Daily British Whig (1850), 1 Sep 1908, p. 7

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THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, T UESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1908. Wa < NGSTONG [PEMBROKE REA iN CONNECTION wITH Pacitic Railway LABOR DAY Trip Tickets will SINGLE FARE eh Rong September ith, 7 good Lo etl i tht' ion u r arn until FARM LABORERS' Manitoba, Saskatchew: $10.00 going trip, return Leaving 220d, 27th, d4th Round be sold at ood = ood 5th and September EXCURSIONS to an and Albérta : $18.00 additional for dates August 20th, and Sept, 2nd, 1lth and Canadian National Exhibition Toronto, Ont., Aug. 29th to Sept. 14th, "08. tickets will be sold at Good going Tuesday Sept. '1st, Monday, Sept. 7th, and at $4.90 RoOing on Aug. 29, 31; Sept, 2, 3 8, Op11, and 12 All tickets turning from Toronto on or day, Sept. 15, 1908 Full particulgrs at Kq & P, R, Twxket Office, Ontario St. F. CONWAY, Gen, BAYOF QUINTE RAILWAY Train loaves union station, Ontario | street, 4 p.m. daily (Sundays excepted, for Tweed, Sydenham, Napanee, Deser- onto, Bannockburn and all points north. To secure quick despatch to Bannock- burn, Maynooth, and points on Central Ontario. route your shipments via Bay of Quinte Railway. For further particu- | lars, app Mr Ry; W. DICKSON, Agent. 'Phone, No. 3 3. MOOSE Open Season. Jleturn $3.55 and Good valid 're. before Tues- and C.P. 'Phone, 50, I'ass, Agent, Your Money Refunded For Any . Pen-Angle (OF a 11-1 That Proves In Any Way Defective. pT FATS Buying Safely" When You Select Pen-A FL Underwear. New Brunswick | September 15th--November Sok] Nova Scotia 1st--November 30h | Quebec September 1st-- December lp ------ October Write General Passenger Dept. LR SLE RAILWAY. . MONCTON, N.B. For [ree copies of THERE RE MAY BRING POWDEIS | NI "Moose in the Micmac Country" | "Fishing and Hunting." Toronto Ticket Office, 51 King St. East. General Passenger Moncton, N.B. Department, RAILWAY, SYSTEM Farm Laborers' Excursion To Winnipeg Chicago, on Au 11th, and 14th, vorth Bay, on 11th, and 14th. Canadian National Exhibition, Toronto, Ont. Aug. 29 to Sept. 14 | be Fi d dist, and X and west ug. 7 Sept And Toei ug. "ith, Sep ny 9h $10.00, points th BUT THERE IS ONLY ONE MAGIC BAKING POWDER "It ts Pare is Pure, Wholesome a holesome and SOLD IN ALL Sl: EW.GILLET" Return tickets in at $3 COMPANY Sept. 1st, oO Aug » a 10, 11 not good on trains 1 tickets good to return until' LABOR DAY, Monday, Sept. 7th Return tckets will « SINGLE FIRST-CLASS going Sept. 4th, 5th, 6th turning on or before "Hues Reduced Fares t Pacific Coast Poin 's Colonist ticket to Colorado, Idaho Washinglu®, at Sept 1 Sep Hoth, 1 15th One way Columbia, Oregon and rates on sale daily, > dist Yay i A bag or a barrel --it's all the same. The same choice Ontario and Manitoba wheat--milled the same-- Ars abply Corner r full HANLEY Ontario Sts Lake Ontario & Bay of Quinte] Steamboat Co, LIMITED. KINGSTON, ROCHESTER 1,000 ISLANDS particul Agent, and blended in exactly the same proportions. That Flour Beaver the same results--and isalways the best is "why always gives for Bread and strs. NORTH KING. toive your Grocer's + Commencing June 27th, iN At ston for Thousand Island pointe daily | i except Monday, at 10.15 a.m: Reiurn ing leave at 5 p.m., for Charlotte, N.Y. | |, "oar G (Port of Rochester), calling at Bay of | Quinte Ports. | STR, ALETHA~--Leaves Mondays Bay of Quinte Ports, at 5 p.m. Full information from JAMES SWIFT & CO. Freight Agents, J. P. HANLEY, Oc 8, KIGKPATRICK. Ticket Axents, STEAMER WOLFE ISLANDER | LEAVES WOLFE ISLAND i= 7.30=2.15 a.m, 1,004.00 p.m, 9.15 a.my 1.00--4.00 p.m : 9.15 a.m; 1.00--4.00 p.m. Breakey's ' 6.830--9.30 a.m. 1.30 p.m. 7.309.155 a.m; 1.00--4.00 p.my 8.00--9.15 a.m. 1.00--4.00 p.mgy 5, 10.00, 12.30 a.mq 5,00 p.m.' KINGSTON = 30 a.m. 3.00--5.30 p.m, m, m, m. wrile for prices is of Fe Jing i Cereals. T. H. Taylor Co, Limited, Chatham, L wht Dealers n all for | " MON LEAVES B.80--11 TUES, 8.30--11.80 a.m. 3.00--5.30 p WD, 8.30-11.80 a.m. 3.005.330 p. THURS, 8.50=1.0Q pn, 3.00 pow 7 p. Breakey's B p.m. FRI. 8.80- ) a.m. SAT, B. 3011.80 an SUN 9.45 : . S tc Simcoe 4 $00 p.m le Table ubject to change without | 2 WILSON,S, One packed FLY mu PADS "=~ -- SOLD BY we -DRUGCISTS, CROCERS AND CENERAL STORES 1100. per packet, or 3 packets for S80. will last a whole season. MON, m 3.00 3 Jam, Sat Island and S Time notice, { Roant ealls at Garden Island going to] snd from BR iuinteva : a it Royal | ALLA Mail Montreal to Liverpoo! "Silver Plate that Wears"® The Sixtieth Anniversary of the introduction of spoons, knives, forks, eic., marked "[B4T ROGERS BROS. enfs silver of remarkable eauly, style and wearing quality that- bi add grace fo your fable. BY fHE ADING DEALERS Te sels, dishes, eXk., with the same Migh reputation are made by MERIDEN BRITE CO. woul l 1 ¢ vince the man. that the best policy if the div ideads | were larger, ft average honesty is Lhatveby |, ALERT AGAINST ATTACK! LIVED T WEEKS ON WRECKED STEAMER. Safer With Captain and Crew Felt There Than Ashore Malay Pirates. Liverpool, Sept. 1.--Fifteen sailors have I@nded at Liverpool with a thrilling tale of shipwreck peril among Malay pirates The "ship on which they sailed from New Zealand was the New Orleans, but the .vessel which brought them home was the liner Stentor, from Singa- pore, which picked them up and saved their lives. "We were bound for Hamburg with phosphate rock," said one of the sailors in an interview yesterday. "We sailed at the beginning of May, after picking up our cargo at Ocean island. We went all right as far as the straits of Macassar, off the coast of Borneo, but there we 'struck a sunken reef. +The ship was badly damaged, and the water gained in the hold. But we kept the pumps going, for we hoped she would get clear so that we could beach her in shallow water. "The engines were kept astern - ali the tune, and at last the ship got off the reef, but before she could make any headway she had struck another reef and settled down. "Captain Humby ordered the boat out, and we abandoned our ship, tak- ing with us all the belongings' we could t into the boat. e "We fin as we rowed away that she had finished settling down. Her bridge. the forecastle and all the upper parts were above water, and although she had broken in half, she was well out of water, fore and aft, at high tide. ! "We did not go far. All roufidthat part of the coast there are fierce Malay tribes, descendants of the old pirates, and we thought it was safer on the water than on the land we went back, to stay where were provisions and some sort of at full speed D0 there safety at Je ast three lived on that All the time we kept a con- watch--for two reasons. There a vessel passing sand, on the sther hand, there might be a boatful yf armed natives at any moment, as the rock on which the ship had struck and we could be "For "weeks we wreck tant might be o Ssh en fri m the land. "All the arms we had we kept close handy ay re hen we saw, too many times for absolute comfort, small bands of natives marching along the hore and watching the wreck. At last our distress signals, we managed to 'keep flying, we S the Dutch steamér De Eerens. They and took us aboard, except the chief engineer and They salvage which re seen by bore down Captain Humby, the steward, who would not com stuck where they were to do Wi iE he Dutchman sonihed at' we took ghe liner Singapore, there for -home IDENTIFIED DY SNAPSHOT. Science Ride May Solve a Mystery. London, Sept. 1.--Queen Alexandra's ride on the scenic railway at the White the other week may possibly lead Thomas Fletcher, a i Cleveland, Ohio, find- t son, a young man of ago Mr. Fletcher, Jr, gainst his" father's wish, f mptly turned' out of doors. Since then the young cf yuple have never been ecard of, though it is the father's belief at oi, ire in this country Mr Fletcher is a friend of M running the Empre Hall at court Ihe other week Mr to the Animal King in a most excited showed him a photo grvavh which had been taken of the White City, and declared young men Sitting on Queen's City o a mil llionairg: flour merchant, 1 30. mar Bostock, who Farl Fletcher came I state jueen at the f the on eats t Bostock, he youth had to admit that tainly very much like him I'o discover him an advertisement was erted lumns of th pers, asking if those who had the ol riding with the aueen on the lway would kindly 'communi Mr." Bostock at Earl's court replies were eived, though must havg been twenty-five the cat nineteen 1 to come to Earl's court on last and. make Hilliard at of the ot Mi met cer had t wa who in the agony with teen rec 1 there ns on wore aske Saturday 1a known to I Hall. Fourteen turned up, o know the meanmg had When was explained to tl ssed sorrow for Mr or two of the gen- as Mr be a milliondire they adopted. It was clear among those 1e Empress evidently of the letter they received 'm they expre sthough o to be lost son wi who turned up We haye not given up hopes,' de red Mr. Bostock rday, "for we ve onl some fourteen out of the twenty-five t is possible that young Mr; Fletcher might be among the re- matnde T his father' S be lief, as a result of inquiries he has made through Pinkerton's detective agency, that the couple are in this country. Unfortun- ately, Mr. Fletcher had to sail for Am erica gn Saturday, owing to the receipt of an important cable from his business house there. I expect him back, ever, in two months. 'My mstruc find the young man, and then to cable | iis whereabouts to his father. 1 can will receive the h iest | all "will be forgiven.' 1S not yest y met ind 1 assure him he of welcomes, and Judging High Art. Mrs Cornwallis-West tells a good story how high art was sometimes gaug and pictures collected in the days when She was Lady Randolph famous Colonel North al and social eighties: hough of latter "rough diamond laudable ambitibn of tion® of fine pictures excited over a that day at paid the ther £8,000." He described it She asked him what it was and found he had Then she en- ¢r"s name, to which he e th ught it we some "But," he added trium- 12 feet by 8 rr -------------------- 1 somewhat form- "Once picture 1 stupegy is back of discipline it is had con- | Christie's | and was | | Officers Defied 'TRAITOR OFFICERS. Many Spspected of Selling Mili- tary Secrets. Tokio, Sept, 1.--Captain Kawakita was recently killed by a Japanese gendarme at Pekin while resisting arrest on sus- picion of selling military secrets to Russia, and it now disclosed that there has been recently a number of removals for misconduct, and other officers are under investigation for al- leged betrayal of military secrets. Coincidently many mstances of ill-treat- ment of soldiers by officers are reported, ral soldiers having committed sui- 18 oe cide The . details have been withheld from the public, but the Kawakita case as a climax has forced revelations. Leading' newspapers ve hemently attack the army, charging that Since the war the officers have become demoralized, living extray- agantly and dishonorably, and that core ruption i$ the natural, _result. = 'They suggest that the nation is investing im- mense sums on an army which may prove worthless in a crisis. General Nogi joins the critics, and says the trouble is higher, up and that until the senior officers set a better ex- ample the juniors cannot be expected to walk straight. Official concern over betrayal of military secrets is illustrated by the court-martial sentence of six years given to Yokosuka, a clerk at a naval station, who furnished to a Japa- nese newspaper insignificant forbidden information. The editor is under ar- rest, i AWAY FROM CARACAS. < Holland Has No Grounds For Action Against Castro. Caracas, Venezuela, Sept 1.--Presi- dent Castro, who. is at present at Barqu- 'isimetq, is expected to be absent from the capital for a month. The fact. that he has left nobody at the head of the government here is taken as an indica- tion of his confidence that Holland has no groun] fot action aginst him. The fact that the British minister to Venezuela. declined to accompany the president to the provinces has attracted considerable local attention and aroused comment : The president has issued a decree declaring that all steamers entering Coro to buy coal shall not be obliged to pay port dues. This coal is owned by the Venezuelan government and is pold for $5 a tong and the action of the President is ang her bow: against the industries of Cardcas SERVIAN SHOT ANOTHER. Claims Rifle Was Accidentally Dis- charged. Belleville, Ont., Sept. 1.--As a result of an alleged accidental shooting affair at Point 'Ann, near this citys Paoco Bogdan, a Servian, is 'in the hospital with a bullet wound through his bowels, and Vasa Miolskoi, another Servianm, is in the county jail. It seems that the men were out in a boat. Miolskoi says they were firing at a mark. One of the cartridges hung fire, and while heé was looking 'at the weapon it went off, shooting Bogdan through the body His entrails are badly perforated, and doctors at the hospital do not think he caw live, The other man surrendered himself, and the foregoing is his story. The injured man is still unconscious. SAVED FROM LYNCHING. Mob Man in Jail. Douglas, Ariz, Sept 1.--Defying a mob of several hundred infuriated men, two heavily-armed officers marched out of the city hall with a negro, Frank Butler, whé had she{ Ernest Phillips, a white man, between \ them Placing Butler in an automobile, the party, hold- sing the crowd at bay, left the city and went to Tombstone, the county seat, where Butler was placed in the county jail. There is still some excitement still in the city, but no indication of -racial troubles, and Placed of the car was his | themselves | anxious | Fletcher | how=- | tions are to do my best to [3 | | | | | I | Have Energy Plus. a little le vequire life i energy a bur- vou have only | than your duties den. If you have life is a and an vou the excess of 'energy Tonic, Pills (Laxative) will the bload vitality required. are a great nerve strengthener In boxes, 25cs at Money back if not | 1f | | of red will Wade's little excass Good, rich, of it just a joy abundance [energy | blood { rive | Iron [ide They and blood maker Wade's drug store satisfactory pro- and Her Method Of Education. A' lady has in olored lady, wi her an old 10 has decided views on »f the young ved she on to her mistress, "I can't unders twhy the white folkses waste so much money a-sending deir chillun!to school | I's got de smartest chile in dis city, an' 1 learns him myself "How do you accomplish that, rah, seeing vou don't know service Be one occ: sion t Aunt one an make take the book and den I say to take yo eyes off'n less leggo him; an I'll | op jes and |set down on d | him, 'Moses, y nu {dat book, much | skin yo' alive." | -- Her Wish. Philadelphia Post, \ Baitimore man tells of receiving a jumique note acknowledging a 'wedding "esent sent by him on the occasion {of the marriage of his chum "Your lovely etching was received." Wrote the bride, "and gives us both | ple asure. It is now in the parlor hang [ing above the piano, where we hope to |see you very soon, and as often as you hind it agreeable." Our imaginary troubles often number our real ones. The man of deeds may be the one of the fewest words, Black Walch Ping The Chewing Tobacco out- 4 ) and only at Wade's drag store. THE REVELATIONS WITH DISAFFECTION. BE TERS ol Ships' Crews, and Not Their Of- ficers, Are the Real Con.- manders., St. Petersburg, Sept. 1.--That the czar's pavy is seething with disaffection has for some time been an, open secret to students of Russian naval} affairs. Prince Alexander Lieven, a naval com ménder and .one of the most celebrated officers in the Russian service, has re- eently had the courage to pubhsh a pamphlet which supplements the criti- cisms ofithe douma on the mismanage- ment of the navy and the causes of dis- affection. The prince states plainly and without reserve that the Russian navy is not only destitute of discipline, but of esprit de corps, and that there will be no im- provement in this state of things until thoroughgoing reforms are carried out in all departments, First of all, he says, it will be essen- tial to secure reliable and competent non-commissioned officers. The non- commissioned officers, he says, were the real leaders of the mutiny 'on board the Pamyaf® Azoff, the superior officers of that cruiser not having the slightest idea of what was in the wind until they were surprised and killed. The question of non-commissioned officers for the Russian navy, he adds, is of the greatest importance for us, for it will cost many more of us our lives if this question is not solved in a satis-. factory manner. One makes a gr reat, mistake if one imagines that the mutiny, lias. ceased. If at the present moment the 'air seems to be quieter, it is only, because there is a mere outward calm among the people. The truth is we are not in a position to exert any in- fluence over our sailors. We have nothing in common with them, and they on their part allow themselves to be entirely led away. by fleeting public opimion. When a still stronger popular movement breaks forth the fleet will join the people and increase the danger which threatens the government. "It is not the officers, but the crews, which are the real commanders of the ships of the Russian navy." Buying Wine For A King. London Tit-Bits. The supreme head of the royal cellars bears the title gentleman of the cellars and it his duty to attend or to he represented at all the principal sales and to acquire suitable lots. The fact that the King is really the purchaser is of course kept secret to prevent fancy prices being run up The King, when Prince of Wales, al ways made a point of taking his own wine with him when he attended public banquets, and this custom still fol lowed by the present heir to the throne The King has his own wine sent to private houses when he accepts invita- tions to dinner, except in places where he is an old or frequent visitor Originally the cellars at Windsor Castle; .which are of enormous extent, were the chief repository of the royal wines, and until they were overhauled nobody knew quite what they contained! The electric! light now illuminates their dark depths and every bin is numbered and catalogued with all the accuracy of a business house. 18 is Fresh Fruit For Children. New York Times. It is an old-fashioned law, whichestill holds good, that every one should take a tonic in the spring of the year Every child in years gone by was com pelled to swallow that nauseous dose of oil which they so dreaded. True, these things will not do any harm, but there are correctibles which will do as much good and are more pleasant to take > There for fresh are is nothing more healthy man, woman, or child than the spring vegetables and fruit which now on the market, and which arg not expensive hing will do mock to help clear up the system than these fresh green The eating of meat but not altogether di man requires meat Veal and pork should be discontinued in the sumer, and in their place plenty of fresh vege tables should be When you do eat meat, water cress to to it See that your children substitute fruit for candy 3¢ sure it is ripe--then let them go ahead { should be reduced, scontinued. Every eaten add plenty of Won't Take The Artist Back. New .York. Sept. 1.--Alfred Kuttner, i brother of Mrs. Julia Kuttner Earle, said that it was the desire of the family to end at once and for notoriety that since the arrest of Ferdinand P rle for assault a few days Mr, Kutt- ner gave out the statement from Mrs. Earle to her plans. "Reconciliation is aut of the questic I could not retain my returned to Mr. Earle. 1 must be sepa rated from him. [It sacred duty which I owe to myself and my children" Mrs. Earle has instructed counsel to begin immediate proceedings agains Mr. Earle for a separation on the ground of cruelty : New Zealand Lumbermen., The \kauri timber industry is one the most important in North New Z A land. In the districts north of Ayck land almost one-half of the population are in some way connected with the industry, and look to it as their main , Stay of existence. First must be reckoned the vanguard of the army of workers--ssome 40,000 { hardy bushmen whose province it is to { penetrate into the forests.and the wild ' mountain regions where the kauri * grows and with ax and saw to "fall" and lop the great trees. Next, says The Wide World Magazine, come the haul ers bullock drivers, wagoners sawmill hands, engine drivers, cooks "saw' doctors" and a host others too numerous to mention, ago. following m regard nm self-respect if | 1S a of The Pain Must Go. The worst aches and pains quickly disappear after Smith's White Lini ment has been applied. It quickly ! penetrates, soothes the inflamed parts, soreness, andl gives Get it to-day costs but 25c., draws ' away the relief as. if -by magic. have it handy; People who tell all often tell more than they know. Failure should never be the 'result of but a single trial. |CZAR'S NAVY SEETHES ; + PAGE SEVEN. ~ The Value of hi Many people fail to save, because they do not realize the Li of small economies. * The practice, ouce begun, of laying aside a portionof - your income, no matter how small, every week or month, will soon become a fixed habit. The result in a few years will probably surprise, and certainly gratify you. Start 4 'Savings Account fo-day with THE STANDARD BAN OF CANADA ' stim KINGSTON BRANCH. School Days! School Days! Dear Old Golden Rule Days. -Of course, the children need new School 'Shoes, and you should try the House of Good Shoe § Making if you have been having poor luck in the. wear of the shoes you have buying elsewhere. All our lines are now complete. \ First Fall Showing of thé New American Styles Both our windows show the smart new styles of Men's and Women's Footwear for fall. As ® usaal we are a few weeks ahead of the other fel-# ows: with our new goods, and a year ahead in style 4 H] J.. H. SUTHERLAND. & BRO. The Home of Good Shoe Making, Dibaba ibis bbb bbs sodddisiatsasi : -- cesses [f you are thinking of busing a new kitchen ID | Range, be sure and see. the UNIVERSAL FAVORITE RANGE It is economical on fuel and guaranteed to cook and bake perfectly with either coal or wood, MANT FACTURED BY FINDLAY BROS. CO. Limited. Carleton Place, Ont. "For 'Sale le by. / All the Leading Dela y OOOO O0O0O00O000O0OO000V0000Y 000000000 OTOOGOOOOVs H WEL $BA CH GAS LIGHT: * PRICE COMPLETE $1.00 This light gives " Maintai Efficiency." - That means a g light ; not only when the Ihe i just light, but all time. MCKELVEY & BIRCH, 69-71 Brock St 5000000000000000000000000MBEE0a006000000008 The Canada Life Assurance Company Holds the strongest Reserves of any Life Assurance C " the North American Commas aCe alian Company aay or Cansglian people for Canadian Doople, 62 years ago. Dividends holders have been large all these years. and are bound to , owing to the unique position occupied by the. Company. : for women the same as for men. Canadian Company purchasing Canada Life Contracts. ° Full pa Particriu Sf how» oiier will shage the office--18 Market Street, Kingston, J. O. HUTTON,

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