Daily British Whig (1850), 18 Jul 1907, p. 5

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ther [Suit really is--A Two-piece propriate for a Summer Vacation Suit, .50 wing som? very natty Homespuns, Breasted Styles. S50 >» wing a nobby range of Halifax ible Breasted Styles. Fe , Serges and' Fancy Worsteds at tailored from top te bottom. ts, regular $1.50, $12B and $1 9 v 69c. -- NO GRINDING MAGNETIC" )F PERFECTION." in a' better Razor than 'have? ' leliver to you a "CARBO (§»8 r on thirty days' trial [88 \ your part to purchase. Mx) XT, ETIC" Razors don PRY; hers will! . - r and you'll have JOR TROUBLES. {EER efic =. tell, 85-87 Princess Street Refrigerators of Refrigerators on hand, we out at iced Prices. of a few of the Bargains we. with large double deors and , former price $35.00, now Refrigerator, with galvanizad 13.50, now 11.00, 5 es at prices from $7 to 9. x e. They are very cheap. 351-3 King St" ¢ - - ih Bpecial--W: are offering this week a large continuous Heavy Roll Rocker, suitable for drawing = - room use at $4.00. $5.50. Ouly limited number of these: Also a line of Boat and Lawn Seats, Camp Uot, Camp Chair and Verandsh Furgiture or close or "p THIS WEEK prices. JAMES REID, Phone 147 ee --------, k 0) SURANCE coy : Ss JHED BE TORONTO, ONT, 18 Market Street, "es vewaes - - #118, in 1905-6 (over) - 1 PANYE made by' On < HEALTH TPL: ES Beecham's Pills are the "ounce of revention" that saves many a dol- ar for cure. Keep disease. from getting In, and it will never lay you _ The safeguards against all" life's common ills are: A Sound . EEE Naf Weer Geel Hundreds of thousands--both men and women--keep healthy by using BEECHAN'S PILLS +a remedy that has stood the test for half a century and is now used over all the civilized globe. They purify the blood, strengthen the nerves, regulate the bowels, aid the kidneys and cure stomach troubles, Build up the nervous force and re- ir the ill effects of overeating. (he best safeguard against indiges- tion, biliousness and dyspepsia. Take Beecham's Pills regularly and you will maintain good health at small cost. At Small Cost Sold Everywhere. In boxes 25 cents. Frontenac Business College FINGSTON ONTARIO Superior Courses --AT-- Moderate Rates. T. N; STOOKDALB, Pripcival. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- COAL From P. WALSH You get genuine Scranton, as he handles nothing else. : ut you 1 successful at- dP to be Kingston Business College Limited, head pt Queen street. Canada's Highest Grade business achool. Bookskeepiny, shorthand, typewriting, tele bjects thorou ny augnt al su! comptent experienced 2 Phone, 40. H. F. METCALPE, Presidents J. B. CUNNINGHAM, Secretary. LIBERALS WINS IN HANTS. O'Brien Defeats O'Brien By Aiter Hot Contest. Halifax, N.8., July 18.~The election | : to fill the vacancy in the local legis- lature in Hants county, caused by the' ovation of Hon. . Arthur Drysdale, former]y attapney-general, to the su- preme court hench, resulted in the ye- turn of James O'Brien (liberal) by a majority of 158 over Evertt O'Brien (conservative), Drysdale's majority ot the last gen- eral election. over Everett O'Brien was 13. ---------- See Bibby's display of neckwear. For campers, lime juice, Abbey Salt, {Saline Laxative, 15c., not 2c.) seid: lite powders, in tin boxes, marshmal- lows. Gibson's Red Cross drug store.' Try Bibby's great $1 meghygee. As a rule. 100 acres of land cover sustenance for 200 sheep - or thirty- three horned cattle. 4 It is estimated that 3,000 marriages are performed daily throughout the world. Nay I satisfy at ledge of the | Florida, with ges." Wig ile new lands began to be occupi everything went forward dnd 168 Rh ORT BANA pi 4 ee su of Y A CANADIAN FLORIDA IN {Why Canada Has Been Backward { Her Present Progress Shows 'That She is in the Forefront. Jacksonville, Florida, July 10.--In an article on Canada of to-day, re cently published in the New York In. gions beside a prairie schooner. He is " uk In | able to. chogse his: route; from well- dependent, W. R. Givens informs wus | that Premier Deaken, of Australia, has | said that the colony should be inde-| | pendent, while Sir Wilfrid Laurier, of | Canada, proposes to continue the po- | litical and™fiscal policy that has held Canada in, chains. A Canadian and a! | liberal mi llowed to. say | Although iberal might be allowed to. say that 7, Re like hostility" ace | Sir Wilfrid's fiscal policy is far from | | that which the premier and every one| (of his intelligent supporters knows] might b& to the country's best inter- | | ests if the policy of the United States | were different from what it is. They | believe. 'that a more liberal policy | would have been better for the United | | States] as well as for Canada, but | they know where the blunder and the blame properly belongs. We are not| "gullible" on this point as your | correspondent seems to think. | Nir. Givens refers ! tal disappearance in Canada of the sentiment for annexation to the Unit-| od States, which a decade or two ago was really not hard to find, but he dogs not attempt to give any reason for this beyond suggesting that it is due the ignorance and retrogade tendencies of the Canadian people. This cannot be true, for the Canadians are among the best informed people of the World, and with the possible ex- sO to {cep#itn of the Americans, the 'most widely read on ciirrent events. They have kept an eve on history in the makihg, and they now sce that there is opening up to them an era of inde- pendent prosperity greater than any | nation has ever enjoyed. While some formerly doubted whether Canada could ever surmount the difficulties incident to her geographical and po- litical position, everybody now sees | that the victory is hers. She has at last reached those portions of her domain where agriculture is profitable, and is beginning to tap the great primary source of the wealth of na- tions, Her products are demanded both from the east and the west, so4 that the United-Stdtes, that once ap-, feared to many an indispensable part-) ner or sid, is now? looked upon by all as a mere iriendly neighbor. That Canada should have waited be- fore starting. em her term of industrial prosperity until the United States had reached of ial development is not surprising to those who un anything of the laws of national growth. Looking at the map of North America and under- standing its resources and climate it would not have Tequired a prophetic mind to know that the seats of com- meres and industry would be for the first few centuries at least)" mainly about thé Chesapeake and the mouth of the Hudson. But the United States de comparatively slow progress, both in population and wealth until the people began to cross the Alle- ghany ridge and find their first great west in the fertile valleys that slope towards the Mississippi, although they had long occupied the whole eastern continent from Maine to all its special advantar with leaps "Bounds. The details and causes of: this 'Americans can read in their primary histories. But the case of, Canada may riot be so well understood.: 'While 'the United States found her richest west almost at her back door with the suuny south al "sorydy; at ber right hand Canada found fon ohe Yond 2% hostile neighbor either attempting invasion or erecting a wall of tarifis that made trade almost im possible, and on the othes hand - the wildernces and the north. When the settler attempted to move back from the shores of the St.. Lawrence or Great Lakes he encountered (in most places within a few hours) a wilder ness that was absolutely uninhabitable extending on the north to the Arctic regions and on the west for more than a thousand miles to the prairie be vond Lake Winnipeg. This rocky .des- ert has at last been passed. The fer tile plains have bern reached, and we have reason to expect for Canada an cra of development comparable to that which took place in the United States lafter she reached the valley of the Mississippi. Mr.. Givens refers to the great num: ber of Americans going into the Canadian west and says it is wholly on account of the rich land, and that there are no commercial or educa- tional advantages there. Let me tell him that that country has greater trade facilities than any other com- amaity; oF the sme ago ever to the almost to-! associate professor of education im the a certain high mark of mater-{3: had be-J b THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, THURSDAY, JULY isth, 1907. | jhave more railways, move warehouses, {ure bunks and a better banking sys- | tet, 'better police system, better order {nnd more education than were ever realized in so young a community be- {fore. | The Canadian west not only {produces more wheat, per acre than |any other part of the world, but has {also the . facilities for hand- [img it. ings are dome there-om a scale so colossal and rapid as to al most astonish Americans. | The newcomer; to that; land is not {obliged to tramp across w wn Tes propared maps' and is given a chance to see the country in a palace car and may choose the sitg of his future home from an observation couch. Are these what Mr. Givens calls old fogyish ideas ? there may be in Canada American tendencies. it is hard to' see whiat cause for "'jealousy'" the Can- ada of to-day can have towards the pleased to know that England and the United States are closer together than in years.--W. H. AYKROYD. Associate Professor. 0. J. Stevenson, M.A., Paed., Si. Thomas, has been appointed, by the trustees of Queen's University, as pew faculty of pedugogy. He has high tions. Hector Anderson, MA., of Cambridge, has accepted the professorship of education. The curri- culum of the new faculty has been drawn up and submitted to the de- partment of education for approval, Dues To Strenuous Life. Dr. D. E. Mundell, chief medical ex- aminer of the Oddfellows' Relief Asso- ciation, attributes the increased mor- tality during the past year to "the strenuous life of the present day." More deaths are occurring from heart and kidney discase than before. Designers Of Yachts. George Owen, 'who designed the sail- ing yacht Kathleen, also designed the Whirl, of Toronto, the Chiriya and Thistle, of Kingston, and the Heath- er, of Gananoque. Hugh Weir, of Hamilton, designed the Verona - and Kestrel. "For An All Day Outing." . Take the. steamer American for Gan- Brockville and Ogdensburg, anorue, Friday, 8 a.m. Home early. Meals on board. Fare 75c. Sale Of Ladies' White Waists. We will sell 300 ladies' white lawn waists on Friday and Saturday at 35c. each, all sizes, from 32 to 42. Corrigan's. For A Change Of Scenery. Take the steamer America's tours. Saturday 2.30 p.m. Home early. Sup- per on board. Fare 50c. White House coffee, in one and two Ih. tine, at Gilbert's stores. Bathing caps and water wings Chown's drug store. Read Livingston's advt. Jibby's sale of straws, 69c. at There was quite a sensation this; morning over the disappearance of the steamyacht Albani, owned by F. Wag! ner, of Detroit, Mich;, who formerly wes at the head of the Frontenac {Cereal works here. The Albani was to wave been sold by eherifi's sale at eleven o'clock, this morning, but when creditors went down to attend the sale, the yacht had disappeared. It was in the slip at the west side of the cereal works at 10.30 o'clock last night, but at midnight, Watchman! Polson reported it missing. The own-| er was credited with playing a cute game, and carrying off the yacht un-! der the very eyes of the law. However, when Sherif Dawson came, ower "from Wolfe Island to his office! at eleven o'clock this morning, he re- lieved the minds of the oppressed. It seems that late last evening represent-| atives of the owner waited upon him and paid the claims registered against! 'he Atbani. Acting under instructions | from the admiralty court, the sheriff immediately released the craft, and it was towed away during the night. The chief claims were those of the! fore on the foe of "the carth." They | guest of Mrs. W. Elliott, avenue. "Rev. .Dr. Gordon left on Wednesday for Montreal, sailing Jones, "have returned from Clayton, pect. in place days United States, and every Canadian is tish tis ng. Michael J. James, Bermingham | Dr. James McCambridge is home {from Pitisburg, Penn, on a visit. He {will spend a fortnight down the Ri- 'deau before returning. Byron, for whom the sued an arrest The two are not related. guests of Miss Florence Carnovsky, | dren, Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., Mcllwain, Portsmouth. ed, to-day, from Troy, N.Y., to spend \liof, Association meeting yesterday. as sowers of wild oats when they were young: Miihy's oe neat steaw hats. Generally n womén Rkes to brag about. the. numerous good traits of STEAM YACHT "WAS RELEASED Creditors Thought The Albani Had Been Stolen --The Claims Had Been Paid | PERSONAL MENTION. - ---------- Movements Of The People--What . They Are Saying And Doing. Miss Mabel Weir, of Winnipeg, University Prof. Cetil * Lavell, MA. left on Wednesday for Muskoka to spend his this week for 2 oh Richardson, of the Northern Island Pulpwood company, in the J tam buco. - be Mola or Feta 8 Nugeton J w bein ba oes consultation. Misses. Mamie Field and Mildred N.Y., after a short visit with friends. Robert Orwell has been appointed in- or of the street railway company of James Brown, who resigr- De. J. McLaughlin, is spending a few in the city before going .to Bri- Columbia, where yo intends prac- , Ala bama, is home to spend a few weeks with his = mother, at 208 University avenue, Dr. €. ¥, Ford has been appointed one of the judges at the keonel Show in connection © with Toronte exhibi- tion. «Children's Aid Society Officer s h »uap- son, Bragtiond, is spewing a Dw days in the city with the local agent, Rev, Mr. McCallum. It was Gordon Byron, not George magistrate is- warrant, yesterday. The Misses Sydnie Bickford, and Josephine Preston, Oswego, N.Y., are Johnson street. Mrs. W. D. Atkinson and two ohil- are Mr. and Mgrs. visiting her parents, Mrs. John Ahern and family, arriv- a vacation with her mother, Mrs. John Saunders, Queen's hotel. W. H. Moss, who has been mayor of Dundas for four years, was one of the tatives at the Oddiellows' Re Tho old man named Waugh, aged eighty years of age, who was struck by. the K. & P. train, about two weeks ago, is able to be around again as well as ever. G. 8. Johnson, of Forfar, has been elected district deputy grand master of Frontenac district, AF. & AM. A E. Geiger, Brockville, is the D.D.G.M of Brockville district. Try Bibby's for nifty straws. At the age-of three score and ten most men like to boast of their powers her husband just as if he really had them. Bibby's $1-shirte are great. Kingston Foundry company, about #200. Charles Cummings, $300, W. G Craig & Co., $105, Perhaps the Inggést claimant was | R. A. McLelland, present manager | of the Frontenso ' Céréal works, but! he had nothing registered. It was he who 'brought the yacht here, paying | the claims against it at Detroit When | the Albani reached Kingston, the oth er lceal creditors had her seized by the cherifi and a sale was ordered. Mr McLelland claimed to be part owner of the yacht. The release of the yacht was a great surprise to y claims in the sheriffls hands were paid | but Mr. McLelland had none there. | | Mr. Wagner's representatives took the! yacht away at a time when there was no chance of detaining them. They had | the sherifi's release order, and took! possession without waiting to consult] with Mr. MclLelland as to his claim. The Albani is thirty years old, and was formerly owned hy W. H. Com- stock of Brockville, She is a vessel of | fifty-eight gross toms, 78.6 feet long, | 13.6 feet beam, and 7 feet depth. One local man had an order to bid $1,500 on her, ! | 140 TRE) aF1avy 014 © § | a - wu fae i » \! VUE DE FRONTENAC ou' on i i { vt | / i CATARACOUI | | 1 seas wk dans , is the | '| a terminal station on the site of the | i NEW DEPOT FOR OTTAWA, Plans For Million Dollar Station and Hotel. Ottawa, July 18. Plans for the new Grand Trunk station and illion-dol- lar hotel in Ottawa have been filed with the railway committee of the privy council. The plans contemplate present Central station to cost one quarter of a million. The station will be oblong shape and will be sur. mounted by -a la dome. The hotel © will be just to the north of the station, abutting the east bank of the canal and Rideau street on the north. The building is planned in at semi-Gothic style, and will overlook Major Hill Park and Sappers Bridge. No room is left for a lawn and a» single line of track leads under an archway of the hotel out to the C.P.R. line running over the Inter-provincial bridge to Hull. POOR DAY AT BISLEY. Four Canadians in King's Second! Stage. | Bisley, Eng., July 17.--The chances! of a Canadian carrying off the King's! prize this year are decidedly slim. But four of the Canadians succeeded 'mn getting in the second stage of the match, the team going to pi at) the six hundred yard range this after- noon. Up to this time the scoring had | been good, but at this range no less! than thirteen members failed to put | on thirty and fell out of the race. | The four successful ones are Caven,| Creegan, Milligan and Converse. Of the four, Caven got a place on the| Daily Telegraph prize list, and Cree-| gan on the Alexandra prize list. HITS MAN ON SIDEWALK. Almost Instantly Killed, While Pedestrian May Die. Utica, N.Y., July "8 --Charles| Stucka, a well-to-do Pole, fell or} jumped from a window of the seventh | storey of the Mann building, in this | city, yesterday, and was almost in-| stantly killed. i The body in its descent struck Jos-! eph Matthews, of Macy, who was pass ing. Matthews was taken to an hos pital with a lacerated skull, a sprain- | od ankle and internal injuries. His re-| covery is doubtful. Stucka may have seated himself on] > the window sill and fallen out, or he may have jumped. He leaves a wife] and three children. i Rumors Without Foundation. London, July 1S--Mr. Lloyd- George, president of the board of trade, assures the Canadian Associated Press that there is no foundation for the rumors that the government com- | mitiee has decided against the allored route. The committee's inguiry, he said, is not nearly concluded yop No Australian witnesses have been heard taken from Canada. | i { | | i { i vet, and still further evidence must ") How The Record Stands. | Ont., July 15.--~With seven London, dead, nine lying in the hospital more | or less seriously injured, and a num- ber of others suffering from shook and | bruises, the calamity which cast its| shadow over the city, on Tuesday af-! ternoon, though not so appalling as at first feared, has left an impression that from the minds of many time is in excellent shape. | Weather" Footwear can be had here. will never efface Died From Injuries. Toronto, Ont, July 17. or Rani sie Tan Shoes, Bathing Shoes, Canvas Shoes was loading sand from a pit, on Bloor street, this morning, when the sand! caved in on him, His skwl was frac tured at the base and his lower jaw broken. Swan died at Grate Hospital, a couple of hours later. Sp -- Drowned At Petawawp, A special despatch from Peta ans camp to the Whig says : "Private Charles Smith, of the Roy- al Conadian Regiment, Fredericton, | was drowned while bathing here this (Thursday) afternoon." A Snap To-Night. All baskets red cherries, worth £1.25 and $1.40, unsold at 5 pm. we J. H. Sutherland & Bro, will sell for 95c. We must have room| Store closes at 7 pm. Carnovsky, "on the corner." -------- Drowned At Yarker. Matthew Tobin, a bachelor, about thirty-five years of age, was found in the river underneath the B Q. rail way bridge, near Yarker. He had {Len working in a garden at Yarker. ---------- Try Bibby's for 45c. fancy hosiery The fountain at Gibson's Red Cross drug store is doing good work cool- ing people these days. Pure fruit juices dispnsed. There is also ice cream made from pure crepm. Bibhy's for latest in neckxvar, Our idea of a him. The| for large lot expected Friday morning. | i feminine diplomat is | a woman who knows how to manage | a man--and at the same tira him from knowing that sh t. Bibby's for beautiful neckwear. There is an daily average of thirty. five immigrants who apply for admis- sion to the port of New York and are rejected. : The yew oak, 1,500; lives to be 2,800 years old, | cedar, S00; chestout, 600; | {ive, 450, and elm, 395 Perfect-fitting glasses, the result of 5' « Try Bibby's $1 outing shirta. The chances of sudden death are greater among men than women in the ratio of one to vight. It wouldn't be so bad if people who sav they have nothing to say would only lot it go at that. { Try Bibby's for fancy hosiery. All the paper you can carry at D. 'B; Fraser's for 3¢. a roll, 78 William whreet, , When in doubt if wanting glasses go to Dr. Chown's. Ten drgeued by collapse of sail- boat in Sweden. Try Bibby's for new collar. i Raid Mme. Gould is to marry Prince Heliote Sagan. v Ribby's sale of straws, 69c. a Tage in Wost Virginia; {perfect test, when you get ginssey at | S---- {Chown's drug store. 3 end of the meals of the day should be Chase & Sanborn's SEAL BRAND COFFEE. 's the first thing for break- We Close at 5 p.m. Every Day, Except Saturday. Opened To-Day. White Skirts, trimmed with embroidery, very pretty styles, 0 55. « Colored Wash Skirts, $1.50, $1.78, 82. Wash Costumes, in pale blue and black, and while checks, $2.50 and $3.50. : Rich Cream and Black Sicilian Costumes, $9. Cream Sunburst Skirts, $6 and $5.50. For Cool Evenings. Protty Light Tweed Coats, $3.00, $5.50, $6.50. Millinery ! Millinery ! Outing Hats, in pale blue and pink, 28c. Pretty Embroidered Lingerie Hats. Children's Embroidered Headwear. Children's Straw Sailors, 18c., 20c., 25¢. to $1. SPENCE'S ™ Lae ites Sutherland's Shoe Suggestions Suitable. + For the Summ Seasom. At this particular time of the year our stock of Can- vas Shoes, for : «All the Members of the Family," All the newest kinks in "Warm and i" A (All Shades) Barefoot Sandals, Ete. In fact the pick of the Canadian and American fac- tories await your inspection. te ------ THE HOUSE OF GOOD SHOE MAKING Gas Stoves & Ranges We carry in stock a nice assortment of the' Chicago "Jewel" Gas Stoves, which are - acknowledged the best stoves manufactur- ed. Examine them before purchasing else- where, All orders for disconnecting Gas Meters promptly attended to. ELLIOTT BROS. 77 Princess Street. Our July Sale is - China Cabinet $65.00 for 55.00, $45.00 for 35.00, $12 for 8.50. $1200 To 33 .00 for 00, © sett for 65.00, $75 $60.00, $65

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