Daily British Whig (1850), 25 Aug 1911, p. 7

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SIR - JOHN MACDONALD! Tells Canadians That If They Neglect Washington Treaty They Would adv of states. the One ol OCRLeS Yeciprocity among nen, was Sir John great chieftain of party. In speech House of ( said 1 shall now move the first of bill I up my remarks, by saying respect to the treaty, | conpider every portion' of i to the country, connecied be pect house the the strongest Canadian Maedonald, aservative the ! the delivered 1871, Bir Johs a wm mmons reading sum with that inobjectionable the articles may re this consider believe, if that good v this and shall simply that t inless fisner ies tionable. With I ash to stanton the with considered abyjec to those articles fully circumstances, an they fully eonxider they will that it of Canada that those articles be rats and calmly o fhe sry for fred, Hegect reciprocity do not and mari of the and the treat mi ve rept the tren get you leave the fishermen of the tiie provinces he Anericans;" teject will Teave the mer that trade off from t ket the treaty, have a large annual keeping wp a warine police force to protect those fisheries, amounting' nbont ¥31,000 per reject the treaty and you will have to call upon Fugland to send hier fleet and give you both her moral and her physical sup port, although ven will not adopt her policy, reject p, Nreaty and vom will find thatthe had feeling which former- 3 ed Ld bd arireberrrt role at the hants Amer i and mere treaty, von engaged in au mar will reject vou expenditure A pfu peter rr=tie Uh will he the Unit say ed States against England trawsferved bo ( anadi; that ed States will and "Here where two great nations England and the United States setthed all their difficulties thelr quarrels upon XA Y justly hike have all a perpetaal hasis these happy results are tobe frastrat ed and by people beens have of their fish for has and the Canadian the endan rered they not got value : "I gentleman on my hin speech to the tian Association Fngland had waerificed of Canada I Fungland had sacrificed the interests of Canada sacrifice has she made of of nations ten vers.' said bhi the honorahle left (Mr Young that interests heen Howe) in Men's the what not in the cause Has she for two peace ? bet ween remdered indirect out of her not made all not, the suka these herself liable, leaving out claims, to pay own treasury 7 Has she this sacrifice, which only. Englishmen and English statesmen know for sake of peace? And for whose has she made it 7 Has she not peace great all millions . ke made to | Chrig! the ! Not Get Reciprocity. sake of Cana severed be «respon ihe Uni Let Eng ner 1 States premaicy jit principally for t ida ? Let 'anada | England let England | sible fe i wk {ted Sts land withdraw and what « {England {6a but « | England dle be 11 en # An eq has she is ie in ever) p and unk she, hada {financial tor the g Fugland's |samething unworthy We were le to woe ( : A jiand to see 1 fillarg to tl cause of danger {worthy 1 right arm { jobject 1 .o httayne the It { great oh jee ancl last: i. betwee {tions that fet thro fers, if rriedd in effect {moves al "HH war, rising t he i | mets {Stutes [Hs i" rences and arbits tribunal, principle to arhifrat Hie y dhasinteront the tablished bye gotien in hiked tat pe ud In ter friendly pb 1 it arhitramer ' to peaceful w hat 1 the quarrel cur man, occur that same pac for « Lrea fis l | awvilization the mn is an epock i , 5 \ of exam wide be Iple to followedg and wit the Anglo-Saxon velopment of the | principle fan he ad sole prin sonth of us | beh wi as the differen of arbitration adopted sett lément tween the that voeated and of ex be peop! ral teiple of English-speaking will have a mc wid and it huence on the we MEXICAN, HOME LIFE DISTINCTIONS '. NTRONG CAST Is EVIDE) Include Almost as Those of Families Large and as Many Relatives Bible Patriarchs, Mexican families are proverbially large. Almost all of the actual care of children is turned over to servants, who are expected to humor ev whim of their charges The existence of sharp caste distine tions and the preponderance of a slave like element makes a great difference between the atmosphere of American "and Mexican homes. In the latter the children little tyrants over those who serve them. Middle and upper class parents do not educate their off- spring to respect and engage in whole some labor. There is a notable ab sence of diseipline in the training of children A Mexican family besides wife and children, includes more often than not depervlent relatives. A man is bound if called upon, as though under the old Hebrew law, to his parents, his wife's parents, are care for the maiden sisters on either side, well . as orphan nieces and nephews, But the same cos tom which provides that a woman's male relatives shall care for her also places her under their éontrol Io Americans it seems that the only hope of freedom for our sister of the southern republic is to become a wi dow As a girl she is under the sw veillance of her pavents. Till she ma if she be of the upper middle or class, hf does not to this day go upon the street unattended The extent which protection of women carried gay be from the fact that th® higher they never attend burials, the experience being considered too mm for them: The Mexican girl wvever sweetheart - alone excepting balcony. She kndws nothing leties, of the independent and life enjoyed by the English or Ameri ean girl. As to intellectual eunlture, some of the wealthiest senoritas educated in Europe and many at home in music, a smattering of painting and in the languages, but they do not at tempt science, history or mathema ties. The majority of the of the country know little beyond read ing and writing. They drite in "their carriages and visit close friends or relatives. They entertain old friends on the occasion of family birthdays and snints' days. But there is lacking the busy system of = calls, clubs, receptions, amd stant theatre-going which obtains among American women. Till a few vears ago even the shop ping was dond largely at home, the stores obligingly sending quantities of silks, laces or other goods for the in- spection of an intending purchaser on receipt of a message borne by a serve ant. The custom was modified by the buyers driving to the stores and have ing goods brought out to the ear riages. New Mexico women shop as Americans do, In the capital of the nation and in the state capitile there in more or less holding of official functions. Young people enter 'with remaptic set into their occasional halla and into garden parties held in the "alamedas™ or as ries, upper to it seen m cnstes aml excruciating her the ath- busy goes from ol are women con Christ for a fortnight cities. There the mas festivities, lasting But of age seems tame formal to foreigner Mexican ed to sLranger cle he is pitality, but, what is more to be ap precinted, tolerant and unmeddle some respect --lon Angeles Times ATE peculiar the close chaperon and on account all oppressi are pretty wel Hut it admitted to homes when once the family air only hos foreigners weeorded not warm a" ETHIOPIA'S CAPITAL. City of Merve Reveals Une expected Treasures, Ancient it all considering know nothing Ethiopia, it to have been either a part of Egypt Africa. | here name for Is who that they king was Most about ancient general are a few enlightened heard 'Aida' sung so often are aware that Fthiopia was a dom south of Egypt, whose king black man had a named @ very named brown daugh verv hght Aida, named who white Further who ter who loved Egyptian Rhadames thi read cannot Some the Sudan that of the Nile, that what santly they go of general than have campaigns have a notion included the upper but find it hard to now almost entirely a powerful nation capital, still exists, but as a small then regions believe is desert was once the wiitil where ancient recently only village, Bedouins made where cruising camels stopped headkquar ters or ! get water Nov the and the re anything to heen uncovered striking than Selilemann aed It appears that h We Ne city As ils we since exp Micenae to our view the ancient capital of Ethiopia v ied in splendor, with Thebes amd Karwak, that the kings lived magnificence and their wealth easily be imagined by the immensity of the ruined palaces amd the hidden treasures discovered. Tt is believed that Meroe KRhartum, a little farther up the river, dispute with each other for being the in the world which have been inhabited cohtinnously. Thirty the Sudan had sort of artificial pros- perity under the nominal rule ol Egypt It had a considerable population and its trade was increas. ing until the blight of Mahdiam fell it. 'In two decades three-fourths in a state of great can and oldest places Vears ago 1 very upon wiped out, all trade destroyed, and when the English finally took sion-ancient Fthiopia was about th most desolate portion of the = earth where civilization had ever thrived It is hoped that the monuments m Meroe will contaity inscriptions which will throw some light on the ancient In what we call historical section of earth It be how, such a died, why it several posses kingdom that has mnter- nation nature feat times the heen animportant esting to khow lived and why it should have covered would of Solomon Ethiopia was one of the great nations of the earth and seems to have been prominent in the arts and sciences as well as commerce, Here is a sealed book in history which it is hoped will be opened and the mysteries. revealed. Perhaps we shall learn something of the later his tory of Amonasro.--Philadelphia In quirer, in Poverty may not be a crime, but it often 'leads to it There's a whale lot of fool's advices parks of suburban towns and smaller 'in this old world. rom, | do | of the point a » partic have | Amonasra, | Ethiopia | Meroe, | of the population is said to have been] deep with shifting sands. In the davs| -- ee ---- | f pil / ~ + MAKING HAY WHILE ' _ THE SUN SHINES RECIPROCITY ING 2 Chief roads ter osttemat tuation in = "Came toe Bankers, Financial Opponents are and Certain Har ask this I ai ined nt chet rahe mW (hn the i terests, wh mterchange be prey these nted mbined industries, bor banks, conseque tied uj mones ransporti CONGErns Ih out the § I wh cent [805 cent yWiL per cent while In was 100 per cent., and the tidy proportion vestment HON. MACKENZIE KING Rails f ), | Line Dick McBride's bailiwiek it is doin the Hut the do Pe consumes sw some Kine show ust what those who make Houndest outery against reciprocity t pretend to do in many cases the of {tween the Tarmer and army middiemer that between has grown {Ie as their [the wide di | by up ounts tor rence the price the producer the freveived paid oughly I the price consumer ¥ Thon thant by convinced {the worst thing tha | nce AL the preser 1 wonder t lForonto, I men like opposed to shou these combines, believe w LL oMeanwh procal agreen with the vould at least hold 1 for Consider the canned goods Yeat i Kinds eget ables [check some time situntior ! aiter prices of and monnting ticular en jeans i n ers do not I should har 1 its full bet went Montreal and vou wonld: see this situati gravity yok At the differ New York t hi and Tor Wo first j raw, then the and lod | f { real | pad Mant mn article. Pork wi a. wo 826.05 i ---- -------- | A Barley Market Worth $ | | I the 1 pike might have prepar- | lt hich and iH.01 an day " ston rw Yor rma nding ad the same here, sind New wre lower ntreal and in selling in Election Prophecy. | «| | | i tutaro nnons is usual the Quebec will er chich 18 to say, dea in Quebec 1s the ty m double t He party came ig Tollos Recipro Quet the w | what ee ha hu 1 area present elec batta vinees remember will } Her | hen toe v hass teciprocity them hack the swim a2 Hope of foar of 'seven in British the roy els liberals seats Colum? the t tal glkw erninent sol that open The prairie west is near tv. It ter for reciproc 18 the west and the that rbors the new I erable liberal gains will be made. is mn the west consid Conservatives Hard to Please, Mercury Ai rden apd want the trade tend he have Guelph I'l hard t please I CONSOrsy a party Mr: Bb to issues " eo his associates wofessed subm to the people to ment Now subnvitted faith they little Li he possibilit of earryn the coun tr in to it and are seeking the ernment | efiort erwhelmmel PPOs mv divert attention fron rea om which the as gone people this they are doomed to defeat 18 \ v hich will meet at the polls Let Go. Wouldn't Ontarlo an of Gananoque, wing i laying his 14 » when the fisif®did not appear to rod recover fishern rod on the dock seeing the When long line well aml into the water } ches A 8 Inside t firmly ht insid ie perch ' bait he pike ei on the with of the hook e found the pike caugh n its mouth w= perch six to er long, and rock bass pere ree iness but "in hold ny Lime, inex] his until escape wa possible While 1 A ¢ Ont barley of { in i Take the case OnIer ivative Mr. Thornton, access to "market will to Uanada, Honger Canadian , Thornton old wigh 10 remember (the boom the Umted States furnished to the Hastings, Prince Lake Ontario the canchdate wath of the United be of little or United no barley My Aric, Durham, says States barley no value as the Slates wants 1% barley farmers "n Edward counties hn market jDurham, ithe the enactment of anh other until tariff, Where Mr. Thornton servative orators err is i saving {Canadian barley is wanted iu the United States. It will always be wan- ted owing 10 its superior quality. Here are some extracts ffom the evi dees cof H. V. Burne, a Buffalo malster, who appeared before the #- nance committen of the senate at Wash. ington during the hearing on the reci- proeity. bill in May, and appealed to then to admit Canadian barley free {to give' his industry a fair chance. 'In 1890 congress enacted tarifi laws which completely cut off our nedrest ind best supply of raw ma- terial, Canadian barley.' "The present duty ow barley a bushel--prohibitory.' "When you cut off our barley vou cut off-a supply best barley that grows ldoors and when cut that supply vou lowered the stand. tard from the best barley that grows to a Ne 3 grade raised in this coun- trv." and other con- not is 30 supply of of the out- oft vou 'You pever can get as much for an i | {only nferior article i perio have um." The hest harle bailey malting that position with the maltster js nt: comes 1 rio.' "1 cities and Rochester, other raised in take Oswego with | could vou to the towns of NSyrgciuse, Jordan, Weedsport, 1 towns and show ond the bee- vou and malt-houses which were formerly hives of industry, standing monuments of idleness. | hat, men, is what the prohibitory thirty cents per bushel state Quotations of the prices of harley at United States points benefit that of tntario when the thirtyv-cent sx removed, shown now AR gentle duty has cost of our Canadian and show the great to the farmers surplus barley per-bushel dirty by a report compiled by ment of labor, will acerue from their ne the depart 8 1911 Six No Ave mos Toronto--Outario. Boston--Feed, best Bufialo--Malting Winnipeg-- Western, No Milwaukes--Extra No Duluth--Feed to "choice malting el The total barley production im Can- ada in 1910 was 43,147,000 bushels, of which M.727.000 bushels were pro- duced in Ontario. Do the barley grow- ers of Ontario want to add from 6,000 to $7,000,000 to the value their annual crop? H so, vote Laurier and larger markets, of for | 1 | { [was AN IRATE HUSBAND BEATS AN INTRUDER Pursues Young Wife With Attentions i. would i feathers the Homestead hectioner, having noe of he comment s het faced nvaded {merchant ould r ward | womar \ | | i -------------- { Master i { | i | i i | | : Haller Hall esitated pick up a brick His next to Nas PUES paus into Be that vd's f fight n 1 there 1 poise snd send it flying Bovd fi He bed in Hy decided to ood k park, his ground Fric of we An spectators, | Haller just all around hundreds perately while han and pounded him Haultain Stands Pat. Win g Te When the was held noted that the part consarvative Saskatchewan, it in 1 he were pear il There Aly Lurk at Mr. Ha {f honorary presi the Conservative tion of wskatchewan heen ntion passed resolutions er Borden platform in ity Mr. Ha recipro regard t he W ok benelit ('anada, party his party encouragement to the Mr. Hau tho Ar with some Undoubtedly is end Haul not wool variety My be the n made Ino fought \x pre} ny way h re e Was brick AC for his flower hetors dos anered convention Wis ultnin vice RO) satay estern ink all wid ment position servi One Consistent Conservative. Her interesting within } experior " WT ontreal other ell-ky the Hest He postmaster ountr ot made wadd been CONSery ais Ma replied been af I port-en party » When vou La 100 kde } for, Sar. J Ma shoulder ri hut SMy riy in 1891 what for reciprocity for it now." A Gallant Effort, { Pitf take ! with ¥ hich This } p 1s line the path of iberties with foreign they are not famili lustrated Visit to was well in BR % Franes tion B.1 lnddy and her famils Canndian did considerable some of the party ahice of French This was evident to a dignified, haired, French lady had several Rhe didn't hut she knew entertainin found qiite t heir " wha understand English by heart some E definitior Sq1h el At Came 1} Via K.C., be heer veteran stor," has cont sup name? or lonald t was n vote people wi language AT conne. of . a [hey and not drawback wh sung French songs for The party ail, nglizh songs, and she suggested singing one The wea met with favor, and, out realizing, with- what guiet amusepient her choice of a sopg caused, she sany with what was intended feeling, "Her Golden Hair Was ing Down Her Back." -------------- man knives Low which Only a wise he actually knows of that be known. to be deen tittle nny Be sure this Label is on the toot rn f the bed you bay When buying metal beds make sure of seeing the very newest designs and the very best values by asking the salesman to show you the IDEAL Line. Most good stores sell them. Our trade mark identifies them. And you'll see beds that combine beauty with the quality which insures lifelong service and satisfaction. Ask us for name of dealer nearest you. Write for Free Book No. 120 <1 in DEAL BEDDING Cm "MONTREAL = YORONTO WINNIPEG LIPTON'S TEA OVER 2 MILLION PACKAGES SOLD WEEKLY ec Flies inure and revel in t ts have discovered wrgely responsible for uberculosts, Typhoid, p Di eases of the Bowels, etc. htheria, Dysentery, infantile Dis- Every packet of WILSON'S FLY PADS will kill SE of sticky paper. enenmeme------ more than 300 sheets S ee Bottles, One by I_ager cools, satis- ihe tonic efleg of f malt are at their oF mest Cleanly brewed end bottled, Reg bes and refreshes hest-aded folk hovs and the nouns 5 I best in your old favorite, Regal : aif At Ligeor Dealer: Leading Hate! Association, Limited, 3 Hamilton, Hamilton Brewi Jas. McParland, Regal Agent in Kingston.

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