Daily British Whig (1850), 4 Jan 1912, p. 4

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

Sopra ig 'antec Rexall Orderlies as the OXO Cubes are not a substi- tute for tea and coffee, but are infinitely better than either. Tea and coffee affect both the nerves and digestive system. 0X0 Cubes strengthen the nerves, assist digestion and add their own rich food properties to every meal. Try an OXO Cube in a cup of hot watér---instead of tea or coffee for breakfast, THE BEST GOAL be had AT ---- - T00000000000000000000000000000008008 Is to ANGLIN'S Cor. Bay & Wellington. "Phone 66. 000000000000 00000000 CHILDREN INJURED Ordinary Cathartics and Pills and Harsh Physic Cause Distressing Complaints, You cannot be over careful in. the selection of medicine for children. Only the very gentlest bowel medicine should ever be given, except in emor- Rency cases, Ordinary pills, cathar- tice and purgatives are apt to do more harm than good. They may cause griping, nausea and other dis- tresdig after-effects that are fre quently health-destroying. We personally recommend and guar- safest which 0000000000000 0000000000000000000000 and most dependable remedy, we know, for constipation and as- sovinte bowel disorders. We have such absolute faith in the virtues of this remedy that we sell it on our guarantee of money back in every instance where it fails to give entire satisfaction, and we urge all in of such medicine to try itat risk, Rexall Orderlies are eaten just like candy, arp particularly prompt and agreeable in action, may be taken at pny time, day or night; do net cause diarrhoea, nausea, griping, excessive looseness, 'or other undesirable effects. They have a very mild but positive acon upon the organs with ,which they come in contact, apparently act- ing as a regulative tonic upon the relaxed muscular coat of the bowel, thus overcoming wedkness, and aid- ing to restore the bowels to more vigorous and ' healthy activity. Rexall Orderlies commonly ocom- pletely relieve constipation, except of course when of a surgical character. They also tend - to overcome the ne- cessity of constantly taking laxatives to keep the bowels in normal condi- tion: Three sizes of packages, l0c., 25¢. and B50c. Remember, you can obtain Rexall Remedies in Kingston only at our store--The Rexall Store. G. ¥. Mahood. JANUARY SALE Our Annual Sale of Men's and Boys' Clothing has begun Great Reductions on Overeoats, Buits, Boots, Shoes and Rubbars, etc. All New Goods. Large jssortment to choose from, # ISAAC ZACKS our ® ton, Ontario, at $6 per year. er year. Attached is one of the best Job THE WHIG, SEVENTYNINTH YEAR DAILY BRITISH WHIG, publis'ed at 306-310 King Street Kings- Bditio s at 2.30 and 4 o'clock p.m. WEBKLY BRITISH WHIG, 1¢ ages, published in parts on Mon- fay and Thursday morning at $1 a ear.- To United States charge tor ostage had to be added, making p ce of Daily $3 and of Weekly $1.50 : Printing Offices in Canada; rapid, tylish, and cheap work; nine impré.ed presses. THE BRITISH WHIG PUBLISHING CO. LIMITED J. G. Elliots, President. Leman A. Guild, Sec.-Treas. TORONTO OFFICE: Suite 19 and 20 Queen City Ch mbers, 32 Church Street. Toronto. H. E. Smallplece, J.P, representatise. 5 BACTER If any ove wants a clear idea with regard wo tuberculosis in cattle, and the danger of communicating it to children, he has only to read the offi- cial report which is sent out by the Ottawa government. It is the work of the International Commission, is a compilation of useful facts by the Veterinary Director General and Live Stock Commissioner of the federal government. Here is information which every breeder of cattle should have. It covers the nature of tho disease, its catching character, its his- tory, and its prevalence, sometimes to the extent of seventy per cent. of the herd, The fact follows that the milk of tuberculosis cows ' contains millions --ef living tubercle germs. "Young. children," says Dr. Ruther- ford, "fed on such milk often con- tract the disease, and it is a fre quest cause of death among them." Dr. Heinemann, in the Popular Science Monthly, tells how cleanli- ness and coolness in the treatment of milk is. absolutely necessary for the health of the people. Those things should be insisted on by the health inspeator. How may puve milk (a scarce article), be detected ? By chemical and bacteriological teats. Pure milk will not spoil "for many weeks." It decomposes the more or owner IN THE MILK. rapidly when it is exposed to the bacteria that is conveyed by dust and dirt and flies. * Market milk containe hundreds of thousands of bacteria per cubic centimeter, some- times even millions. This milk should be pasteurized, that is heated to 140 degrees F for thirty minutes. 'I'his kills ninety-nine per cent. of the bacteria and makes the milk safe. Now it pays to get pure milk. pays to buy a healthy article, and this article is the dearer ' because of the greater expense in producing it. Dr. Heinemann's conclusion is im- pontant : "On the whole the solution of the problem of city milk supplies lies largely with the consumer. 'I'he con- sumer must be willing to pay a care ful dairyman for his work and in- estment and when we remember that quart of milk contains as much food, and readily assimilable food, as a pound .of beef, and if we com- pare the cost of the two articles, we can not but admit that milk is cheap food and a safe food if duced and marketed under precautions." . There should be a demand for « pure article at almost any cost. Who wants milk for tea or coffee or por- ridge when he knows that he is likely to imbibe With it "hundreds of thousands" of bacteria, and that they are a menace to the health of the individual ? It pro- proper Belleville is, municipally, in some re- spects more progressive than Kings ton. It has tried, and it is assumed successfully, the experiment of an ex- ecutive committee, that is a committee to which all other committees of the council reported, and it has been re- vising the work of all these other committees' works. Kingston never had the advantage of this check, and 50 has not the chance to report upon it. Now the city on the bay proceeds to another experiment. The people have approved, in the election, of 'a reduction in the number of aldermen to ten. The city is getting away from old conditions, and is hoping for results if will get with the small er administrative machine. Had Belleville discussed government by commission a little, enough to show the people "its meaning, they would probably have approved it as cheerfully as they approved the small- er council. In the absence of legisla- tion, which the present legislature may not concede, a city in Ontario cannot have a commission, but it can imitate Staunton, Va., in the employ- ment of a general manager. Staunton had become weary of its municipal government--a board of 'dldermen and . » The Germans an election, tance any election are passing through which passes in impor- that has occurred in many years. Prof. Jeremiah w Jenks (of Cornell), in the Review of Reviews, makes it clear that the campaign which terminates on the 12th will be one of far-reaching con sequences to the empire. The reichstag is not composed, as the parliament. of Britain is composed, of two great parties, and a couple of minor parties which merge usually with the govern- H £ ir i: I : : CHANGING. THE COUNCIL. & common council--and as it eould not dispense with them constitutionally, it did the next best thing. It hired a business man, and engineer. and gave him complete control, The result has been marvellous. "In three years," writes Henry Owen, in the World's Work, "the town has been lifted from mud to asphalt. A fine old town, which was sagging badly at its foundation, has been placed on a sound basis without any increase i city expenditures; and the fact has been established that under honest, capable business management the val- ue of the people's money to the city is increased by at least 100 per cent." The story, as told in the World's Work, of the transformation, of the new place that Staunton has become in a sanitary and financial way, is the most interesting that can be written. There has been economy, efficiency, beauty, worth. The general manager's idea was "to make this the finest little city in Am- erica, bar none," and he has succeed- ed so well that the men who disliked the scheme at the outset are now sup- porting it, and the legislature is be- ing petitioned to wipe out the coun- cil of twenty-two and replace it with a commission of five. THE GERMAN ELECTIONS. of the seriousness of the case. There are certain dominating issues. The first is the high cost of living. This is attributed to the high tariff, which is defended by the conservative and government party, and to meet the demands of the day the city gov- ernment in many cities has voted re- lief money and ordered a reduction of prices. The liberals are the oppon- ents of the high tarifl and they are having the aggressive support of the social democratic party and the amall- er groups that are allied with it. The second great issue is the .war scare. Fear of England is preached to ful elector does not see much sense in it, but he realizes how potent is the slogan. The calming considera- tion, when the burden of militarism is felt, is: "We have been gaining England's trade with other nations, aod England js clearly determined to , this gain, it 7 g a a gashing his head quite badly. every believing German. The thought- |. THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, THURSDAY, JANUARY 4, 1912, BOTH ARMS "BROKEN AWFUL ACCIDENT TO A GANAN- OQUE MAN, Death of John Davis, Aged Eighty- Four Years--G. A, Whi sh b 1 WATCH THIS SPACE. I? MAY BE WORTH YOUR WHILE, BIBBYS™ MEN'S AND BOYS' DEPT. STORE. It you see it in our Advertisement you Can get it in our Store... We do not or will mot eX. aggerate. Injured by Falling on Icy Pave- ment. Gananoque, Jan. 4.--Richard Wells, King street, a well-known and highly respected resident of the town, met with frightful injuries last evening, which will lay him up for some time to come. In going down stairs he missed his footing at the top and crashed down to the floor beneath, striking on his head and aris. Both arms and his nose were broken, and his chin and head badly ent. Dr. Davis was called in to attend the un- fortunate man. At noon, yesterday, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Loney, about a mile east of the town, their eldest daughter, Miss Jennie Blanche Loney, was united in marriage to Wallace Hugh Gray, second son of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Gray, of Halstead's Bay. Bride and ' groom were unattended. Rev. Henry Gracey, pastor of St. An- drew's church, performed the ceremony before immediate relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Gray took the train east, to spend their honeymoon in Montreal Another of Gananoque's octogenar- ian residents passed to rest on Tues day evening, at his residence, Brock street, in the person of John Davis, aged eighty-four years. Deceased was well known and highly respected. For several months past he had been in failing health. Besides his wife, he leaves one son, John, and two daugh- ters, Mrs. William Kidd and Mrs. Rob- ert J. Deir, all resident of the town. The funeral took place Thursday morn- ing, to St. John's church, where re- quiem mass was sung by Rev. Father Kehoe, and the remains were placed in Gananoque vault, G. A. Whitmarsh had a wevere fall on the slippery pavement last evening, Messrs. J. H. De Wolfe, shoe dealer, and W. E. Auston, books and drugs, will move into the new Rogers block, King street, as soon as it is ready for occupation, Miss Nina Middleton, nurse-in-train- ing at Brockville general hospital, is spending a short furlough here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. 0. Mid- dleton, King street. M Agnes Johnston, of Victoria College, Toron- to, spent her vacation here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ceorge L. Johnston, King street west. Miss A. A. Howson, moderns teach- er, of Gananoque high school, who has been holidaying at her home in Peterboro, reported for duiy yester- day. William Garden, located for sev- era) months past in Hamilton, who has been spending the holiday season here with his wife and family, left, in company with them, vesterday, to set- tle in the Ambitious city. Miss Jose- phine and ~ William Bedard, River street, spent some time this week in Brockville, guests of their brother, Henry Bedard. Nr. and Mrs. Thomas Calow, Jr., and family, located near Winnipeg; are spending a few weeks here with the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Calow, Elm street. JUDGE JUSTIFIES LYNCHING. Refuses Investigation Into Hanging of Negro Who Slew Farmer. Muskogee, Okla., Jan. 4.--Declaring the lynchinfgof William Turner, negro slayer of George Cason, was justified, the judge in the Muldrow court refus- ed to order an investigation of the mob which hanged the man to a tele graph pole. Further troubt# is feared, and negfoes have been warned to stay off the streets of Muldrow and Salti- saw. The chain of crime in which Turner spent his last day on earth has arous- ed the town against the blacks, and whenever one emerged from the negro quarter he was driven back by a po- liceman, Turner first stole an engine, and rode into Muldrow. After derailing it he made his way to the Cason home, ask: ed for shelter and then shot the far- mer and attacked his wife. Abuse of Patronage. Toronto, Jan. 4.--One of the most glaring cases of the abuse of patron- | age by the Dominion government since! the conservatives came into power last September, is the recent summary dis- missal of Lyman C. Smith, customs! house officer in Oshawa, Ont.; and Ed-| ward Mothersili, . landing waiter at | that town, } The dismissal of L. C. Smith has | aroused a storm, of protest in Oshawa, not only among liberals, but among conservatives, for the ex-customs offi- cer was very popular in the town and was well-qualified for the vosition. w-------------------- Sale: men's leather-lined boots, spe- cial quality, $2.75; men's waterproof hoots, extra strong, $275. Dutton's, 209 Princess street Mrs. May Periett, a young Chica-| go widow, wae compelled to | dis robe, subriit to indighities, and final ly was robbed by a man who enter- her house as a gas inspector. DR. SOPER | DR. WHI | . | The Speedway The Gordon CURLING REEFERS, with Military Callar, KNITTED GLOVES For Men, $1.25 $6.00 and $8.50 50c, 75¢, $1.00, Handsome, Stylish Overcoats in Smart Designs and New Fabrics, you will take pleasure in owning and wearing. ~ Canada. Never before have our makers produced such splendid, garments They're perfect in every detail. The Senator The Castle MEN'S PAJAMAS, Neat designs in English lons. SEE OUR | $1.50 line | NEW SWEATER COATS Cey- In three shades of Grey. Three- way collar. Something fine. See Our Handsome Overcoats $15.00 ooking for Overcoat Swellness, Sir? It's here, Coats The best $18 Overcoats in The Protector The Bryson Classy Coats That Swell Dressers Will Appreciate. MEN'S WOOL FPELT FF. DORAN, : New Greys and browns. shapes. SEE OUR $1.50 line CURLERS, ATTENTION Don't fail to get a pair of our Scotch Curling Boots Smart Agents for Fowne's and Dent's Gloves for Men BIBBYS ww 78 80-82 PRINCESS. Agents for Penman's Underwear and Sweater Coats Make the Liver Do'its Duty Nine times in ten when the liver is right the stomach aad bowel are ft. CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS geatly but firmly com- liver Sis Cures Con gupation, tion, Sick ; " Headache, and Distress after Eating. Small Pill, Small Dose, Small Price. Gencine mus bear Signature A OUR CRYSTAL BRAND Of Swanderd Granulated Sugar Has been tried and found excellent foi greserying and table ure, Pries slways right. ANDREW MACLEAN, Ontarie Street, @rrvvsrassssasssassesd COAL! | The kind you are looking for is the kind we sell. : SCRANTON COAL | is good Coal and we guarantee | prompt delivery. BOOTH & CO. FOOT WEST STREET. Prrssssascrareressren KINGSTON BUSINESS COLLEGE (Limited) "Highest Education 4t Lowest Cost os Twenty-sixth year, Fall Term begins August 30th. tn ing, Shorthand, Tele Feasts, Civ Service and Mug - pates get the best Within a short time secured positions with railway cor. our ngston, Smoked Kippered Fillets - Bloaters Ciscoes Finnan Haddies DOMINION FISH CO., b. « 20000000000000080000000° ] Highest Grades PROMPT DELIVERY. W. F. KELLY. Clarence and Ontario Streets. PPA veteN0000ROOOOROES Tope's * e080 000ee . aie Rh, > Sind sn : .. i® SONS N0NO0CODIREOGOIOOOS 6 BROCK ST. PRONE 520 ---------- Thomas Copley 5 ye PHONE 987, Drop a card te 19 ine Street whe, wanting anything dong In the Carpen- ter line. Estimates given on all kinde f repairs and new work also. Hardwood Floors of all kinds All srders will receive prompt attention. shop 40 Queen Bireet e aracssasen@ | BUILDERS t ALL KINDS OF LUMBYK AT LOW PRICEN, ASBESTIC PLANTER FOR BALE. ALSO OOAL AND ALL KINDS OF WOOD. S. Bennett & Co. Oor. Bagot and Bares ts Sie 'Phone 41. WE SELL Scranton Coal Co's Coal North End Ontario Street. Sélected from the Celebrated Richmond No. 4 and Ontario No. 1 Mines, the best Anthracite Coal mined in Pennsylvania. Place your next order with THE JAS. SOWARDS COAL CO 'Phone 155. EC A " - i WFORDS ie FL

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy