Daily British Whig (1850), 7 Sep 1912, p. 10

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PAGE TEX. | ---- Canada Life Assurance Company The only Lansdian Company whose Policies buve dout tied through Figures hey will age for! you ph siven by J. O. Hutton, ,, 2880, MOTOR CARS For Weddings 2 New Cars in Use "This Week Bibby's Garage F. J. JOHNSON THE LEADING FLORIST . 824 KING STREET. Rows. Carnations, Sweet Peas, and all other seasonzble Flowers. A cholce variety of Ferns, Palms, etc. Wedding Bouquets, Floral Sprays and | Funeral Designs a Specialty. ~ | - "Phones: Store, 239. Conservatories 38% Reatdence, 1212, The Finest and Best, by the pint, quart, .or in bricks, \ A. J. REES 186 Priucess St. Phone 58 + 'Motor Boat Supplies Flash Lights and Batteries. i Spark Coils Repaired. Halliday Electric Co. B.V. on Toronto Street, with two 'additional lots, $1,700. Large Stone House .(board- ing), Earl Street, near Bagot. $3,600, Frame House on.Pine Street with Lot, $1,500: Frame House on James Street. with Lot, $1,500, Double Frame Montreal Street, $2,250. House on Barrack Street to rent, 7 rooms, all improve ments. electric light, gas - for cooking, furnace. Let us quote you rates on Fire Insurance. It -may pay you . Norman& Webb Real Estate. Live Stock, aud . General Insurance, 2 171 1-2 Weilington Street. " 'Phone 730, : 8 for 8sle in all parts ty. $400 to §12.000. Ho nd profits. | i SHE FAINTED WITH THE AGONY "Fruibadives" Cured Her Kidagys Miss MAGGIE JANNACK MouNTaIN, ONT., DEC. 14th. 1910 "1 desire to fet the world know the great debt I owe "Fruit-a-tives" which i saved my life when I had given up hope ! | and all said it was Kidney Disease ad ' ' mentioned the case of Mrs. Fenwick 4 | 'sobad that I would faint with the agony. of ever being well again. Por six years, I suffered from dreadful Kidney Disease. My legs and lower part of my body were fearfully swollen The pain in my side and legs would be Tive different doctors attended me ve me no hope of getting well. kind neighbor visited me and who had-been cured of a sickness like mine. 1 took "Frunit-a-tives" and in a short time, 1 began to feel better--the | awelling went down -- the pains were easier--and soon I was well, 1 have gained over jo poiifids since taking 'Fruita. tivef'--and my friends | look upon my recvery as a miracle' (Miss) MAGGIE JANNACK. "Prunit-a-tives'" are sold by all dealers | at 50c a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25¢,--~ | And that you may, profit by or sent on receipt of price bw Fruita. | tives Limited, Ottawa, TEA! Tea Gardens of and af the finest Black at 30c per TEA! TEA! the Finaxt nenlored Cireen and pound, at ANDRE on Act ot Well! From svion, 1 ov F MACL BANS, rio Street. the health- restoring, strength- givin properties of the time- tested famous family remedy BEECHAM'S _.. PILLS « In boxes, 28c. YK COOK'S FRIEND "The Baking Powder With a Pedigree" en feguards your food against alom, For over fifty years Cook's Friend has be. friended thousands of conipetent cooks. All Gratuns Sell DANGER PERIOD OF WOMANS' LIFE FROM 45 10 50 - Interesting Experience of Two Women--Their Statements Worth Reading. Wiis Ouk, Ont. -- "At Change of Lite | when doctors could do no more and I was | : A iven u by my. 4 | Minister," has ir [ belt visited; { mad { for i Tast | experimints | eager interest | Canada | revolution in | pow | B : all ! requires power ! wants to do | and | keep his two ho | would register on | any excess over the | Mr. | of the | the motor can be 1 anywhere { to the barn to thresh or fill the silo, | farmer and reorganize the farm," i live on the farm is becauss they havef | with | esif | ging frantically i hi | will figure largely 5 | Last Trek" as Emesson Hough called { tim ov the population-bearing quali- THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, ~ |"YDICE" FOR FARMERS HON. ADAM BECK'S POWER EX- PERIMENTS, Do With Regenerate teorganize. the What the Farmer Can Eletrical Power--To the Farmer and Farm, . ! Hon. Adam Beck, Ontarid®s "Power preparation an- ex which. ho pre farms in the poewar hibition outfit wit hoses having the temo ons of el etric np One townshir the purpose of proving ineeonerets i ion, the econ and d of the electric pr 5. Mr will be watihed by farme 1 his success w rural According to the mates it will be | two horse or to lines at $25 a year v-all the work on plowing, threshing, and filling the The farmer with two horse- r will be 'able to light his farm, to chop feed. eut wood, pump af, drive a churn, milk, operate a eam separator, cook, wash and do the other household work which the ns: sirabilit Bec witty aver mean 8 for vairman's esti to supply farmers on This pawerwill the farm except ssible the to do all these but he never them all at one time, arranging his work he can so-power always em- special automatic cut-off separate meter two horse-power He will not be. able things at dne time, by A ployed. a peak For the heavier farm proepsses Hon, 'Beek "will adopt the traveling motor wagon. It will take the place steam engine at the threshing With the assistance of a cable hook on to the line the fields bec. and run across or for plowing purposes it would be hiteh up to an eight-disk plow, which ean rip up 24 acres a day "We are going to regenerate the said Mr. Beck. "The reason peaple do not comforts to the a farm COWS, and few give them no eonveniénce: We are .going to farmers of Ontario. I know where "they have thirty-five There were 27 of them milking. It took the farmer, liis wife," two sons and the hired man two hours and a half night and morning to milk them. With an electric milker--not the sue. tion process--that™s out of date--he and his hired man do all the work in an hour and twenty minutes. And the milk is cleaner when they have finished than it is after the third straining after hand milking "He can have an automatic feed chopper, fill his hopper, go away to iis work, and com: back after a few hours and find his bins full. "We will give them demonstrations all over the country and once they sep it they won't be without it. We will charge $2 a month at first, but if we get enough on the line in any dis- trict it will be cheaper Everything is given at cost." of Mind. Harold Nelson Show, formerly head of the elocution branch of the Toronto Conservatory, and known for many years as "Harold Nelson," a Shake. spearean stir through We tern Can ada, was practically the first actor to introduce reputable companies anc «tandard dramas to the '"'wilderneds" of town halls that served for theatres previous to a few years ago. It was in Calgary that the careless. ness of a stage carpenter threatened to not only terminate the perform ance of "Hamlet," but to dislocate the star's knea in the bargain. A solid platform had been carelessly placed on the uprights, ther covered a heavy carpet, representing a grassy bank Upon this Hamlet supposed to stand while he addressed) the ghost of his father in. the first act. As it happened, Mr. Nelsbn's first step upon the '"'grassy bank' made the platform sink at one corner so pinching the calf of his leg that he was totally helpless to extricate him- The audiefice, in the dim light had not noticed anything wrong, al- though the stage manager was tog: at the carpet, vainly seeking to help Hamlet continue the Presence fr. Nelson, however, was equal to emergency. He stood painfully at his post, and uttered ekactly the line that Shakespeare had written for Hamlet's salutation 6f the ghost: "Speak!" cried Mr. Nelson, can go no further." "for 1 A Pioneer's Opinion. When the, final history of the great | Canadian Northwest is written, there in its pages Dr. of Calgary, son of the late Dr. George MeDougall, an early pioneer missionary, after whom the McDougall Methodist Church of Edmonon received its mame When asked if he thought the pres. ent rush of immigration were "The John® McDougall, , ithe laughed and said; "Why there is absolutely no limita- ties of this north country! But a man has to have conception--he must see visions. must not be like the ambridge graduate of old who came out to this country in 1579, and as he stood in a learned pose on the banks of *the Saskatchewan River, outside the -uld- Port, said, "Doubriess" this country will remain as it is for the pext century, the scene of the wan. dering savage ~~ the pastare of the great herds!' His speach was recor: i od in The Toronto Globe about that time anid you may read it in the files to-day ~Edmon Journal. Living I» Canada. Canada has so far this year estab lished a Bh wat record for this nerstion in the ocqst of living The |. partment of Labér officials have been in igating the situ. oe" chat wiht ve a Tr on the 'entire field of consumption and production. y Romeq on the allff SEP PEMRER. 7 ' w= THEATRES IN IND'A Agiatic - Mind Prod Qt eer Effects SATURDAY, 1912 5s Mysteri Discov ces «1 nd dance act bal en lessons Irom would have known height of the terpsicher shuffle your feet ~monotont half 'an hour while # body to poses, remin cal doll in a Christmas Occasionally she varied her » ance by entering with a mi eous backing of light brown figures in | short skirts that might ha been | girls or female impersqnators for all] one. could judge by their symmetry or | their other charms: 11 It is a curious thing how the East. erns in their attempts to assimilate | Western ideas have got our drama! "muddled. Shakespeare is constantly | performed now in India, but usually | with musical comedy interpolations i ; that make the deceased playwright of | Xetreved i Avon look like a comic opera libret- | "°F of Hid tist. Of course, the management is | TePTeseniative sublimely ignorant of the burlesque | that it was the character of these performances, and Bull ot these q BE a leading native manager assured me | | e coffin. hey that his productions of Shakespeare's | be servants ho plays ate doing njuch to elevate the | dead pérson manual tone of the drama in the native the | WOU he said. atres. I ~ ies obtain One of the most curious sights in| 801 his asgis i ian 3 | Sudan are the native theatres in India is the way | H , : a man of ition and his family at-| OWE tend the show. [lis family probably | he famp < includes a dozen 'vives and these are ey broueht inva closed carriage; heavily | d and led t¢ a special gallery, ! | ho they are parmitted y the | ! play through a kind of gr but uneeen. The Hipdus, follow. instructors this led to a fu native stage han fl our company gol show, not an infrequen nt con India, and calling th native dressing room, sent 3 burra peg (large w "Bring it to me fearful that sow appropriate it. "Yes, master," replied the Before he returned the take his cue, and Lie dle of an impacsi the coclie calmly stage . "Burra veg, he said. On another oceasion, vhen produc. ing a melodrama, it was found that! the theatre which was an old barn- like structure, had several large holes in the roof. One gf these was directly over the stage, and it occurred to thay stage manager that this would be use. ful for the snowstorm in which the | hero was to return home in the last | att. So he ordered a coo te og | to the roof and shake the stage snow ams." Some through a sieve over this hole. It was | Ganthony, rehearsed all = it. when the | him without merey. might came, and the hero stood soli-| red to Mr ' loquising about "The snow--the beau-| have left the comedy tiful snow," there was, alas, no | the y But there was instead a terri of laughter from the gallery. coolie had gone to the wrong hole. { "Play - name tha erform- | ellan- | ip K were flint. Wea graves, expedition i-The 1 by Pre view at ted nald Wingate, the 4} like most to A Lest Play, Grossmith, used to tell a bys Robert Weedon median, ut a play walked on t ab u direct," | Mr. Grossmi | dy,- but lost on hi i "Night after night," meet Ganthony, w 1 liked his play: me bring ye add it he again, 'The. first act was a train,' my existence in down t« "Oh, yesl" marked ba as we quire was Mr. the with to sent 5 Bago, Nobody's busine noah gleeted or left undone. Fhe often times the worked man on the Giving way the liber lity In the laoki vourseli as others see 1¢ Otd Lo ol info wad Daily custom to uaint figures at the foot were. i woul p of London v the good Slory } A he say and he we can't stop to explain, ete, That play was the and haunte months pas a merry 'wag, still pursued | At last it Grossmith that he might | the cab on | night it was given to him. He | Scotland Yard and in- | GOLD PLATED MUNNIE s. From eries ndaon, un rave ements and, Hitherto,' have and were «l y Chronicle, put a box supposed f. Garstang | at Meroe in the | wien sited . | Burlir 1 Egypt, by Bir d; the president nliquaries, exhibit we Sirdar, v English Gantheny, whichf that gentle man asked him to th took the way home The perspiration used to come out on my forehead as I'd say so haven't had time to look at it yet, but I | metimes, 'I or, good, must catch my and d even the re ply. Ganthony's owner four soon as found." ! A HEAVY NEW AUTOMOBILE (OAT. steamer shawl wil be utilized for automobile coats the coming Flue Statinier i -of 'different. colnred Scotch wool, with plaid collar The oviginal shawl fringe encircles the bottom of A white felt osm of the cont, the ALSO ALSO A PRIZE F_$10 for NEATEST. SOLUTION. Some body PRES) his Pozzi Contest t taliing us Eo Jwo "RIES AL ER PRES ANTES br the above Two Sketches, AL » $50 IN GOLD MONEY! Jr qiones. it maybe you. in a lettor or posteard, giving your Name and Address filainty, DOMINION We have large quazutities of PIG LEAD - and - SHEET LEAD in stock. a | d save the | dabdr in the next | come. | 8, "I would .| uld ask me | It was awful. | Is Your Skin Tender? The soothing purity' of Vaseline Cold Cream makes "it mvalu- able for delicate complexions. Vaseline Cold Cream Unlike other cold- creams, it never be- comes rancid: lt is espec tally berelicial when rubbed in gently before and after .motoring or driving, protecting the face from the rough€aing effects® of dust and wind. In order to void impure substitates, always ask for Vaseline Coia Cream, pi [Asist on geiting it in the original packages bearing the Chesebrough Manufacturing Gosipany' $§ name. > Put up in porcelain jars snd tuber. For sale in all the') leading drug stores. CHESEBROUGH MFG. CO. (Consolidated) 1880 Chabot Ave. Offices MONTREAL NEW YORK LONDON 4 K bane of | oceur- | 'DON'T MISS] "THIS CHANCE STRAP SHOES AND SANDALS Half to one-third off ( Childre n's } and Misses White Shoe R1.00 to %1.25, Children's Chocolate and £1.00 and $1.25, sizes regular price, . Cut Price strap, regular Cut. Ppice size $0 3 Cut Price 99¢ King St. 60c Black, 2 ad0 104 75¢ ~ Girls' Strap Chocolate and") vegslae £1.25 to 81.75 atents,; H. 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