Daily British Whig (1850), 6 Nov 1902, p. 7

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«No taste., No The Kicef Ranges-- | #Buchie Happy Theught" No : Experiment | You don't have to exper. ment when you buy a 'Happy Thought" Range. The "Happy Thought" Ranges are past the experi- mental stage. They are as near perfection as the best stove experts and stove builders can make them. Ask any one of the 150,000 Canadian Cooks who are using them what they think of them. They use less coal and do better work than any other Range in the world. Write the Manufacturers for an Illustrated Catalogue. The WM. BUCK STOVE CO., Limited, Brantford. TT AAT AE ACE LE Ll VP A ~~ Ei. Sold by MCKELVEY & BIRCH, 69-71 BROCK ST. me Pome y CURKD BY COLONIAL REMEDY. Can be given in glass of walter, tea, or coffec it hout pati 5 knoivledge. Colonial Remedy will. cure or destroy. the<dis- eased appetite for alcholic stimulents, whether the patient is a confirmed incbriate, ""tippler,"" social drinker or drunkard. Impossible tor anyone to have an appetite for alcoholic lignors after using Colovial Remedy. Indorsed by Members of W. C. T. U. Mrs. Moore, Superintendent of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union, Ventura, Cal, writes : **I have tested Colonial Remedy on very obstinate drunkards, and the cures have been many." In many cages the Remedy was given secretly, 1 cheerfully recommend ard indorse Colonial Remedy. Mem- bers of our Union are delighted to_find a practical and economical treatment to aid us in our temper- ance work." « Sold by draggiss everywhere and by mail. Price $1. Trial package free by writing or calling on Mrs. M. A. Cowan (for Jean J member of the Woman's Christian 'Temperance Union), 2204 St Catherine St. Montreal, Sold mm Kingston by J. B. MclLood, Prin ws street. The Toronto General Trusts Corporation Office And Safe Deposit Vaults 99 YONGE STREET, TORONTO » Od $1,000,000 80,000. Capital, . Reserve Funda President : JOHN HOSKIN, QC., LL.D, Vioe- Presidents : S.C. WOOD, W. H. BEATTY, Fa, J. W. LANGMUIR, ' Managing Direotor. A. D. LANGMUIR, Assistant Manager. JAMES DAVEY, Secretary. Authorized 0 act as Executor, Ad ministrator, Trustee, Reowiver, Commit oe of Lunatic, Guardian Liqundator, Agsiinee, Ete © Djos - to réusonable prices. custody Ronde and otlier valuables Guaranteed ard insured acminst loss Solicitors © brincng Estates, Administra tions, ete. ta the Corporation are continued nn profession:d eare of the same. or further information see the Corpora tion's Manual HON. rent. All wires and at Parcels received for sale MANY MINERAL WATERS ARE ARTIFICIALLY MADE, BY WHAT, EVER Namp SOLD ? NONE HAE THE [HEALTH GIVING QUALITIES OF THE MAGI CALEDONIA. SOLD BY REST DEALERS ERY- WHERE. ROAD - MAKING REALLY BE. Proper Draifiage--A Good Founda- tion Required--Early Spring Is the "Most Suitable Season For Making Roads. Ww. McCallum, Brewer's Mills. turn now to the consideration' of road in itself. As everything of abiling value, it must rest on wo foundation. Temporary and <hitthss work always results disas- trously in the building of a road as building of a house. In order to obtain a good foundation there must be perfect drainage. 'ihis indis pensable for two reasons: , water lying on a roadbed soft- the foundation and causes the road to break into rute. Second, in the winter the water on the roadbed. freezes and in accordance with the laws of nature expands. In the spring it thaws and freezes alternately. heav- ing the surface of the road and honey combing the whole foundation. Again, on the hills where the drainage is not good the surface of the road is cut down by the attrition of the falling water, which often leaves a hill pass- able only with the greatest difficulty. How drainage is to he effected must determined by natural conditions. soils the ordinary surface by ditches of varying depth on either side will be suflicient, but as a rule it will pay to have the drains plaid below the surface drains. Next the question of cross drainage is very important. At present there great loss in the matter of culverts. Every township council has an eager array of veteran parasites about it always on the lookout for "a job' fixing some culvert. This is becauke timber is mainly used the manufacture of culverts: the timber rots and they are continually giving out. Permanent will pay here as everywhere pipes may he but better till masonry or concrete. For the use of the latter the township might well expend a few dollars for moulds. These can be secured at a foundry in ent sizes and by means of them crete pipes are easily made! The crete piping hoth convenient durable and with it the culvert can be readily put in. Wkeire bridges are require | the same view to permanency will alo pay. The only permanent bridge is the arch of masonry con- crete, which up to spans of forty feet can be built cheaply for ordinary highway traflic. The cents every By J. We god a well as in the is first be On drainage some in work else, Sewer used, dit con- con and or drainace of the hill often a good deal of difficalty, other difficulty a little energy will overcome it. If | ible it is bet- ter to turn the water other direction before it reaches RHEL this not practicable drains must be made on either side, even if the solid rock has to be cut through. If there is a rock near the surface that the heaves with the frost a solid foundation of should, be laid until deep soil is reached. Though somewhat expensive the need ofthis is rare. The road the grader. A fair rise to each foot pre but like into some the is good SO soil stone should now be crowned by crown is one inch of width from the side to the centre. But here again dii- fering conditions must he taken into account. On hills an inch and™a half ta the foot shoyld be As mention od above the width of the grading will depend upon the amount of traflie, though twenty-four feet will meet wost tonditions main roads. It better in grading a de- given. on to leave pression in the crown for the metal as this gives the latter more" security on the road-bed, As soon as the grading is finished the road ready for the al which may be- gravel, or better, stone, and should be at least six or eizht inches-in-depth; and eight wide or more, ii the traffic There must be a sufficignt body to consolidate into a com- pact layer. A -sprinkling of stones the surface 1s double for it a great impediment to traflic. It is a wood idea to a rotary screen on th crusher and place the metal on the roadbéd in three layers, the larger being placed on the tom, medium next, and the clippings on If gravel is used it must be screened to © separate the sand and clay. It is worse than useless to draw either of these commodities. upon the road, for thev undo all the good that has been Having cone this far it. should borne in mind that roads made traflic and not hy. traf fi many ; of our road-makers er roncously imagine. All that ary now in quder to make the ready for traflic is that it be A steam roller olives better than one drawn by because heavier and furthermore the horses disturb road. metal in drawing .a the road is rolled the ] every load that it has settled, mixed with the subsoil smooth waterproof which is indispensable to a ood road. If the weather is wet the oil acts as a lubricant upon the pie & of metal with the result that the no here and there and do not un ite. Iv means of the roller the road i< made ready for use. Not only is the n-onveni®nee oi. beating it down by traffic avoided, but the result is far better. The surface is smooth and with little care will soon become impene ! hv wnter 18 is met broken feet is great. of metal on 1s loss use 1a stones be the top. done. he are for fie, as so is neces road rolled results horse it 18 with until hecoming not m ake a keep ing sand Of them dry wy. But M road isture is essential m nt ne in condition. to keep good cours drammage and fall nece improvement can be mgde vads by planting trees on which rays of. the Not only rtable. but much ready to a on vach pro 1s providing shade from the drving winds more ©« of the ich we are not ing of trees op 100 much 10 hope arching make travel are the hot road from vle ountiy all our that and a joy insty re elms 1 beglin, as so. often 1t is in tatute labo, not only is rreater expenditure of energy in work- WHAT A GOOD ROAD SHOULD | ing the hardened soil; but the best re- sults cannot be obtained. However, now the road is made we must not stop. That would indeed be disastrous after such espenditure. The popular view that a road when made will take care of itself for a year is erroneous, Our railroads, the most economical of all corporations employ men all the time to keep their roads in vepair. There ix no reason why this should not be done with just as good results. in the case of our countr+ roads. It has been sug- gested that intelligent laborers be em- ployed to go over the roads from time to Tme filling up ruts and opening culverts, doing in short whatever is necessary to keep the way in a first class condition. Piles of gravel and other materials ought to be placed at convenient points so that it would al- ways be possible to make repairs. Care is es pecially needed after heavy rains: hoth to repair places that are giving way and to see that water is neither hing on the rdadway 'nor in the drains. Wide ti on heavy waggons are a preat advantage in keeping a road in good repair. Under present conditions they are of too heavy draucht to be serviceable, but with good roads they would not. increase the draught. As we have seen there is abundance of road matérial in this district, many farmers would sav too much. Lime- stone and granite are among the be Judgment and discretion are neces- «ary here for all stone does not make good metal; and many day's work has been worse than wasted in placing poor material upon our highways. There is no reason that with a proper organization of the lahor now fritter- ed away in shovelling clay from the roadside into the centré of the road, or in drawing sand in leakv boxes, that are hali emptied before the point for which they are intended is reach- ed, should not have roads in the district five from now. In closing to lay cover OO vears we Kingston repeat that it is hard and fast circumstance. sends on the intelligence and resource of the man in charge. But if these lines are followed good results will he obtained: and a wiil gradually best metho ls. Surely it not too much to expect that the is not far distant when the roads district will Be in the province. lt is impossible estimate in material standards what thi would mean. The farmer would have at his command all the advan- tages? of modern civilization. with none of the drawbacks of 'the city. More attention would paid to the beautifying. of the home. This, in turn, would react upon the mind and keener intellects result. The slavish toil common to farm life pre ent will, when good roads a reality. be a thing of the and the farmer will be a-man and of cultivation, able to talk upon and with ideas that daily paper and high-class be found his table: and a portion of the money now lost in transportation will he devoted to the cultivation those intangible though none the less real qualities summed up under the name culture. In this most moral of conceivable 'atmos phires, the family wil' brought up under perfect conditions. This is no vision of a dreamer, Dut a plain, prac tical statement of possibilities that an attained without great diffi culty. The sooner the people of Fron- tenac, Lennox and Addington recog nize their responsibilities, the will their community play that part the national development which has been called. we may down every impo: sible rules to Much deg time teach goes on experience the easiest and is day of our be at are SO past; of subject weigh.» The magazine will anv on of he he sooner hich mn 10 it DIED IN NAPANEE After Several Months' Illness--An Up-to-Date Store. Napanee, Nov, 6.--Mrs." W. H. vison passed away on Wedn morning after g hngering illness some months. duration from cancer the ~tomach. The deceased was in wer fiftveninth year. A'sorrowing hus hand and daughter are leit to mourn a kind and loving mother. The funiral takes place on Friday afier noon at o'clock to the Eastern cetnetery vault, later to be buried in the family plot at Plainfield, the for mer of the deceased lady. Charles Keller arrived home ay after a three months' stay in anitoha and North Dakota. Drv. A. Warner, Toronto, it Saturday Sunday in town. . W. Smith brother will remove into their new premises next week. They will have one of the neatest, up-to-date jewellery shops in Eastern Ontario The schooner Mary twought in a argo of coal for . R. Dafoe this Wi This fine weather has dispersed the dea that there. will be such. a dearth of coal as was at one time expected. Every schooner the lake is chartered coal to some Canadian port. However, who has thar winter supp dv of coal or a of cords of hard the of their k fortunate neighbors number. of citizens flown to on Tuesday hear to Mclachlan. Gar ay of of one two yester spt and and on to hring anyone oupl wood is nyy \ Deseronto Mis .le went nioht sk Cattle Exports. the week head of cattle the port of Montieal to The exports of live stock port of Montreal for the of October 0.506 head of cattle, and 7.197 the total shipments the season to date 64,505 attle 350561 sheep, crease of 2596 cattle, e of 2,851 ep, with the same date last year The hipment~ of horses for the to fate 158 head, which shows 4 de 702 head, sas compared with period a year' There , imbrovement tile' an November were sent from Fnoland. from month Dud ending 156,80 the f were sheep, and were which show and a- de as compared for and eason werd creave-of the ~am= has mand market ago in the the market rather quiet, ally cholee stee they have sold 100 li whi no export and has rtong been fot the in ruler tor' sequence but the gna has heen at SL.N to y les he rs steady, by, be disorders cans the svstem can Carter's Little Liter griping discomfor . Pills. Nu ot attending \ Use I'ry them { informed hy him that among the best | to | husiness i i Before the moon comes i Now IS IN TROUBLE! UNDER ARREST IN MEL-| BOURNE Has Eight Living Wives--This is What EBoston Detectives Say-- | Claims to Be a Native of New York. * London, Oct. 31.--There - has been | remanded at -the Melbourne police | court a man named Arthur Bentley Worthington, 'on the charge of obtain- ng £1, we by false pretences from Miranda de la Juveney, of Camber- | well, the offences being alleged be- | tween July 27th, 1900, and Apiil lst, | 1902. '3 The story of how Mrs. Juveney, a a student of occult science, | persuaded by Worthington the money which | prosecution, is, | Weekly widow, has been to advance to him the subject of the a cording to the Melbourne 'limes, of a sensational character. The ! Poston detegtives say he "has eight | dving wives and three daughters. Four wives have procured divorces on the | ground of desertion." Worthington was head front of the so-called *'Students Truth," but when he arrived in Mel bourne he described, himself as a na- tive of New York, about Jy five | vears of age, and a teacher. He said that his parents belonged to the Church of England faith. Detective - Sergeant McManammy, | who arrested the man in Sydney, | found among his effects quite a num- | her of documents which it is expected | will - have an important bearing on | the case. For the purpose of '"'horrow- ing" the money from Madame Faverdy | { he used the double persuasion that he || was entitled to a big legacy from an aunt and that he had received spirit- | ual letters. The police have one such | with the ey representation of | Mahatmas, young, well-fed- looking | Hindbo sparks, of from sixty-four to 107 vears old. They ave the youth referted to in connection with the loanvof £200 to Osiris (Worthington) by Osis (Mrs. Juveney). Osiris had | in August, 1901, asked for a loan of | that sum, but Mrs. Juveney at first | refused advance it: but she y gvas a Muhatma let | anived for her. This letter an up-to-date, ty pewitien | and as follows : Isis. Mother. Empre Priestesses. Master waits. The Nile rises. (io at once. Fly swifier than Pe still as night. Do not excite him. Be calm. The building waits. The Mosque waits. The lodge waits. is the ang to had quite epistle, ter The Alpha. | light. Mooc. The two Halls. Omega. to the disc. to-day \ Qfier at onte, Compel Osiris to accept. Him or the Nile 500 years. the two Delta. Take to swallows, For another 1, Aloha, Mode, Delta. Worthington hears himself confident lv in and has said that the "Rosicrucians wil pull him out of | trouble." The scarching of records is to identify him with a man who heen a lawyer, politic: al real estate operator, spirit- litterateur, mining speculator, organizer, bigamist, and confi denee man generally. This man oper ated in New York, Pennsvivania, Mas sachnsetts, Ohio, Nib, Wisconsin, Texas, Utah, Kansas, California, West Virginia, Georgia, and Washington territory. He appears to have heen horn at Saugerties, News York, in 187 oro A81%¢ his real name heing Samuel Oakley Crawford. He enlisted in the Northern Army in 1561, re-appeared after the Civil war. was~- over as a temperance lecturer, studied law fora short while, but in 1367 professed re rious conversion--and- preached a Methodist minister inthe state of Now Jersey. In May, 1365 he mar vied (No. 1), at a 'Baptist. church in New York City, Josephine Ericson Moore, a telegraph ope who i= presumably his' leaal w lived together in Phil oly hia i864, | when ( rawford- Worthing ton hic wife and nine-months-okl daughter and shortly after turned up in Albany the capital pd dew State. There | he obtained' a sum from an | ionorgnt Dutchman, was arrested, and | October 1th, 1870 sentenced | vears in Albany ' carned Omega, Halls, iso prison, said has orator, nalist, and banker, as ope ator, They till deserted | York © Of money was penitentiary, his re Then he was spring of 1831 Chicago, the airvovant, for by the he narvried on to three whence good conduct ase in June; INTL i lv launched. the married (No. in laughter of a whom he speedily Septeniler" of the sa the state Ohi «No the danchter of known judoe, whose name he f Ka as . how. a In 3 ) fe veal, was of citing 0 a note ~ouri, Donner," pli from C1876, hut reward of A brief § Hlinois, under licht of ations <he!t for this capture ork in Peon, + patronage of leading Christian association, was interrupted hy the expostulations of wife No. 2, which ended in his fight to San Fran feco, in April,. 1887, Here mariage the danghter of a wealthy wi of whom the "Major had bor rowed a trifle of £100, wax dramati cally frustrated by the eipt of telegram the ceremony was begin and the batiled but ering oom sought more congenial in Sale Lake where heb Mormon. | 1 to Bove premched in the Femple, and got away Fexa~ in March, 1375, oreat n and the bh hy _the Y a a with tow, re a as ning perses a City; aml tame. a with part, of followers of to expedit nr lent Bri rh confiding and forging ¢ 1 cheques; When ar found acainst bail for him, SEV ner wa stood The Eastern Conscii oldays., i has he Rix of tos i: wells in ie Sate no months The knowledge. tunity of the end of the year 1902. PRICE OF OIL ADVANCES BECAUSE OF DEMAND FOR FUEL. The Standard Oil Co. price of oil to 8c. and 8ic has advanced the a gallon. . The great Cramps Shipyards Company of Philadelphia has decided. to burn oil for furl. The Pacific Mail Steamship Co. is convert- ing its steamers into oil burners instead of coal -- thus effecting a great saving. The -Boston Transcript states that oil has advanced in a few days from $1.22 to $1.27 a barrel. A large plant in Maine which handles $3,- 000,000 worth of raw material in a year will burn oil instead of coal. The General Electric Co. of Lyn, Mass., is figuring on using oil for fuel in its great es- tablishment. The Iron Clad Mig. Co. New York City, with large lyn, has already adopted © of 4 Cliff street, tories in Brook- fac bil for fuel use. TER TR RE RRC, Queen and Terauley Streets, ee RC Stok a sells al Sof, wilifadvance ities Share n HOW INVESTMENTS IN THIS STOCK INCREASE IN VALUE. 1s rhe stock that Paid. 20% on .. Liavest ment THE NEWS OF THE DAY Points the Way to Rich and Profitable Investments; phenomenal success of the Eastern Consolidated Oil Co. is a matter of public It is the subject of newspaper dispatches. read in the daily papers the facts which make this stock the GREAT financial oppor- EASTERN CONSOLIDATED 0} Stock Advances to $1.00 a Share by Jan. Ist, 1003. Thea 3 Sheard, snerease TAQ owlpul Soocea §4/s of oir a. Month Watchful investors mdy Am cunt Invested Jao., 1'0c Date. $100 | $200 10,000 OO 200 500 From t wai 2000 examined « ae almost You must | 400 1,000 5,000 | 10,000 20,000 his tabld lasi on ke the price gadva day eve oil properties Increased Demand Means Bie Dividends. ' Dividends, 10 January Jan. Ist, Dividends | Actual Value to [ Jan. 1st, 1908, Date, Jan. 1, 180} { Plus Dividend $20.00 $24.00 | $224.00 40.00 100.00 48.00 448.00 2,120.00 200.00 1,000.00 " 4,240.00 21,200.00 2,000.00 _ it will" be has earned 200 in divi be earning an income advance of the price actually worth $4,000 par (81.00), which may Wn the meanwhile the $1,000 investid $ to "Ww people ! Scores of investors have and are enthusiastic, the Allotment of Stock at soc. a share Almost Exhausted. ~~ C.B. HEYDON & CO., Rooms 401 and 402 Manning Chambers Building, 72 Queen Street West, Corner : Court House Square, Toronto, Ont. No. 4 to herself wile Mpport leaving to | het escay ed, return to the wd a baby to 7 pair. Meat a Ih; choice cuts, » { 8c. a 1b; t1b:; hogs, h.; to a Front Marc to Beef, Worthing velled the tourist, visiting Northern Pactii arafts unknown roved ton," appears North-West as many townt railway, live pork 9¢, Ge. arbi; te y Grain--Wheat, with a k vr. and }7 to SOc. and Canadian | bu-hel; local i a bushel: spiritua! ! bushel; money. ! ny ' : len, Hie, a the pre hit « | bushel: oats, i spiritualist | shel. 1583, he Flour and ith kim flour, amon in April, where fot worthless in Boston, partnership great tntance married into ac. a wed in he il argent, and to tol of jue a Noman, ome 2 cance 1 Li Wao but him Ye husband, her. Wit ie her behind vt.; oatmeal 50 a bbl; cwt.: bray ec Hana SON) a as victimized dO tiefore tn old shifted here Mar o eeding 1s 3 sin to Sarg | SSG March PRODUCE AND PRICES. each; a pe forequar spring to spring, Northern, buckwhe hush fee i Hungarian. pate and Air; ters, Jc. t Ste. t hindquarters, o Ge. . a Ib]; mutton, lamb, weight, 10: a mgues, Manite bushel; wl soft 15: peas, dat, d 32 to nt, ¥ mn y. $16 $22 a Ww, prices Iirock Ge, lamb skins, rolle meal, Ye. Ge. Ib. hb white 6c No. a Gace. 20¢. a bushel; Bakers' 1) o ton; ar hides tallow. to Te. washed wool Standard Rates Governing The Local Markets. Kingston, Nov. f.--The ocal produce markets this week a Fruit--Apples, 132. to 2c. to ®2 barrel aasen The Butter--Crean l ere' in prints, F1Sc. a 1h. Cheese--1le. prices in a pe lemons, baranas, F150 a a basket Jamaica oran a a peat 8) a= =n. Butter Larrel ; In prints, crad i dozen » \ ore rapes. »" othe, 1 ' a lb a qual 10. Pot Derr -2 * to daosen tables cal ete a ! atoes a 0's, to Me Veg ish--White and a 99 oi a Ih. 1h a Eggs. t i") 25¢. to. } to , 635 1," 0c. a bushe to strong $2.10 2.20 a to $2 oats; £1 LIS a hay, £1 to 86 a ton. a i street © i" ! beef to A mn Dairy Wholesale. 1h; mn a Dairy Retail. Creamery, a Ib. in roil alb; to 6Gic. veal, "winter 67¢. rye, 30 AD to R1.- 40¢. [RLS to Te. Ge. Oe. to a a n I; bar- 68¢. a 17. and cwit. r a $M to ton; $6.50 en hy De! hic trade farm 2uc, chickens, and fowl, {nites ancks, 15¢. to le. due oy dairy, creamery, 19¢, pair, dc. to 65¢.; to ; turkeys, per:lb., 10c. to 12¢.; geese, per lb. to Te.; potatoes, Sie. to $1.10; onions, per bag carrots, per bag, 45¢. to per bag, 50c.; tuenips, . to 33c.; cabbage, per doz- to 30c.; cauliflower, per doz- to Rl; celery, per dozen, 25c. to 10c.; tomatoes, per basket, 20c. to 30. hindquarters, $7 to $8; beef, forequarters, $4.25 to $5.25; beef, me- dium, carcase, $1.50 to $6; beef, choico carcase, $6 to $6.50; mutton, $5; veal, choice, $7.50 to $9. Montreal, Nov. 3.--There Wd abo out 300 head of butchers' cattle, and 2,000 sheep and lambs 2 red the East 'Fad Abattoir to das of the best cattle. were soll at tie. per 1h., but they were not pretty good animals sold - at de. and the common stock 2¢. to dc. per Th, while the lean old cows and small bulls were cht by the eanners at from 1c. per Ib. There was only one veal ealf on the market, and it old for about $8 or about Se. 1 the other calves selling at Nig. to 43e. pee lb. Sheep sold '¢. to Jlec., and lambs at to 4c. per Ih. The only lot whith hrought over 3c. per a lot of 29 picked lambs hv Mr. Girard at de. per lb. hogs sold at from Je. to Ge. per weighed off the cars. to 20c.; butter, chickens, per per pair, 50c, he, bag, to Se parsnips, hag, 200, en, 40q. Toc. aes jet heef, sale at A dew ahout extra: iro m He le. to Hooper's Ashestos Plaster on your, furna+s and pipes will reduce vour fuel bill. A small outlay is once made, the saving in fuel goes on forever. AN HONEST DOCTOR. T------ Ii any of your readers suf- sexual weakness resulting follv, premature loss of <trepgth and memory, weak back, aricocels or emaciation, my Latest Method Treatment will cure them, So positive am I that it is an Editor : fer from from vouthiul infallible ire, that nothing need be paia until the ire is ted; this is certainly a Propo wn, for ib J had any = ne I eouldg not patient to pay } no difference , let them - book and treatment free me jn confidence, ty 1 ( \ for hoe can aadre 1 idberg, ward 'Ave., Detroit, anK Dept. Mich. M., 208 Wood:

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