Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 17 Feb 1910, p. 8

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she CSE Cost of Living High Sterling Orange Slicers And Make Marmalade our way you will save dollars. lade at 20c each Saving on Season's Supply $6.10 And the only outlay Is for our Slicer, which is & pleasure to work with at GOUGHED ALL WIGHT Till This Recipe Was Tried, Cure Followed in 53 Hours, A promirent medical man, who suf- fered with a severe cough and cold on the lungs, oflen ing kept awake all night, snd w by loss of sleep, finally discovered a simple formula whice will cure any cough in five hours by the clock. It ix a laxa- tive tonic cough syrup which can be mula fs here given for the benefit those who pass sleepless Bighite painful paroxysras. Those w tried it say it is magical, any high-priced, slow-acting cough medicine ever sold, Mix in a bottle one-half ounce fluid wild cherry bark, one otince compound ecasemce cardiol | snd three oumps syrup white pine compound. Take twenty drops every half hour for four hours. Then take onehalf to one teaspoonful three or four times a day. Give children less according to age. This will fone up and rid the of deep-seated coughs every time, oi in have What the Mercantile and Financial Times of New York under date of February 14, 1910, said of the above Company : SHOULD APPEAL TO CONSERVA- TIVE INVESTORS, Sound Investment Value of the Stock of the Travellers' Life Assurance Company of Canada, Which is Now Beng Organized by In. fluential Financial Interests in Montreal Under the Brightest and Most Encouraging Auspices Why Lité Insurance Stocks Are Good Investments and Why This One is Particularly So. (8taft Correspondence.) In its purely commercial aspects, life is more solidly butiressed than any other business. 'The assump- _ tion of mortality, of interest, of ex- and contingencies are such that with good management it cannot fail. Jt is unlike any other business in the matter of overproduction, of miscal- culating, the demand, or in purchasing yaw material at too high a price. The seller, not the buyer, fixes the price. The seller produces no more than he can dispose of; and he, therelore, never 'has any unsalable stock on his hands or any which he must sell at a sacri- fice. We repeat that a life insurance business, based on correct principles and under good management, cannot fail, and a general appreciation of this t of the investing pub- the stocks of all good life jnsurange companies command a ver sremitin whenever they are of Altar the A itten dis A rmstrong committee a closures in 1906 we see Thomas F. Ryan purchasing a controlling interest insth uitalle Life Auurauve 3a ciety, of , the total capitali- 20 n of which aa is only ,000, for a wam said to be in ex cess of 85,000,000, and some months ago this controlling interest was wold to interests identified with J. P. Mor gan & Co., at a price unstated, but which, it is le to suppose, was somewhat in excess of that which Mr. Ryan vil. Life insurance stocks Lome --idom, or practically never, trad: © od in on 1 © open market, and if any are offered for ale Shey are JHuiekly snapped These ts ma tl stocks of ail promising young organi- gations particularly attractive to con- servative investors, and we will, there fore, no doubt, be doing many of our readers a service directing their at- tention 16 a sound and promising life insurance flotation, now heing organ- "here in Montreal by powerful and tial interests. We refer to the Travellers Lile As surance Company, which received a pion. charter some, time ago, and will in the mear future receive a license to do business in all parts of the coun: try. This will be strictly on old line y, and being purely Canadian i in character, its management will be strong Canadian business men and its * funds will matevially assist in the de velopment of the rescurces of the coun Ay. The Traw Lile will have offices at 69 Notre | stroet, west, Mont real, and will have an authorized cap i of 31.900, 900. sud wil be- . a fully paid capital mono awd & surplus of $250,000 | ant directors will be ; lmsiness. men, and will be fully any that have ever company, the president being one of the first amd best known millionaires in the country. The personmel is mot completed as yet, but we are safe in saying that few similar organizations of the kind in Canada have beon organized with such influential con- nection as has the Travellegs Life. The chief factor in the organization of* the company is George H. Allen, a life undervriter of over 26 years ace tive and successful experience. Mr. Allen commenced his business career at the age of seventeen by entering the employ of the Standard Life As surance Company in a junior capacity and was promotad from one position of trust to another until he became chief inspector. He held that position ten years out of the twemtysone spent in the service, of the Standard and for the past four and one half years wag manager for Montreal for the Mutual Life of Canada. Mr. Allen is very well and favorably known in life insurance activities in Uapada and the States, amd his ability and influence has been recognized on numerous occasions by his appointment to important official positions in a number of insurance associations. He was the first presi: dent of the Life Underwriters' Associ ation of Camada, being 'unanimously slected to that positiohi upon the for- nation of the association im 1906 ; anid in the same year he was elected Vice-President of the National Associ- ation of Life Underwriters at its con vention held in St. Louis. He is also wesident of 'the Montreal Insurance nstitute, and, in fact, his experience and stamling is of such a character hat he is just the man the Travellers Life needs to place it in line with the successful amd profitable life insurance interests of the Dominion. i To the investing public it will be in- teresting to learn that the company ia tisposing of its stock, which has a par salue of $100 per share, at $125, pay- went for which is to be made $20 on allotment, $15 in thirty days {here ster and 810 in sixty days from time of allotment, making a total payment of $45. The balance is to be talled some time in the future, or it may sever be called. This wo regard as n unusually safe and profitable me- lium of investment, and it is unneces- sary to remind the reader of the meat profite 10 be made by a well- nanaged lilo insurance company he strength of the management of he organization we particularize heve- vith, Its contracts of insurance will sontain all that is best in modern life nsurance and will be unusually broad and X¥beral in character, so that the neasure of protection they will afiord sll be instrumental in quickly build- ng wp a large and prefitable business for the company. We think the present opportunity to buy shares in such a pronksing com- nay as the Travellers Life is not one to be lightly overlooked, as the en- terprise is being launched under such promising auspices that its future suc: cess is pravtically assured. Vi vige interesied readers to communicate at ones with Mr. e H. Allen, care of the Travellers Life Assurance Company, of Canada, Montreal, for ny further information. required. NOTICE. Messrs. GG, H, Allen and W. 0D. Hart are in town for a few days call ing on their old friends and placiny a fow of the shares of this company. Mr. of the Rearied any Canadian insmrance Ss This is rather pointed question right from | our Tailoring Department. If we have ~ meyer made any clothes for you, we would certainly like to do so. | are many New Fabrics for spring nd we have selected the very made at home by anyone and the for- | and beats) and | We ad-{d Hart will take up the actual selling |, stook, KISSED TOO MUCH BY HIS OWN WIFE. Mr. Low.nthal Says She Makes Life a Burden by Hanging Always on His Lips. New York, Feb. 17.--Everything was running smoothly with Mr. and Mrs. dol Lowenthal, of No. 981 Forest avenue, accordmg to the husband, un- til his wife developed a fondoess for long distance osculation. 1n explaining their domestic differ- ences to Magistrate Corrigan in Mor- risami Court Mr. Lowenthal sasl the liked a kiss as well as the next man, but he had grown weary of the ten minute brand demended by his wife. He said she left him last Satunday and declared she would not retumn, whereupon he had summoned her to court for an explanation. "My husband doesn't love me any more, and that's why 1 went away,' said Mrs. Lowenthal. "What makes you think so ¥' asked the Court. "He never kisses me any more." "I she'll cut dow: the length of her kisses we'll be just as happy as ever," said Mr. Lowenthal, "hut 1 can't make a living for the two of us and the baby if she insists on drag ging each smack out for ten or fifteen minutes." "How often does she kiss you." "Every time I turn arowkl, your honor. 1 coull stand fiktle omes all right, but no man wants a woman hanging around his peck every minute he's in the house. "If 1 pick up a paper I have to put' it down and get busy because Myrtle! won't move until she gets a salute. "It's 'haven't you forgotten some- BENJAMIN FRANKLIN A THIEF, AXD ADAMS A DEFAULTER. Idols of the Revolution That Are Smashed With Vigor by a Very! Candid Historian. , New York American. Boston, Feb. 14.--James Hemry Stark, a local historian, bas provok- ed much eriticismn and abuse by state ments contained iv his latest book "The Loyalists of Massachusettes and the Other Side of the American Revo- lution." Mr. Stark calmly asserts his book contains truths which he has gathered after years of research ws which other historians have wilfully passe by. Its pages teem with facts that de- molish the altar erected to Massachu- setts' heroes of the revolution and are extremely humiliating to families who pride themselves co the isumaculacy of their ancestry, Patriotic societivs in Bostan, such as "The Soms of the Revolution," are desply aroused, as the book contains many damaging statements that can- not be refuted. Concerning the causes of the Ameri can Revolution, Mr. Stark's book says: "In Virginia the revolutionary movement of the poor whites, or erockers led by Patrick Henry, was against the planter aristocrary. it was only offs slowly amd very de Manager. liberately that Washington identified | himself with the disunionist cause. { "Patrick Henry was one of the most! unreliable men living. lle had been CHARGE OF A THIEF successively. a storekeeper, a farmer | and a shopkedgper, but he failed in all | these pursuits and became a bankrupt | gAfD JUDGE WAS AS BAD AS at twenty-four. Then he studied law] CROOKS KNOW Where you stand? We want to emphasize how important it is to I to always know just how * YOU stand in your financial af- fairs. The most practical way to keep track of your money mat. ters is to carry a CHECKING AC- COUNT in this Bank and pay all your bills by cheque. In this way YOU have a record of your expenses. YOU! always know just how much money you have on hand. and the facet that YOU have a Bank account will lead to your walching Is expenses more carefully, and YOU will save money by so doing. We cordi- ally invite YOU to call and see us. Banko! Tort Capital $4,000,000 KINGSTON BRANCH: 107 PRINCESS STREET. GEORGE B. McKAY, thing, Sol ?' every few minutes, "I've grown so used to kissing her that the other day when I started! out of a butcher shop absentmindedly aotl the butcher asked me the same thing, 1 rushed back and tried to kiss him, but he threatened me with a cléaver."' "You should be glad that your wife, thinks so much of you," said Magi | stxate Corrigan, : *f know, your honor, hut it's get- ting to be more like punishment every | day. I've been kissed to a staydstill. | fhe even went so far as to bring an on- paged couple to the house to show me' how spoony couples behaved. 1 made a protest because I'm not ruming fin osaulation plant." "] just think the world of him, judge," said Mrs. Lowenthal, advance! ing toward her husband. "Watch her, judge," shouted Lowenthal. "She's going to have i elapse." "Yoy two think too much of other Yo bé guarrelling," said the coutt. "Run along home now to the baby and forget vow troubles, and re- | port to me in a week. And, Mrs. Low- enthal, it might be well for you to go on an anti-osculation diet." Mr.' a ench INCIDENTS OF THE DAY. | -------- Newsy Paragraphs Picked Up By Re- porters On Their Rounds. | William Swaine, piano tuner. Orders pisgived at McAuley's. Phone 778. 1 "People ure attracted by their oppo- sites. That's why a woman admires a man who is a good listener, : H. Cunningham, piano tuner from' [Chickering's. leave orders at Me Auley"s bookstore. "Salon Palmer Taleum Powder," | "invisible." Sold in Kingston at Gibson's Red Cross Drug Store. I W, CO. Shaw, of Guelph, will arrive here, next week; to 'take the position of sales manager & the Wormwith ' Piano company. : "Shave in comfort." Colgate's rapid shave powder and a Gillette safety ra- zor. Sold in Kingston at Gibson's 'Red Cross Drug Store, The Cape Vincent stage made a spec: ial trip over the border, late Thurs- | day might, with the theatrical people who have been filling in the bill for a part of the week at the Orpheum The: atre. i Wild cherry bark, creosote, and syrup {of hypophosphites, {that severe cold or cou recommend it. Sold in Kingston at (Gibson's Red Cross Drug Store. "Phone 1230. 7 The corporation men have put sand on a number of the sidewalks on the side streets and their work has been much appreciated by citizens. Eacly this morning the walks were in a very condition and many were foreed to take a tumble, New laid oggs, per dozen, 30e, Cooking eggs, per dozen, 8c. 4 doz: nice Jemons, 25¢, 1 doz. 40c. oranges, 20¢, + Grape fruit, 10e, sive for Se. 3 lbs, dates, 20e. 4 pkgs. cornstarch, 0c. 1 x good eocoa, 2. XN&y tub butter, 2l¢. and 2c. Choice farmers' prints, per lb, 25e. Laced potatoes, per bag, 40e, i Mullin's grocery, corner Johanson and 'Division streets, Perth Road Items. Perth Road, Feb. 16.-- James Muckle- web is slowly recovering after a severe illness. Mrs. J. Guthrie is also ill. A number of the farmers are hauling logs to Sydenham mill. The Free Me- thodists are preparing to build a par vonage here. Joweph Babrock has to Watertown, N.Y., to work st tbe barber | himself into a fine frenzy and i 1roved to be the case." | | the soldiers to fire if they dared, mnd that if they were arrested they would i tonishing even in its echoes acrows the [bad as the rest of {but it was of no avail. He turned a in large bottles, for [= h. Physicians | resident a fow weeks and practised a few years, | Finally he embarked on the stormy sea of politics. (me day he workel | Who are Still Enjoying Their Liberty : . Ay a! ----Respect for the Bench Called for most dramatic manner demanded. '1ib- | v , erty or death," although he had both | Heavy Semenee. - freely at his disposal. | Montreal, Que., Feb, 17.---Judge Cho- "John Adams joined the disunionists | quiet was somewhat dazed in the po- probably because he saw that if the low court, when he was informed by a revolution was successful there would | thief that he was just as bad as a he great opportunity for advancement | lot of other bad crooks who are still under the mew govermment. This | enjoying their liberty. , { Arthur Paquette, who had stolen a That Samuel Adame was a defaulter riog from a sleeping guest at an Fast Mr. Stark proves in a copy of a letter | End danee hall, was in the box, and, sent by Mr. Adams to the town of having been proven guilty, was re Baton, of which he was the tax ol- | mended until Tuesday for sentence. lector. Mr. Adams sureties had to! When leaving the box he remarked pay £5,000. Of the Boston massacre | to the judge that there were lots of the book says : |worse crooks than him enjoying their "The rioters repeatedly challenged freedom, whereupon the judge replied the torreut of coarse and profane | get their deserts. abuso poured upon the soldiers. is as-| "What's the use, you are just as i their" was the ceatury and would furnish material Way Paquetie came buck at the judge for an appropriate inscription m the! "Repeat what you said," responded Attucks Monument." { the judge, and Paquette did. Of the Boston Tex Party he says : Not so much on his own account as "The illegal seizure of the tea was out of respect for the hench Paquette in a certain sense parallel 10 the wo-| was given four years'in penitentiary. called respectable mob which on the! He had previously served two terms, eleventh day of August, 1834, de-| re stroved the Charlestown Convent and | DEATH OF MRS. DAVIS, a vear later nearly killed Garrison | anc made the jail his only place of refuge." Many of the signers of the Declara- tiem ha dnd moe were smugglers, r. Stark asserts, and John Hancock, |g. : : , while having the mame of being a 5 wo oclack, un a Pon of hig 'iair' trader, was in reality the owner |r: assed af ate Tes os of one of the smuggling vessels Con: { She a ay at. A L oe cotming Mr. Hancock's connection with | 27 at Tincess .. sixpet. iL A Harvard Universiiv, Stark writes : | month ago, deceased suffered a fall, at "In 1773 John Hancosk was elected | DET home, and never fully recovered tramsurer of Harvard College The | from the shock. Mrs, Davie was se: amount of college funds paid over to | YOnty-six years of age, and was born him was upward of fifteen thodsand | 1 County Tytone, Ireland, coming to and four hundred pounds, and like Fis Kingston, in the year 1549. Deceased friend, Samuel Adams, he, too, proved leaves three sons and three daughters, to be a defaulter. For twenty vears | William, of Kansas; James, and John, the corporation begged and entreatad of Kingston, Mrs. H. Thurston, of him to make restitution. They threat. | Ringston: Miss Minnie, at home, and ened to prosecute him and also xe dwar Thompacs, of Copper i i i + way |City, Wisconsin. Mrs. Davig was" a Jut his bond in shity.ds Adams Wo5 member of St. Paul's church. The deal ear' to their emtrveaties, awd it The funeral will take place on Friday Old Resident of City Passed Away Wednesday Night. Another old resident, of the city passed away on Wednesday night, at was only after his death, in 1793, that 0fternoon, at 2:30 o'clock, to Catarn- his heirs made restitution to the .col. A cemetery, Rev. Ww. FP Fitzgerald | lege, when a settloment was made, im 'will conduct the services. 11795, in which the college lost five | ---------- hondeed and Avant ais olin at The difference heotween skin-deep | " ' beauty and the other kind is that you Josiah Quinéy, of Har |e the other kind at a drug store. vard, later asserted that these defalea: | "Throat Sprays. *. It pays to buy i tions hurt the university considerably, them at Gibson's Red Cross Drug and that if would be grateful to pass Store. i w i over 'in silence the extraordinary | Occasionally a lazy man is up 'vith course he pursued in his official rela: {the early bird that is served at 1 a.m, ition to Harvard College had. truth and [With a oold bottle. fidelity to higtory permitted. | In a chapter on the life of Thomas | Datasets Cannot be Saved ox Hutchinson, a loyalist, Stark submits | cannot Teach the seat of "disease, ! proofs to his claim that Benjamin [Satarch is 2 Dlood, astitutional ¥ 1 » isease, an n order cure you Keasidin, whan sixty SEVEN: Yonrs old, oust take Internal remedies Hall's was dismissed from his position = as 'Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and Boston's postmaster because he rifled {acts directly on the blood and (mucous | 3 3 a 3 {surfaces all's Catarrh C $ No the mail boxes. He tells mn detail how {quack medicine, It was prescribed by! Franklin was tried in England and one FJ the best puyaicians in this coun- | : : s soa (try for years and is & regular prescrip- Do Ee Ee Mn, (Lian. If Ia composed of The' best' tonics man of Boston, president of the Photo } or c¢ to surfaces. The perfect combination of founder 'of, the' Darchesfer Historical [Catarrh. Send for testimonials free. ritable Association, | Toke Hall's Famiiy rice 15 Historical Genealogical Society, He 4 & 4 educated in . the - local - schools. He The Time I at: ---- get the fine juicy For a few davs longer Known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting directly on the mucous Electro Plate company, of Boston. He : : is also nent In oii dife, bOiAE a (Sah. wonder] BY ite oT cate Soviety," South Boston Yacht Club, F. I. CHENEY & CO, Props. Savin 41ifl * Yacht Club, president of | o, \, pruggists, om Bi tis the Victorian Chub, |tion. > » lop cong' ve the New England. ps was bom in London, but cae to Boston at the age of eight and was lives in Dorchester. ---------- J wise (3 Ouges Is AL 0 Ting "Happy Ten" Club at Y.M.CA. Had a |g 1 Fine Time + And the, right time to df California is now. r we will sell the regular W. H. Carnovsky, Specials for To-Morrow { A fortunate purchase gave vs posses- sion of 150 Men's Flannelette Nightgowns Full sizes, well made, | good quality, neat s flannelette. Sizes 16, 163, 17, These are good value 7c to 90c, Your Choice To-Morrow 49¢ Each 900 Yards Fine Underwear Cotton Fine make, same weight as Nainsook and good value at 12}c to l4c. Yours To-Morrow While the lot lasts, 10c Yard. New Prints A large range of New English Prints. Many very pretty patterns, both lizht and dark. 10c yard and 12 1~2c. New Embroideries, New Insertions, New Laces, New Ginghams, New Wash Goods. fk get March Delineator now ready. Spring Fashion Book With each book there is Butterick Pattern Large size, a coupon for any FREE. March Patterns 30c Por Dozen « A Special Bargain All This Week We have received an early delivery of Spring Shoes for Ladies, an. have filled our window with these NEW SHOES and a GREAT REDUCTION to those that buy THIS WEEK. Ladies Fine Kid Blucher Lace Boots, nice soft stock, 2 1-2 to7... $1.50 Ladies' Fine Kid Blucher Lace Ox- fords, a new $2.00 shoe, 2 1-2 t0 7

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