Daily British Whig (1850), 8 Nov 1907, p. 7

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'here are several hundred Wo- who haven't made the decision , the New Fall Coat or Skirt to wmted shortly. Perhaps a good have put off the purchase not quite ready to buy. To these aw attention to the fact our of Fall and Winter Coats is the it in Kingston in smart up-to- ityles. Scores of women have s 80, and you may select any or Skirt or Suit and have it 1 aside until required. FALL COATS, $7.50, 8.50, 50. FALL COATS, 2.00. t 'S, $13.75, 15.00 Up to 22.50. and To-morrow Night until 1ave an opportunity of se- at. $10.00, 11.75, 0 Kid VES. KID GLOVE, at One » years to get them good mend, They are now ack, Tans, Greys, White. Gloves, Ves, ish Glove, 69c. or fall. ves, 00, most wanted, Tan Heavy | Gloves, in great varie- iloves, ic. Gloves, black or colors, plain colors or NOTICE | RGAINS FOR} BN | " f Blucher Cut Waterprocf Boots, & urveying Boots, Heavy Soles, regu- i $3.50, E If Blucher Cut Lace Boots, regular 0 | 10; ====== v-ewee $2.85. This Week. ces ccatcsncc cman "Why, ves, indeed; oblivion ! "Just because everybody ed a la Botticelli they little doors to the soul "When 1 was a child 1 had ars. \ "There, I hope that little romance is! } relegated forever to the dark bag that | t holds the things consigned to eternal | I have e remembers | seeing me always with my hair dress- | imagine I must ! have been born without those cunning | with Nature graces either side of the | {as the time of Herod--about the per- genius -ol'the sinuous Cleo to focus po- iod when the head of St. John had a which | Nota puldr attention upon something that head. ¥ ig a le market value with ladies of | was nothing, to work up an interna- such the ballet--she woul have been simply | tional discussion over an hirsute hia- regular cascade of hair falling alll® dancing girl. tus, to use a vacuum to mystify all about my neck and back that, as 1} ut the were tho days before the| the dramatic eritics. The million min- grew older, I confined it. within mod. | days when every woman, including | nows of humanity swept after her in est, unobstrusive bands. I did it just res was her own press. agent. | guessing, admiring shoals. Even Leo- to get rid of my hair without cutting | ly these lat economical, univers- pold, king of the Belgians became en- it 'off. People said the bands were be- Ih y talented days the .stage has tranced. > : Q nown many won - . coming to me. So I have kept to my ol on | ren who have risen to No one has evér\, been so versed or girlish style in hairdressing. That is eo v by means of some one possession | so absorbed in evs hair and ripe all there is, or has ever been, to the {Which they esteemed--and induced ev-| : a his a aay 1 . ; " orvhody -o red lips: and no one ever grew so ole mystery of Cleo de Merode's ears. | Uy else to esteem. 4 : J 3 It } } . who had so neglected the study of the ' is no breach of either confidence han livi In hi 1 : . 4 wman ear divine. Tn him aura im- Cleo de Merode--beantiful, puzzling, | °F inuette _ to recall the choreo- pressions were still virginal: he was ysterious, thrilling Cle graphic pulchritude of Fanny Ellsler, | |. 5 : ; mysteric hrilling Cleo--driven to . like a Haryard freshman entranced hy desperation and violet ink, ied by excellent portraits with herself studiously accompan- of herseli, unaccompanied whose most lauded beauties were those very members which raised her feet to the= he of her profession--about the sphinx riddle of the college widow "How old is Ann?" his by hér famous ears, writes thus of her | Six incl her ears. He rose to the Botticelli butterfly, mystery which has made more talk in| A pulsating - gencra- | and the waters parted as they did for Paris the last ten vears than all the | tion rejoices to its inmost heart to Pharaoh; and they stood still while he brains the great Bernhardt has had ga the veiled deeps of Anna i regarded her. ( leo, in her ingenuous back of her ears during the same de-| He | :. Or fofld memory confidences of the violent ink, tells cade: and the great Bernhardt is no| may tive gaze upon | about it: kindergartner, either in high art or! hersole's lips, or upon Mrs. "We plaved 'La Maladetta.' During free advertising. Car Vesuvian hair, or even upon| the first entr'acte the royal visitor Cleo it now worth a million, and she | the Bernhardt's and Terry's plain, un- | came to greet the artistes. He chat- is an artiste. She used to be a dan adorned haman intelligence. ted long with me--so long that Dir- use. Before that she was a ballet But all of them had something! ector Gailbard became very impatient dancer. worth talking about. "Twenty minutes went hy, Beyond If one eould follow her as far back | Tt took the unique, unadulterated | the curtain thq audience was over NEVER AGAIN: May Officer Speak to Dis- | missed Comrade. A TAAGIC SENTENCE LIES IN ° WORDS "DISM'SSED WITH IGNOMINY." Officer Thus Degraded _| places as the reviewing authority may Brother Officers--It Takes far two yours and that the Place of the British "Cashier-| rime, punishment, name and place ing." abode of the delinquent shall he President Roosevelt recently ed the sentence of a court-martial in Charles E. the case of Lieut. lough, which included ignominy" from the be inflicted. Under his sentence United States. army ther or brother, if they be ing his lifetime. miny" is a prohibits re-enlistment in the army or navy, and blights a man forever. His crimes are published abroad, ed through the army and blazoned in the newspapers. This sentence is seldom pronounced, and then only for the gravest offences. It is essentially an ethical punighment with the loss of position, and caste, an officer so punished garded by his former associates and, Lut Of From All Communication With army. It of the severest punishments' that can the camp and in the state | the « er came and where he usual Cul 3 "d By > lv resides." SIMissE i y x " NS w Lieutenant McCullough was 3 one s : , 3. victed in Cuba of giving worthi no officer - not even his fa- officers-- may speak to the convicted man dur- "Dismissal with igno- lifetime punis shment. wrought. But what was there to do? Who can know how to interrupt so After that Cleo of the Bandeaux be- | came a stockholder in the Anglo-Bel- | gian Rubber company. the Kasai | Trading company, the Congo Supesior | railway, the Stanley-Pool and Karan- ga-ltimbiri Construction company and most of the other companies which urge the gathering of rubber in the Congo. Free State by cutting off the ears and other superfluities and utilities of such free black citizens as prefer not to gather rubber, Sometimes nowadays the Botticelli butterfly dances the jeweled dance of Senegambin; or she makes a tour of Austria and Hungary; she inspects | her real estate investments in Ostend, | Dinant and Hamur: she retires to| her chateau in the Belgian valley of the Meuse, . or About her ears? Well, che save she has them, quite as pink and pretty as the cars of anbody else, But no one has ever seen them---at| least, they have never Leen exhibited in public. And while the theatregoing public has guessed and speculated about the Merode ears, their owner has gone coining money. | She is among the world's most odlebrated and ful actresses, and has made her for-| tune largely by. her unique method of hairdressing. on sueeess- | - ------------ marched before the troops and in pub- by him through life, so he may never lic was deprived of his stripes and escape. | epaulets, 1 custom has been abe n- It is a carefully designed punish- doned. and "dismissal with ignomin, It is the most cruel moral dis- | implies a similar di £ conceivable, Its sole object is Should a fellow-o! neak to the! to deter others from leaving the path disgraced man he is like hy to he repr of rectitude, which officers most dread. manded or punished. Should a man so Within recent years the only other] disgraced have relatives in the army | Person thus punished was Captain | they would = be compelled to ignore Oberlin M. Carter, of the Army En-| { him during his lifetime. | Should a father be thus dismissed, | his son, were he in the would | have to his lips and pass his sire without a of recognition. The sentence is blasting. The brand is | life er. ineffacable er conviction a copy is sent to all the officers in the throughout the United The sentence in McCullough's « read that the convicted officer "bel dismissed from the of the Uni- ted States and be such service, rr 1 close of the sen tence army Sta service confined at about ov | lished in lue newspapers in and AppY from which checks, duplicating his pay accounts, th sling funds 3X th?) camp ex- m . and offic mess, desertion and prese nung Tote claims ainst the United States. He served in the lst nois Vol- | gineer Corps. Carter was convicted of To unter Cavalry as serg May 10. embezzlement while directing the work L August, 1808, and as se md lieuten- | of improving the harbor of Savannah. | int from August, 159%, until October,| Next to "dismissal with ignominy' when mustered out. He had served as | grdinary dismissal from service is the circulat- a private and corporal in the Seventh | most severe punishment in the army United States ( avalry from 1888 to! and navy. A dismissed officer or 1596, He again enlisted in the Sixth [private is not allowed to re-enlist. United States Cavalry in September, ould he do so, he is subject, if 1599. and served in that regiment un- | discovered, to court-martial and im' til he was appointed to be a second | prisonment for "fraudulent enlist. honor lieutenant in the Ninth Cavalry in!ment." 18 Te" | November, 1899. McCullough was For less rievous offences a man in 253 horn in Wisconsin. service may be court-martialed and pariah as by the Brahmin caste of = yo only in Wisconsin, but wherever | sentenced to confinement for a certain India. thg disgraced man has lived,has the period within tne limits of his sta S---- notice of his sentence been published. | tion. With this sentence may be add- "Dismissal with ignominy" is prac- In the olden s a man thus sen- ed a forfeiture of pay for a certain | tically the same as the old "cashier- tenced was deprived of his insignia, | length of time, ed" punishment which was accompani- and his: sword was broken. Nowadays Should an offense be deeemed more ed by a removal ot the insignia of through the newspapers he is more | serious, and yet not sufficient for dis- rank. openly disgrac his dishonor be- | missal, an officer may be sentenced to Formerly in the English army a mancomes more of a serious crime; 2 convicted involved irretrievable sentenced to be "eakhiered." disgrace, » widespread. the loss of a certain number of files which The purpose of this sentence is to jor a roe duction in the lists. wasblazon the man's dishonor before the is is considered the most serious He wasworld, so that his crime may stalk |sentence next to dismissal. Suppos- | The Society Girls in 'The Time, The Place And The Girl," at The Grand, on Thursday, Nov. 14th, | ing a major shall he the fiftieth in the list for promotion. He is court-mar- | tialed for an offense and sentenced tof back on the list to the seventy fifth | a loss of twenty-five files. He goos| major. This may mean a loss of three or four years in the line of promo- | tion. However, unless an officer is actual- ly dismissed from service with no sen- | tence he does not suffer any loss of | caste. When he has Deen restored or | regains his loss of files no dishonor is |attac hed to him, | is sentence of 'dismissal with : declared a major general | 3 ignominy. 'is the most unrelent- | | some time ago, ing and cruel which can be imposed. | When this is pronounced on a man the | | ghost of his crime will stalk by his | side through life. Wherever he may go | | his name will be recognized and his of- | | fe mse remembered, | | 'Army officers will pass him by; his | Jans nearest friends in the army | are prohibited from talking to him | | under pain of diseiplinary action. It! is a most tragic sentence. "1 remember an interesting case of a sergeant who deserted the army a number of years before the war with | Spain. According to thé regulations | he would not have been permitted tol enter the again, and if caught | | would have been punished. | "During the Spanish-American war! he enlisted with a Texas volunteer regi ment and served in Cuba. He fought valiantly, and was one of the best men in the service, "A friend of mine one day saw him | service and recognized him. He passed on without giving any sign. No, he did] not inform on the man. He said that | he saw the man was obeying his of | ficers and doing his duty. He had] found the attraction of soldier's life] {too great to be resisted. "Had he been detected he would Thave been court-martialed and im-| { prisoned. As it was, he remained in| | service and did valiant fighting But | | the Janes ty of a erime he this is the rul "The great army regulations take no cogniz-| of such things. If a man is guil-/ must be punished It is inflexible, i machine of the army and 1 by a moving spirit- | Inavy is of {duty. It has its laws; it obeys them. | | Whe n a man disobeys the laws he must | {be punished, | "From the nature of things, pun-| | is hments in the army and navy are] largely ethical: that is, they are] meant to entail mental sufferings. | | Hence, dis mists | is & more severe pun- lishment for the army officer than {long term of imprisonment wonld {for the ordinary offender in civil life.' be | MOTHERS OF KINGSTON. | We i Vinol Will Make Your Thin, Air} ing Children Strong, Rosy and Robust. | Mrs. L. P. Skonnard, of Minneapo-| lie, writes : "1 feel it my duty to tell] | others what your edd liver prepara-| tion, Vinol, has done for my little] boy. He was sick for two 'vears, pale, | and had no appetite. We tried differ | {ent doctors an wl medicines and had | given up all hopes that he would re- cover, but thanks to Vinol heis 4 well and healthy boy, and | want to] {recommend Vinol to every mother | {| who has a weak or sickly child.' | i Our local druggist, George W. Ma-| { hood, says : "We want to say to {every mother in Kingston that our] |cod liver preparation, Vinol, will build | your chilhren up into strong, robust, healthy children. We have never pd anything equal to it in owr store| for this purpose and we will return | { your money if it fails." Is there a mother in Kingston who! | will ignore such a generous offer as! {this ? George W. Mahood, druggist, i i Kingston, Ont. exalted and gallant a personage who | is des oting himseli to the paying of | compliments ?' | _THE DAILY BRITISH si walc, FRIDAY, _NOVEMBER 8 1007. Was a, shocess,. i fortunately failed to samply with with conditions, i ted name and address, ot not Last Limeric t but many who sent in splendid lines, un- Some omit- send the tea lid with label attached. So here's Sig a. opportunity (-- $750.00 TO 128 WINNERS FIRST PRIZE, $200 CASH " 50 2nd 3rd IN PRIZES 50 Prizes of $5 Each 75 Prizes of $3 Each CONDITIONS READ CAREFULLY. The conditions of this competition are perfectly sim- ple. Limerick which is shown below and panied by a TIN LID ¢with label attached), 3 TEA, Gold, or LIPTON'S COFFEE of LIPTON'S bel, All you have to do is to fill in the last line of then send it, accam- or Blue La- which Red, (embossed Pink, Orange, lid only,) entitles the reader to send in one Limerick. You may send in as many Limericks as vou like so long as a TIN LID . accompanies each Limerick. LIPTON BY seca. SLED APPOINTMENT TO Ha THE KING TEA The Finest the World Can Produce. Packed Only in Airtight Tins. FOR. SALE BY ALL GROCERS. the of a package LIMERICK SATD A CHARMING YOUNG MAID OF DELHI "OF ALL OTHER TEAS I FIGHT SHY _ FOR SINCE EVERY TEST tinct understanding. Signature Addvess The competition will be decided by the Editor of The Toronto MAIL whose decision must be accepted as final. "Lipton's Limerick," and sent: to. MALL AND AND EMPIRE, must be addressed PIRE. Toronto, Ont, PROVES THAT LIPTON'S 18 BEST I agree to abide by the decision of the MAIL AND EMPIRE as final, and enter the competition on that dis. Fditor of The To "Postage must be prepaid at letter rate." All answers must be mailed ty last post Tuesday, November 19 th, | LIBRARY FURNITURE Tables $6.50, regular price $8.50. Easy Chairs, $5.50, regular price $7.5 $4.50 per section. Leather, Early Finish ; also Dining Furniture, in Early and Golden Finish. Envel Couch $5.50, regular price $7.50. Book Cases $1.50, $3 to $265. Sectional Bookcase, 8§2.50 to Couches and Davanports, Spanish Robert Reid, 230 Princess St. Telephone 577 ronto / English Room English "| The health of the Sorioh wi be improved by the COWAN'S PERFECTION COCOA (Maple Leaf Label) Pure, nutritious and easily" digested. THE COWAN CO., Limited, TORONTO fk » i i J Hi by ¥ el re" moxing tion for ore the settler re .ix im 0 in writing to the Comm minion Lands at Ottawa, of his inten tion to do so. SYNOPSIS OF CANADIAN NORTH: WEST MINING REGULATIONS, rights way: twenty-one. UOAL~Coal mini & period. of Canada Life Assurance Company. Want an AGENT for Belleville, also an AGENT for Kingston. Applications treated confidentially. J. O. HUTTON, Apply to - er Se 18 Market St. Kingston, Ont i Ww. tof the Minister of N.B.--Unauthorized publication advertiservent will not be paid for HERE'S SOMETHING NEW IN POST CARDS Greetings from King ston, ed '" Life Models" and Kingston Views. Come in and have a look. T. McAuley Watches! Tn Solid Gold, Gold-Filled and Sterli Bilver Cases, all sizes amd fitted with any make of movt, Our special move ment has 8 universal Yow, fax to Vaucouver. selecting a watch soe our dis play. Kinnear & d'Esterre, Watchmakers & Jowelers 100 Princess St., Kingston guaran which is good from Halis Belore When You Buy COAL From P. WALSH You get genuine Scranton, as he § handles nothing ®& else

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