Daily British Whig (1850), 26 Oct 1909, p. 12

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FAGE TUTIVE _ a ---- - -- i --. YIDNEYS ACT FINE AND. BACKACHE GOES AFTER TAKING. FEW DOSES, . Kidney and Bladder misery simply jand prompt a cure, as a fiftvern: treatment of Pape's Diuretic, which Out-of-ozder kideeys act fine and | any druggist ean supply. hackaohe or bladder misery is re ficved | Ibis unusual preparation gogs direct after a fw dows of Pape's Diuretic | to the out-of-order itadder Paine in the hack. sides or loins, {8nd urinary system, ch ansing, healing rheumatic {winges, debilitating head- | ant Kirengthening these ache, - nervousness, dizziness, sleepless | #4 a completes the pess; idlamod or swollen evelids. worn { You reai@e it out feoling and many other {A fow days of clogged, inactive: Diuretic means vanish. kinnevs, Frequent. painful and uncopirollabl urination dus to a weak © biadder is promptly overcome. The moment. you suspect any blndder or urinary disorder. or feel ism coming, begin taking this |" harmlcss remedy, . with the khowladge | Of your coblidence. that there is no other medicine at Acospt only Pape's Dinrctic-hity say prion, made anywhere else in the cont. treatment--from anv drug world, which will efielt so 'thoroush anywhere in the world, Vanishes. kidneys, al cure heiore orga nay, ar hi treatment with active, bladder and arinary and vou feel fine, @X our phasician, Pape's healthy Organs symptoms kidnevs samply Jean, pharmacist, bhnker or anv mercantile ageney will tell yon that Pape, Thompson & Pape, Toi Cimeinneti, is a large and responsible thoroughly worthy irritable | kidney ficine concern, Lore Harlowe Pearlings. Scott. Mrs. 8S. Harlowe, Oct, 22 -Miss M. Jlorri- | Ward are spending a couple of weeks aon, Forest Mills, spent a few days of | with friends at Camden East. Rev. last week at her home here. H. Neal! Mr. Smith has gone for a week to his is 'home from Whitney. Mr. and Mrs. |father's, at Cross Lake, and from I. Conners and Cassie visited a week | there he will go to conference at Otta- with friends at Tamworth. Mrs. Mor- | wa. Mrs. Jackson and children are at rison is spending a week at Forest | her sister's, Mrs, Forbes, Kaladar. W. Mille. T. Thompson, ¥. Thompson, |Cuddy has been' successful in finding Ww. Black, and 6. Conners are home | his valuable bell he lost this summer. from the west, Miss M. Cole, Arden, | Miss 1. White is visiting Mrs, T, M. is* at her grandmother's, Mrs, R, Thompson to-day, i ree---- | New Styles For Fall Fit-Reform will gain new prestige with the new styles in fal! Suits and Overcoats. The garments are, beyond question, the finest ever tailored in Canada. The elegance and exclusiveness of the fashions are but equalled by the superb patterns and workmanship. " FIT- REFORM it-Seform Sole Agents for Kingston. Clancy and Mastie| rand that THE UNITED STATES. Arthur 'E. McFarlane, "Who is Putting Life Blood 'Into 'His Stuff and Getting Baek Good Coin. 7 In these highly developed-days the writer of a special artieh is -expect- ed tw put fancy as well as the real {acts into his material. He is ex- | pected tw be epigrampsatic, io put life blood ihto his staff, 40 make his readers sit up and: lasgh here and | there all throngh the article 'and | then take it seriously in the efi. | That's what Arthur E. McFarlane, | she well-known young Canadian magasine writer does. If he didn't |-deliver the goods he would mot have . | so maby of his ssticles accepied and | highly paid foc | Kor it takes time to work up I material "for a special. article - (days, and time weans mweney. by big publications. ihe these And leading editors is ready to say, "'Me- Farlane, spead the time and money necessary to get wise on this ques. tion, and let us have what you think it's worth' --this fact means that Me- Farlape ean deliver the goods. Some time ago he made a contract with a certain journal to write some- thing about Barnum and, Bailey's eireus. He didn't simply go to the circus and write a page or two about it offhand. He traveled with the show for two or three weeks: stood in. the tickewseller's cage and kept his eye peeled for imecidents: dressed a8 & clown snd helped in a turn; sand fearned premy pearly everyibing shere was to learn about the hwmor- fous antl serious sides of running a 'Wig circus. That's ihe way special articles are worked up these days, is one reason why their prepartion is somewhat wore ardu- ous but also amore profitable then short-story writing Naturally Mr. McFarlave, sojourn- ing 'with strange folk here and there to learn their habits and Jancuage, has secumulasted a large fund of good stories. . Oue that he told the other day to some friends seems timely just now. when so much is heing heard from sufiragittes on the Jack of consideration sccorded women by the world Mr. McFarlane and Arthur Stringer roomed together for a 'tigre when they their first attack on literary New York In those enti-prosperiy days, the young men Jived frugally thotie surroundings, their window looking out oB a prospect somewd rescme- bling the fasnons street osc in "Salvation Nell.' They were at ( as well as shistracted by many s we noises, but fron the cramped domi cile of # certain family wear by iis every night. sounds of discord ane strife that came to be distinct and of comgglling interast. Oh pirht in this disturbed aud disturbing a row epsusd that made al! previogs rackets there seem as the cooing of doves. All over Ythe eourt windows flew open, that of Mebarlane Stringer among thew. From wha could Le hosed it seemed that mar- der was being done. They were just about to dash off, thinking to rescue a woman from the hands of a brutal, besotted husband, when sm Jenly an excited little urchin rushed out of u doorway, and yelled to a greup of night hawks assembled on the pave- ment: "Come on up quick," youse: me mudder = killin' me fadder." Then: the windows were all slam- med down and interest in the episode suddenly faded. - elles home and A Peripatetic. The hotel at Wainwright, one of the new divisiopal points of the the fact that amy oue of .a dozen: tM | Livat.- Shackieton's "Nimped™ "Finds HAS ACHIEVED FAME IN| Missing Helands. Details have now been recei Rent Tora te Rag the vessel of the Shackleton Expedi- hich further geo- interest . K. Davis, , amd, in ace to visit Macquarie Island amd search for certain charied groups of islands, 1 actual existance of ihe 3 wisich was On May 18 i the vessel signed to Roy no 'land in sight. A taken in the neighborhood, an tom reached wiih 2430 isthoms of line. Capt. Davis then stood east and then south, but saw no signs of lamd in the vicinity. After satisfying hime- seli thai the island did not exist, he proceeded to Macquarie Ishand in or- der to make zoologi ocollectsons. He encountered heavy gales, amt reached the island on May 26. Macquarie Is- land, the southernmost of the off-lying islands of New Zealand, lies 546 miles southwest of Stewart Island, and was discovered in the early part of she last cendury by a echonial sealing wes~ sel. It is 21 miles Jong und five miles: broad, and is the home of eoumbless ryriads of penguins, sea birds and seals. A visit was paid to the southeast point of the island and some speei- mens collected, and then the Nimwodi proceeded aloug the coast northwards. As she drew mear Nuggei Point, fromy which a reef of rocks extends for-some: distance seawards, two huts were seen on the shore and also the" wreck off a vessel high and dry on the beach. In "his report, which is just to hand. Capt. Davis says: "Suddenly, to our: surprise, a column of smoke rose fom the smaller of the two huts. As:-we had heard nothing of anyone livieg on the island, this was extraordinary. Presently, with the glasses, we i make out the figure of a man { ing at the door of the smaller of the! huts watching our approach. We came' 10 anchor, and the boat was lowered and headed for the shore. The mam, who had been watching us fsom the hut, now walked down to the beach, aaccompanied by two little dogs.| There was a heavy surf, but our Cre-| soe-like friend, after pointing out the best landing-place, walked into shel utter and assisted in beaching the oat. | We soon ascertained that his nase: was Wm. McKibben, and that Te had | been a member of a party which had, visited the island in the previous sea-| son in order to obtain seal and pen-i guin oil. | 5 Opera Unger Difficulties. H Baron d'Erlapger, whose ra, | "Tess," was produced at Covent Ba den a few days ago, will not readily forget the first performance, which took place at the San Carlo Theatre, Naples, some time ago. Vesuvius was in eruption at the time, and the thea- tre contained comparatively few spée- tators, who were hali paniec-stricken. During the periormance the roofs of some huildings pear tha theatre fell in, and the lava dust, which got isto HARVEST CUSTOMS. 5 ---- 3 " Quaint Cerempnies When the Grain * > Is Garnered. In many places there are curians and quaint customs connected with the gathering in of harvest. They aul bear a ceftain resemblance to each other, but hava different designs the last shock of corn on has been cut in Devenshire, & ery is heard from one of the reapers - "lve gotten it! "What hast tha' gotten?" shout tha "Fre gotten the neck!" yells the st. As the reaping has been rapidly | nearing its completion, the gldest lab- orgr goes round the field picking the bess ears of corn he sees in" each sheaf. These he ties together, and} intricately plaits into a sort of broom, This is called and when the cutting of the last corn is her. alded with the shout, "I've goiten it!" the reapers: gather together, and stand in a cirele round the man hold- ing the "neck." . He stoops to the stubble with it, and the ring of reap- ers, holding their hats in heth honds. likewise bend to the erannd. Ricina upright, and stretching their arms and hais above tneir heous, we, slowly chant, in harmony, ™ The neck three times. Then they burst into triumphant shouts, "We have un! We have 'un! We have 'un!' Round goes the cider-pitcher, and, with ae- clamations, the plaited neck of corn is escorted to the farmhouse, There it is delivered to the farmer, with the chorus, "A neck, a neck, a neck! Well cut, well bound, shocked !"' is'hung from the kitenen ceiling, and remains there until displaced by the "neck" of the next harvest. To lose or part with this "neck" is to invite misfortune and disaster. ln Cornwall the last sheaf of corn is also called the *'meck,". and is decorated gaily with blue ribbons. In Yorkshire, where the clergyman is still often called upon to cut the first corn of the harvest, the last li gheaf is simply called "the kern." well | The little bundle of corn I§ Its fall before the sickle is proclaimed, by shouts of "We've gotten it!" And the reapers escort the kern home. is dressed in a white frock, with col- ored ribbons, gud crowned with wheat-edrs. At the kern supper which follows. this kern baby is enthroned in the barn, and supposed to preside over the feast. The well-known har- vest supper comes later, to mark the end of the gathering<in, and is eslled the "mell supper." The really interesting- customs are those which attend the cutting of the last sheaf. It symbolizes the eorn god ; and, though its original meaning has been forgotten, it is celebrated in various parts of the country. : Crime In Ireland. What Jreland is like vnder Radical rule is clearly shown by the criminal statistics for 1808, which have just been published as a Bluebook. fn- dictable ofiences for the whole of Ire- land, which numbered 9.465 in 1906. Aeclined .to 9,418 in the 'year 1907, but rose last year fo 10,266. This represents an increase of 8.6 per cent. as compared with 1906, and of 9 per cent: as compared with 1907. The rate represented by the above offences was 2.3 per 1,000 of the estunated population. The number of persons proceeded against for non-indictable offences was 31,697 more than in the year 1907 and 9.218 above the average for the ten years 1898-1907. The numbers of cases of drunken- ness in 1908 is less than the number in 1907 by 2,592, and if the figures for drunkenness in 1908 are compared with the average number of such cases in the 10 years 1898-19071 ap- pears that a decrease amounting to 12,841 has ocearred. The offences committed are classified as follows: Id With ordinary soap you wash-- then spend nine- tenths of your time rubbing and polishing--that is if you are extra particular and can take the time. When you wash your windows, for instance, little streaks of "dirt" seem so hard to get off --it's really the soap not the dirt--that's the trouble, With Taylor's Borax Soap you wash and rinse, dry once and your glassware sparkles like crystal. It's all in the borax----the way "Taylor blends it in Borax Soap The soap removes the grease --the borax remo the soap"~and there you are! Fu It's fine for woolens, too. It positively will not shrink them. It brings them out of the wash as soft and fresh as new. Thousands of Canadian women are using Taylor's Borax Soap today. Try a cake at once and know the reasons why. - At All Dealers-- Cc - Made by John Taylor & Ce, Limited Toronta 8 & \ iH CVErVoOiR I Houssieeping Easier fall and winter 'Crown Brand sous ve more largely used by It simplifies the making of delis cious dishes to such an extent that house! ---- the theatre, nearly choked and blind- ed both listeners and performers. Next day the theatre was closed by! order of the municipality. . The baron! has been a musician all his life. At five he was able to improvise on the keeping becontes easier in everyway, Crown Brand Syrup eaten with bread, todst, biscuits, pudding, porridge or pastry, provides. sustaining dishes that and don't -overlieat the body---dishes that Grand Trunk Padific and one of the new towns slong shat line which are booming at present, wus not built or- iginally at Wainwright, but at a point called "Dénwood. ome three miles and @ half east, When the. line Offences against the person .... 627 Robbery with violence 833 Robbery without violence ...... 7.393 Malicious damdge to property. 664 Forgery x Hl Coining CHRISTIE § please the palate Zoo Biscuits { was going through aud the new towns were being projected, the proprietor of the hotel got what he thought was a called Denwood was" to be the divie With real western en: sute tip that -a spot on the prairie piano, and when quite a young man he wrote a great nushber of songs. | He is an active partner in one of the | great banking houses of London, and, although a naturalized Baglishman, his family history is somewhat cwuri- Assaults Of the prisoners committed to pris- on in 1902, 25.5 were-absolutely illi- terate: Of the 26,629 prisoners con- are plain, wholesome, casily prepared and easily digested and at the same time yery nourishing: Won't you try CROWN BRAND SYRUP? When you think of its purity, its wholesomeness, of all the dainty and gional point victed 700 belonged to the domestic servant class, 14,447 to the laboring classes, '398 to the class of factory | workers, 3,038 to the class of me- chanics and skilled workers, 72 were foremen or overlookers ot labor, 194 ; | belonged to the class of shopmen the line went elsewhere. Wainwright Few Reach Forty. el and olorks, 8.659 " the was chosen as the divisional point. | Out of every thousand people bora | class oi shopkeep'.s and dealers, 2 Nothing dsunted, the\proprietor pro. only 253 attain the age of forde. to professional er iloyments, 219 to; geeded to haul his botel to the new ae class of sailor, marines, and sol | i fi -. Children enjoy Christie Zoo biscuits. delightiul dishes vou can make with it, --when you think of . its fine "'honev-cream' flavor and clear golden colour, -- and how it will save vou trouble and bring variety to every meal--don't you think it worth your while to order some. Children thrive on it. Adults enjoy it. "*3t your convenience Crown Brand Syrup isput up in 2,5, 10 snd 20 sig tight inowrich Hoff idee The Edwardsburg Starch Co., Limiled @ 9 . ESTABLISHED 1858. Work : CARDINAL, Ont, Offices : MONTREAL, TORONTO and BRANTFORD fous, He was born inc Paris, hig mother being an American and his father a German, while his maternal grandmother wae French. terprise he built his big hotel betore the line, ready. for traffic to. come, waiting already to be the centre ol life for the new western hub, gate- way or bread basket--every town in the west is one of tha three. But They are specially made for the purpose of satis- fying the palate and appealing to the mind and fancy of little folks. There are 26 biscuits in our Zoo Line--embracing the alphabet from A to Z. * Each biscuit is also em- bossed with the figure of a well-known animal, wn and located at the opr r of = diers. There were 90 "assaults by wired is now Main street and Second > aw firin shots into - dwelling-housés" _averNe, Wainwright. As he had to "Constipation for Three Years' eat 66 in. the precoding year. drive Yhe lumber for his first hotel " i sone 52. wiles over the prairie, he certainly deserves some modicum of BUCCHSS, z The care exercised in buying raw material--the cleanliness--the quality and the science of baking --everything that has contributed to Christie repu- tation is embodied in our new line. Eggs and Oats. Had Dizziness, Bad Breath, Head- | | Lord Gorell, who has been advocat- b. aches, Bad Color, Poor | ¢ ; ! d Appetite. | ing divoree reform, is a man of mueh . PP pri |-wit, as well as profound learning. He Hamilton's _ Pills Cured] it was who first gave utterance to the * i'remark, "There ure three classes of ] able additi i .] Quickly. ; egus-- CEES, fresh eggs, and new-laid . . . : v . 3 roceive comsidersble sdditions during | Those who doubt if constipation | eggs, while he got his own back on Having no side lines to distract our attention 1s & She, coming pihs. Nioe . hun jee and chronic stomach trouble can be|the interrupter at a mecting who, AR & % rh 3 o" Y and seveaty-one wiles of wire wiil be |cared need only read the striking while he was speaking on the redue- ) x a ¢ "ul: \ » ¥ | x 3 & one of , the reasons why particular women call erecind between Winupes aud Vield, | testimony of Mre. B. €. Currean, of | tion of taxation on tea, sugar. and Christie's " The best biscuits baked " and "The ffi | snd another "56 miles botween Cul- | Westport, to know {hat 'even if all coffee, suonted, "What about oats?" ary. al ranbrosk. | else New rena purest of all pure foods." [ER | &nei boan completed batwesn Toronto clse had failed certain A new wire has cure attends | His lordship, without u moment's ) Y Sudb th vi T : {the use of Dr. Hamilton's Pills. hesitation, replied, "Oh, you eat oats, Zoo SC 1 i and Sudbury, thus giving Toronto an Our biscuits will delight the independent connection with Wiani- 3 For fully thwee years I have suf- do your J am Jorn I ny not see . 3 f ex 5 5 ili § lw legs. 1 rea 1 ht you had children: but thgy are a wholesome and (malt | pes. Owing to the growth of business fered the tortures i biliousness, con- | YOUT =8 y Thought Sou ha nutritious food s well ; ] , i etween Vancouver Island and the | stapation and stomach disorders. 1 only two." His comment, 100, an the mainland another esble will probably Sold by all Grocers ------ eel Oven eats Quicker Saves Fuel Pandora has a sheet steel oven, because steel is more sensitive to heat-- absorbs it C.P,R. Télegraphs. Dr. The 65.000 miles of telegraph wire | elready operated by the C.P.R. will | The main reason for the superiority of Christie biscuits lies in the fact that all our energies are con- centrated in the making of better Discuits. everyone at the Law Court in London Lappetite faded away and. when J dad y : one day by appearing with a rose {eat. anything it disagreed and made] : : ime very sick for hours miter each)!' his buttonhole is almost historic meal, The active pains in my sto-| "I wonder how the rese got there? mach and the dizzy headaches I had! rentarked a well-known KC. he bis to endure almost set me wild. { lordship. Piabably it grew there, | times attacks was the prompt reply. {that 1 had to go to bed. I would feel so worn, depressed and utterly | miserable that for hours 1 wouldn't speak to my family. My system was poisoned with wastes and no- | thing helped me till 1 vsed Dr. Ham- ilton's Fills. Without thes grand system-cleaning remedy I would still be sick, but each day brought me better health and spirits. 1 * was cured and made as strong, ruddy and healthy looking as one could "wish, and will alwdys use and recommen Dr. Hamilton's Pills." Thousands who are in an ailing, low state of bealth need nothing else but {De. Hamilton's Pills. They cure blood { disorders, pimples, rashes, bad color, "ilionsness, liver, stomach and kidpey troubles, Mild, certain and safe. Be- {had terrible pains én my head, My slovenly barrister who astonished be laid in the near futnre. Should the contributors to the! Pacific cable decide to lay on Atlantic erble as part of the scheme of An "Al-red" ecominunication between Grest Brie tein and Apstralia, Via Cancda. the Canadian Pacific - is stated to have offered its right of way from Halifax te Vancouver for a special wire for the handling of this business t Railways to Spend $30,000,000. | With the immense works of the } Grand Trunk Pacific Railway Co. ond | the Canadian Pacific and Canedian | Northern Cos.' improvem#uts, tog { er with the building of muy new ele. { wators, it is difficult to uuagi | ultimate expansionof the two ports | of Fort William aud Port An { Lake Superior. An imag alone separates these two manic ties, and the fusion of their intercste in course of timé will be inevitable | It is stated that within the next few Made for men, women, children~insist on your denler shawsng "Coster * § | years' these railway companies will THE C. TURNBULL CO. OF GALT, Limited, GALT, ONTARIO | spend nefely $30,000,000 upon termi Mi ar GALT Mimined, Sf Ws | inal facilftios' ut thesé points. Sian. | OTe of "imitations sud" substitiles. " dard of Empire. \ 'et al dealers, or The Catarrhozone y . : = - Campanyv, Finceton, int, Make sure your new range has a steel oven, ---- and "Pandora" name- Topographical Curios, 1 he Few Cockneys, in fact, would he plate on t door. Go, able readily to loeate even the ma- at once, to nearest jority of the following places, yer McClary Agency and they are all in the Londen Directory: . Elephant Stairs, Dodsley's Folly, | pick out size desired. Adamand Eve Yard, Clock Bands, | ' Baleorty Arcade; Petyt Place, Morton Tower, Folly Wall, Axe Place aBelle Isle; Seven Step Alley, Balmoral Grove, Jesmond Dene, Alice Place, Hare Marsh, Beehive Depot, Bryan Yale, Sweet Apple Square, Paddy s Goose Hall, 2 ------------------ | Some faster -- than cast iron does. came on so severely Pandoga oven thus heats quicker -- less time required to . _getoven ready for the baking -- which also means less fuel expense. .. . H CEETEE" UNDERWEAR o - - The most economical underclothing . "CRETEE" Underclothing may cost a little more to buy, but is cheaper in the end because it wears longer--and is always warm and comfortable--soft and velvety to the skin, no fatter how often it is washed. > The man who is satisfied with a | crust usually vemaips without the wherewith td purchase little else. Three or four mouth news is quite likely to be somewhat embelished. You and Ihave ue partieular right ' to rms ocr W¥Peade tL,

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