Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Watchman Warder (1899), 5 Mar 1903, p. 10

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sear couvcmén MEANS m GREAT BRITAIN. oqucnce LOlAil # O . ’ . i . ‘ ~ . 7 el ' i ' “ . W)" caus ‘ ' . .D ‘ "‘11 Mama” MY!) LLPL 2. 1 5H " misfit-he m” u $3389“ ' entionS ‘ hi1; own happy fashâ€" 005 through. the ‘ o wager cat ck fair “ill - \hQ hill 01‘ 'rich “'ldo‘V- 'ild ululations A11 will DU 8. Quakcr's 1- Ireland. Probably you know of cough medicines that re- lieve little coughs, all coughs. accept deep ones! The medicine that has been curing the worst of . . deep coughs for sixty . ... WA W . Ayer's CW Big returns for money invested have been handed out to hundred . s of Gough’s Customers during the past five weeks. Rich have been the rewards of those who come to buy. We’ve spared no effort in making our , bargains attractive and tempting, and the people have responded heartily; . keeping up the procession to Gough’s store daily. It has been a remark. ' But Great Sales have an end. We are nearing the time able “keep up.” when the sale must be withdrawn. Preparations for Spring Trade is an Annual lixm' croaching upon the heels of Winter and Gough’s Mighty can only hold out for a short time longerâ€"the balance of \Vinter Gog-(15 '_ must meet a price. Waterloo at once. This week will be a harvest of the rarest kind of values. Prices are slashed most unmercifully. \l'e preffi to realize in part and invest the money in new stock. Its the progressive policy of Gough’s Storeâ€"the policy that keeps stock ever fresh. “Wm ssssm W MW§“QW‘ years is In if you want comfo ' carriages Pecto ls,’l an extra half hour's notice > . _ Ill. be the railway people will procure dining and sleeping car, with a .ok, attendants, food and wines, Ilsa 3100 to $150 extra. “burn the round” 3 This trip cos 300-â€"_â€"nea.rly as much as from Manchester. defenses of Sebastopol, designed like pupswrnmtâ€"t 1830 by an English engineer, were use she a . Treaty of Paris The 31830“ “5011117” TREES IN BRITAIN. biggest ‘ ’scurries' ' in train rovided that the Inch Waste Land on Which Woods Could £0- rebuilt and that the BM Sea Be Planted. ' .__â€"â€"- . British Forestry his own trains, port. It remarks on the fact . part of there are some twenty-one million Russia's eye system as the mails. Isms 0‘ W88“ 131.1", a ““8" Pr°P°"' rim Violation or hasty. m 1' nothing 93‘9“an about tion 0‘ WhICh might profitably be Prince Cortchakofl, whose ambition _ It recommends that two . _ But while on a, visit to a country areas for practical demonstration, of 1‘ Was '50 b° the Emuifitl a, houss just outside Leicester, the . . . when. not under two and not rayon~ ten ny were at '1“ King raced ed me 5- 2: th ‘t‘ h d thousand acres, should be acquired . _ ' . been duayZd. aThe s0;an Igrince if by the State; that lecturers on for- He 1,55%; t8 31” notificatmnuofthfi‘m. areas. had arrived in England and «my be appointed in connection with Czar 8 en '19: tto lb?” mat. formal reception by " ' the universities; and that the afl‘i- “$1186 Of the gray o f aris w l goldnzham Palace was pu colleges make the sub U1 “(gigonwto first? by a day. The news, owing , e. The .PPQP°S‘1 En 1 ' d id 1, but file a formal ‘ ‘ - 8 an can 110 breakdown (if not reach the Prince t° “at apart experimental 15 t 1 U m 16 110:!" if“? it ought to have protest. Thus Sebas opo is s all!h interesting, and we are rather of bef reached him, and he barely had two t fl’ than 0‘ er 0'6- . before the ceremony M it. let’s (ivorcoals ranging in price from $8.50 to $12 to clear at only $5.95 21" Boys’ Overcoais ranging in price from $5.50 to $8 to clear at only till . 5: nsational Values - 5 -' ?°“““-‘i2‘.‘1'§.7 Ken’s" Ileavy Freize Ulsters, were $7.50 new a...» ' ’" '11 Ian’s Raglan Coats, were 38 now - len’s Beaver Overcoats, were $10 now len’s llest Raglats, were $15 I llen’s Tweed Soils, were $5.50, now len’s Fine Tweed Suits. were $7.50 now Men’s Worsted Soils were $12, now - Pile after Pile of Men’s Suits with Tickets frcm $2.95 Suits are priced at half their former value, ”M”W‘M§W w WMM‘W§M‘§“~§“$ Wholesale Slaughltr in the Boys’ Australlian Coon Coats, were $15 and 820. feet The me mm, of mm: De arimentl DOW - $10 ari$2 . " . bent 0,, redress. T‘w- p 2 Saudi Sea Seal Caps. were $18 fez $1.23 m sea him well. ‘11.; ll» « m were $1.50 new 95c 1 South Sea Seal Cap was $20 for - 51' His (“01' ‘-‘ "‘“W’ “ $3 now $1.50 . 3 Electric Seal Caps were $4.50 fr r 9mm“ and ”my“ Boys’ 4-;icce Suits were $5.50 new - $2.50 . 1 ' (l lllv t ' ' 5 PCISTaTl Lanb cars wme 59 {CT - I h liccmen l-ho Cililj‘illl‘ll‘h Boy 5 3-precc Suits, were 36 50 new - $3.95 2 Persran Lamb Caps were $7 icr - " :.a:dl’°bosge.c,'ann the palm my. ## 11 Boys’ and Girls’ Persian Lamb Caps rut: ,pumm or the United. S1 Frcm 25 to 50 per cent. Discount on ‘4 5° for ' - - ‘ . contented. prosperous m0“- ‘ All, Furs l kindly oppression mll.V “'h‘fl'n‘fl‘f l â€" . ocratic party are in 11‘3"“ ' r .7 - The oral \ssionnl W ( mtat ( cats were $20, now 9‘ i ( Corn Coats v are sec. now - 36.50 Wallaby Cc als were $18, new - moo w hot and cold jllSl as Lil“ 1” opinion that such . an experimen A‘n Alleged Breach of Faith. would not make Alice Holtâ€"one of p - the urea: suggested-much. lens proâ€" By the treaty of Berlin in 137s, mbl. than it is to-day. Some, in- which made peace betan W‘ 50°“ '0 may say all- “1° 0““ ’°’ and Turkey after their second con- commendatiOns strike us as pious dict, all the powers were awarded ““1 quite proper. Unhappily we for their kindly forbearance. doubt grayely whether this entirely then that Britain got Cypm'. well-meaning report will, result in the made formall any considerable planting and to- what it already was geographically, 91"“th operations on the part of a Russian lake. No restrictions were the owu-er of land. The fall in the removed, however, from am pm value of timber and ,underwood has of the Dardanellcs. These straits been great during the last quarter of were to remain inviolate. The ‘ century. 09'1“ for instance, toâ€"day Czar's land frontier was extended to is hardly Worth the stripping, though embrace Kars, a port of .Batoum. It the price 9f the W°°d itself has been was stipulated that Batoum should lower m the past. Larch is one 0‘ remain unfortified, but Russia. soon the few timber trees which th‘ found occasion to disregard that pro- landowner finds he Can plant on poor vision. This violation formed the land With something like assuredpro- text for other charges 0‘ bad faith; fit“ The clause in the report refer- but it is said now that there Was a ring to the estate duties may remind secret understanding among the pov- us of the undoubted fact that Sll‘ ers at the time of the treaty that William Harcourtfs Finance Act Batoum might be prdtectcd must be held responsible for the fall ' Russia Not Conquered. of a great. deal of timber in English In 1870 one clause of the Treaty woods which is not likely to be reâ€" . placed in the near future. Too often of Paris was abrogated; in 1902 an- it must be the only way to pay of! other. On both occasions Russia has the dutiesâ€"Saturday Review. been accused of faithlessncss. If she M could be frank with her accusers abs THE RUSSIAN BEAR. would say that an individual or a nation is not morally bound by any Policy Seems to Be Much on the Lines of promise which may be extorted by Napoleon's Forgery of Peter armed forces. Thr- vital pomt to be the Urczit‘s wm. remembered is that Russia Was not The passage through the Dardun a conquered nation at the end of the . ' ' V. . 5 ~ . 0d hu- elles of tWO unarmed ltussran tor- Crimean “ 1r l“ “(‘m a 1 only’ The Ulrâ€" v's mollu 1‘ l‘. for an eloquent In??? os'mg lllllnllfit' round One by from the 1:1", to poctize . sad thing . . to feel that. he rs l . i use the world is comr way of thinléinég. . c Icing: $135.0 8Some ilnc (lg-“vuln- ‘uo: himself forgetting 111ng kg: ‘ it pulled the beards of tln- 1,”; ' or he begins to midi“; arly three (JICDLUI‘l:,-a- Cromwell was onto. or armatmrm in the same old war A names like Clontarf, Brian 132:1... ., ett and Shamus O'Brien. :r:_ ground is slipping from hi‘llc-n... there are no excuses. . B would have been almost. on in- ternational slight if the Prince had not appeared, but there was no fish. ‘A messenger rodo‘posthaste to Leicester, the Prince followed in a last carriage and when he arrived a ”special" of four "odd-und-end” . .had been slung to a fast enâ€" ‘eâ€"â€"less than four are not safeâ€"in eas than 15 minutes. ,7 . He jumped in, the line was cleared and off the train Went. He was without lunch and the carriage Was an ordinary first-class, but the Prince's valet bustlcd some sandâ€" wiches in at the last moment, and the train, with u. clem- lino, whisked its royal freight to London in an hour and 40 minutes. He was just in time for the l'ecopLion. The “)I arriage Special." Probably the- most romantic, as .weli as one of the smartest of speh clal train hurries was one that raced from Londor. to llOVUl‘ a. few years ago, on the oCCuSinn of a runaway match, and which still lives in rail- Way annals as tln "marriage spe- cial." The cnguger' of the train, a. Mr. Vickery, had big difficulties to overcome, for his fiancee Was a Ward in ohancery, that is. she and her all along the line. Many of thSt many are over l-3 less fl] Le fl )lr tin Boy 3’ 2-; iece Serge Suits, Boys’ 2-piece Tweed Suns K ‘.>> \11 L.) I) “fill :llwl‘ Men’s Hats were $1.75 and $2 25, new Men’s Gloves were all ard$1.25, new - Winter Urt’eiwcar. Wetting Shirts, Sccks MlllS, Fancy S} irfs, etc., Clean Sweep. 513 CO rants, Like the church 9.! lawn . the general Spirit of n:rllm:.:' . is lukewarm for lack m” “"\‘\“f' The ancient rage is (rum. 9.x L estate were under the guardianship of the law, and the penalty for marry- ing a ward without the consent of the court is imprisonment. As this consent was not to be ob- tained, the young couple disregarded it and Were married at a. registry of- fice. The bride's relatives, however, had had the bridegroom watched by a private detective, and shortly af- ter- the ceremony the newly married couple found they were discovered. The bridegroom he. a small steam yacht in the Granville dock at Dovâ€" er, and to this they were to have re- paired by train. But. as the war- rant for the groom’s arrest was now likely to be issued at any moment, they dared not wait for the train and a Special was ordered. In 30 minutes it was ready and the couple Vere speeding South. The detective, to gain time to put the machinery of the law in motion, tried to have the train stopped at Canterbury, but as he had no legal authority he failed, and the couple reached Dover. The main reason for taking the special isthat a vessel in the Granville dock has to wait till “70 hours before high water before she can get out, and the or ' y train would have mised the They arrived twenty mlnu 9 too early, having done the journey in two Bburs to the minute, and Waited anxiously for the dock gates to op- en. When they did, the yacht steam- ed out, and the couple left British waters ‘ an hour ahead of the warrant. , _ into Flushing and the happy pair lived abroad till the bride’s majorâ€" lty. Piss-pout Morgan's Special “Special.” , A very special “special" was the one which Mr. I’ierpont Morgan or- dered at Manchester the last time he In: over here. In the States he is accustomed to take specials almost .verywhere, and a big railway mag- nate can do what he likes with Am- erican railway lines. Mr. Morgan was said to be in Eng- land for a rest. However, he slid- denly ordered a “special" for Lon- don at Manchester, and required the but possible. In 40 minutes a train with dining and parlor carriage was ready, with a little bill for $325. This paid, Mr. Morgan stepped in,“ and Was whirled off at 60 miles pedo-boat destroyers is an incident apparently insignificant in itself, but, viewed in the light of Great Britain's traditional distrust of Rusâ€" sia, and under the magnifying glass of irresponsible alurmists, it apâ€" pears to be almost a menace to the existence 0f the Empire. His Majes- ty's representative at Constantinople has protested to the Porto, who is the guardian of the Black Sea, and though no answer has been returned, any possible explanation has been al- ready anticipated and discounted. The action of the Russians was an open violation of the Treaty of Parâ€" is. England nasumes her attitude of virtuous indignation, and Russia quietly pursues her policy. Sallsbury's Famous Slang. When England and France under- took to uphold the tottering Turkida Empire, and threw themselves upm Russia in the Crimean War. the for- mer country, as Lord Salisbury has since said, “put its money on the wrong horse." However, the “wrong horse" was first under the wire. When the War was about. at an end, Lord Lyndhurst vigorously declared that “there could be no place with- out first destroying Russia's Black Sea fleet, and laying prostrate ithe t." miliating peace, it is true, but since then she has come to know her strength. She wanted to rebuild Se- bastopol as a fortress. She did so, because she was strong enough. She wanted her two unarmed torpedo- boat destroyers to enter the Black sea. They have enter-ml. Her de- signs on Constantinople are indisâ€" putable. In England dead weight of public opinion is hostile to Russia. A speaker who attempted to prove that India is safe enough from the Bear's paw, even should Afghanistan be swallowed up, would be laughed at Even a move in Munchuria is con- sidered a menace to the Punjaub. The Famous Forged Will. When Napoleon prepared to invade Russia be caused a will of Peter the Great to be forged by M. Lcsur. This fabrication was designed to thor- oughly terrify Europe as to Russia's intentions. and to win international sympathy for the Corsicnn's great venture. The document is serving its purpose generations after the shameful nature of its authorship was laid bars. The passage which many Englishmen regard as an art- icle of their creed toâ€"day reads as follows:â€"â€" “Bear in mind that. the commerce of India is the commerce of the world. He who controls it is the dictator of Europe. No occadon should be lost, therefore, to provoke War with Persia, to hasten her, ’u’e- cay, and advance to the Padan Gulf." Though it has been proved that Peter the Great never used any such words. how can it be demonstrated that they do not embody his dream! or the dreams of Russian statesmen in the twentirth century) Until this can be done, the average Briton prefers to keep his eye on Russia. bearing in mind, at the sum time, Nelson's dictum, "Close With a Frenchamun, and outmanc-uvre 4a Leo mL's‘Jubilou Borne, ,Eeb. 21.â€"Ths Pop. consâ€" p functions of his jubilee yesterday without undue fatigue. Up- on rsturning, to his apartmen_ ts the B. J. GOUOH The Wonderful Cheap Man "â€""AN TRCTIC’M EAL.” Gem-3 [upper For lo: and Dogs on the Polar Ice Sheet. Dogs was unhitched and fastened. as usual, and than each of the Eskimos climbed over the ice foot with his snow knife and disappeared behind the para- pet. where the other two were already cutting snow blocks. I fastened my dogs, got out their ration of pemmican, cutitupand fedthem, standingby with whip in hand to see that there was no bullying, and that each do: get his share. Then I unpacked the cooker. oil can and kitchen box, passing them up the ice foot as high as I could reach. I did not wait for the completion of the igloo to commence my preparations for supper, but with a few strokes of the spade excavated a niche in the snow- bank, put the cooker in out of the wind. filled the lamp with oil and the boiler .with ice, placed a few snow blocks around it for still better shelter and lighted up. By the time the igloo was completed I had enough wata' melted for our tea. and supper was entirely rendybythetime mymen had fedths .docaandtheylostnotimeinfreeinz theirclothinzotsnowandjoinln; me theteaandbis- cult and pemmlcsn. and less again is tsllinxoatodresmlessslumbsnâ€"Oon- mmnresryinom ' age the pulse is usually above seventy- ftwo, but often also between fifty and ' sixty. The pulse rate is higher in short '. than tall persons and also varies some- : hat with the time of day. independent of meals and movement, diminishing in Ithe forenoon. risinx in the afternoon. lmt during the night and rlslnzil 5th. 1301111118. Habitual pulse ratesllt lbw fifty-81! and as low as fort!llJ have been observed in healthy adults ' but they are rare exceptions We no‘ of no case on record of a healthy pull so low as thirty. l i -H -â€"-:/ DRESSED GIRLS, Would 3‘. 1‘. . . ' 1" ' beautiful dressed doll ‘: ‘ . your name and cddr . .. = .. and no will and 3t... beautifully colored 14 ‘L. 7: Mid cure limit; .. , Wit-h silver l)1;(.'.;.. .. ._ . golden curlyllzzz._, p l ~ ' tlf‘lll eyes anti :1 - 'r E‘Z‘CJM'I, 1:: v- N Gin-d yup: pi’ctfi-‘l! ..l‘; u... 1., Z _ y 'llllit. Itisa petite; . . w 6): mutations.” _ _ ‘ -. ~ 'zzlo Sprout», Levi" in . ~ . , Uranium-d think l in . Milan. Drill l im' or". vr I Got“. Nubonnid, 1'- rh. ‘ l- , 2 “Thanks vcr'. [mull .er :- '._--_l\« 1.1 1 ~.t dead." ______+_â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€" WEEKS TO SEE THE LOCK _â€"*â€"â€" l y - WiilVisit Peterbero and (‘10 up to l :r extant With Mr. Culverwell l, Engineers' Club of TIN-Will“ r ll go 10 1’0lCl'L‘0l’Q i-(‘u‘ Ll’lL‘ll‘ 9.1mm; ] ting this spring, having r'oz"::.r‘.'<-.\ i. ided the :11, -ht’s meeting. at 11‘." . J. Alex. Culver'wcll ()l l‘rg‘tm‘l. ~ w c trip will vxu-nd ()Ym‘ um nu: 1 'd will take place shortl) 3.x 1;»: " v “mug of naVigutic-n. 1" ‘35 expecu'd that the “IAIN.“ “hell of Pctcrbor'o will m‘u-z‘ ‘- :' 'crety a formal reception, :1; U. \a .". . -l(e “Vantage Of this ommz" ' 1"howling this influential bnu} g8 manufacturing and bylinudw; “10911101115 at Petcrbm'o. The members of the socrut} ‘.~-. ‘ earned a particular desire " t the hydraulic lift-lock «m ll." ent canal near Pctcr‘bor'o. ;.‘.;(l A mild be an opportune mom-m; {or ' Trent w’alley Waterway Ass‘oc'n- on ‘9 Explain to the (angina-rm: dawn of this province Ll'w inn 7 m and adl'antago llllfi ndlrnlr “highway Will be to the country .7. the mt. necessity of ii? colitâ€" 3.? invitation of Mr. Culvcrwcll, the H" y Wm mm a. trip by steamer . thy Waters north of I‘c‘LU‘l‘MH‘O, H,hrnl also be tendered a luncheon “1 at Burleigh Falls. --â€"â€"â€"mâ€"â€"-- Vlntr PEOPLE me 0F + ’ 8‘ Consumption are lncreas is: Fatal is Ontario (The Toronto Star) 1‘10 monthly l'(Epot‘i. ior‘ .l:il.:';:" . A by the Provincial Bruin". th discloses the fact ler tl ~ w“1““ the province huh: m .. Much in “Wm, 35 (-ompn . ”‘3': nine month last, ye.- .. Wover. some Sl 'Ilillt‘flnl like-pm of deaths clirrgcd - .V‘I’ “ya?“ three times as ma 1'.- llll'LLlCl' 'l'lzm‘wiu} _(- 1". IL' '2“ i an» I it) ll.’ - There is a cornyspon _ h u 0! death from moasl m One-third the nurnbe-r m: 50!. January, 1902. Don Won are continua”.V “ism“ showing an over December, 1.!

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