t PHYSICIAN'S 'ADVICE, aes and practically anaige stomach Sttuvle. are nee x bi' ten, ue to ac sun h sufferers shoud, stomac ! ! ible, avoid eating fond ts nature, or which hy it sétibn in the stomach de- Unfortunately, suzh a foods which are in biood, flesh and {, properties. This 1s the ties and swmach » rer are hind iy #0 thin, emaci- "ian lag ing in that vital energy a ny <oma from a well {ed @ benefit of thowe suf. 'a Jo ine been obliged to ex- ot from + ale dlet all starchy, sweet or fatty aE a Resale existence on products 1 would suggest that hond try a meal of any food or is which you may like in moderate unt, taking immed Bley after. ds a Seaspgontul of Isurated nesia a little hot or or. This will neutralize an h ay be present, or which may form , @nd instead of the usual wh ng of uneasinass and fullness, you 1 nd that your food agrees with Jou plottectly. | Bisurated magnesia 'v he best food corrective and tacid known. It has no direct action stomach, but by neutralizing the "of the food contents, and oe the source of the acid irr. inflames the delicaie sng, it does more than | fhly ba done by any drug i che, As a physician I believe of medicine whenever necessary." ut I must admit that | hot ase the sense of dosing an in. jiktead jrritated stomach hj of getting rid of cause of all the trouble. | t a he te bisurated magnesia fram | ur druggist, eat what you want at | Ur next meal, take some. of the bis. ated esta. af directed aboye 1 and see If I'm not right. | od, and are trying to | | wrecked vesterday NEWSPAPERMAN TO CLEMENCEAU. DUTCH RE: PLIE He Claims That the Dutch Are Not Helping the Germans--{lemencean Makes Comment, L"Homme En- istter from a Dutch newspaperman, for fen years a re sident in Paris, who replies to M Clemenceau's assertions that Hol land i8 pro-German beyond the lim its of neutrality. The writer regrets that M. Clemenceau did not give his reasons for thinking thus, though presumably. based on inforhation from correspondents. He continues *] know Holland intimately. Any such statement is erroneous. The Duteh population is distinctly anti- Boche.' 1 have just received a char- acteristic letter from a professor ir Amsterdam University, who, though his mother is German, denounces German atrocities more violently than most anti-German French newspapers, "After Belgium's experience, car you blame, Holland = for wanting peace? Tut was the Duteh mobili zation directed against any but the Germans? "You blame us for supplying food to Germany.s I say that the Dutch are not suj Tpke it, but ean we pre | vent the Germans who. commercial ly invaded Holland as they did Par- is, fr sending non-contrahand materials? Does Duteh charity to- ward the millions of Belgians strike you as pro-German? M. Clemenceau comments on this "I have not attacked the attitude of the Dutch nation, which the cor- respondent - doubtless repregentec correctly, but I maintain that the Dutch government is markedly less anti-German. Surely public opinion is able to influence the leaders if # s0 definitely friendly to France. Paris, Nov. 11.- chain prints a om Wrecked On Great Lakes, Detroit, Nov. 11.--At least' three lives were lost and several 'ships were in a blinding gunle nd snowstorm on the great lakes Rose White Once tried always used, flour SPECIAL IN WOMEN'S BO 0TS In Dongola or Gun Metal, with a medium or heavy se button or laced, le, IN ONE MINUTE ! CLOGGED NOSTRILS OPEN---COLDS Stops Nasty Digcharge, Clears Stuffed Head, Heals Inflamed Air Pas. sages and Youn Breathe Freely. p's Cream Balm." mall bottle anyway, just to try it----Apply a little in the nostrils and instantly your clogged nose and stopped-up air passages of the head Will open; you will breathe freely: dullness and headache disappear. By morning! the ecatarrh, cold-in-head or catarthial gore throat will be gone End such misery now! Get the small bottle of "Ely's Cream Balm" at any drug store. This swe fragrant balm dissolves by the hes AND CATARRH VANISH penetrates and heals swollen membrane nose, head and the inflamed, {which lines the | throat; clears the passag stops nasty discharges and a fee of cleansing, soothing relief come immediately Don't lay awake gling for breath, with head stuffed nostrils closed, hawking and blow ing. Catarrh or a cold, with its run ning nose foul mucous dropping in to the throat, and raw dryness is distressing but truly needles Put your faith--just once-- "Ely's Cream Balm" and your or catarrh will surely disappear. [i the nostrils; air to-night strug- in cold Crawford & Walsh, . Civil and Military Tailors Princess and Bagot Streets ATTITUDE OF HOLLANG| '='The separation THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1914. THE TOWN OF GANANOQUE. Death of Mrs, Michael Kelly at Pine Grove. Gananoque, Nou. 11.--Ellen Loret- ta Shortall, wife gf Michael Kelly, passed away on Monday at the tam- dy residence, mear Pine Grove, after an illness of some duration. Deceased was well known and held in high es teem in, 'the section. The / funeral took place this moraing to-St. Bar- aaby's church, Brewer'ssiills, where requiem mass was sung by Rev, rather Traynor. The remaing were nterrec et the Brewer's Milly bury- ng ground. Undec the auspices of the ladies of the Gananoque branch of the Leeds Jounty Patriotic League amd Relief assbgiation a Red Cross tea was held at the council chamber at the town hall last @ening from 6 to 3.30 o- clock, and drew out quite .a large attendance. 'The proceeds are pe used in Red Cross work in section, Under rhe auspices of Gananoque souncil, No. 284, R.T. of 1., a well vitended pie social was held in their odge room. Louis Lalonde, Garden street, yesterday in Kingston. Harmony lodge, No. 15, Daughters f Reboekkah, held an assembly lurper's hall last evening. The local branch of the: 'hristian Temperance union held ypen session in Grace church on Mon- lay evening when the report of the lelegate to Abe provincial convention of the W.C. was given. There vas quite a Tair attendance. Mr. and Mrs. F. G. Salichs were recalled from New York city whither they had gone to spend part of their honeymoon by the serious illness of Mrs. Salichs' father, Principal R. %. Graham, of Gananoque high school, who is a patient in Kingston general hospital. Mrs. D. Grimmer, spending some time in of her parents, Chiel Mrs. II. J. Ryan IE. White. of Kingston, lays in town with relatives the past week. William Clare, left here a few days ago and located at Cupar, Sask., has returned io town. EH. Hurd Kingston, are at their L 0 this spent aw Women's an of Halifax, is town, guest of Police and spent a few during who E. Hurd few Brock and son, (0. spending oan of lays street home 4 BR ITISH PE SION PLAN wes Far to Meet Socialist and Labor Demands. London, Nov. 11 roment was made public the details of a ne plan for allowances and pensions to the dependents of soldiers and sailors Without meeting fully the demands made by the socialists and workmen' party, : plan goes a long way tc meet the eriticisms of the existing scheme, and it believed will be the cause of more enlistorents. Provision made in the plan state assistance to fathers and moth ers or mother dependents of unmarried men. The scale of pensions to wido and orphans is considerably increa lowances will be pa after notification "The gove the is 8 for for twenty-six weeks of death.' A widow with four children will now receive a minimum of twenty shillings (about 85) instead of eleven shillings weekly. A widow on ré-marriage wil receive the minimum gratuity of $195 instead of $65. Total disability will carry a pension of {rom fourteen shil lings per for a single man of the lowest rank to twenty-three shilling for a married an with children. week mie bmi d---- MONTREAL SCENTS PLOT. 'Bucrete Foundations on Site Com- mand Five Railway Lines. Montreal, Nov. 18.--~Through arrest John Hoe, alias Inspector Brousseau, revenne department, German plot has been un whereby a. foreign foe, b battery guns, mig from strategic point all five railroad lines en- Montreal. He is charged with ] liquor without license. of it as the rendezvous of Germans of Montreal. The this club house is alleged construction ? in the , mounting by the German the John of the believes of ilughes, inland that a 'overed means of of control { A a in ongueuil ering a business, al many founda place is tion of to w of the stvle of army Inspector he raided {uantity « out nunition.' solid concrete used for heavy guns used when large turn Provsseau seized, Hoe's premises, a which "hy ammumtion, regular of to be a ar am France May Banish Absinthe Forever Paris, Nov. lL bition of the sale of alcoholic bey be result portation and forbidden when traflic in other supplemented prohi and kin France Frans were but now Permanent absinthe erages in of the war sale of absinthe the war began, intoxicants has its original order with another forbidding the sale of any alcoholic drinks similar to absinthe. ifiere is a marked ' movement in all parts of France tending to perpetuate this proftibition fred ma a £30,000 to Protect Girls. Sioux City, Iowa, 'Nov. 11.--The World's Purity Federation has ap- propriated $30,000. to protect girls who visit the Nan iFrancisco Ixposi- sion from white slavers. This state | ment was . made by John + Ham- mond, of Des Moines, ohn Let Hu of the law enforcement division. - The action was taken at meeting of the executive council in Kansas City. Wrinkles Disaores As If By Magic wirinkie®~T have entirely." writes celebrated Parisian e resiits they pro- and never perman- snly partially suc- sl v a method vihing work such harmless solution pare and use at least trouble. A rn "In the removal discarded cosmetics Mme. Corsa beauty expe duce are dec ent. Mussa cessful an "I've never wonders ax a Simp ANY Woman can p home without the half pint of witeh hazel and an ounce | of -good powdered saxolite are all you'll need. M he two and apply this re- freshing solution to your face daily. The effect is marvelou: Santas The skin becomes firmer, Ete every wrinkle and sag is af Rotel Yau 1 £0 refreshed after Baling the nasi you lsok refreshed, too; you Sgok ten yeurs younger---Sattety i Nor the ™H itive & out behind the spinal column. glan stronghold THE TERRIBLE DEEDS DONE BY PHE GERM GERMA IN BELGIUM. SOLDIERS Some Was tg Wounded Belgian Tells of Things He Saw -- A Bridge Made of Dead. Toronto World, Salisbury, Eng., Nov.. 1---Seatter- ed throughout the léngth and bread- th of England --and of Scotland and Ireland, too ----are hundreds of pris vate houses 'which have been turned over to the war office' to be utilized as hospitals. Some of these are mansions; some small residences, but whatever their capacity for Red Cross work at this time of writing, most of them have their full quota of patients. It was at one of these "hous hospitals," near the village of Hay- es, in Kent, that The World repre- sentative gained his first experience of «he sterner side of this war. Also, he was told a tale of German atroci- ties in ravaged Belgium which would seem unbelievable were it not corro borated by the testimony of thou ands of other sufferers n= this little hospital, when The World called in company with ano ther Canadian officer, were 10 wound ed Belgians The billiard-room and drawing-room had been comverted into wards, and here in comfortabl beds lay these few of the defenders of Antwerp. Eight of the ten ha been hit by shrapnel, one by a fr gment of a shell and one only rifle fire. One man had struck in the jiw, the bullet p: A by been ing All of them had 'defendéd. Fort Kessel until defense was no longer possible, and then, with thé Germans a few hundred yards away, stricken as they were, they had ménaged fo crawl in to the city and join the franti throngs who were on the march t the sea. It was from Corporal CG pe of the 110th Belgian that some details were the heroic defence of H. Filiy Infantry gathered the: la of Bitter Criticism, Nursing a wound in his forearm and crippled with rheumatism as the result of days and nights in the water-soanked trenches, he told his account of the fighting he had seen gince the war commenced. Ie spoke fair English, but at times when h recollection of all he had suffered) came to him he broke into impassion- } ed French These were the times! when he broke off his narrative to indulge in bitter criticism the Germans. His sole anxiety seem to be to get well again and to go back to the firing line It may be h wish will be gratified, but not for few months, if the doctor is to be; believed. "I came up to service the d th Germans invaded our country, said the corporal. "My wife and child I have not seen since. Perhaps, like hundreds of other women and child dren, they Rave met their death the hands of the butchers." Here he caught a look of surprise on the face of your correspondent and raising himself up with difficul ty he said: "Ah, monsieur, you ldo| not believe the German soldiers are guilty of atrocities. Let me tell you that I-have seen'men, and bo) too, with their noses cut off and their ears cut off. Not Belgian soldier but peaceful citizens. Why was this done? I do not know, unless because the barbariang thought they wy dealing with peoplé& who had furnish ed their Belgian fellow countrymen with information. I have seen wor I have seen the body of a little baby, |° a three-year-old boy, who had been bayoneted by a brave Prussian A then pitched into his mother's arme. | I know of worse things, but they |! cannot be written about. Do you | know that they took an 11.vearad) boy senut and cut off his right hand? | 'You will not fight against us," the; said, 'even if you are showing the | English the way to the front." of | '| lo | They By this patients their aid ded Are Barbarians, time several of whe other | were sitting up listening corporals' story. "That's true two in unison, and others nod their heads. 'hey are barba jans,. Better that a Belgian himself than fall into their hand The corporal went on to describe the bombardment of the forts on t! southwest of Antwerp. The first i mation that the defenders of Kessel had of the approach of invaders was the explosion of a she which wrecked part of the fortifica tions. It had been fired from a 16 inch Qowitzer at a distance of not | than 13 miles. Not a German in sight and yet within an hour the salvo of the big shells the fort was untenable. The defenders went to the fre ches and there awaited the onslaught | of the German infantry. Threé time the Prussians sought to bridge shallow siream which lay between them and their objective; and three times the Belgians with field guns, machine guns and rifle fire drove them back. The loss was enormous shoots | less Was followed Made Bridge of Dead. "They were lying -in heaps," suid) Corporal Filippe, "in heaps all over the plain and in the river. And then under cover of heavy guns, they came on again, and this time they crossed the stream. They crossed it on the bodies of their own dead, which they carried and plunged into the shallow water. Yes, that is true. Ask my comrades." The Belgian N.C.O. narratéd some of the hardships éndured by the fugitives in the retreat from Antwerp How wounded men had dropped down on the road and died without a chance of having their hurts at- tended to. = How women and men had fallen exhausted and had not been since heard of .How soldiers, | without sleep for a period of three days in the trenches, had marched along half asleep supported by coni- rades. "My country,' said the coTpor; ig) who in civil life is an electrician, "is wiped out. The 'cultured' Germans have made' of prospering Belgium a | blackened desolute desert. Of my own regiment only a handful remain "| But the day will come when we will repay Monsieur 1¢ Prussian. for his! work, All we ask now is revenge. It will come." Certainly it every Belgian is ani- i jo | was to-day mated with the sai spirit as Corl poral Filippe, it will be a black day for kaiserism when the tide of war begins to change. » NEWS OF THE DISTRICT Found In In The District Exchanges The Perth Shoe company has receiv- ed an order for 2,500 pairs of men's boots for the militia department. Mr«. Alired Vanarnam, a former res dent of Brockvile and Maitland, died, on Monday, at Lorraine, Ohio, aged seventy-four years. Arthur Vandervoort, . living" near Stirling, had his barn destroyed by fire on Monday morning. Horses, cows, hay, grain and implements werg all burned. : Albert Beatty, What Is formerly of Melrose, died at Stoughton, Sask., on Thurs- day last. He was sixty-six years of age and his remains were brought to Melrose for interment. On November 4th the marriage took place at Seeley's Bay of Miss Mar M. Stuart, daughter of Mr. and M John Stuart, to Burns Simpson, of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Simpson. Mrs. Manley Austin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Owen Reid, North Front street, Belleville, died at hee home on Monday last in Theodore, Sask., after illness. The late Mrs. Austin was born in Thurlow, near Foxboro, on January 31st, 1859, son a short IN MARINE CIRCLES SCHOONER BERTHA CALKINS IN A LIVELY STORM. Lost Her Foremast Enroute From Oswego to Picton--Will be Towed Over With Her Cargo--Movements of Vessels. The_schooner Bertha Calkins ran nto 4 lively storm after clearing irom Oswego on Tuesday on her way to Picton, and lost her foremast, and had to put in to Sodus. The steam r Hinckley, in Kingston to tow the y McCormick to Oswego, will trip to Sodus and tow the lertha Calkins to Picton. M. T. Co's elevator: Steamer Fair mount, grain-laden, is due to arrive Saturday morning from Fort Wil liam to discharge; tug Bartlett and barge U'ngava arrived this afternoon with grain from Buffalo; tug Hall will clear to-night with one grain barge for Montreal; steamer Rose mount is due to arrive to-night from Montreal, light, and will be laid up or the season Steamer DL to Hamilton at Montreal. Steamer Midland Queen passed down to Montreal 10 a. m. Tuesday Steamer Natironco passed up from Montreal at 5 p. m. Tuesday. Steamer Doric was delayed for eight hours by the storm and passed here at 9 a. m. Wednesday for Mon treal. Steamer Western arrived fron Montreal on Tuesday night and is at the Kingston Shipbuilding wharf. Schooner Julia 8. Merrill arrived from Oswego with coal for Swift' Tuesday. Steamer America arrived at 8.2 1. m. from Picton with 2,500 cases of canned goods from Picton. Steamer Scout arrived from Pres- ott on Tuesday and took on coal at Swift's. The crew building a house for the light-house keeper on he Gananoque Narrows Steamer Robert Macdenald Swift's wharf with coal Steamer Aletha down from Wednesday. Steamer Tagona b I { p.m. a . City » arrive from Montreal or Toronto Wednesday night. Steamer City of Hamilton is due to arrive from Toronto and to clear for Montreal on Thursday morning. Steamer A. E. McKenstrey passed down to Montreal 11,30 a. m. Tues day, cleared for Port Dalhousie 'KHAKI-CLAD SOLDIERS ATTENDED IN ST STATE PROCES. SION FOR FIRST TIME I A 1 Gordon passed up p. m. Tuesday from is is at Picton n [rived at Swift's 1d left for Mei lay awa is due and to at i to alear In Connection With British Parlia- ment Opening -- Search of Vaults Was Very Thorough. London, Nov. 1l.--Despite the rich cobés of peers and peeresses and the gay uniforms of heralds and diplo mats in the House of Lords, there were unmistakeable signs of the grim struggle proceeding in Furope when parliament re-assembled to-day' and was formally opened by King George. Full state marked the ceremony, but the brilliantly ' uniformed troops, which usually line the route from Buckingham: Palace to Westminster, were missing and for the first time in history Kkhaki-clad soldiers partici pated in the state procession. In view of the German spy scare, the usual perfunctory search of the vaults under parliament buildings for possible imitators of Guy Fawkes, of an earnest and thor | ough nature, The picturesqie Yeo- men of the Guard carried out their historic search, but Scotland Yard men had performed the task farmore efficiently before thei' arrival. In the house and lobbies there was the unprecedented sight of legislators in khaki. Over one hundred mem- bers of parliament and as gid peers have joined ~o01 were a mem bers of the naval and mintary forces and about fifty obtained leave from their camps to attend today' s cere: monies, ei i-- Weather Notes. Several depressions now the continent, while a cold spreading into Manitoba from. the northward. Local rain is reported from Ontario to the Maritime pro- vinces. exist over wave 18 The city engineer will report to the Board of Works next Tuesday with regard to rebuilding the King street breakwater. It is likely that the | City Council will submit a by-law {to the people at the municipal elec: tions in Jamnary, Cape Vinceng, NY. .; talking about | paving its main street. . The property owners will vote on issue. Don't buy White Rose flour if you want a cheap flour; THE EASIEST WAY 10 END Stop Falling Hair et Scalp. There is one sure way that never fails to remove dandruff completely and that is to dissolve it. This des- troys it entirely. To do this just get about four ounces of plain, ordinary Hquid arvon; apr'y it at night when retiring; use enough td moisten the sealp and rub it In gently with the finger tips, By morning most, if not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four 'more applications will com- pletely dissole and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it, no matter how much dandruff you may have. You will find, too, that all itching and digging of the scalp will stop in- stantly, and your hair will be fluffy, lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times better. If you want to keep your hair look- ing rich, do by all means get rid of dandruff, for nothing destroys the hair so quickly, It not only starves the hair and makes it fall out, but it- and Tiching | makes it stringy, straggly, dull, dry, brittle and lifeless, and everybody notices it. You ¢an get liquid arvon at any drug store t is inexpensive, and four ounces all you will need. This simple remedy has never been known to fai EUROPEAN AGENCY Wholesale Indents promptly ekecut- ed at lowest cash prices for all Brit- ish and Continental goods, including Books and Stationery, Boots, Shoes and Leather, Chemicals and Druggists' Sundries, Chipa, Earthenware and Glass- ware, Cycles, Motor Cars and Accessor- tes. Drapery, Goods, Fancy Goods and Perfumery, Hardware, Machinery and Metals, Jewellery, Plate and Watches, Photographic and Optical Goods, Provisions and Ollmen's Stores, ete., ete. , Commission 23% % to 5%. Trade Discounts Allowed. Special Quotations on Demand. Sample Cases from $50 upwards. Consignments of Produce Sold on Account. WILLIAM WILSON & SONS (Established 1814), Millinery and Piece 25, Abchurcy, Laue, London, E.O. Cable Address: "Annuaire London." COAL Thebisd you are looking is the Kind we sel | Scranton Coal Is good oa! and we guarastee prompt Booth & Co. Foot of West Street. WINTER TOURS I'o the Land of Sunshine and Summer } Days. California, Florida, Louisana. Etc Limited trains leave Kingston daily, making 'direct cennections at Mont. real, Detroit and Buliald for the Southern States, and at Uhicago for California, ete. Those contemplating a trip of any nature should consult or write me and I will be pleased to quote rates, ar- range reservations and attend to all details in connection with your trip. For full partieniars anply J. P, FIANLEY, Ralirond and Steamship Ag. ent, cor. Johnson and Ontario Sts. CANADIAN ey oR RoE WINTER TOURS To the Land of SUNSHINE AND SUMMER DAYS California, Florida, Louisiana, Ete. Limited trains leave Toronto dally making direct connec'lon at Detroit and Buffalo for the B uthern States, and at Chicago for CaMfornia, ete. Those contemp! iting & trip of any ire should co.asult Canadian Pa- ( Ticket Agents, who will be pleased td quols rates, arranke re- servations 'and attend to all details in connection w'th your (trip, or write M. G. Murphy, District Passen- er agent, corner King and Yonge treats, Toronto. Particulars Ocean tickets from F, P.A., City Ticket Office, cess and Wellington Sts. na regarding Rall or CONWAY, C. Cor. Prin. Phone 1187 ILLITE CANADIAN SERVICE Sailing dates will be announced when arranged. For information: apply to local ticket agent, of The Robert Reford Co., Limited, general agents, 50 King Street East, Toronto. Apply Local Agents for full particolars Offics, 118 Notre Dame Street W., Montreal, Gua. vi Gra a To Glasgow Scand. Thur, Pretorinn, Nov. CHRISTMAS FRPOOL, For or THE ronto, SA ALLAN LLAN 95 KING ST. W. Nov. "Hesperian" Nov. Nov. Th. rues, To London *Corinthian Nov, 'Steamer enlin 17 nt re. JONN Dee, TO LIV. ith. Hav TITLING ST. Friday, full information apply local agents LINE, 95 King St. W,, To- LING shoes but find it diffien you good comfortable Shoes to wear that any wi 'THE HOME OF Many women require soft, comfortable ance as well as comfort, This season we are shoes that have style and neatness for the tender foot. : $3.00 To $5.00 J. H. SUTHERLAND & BRO It to get the appear- prepared to show man would be proud GOOD SHOES