Daily British Whig (1850), 2 Jun 1906, p. 13

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5 ¥ uy flour ga fine, and Nutritioys as - under any other her flour in Canad, $0 much money is erfect purity -- jug nt what that means ar household}, is that your flour, hould be absolutely I Flour wholesome mos; our to be had ip Ogilvie name ang every barrel and from the maker Tell your grocer al Household: lls Co., Limited eal. contains 130 pages of excellent ore. Your grocer can tell you = YKirted Girl e waist-line--with no placket show- t the bottom. 0 theshang of the skirt--good fit e undoubtedly wears a INERY1" vhich cannot possibly wear wron, ods stores. 2 m the I of You ratories of Dr. 9 Jules Kohr. of scientific research, Lost 4 irl years of weakness and ature's Secret restored by combining three chemical reagents in the world. i is if nt. itis proved by its use in the Hospital Tens of free by | weak and hopelet y 30 days treatment. This is a fact! rself by atest. A 5 days treatment with rs sent absolutely free: All packages are led in a plain wrapper with no mark. A treatment (180 doses) with guaranteed fund of money, for $3.00. thin the last twelve months, (7) Jrawer L. 2341. MONTREAL AVAL JTWEAR !} rtment of Cool Foot- vas, for men, women, cut or Oxfords), $1 50 xfords, high, low and $2.50. hite Canvas Oxfords, ut, large eyelets. , Boots for boys, just er. Prices :-- 5C. id 13--60c I0--50C. ol Footwear THY'S Masse VV VV VAAN VANS ~ Why Red is Economical ED Rose Tea has all the good points of two R good teas and none of the weaknesses of any. - You never drank a cup of straight Ceylon or Indian tea that could compare in ; strength, richness, delicacy and fragrance with the "rich fruity flavor" of Red Rose Tea. Yet Red Rose Tea further. ed Rose ea goes further and costs no more than either Indian or Ceylon teas alone. "Red Rose Tea is better than either Indian or Ceylon tea and is more economical because it goes Rose Tea " bre is good Tea T. H. Estabrooks St. John, N.B., Toronto, Winnipeg NOURISH THEIR BABIES LACTATED FOOD From ALL DeapLy ~~ - WISE MOTHERS [1], LIFE-GIVING DURING THE (14 WEATHER. ~~~ ~ |TSAVES BABY ~ SUMMER COMPLAINTS ~ ALL DRUGGISTS . 10 His, PATESTY. THE KING + SirJohn Power & Son Ltd. ROUSEKEEPERS : Astiseptic, Chemically Prepared ans and rd fine, der. pa mil QW THREE SWALLOWS ESTABLISHED AD.1791. IRISH WHISKEY Famous for over a century for its delicacy | from takine of flavor. Of highest standard of Purity. it is especially fecommended by the Medical Profession or account of its peculiar "DRYNESS" | | | | | | | | "are far super- ior to wood or slate. Why \ not coasider them for the new barn, house or factory ? They cannot burn Of warp, are easily laid and need no heavy rafters. "Worth Knowing mors nbonte Write for a ik kK ng fMalogae and Classik Kids Booklet. This is the Sheet Metal Age. GALT ART METAL CO. Lta. GALT . ONT: SILVERCLOTH Polishes silverware and all Meta's without use of pow= s ad he clean, for ay. Send 25c. to-day for special er package, Address CANADA SILVER- €0., Toronto. 'Good lady agents wanted. {ground that the jnathing and not only Lthe | Thev THE GAS FIGHT. Is Biggest One New York Has Had For Long. New York, June 2.--The gas fight is the greatest one the city has had- on its hands in a long while. The legisla- ture passed a law reducing the price of ras to eighty cents a thousand cubic feet of gas, but the companies resist this, declaring it is not constitution- al, 'and while the suit is pending they are_ undertaking to collect this full amount of one dollar per thousand as heretofore. Resistance is being made by consumers to this procedure, and legal aid has been scoured, and organ- izations have been formed to support contention that the companies charge eighty cents on their bills, and if re- fused put the refused money away in a safe place with proof"of the tender. The fight will be a bitter one, and those interested wish to largely ad vertiSe themselves as champions of the people, and will make all the trouble they can to. thé fas companics. There are banded together in the Gas Con- sumer's Leacue over half a million consumers of gas, and their advisers purpose to attack the franchise of the eas companies if they do not consent to the demands of the people. One of the methods of opposition propcsed is for blocks of ten thousand consumers to get ou injunctions from the state courts restraining the gaé companies out gas metres Sr shut. ting off .tha.supply of gas from the premises of those refusing to pay the rate that has been outlawed. Promin- ent lawyers ceclare that the legisla- tire. was within its rights when it ar- bitrarily fixed the rate of gas at eighty "cents, and that the lecislature has the power . to disiranchise the companies and pave the way to the citv's condemnation of their property and purchase * thereof.. This has a squint towards municipal ownership. POLICE PROTEST PARADG. Nevertheless They Marched This Afternoon. New York, June 2. Notwithstanding the numerous protests by members of | the | narade will be held here police force. the annual police this after- noon. The policemen never liked march- ing in the annual parade and iried several times to induce the commis sioner of police to abolish the annual parades, but without success. Quite a number of business men supported the prolests of the policemen on the parade really meant interfered with routine work of the men on the day of the parade, but also left large districts in the citv practically un- protected for the entire day of the narade. Commissioner Bingham, how- ever, decided, that thefe was merit in | the parade, @nd that it should not he given up, cven at the risk of danger from burelarg and thieves in some of the outlying districts of the city. More than: five thousan men will take part in the parade, and they will he formed into ten regiments of five hundred men each. The men have been drilled 'hy Cantain Dillon, for the last few weoks, and it is expected that they will make a fine. military showing. will march from the battery north on Broadway to the reviewing stand near the Worth monument. The v will be reviewed bv the mavor. Police Commissioner Bingham, and othér city officials. There is one thing that you can bank on. The present day young wo- men are keener, brighter, and better looking and more seli-reliant and less dependent. They all take Hollister's Rocky Mountain. Tea. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets. Mahood's Drug Store The highest tide in the world is in the Bay of Fundy, between Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. The tide there sometimes rises to the height of seventv-one feet, and the increase is occasionally as much as a foot every five minutes. A man's wife would rather go out to dinner than he wonld stay at home and have a good time. Soni Zo will toric hen wil el op nade lon 14 REMINISCENCES g ARE GIVEN OF THE OLD FEN. bain IAN DAYS, British Government Official Issuss Plots Leaked Out -- Some Startling Stories, diced iniscences are just by an oficial who watched the ears. . Yi Sir Robert Andston, who has issued the volume, .0o which as given the not too attractive title of Side Lights «on the Home Rule Movement, began acquaintance with the secrets of Dub- lin castle during the chief socretary- ship of Lord Mayo in 1867. He was adviser to the home secretary in Lon- don through part of the Fenian tur- moil, and afterwards during Sir Wil- liam Harcourt's troublous time at. the home office and the ' dynamite plots, and he was for scveral years head of the criminal (investigation depart- ment. Five years ago he retired, full of anecdote, of which 'the volume be- fore 'us is the forerunner of another, that will relate, he promises, his ox- periences in the secret service and at Scotland yard. s The reader who skips the vehement political snimadversions will spend an interesti couple of hours. go pr Soule Anderson's police methods was to withhold all secret in- formation about crime from the home" secretaries. The reason had a iragle~Oright "The first Fenian who ever gave me information was. 'murdered on his ar- rival in New York. I had given his name to no 'one but Lgrd Mayo, and he assured me that he mentioned it only to the lord-licutenant, when sitting alone with him after dinner'at the vice-regal lodge. But there hap- pened to be a servant behind the screen and through him it was that the information reached the Fenians. A story illustrating how things get into the papers : ? "The Fenian organization in Lon- don was governed by a triumvirate, and one of the three was in my pay. I communicated the result of one of their secret meetings, held the night before, to Sir W. Harcourt and Sir A. Liddell (under-secretary at the home office). The same afternoon the infor- mation appeared in an evening paper, and when I tackled' the secretary of state about it, he replied in' the most matter-of-course way that he had given it to , as he wanted take a rise out of him, naming one of the Irish M.P's, who was supposed to be in the secrets of the conspiracy. How Sir Robert Anderson found an informer when he needed one is told with candor : "The Fenians knew that knowledge of their proceedings was reaching gov- ernment, and one of the leading men determined to discover the big leak. With this end in view he wrote offer ing information, but stipulating ex- pressly that he would deal only with the head of the department. The night 1 met the fellow he fenced with me, and lied to me for an hour, and ended by asking for his expenses. 1 had my pocket full of sovereigns. 1 pulled out a handful gnd threw half a dozen of i them on the table. Then, checking my- self, 1 picked them up again, saying: 'No, you haven't earned don't seem to know half sas much ab- out Fenianism as I do myself.' His to my pocket showed me that I had him. 8 I gave him a couple of pounds and told him not to come hack till he had somethine worth tell- ing. A month later he was definitely in my pay. My first care was to make him procure the passing of a resolu- tion that no active work should be done without the approval of the whole triumvirate, 'and from that time I was able to control the sorgani- zation." The London Fenians, Sir Robert states, adopted an inexpensive method of obtaining rifles--they stole them : "After the Saturday parades hund- reds of volunteers' repaired to various public houses for refreshments, and while they stoed drinking at the bar their rifles were sneaked." Of the dvnamite conspiracies of the eighties, Sir Robert Anderson has something new to disclose concerning two plots which were foiled : "A Fenian who was arrested with bombs in 'his possession, and who earned a life sentence in 1884, had iar the destruction of the parlia- So uféntary "leaders on both sides of the House of Commons. His intention was to fling a bomb on the table while the house was in session. After his conviction one of his bombs was.ex- ploded, experimentally, and Sir Vivian Majendie assured me that no one sit- ting near the table could have escap- ed a terrible death. Another plot, the full history of which I will not present disclose, was specially aimed at Queen Victoria's jubilee celebration in Westminster Abbey in 1887." A chapter on the Phoenix Park mur- ders states that 31.000 was paid to en- able one of the plotters to escape from Encland "I have good cause to remember the night the money reached London. A bitter winter night it was in Febru- ary, 1883. I was going to bed when one of my satellites came to report the matter to me. I drove at once to Grosvenor sauare, to place the busi- ness in the hands of my friend, who then ruled at Scotland Yard (Sir Howard Vincent). He left his bed to sce me. 'I was far more competent to etc., ctc., than he; he'd send orders to the office delegating his pawers to me for the ocepsion. Wouldn't I, ete., ete. ¥ To use an Irish phrase, How- ard Vincent could talk a bird off a bush. In a weak moment I consented. And sp keen was I that I went out with the officers whom I 'put on the job." If T had possessessed official au- thority I might have got the money. But many of the Scotland Yard offic. ers know more about law than some men who live by the practice of ijt; and a knowledoe of law is apt to make people timid; moreover, I was not their chief. So when I pot back at 3 p.m. T had nothine but the worst oold T ever had in. mv life. "My knowledee of Sir William Har- court led me to keep 'out 'of his way next dav. But I had to face him in the. evening, -- Remarkable Memoirs--How London, May 31.--Some ¥hther pref. ! secret springs of crime for more than thirty to! them; you ! greedy look as the gold went back in- | at! for I was invited 10 a" ion to the many known illustrations of Mr. Gladstone's versatility, of mind hn our affgirs in Egypt and the Soudan 'were exciting attention throughout , I met him at a oa ie ita the lib- rary morning with a file of for- eign Sco papers, which so engrossed him that, as he sat down at the table - which I was writing, he seemed wholly unconsdipus ©f my presence, Having finished his perusal of them, he had just taken up his pen when an- other the guests entered the room. ing a Homer, brought go certain passage in the Odyssey to his notice. Mr. Gladstone discussed that passage as though neither Egypt nor the foreign office had any existence. And the moment he was left alone agaip® he resumed his pen and wrote an official minute of grave import- portance about Egvpt." do I know its purport ?" Sir Robert adds in a footnote. "His min- ute was perfectly legible on the blot- tingpad he used. Is it anv wonder that I refused to trust the lives of my informants to ministers of state?" Sandy's Eleventh Commandment. Boston Herald. : Bishop Brooks was at one time in- terested in Sandy McKenzie, 5 well- known character in and ahout Boston, Sandy was a pretty good fellow, but not much of a churchman. One day the bishop was taking him to task for playing cards and becom- ing intoxicated on Sunday. "I am afraid, Sandy," he Baid, "you don't know much about the ten command- ments." "Wha's ten commandments ¥' asked Sandy. The hishop explained, "Ou, aye, I dinna kerr aught aboot the ten commandments," said Sandy. "But I ken the eleventh commandment richt weel." "The eleventh commandment," gaid the bishop, "why, Sandy, there is no eleventh commandment." "Ou, aye," said the imperturbable Scotchman. The bishon. hecoming rather curious, asked, "Well, Sandy. and what is the eleventh commandment ?"' "The eleventh commandment, ye ken," said Sandy, "is for ivery mon to mind his own business." A Deal Further. An Irishman entered an omnibus in London recently, and presently said to the conductor--"An' how far is it from - St. Paul's Cathedral to Char- ing Cross?" "About fificen minutes' ride," he replied, "Thankee; an' now how far is it from Charing Cross to St. Paul's Cathedral 2 "Why, didn't I tell you how far it was from St. Paul's to Charine Cross ? Do you sup- pose it is any further the other way round ?"' "Sure, gn' I don't know. I know it's a deal farther: from New Year's Day to Christmas than from Christmas to New Year." -------------- Let Health Bound Upwards. If you are .-run down start running up towards sound health. Debility means a loss of a portion of life it- self. Vitality means new life, new energy. freedom from diseade and the power to accomplich things. Wade's Iron Tonie Pills build - health by sup- { plving the system with rich, vital { blood. Thev are a great nerve strengfhenor ! and blood maker. In hoxes, 25¢., at Wade's drug store. Money back if not satisfactory. Nothing When You Gpt Used To It } Ladies' Field. A certain number of 'people in ¥ng- land are always shocked at something i and those of us who remember how abandoned and unwomanly we were | thought some fifteen years ago be cause we bicycled will remember that and one ! victory over prejudice, fidently await a similar smoking. will con- about Can't Blame The Merchants. Draper's Record. . We quite sympathize with the hus- bands of unscrupulous and extrava- gant 'wives; but, after all, they mar- ried for worse as well as for better, end it does not' seem quite fair to shift a considerable portion of their marital responsibilities on the should- ers of innocent tradesmen. ------------ Never call .a convention of your friends ta find out what you think vourself. Every new like or dislike' vou form only adds additional discomfort to yourself, EE re------ FOOD OR STIMULANT. Ask your doctor if when he orders a patient to drink lots of pure milk he advises the addition of a large quantity of whiskey. He'll tell you "no" very emphati- cally. Yet there are pegple who, when ordered to bet Scott's Emulsion, will pt some wine, cordial or extract of cod liver oil and think it is 'the same thing or better, If you want and need cod liver oil 'in its best, purest and most easily digested form, get Scott's Emulsion. If you want whiskey, that's another fhatter, but don't look for the same results. SCOTT & BOWNE, Toronto, Oat, You can . neh fot S "Pro Same biz package you have always boughs ¥ wear it out butyou can not fwear it out. ¢ When you buy - wn. | mw --- + It is delicious, just 8 the best you ever tasted tector [3 [oY 111s ,00 cts per year. Needlework is a mag; that every lady times ay Same High Quality ba . you will do just what thou- M1 y : sands of the best judges of J good foods do--buy it again. Try it to-day. | } IDs 7 e a IN) \ should take. Issued 4 ar, 96 pages beautifully Write for sample sending 15 cents. Corticelli Silk Co.Ltd. St.John'. P 1) HAY CURING. Professor Tells How This Should Be Done. W. J. Spillman, agrostologist of the department of agriculture, gives a careful account of a very useful meth. od of curing hay, "iarvesting on this farm a_Very interesting process,' says Mr. Spillman. "The mothod of curing is-as follows : ®, "The grass is cut in the afteroon. The first night's dew nover hurts it, Let it lic the next day until noon. It is then put into curing cocks which are made to lie flat. These cocks are upset the next morning and in the af- ternoon four of thew are made into 'me weathering cock. Let it "stand thus for one day; then haul to the barn or rick," 8 there are many persons those days who are tarning to farming with little or no experience, the explicit directions given by Mr, Spillman will doubtless prove most valuable, al- though, of course, they may require some modification with varving condi tions of weather gnd quality of hay. -------- Pert Paragraphs. New York Success. It is a good deal casicr to pray for men's souls than to pour balm into their wounds--not to mention that it costs less. The supreme ecurt has not yet de- cided. which is the weaker man---he who is not able to see his own weak- ness or he who has no faith in him. self. The millionaire whovhas caught up with fortune by tuming sharp corners is 'much failed doing his honest best, That much talked of "armor of £us- picion" may protect the wearer once in a while, but usually it is of about as much help as a winter ulster in a hup- dred-yard dash, : From an intellectual point of view that time of one's life is most wasted when he tries, in a spirit of dumb loyalty, to admire all those things that are popularly considered admir- able, -------------- Women Treated As Merchandige. Rev. John L. Scuader, of Jersey City, talking about the business wo- maf and comparing the present con- dition of women in civilized countries with their condition in the past, calls attention to the fact that even to-day in Tunis and Algiers a wife can be bought for. the price of a wmaule, ' Gh at Hs Ay 2 poorer than the bankrupt who | | | | | | | | | { | The Perfect Illuminant for Every Purpose That is an accomplished ideal, surpasses every other artifi- cial light in brilliancy, dif- lusive power, whiteness, soft- ness, steadiness, purity, safety and cheapness, Adaptable to all ACETYLENE FLAME The Sunlight by day and "Ar. tificial Sunlight" by Night ACETYLENE Purposes To streets, pub- lic buildings, auditoriums, dwell ing houses, stores, factories, faboratories construction and military camps, rail- ways, motor cars and pleasure craft. A single Avety: Handyand Inexpensive lene flame the size : Acetylene costs much less of 'a 10c. plece, H unit than gas or tlectricity, A busping 1% cubic i Generator, water and . foot per hour gives. i {Shawinigan Brand is the best) i ars Hi thin an 2 are all that is needed. Ap. 2 Srdioa Sames paratus gives no tr size, burning § ereates no danger. : : cubic feet per hour Accepted by Fire Under. i i writers as Standard lighting. COAL GAS FLAME Write for full information, descriptive literature aod prices, Seat free ov request by CONTINENTAL HEAT & LIGHT CO. MONTREAL, P. Q. \ Sole Selling Agents for Shawinigan Carbide Co., Ltd. Securities of the iy Buffalo, Lockport-and Rochester Railway Tri-City Railway and Light Co. Baillie, Wood & Croft Malin 5200-01-02 " Toronto

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