Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 15 Feb 1910, p. 4

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

i Fr a" i ab----" pi TY -- A i t i 5 i | i | i ¥ 2 Lee Vii BEARS ARIE MI IET BBO HE] Bi Geb rte v a 3 ey * + PAGE FOUR. "> "THEY ACTUALLY CURE RHEUMATISM Qin Pills Prove It Tt is one thing to claim to cure Rhen- matism. 1t is quite another to do it, Cin Pills bear out every claim we make for they are not a "favorite prescription" or a "marvellous dr "of a "wone derful secret preparation." They are simply a common-sense, scientific combination of medicines that have proved their value in Rheumatism, Kidney Troubles, and Disor Jver, Ogden, N. 8, July ist, 16508, "1 have been troubled with Rhewca- tism so bad that I could not work, A doctor tended me and advised me to 4 to the hospital but all of no good until a friend told me to try Gin Pills. I did so and after using a few boxes, I am per- fectly cured. I am recommending Gin Pills." D. J. LAWLER, There is no reason why Mr, Lawler's case should be any different from yours, He took Gin Pills and cured himsell of Rheumatism, Why don't you take them and cure yourself ? We will let you test them free, A sample of Gin Pills will be seat you, ab. solutely free, if you write the National Drug & Chem. Co, Limited Dept, B.. Taronto. 2 ALAA LLLLLLLLLLLLLL PIP ITIVIIIVITIITIIITITIYYY Another Week for Low Priced Oranges Fresh arrivals Sweeter than last week. A AAA ARLALLALALALL AL Bitter Oranges for Marmalade. Grape Fruit, 5c to 15¢ Each. W. H. Carnovsky, Brock dy I Sts. ALA LRLLLALLLDLLALLLLLL P9000 000000PPVPIIIVPIVIIIIIPIIVIITITITITITIYTTYYY All lddtddrdlalddldddddoddddddsddddddtd 305 000088060060600000 VOPIVIIIVIIIVTIYIIVIIOVIVYOIIYYVE ® 'OUR SAW MILL Is buzzing every day cutting Heard Elm and Oak Timbers and Baw Logs, making lumber, not butchering if, but sawing it square and mtraight. We give close attention to details, and when you buy Lumber and Timber | here you know it is manufactur. ed right: S. Anglin& Co. Wellington St. North. Phone 66. Men's Working Boots All Solid Leather, 20 per cent. off all Lines to Clear. 70 BROCK ST. (Adams' Old Stand). Cliff's Real Estate Agency ESTABLISHED 1882. Where you can Buy or Scl Property. Also Insurance written in best companies. GEO. CLIFF, 95 Clarence St. WE RAISED NARS rn] without raising the Price We did this by Jreat care in selecting our coal and extraordinary (EY THE EEA BS screening. . . ment it iv assumed that POPPI VIVIIIVIIVIVTIITITY | girls ill there would be an iH ill these | was only | showed Hi sons i { have doctors' d she inference i | an 1 she inference is | and ssJack" Johnston, -- DAILY 18-310 King Street at $8 per year yelock b w KLY BRITISH WHIG, 16 pages. din ts on Monday and g at $1 ing price of Dally $3 1.50 per year = of the best Job Prift. ; rapid. stylish, kK: nl proved presses. eR] ar The British EDW, J. B. PENSE, ging Director TORONTO ( § and 20 Queen City Cham- bers 2 wgyrch Bt, ro v HB Smalipeive. J.P. representative Daily Wing. THE GRAVING DOCK, The council has agreed to submit to the people, for their approval, a by- wh exempt the drydo® from taxation for a period of twenty The by-law carries with reasonable contingencies, law h propokes to vears, it certain and one is that the company manag: ling the dock In | leasing the premises from the govern- ! certain sum of money annually. business is | {meant because men would not pay | 810,000 per annum on rental for a& | property without the assurance they could earn it and a good deal more through the operatiom of the years. not only pro- poses to do the work of repairing for which the dodk is so pesuliarly fitted, hut shipbuilding a< well and therefore a new and very important industry is being established. It is worthy of the people's support, amd there is mo that it will be cordially extend- The company doubt ed. DODGING A RESPONSIBILITY. There is a bill before the New York will hold parents or guardians of children legislature which, if passed, the responsible for the sins or offences of of the sixteen. Senator Davis, the projector of the measure, is satisfied that many children are going astray through the neglect or indifference of the children, and there are a good miany who will with to agree him. occasion comment upon the scene the ago, when several their which occurred. in court some time were confronted with par- ents and the assurance demanded that of thing like parental authority so far as "There yarent, a father, who I exercise some- minors were concerned, ong any manifestation of grief," Il said one who had witnessed the scene, "The mothers acted as if they were affected, though the cumstances were enough to break their not deeply cir: would have parents punished for their failure to direct the lives of their hearts." Senator Davis and control | children, and he scems to be aiming at the impossible, WRECKED BY MORPHINE. A physician in Ottawa laments the {| fact that an increasing number of per are sufierers from the morphine habit. puzzle of the low they get the dmg is the profession. They must prescriptions, but the lvictims get the morphine somehow, that they revive an old prescription and use it again "The probably ! needed the morphine when he was for the medical man, and it again. patient [ill and was given a prescription it," said that vives which a certain prac tit i joner said in Kingston not go long Lago, namely, that morphine should and that encouraged not be prescribed, | should be | handle it. Nor is there very much ex- no one to buy and | cuse for the misapplication of an old } : . [prescription. Each physician should be dated, an order from a the taken by the druggist an fyled. {A duplicate or copy should be easily detected. Seeing that the morphine { habit isso destructive of one's {fulness it should be guarded against in every way, and it is for the tors of the city to protect their pa- | tients from the injury of the drug. | There are some people who should not {be allowed rumstances. use doe- to use it under amy cir SHOULD BE NO HANDICAPS, The people been giving some considerable attention to of Kingston have { the bread question, and they appear {to be pretiy generally against the {Nickle hill. There may be some desive for the repeal of the act now in foree, but there is no public evidence of it. {The bakers do not want it, and the | peopl have made no request for it The oeeasion of it is, therefore, hard to understand. There is a powerful agitation in the province on the bread question, but it is for a standard loaf, and at such a price as the circumstances of the market demand. Hon. Mr. Fisher has demonstrated, and to the satisfaction of most people, that if flour is dear at times it is not due to the. cost of wheat as it haves the farmers' hands. The millers have to do with the value of flour, and, hesides, there have been sometimes the speculators who will try to corner the market, , The standard loaf, however, should not be affected by the vicissitudes of the wheat market, that is standard ine jan to size. The price may vary, bul the price only. The proposal to refer THE WHIG, 77th YEAR GRITISH WHIG, published at Kingston, Ontario, Editions at 2.30 and 4 § a yea To charge lor postage bad KX Whig Publishing Co., Lid. may expend in wages a! that | children--when they are under i The Whig has had} magistrates | should | every municipal body to the influence of the lobby, and it is not well thai there should be a different weight for Napanee and Belleville and Brockville and Kingston, seeing that the bakers of these places have to do a business with each other, and that they should not. be necessarily handicapped. WHY PRICES ARE HIGH. Speaking before a literary society in Montreal, Hon. Sidney Fisher said' "i insist upon getting Iresh. laid eggs in the middle of winter in this city, you must pay for them. You have been tempting the farmer's boys to come to the city by higher salar ies, shorter hours, the amusements a city affords, and your contempt for the hayseed who may sometimes wear dirty clothes, You are responsible for the decrease in the production of the necessities of life, or for their failure to keep pace with the increased con- sumption, and you are, t efore, re sponsible for the increased cost of liv- ing about which we are hearing y much just now." : i you 80 He followed this by giving statistics of the most valuable character. The production of wheat, the staple arti- cle, had been enormously increased in fifty years in Canada, but the price of {it has decreased. In 1860¢it was $1.12 {per bushel; in 1880 it was 31.16; in 1900 in dropped to 62c.; in 1909 it had risen to B84c., but was still a long way from the rating of former years. The older countries were doing before in the matter {and Canada of grain production, would realize some day that her soil would lose its produc tiveness unless its people learned to {fertilize the soil. "We must," he add- ted, "guard against profligacy in {the use of our national resources." | The Canadian grain has been mak- ing a further comparison between the values of many of the goods entering into household and consumption, says : "Apples and potatoes are cheaper this, year than usual, because there was a good supply of both. Ii the same could be said of hog products, salmon, etc, they would be cheaper too. "With respect to imported fruits, they are generally cheaper; few changes {occur in spices and vegetables. | "Flour is dearer this year, because {the price of wheat to the farmer is { higher. Beans are up for the reason {that the farmer is holding on to his {supply, and the demand is good. "From the above facts and figures it {should be plain why there has been | any advance in the cost of diving this {year over previous years--the farmer evidently holds the key to the situa tion. "It is a significant fact' that many {of the young men of the farms are | leaving and crowding into the cities. Can this be the cause of the lesser {production 7 If so the educational campaign to 'keep the boys on the farm' should be waged more vigor ously = and. probably in a few years' time, things would be back to their normal condition again." On the phase of the subject Hon. Sidney Fisher is most emphatic. Reverting to the question of the in- creased cost of living, the minister said : "We have been making money rapidly and easily in the last few years. We are spoiling the producers. So long as we insist upon the best of everything in eatables we will keep up the prices of the staple food pro- ducts. It is the wastefulness of our people ihat is responsible for the high prices. We are so prosperous and so suddenly rich in Canada that we won't have anything but the best, and we must not grumble if we have to pay for it." latter } EDITORIAL NOTES. A" discovery has - been made--that the prices of funy. Hugs are soaring, neckties and cigareiles are cheaper. while Mr. Mann, of the C.N.R., says bis firm is being pressed to divert the rail- to Ottawa via Kingston and Gananoque. We hope the pressure will have some effect. way The Mail quotes the late Sir John Macdonald on the naval question. No better evidence could be afforded of the fact that the conservative party is just pow practically without a leader. Alberta is to go into technical edu- eation--without demanding that the dominion shall pay for it. Alberts is leading the way in a great movement. Hits government realizes what the peo- {ple want. { Dr. Charcot, the French explorer, {has relieved the people of suspense re- {garding his Antarctic expedition. He {did not find the pole, but he found {some land which will hereafter figure lin the maps of the world. } The Ottawa 'correspondent Not the | Montreal Herald thinks that Mr. Sif- {ton is too big a man to remain out lof Canada's public life. Could he be better employed than as head of the Conservation Commission ? That job requires a really big man. The Ottawa Journal refers to a Ca- nadia navy as a cheap insurance for the millions of dollars which the erops { { t forty-five cents per head of the popula tion. This is a new and striking fea- ture of the naval discussion. Someone has called the Whig's atten- tion fo the Spectstor's argument that the anti-combines' bill will not he of- fective, that what the country needs is a trade commission. A public pro- sector is what the Whig and it holds to that opinion. favours, If the Gillette suit against the Raes, of Ottawa, succeeds the business man will not be permitted to do whist we likes with his own. The manufac turer of the products will dictate prices for which he must his goods. This would be a remarkable thing, to say the least of it, the sell Sir Edward Clouston, the general manager bf the Bank of Montreal, has béen suggested as the successor of Sir George Drummond in the senate. He is a conservative. Suppose he is. He is an able man, one of Canada's great- est financiers, and he should be heard in the councils of the nation. WHIG'S FASHION HINT. A a EXCLUSIVE COPYRIGHT, NEW YORK HERALD CU. Green cashmere de soie gown ORIENTAL IS BARRED, Sovereign Grand Lodge Sends Out Circular. According to a circular from the grand sive of the 1LO.O.F., the sover- eign grand lodge has decreed that henceforth that body will not tolerate the conferring of what is known as the "Oriental Degree of Humility and Per- fection" by the various sanctums throughout the United States and Canada. The circular, which will be read at all Oddfellows' lodges, states that any members of the Oddfellows' order who, as Oddfellows, belong to the Oriental lodges or participate in their meetings, will be expelled from the order, and any Oddiellows' lodge giving the use of their rooms to the Orientals to hold meetings are liable to have their charters cancelled, In other words, thé sovereign grand lodge will not recognize the Oriental branches, or any members who belong tol them. The Oriental degree was formed sev- eral years ago for the purpose of ad vensine the social side of (he lodge ife. The movement grew so rapidly that the various branches finally ex- tended until they possessed all the powers of a grand lodge. Owing to the fant that certain of the branches carried the "social" end of the meet- ings to excess, the sovereign grand lodge repeatedly declined to officially recognize the Orientals, and although several threats have been made to place a ban on the movement, this bas not been done until the present. -------- Fight Disease. Don't catch cold, don't cateh cur any disease. You can't H your blood is right. Life and the vital elements that fight disease and weak- ness are in the blaod. Strength and effective resisting power can be had by use of Wade's Iron Tounic Pills (Laxa- tive). They are a great nerve strenythener and blood maker. In boxes, 20%, at J. B. Mcleod"s drug stores, corner King and Broek streets {Wade's old stand), and corner Princess and Mon- treal streets. Money back if not sa tisfactory. or im- -- Vanity. veland Leader. stuck on himself, aint he? "Ig be ? Say. do you know why he gave up the idea if becoming a physi cian 7 "Why #7 "He was afrakl he couldnt feel a lady's pulse without giving her heart trouble." ------------------ William Wethers, Toronto, gre shot and killed his wife and mother inlaw Monday afternoon and then committed suicide after a revolver battle with a score of police. I. E. Suckling has been appoiuted geoeral nt of the passenged partment oh CPR. Adantic ser: vice, with head office in Toronto. Sentence was suspended in the case of Charles E, Brown and Charles Push who pleaded guilty, at Belleville, steabng ore from the Delora mine. A government measure, introduced in the Ontario legislature, is thought to indicate new judicial appointments. Rev. Victor J. Gilpin, B.A, late pas tor of the Unitarian church, at Lon don, Ont., is dead of typhoid fever. THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG., TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15. 1910. HATES THEM. University Doctor Says Nature Hates a Suffragette. New York, Feb. 14.--"Even if women are granted the suffrage they will not kesp it long. Natwe will eliminate from the race, in the course of three or four geverations, all who care about exercising it." This was the opimion expressed to the national league for the civic education Wo men by Dr. James J. Ford, Dean of the Fordham University medical school. Dr. Walsh quoted history to prove his assertion, and showed that mare than one woman made a sudden daftv'for the front in intellectual mat ters bmly to fall back agin inevithbly to domestic duties. "There seems to be a biological law." he said, "that the women wh) take an interest in things outside the home get rubbed out. It is not the Creator who does it, but nature. They rub out them selves. It.is done quite smoothly, and we, in the midst of it, don't notice it. of At Edmonton a mulatto named Me Cormick shot his wife and sent a bul- let into his own brain. with a wound in the base of ber brain the woman lies in the hospital in a dangerous condition. Old Folks Coughs Because Resisting Power is Pneumonia Often Follows. Weak Tells of a Sure Cure and a Never-fail- ing Comfort for Colds, Coughs, Catarrh. One af the worst terrors of old age is that distressing chronic cough. Colds settle on the chest, are wrong: ly treated with drug-laden and chest weakening cough syrups, and car to year the condition has grown worse. Formerly the cough when fine weather came, now bad weather makes it worse fits of racking, life & burden. went but and tearing, Youghing make away Because vou are old reason for suf fering with everlasting coughing, those ble chest troubles difficult breathing can be thoroughly cured with Catarrhozone. You simply breathe the healing vapor of Ca tarrhozone and stantly its rich samic fumes ried hy fnto the of is no tern and are your tin' est the nose, chest, bron- tubes and lungs Just think of it--a direct breathable cine, full of cesses throat, chial soothing, antiseptic pile pss nies that reaches Sore congested mem- brane in two seconds. No drugs to take--no- thing to harm the ag- ed or the imfant cause Catarrhozone is the purest, safest, cough, catarth* and cold remedy ever de vised. Mrs. M., E. Waliord, wife of a well-known grocer in Fast Shef- field, writes "For three years ] suf- fered with a hard racking cough and brotrhial irritation which annoyed me so much at night 1 couldn't sleep. I tried many remedies, catarrh tab- lets, sprays, syrups, ete., but they on ly helped for a short time. Catarrho- zome brought me wonderful comfort from the first. 1 inhaled its balsam- ic fumes every hour or two and am now free from any trace of cold, bronchitis and ecatarrh. 1 can go out im all kinds of weather and don't take cold.' There is no remedy so certain and safe as Catarrhozone, but being a good remedy it is imitated. Beware of the substitutor Large Catarrhozone lasts two months, price Sl smaller We, and 50c. All reliable dealers, every be sizes, from |. Bibby's Now Sell Trunks TOG See our window display. Bibby's Great 50c Nechw Bbby's Sore Clases | ~ Saturday Evenings 10 O'clock. Bibby's Great Shirt Sale $1.00 Shi Soft bosom and stiff bosom styles. See our window display. Our New Hats for Spring are Ready. Bibby's Now Sell Suit Cases GERY smn FOR we rts for 69c. All sizes. Neckwear Sale ear for 25¢c. medi- | The H.D. The Bg Store With Little Prices. | S600000000000000000000000000060000000000000 aaa aaa a a A a 8 CAAA ABDAARASSABADALSSSABEADLLALSLLADSSD, Se itanh THE MAINE DISASTER. How, U.S. Battleship Was Blown up Twelve Years Agios Boston, Mas., Feb. 14.--The official version . of the disaster to the battle hip Maine, in Havana harbor, twelve years ago, revealed, on Sunday hight, by Curtis Guild, ex-govermor. Mr. Guild learned the "story inthe cabin of the battleship Texas, from General Fitzhugh Lee, American con: sul-general at Havana, at the time of tha Maine's blowing up. writing to Mr. Guild, said : "The Maine lay snoored to the buoy where the harbormister had stationed her. She was anchored over the mine, not with the intention of destroying, but to place her in a position so that if she opened hostilities she could be taken care of. On the night of Febru ary 12th, there was a banquet of high-handed young Spanish officers Champagne and stimulants flowed hike water. Some inflammatory spirit who knew the mine plans rushed out to the electric button and loesed the current. Thire was an explosion and 266 men of the United States forces weve hurl ed into eternity." " Toronto Street Market. - Toronto, Feb, 14.-~Wheat, new, per bush., $1.10. wheat, red, per bush., $1.10; wheat, rr bush., $1.04 to 21.05; Oate, per bush, ide. to 45c.; Peas, per bush, SX white, goose, Gen. lee}. he, to Ble Ha Ned Ker Barle per bush Rye, per bush, 68¢c. to Teg timothy, ton, $18 to $20; Hay, ton, $9 to $2; Sraw, per t to $15; seeds ~Alsike £6.25 to 86.40; No, 1, # to $5.50: No. 3, 84.70 to No. 1, bush,, 37.65 to 88 timoth per bush, £1.40 to $1.60 dressed hog £11 to $11.50; butter, dairy, per J We, to Be; hutter, per I oh. to 24c.: egus, new laid, per doze 2c. to 35c.; eggs, fresh, per dozen x chickens, per ih., l6c. to 17e,; duck per Ih., 160, to 18¢.; turkeys, We, to o.; geess, per lb, 150; fowl, per Th, 12. to leg per bbl, 81.50 to &3, bag, by loud, 85¢c. dozen, We, to 10e.; #1 to 21.15; cauliflower, to 81, cabbage, per 75¢.: best, per hindguarters, $10.50; beef, per £7.50; beef 30; beel, medium, carcase, mutton, per $5 to prime, per ewt.. 8.50 to 10.50 lamb, per lb., 12¢. to 20e «1 clay inferior appl pobatoes, Pp to 60e,; celery, p ba per dozen, T°8 dozen, Be, £0.50 £6 RON ¢ to $4 onms, - per {orequar Lers choice, carcase, £7 ewt, £10 Sore, Cracked Lips. Nothing will heal them a Ix. Hamilton's Ointment three times a day--crack tissue forms--trouble is all gon day You'll find a thousand u healing ointment like Dr. Han Buy a He, box ' jn ton s A BERNETHY'S FEBRUARY" SALE EY BARGAINS! BARGAINS !| BARGAINS ! Lots of Bargains in Men's Shoes, Women's Shoes, Boys & Girls' Shoes, Children's Shoes, Moccasins, Trunks, Valises and Suit Cases. "COME AND SEE OUR BARGAINS." B Broke Back, But Recovered. Brocki¥iie, Ont, Feb. 14.--Charles Butler, the C.P.R. brakesman injured last July in the local yards of the company by being knocked from his train while passing under a bridge, and since a patient at the general hospital, has recovered sufficiently go to relatives in Ottawa. Patler had hie back broken, and for a long time his life hung in the balance. Now he - ee is able to walk with the aid of crutches, but will be a cripple the re mainder of bis days. His partial re covery is consiflered a fmirade. { A woman who is weak, nervous sleopless, and who hah cold hands 16 | feet, cannot feel and act Vike a well Carter's Iron Pills equalize person. ithe circulation, remove Dervousposs and give strength and rest. -- "Is G and and | to the abridgement of the fnfluen Hain gs r-------------------------------------------- -------- | Gilman Mclean was attacked ld how ed jdog, at London, which showed = ptones of rabbies and City Aad Jowel's daughter was bitten by other dog. The new Spanish premier ix ple the Untholic church in that countr Pr. A. Hollman, Bufislo, was chef president of the XI Pri Phi rater meeting in Toronto, »od Tea If you use it you know it is good. W HiT ae you tell your friends ?

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy