Daily British Whig (1850), 28 Aug 1906, p. 7

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

filates., nge oven and sitive, work- positive, -- vents into the fresh air out nney, natural flaver' h any foreign ght, fresh' and 1 i udy, - practical nely equipped meat in range y OF write to us . John, N. B. agazine Issued 44 3 $49 SPE33 35349 thee tty | 'ADAMANT Wall Plaster Ready for use by adding water. Put ap In bags, 100 Ibs. in each, White Rock Finish Put up In bags, 50 Ibs. in cach : P, Walsh 5597 Remar @esrterrtTet TTI Teng BRITISH - AMERICAN HOTEL KINGSTON - - ONTARIQ Has undergone alterations ani] » now open to the travelling public. Ww TELFER . . Proprietor A WARM SUBJECT There's nothing in the world we're so wiuch interested in as Coal at this time ul the year. It may sound quiet to speak of coal buying and selling as a science, but that's what we've made it. Two {important discoveries we have made are that complete satisfaction to our customers pays best, and that the way to win business is to deserve it. Booth & Co. FOOT OF WEST ST. Phone 133. Seerreresrrreracsaraceen 'A E. HEROD'S | »"TRUFIT ¢ } senses True Foot Comfort. $ When combined with ¢ : ¢ ' ANTI - SQUEAK makes an Ideal Shoe 286 Princess St. frrerrrerrreesrerreaven Lawn Mowers The Best Mower Only $350 ---- AT .. Strachan's Hardware .. (anadian Chinese - Restaurant 331 King Street Open from 10.30 a.m. to 3.00 a.m The best place to get am all round Lunch in the city. Meals of all kinds on shortest notice. English and Chinese dishes a specialty. 'Phone, 655. Wm. Murray, Auctioneer 27 BROCK ST. New :Carriages, Cutters, Harness etc., for sale. Sale of Horses Every Saturday Auction Sales Book your sale of Furniture at onoe tnd get choice of date. I conduct all the important sales and realize the highest prices. 'Phone, 665, JOHN H. MILLS The Leading Auctioneer J. ROSEN, 236 University Ave Fine Ladies' Dressmaking and Tailoring. New establishment now opened ut 236 University Avenue. THE FRONTENAC LOAK & INVESTMENT SOCIETY. ESTABLISRED 1863 President--Sir Richard Cartwright Money loaned on City and Farm Pro- erties. Municipal and County Deben- tures. Mortgages purchased. Deposits received and interest allowed, 8.C McGill, Managing Director. Office, 87 Clarence street, - Kingston. NewYork Chinese Restaurant 83 Princess Street Open from 10.80 a.m. to 8.00 a m The best place to get an all round Lunch tn the city. Meals of all kinds on Shortest notice. English and Chinese dishes a specialty, Cook's Cotten Root Compound, The great Tonic, and only safe pr Rg lloron hich women can zal of trengthe No. 1, 81; No. & degrees stronger, $3; No 3, per Ly Sold by. re sts, or sent nd Ys ot. : 008 Move 00. TonokTo, Bur Formerly 17 odor) Sliced to Suit AT MYERS' MONEY'S | PERFECTION asked to buy something "just as good," which is NOT as good, Grocers who want to please their patrons always have Mooney's Per- fection Cream Sodss In | and 3 pound packages--air-tighs and moisture- proof. ¥ ABSOLUTELY PURE. SOLD IN PACKAGES AND CANS. Same Price as the cheap adulterated kinds. E.W.GILLETT 0aires TORONTQ,ONT. A Hot Liner Sometimes downs a Ball Player, so its a question whether he gets the ball or the ball gets him. Its very satisfactory to get what you want and you're sure to get just what you want in SPORTING GOODS If you come here. We have everything. DON'T MISS values like these. Angrove Bros. 88-90 PRINCESS STREET Makes the bread > that makes us strong Wherever there are child- ren there must be plenty of good bread. BEAVER FLOUR: makes the lightest, most whole. some and most nutritious bread. It is a blend of Outaric Pl Wheat flavor Manitoba Spring Wheat turned for strength flour by the most skilled millers in Canada. " 'Itis ideal household flour for either bread or pastry. into Milled in a Medel NIL Por Model Canadian Housewives DEATH OF C. E. FULFORD. Nephew of Late Senator Passed Away. Brockville, Ont., Aug. 25. --Alderman John H. Fulford, has received word of the death in Sidney, Australia, of his son, Charles E. Fulford. He was thirty-six years of age, and was the sole proprietor .of "Bileans" in €ana da, and of what is known as "Bile beans" in the Old Country. He had established offices the world over, and while only a few years in business had amassed a large fortune, His business faiely rivalled the "Pink Pill' busi- ness of which, his uncle, the late Sena- tor Fulford, was propriefor. The re mains will be brought here for burial. His business partner died Mast fall Half a bot yf of "Red Cross Cough Syrup" eired® bad cddd. Sold only at Gibson's Rid Lgbss drug store, Ne, DOCTORS ~ DISAGREE TOUCHING THE USES OF ALCOHOL. Rt Ly Dr. Dixon, Who Favors It, is Combated By Colleagues--Ale vs. Water. In the section of medical therapeu: tics, Friday, at a medical convention discussion on the use of alcohol as a therapeutic agent was introduced by a paper from Ir. W. E. Dixon, Cam- bridge. He represented those who to Some extent favor the freer use of the Poison in disease, Er Blackader, Montreal, recogaibed the opposition to the use of aloohol for the last iwenty years or so. Many regarded it rather as a narcotic than as a stimulant. As to the heart action, alechol of- fects very little stimulation, If any at all, the stimulation was slight and flecting, On the other hand, depression resulted. It had been elaimed that alcohol increased the heart output, but it was evident that large doses of alcohol diminished the blood pres- sure. Some said the action on the cir- culation was nil. "In Montreal wards we find that the stimulated action of the heart has been overestimated and that it is somewhat feeble and transitory," he said. "The action of the nervous sys- tem is more complex. It is certainly depressing on the centres of judgment, discernment, and self-control. Of course as vou will perceive this does not con. flict with aleohol's use in surgical matters, as we want rest, not stimul- ation. In resisting the power of bac- teria, large doses are not justified by experience. "As a food alcohol can be utilized when other foods can be given with difficulty. It requires no digestion, and aids in the digestion of other foods. In fever and other conditions on the dicestive organs, and increases the secretion that favors other dig fewer after effects than any other nar- cotic." Dr. Méltzer, New York, favored its use in typhoid. One German doctor used it in tuberculosis. Dr. Meltzer sided with Dr. moderate doses. While a poison in health, in disease it might be a valu- able drug. Prof. Sims Woodhead was glad to as he had heard in Toronto. One set of men were found to be as- signing very definite results to alco- hol, while others--sometimes the same men--in the same schools wot results absolutely different. As a therapeutic agent its value should be thoroughly discovered before it was given--he would not say in a lavish way, for now a certain restraint in its use was everywhere felt t6 be necessary. He ro- wide experience coming to very opno- site conclusions concerning it. The mn most successful in the treatment of delivium tremens stopped alcohol at once. In his own experience with delirium tremens patients he was struck. with the different results ob- tained by different physicians, Dr. Dixon's facts were correct, but he thought the problem too compli: cated. to make a general argument from those cases. They had gained a considerable am- ount of knowledee of the neuro-muscu- lar structures of the heart, and with wrd to jmmunization in animals he said: "1 don't know of any sinele immuni- zing process in which the tissues do not 'suffer in some direction." They ran a definite risk of impairing the functural tissues of the body, and it was not worth while to produce im- munity at this cost in order that cohol be exhibited. Alcohol could only be effectually issued in disease in peri- ods of rest. It failed entirely in peri- ods of activity, As a substitute for fat and as sparing the proteids it be the last in the world to maintain that alcohol was not a therapeutic agent, but he believed they had no right to give it in infectious disease until certain of its cumulative effect a poison. The benefit was so slight they were taking great risks unless they knew exactly the result to be obtained. He svoke, strongly, he said. because "he had seen more probably of the evil of alcohol from a pathological point of view than any of them. They must be impressed with the enormous am- ount of damage alcohol does. Dr. Moorehouse, London, said that when a student thirty vears avo, he had been taught the value of alcohol. e felt then that if he did not exhi- would not be right. After some vears he was led to study the subject by ol ing that after he had taken a drink of alcohol he was not so effec: tive as before. His head was not so clear, his hand 'was not so steady. This set him thinking with the ro- sult that he left off prescribing it. He was not a temperance crank, he wish- ed to say, but he no longer thought it useful. Distinguishing between oases of shock and collamse, he said it was of no effect in shock, in which the blood pressure was lowered. A hypo- position of the patient, or the injec: tion of a salin® solution--perhaps the best of all--were much better agents. In collapse, alcohol might be of ser- vice in reviving vassar motor oen- tres. As between excitement and col- lapse in disease it might benefit and Indigestion. There is no sense in wastite worls alwut indigestion. We knox that it causes terrible suffering, and the dull darting pains are enough to drive one made. What a sufferer wants is relief. He wants the pain to stop. He wants to be well and happy again. The way to get relief and be cured of indiges- tion is by taking Hutch. It goes to Take one just after you eat. Then two or three at bed-time 6 open the bow- els. It will neutralize the condition of the stomach. It will give gratifying relief. Tt will sweeten your breath. It will overcome and banish pain. Plenty of people doubt this, but gheir doubt ing does not change the facts. Hutch of exhaustion, alcohol places no tax | cstion, Used judiciously, alcohol leaves | Blackader in advising | have the subject studied by such mien | membered in Edinburgh physicians of | * | amount might have some food value. He would | bit alcohol in certain extreme cases he | dermic injection of morphia, heat. the quiet an excited patient, and do mis- chiof to an exhausted one. As an ex- ternal agent he found alcohol one of the best for its cooling effect in bandaging inflamed surfaces. It might also be used for inhalation, and for injection in tumors where it vrodueed in deep-seated structures conditions where shrivelling followed. Prof. Rose Bradford, F.R.8., Lon- don, summed up the debnte as already indicated. Not many would be inclin ed to follow Dr. Dixon, he said, in prescribing aleobol in delirium tro i mens, and certainly he personally dis agreed with him. The prescription of wine in conwalescence, he declared, to be a most mischievous practice. In this conmection may be mention led the criticism by the London Ex press of Sir Vietor Horsley's address at the Dominion Alliance luncheon: The Express thinks that ale in mode- {ration is a good tonic for a laborer, and that Sir Vietor is an extremist. | Sir Victor thought little of the Ex- press' opinion of ale. "As a scientific statement this is en- i tively false as it has been absolutely demonstrated that alcohol is deta mental to physical labor. All the in- vestigations, which commencid with the experiments of Dr. Parks on sol- | diers have proved this. The Red River | expedition also confirms it. 4. "The shifting of tho. gauge on the GroatgWestern railway, which was one of the greatest phyrical feats done in England, was done without alcohol. | Tons of oatmeal and water were con sumed by the men and they liked it | better than any alcoholic drink, This | irpmense piece of work was done in Horty hours, "Dr. Parks, in his experiment, set | two gangs of soldiers working at similar work, one gang drinking beer and the other gang drinking water. The gangs were paid for the amount | of work they did. After a fow days it | was found that the. water drinking men were doing more work than those who were drinking the beer. They | were earning more money. At last | the beer gang asked to be allowed to | drink: water because they were earn- ling so much less" money than the other men. . "This experiment was established under absolutely scientifie control, and { confirms omee for all that just as has { been shown with intelloetual work, so | to physical work, alcohol, whether ag | beer, wine or spirits, is only most | harmful and injurious," In the state medicine section Dr. | Hudson, Westmount, denounced pa- | tent medicines in round terms and | Dr. Oldwright spoke of the dangerous of alcohol they contained. | Altogether alcohol hus had a bad tims | of it at the association, and if the { doctors" are right the man who im- | bibes is a back number, ---- DEATH REVEATS| STORY. | Hungarian Nobleman Reduced to Position of Menial. Vienna, Aug. 25.--A pathetic story {of the extinction of an ancient noble | house is reported at Funfkirchen, in | Hungary. { An old man named Istrandi, who [2d been bailiff of the Iglanfulva es tate for many years, died, caving | only a number of hooks, among which | the works of Tolstoi and Kant had | the chief place. At the end of a volume of Kant he had written : { "With all that is nid here about high {living and plain thinking 1 thorough: ly agree from experience.-- Alfons Ba ron Trautenpmch The Barons 1 rautenpach had been {formerly owners of Iglanfalva, but the {family was believinl to be extinet. In | vestigation nowshows that the old {bailiff was really the last Baron | Trautenpach, but had conesaled hi« | pame and title because he no longer {owned the ancestral estate, His gravestone now bears his real name. | ------e-- NOT BLISS BUT DEATH. Man's Wedding Secret Leads to a Tragedy. , Geneva, Aug. 25. -A pathetic try gedy is reported from the Alpine vil lage of Pernant, in Savoy. Mlle, { Regale, the daughter of a trades wo man, had been engaged to be Married for eleven vears to a man who lived at Marseilles, but had always refused to ty #0 long as her mother was Jhe mother died a fow days Mile, agle, who was now re age, wrote to her fiance, stating that there was no ther obstacle to their union. TI who. had continued to correspond with her, but had not seen her for four years, visited Pernant, yesterday, and told Mlle. Regalo that he was married a vear ago, -and asked her ta forgive him for deceiving her. He { left bome shortly afterward, and Mlle, the: Very spot. pore the tom Her { Regale poisoned herself, ------------ Not in many years has the water of Rideau lake been 50 low, During the past six weeks the water has fallen eighteen inches, and is as low as late in the fall, W. Fletcher Loucks, a Napanee old boy, has resigned his posidion at Wais- is a doctor for ten cents, One gives instant relief, kada, Man., and accepted the. princi- Palship of Melita High School, "IS GOOD TEA " i So good. that the increased demand necessitated the construetion of the largest ted warehouse in Canada. One package is sufficient to prove its quality and value. The Blue Label is especially recommended. Prices, 25c., 3oc., 35¢., 4oc., soc., and 6oc., in lead packets. Black, Green, and Mixed. T. H. ESTABROOKS, St. John, N.B.; Winnipeg; Torongo, 3 Wellington St. E. SAVES LIFE OF FRIEND. First Binds Up Serious Wounds of Companion. Hong Kong, Aug. 25.--Details have reached here of the murderous attack on Dr. Horne, an English missionary, and Mr, Eadie, of the China 'Mutual Life Insurance company, which took place at Tung Wa, near Amoy, Mr. Eadie had gone to Tung Wa about eleven miles from Amoy, on insurance business, and was walking along with Dr, Horne, when a native asked him the time. As he pulled out his watch the native snatched it and bolted, Mr. Eadie' gave chase, despite Dr. Horne's advice not to do 80, and a mob of Chinese immbdiately attacked him with knives, stabbing him in several places and severing an artery in his arm. Seeing the serious nature of 'the at- tack, - Dr. Horne rushed to his com- panion's assistance, and recvived a very serious wound in the abdomen. The Chinese, apoarently satisfied with the injuries they had inflicted, left their victims lying where they fell. Dr. Horne, despite his terrible in- juries, succesded in stopping the flow of blood from Mr. Eadie's arm, and then sowed up the cut in his' own stomach. The two men then made their way to Tung Wa walking and crawling and arrived there more dead than alive and covered with blood GAMBLING SUPREME. CourtiMartial to Reveal a Glar- ing Seandal. Berlin, Aug. 25.-The history of the notoriows gambling club which met at Dieuze, a smnll garrison town on thy French frontier, is to be revealed, when Liout, Kurt Muche, a young Bavarian officer, is to be court-mar- tial at Landau. The organization, whish resembled the famous "Innocents" Club," at Ber lin, was composed of young Bavarian, Austrian, and Prussian noblémen, rich merchants and sportsmen. It is asserted that the members not only gambled heavily, but also gave private balls of a scandalous nature. Several of the money lenders at Mu nich, Strasburg, Wurzburg. and other towns are implionted. It is also charged that Muehe and his companions travelled from town to town with their | gambling para phernalia, fleecing wealthy viotims in the big hotels, INCITES A MUTINY. Political Plot at Bottom of Revolt in Portugal. Lisbon, Aug. 25.-The forthcoming court-martinl of the ringleaders in volved in the insubordination aboard the flagship Dom Carlos and other ships of the Portuguese navy, is arousing great interest, Investiga tions have already shown that the re volt was the outcome of a deep laid plot, in which men from nearly all the ships were involved. Letters and re ceipts for subscribers have been found in the possession of hundreds of sailors, bearing the sign of a black cross, proving the existence of a se cret association, which is supposed to be of a revolutionary character, It is proved that all the relwls are members of the mysterions Flack Cross Society, but all absolutely, ro fuse to answer questions, and a wide spread' political plot is belisved to 0 existed. Wade's Ice Cream Soda. We, perhaps, should give it a name of its own, it is so unlike much of the ice cream soda sold. Everything that enters into it ix as pure and perfect as money can buy, while peel Wh cleanlinoss is enforeed in every detail of" the making and" serving. Wade's Drug Store, Summer Excursion To New York. Via New York Central lines, "T'ues- day, August 25th. Fifteen day limit, Une way fare plus one dollar for round trip. Tickets good between Al- bany and New York by steamer, if de sired. This is just the right time to visit Coney Island. Dreamland, Luna Park, and the seaside resorts. Ask ticket agents, -------- A certain drapery establishment, lately burgled at Liverpool, has heen burglarionsly entered not loss than once every twelve months for thirty years, SS Eat THEY KNOW IT SP hovassdy of people throughout the country now the rd co LL a e ordinary les--Ointments supposi- torios and aopliances--will not cure. HST best of them only bring passing re- Dr. Loonhardt's Hem-Rold is a tablet taken internally that removes the cause | of Plies, hence the cure is permanent. Pvery JFacknge Sol earrien a guarantes w " It in perfectly harmlons to the most delicate constitution. A month's mont in each e. pao, any stove, or Cou Nisgarn Falls, Ont ie Y " pigmy fuel-cost This furnace is built to most heat QUICKEST from least to give It gets 7 i all the good: "wad the book about it out of fue] m= comer Fouoar Co. Lana For Sale hy Simmons Beoe., "The Yellow Store," 311.913 Princess Strout. hove 44. : SPECIALS FOR THIS WEEK We want to make room for the New Fall Goods, and te do so quickly we will offer these Special Bargains :-- One Lot Men's Patent Colt Laced Boots, regular $5.00, for,, One Lot Men's Box Calf, Patent Colt and Vizi Kid Laced and Blucher Boots, regular $3.50, for............ ss tverirvasinssssi ibenbosesiis One Lot Women's Strap and Laced Shoes, regular $1.25, for......... $1.00 irene rerrae sresnns Venteisnasren One Lot Girls' Strap Slippers, in Black and Tan, sizes 11 to 2, regular $1.50 and $1.05, 008....Lrsrernseisivininsivenn ariraestais $1.00 Peraaraneiny One Lot Women's White .Canvas Oxfords, sizes 5, .53 and 6 only, regular $1.50 to $2.00, for... aun Shel A HAI RAIN, $100 TH : MPANY Torant OUR SPECIALTY .

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy