Daily British Whig (1850), 11 Feb 1911, p. 11

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A GRAND MEDEINE| THE ROYAL PAGEANT FROOPEPE| ~~ AT'THE GORONATION Bo "Fruil-2-fives" Reclorss The Reith and : Strength of Yould, 2, 1 Jan. ives" tipation and edce, Piles. | s of age and suffe y years with Constipation ied all kinds of remedic were doing me good, As "Fru a-ti § were not sold | then, I wrot IXes, a A After taking four boxes, T felt well-- my Bowels were regular--and the Piles bad disappeared'. N. JOUBERT. i By taking one "'Fruit-a-tives" tablet half on hour before meals--or one or E two at night --old people can correct all i Stomach, Liver and Kidney Troubles. " Fruita-tives " the famous fruit medicine is mild and gentle in action-- pleasant to the taste--yet no. other remedy has béen found to be so effective in keeping old folks in good health, soc, a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25¢. At all dealers or sent on receipt of price ' by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa, AWIFE'S MESSAGE Cured Her Husband of Drinking. Write Hor Today and She Will Sladly Tell You How She Did It. over 30 years her husband was a hard He had tried in every way to stop bus - could not do 80. At last = she cured him by » simple home remedy which anyone ean give even secretly. her will tell them just * what the remedy is. Ehe fs sincere fn this offer. She has sent this SGii valuable intormation P) Ia iadly send it to you if you will but write IBY, oy ans has hobiiog 30 oil, do not money. y write your name and full address plainly in the coupon below send it to her. ] MARGARET ANDERSON, Home Avenue, Hillburn, N. Y. Please tell me about the remedy you used to your husband, as am personall a in one who drinks. y BALM" EY] % PROMINENT PEOPLE 'estify to the Efficacy of the New Scientific Dandruff Treatment, A. E. Lanier, Denver, says: "Herpi- pide has made my grow rapidly." Mrs. Al Guerin, Great Falls, Mont., a find Herpicide an excellent £3. D. Trsek "Nowtan, Wash. says : $the | bim. They are p ' PRE DAILY BRITISH WHIG The Procecent cf 19€2 Will, it is Ane ed, 5s Followed as Closely zs Possible roune The arrangements for the Royal pageant associated with the Corona tion of King George V. are so far com- | plete thst one can now form some | idea of the comprehensiveness of the! scheme. The precedent of 1902 is to be followed as far as possible. The | line of procession will be the same, 80 | that the progress of Royalties will be witnessed by the millions of East and | South Londen, as well as by the more | select inhabitants of and visitors to! the West End. There will be a grand | « EXILED KING'S INCOME | $3,330 a Month Portuguese Government Allowing wim | { At a meeting of foreign Press repre | sentatives the Portuguese Minister for Foreign Affairs said the departure of | the Monarchists had been voluntary. As a proof of its toleration and gener | osity the Government was making monthly payments of $2,220 to Queen Maria Pia, génd $3.330 to King Manuel. | The Government having need of $125, | 000, $760,000 was immodiately offered, a proof of the confidence felt in busi- nessa circles, Reuter's Agency circulates, with re- ference to this aanouncement, the | statement following, which is based, gaye the Agency, on the "highest Por- | tuguese authority," :--""With reference | to the declaration of the Portuguese | Minister of Foreign Affairs concern- |. ing the toleration and generosity dis- | played by the Republic towards the | Royal family, Queen Maria Pia's dow- | ery was settled in an Act approved by | tire Portuguese and Italian Chambers | before Her Majesty's marriage with | late King Dom Luiz, and is an international agreement binding on | whatever Government may be in| power in Lisbon, i "As to King Manuel, His Majesty | has so far received no sums except | those derived from the estates of the House of Braganza, which constitute | his personal property, and there can, | therefore, he no question of any dis- | play of toleration and generosity by. the Republican Government. | "With regard to the future, King | Manuel has never abdicated his rights | to the crown of Portugal, and he fs determined always to maintain them, | even if he were arbitrarily deprived of property which is undeniably his by law." A SCOTTISH EXPLORER The Remains of Major Laing Have | ; Been Found i SE A correspondent writing from Tim- | buctoo announces the discovery of the | remains of the Scottish explorer Ma- | jor Alexander Gordon Laing, who was | murdered by natives in 1826 between | Timbuctoo and Arawan while explor- | fig th sources of the Niger on be | half of the British Government. Major Laing, who was the son of a classical teacher in Edinburgh, was | an African traveller of considerable | repute. At the outset of his career he | entered the Army, and while serving | In the West Indies was appointed a! lHeutenant aff adjutant. In 1819 he! was sent to Slerra Leone, where he! was seized with' fever, and narrowly | escaped death. He subsequently dis- | tinguished himself in the Ashantee | war, and in 1826 he was promoted to | the rank of captain and major. 'Later | he was attached to an expedition ap | pointed to explore the course of the! Niger, and while engaged in this work he was treacherously assassinated by bis guides. NOVEL EYEGLASSES Short-8ighted Persons He Enlarge the image om the Retina ot A German inventor Tins devised what | he calls telegocope eyeglasses. They are intended for the use of short: sighted persons by the very simple means of enlarging the image on the retina. They are especially designed for that class of nearsighted people who cannot wear the ordinary simply corrected glasses. . The monocle combination consists of two parts united in a single metal | frame, a front objective lens or collec: tor and a second nearer the eye to disperse the rays at the proper angle to make the correction for the degree of myopy in question. When properly P ibed and made the two lenses have such relation to each other that distortion, next the face they have tiny concave mirrors which may be extended side- ways or bho fol back so as not to show. They gi has normal sight, an imsge of what It going on almost directly behind man secret poli tir, Set 08. or not is not to bo ascettained head-quarters, ------ --------------. Why- is your nose like the V in civility It's between two eyes. ------------------ Sporting Note. "Can 1 get off to go to the ball ered that the varied units that make ed t of the principles of justice, self-govern- "The Great Sleeper" where, and was often quité oblivious of the chaFges political opponents were hurling &t him. 2 he wanted to, "forty winks" on the benehes. 5 hour In sn easy chair retu fresh the wearer, If he his work - - invented which is air if, '# tight, and 1» and sealed with the owner's la ARE ne or Sheep | Kansas City Swarr. Shee, orado were marketed at . the naval review at Spithead, and probs- bly a military review. As the Over Sea Dominions of the Empire will be well represented, and the great and suiall Powers of the world, the people will once more have a unique and pow- erful illust-ation of what the British Empire signifies . When it is consid: up the British Empire have been wehd- by a generous application ment, and religious and political lib erty, citizens of the British Empire may well indulge in the festivity of the prospect of this great fact being re- presented once more in the metropolis of the world inn a way that will strengthen the strong bonds that al ready hold them. AAA FORTY WINKS 1. Lord Pglmerston was nicknamed 2. Mr. Gladstone could sleep any- 3. William Pitt could sleep whenever 4 Lord Hartington often enjoyed 5 Mr. Lloyd-George after half am A mew type of milk can has been Pilled at the dairy, the to the last drop. ak : on Peas. p fattened on field peas ja Col- SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1911. BS OF NEWS HOM OLD LAND School Childr:n Insured Against Acci- dent--Death of a Famous Jockey ~Not Too Old at 71 A curate of St. Mary's Church, Hit- chim, officiated on Wednsday 2 the marriage of his father, the incumbent of a living, near Baldock, Hertlord- shire, Lotteries at bazaars were condemn- ed by the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Dublin, Dr. Walsh, in & speech at the Irish capital, as an inducement to sambling. . . . The Northampton Education Com- mittee has decided to insure all chil- dren attending the elementary schools against accidents while they are under the control of the authority. x It was stated at Dublin on Tuesday that a lamp inspector employed by the Belfast Corporation had saved $1,000 out of & salary of $10 a week. Al though eighty-six years old, he worked almost to the day of his death. a 8» Mr. C. Bathurst, M.P., speaking at the Farmers' Club, said small cecal was a most useful article for feeding pigs with, "They eat it greedily; it improves thelr constitution, and 1 have reason to believe that it possesses food value." . - » Mr. BE. V. Horton, of Wolverhamp- ton, who is elghiy-three years old, has spent seventy of those years with one firm, Messrs. Henry Rogers, Sons, and Co., Ltd, of Union Street. For the last fifty years he has held the post of cashier. - ° . A champion bulldog, purchased six years ago for $4,000, and insured at Lioyd's for $8,600, has just died. The valuable animal was Royal Stone, be- longing to Mr. Stephenson, of Leeds, and it had won four championships and morg than 600 prizes. . . ». The Marquis of Exeter has remitted half a yedr's rent to those agricultur ists who were until recently his ten- ants in the Bourne district of Lincoln- shire, and have suffered by the fecent floods. The total amount of the re mission is said to be upwards of $2,600. . A od The parishioners of St. Stephen's Church have decided to request the Rev. J. W. Pratt to reecasider his de- cision to resign his living, as, not- withétanding bis advanced age of seventy-one years, they consider he has many years of fruitful work before him still. " ul . » » An old woman of seventy-six, iiving at Clavering, Essex, who has been in receipt of out-relief from the Saffron Walden Guardians, has, owing to the state of her health, been compelled to g0 inte the workhouse. After her re- moval $176 in gold and $100 in silver were found in her Clothing. . . The death occurred at Newmarket of Harry Parry, who in the sixties and seventies was one of the . foremost jockeys on the English Turf. He rode for the Duke of Beaufort, Baron Roths- child, Lord Wilton, Prince Soltykeff, and M. Lefevre, and his successes in: cluded the Csarewitch, the One Thou- sand Guineas, énd "the Royal Hunt Cup, { . Sir G. L. Gomme, Clerk to the Lon- don County Council, believes that the Roman boat recently discovered on the site of the new County Hall at Westminster Bridge, is probably a relic of the first fleet formed to pro- tect the shores of Britain. A coin of Allectus, which was found in the boat, points to its date being about 293-296 A.D. * . . The Bishop of Southwéll, speaking at Mansfield, stated that one of the grestest problems in his diocese was the r remuneration paid to the bre ig "If 1 could only get a good miner's wage for a large number of my incumbents," he said, "they would be In a much better position than at present." . . ' . By 'way of @periment the cane has been relegated to obscurity at St. James's School, Barrow, the teachers having decidcd to encourage industry, punctuality, and good conduct by a policy of rewards taking the form of badges for individuals and banners for classes. Thus if a refractory pupil puts his class low on the list, his schoolmates are left to let him know what they think of him. SLASHED HIS PICTURE The Strange Conduct of an Artist at Budapest A strange scene occurred In the Salon at Budapest the other week. A young man wearing an Inverness cape, the long hair and the slouch hat of the typical artist, was seen to take out a knife and began to slash one of the pictures upon the walls, and before he he had not picture, : 7 i : i ol f1eich ite ails ili HT y ; ie Bek i Pure Vegetable oils and Natural flower perfumes give to the lather of Baby's Own Soap that softening, soothing effect Tm | so grateful to sensitive Beso skins. For almost half a century the standard tojlet and nursery Soap of Canada. Common sense argues against the 'purchase of imitations which all seek - cheapness and not excellence. ALBERT SOAPS, LIMITED, MANUFACTURERS, MONTREAL. " The first pound you use will win your lasting "More bread and better bread" LES J. A. 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