Daily British Whig (1850), 4 Nov 1911, p. 12

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Pp RE GF TWELYR. i FOR --arem TORR THRTY FUE EARS really caatd not ive without "Froif-a-ives" | Fanasnvare, ONY Jan, 29th, 1910, "For thirty fice years (and I am now 4 swan over seventy) I have been a tutrible suiferer from Constipation. No matter wit remedy or ysicians I employed, the result wis always the same --inipossible to get a cure. "About two years ago, I read about 'Fruita. tives" and I decided to try them. I have used *Fruit-astives' ever since. ¥They are the fust and only medicine that suited my cise, If it were not for 'Fruita-tives' 1 am satisfied that I could not live" JAMES FROWDFOOT, The greatest remedy in the world for ail forms of Indigestion and Dyspepsia, is "Fruit-a-tises", Doct Lundreds of people proclaim it, - ""Frott-a-tives" cuffs all stomach j troubles hecsvse # makes the liver i actives sttengihicns the kidneys, puri. | StoRM ors 88 well as | fies the blood and keeps the stoinach | sweet and clean, the only remedy made of fruit juices 50¢. 6 box, 6 for $280, or trial size Atiull dealers, or sent ou receipt of price by Fruita tives Lio ted, Ctiawa, Working Men's' and Boys' Boots; also Fine Shoe Repair- Ing done while you wait JOHN GREEN, 285 PRINCESS STREET. eseae 3 : sevesesse 980000es secenend NI i ~- SPECIAL 8 Hot Bovril; Hot Choeolate, Oysters and - Lunches Pork and Beans, Geo. Masoud's ICE CREAM PARLOR. © 468 PRINCESS STH ERY, HEIKO IIIS Fai ~ SUFFERED FIVE YEARS | route for those who came after ard Finally Cared by Lydia E. Piuk: ham's Vegetable Compound. and at las post helpless. "Frait-a-tives" is | i visitor IN GA IT WAS VERY FIERCE WHILE IT LASTED. But it Went as Quickly as it ane The Story of a Visit to Galilee Sea. The sea of Galilee is not always calm. The mcuntains inimediately ad Joingiug it are 2,000 feet high, am through their deep gorges the storm i ds are sucked into the hollow of | the ke, so that sudden squalls come | literally out of a blue sky. Ove charm: | Ing spring morning we started out te (sail from Tiberias to Capernaum. There was not a ripple on the water {or a cloud in the heavens. But when [we were a quarter of a wile from { shore out boatmen noticed a band of | rongh wa er rushing toward us from | the otlier side of the lake. In spite | of our remonstrances they immediate | 1y gave up the plan for making Caper j ban, took down the sall with such foantic baste that they neariy upset the boat and then rowed for the land With all their might and with such ex: j cited urgings to oue another that we | thought them a cowardly crew. But | hardly had the bout been beached ia a { sheltered cove when, the wind was howling down on us froo the moun- {tales and ihe heavy breakers were | foaming mlong the shore as far out | into the lake us we could see. A quar | ter of an hour later the sea of Galilee was again as level rs a mirror, and suly a soff. warm breeze was blowing { over the smiling waters.--Travel Mag: | nzipe, SEWERS OF PARIS. Haw This Great System Swallows Up the Litter of the Streets. The Putis sewer system is said to be the finest tn the world. The observant In ibe French capital soon | notices that Ns people bave somewhat | diferent ideas frow ours Ws to the use { From uf sewers, fur he will see porters throw big buidles of paper down large opea- Ingsnleft fu the curb, and even rags and garhnge | On Shrove Tuesday there is a car uival along the Paris boulevhrds. noon to midoight the crowd thiows piper confetti in such quan. tities that the broad streets are cov- ered with many tinted paper snow | when the Inst revelers leave for home. | to be cleared up. | Parts. | side. Fhe visitor wouders how this mess Is In the morning, how- ever. every scrap is gone. If be bad stuyed out jute enough he would have seen the litter swept and washed right into the sewers. i Perhaps that takes him underground fo visit them, one of the sights of There are nearly 2,000 separate chipnels, some great aquedocts navl- gated in a hont, with walks on either They curry the telephone ahd telegraph eables. eleetrig light wires, | #08 males und jmeutortic letter tubes. ~Telepliove Igview, Matter and Force. There Is no such thing as a loss of matter or force. The so called "eon: servation" of watter and Its forces wag demonstrated years #go by Joule and otber scentists. When, for In- stance, a thing "burns up," as we say, the substances that give out the light and heat are changed, hot destroyed. The wood or whatever the substance happens to be becomes ashes and gas, and If we could gather up all the prod. tetas of the burning we should find that they had wot lost a 'particle of thelr weight 20d that the form of them oly was changed. The eternity of matter was a teaching of the old Greek plliosophers, or of some of them :t least, and the modern téaching of the ennsercation or indestructibility of the FIO of the uniterse would seem 10 corfoliorate the ancient idea.--~New York American, A Trail of Twisted Trees. All wanver of devices have been em- ployed to murk on line of march, but it Is thought that the most curious tethod of "blazing the trail" fs that still to be seen in Africa. In the fear 1880. after a flerce battle with the Abyssinjaps, the. dervishes pur: sued their foes as furjas the lake div itet. The wahdl's 'men Had small knowledge of geography and little to- pograplical Totelligence. So the af Yahee purty. in order to mark the #ing to cule Lhe force on their return Joiner, (i isted the saplings algag the wily ihe IVIug kovts. The war end ed, but the tied, up trees grew and 8, Pa. -- "I suffered for five years | fonrished, fithouzh uncouthly twisted m troubl ¢ way and distorted, and are now the oniy reminders of that uprising of the der vishes. Xe John Euryah's Indictment. The bill of indictment preferred - against Jobin unyan ran thus: "John Bunyan bath devilishly and pernicions- 1y ubsteived from eoming to. church ro bear divine service and is a common upholder of sevgratl nnlawul meetinss and copa 10 the disturbance and distraction of the subjects of this kibgdom, oh laws of oor Soretefen ford the king" le was convicled and imprisoned twelve sears and &i3 months. | tional polities | Bot to talking about earlier politics. | «| mere THE DALY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4. 1911. NAMES AND FACES. Douglas Marked the Man He Wanted to Know Again, "Stephen A. Douglas had the most remarkablé memory Tor faces of any man fn public life," declares an corre spondent. "Upon tP: occasion of a visit to Washington on election day in 3850 the late Colonel John W.: Forney wis discussing the election of Garfield over Hancock with Colonel Harmon of Detroit. Colonel Harmon had been mayor of Detroit and prominent in na Harmon and Forges and Harmon related the story of a meeting with Douglas in New York. { Douglas bad been nominated in Bali | more by one faction of the Democratic Breckinridge was chosen by | party. the other faction In Charleston. When he lLieard of his nomination Douglas was in Nerv York. He entered the Astor Toure, then the beadquarters | for all politicians and the prinelpal | { hotel in New York, and immediately was sarrounded by his political admir- ers. hon. The according to the iat ne, story be told we, put forth his hand | sud congratulated Douglas on his nom- ination "Thank you. Colone, [Marmon. re plied Douglas. "Harmon wre aazed that Douglas i should have remembered his name, for | he had met the 'little glant' but once, ! fifteen years before, and then for but a brief period. After n time he retury- ed and asked Douglas how he was able to call him by name. "'My dear colonel' sais Douglas, 'whenever | meet a man | want to | know again 1 put a mark on him and 1 never forget.' "~Washingtcn Post, ---------------- THe BRITISH CABINET. How Its Secret Documents Are Pro. tected and Printed. Each member of the cabinet is sup- plied with a key which fits the lock of & certain dispateh box retained by the prime minister. At any particular crisis, when fmportant papers reach Downing street. the premier, after perusing them, places them in the dis pateh box and hands the box to a spe clal messenger, who takes it roiind to each member of the cabinet in succes sion. Each member opens it with his key and relocks it after he has read the documents 'ft contains. In this way the papers are prevented from failing into the hands of strangers or members of parliament who are not in the cabinet. Now and agaln 1t 1s found necessary to print copies of a "secret" which | comes up for discussion at a meeting of the cabinet. The document is ent up into many small pieces and dis | tributed among a goodly number of | compositors in the government print- ing works, each of whom sets up his | little plece. and the little plece may | represent only a dozen lines of type | When all the fragments are In type # highly trusted official collects both the copy and the type and puts the fatter | together. The printing of the docu- ment is then done fn secret under the | eyes of this official, and the men who work the printing machine are for: | bidden to handle any of the paper after i it is printed upon.--National Magazine. ------------ Reverse Methods In India. Lady Wilson. the wife of an eminent | Anglo-Indian official and long resident | fa India, in her book, "Letters From India," says: "It amuses me to notice the way the Indians reverse the order in which we do things. For fnstadee. | at home men fake off their hats when } they come into a house: Indians keep on their turbans, but take off their | shoes. We beckon with the palms of our hands turned inward: they beckon ; with them turned out. My ayah lare my slippers fo a row with the toes pointing toward me. The cook begin to read his Hindustan! book of revipea from the last puge backward ami writes his accounts from right to left When the native carpenter uses na tive screws he screws them fa from | right to left aud saws fnward, which makes one nervous." er e---- A Poser. A verbatim fragment from the law courts: King's Counsel (examining witness Did you know~you did not. but 1 am | bound to put it to you--on the 2Hth--it J Was not the 25th really: It was the 24th; it Is a mistake in my prief see { the defendant--he is not the defendant really: he is the Riaintiff--there 1s a | counterclatm, but you would net un- { derstand that---yes or no? Witness--What!-8t. James' Gazette. A Strict Grammarian, #You think a greut deal of your hus band, don't you?" said the visiting relative, - "You hare the wrong preposition." answered Mr. Meekton's wife, with the cold tones of the superior woman. "i think for him."--~Washington Star. Why, Parker looks upon, the struggle with the wolf as a script, Among then was Colonel Har | sporting event.--Boston Tran: 2 HER ENGAGE MENT. i: | It Started Conflicting Emotions at Werk In Her Mother, Mrs. DeGroff drew = deep sigh when her daughter told her that she had be- come engaged to Mr. Bobles. "I suppose 1i°s foolish of me to feel 80 bad about it," she said, wiping ber eyes, but I can't help ft. 1 know it's a woman's destiny to be married, dear, and | bave always hoped that you would marry and be happy. But a mother can never lose a daughter | without feeling deeply on the subject. ! She can mever help regarding it as an | | awful loss-a tragedy. She cannot | give up her littie girl, even to the best | mar that eve: livid, without the deep- | est reluctance" "Rut, mother dear, I shall come and see you often. And yon mustn't Cry as If it were going to happen right away. You wil! bave time to get used to it." "Will 1? How soon are you to be | married 7 1 "Not for nearly a year. Bob thinks | that"-- "Not for a year? What on earth | does he mean by putting it off that long? I dont believe he intends to marry yeu at all, the smirking young | suip! If he did be'd insist on baviog the wedding right away. And I shall | tell him so. Clara, WArTY you next wounth | I'll show bim™ 5 4 MAKING UMBRELLAS. rr ---- The Way These Necessary Articles Are Put Tegether. In most umbrella tactories the task of turning out ribs and stems is left | to other factories making a specialty of those prrts. These are sent to the | mandfacturer, and the man whose work It is to assemble the parts ihserts a bit of wire into the small holes at | the end of the ribs, draws them to gether about the main rod and adjusts the ferrule, In cutting the cloth or sik seventy- five thicknesses or thereabouts are ar ranged upon a table at which skilled operators work. In one department | there are girlie who operate hemyning | machines. A thousand yards of hem- med goods is but x day's work, for one of these girls. The machines doing this job attain a speed of some 3,00( Yon bring Jbim to time, | You tell him that he'll either i or never. Huh! | fL0 A Valuable Aid In , ~~ Fighting Tuberculosis : ose, $s moderg / ¥ are nrecogni for ALWAYS LOOK FOR Tm TRAST Mana on MEDICILL PREPIRATICNE. 1% YOUR HARANTER OF WERCEY CusLIYY i Ys navseating taste and its -CO Tasteless Liver Oil Compound tras ibility it ast tendency to upaet the digestic NA-DRU ian nasty taste and the & have been done away with entirely, ul ate and the stomach. At the properties of the pure st the right proportions, of of Lime, Soda, Potassium, en, f Malt, Wild Che nd Iron. cold or cough "hangs on", particularly witha obild or growing Start right in with a bottldaf Na Dru-Co 3 Wit will quickiy build up the sirer gthto he cough or cold & your druggist about Na-Dru-Co Taste! ss He has {t--or can get it--in 50¢. and $1.09 bottles CHEMICAL C0. OF Cod Liver Olt Compound 0. This Magnificent Doll' N\Stool and Lovely Imported Doll GIRLS. We will give § AGNIFICEN ENCH, | no 1t Is beautifully decorated, has iw full octaves of fourteen keys, full metal sound producer and you ean play any number of lovely tunes on it, Besides A this, the top raises up just like 8 rest Plano. and you have J also & lovel metslophone toplayon. THE HANDSOME =X DOLL 1S GIVEN WITH THE Plane end she is a auty. Over 36 inches tall with fine curls hair, pearly teeth, fully jointed and dressed in stylish dress, fine under wear. shoes. stockings and hat al! compiete. The fovely bench to sit dolly on matches the plana' Al three costly presenia- the magnificent piano. cosily bench 10 match and handsome doll GIVEN TO YOU FREE I you will sell oni three #3 00) worth of the magnificent National Jesellery Noveitigs at ont each. They are handsome novelties, everybody wens them. and you will surely seil them very qblekiy Return our money. when sold, and we promptly send you nil thre complete exactly as represented. Ry our reimbursement gy stem we stand yment of ali delivery charges. DON'T DELAY Write for the jewellery to day Iisetiniike Bol cakes Address The National Sales Co.. Lid., Dept. P 125% >ronte, Oni. LID presents Lal" BT RN "ha EA Bae . | revolutions a minute. After the hem | ming has been done the cloth or silk is | cut into triangular pieces with a knife as before, but with a pattern laid upon the cloth. sewing of the triangular . er by machinery, The covers and frames are now ready to be brought together. In all | there are twenty-one places where the cover is to be attached to the frame The bandle is next glued on, tnd the umbrella is ready for pressing and io- i spection. pieces togeth- -- The Medicine of Generosity. Generosity has wonderful power io 'curing trouble which by any othe: means would seem incurable. The story is told of a poor blind woman in Parls who put 27 francs on the plate at a missionary meeting. A | friend remonstrated, "You cannot af: ford so much out of 'your smail earn: lugs." "Ob, yes, I can." she answered: "I've figured it out and know Just | what I can afford to give." When | asked to explain she said: "I am and | sald to, my fellow struw workers. 'How much mosey do you spend in a year for oil in your lamps when it is too dark to work at nights 7 They replied. 'Twenty-seven francs' 50." sald (he poor woman. "1 found that | saved so much in the year be cause 1 am blind and do not need » lamp, apd 1 give it 10 send light to the | dark beathen lands."--Christian Her ald. -------- * Told Mis Fortune. While crossing the East Boston ferry | the other evening a little fellow ap proached me. saying. "Tell yer fortune for a nickel, mister." After a few words with the young fellow | consented. He took my hand and sald. "At first | thought you were { going to become a rich man, but it's all off now." : I asked him his reason. "Well. yer sve. boss, anybody whe | parts with his money on a scheme ike 1 played vou for will never be ove of them financiers." A I gave him another nickel for his philosophy .-- Boston Traveler. i They Used to Eat Crows. Onr forefatiers despised some dishes which we regard us delicacies. In the thirteenth century. for instance, al though partridges abounded in Eug: land. they wére eaten only by peas | Ants and were .never seen in the | houses of the nobles, Hares, too, were despised by the upper classes, and , even awoug the poor 4 strong preju- | dive esisted against them. On the , other band, gourmets in the middie i The next operation is the | 1 | MaeNiFICENT Piano a AND : $100.00 in Cash . RA 1 GIVEN AWAY ABSOLUTELY FREE VALUE G325.00 """QY" Ion comEcE answexs UPRIGHT PIANO AND STOOL TO MATCH. VALUE $328.00. ANY ease. Fit lor the home of & King and the Keates: prise ew any business dsy from 9 tobat our Iactory ) YHE PUZZLE. GQEPNINIW ORTONOT MOTRAELM XFAILAN The jumbled letters given above represent the names | Canadian Cities To help you solve them we have letter In gph. name The first is Win | tion of all four names | ist PRIZE. -- MAGNIFICENT Finest action and tone, beautiful hand polished Spanish wa ever ulfered Ino contest of this kind. (It ison vl © $28.00 cash $15.00 cash $10.00 cash $25.00 in cash $25.00 in cash 2nd Prize - . - Brd Prize 4th Prizo . - - . Bth to Oth, § Prizes of $5.00 each - i SLO ho» and 28 prizes of 5 sac A 4 well. knows TOTAL CASH FRIZES $100.00 CONDITION %. "This contest enter iplared of PCY. NOW guess Li: rest ". UF Very neatest nnd . W enter, to handwriting 12 years ul os in the contest are awardod f Be nest and you may ag to be (uliilled which we avi newer is received wa 't and telling you of this condition 3 asked to spend a cent $0 a. ployee will be allowed to f a will write ad ( ¢ C. Jadeing ba Gani br th gentiomen having absoiutely no con te nection with this una, Their deeivion i to be sccepted as final. you Address INTERNATIONAL MANUFA 08 ee hh id] { hs | ages ate herons. cranes, crows. storks, | | cormorants, bitterns and other birds pwehich would revolt the least daiaty | téeder of today.~ London Chronicle. -- . Turn About. "Every busband ought to make his y bride a regular allowance from the | Sar." said a guest at a wedding re ; ception in New York. : "This is but just" he continued, { "because from the start , * Peerless Peninsular a. cast-iron range with modern oven and equipment ll CHET HHH JIT and hot water reservoir aad with a low closet under the oven for pots, pans and irons, . y made The PEERLESS is a perfect » his profit not out of { i | beauty and has many a conven %- i { a ln ¥ ¥ what people ate, but | tudy have produged is called | ence not found on other ranges. LN what Ng / lell (a their | | ** Peninsular," : | Take the top of the Peartess 7 FECA No : Nickel ornaments, the number of | x. plates. { lids, the special features or the size ict which 3 i: Ra Ti . do not affect the internal consippc: Yas eR are mterchange it con A wealthy mustard manuiacturer once i y Sand that he It is made in three SEParati they! : y "------ Peninsulge, able ar ich « & tion or hovest materials and work- | 20 and which slide along or lift yO ' 1 say about the same | manship that go into the ** Penin- | "4! Whenever you want to dean ) the fludy. | suldr." So that whid' buving one, you wie that | ® housewife may fuel free to consult "% +. | her own tastes as regards finish and rut the | appearance. If the ran Ke chimney. * Peninsular © she will know that it xs well save some | will give her good bakings for the | least amount of coal, dealer might thing. I's net the coal x-cylinder ca i. oes up the --n The Peerless The PEERLESS Peninsular is a | "ther "on" or "off. modern cast-iron range. Modern, { becaose it has all the advantages of cast-iron and none of its disadvan- MRPrOvE CRS Li range constrac- | tages. "a fact, it saouid be called Vion lmve been made, The flues | 8 combination range---a combina- 1 widened here oa wall [tion of cast-iron steel. It has the i firm close-fitting parts, the dv- able everlasting frame and the cosy home-like appearance, dear to all women ; wut--and here Wy differs to another, But fron: other cast-iron ranges -- it also every '# . EL Ihins nn quick oven--an oven that cimnge beats evenly on every vide, top and ins hottoni-- x square oven big enough made = to cook four pres at once; and it the sven RET bas n drop-oven door, which is net beset with Jess fuel and the eno § usual on a cast-iron range. striction of the. rasge steong }' Tne PEERLESS Peninsular may Land durable. The perect fange § be had with a steel warming closet wisch these years of In most ranges the oven is That ix, it is getting full heat or none at all, The Peerless Peninsular oven is regulated by rivgany of a siding damper 50 as ti get Just as much heat as you need. "This i an- other way you sive fuel. Get * The Cost" "THE COST of a Range tells more about these Pesinsolar Ranges not a list of pictures and prices, but a book showing that the after-cont is the big cost and bow the " Peninsnisr Luts it down. Yours, for thé using. Clare Bros. & Co. Preston, Ont. Limited Liapidng 5% e rir and wt the same se cond us kept us thinking and working ovr i Prosiest for upwards of zo yours Every yeur | bave we there § weight roduced inne spot andadist || nmin HER i HTH 15 8 WRT (HT FETE R ELLIOTT BROS. glo io

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