Daily British Whig (1850), 27 Aug 1915, p. 6

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PAGE SIX lent tere aes Pro-German Cleric Meets a Violent Death. HE WAS THREATENED WITH LYNCHING AFTER AT- TACK ON PRESIDENT. the faces of the parishioners who had framed it. -- = | A OR i he tore un and threw into | - { 3 i wt i Kl LED PASTOR : iccciic === = Gananoque | and Local News. he sat in his: library, the shot com- ing from outside. When he stag- gered to grapple with his assaflants he was shot again, and this time the bullet entered the jugular vein, al- timately causing his death from loss of blood, according to the coroner. Kayser, presumably dying, was drag- ged. forty feet away from the light of the windows of his house, ahd tied with window cords about the wrist and ankles. He. had been dead for more than an hour when his body was discovered by a passer- by. . . Members of Kayser's congregation | who spoke to hin earlier in the day told the police that he had told them a | Aug. 27. --Under the auspices of] the local Red Cross Society one of the finest fawn fetes of the. season! wap held at "Blinkbonnie," the sum-| | mer residence of Mr. and Mrs. Wil- liam S. Macdonald, from 3.30 to 11.30} p.m. yesterday. The fete took on | a military. aspect, the various tents! and booths resembling a small mili ! | tary . encampment. Through the| | kindness of the military authorities] the Pipe band of the Sth C.M.R. was| tin attendance afternoon and evening. ! Dean Starr, Kingston, as well as! Capt. Stewart, Kingston, who has re- turned on furlough to recuperate af- THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, FRIDAY, AUGUST 27. 1915. THE WHIG'S JUMBLE. TET or pin] oR | "Palm Olive Soap--2 cakes 25e," Gibson's Drug Store. * Read everything in the second sec-| tion of the Whig. The pages are ¢rowded with good news. Mis¢ Irene Ahern left Smith's Falls! Monday for Belleville, where she is employed as a techer in the Gevern- ment School for the deaf and dumb. Five new kinds of face creams in! to-day, at Gibson's Red Cross Drug) Store. : i Miss Irene Cahill, daughter of Mr. | and Mrs. Walter Cahill, Belleville! and Jéseph Hartman Lang, Philadel-t phia, were married at Sacred Heart) Church, Rochester, on August 16th. | It Is Said that Irregularities in Pri- vate Life May Have led Members 'of Congregation fo Commit the Murder. ; that an anonymous tele- : "Palm Olive Soap--2 cakes 25¢," { smilingly « Bat A him that | ter a serious operation, were also at-| Gibson's Drug Store. {he would be "lynched," but that he | tractions to no slight extent. The At the recent entrance examina- | had-heard so much of such talk that | Citizens Band rendered its weekly| tion Mr. Whiting, of Deseronto, sent | | it had ceased to alarm him. { open-air concert on the grounds be-| up twenty-eight pupils. = Of thesé, | *{ have four enemies," they said | fore the evening part of the program-| twenty-five were successful, mund A. H. Kayser, pastor of the St. ye told them, + apd 2 or en The old Oat Meal Mill situated] who failed obtdined a pass in every | James Evangelical Lutheran Be / trouble with them it will be because | near the dam at Marble Rock, which| subject, but failed to secure the re- | Chicago. Aug. 27.--The Rev. Ed- el ot di ) " fv | has F i - i ty per cent. ..| of my private affairs. I am not | has been advertised for sale by ten-| quired six , { ily Sedu hoturious i ee afraid of anything happening be- | def for some time past by the Gan.| Phone 230, Gibson's Drug Store, )r0-G: 1 terances and bitter .attacks on the | United States and President Wilson, | was found dead in a lot near his | home Wednesday 'night. = There | were two bullet wounds in his body, | . and his hands and feet wens bound | with cord. > i The pastor had been threatened | with death in several anonymous letters recently, and about a month | ago applied to the chief of police for | & permit to carry a revolver This | was denied him. The threats so | titaten the pastor that he finally ecided to send his family to the home of Mrs. Kayser's mother in Michigan. Federal and state authorities who to-night are endeavoring to establish a motive for the murder, were given an intimation that the Rev. Mr. Kay- ser was "lynched" for privdte rea- sons by members of his own congre- gation, who believed that the - pas- tor's normal conduct was not what it ought to be. A woman's fob. prints were among those discovered outside the window of the pastor's home. The pastor had been warn- ed to cease his attentions to a mar- ried woman in Gary. Kayser was only 42 years of age, | a native of Wuertemburg, Germany, and a graduate of Strassheim Uni- versity,» He held an inexorable do- minance over his congregation that extended into their homes and com- | mercial affairs. When the war broke out Kayser | became intensely active. articles for German and English | newspapers. When the Lusitania was sunk he upheld Germany's rights and attacked President Wil- son's activities and sentiments. A resolution ofthe Saxen-Verein of his congregation, pledging neu- He wrote | | Russia's Reverses Throws cause of my political feelings." Mr. Kayser leaves a widow and three children. CONSCRIPTION . FORECASTED Greater Burden On Britain. London, "Aug. 27.--Something in the nature of .coascription, though the term was not employed, was fore- shadowed by the Earl of Selborne, | President of thé BoaMd of Agricul- ture, in an address to a deputation of agricwifural land owners which visit- ed in London. "Many more men have got to join| the army, "whether voluntarily or compulsorily?' said the Earl. "The agricultural laborer has done . his | part nobly jin this war, but the re- sponse has been very unequal over the country, and 1 forecast that dur- ing the next year men will be taken from districts: and hitherto they have not gone. "What I shail aim at--and Earl Kitchener has been very sympathetic ----is to leave the farmer his foreman stockman, : carters and shepherds, but the rest of the work will have to be done by women or men not hitherto engaged in agriculture." Ear] Selborne emphasized the fact that Russia's reserves had imposed a greater strain on her allies. "We have a greater burden on our shoulders at the present moment than six months ago," he said. "The financial strain is going to he very great, and the situation is going 'to demand from every class greater and greaters sacrifices." The speaker stated that the navy had the submarine menace well in hand. Signs of the Times - Those attractive ' in dealers'. windows Times. ' you are interested in goods. ------ S------ Ve * - Second standard goods vou see from time to time are 'Signs of the Give them a second look and you will seé that they are familiar friends you have seen advertised in this newspaper. ' Storekeepers are alert. They know' They naturally: want they show the goods that will interest you. ~-&-healthy sign, isn't it ? looking displays of newspaper advertised your trade, so J 5 Hand Automobiles" | new , \ equi with self startery Soha iE 397, ow firaat Ih Beviect, Finpihg i BLA Tata Motor-cycle, condition, 210-214 WELLINGTO FORD GARAGE COMPANY - - N STREET. . lh da, ron a ley Jo Mansell Organ, high back, 10 stops, Sweet tone .......... Boe per Terms: $3.00 cash; week, i Uxbridge Organ, high back, 10 stops, handsome walnut case, $35.00. Terms: $3.00 cash; 75¢ Week. Dominion Organ, high back, beautiful trees sa. qe Terms: $5.00 cash; $1.0 . front, .10 stops 'with mirror in gor week Ze farms whence | anoque Water Power Company, has { been seld to Charles. Pritchard of that section, who purposes tearing | the building down and building an | addition to his barn at his farm. Miss Nellie Kirke, stenographer at | the-office of the Canada Steel Goods {| Co., of this town, has accepted a si- | milar situation with that Company's | branch at Hamilton. Mr- and Mrs. 1 J. 8. Meggs, John street, are rejoic- {ing over the arrival yesterday of a young daughter. Messrs. C. H. Hurd, and William J. Allen, returned | yesterday from a week's fishing ex- { cursion to Charleston Lake. | Evensong. | Lay aside your tools of labor, for the | day is at its ending, { Mind and soul and body all are | clamoring to be free. | Put away to-day"s misfortune and | to-morrow's fresh intending, | ~ Turn your footsteps through the | city home to me. 1 { Far beyond the noisome pavements { where the lights gleam gold and gay, : Like swollen bubbles bobbing down the canyons of the street, I await your weary spirit as it wings its eager way On" the pinions of your longing strong and fleet. - Theré my. arms that ache with ten- derness shall hold you to. my breast-- Old loves have been, new loves may be, but never love like this-- There the heart of me shall keep you for its deepest and its best, And your griefs shall be forgotten in my kiss. Shall it matter If the trysts we hold are ever in our dreaming? Shall we yearn in vain for things we know can never, never be? Sweeter far than worlds that are, the secret world of only seeming, | When at dusk I feel you coming home to me. ~=Winifred Wells, in the Indepen- dent. What the Moon Says. Many people watch the moon ¢hanges with interest. Whilea few may understand them, it is probable most persons do not. - Perhaps the following from an exchange «may prove interesting and instructive. A clear,moon indicates frost. -- A dull- looking moon indica rain. A single halo around moon indi- cates storm. A double halo means very boisterous weather. If the moon looks high, cold weather may be expected. If it looks low down, warm weather is probable. The new moon on her back denotes wet weather. If the moon changes With the wind in the east we shail have bad weatlier. If the moon is bright weather is coming. When the moen is visible in daytime we may look fof cool days. . When the points of the crescent of the new moon are very distinctly defined, frost may be ex- pected. If the new moon appears with the points upward then moon will be dry, but should the rain may be looked for during the next three weeks. Hh Hadn't -Servyd It Before. Once a short little woman and her tall husband went to a cafe of the cheaper sort for dinner. "Will you have oysters?" asked the husband, glancing over the bill of fare. 3 "Yes," said the little woman, as she tried in vain to touch her feet to the floor, "and, 'Henry, I want a has- sock." : Hénry nodded, and as he handed his order to the waiter, said: "Yet, and bring the lady a hassoek. "One hassock," asked the walter, with what Henry tholight more than ordinary interest, as he nodded In the affirmative. Still the waiter did not- go, but brushed the tablecloth with a towel and rearranged the ar- ticles on in several times, while his fate got veryired. - 1 e 'Then he came around to the Nus- band's said, ahd, speaking fu a whis- lf per, sald: "Say, Mister, I haven't béen here long, and I'm not on to all § these Shing, Will the lady, have the assock Ted or fried" ~~ § let us not forget to the first rush... The | With Bars ~-- The District ¥s;a Very © Bad One. hotel men. and clear when three days old, fine lapce: eight. of them are outside the the | points be downward, more or less {Jones had a party at his house, praise; | bottom and * t! 'pon. 'Let ------ thing % {you I enough ---- kil- ling*going on?" all for drugs and sundries, delivery. T. H. Follick, principal of the Ath- ens high school for the past year, 1s moving to Port Perry, Ont., Before taking his departure the Trustee Board and Bible Class of the Metho- dist Church took occasion to show their appreciation by- presenting him with an address and a gold watch, "Try -Cod' Liver Compound for summer colds. Very easy to.fake," 60c. and $1.00. Gibson's Drug Store. : On August 19th, the home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McBratney, Athens, was the scene of a very quiet wed- ding, when their youngest daughter, Edna Mouiton, became the bride off Charles W. Cumbers, second son of Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Cumbers, Broek- ville, WORLD WILL BE DUMR Prom pty ! » With Admiration Of What Britain Has Done | Paris, "Aug. 27.--"The Govern- ment now has under control all fae-| tories able to produce cannon, rifles, | projectiles and explosives,' said Mr. | Lloyd George, British Minister nf} Munitions, in an interview with] Charles Humbert, new editor of the! Journal. "It also controls . all] foundaries and machine and tool fac-| tories, and not one pound of metal| or one detached piece is turned out by this vast industrial machine which | is not destined for the use of our ar | mies. This war-must not be fought | with "brawny chests but with ma-| chinery." { From what Mr. Lloyd George showed him, M, Humbert believes British preparations in many ways are more ample than those of the French. He declares the army now in training will be one of the most 'powerful the world has e 8 and when, later, it will be le tell 'what has been accomplished by the British, the universe will 'ne "dumb with armiratiop."' - -- in. ] A NIAGARA TOO WEILL SUPPLIED Sn Niagara Falls, Aug. 27.--Niagara Falls has more licences according to population than any town in On- tario: Thordld is the most drunken place in the, Province: County Li- cense Inspector George House is worse than no good. he caters to the Haqyor people and is remiss 1A his duty; the police in this part of the country have their hands tied and have heen the object of threats hy _These are Some of the charges made to the Ontario License Com- of the Niagara district heard yester: day afternoon by the Board. The fate of 23 licenses "hangs in the bal- town; two are shop licenses apd one club license. A great. bof evidence was heard bearing on the charees. The Board reserved de- cigion until Jan. 1st. 1916, . The House Party. iI) was a beefsteak dinner. @ of the fellers was the cook, ¢ He said be was'a winnet Yes, Jone's wife had gone away Tg spend a chilly Summer. "Jones put much taought upon this spread, ; . And planned it for a hummer. The 'steak was. burned till it was black An tough as any boot, The kitchen' surely looked as thoug The cook were on a toot. : They couldn't find the butter nor The, sugar nor the tea, The host looked on the wreckage And was sore as sore could be. They left the dinner where it was And went déwntown to eat. The other folks were gay, but Jones Knew misery complete. - He hired a woman to Some in To scrub as women do. She say¥ she thinks within a week may perhaps get through. Enough Killing Without That! al » is a true Atkins story which A 's ne from, The British on 2 . . with els, was widening a ms hchers to come alofig. A muskrat was disturbed, flop into the trench 0 Ehed, Bo 3 Tommy was after it with a shovel, another New: York Weekly, + ; . Wite--Why did you stand" and Jong with that: Turkish. ped- missioners by the temperance people | | over, w sends! "PI tell you of a mall thing 1], } say only yesterday. 5 | shov 1 communi- | "cation trench to enable future stret- » | Won't You ®... * ledged in the paper. BAMUEL CARTER, M.P.P., Member For South Wellington, Strong Man in Legislature. Samuel Carter, M\P.P.for-South Wellington, a new member, has al- ready established himself as one of the'strongest and at the same time one of the most picturesque men in the House. The dramatic material in his life and career are recognized in an article by Don Hunt in the cur- rent number of the Canada Monthly, In which Mr. Carter is deseribed as 'Ontario's scrappiest member of Parliament" and "The man who wouldn't be run over." The story of Carter's radicalism, inherited 'from a line of radical an- cestors, makes an absorbing tale. "There are two main reasons," says Mr. Huiit, "why Mr. Carter is a citi- zen of Ontario to-day, and not still living in the knitting districts of Notingham. For oné thing, he nei- ther wanted to be run over himself "hor to see other people like him run In the second place, he was a onate temperance man. From ese causes he came to America thirty-five years ago. For these causes he is still fighting to-day, and the two bitions merge, with him, into one compelling motive and driv- ing force." : In the Legislature to-day Carter stands first of all for the abortion of the bar and for the prohibition of be sale of all intoxicating Mquors. 'At the same time. trae to his tradi- tions, he is fighting -for those men ger of being fun down in the race of life. His democracy and his radi- calism. pe nentially of the fighting 'A tiew man in the Legislature, he has established, in his very first ses- sion, the reputation of sharing with Hon. Thomas McGarry the laurels of the heaviest 'scrapper' in the House, but whereas McGarry, with all his abilty, rather gives the impression' - shun Jor the mere sake of fight- ang not for yo own deals, Is. ablaze with 8 ! 1, . whén he Aecelvingly quiet, but if only for a moment or two will bej actually startied at the thurst of sponta 8 zeal 4nd en- thusiasm which netic effect." "Samuel Carter," according to Mr, 'Don Hunt's summing up, "Is the sort of man to whom his opponents, if are wise, will apply the motto, Ut 1a well to let sleeping dogs lie'-- : . Carter has a ol almost chronic. in- -- Bont Gibson's Drug Store, Rody | Amd ear - Will receive 'your and Bear It! Old soldjers will tell you that after the fir «age soldier begins fo get a little home they need a little encouragement, and, above all else, they need smokes, first few months of warfare, the aver- sick and weary. Now is the time when Please Do Your Bit To-day ? The British Whig Tobacco Fuud contributions. Anything from 25¢-up will be acknow- &t " KITCHENER thy name of the new Electric Iron made by the Canadian General Electric Co. Under the new power rates, it will cost only 2 1-2 cents per hour to operate this Iron. -i : - --FOR SALE AT-- elieg's Bhool S00 oie Phone 9% "le who, for various reasons, are in dan- b & queer, mag- | E % i.' ' The best face creams are sold at || Tm Men's Fashionable Suits at $15.00 for early fall wear, made from all wool English Worsteds, in plain grey twill, the scason's new model; sizes 36 to 44. Young Fellows' Suits at $9.00 Made from English Tweeds, in Tight and. dusk gens with small hairline stripe; sizes 33 to 86, With. the school opening in just a few days, how ~~ . about School Clothes for the Boys gs Boys' Nerfolk Suits--that will delight any mother, fads of durable fabrics and sturdily tailor- | ¢d to withstand the vigorous wear of the school boy. Prices at $3, $4, $4.50 and $5; sizes 24 to 35 y § Boys' Blue Serge Norfolk Suits, wide bloomers; sizes 24 to 35... SEPTUM Lis $3.50 Boots and Shoes Children's School Boots, best quality, durable box calf and dongola kid, button and lace boots': sizes. 7 to J0 1-2, for $1.60, Misses' sizes, 11 ti 2, $1.80 Boys' Strong School Boots, sizes 1 to §, for $1.95 5 +4 = ' . 2 4 Crs hens "ewe : ly. 336 Street. ERE a Louis Abramson ¢ . Kingston, Ont. _-- Bh ps

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