Daily British Whig (1850), 14 Oct 1911, p. 12

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EFFECTS WERE MARVELLOUS When | Tried " Fruit-a-tes y HagpwiCKE, N.B., Jan. 17th, 1950, +1 feel it my duty tp give you a state- ment in respect to the wondeyful cure I received by taking * Fruit-a-tives'. Chronic Constipation was the complaist 1 suffered from for years. My general health was miserable as a result of this disease, and 1 became depressed and alarmed. I was treated by physicians without the slightest permanent benefit, and I tried all kinds of pills and tablets +1 gaw the strong testimonial iu favor of 'Fruit-a-tives' by Mew Brunswick's 'Grand Old Man' Senator Costigan, and T knew that anything he stated was honest and true i en only to help his fellow-men, 1 tried 'Fruit-a-tives' and the effects were most marvellous, THE MASTER OF ET BARON LYTTELTON' HAS PAS- SION FOR BEAUTIFUL. He Was a Great Cricketer in His Day--He Could Throw a Ball 1035 Yards. So Natare study has an ardent and loyal suppo$er in the headmaster of Eton, Canon the Hon. Edward Lyttel- tan, who has kept his fifty-sixth birthday. It claimed Dr. Lyttelton at the age of sixteen when he began to learn to draw trees, which that time onward exercised over him a most potent charm. The ments of cricket notw thstanding, h= has 'during a match gazed with de. light, on stately trees "in verdure Cac Not very long ago Dr. Lyttelton drew in an unreported speech an in terest'ng comparison between musie and 'nature study. "Music," he pointed out, "stimulates the imagin- ation, while nature study stimulates thinks that boys between the ages of eleven and sixteen, the most impres- not be certainly that may as a pleasure, and merely as something useful in afterlife. i | | days and now I am entirely well from all my | Chronic Constipation that I suffered with for years." A. G. WILLISTON. "Pruit-a-tives" will cure you, just as they cured Mr. Williston. Get a box today--take themi--and begin to fel better. s50c.'a box. 6 for $2.50, or trial gize, 25c. At all dealers, or from Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa, ' THAT TOBACCO With the "Rooster" on Is crowing louder as he goes along Only 46c per pound. For chewing and smoking, AT A. MACLEAN'S, Ontario Street. Second Hand Furniture Large Stock of New and Becond- a urniture; also all kinds of Pre- Jars. Call at H. Sugerman's, 242 Ontario Street. Sectional Book Cases ~ Gunn---The Bestale See our line of Book Section8 1a | Golden Oak, Fumed Oak. Early Eng- Library Tables in Golden Oak and Early English. Card Tables, $3 "R JRED phone 577 The Leading Undertaker RHEUMATISM GONE, SAYS DETECTIVE KILLEN. Morriscy's No. 7 and Lini- ment Cured his Knee. "Feels good as new." St. John, N.B., April 12, 1911 "1 am glad to report that my knee is pletely cured of R} ti thanks to Father Morriscy's No. 7 Rheumatism & Kidney Tablets, as they alone are re- sponsible for my cure. 1 was troubled for a number of years, and tried everything' heard of, and needless to say, spent e a sum of money without any results. | now, and my knee 50, $8.50, $18.00, © Dr autocrat, the genus He regards, at all events, puer with catholic ani humorous sympathy, realizing thas | the dunce at school may possess | mental faculties which sotner or later develop. Dr. Lytiglton tells of a boy who, regarded as an idiot by masters and puoils, spent his holi- | n Paris, bought a Continental Jradshaw, studied it intently, and | ultimately knew the times of depar- | ture and arrival of every train; be | eventually beeame, indeed, one of the | | cleverest of ralway specialists i | hand, and t him Canon Lyttelton is almost perfectly | ambidextrous, and when famous as a cricketer he was known to throw a ericket ball 106 yards with his right then, changing over, & throw 't almost as far with his left. | Naturally this gift often enabled | by a quick change to run out | It is said an unsuspecting batsman. ' that this little dodge of his "came | ofi" triamphantly one day when playing for a clerical eleven, and the | victim on retiring from the field wns heard to murmur, "Hang it all! | when playing parsons you don't ex- | pect to be diddled out." | The "Father of Southwark." Thousands of poor people in the | | South of London will regret thet, ow- | ing to advancing age, Canon Horsley | | is obliged to leave his busy parish ol | when brought to the surface ar St. Peter's, Walworth, for a quiet liv- | j jug in the South of England. For | years he has worked zealously on be. | half of the people of the slums, and' | there is scarcely a branch of parish of | :Bay of Quinte were lined with grea |, municipal work in Londonjwith which' | Canon Horsley has not been conmect | ed. To the people of Bouthwark he | has been in every sense a "father of | the flock," and it is stated that he | once refused a colonial bishopric thal | we might stay at home and work in | the slums. The canon is a man with a fund of | anecdote, and describing the odd dress | of English bishops some time ago, he, told a story of the Bishop of Ba Wells, who had been visiting Scar borough. On the way to the train he | he lost his reckoning, and stopped & | boy. "I say, my lad, how far it is te the station?" "About g mile ahead," said the boy, who had never seen & bishop before. Then, staring at the | bishop's knee-breeches and silk stocks ings, he added, "Halloa, guv'nory What's up? Bomebody swiped yer bike?' How Carnegie Got Library Idea. | Dr. Andrew Carnegie told an audls | encet at Liverpool that he had "take! to library forming because his fathe did it before him." Wm. Carnegie's | efforts at library founding were, an | Edinburgh contemporary points out, | pxtremely modest as compared with the work of his distinguished son. Ino 1808 Mr. Carncgie's father was a jours neyman weaver in Dunfermline. He | and two other drivers of the shuttle | met and agreed to convey books they | had in their respective homes to ons | house, The combined libraries figur- ed out only twenty volumes. hel | pioneers were joined by other weavers, | and they agreed to tax themselves 'o | the extent of a few pence per month and from this fund purchase new books. The little institution ultimate. ly blossomed into the Dumfermline Tradesmen's library. -- Westminster Gazelte, He Tried Himsell, A good story is told of a formor magistrate of Winnipeg, who arrainged himself in his own court upon ire chatge of being drunk and disorderly, und dancing an Indian snake dance uy a public thoroughiare? The magistrate took his seat acd rapped for order. Then he called: fonn Blank, stand up!" The magistrate stood up. Then he solemnly tried himself for being drunk and disorderly, and fined himself $20 for it, "Rut," seid Magistrate Blank, ad- dressing Jhumself, "for twenty years you have been a sober and respected citzgen of thé community. In coun. sideration of that twenty years of good conduct 1 will remit the fine." A burst of & 'was sternly re- pressed by the usher, and the next case was called. Romance of Self-Help. The romantic career of Sir William Hall-Jones--who is retiring from tae High Commissionership of New Zea. land--is an example of what hard work can do. He was born in Folke- stone, where his father was a carver and turner in quite a small way. When he left school he was appren- ticed 0 a cabinet-maker in But his hoalth bloke down, and the tors advi im to emigrate New Zealand to save his life. Thelt he worked as a carpenter, and eventu- ally entered Parliament, where he greatly distinguished himself as » member of the late "Dick" Seddon's Cabinet. from, | excita | and 'steadies the imagination." Ha | sionablei period in their lives, should be pefiaded, to. regard nature study~| it of Lyttelton denies that he is an | ' | ment of research, { walnut, | lara 1 ent B= » FOUND HURON VILLAGES, New Chapter of Canadian History Archives' Report. : A new chapter in Canadian history has been giver by the Ontario Gov- | ernment i . report of the Bureau 1 of Archives, by Alexander | Fraser, the Provincial Archivist. The | volume 1s ti t issued + and history of the Huron Indians. | villages of t | rg whgt. is now the were nearly # : County of Sime For the ! their location, w has been a sub- ect of controversy, has been definite in . Montreal, for the bulky veritable mine the result of five Father Jones in Fraser. All been drawn 'Jesuit. Re { formation given in The report is a informa n and is years rk of Rev | collaboration with Mr. { the works have | upon. Not e the' lations' i been published | been quoted, but much of them is | given that has never been published | until now. Correspondence of the Je- | suit and Recollet sipnaries now in the possessi of descendants | in France and Switzerland has also | been secure : Father Jones is ot St. Mary | charge of Jesu t both the G1 South i continents is gon? over the most of North Si , and by actual cal- culation, having refer | cords, has definitely ted the fous villages. His maps are given in the report, as well as nive of the water color sketches of Father Martin, only the archiv. :, but hss Var- | made in 1555 A chronological aud biographical re. cord of the missionaries and mission centres year by year from 1615 to 1650 is given. Letters and records of the period, both in the possession of Father Jones and Mr. Fraser, w the first time. Por over forty years Father Jones has been collecting and studying these records and' is re- garded as one of the leading aborigin- alists on the condinent. He has ap- plied the term Huronia to this depart. and it is now the accepted term on the continent Sunken Logs. On the shore of Lake the Bay of Quinte, the most ps lumbering operations in th are NOW lI progress Hundreds of logs of ocak and black many of them 50 or more feet long, are being brought up from Ontano, in culiar try | the bottom of the bay with grappling hooks operated by powerful engines and» hoisting apparatus stationed barges Some of the lL have b merged over twenty-five years sub- but found to be in as perfect a state of preserva- tion as the day they went to the bot- tom Forty years ago the zg gs shores of the rimeval forests of pine, oak and lack walnut. The pine first attracted the lumbermen and was the timber | really sought for, but every tree went down before the woodman's axe dur ing the winter months . Sn the ten or fifteen years required to denude the country of its forests the bottom of the bay and the adja- cent coves became carpeted with logs that to-day are worth a high price, It was not until this suromer that plans were devised for raising the sunken logs. Divers were sent down to see if there were a sufficient num- ber to make hoisting operations prot fitable. The repyris brought up rv hoisting work is noy in full swing. Some days a scowl or barge and its will bring up hundreds of do!- warth of logs and on two differ- days the returns reached the $1.000 mark An investigation is now being made in sever of which lu conducted on crew bering operations were large scale years ago. Canada's Lunitber Argot. The Canadian lumber industry will furnizh the generous share of hus swelling word totals, if it has not already done so, says The York Post. Timber tructs across border are divided inte "limits" or "berths." The grow- ing timber on a tract is a "stand," and the contents of a "stand" are measured in " which means a board one foot square and one inch thick, and not a cubic foot. To gur- vey a stapd of limber is to "cruise" it, the man who does and his report is a "cruise." Trees are '"'lalled," and the man who has "falled" theg: is a "sawyer." For transportatio\ by water logs are made up into rafts, but "rafting" means hauling a raft by tugs. The cross Jogs that bind the raft together are "swifters,"" and the intervals between the "swifters'"' are "sections." The Canadian equivalent for lumber-jack js "shanty-man."' Going up to camp is going "up to the shanties." that has been burned is "broely." that is to say, brule. Timber is fre. quently cut with four flat sides, bus with part of the original circumference of the log leit between the flat sides, This curv? is the "wane," "and the log so cut?is a "'waney log." An Official Mystery. Years ago, when Lord Anglesey was Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, he sad once of the Irish Secretary of that; pfention the subject to him." how they transacted official business remains a mystery. ; They , Might Disappear. "You want the pockets to run up and down, I suppose?' said the tailer. "No, sir," the irritable customer re. lied. "1 prefer stationary pockets. fou may make the slits perpendicu- lar, however." An Acre Each. If the land in England and Wales were equally divided there would only be a little over one acre for each per- a - SE tomobrie in the gasoline tank. he can always find an opportunity. A "pitcher n't necessarily is out of the box. THE DAILY BRITISH ecord. of an enquiry | Theze | first time ! t records 8 | American | p 0 the re- ee daylignt for | | other rivers along the bank- | dictionary maker with a | it is a "cruiser." | Land | day,- "Mr. Stanley and I do very well i together as companions, but we diffe: | sa totally sbout Ireland that I never | Just | it is just as well to look a gift au! Ji a man wants to pose ax a mariyr he. SATURDAY, CANADIANS IN INDIA. { Four of Them Are Engaged In Mission- | { ary Work In Allahabad. | The Allahabad Christian College is | maintained by the American Presby- terian Mission iu India, but there are | four Canadians on the stafi. Mr. and | Mrs. Arthur E. Slater, recent grad- uates of Guelph Agricultural College | and Macdonald Institute, are the lat est arrivals, having reached India in November. L. H. Werden of Mimico, a graduate of McMaster Univers: il and Stanley A. Huater, | Rev. W." A "Hunter, Jormerly pasior of the Erskine Presbyterian Church, Toronto, are two of the unmarried men on the faculty, and they lve la i" | with the Christian students of the | college. Stanley A. Hunter graduated in 1910 His father is at present pastor of tue Presbyterian church at Riverside, California. D. A. McGregor, who re- | ceived his B.A. and M.A. degrees from McMaster, teaches one of the daily | Bible classes and helps in the cols { lege. He is also Secretary of the Alla- { habad Y.M.C.A., &nd has been suc- j cessful recently in increasing the | funds for a splendid new building. A | baby boy was born to him Sunday, March 26. Prof. Slater is conducting some ex- | | periments in agriculture that are ai- tracting much notice. He taught for a year at Guelph, and went to India to organize the agricultural depart- ment of the college. Two hundred | acres of land have been acquired near the junction of the Jumma and Gan- ges Rivers, and just across the river from the college, and it is to teach the students of India how to grow crops scientifically. All told, there are 1,100 students studying daily in the college and high school of the mission, and a good attendance is ex- HT ELE OCTOBER 14, 1911. _r or Ek This Food-Tonic Quickly Restores Strength A ter ing dice : 0, RAR, TO a - siege of I gold or a ls SOE besides ordinary | ALL OUR PRODUCTS SEAR THE TRADD MARK NA-DRU-CO Tasteless Cod Liver Oil Compound decidedly pl niegt tast to the uanseatmg properties of plan e well-knoga nutritive aile cod liver oil phasphites to build up erry to act on the lungs ract of Malt, which, it itself, helps the ate other foods. 160 NA-DRU-CO Specifics--one for every ill and the and besides weskened a children there is £ a 50¢. or £1.00 bottle from your druggist, National Drug and Chemical Ce. OF CANADA, LIMITED, U4 ET EE ETT TT ie lanned | | pected when the agricultursl branch | opens. Veteran To Hetire | Mr. C. C. Chipman, who for twenty years past has filled the onerous post of commissioner of the Hudson Bay Co., will before the close of the cur- rent year, retire from the active direc- tion of the affairs of the company in the Canadian west. The company is | % mark its appreciation | able servces by grantng tremely handsome retiring pension. Mr. Chipman will, it is reported, leave { Winnipeg, and England is regarded as | his probable future residence. It is | just twenty years since Mr. Chip him an ex- of his valu. man, after a brilliant career in the | Dominion civil serviée, went to Winni- | peg, to fill 'the responsible post of chief executive officer in Canada of the Hudson Bay Co. Since then he has been actively in charge of the com- pany's immense interests in Canada, and has admittedly been a great fac- ' ition in the growth and development of the company's business during this period. Mr. Chipman has been, for two decades, one of Winnipeg's first | 'citizens, and his retirement will be an | occasion of general public regret. Mr. Chipman born in Amberst, May 24, 1856. Dur. |*don; and also, as private secretary is a Nova Beotian, | ing his connection with the civil ser- | vice, he was, for a period, attached to { | the high commissioner's office in Lon- | ! to Bir Charles Tupper, took part in | {ithe abortive trade negotiations at Ot- | | 'tawa in 1888. In 1891 he was commis- | 'sioner of the Hudson Bay Co., with | full charge of all branches of the business in Canada. A Quebec Centenarian. Ambroise Guay, a centenarian;pass- | ed away a few days ago at the resi- | dence of his son-in-law, Jacques Gar- yneau, in Latourelle street, Quebec. mark by two months and two days. i On the 26th of June last, Mr. Guay | 'was the object of a great gathering | of his friends, although he had not | yet reached his 10 years, but his | friends made the celebration to coin- { cide with the St. Jean Baptiste oele- { bration. The celebration was a most imposing one, and the aged gentleman |iwas given many marks of the high | 'esteem in which he was held. |, The late Mr. Guay was born in 1811 iin Bt. Joseph de Levis on the 6th of |\July. At the age of twenty he was a blacksmith at Beaumont, and where | he remained for many years, being | married twice and raising a large fam- ily. He was the father of fourteen | children, eight of whom are still liv. | ing. They are Elnear, father of 12 | 'children, eight of whom are still liv. |1ing; Madame Jacques Garneau, moth- | er of seven children, four of whom are jstill living, and Widow Pierre Rich- ard, mother of two children. | Labor Conditions Sound. , Apart from a general strike of coal | miners in Alberta and eastern British { Columbia, which had continued since so favorable that dcaws Were equipped had | with the necessary mse and the The deceased passed the century { April, there was little disturbance of | {industry in Canada through strikes | and lockouts during August. All the | mew disputes were of brief duration, | {and none of them of great magnitude. | |: The number of trade disputes that | ing August was fourteen, a decrease i of five, compared with July (includ- | ing one July dispute only re ! August), and the same num | August, 1910. About forty-five firma | and 8,144 employes were involved in these disputes, twelve firms and 415 have been in existence in Canada dur- | ried in | r as in | employes being involved in new dis i | putes of the month. {: The loss of time to einployes through | trade disputes during Augusi was ap- | proximately 208,200 working days, | compared with & loss of 308,100 days | i in July and 62,600 in August, 1910. An Accidental Hit, On fe second day of the recent Toronto Exhibition, one of the mea | interested in the pageant before ithe | grandstand, sought out a friend to get ! his opinion of it. The friend went in- to raptures over the realism of the coronation procession. | "What did you most admire?" he | | was asked. i "I liked the detail, replied the | friend. "They paid such aitent 10 | | such fine realistic points as that offi- | jleer who fell off his horse right im | | front of the grandstand. That caught | | my eye' ! "Yes," said 'the Exhibition man 1 if they tre to avoid hard work, + Some people ride in adrehing : soma others are flighty by nature a many 8 graduate av cou of being ich. | Some men think they are ambitions] WI» A Small dainty soda CLI ALR O0<Pkgs. SODAS Try PURITY -- the every-purpose flour for bread, rolls, buns, biscuits, layer cakes, short cakes, griddle cakes, fruit cakes, pies, puddings, cream puffs, tarts, ginger snaps N the making of everything for which flour is required, gives admirable results PURITY FLOUR Among thou- sands of cooks it is. spoken of as "The every-purpose flour." 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