Daily British Whig (1850), 30 Aug 1906, p. 4

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A and Presses. © The British Whig Publishing Os., Limited Anarchy Going Wid. |: The nnaychists of New York are bee] ing encouraged to show their colours and to the extent of raisine them above the national colours. They are allowed, also,' to say what they please. - The disadvantage of this was ex- hibited in Chicago some years ago when the Haymarket tragedy occurred. It will never be forgotten. There was a wanton sacrifice of life which shock- ed the nation. Some of the leaders in the awful carnage were punished, They executed and so put out of the way. But the nation felt that it was to blame because it gave some men license to do wrong in the name of liberty. Now there is a new exhibition of the distemper which afilicts the poo- ple and those comiposing the foreign element ih the great republic. Accord- ing to one jownal, "the theory is that by not repressing this foul spirit it explodes hnrmlessly in The answer is that "this propagation of the spirit of anarchy unchecked may yet result in a condition as ter- rible as it is in Russian and some other countries today." It is a timely warning and it hed better be remembered. Home lessons are more effectual than any that can be found over seas. We are just now doing a ldrge trade in this line in Ladies' White and Cream Dresses. By this Process they are cleaned thoroughly without shrinking or fading. Every garment properly pressed and delivered in large boxes. The Fielding Vindication. The news from Nova Scotia, and to the effect that conservatives were lead- ing in. the movement to have Mr. Fielding returned for Queen's and Shelburne by acclamation, is surpris- ing. It is the more so in the face of statements that a hackneyed press hag been gending out to the effect that Mr. Fielding is a vicious politi- cian, and public life would be greatly improved by his retirement from it. That is the idea locally expressed, and by one who does not know the minis- ter of finance and cold bloodedly pro- 9% etre { coods to traduce him. Our Black Diamonds §| It seems that there is a diflorence of A a a " £ | opinion among the conservatives of Are Always Fashion~ Nova Scotia with regard to Mr. Ficld- ing. There is an element which * finds wee its mission in persecution. The. Shel -- » ¥ 50 burne and Queen's election was not a Buys a Ton of good fearfully corrupt one as the conserva- tive press asserted. There was noth- ing about it that there is not about _ This is a good time to put m a supply of heat for the Having trouble with the + Gets damp and hardens? you are not using WINDSOR TABLE SALT. It never cakes. it ow i: - ' F the average election. The liberal can- didate was not personally impure, and he did not desire any 'one to influence public feeling in an improper way. There was no occasion for it. The tide was running in his favour. That was shown by his return by over four wiater, hundred majority, though absent through most of the campaion from S. ANCLIN & C0. the constituency, The province was pd 2 Ta Sha iL ' FOOT OF WELLINGTON ST. liberal, and ie liberal still. The recent provincial elections demonstrated that fact. "What we have we'll hold," said Mr. Borden in a recent interview in Tor onto. He had no reference to Nova Scotia, where the party has been los ing ground as a result of its bitter partizanship. The assaults of a fac tion on Mr. Fielding will not avail it anything. It was gratified by the un- seating of the minister, but he will Brssrssssrnssnsrsaneny T---- esti Honest Guarantee e guarantee our milk to be ABSOLUTELY pure : put up in sterilized bottles It is the best. | have his vindication, and in it the Try it, better class of conservatives will . . share. Such is the latest announce Kingston Milk Depot ment, . 'Gor, Brook and Bagot Sts. Ottawa And Its Ambitions. "Phone 567, What are the Ottawa people aiming at ? The press, regardless of political cast, has dischssed the financial condi- tion of the capital, and has created the impression that nothing has been gained by the loodtion of the seat of government within the municipality. One paper has gone into a long argu- ment, buttressed by figures, to prove 'that the city had been a decided lager in revenue by the presence of the & ernment and its buildings, Thik loss, in exempted property, in water rates written off, etc., is estimated at $330, 000 annually, while the federal govern- ment's grant to the public improve ments, under the direction of its own commission, is only $60,000, The out- wider who reads this endeavours to comprehend what Ottawa would be without the government, its buildings and army of efficials, and the result is J vot flattering to the ambitions of its people. ou But a new idea is taking form. 1t has been outlined by the Ottawa Free Press, in. cditorial articles and cor respondence. The proposal is to form an Ottawa federal district, its oare Sugrantes grade, eurctul sereening. Bland government to be lik> unto that Wirt, promyt delivery and come J] of the district of Columbia," the glory 8 satisfaction, Can you 100k J] of which is the city of Washington. g The: origin of the latter is well known {to readers/of \American history. The SO ol You Have Found The Place-- The right place--for the purchase of coal 'if your quest has ended here.' Reason ? Coal 1s about the Bulb price per ton anywhere with. 18 a radios of 'a hundred miles of here. But what kind of coal 7 We la of it wae to have a given terri- | to the enltivation and improve. 'of which the national govern: {mont - Fos Prins. | l'age 'things #0 that the best results and the assumption the air." |--these and other considerations pro- mise to develop into problems which cannot be disposed of lightly and in a few breezy newspaper articles, They have been formine words phonet- vember. All the ministers are getting one job, 2s journalist knows this, but he is ferences. absolute cleanliness soda fountain. Such conditions _. DAILY mutations following annual elec- tions, could not possibly be what it is to-day. The président appoints three commissioners of special 'skill, as en; gineers, divectors of public works and financiers, and it is their duty to man- will be attained. The city being the political Mecca of the nation is made to reflect in its thoroughfares, its utilities, its parks and public resorts, the highest intelligence, Congress legis- Hates for its welfare, and takes no narrow or contracted view as to its wants, Ottawa longs to be un second Wash- ington, and its papers are being advis- ed that the proposal is possible, afd that what is the outcome of Bytown of long ago, "may indeed become the city beautiful of the Dom- inion of Canada," and "surround itself with a plot of land a few miles square wherein the authority of the dominion goverpment would be supreme." An educational campaign has been entered upon, and it will be interesting note what the end of it will be. There is more than one side to the question. The disfranchisement of the residents, (all excepting those having votes else- Where), the acquirement of the land, the extinction of municipal government by the national government of the debt of the city-- Editorial Notes. Interest at the rate of 192 per cent. How is that for high ? It is the toll of a Toronto usurer, Is it not about time the Ontario power commission and the Ontario | railway commission did something ? So far they are very expensive and useless luxuries, iii The new spelling suits some people. ically all along thought of being Roosevelt brand, According to accounts there will be a full bill of fare for the next session of the commons, beginning with No- and without any | reformers of the | down to hard work. -- What a pity it is that all the Can- adian immigration agents did not have the choice of a change of occu- pation, Some men do not succeed when they are too long in ome place and at Ontario is suffering from the exodus of young farmers to the North-West. Over 15,000 are engaged in' the har-| vest. A good many will return to On- | tario, but the bulk of them will settle | in the west, and Ontario needs their service, The Toronto News regards Mr. Fielding as a great party man, but says his disappearance from public life would be a loss to the country. By the way is there a conservative in sicht who has a better record and who could take his place as finance minister ? The Rochester polo ponies, the same | which were in Kingston on Saturday, | are attracting great attention in Tor- onto, Some one suggested that the eleven were worth $6,000, and a train er said that one was worth considera- | bly more than that. This makes polo a luxury. It is announced that Mr. Preston had the choice of his old place as commissioner of emigration or the now office of trade commissioner in the east. He took the latter and he | acted wisely. After the troubles of the | last year his usefulness in England would be limited. The Christian Guardian is without an editor for the time being, and the general will select the man, Editors are generally born, not made, Every man bas not within him the instinct for news. conference The average not con- very conspicuous in 'Methodist Where Purity Abides. Every instinct of delicacy, as well as health considerations, demand that prevail about a are enforced here. Wade's ice cream soda is always drawn in washed and polish- ed glasses. It is a pure and perfect drink perfectly served. Wade's drug store, King Of The Island. The sixty inhabitants of Bardsey, an island off the coast of Carnarvon, have elected an liams--as their chief and all disputes between them ave settled by him. One of the laws of the island is that all the members of the clan intermarry. In the event of a young man falling in love with a, damsel on the main. land, and a marriage resulting, he is banished from Bardsey. ---------- When Returning Homie. itizens Seuning to the city from thai holidays, a wishing to change their baker, can secure prompt -de- livery of the best bread mad by telephoning Tove, No. 141 and 167, t would contribute a8 - circum- -to | old man--John Wil- |" in a IN BRIEF FORM. sie, offer cents M. tractor. His condition is The union su . the t at the Morping Post states have been awarded to E. C.E., Montreal. William E, Hunt was Fort Erie, charged with lottery, and the police sei material in his hotel. tractors on the G.T.P. The first, of fifteen nations present. Robert, Glockling, {of labor, will resign, the Bookbinders' Union. Henry Cargeallen's Camppell- Bannerman, man for the Hon, J. ating that gentleman in Rots The steamer Princess Lake Winnipeg, and Ca and crew drowned, incly stewardesses. Sixteen pec in boats. A branch in the Ontario may be altered departmental letters Frank Ye H. Cartwright assistant. are prince and princess Potsdam, on Wednesday 1th, was named Wilhelm. P. W. Sothman, a na appoint Rev. T. Albert Mpore, the Lord's' Day Alliance, stores in Northern Ontario Sundays, have been closed Summer. The stantinople has lodged that Turkish troops Mergawar, a district on five villages. Lewis Deegan, Royersfor suffered rheumatism for Cullen's place and had stings on the left arm. He ed so much relief that he to walk erect, St. Louis Globe-Democrat. It doesn't take mmoh of make a fool of any man. 50 much. Brockville Recorder. he multiply reports and add is stronger Toronto Star. Just here an trudes. out of man's drink any shorter ? awkward Suppose they tak Ottawa Journal. call a revolution Dr. Pyne ing in Europe. -- Next ! Brooklyn Eagle. Hearst says is with the soul of a lackey, disgraceful failure as New trict attorney." obtuse.' Next ! international (universal* language) congress opened at Geneva, with '500 representatives condition Unues to improve, and every day dur- who taking the waters there, is sinking. J. R. Dundas, at one time a coach: R. Stratton, has been arrested on a charge of person- foundered mark, a graduate of the School Technology, Charlotteburge, has been oF, chief engineer of the Hydro Electric ruilway commission, Persian ambassador have Beck commission continues BRITISH WHIG, THURSDAY, AUGUST 30. OF HE WoL OCCURRENCES RECOUNTED Matters That Interest Everybody --Notes From All Over--Little com 3 ' Galt gas for furnace use at greatly feduped rates. ; Kahle Sisgtion is now open Seydisfjard, nd, rate forty-two word from Montreal. ow, the Russian consul at Tientsin, was shot by a Russian con- critical. mion nen' of British Columbia are raising strong objection to the im- 'portation of Hindu laborers into the provinee, A Jucpatel to Saskatoon says it is feared t the injury to Earl Grey's cye is more serious than was at first Shanghai of the Chinese ambassador to London has asked to Contraets for new shops and store houses at Moncton, to cost $100,000, A. Walberg, arrested at keeping a zd a lot of George H, Richardson, assistant city engineer of Ottama, hus resigned to go with O'Brien & Macdougall, con- esperanto deputy minister as he cannot hold that office and his situation in con- ing this week he has been up and about his home in Hamilton, A despatch to the London Daily Mail, from Marienbad, says Lady has been a Toronto in ptain Haws ling two ple escaped service that is the one in which registered. is now in charge, with The baptism of the son of the crown took place at afternoon. The young prince, who was born July tive of Den- of secretary of says many which have been in the habit of keeping open on during this at Con- a complaint occupied the western frontier of Persia, comprising twenty- d, who has weeks, and who was compelled to use a cane to walk about the house, was taken to #ight bee has receiv- is now able SPIRIT OF THE PRESS. Assistant Foolmakers. a girl Nature to did «| in connection therewith a situation has Great On Figures. to expenses. It in figures than in power. Perish The Thought. thought in e the "E" whiskey * Will it make a Of Course Not. If the veople of the United States want a language of their own, y shouldn't they have it't We--don't need* to call it English, --- Pyne Not Missed. Exchange Just how much figure Hon. Dr. Pyne cuts in the education depart- ment may be leaned from the fact that just while that department is undergoing what the premier would is holiday- Jorome is "endowed that he is "festooned with the Spupish moss of York's dis- | Jerome says Hearst is "intellectual- ly sterile, socially vulgar and morally ness, but poor blood The doctors call it anemia. lacks red New sweat "boys, at Bibby's. Nervous? There are many causes of nervous- the list. MADE A GREAT HIT. She Will Rank High in Operatic i Circles. MISS GRACE BURTON. New York, Aug. 30.--Miss Grace Bur- ton, a handsome society girl of New- ark, N.J., who has studied for years with Prof. James Thurston, has made a great hit as a singer of operatic for her. It is reported that an engage- ment for the Metropolitan Opera House has been offered to her. ¢ HEALTHY AND HAPPY ley, a clerk in the war department, | seventy-four years old, declares that | he spends less than twelve cents a day for his living. ' 2} "My average expense every day for | five years past has been loss than | twelve cents a day," said Mr. Riley, | "and 1 have had plenty to eat. 1he system requires only so much. | sleep | like a baby and at leisure 1 go for a | several miles' stroll through the parks. | "l never get hungry; most people | feel that way when their imagination | runs away with them. I live on £4.11! a month, and I have an itemized statement to prove it. My favorite dishes are apples, eggs, and rice, 'I avoid meats and indigestible foods. They tear the vital organs up and Put*them out of use." Riley saves 95 per cent. of his sal- | ary. He is a man of strong personali- | ty and is an excellent specimen of | manhood, He is not a-wiser; and he | declares he abhors the life of a re cluse. He says he lives well, and he is the envy of the clerks who squander all their earnings and are heavily in debt. He never takes a drink and ab- hors coffee. "F never took a drink in my life and I have never used tobacco in any form" he said. "It is dead easy to live a life of economy and thrift, and | there is no pleasure in spending all | one's earnings in extravagant living. | As a quiet matter of fact, poverty | forced a quiet life upon me. After be- | ing swindled out of several thousand dollars in my early life 1 decided to retrieve my losses and to save some money, Poverty brings good results at hard times. It did me good and | started me on the richt road. "How do 'I live on so little 2 Why, that's simple. My restricted diet, how i that T have a pood salary. is simply | a matter of choice. It is the healthiest and happiest way to live." ------ SCANDAL RENDS CEFICAGO. -- Inspector Accused of Plotting Big Diamond Robberies. Chicago, Aug. 30.--Mayor Dunne de- clared yesterday on vacation in Michigan, that been informed there are charges against police officials, but declared he was leaving the matter entirely to Chief of Police Collins. : Inspector P. J. Lavin stands accused of having plotted the robbery of the Hagamann jewelry store, 5151 Went worth avenue, August 30th, 1901, anc returning from he has developed in police circles which pre- sages a wide-spread inquiry and .re sulting scandal. It is said that an- | other robbery of a jewelry store a | year after the Hagamann affair is likely to figure in the trial. Attorney A. D. Gash, whom the inspector re tained to represent his interests, pro- mised to investigate this robbery with a view to throwing additional rdis jeredit on the long aflidavit of P. p. Mahoney, Lavin's ex-convict accuser, hs Ben Franklin's 'Nerve. Springfield Republican. Andrew Carnegie 1s famous for ghe | excellent advice that he gives to poor young men, "In considerable fear, said a New York milionaire, "I once consulted Mr. Carnegiv about a new venture, The business looked as if it ought to be | profitable. There seemed to be a pub- | , lie need of it. Still, there was some (risk involved, and 1 was afraid. | "But Mr. Carnegie laughed at my fears, | "Yivisa good thing, plunge in' | he. said, 'Fear is old womanish, Fear | pointed out that there were already WO newspapers in America.' "' -- An Accomplished Father, Liverpool Post-Mercury, Presiding at the Wembl y Geli Club | dinner, Col. Sir C. Euan Smith spiq that a certain ominent lawyer used to get very linguistic when 1 ving on the links. A friend, also Ligh up in | i f the legal profession, was teaching the daughter of the first lawyer to golf. "Do you think," said shé, "that | shall ever be able to golf "Oh, indeed," replicd the voung lady, "isn't there! You evidently haven't heard father play." -- -- The Islands At Their Best. | No other tour shows them up so well as the America's ow n tour on | Saturday, 2.30 p.m. Oniv 3c. -- Carleton Place Canoe Club cided to purchase a new modern w canes; music and a great future is predicted | t | Living on Twelve Cents Per RE FO FALL, nl Day. a. R Washington, Aug. 30.--Augustus Riv | EMBOSSING ENERAVING ------------------------ has do- | & rly of Brodkwille, swam fron i Intosh's boathouse, ~Brocksille, | 10 | will en Flyan's Point, three mils, in fonts pla unnutes; in the teeth of gr west wind i Swain, piaho tuner, Orders 3% ath & wal Dp . > Rew RT £5 i What concoctions some People wil SFE dar urs 44 drink for)breakiast as a substitute fo, = 2 ¥ f a » ; coffee, either from prejudice or cx. [cessive economy. These people have never tried Chase & 'Sanborn's Seal " 4 Brand. Iv 0 BIBBY'S ... ASK TO SEE OUR New Bromley Suits The exclusive tailor turns pale when he sees the elegance of the tailoring on our $13, $15 and $18 Suits. Newest Style Raincoat $12.50, 15 to $18 New Trousers for Fall at $3, 3.50 to $5. New Hats, fone New Sweaters, New Gloves. The H. D. Bibby Co. I ------ A DINING ROOM COMPLETE This week we are displaying 'a Din- ing Rycm furrished cimplete in gold- en oa't, consisting of Buffst with a plate rack attached. China Qlosets with grooved shelves to stand plates on edge, also cup hooks. 4 Oak framed Dining Chairs and Bpring Beats covered in horse hide. Quartered oak Extension Table, round cr square styles. JAMES REID, The Leading Undertaker "Phone 147 for the White Ambulance. THE FINEST IN THE CITY 30c. per Ib. A. J. Rees, 166 Princess St. GARAGE GEued? J | is what keeps untold millions from | making fortunes. When Benjamin | THE CANADA METAL COMPANY, Toronto, Ont, Franklin thought of starting a paper Phone Main 1729, y- -- in Philadelphia, his mother, greatly - RR warmed, tried to dissuade him, She OLDERS OUR SPECIALTY Carriage Painting Neatly and, promptly done me to us for good work at reasonable prices. = ; Our work is sure to' be satisfac: And, Neatly done at the | : Whig Office. W. G. FROST 299 Queen St. Telephone 525 Big Storage Warehouse in con nection ; moderate rates. Robe rt Lute, Schenectady, N.Y. for Mone Mclnt King St ha RE 990 rrr 9. ' Ei ¢ ¢ - COST bon $ office, 79 $ G. A. ¢ Who for $ been assoc ' ¢ ' ¢ ¢ ' ¢ ¢ ' " tee BN

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