Daily British Whig (1850), 10 Apr 1909, p. 10

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PAGE TEN, ' THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, S - EE ---- EE This) ERIN'S OLDES T PEERAGE | BECOMES EXTINCT. ATURDAY, APRIL 10, 1509. At Every Stage of Life Suchard"s Cocoa is a most nourishing and health- giving drink. ; It contains every material necessary for the and sustenance of the body, and being pure, an from an excess of oil, it is very easily digested. Suchard's Cocoa makes puny children strong and robust. It Supplies vigor and energy to the strong man. It keeps up the vital forces in old age. Besides, it is a most delicious drink. Many who find Po nds J Dublin, Aptil 10.--With 'the death of fourth earl of Howth, a famous | title lapses, and a family distinguished Irish history since the of Strongbow becomes extinct In the male line after surviving the vicissitudes of wi centuries. Owing to the delicate health, late Lord- th. who for some vears represented the House of Commons, led retired life for many s his name came but seldom FE Si : A Ay 1 wth freed m days of his the VEE (a 3 three always go with Noh scam/in the leg fioaseam in the foot No seam inthe toe No sgseam, anywhere dealer will Your | if mot supply {you, write to Penmans, LIMITED Paris, Ont. The only Canadian makers of Seamless Fashioned Hosiery. alwavs works better when ridicule. hars there om were no would r affidavits, prominently as tithe the public, and indeed at no time f his life did his personality figure so did that of his father, . "Raging Earl" or his grandfather, friend of George IV The family name is, however, familiar to all Dublin people, and to most visi- | to he summer months, throng enjoy the refreshing of that famous hill from St. Lawrences derived their | Nor can the visitors fail to ap preciaté the kindness and liberality of ! the noble. proprietors, who carefully preserved and freely laid open to the the wildest and loveliest scenes | { natural beauty which abound upon + hill of Howth, Proceeding to cannot efor 3 who, in th out to Howth to sea-breezes which the public Howth by tram, the fail to notice, midway between Sutton and the village, a ven rable square ruined tower. [It is called | Castle, 'and stands "in the deer li, before the institution of Baldoyle Meeting, was Racecourse. , This castle is the first fortress- Lawrences, barons of built it to defend the ipproach to their rocky territory at its most vulnerable point, the narrow isth which cont hill with the Corr castle was long since t proprietors for the more pretentious and modern mansion called Howth { which ? nough ts antiquity to have excited | f some of our mushroom he long robe sacred many ooms, is preserved the huge s-handed sword of Sir Amoricus stram, the founder of the family male descendant expired This Sir Amory or Amori wis « brother-in-law and sworn | companion-in-arms of the great Sir | ohn de Courcy, perhips the = most us a ¢ the most adventurous of all" the Franco-Nor- | « who followed in the wake | ' invasion of Ire a > chroni us that Tristram wore brotheghood in | of Rouen bhefare setting | venturesome career of Visitor ined Howth have been f the St 1 hey tar-1 Howth mus the | dana 1 yet ven castle, among heir! cus . the feast of St. Lawrence that *Sir John de | Amory Tristram reached | fr 1127 1d Sir 1st [heir« expedition wag the entire force being ap- | tained hoard their arrival was unexpected, | effected a landing at a spot deemed sufficiently protected y defy the most daring in to have steered of the numerous present Baily have successfully us rocks that The Irish ned to repel the m- | battle was fought Evor: Dalton says a marrow mountain into the sea near to quote Hanmer's ac- {anded at Howth and cruel fight by the side of l= Courcy being sickly, ship. «Sir Amory i and 'general of the field by ed himself most worthily. lain on both sides, but sot his victory, with the his 'own blood, sons, Ciwhereupon for his nd good service there lordship was allotted s part of the conquest, vs which Sir John dé im." ip of Howth was not con- the mere hill itself, but ex- tended along the mainland north and south between the manors of Clontarf ind Malahide and inland far as Artane. It is said that in commemora- \f this victory on St. Lawrence's . Sir Amory Tristram assumed for nd his heirs the surname of nee. though some old writers y have been his patronymic appear ne the and to precipit of pr pil y coast of he yd hast rece I hey fought wi 'h ned rdsh to \ 1 as or of Sir Amory He i m i » Conquest of feats and vic twelve years | in various parts of hed in an. am- being trapped , prince of Con wdventure side | De Comrey th t r Ww per Galway was held by awrence family down Sir Robert, fifteenth lor of Ireland, | varliament f Edmond chancell duke mer Ihance Law ¢ of 1 roval. dward 111 ious to note that t, through rences 1 the y was kidndpped by } Protestant member there came 1 ana 1 anda + ie nrst 1 1 the gniy 3 areer |'little that is good to say of this Lord {in which the fe { the last earll the estates now 1 1 Lady | writ of summons, lies in abeyance bhe- i Incontestable | instirance law so as to specifically a single || i doubt if we would properly present the murmured poetically, © Howdy (stie deeds in Ireland. When Chichester re other cocoas heavy and insipid thoroughly enjoy the delicately rich flavor of Suchard's. \ Frank L. Benedict & Co., Montreal. 6S solved to accomplish the ruin of the) orthern earls he found in Lord Howth a willing teal. T degenerate des cendant of Sir 2~ory Tristram | Blacksmith eocted ahd then reviled to the council | the alleged plot Ulster chiefs, 1 to avert suspicion upon himself, | vas arrested as their supposéd.accom- | nlice con of the New York Tribune been performers : : E on the Fven the English writers have Indeed, instances m tHowth, whom they describe as a quarrelsome, turbulent brawler, and a, man altogether unworthy of credit found it child's play Ihe barons, subsequently earls of {hetween his Howth, chntinued in the Protestant re- | one i ligion -daskn to the end. But it is in teresting to find that by the f been equaled or « Charles Louvier, led L carpe ne T no a oceasion h gnard who | sentry box a and the soldi wall ne: Another great sti 1 ment was a Knudson. While m the ground-floor he hand half a bullock tof a butcher whe { his load. Augustus Saxony, once shop to have death of revert in and the .an- Amory Tristram to the hands of Catholic ient barony Si lies in abevance between them his | his happens from the fact that.the father of the late earl of Howth married for wife a Catholic, sister of the | late marquis of Clanricarde, and that | family - agreement. while the sons | were hrought up in t Protestant re- ligion the daughters were educated in Catholic f These daughters | Lally Emily Gaisford, since 'de ceased: Lady Catherine Wheble and Margaret Domville. The Howth barony, being held by tenure and by of rst the hy the rong, t entered a the were horseshoes up several tween them, while the Howth estate nd castle will, it is supposed, pass 10 | threw Lady Catherine Wheble and her chil as a yery dren took it up and broke i ee m---- Pardon me, but 1 good hors 2,8 I coin in retur 10ther fered him. He hroke others. Then the handed him. a louis d'or, it. came to paying the Insurance Policies. | Foronto Star It is proposed to amend the Ontario S1X vide that "incontestable" life policies here were probably made 1 not be contestable on' the ground others were probably made 0 1 se 15 good, 1 hope at the insured committed suicide. One would naturally suppose that a mpany which professed to. issue such licies would be bound by its cement. but a recent case 'in in which pavment under a policy . is kind was disputed on the ground the the insured was alleged to have 'ranc pec imitted suicide, shows the necessity of making the meaning attached to a | simple word clear that misunder standing will be impossible man takes a life insurance policy he makes what he hopes to be | provi for his heirs. There hould be absolutely no room for doubt | n the matter when the policy is a ie dly "incontestable" one. When, hn : . : Oh, well" saw of 'a 'certain inheritance in|... it is found that a"law suit has With heen left to heirs, that which was bar gained for not obtained. The law | covering what is seciired when an in surance policy is purchased cannot be nw secure but this gold ni An Ttalina, performed X own horseshoes, he broke nails this this Rh ind $0 When a nvasser (to lady "of "Can you tell me, my hether husband tam $10n vour stead t liberals money, woe h ce he's a it he's w five." * . Yes, hut---hetween he at home?" Oh, at } is apd + ome on How would this des "indépendents" whom y "anada? The New Navy. y New ' e Canadien al rec with savage glee the amount of money spent by this ceuntry for militia pur- | Ottawa Cit poses and thén turns with confidence to | I'he the art of prophecy A Canadian navy | the is assembled and valued as follows: One Dreadnought, $10,000,000; three armored 'crui $1,250,000 ez $1 750.000; six tarpedo boats, $3,000,0 {wo submarines, $250,000; mines and fortifications, $1,000,000. Total to be- gin, $18,000,000. A moderate estimate of the cost of maintaining this little navy would be in round figures $30. | vear. Le Canadien says: "This is a beautiful programme for our pa triots at _Offawa. The Georgian Bay canal, the improvement of our forts Foront. Montre fi izén ms war addr of Professor to the Civil Engineers only too well founded have tc i vent the natural re vigore ers at ists. Our pulpwood, | proportion of out of d States, Canada and 000,000 be y roll a cylinder. a sour mish locksmith, Knut tanding in a window lifted m the shoulder iling past with his horse shod. his -suit how strong he was he picked and ! after the other, asking the blacksmith las he did.so if he had. no better. bill the a silver piece on the 3 coin T] it in half, have that humiliated elector A Simple 'Independent !" hye-elections in is responsible for 1servatives he! ourselves-- ing Canadians will y wake up if they are sources country heing looted by. foreign capital hydraulic power, | coal, electricity, natural gas and a large our minerals are being | to so far there seems ganized effort to prevent | FEATS OF STRENGTH. Fairly Outbid Augus- tus the Strong. Not all the world's strong men have public stage multiplied of professionals have ster of Paris, | basin On on tin elder of amuse with one elector of blacksmiths Io show | broke one When elector anvil. It he blacksmith given Xpect a piece Ww and five or | saying. "The f bad metal, Milan, Besides a finger thick ini of Ihe Duke of Grammont, the minister of Napoleon III, frequently astonished women at court by bending a twenty | The Master Won't Dine Without ea & Perrins' Worcestershire Sauce" «He says that it gives an appetizing relish to Soups, Stews and Ragouts." «Of course, he uses it principally on Roasts, Chops and Cutlets, ~--although he says that Fish, Fowl and Game are always at their best with Lea & Perrins'." «Q, no! Master won't have any yut Lea & Perrins'. That's the original Worcestershire 1 $V > Este 5 ©, MONTREAL .&* uy oS 4 THE this story: the house)--- | dear madam, | is liberal or 7, "when he's , and when a conserva- -what Fs He's a perfect nui- riptigp fit certain | 4 Xe - KN yw here in | Protecting Our Resources, cont contained 'in Adam Shortt Association is PLACED ON THE ORDINARY COOK STOVE Remove stove lid at *"B" and place the Charcoal Stove over this opening. Close all drafts on Cook Stove except chimney draft. Remove a cag found in the Charcoal Stove at "B" and place it over opening at "'C."" Place a little paper and charcoal in firebox "A." LOCAL AGENTS. to pre- of this enrich the | " CHARCOAL STOVE rox SUMMER Much safer than an oll of gasoline stove--doesn't heat the room like a gas stove--icss expensive than an electric stove, and casier than ANY stove in producing a hot broiling or baking fire. Avoid the daily accidents reported from the use of coal oil, gas and gasoline. ONE CENY'S WORTH OF CHARCOAL MAINTAINS A ss -- ea ree re oo roma ramet @, Quicker, cheaper HOT FIRE FOR ONE HOUR - Charcoal makes a clean, smokeless fire, lights readily frofy paper, and needs no dangerous coal oil. Charcoal is the quickest, cheapest and best kindling for any fire--in range, grate or furnace. THE CHARCOAL STOVE FOR = QUTDOOR USE Remove cap *'C" and place in open- ing "B"; attach the small smoke pipe supplied with each stove. This makes an ideal stove for outside washing or camping. Ask your dealer or write us for circular complete description. JAS. SWIFT & CO. ' | TRAE STANDARD CHEMICAL COMPANY OF TORONTO, TORONTO, HAMILTON, LONDON, OTTAWA, MONTREAL, QUEBEC, WINNIPEG the question of cheap transportation can all go to the devil" This is a startling and extraordinary picture, hut | why should we alarm ourselves. No | facts of our national poverty to the motherland Great Britain would be kind enough to improve our forts and | pay for the Georgian Bay canal as well as protect our commerce upon the seas Both Interested In Berkshires. Chicago News Ihe Massq romantic mood dear old Berkshire hills of state Berkshires?" echoed vouth, somewhat bewildered r- vour father in the pork raising busi- | ness?" And the look that the Mas maid gave him would have radinm And Catches Him. declared the "is a worm." said a. man who married thre mes and cupying 'a : "woman fashioned | old wi AN YE55 BISCUITS Will You Try McCormick's F-A-N-C-Y Soda Biscuits ? McCormick-Quality in these delicious "biscuits. All ingredients have passed a rigid purity {quality examination made by expert bakers and our own chemist, Fifty-one years of expe in them, too. That's why they are baked so perfectly --a revelation of crispness, flakiness and superfine flavor, McCormick's exclusive design, very neat, thin and flaky --the right size and style for a discriminating hostess. Remember to distinctly say McCormick's F-A-N-C-Y Jersey Cream Sodas when you desire design shown ih picture. Sold only in 10c and 5¢ Blue Label Packages. 5 See that "Little Lord Fauntleroy' trademark appears on package. CCORMICKS ET nN \ R

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