Daily British Whig (1850), 10 May 1902, p. 7

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» 3 THE DAILY WHI, SATURDAY, MAY 10. © TRAP ® CFOR OR. PITOHER ier, of that Town, Suffered From a 5 W bocar Doctors" Treatment bidn't Do Wicher's Backache Kidney Tablets PX _ der, Making a Complete Cure, § oF ------------ ] ¥REElst, Who Sold Mrs. Alexander Gomtiks Wak She Says of Mer Case, ha Fa 915 i 8 ALEXANDER. we H. Alexander, of Trenton, Ont,, aré.much ud and well again, after siffering greatly for twa or 3 ication of Ninay, and Bladder troubles, which ordi y frionds oh treatments failed to benefit, | * G #0 to about the means of her recovery, un- 8 to Dt, Pitcher's Backache Kidney Tablets, kidney troubles, which is making so many "of the country. EXANDER'S STATEMENT. Kidney Tablets 1° consider a great boom 'to le. For two or three years | was gre ined it Besame so severe: oh ork, in fget, some months ns which were highly recommended by friends, thew sed afterwards became worse thai le 1eted wivh all kinds of ailmente--y distressing adache, and oceasionally swelling of the Banas © 50 perdistent and severe, | concluded 1 had dder trouble and complications, I called in ny case as catarrh of the bladder. He treated first. but the benefit was not lasting, I would at specks floated before my eves, tired feeling, and he ine. lagain started using patent medigines, Sy to give them a thorough trial. | took ten ey pill, but they did not touch my case: One vk in my door advertising Dr. Pitcher's Badkache asked him if he had any samples. The gentle- Sofrpyed to be a representative of Dr. Pitcher, ttle boy WH 1 would send to the hotsl, he would be day a litt tots In nit lost all faith in. medicine, but seeing Kidney Tab (ine A t and 80 confident that the Tablets would man vi Bn 4 bot tle, Md Rook that bottle of Tablets according to ligiag the condition | was in, but before that od woman, I went to Mr. Shurie's drug tale, ond after taking this second one; | bo ox pressed Surprise at the change in my Bainew; weary expression, but now, as I felt ft. Although not {gompletely cured, I fol¢ working wonders for me, I continued their IL ten bottles, but I did not begrudge the 4 ceded in giving me temporsry ul bot they have dowe more--they have me, s wolit 16 vears of age, . who vere headaches at times on lea d and turpentine, says that thee always keep them in the hotise now. 8 to several of my friends, among Dundas street, who tells 'me thoy wre the ehd Dr. Piicher'y Backache Kidney Tak- I was, andl vow gre at erty to in any way vou he ' med) "MRS. Ww, A. ALEXANDER." RIE, DRuUGGIST, SAYS: known Trenton dru ist, was spoken to at she said, and ~Jad- for- publication i . of Francis street, can endorse what Pitchers Backache Rind ylau em She pur- and | have heard her frequently speak of the thei Sigmdy as, SHURIE." are publishi ol cures of sovere question as to he f of Dr, #i for backache, lame or weak back, v Specks or mist before the eyes, diasziness, fine, sealding or irritation, nent cally dur of the bladder, uri in blood, rheu- ws in the in in, in o found 2 | fo - the stomach,» and foot. 'The headac neuralgia. Then come 2 doctor, and he agnos me and helped me Som tinios have dissy sy J a Re i a fos of ona well-kn works in the accomt of the roadily confirmed w, he ; hey gre chocolate-conted, small tive prompt lint ; 1 | 800. 60 Bs for 81.95, at all ne Pitcher oronto, 3. { #dmirable | Wak on her BRIN'S LETTER. of War Resoundisg Everywhere, i OF SUFERN Lio. g - A aURTIONS Engaged in Disgraceful turbances --' Miracle Sue Miracle--War Scenes Re- arsed -- The Fate of the ooklyn. : ig Correspondence, Lote No. 1.308 York, May 9.--The opening of 8 i usually looked upon as most joyful period of the year Whe péarants in other lands cane vutto the Maypole dance and graci ousgiits firepared the mind for peace Ng pinass, looking with God's lessing to an abund- plentiful harvest, But in the. glorious song which pro- a jubilee the news from whroad conde dark and harsh, the clash of resotnos from every portion of the filobe and through India with jis 000 of suffering people, where + and dikease raise their hydrg , they drag in their horrid path the ear of the juggernaut, crush. ing the life ont of the millions who fall | by "the way side and welcome dea$, which they can no longer post. When you add to the terrors ese two fearful destroyers, war's sword and far reaching rifle with no immediate hope of peace ana ',i¥0u have. a ldad which hy ¥ shrinks from and, before which extensive bemevolence sands ed and appalled, The means 1 seem abundant, but unforty- they are not equal to the de and a ery goes up out of Rung bittder than that of the Hebrew mo therfor the loss of her children and ref to be comforted because they are it. 3 It nly seems like a span since lord Robéts was recalled back to England and jien. Kitchener was promoted t., his pace. What a joviul shout rang kh the united kingdom when lis "Bobs," whose fame was without was followed by shouting nds down to the Chating Cross im and sent off to his mission in Africa, where the coming of I's red flag seemed like a pro- fion of victory and peace. © He his country in that ungrateful in ill the glories of his former Pre eclipsed almost to destruc When he was recalled lord Kit- bof Egwptian fame, assumed hind. Tt was he only a few years who eit twenty-five thousand frenzied Madhists dead upon the t was a dire holocaust, such as had not seen in countless gen- 5. The power of the black pro- as broken and he has seen no vietory for the Madhists' cause from that 'chy to this, In leading the Byj. tish ts victory seems to have dc serted| his banner, A series of hig | blockhbuses prevented the 2 af the Rders until maddened to despera. tion Ibwet, the Bear leader, resolved to brogk the coraom or die. He di vid: ed his larmy in two great advancing powers and dashed against the posts which British vale defended. The ad. vance | was covered by thousands of cattle pnd sheep, among which the wily Boers moved along ae if they bore charmed lives, The fight for " short time was desperate but when the sub rose the next morning it found Lien. Dewet on the south side of the eordon with boundless plains out: helore him that gave pasture ty his famished cattle and horses and left him ready to renew the fight he. fore the reveille tap should awaken the tired British hosts to begin _an other battle. ps = ¥ Since then Great Britain has heard nothing hut continued disaster and defeat gnd pow a conference is being held, or at least it is so rumored, where: propositions for Peace and dis armament have been most. determin. edly reisoteil Again the ery of suffering labor re sounds from the equator to the poles. and while the world has been amused with promises of Weaee for which iy found. no justification the war still 5 an and thousands of brave sel. diers swell the fearful holocanst from the rising to the sotting of the sun. As 'the spring advances labor trou bles salute us from BVery portion of ge numbers .f women hich they receive vigor Ous Support and indorsement leaders whe have conducted 'the strike Among men, and in many cases wo. men, have attacked their own sex with the savagery of a wild Indian, as if the association with their male friends had destroyed' all that in womanhood. It only 'a short time since when' a man during the strike in way to work. living about three tory, a distatice too great to walk. She was dragged from the car by some of her own sox. She hroke away should be forever assured to the cite zeny of this greatest re. public ever founded by the wis. dom of man since God said, 'Let soene must have unveiled itself 10 the eves of 'the t man. No vexed questions of wealth and its division in the ranks of labor troubled him, for he was monarch of all he girvey. ed. His wants Were few and the sup- ply of everything he needid Was abun. dant beyond the Then we ask ourselves was his dwell ng construrted in that wondrous beauty that Sometimes Somes ti; us in the visions of the night: Lug not withstanding ite beauty and ain. dance, there was something lacking that would have to he created 10 make the first man contented with his lot, and that want the Abvighty in the plentitnde of His werey supnt; od. Or did jt bave to unriergo the evolution of Darwin, and instond, of the heantify} being that God created in His own image, » breathing acci- dent of the lower class sprang up through the ages, gaining little little daring the countless millions of years, till he became the Perfected be ing that we see. Who can dream of or conceive of that unsatisfied longing of the men who have carved thelr way ht of the spanglsg glittering that magnificent canopy and wonder. ed what they were, as the days cafe light. increaged and he sought the heatens in the erutlest way and in the gigantic pile of Babel he tried 1 reach' the sky. : The Almighty frustrated his ambi tion and drove him forth a wanderer over the face of the earth to find » home _ and q language different from that those who swwounded him and om he never expected to up derst How bition tile were his efforts. His am hed itself to pieces. on the Rock a ges and left him stranded, the greatest failure recorded in the history of time. And, here, hundreds of years after, as we approach 2 yeur 6,000 there comes a development of miracles. As measured hy time seems but a span since there was no 283. no railroad. no steam engine, na. none of that magnificent discovery, electricity; no mighty greyhound, composed of steel, plowed old ocean's waves, laughing at eam to impede his progress and defying the howlings of the storm, The expected miracle of the ages for which men have waited impatiently has come Bt last and 4 mighty ship floats between earth and heaven. The bicycle, which was hailed as a wonder several years ago, is now relegated to a back seat among the has beens: the automobile has placed it in eclipse from which it may never recover. The latest of scientific flyers having obtained a speed 'which has astounded the entire civilized world. Sixty-seven miles within an hout ix the record of achievement: no miracle with which the prophets of old amaged the world ever equaled this scientific wonder. The rapidity 'of fuprovements is almost inconceivable to human conception. The miracle of yesterday is cast one side and is sup erseded. by a more wondrous miracle of to-day. A few brief years that might he comted on the fingers of a single band and the magnificent battleship Propklyn' wight almost have heen con The Nerves control the most important functions of the human sys- tem. Among the symptoms of nervous exhaustion are' 'Brain Fag," Mental Depression, Ir- ritability, Insomnia, Prostra- tion, - Hysteria, Headache, Flushed 'Face, Cold Hands and Feet, IRON-OX TABLETS ACT ASA TONIC increasing nerve energy and force; they also supply nour- ishment to the nervous system, Fifty Tablets For 25 Cents there be light." I often think what a ' dream of avaries. | NN es Rs "Love Lightens Labor" So does Sunlight Soap. One woman will do more work than two will with common soap. One woman will do better work than two will with common seap SUNLIGHT Ask for the Octagon Bar. The Ideal Laundry Shape. Sunlight Soap 'in the home lightens labor. * One rub of Sunlight Soap is worth more than two rubs .of common Soap. One ounge of: Sunlight Soap is worth more than "two ounces of common soap. REDUCES EXPENSE It your grocer cannot supply Sunlight Soap, Octagon Bnd, weite to LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED: Toroht a %amdink bis name and address, and a trial sample will bs #ciit you free of cost, sidered the seventh wonder of the world, Look at her as she floats like | a feather on the seq. dive down into | her innermost where - the beautiful engine that propels her is as fine as a lady's watch; go down to her goal bunkers, where are stored thousands of tons of the creative power that defies both and calm; look 'at her amid roar of battle as if heedles of death; see her the murderous fire Texas and the an wering the Reina Mer odes, a from the Brooklyn's broadside 'seem to shake both earth and sea. As (he storm cloud raises you behold the dock of the Spanish aduiral shin covered with dying and she dead Slowly at first, but with ineregang speed, each minite she se tles dee er to the treacherous waves. Then tomes a wild carcen and she phinges head foremost into that briny, wind ing sheet over which for years she satled so proudly, All that remains to tell the story of her glory and het pride was the Spanish admiral naked as he wax born seeking safoty in the flagship of his enemy. As commander Schley conducted the Spanish admiral to his cabin he turned to an officer hy his side and said, . "No need of jeal ousy here; there is glory enough for us all." It was a noble sentiment and should live on his record in letters of gold. With such a history. covered with glory and undving fame one may judge of the indignation of the inhabsi tants of Brooklyn when they learned that the battleship that was named in their honor was doomed to tes truction. On exmuination it was wanidd that this magnificent craft was unsoa worthy, that with her heavy arma. ment above the water she might turn turtle at any moment eartying with her the brave crew to the botiom of the soa. A further fhvestigation, how. ever, gives the hope that this report was without foundation. Lets us hope for the best and that she may sur. vive for many years among her coun: y's most gloriows ¥ Congress bas at last awakened to the sense of its duty. Six war ships. of different classes have been. ordered immediately, apd when finished it will place the United States as one of the foremost fighting mations of recosses storm the danger oy sweep down betwee of the battleship broadside of mighty roar fag world. i$ it Don't forget to give yer own full nexoand 8 3G. ees, on re -- ONE PROFIT LESS. So» What the Fife Engine is to the old fash foncd "Bucket Brigade," the Slater System of Makers price<control, is to shoe business, a From Manufacturer to you, via the Shoe Wholesaler,-and uncontrolled Shoe Retafler,~is the other system - which costs you: two profits instead of one, : i Stamped-on the shoes, $3.50 and $5.00. KET, the |. "In time of peace 1 pare for war." § in BROADER Fal fill 3x A

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