and was laid out in the usual way. A barber was called in and proceeded to shave the corpse. He was going over the curves of the chin and was intent on his work that he did not look at the upper part of the fice. When he had finished he glanced up and to his sorrow saw the dead". man glaring at him with bright eves. With a shriek of - terror he kneeled over on the floored in a dead faint. When he came to the "corpse" was kneeling beside him ad- ministering whiskev in generous doses to bring him "round." It was only another case of suspended animation and the whole affair was hushed up. SO BEntertained Little Friends, Saturday afternoon little Miss Isabel Hughes "entertained about Awenty-five of her youthiul iriends at the home of her parents, corner of Earl strect and University Avenue," the occasion beings the "anniversary of her birth: She was the recipient of many pretty vifts from her little friends. A vlea cant time was spent by all present, eames and amusements being prov ided for their entertainment. At Orangeville, Ont., Dr. Dalton Me Carthy, son of Judge McCarthy, was arraizned on thé charge of assaulting Mis. Mungovan, wife of the editor of the Post. He was sent up for ~trial. Mrs. Mungovan has commenced a civil action against McCarthy for 25,000 damages. On ~ Saturday Samuel Conley stroyed three, Stray canines which had captured on the stieets, James Joseph Tissot, the artist lustrator of "The Life of Christ," de- he il- js dead. ACTS GENTLY 5 LIVER KIDNE' BOWELS THE SYSTg CLEANSE pre crun Upqn the ruins of amother"s hopes, To gam the opping height at the Of one condemned to slabe slopes = expense on lower Is it success? wealth's pursuit richt and self-respect, 11 become our labor's fruit, How many wuoble princip are wrecked-- Is 1t suc Ix it succese "before the world to bear A Great Object Lesson. Toronto Mail After dining with lord Kitchener Lucas Mever is not deemed fits to «it down at the table with Mr. Kru cer... The viscount i= a statesman hould invite the other Boer generals h hin hen to dine wit Bathing is very. populir at the: is land sUrts. notenturely pros 4 N =~ from spots, r blots -- that is seen ire ig in the hosom Ww ret A baeiner And simuitan A heart. mask hedeous by Is it suceess sessions of both: houses of Autinmn Hel the British parlianient will be held to the education administrative the debate on ler chief of which is regard the to con continue ith and | | measures, the covernment s {| the Atlanti position in shipping interests. RS: | isPE-> 05 CHES " cok HEPA CVE _OVERCOMES Paarrun, Co i PERMANENTLY. <0 S&» BENE, EFFECT : @UY THE GENUINE --MANFD BY - (AURRNAJIG§YRVP © Sy, . vo, 9 * " v [7 i ot 3 I Vv » RICTURE iwi hey Listen y A TACHI YO 10S rer Ane Sue I tive i In A ime. In V Co e ph TAY tion, equalizes circulation, stops Ph eh iO Ta ere EiY ng the organs their rover nutrition, vi' alizes the partsand re- big lure le alsin the hike tissue, St ps smarting sensation, aervousness, ete., Rn all prostatio troubles It i . So positive am I that my treatment will cure oe he ar PAY WHEN CURED You need pay nothing until Jos are convinced that a thorough and plete cure has Treatment, otherwise I could ase Jou tat 1 heve conliene sn m7 Latent Method bas failed 10 cure you, call or write me. you Proposition. Ii ma kes no difference who Each Time You Call You Ses Me Personally, * Or each time you write is receives s my personal attention. The r. Soratijshed En. Dacron, and the cures I accomplished after Ts in grep oat 1 ae Paced In rid] oremost specialist of the country. CONSULTA TION, FREE. Call : lors ook Tor Sank for homs & tment, isnt aisle of howe treatment for hose . BOO edicines tor Cai from Windsor, Can. All duty and express charges prepaid. Sain paicuts rpee DR.OGOLDBERG, 20° WOODWARD AVE, COR. w'LCOX ST. e ment var excellence. been established. This shoul DETROIT, WICH. BLACK. BEAUTIES ~~ ow BLACK SUITS A BLACK occasions. of Black and Prince When you keep company with a girl, vou wedding, or a relative's funeral. SUIT is a necessity all thess We are showing an elegant Hue { Beautive in Cutawaye, Sacks Alberta. Black suits ae as $8.30, as $20, or at lots ol priccs between. have to take her out now and then, or even on if you have married the girl and sctiled down to face the stern realities of life, 'you are expected to take her once in a while to a party or a praver meeting, or to a woman's suffrage gathering, to the theatre low Ligh a or us to v THE H. D. BIBBY CO., ONE PRICE CLOTHING HOUSE, OAK HALL. era EE = ~ AUGUST SALE Furniture ~~ Carpets Curtains. Many of our customers are buving for f | i | the are We future. We store the goods until readv for-them. -- You get the reduction. vou get the cash. cover, large Thik chair, spring scar, good For August, aud easy; usual "pre, 85. while they last, 83 CARPETS Clearing out full lines of Ax- i minsters, Wiltons, Brussils, at cost. Our =~ *. BE. Tavior is in England buving our fall We wish to clear bedore new me to hend (xikl pairs of Lace use] am samples, at Solid Oak Bid Suites "I. Our August price, $19. , 'usual price Curtains, also sone leas "than eost £13, £11, that 9 Hardwood Suite, worth this Our are offering value T. F. HARRISON CO. month for great Japuncse Mattings, 10c. up. Chinese and "Phone go and 91. omen's Rainproof Coats . WOMEN'S RAIN OR DUST PROOF COATS made of a fing Scotch Cravenette Cloth are at present in great demand. Some are long like an_ulster and intended to entirely cover the dress, others arc ina three-quarter coat length and much wok in the luge centres of fashion. Any color or size not in stock will be made to orderon short notice. . 'Cravenette Cloth in Oxford, Brown, Green, Black $1 h and Navy by the yard at.......ooconnnnn 1 : Umbrellas for rain or sun, large varie- A 00 I UC. 10 2 ' If you want to keep dry at a moderate cast -% BROS. TTT call on ¥ 2 CRUMLEY NSTIPATION | A Pleasant Outing. n on th Abeth;, of exer teadner ' Representatives To Grand Lodge. The Kil wr tives 1 Th ri Saturfiay Knit ' t yt} o Ant) tlie £1 i Vix 0 ' the 1 nit | 2 |

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