Daily British Whig (1850), 1 Aug 1907, p. 5

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Do? Sir, and had more nmer Suits | possibly sell this p them over until ret out of style and » use of the money HEM. o would any other nan. it What 1g to Do. uits, now $12. r $7.50. Suits, now $6.50. st Co Also. 25 and 1.00 50¢. 'S. 1BBY G0. r Couches. on of Leather Couches. S. The Leading Undertaker. ° "Phone 147. Sati rday. | In our windows, argains TURBAY ONLY. id Oxfords, Goodyear 8, regular price $8.50, 2 98 . n Vici Kid and Pat- w styles, only a few 2 25 Price . )xford Shoes, Spring lay and * Saturday Brown Strap ale price Fri- 's. Brown and Black Togular 81 to $1.25. aced Boots, Blucher lar $1.75. Sale price 1 25 FHYIILL denen berisaet nares een a ds in Our Friday. SHOE YS Sore * THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG THURSDAY, AUGUST 1st, 1907. LONDON = =. = = = [Ey OTTAWA CREW BARRED Every box of Mooney's Perfection Cream Sodas you open--you will find a new delight in these dainty biscuits. When you want to surprise yourself, give your appetite a treat with Moomey's = | Perfection Cream Sodas PETER, PETER. Peter, Peter, pumpkin eater, Had a wife and couldn't keep her. Always sick-- Goodness sakes! Tummy ever full of aches! Peter's doctor then suggested Food more easily digested. So'now she buys no more food fakes; Peter's wife eats Toasted Corn Flakes | * The Flavor That Grows ia Fayer." Sanitas Toasted Corn Flakes is corn in the newest and most delicious form. Thoroughly and scientifically cooked, rolled into filmy cakes, and then toasted to a tempting, golden brown, it is chock full of nutrition. Your Grocer Sells It. Battle Creek Toasted Corn Flake | Co., Limited CANADA asked for a number of men and these we forwarded from the seaboard on WORTH TAKING @ | vor A Y 1 o @ | their arrival in this country. On ar- a $ | riving here they were found not suit- One ounce Fluid Extract Dandelion; § ablesfor the work which they were | One ounce Compotnd Salatone ; 9 Four ounces Compound Syrup 4 Sarsaparilia; A ® ; t Mixed and taken in teaspoonful { ® | wanted. | FROM THE REGATTA AT ST. * CATHARINE. | Pulford and Moore Are Profess- ionals--Ottawa Sore at Being Thrown Out at the Eleventh Hour. 2 Ottawa, Aug. 1.--There will be no {senior four crew sent to St. Cath- {arines from Ottawa. That is definite. | There is a soreness against the re- gatta management, who could have |gettled the professional or amateur {status long since, and not put Ottawa {to all the trouble at the eleventh hour. St. Catharines said they would {stick to their guns and uphold the {Ottawas in their stand and this last {minute retreat is sadly commented up- lon here. It is wondered in rowing cireles why Ottawa is so singled out {when there are more open profession" {als accepted and on the way to St. Catharines than Pulford and Moore. {One team has an American profession al in its composition even. In the capital it is thought influences are at |work in Ottawa itself to defeat its lown men, from pique, perhaps. These are the views in aquatic circles. TROUBLE AT PARK. And the President Accused of In- decent Conduct. Hamiiton, Ont., Aug. 1.--The man- | agpmen? of Grimsby Park, which has always been looked upon as a sort of | | Methodist park, has a scandal on its | {hands. C. M. Gripton, St. Cath- arines, the president of the Park As- | sociation, has been summoned to ap- pear before Magistrate Kidd, Grims- by, next week, to antwer to a charge of indecent conduct. It is alleged that a few evenings ago he acted in a {most ungentiemanly manner in the presence of a number of ladies and children. The prosecution for Gripton is said to be the outcome of internal dissensions which have existed all sea- son at the park. SEEKING DAMAGES | For Saying Their Account Would | { Bs Closed. | | Montreal, Aug. 1.--J. H. Waldman | & Co., mangdacturers of cloaks, want £10,000 demages from J. and N. Friedman, doing business as the Do- | minion Cloak company, on the ground that they eitculatedtiamaging reports about his business. Waldman is a customer of the Sovereign Bank, and in connection with the statement that, | the bank had recently closed out some accounts of an _ undesirable nature, the Friedmans are alleged fo 'have stated that the Waldmans would be the next 'to go. s A ------ Visiting Windsor. Windsor, Ont., Aug. 1.--The British | journalists arrived here, by Grand Trunk, this afternoon, from London. They were met by the members of the board of trade, who will entertain them this afternoon. The Sappho has been chartered and the visitors will be treated to a ride, af tr which an inspection of the steam- or Huronie will be made. The party will leave for Detroit, where they will | get a reception from the Detroit Club. They leave, at 10.40 p.m., for Sarnia. steamer Department Not Responsible. Toronto, Aug. I.--The city council of Chathmn is being advised by the department of colonization that the department is not responsible for send- {ing the party of forty stranded immi- 'grants to that city. The dominion employment agent, at Chatham, had th i------ Time Extended. 3 Toronto, Aug. 1.--The government doses after each meal and at bedtime, @ {has decided to extend the time for is pronounced by a prominent physi- 3 the initial work on Larder Lake claims cian to bo the best mixture for the @ until September 30th. According to curs of the kidney, bladder, and all @ the regulations, thirty day s' work urinary troubles. : must be done on a claim within the This eays the doctor, is the most & first ninety days -of registration. The | simple though remarkable prescrip: 3 season was backward, the plague of | tion ever written to cleanse the @ flics was unusnally bad, and no roads | system of impurities and waste ® had been constructed, hence the ex matter. Itacts as a powerful tonic tension. to the kidneys, forcing them to filter 4 ee ---------- out the acids and poisons, overcom- S| A Contemptible Thing. ing rheumatism, lame back, sciatica x and other afflictions arising from § | Toronto, Aug. 1. ~James A. Bool sour, impure blood. & ing. Walkerton, who claims to be an The ingredients can be procured at 3 actor,' was sentenced to forty days in any good drug store, and being purely & jail, this morning, for stealing from vegetable and entirely 'harmless, can ® | SOV ral boarding houses. Some resi casily be mixed at home. 3 | dents of Walkerton sent to the magis™ If you have a suffering friend show 4 trate an unsigned letter, ving a his- this to him, as he will undoubtedly 3 tory of the Booking family. That's be pleased to learn of so simple and § # contemptible thing to do," remark- highly recommended a remedy. & od the magistrate, as he threw the 3 letter aside. > SHOE POLISH The Public knows better than to take any substi- tute for 2in1. The dealer knows better than to offer a substitute if he wants to retain his reputation. Black and 8 Colors It is: reported that the ness section of Moravia, N. stroyed by Bre. - entire busi: | Y., was'tle- | pointed |i Canals To Be Closed A Month. canals will likely be closed for fully | a month, according to canal men. section of the 'north wall of the fallen out. EE A Small Tory Majority. Orangeville, Ont., Aug. 1.--The offi cial statement of the vote in the Dufferin local bye-election was given out by the The figures are: T. government, 1.943; J. H. Woods, in dependent, 1,850. i Inherits Fortune. 1.--1t lis reported that Hon. W. T. Finlay, minister of | agriculture in Alberta, has inherited 870,000 through the death of a brother in Ireland. He leayes for Europe at once to wind up the es tate: . Calgury, Aug. ------ 4 ¥Lots Of Fun' Few Visitors. Ottawa, Aug. 1.--Llast night, fo began, the city had of real festivity, There | pense "Night Shirt" parade, and th | ness it. ein +n Stuart Masson, mgs. a {8®ha .s not | Burkholder, the A Bas been selected by Harry K. : . ~ f the 1 roost) 2 conduct Thaw's next trial on the Greenway brewery, one of he largest| baron of killing Stanford. White. industrial buildings in Syracuse, has the first time since the carnival week | the appearance | was an im-| streets wer 'depsely crowded to wil Belleville, is ap- police magistrate for Hast- FRONTENAC CHEESE BOARD. Selling Price on Thursday Was : 10 13-16¢. "The making of cheese on Saturday night, was again up for discussion at the regular Tageting of the Frontenac chesse board, on Thursday afternoon, when the following resolution, maved by F. Valleau, seconded by W. Faw- cett, was carried by a unanimous vpte : "That the secretary write the min- ister of justice, requesting that the cheese factories throughout "the do- minion, be permitted to make cheese on Saturday night, finishing on Sun- day, as at present." The following factories cheese : White--Cataraqui 120;; Star, 94; total, 214. Colored--Cold Springs, 70; Inverary. 26; Glenburnie, Glenvale, 76; Gilt boarded Morning Edge, 50; Bay View, 60; Latimer, 50:{ gon Oso, 25; Ontario, 60; Rose Hill, 50; Sunbury, 70; St. Lawrence, 50: Silver Springs, 75; Thousand Islands, 30; Wolfe Island, 80; McGrath's, 60; Col- lins Bay, 60; total, 946. The bidding opened at 104c. and went as high as 10 13-16c. At this price Mr. Murphy secured 630 boxes. and Mr. Kerr, 469 boxes. Three factories, Thousand Islands, Latimer and Inverary, did not sell, The selling price on the board last week was 10 9-16e. een VISITED MONTREAL, But This Was Some Three Years Ago. Montreal, Aug. 1.--It transpuees that Miss Eva Fox Strangway, ioe dashing English female swindler, about whom a general warning has be: sent out to hotel men and mec-hants ell over America, visited this city three years ago and did up the-town to the tune of between $10,000 and $15,000. The Place Viger has her signature on its] register and during her stay there she feigned illness and among othr things ran up a very large champagne ll and was attended DBy"one of Mon treal's most distinguished physicians. She got into some of the larger firms in Montreal for considerable amounts. known to have visiteq Montreal yet on the present tour. a-------- Accused Of Perjury. Hamilton, Ont., Aug. l.--Six young men were arrested at their homes early this morning, charged with per jury in giving evidence, a couple of weeks ago, when they, with some tweny-four others, appeared before the magistrate on the charge of shooting the rooms of the Olympic Club, and found guilty of g mbling on the Lord's day. When ¢ in the police court all plead guilty and declined to elect. The case of Joseph Rogers was enlarged till the request of Rogers' were sent craps In to-morrow at lawyer, but the other five up for trial. They were: William | wellkmown football | player; John 0' Rielly, James Yaldon, William Cornell and Charles Baird. MANY OF THEM FOUND IN| ENGLAND. How Little Workers Spend Their Labor. The little lace-work slaves of Not- tingham exist in a densely crowded district of the east, which is known school attendance officers, told a Lon- Express representative recently that even he, with his thirty years' experience of the town, could not en- tirely credit Miss Squire's evidence; yet he admi that cases were plen- tiful in which children were kept from | school to take finished lace back to | the women who distribute it to the workers. He i a case of a boy of twelve--a half-timer--who went on a milk and worked fifty-eight hours a week. He would fall asleep at his desk at school from sheer wear ness. The other members of the fam- ily could make extra money by lace- making. "We hope soon to have power to check the labor of young children," The Rev. M. A. Dodds, who is the vicar of St. Phillip's the parish in which most of the child slavery ex- ists, admitted that Miss Squire's - in- dictment was true. He accompanied The Express rep- resentative to several houses and in each one put the question: "At what age do children begin working with lace?' "Oh, very young--five or six," was the reply invariably given. "Often," Mr. Dodds added "the children work while the mothers spend the day drinking. One most un- satisfactory ture of the business is that sturdy men and hulking youths live on the earnings of these child- slaves." Mr. Dodds is anxious that the evil should be stopped. "Children attend school," he said, "weak and ti ling after their work. They live in back-to-back houses In some of them, though there are only three reams, there are two families, all the mem- bers of which are working early and late. Somethi must be done. The children must saved. "Miss Squire has been none too late in dra attention to the joyless life which little ones live in Sneinton. She might have gone further. The system now in vogue is fraughtuwith positive peril." In a small house in a terrace off 'the Sneinton road a woman was found at work whose baby, in the same room, was lying ill of measles. Two doors lower down he found a: chrild actuall -- A Lost Boy Found. Toronto, Aung. 1.--While searching for Charlie Pember, a seven-year-old boy, who has been missing from his home, on Napier strect, since Mon day, the police, to-day, found Charles Mcintosh, a ten-year-old boy, who has heen missing from © his home at the | Junction for ten days. The 'boy was | being cared for by the campers on the {lake front. There was an enthusiastic scene at the Junction on the boy's ar- rival home. The Pember boy has not {yes been found. He Was Injured. Robart Eward, employed at the gas works, Barrack street, in the sinking of the new tank, fell off a scaffold twelve leet high, on Wednesday: after noon. He sustained several scaly wounds and an injured shoulder which were attended at the general | hospital ! PE-- Prices Were Too High. Some of the tenderers for the Tete {de Pont Barracks' 'works have had their cheques returned. This, it is un {derstood, indicates that the prices | were too high, and that the plans will |be revised and new tenders called for. Sues For $15,000. London, Aug. 1.--An action has beer } entered against W. J. Reid, on behali | of Mrs. Lillian M. Smith, for £1500 as remuneration for the death of he | husband in the Crystal Hall disaster e-------- In Vancouver, B.C., Joseph Murtin |K.C., former premier, will likely be {an independent candidate in the bye | election, opposing Hon. W. J. Bowser {newly appointed to the McBride cubi | Two cruisers have been ordered to {sai frcm Toulon, France, for Mo ocean [to assist in putting dows ripelhouy tribesmen and preventing furthe: out breaks against Europeans. At Richmond. Ind., Prof. D. Claw | son, a University of } Martin W. Littleton, Brooklya, NY Thaw Ernest Roberts has been given the duty of acting as foreman of the work at the Queen street sewer exten- sion. | Municipalities on the Pacific coast are to be relieved of the cost of main- | tenance: of lepers returning officer, to-day. | Troops in quelling a riot at Lodz, C. R. McKeown, | on Thursday, firmd on the mob, killing {and wounding thirty persons. | Miss Hartman, of Kingston, is the | guest of 'Mrs. R. A. Herring, Montreal { Annex. i | x Toronto gradu- S cuse rT oO | g L i ra N.Y Wl) in acount ate. has been elected to the faculty o of an accident, the Ene anc Weg 0! Indiana University. doing lace 'work who was stricken wi the same disease, How these things can be remedied it is difficult to know. The lace is sent by the manufacturers to a woman, who gives it out, and she is.known as the "Lace Duchess." A prominent maker said he handed his work to a presummbly respectable woman. She returned it finished, and there his responsibility ended. There are four classes of work-- drawing, i scalloping and jennying. A woman acknowledged that her little girl of six .could handle a pair of scissors clip as smartly as a full-grown woman. Most children, however, do! the drawing. The monotony 'of this twork is terrible. It means the pulling out threads one by one till the eyes grow dim and the brain.staggers. Children of Sender Years are doing this. o he following case is typical many families: The youngest chiM, a girl of seven, is called from her bed at six o'clock. She starts work, pull- ing, pulling, pulling til pearly nine Then she has a meal of bread and jam, and after -that goes to school. Dinner consists of a halfpenmryworth of fried fish and a halfpermyworth of pickles. This is consumed during a short interval from work; and after school in the evening the same weary round goes on. She reaches her bed again at eleven. In this way the child® slaves of Nottingham spend their joyless lives. Duke Won't Work. The Duke of Manchester, ' who 'is stopping at the Berkeley 'with his Dr aha, Mr. E. Zimmerman, says that the story which recently ap in the 'American papers to the effect that he was shorfly to take up permanent residence in the United States was absolutely without foun- dation. "1 dislike," he says, "to;spoilagood story, but unfortunately I am obliged to in this instance, and the imterest- ing smmouncetient Jat I was to go to America and work my~ up from the lowest rung of the an lad- der, presumably as a section. hand or something equally plebeian, has not the slightest grain of truthe 1 am content to live in my native. land, and, as for interesting myself in the management of American railways, why, at present I do not think that railway conditions-there are atsall in- viting. "Accompanied by my*father-in-law, I shall return to my EC in Ireland for some fishing, which is much. more enjoyable sport that dabbling in.rail- ways." To Be Kept Secret. election. Said fearless and conscientious. "He will | Have One 1 | Doctor No sense in running from one doctor to another. Select the best one, then «11 stand by him. Do not delay, butcon- sult him in time when you are sick. Ask his opinion of Ayer's Cherry Pec- toral for coughs and colds. Then use it or not, just as he says. We the formules {oars of our preparstiona, make the very kind of we need. drowning." man. elected?" said a solemn "1 do. indeed. to see him elected," saved your life," emn faced man.--London Tit-Bits. ------------------ Bank Notes. Th pocketed $10,000 in ag Same is many' CANADA'S THE CHILD SLAVES 22a, 2 Joyless and Darkened Lives-- by Trying $0 Check This Class of | 45 the individual, tk always | by the uneuphonious name of pro opening & Dew pros- | Seinten. It was in this neighborhood | "of national unity and growth. | that Miss , whose statements 'e can re early years of before the House of Commons com- Confederation when had | mittee have much consterna- | been cancelled and the southern mar- tion in the fown, carried on her re- kets had when the markable investigation. American tariff bore severely Mr. Selby, the superintendent cf | upon us, when we had not found we could solve. opening of our great West that had | --_-- hitherto lain, silent and empty, the |, rebellion that threatened | ful possession of it, but that served | ' only to unite our provinces. more firm- | ly than acts of Parlimment could bind i them, { mountain by railway, attended by the | vanguard of immigration "the first it took so long for other nations to | know much about us when it took so | bearings, ilities. Mr. Selby said, "since it is probable | our i We have tapped out that bylaws under the Employment of ' | resources at a t puamber of Children Act, 1903, will be adopted. points to assure us of great wie; Until then we are powerless." wealth; we have the outflow prises that there is nothing in such | He was a great bore and wasttalk- ing to a crowd about the coming lo- be: "Gibbs is @& honest representative He once saved my! life from "Do you really want to see Gibbs I'd give anything answered the bo! "hen never let anybody "know he * counseled the sol- e famous writer of coon "songs | iver with a local contingent. royalties. ," he said to GREATEST NEED. | set---- ! Better | Education. ] - . | Canada as a Confederation is just But you needn't go| to Turkey for fine grocery store in perfect blend of perfect coffees. N\ our peace- | the spanning of prairie an long for us to know ourselves. But | we have in some taken our | creased we have developed so many enter- | demand as labor; from sea to sea | there is a pulse of life and 'hopeful- | ness that makes it seem as if to-day every i Yet there are needs that must be remembered and remedied. One only I | would here insist upon, a great and | comprehensive one, our need of be- | commng a better educated 3 pect. We | are a democracy, and education is the very basis of democratic progress, but our advance in popular education is far behind our commercial and in- | dustrial development, as witness the | condition of our rural schools to-day compared with that of thirty years | ago. The interests of education, like | those of religion, require to be urged | upon public attention. The distri u- | tion of mental and spiritual food is not regulated by the lawy of supp and demand that rule in f an our higher needs lest we for man does not live by bread alone. And so we can better afford to have | weak administration anywhere else | than in our educational system. Eager immigrants are crowding each other as they press in by our open door, and it is by the public school that these incoming families are to fashioned into patriotic Canadians. This is the mint in which the metal coming from many countries is to be stamped .with the maple leaf and with the superscription of the King If we Canadians are to be worthy of our heritage, by whatever lines we ( ly | bol and | wheat. We require to be reminded of | t that i { may as fellow-citizens be divided, we | must be united in promoting the in- | terests of education, not merely in Celebrating Hudson River. dent that the Hudson river, not its | discoverer nor the first exploiter of | steamships, is to be the centre of the celebration. Festivities which are im- | posing and adequate for the purpose | are to extend over eight days, from | jod includes the date halt on the up trip and his return | 0 downstream, Sept. 19 and 23 respec " tively. Fulton's-celebra son in the pioneer steamboat Cler | mont. took place Aug. 11, 1807, and this event is brought into the celebra- tion of 1909 So 1 = a great water , which will close the ceremonies, models of Hudson's ship, the Half Moon, and of the Cler- mont will be escorted up the river. | one class of schools but in all, from | o kindergarten to university, if for no | other purpose than that in this way | we may produce a robust and lofty |¥ 22 patriotism.-- Principal Gordon in | s Courier. [ H | 0 R 0 | { { The plans for the so-called Hudson- | effectuall Fulton celebration - two years hence | Pl Y, HYSTERIA, PALPITA- have been submitted, and it is evi-| TION and SPASMS. Sept. 18 to Sept. 26, 1, This per | ware of spurious compounds or imitations. 9 udson's | «pp J. COLLIS BROWNE'S CHLORODYNE" on the Stamp of each bot- ted trip up the Hud- | Sold in bottles. Prices in England, 1s. 13d., 2s 9d., 4s. 6d. each Wholescle Agents, LYMAN BROS. & €0., Limited, Toronto Beautiful Styles in Sheer Lawns and Mull Trimmed with Valenciennes Lace, Fine French Tuck and Open and Blind Em- proidery Short and Long Sleeves, sizes 32 to 42, ranging in price from $1 to $4. : ; Lawn Waists, Tucked Front, Embroiqety, Insertion from | wi Collar to Waist, Short Sleevés, Trimmed same Embroid- ery, sizes 32, 40, only 35e. White Skirts, trimmed with Embroidery, $1.75. White Skirts, trimmed with Embroidery, $2.75. Cream Skirts, $3, $5, $6. Tweed Effect Wash Skirts, $1.50, $1.75 and $2. Midsummer Millinery and Children's Headwear. SPENCE'S ™e Lying Mikey a a enti on A ---------------------- DR. J. COLLIS BROWNE'S LORODYNE (THE ORIGINAL AND ONLY GENUINE). is admitted by the profession to be the most wonderful and valuable rem- edy ever discovered. HLOR known for \ 4 E ig ha remed. COUGHS; COLDS NSUMPTION, BRONCHITIS, ASTHMA. % acts like a charm in DIARRHOEA, and is the onl fio in CHOLERA, and DYSENTERY, 06 00 0 outs short all attacks of jd alliative in NEURALGIA, is the onl RHEUMATISM, TOOTHACHE, MENINGITIS, ete. GOUT, CANCER - Alway ask for "DR. J. COLLIS BROWNE'S CHLORODYNE," and be i The genuine bears the words, (Overwhelming Medical Testimony accompanies each bottle.) Sole Maunfacturers :==J. T. DAVENPORT, Limited, LONDIN. Thus the names and the deeds of | these two will be linked with the riv- | or which the destiny of civilization | would have made historic had neither | Hudson nor Fulton ever sal upon | its waters. However, their names are | inseparably associated with the river, | and it is fitting that they be linked in he manner proposed in the program of the celebration. | emt Good Fishing In the Lakes. i The present season promises one | of the largest catches of fish in the | great lakes in many years. The us- | ual output of the lakes for several | years past has been close to 150 mil- | lion pounds annually of which Lake | Erie produced over half. For the past decade there has been a gradnal falling off in the quantit of fish caught in the great lakes. is year, however, the nets of the fishing com- panies along the coast of lakes have almost invariably been overrunning when lifted. The success of the fish- ermen who fish every day during the | season contradicts the & ition | that the lake supply of fish is giving out. The increase in the catch this year is doubtless due to the protec- tion to fish given by the various -Te- | cently -enacted laws. ! LLL L0000000080020800040008800¢ eeeesessetestttstttrttbitttttotentss € Lawn Mowers and Refrigerators For this week only we will sell, at reduced prices, our line of Refrigerators and Lawn Mowers, as follows: 12 Mowers, regular $3 75. Sale price $ 300 1a " " 5176 " " 460 16 " " 8 00 -" " a 80 16 " " 8 00 " " 6 40 Refrigerators, regular $24 00. Sale price $19 20 " " 9300 (% 1840 n oe 17 00 . " 1360 These are all High Grade and fully guaranteed. MCKELVEY & BIRCH, 86 Brook St. | senste PTIVIFIPIIIIIIIIIIINNG ; -------------- Skeletons Unearthed. . In the Village of Bloomfield, On- tario, while laborers were excavating the cellar of a' house, they came across the skeletons vere) bodies, which it is su had many years ago been interred in an Indian ing ground, some four or five sk were found, and pronounced those of is | The steamer Amerien brought about 150 excursiomsis i nd points, to-day, and returned down, the X foiy i a up Tom Isa Dr W. fiordon has returned to Toronto, after visiting his parents, on | Alfred street. | 0000006600000086000006 LLELLERECEES Chocolates Buy Ganong's G.B. Chocolates. - ° They are the Best. & Fs A. J. REES, 166 Princess Street

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