Daily British Whig (1850), 24 Apr 1902, p. 6

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THE DAILY WHIG, THURSDAY, APRIL 24. | OLD FAMILIES OF VENICE THEIR FORTUNES DISSIPA- TED AND FALACES SOLD. ---------------- a TO Eu LET FURNISHED ROOMS, thous foard. B0V Une FOUR £000 FURNISHER SIONS, Wil board, with all modern conveniences, at 191 University Avenue SOME HINTS NATURE GIVES. | HE FILLED THE BUCKET. X ¥ in w= | A stéry of Grant When Fe Was a SYMPTOMS THAT SHOULD WARN MEN , tes i =t past nt. Gani COMIN L €5S 5 # story told of General Gran oF 3 Sion i wheit a pleb. He bad just entered on - {pis first day in "pleb." camp. A first A b The Significance of Sncesing, Ya . Ist: MAY, BRICK i RESIVENCE, 244 J Whe | classman whe had noticed the boy's | 4, Entirely New Class of People CHARLESTON LOST." a ~ A; An Episode of the Telegraph After (vidi r CRA" the Great Earthquake. ys How powerfully the Imagination may be stimulated by a story told in dots and dashes is illustrated by an episode of the Charleston earthquake, relates L. ¢ Hall. At the momerit of the final shock every wire connecting Charles- J &. ; » J GOTH, EN SAL £7 go. 4 J A / § & Age jree add abgut Lf i 20 / we . + strong bufld intimated to him it would 3 Hands--Apo- to & 1 aft fm Apis A The Meaning of Blue | ve a pleasure ve " ow Haw Gongsel -- plexy's Warning Signals. '| diately 'at the semior's tent. Grant 3 Nature scarce ever. strikes without | %+~t There is a rule at West Point, | Very few of the fine 'old palaces of warning. In so far as disease is con- | whish was a rule then as well, that any yenice belong to the descendants of the cern re r signs | cadet who ®eks another to perform | familles who built and originally occu- od 15 gives Elen of what 4 1 pled them. Very little of the enormous modern. 2D. Bibb, 261 Brock street. much serious iliness and live many "1 presume, Mr. Grant, that you have years Jonger than they do. It is indeed | lived on a farm, and, this being the | other countries. The rich wen of Ven- remarkable bow careless we are in this | case, you have had sudashiadiy a guad Ice po a an sively ard Sa a respect. A who will anxious! opportunity to note the effect o people, w names do not appea sean the Td -o of coming ws sun's rays on certain objects. "Now, if | the Golden Book, which cobtained a y : yon had left a water bucket that was list of the patrician families In Veaice innocent of holding a single drop of the | who were invited to festivities at the fluid out in the sun from its rising to | palace. This book was instituted in fts setting, what do you think, sir, 1315 and thenceforth until the Aus. would be the particular effect upon that trian occupation was the index and particular water bucket?' standard of nobility by whieh all claims "1 think" sald Grant, "that it would | to precedence were decided. get warped and leaky." Ocedsionally the grand council, by a "Very \good, 'Mr. Grant. You show vote, rewarded the gallantry or public erudition beyond your years. Now, if services of some eoitizen of humble you will notice my water bucket, you birth by directing that his name be In- Will see that it is as dry as a chip. | seribed upon its pages. None but those Now, by the further exercise of your | whose names were in the Golden Book knowledge, Mr. Grant, can you tell me could use thé golden stairs when they by what means I may prevent the entered a doge's palace, and when this warping and leaking of my bucket? right was conferred it was equivalent "Have it filled," sald Grant. to an order of nobility In another coun- avery prodent person should attend to, "Yery good again, Mr. Grant, but | try: There is one notable exception to Jt 1s at least the forerunner of 4 cold. | note that you said 'have it filled,' mot | the decay of the ancient families, and But it may Indicate an BPPTOACHNNE We | igi itr That necessarily means that { he iy Count Grimani, who-traces his. taek of When | some one must fill it for me. You have | lineage back to one of the most fa- here 1s mull sneezing, accompanied | gown so much acumen that 1 fear | mous of the doges, whose portrait, the tomb, and ¥ shouted alond the tid- by 'something like & small shower of | 1 violate your prescription either in | painted by Titian, bangs in the council | ings that Charleston was still in ex- ) the vietim will do well to take 8 | jetter or in spigit, which I should do if | chamber of the doge's palace. The | fstence. Quickly the sounder was sur footbath, go to bed and adopt | | presumed to carry the bucket to the wis, if possible, more diligent. For an hour or more I called, "Adjusted," and used every effort to revive the feeble pulse. I could fancy myself working desperately to resuscitate a half drown- od man, Again I felt the Wiékering signal, and then once more all signs of ¥ fife faded away. Finally as the wires were gradually cleared of debris the current began to strengthen, and then came the answering "i--~i! C N," weak and unsteady, but still sufficiently plain. to he made out. x mA To me it sounded like a voice from fangs. Should it be only a case of snuff : or pepper, of ecoutse the sneeze is of no 'os | consequence. 'But often it is an indica tion of congestion. There is inflamma- tion somewhere, with too much blood, and the object of the sneeze is to give reliet by getting rid of some of the ton with the outside world was io menial labor for him shall be dismissed wealth for which Venice was celebrat- And for many hours Charleston re telegraph people had started out gangs oT = TT PA rT ' DR. J. COLLIS BROWNE'S For a long time there was no response, life. From that moment my watch ever discovered, 3 $i " effectual th y : In fluid. This soeeze Is a warning that Chlorodyne . shan tua] Hosts Diphtheria, Fever, stantly "lost." And as no other tid- ings could be had from the doomed . tmpending days, weeks, months and ts Ta sacs. If sore | JO. the servie. The Bret Elastin People | 4 iv tos mueh to ask his pled. visitor | ed in the fifteenth century remains. The most of it has been dissipated by mained literally dead to the world. The next morning before the average of linemen to get the wires in working order. 'Operators in the principal of- but at last on the wire which I had in C H | 0 RO DY N ebarge a slight answering signal was THE ORIGINAL AND ONLY GENUINE. fs the best tamedy known tor Coughs, Conswnption, Bronchitis, Asthma. 4 acts like a charm fn Diarrhoea and le 4 OF Vie the only specific in Cholera and Dysene tery. di city it was as if in an instant it had ' 1 + / « £ 714, ck Bored % lglon , Sree looked for these signs and took Wart- | suiright to do anything of the kind, : the descendants of the men who made |... v.g time to collect his wits the fices within a radius of several hun- felt rather than heard--faint and flick- (hlorodvne is admitted by the profession to be the ] ' Chlorodyne effectually cuts short all attacks of Epil. been swept from the face of the earth. ing from them, they would escape : pat liere is the way be went at it: it, the same as in England, France and nme dred miles were set to calling "C. N" ering, like the first sign of returning most wonderiul and valuable remedy ly checks and arrests those tos epay; Hyeteria, Palpitation and Spasms. Grimant ace is on the Grand eanal, rounded by a throng of excited teleg- » pal $ILY GEN Neuraliag the other usual remedies to cyre a cold. The winter cold itself is a grave water tank myself." Grant filled the bucket, near the Rialto bridge, and 1s cele brated for its finely sculptured capi- raphérs, The Morsé was broken and unsteady at first, then the current grew stronger--the patient was grow- Chlorodyne es the only palliative in Rheumatism, Gout, Uancer, Toothache Meningitis, ete. warning. When it recurs two or three tals. times évery winter, it 1s sure to be foi- Many of the rich men In Venice to- lowed in the end by chronic bronchitis. PROTECTION OF WORDS. day " Jews. They practically control Once this comes on it is practically in- | , prea For a Rest For Our Familiar | the banking business and manufactur curable. Quotations. ing. They own the fine houses of his Men are started on their lives much In these days when evergbody: is | torical Interest and the best paying es a A shell from a cannon--with a cer- | Luong eversbody seems to sue. | tates on: the mainland in the neigh tain fixed quabtity of energy. If dis- | (4 ©ouiq ft not be well to start a | borhood. The present wealth of Venice ease of accident does not carry them society for the protection of words and is invested not so much in real estate off, they will die some tifie of what | ,.0o0se Many of these are so bru- | A in banking, manufacturing, four | we call old age--in' other words, when | oye (vurworked by the amateur, The | Mills, elevators, gas companies, cotton the energy with which they started is winged words, the words that burn, mills, the manufacture of glass and In -- a 4 ee tow, Ful Soey, viv the thoughts that bremthe, the telling | steamships upon the Adridtic. She . ' " -- ers have only suficient 'to them phrases, do they not. clamor loudly for o IB M. STOREY, A ofvics. 177 | ooing for ninety, eighty, bos sixty 12 rest? That very sentence affords an fy wiront, a , Seventy, Sixty | in, minating example of what I mean. MARRIAGE IN ARABJA. os rai fewer yours, Rows cary eg How apt, how vivid, bow expressive it ap : 8 sure wn Jp iene SESt pions, hat. | would be if all its epithets had not lost ibe. sowrR & BON | MERCH energy y sooner thal | pete vitality through overwork! To ants' Bank . Brock = Lin the average man. But all kinds of | 4, 4406q reader the whole sentence | Wallington streets. n3 baldness bave bot this significance. Tea sen 8 From W. Vesalius, Pettigrew, M.1., formerly Leotuter at St George's Hos listened to the labored clicking, until pital, London--"1 have no hesitation in stating that I have never met with any at last the worst was known: And at fhe k ihe 8 » eli acjous 8 an Antisrusn odie and a Redative I hte te it in som suanj-Oon Asthroa, ArTHOSS and other discases, am Mrioclly satisii the end of the recital a great sigh | with the result." y a aa I oo . wept out from the hearts of all of us, | Furl Russell communicated to the Collage of Physicians that he received a as if literally in our presence a long | despatch from Her Majesty's Council at Manila to the effect that Cholera has | i ing better--and for a long time we buried city bad been exhumed. been raging fearfully, and that the only REMEDY of any service was OHLGRODYNE. ~See Lancet, Ist December, 1564, CAUTION---BEWARE OF PIRACY AND IMITATIONS CAUTION--Vice Chancellor Sir W. Page Wood stated that DR. J COLLIS Camels are the only animals that | RROWNE was undoubtedly the inventor of CHLORODYNY: that the whole cannot swim. { #tbry of the defendant Freeman was d liberately untrue, which he regretted te A seal has 'been known to remain | say had been sworn to.--See Times, July 13th, 1964. twenty-five minutes under water. ~ Sold in bottle of 1a. lid, 2s. Od. 4s. 6d, and lls. each None i» genaine The starfish has no nose, but can without the words "Dr. J Collis Browne's Chlorodyne™ ma the Govern smell with the whole of its under side. ment Stamp. Overwholining Medica! Tes thnony w companies sach Bote The greyhound, which can cover a SOLE MANUPACTURER- J. T. DAVENBORTE, 38 Great Russell. etree, i To a. thi fastest of quads |B" ebwry, Londan, Eng rupeds. Nearly all bottom sea fishes have the power of changing color at will, like chameleons. A sea anemone, taken from the Firth of Forth in 1828, lived and flourished in captivity tntil 1887, Horses, girhffes and ostriches have the largest eyes of land creatures, cut- tiefish of sea beasts. Grizzly cubs born in eaptivity are al- most impossible to raise. Of twenty. three born at Cincinnati only one lived. The Eskimo dog will eat almost any of the dried fruits. The sour or acid fruits, as the orange, lemon, lime, shad- dock, ete, as well as the sour plums and the hitter olives, are rarely eaten. To protect itself from the rain the orang outang 'crooks its arms over its head. The hair on the orang's upper arm points downward, while on the lower arm it polots upward, the appar: ent purpose belug to shed the rain like a thatch. r---------------- Why Did They Abandon Pompeii? At a period when newspaper discus glons were rather vapid, despite the ac credited appearance of the sea serpent and the arrival of the large potato, sax Nordau in an Austrian journal propounded a problem that should lead to useful inquiry: Why was it that the inhabitants of Pompeii did not return to their homes after the destruction of the city? NATURAL HISTORY. The Wedding Procession an rate and Noisy Affair, A marriage procession among the Arabs is a very elaborate affair. The camel which bears the bride is deco rated with bright henna dye on his neck and shoulders, while there are verses from the Koran inscribed on the hangings. ' His uncouth legs are often gwathed with bright cloths, his head bedecked with plumes and small mir rors, while his back is resplendent with bright colored bits of tinsel, which glisten against a patchwork of many hued cloths. A hood or eage conceals the bride, and no doubt adds to the discomfort of the cramped ride on the beast. There are attendants, and last of all the musicians, chiefly drummers, who attract the crowds by thelr incessant pounding on small but high keyed instruments, If the journey to the groom's home is a short one, it is lengthened by stops at frequent intervals, and all the while the Jover must not show any eagerness to welcome her, no matter what his feelings may be. The Arab may be af- fectionate, but he cannot with dignity betray emotion. Among the lower classes buffoons accompany the pro cession with performing bears or other wild animals,' and when the bride Is wealthy largess is distributed along the route in the form of clothes or coin When the groom's tent or fixed home has been reached, the bride is expected to show great reluctance about enter ing it, and in some cases she has to be lifted by the husband over the blood of a sheep he has just slain.- D.& A." Straight Front No. 297. The picture shows you the effect. scalp disease caused probably by mi- means nothing, but it is robbed even of until only a circular fringe of hair is fact through the medium of a bull, 'In any kind. The obstruction may occur quotations a rest. Lay to sleep our Yawning 1s' a somewhat similar Our reputation assures you that the its sound and fury, groves. The WAM Mlduets Shynt The greenhorn that complained of | : di ples and on the crown of the head abd "Hamlet" that it was too full of quota ies Jeft. a wrongheaded way he pointed out that 4 4 * We Rave loft onl8 wary Mumited | Biue nifis, or Dive Banda. betoken | constant reiteration ton 10° U0 number of that excellent line, THE | weak or obstructed circulation. They Sta passag guage. . bousehold words, Let fortune for Prices, $4 $4.25, $5. hom S oy at Javera) orm is 1 the awhile cease to favor the brave. Let An 4 h e that the isnot up us feign that the poet is made. Leta Made in Patent Kid and Velvet. DS Indicates heart ta Wid ie A der be auested for Selon. ghia if win : chats no more golden opinions. a- 3 matali, Jt 18 6 si thag the Seat vored few withdraw to some select se- : ¥ i | m e to bed or perhaps to go Intb the open cludes ang tie counties thousands to : : Fair. When you sit iva close room, the He ¥ dk . ; a? a y nouns, adjectives: and i vee ofa dish [tl cen The rn is Den | EE ng von __=@hoo at & price that can reach all Lo Sous ing blood, #04 Jt warns you them, their original meanings recreat- ask to see our line of TOPROUND ky, "the of 10 leave the | 2dr energetic, brilliant, as on BALS in Enamel, Box and Patent { pdom. When you are out of bed too the day when they were first coaceiyed fe ------------------ Sometimes the loss of hair arises from but the echo of an echo, It pot merely site of Aett Wl moar 'eorner wd M gradually eats its way over the scalp tions unconsciously expressed a great SHOE, OF ROCHESTER. Are 8 warning aginst overexertion of mere.commonplaces. Gife our familiar the mark. man who would steal another's thun- workmanship, and durability cannot be excelled. 'receive sufficient of the D.&A. Genuine Straight . Front - or when you have done an unusu- and brought forth.--Era. From $1.00 to $2.00 a pair. Jong #ity hard day's work, the'waste prod- ucts of your body are present in exces- sive quantity. Then the yawn is a warning to you to lie down and rest. oo 184 Most people bave a great horror of y Princess | getting a "stroke" or fit of apoplexy, Street. | It is not by my means as unpleasant as the toothache, but the suddenness Thought She Was a Calf, When Muse. Schomann-Heink was thirteen, her father was transferred to Gratz, where a singing teacher, Ma- riétta von Leclair, recognizing the young girl's talent, offered to give her sl Igssons without compensation. For two years she studied nothing but Dominion Corset Mfg. Co. Quebec Montreal Toronte -- of ft 1p what appalla Thete is really about ft, However. No solfeggios. "Then she began learning songs. She bad a very deep contralto without any: high notes at that time, Of fhe 80,000 inbabitants a few bun | dreds at most seem to have lost their | lives. The eruption of Vesuvius lasted | Stoves Stored A Magnificent Vessel. In 268 B. C., Archimedes devised a marvelous ship for Hiero of Syracuse. Her three -Jofty masts had been brought from Britain, whereas our ships' masts are of fron or ebtained from New Zealand or from Vancouver fsiland. Luxuriously fitted sleeping apartments abounded, and obe of her bangueting halls was paved with agate and costly Sicilian stone, Other floors were cunningly inlaid with scenes from the "Iliad." Stables for many borses, ponds stocked with live fish, gardens wateged by artificial rivulets and bot baths were provided for use or amuses ment. only a few days. The deposit of lava and ashes was not very thick. The houses might bave been easily repaired. Many of them stand to this day. They were beautiful houses, many of them, richly appointed and containing valu § ables of great price. Had the Pora- pelians no love of bome, or Were they too superstitious, or did their terror at the eruption make them believe the disaster might come again? RVR Have Good Accomodation For Storing Stoves. a eka xia es . ) Prov : taught young calves." We i "She 1s young ealf," replied ve fe ad Marietta von L r. "Some day she - TON will be a great singer."=Gustav Kobbe SR , in Woman's Home Companion. - § ee -------------- The Antiquity of Wheat. The Chinese cultivated wheat: 2,700 years Before the beginning of the Chris- tian ers, always considering it as a "gift @irect from . 'Sclentific ag: SL9%W We will take down, remove and store your stove for the season at a reasonable'price. All our customers stoves are insured and all orders promptly attended to {he fil eT br Drinking Water In the Navy, For many years after the close of the eivil war water was not generally dis tilled in vessels of the navy except on -------------- long voyages, Later on médical statis- w tics showed that in ships where dis aa . ¥ ane ope bu res Brat ly na almost an entire freedom from dysen- of it than our grandfathers did. whéth. | tery and enteric fevers, while these dis- : orders were more or less common in --~ will or mdenake pony Gradually the prac | : ms ------ ---- ------------------ Fri a2 whet a | EE A JOLLY BATH + icin ol Jove A children al e a shore water Is seldom purchased, the dstilling plants of our ships being am- Joggevity, tilled water only was psed there was a : ELLIOTT BRO T ut the Saute uf this 18a better Rndih vessels that used water purchased In 5 > 77 PRINCESS, 5 REET. a To in and want to stay 48 they 'ean comfortably. certeln Industries. Practically British manufacturers of cocos, for For your Jawn, and you'll have | the prettiest lawn in your part 8° of the town. The children can = operate it. The best rubber and workmanship make it the ideal hose. . MCKELVEY & BIRCH, 69 and 71 Brgc J *

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