Daily British Whig (1850), 12 Aug 1902, p. 5

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A WONDERFUL MEDICINE ECHAWS | For Bilious and Nervous Disorders, such as Wind and Pain in the Stomach, Sick I{ead- ache, Giddiness, Fuluess fer Swelling after 1ueals, Dizziness and Drowsiness. Cold Chill Flushings of Heat, Loss of Ar pess of lireath, Costiveness, Skin. Disturbed re Enda all Nervous and IY Mp invi Fat 2 hi one En Ey verse Pills, an be nelke Bowledged 10 bo WiTRIUT A REVAL, BEECHAM'S PILLS taken as ted, will quickly restore Fem Lealth. They prompt!y r tion or irregularity of the sys Weak 8tomach, Impaired Digestion, Disordered Liver, theyact like magic-- -q fore doses will work wonders upcn the Vital Org Ss ing the musculzsr S stem, rest * lost Complexion, bi ringis edge of appetite, and ane with th Rosebud of Health the w hoic pt sical ¢nergy of the human fram are "'facts" admitted by thousan! classes of society, aud one of the bes & antees to the Nervous and Debilitats s tha: BEECHAM'S PILLS have the Largest Sale of any Patent Mzadicines in the World, Beecham's Pills have becn before the ublic for rie century, and are the most popular family medicine, No A ho arc blisk Beecham's Pilis Published 18 RECOMMEND THEMSELVES. Prepared only by Thomas Beecham, St. Helens, England, Sold everywhere in Canada and U America. Ia boxes, 23 cents. We can only by illustra- | tion and a 'word or two of description in our catalogue, «let out-of-town buyers know about our magnificent selec- tion of rings. All thegemsarerepresented, All the good styles shown. '"Ryrie" Rings anpeal to those who admire ring beauty, and the large num- ber we sell enables us to carry a stock that allows a splendid choice. TALOSUE SEXT UPON APPLICATION. *'DIAMOND HALL." Ryrie Bros., Yonge and Adelaide Sts., "TORONTO. 'Has stood the test for nearly sixty years as a cure for * Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Cramps. Colic, Cholera, Cholera Morbus, Cholera Infantum, Pains in the Stomach, Sea. Sickness, and all forms of Summer Complaint. Don't experiment with new ands untried remedies, but procure that wi stood 'the test of time, We have yet to receive a complaint a: to its eflicacy. Refuse Substitutes. They're Dangerous h has THATS RIGHT 7, MY BOY, DONT LEATHER OR! ENAMEL SHO 5S IT keeps THEM SOFT ANP PREVENTS THEIR CRACKING THE COSMOPOLITAN CHAR- ACTER OF THE VISITORS TO THE MAGI CALEDONIA SPRINGS DEMONSTRATES THE WIDE-SPREAD REPU- TATION OF THESE GREAT CURATIVE BATHS AND WATERS. « ntl that v no use to teq box and sént g card to the Rag and Metal company, 330 Princess street, and 1 received 81.50 King gooa pocket money that came in very handy t Wade' s arug stére. and besides I was rid of , lot of what' } duped rubbish, a : L TIE PEOPLE ARE DIVIDED { Minister Sentenced To Life Im- Prisonment--It Was Alleged That He Killed His Wife. Indiavapolis, Ind., Aug. --Rev. i Wiliam E. Hinshaw is now une ting a life sentence = in the Mich City prison for the murder of his wife. Mrs. Thurza Hinshaw. He was a min |ister in high standing in the Metko- dist church and located in Belleville, Hendricks county, Ind. About mdd- night of January 10th, 1895, his wife was murdered. A few moments later the town was aroused. by cries of "Murder!" and a fusilade of pistol shots. Within a few moments witness- es gathered at the scene of the trage- dy. The preacher was. the only one noted exeept. his dving wife. He stat- ed that he had been shot, cut and wounded by two or more burglars and that his wife. had been murdered. The prosecution claimed that not a bure- lar was to be found anywhere near the premises. Being asked for a more detailed statement, he described quite a lengthy and terrific struggle that he had had with the marauders. He said he was first awakened by sounds of pistol shots and expressions of fright dud terror from his wife. She, ex- claimed : "Oh, Will! T am shot !" He saw two men--one heavy set, with 'a cap; the other tall and slim. He jnmped out of bed and as he did so he felt a strange and burning pain in his"side; that he immediately crappl- od "with one of the men and strugoled through the rooms with him: that" his wife got out of bed and grappled with the other: that at one time during the struggle in the house his wife put her hand upen him and said: "Will, is this vou?" that he threw oft her hand, as he was engaged, as he thought, in a life struggle with the burglar:¥that hey fought through the rooms, down the stairway out the doors and sc- ross the street. As they struggled ac- ross the street. the thoughtyeam® to him that if he could: get his antago- nist across the street to & fence that was opposite his property he might break his back by forcing him across the fence. At this point he was second time and fell When he revived in the c@hl viv he began erving for help'until he once more to the ground. Dur- the strugele he was cut several bv the burglar with a razor. wile in the meantime had stragel- with the other burglar down the and out to the front porch, disposed of her by shot for the unconscious. January sank ing tin I'he d ~tairway where he foally hooting her to death. The theory of thé prosecution was that Hinshaw, having' become enam ored with another woman * of his hurch. deliberately planned Vis wife's murder, ands then on the night of Jan. ith 1 out his plan, shot her as his bel and with her dead cut him- having she slept in body beside him shot himself, self with a knife or razor, and. arried her dead body down the <taigeway, threw it out upon the norch. where it was found afterward. " During the trial there was a notahle conflict. of testimony on several points, As to the two known in the tragedy, it was¢shown hy number of witnesses and conceded nrose- ution that up to the time Hinshaw"s reputation He was quict and orde: nest successiul in "his minister of the spel. whith no ap- actors a hy of the tra- excel- ear- i work as a a was lent. ly. and BROUGHT SUCCESS. Trifles Which Meant Fortunes To Lucky Inventors. Tht accidental bending of a spring in a Beil telephone, which pre- vented the proper working of the deli- [ cute machine, gave Mr. Bell the Eng- lish patents to his invention, When Mr. Bell patented his inven- tion in the United ates, -Lord Kel vin was there. He happened to see one of Mr. Bell's machines, and was <0 struck with it that he took one to England to introduce' to his classes. When the instrument was produced it absolutely failed to work, and de- spite . his master mind Lord Kelvin had to apologize to his classes for his inability to demonstrate with it. Now the whole failure was entirely due to the fact that a small spring in the instrument had got" bent during the journey from America to Scot- land. - Had Lord Kelvin perceived this and | rectified it the instrument would have worked excellently, and the demon- stration would have prevented Mr. Bell patenting the igstryment in Great Britain. Some twelve years ago, when Rich- ard Laverson was a low-grade worker in a Pittsburg engineering shed, he hit upon a novelty in the shape of brooch pins. 3 Ha finished "a few by hand, and they seemed so much superior" to the usual form of brooch pin that he concluded to make a machine to manufacture them. On this task he spént weeks, and finally one day, in a fit of rage, he threw a hammer at the machine and left it in disgust. He did not look again for many weeks, did he found it "worked. Though refused~to turn out hrooch pins, turned out splendid. little safety of a unique pattern. 'These pi since cold in millions all United States, making Laverson rich man. . CROPS PROMISING. machine he it it | pins | have the | a | at the but when | What a Philipsville Writer Has to Say. Philipsville, Aug. 11. has been a boom to the farmers. have finished haying, but many have more or hay to cut house yet, more stacking, for barns are full and many stacks have tisen on most every farm. It the eapression of everyone that they never saw such heavy crops of all kinds as are seen this year. There are large fields of oats that will measure from five and one-half to six' and one-half fect hig bh Many heave fields of spring wheat are to be seen. All small grains will be more than an average crop all through these townships. Corn is the only crop that has not done much, but during the past two has been anaking great strides. Many plots of potatoes have been struck with a blight. In other places they are as green as they were in" June. Visitors : Mrs. W, Perry and daugh- ters, of Napanee, are nding a few weeks at her old hone, herg, the gyest® i Mrs. H. Brown: Mis. H. Brown and Mrs. Taylor, Carleton Place, are the vuest of Mr. and Murs. Brown: itiends from Ottawa are visiting 'at J. Downey's; Mrs. H, C. Davison, Miss Edith and Ma ter] Glen are spetding a few weeks with Mrs. Dow- nev's parents. Chester Lockwood having a milk house erected. Stevans, wife and daughter, N.Y., are the guests of Rev. J. : Dunham and sisters. Miss Nellie Rob- or visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. Brown. The committee of the M. E. church have heen renovating their edifice. The interim greatly "The past week Many more and the loss like is weeks SH fie James Fulton, > {son is arent' cause for despondency or lack of in his chosen vocation: His was as devoted to church | work as himself and Was characteriz: ed as a help-meet in very truth. 'i he-ve- lations the two were affectionate bevond the average. THiz was' testified to-bv his family. by her family and all who were most closely associa- them-and who knew them ambition wife of by ated--with best. : The only thought cht have caused tween them was the alle of Hinshaw to 'g- Miss » evidence was but it The people of Hend to this day much as to Hinshaw's Manv think him a small army friends who continue to by him and who do not him guilty. and never have thought so. He savs he will notask for pardon. His desire isto Walk out ofthe peni tentiary with everybody innocence. Three vears ago a pris- drer in the Michigan City prison stat- od that he and another man had rob- hed Hinshaw's residence _on_ nicht of the murder and that his companion had killed Mrs. Hinshaw. He was tak- en to Belleville hy offic described evervthig very minutely "as on the moht of the tragedy, but finally for some unexplained reason he broke 1 «aid that "le 'had made up » story out of whole cloth." he replied = "I wanted-to of the -penitentiary on a trip health." Recently Mri Hinshaw has expressed Le opinion that he thotight that the murderer was unto death" that he expected a deathbed, con- that would lead to his (Hin- vinthication--and free lam, sucoestod that trouble be- oil attentions Allie Ferr given thi wded as very any s on point, was not r strong. ty are opinion NOCeHce, he divided cuilt or enilty, while of staunch stand fir ; now think has conseioys of his cet out for mv 'siIeK ston shaw'si niconcy. child nn: this to Coronatron ow arrival the of Edward Mooney, Ports: 1. The little chap fi aw the i dav about the hour Ki Fil was receiving the crown, while boomed forth from Fort Henry, to the inhabitants of this crowning event. Now, what a fitting name for this en? King Lawax J the only entitled newest shahly in s. the ns Hr & r i ' would young «iil Shirts To Match enders in blue, and S0¢. The and swellings ment Known, for Sprams, neuralgia, In pens positive cure inflammation, and lambago. a bottles, 25¢c., at} Rome 5.000 settlers Mave leit North Dakota for the northwest territories. | back. : | nt is the most. | lence .* that iS ate] | housework without becoming. exhaust- : ied' mmproved. McLeod's Compound Blackberry Cordial. A safe and pleasant diarrhoea; cholera morbus, and all summer eomplaints. bottle. Mcleod"s drug store, Princess and Montreal streets. remedy for dysentery, per corner 25c¢. Suspenders To Match New shirts $1. The H. tan, blue and oreen Bibby Co. in i \diices from Australia tell ofeter- vible drought in New South Wales and Queensland, which has devastated the sheep ranches of that section, of the southern colony. Millions of sheep' have died. Work 'has bezun on the new govern- ment building at Banfi: Had Headache Nearly All the Time, in Extreme Case of Exhaustion end Nervous Headache -- Wonderful Restorative Influe:ce of Dr.-Chase's .. Nerve Food There are scores of women in nearly every community in Canada suffering as Mrs. Miles did from frequent | at- tacks ~ of nervous headache. "No local treatment can prove of lasting bene- iit. The system must be strengthened and invigorated and the most eliec- tive way to do this is by the use of Dr. Chasé's Nerve Food. The cure is not only certain, but lasting. Mrs." John Miles; Wellington street, Ottawa, Ont., whose husband is employed with Davidfon &_THRackray, lumber dealers, states: "I was very weak, had no strength or enercyv and suffered pearly ull the time with head- ache, in fa¢t 1 had headache for three whole days just before beginning to use Dr. Chase's Nerve Food. was also troubled g great deal with shoot- inz pains across the all. of the Upder this treatment Y has been wondetiy 236 { sm I am now able to do all my Dr. Chase's Nerve Food, 50 cents a THE DAILY WHIG, TUESDAY. little | Morrison, Lieut. i wa have formed a combine 'a big business and will Tegulate ermen. | ant. General Hospital, | AWARDED CERTIFICATES TEACHERS AT ROYAL SCHOOL OF INFANTRY Coin Now Act As Instructors--An Officer Can Travel Abroad-- Certificates of Military Quali- fication. Ottawa, Aug. 12.--The undermen- tioned school teachers having attended the Royal School of Infantry at To- ronto and having passed the required examination have been awarded tificates as instructors' in squad and company drill and' the manual and firing exercises. for the Lee-Enfield Rifles : . G. W. Umphrey, W. R. Robe: son, J. W. Marshall; H. Collens, 8. H. Armstrong, W. H. Thompson, 8S. W. Flmslie, ¥. H. Balls, W. T. Armstrong. Capt. B. ment, C.A., travel abroad, 1963. Certificates of military qualifications have been issued. to: Lieut. J. Moss, **J77 Squadron, C.M.R.: Capt. V. L. Goodwill, 82nd Regiment: Licut. J. KE. Kirkpatrick, 2nd Q.0.R.: D.MeLouchlin, sth--Field Hos: cer T: Drake, 5th Regi: ven permission' to, urltil January 25th, 18 pital. A The market gardeners around Otta- and will attempt to regulate the trade. The city has been divided into areas, each cardener being. allotted certain streets as 'his exelutive preserve for trade. The rardeners will also refuse to sell He- wew pedlars who have ted the supply to green-groce J._R. Booth has written to ithe city clerk a lengthy letter depreciating at- tacks made upon him by certain ald- He outlines what he has done for Ottawa. and promises that the Central Station will he built. Dr. Klock, who was at the time of i his death on the stafi of the Protest- has remembered in "his will by be- queathing his valuable X-ray appara- tus to his confreres of the medical staff for use in the hospital. The . condition .of Sir John Bouri- not unchanged. He is still very weak, and s no sign of improve- ment. Tt is thought that he is dying. that institution THE CITY OF CREPE. Emblem of Mourning Evérywhere Seen in Pretoria. London Express. Pretorians are in mourning for. the fallen. Nearly-every hat has its zone of crepe, and the black in memoriam band encirelss nearly every sleeve. Stroll Church _ Square through the broad: avenues, and eve catches the sable emblefh® of strife that rioted in the land for two vears and cicht months. Here an ex-burgher who has just come in from the veldt, having surrendered his rifle and shouted "God Save the King." lis brow crowned, with a battered and bLeorimed hat... but there the hoop of ¢repe around it--the sign of a brother futher or a son fallen by the war-way. Here is a fashionably dressed Dutch man: he is evidently well favared with the this world. He, too, carries sient, but significant tri bute to mortality Then there wie Dutch ou tailor-costumed lad ies, and voneraile vrows, bearing the (repe for lamented soldier of the superseded republics. The entire Duteh population is mourning. The fact everviwvhere, and there fom erepe. wot in congersation with a Boer of {€enty-two. Fe told me that he of ¢leven sons. One day, in 1% ember, 1899, they joined, with the father, =the same commando--a contri bution of a dozen to the cause. The father was fifty-five, and thé sons' aces ranhed from elve to thirtyv- four. Only: three of that family of fichters. Pretoria is essentially. a Dutch city to-day, was a Dutch city in days when Kruger was supremo. 1 Dutch retinvning to it. and Britishér is still kept well on the coast." This id, no doubt. why "the wearing of the crepe is conspicu- ons, It very noticeable Britons in the city are in ing. The Manser evidently did deal out death and destruction their relatives. Across or one's a is or goods of the are sone in confronts, "one no escape is wa one tw sons remain as it are the sn the few mourn- not to that not Assassination of the Czar. The year 1879 was one of considerable gloom in England, for bad harvests and great dep sion of trade were added to the continued war which hai already entailed much distress. Political rest- lessness followed, and in 1880 came the extraordinary tu of the tide which landed' Mr. Gladstone in power with a large majority behind him. With the advent of a new Government,it seemed as though things took a turn for the better, and the commercial outlook was certainly brighter. = Queen Victoria's grandson--now the German Empe:or-- the eldest son of the Crown Princess of event was of Spec ial interest to his Brit ish relatives. But soon aftér the wed- . ding bells had rune came the terri le news of the assassination of the Czar Alexander I., on March 15th, 1881. The Princeland Princess; as has been men tioned, were old friends of the Emperor ind th 1a tidings made @§ very deep im- nression on- them. The shock was all the greater because the sister of the Princess was the wife of the ruler who came to the throne of the Russian Empire. Besides. all such events af- fect ery membér of all the Royal families, for they cannot but feel how precarious their own life {s. The Prin- cess of Wiles was much depressed by the shock™ which she 'réaceived. and ft was some time before she could get over it. That summer the family ga thering in Denmark was Shadove] bv the constant thourht of the death of one who had always enjoved' 4 keenly his release frém police supervision and the sense of freadom which was so im- possible in Russia, The Czat said once to the dauchters ofthe Prince: "Gool vou. are- going back te nglishehame: IT am going now vour happy Yery Suitable. No one has dévised a spe- n as yet. if they After Yo the: VE ne Llet but 14 a suit of over e the balls under ry piece {ture if the room you have enough ust on vou to keep a whiskbroom busy or a week. » Lox. 6 boxes for 82.50, at 'all dealers or Edmauson, Bates & -Co., Toronto, Andrew Shaw, ®grocer, Otafa, visiting Lis relatives in this city, 'son they say is good. Know Prussia, was married in 1881, and the, do I; Q | AUGUST 2. DO NOT TAKE SUBSTITUTE. When you ask for MONSOON be sure you get it. grade, it is the most delicious tea you can buy. 4oc. THE DEER HUNT: How = Appears to the Hunted From Start to Finish. A howl; a dog is on the scent; an- other dog joins in. and they are af- ter me, and I must leave the haunts 1 know so well. No more, perhaps, .| wilt T nibble the tender branches, the i sweet branches, the juicy branches. | No more, perhaps, will I listen to | i { i | 1 | ! the music 'of the little | rill singing on its way 10 | the 1¢sser lake; no more, perhaps, will 1 view my graceful form mirror- ed on the still water which holds the shadows of nature om its bosom; no more; perhaps, willl scent the breath of the morning, or rest in the welcome warmth of the: Novem- ber sun; no more, perhaps, no more For why? Because men love blood, and veni- And where will 1 run? Anywhere, if 1 may but those cruel voices: , i cannot hear them well, but still I follow, for even now, from distance hurried by ° the wind, I discern the howl .of distance they the faint willing Death. Curse them! What hive I done to be hunted, to be driven a quarry to ignoble death? Ah. yes, I forgot; the passion of wen for blood and venison theysay is good. So they leave their homes and the yuiet of the happy cosy corner anil tome te my heine, and bespoil it, and bespatter jit, with blood. They come the minister from the pulpit, the ho- telke fren his hotel, the doctor frora hs patient, the lawyer from his brief, the rich from his riche the poor from his poverty, the poli- tician from his handshaking, the former from his native. soil, they come, a age host, to wait and watch for me. : For venison is good they love to kill. And. now, I hear the hounds proaching, and as I run I know 'tis play to leave them, for 1 am fleet of foot; buf it. is the bullet I shrink from, e ping of the ball, the wound, the ravening hound, the cruel death. Thin they will a store, aid Aer Jer sa they say, and ap- hang me in front of men will poke my deads hody and guess my age and weight, for they say venison is good and men must kill. - Would that my flesh © tere bitter; but ewen "that would not avail against the passion for blood. A shot! i feel the hjite of the ball, 1 see the biogod, and the figure of a man-rises frem a hil. { ran; spurred hy desperation, trailing the leaves with red I know a lake, alittle lake, per- haps I may reach it, and shake the pursuers from ty path Another shot! It <inzs in the distance pro- elainas--itsellu but--I near- ing. the lake, and perhaps I am safe. Again the voice of the rifle, and 1 fall to rise no 'more, and the hounds are closing on me; but, a 'man ap- proaches, 'and, driving them... oft draws a knife'from his belt. Ile comes quickly to me, and as 1 strtggie he takes yp fresh grip on the handle of that shiring weapon : he lifts his arm, and it is the end. for the blade enters, and is searching ior uy. heart. : The passicn for for: hlood onto Star. and ah HPSS blood. ih: --Charlie Chuin vr, passion in Tor- GROWTH OF CANADA. vid Pieture of the Progress Made by the Dominion. When Manitoba entered ther Confod- eration. its agricultural production found no piace in the records In 1881 it was entered as producing 1,- 000,000 bushels of wheat on an acre- 51,800, and 1,270,268 hushels oats In 1893 the acreage of and "the yield 1,000,000, bushels; and the vield of age of oO! wheat was 15,615,000 oats was neatly 10,000,000 bushels To-day . Manitoba has 2.000.000" i under wheat, and there are at least 500,000 acres more in the Ter- ritories, und 'there has been common- surate progress in all departments of agriculture. When it was remarked the day that Saskatchewan would become a. second Manitoba, a local journal suid that the estimate was 'below the mark. Manitoba and the Territories are filled with the sons ol Ontario, but the older Pro- vince takes pleasure in the progress of its younger rivals, and in the westward movement sees the signs of the growth of our common country Ontario and Quchec, however, have by no means reached the limit of their growth. Both have territory to the north far ling in area the well-settled icts, and pos- sessing rich resources in fertile, wood- ed and 'mineral lands. A more rapid growth populition would be ac- ceptable, of but this is a matter ubout which there need be no uneasines Habitable land of Kind will be more at a premium every The rapid growth eof popul the United Statés, far fire us any unessi- ness, source from which inuuigration, (ler measure in and wealth of ng far more other of course any Naar the wion of o f Vith wore than United States, loubt that the ad- s-country offers to 'be 'fully re- one- which th lI in time oronto Waqrld. -- cogniz Beautiful weather to-day. | | Try Lead Perrins WO RCESTERSH IRE OF SAUCE PERFECTION truly a strong statement, but it's true never- theless--every word of it. LEA & PERRINS', Worcestershire Sauce has been used by folks fond of fine foeds the world over for G0 years. All dishes such as soups, fish, meats, gravy, ganie, salads, ete., are doubly appetizing and digestible when flavored with this world jamous sauce. It is indeed " the only good sauce." . N. B.--Signature of Lea & Perrin' on every bottle. J. M. DOUGLAS & CO., - - MONTREAL, Sole Canadian Agents. "Home, Sweet Home" Without the Necessary Kitchen Utensils Is a Sad State of Affairs. ur Agate Ware Is neat, serviceable and cheap. More than that-- it lasts for years. Call in and look over our 'shelves. Lemmon, Claxton & Lawrenson, RING STREET KINGSTON. EVERY DAY BARGAIN DAY ce AT aes ABERNETHY'S. Boots, Shoes, Trunks and Valises. KITCHEN LUXURIES Don't confine all the luxuries to the parlor. Plenty of nice KITCHEN WARE is a luxury and makes work a pleasure. WE CAN SUPPLY -YOU WITH Beautiful Things. rey & BIRCH, : 09 Ee 71 Brock Street. -- |

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