Daily British Whig (1850), 8 Sep 1906, p. 11

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your tongue is slightly coated, your breath is under Suspicion, your Head feels a trifle heavy of digestion seems even a little slow Heartburn, Belching, Colic - sness begin to show themselves, at's the time to eat a Cascaret, eee 't imagine the Cascaret is ineffec. cause it is pleasant to eat as Candy, ts as pleasantly as it tastes. [tis enial to your Bowels asit is to your not a * Bile-driver* which floods ir stomach today with fluid juices for tomorrow. it acts like Exercise, instead. imulates the muscular lining of the and Intestines, so that they mechan- digest food and drive out the is why Cascarets differ from al] ves, Physic, Cathartics and Whirl- rugs that help today at tomorrow's sarets are the only Bowel and Liver ve that do not need to be used in doses every month you use them. time to use a Cascaret is when you spect you need one. y only way to have them ready to cisely when you need them is to hem constantly in your pocket, as a Watch or a Lead pencil. ten cent box of Cascarets is made at, round-edgkd, and small, for this purpose. very careful to get the genuine, nly by the Sterling Remedy Com- d never sold in bulk. Every tablet d "CCC." £ ample and the famous booklet, » of Constipation,* Free for the ask- ddress Sterling Remedy Company, o or New York. 67 rated Oven Souvenir completely , the air therein every utes without lessen- heat one iota. e, cold air is drawn » aerated flue and of the oven before ly be had on the ANGE other ranges simply : oven, heats it and § you have a pan of | e oven, and a gust I 8s the first ada ® guar- licy-holders. wrnings for a olicy in any you are get- 3 Gold" for fe" Policies MPCOOGRFFOT HOCOLATES CITY Ib. rincess St. you real nourishment For Malta-Vita is rich in nutrition--every nutritive element of the best malt extract. The malt ext wheat, converts the starch of the wheat into maltose, or malt sugar, makes it easy for even the weakest stomach to digest and adds a pleasing taste which cannet: be found in grain foods sweetened with sugar, glucose .or syrups. Try Malta-Vita with cream or fruit. = All "grocers, now 10C. "The Perfect Food". A perfect breakfast is im- possible without it and it's just as good three times a day. It gives and renewed vitality. white wheat and finest barley ract, mixed with the flaked warm Air Lgl Here's the furnace that heats more house with: the same fuel, because it gets all the 'heat out of hard coal before the chimney gets a chance to waste any. :One way fire travel means quick use of the heat, and means the use of ALL the heat that any fuel gives. There's no furnace so easy and "simple- to-manage as- the Oxford Warm Air Furnace. Ash pit is extra deep, so you needn't fear the draft being choked by ac- cumulated ashes. Because the grate-bars are hollow and trian- gular, this furnace 'gets more good from the fuel it does burn, --those bars make the fire use a lot of air,-- perféct combustion. Everything about the furnace is built for service and to save. trouble and money to the man who buys it. Will you come in and let us talk it over with you? THE GURNEY FOUNDRY ., LIMITED 218 Toromto Hamilton Montreal Winnipeg Calgary Vancouver or sale® by Simmons Bros., The Yellow. Sterd," 211-213 Princess street. Phone;* 494, % THERE - ANY BAKING FOWDERS BEE MAGIC BAKING POWDER and Economical Made in Ragland, but sold everywhere 8 for colors. 156 for black. +] stress laid upon a particular note, in THE COUNSELLOR POSED. Excitement at a Piracy Trial. At a trial in the court of king's bench, some years ago, between cer- tain publishers, as to an alleged pir- acy of 'an arrangement of the "Old English Gentleman"'--an old English air--Tom Cooke, the composer, was subpoenaed as a witness by one of the parties, On his cross-examination by Sir James Scarlett, after Lord Abing- dr, for the opposite side, that learned counsel rather flippantly questioned him thus: "Now, sir, vou say that the two melodies 'are the same, but different. What do vou mean by that, sir?" To this Tom promptly answered: "I anid that the notes in the two copies were alike, but with a different ac- cent, the one bein~ in common time, the other in six-cighths time; and, consequently the position of the ae- cented notes was different." Sir © James--What is a musical ac- dent? Cooké=My terms are a ssam, sit. (A laud laugh). Sir James (rather ruffled)\--Never mind your terms here. T ask you what is # musical accent ? Can you see it? Cooke--No, Kir Jgmes--Can vou feel it ? Copk#--A' musician can. laughter). £ Sir James, (very angry)--Now, pray, sir, don't beat about the bush, but ex+ plain to his lordship (Lerd Denham, who was the judge that tried the case) and the 'jury, who are supposed to know notliimg 'about music, .the mean- ing of what. yqu call accent. . Accent in music is a certain guinea a (Great Cooke the same manner as you would lay a atrosse UPON ANY A IVE word for the purpose of being better understood. Thus, i JL were to say, "You arg. gn ads, A uo on ass but: il 1 wer@to sav. Foi are an abs," it rests on i , Sir James. i Ann INDIGNANT SPEAKER. Pitch Bills Into the : Thames. Mr. Rendsl, M.P., in proposing to consult Prima Minister Bannerman on the appeal made to the speaker by the Bishop of * Manchester to' pitch the education bill into the Thames, makes the suggestion that were the speaker to do so he would be guilty of erim- inal conduct. A speaker of the House of Commons once -committed a crime of this chatacter. It was in 1772, when the House of Lords and the commons were not. pn' €peaking terms--all on ac- count of the wounded pride of Mr. durke, who had been kept hanging about thesdors of the lordly chamber Twith a hill sent up from the commons, Members of the lower house were en- raged that their greatest orator should hawe wn hoarse with cold TQuring three hours' "vigil, .and when a bill for placing a bounty on corn | was brouphit down from the peers, the house rejected it by a unanimous vote. The speaker flung the bill contemptu- Y ously' across the floor, where it was seized upon by the members and kick- éd 'out of 'the house. A Eittle Girl's Frodk. et Can't B ok ie { hele girl of French mus- Lik gn was trimmed with va- fentierfirs Tacs, and with inset dis J haped medallions of very fine Toi Ted portion of the collaght | Wal $Mbreideted here and there with tiny flower sprays, the Fork Ber tat with a square Duteh neck, outlined with a band of the val. lace, The front and back of the frock Letter From Greater New| THE York. ' THEW. J.BRYAN CULT HAS RISEN, WITHOUT EF:ORT TO GREAT POPULARITY. He May Pass Under the Wire Ahead of All Contestants For the Presidency of the Republic m 1908. Special Correspondence Letter, No. 1,528, New, York, Sept. 7.--The first days in the week just passed were signalised by an excitement that had no parallel in the history of New York. A year ago William Jennings Bryan went abroad for health and recreation. There was nothing peculiar or startl- ing to mark his out-going, he had never been distinguished in the poli- tics of the nation, he had held no public office; the only thing that gave him any distinction whatever was the fact of his defeat when he was elected a democratic candidate for the presi- dency; yet, from the day he left his native land, till his return last week, his highway of travel has been like that of a conqueror; wherever he went a sample he has been accepted as M. DURAY, One of the most daring automobilists of Furope, driving a De Dietricn Wnachine, recently won the Circuit des Ardennes rovhy after one of the most Erilliant runs in the anoals of automo! ie facing. He covered the 595 kilomeins of the Circuit at an average spped of about 66% miles an hour. Duray is a Belgian. e---------- ------------------ American, and the most wonderful thing in thi connection ip, that tha immense popularity which he has Lachioved in the United States during his absénce, has come to him with- out the slichtest effort on his part and if the sions of the times are not very much out of order, with the single exception of President Roosevelt, he is, in the ¢stimation of his party, one of the greatest living Americans, His leadershin is apparently accepted without a murmur; his primacv is un- questioned, and unless something hap- pens out of the usual order of things, no other candidate for the presidency will be deuce high in the national de mocratic convention For several days delegations came pouring into town and from their as- sumption it was evident that they were here on some very important mission. They all wore badges of various deere i beauty: some of the modest size of a lady's watch, while others were as large as a good sized sunflower; on one point they werp agreed; they were members of the WA- liam Jennings Bryan reception com- mittee and they had their credentials duly accredited to show that they were OK. It was no small compliment that President Roosevelt paid Mr. Bryan when he sent a special order to the health officer, that Mr. Bryan's friends be allowed to take him from the ocean steamer to the Yacht IHili, which had been placed at the disposal of the reception committee by an in- timate friend of Mr. Bryan's, and that every facility be afforded him for getting ashore by the cuitoms officers. I can recall no occasion when such distineuished honor has been paid to a private citizen, and only a few to distinguished foreion visitors. The crowd that went to the battery to witness Mr. Bryan's reception by Acting Mayor McGowan, was simply tremendous; it filled the streets for several blocks, and it required the best efforts of the 1,000 policemen de- tailed for the task with the oceasion- al use of the long night stick to keep the crowd in order. Madison Square Garden, where Mr. Bryan delivered his address, w crammed to suffocation. The doors were opened two hours be fore the time set for the speaking, and though this immense place will hold were Do Your Feet Seald 1f you are troubled with sore, seald- "ed burning feet or toes during the hot weather try Dr. Chase's Ointment. It will allay the inflammation apd take out the soreness in a remarkably short time. DAILY WHIG, SATURDAY, BROADBRI TE _-- Glean Clothes With Alcohol. and Get Sore? wit was crammed to the idea to the reader of - the enthittinam multitude that gree Tr, ol She vast , had come thousands of = ivilege ope of getting a shake from Mr. An id giving him a God- speed on the way to the White House at Wi for that appears to be his destipation. At _the present time no other formidable candidate is in sight while Mr. Bryan's chances are increasing as the days roll by. These are points in Mr, Bryan's political his-, When {he democratic national con- vention was held in Kansas City over a decade ago Mr, Bryan was desirous of attending 88 a delegate; he entered for the race and was beaten in the Lincoln district which was his home; be came on to Kansas City to make a contest; the committee to which the matter was referred ignored his claim and gave the seats to the other dele- gation. This barred Mr. Bryan from fen teri Ale convention; nothing daunted him; he phocured un proxy and entered the hall; Bo one but himself knows how he contrived to get a scat on the stage or Who gave him permis- sion to address 'the conventions he wad entirely 'unkfiown to the politi- cians outside of the state of Nebraskag he made a' speech, every word of which had been carefully composed and 'thor- oughly considered for years; he en- tered the convention unknown, but when he sat down as he finished his address, he had captured the dele- gates, and from that hour up to the present day he has had a more poten- tial: voice in shaping the action of his party than any other democrat in the United States. Twice nominated for the highest office in the nation's gift, and twice defeated by the peojpde, that which 'would have been political death to an ordinary candidate, has given Mr. Bryan increased vigor and more strenuous life and it is now morally certain that his party will accord him another chamce in the presidential race in 1908 and if it does the. politi cal world will not be very much sur- prised to see him pass under the wire ahead of all contestants, Mr. Bryan's success and good for tune is not due to what peopla eall luck; it ig a clear case of pluck, de- sert and an energy that never tires, and if he does not win, it won't be the fault of William Jennings Bryan. The financial typhoon that swept over Philadelphia last week, when the Real Estate Trust company went to the wall did not pass New York without leaving some signs of ruin and disaster in its track. Frank Hipple, the thief who was president of this rotten trust company, was oné of those silly Christians who was great in exhortation and powerfull in prayer: so good was he that he would not allow a Sunday newspaper to be seen in his house; nothing but the Hible should be read on Sunday, and he never was so happy as when he was surrounded , with nice religious people and refreshing hig soul with pious conversation. It was only a counle of weeks before he blew his brains out that ' he Went into the bank vault and gfiole a package of securities amounting to SR50.000 and i'l dged them for a loan of $50,000 in wold; that night was the regilar Fri day night prayer meeting that he wonld not have missed for a thousand] dollars, and it was noticed by the brethren and sisters that his prayers were unusually fine, It is reported that the shortage will amonnt to soveh millions of dollars. What did this stupendous thief do with that enormous sum of money ? Adolnh Segal, the promoter, got some of it; he came here a few years ago from Austria; he had neither silver nor gol i in his pocket, but he had brass enough in his cheek ta fortify an armoured cruiser; there is little doubt that he got manv thousands from the canting hypocrite and thief, Frank Hipple. Tt mnkes one sick at heart when it is remembered the ruin and desolation he leaves behind him. These "truest friends of the widow and orphan" have vanished never to return. All my life IT have battle] against the idea that there was such a thing as total depravity. 1 take it all buck. 1 have found it in Frank Hipple, the president of the Real Es tate Trust compuny. Politics are just "billin" from Cha tauana to Mountalk.. All yorts * of combinations are being made to cap- ture the coming state convention. The chairman of the. state committee says he has the votes in his trousers pockets:" perhaps =o, Mr. Odell, but "de. white man's berry onecartin." Gov, Higging may have something to say; keep vour eve on Brackett. - BROADBRIM, Penetrates And Heals. When you buy Smith's White Lini- ment you secure the most penetrating and healing refnedy on the market for sprains, swellings, inflammation, neur- algia, lumbago, and all other aches and pains. Every drop filled with ut- most curative power and the remedy never fails to enre nromptly and thor- oughly. A big hottle costs but 25c., and - ean be had at Wade's only. Money back if not satisfactory. Invaluable at homé or away is a bottle of alcohol; a pieces of blotting paper and a silk sponge for cleaning clothes, says the Philadelphia Record. Spots appear on one's clothes some- times in a most mysterious manner, and 'by placing the blotting paper un dernpath the spot, sponging the Jitter with the alcohol, the foreign matter is cleansed from the right side of the goods and absorbed on the blotting paper on the wrong side. Especially persons who are much on their, feot suffer during the summer from such. troubles, and will appre- were tucked in groups, half way down the bodice, and if desired a ribbon sash. of idery or lace belt could be worn, a though" the drawing shows the frock banging loose from the - * ok: : y Tb Rit le puffed sléeves were finished with a band and frill of lace, and Jahore was a dband of the valenciennes set in above the three-inch hem. = ---------- A man is foolish to borrow trouble whet thege gre, so mgny people anxi- ous give it away. Among the Cornish fishermen, fish J By th dozen of twenty- ie Lal * ¥ cinte the reliei brought by this wdll- known preparation. This is only one of the many ways , is. which Dr. Chase's Ointment is use ful during the warm weather season. It gives splendid satisfaction as a treatment for chafing of the skin, sun- burn, insect bites, hives, ivy poison ! and skin irritations of whatever form. The exceptional and antiseptic properties of Dr, Chase's Ointment are what make it #0 effective in the cure of itching skin diseases, and have given it first posi tion as a treatment for such troubles, Ge. a box, at all dealers, or Edman- son, Bates & Co. Toronto, : soothing, healing at Most goods would last longer and look better all the time if carefully brushed (not with a bristly broom nor a stiff brush), after the dust has been shaken out. This should follow every wearing. SEPTEMBER 8, y : iles at enormous swexpense just for the and the packin machines, whie would interest you If you ever visit TEA "IS GOOD TEA" I wish you could pa warehouse--the largest in Canada--and see for yourself the great skill and care that is given to the blending and packing of this famous Tea. room seem almost human, are used reatly. t. John, it will be a pleasure to show you through; and after you see the care and cleanliness with whieh it is prepared, Red Rose Tea will taste even better than before. . The Blue Label is especially recommended. Prices, 25c., 30¢., 35¢., 40¢., §0¢., and Goc., in lead packets. Black, Green, and Mixed. . T. H. ESTABROOKS, St. John, N. B. do without tea? How did Wexit? I om glad 1 was not dorm before tea" Sydney Smith, a visit to the Red Rose Tea The testing room (where automatic electric v 3 3 Wellington St. E. /] Skirt Protector aN i " "When soiled, a sponge () [F or brush a i) . Ca [ll Home Needlework is a ma; 3 ( (1 that every lady should take. issued 4 () oF TY TT 2 ny ~ umes ayear, 96 pages beautifully Hlustrated, 50 cts per year. sending 15 cents. Corticelli Silk Co,Ltd, 5 ells yl Sr Lal FTE Ta BITRE CONSTABLE'S BLUNDER. A Remarkable Mistake Made in England. A remarkable police mistake was made at Sittingbourne, Kent, Eng land. A. E. Wood, an urban council lor, was in a railway carriage oven pied by a metropolitan police con stable in charge of a prisoner, The con stable had fallen asleep, and when the Plaistow the prisoner police train reached tried to man, but wake the arouse the finding he could not officer, quietly made his escape. Mr. Wood awakened the don etable, under the impression that his fellow traveller was the pris oner, seized him. Mr. Wood protested that he had arrested the wrong man, and during the altercation the train went on When the car reached Bromely, however, the constable drag ged the councillor out of the train, him beck to Plaistow by a Wood, secing that re sistance was weoeplod the situation. At the po tation he only proved his innocence after con siderable questioning, and finally by of an officer who knew real prisoner who, and tool tram car. Mr useless the calling in and could recognize the New French African Expedition. It was officially an nounced, to-day, that Capt. Lenfant, the Fremeh explorer, is about to lenve on another expedition to West Alrica in order to discovery if possible, a navigable waterway connecting Lake Chad with the coast of the Atlant In his former expedition of 1903-3, Capt. Lenfant .ascortained™ that a thorough waterway esivtéd along the Niger, the Benue, the Mayo Keb, the Logone, and the Shark, but he was wnable to follow it from beginning to end by bout, as the Mayvo-Kebbi was found to be obstructed by rapids, round which it wis necessary to tra vel by land. His discovery, however, enabled the Fromeh government to abandon the difficult and costly Con go-Ubangi- Fort de Posse] route for conveying supplies to the troops on Paris, Sept. 8 Ninety-Three Years In One Cottage London, Sept. B.~Mrs. Brookes, who haz lived ninety three and p half years in the same cottage --it belongs to the rad of Ellesmere Edgefold, Worsley, Manchester, says her keenest regret in that there was no compulsory 'education in her young days, and. that she was never taught to read. She recalls, with 'a touch of pathos, that she was earried down a local cighty-five years agoi Cp eoal mine to work ' the lower Shari in favor of a route Betty | from Fereados, nt the mouth of the Niger, along that river,-the Benue, and the Mayo-Kebbe, to bere, from which points beasts of burden are em ployed as far as Lake Tuburi, where the journey by water is resumed. The result of the expedition is waited with a great deal of interest ------------ Money makes the mare go to grass if there is enough of it to pay for on | automobile, MADE IN CANADA By A CANADIAN COMPANY. REPRESENT THE LATEST SUCCESS mn sewn MACHINE MANUFACTURE. excewent WORK, ARTISTIC APPEARANCE ano ABSOLUTE DURABLE CONSTRUCTION. -- hee THE WILLIAMS MANUFACTURING CO. LIMITED, Ooueany Orrices: MONTREAL, P. Q. TORONTO, LONDON, HAMILTON, OTTAWA, ST. JOHN; N. 8 AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERT. LONG DISTANCE swaic samnee SHOTGUN deposit, state if the $4.75 0r 85.75 gun is wat ted, Bite gw Send us $1.00 send this guaranteed long distance ho barrel xh , you to pay the express agent the bal express istactory, : made beghge i L d steel frame built extra solid to Withstasd the use oF Intest Jmproved top snap and rebounding hammer, best qual y steel works, extra strong. spring. ine waluu 3 stock heavy rubber butt plate, full pistol grip, For 7 in all we Forni t . gun with lnfest ' a sy'omatic shell ejrclor which throws shelis out sotonsatically, makin it possible to reload in ra pi succession. Order to-day or send roc. for our bowtie Special Gun Catalogue sith barrel of $425 and wp, and an geveryt ug in rifle; revolvers, ammunition, of 12,1608 20 and spor! ¢ hing ; . factoly price To W, BOYD & SON, 27 NOTRE DAME ST. W., MONTREAL. i

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