Daily British Whig (1850), 15 Nov 1910, p. 7

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is the best and safest tooth powder foryoun to use on your teeth. Its anti- septic proper- ties arrest de- FOR The Albion Hotel property, oorner Montrenl and Queen streets, Kingston. Will sell at a sncrifice. For particulars t, 189 Wellington St,, Kingston. Every Woman Is imretesiod ind should know abit (he wonderful Won Lull he Tnvalirabie to ladies, SUPPLY CO,, Geueal Apusts . Abas s Sd LbLll bh 3 A p » p a p . . . b b . ; . A ; ; SOA AALS ESS san Toes GRINN'S IGE GRENM § Is made from Pure Sweet Cream, delivered in brick form. Vanilla, Tutl-Fruti, Neapolitan, Birawberry, ete. Orders given prompt attention. * 9 Pnone Grimms" 102 PRINCESS STREET. Every time you order an imported beer you must, pay the duty imposed on its importation plus extra freight charges. 'This is one of the reasons why you should msist on : and thete are others. No beer brewed on this continent is quite so ood as "Salvador." It has been he favorite drink of Germans for centuries. The Reinhardts' of To- ronto haye the sole right of brew- ing "Salvador" they alone possess the formula, "Salvador" is rich in flavor, mellow and appetizing--a nerve and tissue builder par excellence. Always order "Salvador and you dink the best beer brewed.--the beer that is a food as well as drink. Bottled at the Brewery by REINHARDTS' rove oxygenated air | dogma ond Foie was the last great affirmation he MAYOR OF ROME TRANSLATED. i The Paragraphs Which Offended the Montreal City Council and Led it to Pass a Resolution of} Censure, Montreal, Nov. 14.~The trauvslation of Mayor Nathan's speech, against which the city council, at a recent meeting, took exception, has been com- pleted. When the mayor of Rome re plied to the resolution as drafted by | the council and aldermen, alleging that his speech had been misinterpreted, the | aldermen decided to have the speech | translated. Following 1s the part of | the speech which has aroused most | criticism: "To-morrow the whole world, various representatives, will assemble here to see how the Rome of to-day, the Rome of the third Italy, is taking i up again the destiny assigned to it. Such is the Rome which it is my hon- | orable office to represent here, the champion of the liberty of thought which entered" with the tri-color through the bréach. Another Rome, | prototype of the past, shuts itself up | within limits move restricted than the | walls of Belisarius, enzaged in the task | of cofining thought within the nar rowest bounds, in the fear lest, like | the embalmed corpses of old Ezypt, | contact withthe open air might turn | it into dust. From there, from the | fortress of dogma, where the Inst de i spairing effort in veing made to keep up the reign of ignorance, coms, on the one hand, the order to the faith- | ful to banish from the schools the ! perodical press, which tells of the life | and thought of the day, and on the | other hand, thunders forth a ban against men and associates desirous of reconciling the practices and dictates ! of their faith, with the teachings of | practical hfe, of the moral and social OF THE in its i aspirations of the eivilized world, ! "Return, citizens, to the Rome of ' one year before the breach, 1869. | lho faithful of all parts of the world | gathered in pilgrimage, drawn hither by a great and solemn affirmation of the reigning Catholicism, St. Peter's, in sts monumental majesty, received | in its ample bosom the representatives of dogmas in ecumenical council; they came to decree that the pontiff, in liveet representation and succession ol Josue, must like the son inherit omni: scient unlimited power over men and to elevate above all human judgment his decrees by virtue of his infalla bility, proclaimed, recognized, accept ed. It was the inverse of the biblical revelation of the Son of God become man--it was the son of man who made himself & god upon the earth. There wad one man strong in his History of the papaty through the ases who rose up against this blasphemy against God amd man. But Dollinzer stood alone. To doubt or discuss the de crees of the head of the church was lor the hierarchy the first step to sul) mit them 10 free examination--the tiny "whith phssed "the" Of stience And civil progress. And so on the old walls of thoy Ly unsnimous consent the mortar of infallibility. to i fore the world of the Rome of the dave fadore the breach, it was the last pil grimage to the pontiff king. This pil- grimage was for the infallibility---that infallilulity which, inherited from tra- dition, passing into custom, unhappi. ly finds its expression to-day in that popular ignorance which, on the ap- pearance of an opillemic hangs up vo- tive offerings to the Madonna and as sassinates the dociors; that infallinili- ty which incites the pontiff to boyveott ! legitimates human aspirations, the dis coveried of civilization and the mani festation of thought, that moves him to devise new blinds 10 shut ont the light of day. * "I sum up; In the Rome of the past there were never enough churches pray in, while people cred in for schools; to day the churches too large and too numerous, there are never enough schools," to vain are while KA NGAROOS FOR CANADA, Dominion Proposes an Exchange of Native Animals. Edmonton, Ala. Nov. 15.--Kanga roos and wallabies may soon be hop- ping around the prairie 6f Western Canada, if the plans of Premier Ward, of New Zealand, to offect a wholesale exchange of animals between this country and New Zealand ave carried out, Moose brought from the country north of here are munching the tender shoots of trees in the antipodes and thriving on the diet as they would on willow leaves, Premier Ward has writ ten to Howard Douglas, commissioner of parks for the dominion, to know whether an exchange of several ani mals may not be effected. A further shipment of wild apimals and will include elk, mountain goats and possibly several buffalos. Whether kangaroos and wallabies will be brought to Canada has not been decid but the proposition of Premie Ward is being considered. GAS IN LODGING CAMPS. Marquette, Mich, Nov. 15. Lighting » logging camp by gas ia an JMmvat in the upper peninsula. The sysiem been adopted by the Greenwood Lumber 'company, operating in Onto- { image of Dickens | Southern Berkshire county, Mass, { and {uplifted in appeal," Dr. Ferdinand will be made to New Zealand this fall | > T the | ; THE DICKENS STAMPS. A Million of Them Have Been Al. ready Issued. New York, Nov, 14.--~The Herald has received the following from its Lon- don correspondent : The Dickens testimonial stamps, to be sold at a penny each, are being issued with the object of raising a cen- tenary memorial for the benefit of the descendants of Charles Dickens, and the idea is that all owners of eopies of the novelist's works shall frank them with the stamps. The first issue runs to one million, and the first impressions have been sent to King George by his majesty's own desire, They bear an excellent in later life, #nd are inscribed, "A Tribute to Genius," bearing also the figures 1812-1912, with the 'novelist's signature at the bottom. The committee, which numbers among its members such men as Lord Roseberyy Lord Alverstone, Lord Tevoyson,' the Bishops of Durham and Winchester, Sir Lawrence Alma Ta dema, Sir F. Ray Lancaster, and sev. eral othier notable persons in the worlds of literature and art, hope to be able to issue at least ten million, OUTLAWS PEXNNED IN SWAMP. 500 Men Hunt for Highwaymen Who Secured $7,000, Winsted, Conn., Nov. 4. Armed and ready to give battle in event the rob- bers should open fire, several posses comprising five hundred men are ex- ploring a large swamp covering more than 200 acres of land lying between South Fgremont and Sheflield in in an effort to capture four masked men, believed te be Italians, who eatly ves- terday afternoon, held up and robbed Paymaster R. J. Hines, of the Wor- ronoco Construction company, of) West- field, Mass,, of upwards of '$7,000 in money and about $5,000 in cheques then escaped. The search so far has been in vain, It is feared the brigands may be able to get out of the wilderness and make good their escape. The man-hunt will be continu- ed all night, however, and every coun- try road within a radius of twenty miles of the scene of the erime, the hpldest ever perpetrated in Southern Berkshire county, being patrolled by armed men. Is GERMANS ARE OFFENRED. Russian Law Directed at Them. New York, Nov. 14.--A cable patch to the Sun from St. Petersburg says : The German population is deeply offended at the action of Prime Minister Stolvpin in following imme- diately upon the heals of the hospitali- ties to the Czar at Potsdam with a bill preventing any persons except Slavs owning land in Velbynia, Po- dolia and Kieff, the three largest west: ern governments. The bill was semt to the douma with a presidential message, in which M, Stolypin severe ly arraigns the Gorman wiitlers and the government thus. aided their mi- gration to Russia. A New des Stricken in the Pulpit, New York, Nov. M.With his arm 0. Zesch, of the German Preshyterinn church, was stricken in the palpit at Jamaica, L.1., last night, and died before he could be taken from. the church. Hig face became convulsed as he reached the elimax of a spirited sentence, his raised hand fell on the open Bible, and he toppled backward in the pulpit. His parishioners carried him to a cushioned pew, but he only motioned feebly to his heart and died before fur- ther aid could be summoned. Oldest Ontario Sheriff Dead, Brampton, Nov. 14.<The oldest sheriff in Ontavio, died here, vester- day, in his eighty-third yedr. He was Robert Broddy, one of the hest known and most respeeted residents of the town. He had 'beon sheriff of the county of Peel for forty-five years, and was the only surviving appointee of the late Sir John A. Macdonald. Shortage of Milch Cows. Sherbrooke, Que., Nov. 1.--Agcord- ing to figures completed from govern- ment reports, it is estimated that there is a shortage of 5,000 milch cows in the eastern townships this season. They are selling as high as $50, while this time last year they went for about $25. New York's striking express drivers and helpers resumed work to-day. The implest , J ough Cure f Easily and Cheaply Made at Home, Saves You $2. This recipe makes 16 ounces of cough to last a family a time. You couldn't buy as much as good cough for $2.50 as it gives almost = 5 ! : ] : §% g ir : i bie a g | is | | : i ih ih abi il : 2 § f county. The antiquated kero sene lamp has been dispensed with, ings with up-to-date illumina- The sew light is brilliant, and the change is appreciated by the men. Gas as an illuminating agent at logging camps is unique in the north country Riffue Admiral Fisher Sails. } Liverpool, Nov. 14.-Admiral Fishe was on the i supplies the vagi- § i { i | i 28 iz i £ i ce HH NOVEMBER 15, 1910 : $ ey no} THE GRIM RECORD], == "> Te New York Dealers Give Their Rea sons, The New York Herald of Sunday publishes the following tghle as lus trating the decline in meal prices in the past fortnight: -- Two weeks ago Sal'y ets. Ib, cts. Ib. 1 15 OF HANGING IN PAMOUS OLD BAILEY JAIL Many Remarkable Criminals Have Been Lodged in Condemned Cell at Newgate--No Longer a Prison. A London newspaper man writes : What a pageant of melancholy, what a terrible tale of tragedies and dis mal deaths does the mind distinctive Jy conjure up at the very mention of the name Old Bailey. Every murder trial recalls a secies of ghastly hor rors. Durin, mark: condemned Fresh loins pork .. Ham, fresh, corned, smoked ......... . 20 16 Two mos. ago. Sat'y Sirloin or porter house steak . Round steak ........ Chicken, roasting ... Chaclien, broiling Mutton 123 leg of Lamy ........ Is 16 New York, Nov. 13.--After vears of climbing prices in the prime neces sities of life the wholesale and retail mitchers of this city yesterday an nounced substantial reductions in the prices of mests and poultry, pork feading the list at five cents a pound less than two weeks aco, There has been a lower tendency for a longer period in the prices of other meats, The dealers differed somewhat in their views as to the reason for the cut in vrices several maintaining that the reduction was due to natural causes, while others insisted that the rematkable democratic victories in the recent elections had so impressed the western packers that they hw edly lowered the prices of their pro duets 'in order to attempt to forestall a reduction in the tarif on South American beef and Canadian and Aus tralian _matton, It was pointed out that at the Retail tion in Ohicago last September a committee was appointed by them to agitate for the removal of the duty oy foreign meats. It was said that the members of thig committee had re ceived assurances from 'members of the senate and the house of repre sentatives that--in the event of 4 democratic victory at the polls the tariff would be removed. Jacob Block, one time vice-presi dent of the New York Retail Butchers' Assocation, said, in -tliscussing the subject: --" "We are positive that the tariff on meat imports will be abol ished or reduced. The existing duty on imported meats, whether it be beef from South Anvrica or mutton from Australia or Canada, is two cents go pound. Since we have an import luty why should we not have an es port duty ? I was in London recently and saw that American beef, the best of its kind, was being sold there at the same price prevailing here, and that notwithstanding the fact that ex porters have to pay three-quarters of a cent a pound for transportation 'harges. "It is not night that such condi tions should prevail, and the one ray of hope is that 'the tariff on meats is to be abolished. The American workingman will then be shle to eat meat once a day as he used At the present time he ean eat meat only two or three times o week, Why, when 1 first started in business meat was eaten three (ime a day in' Ameri can homes and we had to put out a ong line of ments for the breakfast demand, But the American work nan certainly has a right to have meat moe a day. "The present reductions. in the ices of meat are beyond , doubt =» lireet result of the election. The west wn biel packers are frightened. 1 do not expect to see the prices go much lower just now. The packers will await the action of congress, and if they see things going against them they will lower the prices still more iy or der to indicate that there is no need or ga reduction in the tariff." 18 ix 16 16 the last century many re e criminals were lodged iu the cell at Newgate. For instance, there was Henry Wain: wright, who murdered his mistress, Harriet Lane, and buried her remains J under the hearthstone at his house in Whitechapel. Wainwright was abandoned fellow, who masked his) excesses under the garb of religion, Of female criminals who have been hanged at Newgate probably the most notorious was hate Webster, who gave way to fits of ungovernable passion while in confinement. Another de graded cfeature who was hanged about the same time at Newgate was Catherine Wulson, the poisoner, a tall, (gaunt, repwsive-looking woman, who no more shrank from cowardly secret crimes than from the penalty they entailed, She went to her doom breathing defiance. Very different was the end of Charles White, earlier in the century. His struggles were so violent that the hangman had to push him from the Jlaticem under the gallows, and final y held on to his legs. More horrifying still were the cumstances of the exécution William Bousfield, who murdered wife and three children. In the con- demned cell he attempted to. throw himself on the fire, and when brought out for execution he had to be carried to the drop and placed in a chair, so abject was his condition. When the bolt was drawn the body motionless, then with amazing strength Bousfield slowly drew hime self up, and, to the horror of the on- lookers, rested his feet on the side of the drop. Pushed off, the wretched man again succeeded in getting a foot- hold and yet again; and it was only when the hangman, Caleraft, added his weight to the body that the strangulation was completed. arable poison mysteries Old by the butchers Butchers' conven cir- of his hung have Bailey. Captain Newgate Sir been investigated at the As far back as 1717 one Donellan was executed at for poisoning his brother-in-law, Theodosius Broughton; . and many vears later another ageupant of the condemned cell at Newgate, Elizabeth Fenning, paid a similak penalty after an attempt to poisonbn whole family, in whose employ she was, by intrg- ducing arsenic to démplings. From that time until the rebuilding of the Old Bailey many famous murderers were Jodged in Newgate prison. - One of the most notorious | was 5 Rugeley medheal mony , whi pois- oned his guest and robbed him ino { der to meet his gambling debts. Had {he not been convicted of this crime he would have been tried for poisoning his wile. Another cold-blooded murderer per- ished at Newgate in IS37 in the per son of James Greenacre, who murder ed a young woman whom he had hro {mised to marry, and distributed her {remains in various parts of the metro- polis. Then theres was the notorious 'Mrs. Browaorigg: Courvoiser, who mur- {dered Lord William Russell, and the terrible Maunings. Fifteen years later another murder was committed which created almost as great a sensation--that of Mr. | 'riggs, for which Frank Muller, a German, was hanged. Briggs was done "to death in a railway train, and the Jeuriously shaped hat his gaurderer wore led to the latter's undoing. | For a long time after Muller's exe ,cution, hats bearing any resemblance ito that worn by him when arrested {were popularly known as "Muller cut- 'downs."' Iu the latter years of the last New- gate jail many remarkable criminals were éxeouted there, including Israel { Lupski, one of the very few members of the Jewish faith that have been hanged in London. Others who suffer ied a felon's death behind the walls of i : . : the old prison were Mary Eleanor Wheeler, otherwise Pearcey, who, be coming infatuated with a married man named Hogg, murdered his wile and | wheeled the body through the streets of London in a perambulator; and Neill, otherwise Cream, a medical man, who, it was proved, had killed several women of the unfortunate class by giving them poison in sweets. One of the most sensational trials of the Old Bailey was that of two burglars, by name Millson and Fowler; They brutally murdered an old gentle man, whose house at Muswell Hill they broke into. Their arrest was effected {in the west of England 'by Scotland Yard officers after a desperate strug- gle. During the trial Fowler, in the dock, made » furious attack upon his companion in crime. At the same ses- sions, Mrs. Dyer, the notorious baby farmer, a man named Seaman [refused to return to his home. A ied. The latter had murdered [pathetic appeal was made by his i i idaughter, Alexandria, who followed Turner street, Mile End. This quar- ber father to the monastery, but the tette of criminals were executed at count refused to yield. Countess Ni olstoi, at her homie at Yasna, Poly- ana, is. in a state of collapse. She de- today, Toletoi's mind has boen wrecked by the machinations of the Russisn government, and that she fwould follow him and make a * last plea to her hushand. . I -------------- INFLUENZA IN LONDON. But the Epidemic is of a Mild Type . This Year, London, Now. HH. ~The uvaal influ enza op 5 which arrives fn Lon ith the first cold weather, has mI 2p bing Chiat rae mi ype, chiefly cnses of eatarrh and itis. ay m origin. Among children, how: | more severe gastric type, rv cholera infantam, is com to. KING AND QUEEN DOMESTIC. Late King's Set Has Dropped Com. pletely Out of Notice. | London, Nov. 15.---A well-known and well-informed writer on society mat- ters writes that it has not been pub licly - noticed how completely the late king's set has dropped out of notice People about whom evervone in the last reign gosciped and chattered have sunk into complete insignificance. Ng one notices the imprint, and one odd thing is that most of them seem to have faded off the race courses and other such places where they used to be seen. : Meanwhile the domesticity of the new govereigns is such as thst at Balmoral the royal pair invariably went to bed at 10:30, while the queen used to take her knitting with her when she went for a walk and pulled it out of her pocket whenever she sat down. There will be a fresh development of the revival of needlework for she Ind ies. The Duchess of Marlborough is skilled votary of the art. TOLSTOI SPURNS PLEA. Of His Wife a to Home. Moscow, Nov. 15. --Count Tolwtol, Be self-exiled novelist and philosopher, in the sanctuary of the Scamorodineki monastery, at Optina, Pasting, yester- day, spurned the pleas of his wife, and Return to His to who Ee PAGE SEVEN. = - COSTS NO MORE THAN THE ORDINARY KINDS MAKES DELICIOUS HEALTH- FUL WHOLE SOME FOOD. CONTAINS NOALUM SOLD EVERYWHERE IN ALL SIZES FULL WEIGHT ONE POUND CANS 25¢ MADE IN CANADA, E.W.GILLETT CO. LTD. TORONTO, ONT. UNDERWEAR "der" For comfort-loving people "Ceetee" is the underwear that pleases. Fits perfects Ip--soft and velvety to the skin and guatanteed unshrinkable, Insist on " Cestee.™ women and children The C. Turnbull Co. of Gal, Limited Manufacturers Lath, 1560 La Galt, Oatarie Look for the Tu all sizes for men. QUALITY IN SUGARS do not look alike, if § knows this Insist on Maced alongside each We want the having : ry Grocer to know it. EXTRA GRANULATED SUGAR You will n y hav good Sugar, 16 best narket I ear whit or pro tt uperior f "Redpath gar. 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Tt will burn nine hours with one Hlling. It is safe, smokeless and odoricss; has a cool handle and a damper top. An indicstor,shows the amount of oil in the font, * The fillercap is put in ike a cork in a bottle, and is attached to the font by a chain. It has sn auto- flame y which prevents the wick from being to smoke, and is easy 10 femove and drop back so the ickly cleaned. The burner body or alley cannot becomes wedged, and can be nnmrewnd in an instant for rewicking. Finished in japan or nickel, strong, dursble, weil made, built for scrvice, and yet fight and ornamental. ! . Deglers I wed vf yours, wwilte Sov desoription cirouiar gree 0 fhe mesreit qpency of the ma turned high ¢ wick can be gu i=

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