Daily British Whig (1850), 24 Sep 1914, p. 3

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" TORICIG A BOOK-BINDE v LOOSE LEAF DEVICE EMBOSSERS ENGRAVERS ENE a re on receipt of - price, 'ree pamphlet, Address: THE COOK MEDICINE CO, TORONTO, ONT. (Formerly Windsor.) [There's a lot of Tt besides their d slight extra cost. They give you extra vision and extra comfort. ey are better- looking, too. Come and see us about Toric Lenses. LENSES hildren's Eye We are paying special attention to School Children's Eyes. Have especially strong Frame Can antee satisfaction and eave BEST'S Expert Opticians Open Sundays 1.30 to 5, 6.30 to an guar- yoh EYES TESTED WITH 3 OUT CHARGE NO DRUGS USED CASES REQUIRING | MEDICAL ATTEN. | TION WILL BE S0 | INFORMED Keeley Jr., M.0.D.0. } { OPTOMETRIST AND OPTICIAN 226 Princess Street 8 doors above the Opera Hous The criticism and adwmira- tion of every good dresser in this city with 20th Century and Fashion : Craft Suits and Coats: No -tailor- makes bet- ten Clothes, and Joue pocket-1 book is enriched from 5p.e to] 10 p.c. on every Suit and Coat by buying from us. announced the constipated wagte matter T0 BREAK FRENCH CENTRE - -------- Desperate Effort to Relieve] "mmaer Crumbling Right. . THEY MUST RETREAT AND POSSIBLY BE PUSHED OUT : OF FRANCE, German €ruiscr Boambards Madeas, Indig--British Troops From Hong Kong Join Japanese at Kino-Chau. Paris, Septi~24.--In a series of night attacks, delivered with 'des- peration, the Germans last night failed to break through the French centre Beyond the bare announce ment that the attacks were repulsed in their entirety no particulars are as yet available. This attack, coupled with. unusull activity on the French right, proves conclusively, the = military. experts here say, that the Germans are making every possible move to re- Heve the pressure on their slowly crumbling right. There was generally. a confident feeling everywhere here, and it was felt that, becauge of their enormous losses, the Germans must again re treat, and that this time they would be pughed out of French territory, in the north at least. British Join Japanese Tokio, Sept. 24.--It is officially to-day that British in- landed to reinforce the Japanese land forces operating against the German concecsion of Kia6-Chau on the Shan-Tung per sula.- These British troops were sent from Hong: Kong. fantry ha German Cruiser Bombards Midras. London, Sept. 24.---It announ- ced here this morning that the Ger man cruiser Emden, on Tuesday | bombarded the city of 'Madras, In dia, setting several oil tanks afire, and killing several Hindoos is More Cities In Ruins. Paris, Sept. 24.--Further German vandalism, is reported in the des truction of Dinant, Jumet, Charleroi and Tamines, four prosperous Yal- gian towns, and two other com- munities unnamed. Dinant and Ju met are reported totally ruined Conditions in the district ~contign ous to these centres are such that food cannot be carried in to the in- habitants who still remain. They, { a state of famine. Wee "War Tidings. A despatch from Berlin quotes the FYageblatt ing that four of Im peror William's sons are lying in hos pitals seriously wounded. ! General Pau has gone to the south! of France to form aufiliary corps tor the French armies. as say ELECTRICAI MACHINES Are To Be Exh ed at "Kingston's Only Fair." LL. Toronto, chief engin of the Hydro-Electric Commission in: the city on Wednesday and start work on the installation of hfteen ma- and instruments for demon- tothe * patrons. of King's Fair' the usefulness of electricity in the house and on farm. 'These machines and instru ments include everything from washinyz and | 1 wel Case, chines strating tons Unly machines to curling-tong heaters toasters, Mr ( plensed with the space allotted him by R. J. Bushell that he returned to Vo- ronta on Thursday to secure three ad ditional machines. He was very en- thusiastic about the - fair and was surprised that a place the size of Kingston should _ have 'such gooil buildings and grounds so close to the and yet have such a hard time to make a fair a success ase was So city Aull-Reid Wedding Valid. Toronto, Sept. 24.~Justice Middle ton has given decision in 'the Aull- Reid marrage case to the efiéct that the marriage must stand. The ac- tion asked that the marriage be made null-and woid. The attorney- general's department intervened some time ago and declared that the On- tario courts had no right to annul the marriage. This stand was up- held yesterday by Justice Middleton. The wedding was a Cobburg sensa- tion last year sary to tell the truth in order to shame his satanic majes-| ty. Some men can tell lies that shame him. BAD COLD 7 TAKE CASCARETS FOR ~ BOWELS TONIGHT No headache, constipation, bad eold or sour stomach by morning Get a lU-cent box. Stick headache, biliousness, coated tongue, head and nose clogged up with a cold--always trace this to tor- pid liver; delayed, fermenting food in the bowels or sour, gassy stomach. Poisonous matter clogged in the in testines, instead of being cast out of the system is re-absorhed nto the blood. When 'this poison reaches the delicate brain tissue it causes conges- tion and that dull, throbbing, sicken- ing headache. RE acarets "tmmediately cleanse the "stomach, remove the sour, undigested food and foul gases, take the excess bile from the liver and carry out al and poisons in the bowels. : Cascavet to-might will surely hieh u out by morning. lhey w Rd sleep--a 10-¢ent hox "J were still FOR METHODISM Methodist General Conference éned in Ottawa. . Sept. 23.--lhree hundred and fifty delegates from every part i the dominion are attending the general conference of the Methodist church in Canada, which opened a two weeks' session in the Dominion Methodist church here to-day. letween to-day and October 4th, when the conference is scheduled to close, practically every phase of the work of the church will be discussed. Rev. Dr. Carman, of Toronto, the vet eran ot the ¢hurch, and Rev. S. D Chown, . of Vancouver, 'are presiding over the conference, and Rev. 'I. Al bert Moore is acting as, secretary. Dr. Carman recommended a policy of militancy for Methodism, and eall ed attention to the need tor thing be done for the churches. "li Methodism is go on, attention must be paid the rural churches," said the ehairman Regret "thats = the Apresent war was precipitated s expressed. The churgh must to hold governments down to the principles of righteous ness it was. the duty ot the church to bring Chris#'s. kingdom on earth. "Britain's truth and honor were in the scrap of paper referred to by. the kaiser," said Dr. Carman. *"lhe lib erty of every one of ' us would have | been endangered had Britain not re spected the neutrality of Belgium.' Rev. Dr. T. Albert Moore was again elected secretary of the conference, polling 1:0 out of 234 votes. One of the most important reports to be presented will be that of the Methodist" Missionary Society. The following summary of the finances of the society for the quad- renium totals the iteis-of what may be regarded current income as dis- tinct from legacies; then adds the legacies for a grand total of receipts This, of eourse, omits receipts from sales of properties and from sales of literature. The amount received from church members, including le ing the quardennium i $2; 70. To this should be ad- ded contributions to several funds not credited ' in general in- come: Chengtu Hospital China Famine Fund Mission Plant and E sion Fund «ain Other minor items ...... 1, Making a total including the special funds of $2,909,800.99, against $2,031,2 88 for the prev ous quadrennium. The increase for the quadrennium is therefore $878, 523.11, or over forty-three .per cent advanee on the total of four years ago. The current expenditure for the guadrennium has exceeded the cur- rent income by $83,967.94. In accompanying statement no account has been- taken of the government grant for Indian schools or the ex penditure of same. For the quadren- nium this amounted to $229,672.49. op- Uitawa, ' sone rural to to to endeavor special $1,061,562 16,509.28 the PRIEST SHOT AS SPY. Fed Leading Citizens of Herve Shot in Cold Blood. ! Ostend, Sept. 294---It ig stated here that the Germans, in revenge for an alleged attack on them by civilians, have completely destroy- ed the town of Herve in Belgium, 10 miles eas? of Liege, and. an ad- joining village. The inhabitants, it is stated, resisted the demands of the Germans to pay a fine and fur- nish certain quantities of foodstuffs: "In the fight that followed the Germans lost heavily When they finally conquered 'tliey forced fifty of the male inhabitants to bury the German dead. Afterward they made them dig a4 pit and stood 48 of them on"'the edge. All. were shot and tumbled , into the pit, after which the two survivors were com- pelled to bury their 'ompanigns and then detained as prisoners. A BLIND STENOGRAPH ER Cutting Has Mechanical Device For Reporting speeches, Indianapolis, Ind, Sept. "Bert" Cutting, nineteen years who has been totally blind jor years, has won distinction for him self by reproducing in shorthand a speech made by Governor Ralston. Cutting became blind as a result | of typhoid fever and other maladies. | Being 'otherwise in"good health, he wished to earn a living and hit up on 'shorthand writing as an occupa tion. + He used a mechanical instead of taking the usual hand notes. By this method words. are spelled out in print. Cutting believes he is the first blind person in the world to do this kind of work 'for live- lihood. 24 - old, four device | short- a AMMUNITION UNDER COAL How Germans Kept Supplied For Fighting in France, Paris, Sept. 24.--During the" béttle | f the Marne six barges carrying coal and flying the Dutch flag pass- through a lock in ome of canals. The captain seemed rather vague as to his destination, and 'when asked to produce his papers le, replied that he had none. His was searched and was found, a~surface layer of coal, to entirely of ammunition fr the Ger- | man army. The discovery resulted ! in a search along all the riviig and canals from, Belgium into France, and 120 vessel carrying. cargoes ior the Germans were found. NEED BELTS AND SOChs the cargo undet consist Queen Asks English Women to Aid Soldiers, i London, Sept. 24.--Belts and socks are the prime need of the Iritish expeditionary army, and every wo- man in the empire has been asked | to do her .share to supply this de- | mand. - With the approach of win- ter 300,000 pairs and an equal nun ber of belts, knitted or woven, rording to the war office estimate, should be supplied to "supplement the regular provisions of the government} Queen Mary was notified of this sig tuation, "ahd promised to do 'her part.! She 'then appealed to it] tish women to%aidh her. ac- An Innocent Abbe Gets Short Shrift From Germans. | Department du Nord, France, | Sept. 20 (Delayed )---Falsely ar raigned as a spy, Abbe Delebecq if formerly a professor in the College of Our Lady at. Dunkirk, was sum marily executed at Valenciennes or Friday morning. The abbe was returning on a ycle to his parish at Mainz after a memorial service for his father, who} died a month ago. When arrested | by a patrol of Uhlans he had no in criminating documents, but he car ried letters from French goldiers of Dunkirk to their families. The abbe was tried at midnight by a court-martial composed of offi- cers, who after a trial which was a mockery condemned him to be shot at daybreak as a #py. The priest wa confided to the care of the German | military chaplain and passed the| night in praying in one of the wait ing rooms of the station At 5 o'clock in the morning abbe was placed in a motor car taken .to the place of execution on the outskirts of Valenciennes On the way he repeated the prayers for the dying and gave his captors a let ter to his mother. 'Then he knelt jh! prayer for a moment and soon fell lifeless, pierced by a dozen bullets The Germans first unceremonious- ly threw the body into a hastily made grave which was not deeper than a foot and a half. A passerby, seeing .a portion of a cassock pre truding, placed. stones on the grave for a cross and the women of the vi cinity covered the grave with flow- ers. The Abbe Delebecque priest in the dioces of to be shot by the Germans. bie- the and the 7th Cambrai is IS THE BIG SHIP DOOMED? Sir Percy Scott's Words Recalled by Submarine Success. . London, Sept. 24.-- The Daily Chronicle's naval correspondent writes: The loss of three armed cruisers is-a disaster, the meaning of which it would be foolish to minim- ize. THe vessels were not new. They were even .obsolescent; but they valuable. Wherever the dizaster took place, danger was uot foreseen. The enemy's submarine was not pirceived by any lookeut. The conclusion, therefere, cannot be os cated nat a new e'ement in nave warfare has j.eciolly nearer to ite day four-fold by Sir Percy Scott in which the big ship would be doomed. Are we to conclude that big ships like the Aboukir, or let us say the latest battle cruisers, are at the mer- ¢y of the submarine assailant?: As vessels under way cannot carry tor- pedo nets outrigged, their safety seems to lie in vigilant observation, not by themselves, "but by accom- panying small craft, but still more in rapid movement and in altering their course so as to make it impos- sible for a submerged assgilant to determine their: position. No subma- {fine below the surface has anything like the speed of a cruiser. It must A + straig work from' clear, stomach sw and' bowels regular for months. ur druggist means your head No a and your liver ¥ " lie in wait or have very good luck." "Weeh-end sweels" at Gibson's, .... K ENTISH TOWNS: MOURN. Crews of Ill fated Cruisers Hailed From There. t Chatham, Eng., Sept. 24.--The Cressy, Aboukir and Hogue are Chatham ships, attached to the Nore Commande, and are familiar tacles in the River Medway. Indeec the Cressy and Aboukir only left; Kithole Reach a few days ago, among -the last of the war s to sail from port, The total vs numper over 2,000 and of these a large portion are residents in four local towns and a considerable por tion of the ships' companies Royal Navel resetve men. and were wera DISEASE RIFE IN VIENNA. Residents Panic Stricken at Sion) ery. of Cholera Cases. | via Rome, Sept. 24.-- Off cial admission that there has quite a number of cases of 1 discovered among soldiers returned { from the front created great alatm | here. The city has appropriated 1. 000,000" crowns for the immediate construction of a contagious har- racks. An epidemic of dysentery has already brokem out here, and the | Viennese are panic-stricken over the prospects of a cholera epidemic: Vienna, been cholera SUGAR SHUT OUT. . } Germans Were Selling It Through | Holland. London, Sept. 24.--Because thé Bri- | tish Board of Trade has been 'ap- praised that German merchants still | are disposing of sugar through Hol- land, 'notwithstanding the prohibi tion of its export by the govern- ment of the Netherlands, the Fng- lish government has forbidden the | importation of all sugar from Hol land. | m------------------ He is a good-natured man does not wish to break an clock that goes off on time. "Week-end sweets"" at (Gibson's, A truth suppressed is sometimes more damaging than a lie told. PURE RICH BLOOD PREVENTS DISEASE Bad blood,--that is, blood that is ; impure or impoverished, thin and pale,--is responsible for more ail- | Tents thin anything else. : 1t affects every organ and function. In some cases it Yansts sataizh; in ! 'others, dys ia; in others, rheuma- ey pe Ril others, weak, tired, languid feelings, and worse troubles. It is responsible for run-down conditions, and. is the most common cause of disease. . Hood's Sarsaparilla is the greatest purifier and enricher of the blood the world has ever known. It bud been wonderfully successful in. removing serofula and other humors, inereasing the red-blood 'corpuscles, and building who alarin i up the whole system. Get it today | morning he left in a skiff to go fish | hat had drifted into Morristowr | directly across from here on. the J ! erican shore, | 'You are going to die first, anyway, | scores of trawlers and small steam- ® Store Opens [Winter weights] regularly sold at $1.50, $1.75, $2.00 and $2.25 17. Smartly Trimmed Hats Regular $4.00 to $7.50" Tomoiiow $2.95 LAST CALL! 'Patriotic Sale' ; Which closes at six p. m. tomorfow evening=--don't fail to get a generous share of the wonderful bargains we are offering. "The prices and values aré incomparable. Besides the already long list of specials offered we are going to augument it with a few extras for to-morrow -300 Yards of Fine All Wool English and French Novelty 'Coatings Tomorrow $1.19 830 a. m. Cash Only St eacy's The Busiest Store in Town. ~y BROCKVILLE CITIZEN CANNOT BE FOUND Ernest Sharpe - Went Fishing -- "Boat With Hat Was Pick- ed Up. Brockville, Ont., Sept. Ern- est Sharpe, proprietor of the Strath- cona hotel' is missing. Tuesday 90 ing on the river for a few hours and later the empty boat containing 1 A search of the river has failed to revezl the slightest trace of the, missing man. Sharpe was recently married to a Briekville girl, For some years he has been connected with the Strathcona Hail, and before becoming the lessee filled the position of manager He is a civil engineer- by ts ssion, hailing from Brooklyn. HE REVEALED 300 MINES Captive. From German Trawler Saved British Trouble A story is going the rounds in Lon don that when one of the British mine-hunting craft captured a mine- laying trawler manned by Germans in the North Sea, the . British captain lined up his captives and picked out the weakest looking of the lot. Ordering him to step forward, said : "I want you to tell me where those mines are that you laid. "I'll die first," said the captive, he straightened up. "Very well," replied he as the captain. if any of us do. . You helpegl lay those mines. You "know precisely where they are. We are going to hunt for them and your position is going to be right in the bow of this ship so that if hit one of them you surely will the first man to die He ordered the prisoner placed 7 rectly in the bow and then the ship steamedsahead over the waters known to be mined. I'he end of the story is that this vessel piel ed up nearly mines while * the captured sailor was Kept in his position "of danger. we be 300 DON'T GET DOWNHEARTED., British Naval Lieutenant Big Coup. New Ybrk, Sept. 24.--In a letter just received by a friend in New York a lieutenaht-colonel in the British navy writes : : "We have been right up the Elbe in our submarines, but could not'yet at the big German warships. « They are lying well apart and protected hwy Hints at ships, with huge Bteel cables and nets in_ between. \ "The naval brigade of nearly 15,- 000 men, mostly from the naval re serves, ate in camp being drilled daily, They expect to Jdand in Bel gium when ready. "Don't get downhearted slemt «on: bead news. The Germans will soon be done for, as immense preparations are going on here, of which I re not write more fully." 1 ------ i p-- A stitch in time also puts off the purchase day of a new garment. "ihe home of high class sweets' KINGSTON'S ELECTRIC STORE _ FLASH LIGHTS - All Kinds, 75¢c Up Our vest pocket nickle-plated is a beauty. Solar Gas Arc Lamps 200 in use in Kingston. Best of the kind made. Home lighting our specialty. H. W. Newman Electric Co. Phone 441. 76 Princess Stree. Everything for the football player will be found here. Shin guards, nose guards, knee guards, shoulder and elbow pa Jerseys pants, boots, adn an excellent line of footballs fram $1.25 to $5.00, Secretaries of clubs should write and get our prices and If pos sible call and see our goods. 5 (LD Becyoiss| PHONE 529 -- Gibson's, ' For Cooking and Drinking, also for Cake Icing and making Fudge. "RETURNING TO PARIS capital, announces 'that it" will": v | { tura to Paris. : Govern- | Fhe government, however, will r- it is understood, consider pong. I; kto the capital until the ) been definitely driven from ° Bh territary. EO ---------- Donate 3,500 Barrels of Flow; Calgary, Alta. . Sept. 24, ~R Hood Mills, Limited, donates : sacks of flour, end Alberta company. 5000 sacks of flour to patriotic fund. . Total, 3500 ban Many Leaving Paris, But ment Remains. \ Bordeaux, Sept. 24.--Bordeaux is fw ginning to lose sométhing of the overcrowding aspect it has had since the seat of the French government was brought hers froin Paris. Many persons not: directly nected with the government ave ing on to Biarritz, Pau and other resorts, while still others, in ° spite of the long and uncertain railroad journey back to Paris, have decided to return to the capital. They are encouraged by the continued good reports of the progress of the war. The Temps, which 'was transferced here several weeks ago - from the con- go White Rose flour put 49, 95 Ib. packages, at fa

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