Daily British Whig (1850), 9 Jun 1906, p. 9

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nd there's | be found : eflect only 3 hardly as rom one fashions rs of this our entire Monday vals. lawn, | White Waist ; + fine lawn 1 idored] style. wiz, oo JAW, Lutes gut lered | style, wide insortion front Surplie rn and| sertion ang + Wide jy lace vest, leeves| full sleeves with b id P tucked » col-| elbow cufis Monday 2 . 9 (Exactly as ilfistra 25) ixactly 4 Mustration) HN LAIDLAW & SON --_ rts White Silk Wag, Ww or| cirts || Some of the come) Prettiest wai our we've x ver rined| Seen we recery. ed to-day, and com-| | nawrally we're | oni anxious to haye t in YOu expres 08si- Your approval im- of them. This the time there's an jual- added touch of daintiness that is almost bewitch. otk ing, while the prices have been T5c. placed remarkably: low for such splendid 'qualities. For Monday : ike : White SHE" Walt {Ty buttoned Hack tucked: Fronts trimme : | Are a t 1 t with silk Tae IRT, ins rtisn firming very. pretty & glish sign, 'and short sleeves finished with v off Imserfion and la I'wo clus] qualities of "this styl, at 4 % 3.75 aud ' [5 Other button hack styles at and 1.50 IN LAIDLAW & SON -- 3.50; 3.9% -------- e Brisk Saturday 18 tended coming for something else--to! > "cheap" things--but the *'uiexpen- erskirts [White Nightgowns they do--| From the same makers rom ore of'as came the underskirts-- akers--you'no need to emphasize the of splendi lsaving- if you can't see fine qualitylit now--come--and you style--at awill then. | £4 Small san of White ample lot of! Cotton Night Gowns Underskirts, | strong English cot i s and styles,| sizes, 5% and 60 inch Il with lace| lengths, tucked vokes and ors with pret-| neat collars, YS, repular { trimmed will ¢ 1.00 to 1.25, rie frills, fter 7.30 to from' 55 to choicgemaftor 7 only ) 39 ¢ LAIDLAW & SON ---- . . " suede Kid Gloves These are ahout the scarcest things on the market To secure an assortment offering a choice of sizes, required great watchfulness, ut we have such a one--and ex- pect general appreciation of it to- night and Monday. A full assortment of sis from 7 tnclusive, in the i 150 1 ngths of splendid un ed bid, to-night and day, per pair, only Silt Gloves, in excell ality, showing all the pretny immer shades of pale grey, cream, cham agne, pink and blue, and Hack and White, per ir . only .. SHA pre e of the smart . PUMPS h talked-about. A smarter of pump never was made. Most perate with their slipping and e heel. Our last is a special xpressly for the Pump, and dot ric 3.785 Z ¥rom them. ADA Wan wl er 22 loser Only a few weeks ago a fearful dis- aster if _.Courrieres mining dis trict of France, in which more than 1,400 mijers mot death in the under jevels, concentrated public attention about the methods of protecting work- men in the various trades and enter prises in which some must labor for the benefit of the many. a Thousands of men operate daily in powder factories, in chemical labor atories, in mines. and other places where death lurks against careless ness or indiseretion, and sometimes without either of them. In fact, there are few trades or pro- fessions_in which more or less danger does not exist, The phys himself to fatal epidemics; dier in battle realizes that a hn exposes every sol- flving bullet may lay him in an obscure grave; the sailor is at the merey of the wave, tempest and rockbound coast, and many a mechanic or labor- er carries his life in his hand when he enters a factory or a mine. Factories in which various forms of ammonia are made are particularly dangefous. Notwithstanding all the precautions taken, gases will permeate the atmosphere. So powerful is their corrosive action that for miles around in some cases, especially in foreign countries, they kill vegetation. Workers in this. line of occupation are attacked by diseases of the kid nevs, chronic cystitis, asthma and other troubles. Toilers in ammonia fac- tories, in Europe at least, rarely at tain advanced age. Another evil this employment brings in its train is a tendency to drink. An industry especially risky is the manufacture of chloride of lime. Workmen employed in putting the products in barrels must, in many in- tances, wear special costumes and masks. A thick muzzle formed of several doublings 'of flannel is placed over the mouth. It is to protect the lungs from the gas. Thick-glassed, close-fit ting spectacles guard the eves. Even with such protection, the laborer is able to work only . a few hours at a time, The disaster at Courrieres has at tracted attention to the perils of the men who work in the mines. To a certain extent, explosions of fire damp canngt be prevented, hit appar- dtus has been designed to enable workmen to breathe with impunity, "ven. when surrounded by the most Posonous of gases, The first invention of such _appara- 11s was that of § Frenchman, Dr. Re- ghard. His work has been improved Upon in recent years, but the prin- poo Ware of Oiatments for Catarrh That Contain Mercury As mercury will surcly destroy the = of smel; "and completely: derange the whole stom When entering it trough the Mucous "surface. Such articles Should Hever. be sed #xcept, on vreseriptions Jom. reputable physicians, #9 the damage they will do is ten fold 0 the good ean possibly derive Catarrh Cure, manu-~ J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, no mercury, and is taken Enterually, acting directly upon the blagd nd mucous faces of the system. In uying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you ket the genuine®. It is token internal pd made fn Toledo, Ohio. by F. J. «rey & Co. Testimonials free. Vote by. Druggists. - Price 75¢c. per BE, Macturid hy ¥. i's .. contains & cordborgled Take Hal ¥ * vation, all's Family Pills for Const} Sor Parrs pe rolecl A Smoke . om . ciple remains the of supplying pure means, same--simply that air by mechanical Two varieties of safety equipment for men employed in nfines came into pub- lic notice at the French disaster, One furnishes fresh air, or, rather, renews the supply of purified air as it goes along; the other carries a stock of compressed air to be liberated as need ed. Both gre strapped upon the person of the miner. The first invention includes two poe- kets, or impermeable reservoirs, to be carried wpon the breast. One reservoir contains the air to be inhaled, and the other receives thw air that is exhaled, Borne upon the back is a steel cy- linder, containing oxygen that has btn subjected to a high pressure. This gas is released by mechanical contriv ances as it is needed. The head of the worker is incased in an air-tight helmet, At first he breathes the contents of the pure air pocket. The resulting azote and car bonic acid are exhaled into the other pocket. © The azotenitrogen then re turns into the first pocket, where it is refreshed by pure oxygen from the steel cylinder. It is necessary to suppress the car ff KINGSTON, Foreman Such by forcing the exhaled breath, in its bolic acid. a result is attained journey toward the second pocket, through a box containing granulated potash. The potash absorbs the mois- ture and the acid, the nitrogen return- ine to mingle with thé oxygen from the reservoir. If the wearer of the appstatus in- tends to work during a longer period than usual, a double cylinder of agy- gen 'may be carried, In another equipment a two chamber ed recentacle containing compressed air enables a man to breathe about an hour in a deadly atmosphere. Suit: able machinery. attached to the equip- ment governs the supply, ns A German apoliance fer mine "work: ers climinates the mask. It eonsists of air-renewinge reservoirs carried upon the' back, Trom which tubes lead to 4 nosepiece, In this manner the supply of air is constantly renewed. ~ Exceeding risks are taken by men who work in"the manufacture of ex- plosives, In many factories employees who make powder wear an especial dress. A robe covers the entire body and their shoes are made without nails or other metal, is exceddingly dangerous to the eves of the operator, who guards himself by operating with his hands in a cy- linder of steel. Leather curtains hang- ing from the lewer parts of the cylin. ders help protect the workman, who peers through little windows at the globe as he polishes it. Bottling of carbonated or highly charged mineral watts also carries no little risk to the eves of the oper- ator. If the bottle or syphon is weak at any point, an explosion is almost mevitable. Such accidents are now carefully euarded against. Employees who fil the charged bottles, put on labetsand handle them in the initial stages have their heads covered with a metal mask. Gloves protect hands and arms. Formerly such equipment was made of leather or rubber, but it has been found of late that thick wool answers the purpose better, An air-tight suit has been devised for sand-biast engravers, an occupa- tion more common in Furope than in this country. Artificial means of protection, of greater or less value, has been devis- ed for firemen in all' countries. Those of Paris, however, are probably equip- ped better than the firemen other city. The apparatus worn hy these men cnableg them to inhale smoke-laden at- mosphere with impunity, Eanipment is virtually the same as.that of the miners; it includes cylinders contain- ing compressediair or an appliance by which fetid air is purified, At certain periods of their manipu- lations of the .oxplosive materials the workmen stand behind a network of of any gvoven rope. Such a protection, being flexible, is much better, in case of ox- plosion, than an armor of steel or wool, A number of trades believed to be entirely without risk are really quite dangerous. Among them are those of furriers and tanners. fragments of hair results in serious injury to the health. But the ~reatest danger is that of cottracting malign- ant poisoning, Men engaged in polishing stems or metals run danrer of another fort. Fine dust gets into their lungs. Skin = diseases are freauent among packers of anilines. Only the greatest cleanliness is able to prevent them. The manufacture of white lead is very dangerous. Painters are, in a measure, subject to this menace, To diminish its dancers hygienic drinks in oreat quantities and cleanliness are indispensable. Phosphorous, so 'common in the manufacture of matches, canses direful rcsalts through vhosphorie necrosis, As experience in the employment of stich nebessities has progressed, life and health saving 'agencies have ledn invented® Masks and' breatWine appar- atus are common in such trades. The Old Straw Hat. Somerville Journal. Bring out, bring out the old And hold it dp to view. Of course, it's vellow and all that, But maybe it will do. Some lemon-juice, a new black band, Will fix it up all right, The style will do this season, It's just the proper height. straw hat, and Fully a million people enter the ity of London by rail every week dav, Health the Prize Most Sought For And to Thousands of Weak, Sick- ly People Health is Restored Dr. Chase's Nerve Food You want to be strong: and healthy. Evervhody does. Women as well mer There was a time when women prid- ed themselves on looking pale and delicate. That day has past. To-day robust health is the ideal. A well-rounded form, firm flesh and muscles, strength and elasticity of movement and a healthful glow to the complexion these are what all are striving for, and many are attaining their object by the use of Dr. Chase's Nerve Food When the food "which 8 taken into the body faile--to supply the required amount of rich, life-sustaining blood external assistance must be sought until the system is fully restored, Dr. Chase's Nerve Food supplies the very. material which goes directly to the formation of blood, pure, health- giving blood, Mrs. Barbara Bush, Dixon, Stor mont County, Ont., writes : "1 suffered a great deal from dizzi ness in the head and numbness of the whale system, more especially' the arms and hands, feet and logs. When I tried to walk my logs seemed to want to cross each other, and I would be afraid of falling and grasp for a chair or tabl. I also had distressing nervous feelings ak times and suffered from a gmawing sehsation in my sto mach. 54 "I am: pleased th.say T have deriv- ed a great lial of benefit from using as {Letter From Greater New The introdubtion into the lungs of || bhi York. AMEN, AMEN. AMEN, TO ACQUITTAL OF JOSEPHINE TERRANOVA, Freeman's Ballot Made Too Cheap ~Nations Must Organize Against. Anarchy--Law and Order Must Rule. Special Correspondence; Letter No. 1,516, New York, June $.--The attempted assassination of Spain's young king on' his bridal day has called forth a ery of horror throughout, the world, wherever civilization protects the sanctity of the home, or law is the champion of human rights, It was a brutal and dastardly adt, and it al most seems like special providence that while death and destruction fill: ol the air,-and the ground was cover- CARL SCHURZ. By the déath of this well known Ger man-American statesman, politician amd publicist, brilliant member of the little band of German revolutionists who came to the United States during the revolution of 1848. His brilliant talents, honesty and loyalty and the eminent -services which he renglered to the United States during his long snd honorable career entitle him to a place of honor "aurong" the great men of the nineteenth and twen- ticth centurics. America has lost the most od with the dying. and the dead, that the, two royal victims, whose eruel assassination was the sole object. of this wicked and bloody pageant, were the only ones within the compass of that terrible bomb that escaped un- harmed through that sheeking ordeal without a wound or a sear which in after time * would serve ds & remem- brance of the most remarkable event in their lives, and" which' no doubt, with grateful hearts, they will accept as a special providenve of God. In that belief they will be joined by milk lions of pious Christians. who believe in a living God who still rules and reigns. The damnable atrocity of the crime can scarcely be realized till you consider the time chosen for. the ac- cursed holocaust and the royal victim selected for the sacrifice. Alfonso, the youthful Ling of Spain, was no hate- ful tyrant, whose iron heel rested heavily on the necks of an oppressed and suffering people. 1 venture noth- ing in saying that no monarch so be- loved ever sat upon the Spanish Rrone; through his veins coursed the richest blood of old Castile' and Arra- gon unstained by a bar sinister through a hundred generations: when his birth was announced Spain went wild at the happy prospect of the royal successor and watched with the tenderest solicitude his childhood's de- velopment and his boyhood's erowth, till at the age of seventeen he was called to the throne to become the companion of kings and the ruler, of his people. His whole life has beef as open as the sunlight; his* incomings and his outgoings were known to all men antl were chronicled in newspap- ers throughout the world and his life has been as blameless as that of any king that ever at upon the Spanish throne. 3 The kingdoms of the earth that be- live in law and order will have to organize against this terrible anatch ism which has almost become a hor rid discase among on certgin class of dissatisfied people who wish to live in a world without law and whose chief entertainment. appears 16 be the bloodiest and most relentless form of human sacrifice. Londom has long been a hotbed for all classes of crimi- nals, who, driven from their own countries, have sought shelter there under pretence that their offences were purely political. The attempted | assassination of the Princess Ena has roused the British heart and a special plea of political offences will no long- er. shield these dastardly assassins who have. up to the present time, de- Dr. Chase's Nerve Food. It has built ul my Hérvous &vstem and removed the miserable feclings from which 1 suffered. 1 am very grateful that 1 Lever beard of this great medicihe, for it<hav done wonders for me. Ae | am seventy-thivé Years old my system was run down | and this treatment seemed td ho exadtly what I needed." 1 hope others will betiefit by my experience." Weakness, irregularities, headaches, dizzy apells, feelings of fatigue, dis. couragement and despondency soon disappear before 'the splendid 'restora- tive influence of this great medicine; and for sthis reason Dr. Chase's Nerve Food has become so popular; 50 cents The polishing of electric lagi bulbs 3 » a box, at all dealers, or Edimanson, Bates & Co;, Toronto. fied the laws of God and wan. We {rejoice at the fortunate escape of the | young foyal couple and trust that the {terrible prelude which marked their wedding day may have no duplicate, {but happiness supreme shall be their { lot till life's end. What has our president been doing to cal for his assassination. If we may judge hy the signs of the times, and. the work he has already accom- plished he seems to be an almost im- partial judge and one of the most Po pular men of his day and generation, He is no oppressor or tyrant; his poli- tical differences with the senate have been easily bridged over and nothing 'has oceurrelt to have awnkenad seri- we have allowed two Chinese compan- this terrible mystéry is an insati lust for blood, In that desire there neither rhyme nor reason and those who practice it should -he hunted down and destroved as we hunt wild beasts or kill poisonous snakes, We are not altogether void of of- fences ourselves: for ly forty years ue ies' to administer their own codes ir- respective of the laws of the land. No law has reached them save that of the knife and the pistol; we have allowed the Black Hand to exist in 'sur midst without a determined attempt to stamp it out of existence, If the republic is to last and to be- come a blessing for all time the pow-- ef to administer punishment. must rest: in the supreme law of the land. That the right." We are just now beginning to real- ize that we have made that priceless jewel,' the 'freeman's ballot too cheap. We have denied it to the intelligent women in our land, we have given it without price, to the vilest foreign emiorants, The day may not be far off when we may have to meet these bloody an- archists not only on the battlefield, |: but at the polls, and from that deei- sion the victory must come. Whore the ballot falls as silently As snowflakes on the sod, And registers the freeman's will o As lightning does the will of God. The parade of five thousand police men took place on Saturday, June 2nd. and a finer looking body of men could hardly be mot in any part of the world. Occasionally we have -had to say some pretty severe things ab- out our police administration, but when we remember that we have in the Greater New York, thirty thows and regular criminals wi may bless our lucky stars 'that our police force is as good as it im; still we hope it will grow in grace in the future. va Bhe aonuittal of Josephine Terran- ov was un foregotie eantlision. "Sel it was a cenuine pleasure to find twelve lovel-headed men who could de- cide. a case of such vital impoFtance in accordance with common sense as well as common law. From the first moment of the openin~ of the trial till the worde 'not guilty" fell from the live of the foreman of the jury, like the ring of a jubilee anthem, it was evident that the svmpathies of the multitude were all with the eirl, who was on {rial for wilful murder; there was no denying the killing, the only nuestion to decide. beine, was the kill: ing justified and the -ury desided that h was, to which the entire world says, men, Amen Amen, . The Napoleonic Period. Volume IX. of Cambridge Modern Lord Acton, bears as its title the one word, "Napoleon," and it has a refreshing gpirit. The undue exaltation of Napoleon and his importance isa subversion of the lessons of History. He was an inhuman brute. with great talents for detélvine an cadily deceived people--a people who were looking' for somo one to govern then at a period when they were fully convinced that they could not ~overn themselves, He was a liar, coward, mubrderor, and common thug. As Such, history should place him in a proper light, so that posterity will not misunderstand. To oxalt his military 'géhive to' the rank of that of Caesar and Alexander, to place him ne a ruling "power above Charles the Fifth and Louis the Four teenth, is th concen! the léssbng which his career 'left for Europe. Napoleon's nolicy was gelfish and destructive, and lacked all the elements of stability and permanency. Even his lading riqr- shals had nothiné to offer in his de fence ori many oeontions, and they abandoned him at the first opportuni- ys i . Still Living In Hope. Concordia Kansan. 2 Twenty-two years ago to-day there was &h occasion which called forth the following notice in our paper : "On Monday fyorning an ary of wo- rien, armied with all sorts of small clothes, paregoric, castile soap and catnip ted, invaded our domestic camp. We were not only seared But surrendered, unconditionally. We abe informed (reliably), that it 14 a girl and will very likely make her home with ns for about cighteen years, when we will be willing to give her away to Some voung man, provided he i a member of thi Y.M.CA." Sha Is now reporter for the Kansun, and though the plans we had in view of giving hor away have not yet 'matored, we Bre not altogether without hope. 'Don't Forget In Sukimer. To give pure cold water to the ba by two or three times a dav. To prevent sore mouth by rinsing with a little cold 'Water and borax. , To shade the baby's eves from strong light, especially from full sunlight, To avoid saffron tea f bleaching the baby, fof it has a tedenoy to pro- dace serofulous sores. and stomach for colic, and leave Peopermint in its bottle, Yhe To use rood common sense continn- allv and in large doses; and tha, baby will Be joy 'and household, no hatter weather, 2 ----Cll Ll : Ihperial Plowing. An imperial Pekin Times, announces peror will sacrifice to Agriciilture on the second third moon. a portion of the gfound in front of the altar, as a proof that the pro- fession of agriculture is an honorable one. how trying the that the em- the God of of the ------ ih, Tite's little room in this world of ours for the "Fat Woman. She's a hindrance to herself in treet cars, flats, elevators; hut what can e do, poor ' thing--take Hollister'; ous contenfien. The only soluticn of Rocky Mountain Tea. and only that must rule "the law of | History, that grand work: of the late} 56. wuizy B¢, To apply hot cloths to the little feet } comfort to the | decree," according "th He will a plough | - great | $0 dew IT di Gentle, Sure--Pleasant to Take--A ried and Trud, Genmine, © Natife's Remely. or tablets. Muhood's drug store 35 cents, tea |

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