Daily British Whig (1850), 9 Nov 1907, p. 9

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GHT, 7.30 to 10 O'clock. NGS came to us this morning, han hold them over for next give our customers these spe- Any one of these three for. are YEAR 74. EE a s Lace Curtains' yards FT £'$2.00 NAY TR " TR ir. A, Ra 5 ets Good ~ Ze (asloct Lighthouse Queenstown, Nov. » 'new light- } house just completed Fastnet rock, a small pinnacle off the south east' corner of the coast of Ireland, | and familiar to Americans as the first | part of Brin they see on the eastward | voyage and the last on the westward, the house constraction on a rock, but the most ever erected, having cost no | expensive 'ool Sweaters. are cardinal with white strip up, according to size, urs To-Night, 35c. $420,000, It has been built Irish lights board, and is one most important beacons on our coa The rock lies in the direct route Atlantic shipping passic Ireland and is thus ad js of the utmost importance adequately The hew lighthouse « f castdron tower. This latte ty-one feet high aud to light ustomers without chargé 250 CATALOGUE OF FASH- ontain 32 er makers. \M GLOVES pages of new de- ves, in both 'plain or fancy 39¢, 45¢. iC ' ves, 25¢, 35c¢, 39¢, 45¢, H0c ves and Mitts, 20¢, 15¢, 25c¢. LAIDLAW & SON. summit of the ro It wr. however, hefore it was discovernd that the eastiron tower was not stable en- ough ito withstand the ings of the waves to whi subjected. The Fastnet is the full fury of the Atlantic south and north-west gales i Lait waves. often dashed over the top the lantern, 173 feet above the normal | level of the sea. On one occasion a full cup of cofiee standing on the ta- ble in the top room was thrown to he floor-whena-heavy wave thundered | against the rock and submer god the tower. Under this continual pounding large masses of rotk were dislodged from the pinnacle, undermining® the tower. . From time to time this ero-| Je Sow # sn ang He did during | a oslaoed 0USET exposed tol of ep out the down tal weight of. 4 30 tons To ke the storm the keepers can -elose teak ind Jet it a heavy gun-metal easing. ; course sion was reps { Douglass deci ture by a more modern ome The granite: of which the lighthouse is built came aries 1 Cormwall wked of stone. | heavy door ro the laving of the lowest was ntly delay expe the roug r the progress number were wie ing from apiece 1 weight and three and represent ABOLIST. \VER | op ER it wrjings | draws it | ver. No | ressure. of | TEA SERVICES § Wedding gifts of silver are always appropriate, and full \ BR § : . > MARCEL MEU VIER, THE BOY :CHAMPIONIDI INC Pe OY TIONT STRING SN CRICHING THE SPINNING DiRBoLO BETWEEN THE or partial sets carn be had . $2. as desired. ELL WE CARRY CHOICE : DESIGNS. N 3 Our quality is right. Our § me | ® prices will appeal to you at Out. once. w in the cil, the rn Novem- the arbi- ing been which re- oll ~ates, collected +EWELLER Tuesday. - Issuer of Marriage in hore- Licenses. ned kind, kind is ss Drug | SSPPP9IV0I90OVIOOIIER® it. T NOTICE 3ARGAINS FOR} MEN! Jil Cali Blucher Cut Waterproct Boots, [B $3.50. ack Surveying Boots, Heavy Soles, regu- Lm. a. $3.50. ox Calf Blucher Cut Lace Bogts, regular Mi BBB 10, warsns swan snes ver This Week. - $2.25. House tha the since intradustion of Little Princes David have been keen devotees, day to appear at Marlborough ; and spin the bobbin before the Prince and Princess of Wales and the royal 4 ~Marcel Meunier, . dimbolist, is the royal exhibi- oul -Fptur Londun, Nov.* the ckantpion boy first player to give & and and e the Heary KINGSTON, ONTARI 1 antly {it was at their urgent request that|Land isn't even ordinarily IRELAND'S "STATUE OF LIBERTY." : Leva We of L igblhovse tones lain in connection with the c courses in a single beiny twenty-two It took four years to complete the tower from the of the first A humorous incident occurred in con- ection with the fitting up of the oil ipe A plumber went off from the nland to carry out this part of the construction, but he became se fright ened after his first day on the rock the wildness and foncliness of the that nothing nain, and he was accordingly off by the Lifeboat lantern which caps the mason , tower is of the very latest pattern by Chance, of Birmingham. It the dioptric type, and the light is de from a series of incandescent giving a power of 1,200 can- day exactly stone could induce is of rived burners, dles. The power of the rays thrown from the 1,200 candle-power burners is in- tensified by the lenses to some 750. 000 candiepoteers The Bight is belli white, closely 'resembling the beam projected from an electrie search- ight, the duration of the flash being three-twenty-fifths of a second. the Prince of Wales arranged the en- tertainment for them. Marcel"s eyes were still shining with lelight at the recollection of the great day when a newspaper represen tative saw. him "] was so excited when M. Nathan, my manager, told me that the prince af Wales wanted to see me play," be said, "that 1 felt like crying with gladness, 'Is my mother coming also 7' I asked. 'Yes," said M. Nathan. So | put on my best clothes, and we drove in.a cab to the palate--for it 'is a palace, is it not, though they call it a hquse *" "Truly it Mme. Men a palace," interrupted 1. 1 assure you, was well He has been brought up well. His father will le pleased. And to think that I used to object to him playing diabolo in Etampes I" "When we got to the Marlborough Palace," continued Marcel, "ws went into the garden, where a lot of ladies and gentlemen were there waiting. The little princes were thers, too. | howel, and of Wales kind. He laughed and said that | was a little boy togdo great things 'Come, Mar ' h¥®anid, 'show us what vou So 1 started playing in the ordinary and then I caught the hobbin behind my hack, ard eves; one applauded. T made the diable rm from stick to stick, and let it glide ap and down the cond "The little were delighted They onch h linholo . selves. T plaved for more than half an the end the prince pat- ted me hack and shook hands and gave me this," and here Marcel pulled out a gold pehcil case with the 1 monogram on it mn 1 played with the litgle prince amiable and kind They vlay very well. and one of them ean throw the very high. 1 showed them how to keep the diable whirling on the eord : "And the prir said Mme Meu- nier, "she was so gracious and courte One wonld sav that she was a vringess if one did not know it She asked me if Marcel was woing to be on the stace always. 'My ith, ro I sal. 'He must go to school whe + yeturns to Etampes' She seemed i to learn that, Far Marcel has much to learn hesides dia- But it w enchantine to meet 'sich a kind and gracious. lady. Ant when T go back Ftampes 1 shall have fine stories to tell)" the Prince was 'ery can do.' way princes sets them: and at on the hour, roy es. Thev were very diable ons and kind your highness' hola nn Baroness's Bravery. Nov 9. ~The Royal Hu has awarded a (si vellum to the Baroness Hornstein-Binningen for attempt to save a London, Society yonial Paula Yon her courageous % WOME nH cashed away who was beg while bathing at Ballymoney, count: Wexford, on 3rd. The was afterward by a guard with the help of another man st 1 WOR coast August rescued wt aid I Lato When & girs aa becom it's a case of "loved and lost Many a man who thinks he is bril- bright, 0, SATURDAY, NOVEMB INVENTION OF ITALIAN. -- War Fogs. London, Nov. 9.--A scheme to petfse fogs by currents of air, over London from "projectors" six miles away, has been laid before the public control committes of the Lom- don county council, and M. Demetrio Moggiora, the inventor, is ready to start experiments. M. Moggiogn says his apparatus has already been' subjected to severe tests at Milan, Italy, where fogs, clouds and hailstorms were quickly dissipat- el. With his projectors, or "air can. non," placed within a radius of six miles from the houses of parliament, he says he will clear away the worst fog in London within twenty minutes. "The theory is "that the fog hangs over London simply because there are no air currents to earey it away," said M. Moggiora to a newspaper re- presentative yesterday. "Now, my projectors, acting like cannon, fumish the necessary currents of air "Each projector is about sixty feel long, An explosion is caused as in a cannon, and the concussion has an ef- feet for six miles Thus, if ten or more of these were ranged over Lon- don from different directions, the fog would be lifted immediately to an altitude where the wind would blow it away. After the apparatus was per- maneptly installed the cost would be 7d. for each explosion, and twenty ex plosions 'would rid the metropolis of its dec wet fog. The cost for original construction would be £3000. "1 am confident." said M. Moggiora, "that my experiments will demon- strate the practicability of a fogless Cannon to on London dis- shot London." "The suggestion is no ble than wireless telegraphy." official. "Who knows but in a short time we shall have a department for the control of fogs and rain, with ex- the proper propor- sunshine and cloudy weath- more incredi- said an perts to regulate tions of HARD ON ROOSEVELT ZADKIEL PREDICTS YEAR ST OF DISASTER. 1908 Will Be Most Stars Say That One of Trouble For People. London, Nov. 9-The year 1908 is to be one of trouble for most people, if Zadkiel has interpreted correctly the "voice of the stars." President Roosevelt, for instance, will find it difficult to carry out fur ther measures of reform owing to the fact, apparently, that he was born on October 27th, 1558. There is to be trouble in January in the colonies and in foreign politics, and a new sensation is to come be fore the divorce court. It is com- forting to learn that wronmongers, en- and medical men born on 24th are to have a good gineers January year Zadkiel is nothing if hot topical Hence there are frequent references in the course of his new almanac to railway discontent and actidents, poli- tical excitement and the position of the government, amd trust wars The railway disasters and conflagra tions to occur in the eastern states of America during February "will be de plorable."" There are love troubles in store for courting couples on February 10th " Here are some other events of year April at sea the 1st and politic cord and trix Storms and misfortunes al excitement, - dis- The position of the British government neither hap nor Fishermen, however, will catch a lot of fish Mav-- Disasters on railways in north and west of England and United States British Secure the the will suffer from depreciation of stocks, accidents of their emplovees British government in a quandary Judv--4a will hardly escape foreign and colonial warfare, and the kaiser must avoid dangerous places. August-- Trouble generally October --Extension of the trade of Great Britain; some wonderful new in- Ironworkers * and shipping people prosperous June railways discontent and PrIRAR Y Yentions of cruelty magistrates counties ovember to wo Poisoning Unrest and India. Trouble in Ireland, Madrid men before cases in Severn plague Moroce in o and Fifty Years' Courtship Ended. London, Nov. 9.--A: courtship whieh began half a contury ago awd renewed a few weeks back, has ended by the marriage at Tiverton of John Manning with Mrs. Sarah Williams nears was been happily New "Glory Song." Nov. 9.~The Rev. Silvester writteh, a new It has been set to music of a devotional and tureful character, and it is much appreciated by the congre gation at Whitfield's Tabernacle. EE ---------- ------------)---- An Efficient Treatment Catarrh. Will fiest desfrov the germs that ex- Then there are mum- berless sore spots in the mucous mem- brane to be healed Every require- ment of a perfect care for eatarth is found in fragmat Ealing Catarrho- zone, which not only instantly kills the but restores the diseased membranes to na normal condition and prevents the relapse which is sure to folldw: the use of ordinary remedies, Catarrhozone is a scientific care for eatarrh that relieves quicker, is more pleazant, most certain to cure than other known remedy. Failure is Londor Horne Sang." has ory cite the disease germs imp ie, 3 ny cure teed. Use only Catarrhozone. months' treatment, $1; trial, Be. it to-day. J ally svallowed the nail he had been ser- TALES ABOUT HiN EXPLOITS OF PRINCE DE. LIGHT OF NATION. Four-Year-Old, Heir to Throne of Norwav, Idolised By Father's Subjects, Christiania, Nov, 9.--Little Prince Olaf, the pride and hope of Norway, now in England, continues to delight his adoring countrymen and women by Mis exploits. The beir to the throne is now four years old. Recently a very bald guest at the royal swamer 3 appeared with his scalp 'covered with scratches, which he had sustained in a fight on the floor with Prince Olal., On one occasion, when the queen was receiving and the rooms were beginning to get filled with ladies, Prince Olaf suddenly wirned to his mother and said: "No more old ladies, ma." One of his great pleasures is to get a footman to act as his horsé, and, with the footman crawling on all fours, Prince Olaf holding the reins and whip, and the king and queen behind this royal cortege passes through the rooms of the palace. The youn prince's outdoor life is chiefly devo to play and sport. He has had his first riding lessons on the little don- key which King Edward' sent him, and in bis first winter in Norway he start- ed ski-ing, supported by the king or one of the adjutants, In the royal park Prince Olaf may often be seen with his little wheel barrow helping the gardeners in cart ing away leaves™or weeds, or building sand forts and planting the Norwe- gian flag on top of them, When ho drives through the stree's dressed in his sailor suit, with his nurse and his little terrier, all the people stop to greet him. He always returns the salute in the military way by bringing his hand to his cap. A visitor who two years ago called at Prince Charles" home in Copenha- gen some time before the prince's de parture to assume the crown of Nor. way, found Prince Olaf marching round the rooms, filled with packing cases, with a Norwegian flag in his hand, of which he was immensely proud and would on no account surrender. a Independence Day--May 17th-- ter his arrival, ,a procession of schoolgirls sang 'a song in which] praise of Prince ¢ was set to a pop- ular tune. Since .then Prince Olaf's popularity has gone on steadily in- creasing. » That Hurts. - Pain is nature's signal that some serve is in distress. Nerves ory out when poisoned, when under pressure, or when directly injured. The remedy that relieves the pain, no matter what the cause, is Smith's, White Linmment, Cures, sprain, swellings, bruises, lumbago, neuralgia, rheumatism. The handicst remedy you can have in the house. Only 23¢., at Wade's drpg store. Motor Aecidents And Moustaches. Paris, Nov. 9.--A motorist declares in the Gaulois that more than half the motor accidents which occur are caused by the moustache. Men who have neither the inclination nor the capacity to become chauffeurs do so, he says, simply because in that capa- city they. will not be compelled to shave, as all other servants are. Cat Prevents A Burglary. Liverpool, Nov. 9.--The caretaker of the premises of Messrs. Schierwater and Lloyd, in Church street, Liver pool. was awakened in the early morn- ing by his cat jumping up on his bed and wagging its tail furiously hoard a hammering downstairs, and was just in time to prevent burglars breaking into the shop. " -------- NEW YORK CLERGYMAN CARRIED IT FOR MONTHS. -- Doctors Told Him it Wasn't There and Treated Him For Bron- chitis and Pleurisy----Coughing Fit Brought the Lost Bit of Iron to Light. New York, Nov. 9.--The medical pro fession is taking great interest in the case of the Rev, Thomas H. Baragwa- nath, pastor of Grace Methouist Epis- copal church, who carried in the top of his right lung a nail an inch and a quarter Jong for sixteen months, and has now rid himself of it in a violent fit of coughing. Ever since he accident jously inconvenienced by its presence, but several doctors had assured him that it was practically a physical im- possibility for the pail to be still in his interior, and that his symptoms were those of bronchitis or pleurisy. It happened in charch last Sunday night. Dr. Baragwanath tells the story himself : "My assistant was leading in prayer, and | was kneeling behind him. A vio lent paroxysm of coughing came on, and i bent down so that the congre- gation shouldn't see me. 1 got head almost down between my knees, and 1 suppose that helped things a hit. Suddenly 1 felt something give way down here," and the doctor pointed to a place about pix inches below his right shoulder. "f hadn't been thinking of my nail at all, although at any rate I was still faithful to it. 1 felt whatever it was come half way ap my throat and stop. Then 1 couygbed again, and my mouth filled with biced, 1 put my fingers in and drew =ut the long-lost pail! Here itis mow," aid the doc my tor fished it out of Ais waistcoat poc- Years of Constantly pai Increasing Sales 48 Awards It is a perfect food, aa wholtsome api digested, fitted to repair wasted strength, | preserve health, prolong life. renched quickly wend comfortably LAKE SHORE RY. vie Buffel; ior | bets LA every toilet purpose as g a -S0ap as "Baby's ~~ Own" cannet be bought for as little money. rer Albert Soaps Ltd, Mfrs, Montreal. Beware of imitations and substitutes accept mone bul the pemwine © Piby's Moye Ma: je! a cake ole aeeand With Maypole Toi sad 5 oap world in 80 streaks friend--un Ei MAYPOLE SOAP ©8 soc. for Colorvs--ise. for Rink, Framd L Bemedict & Co., Montvenl, a

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