Daily British Whig (1850), 3 Nov 1911, p. 9

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INTERESTING EXPERIENCE OF A TORONTO LADY I have seen OXO Cubes advertised a great deal and thought I would try them, so I bought a 25c. tin and found them so satisfactory that I am going to tell the women of this city how I used them, MONDAY night, we were going tothetheatre, so I nlled my brass kettle ind alcohol lamp aud left them in the den with the box of OXO Cubes. We were tired and cold when we returned from the play. But in a moment, the water was boiling, the 0X0 Cubes were dissolved, and we were sipping the most delicious "beef tea" 1 ever tasted. And how we did sleep that night | TUESDAY morning, my small daughter wouldaot take her milk, I was at my wit's end when I thought of the OXO Cubes, 1 brought out the box, let ler open one of the carions, and showed lier how to stir in the OXO with the milk. She said it was 'goody' aud every morning now she wants her "brown milk." WEDNESDAY There is a dear old lady next door who has been ill for a long time, I wanted to make something to tempt her appetite, So 1 dissolved au ounce of Gelatine and three OXO Cubes in a pint of boiling water--then added a wineglassful of sherry and poured into a mold, allowed it 10 cool and sent it to my poor friend, When 1 ran io to see her next morning, she actually cried as she tried to tell we how good it was, THURSDAY Two of the children do mot come from school | at lunchtime, I do not care to give them meat sand- wiches -- yet want them to have some. thing more sustain. ing than bread and sweets. OXO Cubes solved the problem. I now spread OXO Cubes on bread and know that the children have a nourishing and appeti- zing luncheon. FRIDAY Just as we had finished dinner, who should walk in 4 but my brother and his new wifel While I was warm. ing the rest of the dinner, I had the . kettle boiling dropped in a few OXO Cubes and brought in two big plates of steaming OXO soup in a jiffy. After dinner, my new sister asked 'how did you make that delicious soup?" When I told her it was OXO Cubes, she was so pleased to know that she could have soup like mine. SATURDAY 1 came in from doing my Sunday shopping all fagged out --and I could feel myself comin down witha dread ful cold. I madea cup of OXO and felt so rested that I added two OXO Cubes to another cup of boiling water and drank that. When I awoke Sunday morning, I had not a sign of a cold, I am finding new uses for OXO Cubes every day. SUNDAY We were tired of the everlasting eggs A or chops for break- fast so I tried to see what I could do with OXO Cubes. 1 fried a small onion . n slices, with g ; itt butter udtil browh--then . iy RW In teacuplul of stock made with two 0X0 Cubes and boiling water--and added a tablespoonful of curry powder, a little chutney and finally minced cold beef. 1 stirred it for fifteen minutes over the fire and served in a hot dish, isl with beiled rice. Everybody was delighted with my OXO creation. OXO Cubes #re the greatest advance n food snventicr a began to eal and women [carmt to cook. 70 Cubes, agc. 4 Cubes, roe. 1 | { SLACK STIR I srs ad K baht IR STOVE POLISH The easy-shining stove polish in the big can. Not a powder, which must be mixed with water ~=nor & hard cake, which must be scraped but a soft paste, ready to use, that gives a brilliant polish with a few rubs. good for stoves, pipes, an ironwork. If your dealer does not carry "Black Knight" Stove Polish, - send us his name and toc. and we will send a full size tin by return mail, 36 The EF. Dalley Co. Limited, Hamilton, Out. Makersof the {sous "2in 1" Shoe Polish, 'WEDDED IN FAR WEST [TWO FORMER NAPANEE DIS. | TRICT TEACHERS BRIDES, i They Were Miss Ada L. Wartman | and Miss Lulu 0. McKim--Double Ceremony at Wilke, Sask. { Napanée, Nov, l.<Two weddings of, interest to Napaneeavs took place on October 18th at Wilkie, Sask, at | their respective homes, which o wide Ihy side. Ada 1. Wartman, nlm fof Mra. R. Wartman, was wedded to Albert KE. Green, of Silver Stream, i Sask, formerly a prominent farme: at Phippen, Sask., and a few minutes | later Miss Lalu OO. Mehim, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. N. BB. McKim, former- Iy of Selby, and Napanee, was united to DD. W, Uhffe, of Moosejaw, Sask. ! ily the mmmediate friend of the | contracting parties were present. Kev. | iW, H. Stratton, of Wilkie, Sask., offi- jciated. The brides were handsomely gowned in white embroidered net oven twilk. Miss Hazel MeKim, daintily | {dressed in cream with lace trinunings, made a charming little flower girl, while Mrs. Powell played the Wedding | March. After a sumptuous wedding! dinner, the newlv-wedded couples left | | for their respective homes at Silver | { Creek and Moosejaw. Both brides are well known to MNapaneeans, having! | tanght school in this vicinity. i eo annual Thanksgiving supper and | concert was held in Trinity church on ; Monday night and was a success. { i Lawrence 1. Wright spent Thanks- | giving with his father, R. (i, Wright, | Mr. and Mrs. A. 8. Kimmerly left this week, the former to spend a couple of | | weeks hunting near Cloyne, and the] latter to visit friends at Cloyne, Mrs, | | Cheetham, of Buffalo, is the guest of | ! Mrs. W. HH. Boyle. | A CHURCH ENTERTAINMENT at Moscow on Monday | Evening. | Moscow, Oct, 31.--The anniversary | services which were held in the Meth- | | odist church on Sunday last, were] Hargely attervled both morning and | evening, eloquent and interesting ser- | mons being preached by the pastor, [| Rev. J. 8S. MeMullen. The solos rem- dered at each service were given in | goord voice and much grace by Perey | Nesbit, Napanee. | | On Monday evening the Thankagiv- | ling entertainment was given and was | | a success in every way. The chureh | {was well filled and an excellent pro- | {gramme provided. Herbert Treneer,.| FAT.C.M., organist of St. Andrew's | {Presbyterian church, Peterboro, =» | blind Kingston musician of wonderful | {ability, opened with a piano solo. | { Mr. Treneer generously gave five num- | Was Given | bers wnich were given hearty applause here in the immediate tature, and that the present Fmpress would in all pro- | and responded gracefully to several en- cores. Percy Nesbit gave several se; i lections and also responded to encores | end excelled © any former appearance. {Miss Mayell, Kingston, entertained | | with several choice readings and cap- | | tivated all by her rendition of the| jwind, "Whew, Whew, Whew." Miss Ibrena Jenkins, also of Kingston, gave solos in a sweet voice of great range in one so young. The accompaniments were all plaved by Miss Pearl Nesbit, Napanee, in a most capable manner. Rev. Mr. McMullen officiated as chair | man, to the satisfaction of all pres est. It sn estimated that the proceeds | will reach $80. Week-end visitors :' Mr. and Mrs. A, guess, S¢denham, and Mr. and Mis. Wagar, Enterprise, at A. A. As- | Miss A. Hufiman, Cole | | brooke, at George Hufiman's; Mrs. | Poupe, Napanee, and Mr, and Mrs Robert Milsap, at W. Close's; Miss L. | | Woodruff, Colebrooke, at 8. Hat's: | Mr, and Mrs. Frank Switzer, Switzer- jville, at R. Wilson's: Mrs. M. | Edmonton, Alta, at H. A. Baker's; | George Sutton and sister, Miss Jen- | | nie, Odessa, at J. B. Lucas'; Mr. and Mrs, FE. Nigsworth and daughter, Hel en, at 'M. Townsend's; Percy Neshit and sister, Miss Pearl, Napanee, at G.} W. Lampkins; Mes, Z. Vanluven, Na at E. VanLuven's is. D. 1 selatine's; rianee, | | i > CROP CONDITIONS UNIFORM. | Peas. Beans and Buckwheat Below | Last Year's Production. Ottawa, Nov, 2. The field erop port which has just been issued shows that the comparative quality of crops at the end of September was fairly uniform for wheat, oats, barley and] rye, but peas, beans, buckwheat, mix | ed grains and flax were lower this year | by 8 to 12 per cent. The condition of | potatoes, which is 76.75, is the same as last year, but 13.60 less than two | years ago. lhe comparative condition of fodders and root crops for the do minion at the end of September ranges from 82 to Xi per cent., of alfalfa 79.55 per cent., and of potatoes 76.7% per cent., and generally lower in On- tario than elsewhere. The maritime | provinces and north-west provinces give 9 per cent. and over for pota- toes and nearly as good for other field rQois. The increase in the production of the principal grains in the decade, computed for the present year on the estimates of correspondence, is shown to be in round numbers 148,035,000 bushels of wheat, 157,049,000 bushels of oats, 21,711,000 bushels of barley, 664,000 pushels of rye, and 12,360,000 bushels of flax. These figures are ex- elusive of returns for (wo districts in Saskatel swan and of one distriet in Nova Seotia. The average yield of fall wheat in the north-west provinces this vear is 21.68 bushels per acre, of spring wheat 19.82 bushels, of oats 15.93 bushels, barley 32.93 bushels, rye 23.52, and flax 11.46. In Ontario and the maritime provinces the averages are 21.75 bushels for fall wheat, 19.35 bushels for spring wheat, 30.76 bush- els for oats, 30.67 bushels for barley, 18.20 bushels for vve and 12.61 bushels for flax. Including the province of Quebec, but excinding British Columbia, the revised tot of production in Can- ada for 1911 are in bushels as fol- lows : Fall wheat, 26,479,000; spring wheat, 176518,000; rye, 3,007,000) bar ey, A3ATH000 oats, U8, 774,000) and corn for husking, 17,159,300, Dr. Wilkie, a native of Perth, and a missionary in India, is home on & vieit. When he retums to ludia he hopes to take a CPR. {rain to Mon: treal and h re- | i i fine woman, ithen divorce. { the C. THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1011. MARRIAGE A BUSIN Says His Frame-ups. Nov, 2.- Nat Goodwin Marriages Were Business Oklahoma, City, 'Okla ; it is good basiness to he din divoreed," sad Nat actor, weknow lodged expert the subject. "Al of mw first have been propositions," added the divorce likewise" "Take the case of Maxine Elliott. A Maxine, and a fair act ress, apd alvo very beautiful. We mar- ried because team work the stage at the time was good and the box office prospects with matrimony seemed better. When business ceased, Why I'd like know? It's nobody's business." "What : wives best from point Why, Eliza Wethersbee, an Woman. Maxine Flliott w fair, and Edna Goodrich was the worst, She couldn't aet, My marriage with hor was a frame-up," a 'motherly interest' position. That was all." 5 Goodwin, the and an on marriages, the purely except one, Goodwin, our on not, several artistic wife, actress the of view? AIneng By Was wn my lirst English as the side of 2 + WILLIAM BOOTH Head of vation Army known who is years of told an dience in 5 eyesig ig falling hin that he ph able tao &f person A Ty audience and well now x Germany Denmark, t general sald he hoped 16 be able to undergo an oper: tion which would restore his vision New Winnipeg Theatre. Winnipeg, Nov, 2. ~-Sullivan and Congidine announced yesterday that a theatre million over a would to cost dollars, new of a be built bability be devoted to burlesque. The same announcement stated that Canadian circuit will comprise houses at Calgary, Edmonton, Moose Jaw, Saskatoon and Fort William. Low, ' § Mun prominently delegate to the BTAGN! mentioned as United States Is papal On November 11th six strokes of pen or pencil will represent the date, thus : 11-11-11. And it will read just the same backward or standing on vour head, ns 1881 did W. A. Melaw, Picton, was married, on Monday, to Miss P. E. A. Hafli man, of Watertown, N.Y They will live in Picton : PROMINENT RAILROAD MAN STRONGLY ADVISES MIS FRIENDS TO TRAY GIN PILLS FOR THE KIDNEYS "I have been a Puilman Conductor on P. R. amd Michigan Central during the last three years. About four years ago, I was laid up with intense pains in the groin, a very sore back, and suffered most severely when I tried to urinate. [I treated with my family physician for (wo months for gravel in the bladder but did not receive any benefit, About that time, I met another railroad man who ha been similarly affected and who had been cured by taking Gin Pills, after having been given np by a prominent SAR Whe treated him for DAbLEen e is now ing on the road and is . e strongly advised to try Gin Pills which I did,--with that the pai thre take a CPR BE } reed, be | business | "and } to! pro- | au- | = Death of -| Stella, Nov. quarter ! the | d ; William |} proportionate advance of any part of | THE KAISER INDISCREET. His Remarks Concerning Islamism i strongly Criticized. | Noy ~The himself kaiser inte eon Berhin, again brought with a) section of his sabects indis utterance while hend of sereet confersing | Bishop Munsch, {German Catholic missions in Africa. The LKaiser sad that wenaced spread of Islam's religion was {endangering the German colonies, andy that energetic missionary * work must be done to counteract the evil. He idded that he was pldased that "the were teaching the na 1 was necessary tol was not canting | j with | missionaries Lives to work, | teach thems religion, but jt { necessary to turn them into | pletists, Withelin's condemnation of Telam- ism was printed in the leading Catho- | Hie from other papers, | shich declore that # was a short-| sighted blunder likely to undo at one stroke all the laborious work of the | Garman diplomats in reepnt years try- ling to gain the confidence of the Otto- | { man empire, which | work some time! | ago caused the kaiser th be hailed as! of Islam." i condemned of the Hew SPApers [| "The 'rotector {ihe incident | ticularly tactless in view i between Italy and Turkey, I'has is for the reason that popular | { sympathy wm Lermany i. strongly on Turkey. It is not sur therefore, that a semi-offi- | cial denial is issued, asserting that i the kaiser had not said that the Mohammedans were likely to endanger {the German colonies, but that when! | the zeal of the Mohammedan was men- | { tioned in conversation, the emperor | | expressed his conviction that the Ger | {man missions woul not. fail 10 {carry out their work with equal | energy and in accordance with the | missionaries of Islam. I In talking with a Roman Catholic! bishop the kaiser forcibly enlarged on | | the menace of the spread of Islamiem, | | which he declared is endangering the | German colonies in the east. His ma. ljesty insisted that energetic mission: | | ary work must be undertaken to coun- |! i teract this evil. His majesty added | | that religion was necessary to every- | | one, pat it was not necessary that | i ax par: | war | | Tprising, everyone should be pious. | STELLA NEWS BUDGET, William Fleming--A, | | Miller Kiled in Oregon, L.--Both cheese factor- running yet. Wild and i § | {ducks are plentiful around the lower! {part of the island. W. H. Preston; has part of his large farm to Capt. Glen John Reid, Lake Shore his farm, to Walter Wemp, Lake, Miss McKenzie, principal the high school, and her sister, tench- | in Na. 1 section, spent Thanks-| giving with their parents. | Appropriate Thanksgiving services were held én the churches on Sun- | day. Miss PP. Tilson, teaching if Wolle Island, spent Thanksgiving Day {with her parents here. William Flem jing, an old resident, died, on Mon- jday, d a long illness, of heart trouble, The . 'Urentices Boys' annual ball, in commemoration of the Gun- powder Plot, is to be held on Friday levening, 3rd inst. A ' sinzing has been started with ten members, | {The Methodist eonggegation had a suc- cessful pie social last FiWday even- ing. About two-thirds of the village are now laid of cem- eut The council should now paint ithe town hall and have the umsightly pile of old planks removed from the front of it The mill jor {feedd, which Mr. Sandwith had instal: | led, is ding good satisfaction. News has reached here of the death accident of A. Miller, in Goble, | He was born on the island, ! and iprer, lies are ies are geese sold ! has sold | Sharbot | ol after ciub the sidewalks | in Lay {Ovegon fand was a favorite with voung old, : He was a mariner on he lake& for several years before (west, According to the news received; \ he had many friends So his new 3 ! | home, Much regret is felt here at his death at the early one going age of thirty, of the penitent€ary with his wife and children, ! spent their vacation here. Those who went, from here as passengers on' the stenmer Alagha on Saturday did not! arrive back" until Monday morning. Owing to the gale of wind the boat! was unable to leave Kingston. ij At Mount Chesney. Mount Chesney, Nov, 1.-- Farmers ' thave nearly completed gploughing. Reid | Bros. have finished threshing in this | locality. A few of the young people at- {tended the concert in the Methodist {Church on Oct. 30th. The many | {friends of Mrs, Giles Stoness, who has {been il with typhoid fever, are glad (to know she is recovering. Mr. and | i Mrs. E. McGarvey have returned home ' lafter spending a few dave on Wolie | Island. Mr. J. Perry and sons are doing a! | rushing business with their potato dig- !ger in this vicinity. Visitors: Mr. and { Mrs. William Gibson at George Thomp- ison's; Miss Ruth Swift, Chicago, at MeGarvey's; Miss Alice Pat- terson at home; Mrs, Joseph McGrath {visited her parents at Oates; M. Me (Garvey paid a visit at Seeley's Bay; {Miss Johanna Swift, Utica, at John I McGarvey's; Miss Nellie Cashman, Glenburnie, at Mr. Fowler's; Mr. and Mrs. Barr, Burridge, at H. Sear's; Mrs. M. Fowler, sr., at George Drap- ler's, Glenburnie; M. J. Mangan, At {kison, at Mrs. P. Fowler's; (. Stones { Visited at Morren; Mr. Bretnall at jJoseph MeGirath's: M. McGarvey and [Sisters spent Sunday at H. Riack-! (#tock's, Kilburnie. ¥ Rhodesia Population. i Standard of Empire, Salisbury, ---An analysis of the cen sus returns recently published shows that Rhodesia has made the greatest Caughey, South Africa, The returns show that the white population of the Cape in- crensed from WM to 1911 by 3.47%, Natal increased 1,473; Transvaal, 192 - (554; Orange Free State 32,756, and Rhodesia 10,95. In percentage, Rho- desia is a long way in advance of all others, as she shows an incremse of S730 per cent, as compared with the Transveal's 41.56 per cent, the ge Free State's 22.96 per cent. and the Cape's 59 per cent. f ic i J Pals NINR. - -- - . . -- -- Women's Felt House Slippers , ALL KINDS We need not day that you peed a cosy spot for your feet these chilly: mornings. \Yhen you see our assortment snd the small prices attached you'll rescue them from any discomfort. We in- Vite you to see our stock from . 40c. to $2.00 REID & Cl | P.8 In all sizes and in several styles, "iB 4 wear sellsas 0 low as 75¢ and as high as $2.00 a garment. The chances are if you ask for good un- derwear, you'll get 'Phone us for your Rubbers Ly grinding | COWAN PERFECTION "The Real Thing" For Those Who Work Outdoors There is nothing like a cup of Cowans' Cocoa to warm you up after being out in the cold. It is a good wholesome drink, appetizing and refreshing. Nothing but the pure cocos beans, and the best beans at that, go into the manutacture of Cowan's Perfection Cocoa. It is absolutely pure. 199 Do: you use Cowan's Cocoa? THE COWAN COMPANY LIMITED, TORONTO AND ANY OTHER KIND YOU KNOW OF Test it in every possible way, and thus satisfy yourself that ST. LAWRENCE GRANULATED is the purest and there- fore the best sugar for you to use. See Prof. Hersey's report which says that analysis shows St. Lawrence Sugar "to contain 99 99/100 to 100 per cent of pure cane sugar, with no impurities whatever." : Look at the sugar itself--its perfect crystals, its sparkling cleamess. Test its matchless sweetness ; then you will understand why St. Lawrence Granulated has no superior for purity and quality. oo Your grocer should have ST. LAWRENCE GRANULATED in 20 Ib. bags--also by the pound and bagrel. THE ST. LAWRENCE SUGAR REFINING C0. Limited, MONTREAL.

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