Daily British Whig (1850), 19 Jul 1910, p. 4

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DAILY BRITISH WHIG, 808. ¢ King Street. Kin . HAVE YOU SEEN OUR Hn ng 8 § jock p.m. Pianos THEY ARE _ Durably constructed, Artistic Designed, Sweet Tone, and " REASONABLE PRICES. . We Please sur Customers. : TRY US. All Popular Music direct from publishers. orning af $1 a year 1.5 work: nine Yiaprov 'PORONTO OFFICE. Bt, represen Daily Wibig. WORKING FOR A VETO. The British 'Columbia government is i to be contrary in its legisla- tion. It has been appealed to with reference to the aét which was passed at the last session and seriously af- - hh - THE WORMWITH PIANO CO ' Limited, pia and the other provinces. It has been pointed out that this act impos- ed the most oppressive taxes on all companies and corporations which have business connections within the ¢ province. The measure not only af- EET fl fects individuals, but combinations of . . individuals li ex and railway Quality a a fori Lumber relations almost impossible. In =a sense British Columbia, through this i legislation, would have no communion The best that cholcd 1 with the rest of the dominion, except . Je machinery, care | under conditions which are most ob- orkmen can rroguce. 3 % 3 i The R acture. Arviig. noxious, It has committed itself to ading and housing of LUM- [jf this policy, however, and shows no BER is a science which we have acquired by close study and dispobition to make any change. Mean- long experience. while the contingencies following the enforcément of the new law are such SUPERIOR QUALITY: REASONABLE RATES. il that the federal government may have ll to veto it. This veto must take place ll within a year, and sufficient time must be given for the preparation of the case for and against it. The de- the British Columbia law, to be interesting, if not 3. Anglin& Co. "Foot Wellington Street. bound fll unique. HE IS MAKING HISTORY. The Winnipeg papers contain the re- cord of the 'Laurier entourage," as the Canadian Courier ' sarcastieally puts it." One of the events of last week was the formal opening of the St. Andrew's Locks, on the Red river, It was of the work on these locks that Hon. G. E, Foster expressed his contempt at a political meeting last October. He was in vicious mood, and charged that the expenditure represent- ed a waste which would put the aver- age trustee of funds where he would be harmless for many long years, His was the envious, jealous soul = and it was giving expression to suit- Compound. able language. The fact is that for .'Sowards Keeps Coal AND Coal Keeps - Sowards. HAVE YOU TRIED HIM? | 'about forty years the people of the had been begging for this public and not until the liberal government succeeded to power was any earnest attempt made to supply it. Mr. Fos- ter regarded it as the greatest, for «criminal extravagance. The president C ? of the Winnipeg Board of Trade, at ( hur thé formal opening, pronounced it *'the rystal Brand finest work of its kind in the world," Of Standard Granulated Sugar is un- costing $1,500,000, and he added his excelled for preserving or table use. thanks to Hon. Mr. Pugsley because - ANDREW MACLEAN'S, he had pushed it to completion. Ontario Street. | By the way, the premier-will be call- 2 ---- ed to account for giving away to an- d. E. Hutcheson other dash of optimism. He thought AUCTIONEER snd AFPRAISER. the construction of the St. Andrew's * -- : i A oar Je, vada' or 3 river to Lake Winnipeg possible, a Hu " 5 bores ' recelys great achievement, but it was "only a il Looks, making navigation of the Red beginning of what is to be done." It was proposed to open up the Saskat- chewan river to navigation from Fd- .monton to Winnipeg, and engineers were already engaged' upon the sur vey. The speech of the premier, in great country, with natural resources isted by public works, is a master- piece, and it was made under circum- Cliff's Real Estate Agenc 'etances when glowing language was : : "not expected. ESTABLISHED 1882. The progress of Willrid Laurier, the Where you can Bay or Sell citizgn, out to see the country and to © Property. Also Insurance study its needs, is causing the opposi- + written In best companies. tion =u, great geal of pain. But the and HS Re premier has only' started upon a trip . GEO. CLIFF, tat promises to bs the most success 88 Clarence St ful of any that has been made by ' a : IE publi¢ man in recent yoars. He is not making long speeches, but a good ¥ $ many brief ones, and he is making sesscscdsscssssose wal | Where has the editor of the Ottawa Citizen been, oF -where is he now, that sof the WHIG, 77th YEAR| blished at on, o, Editions at 2.30 and 4 WHIO, 16 pages; on. 'Monday an 0 aking price of By 8 T_ Year. presses. The Bich Whi Packing Co, Li. ok Oe fecting trade between British -Colum-: west, and of -Winnipeg in later years)! work, | 'which. he pietured the future of that}. The T th liberals wherever he goes. 4 ru _GOING INTO ECSTACIES. # THE DAILY BRITISH. TUESDAY, i ing that the pine logs and pulpwogd should be converted into lumber Aud pulp in Ontario. In other words the Whithey govern: ment succeeded to the plags Iaid by the liberal govermment, to develop the ngerests of the provigoes, the plans to vonserve and care for! its natural re- sources, which it opposed, and its edi toriat admirers go into ecslacies and ery "Bravo, Whitney." Sir James must accept these heroies with humil ity. EDITORIAL NOTES, Oiled streets are not liked here some people, but the oil - saves the macadam and keeps down the dust. by The law is very exacting as to the weight of bread. It is not nearly so particular with regard to the purity of the foods one has to eat. The foods that are dusted on the main streets cannot be healthy. Kingston nay get a new school in time, but it will hardly he this year, and it will bet be on 'a down town site, The city is growing westward. The west is where the congestion of school population must be relieved. Bishop Sweeney, of Toronto, does nol think much of formal religion or formal worship. it does not amount to much. He must be careful or he will have the reli- gious , critics of Kingston after him, In his opinion The rumour that difierences have ocourred among the engineers of the Quebec 'bridge, and that two of them are resigning, is denied. What is to be gained by repeated falsehoods? Enough lying has been done with gard to this public work already. re. How glad the people generally are that Archbishop Gauthier is not leav- ing Kingston. The telegram that came {yesterday about the Ottawa see made {a commotion. JU was short-lived, but long enough to make the citizens real ize the love and regard "in which the i archbishop is held by the masses. { The "Who's Who" in Canada, issued iby the London Times, is very inter | esting as far as it goes, but it very imperfect, Some responsible per- 'son in every city could have supplied | reliable data and the brief | men who have reached prominence 18 records of | in {the political, professional, commercial, lor educational life of the country. The lawyers who represent the Uni ted States at The Hague are given to spreadeagleism. According Mr. Torner, Uncle Sam is not only an | imperious old gentleman, but all-power- 'ful. He cai have what he wants, and must have it, at the expense of even 'a. war with Great Britain. The big noise did not cease when Mr, Roose velt came home, t Betrayed by a Woman. Philadelphia, July 19.--J. Howard Lowery, -a bank' teller who disappear- ed from Utica, N.Y., and was later | char, with embezzling $115,000 from the Utica National bank, was cap- tured in Philadelphia, to-day. The lurrest was made by Daniel J. Kelli- her, representative of the American Bankers' Assoifation of New York. It {id said that Lowery was betrayed to {the police by. a woman supposed to | be hi¥'Wite] living in Wilmington, Del. to Economize in Conmifort and Health: There is an economy greater - than that of movey--that of health. Nothing wears a woman gut more than cook- ing over a hat stove, - Clark'g meats have -been a boon to merino of over-worked women! All ready cook- ed they save so much work, fuel and worry, that they are more and more be- éoming a necessary part of house hold requirements. he Hon. Charles Murphy Here! Hon. Charles Murphy, secretary of state, in company. with his brother and sister, are to arrive here this af- ternoon = on the steamer Rideau thucen from Ottewn. They will be met here by a few friends: but Will. pro- veed direct to Clayton and return late to-night. The secretary. of state is taking the round trip on the Rideau steamer, being much in need of a rest after his strenuous parliamentary la- Lid JULY SIR WILFRID LAURIER SPEAKS AT ST. ANDREW'S LOCKS. Omly the Beginning of Things in the West--Red River Navigable for 300 Miles--The Saskatchewan to be Made Serviceable. The St. Andrew's locks, in the Hed River, were formally opened a few days ago and Sir Wilind Laurier was the principal speaker. He said : "I have the testimony of enginéers that this 1s one of the finest works of as character to be found om the American continent, not to speak of the old world, 1 also offer my. con- gratulations. to the city of Winnipeg that wt last a long felt want bas been fulfilled, The province of Mani- toba has been represented in the house of commons for more than forty years 1 have been there myself for thirty six years, and during these thirty-six years not one session has passed but 1 have heard of the lock to be built at the St, Andrew's rapids of the Red river. It has taken a long time to come, but it has come, and it is perhaps h pardonable pride for me to say that it has come under the Laurier government. (Cheers, 4 ~ "As we were passing down ihis stream; as we came past the church of St. Andrew's, famous in the annals of this territory of the past, as we passed by® the 'still more famous church of Kildonan, 1 asked mysell what wopld be the astonishment and wonder of the old fur traders of the pt, MacTavish, Alexander McKenzie, and the last of them all, Lord Strath- cona, if they were to come here ' and seo this wonderful achievement. Their days wees the days of primitive --na- vigation. When they came to this rapid they had to unload their ca noes, put the canoe on ther heads and take it over to the other side of the rapids to get clear water, but to- day you can take your boats with a draught of me feet of water and a clear space of navigation of 300 miles before you. This is some achieve ment. If is something of which we have reason to be proud. But, sir, it is mot all. It is only the begin ning of what is to be done, It only the commencement of what i before us. We have opened up Red river up to Lake Winnipeg, and it] now remains for my friend. Dr, Pugs-| ley, to open the Saskatchewan river from Edmonton to Winnipeg. | (Cheers.) "I am glad to say that already ay friend, the minister of public works, is already at this work. He has en- gineers in the field: already surveying the ~ Saskatchewan river, and before many years are over I hold that we chall witness such a thing as has been witnessed to-day--that is to say the opening to navigation of the Saskatchewan river up to the weily of Winnipeg and if God spares me and if the grace of God and the will | of the people keeps me where I aml I am sure 1 shall see the day when a barge laden with coal at Edmonton, nay, at the foot of the Rocky moun- tains, will be unloaded at Winnipeg without breaking bulk on way. "Do not tell me that this is possible... It ie not impossible. Ove day the great Napoleon gave am or- der to his general, and the general answered : 'Sir, 1 cannot do that; it is impossible." 'Impossible,' said the great Napoleon, 'the word umpossible is not to be found in'the French dic tionary." And I say," continued Sir Wilfrid, "the word impossible is not to be found in the language of the west. (Cheers,) Therefore we shall accomplish this. Sir, we do not know the possibilities of our country. We do not know yet what we shall & ac comphsh in the future. When' French | Canada was discovered by the French! adventurers in the sixteenth century the French crown did not believe that' it was worth spending any time and blood to retain the country to the French crown, and when 1t was lost by the French to the English crewn, notwithstanding the fight of her gal lant generals, one of the chief offi-! cials of the day said. 'Oh, France has only lost a few acres of snow.' + "We have since found out few acres of snow made one of tha most fertile countries under the sun. {Cheers.) ~ When Sir John Macdonald noquired these north-west territories] from the Hudson Bay, many croakers told us that never a bushel of whest| would Be grown in the valley of the Red river and the valley of the Sas! katchewan. Last year thé export of wheat from the valleys of the two rivers was 75,000,000 bushels, and only the other day a member. of cabinet, speaking in London, stated that within a few years these western provinces will produce no less than one billion bushels of wheat, is isl im- cur with that view. This will give that those |" my! 1 con- | JUST RECEIVED A Big Shipment of Table Linens and Table Cloths Size, 2} yards x 3 yards. Regular nd $3.50 each, on instalment plan. For cash, 10 per cent. off. Also received new case of Clothing, which I will sell at low prices. Come and inspect it. 4 New Ladies' Underwear and all kinds of Stockings, at low pri JOS. B. 4 COLBORNE STREET, the outside world an ides of 'ihe pos gibilities before the west. At the present we are only on the fringe of it. A motto we have in the east is 'Hope on, hope ever." 1 bring it to you, although 1 know it is in you more than it is in myself." DEATH AT PHI LIPSVILLE. B. Phelps Passes to Her Rest. The death of Mrs. W. B. Phelps, at Mrs. W. ris $4 to 85 each. Now reduced to} ABRAMSON, |. her home in Philipsville, on the night of the 12th inst., removed from that | village one of its oldest and most po- | pular residents. She was born in the } Rear of Yonge almost seventy-three | years ago and was the daughter of the | Brown. Fifty years ago, January, she became | Phelps and had ever since resided in Philipsville, Besides her husband, she leayes a son and | two daughters, B, C, Phelps, of Water- town, N.Y., Mrs. William Laishley, of | Toronto, and Mrs. H, C. Davidson, of | Brockville. Besides always being a devoted wife, a kind late N. C. the 9th of next the wife of W. B. and loving | Imother and' a true friend, Mrs. Phelps | : Sal | was always a sincere Christian, enie prising and energetic, and a benefactor | to the poor and to ber church. Rev. Mr. McAlpin, Baptist minister, con- ducted the funeral at the home of the | decensed and, gave the friends a very | impressive heart-to-heart talk, full of | sympathy and full of love. { Mrs. Fuyter--I1 was a fool to MATrTY yOu. Mr. Fuyter--1 think so--but yon must not take all the blame on your gelf. 1 asked you to. LETTERS TO "THE EDITOR. What Constitutes Worship. Kingston, July 19.--(To the FEdi- tor): 1 notice that Rev. Mr. 8el- lery is very anxious that the people shoul. go to church and engage in worship. Very good. But in order that I may fully appreciate Mr. Sel- Jery's position perhaps he will define wort hip--true, genuine, intense, un questionable; worship. = There seems o be some misunderstanding with re- gard to it, and the sooner it is re moved the better. ~CHURCH ATTEN- DANT, resin pg Gave a Lawn Social. The lawn social held on Wolfe Is land, Monday evening, was a great success. The social was under the di- rection of A. McLaren on the spacious lawn Surtounding the Hitchcock sum- timer hotel. A record erowd attended, a large number coming from Cape | Vincent and Watertown. The Wolle Islander left the city at eight o'clock with, 150 people and returned at one. Fveryone declared that they couldn't remember having had a better time. Crosby & O'Connor's orchestra made the spacious grounds ring with the sweetest of music. . Former Kingstonian Dead. Word has been received in the eity of the death of a former Kingstonian at Rochester, N.Y,, in the person * of Mrs. Fannie Canfield, wile of Wil- lism A. Canfield. Some years ago de ceased was a resident of Kingston and [has many mequaintances in. this dis j trict who will be very sorry to hear tof her death. Besides her husband {ehe is sacvived by one daughter, Mise Susie. Mrs. Canfield was mxty-five years of age. "interment took place at. Rochester. ---- Beautiful Stock to Choose From. Prevost, Brock street, bas a fine as sortment of tweeds, serges and che viots. Anyone mm need of dlothing will do well to call on him. Ready- made clothing and gents' furnishings James. Kane, the voung post office clerk, who was badly injared by. being struck by a baseball, last week, on the the shock, and hus been able to leave cricket field, has nearly recovered from | the Hotel Dien for his home, on Syd-|~ i ------ i -- For boys 4 years to 14 years! Two-piece Summer Suits, made from genuine Halifax Tweeds, in plain and fancy patterns, single and double breasted, Norfork and. Reefer Styles, all new goods, sizes 22 to 33. ; Suits that were made to sell for $4, $4.50 and | $5. WHILE THEY LAST, : 90 Ee EE EXTRA SEATED PANTS Boys' Knickers 50c. At this price we offer something special in Boys' Tweed Knickers, sizes 22 to 33. These Kuoickers cannot be duplicated clsc where for less than 75c. and 90c. BIBBY'S PRICE, §0c Sale of Children's Straws, 25¢ Sale of Boys' Stockings, 15¢c The H.D.Bibby Co The Big Store With Little Prices. | ABERNETHY'S SALE OF White (Canvas Shoes (With the exception of our $2 spegial) For the next 2 days we will clear out the following at very low prices: Women's White Canvas Shoes, reg. $1.25 and $1, for 73c. Women's White Canvas Shoes, $1.50, for $1,15 Girls' $1.25 Values. 98c.. Girls' $1.00 Values, 75¢. Children's $1.00 Values, 80c. : Vo | AR I | "" 3 " We also havo a few Bargains in WOMEN'S TAN SHOES at $1.98. Regular $2.50 snd $3.00 values.

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