HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1908-05-07, Page 12
CUKES
.Dyspepsia, %oAt%
Eimplos,
Headaches,
Constipation.
Loss of Appetite,
Sat Rheum,
Erysipelas,.
Scrofula.,
And all tt'oUblos
arising from the
Shun",ch, Lives',
Bowels or Bleoci.
?tfrR A. Lethnngue,
of I,.tllyduhr, o, t.,
writes: '" L Lelieve 1
would have been in
ley grave 1o.ig azo
hail it nut been ter
lftrduek lhloud hit-
ters. 1 was rgn'down
to such un extent
that 1 coul.l scarce-
ly move about ttie
house. I wukt subject
to severs headaches,
backaches and dizzi-
ness ; I.333. appetite
,wa; goao and I was
tumble to do ,ur
housework. After
using. two betilee of
Il.li.11.1Lw4I.n
health fully restore
I weru,lyrce•.rtimcnu
it to all tired and
worn out women."
TO AIDVERT1SERS
Natio() of changes must be left at this
office not later than Saturday noon.
The copy for changes must be left
not later than Monday evening.
Casual advertisements aooepted up
to noon Wednesday of eaoh week.
.'STABLISFIED 1872
THE WINO'11A111 TINES.
B. ELLIOTT, PBBLIS.IGR AND PxoPRrETo
THURSDAY. MAY 7, ti 0S.
NOTES AND COMMENTS
In an article on the incline in the
politioal influence of the farm, the
Weekly Sou deplores thi fact that legis-
Iative representation is rapidly passing
to urban centres and mining campe.
The farmer himself is to blame for this
condition, Let him give his support
more to his own class and less to tools
of the "interests." -Windsor Record.
The farmers of North Huron have an
t xoellent opportunity of supporting Sohn
'E. Carrie, a practical farmer, who it,
the Liberal candidate in North Heron.
The guarantee of two and a half mil-
lion of bonds for the Mi.sokenzie and
eMMann Northern Railway by the Ontario
Government in the closing hears of the
session in the worst es'iibition given
by the Whitney party since assuming
power, It bears the old, old earmarks,
it is drawn in the same old hand -writing.
It stands +'or everything that should not
be permitted by the people. On the eve
of a general election, the meaning and
financial results of each transactions are
too well known,-Bobcaygeon Indepen.
dent.
The refusal of the Whitney Govern-
ment to pass legislation for the effective
control of automobile traffic ahould be
remembered by the farmers, whose ab-
solute rights in the roads that they build
and maintain by a tax on their farms
are usurped every hoar of the day, while
women and children are ousted from the
highway, which for them, is no longer
safe to drive on. Farmers should pre-
pare to make their infiaenee better felt
at the next session and every recreant
member should be marked. The auto-
mobile bas come to stay, but it has little
title in the highway whioh it has come
to destroy and render perilous, and it
must be regulated. -Windsor Record,
A SECOND EPISTLE.
The Rev. D. C. Hoseack, of Toronto,
as an Indpendent is politics, wrote a
letter during the campaign of 1905 that
was lased to great advantage by the
Whitney campaigners. Mr. Hoseack,
like thousands of other Independents and
Liberals who favored a change of Gov-
ernmant iu 1906, has since learded that
the Zion, Sanies Flint' Whitney is a poli -
!Wien and llOt a statesman. Mr. Bon,
saok has written another letter, Some
of the points Mr. Hossack makes are
7,
Course of a Cold
mom HEAD TO LUNGS
The usual course in a eeld is inert head to
throat and thence by way of the bronchial
tubes to the lungs. At the various stages it is
Keown by different rian)es, butyy ou tan be
certain el D
ctDr. res
a Syrup ofLirse
ed and
Turpentine soothing and phealing the raw and
isEamed membranes, allaying maamncation,
tiding expellee -Aden and positively overcoming
the cold.
Dr. Chase's
Syrup
Linseed and Turpentine
Far hole being a mere remedy this great
prescription has a sacral t and far reechir.
&fere oe the whole sy. tem and while it keeps
' loose aid free, it potitiveiy cures
o&1s infectious of the duvet and lungs
23 oe is a bottle, at all dealers or Edmrneon,
it Biwa et Co., Toroata.
MI. J. Provost FI,enFrew, Out., status
IOtst wattsoltat.,oid ixtd such a
torero odd on the we x he was
to die. Two
oF�i'.
Clraiae';
of ' sod T rade we ve his lie.*
as follows
: ---
"On Jan4ary 2#, 1005, Mr, Whitney
wade a pabflo appeal for aid, and de
olered that ehciid hie future conduct
net be approved, the people Wight with -
r
r ih is eonfi.itnoe. Doeg Mr, Whit-
ney feel Viet he has lost public confid-
ence? He has so at ranged many con-'
atituenees by hiving Liberals that the
withdrawal of Liberal confidenee Will
no; affect the standing of the p sties in
Ghia Legislature. On Je nary 26, 1905,
Cir. Whitney published his 'glad eppre-
dation' of the feet that 'Ltberale in
large numbers' supported hits. Ie 3908,
apparently with the expectation of los-
ing Liberal snpport, Mr, Whitney et
appreoiatiou is exproased by hiving the.
Liberals. There were a grin; humor in
the sitcatien did it not savor so strongly
of the very ordinary, commonplace and
tricky paliticiau."
"When the Government passed the
three fifths olanse of the local option not
they were guilty of reactionary legisla-
tion Ever since Ontario became a
Provinoe the micj.trity in a munioipality
has hail the right to deoide upon the
granting ot licensee. These rights were
firmly established and founded upon n
SOON of British jastioe and equality
Why have the Government tampered
with them?"
"A Judge only a few days ago doolin-
ed to hear a case in which his son in-
law was a witness. In the Larose case
the brothar-in•law of one of the Minis-
ter was a claimant, and $150,000 was
given to him and his assooiates. The
explanation is that the recipients of this
largo sum furnished valuable informa-
tion to the Government. What was the
information? The people paid for it
and should know what it is,"
""The close of the session witnessed a
rapid degeneration in the Government.
Their acts have been suspicious, and the
Pcovinee should be on the watch."
"Every Liberal -and there are many-
who from a sense of duty supported in
the last campaign the party now in
power, when he considers the present
aitaation will perceive that the same
sense of duty will compel him, to labor
fora strong and able Opposition."
TAT THE KIDNEYS D0.
What Booth's Kidney Pills are
Doing for Wingham People.
All the blood in the body passes
through the Kidneys every three
inmates.
The Kidneys filter the blood.
They work night and day to daily
remove about 500 grains ot impure,
matter, If they fail some part of this
impure matter is left fa the blood, bring-
ing
ringing on pain in the baok, headache,
dizziness, irregular heart, hot, dry skin,
rheumatism, gravel, dropsy, deposits in
the urine. Booth's Kidney Pills make
the filtering right and overcome Kidney
troable. Hundreds of Huron (County
residents bava found this out.
Geo Fretwell, of Minnie & Victoria
St., Wingham, Ont , sans -"A dell,
heavy pain had settled across the small
of my back from hip to hip. There was
a soreness and tenderness there that
would pause me to suffer both night and
day. There was an unusual scalding in
passing the urine and it was filled with
sediment of a high color. I had used so
many different remedies and found no
relief that I had begun to think` nothing
would benefit my condition, ,Booth's
Kidney Pills were advertised and I pro•
oared a box at Ur. McKibben's Phar-
maoy. They did me so mach good I
continued the treatment and the second
box had entirely cleared the urine and
taken away the scalding My baok
strengthened and the pain left it. The
rheumatism with which I have suffered•
for over four years has also been greatly
relieved and I sin stronger and better
than in years previous and oan only
thank Beoth's Kidney rills "
Sold by Dealers. Price 50. cents.
The R T. Rooth Oo,, Ltd., bort Erie,
Ont , Sole Canadian Agents,
ABOLITION OF THE BAR.
Dominion Alliance Urges Independent
Voting.
Setting forth that the abolition of the
barroom is a political question, and
calling on the electors throughout the
Province to put the cause of right be-
fore the cause of the party', rand to seoare
thereby the abolition of the barroom,
the Ontario branch of the Dominion
Alliance has issued a manefesto to the
voters of the Province. Ia this they
point out that "the most important issue
before the electors of the Province of
Ontario at the present time is the tem.
peranoe Armada'. "The problem" it
toys, "with which the temperance re•
form deals lies at the root of our nation-
al life and permeates the whole 5ooial
organism. g ni. It must be dealt with polit-
ically,
"We ag•tin affirm that the Iegislation
that the aitaation demands, whioh
pablio opinion will warrant, and which
the Legislature should enact, is the
abolition of the barroom and the treat-
ing eyetenl, drinking in clubs, and the
imposition
ot
tach.
Other e restrictions
i
et ons
upon the liquor traf ,els Would most
effectually curtail its operation, and
remedy rte evils.
„
hewent
r
P Iiegislatare has net only
failed to promote lath legislation, but
has taken
away ' from
the
people e the
tight, • to Iong enjoyed and never mit.
toed, to &hellish harrooine locally by a
majority j i' rota of the +eleotbrs. Tbe re -
trait has beer the entrenching more
eeourely than ever, so tar its legielatioli
lir oonoerxtedt of the barroom system,
TUE WIN'GH4 M TIMES, M &Y 7, IOW
1
TWENTY YEARS AGO, tent lit
eory
the. Gruner' tyles,
LOCM. NFW$.
Rev. E. Devte, Df A , Lecithin, broth-
er to Mr. I3. Dtvie, of Ghia town, his
been appoiuted a oonoa of the dioueae of
Huron
The Lioense Commissioners under the
Crooks Aot will be the sane as they
were ander the Scott Ant Io the West
Riding they are Messrs J se Stevens,
Clinton; 8, Sloane, Godtirteh; and W.
Drummond, Blyth. Mr Paisley will
still o intinue to disoharga the duties of
hie office.
Mr, 8, G McGill, barrister & l , of
this place, hes taken with him into
partnership R. Vanstone, Esq , of Kin-
cardine, a young and rising lawyer of
the Bruoe bar, sed late Police !Aegis
trate for that county under the Scott
Aot. We weloonee Mr, Vanetone to our
town and wish the new firm every sin -
ease,
Mrs W J Chapman has been absent
for Soma time visiting her mother Mrs,
Cowherd at Amigari, near Fort Erie.
Mr. S Yvuhill hes ki idly furnish°i
us with some statistics gleeuert from the
assessor's5 roll of 1S88 Bh tt may be of
interest In 1888 the total real estate
atsessm ut was $112 075 aa increase of
$5,243 over last year. Tne personal
property amounts to $74 135 an increase
of $19 555, The total income assessed is
$13 650 an increase over '87 of $9.800.
The total ptrso» sl Weems is $193,311), a h
increase of $35,123 aver "87. The pop-
nlarion thin year le 3 073, an i-ivreiie of
140 overcast year,
LOWER WINaiI.t,u
Mr, J Anderson has been engaged es
teacher for the reuhhinder of the year iu
the Lower Wtogham oboe' from the
Ist of May, Mies Sate E tale has re-
signed on 4cooant of poo, health,.
Mei'. A.tvid. Ste erert Is preparing 10
fo'lbw her ha3beud to W.sshinnton
Territory where they intens meting
their insure home.
BIRTHS,
Fleunigin-In Ternberry on the 30th
alt , the wits of Mr. Francis Flannigan;
a daughter,
Risohie-In Whiteobnroh, on the 29th
ult., the wife of M:, Saha Rit,ihie; a
daughter.
Oruiokshanks-Ie Tarnberry, on the
1st ult., the wife of Mr. George Craik-
shanks; a son.
Poasiif-Ie Tarnberry, on the 23ud
alt., the wife of Mr. A, Poslif; a son.
DIED.
Strong -In Howick, on April 2tst,
Mr. Wm• F Strong, aged°31 yearn, 10
months and 21 days. n4
Proctor -At Bhigrave, on the 29th
ult., W. W , son of Mr. Charles Proctor,
aged one year sad 4 days.
with all its concomitant evils,
"We would call upon the electors of
the Province to work and vote only
for the nomination and election of such
candidates as can be depended upon
'to do all in their pawn to secure at
the earliest opportunity the euaStwent
of effective Iegislation against the bar-
room evil, and who will hold themselves
absolutely free from ,party dictation in
relation to such legislation.
"To this end We suggest to friends
of our cause the ditty of attending the
preliminary meeting's and eonventious
of the political parties and their doing
their utmost to secure the nomination
of men who will fairly represent the
people upon this snprezne (lactation
We further urge all right-thinking
citizens to put their temperance princi-
ples before any mere party preferences
in the app-oaohing contest,"
The oironlar bears the signatures of
Ben H. SPence, Secretary, and Joseph
Gibaou, President of the branch. °
A Word to Advertisers.
The Derham Chronicle is responsible
for the following sensible article on ad-
vertising, It is well worth perusal; -
"A Word To Advertisers." We want
business men to advertise, and we want
them to make a profit out of advertising.
To do this the ad. writer should stop
loug enough to think, and having ooa-
sidered he shoatd pat his thoughts into
words that world appeal to tees parches -
tog public. Stringing a few sentences
together hap hazard isn't goiug to pro-
duce the best results. There may be
nothing in thorn to iatert;st the buyer,
and the time and energy are largely lost.
An ad. is profitless unless it sella goods,
Make your ad. stand out so that it will
hit the purchaser and force him to
think, enquire, examine mad buy. An
ad. may be ever so well worded and
spoiled when put in type. The compos-
itor should have same artistic ideas and
make every ad. stand oat so as to have
some feature to arrest the attention of
the buyer. To do this, the compositor
must have time; he oan't-orowd two
days work into one and produce the best
for the advertiser, The reason a mer-
chant advertises is to tell the public
what he has to aell and to induce them
to buy. Well worded, well arranged
and well set advertisements will help to
do this so long as the advertiser retains
the confidence of the public by doing
exactly what he says he will. To sum
up, the man who wants to get the best
results should give good matter, give it
in time, have it set up as it ought to be,
live up to what it says, and watch the
requite. No use going to a pelnt shop
with a bunch of hieroglyphics just as the
forms are going on the press. Say' what
you have to say, then gait. People have
no time for reading eermens in the ads,
AFTER.
[PhilipBetake Menden.]
n.
A little time for laughter,
A little time to sing,
A little time to kite and cling,
And no more kissing atter.
A little while for soheming
Love's unperfected schemes;
A little time for golden dreams,
Then no more any dreaming
ll. little while 'twins gluon
To me 16 have thylove v
r
Now like a ghost alone 1 move
About a rained heaven.
A little time for epeekina
Things Sweet to ear and hear;
A time to leek,tied and d you none,
Then no Mote any eseking.
A little Gillis for saying
Words the heart break* to say;
A short, sharp time wherein to pray,
Then
more any praying,
But long, long years to weep in,
And compprehend the whole
Great grief that doeoltttei the i*nl,
And eternity to sleep in.
Didn't Agree with Me
Mr. Arthur Tennison, 88 London
Street, Toronto, writes enthusiastically
of the merits of Psychine for all
stomach troubles.
"For seven years I have had indiges-
tion and dyspepsia. I tried scores of
remedies. My room resembled a drug
;tore with nostrums wihiclh I had bought.
Eventually I used Psychine, and every
lose brought permanent relief."
All throat, lung and stomach troubles
quickly cured by Psychine. It is the
prescription of a great specialist. At
all druggists, 50e and $1.00, or Dr. T.
A. Slocum, Limited, Toronto.
THE DREADED TIME.
[Baltimore American.]
I am sitting on the fence, Mary,
I'm sitting on the fence;
And no,one is the world. dear,
Bat you can bid me hence.
T know not what to do, Diary,
To fisc from what I can,
Or stay at home whate'er betide
And face it like amean,
You're going to houseclean, Mary,
Yon said psrhaps next week;
I shedder at the words, Mary; °
For I, alas! am weak;
I thought of scrappy dinners, dear,
I thought of carp it man.
I thought of stovepipes, and I swore,
For I was selfish, then.
Romance is dying hard, Mary,
Bnt moat it not be dumb,
When carpets you are taking up
And hammer hard your thumb?
When we men fall in love, Mary,
Life's an idyllic dream I
Bnt when it comes to cleaning house
'Tis only one long scream!
DAIRY POINTERS.
Don' neglect to strain the milk just
because it is going to the creamery.
Cows mast be healthy and Olean in
order to produce pure and wholesome
milk.
Don't keep the milk or cream in the
barn or any other place where it can
take on objectionable flavors.
Yes, it pays to feed high-priced grain
to the cows if they will make milk out
of it and not put it on theirbacks. That
is the whole thing in a nutshell.
The creamery organization that is
about to build and equip a creamery
can do well to investigate before making
a contract with the first promoter that
comes along,
Feed the cow which gives milk of
average richness one third as mnoh
finely -ground grain as she gives pounds
of milk. Give her all the rough feed
she will eat np clean,
With all the invention!, good and bad,
which have been thrust upon us, no one
has yet invented it way of achieving
success withoutchustling for it. The
work of the farmer has been made
easier, but the fact remains that if he is
going to make a saooesa he must, to use
a street phrase, "get up and deet."
Iain in the head -pain anywhere, hos its (Huse
Pain toeongcstion pain Is blood D+resaure--nethint
else usually. At least so says )r. Shoop, and to
Drove it he has created a Iittie pink tablet. Thal
tablet -Bailed Dr. Shoop's Ih,:nclaelie Tablet --
coaxes bland pressure away from pain centers
c• °
Its etlett.s ct.arrnini;, pleasingly dsligtitful. (;cutis,
though safely, it surely ,equalizes the blood circa.
ration,
If
Ifyou hn
e
aheadache. fret h,
o
i
pressare.
.its painful periodsa with women, same
cause,
If you are sleepless, restless, nerrous, it's blood
cbngestton-blood pressure. That surely is a
certainty, for Dr. Shone`s lrcadaehe Tablets stoS
it In 20 minutes, end the tablets simply distributl
the unnatural blond pressure.
Breisb your finger,
and
dorsa t it
get,
red,sad
swal andpain you? Of -course it does. It'
cos►.
estiett, bleed pressure. You'll end it Where Dela
resume
£1wal•s. It's sitendY ilonunon tense.
Ws tell at
25 dents. and clieelYulli" recolninentl
Dr., hoop's
Headache
Tablets,
"TALL DEALERS"
TOWN DIRECTORY.
BAPTIST Cf 1EOg-Sabbath services at
11 a in and 7 p Sunday Sohool at
2;80 m. General prayer meeting
on Wednesday evenings. Rev, FI.
bdg,r Altera, pastor. B.Y,P.U. Meta
ltleaday evenings 8 pan. Abner ()mine
S.S. Superintendent.
METB,ODIST thanat H -Sabbath services
at 11 a in and 7 p m, Sunday School at
2:80 p in. Epworth League every Mon-
day evening, General prayer meeting
on Wednesday evenings. Rev. W.
Su
G, HZW2operintendu, paentstor, F, Baohanan, S.S.
,
PRnsnyTBura w Onunoet-Sabbath ser-
vices at 11 a in and 7 p nI, Sunday
School at 2:30 p m. General prayer
meeting on Wednesday evenings. Rev.
D. Perrie, pastor, h;, A J Irvin, S.S.
Superintendent. .
ST, PAUL'S OIIVRQH, Er1SQOPAI,-Sub-.
bath services at 11 a m and 7 p m, AEU. -
day Sohool at 2: °0 p M. General prayer
meeting on Wednesday evening, Rev,
T. S. Boyle, M.A., B,D., Rector ; Ed.
Nash, S. S. Superintendent ; Thos. E.
Robinson, assistant Superiatendent,
SALVATION ARmr-Servloe at 7 and 11
a m and 3 and 7 p m on Sunday, and
every evening during the week at 8
o'alook at the barracks.
Poa'r Orriaa-Qflico hours from 8a m
to 6:30 p m. Open to box holders from
7 a m, to 9 p M. P. Fisher, postmaster.
PunLIo LISR. nv-•Library and free
reading room in the Town Hall, will
be open eevery afternoon from 2 to
5:30 o'clock, and every evening from 7
to 9:30 o'clock, Miss Ethel Elliott,
librarian.
Tower COIINQIL-W, Holmes, Mayor;
Dr. A. J. Irwta, Reeve; David Bell,
Thos. Gregory, D. E. McDonald W.n ,
Nioho1son,Gao. Spotton, Geo 0. Fianna,
Ooanoillora; J. B. Ferguson, Olerk and
Treasurer; Anson Dalmage, Assessor,
Board meets first Monday evening in
each month at 8 o'olook.
$ISH SCHOOL BOARD..- John Wilson,
(chairman) Dr. J. P, Kennedy, Dr. P.
Macdonald, Dr. R. 0. Redmond, J. A.
Morton, O. P. Smtth, W, F, Van9tone,
Dudley Holmes, secretary. A. dolens,
treasurer. Board meets second Monday
evening in each month.-
PUBLIa SCHOOL BOARD. -. T. Hall,
(chairman), B Jenkins,I1. E. Isard,A.E.
Lloyd,13. Kerr, Wm. Moore,Alex. Ross,
0. N. Griffin. Secretary, John F.
Groves; Treasurer, J. B. Ferguson.
Meetings second Tuesday eveningin each
month.
HIGH SCHOOL TEACHERS -J. A. Tay-
lor, B.A., prinoipal; J, O. Smith, 13.A.,
classical m aster; J. G. Workplan, B.A.,
mathematical master; Mies J. MaoVan-
nel, B.A., teacher of 6E ng I f a h and
Moderns.
PUBLIC SCHOOL TBACHERs,-A. H.
Musgroye, Principal, Miss Brock,
Miss Reynolds, Miss Farquharson, Mist
Wilson, Miss Cummings, and Miss
Matheson:
BOARD Or HEALTH -Thos. Bell,
(chairman), R. Porter, Thomas Greg-
ory, John Wilson, V.S., J. B. Ferguson,
Secretary; Dr. J. R Maodonald,
Medical Health Officer.
CANADA'S OLDEST
NURSERIES
INtENDING PLANTERS of Nur-
sery Stook and• Seed .Potatoes should
either write directed to us, or see our
nearest agent,before placing their orders.
We guarantee satisfaction; prices right;
fifty years experience; extra heavy stock
of the best apples,
AGENTS WANTED.
Whole or part time;:salary or liberal
commission; outfit free; send for terms•
THE TILOS. BOWMAN &
SON, CO., Ltd.
RIDGEVILLE, ONTARIO.
Synopsis of Canadian Northwest
Homestead Regulations.
ANY even numbered section of Dominion
Lunde in Manitoba Saskatchewan and
Alberta excepting 8 and .8, not reserved, may
be homesteaded by any person who is the sole
head of a family, or any male over 18 years of
age, to the extent of one-quarter section of 100
acres, more or less
ApplicationUe n
in bpbe made
Lands
Agency or Sub -agency for the district in which
the Banns situate. Entry by proxy may, how-
ever, be made at SU Agency, en certain condi-
tions by his fattier, mother, soh, daughter,
brother or sister of an intending homesteader.
The homesteader is requited to perform the
homestead ditties ander one of the following
plan •
s.
eultira11 t t one of the and in each for three
yearn.
(2) A homesteader may, if he so desires.
perform the landuowned oolely by hitn,�not less
,than eighty (80) acres in extent, in the vicinity,
of his homestead. Joint ownership in land
will not meet this requirement,
(8) If the father (or mother, If the father is
deceased) of the homestender leas permanent
itleathnrt81acitnthm,,n eighty see nexe
in otherthv.
e is>t hit of
thehomestead,
y
or upon a
homestead entered for by him in the vicinity,
such homesteader may perform his own rest-
denee duties by living with the father (or
(41 The term "vicinity" in the tWo preced-
ing paragraphs to defined at meaning not more
than nine miles in a direct line, exclusive of
the Width of road allowances crossed in the
erica
sue eat.
6 m
() Arh
omteteader intendiarr to perforin lits'
residence duties In accordance with the above
While living with parents or on farming land
oi'rned by himself must notify the Agent for
the district of tinea intention.
Six monthe notieo in writing must be gtz'ou
to the Commissioner of riominlon Lands at
Ottaivh of
intention to apply for potent.
tv. W. aoltne
Deputy of the Minister of the Interior".
N.13.••-17natrthorized pnblteettot► of this ad-
rsrtisement will not be paid for.
ESTAB141313$D 187a
THE WIN6ILt TIM
to PUBL.I8$SD
EVERY THURSDAY MORNING
--AT-
The Times OBIce, Beaver Brock
WINGHAM, ONTARIO,
adTva®HQ o1r 50BCuitBsnaont IePqTpIaONd-, SNppaepr earnndiumooinn-
tinned arrears are paid, except at the
option the lisher,
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EXPERIENCE
ATENTS
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PUMP THE BRITISH IN
KIPLING GIVE$ HIS VIEWS ON.
CANADIAN IMMIGRATION.
Says. Dominion Is Getting Kind of
Men Needed -Some Objections to
English -- Rotten With Socialism -
Remittance Men an Affliction,-
'
ffliction-" Three Sorts of Unfitness -Too Busy
to Kick.
".Pump the British in" was the an-
swer Mr. Kipling lnttde on the spot
when invited to solve the problem of
keeping the Jaapnese out of Canada. ,
In the fourth of his "Letters to the
Family" in Collier's he pats his little
idea on the head, and argihes that the
kind of British immigrant we are get -
6
ting is the kind we need. Ile_ will
not find many people in tehia Country,
to agree with hint, not even the im-
migrants, many of whom profess
themselves as much disappointed in
Canadians as Canadians arc in them-
]3ut Mr. Kipling does not pretend thatt.
Canadians are enthusiastic over the
present run of English immigrants,.
He made many enquiries, and found'
that our objections to the English aa
immigrants was that they do not'
work; they are rotten with Socialism;!
they carry frills and don't fit into our
way of life; they are always kicking„'
and we are sick of remittance men. , '
He was told a story of an English.
man who was found half-dead with]
thirst beside a river. When asked whye
he didn't drink, he said: "How the
deuce can 1, without a glass?" The'
following quotation is what Mr. Kip -1
ling calls his argument in fav€ of
the English immigrant: "All these aro'
excellent reasons for bringing in the;
Englishman. It is true that in his own'
country he in -taught to shirk work,
because kind, silly people fall over
each other to help, and debauch and
amuse him, Here, General January
will stiffen him up. Remittance men
are an affliction to every branch o
the Family, but your manners an
morals can't be so tender as to suffer
from a few thousand of them 'among
you six millions. As to the English
man's Socialism, he is, by nature, the
most unsocial animal alive. Wh
you call Socialism is his intellects
equivalent for Diabolo and Lineal
competitions. As to his criticisms,
you surely wouldn't marry a woman
who agreed with you in everything,'
and you ought to choose your immi-
grants on the same lines. You admit
that tete Canadian is too busy to kick
at anything. The Englishman is a'
born kicker. ("Yes, lie is all that,"
they said.) He kicks on principle, and
that is what makes for civilization. So
did your Englishman's instinct with- •
out the glass. Every new country;
needs -vitally needs -one-half of one
per cent. of its population trained to
die ofethirst rather than drink out of,
their hands. You are always talking
of the .second generation of your
Smyrniotes and Bessarabians. Think
what the second generation of the Eng-
lish are!"
We are being invaded by what the
poet calls "three sorts of steam -borne
unfitness." The first is the soft, the'
second is the savage and the third is
the mad. He points out that rail-
ways and steamers make it possible
now to bring into Canada persons who
need never lose touch of hot and cold
water taps, spread tables and crock-
ry till they are turned out, much
urprised, into a wilderness. They ar-
ive with "soft bodies and unaired
outs," having escaped the long or-
deal which "pickled and tanned the
arly emigrants" who had to endure.
he ordeal of a long sea voyage and a' •
erilous journey into the bush or
oross the plains. Thus we get the
oft immigrant, who is often socialis-
ic and generally speaks the English
anguage.
He uses the Russians to illustrate
oth the savage and the mad type of
nfitness; and relates the story of at
rowd` of Russian immigrants, who, atl
fire in a Canadian city, rdverted tee
the ancestral type and blocked the!
treet yelling "Down with the Czar l"'
he Doukhobor pilgrimages furnish
xamples of madness, Kipling dee
tribes these people, having undress -
d themselves, striking out over the
rairie, and being pursued by polis:t
ith warm underclothing. There is
ourth brand of immigrant, consisting!!
1 downright bad folk, grown men+
nd women who honestly rejoice iiia
oing evil. We need not trouble Mr."
ripling for examples of this breed.
e does not suggest what we are to
o with the alien criminal, nor do we!
eed anyone's advice. Deportation is
he sure cure.
Our Imperial visitor pays some com-
liments to the newspaper men of
anada in this fourth article, He
ound us a decent, alert body of men,
ee from the taint of yellow journal -
m. He was accurately reported here,
nd found the reporters quite ready
give him a friendly hint if he
lowed a tendency Alward any indis-
reet remarks. But the papers struck -
im tis lacking individuality, and to
o somewhat conventional, not to say
d fashioned. One straight -eyed
outh translated Kipling's somewhat
ague suggestions s bY
remarking:
You mean that we are a beck nuin-
er, copying other heel numbers?"
nd, although 0 11h he politely disclaimed.,
he -idea, this is what Kipling meant.
evertheless we persist in regarding
The Man Who Would Be King" as a
ohdorful story, and "Recessional" as
noble hymn. Thus we offer the
her cheek. -Toronto Mail.
Rode In the Hearse,
Riding eight miles inside of a hearse
keep from freezing was the eetper-
ace of Rev. ''Charles J. Palmer, an
piscopal minister, who was called
New Ashford to read the service
enethe body of one of the oldest fe-
dentsof that town. The thcrrnome-
o registered 15 degrees below zero,
id theme was a bitter wind. After
remitting the bodyt
oche
gearth the
der took the placof the casket ih
o hearse, and rode to taneshoro •
retched out inside the vehicle. The
initter said afterwards that he ex,-
eted to have but one more ride at
e kind.