Daily British Whig (1850), 15 Nov 1910, p. 8

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PASE FIAT. . Sickness is usually caused by thé accu- mulation of waste matter and impurities within the body. Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills, enable the bowels, the kidneys, the lungs and the pores of the skin to throw off these "prevent or cure dis case. 1 6c. a box. and Chewing Tobacco at deeply in loves with Josephine and was pound is a good! wring her pussiopate, love-letters. Why, pay Siginy-tive} ANDREW MACLI A RACLIA Bireet | de id $s Female Pills soldier Jue, 9ain, and' if his Fi Hg mk never fails. These werful in regulating the the a | he lema), system. eluse 1 i , go 's are nid at 52 bo or 810 a isd to jeans address, Ofamt Best's , --_-- from Station a City Galde Book and Map | #4 HoH dH Dr: Martel's Female Pills SEVENTEEN YEARS THE STANDARD Prescribed and recommended far' women's all most famous. of his four sons, was prepared remedy of proves porn worth. The result from their use is quick aad .hristened ments, a scientifically permancot, For sale at all drug stores. 1 ILUB HOTEL | WELINGTON 87. PLL 001. LLM A Radbitiad TIA CIR CRIES BY rn: BEWISE: 10:0. And hyve Jour | eatin and. or petafd the ohn A ayy Bet EN ai aa splendid a. ot Bok ue haw, a BRrehely low trios it wih pay you Uh see them bes fare buying, elsewhare 8 of Yousehoid Goode DORE and sold. Antique Furniture a Specialty. Give us x call .. LES ES, Cer. moves and SES. Seal Kinguton. "G ee Kaw by I isk town by ity good burn # ing qualitivs. P. WALSH, 55-37 Barrack St. STONES AT KITCHENER HE DECLARES THAT : K. of K. WasdBorn In Ireland, But | | { harines, 5% lav are not 16 many, tear PIIINCESS. be | dier who did' 'his daty quietly and | ing stones to sucess later. lo | whom ho eame in contact. | {had "grit" | ! tolia, MARRIAGE SPOILS8GOOD SOLDIERS. He Is Not Mibernian on Either Sides of the Family--Received His Early Trainingsat Home:and Then Went on the Continent, Where He Served: in Frando-Prussian War. Much has.been written of "K. of K." Of his silence, his jawe-inspiring -blae ryes--eyes thas can; flash fire on ocea- sion, and his swell known . dislike for women. Not long agothe praised a storm of feminine pmtest. byideclaringrthat "a soldier marszied is a.soldier spoiled." By this statement hetisiled to back up by the name of a single grest. soldier who was a bachbielor. On the other hand. as Miss Dora D'Espsigne- Chap- man pointed. out, numbers: of famous generals, nom Alexsmdér the aren in a are wll xan to have 8 Did not Napo "who adored Hs Creole wife, do his work phy bis Italian cam; Bo When he was soldiers who Mutiny. , married. himself'is a {ather before by been most great fought so ably in de ah the Boer War, hiza had held the 'views; "K. of K." Englanl" wot one able soldier the less, "If. the officers af the army of. to- ang you look for the officens the army of to-morrow?" asked an officer's wile, to whom J«wd Kitabener had 'held forth on this pet subject, thereby, it is said, reduging the, great. soldier 'lo silence Pane have: more than once spoken Jord Ki 2 as an. Irishman, But this isn He was born rig 'the | Emerald Isle, it is true, but his mother - 3 a daugh- | ter of Rev. Dr. Chevallier, of 1, and his father wasn't a * yy" either, When his: father, Cal.. Kitchener, left the army, be decided to settle in 'Ire- land--and * it was in Gunsborough Villa, County Kerry, that this, the on June 24th, 1850. He was "Horatio Herbert." Lie a gréat, many other celebrated n Lord Kitchener 'never*went to a " "public" setwel, First of all. he was Laught &b' home, got very ich the = jt of rdug that the awerage es boy sags he want to Switseriand, no 0 years ii at the agdol twen- | ty"otie, yon vod his commntisgion .in | the + Royal; Ruston ' Then came. puny years of ohscusity, {and real hand work for the young sol- _ Ysoemyed "in 'ne "way more remarkable than the other young officers with 'K. of K.'~ was Ambition: Pe he and 'meant to get them somehow So "thréughout these long dull years, spent chiefly in the east in ser- | vey work and!as 'vi of Ana- Kitchener was hard at work for all he was worth, both ish and Arabic jJanguages, | i step- w he chafed at the quiet life and Jonged for active séfvice only Lond | Kitchener himsell knows, for he is | not a man to talk mmeh about himself | and his affairs. Then came the Egyplian troubles in 1880, and the 3oung paldier got his ! chance It happened like this. Lieut, Kitchener, as he'then was, was stationed at Oyprus, but was in Egypt on leave wher tip British h fleet { arrived. at net ES He a ehes f saw his chance, waited for, and & a of leave, feeling fied ro all the time that the War Office .would not grant it to him. a So what he 'couldn't. get by fair But ' studying. the Tui ng that these should be The kind you ars looking for ta wi the kind we sell. fins Coal an we Fuarante. + Lotd Kitchener had traveled it alone. Ho has usvet been oman _lo_ fol he got by nt go of-a little subterf uge. With the help of a a Diwspaper cor- respondent he, somehdw ar , con- wived that the refusal Ss not reach him until Sa east: -had sailed for Cyprus. So there » was, the he man in the right place, at the t moment, for he had an intimate knowledge of he Arab, nd he thanhacse, those years of study guage with something like fluency. Te eg for in, This was She foundation stone of his fortunes Eom that time onwawds: promotion Wher yr South Afriea hel; ry till further along the aad Ww hard road sometimes to - Alone, silent, he and fulfilled his rok ichet- many friendshi pe. has done his ty y ambitions. ne once said. or's" strength lies in oreaie. STWhat i fo Be will be." in he mot Onee during the Soudan campaign k him not to expage a ancthing Becatiee wl £m ne Tow Sound 'sn &&V lum' for 'PHGY artists born i of the sky, AY BRITISH WIG, ron ES ~ MATCHED IN POCKETS. >] Scottish Lady Mas a Strange Experi ence With. Two Chicks. A novel ex befell a Kirk. caldy lady, w a keen interest in poultry rear the other day. It appears that had set a hen on a dozen of eggs, and as the period of in- cubation expired she found ten chick- ens had hatched, while two eggs still remained unhatched. With a view to giving them time fo hatch she left the eggs under the hen until next morn. ing. It so happened that she had arrang- ed to travel to Edinburgh with a friend next dav. and, after dressing herself and finding she had still a few minutes to spare belore train time, she decided to have a look at the eggs. Proceeding te the she found the eggs atill unhatched, and, coming | to the conclusion that they must have | proved unfertile, she took the os and put one im each pocket of her ulster, with a view to taking them fo the house. Om: the door she found her neighbor waiting for her with the information that it would take them all their time to catch the train, The lady accordingly ran into the hose for her umbrella and, forget all about the eggs, proceeded with all aste to the station. On approach- ing the ticket office she put her hand in her pocket to get her purse, when she was shocked to find t omitted to leave the Being afraid that they a t broken and spoil her dress, throughout the jou rney sat with a hand in. each pocket holding the eggs. The heat of her hands seemed to pro- vide all that was necessary to com- plete the hatching, and. before her ar. rival at Waverley Station she had & healthy-lookifig chicken: in each pocket. In the circumstances she decided to take the next train back to Kirkealdy but as she had to wait she paraded the streets for a short time with a bird in each pocket. On reaching home she. placed the chickens under the hen, and they seemed to be none the worse for their strange experience. Turner's Ambition. Turner could not bear to sell a favorite painting. He was always melancholy after such a transaction. 1 have lost one of my children this week," he would sadly exclaim. At a meeting at Somerset House it was de- chided to purchase his two great pie- tures, sthe "Rise" and the "Fall of Carthage," forthe National Gallery. A Mr. Griffiths was cofmissioned to of- fer $25,000 for them 'A noble offer,' said tHe painter, "a noble offer; but, na, 1 cannot part with: them. Impos- sthle." Mr... Griffiths, greatly disap- pointed, took, hig: leave. Turner ran aites him. , "Tell those. gentlemen he suid; "that. the nation: will mosy likely have the pictures. after all." Long before this. Turner had wiatur- rd a, purpose, » edntivued to be his demi « whilé: lille. dasted. hue was jo rr tochis 'country a Rushes gallery. 10h, pictures: and to $500,000, 4p build-and endow an sai for. degared artists. TA was for i Jreat abjert Aha hg desried him- in |. pleasures ,Co5t. money, ali hixuries. His " Xe, once made, cold got vibe fl. ; nope oscasion he. was 500.000, flor. He. a art treasures locked sup 1 rive. te the hey oe he house, olt. ge JIC 8 iveipook merchant, mr 7. fo you," hye od i fave refused a better offer," and that was true. By his will he Dbéqueathed $700,000 to in«Magland lection to his country. bequest 'wae, however, coupled with the eondition that his "Rise. and Fail of Carthage' should be 'hung in 'the National Gallery between Claude's "Seaport" and "Mill and 4 magnificent art col. This latter Oharting the Sky. Sir William Christie, the astronom. t er royal, quitted Greenwich Obsgerva- tory, after forly years' service, on Jet. 1. In an interview, he explained ( 1h reat Tes a d been i HW bol Shiro Hg mage Fou; ol ry Toate gh ul developments Bats ago eign- téén' observatories had fakén upon themselves the task of making a chart The sectfon'of the sky allotted to Greenwich Jad. allocated to it ifi"the recogtiized cdlylogue 25,284 stars. Greenwich has now completed ifs partion of 'this work, and has by the aitl of photography eounted 719.088 stars in' the gection, It therely means {hat combined telesoopi¢ and photo- graphic power were probing the heav- ens deeper than ever before. "What," he was asked, "has been the prineipal discovery in your term of office? "The outer satellite of Jupiter," re. plied Bir William. 'We discovered it in February, 1008, and we did it through photography." pe -------------- The Friendly Safety. A historian of invention tells us that to the wails of a long-suffering infant we owe the boon of the safety pin. Here is the story. A little boy named rrison, aun English blacksmiths son, bad 10 look alter his baby broth- et. The baby often cried, and its ténrs. were usuglly traced to pin punc- turds. . The boy nurse tried a long time tor bend the pins in such a form that they could. be used with h, slaty s brother's flesh, +I he failed; but his father; the: i Jirotis ing the utility of the idea that ie 1nd had been at eae up on bis own account @ y turned out the safety pin that is in use to-day all over the world. Whe. ther the salety pin would have still remained in oblivion but for the tor menting of one little Engish baby no ane knows, of course. ader, the milkman. alone, EUGENE O'KEEFE. He Is thy Only Private Chamberlain to Pope In Canada. Eugene Reale, president of the Home Bank of Canada, and ot the O'Keefe Brewing Co., whose liberality has resulted in the Bunding of the uew Bt. Augustine's Seminary, near Teronto, been u resident of To- ronto sings it became a city in 134. He was born in Ireland in 1837, and when but sever years of age came with his parents to Torento. For six years he was ronto Savings Bauk, aod i tefed into business for himself, form- ing the institution of which he is still president. For many 'years he was vice-president "the Home Savings & Lown Co. of ada, becoming its esident on he death of Sir Frank mith, and in 1904; when it the Home" 'Bane of h ME. O'Keefe was elected first president, a' position he still retains. * At 83, hale and hearty, he! is still in harness. In January, 1900, Mr. O'Kcele's re- ceived a very sigual favor from Pope Pius when was appointed a pri: vate chamberlain to his Ty which gives him the aight to attend the pontiff on all great occasions. The great privilege thus accoraed game to the distingwithed octogenarian, cause of many notable benetactions 10 to the charities of Toronto in fouls: and Canada in general, "Mr. O is the only man in Canadas holding such a distinetion. Private chamber- Jains are high officers in the papal court. There aré laymen as well as clerks in this renowned order. Iu costume, of course, the two states are widely different. For the laymen, who are" AM nobles, either by' birth, as in Eurdpe, 'or by distinguished service and unimpeachable character, as here' in America, the costume consists of a civil'dtess, Henry 11. style, ornament- ed with white lace, cloak lined with black ik," hat Rafigelo's style, in black vilvet with rich 'ostrich feath- ; hat and shoes with brilliant orna- monte black' velvet belt and precious buckle; sword with shiver chased han- dle in stéel guard. great gold and sil- ver chit around neck, and from it three sminller ones having for pen- dants golden tiaras and keys with the letters "C.8." There is an evening dress, French style. Eagene O'Keefe is a founder of the Canadian Church Extension Society, and one of its chief promoters in' Toronto. ------------ The Next Eldorado. It is rumored in Vancouver that the next gold excitement will be" in the Similkameen, and the rush may take place next spring. It is hard to. get' guthentic information," writes John P. McConnell an The Sunset, Cand heat is Jull of amor. this one fact I did ik do A _ ing man {rom Vancouyer been in there «siveral times. has kept close mouth, 400, buj t . best-guatded secret will out when a hundred prying coves ard as, many picks are keeping tabs ou it. He has secured some. pro- petty. on: Champion Creek, and the story, as it.comes 10 me, says he has | richness. Samples Kguey Tock lode of Lina Cock isan ho Jog oon 8 she the rich- est fopm in whie i is_mined, cept the mati Thema nT kt x Sin he Tulameen hart ot.a series of of rieh wa The of the of these metals, but it is "Dig | ors, , which re- applidnoes © metals came must be a ledge, and ome of thesk days. it will be uncovered Champion: Creek looks {ikely, because it is w ,ahat creek that some of the best: finds have been made. Tula- meen witli be &wept. with a fine tooth comb next swmuper, so look out for a bg steike and 3 hig boom. Bn i Tulampepn y one. Granite C oo inthe older placer days yielded a rich harvest; of gold and 'platinum, and its upper are still rieh o Ay pat, like. the Tulameen, diffi- cult to work. Up there too, there are ledges of Sold and platinum to be dis- co HER Er th - Ty ; ey Stmnont rocks nas. with "the yellow metal - Ix. vigible fo the naked eye. There will "be. ung doing on Stegmboat. -- SP) e Similka- meen and its bra re have greater indications and leds praspecting done for- lode. and platingm than any distriet 1 know of in British Columbia, 1t ir almost a virgin field for the lode gold and: platintitn hunter. ¥ Up to Mother. A Toronto WAUBIASHIT 2 agent hir. ed as office boy a lad who had Just left &chool.§ The boy 'was slow and stupid, --d alter two weeks trial the manufac- tree's agent dismissed him on a Sat urday noon. "Yours discharged," be said. "The bao 'will give you your pay. Don't coma 8 back here again. On the Meo got down the office staff, but ho oY The lad was st Pass 'you doing here?' de- manded the agent. "You were boube ed, 'weren'v yams" i xa, gn do doit do it + gpl 3d ; asthe Vimeert Yickin® | i ever got." + : Criminal Statistics. The criminal statistics for the year ended " périue his oiling ta the whole ni ed aes days of the weel ex |' to handle ||' ° Sseaseseqsesseisevy 15. 1910. Knox Knox Gelatine is granulated; it dis- solves quickly. Eachpackagecontains two envelopes, enough gelatine to jell one- half gallon of liquid. { Each envelope makes one quart.) Knox Gelatine is un- colored, unsweetened. It garnishes the meats, gives body to the jells, stiffens the sauce and gravies, thickens the soup, givesconsistency to the ices and cream and is the basis for Delicious Desserts ice Pure, Plain Sparkling Gelatine ar ravi" ice can) corrce fLanoies) -- -- » - wre 14 pup cold water d prunes 1 cup sugar of ane lemon Recipe Pain de Prunes juic + Rucips Book and Pint Sample FREE + box Knox Sparkling Gelatine sugar and gelatine are dissolved then add epos Thred-tdurths ff v pound of prunes gives a more delicate confection. i i Branch Factory CETTE TT ------ eve: add the kernels from the the softened gelatine: stir over the fire until th nge juice to make one quart in all Soak the gelatine in the cold water five minutes. cook a pound of prunes until tender: remove the stones and pass the pulp through a "thges. acup of shigar ah e _ "Dainty Desserts for Dainty People," illustrated book. and a pint sample, will be for your grocer's same. Address FREE 'Charles B. Knox Co., 500 Knox Ave., Johastows; N.Y..U. sia. Montreal, Canada ~ Monuments manship Guaranteed at Lowest Poss. ible Prices. Bruce & Mullen. cesebessobvesecusnsnss 'Ghiocolates and Phone 640. If You, Are Lookirig for the. Best in GO'TO SAKELL' CO00000R0RACINTN00000 000000000000000000000 _ _-- Latest in Design and Best Worl. A Call of Inspection Solicited: Granite ant "Marble" Works, Pure lce Gream Next Door to Opera House. 220 Princess Street s 0000 c0eOPIRBRBOBNI nday morning the agent | SPECIAL PRICES THIS WEEK 0 EABLES AND RUTTAN AND COBBL FOR €HRISTNAS: WE STORE YOU James Reid, Chocolate Maple Fudge 20c. per 1b. AT iis $M Ss A.J. REES, our sent HOTEL DIRECTORY. DESERONTO, Go to the STEWART HOUSE. Leading Commercial Hotel. Rates, $1.50 per day. JAS, STEWART, Prop. TRAVELLING, GRAND TRUN pt BRANCH RAILWAY SYSTEM LOCAL waddit ALY oz oil n 3 > a 8 Tovens eke S Bhpey Kast. ye C hy. rie : - 2TeEser ld £3BBEEES 1 Train " 4. 5. Jai! . 2 Sther tralng, dally albept Bun- a from os " Iv FUR and 3 For Pullman ac commodation and all Information apply to J. P. HANLEY, Agent, Corner Johnson aud Ontario Ste, KUNGSTONG PE VP, In Connection With CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY. Trains Leave Kingston i201 rm Express For Montreal, Queber, St. John, NR fax Boston, oronte. Chicage, Den ver, Renfrew, Batlt Ste. Marie, Dulnth st Payl: Win uipeg Vancouver SeRitle ritiand and Ban Francisce fan | 5.00 pap «Lord! fer Sharbot Lake connecting with ¢ PR East he | West N FANCY MAHOGANY E SEAT ROCKERS. BLY RR PURCHASE The Leading Undertaker. | Phone 147 PARLOR i EARLY Fudge 166 Princess St 7 igh Clas Tailoring REASONABLE PRICES Henfrew Tues am Mixed 0 Ate rme afdiate points, Mon Friday assengers leaving Kingston at of pam. arr Ottawa at § Pete hore, I Toront p.m 1.06 p Boston am. St +12 Full pa and PP an 1icket , Ontario Street F. CONWAY crn Agent BAY OF QUINTE RAILWAY. Train leaves Union Btation, Ontarie Sent 4 p.m al ( Sunday ox axcepted) to, Bannockburn and » and all 0 Seciite qu Maynooth, a nts on Central ipments via . your . Qulate Hallwe % EN as Lake Ontario and Bay of Quinte Steamboat Co., Limited, spanee ints north, o Bannock- Str. ALETHA Leaves Kingeton dally except Sundays at 3 p.m. for Picton and intermediate Bay of Quinte ports. Full information from James Swift & Co. J. P. Hanley, Freight Apepts. Ticket Agent. p------ Highest Grades ¥ IMiawa, " a --

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