Daily British Whig (1850), 23 Jun 1904, p. 7

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any, but our Trade. deration was Of our goods a way as to arantee satis= orders ? Store, [illinery antle Store. WHERE BAGS by pur~ HOE EEN gs are made 'ee Bags, , Can. EFEX FLEE XAEEEE FH >t» eceived of the No kit- with- » cabi- dust moth of and _ Ceylon Natural only perfectly Black Tea Drinker. Sold only in sealed lead packets. ZN TH XX) ! VIR; OXFORD TIES ! Shoe buyers who want cool footwear for the boy or girl should try our OXFORDS. The goods are extremely light in weight but wonder- fully stout and durable. I. JENNINGS, KING ST. alia Luh a R SPECIALS : Saguenay Salmon, Brook Trout, Fresh Mackerel, Frog Legs. ey DOMINION FISH Co. 63 Brock St. "Phone 520. 0 Seven Sutherland Sisters' Hair Grower '9€) "ON (ejuowfise) MISS SARAH SUTHERLAND, 266 Yonge Street, Toronto Seven Sutherland Risters' Halr Grower d Sea'p Clauner Produces h wd t bo x1. druggists, tle, SEVEN SUTHERLAND SISTERS SOLE PROPRIETORS Canadian Office, 256 Yonge St., Toronto 4. H, Bailey. Foreign Manager 9 " Recommended and 'sold by Geo. i Mahood, corner Princess and Bago Streets, Kingston. > Screen Doors, Window Screens, Oil Stoves, and everything you need in your home this summer Best goods, lowest prices. J. NUGENT & CO..!, he ii Xing St., Next to McParland's. Ee -- - "THE QUEEN OF TABLE WATERS. Naturally digestive tract. JAPAN TEA DRINKE 3 KERS YOU REALLY MUST TRY "SALA Green Tea, free from adulterations of any k the Japan Tea Drinker what ""SALADA" Jetter than Corticelli One Week's Trial Will Show Mothe The wise IA ¥ same flavor as ind. By ail grocers. SII'K ¥ Ladies, if you know of anything | Sewing Silk, he secret may make you FAMOUS rs Grand Results. mothers of Canada who are for ted Food ty in keep the little ones well and strong dur Lactated Food is can ment that It builds up the frail child r food can do. as saved thousands of regularly using Lact their babies, find no dj ing ing the hot weather the only infant nourish supply the healthful elements: of moth er's milk in a way that no othe Lactated Food h babies" lives ; 1 the chicks and keep théir roosting places clean. Feed coop are very necessary to keep the large chicks and fowls from tramping the little ones to death Watch the, hen that first comes off the roost and that last retires at night She is the hest layer . There ought to he a shallow hox full of dry dust in every poultry house, hoth winter and summer, and it should, be often renewed A con tant and © never failing dust bath is the very best remedy for lice. Exe of salt not good for « when they get to it they some t s eat it in fatal quantities; but a l Jt, as for instance, in their food. is beneficial. Chickens are the st profitable stock on the farm, but they pencrally receive the least atten tion, Empty the ashes, either woorl or cowl, into the poultry vard, or house. Are: vou keeping accounts with the poultry Can you tell how many eggs vou have sold, how many you huve set. and how any chicks have life of your LACTATED season depends hatched ? And Inter, little one, FOOD Has Never Any Mother. failure ¢ upon t Success or rights now passing. wind gravel. Be sure how one trial may save the dear mother. Disappointed . FOR POULTRY RAISERS. : <0 ' Some Hints That Will, Be Of Advantage. of the poultry he days and Don't forget lime of clean water for many chicks v vou, sell anid von raise, and how man what van get for them ? All this wil! wo interesting next winter Phere is more cholera in the drink- ing vessils than any where else. Keep them clean. | chickens tiie de but thev require more ones. Don't forget to bh on the thrifty pullets. They to lay the high priced eggs next t Sell the voung roosters as \ ne into the best h wa The roosters run of the r's Y& (Wise H Len softers the water and cli-made man effervescent alkaline, it greatly beneiits the 1 lpollinar and material used in mar te in keeping + poultry that hard now cad) Disinfect- ant Soap Powder dusted in the bath, lisinfects. seldom mixes mo his mildly entire Japan tea, Itis to Black is to the gz ' are well their day and generation. H Toate Joove. By Bessie G. Strootay. . Miss Pierce ing over theses class who were, Juno candidates the degree of bachelor of arts. corner of hop ly, and little wrinkles peeped in * Margaret Pierce, you're thirty-nine, aren't you ? _ The truth particularly dull thesis, at freak had made her think ried 1 wouldn't be here." hard as she endeavored to correct ponderous Yo article Culture of the Sensibility," wailed, "0 married 1 dear, 0 wouldn't he here," wasn't that exasperating ¥ Miss Pierce sw ung her around to the window | thesis still in her slect as it settled Now hand watched down over the cam corner of the museum with a long out of ong of the fraternity houses, and after much playful shouting, join ed the party of coasters, Miss Pierce watched them with bit ter longing in her heart. What a splendid time they wege having - in this, the happiest piiod of their lives. And she had missed something somewhere--hy the: road that had been--thirty-nine-- years long. She fell 40 musing and the thesis was forgotten. What had she done in those long years ¥ Had it heen worth while ? She glanced around the beau tifully furnished noting the pretty chairs, the pictures of her own selecting, and the palms in the long windows nodding out to the Snow. drawing a good salary, and the results of her depart ment were all that could be desired That was just it. The students liter ally feared her so much they put more than the required time on her studies Yes, she was What a sour, unsociable creature she was. None of the girls thought of confiding in her like they did in the other members of the faculty. preceptress at Hanley Hall, the girls had called her "The Ogre." Not directly, of course, but she had not failed to hear of it. Only the other day she reminded herself, when she stepped into the gymnasium some of the girls had been waltzing, but had stopped immediately, scud- ding out of the various exits. She hadn't cared about the dancing, if they had only known. When she was A student was coming in the office now to ask some simple question but ker face wore a frightened expression After she had gone Miss Pierce faced | the past resolutely to discover the cause of her unpopularity. After being left "an orphan, she had | worked her way through this same college in which she now taught. She had stood at the head of her classes and won a scholarship, but pleasure had she given herself or oth ers J The girls used to ask her to their | midnight spreads in those old days. but when she had persistently refused to go, they had stopped inviting her She knew that they were for the most wealthy. girls, and had conceived | the idea that they didn't want her { So, while white robed figures laughing | the | | pa Iv glided through corridors on | Sesevses@ | some one say, g Tete stesats sen was in her office look- that had been handed in that afternoon by. members of the h [ Miss Pierce was tired, woefully tired. The mouth dfooped dejected: her eves as though saying, "Ha, ha, getting old-- of the matter was Miss she had in dulged in a long-drawn "0 dear, 0 dr," but wh of hér memory of the rest of the old childish couplet, "If I were mar- And now, a | gathering twilight, the lovidess on_ The { that fool- dear, if I were oak chair [above the bushy beard and and with the | was Just lonesome, the | ther office, mechanically | what | have been there. Everyone #0." Oh, it had hurt Once she had started to play tennis, someone remark that she and but hearing was crawling out of her shel] getting giddy, she had thrown downy the bluffs, away from everyone, credit to one who had devoted a life time to study. The faculty had prais for a copy, so there cient honor, but the other virly gone up the lake to the commence ment breakfast, and she had sat on the bluff alone. wanted someone to care for. W hy was it Love had never come to hier? Phe tears sprang into her eyes and rolled down on "The Culture of the Sensil il. ity." Her head went down among the ponderous documents, and there in the wo man sobbed. The door softly opened and someone ish rhyme chanted itsell* over and | was standing by her chair. "Miss over. A student was practising in one Liercos- Margaret. What i the of the music rooms across the hall, | trouble ?' It was the old Latin pro and the slow monotonous chords | fessor with some volumes oi Virgil un- And because intensely up to der his arm. woman and Liwxce looked she was a moved, Miss the Kind eyes obbed, "1 that's all." And the ancient volugies of Virgil | were suddenly lying on the floor, and Pus, covered the drive-ways and | with Miss Pierce's tired head on the clung to the close cropped evergreen | baggy coat, the professor said strange trees. A group of girls clad in golf | things for a mah who was thought suits, and high shoes camp, around the [to love his musty manuscripts more than any woman. sled, and started, laughing, toward | When the professor and Miss Pierce the hill back of the president's cot- | came out of the office it had stopped tage. A half-dozen young men came |:leeting and the sun was Just shining | enough to make ev ry thing | benediction. to the dying day Some | girls came dragging a sled up the driveway, laughing at the capers - the wind cut with their heir and clothes, Moved by a sudden impulse, one of | them stopped and said : 'Oh, Miss Pierce, we've had the loveliest time, | and are going again to morrow, 1 [with you would go." Then, while the girls looked on astonished, the digni- [fied Miss Pierce smiled and patted the tumbled hair: "I should enjoy it ever | so much, 'my dear; 1 will try to go." Love had at last come to Miss | Pi and was walking with her down { through the snow bound campus where i the janitor was lighting the street lamps, arkle the ! -- | Hard Place For Grooms, | Among some of the wilder Thibetan { tribes, in the Koko-ner, there is a curious marriage ceremonial function. This consists in placing the girl, on | her wedding morn, in the upper part | of a tree, while her male relatives re | main on the lower limbs or else ir f the back part of her father's tent | or hut, while these same relatives guard the entrance--in cach case the latter | being armed with Lolo thorn sticks, | The groom, when these preparations hygye been completed, rides up and an | notinces his intention of seizing the bride. Thisg requires fortitude, for the relatives beat him unmercifully 'when he atthmpts to reach the woman, I he manages to elude his assailants jo touch the toe of the woman, she is his, he is welcomed into the family | and complimented on his ardor | Should he fail, he sufiers not only the inconvenienee; of being wifeless, but | of cattle and other present { given during the negotiations, By th | sale of a girl to ono man, however the father does not relinguish® his ): elaiing upon her, but may sell her to | other who come afterwards, way have hali a dozen hus. the loss suitors until she | bands. are not supposed to look around dur ---------------- ng prayer; but Dr. Milligan has come Former College President Weds ta the relief of his needy brethren. | . Preshyterian says because the os | Special to the Whig : : ; tablishnd church and the chur | Danville, Ry June 23. Miss Leily | 1aV lished church an we free churche {S. McKee, who recently presidency of the W women at Oxiord, | here to-day to Jam Kansas City. place at resiamed the tern College for J. was married B. Welch, of The ceremony took the home of the bride's mo i "Old Pierce ought to! wissed her her racket and walked as fast as she could past the boat houses and along At commencement she had given a learned oration that would have done ed her and a man of science had asked had been suffi- had dox in introducing liturgy in Pierce was not only tired, but de- It. had always been so. Ii she decid- , cidedly provoked at herself. A few [ed 'to go to Europe ia the summer, niinutes before, while looking over a |she would have gone alon: Oh! she N The weekly wash i smelling. There is no will not be greasy, yello A comforts, no steam, but Ne use common soap it is nothing but slavery. aad will wash blankets beautifully white and make them soft, fleecy, and clean Use Sunlight Soap as directed in the modern way--you'll have no dis- « LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED, TORONTO, CANADA ] ' * bid ) Se 1 a 2 . 8 Y 3 > . L WY Rod 9 o » ' i xX -_-- NT \ =A £27} = = : Fl ois. : aN a ta; : 3 we 0) g s hard work under'the best of conditions, and if you CHT SOAP unsaponified fat in Sunlight Soap, and your blankets wish, or have a disagreeable odor. i perfect cleanliness. a 4 BUY THE OCTAGON BAR. LETTERS TO TEE EDITOR. An Old Time Presbyterian Disg- cusses Liturgy Question. Kingston, June 22.-(To the Edi tor) : Preshyterian's letter on the Liturgy in the Whig™of the 15th inst ' I think should not go unchallenged. At the recent meeting of the General Assembly of the Preshyterjan hureh, the assembly as a body. observed the sacrament of the Lord's supper. The moderator conducted the service by dispensing the elements. he usual prayer offered up to the Most High was read from a book, and the sacra mental service was conducted or read out of a book also. Preshyterian say Mr. Knowles seems to have a h ror of liturgy in the Presbyterian uch, that he scems to know very little about 'the parent church in Scotland, where a liturgy is almost universal, and also in the United Free Church of Scotland. That is a pretty wide stateifient, but for the sake of argu- ment we. shall accept it. I would ask what does Mr. Knowles or the 'average Preshyterian know litug * Mr. Knowles iy berated for fin fault with an inno vation on 'a time-honored. eu handed down to us from the ref tion setthment. Surely Mr standing on firm ground. Not so with those who have the habit ~of shufl ing out their writtey prayers stealthi'y §« it were from under ' about a tom in Know log is the Lille, as you in Neotland use » liturgy, there would not be any thing therefore, nnortho the of Canada, That ic, and thus he is pleading ® to introduce a custom Presbyterian church « poor logi or the x For Sale by Simmons Bros, Kingston. When you think of the splitting of wood, carrying of coal and dumping of ashes--the tiresome weariness of a summer with a coal or wood range--the dirt and heat of the kitchen--you'll turn with joy to the helpfulness of the * Oxford : Gas Range No fire It means a cool, clean, cheerful Kitchen all summer, except when you are using it. No trouble--just the satisfaction of a perfect cooking ap. AE paratus. ii} iy Call in at one of our agencies or send | 4 . for our leaflet. : - <5 The Gurney " Foundry Co. Limited Toronto, Canada Ww Montreal Winnipeg Vancouver : . 108 : ; L. rr -- Then travel in comfort, cleanliness and safety by «.. THE..., : Lake Shore & MICHIGAN SOUTHERN RAILWAY. Special St. Louis Service. Special St. Louis Service. « Through trains, tuperb equipment Double Track--speed and punctuality. Cests no more than the poorer roads. J Insist that your ticket reds, via Lake Shore FOr BOOK or PARTICULARS, ADDRESS, ..... Jo W. DALY, G. E. As, - - | BUFFALO, N. ¥, | { their missions of fun, she had locked and was attended by many | that is illegal. The old Jaw of use and her door and poured over a Greek ds. Mr. and Mrs. Welch will spend | ¥ont and the written law have not her Sour 4 several months in Europe before ta. | Don rescinded. With reference to" the She had gone to the Freshman ban {ing up their permanent residence jp | S'2toment that a liturgy is in such aquet, when: the college papers were | Kansas City neral USC, |, pray how was that Full of "The Feast cof th a emre brought about ? Lid the lay eloment | Freshies." What fun the other stud |. A festival and concert will be held 8 Jn it ? No: wo mal than the | ents had indulged in, hunting the So | on St. John's church grounds ts Tesbvicriang of anada. The high phomores who appropriated the punch burg, on Thursday, June rd. : hiurch Jiabty introduced a ritual in to bowl and the Freshman colors. But [ 758 re Fair's | 1, fothedrals, celled the, cathedral | \ Picnic and dance in R. H. Fair's church service, though Preshyterian i she had considered such things be | grove, Glenburnie, * Thursday ers ee) oe! jigh Peal rian in neath one who went in for higher ! Junt: 308; 3 +f nam A% really nglish « rch ser Vrning, and although cordial tose | vice and high church at that. Thai | ed! had remained cool and unbending oe i RI . = i Should uring a preload f thirty ; orty years exert some influence of through it all. | When You Need Physi, maller conpregations is nod i 1 at this function she had met | or ig. A liturgy 1} i PvigeRonlly il wii und Avoid Drastic Pills}: ivaiess' f: fut the thing go i or some preaches, ory con eves, who had fronted hen ith | c 1 S venient Ra read th: prayers, ed attention. She ad sen a grea et In St. Giles cathedrs T y I feal of him that first year, and, with{ Thousands Injured For Life By | have liturgy, ritual, rss) Riley ro | her nature all softened, was just he Careless Selection of Purgative remonies, By some it has been called ginning to live in the dreams thot Pills ¥ the idols in "St. Giles, any cannot come to every girl, when he told her . heliove that such jis a fact in a Pr # kh engagement. So, looking ! Gy terian church in Scotland. straight at the man, who, attempting | Constipation is the bane of modern AIL honour to Rev, Jacob Primmor friendship, had taught her love in | life, improper food, imperfect mabtic [LC has been carrying on the tres. stead she had. Songraluint d him tian and dyspepsia are the exciting work: ug amp iouxly wn ' nr argare Ses. \ smilin = Phen he = Diy Yate; Add to this the use of drastic pills ed hs ig Grddpm, over two hun : pe hed Tl but in the morning | Which weaken the muscular coating of |" , a i 4 a hoy fully Yi a cru 1 y 5 5 4 a won shamefully abused uel comic t cvnical, pessio | the bowels, and you have the cause of . Tt td : ' there had. come out a 1 nine. discasss out of ten threatened with mprisonment, ete, for mistic woman, with a hard, white Drastic pills became such ga monger: | ©2100 ng these Nelativus uy tems. Such face { al} ered mtv vears | 10 public health that Dr. Hamilton de oe Piracy Dr. Milligan' actions is That had a Jappatee pend vea | viscd a special pill for his own prac | c#leu ated to inflict upon us in Can Baw, an eo tearh i by | tice, which is both mild and certain i | 242. We are sure to have the prayers other school. she had determine wi | action and free from the injurious ef. | Tend now, as the moderator in his of set hips to pu him Sntirely aut OF | fects of pills containing mercury. ficial pasty has tian] dr her life. But having, so much wo The pills of Dr. Hamilton achieve! | Preep ny sxample~OLD TINE cou she naturally heard a Rreat | ouch abelian success that their fame | PRESBYTERIAN. deal him, and, in fact, met him {spread far and wide, till to day they ---------------- near! ory Year. al some conVeuip lu by every druggist in the land. Benefit For Clement Scott tion ~he had known of his mariage 1 ie conditions giving rise to consti Special to" the Whig i and the death of his wife soon after, paticn are never acgravated, ut odo Tune. an The theatrieal and the last vear he had come back promptly cured by Dr. Hamilton's benefit' given at His M sty' thee ir to the did school as professor of La Pills, + hiely assist the dorces of nature | 1; afternoon for Cle ont Soon ri tin } uage, in doimg their work properly, eat of EK rit wil Ne vas the one who had mad You will find Dr. Himintonn Pills an je ro ng i Woe a her il, but why had she let it af [i001 ive for constipation, sick head performances sine that given some foct h and why had she always | iho "ind billiousness Never have | {,..," ago for the late Neji Fara hoes inpleasant to everyone ? She | (hoo heen known to fail, and certainly Nearly every netor and actress Fone dsthe sophomore cotillion of | (hey won't fall short. in your case. note now in London, took part, the her days and her haughty re Just the pill for young people, fr number including Sir Hepry Irving, fusal to tuke part, and the sniall am- |), 41d, the weak, and above all, the Arthur Fourcher, George Alexander, ount of college spirit she had shown proper pill for people who ape strong | y Patrick Campbell, Mes. Langtry ©) when their orator won first place in | ond who wish to keep strong. Dr and: Beerbohm Tree. Mr. Tree appear. the inter state contest, The evening of | Hamilton's Pills need only be tested ed in a new. and enterfaining mono the ju promenade she had stayed once to prove their value. logue specially written for the occa at h hoarding-house and worked | Without exception they are the saf sion trigonometry, She remembered how | est, best and most scientific cathartic . )) the girls came home and talked it | pill 'manufactured, according to Dr. ek ® re. but "when she went: down the Hamilton's own formula. Price 2c Annual picnic of St. Lawrence Meth- over shere they perchtd on the ban. | per box, or fivé boxes for 81, at all | odist church, will be held in W. G, ® Stans. they had suddenly oppo, | druggiste, Refuse any substitute for Woodman's Grove, Wolfe Island, lg ot as she passed on, she had heard | Dr. Nemiliony Pilla, Tuesday, June 2st. ' E@P®O999 909 ee ------ 209 eo9eE Wonder Why ? You never hear a customer of TOYE'S grumble about the. quality of his bread. Wonder why it is ? Are you a grumbler ? Then switch ® off onto TOYE'S bread. 2000 cove0ces0® dg

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