Daily British Whig (1850), 28 Sep 1912, p. 10

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AGE TEN. You' ve Tried the Rest--Now try the BEST! WHITE LABEL ALE leaves you with a satisfied feeling, no matter where or when you taste it. It's that real, true brew of ale you rarely get now-a-days---all flavor and purity. = "3 of d by RIGNEY & HICKEY, 136-138 Princess St., Kingston DOMINION . BREWERY CO'Y, a, TORONTO 1 -- I IF YOU ARE TROUBLED WITH Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica or pain of any kind geta bottle of Radway's Ready Relief; foil Ww BS the directions you find with tha bottle and you will secure fostant relief from palu--a record of more than g FIFTY YEARS as a sure cure for Sere Throat, Rheuma- tism, Neuralgia, Quincy Sore Throat, Colds, Lumbage, Grip and Pecumonia. A POSITIVE CURE W. C. Raker, of 960 Juliast., New Orleans, La. writes: 1 have heen a sufferer from chrouto hefiumatiam for more than &lx months. HgtTaleg my hands TOMY NORA OT EVEN Hafore I had loot Rad w FOR SALE BY fory ORUGGISTS, RADWAY & CO. Lid, Montreal, Canada. i Women's Fall Boots Special for this week at $2.00 Women's Dongola Boots, good, ,..4 weight of sole, short vamp, medium heel solid insole. A regular Fall Boot for $2.00. Lt -------- So ------ ---------------- 1 tt = | with a fine imagination; y | ful affection of Sir Robert Peel, | ferring to the kindness he showed and { mother to one of his children, = You can almost F EEL your strength coming back, as you enjoy a bottle of this rich, creamy, 'Before aawals; with tse and after meals--take it as you' prefer. It will do you good anytime, and all THE DAIL ¥ | QUEEN OF VICTORIA VERY FOND | LORD BEACONSFIELD. | Bir. Carpenter Tells Interesting Story Mustrating Queen Victoria's ° Tne Al Kinds. of Domestic terest in Details. It is a popular heli ef. that "Dizzy - was the Prime Minister whom Quéen Victoria liked most, while Gladstope "got on, her nerves," to quote authority. It would appesr, however, from Dr. Boyd Carpenter's remiinis. censes, that Sir Robert Peel was her late Majesty's favorite Minister, and that Lord Salisbury was regarded by her with slmost equal admiration. When at Osborne one evening Dr, Car- | penter asked Queen Victoria whether she regarded Lord Beaconsfield's nov. €), "Coningsby," us a book which gave a fairly correct picture of English life ! of the time. Bays the bishop | "She looked a little Blank for a mo- ment, as though hardly knowing what | reply to make. Then she pursed her } lips and said, in her quizzical way, 'I didn't care for his novels.' . This | lod to a conversation about Lord Bea- & onsfield's powers. 'Yes,' he was, in { the view Fr. Queen, an able wan, 'Yes--great, J bat not so great as the present™-i.e. Lord Salisbury, then Prime Minister. "She went on to speak of her Prime | Ministers. The two who held high | place in her mind, as she spoke, were ir- Robert Peel and Lord Balisbury. | She spoke with very warm and grate- re- one ! the trouble he took at the time Os- | borne was as a royal resi. | dence. "We owed it to him that we | got this place'." Dr, Carpenter, by the way, tells an interesting story illustrating Queen Victoria's interest in all kinds of do- mestic details. Her Majesty was god- "bus," he says, "she knew the names and | ages of all of them, and there were eleven of them. Indeed, on one occa- sion she set me right about the age of bo youngest boy. 'How old is your | little boy now?" she asked me one | evening at Windsor. I answered, with | true fatherly doubtfulness, 'I think { about. nine, your Majesty." 'No,' she P promptly said, 'he is ten.' And the This was in 1897." Baby of the House. | Sunes was right. { | Bir Philip Sassoon, who was recent ly elected by Hythe, is the "Benja- min" of the British House of Com- mons, Hitherto Lord Wolmer egjoy- | ed this distinction, but he has been | beaten by a year by the new member, | who is not vet twenty-four Sir Philip Sassoon has not only sue- | ceeded to his father's title, but also | to his geeat in the House, for Sir Ed. | ward Albert Sassoon represented | Hythe ever since the "Khaki" elec: { tion. The young politician was edu- cated at Eton and Christ Church, Ox- ford, where he graduated with honors lin history. Like his father, he takes an interest in the Territorial move- ment, and holds a commission in the East Kent Yeomanry. His mother is a daughter of Baron Gustave de Rothschild, so that the pew member is connected with two of the most powerful financial houses in Europe. ww Sassoons have deriv- ed most of their wealth from India, and Sir Philip Sassoon has succeeded to his father's interest in the firm of David Bassoon & Co. A Prudent Editor. . In a d of Dr. Momerie's life | and work "we_find this story, with { which he once éoncluded a sermon: | . When Dr. William Smith was bring- | ing out his Biblical dietiogaty, be being a prudent editor and understand ing the taste of the public extremely wel he determined that the articles should | contain as much science as was oom- Julie with orthodoxy and no more. he one = "The Deluge" was to be | written by a man whom the doctor consider ished it turned out.to be quite hete- rodox. There was no time to procure another, as that part of the dictionary at once, 80 When people "Deluge" isoovered only "See Flood." A fres a was then found, but when his article was | returned it was worse than the first, | It was mot allowed to Rp 5 Dr. Smith silply wrote: ood, see Noah." How he article I don't know. The Life Story of a Sow, dote, which occurs in Watt's "Edin- burgh and the Lothians," you must know Edinburgh's Cowgate and its | ourious buildings. It happened to Dr. Guthrie, after whom a street in the neighborhood, inclosi Horse vid and Co named. . Guthrie on a charitable visit. When he enter ed the room he perceived a sow, of | which the family seemed very proud. "However did you get that great ani mal upstairs?" asked the doctor, pants ing afer his climb. "Ay, but it nevez ws doon!" was the clusive reply. Precocious Fox. Charles James Fox is probably the only man who ever made a maiden in the House of Commons The rainiest day on record any. ia England yas August 6, 1207, Then the sain gu ho a ni" coe duit inches, as overflowing rainiest Race in England. is Sty Head, in estmorland, where the mean annual safe, but when it was fin. managed with this | To get the full flavor of this aneo- vad | clave h : the summit of a tall "land" one day | and come | | find women w health by thi: famous medicine. | every woman you meet Treat good it has heen doing = BRIT) a WHE, SATURT iY. AH Wonderfully After Being Put On A Well Known Food. Hu lor wore T 1 thers may s Abput Baby' by i I . Ha ront Street nto, who is the Agent Tor Hewntion is phper.) 1 in 1 1b, air ti Canada. ght s Poad is « Pruygyasts i panes ar "The Baking Powder With a Pedigree" safeguards your food against wt For vver fifty years Cook's Friend has be- friended thousands of competent cooks All Groen Sell "INDIA PALE ALE- that Grew" Selling fast" because made right Tae TRUE FLAVOR---AND Pure. TRY IT! LABATT'S XXX STOUT Made and matured in the old way THE IDEAL BEVERAGES JOHN LABATT LIMITED LONDON, CANADA 30 JAMES MePARI AND, Agent, RIB King Street East, WOMAN'S MOST Shp He UU MEDICINE! Known All Over The World | ~~Known Only For The Good It Has Done. We know of no ot! has been so successful ia re suffering « genuine testimoniais, r medicine which f women, or received 80 many dia E v3 has Pinkbham's Vegetunle Compound. In nearly every community you will | ho have been restored to Almost knows of the mong suf- fering women for the past 30 years. Fox Creok, N. B,~"1 bave always had pains in the abdomen and a weak- . ness there and often after meals a sore- ness in my stomach. Lydia E. Pinkham's i VegetableCompound } has done me much and I can work with ambition. 1 have encouraged many :1 mothers of families to take it as it is the best remedy in the world. You can pub: Hal} Vin ues the papers." -- Mrs. WILLIAM S. Bourque, Fox Creek, N. B. . In the Pinkham Laboratory at 1m, | Mags, thousand s of are fies containing hundreds of fetters from women seek- ing health, in which many openly state over their own signatures that they live | i regained their health by taking 2 | Pinkham's Vegetable fn phere ff peg . SSFUL - prayer for SEPTEMBER 28, FAVORITE PREMIER A BEAUTIFUL BABY | | Food and a | i 43 baran i was capable of thirty-five again, 1942 BOOTH ANECDOTES. { The Late General Was a Man of Many And Varied Characteristics. Many anecdotes are the DUrber 1 sly, 'What can dim : deacon, 'I should ule was shaving they be doin Ala i nt wouder if nim out charity On another oc talking 1 spor ler "Are you saved?' he asked suddenly the young wan flushed, stammered hesitated : said the general There is a chance SOLE on General Booth "do not even for discussing prayer, General id a story, a story "with a "There was a young cle rgyman ap- punted to a small country town," he "and a short time after his ar- rival a horsy-looking man in leggings stopped him on the street one day, bowed respectfully and said in a trem- bling voice . "If you please would you mind next Sabbath offering wp a bit of a Milly Deans "The minister, of course, assented The man, whose look was worried and haggard, took leave gratefully, and on the next and the two following Sun- days Milly Dean was prayed for from the pulpit. "Then one .afterncon the man leggings met the minister again 'Thank you for them prayers, sir,' said, - 'but you needn't pray no more for Milly Dean.' 'Why?" said the other, she dead?' * " "Dead? saidfthe man in leggings 'No; she's just won the Blue Ribbon handicap by a length and a half' An instance of the fire and feverish anxiety of Genegal Booth to compress as much work as possible into the closing 'years of his ministry was pro- vided on his missions by motor "Faster" was the word that impelled the general ever forward, and it is to be feared that in his anxiety to carry the message into the remote villages that are still off the train track he did not always observe the speed limit He frequently exceeded thirty miles an hour. Y When his chauffeur was getting all he could out of the engines the ge eral's ory was still "Faster!" The car miles an hour. That did not satisfy him. He always wdnted to move quicker. He would sit on the front seat by the driver, whispering every now aad "Faster!" in he shocked, 'is Bram Stoker's Advice. The late Mr. Bram Stokér had a ready wit. Sir Henry Irving, whose manager and secretary he was, once told an amusing story of him. Hardly ! a mail arrived that did not bring Sir Heary a batch of begging letters. One day he got a note from Paris, ran .thus Dear Sir Hemry--As 1 walk slong the boulevard hardly a day passes an which 1 am not mistaken for you. The resemblance is extraordinary, and it is really most embarrassing, and I should be glad to would have be do in the matter. Mean. while the loan of a five pound note | would be much appreciated by yours | 0 [* | sad | | P hrase, 'As sparks in close succession rise'." | ieving the | | i wr) truly. "You'll look to it, Henry "Certainly!" was the prompl reply A day or to afterward the letier | happened to cross Sir Henry's mem- j uy, and he asked Bram Btoker what w had done in regard to it "l sent him a postal Stoker?" said Bir cut." An Appropriate Hymn, whieh | know what vou | order for half | a crown and told him to get his hair | CHEW Llc GEORGES NAVYY PLUG for Sale Everywhere Te Rock City Tosacco Co.Lm. QUEBEC Or a Clean Painted Floor! WHICH IS BETTER? You KNOW wiich YOU Ihink what a difference a wand sgomer hav Yoa iow dimes' worthol M +L Pure know which LOOKS the best Paint would make wbout the end is th2 easnst to KEPP® house. It would vinke some of giean. Better deoide now to A the wood - work look like new - or weahen thiuge up right » y a worn- bare, shabby looking floor 8 tia or no of Ni 1 Fluor Paint, #vic aud span us when you foot walked on it with M+ |, Floor = =L PURE You should use M-L P PAINTS the WALLS eng CRIL- ug 1 0 0 INGS with 8-1 Flat Wail Colors, covered Deiter and lo hy r than You'll Sm ft Lar essior 0 keep mest other paicts. You buy it them oleast snd senitary as well ww Gas all ready to apnil, aa Bri alter fooking. Easiest to Mado of guaranteed pure 1 apply colors are eloaror wisterials, mixed with end Mrigher 1 keeps ite twenty years know FRESH LOOK longest ledge of paint A efissie, sanitary. dor waking for chle, washiab YERY econ made e Paint Punt eds paint gta the suri For Floors Get M-L Floor Paint The Most Economical Paint You Sold | by W. A. MITCHELL - A certain professor of divinity who | was spending the summer in the Scot tish highlands was invited baptize the infant son of the local minister. -- n the tyme for the ceremony ar- ived the gust gave out for congre- gational ~singing a paraphrase mue h | on sue h cecasions. "Let us, 'sing. from the fifth beginning at the seco nd ve ree, favored « he, Io his consternation, the congrega- tion giggled sudib iy Afterward, ask- ing the clerk what he had de that functionary <eplied. "You must know, professor, the minister's name is Sparks, and yonder is his tenth t bairn." Royal Measuring Board. In the gymnasium of Buckingham Palace in London is an upright meas. uring board, on which the children of the King and Queen record their heights every few months. Each has a burning ambition to be tall, and there iz said to be a keen rivalry among them as to who shall be the giant. Before the Prinde of Wales left for Paris the. first time, his younger brother had a slight advantage of him in. size, but during his absence he gained .in width as well as in height. | - Shadow of the Holy Stone. If is a singular fact thet June 21 is the only day in the year that at sun- rise a shadow is omst by the "holy stone" across the altar stone at Stene. | henze, England. The event is always | made the occasion of a pilgrimage at davbreak by members of the Univer- sal Bond of the Bons of Men and many tourists. Btlonehenge is report ed to have been a sun temple. \ Practice makes rect. The more ult a man finds, becomes at it. Some of us are so unfucky that just | aa we foal we are ting fo the ¢ the Cotton droge cut of hinge. - para- | ne wrong, | more expert he! | | } i IT RESTS WITH EVERY WOMAN 10 BE ATTRACTIVE perfect features or atord to have an ut, tired appear No woman, otherwise, « anemi who never Why? and them you wi th The fact she is pale, sickly Oc ause worn look are not fren do you see bomely fexion, the Bright ee > however, for he The healthy con make i Good features, the essential factors, faces are ' tive? the altogether fresh appearance Fhe { ualitics Are Within the Reach Every .Girl and Woman ore the werner petmie wie i health, by using Restoratone Tablets. Prompt ir freshness of youth. It is their capacity atone Tablets stand first. In. short, . tion. Their continuous efect is enfirely be ne properties raise the vitality and putrition f r the blood to a healthy normal Restoratone Tablets have buhdeeds of cases; all you need Jodo is to give ihe WB vieced of their wonderful virty They are rec most 'natural and, therefore, the "best" ir diseased conditions found in girls and w they 3 g sod ¢ omplexion. THE RESTARATOA © COMPANY TOAGHTS, "Camioa ° Dries Hardest

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