Daily British Whig (1850), 7 Jul 1906, p. 11

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A A" en Tea tea drinkers because urity. Oc., 40c., 50c. and 60c. per Ib. d, St. Louis, 1904. R'S CROSS N GIN: S in Bonded Warehouses, went Supervision. CO. Montreal nS. ; orsets are made as some 8 they should e--so they ally, but little ease. Here's on a woman's ideas--with nt. Modish to a degree, that bears the "D @ A™ de, whatever their price, and comfort and again nerit. Ask your favorite r what make you think you Reputation. ly used Neave's Food in two ot Castle and the Village Home), lion in saying it has proved very 7th, gor. GBRIDGE, ENGLAND. 0., Limited, Toronto, and treal. juaranteed. *d men are annual} wep! use or later excesses, -- A Was rescued im time. He lange soon came over me, I became nervous, despon- ly tired, evil forebodings. weak, dreams and draing ning sensation. To make Ontracted a blood disease. all failed till Drs. Keg. veek I felt better, and in a are the only rellable and Of no pay. You ru 1688 at stake. Beware of ® we take that our NEW ire, Weak Parts, Kidne: all or write fur Question lichigan Aves Detrolt, Mich oY =, ps s EAGUTAP THE DAILY WHIG, SATURDAY i . I did so, itching of my scalp has ceased. I suggested to my aged Father ABBEY"S SALT for their Rhbeumatism--and they tell me they have received immense benefit." Name gives on application. 25¢. and 6oc. a bottle, At all Druggists. my heart--which increased to such a degree that 1 became very anxious. and an intense 'itching. or heafirg, of the head made life miserable. I asked a druggist, was there nothing he could suggest that would help me, and he replied 'Why not try ABBEY'S SALT ? without solicitation that the Rheumatism has disappeared--my appetite is grand--and - the I lost my appetite, and can now state positively, and and Mother 'that they should try for business men are designed to give the maximum of comfort. They are correct inggtyle, and are made from the finest Irish linea, woven expressly for them. Two qualities, ell sifle. 15¢ end 20c. TOOKE BRQTHERS, nr MONTREAL: PURE AND WHOLESOME. ! ONE POUND CAN 25¢ EW.GILLETT Sure LIMITED TORONTO,.ONT. Wilson's FLY: PADS ONE PACKET HAS ACTUALLY, KILLED A BUSHEL OF FLIES Sold by all Druggists and General Stores and by mail TEN CENTS PER PACKET FROM ARCHDALE WILSON, HAMILTON, ONT. TO HIS MAJESTY THE KING « SirJohn Power & Son Ltd. ESTABLISHED AD. 1791. THREE SWALLOWS IRISH WHISKEY Famous for over a century for its delicacy of flavor. Of highest standard of Purity. It is especially recommended by the Medical Profession or account of its peculiar "DRYNESS" Storage ! Do You Know That? Citizens of Kingston and vicinity de- ing to store household goods have facilities extended to them by ralling on W. G. FROST 2909 gaeen St. Telephone 526 all goods Téft "in his chargé receive the best of care at a reasonabfe cost. Clean, Dry and Prompi Service Failure to Find Husband Con- scarce and _forvigners do not often see them. They are kept out of sight and not spoken of exeept when it is un avoidable, since it is a disgrace to any Chinese family if one of its ant have to go out in the fields and work, and the SPINSTERS IN CHINA. FEW sidered' a Disgrace. The oldimaids of China are very daughters fails to marry. This. pragtical seclusion of the young unmarried women who do not making of matches through the parents, arg mainly responsible for the few single women in the em- pire, In theory, at least, the bridegroom never sees hig bride till after the mar riage, consequently, 'his aversion to marrying a Young womani lasking in beauty does not have to He 'taken di rectly into account. As it is one of the chief sims in life of the Chinese mother of daughters to train her daughters so well that they will be thought desirable wives by the mothers of sons, the uncomely daughters, of course, receive special attention in all the household arts; thus, even a "homely" girl is pretty sure to®have qualities which will ap peal to the mother looking for a son's wife, The Chinese woman shines least of all as a motherdn-law. The bride is taken to the home of the bridegroom's parents to live, and practically. becomes the slave of the britlegroom's mother from the mo ment her feet cross the threshold. De- voted to hep «son, ns the mother is naturally and according to all Chinese tradition, she is prone to be unduly severe, even tyrannical, in her de- mands upon his wife, whose life is, therefore, 'sure to be anything but a pleasant one. Even the son is expected to obey his mother as glong as she lives: the danehigg in lg Wwust, bog humbly and uriquestionably to the mother-indaw's slightést. wish. Such a thing as the Younger . women showing th least opposition to the olicr one's will is practically unthinkable, and thus the early years of the Chinese woman's married "life are often very unplea- sant, TO QUIT HOLY RUSSIA. Anarchy Reigns and Newspapers Teem With Tales of Crime. St. Petersburg, July 7.--It is report- ed that the government has decided to take legal proceedings against fourteen members of the douma who signed a recent labor manifesto. The labor party is now issuing a proclamation to the people accusing the government of systematically. obstructing the donma's 'work, and exhorting the peo ple: to organize in support of the douma. Unrest is Anereasing everywhere, crimes are multiplying, murders, in cendiarism, strikes, robberies and arm- ed conflicts bétween the troops and the populace occur on all hands. The pres- nt worst centre is Poland, Warsaw's murder list for the last two days in- cludes 'ten killed and ten wounded. Other towns are in similar plight, and the country districts are infested with robber gangs armed with revol- vers, The Cossacks sent to restore or der are often worse than the robbers, so that hundreds of Russians arp em grating, trade Is paralyzed," and whole towns are deserted. It is reported that 400,000 Germans have asked per mission to return to Germany. Famine and disease are rife in the Volga districts, the Caucasus is in complete anarchy, and reports of the crimes. there. fill columns of the papers The douma's saying that the douma is the only from revolution seems to be coming true. Government securities are steadily dropping, and on the exchange there is little busi ness, escape Adopts The Kingston Plan. Indiana # in © for election reform. The two leading political parties have come to gn agreement in regard to campaign expenditures, and are pledg- ed not to pay-out a dollar at the coming election for votes. This is sig nificant coming from the state made famous by the publication of the Dud- ley latter, telling how the "floaters" were to he marshalled in "blocks of five," to vote. A Hard Job. St/ James' Gazette. The _ingpector 'asked the boys of the school he was examining: "Can you take your warm' overcoats off 7' "Yes, sir," was the response. "Can the bear take his warm overcoat off ?"' "No, sir." "Why not ?"" There was silence for a while; and then a little boy spoke up. "Please, sir, because God alone knows where the buttons are." Notice--Life insurance companies will reduce. the "rate thirty-three per cent. to all who agree to use Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. A wise measure Carriage Painting d Specialty to equal Tea or tablets. 35 cents. Mahood's of be on the shelf in every home. drug store. . For sale by .all medicine dealers at Nelson's bust -is to be erected in| 50c. a bottle or sent prepaid hy The the chancel of the church at Burn- {Tuck Bone Oil Co. limited, Smith's ssi BROKDBRIN' Letter From Greater New York. WHITE'S MONUMENT WAS THE MADISON SQUARE &F GARDEN. Spot Has Been Many Things at Many Times--Roosevelt Sees the. Tountry's Safe, and Goes Off for Three Months Holiday. Spedial Correspondence, Letter No. 1,520. New York, July 5.--1 approach the letter of this week with a heavy heart the record of assassination is hateful to me. Leafy June is gone; midsum- mer with its fruits. and flowers is close at hand, and instead of enjoy- ing the delights that brightened life and made the glorious seasons of the past like one long golden dream, I take up my newspaper and the first thing that strikes my eye is an ac count of a railroad disaster, with an appalling list of wounded and dead; an accident where an automobile ran into a trolley « with a shocking list of fatal disasters, double-headed for feurithat the average reader might pass them but then the ordinary read- will not do. If reports of murders, railroad accidents and divorces were CONGRESSMAN JONN SHARP WILL- IAMS, OF MISSOURI, The leader of the democrats in the Hous® of Representatives, has teen offer- ed a professorship at one of the large Bastern colleges awd is seriously consid- ering the idea of wiving up his political career and devoting himself to an academic life. ---------------------------------------------- printed in diamond agate and. the re- ports of the condition of crops in the west, the rise and fall of stocks, the accounts of the great revival at Bos- ton, where thousands of weeping sin- ners were brought to the foot of the cross, were set. un in double leaded brevier, the scandalous column would have the call every time. One subject has entirely engrossed the public's attention for the last two weeks and mercy only knows when we shall see the end of it. The assassina- tion of Architect Stanford White, has proven more than a nine days' won- der. The counsel for the assassin, Har- ry Kendall Thaw, have thrown out a drag-net, which, like the tentacles of the octopus, will leave a poison more deadly than the venom of the snake whose touch means instant death. Al- ready, the air is heavy with stories of the midnight revels in the Standford studio, awav up in the tall tower, where the architect, like Mephistoph in the ancient story could look down on the wickedness of New York. The Ma- dison Square garden was one of the best known places for all sorts of meetings and entertainments in the city. It on a plot of eround where cattle, horses and hoes had webkly sales and was known as "The Bull's Head." Durine the skat- ing rink craze an immense building was erected. It was richly furnished and it was here it is said that several other men and a number of young girls below age of consent held jinks till morning, and Moody and Sankey sent forth Christ's invitation to a ET EET The great curative powers of this remarkable Yemedy is attracting much attention and everywhere it has been introduced it is win- was erected . ning its way among Tuck 4 Bone the people. It is a rowerful, penetrating I F which we believe has a larger percentage of cures of rheumatism to its credit than any other remedy ever offered for this dread disease. It acts directly on the bone--the lodging place of rheuma- tism--dispels the poisonous acid from the joints to be carried out of the system in the natural way and by its splendid work has proved that the surest and quickest method of getting relief from the torturing pains of rheumatism, as well as the common sense way, is by a direct attack on the aflectggegart. For the of life it is invaluable. Mrs. W. H. Thomas, of Lombardy, writes as follows: I was subject to stilf neck. Suffered for years and have been as long as two weeks at a time not able to turn my head without turning my whole body. I doctored and got relief only to have the trou- ble return again. In August last I had a severe attack and I tried Tuck's Rheumatic Bone Oil having been read- ing in the papers about how good it was for rheumatism, ete. Three ap- plications, completely cured me gnd I have 1 no return of the trouble since. recommend Tuck's Bone Oil to everyone. MRS. W. H. THOMAS, Lombardy, Ont. For rheumatism, lame back, meur- plgia, sprains, coughs, colds, quinsy, "or bronchitis, in short for any and all kinds of inflammation there is nothing Tuck's Bone Oil. A bottle oil small ills mss p-- sinful world to accept salvation and be washed 'in the blood af the lamb, It was wonderful, a marvel of mar vels. It was at four o'clock on a bit- ter winter's moming that I pulled my- self together, started for the rink to gel an item for my weekly letter, 1 did not expect to meet any sinners like myself afloat in such intemperate weather, The streets around the rink were crowded, and the rink itself was crammed, I never again on earth see such a scene as greeted my eyes on that frosty winter's morning. Once under the influence of the roug| evangelist everything else vanished or faded out of sight; the weeping thous- ands who listened to the evangelists story of the suffering Christ as he struggled with his cross along the Ap- pian way, across the field of blood and up the stony sides of Calvary; and then he told of the final horror of crucifixion, as I shall never hear it again. "Sinner," he said like the blast" of an archangel's trumpet, that blood was shed for you, for you and me. Won't you come to Jesus, who died that you might live? Won't you come to Jesus?" A low wail like that vast multitude with cries and the sweep of a 'wintry storm shook tears. The evangelist raised his hand and said, "The Saviour is dying, hear Him speak ! The mortal man is dying, hear his message!" A hush fell on on that vast multitude like death. "My God! My God! Why hast thou forsaken me?" After this great revival, Barnum's greatest show on. earth and norse shows found shelter and then kennel clubs, prize fights, running and wali ing matches had their day, till finally the ground was clearédd for: the Madi- san Square garden, and Stanford White was the architect. He was the designer of many noble buildings. Tut his greatest pride was in the Madison Square Garden, and when the bheauti- ful goddess was successfully mounted on the tower spire, and he stood wl miring his finished work, and a friend who was with him asked what Le con sidered the his greatest' architectural triumph he replied "That 1 can hard- ly tell, but I think. this wi'l lo my monument." There is little doubt that he spoke in the spirit of jwoplucy ow- ing to its . central position and the various uses to which it is app' For the assassin who murdered him I can find no words that would fully convey an idea of my abhorrence and contempt, In his thirty-seven ye of worthless life and for several ye with an income of eighty thousand dollars per annum, 1 can find no re cord of any generous act or thought with opportunities for honor and dis tinction not granted to one man in a million, he has lived a constant dis grace to his family to become the companion of wantons and gamblers. If by a mistake of justice, he escapes the electric chuir, Tot us Hope that prison bars will hold him fast till death closes the necount of his miser- able and disgraceful life. What shameful * revelations are yet in store for the public affecting both i the living and the dead, 1 ither know or 'eare. I wish I could blot the whole of the infamous story from my memory. After all this disagreeable matter, it is a pleasant thing to turn to the condition of our God blessed country and learn from those whom we have appointed to keep an eve on the ra- tional cash box that Unde Sam is perfectly solvent and if our departing statesmen have spent a billion of dollars Providence he thanked we had the billion of dollars to spend. We are not bankrupt, we have more mil lionaires and multi-mithonaires than any. other céountry on the face of the earth and we are richer, per capita, than any nation on which' the sun ines; we are not going to the "Dem nition Bow-wows." The produce of our farms last year was #ix thousand four hundred and fifty millions of dollars and this year the produce is so great that there are not enough hands to gather the overflowing har vest and the farmers in the west are arresting all travelling hohos and are compelling them to work for two dol lars a day, and President Roosevelt says that everything is on the dead square from Bar Hurbor to the Rio Grande, that there is no disturbance in the Philippines, everything is easy at the Sandwich Islands; Porto Rico is taking eave of itself very hand somely and Alaska is turping out more gold than in any former period of its existence. So assured is he of the safety of the country that he pro mises himself a three month's vaca tion at Oyster Bay. He says that he wants rest more than anything else, so he assures the constituency that placed him in charge of the govern ment that he is. not goin~ hunting any more for bears, jack rabbits, or mountain lions, rs urs BROADBRIM. ON THE WRONG TRACK Wreck and Loss Averted by Pre- sence of Mind. Paris, July 7. Last night the ox press train from Calais to Brindisi, carrying the Indian mail and having on board a large number of English passengers, narrowly estaped destrue tion. A catastrophe was only avert ed hy the presence of mind of the keeper of the French end to the tun nel, leading into Italy. It appears that in consequence . of the displacement of the bed of the River Are it bad been foungl necessary to place a temporary point near the St. Antoine torrent, Owing, it is supposed, to some accident, the point was wrongly set, and the Brindisi ex press ran off the down line on to the up line, and continued running at a spewed of sixty miles an hour on the wrong set of metals for several miles without the driver perceiving what had happened, it being pitch dark at the time. The keeper of the French end of the tunnel, however, saw what had hap pened, arfd set all his signals against the express, with the/result that the train wag brought up a few hundred vards further on in the tunnel. A mile away, approaching the ex- press on the same line of metals, was passenger train No. 1008, gad but for the presence of mind of the timnel signal-keeper a collision was ineyvit- able, The railway company has suspended the station master and the signal man responsible for the wrong setting of the points. ' The engines of a first class man-of hamthorpe, the hero's birthplace, | Fulls, Ont. Toronto. LonDoN. SPARROWS TENACIOUS. Couldn't Be Thwarted in Nest Building Enterprise. Indianapolis News . "When some folks wish to tell of ex- treme tenacity of purpose, they speak of it as being of the bulldog variety," said a man who lives in Meridian street near Mapleton, "I don't," he continued, *'for 1 believe that for gen- eral tenacity of purpose the English sparrow has the bulldog rubbed off the landscape. "A pair of sparrows began to build in one of the gutters on my home and 1 removed their building while it was in process of construction, Again they started to build, and again 1 removed their home. 1 thought I would stop their construction work and so nailed some shingles over the place where they had been so busy, AR "Meanwhile those sparrows perched on a tree and watched me and cursed. Next day 1 discovered that they had pried their way past the shingles and had again built in the gutter, and again 1 evicted them, while they stood by, watching and swearing. For two days I heard no- thing from them, and then when I be gan to use the pump in the back yard I pumped out a nest they had built somewhere in the pump's internals, they stood by and watched and one of EwWore, "About an hour later I saw going in and out of through the opening just above the handle, carrying in bits of grass and feathers." | them that pump EYESIGHT UNRELIABLE, Falsity of Adage That Seeing is Believing. Geneva, July 7. RBrof. Claparede, of the Geneva University, has | mak ing some interesting experiments to prove the unrelinbility of eve-witness es of an event, and also to prove the great deterioration in the powers of observation due to the high pressure of modern life. Recently in one of his classes the professor brought in. a man who wins masked and his body hidden by a white shroud. The "unknown stayed ten seconds in the classroom, made + signs, and then walked out. A few days later the professor asked his pupils to pick out the unknown's mask, which was placed, with ten oth ers, on a table Four students only out of twenty-four chose the right mask, although it differed in color and size from the others. Ton pupils chose different ones, and eight confessed that they were unable to decide. "You see," said Prof. Claparede to bis class, "how unreliable is the evi dence of an eye-witness of an event, even in pn law court and on his oath." During further experiments the Swiss savant came to the conclusion that not one person in nine can give a cor rect deseription of a man whom 'they have looked at for ten ssconds. Wo men, he belioves, are much closer ob servers than men. Son Be Done Being Tired. If you tire easily, if yon never rest thoroughly, if there is a constant sense of weariness or exhaustion, what you ned is new, rich, tissue building and nerve-strengthening blood. Wade's Iron Tonie Pills sup- ply just the aid required every time. They give quick and thorough benefit. They are a great nerve strengthener and blood maker. In boxes, 25c., at Wade's drug stord™s Money back if war cost about $700,000, not satisfactory. Ee Write for our free booklet telling all about the "SUNSHINE" furnace. For Sale by LEMMON & SONS M<Cl MONTREAL, How Is Your Furnace Constructed ? You want a furnace that is comstructed on scientific lines--one that will extract every atom of heat from the fuel and i send it through the house, not up the chimney. The SUNSHINE is the result of more than 56 years in successful fur- nace building--it is in use -from Halifax to Van- couver, and is giving sat- isfaction everywhére. l , Will burn any kind of | fuel, is easy to run, solidly built, wastes no heat, and .is everything that a good : clean, modera furnace <3 ought to be. v VANCOUVER. WINNIPEG, St. Jour, HamiLTON EC Let Hae 54 3 More nourishing, more wholésome, more economical than MEAT, made of the whole- wheat, cleaned, steam-cooked, shredded and baked--An ideal summer food--Keeps the stom= ach sweet and clean, and the bowels healthy and active. MADE IN CANADA Send for the "Vital Question Cook Book," postpaid. CANADIAN SHREDDED WHEAT CO., Limited, Niagara Falls, Toronto Office, 33 Church St. We Own and Offer a 5 per cent. 1#t Mortgage Gold Bonds of u Buffalo, Lockport and Rochester Railway Co. CARRYING 100 PER CENT. STOCK BONUS Price and full particulars on application | Long Distance Phone Baillie, Wood Toronto Main 5200-01-02 Members Toronto Stock Exchange -- -- For the Summer Season Refrigerators, ilce Cream Freezers, Lawn Mowers, Garden Hose, Win- dow Screens, Screen Doors, Gas Stoves, Wickless Coal Oil Stoves and Ovens. We carry a large assortment of the above articles at reasonable prices. Inspect our stock before purchasing elsewhere, » » . " ELLIOTT BROS 77 Princess Street. 'Phone 35. a '

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