Daily British Whig (1850), 19 Oct 1912, p. 11

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ol ~ THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1012. . PAGE ELEVEY. g-4 = = For all those 'whose occupations require clear heads and steady Rervas, a4 well a hide in poor itia the ideal beverage, | y Trade-mark on Every Pachage Booklet of Choice Recipes Sent Free 'Walter Baker & Co. Ltd. usbilabed 1700 CAPT. NELSON'S STORY OF THE MARINE DISASTER OFF GALLOUP ISLANDS, He Saved Five From the Sinking] Barge Buckley---Seven Altogether Were Rescued in a Thrilling | Manner. Watertown, NY. Times Onz of the worst marine disasters in the history of Lake Ontario oc- | curred early Thursday morning when the barges H. B. and Buckley | broks loose from (ue tug Proctor and four persons were drowned Three were members of the crew of the H.B., and the ether wis the 16-year-old daughter of Capt. Der rick Derochie of the boat. The crew of the Buckley was saved io a thrilling rescue made by Capt. A. | C. Nelson of the Proctor. i Thoge on board the H.B. who lost | their lives were John DeCant, Stephen lLeBense, Fred lLaHance and Alice, the latter the daughtef of Capt. Alderick Derochie. With Captain Derochife when rescued was his son, Elmer. The, crew of the Buckley, all of whom were rescued, were Capt Moreau and wife and child of Mon- treal and Alexander McMillen of Cornwall and Phillp Truesdale of Oswego. < It is gaid'that there were no life preseryers on the boats and no small boats that could be launched. The survivors of the wreck ar- Yived early in the morning at Cape Vincent and part of them left on the barge Menominee for Ogdens- burg In the affermon. The cap- tain of the H.B,, and his 20-yéar-old son were. picked up by the tug Nie- arsugua, Capt. Nelson of the Proctor gave a th:illing story of the wrack. Im it he said: | 4 JAMES McPARLAND, Agent, 839-341 King Street East. o "In command of the tug Proctor of the Ogdensburg 'Coal and Towing company, 1 left Oswego at 4.0 Wed- nesday afternoon. I had three | barpes, the Menominee, H.B., and Buckley being towed in the order given. They were loaded with coal. "We had fine waather until about | four miles from the Gallpup Islands | when we ran into @ heavy wind com- | ing down the jake from the west. A tremendous sea was stirred up and when ut three miles below the Galloup shoals buoy about two im the morning the tow line broke be- tween the H.B. and the Menominee leaving the Buckley pnd the H.B. helpless in the heavy sea. "When the tow Jing broke loose the steering gear of the Menominee was disabled and 1 had to run to Cape Vineent. 1 put on all steam and reached the Cape in safety and then stasted back with the Proctor to rescue the others. A tremen- dous sea was running and the trip was made with great difficulty. Buckley in Sinking Condition. "When 1 reached the scene of the wreck two hours later, | found "the Buckley in the trough oi the waves, every sem breaking over her, and she A Great . Bargain GoodMarket Garden of 30 acres, frame house, with all out- buildings and furnace within § mile of city limits, $5,000.00 Norman& Webb Real Bstate. Life. Fire, Live Stock, and General Insurance, 171 1-2 Wellington Street. Wak in a si condition. Her crew was standing on the holding on to any stationary object in order A0 be kept from being swept overboard ' They were soaked with water and al- most helplessi from | cold. Among them was the captain's wife and in- fant son, a baby only a year old. "Iran the Proctor as near the Buckley as 1 dared with the heavy sea running. 'The first time [ ran the Proctor so near that one of the Buck- lay's crew was able to jump from her deck to safety. : © "The rescue of the crew was one of the most dillicuit teats | ever attempt- ed. The sea wad tremendous and thete was danger that the two boats would crash into each other and both sink. My crew managed to throw several limes over to the Buckley and we had How He Escaped An Operation And Was Completely Cured of Piles of 14 Years' Standing by Dr. Chase's Ointment. Mr. Chas. Beauvais, \ Doctors say that about one person in every four suffers more or less from piles, and who can imagine a 4 'om PEATH IN A SUBMARINE. Japaiione Naval Officer Revoris Events Almost to Last. Conspicuous among the submarine tragedies of the year, says Current Literature, was the loss of one of lithe finest vessels of this type of the Japanese navy. She went to the bot- with all on board in conse- quence, it is inferred, of some act of negligence. The tragedy occurred in Hiroshima bay, in a considerable lepth of water. The task of rais- ing the sunken craft was accom- plished .only "after prodigious exer- tion, when it was discovered that her commander, Lieutenant Takuma Foatoma, had left a letter written in his very last hour. It is an.ex- pert report of a unique kind, giving smong others, these details of the approach of death in a yessel deeply submerged. "While going through gasolene submarine exercises we submerged too far, and when we attempted to shut the sluice valve the chain in the meantime gave way. "Then we tried to close the sluice valve by hand, but it was then too late, the rear part being full of wa- ter, and the boat sank at an angle of about 25 degrese. The boat rest- ed at an incline of about 12 degrees, pointing toward the stern. The switchboard being under water, the electric lights gave out. Offensive gas developed and respiration be- more annoying, torturing, disagree- able ailment? After trying a few treatments with- worse, the medical doctor Is consulted. An operation, he says, is necessary. Yau think of the suffering, Xkxpense and risk to life itself. and hesitate before taking such a step. In many thousands of such Dr. Chase's Ointment has thorough and lasting cures. this letter for the proof. Mr. Charled Beéuuvais, a known citizen of St. Jean, Que, writes :--" 'For 14 years 1 suffered from chronic piles, and considered my case very serious. I wos treated by a celebrated doctor who could not help me and ordered a surgical opera- tion as the only means of relief > r. cases made Read well- out success, and as the ailment grows § came difficult. About ten a. m. on the 15th the boat sank, and under this offensive gas we endeavored to expel the water by hand pumps. "At the same time the vessel was being submerged we expelled the wa- ter from the main tank. The light having gone out the gauge cannot be geen, hut we know the water has been expelled from the main tank. "We cannot use the electre cur- rent entirely: the electric liquid is overflowing, no salt water has antered and chlorine gas has not de- veloped. We only rely upon the hand pump now. The above was written under the light of the con- ning tower, when it was about a juarter to twelve o'clock. We are "However, I decided to try Chuse's Ointment, and obtained great relief from the first box. By the use of three boxes I was entirely cured. This is why it gives me great pleasure to recommend Dr. Chase's Ointment to all who suffer from piles as treatment of the greatest value" Dr. Chase's Ointment, 60 cents a bux, all dealers or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Limited, Toronto. Thomas Copley, Telephone 987 Drop a card to 18 Pine Street when wanting anything done in the Carpen- tery line, Estimates given on all Kinds of repairs and new work: alsc Hardwood Floops of all kinds All orders wlll recélve prompt attention 'Bhop, 40 Queen Street, Electric Restorer for Men Phosphonul restores every nerve in the body ------------ {0 118 proper tension ; restores vim and vitality. Premature decay and all sexus) weakness averted at once. wi £) Ou & Dew man. Price 334 box, of fwo for adled to headin, dor sale afi Mahood's drug store. Hunters and-- * Trappers » WILL GET THE Best Markat Price, n reatment, Correct Assortment, Quick Returns. by shipping their Raw Furs and Skins REVILLON FRERES TRADING COMPANY, LIMITED to drag the crew through the waves, A line was placed about their waists and they jumped overboard. Mrs. ! Moreau, wife of the captain, shared her loi with the vest. A rope was then | placed about the waist of the baby and he was hauled through the water] and on board. In this way the entire! wew of the Buckley was rescued. | stood by the Buckley until she sank a few minutes later. bw x 'Rescue by the Nicaragua. "When 1 got imto Cape Vincent 'Phone 730. with the Menominee told Captain RSH $0. B10 BABY CANE NEAR DYING Head Broke Out. ! : ¥ £ 3 513 : i: i : ks i I Bets ker ili prea fl i Fal i Alexander Mcllonald of the Niearagua,, 'a boat of the Ogdensburg Coal & low ling company fleet, of the plight of the | barges, and he at once put out to { their assist Some seven . miles from the f the wreck he found | Captain Derochie of the H. B. an {his twentygear-old son floating on a piece of wreckage. They had been in the icy water for several hours and | were in almost exhausted ' condit- lion when they were picked up. Cap- | tain Derochie said that the H.B. sank within five minutes after the tow line parted. When the H. B. sank the cup- tain and his son caught a piece of wreckage and man to keep above wabhr, "The captain's fifteen-year-old dan- | ghter and thiee members of the crew | were unable to save themsdlves in the i 2 Hi 59g 3 b A & fer - ESTABLISHED i728 the old reliable Fim of the Fur Trade 134 and 136 MeGill St., Montreal! Auk for our Free Price List WE PAY EXPRESS CHARGES PEL040000 0004 READ this OPINION Of the Largest Jack Manu- facturer in the Whole World About Zutoo Tablets beert* a sufferer from headache childhood and have used all, or nearly all, of the so-called "cures" on the market. Some months since my at- tention was called to your Zutoo Tablets and I have been using them ever since with the most gratifying resuits, 1 find y cure a "sick" or "nervous" h in a few minutes and leave no bad effect. My family use them whenever needed with equally good re- suits, I have frequently given them to friends who were suffering from headache and they never failed to give quick relief. I find a good remedy for "sour" stomach as well as headache. I always carey them in my grip on the road and wi not be without them at any cost." A. O. NORTON, 286 Congress, St. Boston. af F f $ J that great 'man's strength, "is hand and exclaimed: now soaked by the water, which has made its way in. Our clothes are pretty wet and we feel cold. 1 had always been used to warn my ship mates that their behavior (on an * emergency) should be calm and delicate, while brave; otherwise we jeould not hope for development and ai should not cultivate excessive ; delicacy, lest work should be retard- ed. People may be tempted to ridi- cule this after this failure, but I am perfectly confident that my previous words have not been mistaken. The depth of the conning tower is now fifty-two feet, and despite the en- deavor to expel the water, the pump stopped and did not work after twelve o'clock. The depth in this ngighborhood being ten fathoms, the | reading may be correct. "The officers and men of subma- rines must be appointed from the most distinguished among the dis- tinguished, or there will ba" anpoy- ance in cases like this. Hanpiy ay the members of this crew have dis 1charged their duties well, and 1 am )satisfied. 1 have always expected death whenever 1 left my home, and therefore my will is already in the drawer at Karasaki. 3 lI respectfully request that none cof the families left by my subordin- ates shall suffer. The only thing 1 am anxious about is this, (Atmos- pheric pressure is increasing, and 1 feel = if my tympanum were break- ing. "12.30 .o'clock, respiration is ex- traordinarily difficult. I mean I am breathing gasolene. I am intoxi- cated with gasolene. "It is 12.40 o'clock." Made Successful Flight, Picton, Oct. 18.--Main street Mathodist church will hold their Thanksgiving servic's on the 20th ins', when Rev. Mr. Clarke, of thi Tabernacls, Belleville, will occupy the pulpit. George Boulter won several nrizes on his horses at the county fair. Miss DeVonda made a fine balloon ascension the second day of the fair. She landed on the heights of the MaeDougall farm. Mr. and Mrs. F. Adams have gone to Toronto to spend the winter. Mr. and Mrs. Benson, formerly of this county, have been visiting in Lodi, California, prior to their leaving for Cuba, where Mr. Benson owns an orainge and grape fruit plantation. John Kelly has been appointed man- ager of Sir William Mullock"s farm 'n New York state. Miss A. McCon- nell, graduate nurse of St. Joachim's hospital, Watertown, N.Y., but~ a former Prince Edwarder, has been appointed superintendent of River- side infirmary, of Charleston, 8. Co. G. Clapp has resumed his studies at Albert College, Bellevilla M. Palmer has gon» to Toronto to take a civil engineer course at the Technical school. Miss Edith Mal- lory, after visiting at her parents' home, Bloomfield, for some time, has returned to South Pasadena, California. Miss C. A. Fox was ntly married to J. Walker. Demnorestville, at the residence of the bride's parents. Queen street west, Rev. W. D. Harrison officiat- ing. J. McConnell was married to Misses G. Canehan at St. Gregory's church-.on Wednesday. ey will reside near the'old homestead. Good Advice. Not long ago Lord Kinnard, whe is always actively interested ip religious work. paid a surptise visif to a mission school in the sast-end of London and told a class of boys the story of Samson. "He was strong, and then regained his strength, en- abling him to desiroy his enemies Now, Boys, if | had an enemy, would you advise me to do?" A little boy, after meditating on shot up ex: "Get a | vottie of 'air restorer!" Sirs. Seymour Norton, Deseronto, vas buried on Thursday, deceased hav ng died in Neepawa, Man. She is syr- ived by five children. Even an interesting novel loses most A its charms for a girl when she fiseovers the duthor bad dedicated it to his wife, progress, and that at the same time what i Ty S 3 1 Wail l ABSOLUTELY PURE This has heen proven by doctors and chemists time after time. It is manufactured from 'specially sclect- ed and cleaned gram in a plant that is equipped with every device known to the art.~Every step in th: process of malting and manu- facture is watched most carefully by men of broad experience, under the supervision of a chief chemist. Great eare is exercised to have ev- ery kern:l thoroughly malted, pro- ducing a liquid food, tomic and stimulant, requiring no digestion, in th» form of a medicinal whiskey. | ' 81.25 a large pottle g he The World's Best Toric Stimulant 2 The genuine is sold IN SEALED BOTTLES ONLY Doetor's advice ind an i. TELLING THE STORY OF Pure Malt Whiskey nd Medicine. WHAT IT DOES The results wecomplished by use in cases of stomach trouble, wasting, weakening and diseased conditions are wonderful, It aids in destroving the disediae') germs, and by its building and healing properties restores in a gradual, healthy and natural man ner. In the prevention and relief oi coughs, colds, pneumonia, grip, malaria and bronchitis it It ands digestion, nourishment to the strength to the ten It wakes the old and keeps the ®oung wind vigorous TESTED OVER 50 YEARS For more jihat half a century Dufiy's Pure Malt Whiskey has been" before the public, and to-day it is hetter known and more widely uscd than ever before. This is due to its great curative qualities and to the friends it 8 continually making. Professional men, busi- ness min, teople in all walks of life, evirbwhere, use and endorse it because it has "given them health, strength and vigor. Prescribed by dsetors gud used in hospitals erywhore. Recognized as a family medicin » everywhere tinayes isthma, has no equal giving body more and more of whole vy feel voung strony dealers and hotels request never mm bulk, by itlustrated medical book let Whiskey Co., Rechester, druggists, sent free N.Y. on buffy Malt p-- CORSET SURPRISES NEGRO, Necessary to Keep Women From Breaking at Waist Line. A Southwest African negro, Lu- kanga, after a stay in Berlin, says the London Standard, has published some observations on women's dress which caused much amusement when reproduced in Germany. He first talks of the difficulty of providing his inquisitive friends at home with a criticism of the beauty of the Ger- man woman's figure. "Neither in the streets nor at home, nor, again, working the fields, are the wbmen winont fhe." he says. "Only in the eveni can one make any judgment, for then only a part of the figure is clothed. Evidently jthey do not dare to go entirely with- out clothing, as their figure is divid- ed into two parts, which are only loosely bound together, so that the waist has to be streggthened and maintained by means of a stiff cui- Tass. "This protection fs covered with only a little clothing Yn the evening --no more than is necessary. if the women were without this cuirass they would undoubtedly break in two, and could not hold themselves up- right. It is evidently an old inven-i tion, but it is so made that they ean scarcely breathe. Consequently the German woman cannot run, and, in- deed, can scarcely move. Conse- quently, she grows very thin beneath this cuirass and very fat both above and below--all of which the white men find beautiful. "Already in an early age the young girls are fastened up, in this way, for the mien fear that otherwise they may long remain healthy. The re- sult is that the women are early in Rin q George's Nav KING GEORGE NAVY PLUG CHEWING. TOBACCO SG IN A CLASS BY ITSELF! It surpasses all others in quality and flavour because the process by which it iifgade differs from others.--It is deli ¢ously sweet and non<itating. SOLD EVERYWHERE: 10¢c A PLUG RGCK CITY TOBACCO Co., Manufacturers, QUEBEC - life. weak and delicate, and the men speak of them rather scornfully as the 'weaker sex.' The women have to move along something like tor- toises, and you cannov imagine," writes Lukanga to a friend, "how the legs move under this iron bei." ------ Fok pretty, but quiet welding took at the home of J. A. Gordon Jeseronto, when his seeond davgiliter, Miss Clara Maysell, was united in rrIage to Albert Walker, Orange H. Ferguson, G. T. R. conductor, Brockville, was presented with a tet eran's pin to mark hid twenty five years of membership in the order: Mrs. W. MH. Ponton has left / Bille ville for Edmonton to spend the win ter with her daughter. UPSET, BILIOLS SICK? "CASCARETS" No Headache, Bilionsness, Upset Stomach, Lazy Liver or Constipat- ed Bowels by Morning. Are you keeping vour bowels, liver and stomach clean, pure and fresh with Casearets, or merely forcing a passageway through these alithentary or drainage organs ery few dave with Salts, Cathartic Pills, Castor Oil or Purgative Waters. Stop having 4 bowek washday. Let Cascarets thoroughly and regu- late the stomach; remove the undi- gested, sour and fermenting food and foul gases, take the excess bile from the liver and carry out of the system all the decomposed waste matter and poisons in th: intestines and bowels. A Cascaret tonight will make you feel great by morning. They work while you sleep--never gripe, = or cause aby moonvenience, and cost only i0c. a box from your druggist. Mil lions of Tn spd women take g Cas caret "pow and then and never have Hevdache, Biliousness, Conted T Indigestion, Sour Stomach or stipated Bowels, Cascarets | to take Con in love FINE FOR SALE Solid brick, iilne electric lighting, hot water | heating, on car line, ¢lose to schools and Queen's College. House practically new. Double lot. Excellent lovation. Corner Union and Frontenac Streets. | J. K. CARROLL | 14 Market 8. Real Estate and Insurance, rooms, | Box - Calf and Tan .Calf, leather lined, double sole, Goodyear welt. Just the Boot for wet Fall weather. |

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