Daily British Whig (1850), 25 Mar 1903, p. 5

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make it warm for Wig. You can count off that. [INTO A ERCOAT at in new shades of Co- y very smart but very ilks or rides, er out-of-style medium Is--a coat of grace and ! must. see: the Long ep of skirt, full grace- Goud rain or shine. , $7.50 TO 14. ENGLISH HATS : | Kingston, IBBY CO. use, Oak Hall. SALE | re AWYER'S D. Carey's Shoe are offering the on, gains Here. VYFR, ind Opera House Block. . 00-0000 CCOV0OO000SP 299 000000000:00000C FLAVOR. ndisns want MAPLE SYRUP and 10t been able to get a satisfactory APLE SYRUP the fresh Maple fisvour segurely lorate in quality. ., Limited, Montreal. (E, 400 8t. Paul St., Montreal. % soats. Hundreds of stylish 3 ics that appeal to dressy e. Not a few patterns ina by Canada's, best tailors. s in quality, price, fit and ? ognized fashions for spring ) See It. and Boys' clothing. Wa Boys' Clothing excel any stock to choose from,' at ) Q 0 0, $4, $4.50, $5. 2 Q 0 thier and Gents' Furnisher. 3 Princess Street. 3 Iden's. ® 4 FOO-0O0COOOD000000e i ---- ""T GO TO HEAVEN. ity Man Denounces nen Who Wear Birds. , March 25.--There is a gin in society over the statement Prol. Dallas Sharp, of Bos ersity, in his sermon at the thodist church, that the gat nis closed upon women who bird in their hats. lessor said : "No woman who sea gull or a song bird.indy ever get to Heaven. If Pou Easter bonnet get it, wear it 1, for what better place to han to church ? e bonnets, however, without and killing. Those who rob of the song birds and the autiful plumage 'can ndt hope hn." Wo- ¥ 5" Brigade of Bronk Street church paraded last even- a large company, EEE 1 .# From Metropolitan Stock Exchange. J i) i! Backache is a forerutiner ana one of the niost common symp-~ toms of kidsey, trouble 'and displacement, womb ago I was/in o very READ MISS "Some time weak Sondition, Yo work made me nervous and my [ frighttull all the timo, aiid I aE tea head. aches! "My mother 'got. a bottle of IL. din EB. ws Yegetabio Ca pound for me, and if seemed to strengthen my back and help me at once, and I did not get so tired: as tbefore. I continued to take it, and 'it {brought health and strength to me, and I want to thank you for tho 'good it has Ae o" Mids TR Ka: & Wales Ave, Compound cures because it is the greatest known remedy for kidney and "womb troubles. ! Every woman who is 'pusslod about her condition should write to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., | and tell her alk % STOLE TWO.RINGS. a -- And Presented Them to His Young Sweetheart. Police Constable Megarry last even: ing pl under acest a young man na; drew . Palmer, a waiter em- ployed in the Hotel Randolph. Palmer was charged with the theft of two gold rings, with diamond and vuby settings, from Miss Constance Hora, King street. He was formerly employ- ed in the Hora household: and it is al- leged that while «there he took the jewellery. The rings = were recovered from a young girl residingvon Mont- real street, with whom Palmer was friendly. At the'polices comrt this: morning, Palmer was not asked' to: plead, hut was remanded forione" week. Menu: while an investigation into certain ail fairs will be carried on. bt got Every Transaction A Credit To Us 2 qs; mised pickles, 25; 1 qt. chow- chow, MWe. 1*¢t. sweet pickles, 25¢. 2 doz. fine lemons. 25c. 8 tins catsup, Pe. 4 packages fine jelly powder, 25¢. 2 large sealers baking powder, 25c., at Mullin's, corner, Johnston " and" Divi: sion streets, --------------y Queen's Did Not Protest. Toronto University authorities had a discussion - 'with How. Mr. Prefon- taine regarding a new observatory] There were no representatives from Queen's t6 protest, as Toronte does when Queen's is asking a government grant, r . & AMERICAN AND CANADIAN CORN == FOR SALE IN CAR ' Low Write or wire for prices, delivered your station. « A. WITZEL Bogset ines COMMERCIAL, ---- MONTREAL STOCKS. arch 205th. Buy Sell. Canada Pacific Ry 1203 120) Toledo Ry a 314 81 Montreal Street RY. 2 voi ni AT? 7 Toronto, Streot Ry... 1154 116% Hal fax Street Ry .. .. 100 08 St. John Kleclric Ry . 126 115 Commercial Cable . 165 155 Mostreal Petegraph ... _. 000 164 Hell Telephone Co 000 165 Dominion Cotton Co we BO 46 Canada Colored Cotton |. 49 00 R.U® 0. Nay. Co ... oR 07 Hane of Montreal 286 000 Ontario Bank .. - 181 000 Merchants! Hank .. 000 171 Tominion Steel . 324 a2; Dominion Coal . 1154 1144 Montreal Power... ..... 97 00g Nova - Seotia Street | 104F 108% Winnipeg Ry wears 200 5 Ogilvie Milling Co ... 000 183 NEW YORK STOCKS. March 25th. i JLOSE. . St. Paul'... .. on Mrs. Broonahan. Geo. McDonald left BR. Transit . 3 for Brantford, having secured a posi- Manhattan .. tion as miliwright in the Brantford inion Patific Starch Works. Three cows in this sec- Sugar... .... 4 4 R N b ives Peoplé's- Gas tion have given birth to twin calves. U.S. Steel . Lilian Maniory Napanee road, Spent T Deal a trou Tuesday with Jessie Winter, Miss © » " > » Miss, Pacific - Knapp, Kingston, has a large music Southern Pacific Ontario & Western Western Union NY.C C Seite sabes Koviainctap se Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetablo | der. The team brook by Mr. Bane. P. Blackhurot left here for Lindsay, eo good pofition there, Mrs. William Hill of Newburgh, is spending a few days here. ston has returned. B. i = " COURT-MARTIAL. soldiers. - He rose from ofiicers army and" in civil life. Whi ot his brother officers were aware tha charges were pending against Merc the officers of a March: 21st, Was not present. 'Lord Roberts, specaly on that octasion to the High Ryn who had served with dis tinction, but did not Macdonald. This attracted = consider able notice, and the sensagion was in creased when another speaker, Nas not aware of the facts in the case ded the general as o 'typical High land soldier, and found that his re marks were received the majority of the Gen. Mucdonald, it is announced, left England for the continent some days ago, and it is understood he is 're- turiihg to Cevlon, under the advice sf"Lord Roberts, after hearing Mac donald's, version .of the charges. ------ LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. ---- The Pay Of Otrriers. Kingston, March 21. (To the Edit- tor) : Kindly insert the following let ter which appeared in L'Evenement under date of March 20th, for which you will eonfer a favor to the letter carriers. What is the law of Mr. My lock for the-fotter carriers, 2 To the Editor: Some papers hive reproduced an article signed by a would-be merchant who admires the law passed bv Me, Mulock during last Sossion. - Wishing to see into the mat- ter, I got a copy of that law. After studying it we affirm that this law is iniquitous;we only see in it one good clause, the one which allows the car. riers. to get the maximum of .pay after four years, instead of eight as before. But the time lost.by sickness is taken off. Who are the public employees who deserves more than the carriers ta be .paid dur their sickness ? When the carriers fall sick, where, and how do they contract their. sickness Is it necessary 'to answer that ? We know. they must face any kind. of weather to fulfil their duties: When a carrier is absent, his work is taken over by his comrades without any extra remuneration. Is that just? The law does fot mention the old carriers, whose_health is often broken down Wer twenty-five or twenty-eight years' service, Nothing is provided for them. - To sum up we affirm that this law in reality. did not increase the car riers' pay or better their position. The carriers have the sympathy of the public and we beg our members to show that the people's money should be used to better the public service. We think that the postmasterigeneral should begin by paving well his own employees before trying to be the ar biter of workman's difficulties. We will have something more to say about thé way. the king's carriers are treated.--Good-Bye. NEWS FROM YARKER. Injured--Going To North-West. Yarker, March 24.--David Goudy, while driving home from here, had the misfortune to have his arm broken and shoulder dislocated. While passing un der the railway bridge his team took fright. As he was sitting on but a single board on a lumber waggon gear, he was unable to hold his hors es. He was thrown off, the wheel strik- in Bim on the arm, breaking it and the rolling he got dislocated his shoul was stopped in Cole- Man Badly having secured a D. Amel has rented the farm of 'lass here. 2 J Mrs. P. Manion, visiting in King- McCabe has Atchison, Pid Louis. & Nash Rock Island .. . . Pennsylvania: Ry | Texas & Pacific ., { leave for Alexandria Bay, N.Y. John A 1 ehisoh 5 { Freeman leaves in a few days with on ar F | six car loads of young stock for the American Loco { North-West. A gang of men are ent Amul. Copper {ting up the hub tis . M. Tobin leaves in a few days fof Bylleville, Metropolitan Stock Exchange. Incorporated Undet the Laws of Massachusetts FULLY PAID. « ° KINGSTON BRANCH Clarence Chambers, Clarence St. } only one dangerously ill at the Gene. {Opposite British American Hotel [ ai Hospital, from. which many of . 2 : those ill have departed. The hospitals "Phome 409; I. J. MCKENNA, t . @NAREr. | wounded and = the government build Ms E! ings destroyed during the disturbances at Port of Spain, Trinidad. . Bonde, Stocks; Gratn and Provisions bonght on margin or for cash. 3 moved here. A son . n Bl & 4 1 badly injured 'by his = him and breaking his arm, is F : be around apain. pitals are fast recovering. There is are not now overcrowded. -------- to' Napance.. Hegry 'Beatty navel his familv last week to Omemee. John Lowe and wile, visiting here, Mis! John Juniac.is in. Kingston for a few days. Mra. J. Dillon has been a few days with her parents of Col.' Clyde, who was horse throwing able to ----------------. Fast Recovering. Typhoid fever patients in the hos- Fourteen rioters were killed, Yorty AMOUS SOLDIER TO FACE ; the ranks in the Gordon Highlanders. to his pre. t Sess more hard-won decora- tious. He is extremely popular in the the army officials and man; Gen. nald, no intimation of their na- ture leaked out, until the dinner of Highland regiment, at which Gen. Macdonald the commander-in-chief, paid tribute in a mention -Gen. who in cold silence by officers present. E occasion by the hand and wisely an y t nection between western eountry. an eastern all-Canadi an outlay, cise a controlling western Canada. It would aid ix _ | building up our St. Lawrence and At . |[Hantic ports and .our. mercantile ma rine. It would » | of assimilating the foreign element . {now settling in the west, by promot . | ing interchange of trade and eastern. Capada, and, in develop mandate to. us to be up and doing, and even if the doctrine of "Onward Canada" does not i in every Canadian heart, it is at least a dominant Canadian sentiment to day. impelling Cantida to do her duty by her people and her country, and if in this way Canada be true to herself, she cannot be false to the great Brit. ish world-empire. -------- EVIDENCE SUFFICIENT, RII" To Cause Examination of Suction Pipe. Ex-mayor Polson thinks that the fact: of .there being bacilli cok found by the tests made of local water by the provincial board of health analysts should be sufficient reason for action by the local board of health and the city council. Ten years ago when Mr. Polson was may- or and before it, he gave much of his time to the water works. Typhoid fever 'was much in evidence then, and after the laying of the new pipe it was pretty well stamped out, and has mot been very prevalent in winter since. Now that the trouble = has broken out again, Mr. Polson thinks that carefil attention whould be given 10. the* report of the provincial board of health, and. advises that the sue tion pipe should be carefully examined t6 discover if there are any leakages through which polluted water could gain admittance. It is only natural, he saye, that the sewage and the fre. quent freshots during the winter should have a bad effect, 4 Waterworks Superintendent Hewitt says that it is four or five vears since the suction pipe was examined. As soon as the warm weather comes, so that it will be possible for a diver to remain. in the water long, he expects that a thorough examindtion of the pipe will. be; made. This requires great care, and a diver must start from the pumping station and go slowly outward, feeling the pipe with his hands. 3 Elected To High Position: Dr. J. H. Bell, mayor of this city, has been honored by the grand coun cil of the Canadigh Order of Chosen Friends, now in session at Londow, Ont., by being elected to the position of grand councillor of that order Ly acclamation. "This is the" highest gift in the order. Dr. Bell first attended grand council in 1897. During this time his father, the late W. P. Bell, was at the head of the society as grand councillor, He: was that year clected 'a member of the grand execu tive and reelected in 1898. In 1899 be was promoted to the position of grand representative which placed him on the grand executive of the order. In 1900 he was re-elected, and in 1901 he was elected grand vice-councillor and re-elected. in 1902. His new posi tion carries with it a large salary, to gether with other emoluments. It is seldom that a son succeeds a father to a high office in civic life or in an order. A generation very rarely wit nesses such an occurrence. A Napanee Calamity ! A prominent Napanee resident, who was in Kingston te-day, stated that the telephone rates in that town were likely ta be raised. "Do yon know why 7" he asked, "Well it is to keep sweethearts from monopolizing the wires, It is to make telephones so ex- pensive that the young men and wo- men who love one another won't bill and coo over the wires all day long. 'In, Napanee now it is a wondeg that the wires don't blush red, the love words that pass over them: The sound that a kiss makes--the ph, ph sound--js. sent. many times a day from one recefver to another. And such ex- pressions as darling, and deary and honey and sweetheart, drown out al- together the plain business talk ab- out the price of coal, and the boom in steel, and the bills receivable that are due," ---------------- Economy In The Home. True economy means obtaining the best value for one's 'money. Clark's delicious pork and beans give the most nourishment for the least money. ing that | - FS ; ; , a Says Property Belonged t. unprogressive Capada of |, nF fathers, But Was |1, movement. by: inaction, we should take unprecedented development. One of the most serious of these problems is the Sailway question, to which I have al- The . wise, solution of this problem; as, for example, by direst railway con- Manitoba and the city of Quekeo, moans much for Can ada. Aflording to Manitoba and the it would encourage railway extension in the west. It would exer | inflgence on the com- wercial relation between sastern and assist us in the work between them ing inter-imperial trade; would streng- th t. only. Canadian b i French cathedral or Roman Catholic erial sohtmat ian but also: dur: | LrSk, catia or. Raman Go given Gentlemen, Canada. must not mark | for church purposes by Mr, Lambert time,, Her gifts from Brovidencs are a find 'a resting place tested by the fact -------------- : & d | several sent. position. ice list | masterfully grapple with, and if possi- schools, came here several ago <h at, mg Je pedal, ble successfully solve, . the problems J 10 inves the matter, 4 ut found then. that of Macdonald, while few | BTOWiDg out of Canada's great and | some missing links in the title to the property, and Mra. Campbell come on to press the » Se of certain new facts which have lately come to her knowled, bell makes claim is. worth many' mil- lions of doMare. Jt includes the site of the famous citadel of Quebec, with ita elaborate system of fortifications - and the summer residence of the gov- ernor-general of Canada, the Chateau Frontemat and Dulferin® Terrace, the Place 4 ! rand that, Bortion of the city Wik as the Cape, uding | all the fashionabie residential quarter. 3 Mrs. G P's: Tather was a - | bert, and Lamberts were one of the féading French iawilies in Can- oda. "There is said to be undoubted - | proof of the property in question ving been gran by the of France to one of her ancestors. It included the site of the present in the early part of the sevenmtbenth century, This donation is recognized by Mrs. Campbell, and is further. at- that two pews, which wert set apart for all time for the Lambert family in the church, are still ped: for their use. It is said that the Lamberts were dispossessed of stheir property by an aot of confiscation on the part of the British * authorities immediately after th: conquest of the country by Gene- ral Wolfe, and there are said to be various reasons why the confiscation was illegal and must be remedied. In the first place treaty of Paris, in virtue of which, alone, Great Britain has claitn to the ownership: of Can- ada, provided that the French inhabi tants of country were to be left in undisputed Rh auian of Shoir lands and other properties. rs. Campbeli is also advised that even if the con fiscation was legal it should last only for three geubrations and that she is now ontitled to recover the pro- perty of her ancestors. i, The property confiscated from the Lambert family included: not 'only the most valuable y in the city of sec, but the Islands in the River St. Lawrence as well. The proprictorehip of these islands is to bo tested at ance, ps well as that of the property in Quebec: When Mrs. Campbells 'husband was here he saw: a number of valuable papers bearing upon the confiscation of the property of the Lamberts. These have since di ved, and it is feared that they were burned in the fica which some fime ago destroyed the parliament house of Quebec and A number of valuable records. A me morandom in Mrs. Campbell's posses sion, shows that the box contained | these papers was f rly kept in vault thirty-seven benfuth the old parliament house. The Second Fiddle. She--Gracious { The last Sime I saw him he was the most opinionated fel- low in. town. How he has ged | He---Oh ! didu"t you know he was recently married ? -------- A Worthy Corps. Lord Dundonald, speaking of the army medical corps, said © This de- partment under the direction of Col cation in Brooklyn, and the suthor of eal at books the wathor of has The property to which Mrs, Camp + This Space is Rev fossr Barrack St., Kiogston. Seornana T Tr rneont Fo cpireis Wiaiaiare Sabont . ot - Jelasses, 1 thi presents true C "of thie ] eda px SL © greatest semsgtion in British mili ; : of the si the city is veation of the association inf. irclos, sine the case of Col. | 2 [There is a: third, .a. more br Tie ex Camipboll, of De: Kalb yor Tle and since that |: itine Haker, who was sentenced oh I lurprising antl avenue, Brookiyn, .. who is here J oters ive y gust 2nd, 4875, to pay a fine of §2,- rr alin wo) he 'for the ose, and has been collect 'actively sngaped in propogating the | 500, and to 0 twelve months' | any: va pari ih ect, who ing evi in support of her claim idea among the manufacturers and |. jmprisonment for assaulting a lady ine ata: the .unparalisled dae | Tor over a month past. W, A. Camp- |imainees men of the country until awh catrlage. Gen. Macdonald | Our country is making to-day, de- bell, 'the husband of the claimant, who § now it is believed that the schemw 4 is regarded as one of Britains prea | mand, "that instead of checking the is one the superintendents 'of edu- has made sufficient progress to be Iaunched fairly and' squarely on the sea of public oon The associa- ton is much encouraged in its en- deavors along this line by the suc oss that attended jta shorts to defeat in the last session ol "congress two pet measures of the labor lobby, he eight-hour * and anti:injunction bills. : For more than a year Prosident Parry, of the association, has been incessantly at 'work urging the manu: facturing interosts to got ather to combat the so-called / menacing atti- tude of the trades' Vala At inter: vals hag visited Chicago," New York and other industrial centres and advocated before meetings of vous mercial men the scheme of federation | that he has undertaken jo, juth through. = That "his endeavors fact that the employers of this city | havé lately sombised to fht the la. bor anizations and still more re Antly the iron and' steel 'manufac turers of 'the country have combined for unitéd abtion against the demands of. the siractural iron workers' un. ions. Persont who see below the sur. face of things are convincgd that the Lo New Orleans gathering will see perfocted a defensive organi zation of employers that in strength and numbers will be fitted to wage a fight to a finish against organized labor. Tha? the latter is not blind to its impanding danger-is shown by | the fact that measures aw being tak. en in all hasto to heal the differences between various unions, to combine the smaller and weaker organiza. tions into stronger bodies and in short to marshal the labor forces in- to one solid army for the. coming battle. Red Letter Day. This day is known in the Catholic talondar as 'The' Annunciation," which commemorates the visit of the Angel Gabriel to the Virgin Mary. In England jt is called "Lady's Day; in France "Notre de Mars." It was formerly celebrated with great pomp in Rowe. No less than thirteen saints figure in the calendar on this day, including two women, 8t. Dulas and St. Ida, one Irishman, St. Cam- mon, and two Englishmen, 8t. AM} wolf and St. William, the child martyr | of Norwich, #4 x Ask Him Ask your doctor what he thinks of Ayers Sarsapa- rilla. He knows all about this grand old family medi- cine, this splendid tonic. Follow "his" 'advice and we will be satisfied: 0 Aeagyteta oo Seer AER Gg Lowell Bas AUN SIP $A BEAUTIFUL WINDOW Catches the Eye of the pur- chasing public, Your window } will be best lighted by one of our Reflectors. The best stores' use them. Call and o , b get prices. $5RECK & HALLIDAY, | i Practical Blectriciany, Priscoss 81, 5 Reserved for 'P. WALSH Coal and Wood Deale', ttt dem a. LEARN LEGRAP Neilson, has been doing admirable : work. 1 cannot speak 163 h hly of To-LET, the devotion to duty t leads its members to uhdertake this work, tons Sas BED ROOMS; BETH OR many of them at heavy on ial Joss to themselves, us every day which | HOUSE IN VAUGHN ACE they fake from their private practices from May lst. Apply st Cask to devote it to hard 'w in camp is a direct loss to t ves fmancial- Iy, however much # may gain. The least the coutitry can do is to make the hospitals ax efficient uu possible and in every respect worthy of the officers and' men who man them. Do You Cough ? Rev, C. W. Service, BAA., M.D., Me- thodist missionary in western China, | writes to the Methodist mission oops | that on February 9th, his wife gave birth to a daughter. Both mother and Ea i ' child are doing well, Take Tarol. It is the beat ly PWELLINGS, SaonEs. J. 87 Esta Insurance, ees. Tou AN x weniences, at 191: University Avesus. ons, o OFFICES, u, te and , 81 Brock: for cold, coughs, bronchitis, and con- sumption. "Try it. CTR A. A Moors has best ber of the CO.O.F, For nourishment ' than Scott's" Emulsion. Ite yOu cannot get from orinary. food, best materials for making furnishes a gre. trish take so little of it. That Tittle enables 'overcome wasting and to build up the worn-out tissues, Morcover Scott's grit fles-buildes, aid' when the nob been fruitless is evidenced by the gain' flesh he 18 getting: the.upper ; COO YYOCT abd 2 pe Women's "and Child a] Scott's Emulsion is a wonden great deal of rouris JL. oak a er pt na brea 5 Manufacture Daily Si $3.50 and $4.50 you get the same values as ; PACKARD SHOE others ask $f exten fork THE is the only UNION MADE hoe for sold in Kingston. They embrace all the newe American idea in Swell Shogs, Ses them a Ss SU THERLA \ Be TO-!

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