Daily British Whig (1850), 18 May 1907, p. 10

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D. Phat pT "YOUNG, by keeping stomach clear--liver A 1 of Abbey's Salt, in a glass of tepid A dessert spoonful e "fountain of perpetual youth." ter every morning, is th E ) . Try it this summer, of improvement--of range is the 8 | usago ! it is w clean range. Burners It put and can be quickly wiped, pans handy to get at and keep ven out, BR « This range can be fitted for 8 the use of natural was, v Simmons Bros, .,,. Oxfor $ ALWAYS COOL AND COMFORTABLE. 9 and keep young. At all druggists. 25¢. and 6oc. a bottle. SEES SOME HOP RAND'S DISTRESS. "on Too Big a Scale. eT Lea & Perrins' | Sauce: makes good Roast Beef taste Better. 7 By Royal Warrant served on the King's Table. Insist on the Genuine. Established 1857. 129 J. M. DOUGLAS & CO. Mostra, Canadian Agents. -- "am LORD MILNER. Cape Town, May \ Aldwyn, who is returning to Engla next week after a two months' tour situation to-day, commerc althou, est point and that the outlook is mow favorable, Transvaal by starting the machine of government on a scale beyond t capacity of the colony to mainta A hopeful sign has to be met is the development the lower grade mines. he found throughout interference, and he advises the i ticularly in view of the native dar er. -- «A Vain Desire. Chicago Record-Herald. PEOEPI00000 000000000 DOKING COMFORT AND CONVENIENCE : Just ome gus range bakes ns well as any coal range--bakes more evenly--far More quickly--and #0 sayes the cook's temper, the table's repute and the § 8 money. Just one ges range represents the farthest : ingenuity--of labor saving and fuel economy. the . The Yellow Store D PO@ PPOIVPOOO® d J 1 -213 Princess St. Phone 493 © elite lela eee jo "lol Shoes 'ment of in Tan Calf, Velour Calf and $3.50 to 5.05. Blucher and But. in fine Vici Kid, Patent Colt, and Canvas, $1.25, 1.50, 1.75, 00 and 3.50. * and Girls' Oxfords in Patent and Vici 3.50. cheaper lines for id, neat and. Sresy, also every day service. $1.25, 1.50, 1.75, 2.00 to Pele talato to 0.0 0 ¢ os PETIT IIIT We have a {large assort OXFORDS Teele doit to 3. 20°92 3 o Boys and Girls And swing on the old front gate ; my face, Forgetting the proud and the great ; A Aud drink of the And dream as I used to dream. way ; To stray through the orchard aisles, Pay For the poorest of fortune's smiles : I want to escape from the noise and t mirk v But they'd probably want me to go work If I wandered out there again. ---------------- Get This Healer To-Day. some good Wade's Ointment. It heals everything. It flammation, prevents formation « pus, and is a specific for a variety skin affections that ments do not salt rhewm, scald erysipelas, piles, ote. In 25¢., at Ware's drug store. big boxe Check Reins In Germany. Cleveland Leader. In 1905 the use of the check re ice regulations of the city of Berli or of of Berlin one now seldom sees a chee a few belonging to private 'teams. tion--if you have the backbone to liv up to it. Kent alone has 29,811 act YOU LACK ! . ing Weak. . Build Up Now. During the winter the svsfem gets sluggish. The blood, polluted with impurities, deadens the nervous = gys- tem apd dulls the actions of both liver and kidneys; the foulness of the System increases and when spring comes we are limp and useless, Spring "system cleaning" is a duty; the body sowers must be flushed out and waste matter removed: otherwise weakness and nervousness will surely follow. Begin by enriching the blood. Make it pure and mutritious by taking Ferrozone, M's the greatest blood former known to medical science. Ferrozone makes the liver fairly sing-with new life, makes the kidneys diiies 'with renewed vitality, and thus Us for Your Oxford Shoes is expelled, Of course digestion must be impro- ved, and probably the stomach will require aid as well. Ferrozone serves the ~p&rpose admirably. Those who ; s Juse it, enjoy appetite and digestive powers far beyond the ordinary. That tired feeling is replaced by the buoyant, joyous sensation of health and vigor. Day_by day as your strength increases, you feel new energy surging through your veins, and know that a tonic of great merit is at work No remedy more nourishing or up- ifting, treatment so sure to bring' I lasti ralth, good spirits and con- rn dy Perromme | Sontag just what rundown folks need: it' cures be- cause it supplies more nutriment than you can get in any other way. Frea from alcohol and prepargyl only in choeolate-coated tablets, Boe. per. box Jor six for $2.50, at all dealers. Be "Ferro ne, » DAILY BRITISH LORD MILNER BLAMED FOR Viscount St. Aldwyn Says fe {tor and he Started Colonial Government |gative medicine merely gaMops through 18.--- Viscount St. South Africa, gave his views on the [and in the same way they will "restore His lordship believes that the pre- | heart palpitation, neuralgia, rheuma- vailing depression has reached its low- tis: and the secret ailments that make he does not expect a rapid recovery. |dicine dealers or by mail at 50c. a He holds that Lord Milner, is great- | box, or six boxes for $2.50 from the ly to blame for' the position in the | Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, is that the Trans- vaal progressives'desire to work with view, remarks on the seneral Botha's ministry for the good |of the orator from the House of Com- of the country. One difficulty which | mons : Viscount St. Aldwyn declares that | Commons was a stage from South Africa | eminent men delivered elaborate dis that the people are tired of England's | Courses. Within my portance of hastening federation, par | been wrought in I waat to go back to the old home place In the cool, clear spring I would lave I long to kneel on the springhouse floor rich, sweet cream, And sit on the step by tire kitchen door I want to go buck o'cr the long, long | vival. Even 5 rn 'of 4 chic] i Forgetting the pride that a man must | 140 of thought 'which dominated par And the scheming of money-mad men-- | thods, less voluminoug in his speech. You can't get along without having and a voice the healing remedy in the house. The one to choose, always is ber. stops in- ordinary oint- reach. Cures eczema, head, cold sores, was prohibited ini the German emper- or's stables, and almost simultaneous- ly with this prohibition the new pol- { else's." 0, governing public cabs came into el- | "Well, fect. According to the provisions of low. these regulations the use of blinkers | get out #" the check rein on public cab | horses was prohibited. In the streets [od the rein or blinkers on horses, except on | There's nothing like a good reputa- Of 48,867 acres of hops in Eggland, Cres REGAIN NOW THE STRENGTH Winter Leaves Us Miserable, Ail- the winter's accumulation of pollution , E DANGEROUS PURGATIVES. : se---- . Medicines of This Class Do Not Cure--Their Effect is Weakening. Nothing could be more cruel than to induce a weak, anaemic person to take & purgative medicine in the hope of ing relief. Ask any doc il tell you that a pur- the bowels, w the tender tjs- sues, He will tell you also Hay > purgative cannot possibly cure dis- ease, or build up bad blood. When the blood is weak and watery, \hen the system is run down a tonic is the one thing needed---is the- only thing that will put you. right. And in all this ll is no tomic so good as Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. Every dose of these pills actually makes new, rich red blood which fills She veins, reaches every organ in the b and brings health and strength to oo t people. Miss Annie Beau- dreau, Amherst, Magdalene Islands, Que., says: "I was pale, my heart would palpitate violently at the least exertion, and 1 suffered greatly from severe headaches. I tried several me- dicines which seemed actually to leave me worse. Then I was advised to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and a half dozen boxes have made me as well as ever I was. They have done me So much good that I would like every weak girl in the land to try them." It was the new blood Dr. Williams' nd | Pink Pils actually made that restored in { Miss Beaudrean to health and strength, all suffecers from anaemia, indigestion, ial | the lives of so many women and grow- gh ling girls a burden. Sold by all me- ery | Ont. he ------ in. Oratory At Westminster. H. W. Lucy, in the May Albany Re- disappearance of | "Time was, at and since the period of Pitt and Fox, when the House of which v comparatively m- | brief experience a great change has this respect. There {are many able men in 'the present parliament; there is not a single one who poses as an orator." This state of things is due, in Mr. Lucy's opinion, to lack of time, and to the fact that 660 members are no longer content to form an audience enraptured by the eloquence of eight jor ten. In days that are no more Mr. Lucy knew quite a different state of things. In the Seventies, even in the eighties, there were giants of ora- tory. Gladstone was the last sur- he towards the end of his carcer was influenced by the newer ng- liamentary debate. He could not help being eloguent when deeply moved, he | but he was more direct in his me- to | John Bright, Mr. Lucy regards as perhaps the finest orator known to the House of Commons in the last half of the nineteenth century. "Na- ture gifted him with a fine presence, like of which hag rarely rung through the classic cham- ---------- A Runabout Romance. of { Cleveland Plain Dealer. of "Hear about Blinkley 7" "Nope. What about him?" "Well, yesterday he left his runabout in front of his office and was gone for > {a half hour, When he came back what do you suppose he found ¥"' "His car was gone ?" "No. The car was there all right, . |and in the seat was a stunning young In | woman." "I see. She made a mistake and took Blinkley's car for some one n,| « she didn't." Blinkley isn't a romantic fol- What did he do ? Tell her to ~ "Not a bit of it. He jumped in, pull- throttle open and took her k | home with him." | "Gracious! What did Mrs. Blinkley | say ?" . | 'She said, 'That was a delightful | ride and I'll call for you again to- morrow, dear.' ------------ The Judge In Jail. Cincinnati Enquirer, "L" said 'an esteemed magistrate, "spent a week in Jail before I entered on my judgeship.' I ate the prison food. I slept in a cell. I conformed with all the prison rules. I wore the prison - clothes. I did prison work. Thus I learned the value of the sen- tences I was to mete out later on. I got to know what a week, a month, a year, in jail meant. As 4 result I am more merciful than most judges. 1 think it would be a good thing if every judge before taking office would spend a little while in Jail as 1 did. He would then know the value of pri- Bon sentences, a thing he doesn't know now. Now he js like a cashier who attempts to Pay out money in coinage of which he is ignorant. In Badun this thing I. speak of must, be! done, Every judge in Baden before he takes his seat on the bench is requir- ed by law to pass weeks like a com- mon prisoner in jail." Last Will Stands. February 18th, 1897, and one dated November 4th, 1503, was tried at last to determine which will shon'd stand. The court decided that the will dated November - 4th, 1903, was the true will, and ought to be admitted sary -things every, time. Tis action } to probate. An appeal was taken to Sy aainge wi Ty. time. Its action is days' treatment. Price 50c., 'at Wade's out of the estate, drug store. the divisional court, who have now |! dismissed it with costs, to be paid WHIG, SATURDAY, MAY 18 Canada in 1899 and took his theolo- gical cour i burgh, & afterwards was four years in a Bristol! suburban charge, has re- turned permanently. He goes to Brandon, Man., to supply for Rev. R. W. Dickie, for a month. Queen Victoria Clergy Fund has agreed to add to the work on which it is en- gaged that of raising money for the London branch off the Clergy Pensions institution, upwards of $260,000 to this object in the next three years. the Christian countries of the world at the rate of from five to ten per cent, rach year. The are estimated at million copies, a fact which would in- dicate that Rifle in the Bible are by no means decreas ing, as some w ould assert, 2 € When William Johnston of the vil- | fections is bound to appear sooner or lage of Bishop's Mills, died, it was |} . found he had left two wills, one dated [lumbago or neuralgia, A dispute arse poison in the blood between those interested, and an jegue | 120d and expelled and the disordered | #4 3 Brockville in Dossmbes | condition of the tive org and its return prevented, Dr. Hall's Rheumatic pr NEWS OF CHURCH RELIGIOUS ITEMS FROM ALL DENOMINATIONS. > The Pulpit. 'A Coward's Castle" ~The Oldest Roman Catholic Prelate in America--How the Denominations Rank. Rev. W. C. Crux, Gladstone, Man., has been invited to the Methodist church in Kenora. - The Keswick convention at Killarney will be held this year from the 27th of May to the 1st of June, King Edward has appointed Rev. Prebendary E. A. Stuart to the canonry of Canterbury cathedral. A call from the Baptist congrega- tion at Saskatoon has 'been accepted by Rev. A. J. Archibald, of Dighy, N.S. A unanimous call to the pastorate of Knox church, Embro, has been ex- tended fo Rev. Mr: Barber, Arthur, as successor to Rev. G. C. Patterson. Rev. Walter Baker. who has had charge of the Congregational church, at Chebogne, N.S., has resigned, to accept a charge at Cowansville, Que- bec. Rev. H. C. Speller, Guelph, Ont., has been called to the pulpit of Tabernacle Baptist church, Winnipeg, succeeding Rev. C. Burpett, who goes to Vancouver. Ln s The five leading denominations in New York city number: Episcopal- ians, 100,000; Lutherans, 48,000; Pres byterians, 46,000; Methodists, 44,000. Baptists, 38,000, It is understood, that Dr. W. M. Macgregor will be the late Principal Rainy's successor in the convenorship of the Highlands and Islands Commit- tee of the United Free church. The Congregational is the latest de- nomination to set on foot a- men's national organization similar to the Presbyterian Brotherhood, the move- ment having been started in Chicago. Rev. R. J. D. Simpson, of Perth Avenue Methodist church, Toronto, has. accepted an invitation to become pastor of Midland Methodist church at the end of the present conference ear. " The Colonial and Continental Church Society obtained £9,601 in Canada and promises bf £3,000 during the past year. The problem af evangeliza- tion of the North-West is now en gaging attention. a T. M. Marshall (Prince Al bert), C. B. Freeman (Moose Jaw), and C. C. McLaurin have been appoint ed Baptist general missionaribs for the provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, respectively. A Church Army League of Friends of the Poor has been organized in London, the object being not to raise money, but simply to get people to take a personal interest in and act as the friend of some poor family. Rev. Gilbert Agar has resigned the pastorate of King Street Methodist church, Toronto, feeling that he is not suited for the mission work required in that district. He is going to the North-West. for an extended tour. In resigning the pastorate of Epip- hany Baptist church, New York, Dr, Madison Peters declared. the pulpit to be a "'coward's castle," and asserted that ministers are not free to express their honest sentiments against the influence of dishonest rich members. An odd feature of the history of the Moravian church, which has reached its 450th year of existence, is the fact that ~ there never has bee n a schism in the church, which is believed to be without parallel in any other religious organization. Rev. A. V. Vale, rector of the Ang- lican church, Lindsay, will leave for the Mackenzie River district in July, where he will remain until the begin- ning of next year, after which time he will take charge of the mission sta- tion on the Herschel Islands. With a site that is extremely valu- able, an income of upward of 210,000 a year and a congregntion of only about thirty worshippers, the Church of St. Poter-le-Poer, in London, has been closed and its resources will be turned over to some struggling church. Archbishop Williams, of Boston, has just celebrated his eighty-fifth birth- day, the oldest Roman Catholic' pre- late in America. Bish p McQuaid, of Rochester, and . McC skey, of Louis- ville, arg both pnt eighty-three, an Cardinal Gibbons will be sev nty-three in July, Rev. J. G. Inkster, B.A. who left In New College, Edin- The London Diocesan branch of the it being hoped to devote The sale of the Bible is increasing in total sales for 1906 from ten to twelve cading and interest ---- . i "The Perfect Food" Now 10c. Couldn't be made better-- there's none "just as good," there isn't a better food. Simply delicious. The groceroffering a food "just as good" as Malta-Vita has little respect for your judgment or health. EASY MATTER TO REMOVE GRATES If necessity requires, it is an easy matter to remove the grates from the Sunshine, 3 Just loosen the cotter pin (see the top arrow pointing at it) and the grates on the right can be lifted out. Repeat the operation on the left, and you can do the same with the remaining grates. Could any operation be easier or simpler ? These four grates are made of heavy cast-iron with the strongest kind of bull dog teeth. Heavy and strong enough to grind up the biggest clinker into particles small enough to sift through the narrow openings between the teeth. What's left in the ash-pan is not worth sifting. If your local dealer does not handle the " Sun- shine," write direct to us for FREE BookLET. - | M"Clarys London, Toronto, Montreal, Winnipeg, Vancouver, St. John, N B.§ LEMMON & SONS. wonderful Medicine ever dis. covered stot the medical world. 10,000 © x in' one month in Paris. The National M 1 has recommended this Remedy for use in i where, is well known, a pe the remedy ic nts and is now used as a ng armies of both France Ses in irom seven to ten days pever return. Draing entirely cease 's treatm he skin beco 1d active. A Food ent cure no matter end us to-day your name ater; rheumatism, gout, sciatica, To expel any of these diseases the must be neural. kidneys and diges ns must be removed. If this done the disease is cur S| Cure will 'do these neces- vn and thorough. Ton I ---------------- There is no one article in the line of medicines that gives so large a re- ! turn for the money as a good porous [18 strengthening plaster, such as Car- ter's Smart Weed and / Belladonna Backache Plasters, A woman has two unceasing ambi- To put under carpets, nothin , tukes the place of old newspapers, and it for this purpose, if for no other. A woman seldom says, but occasionally she makes 'a mistake and says what she means.. well worth one's while to save them means what she Ei 7 Mabe second s New York is building new flats at the rate © 1,700 a year. De. KOHR MEDICINE co. Poo. Drawn L.2,341 MONTREAL . RE ---- ------------ --_---- . --_------ m-- The Rheumatic Group DOPOD OOS a iin a z 4 . & POPOV OODLE AL AL bdo s a When there is an excess of uric acid YoY Vveee TTT TTRIINe900000000000000000000 in the blood one of the group of af- | Ice Cream F reezers and Lawn Mowers We are now showing ' sartment, th--nice _as- 3 McKelvey & Birch 86 Brock Street, Next to Carnovsky's Fruit Store COAL! sudden changes in weat) to. the wisaom be ting od Coal. tid Uosh: Ina the Kong t sends out the most heat, g sinkes' home comfortabls ; { can buy, a ter mined. | i . BOOTH & CO., Phone 133. Foot of West | A. E. HEROD ORDERED FOOTWEAR Now is the time those R pairs are waited. Our ant ueak Is used on all worl S------ 286 PRINCESS ST. THE HOUSE OF QUALIT NewYorkChinese Restaul 83 Princess Street Open from 10.80 a.m. to 8.00 a The best place to get an all Lunch in the city Meals of all pn shortest notice. English mand CO) Dishes a specialty. If you wish to be successful a tend The . 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