Daily British Whig (1850), 8 Jun 1907, p. 11

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"he Safe Tonic for Young and Old The «Canada' Lancet" leading medical authority rae Sidi) ways. of Abbey's « Its ingre di Bave repeatedly analyzed by been : chemists, and have been pert nounced fully up to the 2 dno of the test for purity as La down 1 ther latest edition of the British Phar mIeope. We consider Abbey's the effervesci . ptt 0 ng sak made in any Get well and well 2 morning glass id by s Abbey's = flervescent Salt: and 6oc. a bottle. At all Druggists, s the demand for a fur- ce possessing the larg- amount of grate sur- e in Proportion to the meter of the top of the > pot. It possesses all advantages of a re- n flue construction, The "Admiral" has largest ash pit of any nace on the market, rmitting the free re- 1 or coal mi be bu - e "Admiral" Fa te for Catalogue- 2 Bees, Furnaces, Kingston, "FRUIT-A-TIVES" differ from any other remedy in the world. "They cure, absolutely, Stomach, Liver, Kidney, Bowel and Skin Troubles. \ Because none of the usual remedies have gi ef, i reaso! "ould Hot ive "Fruit-a-tives" a good, kt Pt a EY res it acts directly on the three great eliminating organs--Bowels, Kidne . - . -- ' YS and Skin. But fruit contains only a minute quantity 3 the medicinal principles and in order to receive any marked benefit from fruit, one would be compelled to oat iare than could be assimilated by the system. : « Fruit-a-gives i ive vi it i na Raves _ contain all the curative virtues of fruit in a wonderfully In making "'Pruit-a-tives," the jui < i 9 S, juices of apples, oranges, figs and prunes are combined-- tod. bt a wid hl Sistovery of a famous physician, a chemical change takes place in the EX ned Spal action is many times increased. Then tonics are added, and Gas . » - " "Fruit-a-tives " contain no Calomel--no Cascara--no Senha--no Morphine-- no violent purgatives--only fruit juices and tonics. "Fruit-a-tives™ act directly on th Now {i i arousing this to vigorous action. * Sowsley Ridasys. aid Shibn-stentiening Suid ith the Kidneys thy--the Bowels moving regularly i ive--an ney t} t 1 i every day--t Av the pores of the skin deing their full share i: ridding the S ord ty can a no disease, Fruit-a-tives" mean health for every member of the family, 5oc. a box--6 boxes for $2.50. Sent to any address on receipt of price if your druggist does not handlc them. FRUIT-A-TIVES : LIMITED, OTTAWA. 103 LL APN LL 2 Shoe Polish is the best Shoe Polish made. It softens and feeds the leather and preserves alike the roughest boots and the finest ladies' shoes. As a labor saver it is a wonder. * Gives an almost instantaneous brilliant black shine. Every good thing has its imitations, but if you ask for 2in 1 no honest dealer will take chances with his y | & (1d reputation by offering you a substitute. Black and all 1% Colors, 10c and 25c tins is just the soap for washing woolen blankets and flannels --and removes all the dirt from the most delicate lace creations without ® injuring a singie thread. rite for our ome illustrat Crewe of Priam 08 ITE Licbards Pare Soap wrappers and rw - Free BE Danian Soap ad rertimments from sur paper and we wil send) ou ul wou venir. The Rickards Pure Soap Co., Limited : WOONSTOC! XK, ONT. . Cnt out this ad. it is valuable, Please mention Kingston Whig when sgmwering this advertisement J eral observance. The character 'of this observance is changing every year. It Letter From Greater New : York. OLD DAYS RECALLED BY THE OBSERVANCE OF MEMORIAL DAY. r---- Bitter Memories of the Rebellion Passing Away---Down at Coney Islan@--Hard Times Have No Effect on the, Amusement -- Faces, Special Oorrespotidence; Lotter No. 1,567. New York, Jume ®S~--Meworial Day met with & more gedefal observance than it has for many gp but, togk- ing back along the of the old boys who wore the blwe I miss the faces of comrades that bore the tat- tered banners of their regimeats through the deadly storm of batyle. Their places in the line of march were vacant but the gracious and loyal me- they bave leit behind have made their names Gmmortal, Iv is genuine pleastire to record that as the years roll swiitly by the bitterness en- gendered by years of treasonable strife is rapidly passing away and tate has decreed © that soomer or later, the brave sons who bore the Stars and Stripes to victory, and those who met a terrible defeat shall lie down in peateful sleep together, under the same i, covered by the same beautiful flowers, there to rest {ill the judgment call. Like is too short for continuance of cherishidd Dates. "Blessed gre the mesciiyl for'they shall obtain mercy," I never realized how rapidly the me mory of the rebellion is being forgoty ten until 1 read the obituary of Mrs. Jofferson Davis and of General Joe. Wheeler. Mra, Davis accepted the in- evitable with an homest heart. Tier busband would have occupied a warm- er place in the nation's heart than he does to-day Mf he bad followed the example, of his wife, He ddnot. He proferred to live in the memory of af ter generations as an example of un- repentant treason than be the recipient of an honorable pardom, freely given, which would have buried his heinous crime 'nthe lethe of forgetiuiness. Mrs. Davis' body was escorted to the grave by the soldiers that met her husband's cohorts on the battlefield and left them there wounded or dead. The son . .of.the brave soldier who saved the nation's. life commanded the escort, and laid her in the grave with the highest military honors that could possibly have been paid tc the most loyal woman in the republic Little Gen. Joe. Whevler, though only a boy in ize, weighing Lut twenty one pounds, had the desperate emergy of a giant. At the age of twenty-one he was ded the ablest cavalry leader in the confederate army. At the lose of the . rebellion he retired to Alabama. After a time he took the oath of loyalty and later was elected to congress, ere he met Congress man McKinley, representing Ohio, who contracted a warm friendship for the former confederate general. On Me Kinnley's election to the presidency he gave Gen. Wheeler an appointment in the army, and Wheeler declared that the happiest. day of his life was that on which he was allowed to wear a federal uniform. He did excellent ser vice in Cuba and the Philippines, He received rapid promotion, and after his death he was buried with all the honors of war, a part of his escort on the bloodiest battlefields 'of the rebellion, when he commanded "the con- federate cavalry. Also, Gen. Long- street, who planned and commanded the tremendous battle of Gettysburg, loyally accepted the nation's pardon for his treason. and was provided with honorable service under the, federal go- vernment, It was these memories that helped to give the sacred holiday such a obi becomes more secular than religious Flowers are scattered over the graves of our patriot dead as of yore, and memoriaf. services are held in most churches, but the large number of excursions carry away thousands to see ball games and prize-fights. The rapid thinning out of the brave sol dir who fought in the rebellion. and occasionally secing among them an old confederate, puts me in mind of a circumstance that took place in Tren- ton, N.J., many years ago, When I was a boy, soldiers who fought in the revolution were growing scarce. and what few remained were held in es- pecial reverence, and every Fourth of July, they were dressed in the old re- volutionary uniform, and rode in front of the procession. For some years there was an old revolutionary soldier who had been brought out every year and-treated with the great- est consideration. Free drinks and freo lunches were showered upon him, and on this especial day a number of young men and boys gathered around im, and kneeling at his feet and looking up into his face with rever- ence said, "Daddy, you were in the revolution, eh 1" He answered, 'Yah, did Washington look 2" "I don't see dat man." 'You were in the army exploded. Never seen in a Fourth of July protession. Strange 'ag it may seem, the 3lst of May closed the spring season. Satur the first thought was. to get rid of it. The day was cloudy and cool, but Coney Island, held out dazzling at- tractions, and although some dave in advance of ite usual opening 100.000 people. traveled to the resort. The hotel and Testaurant people propared for 4 rush, but, the cool air was pro- voontive of hunger, and long before money. As the day wore on and sunset approached, slight flurries of rain add- being the soldiers whom had met him | good blood banishes rheumatism, gen- I vas there." "Now tell us.--How and never saw Washington ?" "No, I stoop to # don't wee him." 'How was that?" the Hessians." His patriot claims this after thut was he day was the usual half-holiday. Being : " x have frequently driven him from his payday, every body had money and arden, Jo was stated at a prop ing of ed to the general discomfort, and by the time it was dark, a ronring storm psi in, a the rain fell i or an hour, Then changed to hail, and, wonderful for the his or the lunch counters and hotel tables looked as if swept by the cyclone out- the side. Daylight was breaking on morning of June nd, and wore shippers were on thelr way to before the last of the hungry and rev fourid their way back to the Island of Manhattan, love dogs. There is no creature in the animal creation that has such a affinity to man, Show him a kindness and he never forgets it; he is glad see you and makes you know it when g jumps up wags his tail with every symptom of tification and delight. While the ibit was mot so large as in former years, the auality was great and pure, and, financially, it was the most satisfactory exhibit on the list, Notwithstanding the report of hand i the forty-five places of amuse tions have taken place of pictures, mapaseripts, ete., where twenty-five and thirty thousand dollars bave been paid for = sincle article, but, the thousands of strikers who are stand- ing 'out for higher wages and shorter hours, certainly give am uncomfort- able look to our affairs. The end must come, law and honor must rule, and all that we can do is to watch and wait. ~BROADBRIM. AFTER DOCTORS FAILED. -- Dr. Williams" Pink Pills Cured a Severe Case of Anaemia. Anaemin--poor watery blood--is the cause of most of the misery which afflicts mankind, The housewife es- pecially falls an easy prey to it. The long hours and close confinement ne oossary in performing her household duties, sap her strength. She becomes run down and often suffers extreme misery, Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are the housewife's friend. They make now blood--lots of it--and pure blood ban ishes all women's ailments. Mrs. E, St. Germain, wife of a wellknown farmer of St. John des Chaillons, Que., found now strength through Dr, Williams' Pipk Pills. She says : "A year ago I was extremely weak, 1 could not attend to my work, I'suf fored from dizzy spells; wy head ached; my blood was poor; had a bad cough and the doctors feared 1 was going into consumption. I fol- lowed their treatment for some time but without relief. I grew discouraged and finally gave it up in d ie. 1} was strongly advised to try br, Wil. liam¢' Pink Pills, so procured six box- ws. Before they were all gone I felt relief. The headaches and dieziness be came less frequent and 1 felt a little stronger. 1 continued the pills jor a couple ofl months at the end of which time | had gained in weight; the pains had left me; my appetite was good and TT felt as strong and well as ever I did. 1 cannot say too much in fa- vor of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for 1 certainly owe my good. health - to them." The woman in the house, the man in the office, the boy or girl in the school will always find a friend in Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. These pills actu- ally make now, rich red blood and eral debility, kidney = troubles and those aches and pains caused by over work or overstudy; -good blood builds up the tired unstrung nerves and makes palo thin cheeks rosy and heal thy. The pills are sold at 50c. a box or six boxes for $2.50 by all medi cine dealers or by mail from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co, Brockville, Ont, ---------- Beneath Contempt. Fredericton, NB. Herald. ; While Hon. Mr. Enunerson sat in the police court, Wednesday afternoon listening to the proceedings in his suit to vindicate his reputation and punish his detractors, he recived a telegram announcing the death of his anc at Portland, Sine. After read ing the sad message two or three times, pho put it in his pocket, tearing up the envelope throwing the pieces on the floor. The incident was observed hy sume of the newspaper. ghouls, woo are seeking to destroy the ex-ministor, and this is how it was described in two tory newspapers, the Halifax Herald and Moncton Times, "Myr. Emmerson appears to be in poor health. He was quite mervous throughout the session, was eon: stantly tearing up bits of paper and throwing them upon the floor, A tele graphio meésage, handed him during the trial, seemed to depress him dexp- ly. He read it over and over again and his hands trembled to such an extent as to cause general comment in the court room. It is rumored that the message was . & cable from ir Wilfrid Laurier." Could devilish ingenuity to injure a man 'go further than that? What must be the patare and disposition of a newspaper correspondent who would uch baseless statements to wound and villify a fellow man. "Vol, you se : ------ vou see, T was on the side with Disliked By The : Bees that have taken up their abode at the side of the house occupied by the earetaker of the East Sussex Smmlipox hospital, Plumpton, appear to have token a dislike to that official. They the hospital committee, and of exports to dislodge them from the premises have failed. - em-------- . Muscles Full Of Pain. You were overheated, cooled too quickly and canght cold. Cure 'comes quickly by rubbing on Polson's Nervi- THE ABSOLUTE cuMAX! 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ELLIOTT BROS. 77 Princess Street, AS A SURE ROAD TO HEALTH AND STRENGTH NOTHING TO EQUAL ' TRISCUIT The palatable and nutritious Shredded Wheat Wafer. Contains in most digestible form all the nutritive elements of the ! whole wheat kernel. Its continued use will prevent neatly all the stomach and intestinal disorders known to mankind. Try BISCUIT for Breakiast ; TRISCUIT for Luncheon.' All Grocers--18¢. a Carton ; 2 for 28e. Self-Opening, Square. Bottom, : ; Made from the Tou ] ALL WEIGHTS AND SIZES. | The EB. Eddy Company, Limited, \ HULL, CANADA. i Always Everywhere in Canada. Ask for Eddy's ' dusk the last sausage man Was re tired from Business, his stock all 30ld { ve line. This penectcating linimnt never ails, Large bottles for 25e..

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