Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 15 Jun 1907, p. 9

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To-Night 7.50 to 10 O'clock. particularly good bar. 3 gains will be offereg 3 would be well worth com- Silk Waists nite, made from good dn the very latest style York for this summer, Sleeve, The front of osed of small pin tucks h a deeper hemstitched iter. The back of blouse the front, Full sleeve , tucked and hemstitch- go. This stylish waist 'o-Night, 52.95 s White urtains ottingham Nett, sizes inches wide, regularly -Night, ) Pair ood Quality . Towelling ularly worth 12 1-2¢. iht while the sts, p ara. IG GOODS The lowest prices and the best made goods. Suit Cases from $1.75 ° to $20." i Club Bags from 75¢ to ¥ $10, : English Deep Club Bags $5 to $25. Trunks from $2.00 up. . We sell Trunk Straps, : Shawl Straps, Address ¥ - ed, assisted by more than forty oth- | tal frontal of white ¢ er bishops and archbishops in full | white roses SECOND SECTION. . THE DAILY -- YEAR 74. -- EE -- BAPTISM EE ---- OF Ceremony Was Witnessed By a Brilliant Assem- blage of Foreign; Princess, Diplomats and Grandces of Kingdom. Madrid, June l.--The baptism of the and the floor was covered with Turk- infant prince of the Asturias was formed with regal pomp and magnifi- | were ranged on ¢ cence in the royal chapel. { In the 8 Queen Christina was godmother, and | been erected r Carindal Dinaldini, the pal nuncio,'| for the members of represented the pope as godfather. | corps and Cardinal Sahcha, the archbishop of | court and state. x Toledo and primate of Spaing offline | The altar was decorated with a fou- hood, the * wax taper, the basin, the - and covered with | ewer, the marchpane and the cotton wool "antl the veil. The infant prince was carried by his er | ish carpets Halberdher iress, Christening font of the and clusters of carna- canonicals, and surrounded by a bril- | tions. 3 Pee ba} ¢ { nurse, and Queen Christina and Ca liant assemblage of foreign princes, Precisely at noon a salvo of artil- iH on R A Id n ua : i 3 he oa grandees and civil and military offic | lery announced that the procession dina Rinaldiny, as godmother anc . Tan Lad left the st partments, whage | deputy gddfather, followed. King Al Long hefore moon yesterday, the | it had been m lled hy the cham¢ | fonso walked alone fo wate the gals vlaza and approac "ca | berlain. The f the chapel were | uniform of a captain etary Swit Orders of the Golden Fleece and advanc- } Charles 11, : at the The ambassadors extfaordinary came next. They included the Archduke Eu- 3 ing the emperor of Aus- a moment later thrown w ! Id b ! the chambhe were filled with spectators, ed the prelates and other distingu d x ed guests as they drove to the palace | ing slowly down the galles in state carriages. head of the glittering pre rlain cou ion. The chapel itself, which consists { Four ~macehearcrs followed yh Ee ae cL Ura Pop cmenting only of a small nave, was too small |ch mberlain. and after them came the tl ¢ of Portugal: Prince Arthur of to accommodate all the members of EF andees, covered, and walking two Connaught, represes King Ed the court who were entitled to witness and two s ward. and Prince Le 1, represent the ceremony. but many who were un- Then came leek carrving lo 0 80 Kaiser able to see the actual baptism had ax OR MussIve S 8 ; Syn Behind them: came Spanish in opportunity of viewing the impo holical articles used christen. 1 4 Princess Fulalie and Princess procession from the gallery which | ing. The grandees Jira the former wore a white loads fram' the state apartments to | Tovar, Montem befar ar 3 $ wd magnificent the chapel ro, and the Counts Vell cess Isabella 1 with thir na and Sama. The tapestries, } The salt-eellar and the robe, the This gallery was ad ty-two splendid Ge ---- ter and Prine Pe = -- pf ! pal official i PE RQCK and gentler ! : Quintet of Beautiful Amateur Actresses. The fe ! brought espe ally: from t Church San Domingo de Guzman for the christening, stood on urider a golden ha; who wore avers with priceless, pt » the bish ed on eith platiorm ince and em y ery quict, and when nal Sancha poured the from the River Jordan on his head, murmured slightly, but did not ore, Immediately after the christening the taken into the preshytery, formal inveititure of vari of chivalry, including the took place ardinal n rT Deum, and rriedd back to Queen partments, baptismal baby was where the yrders HOW TO KEEP EMPLOYEES. Semi-ready Company Solves Problem of Holding Good Men. Montreal Gazette.) Far away from the smoke and dust of factory and railway, the Semi- ready buildings in wntreal are mo dels of puritan simplicity and gene- rous proportions. ' they are on the streed leadling to the beautiful park an the top of Mount Royul. When one goes through this splen- did factory, equipped with every mo- derd feature, amd governed by a rhymthic svetem, one cfases to won- der 'why the best journeyman tailors in Canada seek service under the in- ternational trade emblem of the "Semi-ready" company. The Semi- | x . : -- is picture represents the five daughters of Mrs. Brooking, --r IY hat ah Neh Cart; England, and the late George Brooking, of Dart- pradys wt a a a ie mouth, Devoa, England, and Risagua, Chile. Three of them appear- When a journéyman. tailor spends ed in the amateur performance of The Ideal Husband,' given at the Imperial Threatre, London, in aid of the Ibero-American Benevol- ent Society, and proved themselves actresses of a talent well above the ordinary. Miss Maria Brooking (seated in the centre of the group) was a charming Lady Chitern, Miss Lillian Brooking looked and played the part of Mrs. Cheveley quite {aultlessly, and Mrs. Donald im thurn (who stands close to her in the®hotograph) was the Lady Basildon. The Ilbero-American Renevolent 9 Society exists for the benefit of poqr Spaniards and South Americans in London, who number something like 40,000, three vears forgetting his old ideas and learning the Semi-ready svstem he carmot be coaxed from sich attrac. tive surroundings. The H. D. Bibby Co., 78-80-82 Princess htroet ------------ Learning is wisdom with a large portion of the experience extracted Wade's € Paste, in tubes, 15e¢., J at Wade's Drug Store, high aritarier of the Ianto Domingo de Guzman ithe Royel Clap KINGSTON, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1907, RE THE ROYAL BA - 4 i TAN -- i a [Ovo fo bbe Ning 004s wy Fo lhe BROADBRIN'S AWFUL CONDITIONS EXISTING IN THE STATE OF KENTUCKY. It is Risky For a Juror to De- clare Even a Murderer Guilty --The United States People Should Renew. Their Oath of Fealty. Special | ( nder Letter No. 1,588 time this of the birth of the re t house in the city of on the Fourth of July, their lives, cacred hons + nat they would sup | port and maintain the Declaration of | Independence re mde, and when the | old court bell rang out a joy: | ous peal proclaimed "Liberty inhabitants = thereof," they they were' creating a system, the wis of man ever ¢unceived since creation dawn and that would last till the crack of doom. Eight years of bitter and relentless war followed. Home were wrecked, fortunes were scattered to the winds, sons fought with fathers and brothers. with hrothers, Peace came at last, when both parties, hav. ing destroyed all that could bq des. troved,sank down exhausted on the battlefield, leaving behind the deadly aftermath of war in poverty and sul- fering untold. There were, thirteen se- parate colonies, loaded with debt, which had no means of paying, With no army, no navy, no judiciary, to administer the civil and: criminal courts and mo settled system for the collec tion of revenue for'the support of the government, each of these colonies de sired to be an independimt republic, free from interference of anv of its as sociates. It did not take long to de- monstrate that such a condition of business association was impossible, and that on the first sign of danger the weaker party was certain to go to the watl. The formation of a stronger fraternal head brecame an overwhelming necessity and in 1781 the, fedoral constitution was perfected, and, with several important amend ments; has been supreme law -- of the land ever since. Our federal system oYords the citizen the greatest protection in the pursuit of" life, liberty and happiness. Tt has been our hoast when comparing our government with that of any existed in the nast, that we surpass them all, and there ie no time better claim is jactified. © With an army and navy, with a judiciary: and system supposed to be in good werk. men who met in the old | hil gdelphia | 5 pledged | their properties, and their | hs | marked, » throughout the land and to all the thought | { est and the best, for the government | ing order, there are now twg trials going on revealing the most revolting and atrocious system of cold-blooded assassination that has ever cursed the criminal calendar, In Idaho a mem- ber of one of the principal bodies of min ng strikers, Haywood, is on trial for the murder oi Governor Steunen- berg, and Harry Orchard, one of the most desperate thugs in the villainous sasosfution; has been accépled 0a stp 5s. ovidenece. No more terrible glory than that told by him was ever heard in a court of justice, Counting the men he killed in blowing up. mines, with those despatched by Private assassination Wis vietims could not have been far short of fifty. He a a he . i" : 3the ways illed sixteen wtrikers in tho blowing aored of ry" : lly 1 end the up of a single mine. Harry was a model thug. He killed for money, for not one of those he killed Bad ever injured him. A number those he did not even know by sight and a man had to be sent along to point out the victim, and with all that precauticn he killed the wrong man. The Miner's' Secret Service did not pay whem he killed the wrong men. Again, in as well organ- ized a state as Kentucky, a judge of one of her courts has boasted that he has had thirty-three of his enemies put to death without ever raising a hand himself, A hundred dollars seem- od to be the usual price for in as sassination, These assassins were well known; their regular business was murder, sometimes as an amusement they took shelter by working as min- ers, but when the removal of some one wax desired, the persom who wished | his neighbor put out of the way only spuntante "| had to hand one hundred dollars to New York, June 13.--In three works | Fo pry ion . will celebrate the} Orchard, and his enemy was removed with neatness and dispatch ard no questions asked, In the moun- tninons districts of Kentucky, where these trials are now going on it was almost impossible to get a jury. la juror failed® to acquit an assassin, or to disagree with the other. elaven, his life was the penalty of his rashness. And, not only his own lit, but those of eviry member of his family were oner or later, for the death excoufed "with the toll, which was dread certainty of fate, In view, of the terrible happenings which are report- od every day, is i$ not a duty ich avery American owes to the land that gave him birth, to rally around jthe Any F394, shirt will out- wear any ordinary shirt that costs the same, One/feason is the way we sew\ the cuffs -- '""gutter- seamed," edges turned flattened, and sewn wi fine, tough thread. - Won't fray nor crack. . Button- holes worked better than other | nation that pow exists, or ever has | than the present to sée how far that | Rl Sate ies governs avery etail of every ¥®M, shirt ~to make it better than seems needful. Pay the same, and get more ghirt- ease for your money. 208 | J costly and priceless jewel, the free sell it for a do Wo welcom Ce hates and all "allegiance, The Dane, Swede; and earth," and also ion must and shall he preserved. Correspondent," when he takes up his newspaper in head-first on solid type relating to a single atroei- ous assassination. I paper in disgust, and then I took up another paper the first . thing shat caught my eve was "Knights Tem: plars in the Holy Land." R told the story beautifully, of the desperate charge up the Via Dolorosa and th levelling of Mount Moriah, where once stood the Temple of Solomon, where Abraham ® where Jacob wrestled with the Angel, till he won from him his The brave knight fell by the wavside mortally hurt, his left log was en, five ribs were smorhed, and he was in a'general had in two hours his corm had disappear 'dled brain can create. flag whicki is the symbol of our na: tionality and the defender of our constitution and swear, by the mem- ory of the patriots who founded it that anarchy and trewson shall mo longer have a voice in our govern ment? We have wuflered an. uh, We have given way too much, We have par with an public lands and there is nothing more to give except that man's ballot which we are now harter- ing 'away for | mothing to a set of ignorant forei who will willingly e the German, the subieots of ~ and al} "owe her! rest as- Japanese, inside of our treaty limits, will find a hearty greeting up to the full measure of their deserts, ; The Fourth of July/is only & flew weeks off and there can bo no better time to renew our oath of fealty on the nation's altar, and join in the im- mortal apostropby of Lincoln, pledge. ing that 'the government of the peo- ple, and for the people and by the people shall not perish = from the to renew the oath of Webster, "By the eternal, the un+ It's terribly" trying to "Our own the mormng to run seventeen 'columns of threw down the Tsano to saorifios, blessifig. "repait. He Had been troubled With corns on his left toe) he got a box of Gully'y Com Cure, And od. Get it at yopr deuggist or write us for it, price 0c. a box: This is journalism in 1907, On my desk is a paper of twenty-two Pages. Ten years ago it boasted 'that' no illustrated ad- vertisement was or would be pod It now fills four 'mortal pages with the most stupid pictures that an ad eo country newspapers are now furnishing the t and most respectable examples of e journglism published in the Un- ited States. 4 Last week when the eclebration of the, Protestant Sunday schools tack Place there were 130 children in line. t was a glorfous sight to see fine healthy specimens of the human race, who are to he the fathers and mothers of the next generatiom, It is much to be regretted that the' nar- row-minded policy which has govern od the Sunday school celohratiops in Brooklyn for the last twenty years still prevails, a policy that excluded | the children of Universalists and Uni- tariuns, it was a disgraceful , exhibi- tion of narrow-minded. higotry .of which they should be ashamed, I won- der if they have ever read that Christ said: "Suffer little children to come unto Me. and forbid thems not. Sor of such is the Kingdom of Heaven. hint won BROADBRIM. Farias Poem Endangered. Tennyson, just after firishing the manuscript of "Tn Memoriam," ha trouble with hig*iapdlady and gave up his lodgings. He forgot the wann- seript, but could not be induced to i: by hand-- won't ravel. me go back and face. the landlady," His friend, Coventry Patmore, who was with him at the time, returned to the lodgings, forced his way in and found the poom, which alrepdighad been thrown carelessly into a drawer rubbish, Sor = PAGES ; "First Aid to the HEN Heartburn, Stomach, Headache, or any of these. forerunners of Indig appear, Old Dr, Cascarpt wants to be on the spot in your pocket, Br , but exerolses naturally the muscles that Intestines and Bowels line the walls of- the " Want of Exerolse weakens and relaxes the Bowel~ Muscles, just as it weakens Arm and Leg muscles. Old Dr. Cascaret goes directly after these Bowel-Muscles. Hé wakes them up Exercise that they don't need any help fo do their duty. Heavy dinners, late suppers, whi wine or beer drinking, nervous excitement, sudden exposurp to sold ar hes asda loss of Social Sunshine it saves, Life thin Cascaret Boy don't-notice its - presence. in pursé or Contains six Candy tablets~Price Cents a Box at any Druggist's. : i the genuine, made by the Sterling Remedy in bulk. ~ Bvery tablet 1906-AY

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