Daily British Whig (1850), 10 Nov 1906, p. 10

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City Hall. Depot atd pm. F. Yo Aceat B; Q. Ry., Kingston "TA LINE] TO LIVERPOOL. frasmininssssine Thurs, Nov, 8 a FEL NOV 18, TO LIVERPOOL. srmmemen no. Sat, Nov. 24. Hi E Bi ° ge e = £5 this. company Sound to the joi . Address, nearest . office, Hésd Office, Waterloo, Ou" toffee) S. ROUGHTON, District Agent, Kingston. "4 TRAVELLING, W INTERCOLONIAL SPORTSMEN Reports from all the Game Sections of the Maritime Provinces ifdicate a most successful season. Write for ! - | ** Fishing a d Hunting" "Trail of the Mic-Macs" -* Week in Canaan Woods" $ "Moose of the Miramichi TO GENERAL PASSENGER DEPARTMENT, Moncton, N.B.' FEL London Town," is the name of" 'new musical play, in which Camille D'Arville al return to i i i ¢ i sift "Simple Life, i ," who tries to convert the "Smart Set," to a more healthy mode of living. gy Caroline Lovell, who retived in 1857 after a successful career of twenty-five Sct | years, died at the Kome of her dough- » The ter. in Englewood, N.J., last week at of the age of eighty-nine. the Louie Mann and Clara Lipman, who , neck | are going to London with **Julie Bon t, down my Bon," will sail It iteied | November 14th. They open at the Wal- dorf theatre. ten days later. Henry Miller's production' of Brown- Passes," with Mrs. Le with their company, the affected | ing's *Pippa and Cuticura | Moyne as Ottima and Monsigneur had performance at the atre, New York, on Friday after Cutieura Oint- | its t, and | The, ticura | noon, all Five generations of Jeffersons have Lwill be | played Rip Van Winkle in Chicago, the fifth being Thomas Jefferson, who op- ened the. play made fathers. The Ben Greet players began their fifth American tour on October. 25th, at the University of Virginia, present- "Everyman." Mr. Greet vive "Masks and Faces," has played the part of Triplet over a Athousand times, Brooklyn is getting all the bist at- trations 'this season and businéss is good at the theatees. "His Honor, the Mayor," is doing wicely at Teller's, ay: Virginia Harped is at the Shubert, and "Mrs. Wiggs of the Cab- bage Patch" is at the new Montauk. Leo Ditrichstein, has in preparation a serious play of American life entitled "The Writing on the Wall," and a new comedy {fom the German, *Lalu's Husbands." He is collaborating with on another comedy. duced. Alla Nazimoff, the Russian actress, to have acquired a knowl kdge of En~lish language during the few months she has spent in America. direction of Henry Miller she will shortly be seen in a series of "Hedda Gabler" famous by his fore Percival. Pollard soon to be pro: ie said Under matinees will be given in English. for long theatrical runs belones to, Hoyt's "A Trip to Chine which ran for more than nights in. New York back in 1890, is said to have made 3300,000 for its manacer, hnd looked upon as a broduction that al- ways drew crowded houses. In Boston on Monday Square gave the first of the Shake- -- hore Shall Spearean ! urd § but, » pe the house was packed from cellar ? to attic at the matinee, when all were taken by the/ Twentieth Century club and sold to' the school children of Greater Boston in Ni to familiarize them with the master Commission found pieces of English literature. theatre been ten times as Jarge would not have satisfied all the juve nile applicants, who ingly Caesar, which was given by this thor- town, The rigorous & vestigation into seats The premiers . in United States of Hermann Sudemann's play, "John the Baptist," took place on Tuesday night in Philadelphia. Sudemann = is perhaps the most popular of living aywright in the fatherland to-day, ost of the works are well known and well liked in this country, the most prominent ones "Magda," "The Fires of St. John" and "The Joy of Living, plays " the Geeman titles of these being "Heimath," "Johnnis- fever" and "Es. Lebo Das Leben." Int the play of "Joba the Baptist," Mr. + Bothern; of tourse, appears in the role of John, and Miss Marlowe as Sa- lome, daughter of Herodias. The time of the play is 20 A.D., and it is per- formed in five acts and a prelude. To Study Railroad Wrecks. St. louis Post-Dispatch. The German government has taken possession of a 'short strip of track near Berlin and is planning to executes a unigke series of railroad "acei- dente," made to. order. Fverv variety of misplaced switch © will be tested, every possible defect on wheels, axles and the car equipment will be tried, and the grand finals is to be an im- menses head-on collision of locomo- tives, These spectacular exhibitions are not planned by the government 85 a national ' amusement. They are for the purpose of scientific. experi ment, so that the engineers and rail- way experts may study wave and means to prevent accidents of all kinda in the. future. Rajlrond disasters have occurred with alarming frequency in the German . empire. It is estimated that the German "railwavs lose 81.- 260,000 annually through damages. After the causes' and effects of - each variety of wreck have been noted it will be the task of the government officials to devise safeguards. Inhuman Treatment. A short time ago reports were cur rent of a leper who had been dis- covered in the United States being driven from. pillar to post between Virginia and Maryland. He came from Syria, but, the disease did not develop within the' period, which permitted of his deportation to his own country. © Was, however, denied an asylum anywhere; much of his time was spent in box cars, or eamping out on moun- tain sides, and once he was shot at. Now he is dead, and the secretary of the Maryland state board of health says had the man bebn treated more humanely he would no doubt have lived many years more. Would it have been less humane to have shot him in the first place ? ---------------- Naps And The Health. | London Telegraph. Prolonged "orty winks": during the day are severely condemned by many doctors on the ground that they affect one's regular sloep, Scientists have found that in the ordinary course in the human being there is the greatest vitality betwebn 10 a.m. 2 p.m,, and the least between two o'clogk. and six o'clock in the morning. Long sleeps during the day interfere with this, order of nature and sometimes afioct various ofgans, causing head- . ache. The nap of forty winks, but anly forty. proves refreshing to many because it is too short to *have any Injurious conscgpences. Have Energy To Do. ; Human energy is almost unlimited in ats power. Energy comes from rich, vital Blood. Weakness and fail- wre result when blood is weak and impure. Have itmost. mental and museular energy by enriching and vitalizing voug blood with Wade's Iron Tonic Pills, They help almost at once, They are a great nerve strengthener oughly reliable stock company. . a At Chicago on Tuesday night Rich- invested only in gilt-edged secu- ard Mansfield rities--first a of it when he gets the | With "Painting the Town," and blood maker. In boxes, 25c., at ade's drug storé. Mondy hack if not satisfactory, MAZIE KING, ; * at The Grand, on Monday, November 18th, s x % Y, NOVEMBER 10. T0 ATTEND SCHOOL EDUCATION.OF BOBBIES IN ENGLISH CAPITAL. Essays on Murder -- Stalwart Constables Seek to Gain Knowledge Neglected or Denied in Youth. London, Nov, 10.--The fact, as stat- ed by Sir Edward Henry, the chief commission, on Tuesday, that "re ports of police constables are often ex- tremely, illiterate, many sonstables finding it difficult to write reports ow- ing to their defectivé education," has long been known to the authoritios, pecial police classes are held in con- nection with many evening continua- By the chee _-- i J being to teach illiterate members of "the force how to write reports on such things as street accidents, burglaries, cases of suicide and murders. A reporter, who paid a visit to one of these classes, found a number of stalwart constables seated at desks in a school classroom. "We specialize on burglaries and murders," said the teacher; "imagin- ary ones, of course !" He picked up a Pagier 'from one of the desks. It prov- ed an account of a ghastly crime in a free, bold hand by a constable, who was imagining the circumstances in which he found a murdered man's body. A second paper was an essay on cabs, setting forth the law both as it affects "cabby" and his "fare," and also the duties of the police. A third paper told how an arrest is made, and a fourth dealt with the removal of dead bodies, "I have a police code," explained the teacher, 'for my guidance, and I use that as a basis for the lessons. After a lesson--to-day the subject was perjury--the men get to work on' re- ports and essays. They are also taught arithmetic, and they do a lit- tle reading, but the main subject is composition. "Very few of the men were born in London; néarly all of them come from the country. Their attainments are very diverse, Many of them are not above the level of attainment of a boy in the fourth standard." w OUR STRANGE DREAMS Are Jumble of Inherited Ideas. I think very often our dreams are a jumble of ideas that we have inherit: kind of free play of what I have call- ed, and that dreaming is largely a ed ancestral memory, We dream of things which we have never. experienced in our waking mo- ments, I remember a very realistic dream. It was a battle, and I was in a regiment of cavalry that received an order to charge. The whole scene is vividly before me as I write, and were I an artist I could sketch the face of a man who rode 'by my side, I can tell the throb of eagerness the thud- ding of the horses hoofs in the mad rush as we quickened our pace to get closer to those we were pursuing. Suddenly the squadron of men in front opened, wheeling off to the right and left, and we were looking into the iron throats of a masked battery. They opened fire unon us--a moment after the ear splitting thunder, and 1 was in a hell of smoke, dust, blood, and metal; every piece seemed to sing a war chant of its own. Then awoke 8nd I was shouting *God I". never knew it was anything like this." Here surely is something experienced by an ancestor which has descended from generation to generation and taken its 'place in my collection of impressions. THE SWISS FOURTH. No One Kmows Name of Swiss President. August 1st is the Swiss Fourth of July, the national fete day. A tra veller tells how he helped to celebrate it one year at one of the climbing cen- ters in the Valais by eating the sump- tuous dinner provided by the hotel without extra charge, applauding the fireworks display and a bonfire nght ed high on the mountain side and shouting "Hourra !"" at the end of a patriotic speech extolling tlie ancient military glories ond present republi can democracy of Switzerland. Next morning eame the strange sequel. The orator of the occasion, the most dis- tinguished native visitor in the place, was appealed to as one who would certainly know the name of the Swiss president, but even he could not, re- member it. Nobody ever can. .lhe name of that unassuming functionary is_always less familiar in Switzerland than that of the lieutemant-governor is in llinois. He is werely the de- mocraey's temporary official. Wild (Geese As Decoys. Two brotht®™ names Frakes, living in Kansas, have wild geese, with clip- ped wings, which they use as decovs, One pivht-Fide- Frakes heard wild geese Giving arownd his house in an- swer to the calls of his trgined de- cops. He went to the door in his nicht clothes and killed five. On an other occasion a lot of wild reese lit in the vard with his decoys. He has- tily rioged up a fish met, drove them all into it amd saptured three wild ones. The Frakes boys take ten *de- Coys to the river, tie them on a sand bar, md then wait in a blind until the wild geess appear. As soon as wild geese apoear the decoys set up a wild crv. and the wild feese always sail around. In Apri), three vears ago, Dick and Muce Frakes killed seventeen geese in one day; eivhtoen the next, and thirteen the next. That was the best record they ever mado. -------- Strange Story Of A Bell. On the death of the Duke of Welling ton, the bells of Trim, near Dangan Castle, his father's seat in Ireland, for which, when a young wan, Wel lington had sat in the Irish parlia- ment, rang a mufiled peal, when the tenor, a beautifully toned bell, sud- dently. broke. It was found by a curi- bus coincidence to have been cast in 769, the year of the duke's birth. William Swain, piano tuner! Orde "received: at' McAuley's book store. The light bread or the leaden loaf is a matter of choice--not luck. Choice of method--choice of yeast oy --but, above all, in the choice of ~~ the flour. She who chooses Royal Household Flour will not have to bargain with for- tune for successful baking.--It is made from the finest, selected Man- itoba wheat, which contains more gluten (that quality which makes bread light) than any other wheat. It is milled under. the most sanitary conditions--absolute purity is one very important quality which the Ogilvie System of milling guar- antees. There is no other flour in Canada upon which so much is spent to insure its perfect purity. Ask 'your grocer for Ogilvie's Royal Household--the flour that makes light bread. Ogilvie Flour Mills Co., Limited MONTREAL. "Ogilvie's Book for a Cook," contains 130 pages of excellent recipes, some never publahed before. Your grocer can tell you ow to get it, FRER, 8 A ETP a EE a ---- MADE IN CANADA BY A CANADIAN COMPANY. EY SE ---- WIFT rd DURABLE wo LIGHT - RUNNING. ALWAYS LOOK FOR THE NAME TeNlewhianss. THE WILLIAMS MANUFACTURING CO. oreany orrices: MONTREAL, P. Q. Hue. TORONTO, LONDON, HAMILTON, OTTAWA, ST. JONN, N. B. AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE. Dr. KOHR'S RESTORINE =: tary, ~the inost wonderful Medicine ever dis- . It is astounding the medical world. , 10,000 Cases cured in ome month in Paris. The National Medical Board has recommended this Remedy for use in the Insane Asylums where, as is well known, 8 majority of the male inmates are victims of lost Vitalit in its most terrible form, Iu Rurope the remedy ir evidorsed by all governments wud is now used as a Specific in the great standing armics of both France and Germany, Stans losses Ja from seven to ten days #0 that they rever return, Dralus entirely cease after a few day's treatment, The skin becomes clean the evesbriglt. Confidence returns. stepelastic, bowe- regular. Headaches disappear. No more weak me mory, the mind becomes Bright and active. A Food ior brain and Blood. A cure no matter how chromic the case. Just sent us foday your name 22d address painly written and a § days treatment of Restorine wi'l be sent FREE in Jain sealed pack: 2g Do not hesitate a moment 'e will treat you Wilh scccess and wil hotest confidence, De. KOHR MEDICINE CO.. Po. DRAWER L 2341, MONTREAL. fecisvene? && . a we "Tiger Brand" Underwear Such high-grade' wool, so perfectly fashioned, *Ticer Brann oes't pull or stretch out of shape. Same give and stretch ® after washing as befole Doesn't stiffen or shrink, Keeps its Shape Unshrinkable has only the origina roast beef. Use AR as other brands of same results, It makes excell rich beef tea, etc. "CuraNary WRD is used for, and how to or "BEEF economically. ARMOUR LIM Canapian Facto SYNOPSIS UF CANADIAN KORTH-Y HOMESTEAD REGULATION Any even numbered section of I fon Lands in Manitoba or N West Province, excepling 8 and 206 reserved, may be 'homesteaded hy the sols head of a family, years of age; to the exten rter section, of 1060 acres, Application for homestead entry gpection ust be. wade in person L) apvlicant at the office of the local J ent oe . application for. entry or fnspe personally at any Sub-agent's » wired to the local Agent t t, at tho expense of the and if the land - applied fi vacant on receipt, of the telegram application is to hava priority. and 1 will be held until the nece s to complete the transactios ed by mail. caso of "personation" the sntr be summarily cancelled and the t will forfeit all priority of cla plicant for inspection mus or bomestead entry, and plication for inspection wi vd from an individual until cation has been disposed oi. A homesteader whose entry is standing and not liable to cuvce ubject to'approval of I juish it in favour of father, daughter, brother © , but. to no one else, on of abandonment. ere an entry iS summarily can intarily abandoned, subse ion of 'cameeliation applicant 'for isspection will tit to prior right of entry. Applicants for inspeftion must st what particulars the homesteader default, and if subSeguentry the ment is found to be incorrect in r jal purticulars, the apnlicant wil any prior right of re-entry shoul land become vacant, or if entry has granted it may be summarily cant Duties.--A "settler is required tc form the conditions under one o following plans i= (1) At least six months' resident on and-cultivation of the land in year during the hg of three you (2) Hy thier Xr mioghar, father NSA a of '= homes! resides 'upon a'farm in the vicinity land entered for by such homes the requirement as to residenco m satisfied by such person residing wi father or mother. (3) If the settler has his perm residence upon farming land owne him in the Wicinity of his home the requirement nay be satisfic residence upon such land. "Defore making - application for y the settler must give six months' in writing to tho' Commissioner ol minion Lands at Ottawa, of his tion to do; so. SYNOPSIS® OF CANADIAN NO WESTs MINING REGULATION Coal lands may be purcha: r acre for soft coal and §: uthracite. Not. mpre than 320 can be ' acquired by ome individu Company. Royalty .at the rate nis per ton of 2,000 pounds sh: Ccted on the gross output. arts. --A fee miner's certifice granted upon payment in advance per annum for an individual, and $50 to $100 per annum for a co! according to capital. A free miner, having discovered al in place, may locate a claim 1,500 feet. The fee for recording a claim is ! At least $100 must be expended claim each year or paid to the) recorder in lieu thereof. When $5( been expended or paid, the locator having a survey made, and lying with .other requirement the lind at #1 'per acre. © patent provides for the payn & royalty of 24 per cent on the sal Placer mining claims generally a feet square entry fee $5, ren yearly, ' A free miner may obtain two lea dredge for gold of five miles each term of twenty' years, remowable discretion of the Minister of the In The lessee 'shall have a dredge in ation within one season from the of the lease for each five miles. $10 per annum for each mile of leasetl. Royalty at the rate of : cent collected on the output after cecds $10,000. W. W. CORY 'uty of the Minister of the In 1 b TI TO MIS MAJESTY THE KING SirJohn Power & Son 1 ESTABLISHED AD. 1791. THREE SWALLOW IRISH WHISKE Famous for over a century for its delicacy of flavor. Of highest standard of Purity. ~ It is especially fecommended by the Medical Profession or account of its peculiar "DRYNESS" Dr. Brock's £5°07y 1 Pi SemaieaBeniation', Pip only in Ki at. the BEST D 1 Steet. Mailed receipt of price Brsasessssacssssanas * 2 3

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