Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 28 Jul 1906, p. 12

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3 ert d ; £ i 'any charge, my home inst: to any sufferer 's allments, . I want to tell oll | i i J sh i i il ih } | i iH i) | i ih i I g if [ f | ! ii ! i g £1 : § i ! i i i i i i x i I= [i 8; - i | LH | 3 g 2 F i § i g = 5 EF F2R2 hi: IRISH WHISKEY Famous for over a century for its delicacy of flavor. or highest standard of It is especially , ' recommended by the Medical Profession or ] nt of its peculiar - "DRYNESS" London, July 28.--Beyond feeling Srgined pnd stiff, Misa Granville, the known actress, who made an as- cont on Thursday, with C. F. Pol lock and another gentleman in the balloon Vivienne III, was none the worse yesterday for s tumbling des- cent made near Streatham Common. "Gh Progress was "slow, 'and alter our balloon ha , much gas we down into Et marie the wk eon and gardeng r Streatham Common Mr. Pullock decided to land. We were all surprise Lod, however, tofind that thy escape valve would not work, and to get down, Mr, Pollock had to use the rip- ing cord. . Pie scomed fated, however, to re- main 1p, for a summer whirlwind got underneath the balloon, lifting the neck of it right up and swinging the car about. Then when this wind sub- sided we came down like a runaway lift, while we hung on to the ropes with our feet raised so as to mini- mize the effect of the L "I did not like the look of an acre or two of glass ahead, but there was nothing for, it but to hold tight. Mr. Pollock 'was splendid, and called to us to. loo k out for a barbed wire fence, but we took the fence with us, and when we did come to a standstill further on we found we. had escaped with a few bruises, "Oh, yes," added Migs Granville, "I have made several balloon ascents, I was out through the whole night in one only last week," iL For A Twitching Hand. Hand trembling, an affliction akin to "writers' cramp," is apt to result from the long continued exercise of certain muscles and the neglect of others, The worst feature of the trouble, ac- cording to Health-Culture, is its trick of coming on at the very time when steadiness of hand would be most de- girable, The twitch of a map finisher's muscles may throw a national fron- tier 100 miles out of treaty lines; type words nv get lued together like the nouns of the Volapuk craze. Hot baths afford onlv temvorary re- lief; drugs might as well be preserib- to a sufferer; but there is one ney- er-failing specifie--the cure, Procure a couple of iron rines--say, five inches in diameter--and fasten them high enouch to keep an experi menter's feet off the ground when he attempts to dangle by one hand for a second or two. Practice will raise the score to half a minute, and by that time, the tremors will have vanished for the next half year. grapple swing These Painful Ailments. Rh 43 i 1a ™ 1 atakia, etc, are due to morbid, pois- oned conditions of the blood. The poisons must be neutralized and ex- pelled and the blood enriched in order to cure, Wade's Iron Tonic Pills do 'the things necessary to cure and to eure thoroughly, are a ~reat nerve strenothener . In boxes, e., at back if 4 July 27T.--A daugh- , to Mrs, Stel- state prison at nan is servin ge in Mi Thor, 3 v i be sent to Mrs. Broonaw's mofh- Sad » ives in Michigan. . Mrs. Bren. Ran was sentenced to prison for life Jr THE DAILY WHIG, SATURDAY, JULY 28. THE PEACE MAKER "TEDDY" A Brutal Case in New York Police Courts--Swiss Hotel-Keepers Will Regulate Tipping in the Future. Sriecial Correspondence Letter, No. 1,523. New York, July 27.--It is a genuine pleasure to commence a letter an- nouncing a peace jubilee; there is a little slan, diyided thr a the re- public = wi set up a howl at our arth). President no matter what he does k ghily 3 low months ago he great peace-maker. firebrand between Russia and was extinguished and the angel of peace gave happiness to millions of homes, saving millions of Hives and hundreds of millions of dollars where he stood alone on that tranendous day, he stands at the present hour, In the southern republics Guatemala and Salvador are facing each other in bloody battlefields and the swords and bayonets of two great armies are buried in the breasts of those who should be brothers. Our president had "scarcely learned the news of the dreadful slaughter that horrified the land, when Be called on the president of Mexico to mssist him in restoring peace and the two greatest republics on the western continent ask the rul- ers of our brethren of the southland to listen to' the veice of peace; the offer 'was actepted without a mo- ment's delay, and the war which threatened every republic in the south is averted and peace once more teigns supreme. x But in order that the world may understand our position as a nation and that we be recognized as the peacemakers of the passing hour; he sends his messenger who holds the highest office in the land, except him- self, to announce to all of the south- em republics that he now, 'and 'al- ANNIE ORLOFSKY, The infant daughter of normal parents in New York, is said to be the tipdest infant living. She weighs but fifteen ounces and her face is not much bigger than that of a watch. She 'is perfect in forin and is now raised in an incubator. ways will be in favor of peace, not if there is any fighting to be done, which cannot be postponed or avoided, his secretary of state goes on one of our grandest battleships to assure them we pre always ready to take a hand in obeying the instructions of the father of his country, "In time of peace prepare for war." To mar the happiness we might otherwise enjoy, the news from Russia lookf® dark and lowering; thousands of Jews ave fleeing from Warsaw, fear- ing that a general massacre has been ordered by the government: the streets of Warsaw, Poland's imperial city are lined with blood-thirsty Cossacks, who hate the Polunders as the Poles hate them with a hundred per cent. interest; thousands of troops are turning into St. Petersburg; marshal law has been proclaimed, and the en- tire city looks like a military camp; the czar will make no promises to the douma and ho desires that his decis jon shall be known in every part of the empire and that for his personal safety and the security of Russia's government he will _lpok, for the fu- ture, to his faithful army; perhaps he is leaning on a broken reed; * the Hydrahead of rebellion is seen in the land and on the sea; on some of his battloships the officers have been thrown overboard, while fn the Cri- mea © whole regiments have been brought in conflict and the czar had to send one of his best generals thero to take command and he turned a heavy cannonade on the robels before ha broaght them to submission: trou- hle still reigns everywhere in the Cau- casian Mountains, treason -is every- whore and Russia's imperial ruler knows it. A large body of Jews have asked our president to intervene for the safety of their co-relivionists; he informed them i he could do so it would gratify his heart beyond con- ception, but 'the comity of nations forbid it; in the case of a single na- tion, the umiversal rule is Hand of" we demanded that in the late ro- bellion and 'no country, during the war dared to recognize "The Southern Republic" we must do by Russia as she did by us; we give Yall the sym- pathy humanity demands, but we can- not interfere with Russia's. govern- ment in this cruel hour of disaster, 'A case that has occurred here in one of our divoreo courts was not only inhuman but brutal; a very heavy operator in Ft itbuk Mestre to get a divorce from He wife, who had been true and affectionate and a loving mother to his children; the frst charges brought against this innocent woman was that she hahitu- ally used whiskey and drugs, and as if that wae not sufficient she was ac of immorality with John Doe, a certain Richard Rows, whose could not he identified ; t the ing infamy prose- HELA bia ore as & wilness, and he swore to her ualaithlulions; the shock was so t to the poor wi that it Killed her; neither the nor ome of the id oath of this negro y but the tor's counsel not-sat- isfied with the attempt to blast the poor woman's character, tried to cheat the black out of the large sum of money that he had-offered for they wanted to, but they should not rob him of his promised reward; when called again to the witness stand he revealed the whole of the infamous plot and the sums of money that were offered for his perjury; the char- acter of the woman was vindicated bright and clean while the villainous husband got out of reach of the court os fast as railroads and steamboats could carry him. There is no punish- ment in our criminal law equivalent to such a shocking crime; the mother still has 'the eare of her children which they tried to kidnap from her but fortunately failed; it is the earn- est wish of our heart that this man, notwithstanding all his cunnine. may discover in the near future, * way of the ' is hard." : A meeting of the hotel-keepers in Switzerland has taken place to regu- late the sub of tips; one of the landlords declared that the tips fre quently exceeded the -landlord's bills agd this extravagance has -been brought about by foolish Americans and the tips haye grown so large that they are keeping © other foreigners away from Switzerland; that the loss of travel is twenty-five per cent. where it was only five per cent. before the American travel of automobilists and they proceed to arrance a sys- tem of tips, that, while it would add to the income of landlords, would not seriously affect the cutting down of the servant's tips, but increase tra- vel to Switzerland to that enioyed be- fore the invading of the American autotmobilist. --BROADBRIM. HURLED OVER CLIFF. Runaway Horses Attached to Brake Upset Vehicle. Geneva, July 28.---Twelve school girls and a coachman were severely in- ured in a carriage accident which oc- curred yesterday on the mountainous St. Gothard route, near the top of the Realp. Some forty girls from the Zurich High School, accompanied by their teachers, left Hospenthal in several breaks for the Realp, with the inten- tion of making geological studies in the mountains. The = four horses of the first brake bolted and dashed up the mountain road at full speed. At a sharp corner the brake over- turned, and, with the girls and horses, | rolled forty feet down a steep slope, where it was smashed to pieces against a boulder. . The driver and twelve girls were se- verely injured. Several had legs and arms broken, and others were kicked by the struggling horses, two of which had to be shot afterward. -------------- A Six-Day Excursion. On another page will be found an- nouncement of third annual six-day excursion to Montreal and Ottawa per steamer Aletha, August 2nd to 6th 'inclusive. The growing popularity of this event is evidenced by the numer- ous enquiries and bookings of former patrons, and many new ones. "Finest water trip in America," the verdict of past two scasons. The Thousand 1ls- lands, the rapids of the St. Lawrence the grandeur of the Ottawa; and the marvellous beauty of the Rideau (all to be seen by daylight); with a chance to visit Canada's commercial and political capitals, are among the many attractions. Five Years To Go Five Feet. Not long ago a letter was delivered to the Hackensack, N.J., Wheelman that had been mailed five years be- fore in the post office next door. At the end of February, 1901, the financial accounts of the organization would not quite balance and this puzzled both k E. Westervelt, the treasurer, and John R. Seidel, the steward. By the delivery of the delayed let- ter the discrepancy was explained, It contained a check for $64, that had been sent by Mr. Seidel to Mr. Wes- tervelt. . The date on the envelope, February, 21st, 1901, showed it had been muil- ed before the financial puzzle was en- countered. No ome can explain why it took the letter five years to go about five feet, ------------ If a man would put only his own property in his wife's name, it wouldn't be so bad; but as a rule the most of it belongs to other people. A TORONTO MAN TRIES Something New and is Delighted ~Feels Like a Boy. AM. N. Dafoe, man- ager of the Dustless Brush Co., 29 Col- borne street, Tor- onto, is telling his friends how he found health after Joars ol J illness and n. e says: "I have been a eat sufferer from i for many years. I have heen treated by local doctors and have taken neatly all the - M. N. DAFOE, advertised remedies with only tempor- my relief, if doy at all, but since using Anti-Pill I can eat anything the Same as when a boy. I have n taking one Anti-Pill at bedtime for the t three months, and find they regulate both stomach and bowels. My old time vigor has returned, so that my its are buoyant and tem- wd normal. As a result of this un- ped: for experience. I am in duty bound to give all credit to this won- derful remedy, Anti-Pill." Every druggist sells Dr. Leonhardt's | fl Anti-Pill, or a sample will be sent free by The Wilson-Fyle Co., Limited, Ni- agars Falls, Ont. remedy that eured Mi. Dafoe s completely ia surely. worth a cial. 503 Just notice the of quality. in lead packets. WINNIPEG. HRT. HANNAH MORE. Love Story of a Famous Woman Told Again. She was born on February 2nd, 1745, at Stapleton, in Gloucestershire, her father being the master of a school in the neighborhood. In 1757, her eld- ost sister, Mary, who was then _twen- ty-one, with her sisters Blizabeth and Sarah, opened - a ladies' school in Trinity street, Bristol, taking Han- nah and her younger sister, Patty, who were then respectively ten and twelve years of age, as pupils. The school was a ~reat success, and Han- nah became a highly cultivated girl. Somewhere about the year 1767, she made the acquaintance of a Mr. Tur- ner, of Belmont. He was a wealthy bachelor, considerably older than her- self, and the owner of fine estate near Flax Bourton, in Somersetshire. She is described as being at this time an exceedingly pretty girl, with delicate features and beautiful eyes. These characteristics she -retained to the end of her life, as the portrait of her by Pickersgill, in the National Portrait gallery, clearly shows. She became a constant visitor at Bal- mont, and in due course of time re- ceived from Mr. Turner a proposal of marriage, which she. accepted. She withdrew from her connection with the school, and made all preparations for her wedding. This, however, never took place. Three times was the dav fixed, «and as often for some unintelligible reason, postponed by Mr, Turner. His affection for her seems to have heen sincere, but he was a man of a curious and rather gloomy disposition, and his strange conduct may possibly be pre- ferred to some mental perversity, At last her friends. interfered, and insist: ed on the engagement being broken off. Mr. Turner was very anxious to make a settlement on 'her, and though for some time she declined to entertain the proposal she was finally nersnaded. by Sir James Stonehouse to accept the annuity of £200 a vear. This unfortunate affair did not inter- fere with the friendship and respect which Mr. Turner continued to feel for her, and at his death he left a lozacy of £1900, But it probably left ite mark on her, and thourh she sub- sequently received two offers of mar- riage she declined them hoth. Sarah Siddons came under her spell and lived with her for a while. \ MILLIONS IN LAW. Sewing Machine Man's in Chancery. It is not often that litigation over wills involving eighteen millions ster- ling arises, even in America, much less in Europe. A case of this kind has just been decided in Paris. It concerns the estate of Me. Singer, the great sewing machine manufacturer, to whose widow and six children' the colossal sum named was bequeathed. Mrs. Singer, with such a goodly es- tate as ome-seventh part of cighteen millions in her own right, successfully sailed through two subsequent mar riages before, herself paying the debt of nature in 1904, when she bequeath ed the whole of her share to her third husband. Naturally her children felt averse to such a disposition of the family property, and as it $acluded more than S000 £20 shares in the Singer company, to which was attach- ed a non-negotiable condition, they in voked the French law. The Judges seem to have found difficulty in giving any absolute decision, and urge com- promise. Money Timnfoil Becoming Valuable. New York Tribune. The recent rise in the price of tin bas led many European chocolate manufacturers to inclose this notice in the wrappers of their chocolates : "Do not throw away the tinfoil in which the chocolate is enveloped. Tt is composed of pure metal, a metal which is very dear. Keep it, and be fore long it will be ealled for by our agents, who will pay for it at its market value. The chocolate industry in Europe spends nearly £800,000 por annum in tinfoil, and these £800,000 are generally thrown to the winds." What seems to give some color to the alleged pregiousness of the paper wrapped around the chocolate is the story told by a socialist journal of Hamburg to the effect that a group of workmen were able to procure a part of their common library by collecting and selling these fugitive sheots of tin. oil. a -- Peck's Foot Powder.. Gives instant relief to aching, in- amed or perspiring feet. It is cool. ing and soothing. Big boxes 2Be. Wade's drug store. g he ------------ Only the honest grafter confines his operations to trees shrubs, » 3 ED TEA 1S GOOD TEA" amber, which is always a token Sold by the best grocers in Canada The Blue Label is especially recommended. Prices, 25¢.,30C.,35¢.,40¢., 50¢., and 6oc., Black, Green and Mixed, T. H. ESTABROOKS, St. John, N.B. OSE FATE, "Matrons who loss the ~ cup and she > i The grounds of fale in in grounds of Tea." ~Churchill, color--a rich TORONTO, 3 Wellington SL E. The grates in the "Sunshine" consist of two pairs (4 bars), with short bulldog teeth, and are operated by two different shakers If any part burns out it can easily be removed by simply taking out a pin, and replaced without getting an entirely new set. It's a real comfort to have so many simple features in your furnace--means constant ease and economy. Sold by all enterprising dealers. Booklet free. LONDON. TORONTO. 3 MONTREAL. : ) | WINNIPEG. 3. oo _--_~ VANCOUVER. 7 | ] 0 ST. JOHN. ul 5 4 HAMILTON. Ed 1 Bo al | RB / nN LEMMON & SONS, King Street MADE IN CANADA BY A CANADIAN COMPANY. Ta) lai? WIFT ILENT URE DURABLE avo LIGHT RUNNING. ALWAYS LOOK FOR THE NAME Thellew Glia THE WILLIAMS MANUFACTURING CO. Gomrany orrices: MONTREAL, P. Q. LITE, TORONTO, LONDON, HAMILTON, OTTAWA, SY. JOHN, N. 8B. = AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE. Detroit. Bank References. Ne Names Used Without Written Consent. you have tra Tess! A Leyyo ust yn FN Sain I se private diseases CURED, prowlisiug lives, eran sked. thousauds of ec Ane oe Sued, Avoid quacks. E. A, Promised te aac ntracted aserious disease, treated wits or. a wht up hope when a frend 1580 mY money and Istill had t disease, Win drt SE ee Co Su ed oe ihout a3 n m, and Dr, an Te gn taking the New Method Treat mens ry OT toik Then new bv rains ceased, worm Stopped failing on ine y eine disappeared, nerves rew stronger, hair eutlrely cured by Dr. ea ine clear and oy Vitatized, X was 3 da ¥ We T, And recommend him Brat reat and s ees, Vers on ofm Ll CONSULT Ee loasen -. minal Weakness, y for Home Tr. OS: BOOKS FREE. Catt i tatment. NO CURE, NO PAY, or write for Question Blank ll DRS, KEN \ Cor. -- SOY 4, KERGAN, VARICOCELE NERVOUS DEBILITY of d Boys. the wear and tear. VER BT PAID BY ARVER BROTHERS LIMITE! TORONTO ONY To ANY THIS SOAPCONTAINS ANY FOR: ADULTERATION WHATSOEVER | CONTAINS ANY IRIURIOUS CHE? xT RELIABLE FOC For Boy Just what you Something that w Don't fail to see ou Boots before' you purc $1.50and $ H. JENNINGS, 35 ee Look ou for B Remember that applications of pe may cause serio trouble to a delic Don't take chanc acceptany "just Soaps for the bs buy ' Baby's Own Specially recom for nursery use National Cou Women in Mor Albert Soaps Ltd. Mirs. "AN EXCELLE admirably ada Wants of Infa: Sir Chas. A. Canes Drofessor of Chemis Ex-President of the | Surgeons, Ir ed' For Inf Inval And The GOLD MF WOMANS EX "London, DR. BARNAR! * We have already use two of our Homes (Babi Village Home), and I ha saying it has proved ve \ USED IN T Russian Tmpeei | Merete _JoSIAR ) PG x Fordingbridge, | Wholesale Agents-- BROS. & CO., Lit and LYMAN, SON treal best wonthly m in Kingston at | Bross resesen § Dr. Brock' i JRE, 124 Princess receipt Of price--$1. Fi 'emale Periodic: Beaase g

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