Daily British Whig (1850), 14 Aug 1906, p. 6

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Speculation Has No 'Haunts--It Is Car: ial, broker's office and in the bucket :| BHop, and plungers are to be met with in both places. In the one, as in the other, there' is, trading on margin. Fixing on theses points in 'common, and -ufiinformed as to the points of diftorence,. the undiscriminsting but righteous public condemns both, and, worse than all, seizes on the term was based on two tarts § A * thd flesh lusteth against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh, and thee ard contrary the one to the other; that ye cannot do the things that ye would," | Galatians v., 17, "For-all thatils in | the world, the lust of the flesh, and the | lust of the eyes, and the pride of life, is not of the Father, but is of the World. And the world passeth away, and the lust thereof; but he that doeth the will 3 Gog abidetn forever," L John 1. 16- The twe forces, the world and the » and Paul as radical antagonisms dll of, God, were recognized by both was, impossible, thas: they come to a There was no | energy 'working' towards evil, a power | almest demonic in our being. The oth- It rose. | There could be no doubt that the apostle in speaking of Monument Just Erected to Its 'Discov- or, Sir James Mector--Sym- pathy.In His Sorrow. At Laggan, near the etitrance of the Kicking Horse Pass, has just been erected a mon nt to Sir James Hec- tor, the discoverer of that gap in the Rocky Mountains. It is the offering o geographers, geologists and other men "of science: in° Canada and the United States, to whose contributions have been added those of men connected with the railway for which that pass affords a route. Standing at the open- ing of the defile he was the first to thread, and within sight of travelers on the passing trains of the C. P, R., the monument is located exactly where #t ought to be, and is sald to be in every way suitable, It is de- scribed as a beautiful and enduring product of the stone-worker's art. The material out of which it is made i$ a large-grain granite hewn from quarries in the Cascades range, a stone which the cutters and polishers can fashion to their taste, but which time and weather can scarcely crum- ble. Sympathy In His Sorrow. It is unusual to pay such a mark of honor to a distinguished man in his reason for not waiting until Sir James Hector should pass away. He was in three years ago, and, strange 20 say, the region which had been the scene of his hardships and achieve- ments of nearly half a century earlier became a place of affliction fer him. His son Douglas, a young man of 26, who had come with him on this visit, fell {ll and died in the hospital at Rev- elstoke. It was a heavy blow. To this Send 3 Corks drawn from quart bottles our Whiskies and receive a handsome cote pin. For 8 corks we will send a silk The Wonder City of the World. WITH Coney Island, Staten Island, Manhattan Beach, Brig: North Beach, Rockaway Beach, Bergen Point, Far Rockaway ang other Loh, seaside resorts, giving the finest surl bathing in the world, lifetime, but there was a particular' and. cony, reached by cars dnd ferryhoats.at five and ten cent fares : "iVenigmtly WITH Dreamland, Lupa Park, Hap yland, and many other great and {| attractions, the like of which the Worl never saw before, Within egy po {] and at low admission fees ; 5 i; each, WITH roof gardens, arenas. Casinos. vaudeville shows and other amu places of their kind within walking dis ance ; : lusement, WITH the great Museums of Art a @ Natural History, the Zo.) iva] {} Botanical Gardens, the Aquarium, and other - museums and institutions pi terest, the finest historical landmarks, etc., all through 'the City te WITH really pleasant summer weather, largely due to its Situation, wy the sea on either side, from' which cooling breezes are constantly »l wing 1S NOT ONLY trip the aged explorer had no doubt looked forward with keen happineps. A THE MOST ATTRACTIVE CITY ANYWHERE, BUT ALSO The World's Greatest Summer Resort, The mouths of AUGUST and SEPTEMBER are as good as an Watch with enamel charm, fo Design Registered WRITE FOR OUR PREMIUM LIST ss H. CORBY DISTILLERY CO Limited, Montreat A --_--------------__t NEW YORK, RE. [ "Ducket shop" as a convenient name | the for both. The recent raid in Toronto | the Was sufficiently sensational to be the | sca talk of the town, talk in which the er- | eye ror [often ropped up that. "bucket | er exercise. a shop™ was aes term embracing all Just of the eye was thinking of great games of the amphitheatres ttered over the Roman Empire. The might be a means of moral control roving inquisitiveness that would bring ruin. The valnglory whether in children or adults, can be cured by the usé of Dr. Fowrer's Extaaer- or WILD STRAWSERRY, for al by oll deers. many substitutes, Do not sccept them, They may be dangerous, what You war SPORTING In Jou come here, We have MUFF val Hh hae values E.W.GILLETT gear Twenty Minutes Time Enough? To Care the Worst Headache From ew Reduction Method. Most hendnches and pains y COI A' E For. Rest of the Summ a? Tan Boots, worth 0 Chocolate Boots, Going to clear them out at $1.75 Wonten's Low Shoes, Tan a : turn, sole, worth $2.00 ¥ suited to all forms of H positive in every tem ri 3 oe produce on margin. Many selves to be unaware of the dlatinction. The Broker. The legit making delivery of fhe actual property other service the Broker very common- ly renders. He obtaing for the custome JSF & loan of the money, over and, above the'latier's margin, that Is required to Pay for the stock, the stock itself be- ing Pledgea a8 collateral for the bor- funds, But there 1s an actual purchase of the stock, an actual pay- ment of the n altogether | take a' customer's order | exactly the same as it is taken in the | legitimate broker's office, only they do | not execute it, though they give him | & memorandum in which a purchase | OF sale on his account at the price of | the moment is recorded. If the price | goes up, and he is insistent enough to fave the stook then sold, he will have & profit to his credit. This, of course, cannot have come from the payment made by a purchaser, for there was no purchased. The difference between the price of the lot when the so-called buying was done for the customer and wien the so-called selling was done for him, 'comes ont of the pocket of the | bucket shop proprietor. The latter had | bet that the price would not 80 up and | had lost.- As the frequenters of such | places are usually speculating for a rise, If there is & bull market the buck- { et shop eventually gets "cleaned out" by ita ciistomers, or to save his monay its proprieor closes up. rofit by Dealers. In times of falling prices the clients | of the bucket shops cling to the "bull" | aide as they do in days of prosperity, | and then it is the bucket shop man who wins the bets. On the reaction | of three years ago the bucket shop | People made rich hauls. At other times, when there is neither a 'Gull" | ner a "bear" market, but what is call- | ed a traders' market, that is, when | Prices are up and down, the bucket shops usually do very well In such | times their dally letters ere full of | warning to customers to hold on, as a | big rise is coming. The customers | Who heed that advice generally exper- setback which wipes érwise well versed fn the Ways of business, and not without ex- | perletics of stock-denling, show them- | mate broker buys and sells | shares, bonds and produce, taking and | for his customers. If a client orders 100 | shares of C. P. R, common stock at a | Stated price the broker gets it for him | IZ it ts obtainable at'that price. An- | purchase sum, and an ac | tual' delivery of the script. The busi- | neas 1s facilitated if the bioker belongs | | ing* | men coming Into the city to find the aC 2 bucket oh n.. Chicago, ty 1 ' slam o wh broken lots, ¥ , en of d ; wheat » hi 'These buyers segregated 'what wn open ant ie lace a erage @salers th Broken lots of securities hes | fender marging Bachme 4 distinguish. ipecialized to its boone, brokers! executing orders for stocks, | or pride of lfs was al) that semse of might and power, the sense which a man gets that he can do anything, which breeds insolence. The Greeks re- em. ; "There is that Insolence in the vast corporations," sald the speaker, "that think they are bound to have their own way without any regard for right or wrong." The same insolence of power preceded the fall of Rome and Assyria and Carthage. It was hard to discover this spirit In daily life. = The world laughed when good men went out tiit- ing against windmills. 'But evil things painfully traversed twenty years be- fore that son was born, and before the building of that railway was begun, ment. The natural grief he would in any case have felt at the loss of his son must have been intensified by the circumstances. This bereavement was made the occasion for the reafing of memory of the son as well as of the father. It is a token both of gratitude for Sir James Hector's services and of sympathy in his sorrow, The Palliser Expedition. Nowhere és there a better account of Sir James Hector's services than in "The Selkirk Range," a book pub- lished by the Department of the In- terior, the author being Mr. A. O. Wheeler, F. R. G. S, topographer of stole the clothes of very good practices. This was common in politics, | "The world 1s bad enough, but to| judge by the party spirit one would | think the world is In an awful state, | A good deal of the badness is due. td our distorted vision. A ¢ertain man | is sald to have the cloven hoof till you | come to know him, and you find out what a very harmless shoe he is wear- | It was very difficult for young! world spirit at the beginning and to know just what to do. He was not a | perfectionist and was not going to say | that we were told in every case what | was shsolutely right, but it was safe to | remember that the struggle never ceas- | ed, and behing every action there were | two , forces struggling, for mastery, Looking back over a good man's life, it would be seen at last how God had got rid of the blunders. He did the impossible and brought His own will to pass. What that will was we were in the world to discover. It was God's pur- of good for His creatures. By a sed transforming power from within it would work itself out in the lives of obedient. { Canadians In the British Commons. | In & recent letter to The Toronto Telegram, Mr, Henry J. Morgan, of Ot- tawa, says: In the list of colonials now holding seats in the British House of Commons, which you published, you in- ! clude in it but seven gentlemen who Canada, are natives of there are at least tén of our fellow.country- men who enjoy that distinction. Here- with, I give you their names with their political stripe, and thé constituency Tepresented by each: Hon. Edward Blake (Nationalist), South Longford; Sir Glibert Parker (Conservative), Gravesend; Charles Day Rose (Liber- al), Newmarket; A. C. Forster Boulton (Liberal), sey; Harty C. Brodie, a native of British Columbia (Liberal), Reigate; Hamar Greemwood (Liberal), York City; Chas. Ramsey Devlin (Na. tionalist), Galway City; J. A. Baker (Liberal), Finsbury; Dr, T. J. MacNa- mara (Liberal), Camberwell; and A. Bonar Lew (Conservative), who pre- viously represented Blackfriars, Glas- 8oW, but was defeated at the general election and has since been returned by another constituency. It will thus be seen that Greater Britain must pos- sess a larger representation at West- minster than that allotted to it by the writer of the article referred to when Canada alone monopolies the full num. ber given by him to all the colonies, With our representation in the House of Lords by two native Canadians (the Earl of Elgin and the Baron Halfbur- | ton), and by two Canadians by adop- | tion (the Barons Mountstephen and Stratheona), the Dominion is at this moment pepresented in the Imperial Parliament by fourteen individuals, 8 numben I am inclined © think, equal to, If it does not exceed, that which we have had there at any time, | Full Up. To borrow money is a seMish, mean practice. The chronic borrower reminds us of a certain little giM at an Easter feast, says The London Advertiser. "This little girl ate at the feast a | great quantity of chocolte eggs, and and cakes, and peanuts, and things of that sort, and finally the time came for her to go, *" 'But will have a little more cake you go? her hostess sald, Politely, "'No, thank you, ma'am. I'm fall, | said the little girl. 'Then' sald the hostess, 'you'll put some nuts and candles in your pockets, won't you? "The little girl shook her head re. gretfully, "They're full, too she sald™ | 1,000 Islands--Rochester. Steamers North King and Caspian leave daily, except Monday, at 10.15 am., for Thousand Islands. Return- ing, leave at 5 p.m. for Rochester Bay of Quinte ports. 'fore camnot recommend the Imperial | thoroughfare by this lMne of route, | either by land or water, as there Government to the presént Canadian Pacific Railway Co, and the Kicking Twenty-two years béfore (1858) Dr. Hector had discovered it. Unlike most of the mountain ways, it seems to have beén unknown to the Indians. Ascend- tle Mountain, he reached the waters of the Vermillion, which he traced to its confluence with the Koote- nay. The latter he ascended to the di- vide between it and the down which he came to its Junction with the Kicking Horse River, Near that point Dr, Hector was kicked by one of the pack-horses and laid up a day. The incident gave its name to the stream up which he made his way back over the summit of the main chain, thereby becoming the discoverer of the pass now called by the same name as the river, though it is also known as the Hector Pass, as one of | the peak of the Rockies Is known ws | Hector Moufiain. The explorer would have rested longer to recover from the effects of the horse kiok, but that he and his party were on the point of starvation. Game was scarce, or it kept to the higher altitudes, whither the party had not time to follow it. | Tan Stat Soratald iy my will, for Tomo he eek On te Lovuniaint Sending the | 600 feet and was in- applications of Peck's Corn Salw Guaranteed. Money ive. tisfactory, In boxes, the department. In that valuable work is given the story of the Palliser ex- pedition, sent out to British North America in 18357 te make a study of the interior and to report as to the ad- | visableness of building a transcentin- ental railway through British territory. | The geologist of the party was Dr, Hec- | tor, now Sir James Hector, who in after years and until quite recently was head of the Geological Survey of New Zea- | land. The fleld work of the party, which 'was acting under Royal Commission, | covered a period of three years and ex- tended over a great stretch of coun- try, incladig most of the present Dom- inton south of the Arctic slope, and be- | tween the Great Lakes and the Pacific Ocean. Capt. Palliser's map was the first detadled one that was ever pre- pared of any part of the Rocky Moun- tains. It is interesting te recall that in his report of 1863 Capt. Palliser dis- approved the idea of a transcontinen- tal railway. He said in part: "I there- Government to countenance or lend support to any scheme for construct- ing, er, it may be sald, forcing a would be no immediate advantage commensurate with the required sac- rifice of capital; nor can I advise such heavy expenditure as would ne- cessarily attend the construction of an exclusively British line of road be- tween Canada and Red River Settle- ment." Canada, of course, at that time was made up of what are to-day the | Provinces of Quebec and Ontario. Kicking Horse Pass. Capt, Palliser was a topographer, not ® statesman. He could not look a half century into the future to see the poli- | tical map that has been made there on | the basis of his physiographic map. | Less than half a generation after he | wrote, the construction of the C. P. R. | Was In progress, and its lines cover | largely the course swept dy the Pal- | liser Commission's investigations, In | one important respect it seemed destin. i ed to follow a route the Palliser expedi- | tion had not explored. From both sides | construction was directed towards the | Yellow Head Pass. In 1880 the project | of the road was transferred by the | Horse Pass was eventually selected. ing the Bow River to a point near Cas- head Beaverfoot, ---- Artist Foretells His Death, Herr Kart Gritsch, a young Grundel: foretold his own death on Sigriswiler Rothorn he Ee ---------------- Hard or soft corns cured with three back | if pat sa- 15¢c., at Wade's store. Fresh Mellin's Cross drug st Food at Gibson's ore, swift and pleasant railway journey | with his son across a continent he had | must have promised him rare enjoy- | the monument, which stands to the, and connecting meters. tended to. ELLIOTT Vv Ses the year in which to really enjoy avis to New. York. In , great rl spects these are the most desirable months in the year for visitors and any. one Who has visited New York at other periods 'of the year sh¢ uld cortajnly come in these months, and experience new pleasure while renewing glq pi How to thoroughly mio 8 visit t New York during these months is fully explained in 3 % 5 «NEW YORK?" .... (The Mouthly for Visitors to New York) ~ FOR AUGUST i "New York" is a Leautitul illustrated publication, Which proves New York's greatness as a swminer resort 'by wo and feature" as no. other nublication ever did, . "New York" for September will soon follow. Send 25 CF S for a whole year's subscription. 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