Daily British Whig (1850), 25 Jul 1914, p. 11

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TYREE Civic Holida July 27th a Y ¥|CURED Send for Free Book pr full particulars of TRENCHS REMEDY the world ous cure for Epilepsy and Fits. Simple home treatment. years' success, Testimonials from ant! parts of the world. Over 1,000 in one year. Trench's Remedies, Limited, 111 St. James\Chambers, Toronto Round Arip ket nil Mili be i Good HAE N- a July 27th - only. ; FARE AND ONE-THIRD Good going p.m. trains July 25th, All trains July 26th and 27th. Re- Sung on or béfore July 28th. ind Trip SETTL ' EXCURSIONS To Northern Ontario July 30th. Re- turn limit ten days from dates of pale. Liberal stop-over privileges. Full particulars on application. For tall particulars apply to J. P. HANLEY Bailrdad and p Agent, Cor. i and Ontario Sts. CANADIAN PACIFIC LOW RATES FOR CIVIC HOLIDAY Return tickets will be issued from Kingston to Sault Ste. Marie, Detroit, Mich., Buffalo and Niagara falls, N. Y., and Newport, Vi, and intermediate stations, as follows: AT SINGLE FARE Good going July 27th, returning July 27th. AT FARE AND ONE-THIRD Good going p. m. trains July 25th, all trains July 27th, returning up to and including July 28th. Particulars regarding Rail or Oc ean tickets from F. CONWAY, CP, A. City Ticket Office, cor. Princess and Wellington Sts. Phone 1197, -- CANADA STEAMSHIP LINE LIMITED MONTREAL--QUERBEC--SAGUENAY 88. Toronto and Kingston leave daily at 6 a.m, connecting at Prescott with Rapids Steamer, arriving Montreal 6.30 p.m. = d at TORONTO EXPRESS SERVICE Bteamers leave Kingston, at 6 pm dally except Monday for Toronto, ar- riving 7 am. Returning leaves Toronto § pm. daily except Kingston 6 am T0 CHARLOTTE (Port of Rochester) 88. Syracuse leaves 2 esany, Thurs- fay and Saturday at PRA arriving Charlotte, N.Y, 10.15 Ao 1000 ISLANDS--BAY OF QUINTE . B88. Caspian and North King leave at 10.16 a.m. daily except Monday for 1000 Islands, and at p.m. for Char- Jotte via Bay of Quinte, HAMILTON--TORONTO--QUEBEC Weekly service by 88. Alexandria, Belleville, Clty of Ottawa and City of diton. Delightful walter outings at reasonable rates. " ¥olders and luformation from J. P. HANLEY, City Picket Agent, FPhous 9. ne 99. Rideau Lakes Navigation Co. For Ottawa Every Monday, Wednes- day, Thursday and Saturday | at6am. + Passengers going through to Ot- tawa may occupy stateroom the eve- ning previous. No extra charge. For Clayton every Tuesday, Wed- nesday, Friday and Saturday at 6 p. - Jones Falls and return, 50c, every Wednesday and Saturday at 6 am. OFFICE FOOT OF JOHNSON PHONE 891. EE. HORSEY, General Agent, Phone 31. ST., . From Southampton From Montreal July $8 July 23 Au a, call Plymouth ten --Cubin' (11) $46.25. ritish bound, $30.36 up. West: nd $0 us up. Analy y Loeal Ticket Agent, or THE ROBERT REFORD 0. LIMITED, Gen- te, 50 King St. East, Torenta From Montreal Queue July 28 Royal Geo ; al Baward Aug. 28 J EH Royal) George Sept. 9 ik Sunday, arriving -- a" oA -------- ; * g/\» Ss /\*/\® - a See us about a fence this spring. We save a great variety aad cheapest prices. PARTRIDGE & SONS. West, King St. homes 350 & 1185 assssssssssssssssansadans | HERE'S A | BUSINESS bu: POINTER -~ Send for us when you wan RITA vho Know their INGA Nc oo em DAVIR. HALL | 66 Brock St. "Phone 335. Res. 856 vertisement. pair ( of BOOTS AND SHO) sold b sells others. Every day someone says, Mrs. So-and-so is se well pleased with her shoes that | thought I would come to you. We are homan--never satisfied. We want to add you to our chain To fit you is to fit your friends in the future. We have ail makes pnd styles of men's, women's and children's boots and shoes at the price in the cit Our castomers Are our wie (08 y lowest PERRIN'S DAIRYCREAM SODAS One would hardly think that a soda biscuit could be #0 delicious as these. Two kinds "Regular" end "Famcy Thin". 5, 10 and 25 cents the package at ail grocers. THE PERRIN "SAMPLER" PACKAGE contains 15 delightful surprises in sweet biscuits for you. Send 10c. in coin or stamps (lo cover - tage) and vour grocers name and we will gladly send it to you. D. S. PERRIN & C y Su RMITED LONDON . CANADA EST STEAMERS CANADIAN ROUTE 70 LIVERPOOL. fs gam Pvexsais Qo tal' "Huieian ns n 1 Aug. ug. bili AH n 8 Aug. 6 Sent Hesp'n 15 Aug. 12 Sept. Corse'n 32 Aug. 19 Sept. . ip July 27 uy . ug. 1 5 Aug. 10 i an . + 18 Aug. 15 Sept. To London & Havre Sicil'n 2 Aug. 6 Sept. Ionian. 18 Aug. 20 Sept Corinth. 23 Aug. 27 Sept Scotian 13 Sept. 18 Oct . For full information apply Local Agents, or \ ' jup to 5 Wise ad * Otherwise "My mother, made me what 1 said the political speaker as proudly threw out his chest. "Well," said a small man at the rear of the hall, "she must have put in most of her time at other things," The people laughed but the speaker weut on wilh his oratory. am," he Photographer (to young man)--"It will make a much better picture if you put your hand on your father's shoulder." The Father--"It would be much more natural if he had his hand in my pocket." In a railway London, carriage, a youth on the way had disturb- ed and annoyed the "other pas sengers by loud and foolish be- marks during a great part of the journey. As the train passed Han- well Lunatic Asylum he remarked : "I often think how nice the asylum looks from the railway." "Some day," growled an old gentle- man, "you will probably have occa- sion to remark how nice the railway looks from the asylum, " Allow a horrid man to kiss me-- never! Neither would I; but thank good- ness, there isn't one among all my male acquaintances. Flora--1 gave Jack the gree last night Dora--Are you a Mason ? Flcva--No, but that's the freezing point, ain't it ? : 32nd, de ? "Aubt Chloe, dolyou think vou are a Christian?" asked a preacher Mi an old negro woman wha was smoking a pipe. "Yes, brudder, 1 'spects "Do you believe in the "Yes, brudder." "Do vou know in the scriptures that declares nothing unclean shall inherit kingdom. of heaven ?"" "Yes, I'se heard it." "Well, vou smoke, and there nothing so unclean as the breath an smoker Ro what do you 'say that ?" "Well, to leave I is." Bible *"' there is a passage that the is of to when 1 go there FY expects my breath behind me." Simple. Student A---How can I keep toes from going to sleep? Student B----Don't let in.--Purple Cow my them turn Only One arose The The man to a girl "Oh, thank you most Kiddly, sir," she replied "Don't mind her being polite," ex plained a sad-faced woman "Pm taking her to a sanitorium."--Piits- burg Chronicle Telegraph. Out. and gave his seat 3G Strong :on Arithmetic. Canvésser-- "I've called to ask you to give us something for the O. P. O. 8S. The" Old Gentleman-- 'My dear lady, I already give away one-tenth of my income." . Lady Convasser "Oh, just this year couldn't you make it an elev- enth?""--Punch £ Lady Striving To Please. "Josiah," said Mrs. Corntossel, "the first of the summer boarders will arrive to-morrow, "I know it." "Well, hide those scientific works on agriculture. And don't forget to tousie your hair and stick your trousers in your boots. Summer boarders always like to imagine there's a real comic- -picture farmer around the place." Mediation. Cohen--Hands up, or I'll shoot. Quick-Witted Burglar--Fifty dol- lars fer de gun! Cohen--Seld--Gargoyle. Words of Wise Men. Patch grief with proverbs, Shakespeare. An honest man is able to speak for himself, when a knave is net.-- Shakespeare. Give me health and a day, and I will make ridiculous the pomp of em perors.-- Emerson. The best way to make ouf poverty respectable is to seem never to feel it as an evil.--Bovee. As the flower is before the fruit, go is faith before dood works. -- Whately. Words are but blackeyes to sense, and will dance attendance without wages or compulsion. --Swift. We can do more good by being good than in any other way,---Row- land Hill He is armed without that is inno- cent within; be 'this thy screen and this thy will of brass. Horace. Be not familiar with the idea of wrong, for sin in fancy mothers many an ugly. act.--Theodore Parker. : miere THINGS THEATRICAL Notes About Plays, Players and Play- houses, ) Lady Randolph Churchill as she still calls herself, although the wife of George Cornwallis West, has writ- ten another play called "The Bill." A writer in the Birmingham Pest bodly asserts that in England to-day the proportion of men at an after- noon performance is Insignificant, and that they are invariably . out- numbered by women in the evening. In a word, the audience is an as- sembly of women and the men they take with them. George Tyler of Liebler & com- pany has arranged for Mme. Alla Nazimova, (Mrs. Charles E. Bryant) to appear in New York early in Nov- ember in a comedy, which has not yet heen named, by McDonald Has- tings. The scene is laid in Lon- don. Next season Laura Hope Crews will change managements, for David Belasco has placed her under con- tract. She will create an important role in a new play to be launched by Mr. Belasco immediately after the vroduction of "The Vanishing Bride." Owen Johnson's dramatization of hi= own book, '""The Salamander," will be' given its metropolitan pre- in Ociober, and before the holidays have passed New Yorkers will be given their first glimpse of Bavard Veillier's and Irvin Cobb's idvitic play, "Back Horhe, ' and Hd- win Milton Rovle's novelty . farce "Peace and Quiet." The firm will present Edgar Selwyn's new comedy, "Rolling Stones." and in association with A. H. Woods will produce "The Guittvy Man." : "The Misleading Lady," will be- gin a forty weeks' 'our :{ the pmin- 1 «ities in Sept:vinar The company will be virtually the same as that seen at the Fulton theatre wsen. levis S. Stone will continue as the leading man. William A. Brady will "Ansrtment 12-K" in Maxine liota's theatre Monday evening. The cast includes Helen Lowell, May Al- lison, Robart Ober, Edward Begley, Alan Brooks, Jean Shelby. Harry Enzlgzh and George Sevboldt. David Belasco has engaged Janet Beecher for one of the leading feminine roles in his forthcoming production of "The Vanishing Bride," which will inaugurate the season' for the Belasco theatre early in September. Miss Becher's role wil be that of a brilliant American soctety woman, who lives, as #he de- scribes it, a life of coler. To her color is 'both a delight and a neces- sity, and her color schemes during the action of the play give onpor- frnity not only for unusual pictori- al * ornamentation, but for some remarkably striking and original costuming. ' "ipa last las produce El- COMMENTS BY ZACCHEUS, Who Deals With Elections and Lack of Dress. A---Above all liabilities, wrote ton, give me liberty to know, ter and to argue according to science, B--Battling against "distilled dam- nation" was a moral issue - worihy be taken up by any or ail Mil- to ut- ron- to churches. L--Clergymen who rose in defence of a principle had an undeniable right to do so. "Demagogic clergy," therefore, is gratuitous insult to that body E---Entirely out of plice on lips of a servant of the people. (riants of not so long through their indecision now see their power dwindled to a dow. » H--Heavy losses by 'both Ontario and Manitoba governments show how the wind blows. I--Interest will now turn to federal field and tocy finisk. J--Joe Martin coming back. He is in that class of politicians who talk moro than they think. K--Kindling discard that men find difficult' to. allay. I.--~latin quarter students, in Bel- gium, have formed an anti-collar club I'he contemplating an anti- sock society 3} M---Maeterlinck, ed the former. No telling what all these will take off next. (One thing is certain, there limit in discarding attire beyond which even men cannot go and con- tinue to demand respect. Perfect mode, except there soor comes a reaction, must pesume itself into something like a "bathing suit,' or better still in bold "pedibus aum jambis,"" Q--Qui vidka verra R--Reputation for browbeating and driving not so good as tactful leader ship. ' S--Song that is likely to survive all others bids fair to be * 'We Won't Go Home Till the Morning." T--Tub of Diogenes, where thou ? ' U--Unknelled, unsung and ubregret- ted has Dr. Reaums passed out of sight. He was anything but a true specimen of his race. V--Voice of the people, , voice God. W--Worthy epiiaautatives the world honors if they be but men and not tools. ) X--Aperience is a hard teacher and the deceiver must pay the price. Y----Young men aspifing to eminence must know there is but ome raad Wierato~Tuner bright ! ZACCHEUS. a the G ago, can sha the wiser girls are the poet, has join- people is a art of A Real Marksman. London Express. We have lots of good men the s still, as last week's of hits in battleship wactice but we haven't anybody quite up to the mark of one of Lord Charles Beresford's men at the bombardment of Alexandgia in 1882. Lord Char los asked a gunner if he could hit a man, who was on the fort. The gun- ner : , "Aye, aye; Sir "Then hit hindi in the eve," behind record shows, Te said HOMES oF THE NAVAIOS. Stuffy Winter Hogans and Light am Airy Summer "Cottages." The Navajos are the least gregarion of native American tribes. vever vw gregating in towns and vilages au pever forming permanent comwupt ties. Their homes, called bogaus. an mere hovels, built of stoves our ib trunks and limbs of trees, with round. ed roofs thickly covered with eurtb A smoke vent in the roof and' Bn door way in the side are the only means ¢ ventilation. In cold weather (thes cavelike structures are. kept tigbtl closed, so that ne one but un India could live in them at all. But when springtime comes (hb Navajo Squaw constructs a) sume cottage, sometimes consisting of » more 'than & windbreak of sagebrusi around a cirdular clear space. Some times the summer hogan is a shady bower under a desert cedar tree, with leafy branches piled around as a meas ure of protection against winds and sandstorms. Sometimes it is a shelter formed by the utilization of old pieces of canvas, sheet iron and other cast away material picked up around the refuse dumps of the railroad towns. In any event, the dwellers In the sum- mer hogans are practically in the open all the time. Fresh air is never for a moment excluded.--Christian Herald, NAILS IN STONE WALLS. Easy Method of Placing Them So They Will Remain Firm. Few women know how to drive a pail into a brick wall, and yet it is what they often need.to do for them- selves if there is no man about. The following method is easy and has been found entirely satisfactory: Hav- ing decided upon the exact spot into which the nail is desired to be driven, which must be in the plaster?between the bricks, provide yourself with a hammer and screwdriver. With these tools commence working out the hard plaster by tapping the handle of the screwdriver. As the plaster turns to dust it must be blown or dusted out so that the size of the hole may be se¢n. When a space about one inch long and nearly one inch deep has been worked out get a small piece of wood about the same size and with the hammer wedge it tightly into the space. When it seems firm take the nai] and drive it into the wood. It'will go in nicely, without -bending, and remain firm an indefinite length of time. This same metfiod was used at one time when it was decided to hang a hammock be- tween the fence and the wall, with the juecention that the hole was dug out a little longer and deeper than for an or dinary nail.--Minneapolis Journal, Homemade Barometer. Those who love experimentation may try the following method of making a cheap barometer practiced in France: Take eight grams of pulverized cam- phor, four grams of pulverized nitrate of potassium, two grams of pulverized nitrate of ammonia and dissolve in sixty grams of alcohol. * Put the whole in a long, slender bottle closed at the top with a piece of bladder containing a pinhole to admit the air. When rain is coming the solid particles will tend gradually to mofint, little star crystals forming in the liquid, which otherwise remains clear. If high winds ure ap proaching the liquid will become thick, as if fermenting, while a film of solid particles forms on the surface. During fair weather the liquid will remain clear and the solid particles will rest at the bottom. Reading Music. The literary man, writes a corre- spondent, may very well, when he is lying on his back, console himself with literature. But what is the scientific man, with po particular interest in literature, to do? of my acqgfaintance once got through a month of painful convalescence by the aid of another kind of reading. He read through the scores of his fa- vorite composers. He had no ear for the rhythms of literature, but A ear for the rhythms of music, and as sured me that he heard the as he read the scores. He said that dur ing that month he really came to un- derstand Beethoven-and that no per- formance of his work ever satisfied him afterward.--London Spectator. A Bit of Blarney. Aun Irishman who was begging in the street was asked by a lady how it was that such a fine, strong man as be should be asking for alms. With na- tive blarney he replied: "Lady, begging is the only profession I know in which a gentleman cap ad- dress a beautiful woman without hav. ing -an introduction." The remark was quite profitable.~ Loudon Answers. Moss Bread. Along the shores of the Columbia river a kind of bread is made by the Indiabs from a moss that grows on the biz as a man's head, and these are baked in pits. His Standard. Young Bride (to whaiter)--Waiter, my husband has been here very Dy Intely. 1 hope he's all right, eh? Wuiter--Oh, yes; he never has more thon (bree glasses of beer. If he were pot happy he'd surely drink six.~FlHe- gende Blatter. 3 the good and happiness of each othes.~ Mejwdith, | > nimi Yes, Cordelia, the drum ajo be- longs to the ban if he does give one the impression the band be- longs to him. 16 err is human; to sidestep . is di- A certain professor | Electric F; ans. n the city. Halliday' s Electric Shop Well, why don't 2 or buy one oh our Lowest prices a Lerrons ster Nothing is more fashionable than this wrap of self-figured silk or satin. It has two plece sleeves in one with the body to form a front yoke and turn buck cuffs, » ---------------------------------- Selt-figured satin or silk would be admirable for this light summer wrap. In black, dark blue or any of the fash- fonable shades it Is .charming. For summer resort wear brilliant colors are preferrad. To make. It required 4 yards of 36-inch, 3% yards of 44-inch or £8 yards of 64-inch material. One and a quarter yards of contrast- ing material will be needed for the rip- ple collar and flare cuffs. If narrow material is used, the pat. tern must be placed on an open fold; the seam at the center back may be Gary &Pracfical Home Dress Makin Prepared Especially For This Newspaper . LIGHT SUMMER WRAP. avoided, however, by the tise of 8 wider fabric. In this instance cut off % inch trom back edge of back of pattern and place on material with back edge on a - lengthwise fold. 2 As the first step In the construction, sew the sleeve to front and back as notched and close the under-arm and sleeve seams, The large "O" perfora- tions mark the center of the front Close center-back seam (in case nar- row material has been used), also back seam of ruffle. Now sew ruffle to lower edge of front and back as notched, Sew plain collar to neck and front edge. notches dnd center-backs even, or if desired with ripple collar, close back seam (indicated by single large "O" perforations), gather on double "00" perforations; sew to neck and front edge, notches and center-backs even. Bring single small "o" perforations to corresponding perforations in front and tack. Join collar stay sections togeth- er, adjust to position underneath ripple collar, center-backs even, stitching low- er edge (indicated by small "o™ per- oration) to neck edge and stitch gath« ers in collar along upper edge. Close the cuff seams as notched and sew to lower edge of the sleeve. To add to the daintiness of the coat wear separate collar and cuffs of linen. Newman e Above Patterns Can belObtained from Princess Street & Shaw, will be a ooked, world on, to work grocer sells it. then Io t the tas taste. Nes toasted iPriscutt, the luncheon with Always heat the Biscuit in oven to restore over It Silk OF Crem Oe rrier or Star Shredded Wheat Wi butter, cheese or marmalades. Your Summer "Meat" treat if you will make it Al the meat of the golden wheat steam- shredded and baked in the nest, cleanest m most hygienic food facto : ies more real, muscle- Aine a than meat or € » Co muc and is more easily digeste on, to Grow ta ys live -on. Ready - cooked : and ready-to-serve. _ Your ood to play * { 5 e988; Ed salt or Eo a as meal of

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