THE DATLY BRITISH WHIG, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1. 1042 Fer Hunters' Excursions Good going until © November 9th, inclusive, to all peints on Te- miskaming and Northern Ontario Rallway to Campbellton, Bathurst Newcastle, Chatham, N.B., to Am- herst Truro, New Glasgow, NBS to Sudbury 8.8. Marie, Penetang Midland, Lakefield, North Bay, Coboconk, Lindsay, Parry Sound, to all points on Lake of Bays steamer line, te all points on Mus koka Navigation Co, and to some points on Nor. Nav. Co. Al tickets good to return antil Dec. 12th, ex cept to points reached by steamer lines Nov, 12th, For full particulars, apply to J. P, HANLEY, C.P. & T.A., Corner Johnsoh and Ont. Streets. KINCSIONG [PEMBROKE ILWAY "7 CONNECTION WaTHl CANADIAN PACTFIC RAILWAY. H ' EXCURSIONS Round Trip Tiokets at + SINGLE FARE, October 7th to November 9th, Mattawa to Kipawa, Temiskam- ing Northern Railway Stations and points in Quebec. Oct. 17th to Nov. §th to stations Sudbury to 8.8. Marie, Havelock to Sharbot Lake, Parham to Cala bogle. All tickels good to return until Dee. 12th; 1012, Full particulars at K. and P. and C.P.R. Ticket Office, Ontario Street F. CONWAY, Gen. Pass. Agent LAKE ONTARIO & BAY OF QUINTE STEAM- MOAT CO. LIMITED BAY OF QUINTE ROUTE. Str. ALETHA Leaves Kingston dally, except Sun- day, at 8 p.m. for Picton and inter mediate Pay of Quinte ports, call- ing at Deseropto, Northport and Belleville- on Tuesdays, Thursdays. and Saturdays. Freight handled with despatch and care at reasonable rates. JAS. SWIFT & CO., Freight Agents. J. P. HANLEY, Ticket Agent. a eB Fore 1D] 1) qu Eaves VV Canadian Northern S. S: Limited lo Fineat Fastest Steamships id ' Route. Holding AH Records. Mountrent-Guebec<Bristol (Summer). HALIFAX BRISTOL (Winter), From Montirea and Quebec. Nov. 13 -- 1 Steamer. From Jristol Nov. Royal George 27 ' WINTER SERVICE. i; From Halifax. Steamer, From Bristol Nov. 21 Royal Edward ' Dec. 11... Rayal George "i "idl Ro Al jatward Jan. 8 1813 aya norge Vea . Jah, 8 soval Bd ward oy Feb © ov TRY Feb. 19 information write os ent or Canadian fbed, 226 Bt. James . For farther pee any Steamsh Northern 8.8. Street, Monty | SERVICE |Could Not tion Until Cured by Dr. Chasecis Kidney-Liver Pills. Mr. J you sufl forget attention 3 the if tion, pay iver is wher The liv filter th bowels ber whole (dige As to to experience Liver Pills #0 prompt and thorot Mr. J. D. 8, Barrctt and formerly of Tw writes: --*"For scverni great sufferer from ind t least bit of food caused me able trouble and ofterd 1 cely eat a meal a day remedies I tried proy 1906 I began the use o Kidney-Liver Pills, about eight hoxes I cured Since that time been troubled with indig I consider a great blessinz Dr. Chase's Kilney-Liver pill a dose, 25 cents a box, a or Edmanson Bates & Co, Toronto. and els, real tg of with Dr Ch Ther than Kingston Business College 1 Limited) Highest Education at Lowest Cost Twenty-sixth year, Fall term begins August 30th. Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Tele. graphy, Civil Service and Eng- iis! Our mraduates get the best popitions. Within & short time over sixty secured positions with one of the largest rallway cor. rations in Canada, Enter any ime. Call or write for Informa~ tion. H. F. Metsaife, Principal Kingston, Canada OReefv's Special Extra, Mild r Extra mild, mind you. Brewed for those who find that ordinary Stout is too heavy. Order @'Keele's, remember. "84A E. BEAUPRE, Local Distributor. 'Phone 313. GoesFarther Three drops of Shirrifi's True Vanilla go-as- far as six to z= eight drops of ordinary = vanillas. Shirriff'sisthe real extract of Mexican Vanilla Beans. Aged tintil its strength, bou- quet and flavor are fully matured. Try a bottle in . 16" "CANADA" in One Class Only (viz. 11) to LIVERPOOL. « Oct. 10th, Nov. Jb w adth, " dat « Nov. 1st -- REA HAVRE--LONDON > Tw Ook. Xi Now, 11k Sig 3 2% $obn Lo fin 'e Nov. A bite of this and a taste of that, all day long, dulis the appetite and weakens the digestion. Restore your stomach to healthy vigor by taking a Na-Dru-Co Dyspepsia Tablet after each meal-~and cutout the piecing'. Na.Dru-Co Dyspepsia Tablets are the best friends for sulferers from indigestion and dyspepsia. 50c. a Box st your Druggists. Mads by the Digest His Food Suffered For Years From Indiges- STOUT. i assaults until the rancher | determinedly, battering it upon [A WARM FIGHT AWAITS | | HOX. LOUIS CODERRE, | EN'S NEW MINISTER. BORD. In Hocheloga Constitueney--A\ Nationalist May Run, as Well as # French Liberal Montreal, Nov, 1 that the Hon. Louis Coderde will [Rave the fight of kis life when he {seeks re-election on November 19th. {Although he won the seat last year {by some 1.200 majority, it is . ac- | knowledged by his own sup- | porters that he went in on the great | wave that swept the country, and | that it will be impossible for him to {secure that majority again, The constituency of Hochelaga bas about 20,000 voters, of which 12,600 are French and 5,000 English. The English portion comprises West- { mount, which is strongly conserva- { tive, but the real fight in the com- It probable is even 1 C. H. CAHAN, portion of the riding. At the present time it is doubtful | who the liberal standard-bearer will "be. A number of possible candidates | have Been mentioned, chief of whom | are Major G. W, Stephens, the late i chairman of thie Harbor Commission, land Mayor Rutherford of West: mount. Both are very strong mien, but there is a feeling abroad that a Frenchman shquld be selected to {fight the liber battle. Several names are under consideration, but fnothing definite wil be known until to-morrow. It is probable that 2a Frenchman from the local house will be selected and a vigorous campaign launched. From present indications it looks as if it would be a three-cornered | fight. C. H. Cahan, an ardent na- tionalist and former conservative, it likely to run on the nationalist pol- | {ley He is in accord with the | Yiews of both Bourassa and Monk, {and would probably have their sup- port In the fight. One thing is cer- and that is that the new minis ter will not be returned by acclam- ation, but will be forced to fight from the very outset. Many who are in a position -to know, state that Mr. @pderre will be uhable to carry {the seat, despite the fact that Pre: _mier Borden and all his ministers | he to come down and take part in | B | ing contest will be in the French | the eampaign. The fight promises to be the warmest carried on In a decade, ; ---------- DID A GOOD DEAL. | Bare-Visted, wittle Girl Fights Tn furiated Cow. Redlands, Cal, Nov. 1.-Using her bare fists to hatter the nose of the! V varaged animal, little Anna Jackson, Puight years old, saved her infant sis , ter from probable death when charg j ed by a range cow at the ranch ol George Jackson, the father. Bo crazed wus the animal that Jack: son, who came to the rescue with a pitchiork, had a desperate battle on his hands. After he had driven the COW away continued itp rageful was forced it to shoot the animal Anna and her six-year-old sister, Reva, were crossing a field when the i cow charged Anna placed her sis | ter behind her faced the animal the | nose and eyes with her little hands. | The attack so surprised the. beast that Mr. Jackson arrived to the res , ew belore deadly damage was done. The father attacked just assthe cow had swept both infants to the ground. They escaped with brisises. and ' CHURCHILL ON THE WAR, | Powers Honestly Striving to Secure Just Settlement. ! London, November 1 Win- ston Spencer Churchill, First { Lord of the Admiralty, speaking {| Sheffield, devoted his remarks to { Balkan events. He expressed the ; fervent hope that when the war was sended the nations would be found united in the resolve that about Bal | kan diffculties there should never be { anoth war, and that the long dis. | mal chapter of human misery un-| { folded' in that region of the world y should in one 'way another be | closed once for all { There happily were signs, he said ithat all the powers were* honestly striving to adjust their differences and bring their combined influence to 'bear to make an end of the long fierce and disastrous struggle and te secure a vettlement just to the belli- gerents and beneficial to the popu- lations concerned or Powers to Remain Friendly. | London, Nov. 1--The ministerial organ, the Daily News and Leader, | gives prominence to an article on in- | international negotiations, in which it says: } "The most satisfactory thing in! connection with the Balkan war is! that atl the powers remain on friend- iy terms. The quarrels and differ- | ences of the last few years seem : have disappeared like ma hefore | this new portent. Great Britain and | Germany are freely exchanging views, and, what is even more re! markable, the consultatigns ot Framce and Germany are close and constant. The fear that the super- ficial class interests of Austria and Russia will lead to open differences has also been removed." The writer of the article intimates : that the question which is absorbing the powers is whether the territory | which the allies conquered should be restored to Turkey. The powers would never agree to the taking of | teritory from Turkey, but when the conquest is fait accompli the ques { tion has another aspect. "It is sat- isfactory to know that no power hao yet proposed the restoration 'to Tur- I key of territory which the allies have | conquered," says the writer. "Should isuch a proposal be made, Great Brit. ain would do her utmost to prevent the concert of mations from acquies- cing." t te LATE MRS. D. P. ALGUIRE. Westport. On Oct. 23rd, there pasded into the tinseen. to be with 'the great com: pany of those behind the veil, ons who was greatly beloved by all whe knew her, and admired for her many womanly and Christian virtues, in the person of Mrs. D. P. Alguire, nee Mar garet Bilton, who passed away in Westport in the sweetest and. most tranquil peace, surrounded by her im mediate family. For some years she had been in a weak state of health, which had _developed during the past summer iMo a eritical illness, in "which she lingered in much distress, borne, with the greatest fortitude and in calm resignation to the will ol the great -Pather, and' "the end came not unexpectedly, but with a sense ol shock to the entire neighborhood. Mrs. Alguire was born in the vil lage of Newboro, April 28th, 185], thus being in the sixty-second vear o) her age at the time of her death She was married to D. P. Alguire on Aug. 20th, 1578, by the late Rev Robert Oliver. and together they sot tled in the willage of Westport, and their home was ever one of the choicest and brightest spots to a widd circlo of relatives and friends, Fou | A SOUR GASSY, UPSET STOMACH "Pape's Diapepsin" Overcomps Your | Indigestion in Five Minutes," Wonder what upset your stomach- which portion of the food did the damage-do you ? Well, don't bother. If your stomach is in a revolt; if sour, gassy and upset, and what you just ate has fermented into stubborn Tumps; your head dizzy and aches; belch gases and acids and eructate un digested food; breath foal, tongue coated --just take a little Diapepsin and in five minutes youn truly will won der what became of the indigestion and distress. Millions of men and women to-day know that it is needless to have a bad stomach. A little Diapepsin occasion ally keeps this delicate organ regulated and: they eat their favorite foods with- out fear. Will Represent Canada, Oftawa," Nov. 1.--The government | hag appointed Col. W. P. Anderson, ehiel engineer of the Department of Marine and Fisheries, to represent ' Canada at the River and Harbor Con gress. to be held in Washington in De ; comber. i mip se | don't-repeat-it stories are slanderous as well as danger- 4 The usually {sin which costs only fifty cents fora | sO Unnecessary, 1i your stomach doesn't. take eare of | your liberal limit without rebellion; i | vour food is a damage instead of aj help, remember the quickest, surest, most harmless relief is Pape's Diapep- large case at drug stores. It's truly wonderful--it digests food and sets thinss straight, so gently and easily | that it is really astonishing. Please, | for vour sake, don't go on . and on with a weak, disurdered stomach; it's i a eb adhe Bs & 'cones fram ~The Trail + the Lonesome Pine," at the Grand os | ous worker in the . various { and women's organizations, and ar LOWNEYY HOW? yoy How COcon QuonT To TAZ2TE ! Was Highly Respected Resident ol blessed the union, one | of the eldest, died in infancy three, Misses Mabel children whom, the remaining and Fdna and Howard, abidifiy home To. thém . particularly loss of a most loving wife and ther has come as an especially tar grief, for in her home life was a most besatiful example of the the mo bit she | i | } | this | potatoes. | Mra. William Miss F. { lington's; Mra. D. Carling, Miss | | | ed Four Charges Heard at Criminal Assizes. Toronto, murder attempted negligence, one each « operation, three of shopbreaking, list of cases for trial at tl assizes, which. open-on hey ember. llth, This is one of the heaViest cent years the trial of Dr | four charges } in connection with the wrecked Farm | ers' bank, is | ant to. the public, but it i | sibs that theitrial will be postponed son account of Dr. Neshitt « state of health Tidings From Bob's Lake. Lake, viein;ty Bob's closed Smith, hunt. son and at, Be | cupine, Kelly's; Hannon, Shellington, Mrs dore. and at bShellington | Kingston last week. N. Brown, horne, | visited . { ALICE LLOYD, i Miss Pix.it™ ar th rday Nov snd, matinee real Christian, where her many .g cious - qualities of mind and heart endeared her, in the closest manger, to those around her, and caused the home, 1m a very veal ssnae. to ever be the dearest place of all. A member i ora of the Methodist church from her gil she became a most zeal societie hea loyalty 'to and interest in the Sun day school and all that concerned the work of the church, was a source of encouragement and ingpiration to those who labored with her. Nor did bar afforts cease with her own nomination. but extended to every enterprise that called for a word oi} sympathy or a helping haad, for she'! ever stood ready to assist any | worthy cause. of whatever ehara ter, | bv kind acts of love and charity One of the choicest spirits; as all will confess who knew ber. the late Mrs. Alguire stood for afl that was! noble and beautiful in' womanhood, | and ber taking away léaves a decid od vacancy in the wide circle of friends and relatives by whom her memorv will be cherished for ' many! years to come. Desides her sorrowing 'hewhand and | family, Mrs. Alguire is survived by two brothers and we i i ilton, Wastport, and Robert Rilion. By a Mrs. Joseph Gone | and Mrs. RB. W. Leech. both of West. | port. To these also the sympathy of the entire community goes oui io | this dark hour of trial and bereave ment. The funeral, held at Abe) home on | Sabbath afternoon, Oct. "was hood days, de | Nov. home ¥ Work vatot of next sympathy and consolation then borne emn reverence of many who had learn to know TORONTO'S HEAVY five of manslaughter, one of dnd ir., at | Hamilton spent Thanksgiving a Bert 3 Good garville od from a severs attack of quiney. on at and -will be completed by AINGLO-GERMAN, She the Conference Held at the Guildhall, Talks of Peace. Nov, 1. A London cable to her rest amid and love her so well LAST. vierman understanding' nnposed hundreds ot the commerce be ny and England, met at hall Ww Willi Mather iniries are united ent wat for o¥er nt world. Herman Heichi, England together may comme industrie Mans ri fe which he said and England off Murder to be of representatives of tween ( the Nov. 1.----Four charges oi Gail sterday said the and 'would pre troubling the of Berlin, said and; Germany should stand the danger whieh am two nal gal murder, two of erimi f fraud, ill Ore robbery make and and up the criminal perjury 1 need i 3 "Eres we being rapidly developed speakers eritiviend bord Rob Manchester speech, in war frormany inevitable, the con pinion that England realizes that Germany seeking territorial passessions, will bene more talkiol war fists of re Jeattie Nesbitt of making false return bittween perhaps the most import sensus of when i# not there ite being precarious a TAKE POSTS ON NOV, 15TH. Exaniination Test Before Appointment Confirmed. i Fhe mmodieal offi several districts itive has been di completed . their ion under Dr. J. W, secrelnry of the Pro vincial Doard Health, apd Prof. Amyot, provincial bacterielogist. It is expicted that, they will go out to their posts a November 15th. Be- appointiients are confirm- , each will have to pass an the health act, sani- rictogy; hygieoe and oth- coming within the sphere sork assigned. The doctors been stalving for some months been given special training laboratory, The de for greatly mmproved new organizalion Oct. 30 are plowing I'he cheese the heesemaker Cree has to Cloyne | Visitors Mrs. homp soi, Amold, of Cole Lake, Atwood's; Mrs Barr, Steele, Mis Steele, all Farmers n wd digging factor) Must Pass whe son ¥ roy COUrgs Mi n N. of M. Kelly, at Joseph Mr. and Mrs. W, Steel J. B. Kish, Mrs. 8. Barr, Mis at J Mra Hickey, "Miss Be | (ati Hickey, all of Tich- Lor subject T. H. Hickey's; M Lad of made a flving Mis Parham yoeeent! Hamilton, at it fore their ed, however Steele's examinat on Jd. H mn Lhe tap ta have M. Steel snd Mi J t t ber wl Wa FeCOYeEl have the p meial tooks the parfment fre i tv result 1 Steele, at 1 ¢ Hn hie aif pr le friends at ha contributions to both™ aud démocrats na crawled along to £1 000,000 mark during the Campaigs the rog ati gaan - coman ities the Port new government ele Arthm rushad Bet is beng when in the case . Sept helpful. advice Year. Exceeds all others in leavening power, purity and wholesomeness. Used wher- ever the best and finest food is required. Royal'is the only baking powder made from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar, and is admittedly the best and most healthful g Ff of v It is economy to use the best. %