Daily British Whig (1850), 28 Apr 1906, p. 15

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

OCOLATE amp always include 2. Strengthening slesome as bread ang n Street, Montreq), OPORDROODes can depend upon For its quality is a] WAYS the ANY weg. fame fh any chim son, all the year purest, cleanest cer all the world, for everybody, MADE IN CANADA of selected Ontario Wheat ok," postpaid. ed, Niagsra Falls, Ont, Bt. Al food in An all-day food AGENT, a JRANCE HHH Want a Home HACIA > AAA HSIIISISIIAIGIGISIE ASIII IE nsurance, have a with Zeigler, "1" Sik E 7 Brock Street. JR SALE eral Store doing &-Jarce in a smart village, in district. For pe s PF. Jd. LO ate Agent, 159 Welling Kingston. ILA Expense Is . Light xs simple to prepare overings. Just mix /ERLASTING WALL Frid 'INE : coating hardens with age. A tify the hofiie. Women tly howe surroundings ow to use it. FREE. ABASTINE. PARIS, ONY. Hayy ¥ DAILY WHIG, SATURDAY APRIL 28 : WORST ECZEMA DOCTORS EVER SAW ad Rapidly Over Body -- Limbs Byes 'Arms Had to Be Bandaged and Scalp Looked Dreadful -- Suffered Untold Misery for Three Years -- Better in Two Months. MARVELOUS CURE BY CUTICURA REMEDIES who is now twenty-two rs of age, when he was four months old began to have eczema or 'his face, ading quite rapidly until he was : covered. We had all the doctors us and some from larger places, no one helped him a particle. eczema was something terrible, and the doctors said it was the worst « they ever saw. At times his whole rh and face were covered, all but his feet. 1 had to bandage his limbs and arms; his scalp was just dreadful, used many kinds of patent medicines before trying & he Cuticura Remedies, -- 0 no aval Q aly ind teased me to try Cuticura At last 1 consented, when my boy was three years and four months old, having had eczema all that time, and suffering untold misery. I began to use all three of the Cuticura Remedies; the Cuticura Soap helped as well as the Ointment. He was better in two "My son, nearly around but The ; in six he was well; ponths; in SIX months well; at I gave him the Cuticura Resolvent one ye ir, -- using twelve bottles, i think, -- and always used the Cuticura san for bathing, and do now a good Soap! He was Sv years old before , and his skin became per- r when cured. I give you per- to publish this letter for I am always od to do good when I can. I think I have told you all there is neces- gary to tell" Mrs. R. L. Risley, Oct. 24, 1903 Piermont, N. H tment for ev y ay | A. A Free. * low to Cure Disguring Humours ut the Skin, Scalp, Hair, and Hands, Dr. Walter H. Moor house, Dean Medi. cal Faculty West. era University, Londen, says: "It .is a most important thing that the physician can confidently re- commend a certain brand, as one which possesses in so emi- nent a degree as your . Wilson's Invalids' Port has, all the bracing tonic effects of good, sound wine, along with the ex- tract of Cinchona Bark, which is one of our very best tonics." All Druggists. The Rich, Fragrant. Creamy Lather of BABY'S OWN SOAP leaves the skin so white, Smooth and sweet, that every time it is used it gives renewed delight. ALBERT SOAPS, LIMITED Mras., MonTREAL. 1-106 ¢ | i ] EC ATTEND THE BEST 7 copy? VOUNT men and women who Hon in ting 2 Commercial Educa- Keeping d. Typewriting, = Book- Will fired 1 f'a Civil Service course find the' Frontenae usiness College ingston, Ontario The 1, fate usipery HiPPed and most up-to aster Onto; ¢ tioing institution in ah 8 mav Rraduatey 4 * Situations enter at any time, and re assisted to good pay- ates, Write for catalogue and 3a "Phone 880 Ww, "HShaw, 7.5. geockdale Principal. v, will begin her American aadevilie scason : New York early in May. She will appear in a short version of "Pagliacci." The reigning successes in London at present are Marie Tempest in All of a Sudden Reéggy" at the Duke of York's, and Seymour Hicks and Ella- line. Terriss in" "The Dpauty of Bath at the Aldwych. Both, productions were made by Charles Frohmar. THINGS THEATRICAL THE REIGNING SUCCESSES IN LONDON, Francis Wilson, in "The Mount- ain Climber," in New York-- "The Submerged Tenth' a Sarah Bernhardt's appearance under New Play. canvas in Texas seems to have bad Schuberts have obtained the Eng- | scriptural warrant, if not direct pro- in the Book of gaid unto him; he said, 'Be- lish and American rights to Sardou's "La Piste." ; Augustus Thomas is working on a new play in which Digby Bell will star late next season. "The Second in Command phecy. It is written Genesis ©: "And they "Where is Sarah?" And hold, in the tent !'" E. H. Sothern has bought from has been § Ludwig Barlay, the celebrated trage- revived by Cyril Maude. When first | dian, all the incidental music which produced it played 382 times. was specially composed for that ac- H. B. Irving is now playing *Mauri: | tor's production of "Hamlet. This tette," adapted from the If § music will be used in future perform- it succeeds he will bring it to Am- | ances of the play given by Mr. Se- erica. thern and Julia Marlowe. J. M. Barric has been writing sa- Julia Neilson and Fred. Terry, tires for the stage. Two were given | whose popularity is so great in 'Fng- at the London Comedy Theatre re- | lund, seem to have added to their list cently. . of successes with "Dorothy o' the "The Submerged Tenth," 'is the | Hell," the new play in four acts by striking indicative title of the new | Paul Kester and Charles Major. The play which Charles Klein is writing plst is founded on the story of "Dor for Henry B. Harris othy Vernon of Hadden Hall." "The Dairy Maids," the new musi Francis Wilson has scored an enor- cal play, was produced at the Apollo | mous hit in New York in the farce Theatre, London, last week, with all | "The Mountain Climber," which was the evidences of sueo written by the authors of "Are You a 1 KYRLE BELLEW, As "Raffles the Am ateur Cracksman.'" Mason ?' It gives Mr. Wilson the best laugh making opportunitics he has ever had, and he is crowding the Cri- terion at every performance, Charles Frohman will make an early production in September Y Stoops to Conquer," with two of his stars appearing as Tony Lumpkin and oi "She Hardeastle, Cosmo Gordon awennox is preparing Katherine Kidder has heen engaged | an English version of Jules Mmaitre's for an important.rolé in "The tm-| "La Massiere" for George Edwardes, barrasstent of Riches," to he produc | who will produce it soon in a London ed in Washington next month, under | theatre. The piece, it is announced, is the management of the Converse! to be thoroughly Anglicized, which ters firm. means probably that nothing what Miss Gertis Miller," a popular mem- | ever will be left of the French aromg ber of the London Gaiety company. for atmosphere. In some cases, of has taken action to have suppressed | course, treatment of this. kind is al- a: photograph in which her head is at: | most essential, but eminent French tached to the slightly clad figure of | writers may well' complain of a sys- some one else tem .which makes them responsible for --_--r rT [all 'the manifold abominations per- petrated under the mame of adapta- tion. Sarah Bernhardt, whose farewell visit is proving the surprise of the year financially, was not always as fortunate as at present in the matter of attracting audiences in America. On the occasion of an earlier tour. Ma- dame Bernhardt was greeted by many hal Houses, and these never failed to draw from her some sarcastic com- ment, On one occasion Madame Bern- hardt played "Camille" before a small gathering in Youngstown, Ohio, and, | in her parting scene with Armand, sub- | stituted a forceful remark concerning the size of the audience for the right i linc s of the piece. Those present whe did not know French missed the jEke 'but the linguists in the the led it" hugely. Under | stances five years atre enjoy- similar circum- tar ago, in Omaha, the { divine Sarah interpolated four words | eltectively in the dving speech of Ca- mille, "Ah 1' ghe said, . see a face! {1 see a face! but not many faces." hindi, MISS EVELYN R. LONGMAN i TRENT CANAL COST. A young New York sculptor, who wond considérafile prominence Ly the fact t + z af the models submitted | by twenty ; Total Expenditur: to March Was eight sculptors in the competition for $4,957,653. the bronze emtrance doors of the chapel i 5 al the U.S. Navdl Academy, Annapolis fog Ottawa, Aprib, 2%.--A report from Md., the prize was awarded to her (nr. brant, superintending engineer i She Was born in Winchester, O., twenty-{ (po, po wie ol 2 oO BCS rs oh lie or With Torna hi Tr nt canal, gates that the econ- Taft in Chicago and With Daniel" ( racis not yet completed are the hy- French in New York draulic litlock No.2, and : sections 2 and Balsam Lake and 3 of the Sim division. The former is heing con- structed by the Dominion Bridge com- pany, Montreal, who 4 Mrs. Patrick Campbell is ploving "The Whirlwind." The London Times' of the French critic says the c have * 'already original 'is a perpetual staccato of {done work and supplied materials 15 brutally plein truths, {the value of SI28515. Larkin & Sang Mrs. Brown Potter, supported by | ster have the contract for No.'2 geo. Gilbert Hare and a small English Frigg have so far received $381. - - = 607. here 3 is still about $30,000 worth [of work to be done, Brown and Ayl ; fer are the contractors for No. 3 see- j Sem, and they have acne work and supplied materials to the value of £445,171. There is still about £100,000 worth of work remaining. The total expenditure on the exnal up to March 3st, was $1,957,653. --------------------------... Thin Blood Experience count anything with you? Then what do you think of 60 years' experience with Ayer's Sarsaparilla! Sixty yeais of curing thin blood, w tak nerves, general debility! We wish you would ask your own doctor about this. Ask him to tell you honestly |: what he thinks it will do for your case. Then do precisely as he says. i | ; : { In the course of a'lecture on "Fresh Air and Ventilation," by Dr. Somer- ville Hastings, .at the Institute of Hy- giene, he stated that the 2.000.000 deaths which annually oeenrred in the tir j bontains 130,000,000 ecubie yards which NEW YORK LETTER SAN FRANCISCO NEWSPAPER | MEN COMPLIMENTED. Gotham to Be Made A Paradise, Its 'Plague' Buried in the Atlantic, and = Sickness Re- duced to Minimum-=Boy of Nine Captures Burglars. New York, April 2%. Seldom has a community been so deeply moved as New York has been by the terrible calamity that befell the metropolis of the Pacific coast, San Francisco. The sales of the mewspapers were enor: mous, the editions being innumerable. Indeed, some of the newspapers for- got about the editions, and simply sent extras as fast as the forms could be changed. They all expressed their admiration for the plucky newspaper men in San Francisco, who clubbed their forces and got out one news- paper to be distributed by all. The streets here. were lied with people watching bulletins and buying extras, the crowd exceeding that of any pre vious occasion nice the death of Lincoln and ®on election nights. There was no escaping the meaning of the faces that looked "at the bulletins, they were all serious, with a vein of sadness about them. Many were ex pressions of regret at the sad fate that had befallen the fair city by the western sea, and many were the fears expressed that she would never arise from her ashes. The wound to con- fidence wrought by an carthguake is a terrible. one. It requires a steady nerve to rebuild such a shaky foundation, with every indication that another calamity like the one just enacted is almost as sure as fate. Une thing is sure, the buildings will be of steel comstruction hereafter, frame 3 having proved a de on lusion. It Was a delight to witness how the gdperous promptings of sym- pathizing hearts came to the surface. Money went leaping and rushing like a torrent to help the poor fellows on the coast, and if money conld plant them surely on their feet again it would be on hand in no time. What a comfort to feel that we have . a government that could supply 200,000 rations AG starving people almost at once. The occasion brings out the fact that the people of this: country are very closely allied to cach other, that city is bound to city, one sec- tion to another, so that what touch- es one touches them all. Corporation Counsel Delaney's de- cision that the Great Eastern Tele phone company's claim to a franchise 1s worthless, is not going to end the. fight. The officials of the Great East ern do not admit that the adverse opinion of Corporation Counsel De laney is a deathblow to an indepen dent telephone service in Greater New York. They say that they expeotud that the influence of the Bell mono- poly would be such as to prevent a favorable decision from the Tammany corporation counsel. Attoméy-Gene ral Mayer, last January, upheld the validity of the franchise. Papers are now being drawn in mandamus pro ceedings to foree Commissioner klli- son to grant the neecssary nit to open the streets. The counsel of the Great Eastern Telephone company: savs there is no doubt of the success of these proceedings. The board oi alderman considered a proposition #0 make New York a par adise. The plan is contained in a brief that was submitted to Mayor MeClel lan by 1, B. Lothrop and Dr. Hans Liebreich, Gloucester, Mass. The may- or referred the matter to the board of aldermen. It was set forth in the brief that the air of New York is charged with carbolic acid gas, particles of dust and various other things, all of which go to make up what is called a plague. Upon approaching New York the traveller sees a gigantic clond which similar to a volcanic witch kettle. It is this which comprises the plague, and the plan is a system of camelization and evacuation to ca off all this poisonous atmos pheric matter through sewers' and de posit it some where in the Atlantic ocean." The promoters say "mortality will be reduced to the lowest mini mum." It is stated that the cost of the installation would be about $5.- 000,000 but it is suggested that if the city desites to make an inexpensive experiment it may try the plan in the subway, and in a few minutes thereby rid the tube of the foul atmosphere. It is estimated thdt this "plague" can be carried off. through the sewers, thus allowing the pure oxygen of the upper cloud regions to cover the city. The hoard of aluermen referred the proposition to the health committee, without snggestion. Pierpont Morgan, report has it, is to have an Italian garden for his re sidence here. For the fashionable strip of Manhattan between Madison and Fifth avenues, between Madison and ! of a new development. Lawns and gardens have not been: numerous there. Except for the Vanderbilt man Bone Wherever Oil kas been introduced everybody is Rheumatic talking about its wonderful curative powers. Here. is what one A Lettep suficrer writes : < Dear Sirs--I want every- of Thanks one to know what Tack's Bone Oil did for me. suffered for a: year and nine months from a sore leg and at times the pain was almost unbearable. If 1 moved about the house I was obliged to go with my knee on a chair. I was under the doctor's care for months and was six weeks in the ~-- hospital from which mv husband brought me home not much improved. A neighbor told me of Tuck's Bone Oil and advised me to try it. 1 did =o and at once began to get relief. Four bottles cured me and 1 ean now walk over town and back again at mv case. 1 think Tuck's Bone Oil is the best medicine ever made, Mrs. J. Hopking, Smith's Falls. For rheumatism, lame back, neural gia, sprains, coughs, colds, quinsy or bronchitis, in short for any and all Finds of inflammation, there is noth- ! eg to equal Tuck's Bome Oil. A bot- tle should be on the shelf in every home. For sale by all 'medicine deal- w orld mivht to a large extent be at- tributed to the habitual breathing of j ------ a------ 3 i hood ol aer impure air, J.¢. Co... We ave ve secrets We publish Ajeide. ers at 50c. a bottle, or sent prepaid by .The Tuck Bone 0il Co., Limited, Smith's Falls, Ont. sions all were' closely built with shoulders touching, 'until the Came: gie and Clark residences set . thew- selves. round with a little green. Mr, Morgan, it is reported, has decided to do away with two or three of the buildings on his land, and build an Italian garden. He i» travelling through Jtaly and has visited the Re- naissance Gardens in Rome, Florence and Trivoli, whichtare models of the former style, Maxim Gorky made cheap meat of his mission in short order. What the czar could not do after long endeavor 'Gorky himself did in a day, and did it completely, Rishop Goodsell says, "no minister ever recovered from the stain of a woman scrape." Gorky will find. that it will cling to him, in this country at least, so long as he is re membered at all. But why is that Wilshire allowed Joose ? He signed Gorky's namg to. a telegram to the murderers of mining = regions, and in his wretched magazine glorifies them. It is time that. he is suppressed. He might be put in the same cell with the murderers he admires 80 much. Meamwhile Gorky is in Coventry. There may he stay. y E ' On all the original theories on econ- omy the Most eccentric was announced by a girl in a fashionable millinery store a few days agu. With two friends she was going through the painful pressure of choosing a hat, and at last she found something that suited. She was giving orders about its upbuilding, and when she espicd a ready-trimmed af. fair of brown straw with three shades of russet ribbon completing its whole adornment. She cagerly asked the price, and to tha amazement of her friend she paid spot cash, and order- ed the hat sent at once. "What do you want with a brown straw?' asked the chumé. "You haven't a brown gown." "Oh, IT know al that," ans- wered the purchaser. "But do you gee all the wribbon I am getting on" that hat ? Well, 1 can get a brown linen suit and wear the hat a few times, Then, you see, T am just daft about russet shoes. \T wear them the whole year round--in the house--~I mean in the win ) Well, that ribbon will make lovely shoe ties. It's go soft and wide. You have no idea. how mugh jt costs me to buy shoe- ties. Why that hat will keep me going for months." People are asking whether the San Francisco disaster will efiect the pre- sidential campaign. One of the leaders in the political field, - owns much pro-. perty in the stricken city, and it has unquestionably lost a great deal of ils value, ~ Will money be as ready to hand out and easy to lavish on all political schemes the leader fancies ? It does not appear possible that the sinews of war can be supplied as readily as they have been and chang: es of attitude on the part of public questions may. soon be looked for. The earthquake may have shaken Mr Hearst's power to wage political war as much as it has his buildings on the treacherous soil of the coast, A great many New Yorkers have heen trying to imagine the plight of the stricken people .in San Francisco, They have wondered how they them- selves would be able to withstand such calamitous circumstances, each feature of the conditions standing with sword uplifted "against the health of the hapless victim. Were New York to awake to-morrow morning and find it self in the streets; the gas cut off, the water gone, no provisions purchasable, the continued pressure upon the brain that nothing now relieves , with nights without sleep and davs with- out labor or refreshment, one's sole existence upturned and faith in things unrooted, a wail would go up that would be heard round the globe. Half of the wretched victims would sink to their graves at once, and the others would carry the recollection as a me mory whose honors would sink into their very innermost being. Many have said that they have not slept at night since the news of the carthgpake broke upon them, A boy with a double-barrelled gun, only nine years . old, captured two burglars, in a way that excited the unqualified admiration of the police. Edward Reilly is the boy and his decd was performed in the Bronx. His parents went. visiting. He and his bro- ther, on one of the upper floors, heard sounds which led him to creep down stairs. He took a look that satisfied him that his surmise was correct, that there were burglars around. He oot his father's loaded gun, and told Wil lie to follow him. Planting himself in command of the collar stairs, he told his brother to run out and yell. This Willie did to such effect that not only the outside world heard him, but the burglars did also. Up came the "men from the cellar. The instant their heads appeared, Reilly aimed his gun at 'them, "Another step, and I'll blow vour heads off," he eried. Back drop ped the men into the cellar. Detee- tives Keeling and' Gordon, whom Wilks li* had encountered, ran up just then. They took the men the station. They were a very much surprised pair of 'rogues. The bays of the neighbor- hood looked upon: them ps heroes, amd want them to start a wild west com pany, for the nrotection of the Bronx. to That section of Greater New York hds been infested with burelars, sneak thieves and other branches of the fraternity, afd the advent of a vigor ous company of voungsters armed and ready to use their arms. as Reilly: showed he was, would work wonders there, and brine about some sense of security ~OLD-TIMER. Be Disease Proof. Don't catch cold, don't catch or in- cur any disease, You can't if your hood is right. Life and the vital ele- ments that fight disease and weak- ness are in the blood. Strength and effective resisting power can be had by use of Wade's Iron Tonic Pills. They are a great nerve strengthener and blood maker. In hoxes, 25¢. at Wade's Drug Store. Money back if not satis factory. ---------- Silver and lead are generally found together and some scientists © think that lead disintegrates into silver. Gold and copper are also found to- gether. In. New South Wales, the Great Cobar | mine furnishes copper containing four ounces of gold to the ton, ' Wade's Compound Syrup oi Tar and Wild Cherry for coughs, Big bottles 20c. at Wade's drug store, other * details, } Twenty-five years ago it was difficult to sell spring wheat flour for pastry at any price. | People didn't want it--they were using soft, winter wheat fiour, and saw no reason * for changing. Li But hard wheat flour was persistently pushed and prejudice has been overcome. The women tried it, succeeded with it and appreciated it.--To-day hard wheat flour is the favorite for pastry as well as for bread. > The flour that is doing the most for the reputation of hard wheat flour is the brand known as Ogilvie's Royal Household It is hard wheat flour at its best--milled by modern methods, retaining all of the good of the wheat and none of the bad-- it is without an equal for every kind of baking in which flour is used. Talk to your. grocer about it--if he isn't enthusiastic it's only because he isn't informed. ---- Ogilvie Flour Mills Co., Limite, MONTREAL. "Ogilvie's Book for a Cook," contains 130 pages of excellent recipes, some never before published. Your grocer can tell you how to get it FREE, © ® COX AOL XO] SHEET LEA Willium Street, Toronto COLO ©LO0O POOP EE® © DE E. B. EDDY"S Rising , ~c Star § Parlor Match In neat attractive boxés containing about 780 MATCHES Ask Your Grocer For Them It will cost you only 8c. to try them. 0000 9009 ©0000 PPCLEO® "It's more than fine: it's elegant." ¢ If you could héar what some of the men are saying about these new Spring Suits Y Spring Top Coats Spring Rain Coats § J tia aay you would not lose a minute in picking out the garment that pleases YOU. Many of the clothes are exclusive importations--and have no duplicates. ~ That is why early choice is so desirable -- and why YOU should come SOON, ® okie 53 Z of He CIO] 3 3 pa cma E. P. Jenkins, Kingston. - D Immediate Delivery i UU GET OUR PRICES The Canada Metal Co. Phone Main 1729

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy