Daily British Whig (1850), 23 Oct 1907, p. 7

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1 Suits. Surely there ortant as the present cessity of New Under- * garments it is almost lew under ones. The nderskirts is our cus- prices: are as usual the 4 Sateen skirts 35, 1.49 and on up to b. 1 . Moreen skirts 15, 3.99, 4.99. [affeta lerskirts 11 Coats P-- Children e a great store for "s Coats. "Head- rents call us. This s for their outfitting been greater than in easy stages up - HOURES ECE Tr > &® &® s forLadies: > Them Back in Style | Ie Jive Several nice lines § adies' Dorothy Dodd 3 Cut Patent Leather, adies' Dorothy College | Patent Button, $4.50. adies' Vici Kid Dorothy ton, nice and dressy, Sole Dorothy Button adies' Empress Kid But- comfortable kind, $3.00. yles. We will be pleased ies' Fine Vici Kid Tus Shoe Store. reosived. FOR FIVE EARS Treated Continually by Best Doctors --Sores Behind Ears Spread to Cheeks--Could Hardly Bear ltch- } 4 -- Medicines Fail-- Instant | Relief by "Magic Three" and WORDS CAN NOT EXPRESS GRATITUDE TO CUTICURA ---- [ "Words are inadequate to express m titude for Cuticura Remcdes. x been troubled with eczema for ! » five years on my ear andit beganto extend on mycheek. 1 had n doctoring with the best physicians, but found no relief whatever. When in- forming them that I could not bear the itching I was told by one of our best dec- tors," not toscratch." As the medicines and salves did me no good I thought I would et the "Magic Three," Cuticura doug, Cuticura Oint~ ment, and. Cuticura Pills, costing me one-half of one visit to my physician. After using as directed, with plenty of hot water, I can. truthfully state that I found instant relief, 'hen I had used three boxes of Cuticura Oint- ment and two cakes of Cuticura Soap I found my skin as soft and fine as a baby's. y circle of friénds is very large, and I am persuading them to use ,» Cuticura Soap and give up the kinds they were using." I find no trouble case has proven to them that if Cuticura Ointment is good, Cuticura So must be likewise, '1 hesitate to send you the enclosed jcture as it has n lying around in my desk for two years and is very soiled. At the time it was taken my ears were scaly and you will find some remnants of Cuticura Oint- ment on it, and, to me, it is very pre- cious, as I can now say when i at it that Cuticura is a blessing, and that is why I nave kept it even though it was soiled, Miss Netta Ayers, 131 Franklin Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y te 1 and. 15, 1906." E Rut umor OF TtAnte: Chikires Ag A duis Con. Owtment to Heal the Shin. ahd Cibiculs Reoivent ¢or In She form of Chocolate Coated Pills, in Vials of sixty) $0 Purify the Blood. Sold throughout the ta Totter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Props. sardiaiec Free, Cuticws Book on the Skin. ne ------ --No Stretch --No Shrink | The way Stanfield's Underwear is, when you buy it--is the way it stays until you are ready to stop wearing it. can't shrink because the shrink is taken out of the wool, before garments are woven. The natural "spring" of the wool pre- vents stretch- ing out of shape. Stanfield's is the Under- wear for fit and comfort. SOLD EVERYWHERE. W.GILLETT crue TORONTQ.ONT. With = Tose Maypole Fui® smnoid' Si world in England. No mess, . Ne encertaln remit no streaks. The tired women's best friend--as Economical Home Dye. MAYPOLE SOAP ©8 0c. for Colovs=13c. for Black. Frank L. Benedict & Co., Montreal, --b Men may be as deceitfal as women BIRL'S DEATH LEAP ri, Her Employee and Going to Ckhunch = Climbed the Stairs and Threw Herself Out. A young servant gi i 3 § girl met with a tragic fate at Sag, v. 4 Saggart, a small near Dublin, recently. all Village Minnie Hunt, aged 21, was em- ployed as a domestic in the district, She obtained permission to to church, and on her return Egor a fellow-servant that she had been up in the church tower, and had made several efforts to throw herself over, but could not do it. Her employer had her examined by a doctor, who suggested that she should be kept un- der observation, and, pending the ar- rival of her mother, a woman was called in for this purpose. Later on' the girl asked for permis- sion to go to mass, but Mr. Hutton, her employer, refused to "allow her out. Later it was discovered that she 'had escaped, and had succeeded in making her way to the top of the church tower, which is about 120 feet high. Here, in view 'of a crowd of horrified spectators, she sat on the edge of the parapet Efforts were made to reach her from the inside, but it was found that she had locked the door. She also threatened that | she would jump if anyone came near her. At last Father Seevers, the parish | prigst, and a police-sergeant forced | the door, aseended the tower, and succeeded in getting quite close to the poor girl, but she still refused to come down. For three hours<the- priest - knelt | within a few yards of the unfortunate | girl on the top of the tower. He dare | not approach closer, as each time he | moved she advanced as if to throw | herself over. He prayed and implored her to leave her terrible position, but she refused. He held up a--crucifix, asking her to take it, but she would not, saying that she would meet him on the ground. When he offered to go towards her she would step for- ward as if to_go over. The situation was a terrible one Suddenly she gave a loud shriek, leap- ed over the parapet, and fell on the gravelled walk of the churchyard. | When picked up she was quite dead. | ENGLISH SCHOOLBOYS.. Physician at Rugby Finds Numerous Deformities. Some' remarkable facts as to the | physical condition of the better class English: youth are tabulated in a pa- pr contributed to The Lancet by Dr. lement kes. Dr. Dukes, who is the physician to Rugby School, gives the results of the physical examination of 1,000 boys, between the age of thirteen and 'fif- admission to a public school. | These British. boys, he says, may be segarded as a- special class; strong | and healthy, well bred, well fed, and reared mainly in the country. The examination showed that 522 | of the boys were above the normal height and 365 below it, while 118 were up to the average . Again, 472 were above the normal weight, 471 below, and 57 of the average weight. Further, 455 were above the normal chest measurement, 423 below, and 132 up to the average. Of the M,000 boys examined, 445 showed lateral curvature of the spine, 526 were knock-kneed, 329 were flat- footed, 128 pigeon-breasted, 64 had bow-legs, 70 stammered, 12 were color blind, 128 suffered from myopia, 19 from aural deafness, 9 from nervous twitching and 3 from lisping. Dr. Duke goes on to remark that it is somewhat depressing to register in the twentieth century the large num- ber of acquired preventible deformi- ties (not momentous, it is true, but still indicative of inferior systems of | nurture and education) which are presented by the most favored class of boys in Great Britain--deformities oc- curring between the time of nursery life and the completion of education in the preparatory school at the age of thirteen. Keir Hardie's London Home. Mr. Keir Hardie's London home is a picturesque old house in Nevill's Court, a quaint little alley connecting Fetter Lane with the great printers' colony of New Street Square. The simple stone-paved pathway that leads from one end of the court to the other is only a few feet wide. Mr. Keir Hardie's modest mansion, which is fully 400 years old, is built of mas- sive timber through and through, with irmegularly projecting easements, winding wooden stairway, and outer walls of plaster stained and tanned with the weather and smoke of cen- tunes. There is a pleasant little _story-- and a true one--of Mr. Keir Hardie's discovery of this London home of his. Wishing to be nearer his work in Fleet street, the Labor leader gave up an almost equally ancient house in Chelsea, where he had lived ever since he came to town, and wandered about seeking a lodging after his own heart. Chance directed his footsteps to Nev- ill"s Court, and tapping at the door of the very house now tenanted by him, he lied for the vacant rooms. The worthy landlady, however, after look- ing him up and down, refused to let him have them without roles e good woman's as J - imagined when the tweed-clad stranger reeled off the names of a dozen members of Parliament as in- timate sponsors for his respectability. em The British Crown. "The crown is already of great weight--39 oz. and 5 dwts.--no light burden for the King on the occasion His Majesty performs the cere- Yoet of opening Parliament. To add to it the Cullinan 3 would in- crease this weight by about three quar- ters of a pound avoirdupois, which, it is estimated, is what the jewel weigh after it was cub The crown i s to-day in the Tower of contsins 2.818 di , 297 anon, many other exquisite jewels. Its chief gem is the ruby, the value of which has been estimatad ai £100,000, which was given to the Black Prince in Spain in the year in some thipgs, but no man ever pre- tends to be having a good time when be isn't ont scan Hn en i Kingdom She Escaped From the House of hundred servants and 1367, and was worn by Henry V. in | fe What 'It Costs the Aristocracy to Maintain Their Seats. Tt is said that there are at least ad i} housss dn-"dhe United re a staff from two Faded ad fifty to five involve an annual bill for wages ranging up to $100,000, and in many of them the alone account for more than | a year, says The Bellman. | How large are the number of servants employed in connection with these estates is shown by a relatively mod- | est establishment in Suffolk. The total number of sérvants employed is and had seemed strange in manner. | °B€ hundred and seventy-three. This, it should be remembered, is but a second-class establishment, al- though its wages bill reaches $40,000 a year. Of still smaller establish- thents there are about six hundred in the United Kingdom employing be- tween fifty and a hundred servants with wages bills averaging at least Expensive as country seats are to maintain, they are little more costly than town houses: For a tiny house in Park Lane, such as would be pro- curable in a London suburb for $300 a year, a rental of $15,000 .is asked, while some of the larger houses com- mand a rent running into five figures In Grosvenor Square the rents range from five to thirty thousand dollars a year, in St. James' Square you may. pay as much as an annual $50,000; $300,000 has heen paid for a house in Carlton House Terrace, and Lord Bur- ton gave $750,000 for a house iu South Audley street. And town and country houses are but a part of thé expenditure of the wealthy class of Englishmen. A steam vacht may easily run away with $25, 000 a year; a similar sum is by no means uncommon for a grouse moor and a deer forest; a London season, with -its costly entertainments. may easily account for $50,000, and so on through the long list of items which figure in the annual balance sheet of the rich and which are considered as necessary to them as is tobacco to a poor man. It is thus not difficult to sec how, aghast many a man would be if he were suddenly brought face to face with the necessity of cotting down his expenditure to a pitiful $250,000 a year: V. C. HERO DEAD. Army Medico's Gallant Deed at Chit- ral Fort. Few braver deeds are recorded in the annals of the Army than that which won the Victoria Cross for Ma- jor (then Captain) Harry Frederick Whitchurch, of the lndian Medical | Service, whose death has just occurred at Dharmsala, Punjab, at the age of 40. During the sortie from Chitral fort (says the official account), Surgeon- Captain Whitchurch went to the as- sistance of Captain Baird, who was mortally wounded. and carried him back to the fort ppder a heavy fire from the enemy. Captain Baird was . i- | on the right of the fighting line, and | teen, which was carried out on theirs had only a small party of native sol- diers. He was wo on the heights at a distance of a mile and a guarter from the fort. When Cap- tain Whitchurch went to his rescue the enemy in great strength had bro- ken through the fighting line, dark- ness had set in, and the two captains with their scanty force of Sepoys were completely isolated from assistance. The wounded officer was placed on a | dhooly by Captain Whitchurch, and the party attempted to return to the fort. The Sepoys bravely clung to the dhooly until three wefe killed and a fourth badly wounded. Captain Whit- church then put Captain Baird on his back and carried him some distance. Meanwhilp the little party kept dim- inishing in numbers, being fired at the whole way. At one time they were surrounded by the enemy, and several | times they had to charge walls from behind which an incessant fire was kept up. In the end Captain Whit church brought the wounded officer and the few remaining Sepoys to the fort. Nearly all the parfy were wounded, Captain Baird receiving two ! additional wounds before the fort was | reached, . Major Whitchurch was the only son of Mr Frederick Whitchurch, of Blackgang, Isle of Wight. Prince Edward's First Gun. In these modern days, when even kings and queens send their sons to public schools, the holiday question is as real in the palace as elsewhere The Princess of Wales solves the dif- ficulty by sending her children to Deeside, where within easily defined limits they are able to-lead the un- trammelled and busy-about-nothing existence in which young people, and especially boys, delight. Close to Abergeldie are safe stretches of the Dee, where the royal lads can indulge in their father's favorite form of sport. For some time past Prince Ed- ward and his next brothér have walk- ed out with the guns, and learned the sensible sportsman's first duty of keeping well out of the way of stray shots; but this year England's future King, now thirteen years old, will be allowed for the first time to take an active t, to carry, load and fire a gun of ed own. All the King's grand- children are encouraged to play not only cricket and football, but also the national games of Great Britain Relics at Cape Town. Whilst 'making excavations at the Cape Town Railway station for wall- | building purposes last year, some workmen found several loose stones with inscriptions, such as were used by the captains of ships calling at the Cape before Van Riebeek had built hig little fort, to dénote the plages where letters might be found. Further search revealed the flight of steps on the old seashore, which con- | stituted the first landing-place for per- sons arriving by sea, and may have | i been used by Van Riebeek himself. The stones were found at a depth of over 20 feet, and with them a small tobacco pipe and a key. have now been, placed in an alcove on the station platform, the exact spot where they were found, and an inseription in sth English and Dutch tells their history to trav- elers. It lot of strenuous wil pow as if Pract fect, but it makes requires A didn't want to get married doesn't always make per 24 doctors wealthy, -- : erected at | for a girl of twenty-five to act THE DAILY BRI{ISH WHIG, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1907. mmlf------------------ - itp UNHAPPY "SNAILS -- ARE INCLUDED AS AN ART ICLE OF DIET. A Famine is Feared in Yorkshirs --Miners | Regard Them As Much a Luxury As Do the French Epicures. Sad tidings for snails comes from | Yorkshire. Hitherto it has been | commonly that the virtues of the snail as an article of diet have only been appreciated by our French neighbors, -but this is a mistake, for in the coal mining village of Knolt- ingley, Yorkshire, a few miles from Wakefield, the snail appears to be so eagerly sought after #5 a table deli- cacy that a snail famine is feared. | It is estimated that for many years | snails have been consumed in Knott- ingley at the rate of nearly a quarter {of a million. The origin of the cus- | | tom is curious. The local medical | dispensary was in need of funds, so | an enterprising looal publican hit up- | on the happy idea of offering boiled | snails at six a penny to his customers, the proceeds to go to the dispensary. The Yorkshire miner is not extraordin- | arly particular what he eats, and | his sporting instincts are keen, there- | fore contests as to who could eat the | most snails (soon became popular. | Other publicchouses in the district | took to making similar delicacies, and {in this way considerable sums were | raised, one public-house alone raising | $45 a year in this way. Once started, | the taste for boiled snails developed, | and now Knottingley, Brotherton, | Castleford, and many other mining | will in the district have their | pop pRion of snail eaters. Interview- {ed as to the effect of the food upon | the health of the people, one of the | best known medical men in the dis- | trict" expréssed the opinion to a press | representative that snails were not | clean creatures. "But I must admit," { he said, 'that they do not appear to | have produced any ill effects upon the { people." There is a firm local belief ! that a snail eaten alive is a certain cure for consumption if taken in the early stages of the disease. The snails are gathered from the walls and hedje sides, and-so great has the demand | been, one public-house aloné provid- | ing 13,000 of them last year, that they are now becoming scarce, and the dis- | pensary funds are suffering in conse- quence. The dispensary authorities, | it should be added, have no direct responsibility for the practice. -------- i | FOUND BONES IN TRUNK. Workmen Discovered Cremated Re- { mains of Woman In Tin Box. Some excitement was esused in | West Ealing, England, recently, ow- | ing to a rumor that a tin trunk con- taining charred human remains had been found in a house in that locality. | Workmen are engaged in pulling i down the house, and while examining a cupboard, says The London News | Agency, they discovered a box about | 18 inches long, 12 inches wide, and § inches in height. The box was seal- od, and conveyed to jhe Relics star tion, where it was opened by the divi sional surgeon, Dr. Bennet, who pro- nounced the contents to be the cre- | mated remains of human bones. The | ashes were perfectly white, and among | them re small pieces of bone. | The Police at once instituted in-| quiries and found that the box be-| longed to a former tenant of the house. | It contained the ashes of his first | wife, who had been cremated. He | was able to convince the police that | evervthing was-in order by producing | a certificate of death and cremation. | He said that the box had been left | behind by accident. | It appears that' upon the death of | his first wife the tenant in question | caused the body to be cremated. The presence of such a gruesome relic in | the home evidently proved distaste-| ful to the second wife. Consequently the casket was taken to the gentle man's offices--part of the homse in| question--where it was placed in aj tin trunk, which was locked and de- | posited in the back room. | | Impoftant Change of System An. | nounced by Gevernment. An important change in the system of governing India was announced recently when it was stated that the | Government will establish an Im-| perial Advisory Council and several | | local Advisory Coungils in that col- ony. , | Phese latter will be partly nomina- tive and partly elective. Two elected members will be chosen from a spe- cial Mohammedan el of the class paying an income tax, having an income of $330 a year, or pay a land revenue above a fixed amount. It will Weide also all graduates from Indian umaversities of more than five years' 8 ing. This is the first time that.an elective element has been introduced, and the proposals are subject to the "'essen- tial condition" that the British Gov- ernment be leit with undiminished power. Women as Aldermen. From England comes the following little comment anent the recent bill to admit wdmen to sit as aldermen and councillors: The bill to enable women to sit as | aldermen and councillors on county | and borough councils has revived all 'the usual arguments for and against women gerving on public bodies. It is regarded' as likely Io Promote the suffragist movement, some even see in it the paving of the way to | the bench at assizes. | seem likely that the bill will be pass- | | ernment's but if it does it is not likely to lead | | of guardians, parish do not want women on the larger | | teers pushed Civil Su ed this session, in spite of the Gov- | 5 : : "| his pants, p! intentions 10 this effect; ta mateh out of his pocket and drew it the relics | © NY of these results. Women sre | flcross the place where a man Alwass | already elegible for election on boards | jou] announced the fact that it was h councils, and | a nail he was tryi school boards, and if the ratepayers | po had torn up a JEW ASSAILS JEW. Vulgarity of Race In London Is Vig " orously Denounced. A and a member 1% 5a 3 published at issue of the Jewish , is responsible for most, if not x ® he Ae wish fe which ex- ists in h The following are extracts from the letter: "All pectable members of the Jewish ity shogld be. Erte. ful to 'Anrasius' for go strai er i aon cad a Jazge gestion of our : jewish Eh at oa in hia ok : is Whatever be the due. cause of characteristics--whe- ther racial or otherwise--they aré cer tainly most ae AS ede, the East i a and A --and see Ycrdes of Jew espes with their gaudy and hideous costumes, their enormous wd Be some hats, their plentiful su of mock jewelry--to see them is to be overcome by a sense of nausea! This type is not confined to the distriots named, but is to be found also in the suburbs and West End the latter case, real jewelry being substituted for imitation. "Now, for the Jewish young man. Who doesn't know the type which will only wear the very latest style in cloghes, the latest shaped hat, the latest tie, the latest cane--the crea- ture that wears of col- ored waistcoats; who walks with el- bows out ostentatiously puffing a fat cigar, occupying as my the pave ment as he can, snd ger loudly as possible, with the thickest voice and the most objectionable, slovenly and vulgar enunciation! "The pomposity and conceit of this type, coupled with thelr appalli ig norance, is simply ove! ming. They send a shudder through the frame of all fellowJews with the least sus- picion of refinement. "This type of Jew is, unfortunate- ly, plentiful, He pervades--and , dis- races--all classes of the sommrunity. fe is quite as much in evidence im Throckmorton street as in Aldgate and Whitechapel. You will find him plaj ing the aristocrat in vig -- 1 should say, aping the arities of the aristocrat, for the v ties alone attract him." SCOTCHED, NOT KILLED. Sedition Still Rife In Indla--Calcutta Much Excited. Extraordinary scenes occurred in the Calcutta Police Court respily. A large mob of students who deserted their classes in spite of the protests of the teachers gathered In the halls and corridors to hear sen tence passed on two national wvolun- teers who were arrested for asssult- ing the police at a boycott anniver- iy celebration. e student created such a disturb- ance, shouting "Bande Materam" Hail Motherland 1), and and ting that police to clear the court. Many of sta- dents retaliated, and scuffies took place. The mob was finally driven head- long into the street. Here further opposition was shown. Finally mount- ed police charged the mob. Even then the students fought with fists and teeth. The determination shown by the students was very strik- ing, considering the accepted idea that the Bengalis have no courage. Later on further excitement was caused by the ap ce of Befin Fal, the extremist leader, in the wit- ness box in the sedition case against the Bande Mataram newspaper, Befin Fal obstinately refused to answer any questions, in spite of a warning from the court, and he will appear to answer a charge of con- tempt of court. The excitement that prevails throughout Calcutta is in- tense. Affairs in eastern Bengal are also not improving. Five national volun. eon Comilla into the .river at Chandpur and he v | ADVISORY COUNOIL FOR INDIA. | opis sacuped drowning The planting community in Behar is incensed at the Calcutta High Courts setting aside the death sentence on the men who killed the planter, Mr, Bloomfield, with laths. Wait For the Sunshine. Everyone must have marked the in- crease of suicide he cause, no doubt, is to be found in the tension and nervous excitement of our age. We no longer call suicide "self murder" or bury in the crossroads the man who dies by his own hand, A man's life is his own, termin- able at his own will; 8» far, at least, as the community is . But suicide is still a scandal, a horror, a family disgrace. If the man leaves duties unperformed, if he deserts a wife or children, it is a crime. Of- ten, no doubt, it is the fatal impulse of a dark moment. Wait joe a Sebgin of sunshine, a » impulse away. Think of the head cook the Prince de Conde, who, when his mas- ter was going to entertain the King because the fish did not arrive in time, fell upon his sword, he waited a little the fish would have arrived. Your despair may not more reasonable than his. At all events, none of us will have fo wait very long for a natural death: Euth- anasia, as it is called, shortening the pains of death when death is inevit- able, can hardly be aserime, at all events under professional restriction. Got There by a Scratch. One of our friends is suffering . a] ny t i from women Sitting in pal Samet and upon | 4 ocnlt of a bad mistake. The other t does not | night he heard a racket in the barn, out of bed, he grabbed and, springin ed what be thought was his - matches. An unearthly to light and that t two feet of good flesh. He now sleeps on his left | couneils they would have simply 10|gde and pays no attention to any say so at the polling booths. In all | probability it would be found that | | women are more disposed to be care- | | ful of the ratepayers' interests than | men. In any case there is nothing | || vory eonvineing in all thé objections cal public bodies, which, in many -| opses, are mot so perfect as to be some lawyers and | impermeable to Lpprovementy tlw poises he hears in the night An enterprising scissors grinder of Los Angeles, Cal., has mounted his urged against their ing uj lo | inde on an automobile, using the car's power to also run the grinder, and now rides from place to place in- stead of walking, as formerly, ¥ ad The Original and Gentine Worcestershire. ------------ ASK ANY HONEST GROCER FOR THE BEST SAUCE. Hs 18 SURE TO GIVE YOU Lassa P ERRINS J. M. 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