Daily British Whig (1850), 15 Jul 1904, p. 5

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ge of ing their Store lake ALWAYS E = g A iy) [ e « = = Nith a s - tore, Tr, reg- ng for for ice andise from ints d FOR SALE YEARS AFTER. FATHER AND SON, SEPARAT- EDAT JOHNSTOWN, MET. One Had Lived In Setotland And The 'Other In South America, But They Came Together In Theatre. : Atlantic City, NJ., July 14.--After a fiftcen years' separation, believing each othér déad, Richard Paget and his son, Herbert, met in the city last night udder dramatic circumstances. They weke separated at the John stown flood, and both were severely injured. s Unable? to find his hoy, tha father could not stand the strain he was un- dergoing, dhd, 'after a vain search, he decided to return to his old home in Scotland, When Hcrhert Paget was permitted to leave the 'Altoons Hospital, he went at once to Johnstown, where he tried to get some trace of his father. He was unable to do so. Being left to his own 'resources, he went to Denver, wher he worked for several years. The last four 'years he has been em- ployed hy a mining concern of Battle Creek, Mich, Last April they sent young Paget to Bolivia, South Am- erica, to superintend the installation of engines and look after their ufin ing interests there. The elder Paget, after the effects of the great flood had gradually died away, resumed business in Edinburg, was successful, and is new 'wealthy. : A fecling. kept urging him to re turn again {6 this country for a vis- it. The vovage did not agree with him, and he came to Atlantic City. He was accompanied to this country by Mr. and Mrs. John MacDermott of Edinburgh. Young Paget returned to the United States from South America, met a party of fritnds last Friday. Unknown to each other, father and son were passing Young's pier, when their at- tention was attracted by a man an nouncing a, "thrilling and spectacul- ar" reproduction of the Johnstown flood, and both went into the hall, where the performaace was given. The performanee was too much for the elder man, who created consider- Kingston Druggists WHO SELL Chamberlain's Colic Cholera and arrhea Remedy, © Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. Chamberlain's Pain Balm, Dr. A, PP. Chown, 185 Princess street. Frank J. Hoag, Up-Town Phar- macy, G. W, Mahood, street. W. 'H. Medley, street. 156 Princess R32. Princess - The Taylor Drug Co., 124 Prin- cess street, Henry Wade, Market Square. ABSOLUTE yond of womb organism, the limbs tremble, t "goes to pieces " and is flat on her b No woman ought to arrive at this troubles. infallible cure for all displacements and inflamm Read how Mrs. Frake wrote to Mrs. | result, and how a cure was effected by the use of -- THE DAILY She must remember female ill) such assirre "A Sick Woman's Devotion to Duty is a Heroism which a Well Person How distressing to sce a woman struggling with her daily round of household duties, when her back and head are aching, « and every movement brings out a new pain. ; : One day the poor woman is wretched and utterly miserable; in a day or two she is better and laughs at her fears, thinking there is nothing much the matter after all; but before night the deadly backache reappears, he lips twitch -- it seems as though all the imps of Satan were | terrible state of misery, because these symptoms are a sure forerunner that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is almost an gularity of periods, which cause weak ation of the womb, or any of the multitudes of illnesses which beset the female >inkham when she was in great witich) Phkdat. sii of Fisri ied Fo OF Cannot Understand. , ,,. clutching her vitals; she stomach, sick headache, ete, trouble. Her letter tells the Lydia E. Pinkhani's Vegetable Compound. that it is of no use. less I ache all over. * DEAR Mns. PINKHAM :~ I have read of your medicine making 80 many cures, and have been advised to write to you, but I feel The doctor says that I have womb trouble, but he does not seem to help me a great decl. 1 have stich a weak- ness across me most of the time -- have backache, am very nervous; and-em troubled w very weak, cannot walk any d 10e or st I would like to know your medicine would do me gobd." -- Frage, Prospect Plains, N. J. Ir leucorriicoa, Mrs. SAMUEL me. When | doctor said I had congestio my kidneys and bladder, time, and walk about to do my own with the physician and toc able to do mm ness across me. and can Q Tam and long un- if you think Plajos., N. J, ** DEAR Ms. PIxxnAx : --I cannot, thank you enough for what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable first wrote to you I had suffered for years. suffered with bearing-down feeling, could scarcely own work, have no more backache or weak- praise your medicine enough, and would advise all suffer- ng women to try' it." -- Mgrs. SAMUEL FRAKE, Compound has done for The n of the womb, was troubled with my back ached dreadfully all the housework. 1 sto] vk your medicine, an doctoring am now 0 all my own work. 1 cannot Prospect $5000 ¢ FORF o will prove their absolu! dia I. Pink IT if we cannot forthwith produoe th al lotterd and signatures bove t The Madlcine weging to be taken from the theatre The performance" was lights turned on, anc was being assisted from the house he passed his son in the aisle. "Father, oh father, is it cried his son. "My son, old boy's X Mr. Paget was taktn to g privat office, and was soon restofg sciousness, "We would rather vou wouldn't sav too much about this meeting," said Herbert Pages "Father and T want to enjoy our new found happiness by ourschibs, 1 cannot tell vou how wi feel about it. We only ask to be lofi alone. Father, Mr. and Mrs. MacDer nrott and I intend to go. straight. to St. Louis. What our plans in the fu ture shall be have not as yet. mate rialized. We haven't thought of that Why should we ?"* stopped, the you ?' !" feebly cried the then fainted in his uy son man and to con The Ontario Farmers' Outlook, A tour of observation just now through the western part of Ontario shows this fine country district at its best. The fall wheat crop is headed out and vigorous in appearance, insur- ing a fair return if it escapes rust. Barley is unusually strong, and is, in spite of the dilatory spring, well ad- vanced for the period. 'Oats and peas promise equally well at a wider inter- val from maturity. The grass crop is quite exceptional. The cutting of kay is in full swing, and the growth is al- most unprecedentedly heavy. A few bright days would place its quality where its quantity now is, quite peradventure. be- With a reason- able prospect for fruit, early and late, 4 the season bids fair to be a fortunate o B | one for the Ontario farmer, 3 ET-------- Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of 1 I Am vpundmg and have moved next door, below 8.°S. Corbett's, the undertaker. will sell dll the goods. New Ready- Made Clothing, Gents' Furnishings, Boots ang Shoes, Jewelery, Musical In- strumen and 2nd Hand Bicycles, and 2nd Hatid Clothing, Stoves, Furniture, | dent on the Irish question, says it ete. below cont. would he as sale a solutfon as any P. S.--1 will pay the highest price | 0 have an annual session of the Irish for 2nd 'Hand Clothing, Furniture and | members at Dublin for the discussion Stoves. « t I. ZACKS." Emigration /Swindler LET ME HAVE YOUR SALE And I will guarantes you satis- factory results. We don't brag, |' ll but perforin the work, Nothing |, sacrificed, but your best inter- | ( est studied e head, W. J. MURRAY, The Avctioneer |v: «oud 2 provid in any town, with houst rent free, industrial schools. her Indians. tant; flood which destroyed San Juan Monte. Two hundred lives were lost, ed. The homes of Americans and CURE 8I1CK HEADACHE. A hours; totaling seventeen and one-fifth inches, This is nu a munication with outside places is in t at $2,000,000. Prof. Goldwin Smith's Suggestion. Smith, writing to a Dundee correspon has been sentenced at Dublin to twelve ---- Facts About Canada's Indians. 108,233 red men. 1903 over Canada has They increastd by 112 in 1902. They cultivated 100,000 acres, Value of their farm produce, 1903, a million. Value of their 1903, a million. Wages carned, 1903, a million and a hali. 10,000 Indian children are being edu cated in nearly 300 schools. 258 Indians are learning trades in fishing and hunting, Canada spends £300,000 a year on AL000 of the Intlians aro Protest 42,000 Rowan Catholic. 17,000 Indians are pagans. Many Lives Lost In Flood. Manilla, July 14.~A cloudburst over he hills northeast of Manilla caused o del The low lying districts were inundat for Transportation carried on in ighers are isolated. hrough the streets is oats only, Rain has for fallen twenty sevey unprecedented. Com errupted. The damage to property is estimated -------------- London, July 15. Prof. Goldwin of purdy hish questions, subject to he ratification of, the united parlia- wnt at Westminster, where, the Irish ntation would remain the same sent, Punished. July 15.--<A Russian London, Jew nonths™* hard labor = for obtatning from people at Leeds on the was the manager of a He anhouneed Pass vat one pound per and in addition advertised that noney rround that he 'anada to Canad Hy "az 'nobody paid OR "it TO-LET FURN- any rent in Canada.' able excitement by weeping aloud and as the oll may | They 9 m Patents H tangling or soll For Elect Consul MYERS' Shut your eves when you look at ; he faults of a friend, : Plain or with Chili or Tomato Sauce. W. CLARK, Mrn., MONTREAL and automatically 1a ful, in perfec dition, used ouly a short time will be sold at a low price. Also ersible one Rev Rind and Boiler, suitable for 8 Toe. King are simply delicious, d a perfect food. WS or Sa---- v zs Hsiatic Dyes " Wash Silks (L¥ PATENT HOLDERS) Tha colors nee fa the alk the best. which pr eg Put np Vents waste by A sha Da Tory SUPE 4 corre 4 needle FOR SALE. all and Portab) light | Pan is serivusly planving to dethrone work or Steam Yacht, about 14 | all of the idols of the land and in som. Jores Dower, Sos $150; be? avid {way to commend Christianity to the ; , 76¢. per hundred pounas, wii | PA1I0M do tne work of wire costing 3 times ---------- Apply to J. A. Gould & and Queen streets. rical ~~ Work t Breck & Halliday, practical Electricians, Prin- cess Street. Better Than Ever CELEBRATED HOME~ ork Sa IN TEE CHURCHES, What Is Doing In The Denomi- nations. United States. A great evangelistic in Philadelphia. in use. The total gift in the United States for thd last eleven years to cducation amounted to £610,110,000, Rev, J. Lambert Alexander, late of Lanark, was recently installed as per- manent pastor of the Union' church, Berlin, Wis, American missions now have cighteen churches in Austria planted in centres of influence, with a member: ship of 1,114. There are 1,760 English clergymen who are sharcholders in joint stock companies engaged in the liquor traffic in London alone. Out of 72,398 students in seventy- two American colliges, thirty-three per cent. are members of the Young Men's Christian The American hoard has eighty-five Bible women and forty-nine native teachers in the Madura field, with a church membership of 5,086. Rev. Lemuel Moss, DD, LL.D., one of the foremost Baptist educators and divines, is dead at New York, after an illness of more than a year. The Uganda mission, in Central Af rica, begun twenty years ago, has now 1,070 church buildings, seating 126,- 850 persons, crected chiefly at the cost of the people The news that the Archbishop of Westminster, England, has' become in practice a total abstainer, has been ailed with great enthusiasm among Catholic temperance workers in Eng lan By the death of Bishop Huntington, Right Rev. Charles T. Olmsted, D.D., who was appointed co-adjutor in 1902 succeeds to the bishopric of the dio cese of Central New York, with the full powers and dignities of the office. The China Inland mission reports in China 199 stations and 788 workers During the past year thirteen new sta tions were opened and 1,688 persons baptized. In the once bitterly anti- foreign provincg of Hunan mission sta tions have been opened in all but one of the prefectural cities, The Salvation Army now has thirty eight stations and outposts in Japan, with ninety officers and cadets, all but thirteen of whom are Japanese, a home for discharged prisoners, a rescue home for women, a sailors' home at Yokohama for foreign seamen. and a league of mercy composed almost on tirely of Japanese women, Australia has 3,960 Chistian Endea vor societies, and the endeavorers there are greatly interested in missions to the aboriginal-, Among Japan's 115 Christian Endeavor societies ar some in the royal navy, one in a post office, and others in the famous Okay oma Orphan Asylum, conducted In Ishii, the Japanesc George Muller Korea has twelve societies, Togo, the great admiral of Japan, is said to be an earnest Christian, as is his wife, who i« a graduate of Vas sar College. Admirals Urin and Leu rato are members of the Presbyterian church, and a recent canvass reveal that more than 100 officers of the navy and army are also members of Christian churches, Reports contimie to come that the govornment of ampaign is on Eight large tents are over Association Ja Bath Brevities. Bath, July 14.- Mrs. Fred: K. Baker and daughter, Guelph, - are visiting at Max Robinson's. | C. Mills and wife visited at «Napanee one Sunday, at their con's, Frank Mille: Quite a num- r of our citizens were disappointed on Tuesday last hy the stdmmer Ale tha failing to call 10 take the exeyr- sion to. Picton for the Orange eclehra- tion. Mrs. Robert Moft"" and family have gone to Brockville. on. a wisit to Manson Smith. On Saturday last, July 10th, to Mr. sods Mrs. Robert Calvert, a son. Mi, M. Cummins rand daughters, Dorothy and Lizzie, of Belleville, are visiting at Mes, John Thompson's, Hotel National. A Million Women LydiaE. Pinkham's Veg There are 143 denominations in the that Restored Health Is §000000000000000Q00008 SPECIAL " Ordered 3 SHOE SALE : lms wel | (yg oc O 00000000 ® COO0 OO00000OOKL We have made the rounds and ordered out all our Men's Fine Oxfords and have added about 35 pairs of Patent Colt Bals and Buttoned, all this season's fresh American Shoes, and have marked them at the low price of $2.59. Just two lots : ot 1.--About irs of | Lot 2.-- Lar Russet &iPPatent, 3 Coltskin, Velour Calf and Vici Kid Oxfords, the $3.50, $4 and $4.50 kinds, all one price and all Good-| the $4 and $4.50 kind year welted.... 2 59, for....... $2.50, See Our Men's Window, They Are All The One Price, $2.59. The Barly Bird Catches the Worm, J. H. Sutherland & Bro. LEADING SHOE STORE. x ® ° Wash Goods Whirlwind Our Wash Goeds department is fat with REAL CLEARING THEM oUT BARGAINS. Just when the weather makes them indispensible, we slash a slice off the price and put the finest at your service at less than the cost of commoner kinds. We want to clear out the Summer Goods. We will pay you to take them away. English Plain and Cord Shirling Prints, 36 and 40 inches wide,in medium and light colors, worth 18¢c. Sale Price, 0c yd. Anderson's Scotch Fast Color Shirting Ginghams, 32 inches wide, in Oxblood, Blue and Pink Stripes, for- merly 25c. a yard. Sale Price, 10c. yd. A Bargain Counter contzining Fancy Dress Musling and Zephyrs, ranging in value from 25c. to 50c. a yard. Sale Price, l5c. yd. White Basket Waist and Shirt Waist Suit Materials all reduced. Prices from 5c. io 60c. yd. Try Us for Your Summer Wash Waist or Suil. RUMLEY BROS. bm bs TT pairs of Men's Guaranteed Patent Colt Bals, a few pairs buttoned. The latest American styles and Goodyear welted, wi * Sa oo y orion gis Logs. Poultry always on hand. All fish cleaned if req DOMINION | On all goods for a couple of weeks. in pe : During sale ata § White Vestings COST. Everything must turned into meney for purchases. tid Reductions for Cex it Only, as it's the Cash We Want: : ¢ THE 20h CENTURY TRETIIENT, Tho Source of all Power, , aeovers Te Fountain of Youth, sii Jules Kohr. The result of §0 years of scientific research, Lost manhood brought back after years of weal despair, Nature's Sacret restored by combining three of the rarest chem reagents in the world, is is no-experiment. itis proved by its use in the Hospitals of Europe. Tens of 7 ad A pm end by 30 dzys treatment. This is a fact) P. WALSH, Barrack St, 1¢ soiling SCRANTON COA As follows j= Pea, pertom,........; Chestnut, per ton... ost Stove, per tor. ....... Egg, per ton.. Ss mesare ully sealed ina plain w fu'l 30 days treatment (180 or nd of a the Tast

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