Daily British Whig (1850), 24 Mar 1914, p. 11

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uh rom rt 20c, 0c Gozen, 1 Grape-Fruit, 3 for 25¢, 4 tor fe, 8 for Bec. t, Simplest he Fasilly and Cheaply Made at Home. Saves You 82. This recipe makes 1 ounces of cough #yrup----enough to last a family a jong Time. You couldn't Bly ad much or as Wood cough syrup forgdig, Bimple as It lg, It gives aimant lustant Feéliet and usually slope he most obsti. bate cough In 24 BoWre, "This ts Hartly due to the fact that if Is slightly laxative, Stimulates the appetite and rag on cxrel. lent tonic effect. TL ks pletitant lo tke pilldren Mike It. An execllent remedy, too, for 'whooping cough, crinp, core ngs, asthma, throat frogbies, etc. Mix tWo éups uf granulated sugar with ane cup of warm vater und tir for two mutes. Put 2% ounces of Fluex (fifty worth) in a W=ounce bottle, and gar Syrup, At Keeps perfectly. a teaspoonful every ope, two or three hours, 2 Fine is one of the oldest and berts shown remedial agentss for the tiirgat membranes. Pigex is the m valuable toucentrated compovnd of Nerwuy white pine extract, and i= yich in guisicol and 8) the other natural, ¥ n ther preparations formula. The prompt results from this' redipe have endeared it to thonbands of hatike~ wives in the United States and Canada, which explains why the plan has been im- ftated Ofgen, but never succe ily. A guaranty of absolute Satisfaction, of money promptly refundad, goes with .this recipe. Your druggist has Pinex, or will Ret It for you. If not, send to The Pinex Co., Toronto, Ont wealing elements, not Work in this esseaneee FOUND LOST TRIBE Professor Speck Says He Has Loca ted Five Families of the Wawe- nocks, Missing 187 Years, Philadelpma, Sareh- 24. Prof. | Speck, 'of 'the: University of Pennsyl- vata, is La report on a tribe of Indikhs lost for I87 years, h be found uwsetpectedly on a re trip to the province of Wuebeo. The tribe "was known as the Wawe- i nocks, once ong of the strong tribes' 'of New Bagland. Thve families 'nll the. gedin. | A guide Whom Prof. Speck = em- ployed to direct Him in Kis research {trips to the Indian country told him (eh. 2 oule,_whtm he called "Wali, | "Peop) e iy," {living on the Held River, pear | Piereville. Taking the : guide with fim, Prof. Speck visited the tribe. Is found agly Soe, old J. Nebtune, who spoke the original language a he tribe. From Neptune Prof. Speck learned {another version of the Histarieally {celebrated massacre of Norri | wok. in Maine, where the Wawsnovks formerly lived. Whittier in his poem, "Mogg Megono,"' uses the massacre ns the theme of a eulogy on Father Rasle, who is pictured as A martyr ard hero. Neptune's story are PALACE Livery Has re-opened as a first-class livery, hack and boarding sta- ble. Vehicles. of all deferip- | Ye, | Thomas , Copley L. LAWLESS, Prop. Phone 77 -ma ney : will receive! prom) leo Queen ey » | A inde. . ore aii schists; t attention, Shop, > Children Cry for Fletcher's ou Have Always Bought, and which lias been use for over 30 yecais, has horne the signature of and has been made under his pere sonal supervision since its infaney - Allow no one to deceive you in this, a Countericits, Iniitations and *" Just-as-good "* are but IpSHmentathut trifle with and endanger the health of infants and Children--Experience against Experiment, What is CASTORIA Cuastoria Is n harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paree gorie, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant, It talus neither s» Morphine nor othér Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee, Jt de: troys Worms and allays Feverisuness. For more than thirty years it has been ih constant use for the reliel of Constipation, oy, Wipa Colic, all Teething und Diarrhea. It' regulates the Stomach and 'Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natarsl sleep, The Children's Panacea--The Mother's Friend. eeNuINe CASTORIA Auwavs Bears the Signature of » "in Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought ' --_ ca _ ---- i ID AS t- je Automobile Dealers Will Read This Book With Profit Write for it to-day. Don't put it off and forget all about it. You'll find on pages 12 and 13 informa-. tion which may mean- all the difference between success and failure. Tear off the coupon and mail NOW, before you have time to forget. Y O you want to know how some of the most successful automobile, dealers in Canada have reduced their expensive ground floor area in congested districts, and cut down their ovérhead expense? This Book will tell you. OTIS-FENSOM ELEVATOR COMPANY 50 BAY ST., TORONTO . 5 of the massacre i Ae. t 'given to Mr, jan, when Gen differs fram the cording to the Speck" by the Bowell, with th ; within a few miles of Norridgeweck, ho 'Senta friendly Indian to Father B% Rasle, to ask him to come secretly to him for 'an Interview. Fatber * Rasle met the getiéral snd accepted a 'bag of 'gold 4pon agreeing to all the In- dians of his tribe together for a cotncil 'on the following day. Father Radle 'gathered the tribe together in a church and the English traopa 161] 'on them, setting fire to the chfrch and 'shooting the Tadiens &s they fled. An Indisn, believing that Father Rasle had betrayed them, shot bim as he fledl. COMMISSION RULE IN LEEDS | Pxperiment of Yorkshire Town is Watched With Interest London, Marcn 24.---Leeds is mak- ing an experiment in municipal ad- ministration, new to England but popular in America and Canadian cities, under the name of commission government. The innovation followed the recent strike of municipal employees, the investigation into which revealed a lack of co-ordination in labor matters bhétween the municipal departments and also a tendency to regard muni- cipal employment as political spoil. The municipal administration of Leeds will be concentrated in the hands of a small commission, which can be held more responsible than is | possible in the case of a large city | couneil. If the Yorkshire experi- | ments prove successful, it 4s suggest- led that the London County Council {might advantageously . follow suit {and éven Eo the length of engaging {a general manager. A salary of $50,000, it is urged, {would not be excessive for a good man, who would undoubtedly be able to make a 'large feduétion in the | present expenditures, caused by the | present system of government in the | metropolis. WERE MAXY DEATHS Coal Mines Show Big Increase --- Washington, 'March 24.--The year 1913 was more fatal for coal miners in the United States than the preced- ling twelve months. A repert issued hy the bureau of mines showed an increase of fatalities of 4250ver1912, and twelve deaths for every working day in the year. In the army of 728,- +3656 underground workers, 2,785 per- | ished, a fatality rate of 3.82 in every 11,000 men employed, as compared {with 3.27 In 1912. Six thousand more men were em- ployed in 1913 and the increase in production was between thirty and forty million tons. { 'The states in which the greatest number of 'deaths ocurred were: Pennsylvania, 1,227; West Virginia, 337; New Mexico, 272; Ohio, 165; Illinois, 164; Alabama, 124; Color- ado, 108, Fatalities in WHD AT FIRST SIGHT Wife Says Man's Lonliness in Texas 'Appéalead to Her. Jima, O., March 24.--With a few hours after meeting the first time, although they had corresponded for a year, Mrs. M t Houston, 57, trained nurse, and James P. Con- nally, 58, prosperous lumberman of Peach, Tex., were married here yes- terday. That portion of an 24. réading "1 am a church member and well fixed financially, but am lonesome," ap- '| pealéd to Mrs. Houston and she star- Jted tha correspondence. eee Sent For Trial Hamilton, Omt.,, March 20.---Be- hind closed doors at the police court} A. B. Mackay and James Gow, prom- {nent men, who figure in one of the sensations that the police have sprung in some time, heard the phrtial result of the investigation which De Chief Whatley and nesses and a number of others. Their evidence, it is said, laid bare a scan- dal which has been on the public tongue for months past. ~ ihe accused were comruitted for trial. Rhodes Stholar From Ishand Shstiotstawa, PEL, Mirch H- Allen T. Scaman, aged twenty-ove, of J. D. Sedmasn, of Chsr- Iottetown, has been 'selected ss Rhodes stholar for fhe island. He won a medal in the Prince of Wales O nd has an excellent record as an sth- Bi I SE visits PRINCE'S TENANTS -------- King George Helping to Solve Hous - img Problem. : of the Little People London, March 24.--1 have come|' Dwarfs have always been a purzie to inspect the 'cottages and flats to scientists whether they are hu built for my son. May the 'queen man , animals or plants. Some and 1 come in." of the difficulties of understanding With this simple question on his'the origin of 'the human ones were lips King 'George, accompanied bylecleared away the other day by Pro- Queen Mary, visited the workmen's fessor Hastings Gilford in his first houses erected on the Pring of|Hunterian Lecture at the Roval Col. Wale's property at Kennington, one of Surgeons, London. of 'the sium districts of London,| Of course, there are whole races of which his majescy is cleaning up. dwarfish human beings, but the kind The visit was productive of severaliof person who especially deserves the amusing incidents. One old char-iname is one who is conspicuously woman describéd Queen Mary 2s "alsmall amongst his own people. Most {rent me By -- ar, Nomyh ot Shoe eccentric little folk, often a bi oO midg B . ' stout ready on the table for her hus tS Deatgets fie really, aweording t iMord ith band's Tuncheon till the royal visit- the gilt of f sudeved hi ors laughed. i Jetpet wal youth--not "I am antions to make provision --n ar of fairy Ho gill, ow ny for the lower middle classes," said|yas often, thonght, he said, that mid: the king in conversation With a ten-|oets" were people whose growth had ait of one of the cottages. "T am|guddenly been arrested Kine ht also anxious for the welfare of the ; Bo Some working classes, but in London 1 realized that a man of the ing a house within his means which is not too far from the centre, I had that man in view when 1 decided to have these dwellings erected for my son, for the problem is a serious one for hundreds in London to-day." WAS NEWS TO ALFONSO Learns From Picture How Heavy IV. Met Death London, Mareh 24.---A curious little story is told about King Alfon- £0 of Spain. He recently visited Bayonne and ingpected the local mus- eum,' which contained, among other treasures, a realistic picture of the death of Henry IV. of France. After looking intently at the pic- ture King Alfonso suddenly exclaim- ed: "But Henry is not dying a natural death!" "Of course," remarked one of the French guides, diplomatically, "Your majesty remembers that Henry was nesassinated." : 5 But King Alfonso did not remem- er. "By whom was he Kiiled, then?" he asked. . "He was killed by a monk. named Ravaillag," sa"d the guide. - Then the king appeared to compre- hend, for he exclaimed: "A king killed by a monk. Now I understand why the story was never told me." MAY BE EXILED Russian Writer Charged With Blas- ~ pheiny in His Novel St. Petersburg, March 21. --Court proceedings are to be brought imme- diately against Maxim Gorky, the Russian novelist, on a charge of blas- phemy. The charge is preferred mn connection with his novel entitled "Mother," in which he is "alleged to have insulted the national faith. If found guilty the novelist's sentence, according to the Russian law, would be exile to Siberia, which, in his pres- ent state of health, his friends believe would be equivalent to a sentence of death. « Electric Walters Aun electric invention which, it is claimed, will do awa¢ with waiters in restaurants and hotels is being ex- perimented with each table in the restaurant is to he fitted with a frame bearing the menu and a series of elec- tric "press" buttons corresponding with each item on the menu. The cus tomer asits down before the already laid table, with a neat pile of plates and glistening silver on one side, chooses the dish which "he prefers, and . presses the corresponding but- tons in furn. In the kitchen of the restaurant the pumber of the table and the number of course required are signalled on a screen to the chefs and their as- sistants, and in a few seconds a steaming hot dish appears in a little lift at the side of the diner's table. The customer helps himself, presses a button, and the dish disappears as quietly as it came, leaving at the side ol the plate a little aluminium ticket indicating the sum to be paid. the A ByPath of Science The late Dr. S. Weir Mitchell, during his Yong vears of @aetive work as : physician and scientist.and his thirty years or #o.of production as a novel ist and poet, explored many fields. No subject. that he studied, either scien- tilic or social, is 'more curious than the one he described in a little-known paper entitled "Of Ailurophobia and the Power to Be Constions of the Cat as Near, When Unseen and Unheard." In this per DE, 'Mitchell declares that there are persons who have heen able to distinguish the presence of a cat by its smell, but cannot any longer do so, and yet who retain ability to detect unseen cats. "It is likely," he says, "that the cat emanations may afiect the nper- vous system the nasal brane, although' as odors. Why these emanations should, ii plainly perceived as due to cats, cause certain symptoms in those who dread cals, is re ood "The ultimate canse of unreasonable terror of cats I cannot explain." mem- No odds how bad your liver, &tom- ath, or bowels; how much your head aches, how mi and uncom- fortable yon are from constipation, indigestion, billousness and sluggish intestines--you always get the desir- ed results with Cascarets. They end the headache, bilious- ness, dizzittess, nervousmess sick, lower middle class finds difficulty in procur- so. The professor pointed out that in many cases "the so-called dwarfs or midgets are mot in reality the re- sult of a stoppage of growth, but rather of a protracted delay in de vi t, so that they remain in. fants all their lives. When they grow old, as they often do, their in fantile characteristics atl peraist, in spite of their wizened appear: ance." Dr. Gilford gave many quaint stances where their smallness and their babylike minds stood dwarfs in good stead. One mannikin, he sakd, travelled wherever he eared to go on the railway with hafi a ticket until he was thirty years old; an other intelligent child oi fourteen years got through more easily still, for his mother or any other woman who cared to assume the responsibil ity, comnld carry him about as a baby in arms. This intense prolongation of period of childhood was really thing very much akin to a The lecturer classified it into forms, but said of the many mens he had met and examined "They seétin to be intelligent and captivating little people, their in telligence being - of the childish pat tern, such as might be expected ol young people who had gathered vears of experience. They never seem to be spoiled or even embarrassed by the attentions they receive from the public, but show quaint «4ildish traits and a charming naivete which makes them great favorites with those who have dealings with them." Science naturally divides dwarfs in- to many kinds, but two of these are quite "distinct. In ome class the bones grow harder with age, instead of re- maining, as in the other -class, prist- ty fike those of little children. When as in the other case, the bones begin to harden, other changes often happen and the midgets become a strange compound of adult and child. "They often rejoice," said Professor Gilford. "in heards and moustaches, and sore of them have become the proud fath- ers and 'mothers of diminutive beings like themselves. The celebrated Team Thumb Was an example of this kind of 'ateleosis," and it is well known he married a miniature lady who was also an ateliotitic, and who presented him with a daughter." ne } the Some disease many speci Oranges Better Than Physic Dr. Harvey Wiley, former chief of the bureau of chemistry of the de- partment of agriculture, and univer- sally admitted to be one of the greatest authorities on pure foods and dletetics in the world, says: "Eat oranges, eat them in winter, eat them in summer; eat as many as you can afford to buy; they ate bet- ter for you than physic. Oranges are excellent for people. It is good to eat oranges for breakfast, and al- so for dinner--not from a medical, but an anti-medical standpoint. Both oranges and lemons ought to be used as freely as the financial ability of the consumer may permit. A laboring man may not be able always to eat oranges at breakfast, yet the fruit is usually very cheap and the consumption of it will obviate the need of physic, and save many doctor's bill. a Rarest Thing Possible When Sir Behlichamp was appoint- ed to his first post in India, one of his subordinates who did wut know him, tried to find oft from a brother officer what sort of a man they would have to deal with. The dialogue went something like this: "Does he play+bridge much?" "Not much." "Billiards, maybe?" "Nothing to speak of." © "Any good at chess?" "He plays badly." "Poes he zo in for any outdéor sports?" "At long intervals." "Then what on earth does he do?" asked the bewildered man finally. "The rarest thing possible," snap- ped the other; 'he works."---Pear- son's Weekly. ' o a 1t way be that your own home linen ought to go to the tub before vou' do much community washing. This old world would be a much better place to tarry in if courtesy could be constantly kept on the move. HEADACHY 7 CASCARETS TONIGHT ! DIME A BOK sour, gassy stomach. They cleanse your liver and Bowels, of all the sour bile, foul gases and copstipated mat- ter which is produci the misery. Cascaret to-night will straighten ¥@u out by morning-- a 10 cent box keeps your Read clear, stomach sweet, liver and bowels regular, and you feel cheerful and bully for -- PaeB ELEvis He WHEN YOU BUY RUBBERS be sure that they bear the "Jacques ™ Cartier" Trade Mark. The "Jacques Cartier" mark on rubbers stands for skilled workmanship, bes quality and latest style. AT ALL DEALERS. RE! Mark Quality Fill the Salt Cellars direct from the" Regal" package. barrel than amy other flour on the marker-- bread that takes up water readily, "'standsup" well in the oven, looks well, tastes well and is light and nutritious. Being a carefully prepared blend of Manitoba Spring wheat and Ontario Fall wheat, Beaver Flour is also an ideal pastry flour, making the most delicious cakes, pies and biscuits. Keeping two flours--one for bread and ene for pastry -- involves unecessary expense and bother, Beaver Flours is best for both. Ask your grocer for it. PRALXRS- Write for prices on all Pools, Coaree Grains snd Cereals, a} 2 a F better tha. EYE BIT bakin | » 38 181 116 SEES. RB TAYLOR C0. LIMITED, - CHATHAM, Ont ---------------------------- -- 9 oi ---- Rubbers It is almost impossible to keep your feet dry at this season of 'the year without a pair of good rubbers. Come in and let us fit your shoes correctly. with a pair. } 4 -- J, H. SUTHERLAND & BRO THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES

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