Daily British Whig (1850), 23 May 1910, p. 7

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£4 Ae ENA Sl my $s " \ a. 7 THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, MONDAY, MAY 23, 1910. PAGE SEVEN. THE Sawyer Shoe Store § -------- ---- Daintily devised Foot Dress for the most wistful wish of womanhood § *ITEISIOOeetesteY A PS PA AAA From the factory of Utz & Dann, makers of the famous ghoe for women. The Sawyer Shoe Store Sole Agent for Kingston, F60000009000000000000 Standpoint Y 8 hu yo _ Wp oi! ftowand see to it that I i Have Good 1 PLUMBING I { { ? § { {4 n this day of modern ideas, there is no excuse for con- {1 rac Ung digease from germ-) } breeding cesspools or poorly) constructed lavatories. || { y In Our Work i) We Keep Abreast HH ot the Times | DAVID HALL, 66 Brock . A% Tophiude Nb. EAB." The Gomet May contain a great many gases and have a long tail to tell you shout 8 am. when you are taking observation, But GET WISE, take it from us, that the only Gas Problem you want to consider seriously is to arrange about getting the pipes in your house before the warm weather arrives, Ask Pete Hunter, or eall np 19 7 and we will send a man to give you the necessary in formation, KINGSTONLH.& POWER DEPT. "CC. FOLGER, Gen. Manager. Highest Grades GASOLINE, COAL OIL. LUBRICATING O1L. FLOOR OIL. GREASE, ETC. PROMPT DELIVERY. 'W. F. KELLY, Clarence and Ontario Streets. Toye's Building, "OOOO 000 COAL! The kind you are looking for is the kind we sell Scranton Coal goovd t i srt gr OR ig BOOTH & ( 0, UNIQUE LAUNDR | i { | call and give i send a card and we will call for goods and deliver prompt- 73 Clarence St. { CURED OF LANE BACK WHER 84 YEARS OLD * Gin Pills did it. Anyone, seeing Mr. Samuel Martin, of Strathroy, Out., for the first time, would guess his age at about 60 years i of eighty-four. Heisas spry on as a cat and is the picture of | heclth It is hard to believe that Mr. Martin passed twenty years of kis jife in misery suffering tortures from Lame Back. He tried nearly all the advertised remedies and household recipes, but received no benefit from any of them. some pani ago, seeing Gin Pills advertised, Mr. Martin purchased a box from W i Steplen a pular druggist of Strathroy, 'The relief, which Mr. Mar tin experienced after he had taken one | box, was so great that he knew he had | found the night remedy at last. He | bought and used two more boxes of Gin i Pills, which completed the cure, | Age is no barrier to Gin Pills. . They ! never fail to cure Lame Back and Stil | Limbs, because they cure the Kidneys { and Bladder, which are the cause of the | troubles. Gin Pills also act on the Liver and assist in curing Biliousness, 50¢. a box, 6 for: $2.50, at all dealers. Free sample from National Drug & {| Chemical Co. Dent. B. Toronto 10 is feet 'The connoisseur 'always insists ' 4 on | BEER The favorite drink for centuries Money cannot buy a better, purer or more nutritious beer. | Salvador teases the palate, aids digestion and tones up | the, entire system. Healthy i families always use Salvador lin the home. Brewed and | matured by 'REINHARDTS' OF TORONTO Sold Everywhere Ara Loeal Agent, E. BEAUPRE, Kingston. Tel 213. Do You Realize What an Importc nt 'Work the Kidneys Do?. Do you know that every drop of you | blood goes to the kidneys hundreds of | impurities. That is + kidneys have to do. | blood, times every day? Dotyou know way? To be hitered and 'purified from ite the great work the They SGlter the Then these impurities go to the bladder aai are aut of the body aloag with the urine, Do you think it possible (or you to he well, unless the kidneys do this work thoroughly? It is these impurities--this unfiltered blood --that eguses backaches, lead. aches, rheumntisin, diabetes, Brighn's discuss, ete. They poison snd inleiiens with the whole system, If you have any kidney trouble let Doan"s Kidney Pils do for vou what they have done for thousands of ot) ers fhey care all forms of kidney trouble, and they cure them to stay cured Mrs Maurice Duiron, Charlottetown, y Writes =' | was trou kidneys for five years, at times that I could not cross the floor for the pain, did me vo good at all, | sent to the drmzgist and pot five bores of Dein's sad i am glad to sav 1hat fier taking them 1 was curcil. | have had Bo trouble for nearly tires years now." at ali dealors or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co. Linited, Toronto. Ont. 8 ordering specify " Noan'a®™ HE Underwood recog- nizes no competi- tion. A typewriter so - superior to all others has no competitors, F242 Ee UNITED TYPEWRITER C0., #TD. J. R. CG. DOBRS, KINGSTON. Fig Pills will cure sit Kidney, Liver and bladder Trouble in two weeks or: your money back. 25¢ a box; at all drug stores, © |} E nl successfully w ly. wipe led with my | They nero so bad 4 I'went to a doctor, Lui he | Price 50 cents per tox or 3 for $1.28 | : | acquainted with the genial, \ | | a mtndiany HE 3 IMPERIALIST. C. A. McGrath, M.P. for Medicine Hat--He is* Business From Drop | of the Hat. "In business an employer general ly wants his employes to keep their | mouths shut, and do little or no talk. talk." C. A. Magrath, M.P. for Medicine | Hat, hasn't been in politics very long, which he made the other day. He has been in business for thirty years in the west and in politics for two or three years, and he hasn't become reconciled to thé change. Some of doesn't care for politics. Mr, Magrath himself won't admit that he would sooner be doing a political turn than eating a dinner, but at the same time he is one of those men that politi- cians are looking wp to these days. ¢ was sent to Ottawa in the gen. eral election of 1908. Of course, every politic isg claims to have been "sent" or "sent for," but Charlie Magrath, of Medicine Hat, is one of the really and truly "sents." made more than two or three speeches in the House man on the Opnosition benches. Out wast they that Charlie Magrath was a good square fellow--a chap who was busi- ness from the. drop of the hat. Thirty vears ago he went west from Pontiac county in Quebec, and he landed in Alberta about 1878, or about the same time Hon. Frank Oliver was getting out the smallest paper in the world at the biggest price somewhere in the west. Magrath did survey work, | came connected with irrigation and | railway interests, and made a little money, being for years manager of { the. Alberta Coal & Railway Co. at Lethbridge. No, he is not a million- aire, far from it but he made enough to keep him from asking for an old-age annuity Physically Mr. Magrath is a big man, a little stooped from the weight of an overly heavy share of the burden of Canada's west, He's got a heavy handshake. His hair and moustache are quite grey, but his eyes are clear, and his face and south wrinkles; all of which de- that he never let his work get ym his nerves. He quit making money because he did not want to be wealthy, and did not want to bother with a distribution bureau if his con- ! science troubled him. Of course, a ! man of his energy. couldn't live in southern Alberta doing nothing, so they sent him to Parliament He has not done anything very sensation- | al on Parliament Hill. He is not like- 1¥ to, but somehow or other when you note { look at him you know he's going to | count for more than his vote. {| If Mr. Magrath hadn't been fortun- i ate enough to receive a mathematical { training in his youth he might have | been a poet. He has a streak of | poetry somewhere, even though' he | keeps it bottled up, because the busy | west is not very strong on poor poetry. | However far the poetry idea may be from the facts, it is very true that ! Mr. Magrath is an idealist. He can | picture the greatest of pictures for Canada, but his mind's picture of the | coming Canada does not consist alto- | gether of a money-making and a money-mad 'people, but a nation strong in all the virtues. i "l am an Imperialist," he told the | writer in a burst of confidence when that subject was broached one day, | but he added, "Not of that sword- | waving, flag-flapping kind. It seems to me that a united British Empire can do much toward preserving the peace of the world. hat is some- thing worth strividg for. Therefore, if for no other reason, Canadians should do all in their power to strengthen Imperial ties. If we Cana- dians want to help the coming of the | world's peace we can do it by being | ardent Imperialists." His publication hardly promises to be a Fassic. but it does promise to do some | mood work for the west. It will be | a pamphlet dealing with some phases j of western Canada, together with a | hand-out of advice gathered from thir- | ty years' experience. | will be in the role of an author. In the Wrong Place. Mr. H. J. Crawford, pringipal of the Riverdale Collegiate, makes the man, and his services, are much in'demand. Not so very long ago he occupied the chair in an Islington hall where an amateur dramatic company was giv. ing a performance, the proceeds of which were to be deve to a local chureh, The dramatic company was headed and organized by Mr. Law- rence Anthes, of the Toronto Foun- dry, a warm friend of Mr. Crawford's, | and most of the cast were also well popular consequently, principal. During the first act ene of the church officials held a whispered con- ference with the chairman. and when the curtain fell the latter mounted the platform and addressed the audience. The tones of his resonant voive reach- ed the actors, and, knowing Mr. Crawford's happy kuack of saying what he had to say in a way to please his hearers, one of the troup fired off a horse tol and the rest cheered Tastily. But the/applause was not taken up by the apdience. Instead there was a moment k absolute quiet, then an hys- iggle or two, and, almost be- actors had time to wonder ir plaudits fell so flatly, a { friend hurried in through'the wings | and whispered hoarsely : . "Shut up, you idiots! * Crawlord wasn't boosting your show. He an- nounced that Sister , who died yesterday, would be buried to-motrow | afternone Ancient Masonic Apron, C. Townsend of Byd- tia, has in his | probably the oldest Masonic | apron in that city, if not in Nova Sco- tia. It is dated 1792 and was the pro- { perty of John Muggsh, Si owas as wads ia Mason in that year by lodge then in o Spins. The spron is of the devices are wrought in IS NO FLAG FLAPPER IS ONLY A REAL PEACEFUL | ing; in politics, which is the coum | try's business, we are all expected # | but he has been unable to find out | the why of the foregoing statement | his friends in the Commons say he | So far he hasn't | Yet he looms as a big ' have said for years ! be- | is free from those north Mr. Magrath has dipped in business | and in politics; and his next venture | oronto, | happiest kind of a chair | NEW C.P.R. SCHEME. | tom Improved Lands In West Prove a Big i inducement. { The first active step in the settle- | ment of farmers from Great Britain on the improved farms of the Cana- | dian Pacific Railway Co. in Alberta, under the new policy inaugurated by Sir Thomas Shaughnessy during' his ! visit to Great Britain in the early | part of the year, whs realized ky the | arrival on the Empress John with a party ofp 170 people | om Great Britain to go ikto oceupa- | tion on these farms, | The new policy of the company in- { volves - the improvement .of farms | varying in size from 80 to 100 acres. On each of these farms the company | breaks and cultivates 50 acres and puts it in crop, fences the farm, puts down a well and ereets a small house | and barn, the cost of these improve- ments being added to the list price of tthe land, and the purchasers given ten years in which to pay for the land and improvements. In the colonization of the West, it | has been found that the American or { Canadian farmer is not afraid of pio- fisér conditions, and is prepar take possession of a prairie farm and | immediately proceed to make his own | improvements, living in a tent or teia- porary shelter until he can get a { house erected. {| Betilers from Great Britain and { Northern Euorope are not accustomed to pioneer conditions in the West, and setilement by this class has been | deterred owing to the faet that they were unacquainted with these condi- | tions, and were afraid of the hard- ships resulting therefrom. To meet { this condition, the new policy of the | company has been orgamized, and the | success so far met with indicate that | the number of ou who can be | brought ont to oeg myproved farms i is only limited br the number of | farms which can be got ready fo¥ | them. Anyone who had seen the first party which arrived on the Empress | of Britain would have been struck by | the appearance of these people, and { by the fact that they are of a class { which, up to date, Canada has been obtaining a very small number. The company makes it a rule that | these improved farms are only sold to married men who have had previous experience, and the fact that on their arrival in Alberta they can at once | move on to a farm with some crop in the ground, and with a comfortable | house in which to settle their belong- ings, as well as a barn for stabling the horses and cattle that they will immediately buy, makes their chances of success very much greater than it would be were they simply turned loose on unimproved land. The new policy of the company is the first of its kind which has been tried in connection with the coloniza- tion of railway land in America, and its inauguration has probably attract. ed more attention than any scheme since the tide of immigration began. Toronte Boy for South Pole. One of the physicists who will ac- | company Capt. Scott on his British expedition in search of the Bouth Pole this year 'is Mr. C. 8. Wright, an « Toronto boy, who has been working the last two years in Cam- bridge under Prof. Bir J. J. Thomson in the famous €avendish Laboratory. Mr. Wright, was educated "at Upper Canada College (head boy 1904) and the University of Toronto, where he took first-class honors each years, and | finally won the 1851 exhibition-schol- arship. He is the second son of Mr Alfred Wright, Canadian manager of the London & Lancashire Fire Insur- | ance Co. The work of the physicists, Dr. Bimpson and Mr. Wright, will comprise the usual meteorological and magnetic work, and in addition a sur. vay of the eurrents and conditions in the upper atmosphere will be attempt ed by sending up specially construct ed balloons carrying instruments for gisterir the temperature and height, Work on ocean currents, at- mospherie electricity, radioactivity of the sea and air, salinity of sea water and analysis of the atmosphere will also be undertaken Another point to which Mr. Wright intends to devote considerable ' st- tention is the investigation of the crystal structure of ice from the { point of view of its age and past his- tory. Should any simple relation be found connecting the crystal structure | and the age of ice considerable light would at once be thrown upon the origin of the great ice barrier--that vast floating ice sheet, 200 feet high, | 200 miles long and of unknown width, which has so long puzzled the mind { of the geologist. | «"" Where Girls Marry Quickly. On the prairies Bf Manitoba, Sas- | katchewan, and Alberta are hundreds | of settlers who are eager to secure { wives from the Old Country, but who, | owing to the necessity of tending their farms, have been prevented from vis- iting the populous centres in search of marriageable girls. Tagmeet this requirement, the Sal- vation Army Emigration Department has established a marriage bureau, and Army parties are personally com ducted by an official, who, while he does not act as matchmaker, ives valuable advice on matrimonial af- fairs. Out of a party of fifty recently sent out to British Columbia, more than half were wedded in a little over a year. The age of the lady emi- { grants ranges from eighteen to forty, | and théy are drawn from all classed-- from the factory girl to the lady with a small private income.--London Answers. Stopping Undesirables. Since the beginning of the 1910 75 persons have been pi up at the frontier as undesirables, ae cording to the report of the Ontario police. The provincial authorities claim that many of the lowest crimes itted are the work of just such were wanted by the United Siates authorities for" murder and another for rape. . Pruning the Grape. In pruning ihe gaps cut back 10 the third bud, it is usually the trad chtisely perfect bud produced. When a barber gets out.of one scrape he gets into ano A Many a man fails to make good be tues he most of his time try- prove that Inek is against him. Pad all the world loves to laugh with a laughes, ; Britain "8%" A MASTER HORSEMAN. Count Gleichen, Equerry to the King, Is Soldier, Diplomat and Author. Count Albert Edward Wilfrid Glei- chen, extra Equerry to His Majesty the King, the announcement of whose marriage to the Hon. . Sylvia Ed- wardes, maid-of-honor to Queen Alex- andra, has just been made in Eng- land, is well-known in official social circles in both Canada and the Unit ed States. He held the office of mili- tary attache to the British embassy at Washington in 1906 and 1907, and during that time traveled all over the United States and came several times to Canada, being wquite a frequent visitor at Government House 'as a guest of Their Excellencies. He made himself quite a hero to the enlisted men of Uncle Sam's cavalry on the western frontiers by his splendid horsemanship. He came across the Atlantic with the reputation of being one of the best horse-masters in the British army, and when he visited manageable horses in stables. He not only showed, however, that he was able to s with the worst buckers and kickérs provided, but he persisted in staying with them until they were subdued. When he caine to Canada he used to e great delight in the outdoor sports, and on one occasion he travel from Washi hockey mate and a Montreal team. ite of His Majesty, but a very near relation, being the eldest son of the loke, Langenburg. He is well known made his mark as a soldier, a diplo- mat, and an author. He saw active 85 as an officer of the Guards Camel Regiment and was on s§ in the Soudan in 1806. He served in er. His specialty as a soldier has been intelligence work, and he is cre- dited with very valuable services in the Intelligence Division of the War to 1903 he was Director of Intelli in the Egyptian army. His di tic career has been varied, incl pom appointments at Berlin and Washing- ton and service on spegial missions to | Morocco, Abyssinia of Fen His best | known books are th the Camel Corps up the Nile," and "Armies of Jurope. The Hon. Bylvia Edwardes, the bride-elect, is a daughter of the late Baron Kensington. She was maid-of- honor to Queen Victoria, and after her late Majesty's death, received the andra. Stomach Hundreds of Thousands of Bettles of Nerviline Curing Cramps, Diarrhoea, Stomach Disorders. Deadly cramps--the symptoms not to be mistaken. Suddenly and without warning, the patient experien ces such agony in the stomach as to contort / the countenance him to cry aloud for help. Chen it is that wonderful power of Nerviline can make it- self felt--it cures 80 quickly, you would think it was made to cure cramps, and cramps only "Last. summer I was stricken with a frightiul attack &f cramps. I, feared the pain in my stomach would kill me. i 'My eyes in my cords. "My cries attracted a neighbor came to my assistance, and In a mo ment or two handed me half a tea spoonful of Nerviline in some sweeten ed walter. "It seemed as if charmed away the pain. In ten se wall. Nerviline has a wonderful name in this lovakity, and is considered best for cramps, diarrohea, flatulence, stomach and bowel disor ders. | all my friends to Nerviline and cause LETTER No. INT? bulged out forehead and the stood out like veins whip an angel had conde 1 was urge use "MANLEY M. LEGARDE, Williamshure," i# safe or van afford to miss the manifold advantages of hav- nr Nervidne on hand in case of ac dident or emergent sickness. Large bottles, 50c.; trial size, 200, at all dealers, No home Though there is practic- ally no such thing as really pure water, the adults of the family need not do with- out a beverage that bene- fits. Regal Lager's abso- lute purity is its maker's pride; and this delicious . brew is also a health-helper. CURTAIN CLEANING 3 you still have your house eaning to do. let us help you get ft over quickly. We can clean your curtains, ete. you. R. PARKER & CO., Dyers and Cleaners, 49 Princess St, Kingston, Ont. furniture covers, in a way that will delight some of the U.S. army posts in Colo- | rado, Utah, Nebraska and New Mex- | ico, the cavalry assigned to his use | some of the most spirited and un- | the barrack | all the way | ton to Ottawa to see a | between the Ottawas | Count Gleichen is not only a favor. : late Admiral Prince Victor of Hohen- | in Enrope as a yachtsman and has | service in the Nile Expedition of 1884- | ial service | South Africa with Gen. Methuen's | division in 1899-00, and was severely | wounded at the action at Modder Riv- | Office from 1894 to 1899. From No i same appointment under Queen Alex- ; Distress in the Used Every Year For and are the who Sn H PARKS & SON, oe I -- @ In the froden regions of the North or in the Bot O! CountHies of the South, a pure high grade offee like Seal Brand Coffee is the friend of mankind, bringing comfort and cheer wherever used. Sold in 1 and 2 Ib. Cans only. 1s CHASE & SANBORN, MONTREAL. seseserresstsstesesnte cosescesssstesetsrtete PROBABILITIES Warmer. Weather * + * dee Prepare for it by ordering your Suit from " n CHE a CRAWFORD & WALSH, Leading Tailors, Princess and Bagot Sts il i | § frosssestatananasatese PIV FHIIISIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIISIIIIIIINIIIY A ---- The Royal For comfort combined with style and beantys a shoe that has won the hearts of thousands of men and women all over the world. Made in Blutcher, Button or Straight Lace. All the popular leathers If you want the most sati-factory shoe on earth try a ROYAL SOLD ONLY BY { REID & CHARLES : MONUMENTS :! RRR Se § Granite and Marble | { AST Latest Dela and Highest Class of Memorial Work, i We have modern equipment for manyfacture of anything in Granite or Marble Our business success is due. to Tub nishing first-class work. . J. KILPATRICK & CO. "Cor. Cle rey nnd Princess Streets. Kingsion, Ont. JAS. MULLEN, Importer and Manufacturer of all kinds of Cemetery Memorials First-class Work Guaranteed. A call of inspection solicited. 372 Princess St., - Three doors above Barrie St. w¥ «€ THE DAVIS MOTOR © Has obtained an enviable reputation for POWER, RELIABILITY and ECONOMY. Ask any owner for opinion Every Motor is given a thorough test before being shipped from the works. Have you geen our 1910 Models? They are beauties. Place your order with us for a new Launch equipped with our 1910 Model Edgine and your summer outing will be a huge success. We carry a full line of Gasoline Engine Fittings and Supplies and can furnish same. at low prices. We are Agents for the TWIN GRIP WRENCH complete outfit for Motor Boat Owners. Price, $1.25. THE DAVIS DRY DOCK CO., Phone 420% 000000000000000000000000000000000008 "NOTICE To The Trade We nave been appointed Belling Agents for the well-known Christie Brown Biscuit Company, Toronto, for this district... Our" » traveller will be out with samples next week, and will be pleased to book your orders R.H. TOYE, & CO., Wholesale 195 Ontario st, 'Phone 467. The mostse Night Ph 235. Florists | "5. "#5. a. Al kinds o car onus and Flasts & to all De Money aod on City and Farm g perties, Municipal aod County Fe lures od Sxigages p purch, 5 interest allowed. Wegilo Musnging, Dleestos 3 4 C

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