Daily British Whig (1850), 22 Apr 1911, p. 14

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

At AN? Of course, it is "spring fever'. But why not keep the liver active-- the stomach clean--and the blood pure -- with A glass every morning is the best possible tonic for young and old. 'At all druggists -- 25¢. and 60c. a bottle. 8 ® i Se HAA A------ GOVERNOR oF AUSTRALASIA. Old English Favorite of am Family---His Is a Member County ed Place, i Sir John Fuller, whom King George! has transferved from the post of vice! chamberlain of the royal household, | to be governor of the Australian col-| ony of Victoria, is, in spite of his modern knightehip, member of an old} cated at Winchester and at Christ | church, Oxford, and was AD.C to | Lord Flgin, when viceroy of India. He is a sportsman in every sense of the! ond, ord of all open air pursuits, which will commend him to Austral-| jans, and is a erack amateur steeple | chase rider, Moreover, he has been a! frequent visitor to the United States, | with Lady Fuller, who is one of the | "hippees of Chaleot, Westbary, in Wile | shire. He has several county sedts, but his favorite home is Ee hall, pear Corsham, which dates from | 1664. 5 { Of course, the house is said to be--or | to have been--haunted, and in this connection the late Dr. Ellicott, bishop of Gloucester, used to tell a story! about it. It seems that about forty years ago there was some difficulty in' finding a suitable residence for the | clergyman appointed to the district, so, Jaggards was rented for the purpose, | the bishop himself going to see' the place. But the clergyman soon began | to have trouble with his servants, who | would not stay in the house, which they alleged was haunted by a wo man in blue, who where. Things became so bad at last' that the clergyman resi , and was succeeded by another. The bishop, on being appealed to, suggested that when the lady next appeared the rec | tor should ask, in a sympathetic man- | ner what he could do for her. This! was done, and with "a seraphic smile' | according to the tale, the spirit vam | ished, never to appear again. Subse quently, the late bishop of Gloucester received a letter from an old clergy- | man in Amerien, who said that an! aged parishioner of his, on his death- bed, had told him the story of a crime he had witnessed in England while a] boy. He had been captured by a num- | ber of bighwaymen, who had their; headquarters at Jaggards, and while there had witnessed many deeds ---------------------------- - -- lo - ; . ; - SIR JOHN FULLER. = So VICTORIA. ! 3..isl customs are altering in Scot Mome is Jaggard's Hall, a Haunt- airs. But now 'this custom is being | changed. county famely of Wilts. He was edu-|gerve red every: nection 'with its of come out, Mrs. Cameron was suddenl- -------- Dance Guests Soup. land, and innovations are becoming disturbingly common. Formerly it usew to be the custom to give departing dance puests 3 cup of t soup to fortify them against the cold morning At a ball recently dancing went on until 'about 4 am., and when the ts were sbout to they were conducted to the tables, where, standing, they partook of--ham and eggs ! change created a sensa- tion, and now it i to a bite or to the ting the ides with breakfast at home. But this is not the only nor most important inmovation at Edinburgh is to have student hotels, ially for women studen ta. A site Ha ey selected, the old Craigmiller course, ntaining nineteen acres. Hers a fine three storey building, modern to the highest in every intment, is to be put up at a cost of $300,000. Here all women students sre to be required to reside ex those living at home or with kinfolk. Each will have a study bed-room of 100 square feet of foor space, fitted with bed, bureau, book- case, desk, dressing table and board. The building wi library, dining b /roome, and a sitting room. The building will have hot water heat in all rooms except public ones, which will have fireplaces. This is due, like the ham and innovation, to successful agita- tion by women. Glasgow has a new worry in con: widely -advertised street railway system. The worry is due to the color scheme of the cars-- red, white and blue. People long since ceased paying any attention to the side panels on which destinations of cars ave indicated. So, when some route changes were made recently, Glaswegians began to go everywhere but home, and then objurgations be gan. Some of these have been really profane, and the newspapers are urging the people to pay less atteation to colors and more to side panels. Tt ix even suggested that all cars be paint ed blue. While standing in front of a store in Shandwick lace the other day, waiting for her husband, Lieut. Came ron, of the Royal Field Artillery, to violence, including the murder of a seized by the throat from behind by a ------------------------ WOMAN FREEMASON THERE WAS ONLY ONE SUCH A MEMHER. . i How She Came to Join the Body--| . What is Seid tebe an luthentic © «Account of Often-Garbled Incident is Herein Set Forth. "Mystic. Shrine' writes York Sun es follows : "Thete hive been many reports cure rent of the initiation of the only wo man Freemason and the authentic facts appeared only riceatly in an ac count given by Brother Condielock, edi. tor of the Seottish Masonic Histori- tal Directory, who made a most care ful investigation. The only woman admitted into the fraternity was the Hou. Miss Elisabeth St. Leger, daugh- ter of Lovd Domerdile, and afterwards the wife of Richard Aldworth. She was initiated under warrant 44 of the D ile, Ireland, (mow dor mant), in ITS. ' "The Hon. Mise Elisabeth St. Leger kad been reading in the library of their house near Doneraile and fell aslecp. When she awoke she heard conversa. tion in the next vroow, and as the undergoing repairs sho found that by removing a brick from the wall she could sec what was hap pening in the room. Jt was a meet- ing of the Masonic lodge. Prompted by curiosity she removed several bricks from the wall and was thus enabled to witness the whole proceeding with- out hindrance. When the meeting was over she attempted to escape but the tyler on guard arrested her. Her fath- er, Load Donersile, and the brothers of the lodge were immediately sum- moned by the tyler. On hearing the circumstances of the case some of the brethren demanded the voung lady's fifo. Others were mote lenient. I he members of the lodge re-assembled ard the option was given of sub mitting to the Masonic ordeal or death. Boing asked te decide, acting on her father's advice, she gladly and unhesitatingly accepted the offer and was then duly initiated and became a Freemason. The story of the woman hidden a clock and all its romawtic details thus vanishes and wo possess Lae trae history Mrs. Aldworth diel in 1733, eighty, and was buried in the Davies" | vault in the old St. Fiauebarre ca-| thedral in the city of Cork. And in the parish church of Doncraile a tab let is erected to her memory. She was the New wn aged TRAE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, APRIL 22 1:1 SAL SODA CT LLETT'S SOLD For Making Soap. For Softemag Water. For Removing Past. For Disafecting Sunk. Clineta, Use only the Best. We Manufacture PLUMBERS' Write for Prices. THE CANAWA METAL €0., LTD. FREE 10 80s a0 To every bay who sells $5.00 worth of o at shor gc. we will send a wan h that hell be glad ro own--t is a come, regular site aad wolght raan's watch. ciel sils uhem we will send For a wich she Il 4 proved to carry -- 3 small, : model lady's wateh, stew wind ig, beavtitu 4 v al a adyl lady 3 auc are good tuneRevper g Send us your ame and address and we will send vou tha cards to «ft » Li and send us $a q gt when sold you don't want a at on ape mas Ar0 vary caw olner a that peopie ary Y ha rade &vored car's " f sord then: ll in & few dayx 1 may try anotoer 101. * You should see the etter YOU sent me SO ou return us the money and we will seod + eelobrate | BN Port Tarde it a ¥ Roashed pou the watch ol you oan keep $1. Bb For Yivey rouble, to sell --they a2 so-much nicer then thom on mght. Ther: are comics, births and spacial motto cards, ete. Ove boy w A nttle girl anys "| have rold all the toese that we get every dar, Write us to send you the cards, today: You can vuake bits of money and get many nice & good game ¥¥ you » acting as our Ageats sell our cards and retern the mosey within I day We yive an vxtea present of OVERLAND MERCHANDISE CO., DEPT. 69, TORONTO SUPPLIES | enon aN SS SR i to . ah Long's Laundry st-class work guaranteed Drop yd and 1 will oa promptiy for i 155 WELLINGY wk and Clarence § THOMAS COPLEY, Proxe 987. : i {| Drop & card to 19 Pine Street whes wanting anything done la the Carpe: | ter line 1 of repairs and new work ai Bardwood Floors of all kinds All orders will receive prompt aiteniion Shep, 4% Queen Street \ \| THE AMERICAN CAFE 183 Wellington St. : The Up-to-date Heatauram ! and Eating Houses, Separate Well lurnished | veseesssesssesssssehesesesd ALSO COAL AND ALL KINDS LN OF WOO S. Bennett & Co. Cur, Nagot and Barrack Ste. y "Phone 941. | @geovsessssesssesesstscsand FOR. HOUSE CLEANING { i GOLD DUST POWDER, 80 CLEAN (Sweplry « pond) other House-cisandng oe quisites. A D.Cou per, Phony w C45 8 Princess dueei. frompt Lsltvery Lo And all Lad 000000 Estimates given on all kinds young girl in blue, who had been car | man whe unfastened her $30,000 pearl ried off to Jaggards, and in the quar-{ yecklace and ran away with it. rels which ensued had been killed. The| Despite a large reward and frantic bishop had his correspondent's story | police exertions, not a trace of the investigated in Wiltshire, and the re-| robber has been found. That Mrs. sult was that the death-bed confession Camerpn was upwise in trotting which he had received from his clerieal-grumind the streets with such a valu friend in America, was shown to be .ghle outfit about her neck is the gene absolutely as related. jn bighisin and she has stated that | Freemason. le married the oldest ---------------------- | if she ever recovers her s she will yg! si the Earl of Brandon. The Kaiser's Example. ~ | not again wear them ly in the aughtes ". ! A singular petition to the German' streets for public inspection. empesor has been forwarded to Ber | a lin by an Ameiican society for The ! ORIGIN OF MENU CARD, prevention of cruelty to animals, It! calls attention to the fact that "in| the fine ejuestrian statute of your | majesty erected at the entrance to | the new railway bridge at Cologne of Prunswick in 1511 he was observed the tail of the horse is docked." | in the intervals of the dinner to be The petition sets forth (says the Mail) seen consulting a long slip of paper that "'your majesty is not aware that | Which reposed at the side of his plate, the docking of the horse's tail con-! to which be every now and then re- stitutes one of the worst cruelties ferred. One of the dukes guests, whose practiced on a dumb beast, Jy Curiosity was aroused, ventured to adds: "In our humble opinion it | ask his grace what the paper was for. would be a mistake to leave the] He explained that it was a sort of statue in its present form. A beauti-' Proframme or cata Te fo of She dishes ful long tall might be put in the | af the Summangied ey place of the stump. Such an altera- | 43 ally appealed 'to his' 4 ~ tion would not only add much to the | co ) Spe hud Hp a later st appre beauty of the statue, but would also the rept, he might carefully age > stop sdverse criticism regarding your | jig appetite for it." The simplicity majesty's feelings towards a humane | ng wiility of the idea, says the Lon eaure."" The emperor has nol yet don Globe, at once took the fancy of replied to the petition. | the duke's econvives, and the menu card i. {from that moment became an institu A Big. Decrease. ition. The. new fashion was so much The agricultural interests of the | admired it travelled far and pear, and province of Ontario, Canada, is the 'was adopted in England and France }- subject of a special report lo the at once. [os bates te the FOrTo| iu puri, Woshingon. om im shies bn Kugines iu Stock for De. that there has been-a tremendous by ooking at the dishes and taking Hvery. crease in the rural population of the | things as they came. They were not province, it falling of 104,488 in. re T Baticular aT owe habitants in th! past twenty-one | . ; , : vears, but he thinks the depopulation Ea Shuclutely installed, while of rural Ontario has now ceased. Inthe a a x The fachion- 1908 the population of the lta | G0 ie of fare used in private man ral regions increases by 28 a woman of strong mind, inflexible purpose and rectitude. of life She was punctual and scrupulous in her Masonic duties and in all her relations of life. The late Colonel Richard Aldworth, who died in 1890, in direct descent from this only woman There are many prepar- . stions that will relieve a cough --few that will cure it. The first class, containing such drugs as Opium and Mor- phine, simply deaden the irritation and stop the cough, but do little or no permanent good. "Father Morrisey's No. 10" does not contain a trace of these dangerous drugs, but is an absolutely safe and scientific preparation of Nature's own remedies-- Herbs, Roots and Balsams. It entirely removes the irritation that caused the cough, Ly cleaning out the mucus, stopping the inflammation and healing the delicate membrane of throat and lungs. Moreover, it tones up and strengthens the whole gn , system, particularly the lungs, and protects against future Like Old Maids. coughs and colds. Boston Weekly Gossip Trial size 25¢. per bottle. Regular size soc. At the dedication of a new fire en 2 gine in a little town on the Mas At your dealer's. sachusetts coast, the following toast was proposed : "May she be like the dear old maids of our village, always ready, but never ealled for." The 1911 Ferro Is the Engine You Will Like Best Carburetion sad igaition twe things on which Will with some of GRIMM'S Delicious ice Cream $ be complete Aftcmoon feas.. 3 3 WAS improved in 1911 Ferro i have been Fo Hd aE Ea Javelle Water Easily Made. should be with which re- move obstinate ink or ink stains, This is made from one pound of sall } soda, one-fourth pound of chloride of | lime and two quarts of cold water. These should be thoroughly mixed, let stand for several hours, drained, and the clear liquid bottled and kept in a cool place. The stain should first be wet with the mvelle water and then rinsed well with cold water Repeat, if necessary, and wash at last in ammonia and water, No housewife without her javelle water to Modern Custom First Used by Duke of Brunswick in 1541, At a banquet given by Duke Heory jo The kind you are looking for is the kind we sell. 1 Scranton Coal fs good coal and we guaran!.-e prompt delivery. BOOTH & CO, FOOT WEST HTREET. 23 Father Morrisey Medicine Co. Ltd. - . Montreal, Quebs nteed in Kingstonby Jas. B. Mcleod. ---------- Sold and gun Chews the The A. R. WI MACHINERY 00. Canadian Distributors for the Ferro (AS over |. rH - y * {sions by the nobility and gentry were 1907, while in 1909 there was oi v written on large cards ela- Way to Health AR wealth of the VOT ormamented wih geciromomic What are you doing to give your children proivee uy, increneet Cit 1 Caricatures. sound and healthy teeth? Out of 11,374 children inspected by a Wn *T -- a the Medical Inspector in the schools of Toronto nearly 3,000 Ef -- a +o 9 cases of physical defects were found. Of these 2,027 were credit- | te [herded he aly of Honcal in No. ed to decayed and imperfectly formed teeth. Sound teeth and good ah Saag pe ob igh Pato bones come from thoroughly chewing a food that is rich in the phos- wn phates. You can't build them with mushy porridges, soggy pastries or sweetmeats. Shredded Whole Wheat contains all the necessary phosphates in a digestible form. You HAVE to chew ' SHREDDED WHEAT The crispness of the shreds compels thorough chewing and a thorough mixing with saliva, which is the first process in digestion. : Shredded Wheat Biscuit every morning for breakfast, served with milk or cream, will build sturdy, robust youngsters and is a preventive of stomach and bowel disorders so common to children. Being ready-cooked and ready-to-serve it is so casy to prepare a nourishing meal with it in combination with fresh or preserved fruits--a meal that is deliciously satisfying to grown-ups as well as youngsters. Your grocer sells it. - MAY AVOID ERATIONS taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Compound Rllowing letter from Mrs how unwise women to the Trains Without Drivers. Germany possesses a 'miniature, most iar: of which chief peculiarity is that its have no drivers. It is used for carry. | ing salt from the salt mines ut Stas furt, and the trains consist of trucks, each carrying ! salt. The engines are slectric, of ERE gn dhe yard with | ane mu on a 5 57 FE EEF Hi 5 2 i i> dk 3 § ii i 7 a if I sale ii g fl I Fl i]

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy