Daily British Whig (1850), 2 Dec 1905, p. 14

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T060 M ANS, MELODEONS A MODERN, PERMANENT, RE- LIABLE SCHOOL. « Established In 1883 ., MISTAKE mi 'when you decide on entering raha in the Cor. Barrie and Clergy Sts. © Ask any of the bus! or profession- al men who have our graduates, or any of our well-pleased pment ; Sompetent teach. ors ; orn Soul rates. : Day and Evening Classes T. N. STOCKDALE, | Principal, Tt 3 ¥; LN em] LL : Will be more beautiful and more comfortable. If you buy a Ladies' and Gentleman's Chiffonlers. Didi' 'and Gentleman's writing oiglone Reversably Cushioned Morris Setona "Saad achines, pew and 3 , all t 114 Gore BEE i SHE Rr The Cook Medicine Cou. 'Windsor, Ontario, | EASY MONEY AT HOWE BIRD BREAD 10 CENTS, aohey with nario Si pe oF Sn Ar COTTAM BIRD 0 OL, Londen, Out, © THE FLOATING HOTELS, Palaces Are Up on the At lantic. Viewed from a distance as she glides majestically out of the harbor to- wards the sea or is sighted from the shore Dloughing her way down chan- nel it is difficult. to realize the pro- portions of a modérn liner. To thor- hly appreciate the vast bulk of a lov than one should stand close be- neath her in a «dry dock. Few sights bring more vividly to one's mind such & sense of personal insignificance. Taking the North German Lloyd's magnificent express steamer, Kaiser Withelm Il.--the holder of the blue ribbon of the sea, the transatlantic reco! an object lesson, we find, starting from the keel upwards, that she has first of all a specially con- structed double bottom, divided off into compartments. This contrivance greatly increases the safety of the ves: stl in the ovent of an nocident, such as striking a submerged rock or wreck, A blow that would ave a disastrous effect upon an ardinary vessel might not cause her any injury of vital im. portance. Apart from this double bot- tom, affording an excellent protection the space is utilized for the storage of fresh drinking water and also for car- rying salt water ballast. Towards the end of the voyage immenso inroads must necessarily have been made upon the coal bunkers, with a correspond- ing lightening of the vessel. Electric ty is called to perform a number of useful offices. By its aid a system of telephones establishes a means of communication throughout the vessel. The male passengers press a button, and lo! the needed heat is fortheom- ing to light a cigar; the fair sex do the same, and the indispensable hair curlers are warmed by the same agen- cy. The iron giants are never idle on the voyage, and the amount of fuel they consume may be gauged from the fact that the Kaiser Filholm IL. has a coal carrying capacity four times as great as that of the largest battleship afloat, When her full complement of crew and passengers is aboard the cap: tain has under his charge no loss than 2.500 souls, a grave responsibil: ity, indeed. Some idea of the spacious accommodations provided for the pas- sengers can be gathered from the fact that the first-class dining-room oeeu- pies an area of 6,500 square feet. The enlisary department is on an equally gigantic scale with the rest of the or. rangements, a separate kitohen being sot apart for the crew, and each class of passengers, respectively. The task of the steward ls no sineoure. Under kis 'charge are the great refrigerating chambers from which he must judici- ously draw his daily supplies and maintain a constant change of menu. Crockery i8 apother item that at times causes him anxiety, for such things are apt to he broken in bad weather. Consequently, a liner must carcy a warchouse full of these in- dispensible table adjuncts. ---- Convicts And Their Families. Leslie's Weekly. speaker before the State Federa- tion of Labor, at Trenton, N.J., made the excellent suggestion that, "when a man 'of lamily is imprisoned, the work he does inan institution should go to the support of his family." Convict labor directed to such a purpose would serve several good ends; it would keep the convict from idleness, one of the worst possible evils of prison life, and it would also help to prevent thos de. | | pendent? upon him from falling into pauperism, or something worse. Under the system which prevails in many parts, and particularly in jails and other institutions where criminals are deta for brief periods, the wifé and children of a criminal often miffer o heavier pinishment than is meted out to him. He is well fed, clothed, shelt- ered, and maintained in idlencss, while a dishonored name. "A man often hits his onemy harder THE AU1OMOBILE | they are left to struggle for a: liveli- | remed oo § with the handicap upon' them of | THE AND ITS SLAUGHTERING PRO- PENSITIES. Pay Dear in Human Lives for Sport -- Yale-Harvard Foot- ball Match Excited New York ~-- Lord Kitchener's Pro- gramme. Special Correspondence Letter, No. 1,400. New York, Dec. 1.--The shocking death of Mrs, Burton Harrison in » terrible t bil ident, which occurred near Long lsland Uity, on Saturday, November 25th, adds but one more to the list of id, J crimes which has clouded the record of the phenomenal locomotor of the twen- ti:th century. Once more the question in forced upon us, whether we will listen to it or not, "Are we not mak- ing too much of a good thing 7"' Are we not going too fast ? Does not. the loss exceed the profit gained ky many thousands killed, and many more of maimed, disfigured and un- fortunate lives? Is it not time to") ery halt ? Not a day paises, but from some portion of our country, comes the news of a shocking automobile dis- aster, seetus to be a fatal fas cination about automobile riding that the most experienced motorists can- not explain. After the first few trials, fear vanishes from the most timid and no matter what the pace, every rider wants to go a little faster. The man who pays ten thousands dollars for a swift flying motor wants speed in re- turn for his ducats, and he generally gets it, even if the additional price is a child crushed into a shapeless mass wf blood and bones, with a cracked skull, a half dozen smashed ribs, and a broken collarbone thrown in to make a good: measure, When an acci- dent occurs and the dying and dead are dragged from under the smoking and ruined pile, we are told that a rubber tire had burst or the steering gear was out of order, that the brake did not act, or it eould not be reach- ed in time to slacken the speed of the tremendous machine that was madly rushing right' into the jaws of death. When the accident occurred which cost Mrs. Harrison's life, the automobile was speeding thirty-five miles an hour, time for an ordinary railroad train running on smooth steel rails : not one of the exouses offered above might have been avoided with ordin- ary care, but it would seem as if the lives of our pleasure-scekers were nev- er_held so cheap as they have been since the invention of the automobile. It is only a few months ago since a husband and wife, two friends of Mes, Harrison's, resentatives of the great Sharon fortune, were dashed to picces without a moment's warning by nearly a similar accident to that WHAT SULPHUR DOES For the Human Body in Health and Disease. The mention of sulphur will recall to many of us the early days when our mothers and grandmothers gave us our 'daily dose of sulphur and molasses every spring and fall. It was the universal spring and fall "blood purifier," tonic and cure-all, and mind you, this old-fashioned rem- edy was not without merit.-- The idea was good, hut the; remedy was crude and unpalatable, and a large quantity had to be taken to get any effect. Nowadays we get all the beneficial effects of sulphur in a palatable, con- centrated form, so that a single grain is far more effective than a tablespoon- ful of the crude sulphur. In recent years, rewearch and experi- ment have proven that the best sul- hur for medicinal use is that obtained rom Caleiym (Calcium Sulphide) and sold in drug stores under the name of Stuart's Calcium Wafers. They are small chocolate coated pellets and con- tain the active medicinal principle of sulphur in a highly concentrated, ef- fective form, Few people are aware of the value of this form of sulphur mn restoring and maintaining bodily vigor and health; sulphur acts directly on the liver, and excretory organs and puri- fies and enriches the blood by the prompt elimination of waste material. Our grandmothers knew this when they dosed us with sulphur and mo- lasses every spring and fall. but the crudity and impurity of ordinary flow- ers of surphur . were often worse than the disease, and cgnnot compare with the modern concentrated preparations of surphur, of which Stuart's Calcium fafers is undoubtedly the best and most widely used. They are the natural antidote for liver and kidney troubles and cure constipation and purify the blood in a way that often surprises patient and physician alike. ; Dr. R. M. Wilkins while experimeént- ing with sulphur remedies soon found that the sulphur from Calcium was su- perior to any other form. He says: "For liver, kidney and blood troubles, especially when resulting from consti- pation 'or malaria, I have been sur- prised at the results obtained from Stuart's Calcium Wafers, In patients suffering from boils and pimples and even deep-seated varbunctes, "I have re: peatedly seen them dry up and disap- pear in four or five days, leaving the skin clear and smooth, Although Stuart's Caleium Wafers is a proprie- tary article, and sold by druggists, for that reason tabooed by many physicians, vet I know of nothing 'so hsafe and reliable for constipation, liv- er and kidney troubles and especially in all [forme of skin disease as this ly. At any rate people who are tired of vills, cathartics and so-called blood "purifiers," will find in | Stuart's Cal ¢inm Wafers a far safer," more "palat by mot striking, in which Mrs, DAILY WHIG, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 2. There seems to be a peculiar fatality trials the most timid lose all sense of danger and the deus: i every case is for the chauffeur to drive faster; is hardly ever requested to slow Severe laws will have to be to regulate this matter and they reach the violaters of the w we look for similar accidents fodiball game- which. tock place on Saturday in Boston, affected New York nearly as much as it did the hub of the universe. From the com- mencemient to the ending of the game, FTE hon were besei va tors." All 'sorts of conflicting reports tele ones Harvard seemed to have victory in sight, thousands of Yale were at last to go down to disaster. The forty-two thousand lov- ers of football who crowded seats of the stadium and all the reserves of the aristocracy exhibited no wilder thusi than the thousands who crowded around every bulletin board in town awaited the final news of Has PPoi disbursing officer of the Cammission. He will receive a salary of $12,000. been . a nted treasurer and Panama. Canal Harvard's disaster. The most unhap- py man in the multitude that crowded Boston on Saturday, was the captain of the Harvard eoleven. Chafing under the misfortune of his absence he had hoped for victory which would wipe out the memory of Harvard's past defeats. Just recovering from a pain- ful operation under the surgeon's knife he demanded of his surgeon that he should be carried to the battle- field. His ' ocondition wavering be tween life ahd death, made the grant- ing of such a request impossible as a compromise, the sdrgeons arranged to give him reports every few mmn- utes from the beginning to the close of the ate. | e compromise was accepted by the hat fpRigin » ahd he was able to follow the game from the beginning to the close. He had brought his. men to the very highest state of perfection; the eleven were in better condition than any eleven had been for several years before and in the tremendous battle he could see nothing but victory for his men. Con- sidering his critical condition I al- most wonder if he lives while I am writing of his favorite's defeat. Though thousands of miles are be tween us and the united fleets of the great European powers, which are now on their way to Constantinople, and though not in the battle, the United States feels serious interest in the result. The sultan has refused the demand of the powers looking to- wards a betterment of the government in Europe and Asia, At a glance it would seem aus if madness ruled the hour, for the representative. of Mo- hammed seems in no position to re sist the powers which are now bearing down upon hiny; but behind his ap- parent weakness is a power which can- not be overestimated; it does not consist 'solely of those who are under the immediate Turkish government but of ithe millions who are united in the faith of Moslem. The bond that binds them together is stronger than hoops of steel, for it issnot alone, in Mecca, where the coffin of the prophet is said to float between heaven and earth, that the followers of the prophet turn for help in the hour of danger, as the Christian turns for the intercession of Jesus Christ, the Son of God. The da, is not so long past since the powers now coercing the sultan .of Turkey were joined in a holy alliance to de- fend him. Then the cry was "Hands off the descendant of the prophet," and this demand was promptly obey- ed when backed by hundreds of cannon and millions "of glittering steel. Through the whole of the Mohamme- dan race for almost a century the coming of the Madai has been anxious- ly expected. by the millions of the peo- phets' devoted. children, From the mountains of Afganistan through the valleys of Lahore, in the ancient city of Delhi, and along the sacred lands of the Ganges so dear to the heart, is a common inspiration which awaits the coming of the new deliverer who is to free them from the Christian yoke and who is to give 'their op- nressors into the hands of "the faith- ful." England is looking. toward her In- dian possessions, . The brave soldier who crushed the African rebellion has been given supreme control of India, lea¥ing him entirely fre¢ from govern mental interference, and Gov. Curzon, deeming his power intruded on, offers his Yesignatich and feturns to Europe. Gen. Kitchner undoubtedly under- stands the military situation in. India better than any man living since Lord Clyde. His i tended Sodan as long as ond of the present freretion is alive. In' last | con- flict with the followers of the pro- phet, forty thousand of the prophet's men were left dead upon field, and an English writer, in en ing the scepe, declared that, = in their white uniforms, "they 'covered the Moslem plain like a fall of mountain wnow." > --~BROADBRIM. A man always with his eyes on the ground bumps his héad; a man with able and effective preparation. his nose always in the *gir stubs his toe, Harrison perished, - about" automobile riding. After a few the wildest excitement prevailed in | every portion of the city. All of our | distance by anxious bet- | came in, and for a few moments when | of dollars changed | bands, for it looked as if the colors | _conflict ; oo P i Mahdi will not be for tten in the | | | { and Coons. lot. The manufacturer sold these to each customer. " es' prices, 127 We (Whisky Makers, Whisky Sellers and Whisky People) | through, recommend Temperance. Strange? Not atall, in eating, smoking, playing and working, ; lance always pays a penalty--No more so in drinking than in anything else Be started off with the liveliest trade we ever bad, and the fact that viscing fact that we are doing just | EVER RECORDED FOR HIGH GRADE GOODS. Men's, Youths' and Boys' Overcoats At prices that means a big saving to you. You can save from $5 to $7 here. goods to the trade at 89 and $10.50 per at a price. THEY GO ON SALE SATURDAY MORNING AT FIFTY-NINE CENTS EACH. Winter Caps A Big Shipment of Men's and Boy's Winter Caps, all styles, opened this morning, to be sold at manufactur. nantes We mean temp as well asin drinking, too, Inte temperate. Use Comman Sense and "The Whisky | " Popularized By Quality." READ OUR "ADS. { They will prove to be worth your while, sooner or later, in Dollars and Cents. Our Great Alteration Sg) the rugh still continues, is the most ton. as we say, viz.. SELLING CLOTHING AT THE LOWEST PRICES SRR Fur Coats range in Wambats, Bulgarian Lambs, Calf Skins If you are thinking ofa Fur Coat, a , be sure to see ours Another Big Snap In Men's Soft Colored Shirts, just received this morning. 23 Dogzen Colo red Shirts, some Stiff Bosoms in the dozen. We have secured them (A limit of tw It will pay you to come here for your winter outfit, RONEY & CO. Princess Street, The Store that Sets the Pace IS A WEDDING DIRECTOR. New Way Her Sex Can Earn Money. Philadelphia Telegraph. wide-awake woman in Boston has found a new outlet for woman's ac- tivity by taking charge of weddings. On the day of the marriage ceremony the bride and the bride's mother are generally too busy and too tired to give much attention to the manage ment of details. As a helper in this household emergency, the wedding dir- ector fills a long felt want. The name of the pioneer is Mrs. Nellie Bliffins, and she lives with her husband and daughter - on Boston's aristocratic Beacon street. Mrs. Bliffing' method is to get to the house early and to give her first attention to the trosseau. She sees to it that the dress, gloves and slippers are just right. She then takes charge of the packing: The bride 'eats her luncheon in comfort, knowing that ev- erything she needs will be in her bags and trunks, carefully inventoried in a little book as to its precise location. Mrs. Bliffins is at the church door before the marriage ceremony to give the last touches to the bride's gown before the bride enters the church. The girl's mother is even saved from having to see that the rooms are put in order after the newly wedded wife has gone on her wedding tour. Mrs. Bliffins attends to all that. The value of the work of the wed- ding director is best attested by the popularity it has attained. Most of her business, Mrs. Bliffins says, comes indirectly, It has grown on the prin- ciple of the advertisement of a. cer- tain merchant some years ago: "If you don't like it, tell me; if you do like it tell others. At first many people were inelined to pooh-poch the idea of a wedding dir- ector. Today, however, thev have learned, that even to run a wedding properly, takes some expert knowl: edge. Mrs. Bliffins is a student of de- sign and decorative art as well as of the changiog fashions. Frequent visits to New York and occasional ones to Paris emable her to bring lack ideas of how they manage these things in other places. But more valuable yet are the many suggestions hfr*woman's wit and her woman's taste enable her to add to the convenience or the beauty of the wedding. -------- In France some women artists and others are allowed 'to wear maseuline attire, hut for this a tax of about two guineas a year has to be paid. . The total value of toys "made in Germany" every year'is no less than £3,500,000, Belief is not morality; not character. opiniop is Ov 1 WILL REFUND YOUR MONEY IF IT FAILS MUNYON, Philadelphia Three Prizes $30.00 Each 70 BE GIVEN BY THE ORANGE MEAT COMPANY Open to all piteons who nse ORANGE MBAT. and carn one or all of these Ls THE" FRO uing cap and car CO, of Kingston, Ontario, manufacturers of ORANGE MEAT, Canada's choicest cereal, offer three prizes of $30.00 each oun} jarty whe will furnish theth with a suitable name that they will accept and adopt or A NEW PACKAGE OF ROLLED OATS A NEW PACEAGE OF CORN MEAL A NEW PACEAGE OF RICE One prize for each name. f : CONIITION. Send two i taken from our 15c. package of ORANGE MEAT prizes. with the names you submit for each : Two coupons with names for one ckage ; four to ns with names for two packages ; six coupons with names for fired Packages. Address all answers marked *' For Competition * to Competition ta close Jan. 1, 1906 ** ORANGE MEAT,"' Kingston, Ont, "" You've tried the rest Now try the best." Its mellowness suits overy palate and its wholesomeness is unparalleled, hasnt Brettins Di ill 8, Argyleshire PEP PPPS OOS POPPI PIIEF SHANNON FILES & CABINETS Transfer Cases. Card Index Outfits. Special "Patient's Record" Cards for Doctors and Dentists. Typewriter Ribbons and Carbon Papers. Si. J. B.C. DOBBS & ©0., 171 Wellington > Typewriters for sale, to rent, repaired. ; : 8 ' © engineering First Lady Engineers Europe to adopt" eng® : Sixth on the list of some two dozen | Proiession. + students who have just gained their Epi jomi Deadly Poultry arly desdly diplom, ineers at the University i : cul 4 Se Bees the same of Tie. | An epidemic of a. FU poultry nay Cecile Butticar, a young Swiss wo- kind has visit ) : and in #0 . ety Pr Iman, twentyfour years of age, who in Somatesi, fas many A6.0 Mile. Butticar is the first*woman - cent. of the birds. ¢ EE YEAR 72. -- E P. Jenkins Cle Saturd BIG S we QF Overce Was due to ti excellence of tailored. garment "HT-REF Is the peer of B. P. Jenkins Cl Choicest Mate A combinition to our shoe Wear "A Military Boot 84 Brock St. Sign WANTEI re FUR FINISHERS. Al McKay, Brock stree A MAID. APPLY TO 2 Ss 216 Johnston at own home. A Whig office. A FEW SMART GIRL steady work, and « Apply Kingston Ho Kung street. GENERAL SERVAN ing; dlso nurse girl the evening to Brock street. SITUATION © AS A store or otlice or Would take share ply "F.M.."" Whig 1ER, FOR S testant, for 190« ry and experienc freas., Clarend A TEACHER, FOR SC Ne Sterringto PrICe Jar Scott $ \ A FURNISHED double and single board, in good loc ch per week or Whig office Xx 1, AN EXPERIENCE teacher, (Protest Section No 8, tating salary and Morrison Sec.-Tr p , Ontario EENTLEMEN TO GI} Overcoats and Thomas Galloway's Also bring your ol them repaired. St guaranteed to plea LADIES' TO DO PL sewing at home time. Good pay. distance, charges | for full particulars facturing Co., Mon TEACHER, FOR TH 8, Glenburnie. Du January 2nd. Hol Prove ing Hickey A LOCAL AND DI for "Canada's Gr We are prepared offer to a relia salesman to repre ston and. surroundi tory will be reset man. Write for Stone & Wellingto MEN AND BOYS TO ing Trade, pays pleting course of | at home or in ou ates admitted to Plumbers Associ = cured. Coyne Dr Schools, "New You Cincinnati, 0. Fr TO-1) DWELLING, OVER street, possession premises CLUB ROOM OR D over Miss Greaza' to J. 8S. R. McCan OFFICE, IN GOO King strect. Rent Forrest, Gents" ) RICK 451 SHOP AND Princess sti Possession Novem Steacy & Steacy. OFFICE, OVER Braver Corner -- Ki two well lighted Apply to McCann For Bn re rr---- PIANOS, ORGAN: and Sewing N second hand, all sireet. Joseph G CLASS.CASE. FOR » inning Table ® price, and other Tuesday, at 1 over Dr. Chown' Er ------------------ The early buyhg | the "best. chance. I will store the parc till Christmas. Gil drug store,

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