Daily British Whig (1850), 16 Jun 1910, p. 4

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

"NERVOUS. HEADACHE J AND MUSCULAR RHEUMA DISAPPEARED WHEN Ap NERVES WERE RESTOR- ED BY Dr. Chase's Nerve Food. Feeble, wasted, starved nerves often make their condition known by 'ner vous headaches. This €s one of the first and most marked symptoms, Hf you 'are st al subject to rhecma' tism you have no how worse it gets when the system yr Yun down. ; "Both nervous headache snd muscu lar rheumatism di when Dr. "hase's Nerve Food ds used ild and rovitalios the w treatmen the rheumatism was wh dually driven out of the Fn and Handior 2 Conse erve Food ow dd nerve regulator ond healtn build- or' y make a mis Chass Nerve Foud when the nervous system down, for by forming new Blood «this great food cure builds up the wperve cells as nothing else can. When you have up your mind to test ¥ his froptment go at it adn earnest and keep Jeep. at it it vocuarly wd il you feel again. the Wer. bie. a box, 6 for $2.50, all dealers, or Edmauson, Bates & Co., Toronto, Write for free copy of Dr. Chase's Redpes. You esnnot take in using "ll sneer in Ottawa, pupers has been pleased to remark that Kingston is more disturbed about the (ttawa, than VENBER BRICK. BEST PORTLAND CEMENT. PLASTERING LATH. : SumiER Goops ' BOOTS AND SHOES. More for your money here than | anywhere else. ISAAC ZACKS, 271 PRINCESS STREET. We GiveYou Cash Coupons WATCH OUR WINDOW FOR isi a PLAY OF PRIZES. i © « REMEMBER THE PLACE, i § HOIs Real Estate Agency ESTABLSHED 1882. 8 +B Where you can Buy or Sell : Property. Also Insurance fi written in best companies. GEO. CLIFF, 7 98 Clarence St . i 3 i 4 g Se-- Oage's Grocery | Cor. Montreal and John Sts. hone 549. Prompt Delivery. ' wai. bl Kin fons at 2.30 and 4 TISH WHIG, 16 price of ne iy work; ¥ Suits, 13, aad be eee: Daily Whig. ed at tatio mrs on Monasy Sd eile fon ver rad ifashed Ehed 1s & EXE de veut 3 vost od The British Wiig Sling Co., Lid. 23,30 Guess Sly Ghar: THE DAILY BRITISH. WHIG, TRURSDAY. JUNE 16, 1910. made her mark. There was no aspect of farm life which baffled her. She did what she gould herself, and she super- vised the rest and made good as a woman farmer. A third visitor of note was Mrs. George Cran, a woman of practical turn of wind, and one who saw at a glance, as she passed through it, just what the country needed. If is her conclusion, .very candidly stated, that the woman who wants town life, and its joys and comforts, had better stay at home. She sees openings only for thése who propose to become house PUTTING IN PROTESTS, Smith's Falls is moving in as the capita company. Y | presentative men from every coun centre all along the line. will be before the railway commission no other institution has done. given dollars in may have an 'hour, and the church, by guidance, may help to bring this to that kind will commission and especially its | man. This remark may since one of canal, and its the capital city. use at Which may be true and reflect upon the critic and the in- fluence of his paper rather than upon the efforts of the Kingston people tc keep open a necessary channel of com- munication for general traffic. INFLUENCE OF THE CHURCH. The Bishop of Ontario has, in hi address to the syned, now in session discugted o large number of subjects. It may be asked whether the clergy and laity ware interested in the mat ters which came under his lordship's | notice, outside of the diocese, and in the course of his travels There is no doubt of it. in one part of the world affect condi tions in another part, and the church and its institutions are deeply con- in all that affects the masses cerned and their welfare, It may be that there will be some who will not accept as final or satis- fuctory the declarations of Bishop His theory of the land question in England, and its relation to poverty and the degener- the general theory, but he is expressing the mind of those who have made a study of the subject and speak with Mills on certain things. ary of "Hum life, may not be equal emphasis. The Asquith govern ment, for revenue purposes, has levied land which has hitherto either escaped its due share of this ! burden, and it has amended the land laws so as to make the soil if possi- ble contribute to the support of the a tax on people. Some day there will be furthér in- ' vasions upon the preserves of "proved. the contentment of the people. derstanding between capital and la Phe office of the bishop and the priest and Christian layman is to se- '{ eure, by 'precept and example, the bet- among the people. It .' cannot be done by any plan of weclu- sion or isolation. It is the result of {life upon life, not on Sunday or 4a, lt eveey day. and in every walk 'land voeation. ter PICKING THE PEOPLE. department of Can- every reasonable ef- ada has "4 the Rideau canal matter, and proposes to send a deputation from its council to Ottawa to protest as vigorously as possible against the appropriation of "ithe said canal, so far end of it is concerned, 'hy the O.P.R. It is proposed that this deputation be strengthened hy the presence of re- and board of trade at every business The hearing the tribunal that reflects public senti- ment and protects public interests as The argument, that the company, if its. way, will spend a million improvements in Ottawa, influence upon the con- trollers--it appears to have made them sing exceedingly small--but bribes "of not affect the railway chair- provoke another the abroad ? Conditions $tion, the landed gentry--some day peasant own- ership may displace the landlosdism that now prevails--and the social econ- dition of the masses be very much im- Out of the congestion of cities ands towns into the freedom and pure air of the country, with all that this change involves, may produce a : new order of things, one making for | the happiness, health, and the Similar- ly some day there will be a better un- judicious wives, who know something about hos- ticulture, poultry raising and market producing. It will mot do to avoid occasionally "roughing." It eannot be avoided. For women of the right kind Canada offers a great field of usefulness, and | {and more attractive to them. Indeed there are schools in England where the women are being trained in out- door wok in order the more surely to qualify them for service in the Ca- 1 fnadian North-West. The point is that the method of wu cation, in connection with the immi- gration department, is the very best. To be sure, the wrong kind of people will be found among the arrivals, but it is not the fault af the department which has taken so many pains to spread oWwoad information w ith re- gard to the country, and the kind of service which it invites. POLITICS IN THE COUNCIL. Mayor Gaynor, of New York, has been in office six months. He was a compromise candidate. Nominated by an independent commitice he was ac- cepted by Tammany Hall, and, as goon as elected, commenced a rule that has meant economy and cofficiency in the civic administration and death to the mathine, » Some of the accomplishments are as- tonishing. He put an end to the padded pay roll and the saving is > | $125,000 a month. The end of the awful waste in the several departments re- [resents a saving of $1,000,000 =a month. Every useless official was dispensed with, and the working ¢] time was extended an hour each day. Everybody works. The old aqueduct commission, as a political voncern, was abolished, ~ and! _}its work transferred to tho water de- partment, Result, a saving of $500, y | 008s a year. The condemnation com- mission, 'another political organiza- passed in its cheoks, at the mayor's demand, and $1,000,000 has been kept from the spoilsmen in half a year, The tax board, with the mayor as the head of it, was revived, and the result will be an addition of many millions next year and a large in- crease in revenue. The police grafting scheme, by which vice and intemper- ance thrived under police supervision, and the politicians made rich, went out of existence, dying painfully, and $1, 000,000 remains in the pockets of the people. The liquor men cannot buy the right to dodge the law at any price. : In the water department, with 4,000 employees, there were various leakages, and they have been stopped. This means a saving, in honest buy- ing and honest contracts, of about $3, 000,000 in six months. In the fire de- partment there will be civil service rules in appointments and honesty in giving of contracts, and hundreds of thousands of dollars will be saved. The army of peace or idle men has been disbanded. The heag of the de- partmont 1s on' tho job all the while, and every man under him is busy, The work of six months. The 're sult of a non-political performance of a publke duty. It is a great object lesson, and it can be laid to heart by every city in which the little men vy want to handle the patronage are howling for the machine. A non- political administration means an eco: - | nomical and correct administration and one does not understand why anything else should be wanted by the taxpayers. They have to bleed in any case, * » » its EDITORIAL NOTES. The agreement of the boged---of edu- cation with the School of Pedagogy this year should be a perfect docu- t. It has been revised and approv- od several times.' The papers of n are anxious that the erimin responsibility for the Herald t should be put upon some one. The thing is to lo- cate this responsibility beyond a doubt. A police officer in Montreal, who was an active spirit in the last civic | election, has been dismissed--as an ob- ject lesson. It is one which can be learned by® public officials outside of Montreal. it is becoming more | The U. 8. court (at Chicago) has mier. This looks like s far distant is just now. The Society Tor the Protection Animals had better take a recess while the vagrant cats that are killing the | chickens and birds about the city ave being exterminated. Their destruction was never so great as al present. There are some people who deadly love a gamble at anything. A few of them took a hand in the horse yesterday, and are once more ing upon what 'a great statesman said | about the uncertainties of such things. rave, _ Mr. Bourassa is desirous of return- ing to the commons. He went 10 the Quebec legislature, to stimulate it with his nationalist" ideas, and it would not he reformed. His methods usually are not of the persuasive kind. The Belleville, city fused the high school accommodation that is demanded. Does the « depart- ment threaten to withdraw the annual grant? Or is any old thing good enough for high school purposes Belleville ? ---- Good Abe Lincoln used to counsel aguinst the danger of swapping hordes while crossing the 'stream. Some men in Kingston, who were financially in- terested in yesterday's event, -are day protesting that it is dangerous to change drivers while contesting a race. ! in to- La Patrie says the architects and builders should know what certain structures which they: erect will stand. To be sure. But bailding nowadays | calls for technical knowledge that is only acquired in the technical schools. The artizan of the future who is equal | to any service will be in a special | class, The Montreal Herald is again on) its fect, and ils issue, of Wednesday, bears all the old ear marks of - the publication. In the midst of their intense sorrow it is worthy of vom- mendation and' congratulation that the staffs have shown such spirit and enterprise, The awful catastrophe has awakened umiversat sympathy. Out of it all may the Herald grow "more and more tender and helpful; may all mankind and may sunshine and sweet ness be thelr mission to all homes. GOOD QUALIFICATIONS. Mrs. B.--Mrs. Teaser would make a great baseball catcher, Mr. W.--What makes you think so? Mrs; B.--Why, the other night she caught her husband stealing home and put him out. Here's a Good Deal. Manitoba Free Press. Minneapolis is praising the fore thought of those who drew the fran- chise of the company supplying the city with gas, granted forty years ago, which contained the condition that the municipality might buy the plant at an appraised valuation in 1910. The city did not desire to ex- ercise this right, but it threatened to do so unless the Sampny materially reduced the price as. The out- come of the negotiation Bhat followed is that the price to private consumers has been reduced to 85e., and to the city, for street lighting and other public purposes, to 65. Nor is this all. It is provided that the prices shall be subject to regulation every five years, and the city is given a new option for the purchase of the plant at the end of twenty years. Red Rose ea "Is Good Tea" in the gealed pack-I; i contingency with conservatism as it of | _ {have destroyed a council has re- [2d journalisis realize the brotherliness of. Alc flavor and|é & suangth is ryuinad' i PITH OF THE NEWS. | The Very Latest Culled From All Over The World. Floods in Servia have caused rom of twenty-five lives. NW | missionary congress, The Canadian Northern railway will huild thas sesson the line from Hawk- vl ury to Montreal. Viscount Walverhampton, lord presi dent of the council, has resigned from the British cabinet. The forest fires in Northern Ontario school, g mill and {reveral settlers' welling. Buffalo teachers are forming a union | 2 will be chartered by the Ameri {can Federation of Lablot. | Warm showers are general over the j western proyinces, with millions of dollars of crops coming fast. { Joseph Hemenack was killed and William Kelly fatally injured by a fall of coai in a mine at Coleman's. The British Antaretic expedition, on th: steamship Terra Nova, has start. fre mm Cardifi, for the routh nota, An estate totalling $3,561,605 was left by the late Sir George Alexander Drummond, K,C.M.G. » of Montreal. L. J. Atwater, manager for Patri arche & Co., at Bufiplo, N.Y., was in dicted on a charge of keepinz a bucket shop. { Governor Gillette, * California, bas asked the attorpey-general of the stac to take steps to prevent the Jefirie Johnson prize fight. Terrible floods have swept over the provines of Erzerugh, Turkish Armenia, Half the town of Hassankaleh has been wrecked hundreds of persons be ing drowned. There has been a wonderful rush of gold seekers from Stewart City to Bitter Creck, B.C., where a gold bear- ti, rec! 1s reported to stretch out fu over ty... ty-miles. Sir Thomas Shaughnessy and a {party of C.P.R. directors are going to inspect the Dominion Atlantic rail Fy in Nova Scotia, of which the C. R. recently secured control. I Walter J. Travis, former world's am- ateur golf champion, defeated 8S. Ly- on, Lambton, Ont., in ihe semi-final round for the Lyndewood Hall cup on the links of the Hunting gdon Valley {Country Club, Philadelphia. A new banking company, the Slinn {si souldis Limited, with a capitunl stock o* $00,000, has been formed to take joV er the two largest Hakery businessos {in Ottawa, the A. E. Slion company, Himited, and the G. W. Shouldis. - Capt. Baldwin fell, with his aero- plane, seventy-five feet while he was practising on Wednesday at Mineola , but though his machine was bad y smashed, he was not injured. Bald: win had jist started and was making a turn, when he either lost control of his engine or shut off the power too 800. It is stated that John Kay & Co. and the W. A. Murray company, Toron- (to, are to amalgamate, form a new {company with a capital of about- 3, L 00,000, and erect new premises on Yonge "street that will cost at least $1,000,000, both, moving to the new store. W. Parker Murray, it is under stood, it to be head of the new com pany. Melba's Exquisite Voice, The Star, May 21st Covent Garden was crowded in every corner, last night, when Mme. Melba made her appearance after an absence {of two years. Her position is indeed unique, and it is the more remarkable when we reflect that she is by some years the senior member of the com- pany, and that last season was the only one she has missed since her de- but. Her voice is still as pure fresh as ever it was. She sang part of Mimi in "La Boheme," is a favorite with her, time the thifd act was reached she hud thrown off all signs of 'anxiety, and sang as beautifully as ever, and with the exquisite finish which has made her famous. She was more im- pulsive in her acting than was her wont and made the scene very touch- ing. At the fal of the curtain there were endless recalls, and finally she came before the curtain many times alone. and the which and by the A Word of Warning. Montreal Witness. Other dangers threaten hundreds of our citizens every day in the picture shows and theatres, maay of which are nothing but fire-traps, and are made worse by overcrowding. Oceas- ionally, the authorities muke a pre- but nothing that, can be called thor- ough is accomplished. and the most of them continue to be had at their best, and radical mas are Te essuy 1 rendey them saf-, 'Sehr ae have to wait for another Iroquois + ho- locaust before we make our places of entertainment reasonably * safe? many of our other buildings be called safe; and are the building by-laws reasonably enforced? freatre Wants a Bigger Life. Montreal Gazette. Mr. Bourassa is reported he thinking of going back to Otdawa and seeking a sent in parliament at the next election. The report sounds like one that may well be true. A strong swimmer may enjoy himself in nar row waters. He must at times, though, long for the buffeting and the trinmph that can only be had where the tide runs swift anc deep. Hotel Courtesy. One hotel in New York extends an untsual courtesy--if it be a courtesy-- to its guests, Over the desk where most of the business of the hotel i done hangs a sign which says: ** Tha clerk now op duty is Mr. Smith," Mr. Jones, as the case may be. Wheth- er the sign is § to save the feelings of guests or clerks isn't quite plain. It saves the clerks from being addressed as "Hey, you," and the festa fro from having to say, "Oh, Nr. to Newsboy Gets $1,000, bor of Pu MoKissick, a yesterday 'afternoon and As the old watch Oerholt de- $1,000 for ite re- word. The watch the | Rowell, Toronto, has been ap- | {pointed recording clerk of the world's! tence of ameliorating these conditions, Can The H. D. D. Bibby Co} The «Big 8 Store With Little Prices. We hear this every day, and we just want to say that we are showing the handsomest Summer Suits we've ever shown, and that's certainly SAYING SOMETHING! The New Summer Suits are so splendidly cut and tailored, and the new materials are so be: autitul that these words of praise are not out of place. HANDSOME BLUE SUITS 2.50, $15, $18.00 FANCY ENGLISH WORSTEDS, in New Greys, mend Greens and Browns. ... $12.50, $15, $18 NEW TWEEDS, in rich colorings $10, $12, $15 TWO-PIECE SUITS, in Pancy Worsteds, p Homiespuns, ate, cee SHBB0, $10, 812, $15 NEW TROU SE RS. ~New 'patterns a are very handsome, and we can fit perfectly men of any proportion $2.50, $3; $3.50, $4, $4.50, $5.00 See Our Display of Real Panamas. $350, 5.00 MD 7.00 There's great satisfaction in bt your Straw Hat here . You'll be sure of the style, gure of the quality, and sure of the price We've shapes adapted to all ages of men, brims of yvarions widths and * crowns of various heights Split Straws, Leghorns, Braids, BSennets, étc. Some snappy Fancy Band Numbers for swell young fellows who want the thing. $1.00, 140. 200, 250% SEE OUR SPECIAL $2 SAILORS, 1ying Milan A Aa PN NN SN NP MA ON The H.D.Bibby Co WE SELL SUIT CASES, TRUNKS AND HAND BAGS, A A IN Pi PSNI Summer Needs. Now that the hot weather is here we are well prepared to relieve your foot troubles. New Barefoou Sandals-- ° for children, boys, girls, women and men, Canvas Shoe for everybody. White Shoes for men, women and' children. Bathing Shoes. Yachting Shoes. Tennis Shoes. Straw Slippers--30c¢ © for men, boys and women Fancy Patent Strap Boots for children, girls and women Oxfords for everybody. ABERNETHY'S

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy