Daily British Whig (1850), 10 Aug 1907, p. 7

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we have secured 3 ¢ bargains. These Night at 7.30. Boys' and Girls' otton Stockings izes 9, 91, 10-inch. air. , t, 15c. Pair. vests ong Black & White ilk Gloves. Special } 75¢. Pair. SECOND SECTION, Che YEAR 74. N, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, AUGUST .1 ----u p-- -- KINGSTO ---- -- = opens on the rath, anc = date there will begin an 3 London aristocracy to the moorlands men will predominate, 1 women have participated ® in what is called the sport, the biggest bags of a day on the he laugh cent and helpless them an apparently pe his form of sport is discon the queen, but that it duiged in by the country there can be no. dc ying that a won is extensively sporting clubs of than a man can become class shot without an mhmte \ x 1 a natural genius for tl markswpman « how fr practice and wide her experi with proper instruction sible for the average Wi shot, and there 1s NO nereasing number omen to be seen at fact that far more shoots is due to the attentibn is paid to the moderti sportswoman tha or twelve years ago t London Sho ing S¢ et g.--Grouse shooting 1 long before exodus of t nt ¢ of ther Unfortunately, and so en participate in the hier becomes itive delight m the loubt mot b excellent her juent her ut iL is quite poss man to become of re all big ation of the School is the vear with 1 n was the case whman ready vhen once gun taking fully sportswoman ady her sp After a initiatory lessons x 1 1} g port 1 ILL A od yi r be g d ir Ww tudied care the embryo further mm have ng 9 shot ab ariven Grovse al (he Grouse Bots knock over these birds with any deg r at a terrific speed, 0, 1907. World. Among the many curious and unusual animals which have been found by Sir in the Uganda Protectorate, is (he whale-headed stork. The bird resem bles the common stork m everything but the head, which is anything but beautiful The beak is enormous and gives the stork a peculiar, whaleliké appearance. It is rather a puzzle to scientists to discover the reason for this enormous appendage The whale's mouth is built to catch a multitude of small fish, and possibly = the stork's beak may have been evolved by the + Fast Africa is now a real paradise Nimrods. British Africa is fast becoming a vast continental pre serve, while the Portuguese dominions are not only open, but inviting. ~ Lions abound, it appears, in the territories of the Portuguese Company of the Boror region, which covers a vast extent of territory, to a degree which has become quite intolerable even for easy Portu- guese ways, A proclamation has ac cordingly been published, in the terms of which the company undertakes to pay $25 for every lion's head brought in and to leave the skin to the slayer Mice are employed to give warnings of danger on English submarine boats Should there be the least leakage of naptha, the mice give warning by ir " cessant squeaks, 'as they have a great dislike for the ye-of that liquid. In the British navy an allowance is made for feeding the mice on submarine hoats Carrier pigeons as mds to a physician are reported from the North of Scot land™ The doctor has a scattered prac tice, and when on long rounds he takes several pigeons with him. If one of his patients needs medicine immediately, he writes out a prescription, and by means of the birds forwards it to his surgery. [to the average woman than any other, the medicine If after visiting a pa t imvolves =o little walking exercise tient the docfor thinks he will be re se shoonng Tou ' hd a pigeon, with which he can be called he method of giving instruction "in | : ¥ g : on tf necessary ne few yards from a high tower re < nt y hillst 1 | . resent i lst low 2 > ¢ | ing a hillside, down which the fo Clery 1, Le Place, of Deep River wants would come flying in real | 0 Ihe clay birds are dispatched from : Ithe top of the tower on their flight | i NE e air, and pass over the heads | 1 Fh Ges the rhembers of the house Wt they go whirring past the butts. | Shooting these clay birds is really line, but the dog can distinguish th is able to | exciting, and if aristocratic women Phapn:gs a --_-- sree | stopped at this'thiere would be no harm Le Place call, one long and three shor f certainty she has made considerable | done. But live bird shooting from traps headway to becoming quite. a passable is another thing, and the sooner it is markswoman, for they are very tri ky | frowned down by public opinion the bet- hooting. and put her skill to a severejter Shooting on the moss should also time a Sportswo i rings, from the others cles of pure gol Ihe sHummed by every woman of dignity In Caravan Latest Fad o Aristocrats. MAN BURIED IN MUD. ed By Children After Close Call With Death. aris, Aug. 10.--Two children nc plished an amazing rescue of a at Lille yesterday. The little ones » playing near a moat, when they a man's head projecting out of mud. ie man cried feebly to them for , and the children at once ran vv, and informed some men near at d. They hurried to the spot, and r considerable difficulty succeeded digging the man out of the mud. was in a terribly exhausted con- op, and explained that he had been k fast in the mud up to his neck twenty hours. While walking on fortifications he had fallen into mud at the edge of the moat, and Id make no one hear his cries for * » until the 'children saw him. rimsby Park May Be Closed. rronto, Aug. 10.-1t is stated that inding-up order will be applied for some of the cottagers at Grimsby k in the near future. The chief vance, as ventilated by Rev. ly Benson w davs aga. is the cased ch s and the decline in lic interest. A number of promin Methodist laymen, who are share lers, take a stand similar to that Ir. Benson. ines that will hold fish and catch =a m, at J. Routley's, 173, 175 Prin- x sireet; branch, 351 King stseet broken lots, Shoes. Patent Blucher Oxford, ex- d, == « «==. .y $3.75. Oxford, medium sole, 4 mies esa. an 88 xford, Dull Back, Empress, - ww sess. 83.50. e, American make, a stylish 'holes for $2.95. has become the fad of if not hundreds, of have deserted tows i 1 ences of the gypsy restlessly over. the sister-in-law of England's richc the Duke of Westminster ple, and now her followers field are increasing daily break the many ha he. too, has somethi pioneer 2 2 q parison with the other will before he starts Whereas other peop! deed, regard the journe ake amp, on the other, & road with a genial spirit and an mind, he will find life episodes and 'memorable scenes For all he does is sect LEADING LIFE OF NOMAD Life in a caravan the nd 101 t peer of ve the other if he ope full of pleasant of numerous nurses. ds by the Count As AY f British in a preturesque FIRST sy arSBos-OF SPAIN'S FUTURE KING. The Prince of Asturias, the infant heir to the throne of is rapidly. growing into a bi nificent palace where he is now sta and in the charge carried about in the groun aristocratic women who act as his g and lusty poy ying with the Seng king and turning out scores ¢ 11 odd ra RK * . Ihy t D we | ought to leave {13 I g plutoerat n undisturbed en beiated n callings--orga t of th nkey-dinners and a, as ul of ete Spain, at La Granja, the nrag- queen seen being ess del Puerto, one of the' honorary nurses, s Oi ofl « of sport with the gun | and refinement But it 1s the fashion, pheasant woting appeals perhaps e {and in England the fashion rules | LITTLE ITALY IN LONDON. y to lic und the Church of St ---- Peter in wck-hill, for the Italman, It is Under the Nose of All Resi- ! gh he belong to the Camorra, lents : person, and indeed the ¢ Ce fe of this little community is wing the bigge 1 V most cosmop There are all | s of "quarter reces ' year improved by the zeal ! k mn its midst. The is the Festival of Carmel, which falls Little Italy 1s seen knows But litle Ita Re | people have a natu ho, 1s der nose, at his doorstey ration, and they try peak, and is for his re mor ke the dim courts and alleys as famihar to in i$ aware tha ke a b i the motherland as gyno { ice-cream ba f tances will permit district which may y ) aid 1 1 le the area « ------------------------ y Ey reet I, Back-hill, Litt The Ignorant Rich. bat tree Sur Tr treet, Bal 1 ( B their atte New York Evening Post I W hould the vulgar rich be criti at or reason it \ making a display of their rhood t ded he p tra hving and osten- Saffr never had a harit s no doubt true, nice reputat any rate wit} M Stoke n her speech at y Of nturies efor t | Chauta Ay that envy and they for { a part of the pleasant gar tred are en red by the frequent lens I ) md the | tself if wury, on the part of tawdry ferived 'its nat m the crops of naires. Yet what would she have? n wl grown re I flinging money about how ne there g1 a 8q d 1 Wil people know it he 1s rich? To 1 swarming th poor pe ¢ anonymously, would be ridiculous ( Dickens n gf ( rity "without reclame is an obsolete 1 in severa d the New Testament 1 vas before tt Beside even empty-headed rich AT in r y rate came ymething. Many of them have They are ' than that of wast es mm what Mrs, Stokes , though ther e | Ing t chang within the last fe i and xurions living." In 1 little Italy is rapidly be € n 1 r triumphs 'than ding is ge \ which have beén 1 ue will come 1 of gettingapid of one's surplus af London w Ie ittsburg connoissenr hit upon the ] ding place Ihe po- |Oriental id Jf investing his sooty mil e will 1 sty, because they areplions im wi tones These v difficult peoy to deal with While fhe carried al s trouser pockets tl \ e¢ Italians are v- | Natur he could not resist the temp \ } nt q t tation of jem on the table of ih 4 r {he } in It would be ou oref to settle the f r 1 to deprive such rch ence ntervention of the jmen pleasures which their nolic 1 f cannot be contrived {hm 1s are capable of conceiving he b mterferes stands | ke id not take away uthern | from a ild in the slums the piece of mates envy. On ridle-chams ding, whether of the piano or ~1r reprisal the Italian has ng fruit from a must have noticed that has recently " a 4 perambulating good . . . me ali Italians Two quart fountain S§Tinges, 5e., i The centre of lif¢ in Little Italy may at Wade's drug store. -- > fore getiring, and you will find relief. | tennis g They never fail to do good. very 1 Ten blufis don't equal one "make nerve strain a match like this last a match 1 do feel oddly strang up. Harry Johnston, the African explorer, qunners. below at a treme heed EE " ¥ i Hemendous hold when the telephone rings if they | ; A te on ealisuc 3 are ontdoors or calling on neighbors. | and splendid practice There are several subscribers on the | 1 i re | know have been permanently cored by a garden-party game have very, little notion of the tremendous | I am supposed. to have nerves and I suppose | have, but before PAGES 7 to 18. | NO. 186. ---------- -------------------------- CURIOUS FAC thie craw of a hen killed on the ranch laf Alberto P. Palos, near Tapalha, Mex- : I 'R OF )S. WOMEN PREPARE FOR SLAUGHTER OF BIRI | ee a Raman Ein a a {gold in the chickens craw caused an | mvestigation to be made, with the re- {sult that a gold placer field of great { richness was discovered by Senor Palos in that locality. He sold the placer to ! Silvano Camberos for $200,000. Tt is said that Alvarado, the rich Mexican | peon, discovered his gold and silver | mines through the rummaging of a pig. i ST --_------------ { TWO-CENT RATE PROFITABLE, | -- Decreases Practically Nothing For First Year, After one year of operation of the two-cent rate in Ohio, it is reported that la railroad controlling mere mileage in | the state than any other will réport that its receipts during the year will he but $300 less than betore the two-cent rate went into effect, While, during the pre- ceding year, the system was operated on a three-cent basis, much of the travel was done by holders of interchangahle mileace books, which forced down the receipts. Of course, part of the good showin~"is due to the increase in traf- fic.. Then again, the ¢utting off of passes has also affected the receipts to some extent. An offical of the system SAYS: "If our experience is a criticism the Inet result of two-cent fares will be this, 'The strong roads will break even; the weak roads will lose some revenue, and the public will be on the road more of the time and in 'poeket all the time." An official of the Pennsylvania lines west says rates do not affect travel very much. He argues that if a rate of $1 were to be given to Chic and return few people could: take advantage of it because their business would not per- mit them to go, because of the other expenses of the trip and the general in- clination on the part of the public to go to no place where it has no business, He thinks people travel mostly on ac- Here. an assistant gets the message, | count of necessity, and those who. travel prepares the prescription and dispatches | for pleasure are wealthy enough not to | draw the line on a dollar or two in the | matter of car fare. He concludes by omipared, I 1s, to part rec 1 ! 2 BLA even » partridge or quired late? in the day, he simly leaves | saying that a two-cent rate does not ,| scare the road any more, as most of the business is on that basis now.-Pitts- rt of sport 1s to place the pupil One of the® most intelligent dogs 1 burg Gazette. Connecticut 1s a Scoteh collie owned A Minister Who Knows. nvort carn his breakfast the dog eachl pov Mr, Blanchard, of Clairemount , morning fills the wood-box, carrymg one| Lows what he says in stating the only stick gla me n bis. mouth lo Ae wire, cure. for hay: lever ju. Cotarrho- woodpile ontside into the ¢ one." For two moths 'of 'the year for ten years I suffered. Catarrhozope cur- | ed me 20 perfectly that the disease has not returned. Others in my pgrish I +! Catarrhogone, which I strongly re mend for hay fever, asthma and bhron- | were found in! chitis, $1 at drugyinte, zurd and 'the -------- cream dor Why Disease Comes. A f ehr i r MISS SUTTON AS BHE APFEARED AFTER HER VICTORY, 7} to ast god ghare of chronic diseases are ¢ ; 8 3 : ) th to nek of nutrition of the vital Londo AUR. Miss May Sutton, I lly, 1 suppose, one should 1 ) y Brite t gar Se OFgONS ge n \ dn 6% PHS ath re. of p ment from the ® blood. The blood | the young Californian, who' h 3 . \ BY EE me ¥ 1 stippic body una Ss 1 Ho iC fir 1c must be pure and rich in iron to ceeded in becoming the world's cham- i Pri Iv, | que ss a champion 1} 1 igh keep the syatem in order. Those who | pion in lawn tennis, 1s the heroine of 2 good p Aided by circumstances, } hogs work ng men lare in any Sense run down need bet | po pour here, although the English 1 love 1s better than anything, ex- to the .p jas tended to n- {ter blood. They can get it hy use of would naturally have preferred that her | copt music; but I play other games a ' r Wale s Iron Tonic Pills (laxative) Mrs ve wo. | home baskethall in particular 1 can't 8 They arc a great nerve strengthemer Sut Jors easily, | inderstand the fascination of cricket a th nr and blood makef. In boxes, 25¢., at he is quite elated over her. bit: in tennis you are doing something Wade's drug store. Money, back if not Ti Indaced to talk to all the time : a pr satisfactory of a leading daily immedi- | "1 am going into, the country for a | ee -- ¢ after her victor he said few s and then I've promised to play : When with starts to sow his wid "i do not diet at all before playing. | in Canada. Otherwise I would have : ots it's time for the father to start] eat and drink just what | fancy The | liked to have gone fo Homburg for g { threshing only change in mv life | make is in the » games. They tell me the Couns { That tired, languid feeling and dull | matter of sleep. | keep e ly hours and there are as _periect as they ean be; Liect. thoug to the (headache is very disagreeable... Take |'sleep all 1 can for a few weeks before However, another Xishe, per haps, I wi 1 : two of Carter's Little Liver Pills be- | plaving. People who only know lawn e a chance over there. 3 0 : . ! ) I'm awfully glad to have won; its one | you see, and 1 am a patriotic person," i fest wa another little feather in America's cap, he added, as she looked anxiously over to the courts, where another fierce con

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