Daily British Whig (1850), 13 Jun 1908, p. 11

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FIFTEENYE KEENDSUFFERING 1 ' (dA Rhsumatism ° Developed | Burning, + Painful Sores on Legs--Tortured "| Day and Night--Trled All Kinds of Remedies to No Avail --Wife /Had Debility and Pains in Back.' 'BOTH USED CUTICURA'. AND ARE WELL AGAIN great suf- fa E¥Es 1% i 254 i i i sigs 5% : he : Fick hfest AH i V.V. Al Me., July 21, 1 bl ©, {e af in A Single Treatment - Sir John Powe #& Soir Lea! TABLISF,ED AD. a EE 3 ALLOWS : 'Fe.mous for over a ceritury for its delicacy of flavor, Of highest standard of Purity. It is' especially recommended-by the Madicat- Profession or account of its peduliat \ 0 DRYNESS" AVEARS GF J the growing period of the year: LOVER'S: VENGEANCE ro------ Body of Young Woman Found Hacked to Pieces in Suburb of Town, Nice, June 1l.--A terrible crime has been committed in. "the neighborhood of' Nice, Pwo hoys, while walking » a wooded slope 'én She ae of he dty lyst eveliing, cape across the body of a Young women, She had jew iterally haexed €0 death with a knife, there bemg fewer than twen- ty-five wounds egy 9 body, The doc- tors found that four ol the stabs had prrctratéd the heart. The victim, it was evident, had fought desperately for her life." Stine distance away were found her hat, some hetpins and « "transformation." The murdered woman has since wen jauitified 2 a dressmaker"s assistant named Julis 4: wig reside 1 close to the scene a i. On Tuesday evening she went out in order to meet a friend, and elie" was not seen alive afterward, wo ive The motive of the murder is believ- ed to be vengeance. The dead woman some eight months ago, was engaged to be married 16 a youth Por taneri, A weCond yogng man, pamed Scopi, wha had ought Julia rela's hand i was geal : d to be reveny- ed, One night in pber last. all three met om the men glais, pay x caine two mem, the upshot of which was that Sedpi drew a revolver and shot his : rival dead, 5 The, woman, who was the only oth- er witness of the deed, puve pvidence against Scopi. He was convicted on her' uncorroborated testimdmy, 'and was sentenced to' eight years' imprison: ment. Scopi totally degiéd lis puilt, and his friends 'always maintained that he was infigént of the killing of Portaneri. Now that the woman has been struck down by the 'hand of an un- known assassin, the police think that some of Seopi® frigfds are respon- sible Tor the deeds ANTL-DANDELION, ------------ Chemical Now Used to Eradicate Yellow Flower. The North Dakota station has been experimenting in methods of destroy- ing the da nim JEwnd. As a re sult of these experiments it is' stated that this pest play be eradicated in blue grass lawns, in parks, in mea- dows mind on roadsides without, injury to the grass resulting frém the use of | the chemical employed is the work of destruction. In' order to keep the dandelions out it is necessary to spray st intervals'el ors month * or" HX witks Yhrbighitut or ideal ordinary lawn purposes the spraying apparatos is' the yressed air type of hand spraying machine. It is necessary that sufficient pressure be {maintained by the pump to make a forceful spray of a fine form. olf the liquid is thrown in large drops the grass will he dfe beledd injured, as the very young fo roots beneath the soil have & oh power of resisting the action of the chemigal. The capa city of the tank «h be 'approxima- tely three to four gallons and it should be of such neat construction that one can readily carry. it about. N ily, if: it i% properly mir tight, it will be dree-from leaks ' and chances to spill liquids, v The wachine should be fitted with about thee feet blicompressed mose and a three-loot extension rod allow- ing one to 'readily swing the nozzle over the lawn. The nozzle should he Nol such a nature as to throw a rath-4¢ r wide flaring funmel-shaped spray. The. most satisfactory substance for genial work, dandelionfand miscellaneohs roadside weeds is iron sulphate, used 'gt the mté of xi mately two pounsls for each gallon ol water. On lawns for dandelions alone where a hand machine is used the strength of one and one-third to one and one-half pounds per gallon will he founkd to give the desired results, though, if the dandeliont cate large and coarse and the grass hardy, two pounds for edoh gallon of water will give boast ults, Onl nownd do not spray. until two or three days after cutting, and do not {mow the lawn until Irom 'twé to thide days; nlter spraying on bright' . Spray lawn should. be Tha after spraving. it is not likely INTERESTING SIGHT. Visit to the Home Kellogg's Toasted Corn Flakes. To swe the process through which the corn goes while being made into Kellagg's Toasted Tora Flakes, one wel] never suppose it would be so difficult to make, and require so much time 'and machicery. Being a stranger and not interested beyond that of a consumer, I was not permitted to see the secret process, how they got such a delicious flavor by the manipulation of the eorn it- self. 1 was shown the material from which the flakes are made and pever saw such beautful grain before, so pure, jlean end white. 'The man in RT said it was the "Sweetheart of the Corn," end that it took a long tinie experimenting on it hy Awm- erica's best food expert, before they succedded in cansing it to retain the flavor while rolling it into thin flakes and cooking under thred hundred de- grees heat, My escort told me why they rolled it intg thin flakés was to break' up all the little cells, and that bythe intense heat of the oven that starch would be changed into Grape Sugar, making it very easy to digest and especially beneficial to those of sedentary habits and all brain work- ers. It seemed light food for the la- borer, but he said light in weight only, because all moisture had. bem evaporated and that there was no food value in moisture, and that every nutritious element of the corn wae retained in its most perfect con- dition for human food. In the office I was shown a couple of imitation corn flakes, The manager, said one had even tried to imitate the name. He told me they had now two- thirds the people using "Kelog's Toasted Corn Flakes," and were after the other third by increasing the size of the package one-third, and in fu: ture there would be. for sale every- where the best value in finke food eves put on the market in "Kéllog's Toakted Corn Flakes." A ROW OF SPARKLERS, ufatut Royal Lady With Diamond-Stud- ded' Teeth, ve Whether it is or is not good taste for a lady of rank to stud her' teeth with diamonds is the question at pre- sent agitating the 'smart sets of Ber- lin 'and Vienna. This fashion, which has lone been common among theatri- cal artists, has found a disciple in no less person . than the Princess of Thun and Taxis, wife of the head of the illustrious family of that name, who before her marriage was well. known in England as Archduchess Marguerite of Austria. The princess is the youngest sister of the Duchess of Orleans, ---- AMERICAN PREFERENCE, ---- Tourists Prefer the Honest Cane adian Shoe to. the Foreign Bhoe. Ini New York one can buy a Slater Shoé on Broadway, but they cost moré than the same quality in Cana- da. The American tariff is so high that® tolfrista Bave to be rigidly scarchid at the steamship wharves, and the American mpker to meel com- petition, has to make varnish eid "finish" cover the lack of real value in his product. With American lasts and honest shoe Jenther the Slater Show is fo-day preferred by the sAmerican Yisitor, bingy of whom 'risk inspection /at the frontier to secure while in Canada a really, worthy shoe. The Canadian dealer' whi cannot' get the Slater ag ency naturally 'Has to try and per wuathe bis customers to 'buy a fordgn shog and pay 'him the dollar duty. He chntipt guarantee © the shoe--amd he won't. For 'enle 'by F. Wi. Lotkett, Kingston. Ambrican dentists" in the leading cditiek of Earope hate a ldvger profes sional infome than their colleagues who, ptactice in the United States. It a well known fact that Ram- says "Paints beautify and give life to evetything they touch. Thew brillian oy: purity of color and power for sov- sting gies them wi lenged ship. 'W. A. Mitchell sells them at a prive-that will please' you, and guar andeesevery can. For the first three days after a mag substitutes on belt for suspenders he | has a feeling that all is not quite as t i tia Waltlort or has impart. Frabumly | a anath finoet to the fund. THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, 4 The British workingman sées in BRITISH PUBLIC TIRED Of Militant Section of the Woman Suffragisis. : The British public is growgog tired of the militant section of tie women safiragists, For « time it was rather amused at she anties of these ener- 'getic young ladies, particularly as "ome of them were distinctively tractive. Much may be excused to. a preity woman, @nd = male audiences, expecting to: bee. in & "Woman's Rights" champion only s forbidding female with spectaples and a cotton umbrella, were agreeably disappointed at finding themselves defied and as sailed by charming young revolution- ists, dressed im the latest fushion. Be- sides, the "suffragists' were so genuinely in earnest, and they had, as many thought, a genuine grievance. For a time they were quite in the mode, and instead of beine recruited, as their predecessors had been, irom the ranks of, dowdy middle-class spin sterhood, they had gucceeded in enlist. ing many of the ladies who stand in- side the most select circle of London society. The agitators, too, have found. themselves partly disarmed by the re- cont statement of the prime minister in answer 10 a deputation which call- ed upon him in Downing street, Mr, Asquith said that, while the govern. Lment did not intend to introduge a "Votes for Women™ bill during this parliament, it did propose to put franchise reform, op the widest de- moeratic basis, upon its programme, and if any member chose to move an amendment giving women the vote on the samb terms as men, the govern. ment would Jeave the house fres 10 consider it. Bat. Mrs. Faweelt and the other ladies of the moderate party, who have acquiesced in rather than _spywoved the tactics of their forcible sisters, are fairly content with a "toncession which goes a way beyoad anything previohsly. granted them, and are now devoting tham- selves earnestly to agitation of the constitutional and peaceful kind, There is to he a monster procession of women, on Jume I3th, and they hope to show that there are ap least a hundred thousand members of the sex, of all ages amd gades, who are suffiviently interested in the vote to march through London on. a Saturday afternoon in order to testify their de- sive for it. Female suffrage will un- doubtedly be one of the issues at the next general election. But it will scarcely be made a line of division between the parties, for the support- if ers and opponents . are pretty equally divided on both' sides, The labor members are mostly rather against it. the woman-worker an industrial competi- tor with himself, and is not too' anxious to give her the power of in- fluencing the legislature. i PROBLEM OF THE AGE, ; Poor in Alms. House--Condition Very Distressing. Teronto Weekly Bung ing Uf the entire population of the Uni- {ted Kingdom of sixty-five years, and upwards 'thirty per cent. are in almshouses or in receipt of outdoor relief, and in some communities the J proportion reaches. eighty per cent. in } Germany the family of; the average week and then in insufficient quanti ties. [In New York hundreds of thou- sands are" wider in tenements in which bodies are dwarfed and = souls starved, and a population equal te that of a large city is stangling in hopeless idleness. In facts such as these lies the tragedy and the great problem of hu- man existence. But to this tragedy the eyes of statesmien are blind and voice raised in demand for the solu- tion 'of the problemn fall upon dea! ears. At Washington the clamor is for battleships sufficient, to make of the Pacific an American lake. At Ber- lin all the energies of the government are centred on the maintenance of an army strong enough to hold the Rhine on the west, and at the same time extend German power to the south and on the high seas. 'At Lon- don discussion centres around means by which a world-wide Empire may be held together. Flags and artificial boundary are more than the wail of starving children, The maintenance of the bal ance of power is of greater account than the distreés of old age. Nineteen centuries of preaching of the gospel of peace and human brotherhood and still untold treasures are being wasted in the creation of implements for hu man slaughter, while 'hosts of those who are taxed to provide the treasure are born ip rags and die in abject poverty, reat lines A Practical Suggestion. Philadelphia '. It was his first Sunday school and he sat ip the infants' department eag- erly watching the superintendent illus- trate the Jetson on the board. The superintendent drew the path to hea- ven--one straight line~and started the figure of ao man on if. Gradually the man became larger and larger, and fin- ally when he arrived at the gate of heaven he could not get in . The superintendent turned to his small audience, and, in a tragical and sorrowful tone sai "You see, he ia so puffed up with sin that he cannot enter in." sideways," came the small shrill voice JUNE 13, 1908. at- § workingman stes, meat oply once wo } "I'ry him sideways; mister; try him |, Afloat or Ashore the " Montserrat" bottle is always in constant demand. "MONTSERRAT" Lime Fruit Juice makes dozens of delicious, cooling summer drinks--makes the best limeade you ever tasted--and is cheaper than lemons. " Montserrat ** is the pure juice of ripe West Indian Limes with all the natural flavor of the fruit. It mixes with every- thing (except coffee). Be sure you get "MONTSERRAT." Canadian Agents: "Nafiosal Drug and Chamical Co. of Canada Limited. nh el TALL Is what I asked for. **2 in 1°' is what I want. No substitutes for me, thank you. | No dealer who honestly desired ; to give you the best for your money will offer you anything else when you ask for "'2 in §*'* At all dealers 10¢. and 25c. tins -Heela Furnace The only way to insure against the escape of gas, dust or smoke from a furnace i$ to buy a furnace that 7s and wi// remain airtight. All furnace joints except fused joints This requires airtight joints, are made with bolts and cement. They may be airtight at first, but in time the cement dries out and the bolts work loose, making the joints leaky. Fused Joints (Patented) are made by fusing iron and steel togetiter at a whigé heat. They are absolutely airtight and remain so. They can never work loose or leak. In twenty years not a fised joint has ever leaked. This feature makes the «"Hecla" the safést and most sanitary furnace on the market. Fused Jolnis keep the Hiotisé free of Gas, Dust and Smoke Our catalogue tells about other exclusive features such as the Steel Ribbed (Patented) Pire For, the Individual Grate Bars, and the Cast Iron: Combustion Chamber, \ 57 Care & Co. Limited Preston, Ont. © "KinosTON Acewts: ELLIOTT BROS. 4

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