Daily British Whig (1850), 16 Jun 1914, p. 11

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¥ THE LAKE AN RAIL ROUTE TO WESTERN CANADA. Service has been inaugurated be- tween Eastern and Western Canada, trains leaving Toronto via Grand Trunk, Mondays, Wednesdays and Baturdays, 11.15 am., to connect at Sarnia with the high-class steamers of the Northern Navigation Co., for Fort William, thenee Grand Trunk Pacific to points In Western Canada. + We can make all arrangements to bring your family and friends from she "Old Country." : For full particulars apply to J. P. HANLEY, and Stecmshipy Agent, Montreal y "clitéage Via Tanadian Pacific and Michi gan Ce B lronds via Mickigs; fe Steel Fahes helen Win or and Detroit aviog Monts ax 1 Toronto 6.10 pm. arriving trot 12.356 a. m., and Chicago 7.46 am, daily, Equally good service returning. Through Electric Lighted Equip: © riv itoba Express Nb. 7 leaevs dally except Bunday [0.50 riving Winnipeg second 10 Express No. § leaves WhHin 9.26 p.m. and arrives Toronto 5.1 Bi. daily except Tuesday, . * ' Particulars regard Rall wg rom F CONWAY, - ket cor. neess and Wellington Six. Pho ner. PAA rm miriam cn sions. CANADA STEAMSHIP LINES, LIMITED SS. KINGSTONSSS, TORONTO Commencihg June 2nd, leave dally except Manday, at % am. for Clayton, Alexandria ¥, Brockville, Prescott and Montkeal. At 5 p.m. for Rochester and Toronto \ ASPIAN $8, CAS Commencing June "Tth - leaves Sun- days, Wednesdays and Fridays | at 10.16 am, for 1000 Islands, Clayton and SGanancdie; and at § pm. for Rochester, N.Y, calling at Bay of Quinte ports. 3 58. BELLEVILLE Leaves at 7 a.m., Wednesdays, for Montreal, and on . Saturdays at mid, night for Toronto, OITY OF OTTAWA CITY OF HAMIL A Leave at 8 am. on Sundays and Thursdays for Montreal, and on Sun- days and Wednesdays at midnight for Toronto and Hamilton. SS. AMERICA Commencing June 1st, leaves daily except Sundays, for Cape Vincent at 9. am, and 1.30 pm. Returning ar- vives 11.45 am, and 8.30 p.m. L885, BROCKVILLE Leaves at 3.30 pm, dally except Sunday, for Picton and intermediate Bay of Quinte ports. ight reserved to change steamers time with. or without notice. J. P. HANLEY, EB. E. HORSREY, City Clcket Agent. General Agent. [LY i] INR DAN ADIAN From Southampton' From Mdntreal June 4 ANDANIA June 20 June 11 ABCANIA June 27 July 2 Ausonia July 18 Steamers call Plymouth eastbound. tes--Cabin (11) $46.26. 3rd-class, Wah Sasthouna, $30.26 up. West- und $30 up. Fy AA Local Ticket Agent, or THE ROBERT REFORD CO, LIMITED, Gen eral Agents, 30 King St. East, Toronto Quebec King 56, Baer Tatonte, Ontario From Mont. June 16 June 30 July 14 -- quite different from any othér sauce you have tried 'before. You can taste the dé lcious oriental fruits and spices blend 'd by a secret process with Pure' Malt V ncear, ILE FATENTS a J. 3 Dennison f _ REAISTERBUATTORN EY, 13 Klug Street West, Toronto, Pat ents, Trade-Marks, Desigua, Copyright, tested ¥- where; el eel yea expe ; write tor vooxiet. ory BREEERSEXE VERN HOUSE SLEANING--Use "COBRA" For your floors use "Cobra" Floor Polish, it's a clednser as well as a polisher, For your furniture use "Cobra" Furniture Polish, gives a hard and bright finish, easily dusted. For your metal work use "Cobra" Metal Polish, Cocs its work quickly; a lasting polish. Sold by all first class dealers. £ SAMPLES For 2c in stamps we will Bend a large sample of "Cebra™ Floor, iad a and Boot Polishes, BEING EREFEERNERINETTINFERE TRNAS BE Ervsessnnse ¥ (EH a Rash on Legs and Back. g Irritated Breakin Out, Used Cuti- cura Ointment, DiseaseVanished, Kentville, N. 8.--*" For about five Years I was bothered with a light rash which would appear most heavily on my legs and back. 'This troubled me most in thespring of the year. They sald it was ezecema The cezema itched and burned and my scratching irritated the breaking out. After it broke out 1 could not obtahs mare than three hours' sleep cach night io pained me so. - My legs and back wore a solid mass of itching adres. **1 was given Some salve and alter using this préparation about a weok the disesss b worse and 1 could not obtain any rest ab night. I used all the patent prepa- rations of the market but they only seemed ta increase the suffering and afforded me no reliel whatever. About this time a friend recommended Cutieura' Ointment to me However, 1 had lost faith in all remedics and told bird 90, but he lasisted thas I try Cuti- cura Ointinent so I purchased a box." The first appliéation gave relief and in about a week the sores were healing and 1 was able | #0 obtain a good night's rests the fit I hast enjoyed for many months, I continued the frettment' for anothics menth and by that time all signs of the disease had vanished." Gigned) Willard F, Aen, May 16, 1913. : For more than a n Cuticura Scratching Nero has watched his Rome burn to a cinder beneath 'the encircling folds of a cireus tent, Pompeii has fallen to ruins in the scattered saw- dust of the ring and Cleopatra taken her last look at Egypt just before the clown's entry for the big arenic numbers. And now, the wise King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba have made the hero and heroine of a circus spectacle surrounded with all the gorgeous pagentry and lavish costumes that the wealth and ingen- uity of master showmen can devise. The good old public like some things all the time, One of these is the spectacle and it must be "niass- ive." If it is under canvas, the pub- lie want it just as much as it does the clowns, the elephants or the beautiful lady rider in pink and fluffy tarletons who, with her spang- les and smiles, seems the quintes- sence of fairyland. And so Ringling Brothers 'are this season featuring a mammoth rn LANSDOWNE ARMER DIES At Age of Ninety--Undertaker's Wa- ter Tank Collapses. Lansdowne, June 15.--~The death occurred on Thursday of Patrick Ralph, a well-known farmer, at the great age of ninety Deceased wus. aman of sterling integrity and highly respected by all who knew him The funeral was held to the Roman Catholic church, Melcombe, on Saturday and was very largely at- tended. Mrs. George Truesdell, who had an attack of paralysis some days ago, is improving. When A. W. Vears Burteh, + undertaker, opened his store Monday morning he found that his water tank situated upstairs had collapsed and about 700 gallons of water had poured down on his goods. | The tank, a ' Steel one, had given way in all directions and is a 'wreck. The damage will be several hundred dollars. St. John's church "parish has purchased a horse and buggy for the uke of Rev. Mr. Powler: The use of the Christian era in The eellar of the old Tavior store, of a prominent corner, which has been #0 eyesore for twenty years or mors, is being filled in and levelled up. The new fixtures for the post are now installed and will prove a great convenience, W. H. Leacock has rented Thomas Ishester's residence and will take pos session July lst. The remains of the from Syracuse on Tuesday to her old home at Rockport. i vices were held on Wednesday. general hospital much improved health: : Fred' Johnston left on Tuesday a trip. to thé west. Mrs. Parsons, lage hall. Used Tray to Slide Downstairs. London, June 16. --Lord Suffield tells & bright little tale of the 1879, in his fascinating book, Memoirs." 1 went out one day to Lodge, where 1 arrived just in to see | I'rincess Mary, now our queen, sliding' down the stairs on.a tray. Her litle royal highness looked much embarvassed when she saw me with her mother, feeling that her progress downward bad been perhaps a little undignified, but the duchess simply laughed at her and said - "Never mind, dear child, it is only Lord Fuffleld." Therd's no reason why lightning White shouldh't strike * twice in the same it ean find that place. Wa. fesry Diy mr Kx ALTRI Ie spectacle production wherein the wisest of kings is the centre of the most glittering array of pantomimie magnificence ever offered in ecircus- dont. Plafining a spectacle such as that which will be seen in Kingston when the shows of the famous five brothers exhibit here next Thursday, is a tremendous task, It means the massing of more than 'a thousand actors and hundreds of horses into great ensemble groups. Fortunately the show grounds have not the limi- tations of the theatre stage aud, for the purpose of roofing their gigantic production, Kingling Brothers have had made a specially ¢onstructed tent measuring 520 feet in length by 280 feet in width--the largest stretch of canvas ever carried. "Solomon and the Queen of Sheba" is produced under. the personal di- rection-of AL Ringling, assisted by a corps of stage managers," headed by Ottokar Bartik, balletmaster from the Metropolitan Grand Opera house. An FINDS SON CONVICT. Father Learns That Boy Was Shot In a Prison. Sacramento, Cal, June 186. Read a report of a prison break at the Folsom Penitentiary in a newspaper, H. S. Barnes, a Sacra- mento county rancher, learned for the first time that his, Per¢y Bar- nes, was a cvonviet and a participant in the break. The rancher had not seen his son since July 1912. Soon after that time young Barnes was arrested in Yuba county on a charge of grand larceny: convicted and sentenced to two years. The prison is only twenty from the Barnes ranch. Picking up a morning newspaper, the elder Barnes saw his son's like- ness on the first page. He hurried to the penitentiary, where the young convict is hovering between life and death with a bullet wound through both lungs. Four convicts killed by prison guards during the break were buri- ed at the prison. office | late Miss Barbara Kirker were Wrought. The funeral ser- | Chas. | Harton: has returned from Brovkville m |} for government 'delegate, will address the | Woman's Institute to-day in the vil- | time ;! As soon as a rat discovers that he is trapped he loses all interest 4n the piece of cheese that cansed his downfall. | You could not please us better | {than to ask your doctor about Sere Ids, x ok biar coughs, colds, croup; i Thousands 'of : fantilies vay: keep it in the house. The x proval of their physician and experience of 3 | |phyeicians. i The spectacle is made a part of the jeiréns program, and opens the after {neon and evening performances. Its | pageants are marvels of brilllancy and the processions presented when Solomon and Sheba's queen vie with one another in their contest for su- premacy in riches, are said to be the ! most remarkable displays of their 'kind ever seen in Americ; A gigantic wordless iy enacted upon a stage bigger than that of a | hundred ordinary theatres, it has !been pronounced the most magnifi- cent spectacle ever presented in f America It requires a cast of 1,250 characters, a ballet of 300 tdancing girls, and a caravan of cani- 8 It depicts the glory of Splomon lana the beauty of the Balkis in a (succession of scenes that picture the pomp and splendor of ancient Israel with strict regard for historical ac | euracy. {Five trains are required to trans- port the wonders of Rinlingville, ond Lone entire section is loaded with spec- lal scenery, costumes, accessorios ana [e'ectrical effects used in the "Solo mon and the Queen of Sheba" pro- ¢uvtion. There is a chorus of a thousand voices and 90 musicians | augmented by a cathedral organ. The { grand processional in which Solomon goes to the gates of Jerusalem to greet Sheba's queen is a pageant of | grandeur enlisting the entire cast of { characters, almost 700 horses, ele- phants and correctly caparisioned desert camels. ' Ny Sm A A ing AUSTRIAN GIRL ARRESTED Police Double-Cross Arrest Her. Berlin, June 16.----Rosa Langstein, the girl clerk, who was arrested at Hamburg on a charge of having ob- tained from a 'shipyard portions of the plans of a warship and of hav- ing sold them to she Franch Intel- ligence Bureau, was sentenced at Liépzig to thirty months' penal ser- vitude for espionage' 'She is an Austrain subject. Having obtained posession of a drawing of some warship machinery she offered it to the French Intelli- gence Bureau, which had sent her ito Germany with a list of matters {regarding which information was desired. In attempting to obtain this she fell into a police trap and was arrested when starting Paris with faked secret information papers on her person. addin THIS BOY BAFFLES DOCTORS. German and Ailment Does Not Cause Him Incon. venience Philadelphia, June 16.--Henry Lew- is, thirteen years old, is a patient at the University hoSpital, suffering from an ailment that baffles the The boy has been gain: ing steadily in weight, and now weighs 190 pounds. {i The 'boy's weight was normal until irecently/ 'when he began to take on flesh at such a rate that his parents became alarmed. He does mot ap- ipear to suffer much nien land the only treatment at this time jeonsists of a strict dieting. "Don't think of matrimony until {the tango craze dies out; good tan- | goers may hot be good life part- s," Representative. Moore, of k | Washington told a Washington high queen when she was a little girl in i "My Lh Sir John A. Macdonald once deputation who waited upon him i school graduating class. AN SEES IT said In reply to the demands of a for advanced liquor legislation: "Gentlemen, when the churches unite and say yom fast £0, this trafic must step down and out." : p, a Thank God the time has come. The clock has struck the hour, and wvery one whe is following the Divine Master must take his stand with the barroom or against it. ' oi : The issue in this provincial election is not grit or tory, but The home, of thé Bar-room, its righteousness agbinak iniguity. deadly enemy. ney, education, happy family life and prosper- ity, or poverty, ignorance, misery, brawlidg and: disgrace, the natural outcome of the licensed liquor traffic. The ballot isa secret vote: in this instance a sacred one also. Mrs. Ruthesford, Toronto. for | inconvenience, | | il fas Ion One cents yor th of gas in three hours. ' Keep cool when you iran. + one. Money back if not satiétied. Price 315 complet AVID HALL .D 66 Bre ain wy Bary & Practical ome Dress Making] ALerrons Prepared Especially For This Newspaper by Pictorial Review A SIMPLE FROCK. Dainty summer trode 16 n ton crepe 'that ean be made for Sh Ton at ee In'this Gesiga. 1 though the waist is a alightly foundation.' There fs an original bis drapery at the front of the walkt ranged from either side & broad box' pleat from the bist. 'T skirt 13 a' two-piece affals, with fant sides and a caught-up ranged in side pleats below thé To make the dréss réqulies 4 of 36-inch material,' with % yard Ing 36 inches wide for Iming * waist; % yard nig' 3¢' inches 'wide Tor fous dation gores; 3% yard allo net' 18 inches wide for: shield and: ; The material will have to spread out full width 'te 'accommodate the" outer section of skirt '(riiarked J) 'afilf the outer front back and sleéve of the waist (the last three cut in one piece): These are marked by a ne of Mrge. "0" perforations, Which are iald on a lengthwine thread of the crepe: The pieces marked' dy tHple "TTT perfo- rations, with the exception of the stay, arrange on a lengthwise fold; the stay oes on & crosswise fold. : The girdle Is cut 'on the bias. Perforations outs line the round, square or V-shape for the neck. 2 Now make the lining, and if the shield is to be used place upoti the front. The pleating of. the front res quires particilir care.' "To 'do this bring *T" to small "0™ perforation in left front, and the two single "TT per- foratiohs together on small "o" per- foratioh in right front, upper edges even. 'Turn under dg of dane tront on it ubder-arm and sleeve seams as nmotchell; close back seam.' Close cuff skim as notch. od; short sleeve, double "ov" rioration at Pert fe olatside 0 tery and | along double "ob" peffora ey fn A a to the if bu pleting the decorative scheme. Stes 1416. 18 and 20 4 4 A

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