Daily British Whig (1850), 14 Nov 1914, p. 10

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ALLOW ME TO PRESENT MY BEST FRIEND --------" WHAT WHIG CORRESPONDENTS HAVE TO TELL. News From Villages and Wau | Throughont the Adjoining Coun. ties -- Rural Rvents, sna Move 1 | : iE WHERE CANADIANS ARE QUAR. ! PF : CA bi y J TC TERED IN ENGLAND. Miliary Caste Distinctions Felt by Canadians -- Privates Get a Taste ot It at Hotel. 'ients of the People. London, Nov, 13.---If Salisbury o il . a a aan : Plain is 0 be used as a camping Glendower. Notes ground, it ought to be put into a CGlendower, Nov. 12. There §5 4 © - A sanitary condition, says the writer some talk of "the feldspar - wine . #o fof a letter which is printed in the sButting down for the winter. The | 3 : , Daily Chronicle, who Says ground Is so hard to plough th § ol Tr With the afadian scouting. many peoples ar fiavi iri oa is s0n, e Says, © ains \§ireshing one he En dee 4 . 5 ! > i { that the cap is a veritable swamp. . large quantity of coal to be load: writer also asks why the mili IN BUYING on the boats for the feldspar minis, | ithorities' do not provide al iA CAKES Miss Mary Goudy presched in the heap motor-bus service between the ; SansruL 70 EW.GILLETT ¢O. LTD. . Friends' church last Sunday. Ar {camps at Salisbury. TORONTO, chibald Tiningerman is getting along | The Chronicle adds a foot pote ROYAL S2REL WINNIPEG. n "with his house quite wel Sanford | that this letter is typical of many DECLINE Leaman has cut a strip "of : Wood 3 ' | reacing the paper concefning the Vr denna SUBSTITUTES. along the road ou'hi lace ~ IMENT: , A | conditions at the camps. o . . . » . ? Pag Bechara If A ¢ * i Garage proprietors lave beel ask- * BSharbot Lake News, { 2 rt ial ing extortionzte fores from the sol- | 2 ee A 1 11 rt So La % riviliar S IS Sharbot Lake, Nov. J2-A num : diars 45 well ds civilian visitors to i rand from the fanbs, never asking ber of hunters - have returned from | o> {ozs than double the legal fare esmp. with their alloted portion of FE , ' <- So A peculiar disclaimer appears in game. Phere are t%o cases of diph Fa ne 4 is i n - theria in this locality. ; Mrs. Wil ja paragraph' published in the Lon lia Butterill i Havelock. | # " army: k don press to-day. Harrods Limited, 4 ny I 1 or .avelock, ig spend © PICK OUT YOUR SOLDIER BOY'S CAMP. # ntfs § § f whase carts are offen seen at the an Hae. Robert, Chariton. Mrs. J Where thirty thousand Canadians are at present encamped, The MAP pepresents: an' grea or "miny fcamps, sfate that though they have ing the winter with her parents, Mr square miles and the veader will see the names of various camps 'made familiar by the letters honte of the undertaken catering for the officers Conboy is able to be around again, men of the first Canadian contingent now (here. The camp is twelve miles away from the town of Salis. [of the Canadian contingent, they Ww. , Cannon and family intend Jeay bury, and it costs four shillings to ride there on & motor bus. The comp is three miles om any village. [are in no way responsible for the ing for Florida to reside. Mrs. W. | Canadian are mostly at "Pond Faro," "Bustod," "West Down" and 'Bulford® ¢ ps... tearing to the men or thelr ean Commodore dietl last Saturday sven Minit pi xen nt THEME A A sec i ing of a paralytic stroke. A mum ir. and Mrs. Motzer, Odessa af R ; reappoliited tg B15 old regiment. i ber of ladies in the village are knit Asselting's: Mrs. ©. wo hi 0 re | THE PRINCE OF WALES, Hig faonily fs d very "thcient Jne. | Ban On Canadians. ting for the soldiers af the front rook at 6. Shumate. oe ef : : | One OL ES iam Cary, po, DO . | Sanderson. oF arkor. at and { Under Care of Hom. Lucius Cary, | was a brother-in-law of Henry FHL. or " D0, ov --- To Farm Transfers At Colebrook. | Wards: Mr. and Mrs ¥ Lica and | Muster of Folkland. | having 'married Mary Boleyn. sister dak s diracted against camp jour , y : dnt a He 4. AeUCHE ang | ting Gaoreh ar iinister of {of Queen Anne Rojeyn, who'lost her f llon kal / . Colebrook, Nov. 12.--Wilbert: Wil. | daughter, Nellie, Maple Lane, at R.| - King George and h nilnis er of Ise d on the sealfoid « Jobn Cary ifm is seen in the fact that a new son has sold his farm known as the |-eter's, t war, Field Marshal Lord Kitchener, Des lord. chief' baron of the exche-|order has been issued that no mem- K pf Te wa , : George Garrison homestead to Irvine main { have placed the Prince of Wales, un- | em F Bios . jber of the forces be permitied to Bu - 8, and takes ni og the Ie Heine's Prophecy. » der the immediate care of the Hon. |auer in the relgn'ofl Richard 1I., and |b! } , kell posses . m 4 A fis icorrespond either directly' or indi TE | " NAO dato alkland, | he ih turn wa¥ descended Zrom Adgun: | 0 of March next." Richard Wilson has" hristianity and this is the) lwucius Cary, mister of Falkland, i a (Oe 3 ¢ Vd r as- | rectly with any newspaper office sold bis farm north of this place to 1Righest merit has in some degree | FiO on rejoining his old regiment, | Cary. Jard of the JMagor and « . | A violent*hail storm which raged Chaules Jackson, conductor on the |S0flened, but' it could net destroy, the Grenadier Guards, at the out | CO.N.R., runnmg north from Napa. [that brutal German joy of battle | Preak of the present war, was ap- | tle of Cary, in the County of Somer . rosterds ' ad 17 og et, under Henry 1 yesterday caused much destruction y i , When once yo ing talisma winted to the command eof the | nes, Who has leased said farm to W. [When once the taming talisman, the 1 REAL company, thai is to say, tae | the crown jewels to Quee Xi . rad tin the camps at Salisbury Plain, se \ N ¢ : Sir Edward Cary was keeper ow! 3 - ) ) . ike WITHOU > 3 2 4 we - A { Cross re ir avage ed : 3 rat X Ransehorn for one or three years | VT0S8, breaks in two, the savagery firet company. of the first battalion. | 2nd his son, who died as Lord Falk n Elizabeth | veral large marquees, ineluding the from March 1st next. of the old fighters, the' senseless land, was the first peer created by jorderly tents, having been blown thie mt =10¢ | Richard: Wilson has bought 'a house | Berserker fury, of which the north The Husiag of Falklang, Fao B® 'Kins James after hia, sccassion to | down : and lot in the village of Yarker and |" Poets sing and se nich, will [eX Air lo this father's peerage 54 throne of England. The ninth] With regard to the case of typhoid intends to reside there. Wilbert Wil Loup anew That 'talisman ia t reported, it is learned that the namely, tha Scotch yviscounty of " q ju red 1 Falkland, and barony of Cary, both viscount, a captain of the Toya) navy | Ie had son hss bought Seymour Birges' aed, and the ay ronie when | Falkland, a y, y killed fh a duel 'ih 1809, d {man stricken wth the disease had | farm, near Violet, which is now um po aba URLY : ti Then the i ¢ dating from the reign of K ng Fane | resisted inoculation, as he object-| a tone gods ris 2 8 , is half an American or der'lease for 'a short term, W. Wil ' ds Will rise from the sil i ar. 1 Falkland Mis n will ide in Yark £1 I L ruins and rub the dust of a thoy. | Mother, Lady Falkland, wa Mi 80RD (will res IR. Xarker 'until the loud vears from their 'eyes. Thor, | Mary Read, of New York, daughter term expites, before be moves. Cha: with Kis giant's Rammer, will ai [of Robert Reade, and a cousin of | . Ba Re led" "Woodrifi is very ill'. of heart lust spring up, and shatter to bits | Mrs. Levi P. Morton She made | War Oddities. trouble. Mra. 'B. 0. Martin aud |}, Qothic cathedrals." "|e debit in New York about the; london ~Matehes are so ] yolitig son, Warner, are spending a So wrote Hallie 80 year aso. and | time of Miss Consuelo Yir 's mar. | at dhe front that an offiter of he i 3 re | tor } Band ern 26. In Now ' i | second Sherwood Forester paie { few weeks 'with her parents hgre Mi: | ) id that at the hand of the | riage, in New York, to 1a ke | seca ie orw 0g 5 iru that in a Salisbury hotel the mana- Mastin, widow of the late Charles | pe arbarians would be found the [of Manehester | 0 for u single one I Martin, of Loughboro, haa moved in | d es of Kant, of Fichte, and of Inasmuch as the king ompany | Herlin : Five day excurs with Joseph Boyoe, her brother, and ¢ , who, regular process, {of the 'Grenadier Cuards is 'statew | through de vastated Belg intedds to 'reside there. The water | whic} * traces back to the begin- | for service at the front, weeks | ddvertised by the Klor in fhe river © here was noveriknown |nings of German thought} had shorn | hence, the master of Falk will f tung, to view the ruined as dow ab this time of the the "tailsman" of its power find himself burdened with re, Dinant, Namur, ete. ! mr i heavy responsibility For Jeane de Reszke, the ------ royal charge, that is to say, the next | mous tenor, has given 30.000 ci " . ; . z Air For the Sick. heir to the throne, were to be killed | @ttes for the benefit of the wound mented with nerves, hes, neuralgia, Storms' Corners Budget | ur is just as important and | by a stéay shot o the Germans | ed of the allied armies London. Nov 13.- The opinion nervous debility. In such cares thefe is Storms' Corners, Nov, 12.--Far- | necessary for good health as are campaigning on the continent with | Half the Rubbing taken out of Scrubbing Old Dutch Cleanser wr KEY O.MAP . "=== WAGON ROADS" Schis of aps +ert~ RAILROADS REA > | Mrs; J | tants of officors and: men, besides ed to the practice That military caste distinctions more pronounced in England a talk to vou abo ut sree | hin in Canada ds exemplified in Nerve Troubles: Hike an intr who had sacrificed a good position / a ) 181 + 2 Ent to join 'the forces and 'Wha States. J om Our. net 3 in intricate network of X y pofitrofied and ted him not to use the -- ~ - nourished | Pe I f mm knewn moking rooms as offi- as the ner entres, ah of thé upying them B¥/ nerve centres ends upon the condition of the 'bodily auth, n the hodily health is lowe t nerves suflar in sympathy Then it that we are tor- 4 member of the family te which be longs Mrs, Stuyvesant bis} narried & Miss Anthou of New York, | | { telegraph w ABSINTHE AND VODKA. France and Russia Have Not Barred Other Beverages. Cambria, France Two brothers | (),,¢ Russia and France have pro- ! nothing to equal "NMWincarnis, the Wine of mers are nearly through ploughing. | pure food and pure water his regiment, there would be a di jone a. s unt in the Royal Gar | hibited the sale of alcohblic liquors 5 Life.' " Wincarnis ' is a powerful nerve fo d A number from here attended the Fresh air and sunlight dre the | position on the part of the public to | rison artillery, and the other Mery is denied by the bre ! dis- which acts directly upon the nerve centres 3 |» 34 a n > » CAS N wie 1 > Ontario Sunday School Cenvention { cheapest and best agents Tor the re- | blame his captain, the master eo. |8€ant in the royal field artillery tillers, who point owt that Russia . 3 ¢ ; a a : and gives them pew life and new vitality. The result is wonderful. Will you try it? In "Kingston. Methodist _anniver- | covering of an ill person Falkland, for not having saved the | both British detachments, met on. banned only vodka, of which the I sary services were conducted on Let fresh air and sunlight enter [life of the young prince at the cost |the batilefield here, not having | venment has. a monopoly; but the ' een each c her for nine years | Send for a rlleral free trial bottle of * Winearnis. * Enclose six gents stamg I postage COLEMAN Nay. Oth, with Rev. Mr. Farnsworth | vour sick roo ns, through iopen win-|of his own | i : use of Newbiargh, as speaker. A success- | dows, as much as possibla The future Lord Falkland is a i; London A pedsant of Quievy Linon iv permitted. 'France has pro- ful concert took plage the follow Expose the bedclothing to the op- | particularly gallast officer, who, | fell into the hands of a British pa | hibited the use of absinthe but not ---- . | FF q & Co., Lid., Wincarnis Works, Norwich, | ngland Yeu chn obiain, regular supplies, loam all loading tores, Chenists, and Wine Merchants. snes and liquors among the ing evening. The Ladies' Ald of the | Alr and sunshine for some time | when he led to the allar an extreme rol and was found in Rout éosion | Me odist church, Wilton, purpose | each day. ly pretty girl, of the nate of Ella | 26 marks, which he admitted hav | halding a Lagaar. Mrs. 8 8. Shibbly | The old superstition that night air | Catford, sQuie years ago, found it [Ing taken from & wounded Death 5 1 | { The Story Of+a Hymn, has returned Rome. after spending | is unhealthy, even for an invalid, is | imposdible™®o continue to live in Lon- | Head Hussar. As the troops were two montis in Utida. Mrs. Sym-| entirely false On "the contrary, |don and at Windsor, as a marrieq | Of to the firing line they did not [pom the Home Herald ho kelis, an old and respected resident | night air, especially In large cities, | officer of .the Grenadier Guards, one | know what to. do with the pris- Not one in a thousand who sings hitd' a stroke last week and is not! is purer and better than day air, he- | of the most expensive regiments of | Oner. He solved the ditficulty by the old hymn "Blest Be the Tie That expected to live. She Is ninety-slx | cause it contains less dust and fewer | the army. So he exchanged his cap- |#sking for a rifle and for four | Binds," knows: its history. aL Was years of age. F. Cole is home from | microbes, tainey for one of the native regi-|days fought courageously beside | written by the Rev. John Fawcett, thé west after spending eight To ggt the best ventilation have | ments in the East African protector- | the British. At Compiegne he was | who in the éighteenth century, was, months. Mrs. /H. Huchins 18 no bet- | the window open at both top and {ate took out his bride to Central Af- | handed over to the mavor, tried | the pastor of a poor little churgh in | tery Mrs. BE. Miller entertained o | bottom. rica, where she, in due course gave | for theft and acquitted. Yorkshire, England | few of her friends last evening,| The averaew healthy person has | birth to his eldest son, at Fort Nand | ttt In 1772 he felt obliged to accept a | Miss L. Simmons is attending high | little to fear from drafts, but'the|of which he aws in command. He | Williams Well Known Here. {call to a London church. His fare school at Odessa. Visitors: Mr. and | aged, enfeebled, infants and persons | happened to be in England on leave | General Sir John Hambury-Wil- [well sermon had been preached, | Mrs. I. McDonald, Portland: Mrs { ésbecially susceptible must 'be pro- | of ibsence when the war broke out |liams, who heads the delegation of | waggons loaded with furniture ans Wii Parrot, Wilton, at J. BE. Storms; | tected from them and.was, as | have mentioned above, | Dritish officers attached to the Rus: [books stood by the door. His a | : . | flan armies naw operating against'gregation men, women, and children | Germany and Austria, and .who is were in agony of tears j especially accredited to the headquar Looking up, Mrs. Fawcett said: | {ters of the Muscovitte generalisdimo, | "Oh, Joha, John, I cannot bear - ee NA A rp i A A is -- | Grand Duke Nicholas Nicholalovitch, | this! I know not where we go!" very well known in this side of 'Nor IL," sald he, "nor will we go [the Atlantic, having spent several! Unload the waggons and put every- , years in Canada, ag military secre-| thing back." | tary to Lord Grey, when governor- His letter of acceptance was | zeneral called, 'and he wrote this hymn Indeed, it was there that he re- | commemorate ue episode ceived the handle fo. his name, tn { through the knighthood bestowed - : {upon him by the then Prince of Resist Melancholy. - a ------------ Hepresentative "or the Dominiun of Canada:--Mr. Frank 8. Pd. Box, 577, Toronto. Phone, No.Main: 275. Telegrams Unit" LATE Vigor of Mind and of Body As Essential for Success in Everyday Life as for Glories on the Battlefield. Draln power, 'as well as museular strength, can only be mamwined by a plen- tiful supply of pure, rich: blood to rebuild the cells and tissues wasted by the activities of, life, the worries of business or household cares or the devastating effects of disease. If you have got run down in health, so that you fall to obtain from the food you sat the necessary nourishment for blood and nerves, yolt can turn to' Dr. Chase's Nerve Food with positive assur nce that this feod cure will help you back to health and vigor Neuralgia of the Heart. G. Clark, Posterville, York i... writes a ve been a great what the doctors sald .was aigi [ 'the heh 16 pain stared the back of the nek sad worked down into the region of the heny Though I hud taken a lot of middicine oF one kind and ans other; I could not ge hing to help me until 1 used Dr. Chase's: erve Food "When I began this refitment I could not rest in bed, except by ting upright, on account of the dreadful pains about the heart and the quick, loud heating. The change which Dr. Chase's Nerve Food has made in my condition is wonderful. It has entirely overcome these sv mptohis, and ig making me strong and well. If this states ment will help to relieve the suffering of othérs, you are at liberty to use it" Dr.Chase's Nerve Food The Great Blood and Nerve Restorative 60 cents a box, 6 for $2.50, all dealers, or Bates & Co., Limited, Toronto. | Wales, in behalf of Edward VII, on | the occasion of the celebration of the | Quebec centenary i The late king entertained a very | high regard' for Hanbury-Williams, | It was at his instance that the.lattér | received his appointment to the staff { Of the governprgeneral of the Do- | minion, in'order to'atone for the un- deserved slight placed upon him | through. thé éghedlling of his nomi- nation to the post of military at- tache "of the English "embassy in Paris, : Villie's Politeness, The topic having turned o the | wonderful ways of thé kid genera- tion. Congressman Samuel W. Bea kes, of Michigan, recalled the polite- ness of little Willie Willie visited an aunt in the adja- listened to the phonograph and look- €d at the souvenir postal cards, the | loving relative came across with a { comfortable chunk of bread and but- | ter "Thank you, aunty," | | | cent town one day, and after he had | | | responded | Willie ip a sweet sort of vonce as {he gently clutched the fodder "How: polite you are, Willie?" ommended dunty, with a.pleased lke to hear litle boys say foxily suggested. Wil- "if yow want to hear me say it | again you might put a little jelly on top of this butter." Exchange. calls a recipe of Charles XII., which may appeaj to our men in the field. Given a, f&t hen, then, Charles was always sure of a good dinner. The fowl was larded, irussed, ¥nd stuff- ed with huttar, Then, to quote Mr. Hackwood, 'a piece of hat steel was inserted into its belly. , It was then shut up in a tin 'box, which was| ped on a soldier's back. 'In a few of the Tarters: who cooked their by using it as a saddle." Cooking On the March. | N Of cooking on the march, one re- ment of dally subsidies to foreigners Never give way to melancholy. Re- | eist it steadily, for the habit will en- ecroach, I omee gave a lady two and twenty recipes against melancholy, One was a bright fire; another to re-.| member all the pleasant things said | to and of hef; another to keep a box of sugar plums gn the chimneypiece and a Kettle simmering on the hob. | I thought this mere trifling at the moment, but have in after life discov- ered how:true it is that these little pleasures often banish melancholy better than higher or more. exalted objects; that uo: means ought to. be thought foo trifling which cin oppose it either in ourselves or others. Sydney Smith. Table Mountain. At Cape Town, in South Africa, | where the traveler usually has the | first glimpse of the continent, is | Table Moun a magnificent nat- urgl curiosity which rises bvhind thé city to the height of almost 4,000 feet and has a level top about three square | miles in area. Its resemblance to a huge table ig so marked that the dense clouds which collect at times around the summit are referred to as the tablecloth, A pretty little flower which is found nowhere else on earth grows on top, whilo on the northern sidé of its base is a similarly rare tree; popularly calléd the silver leaf tree.-- Liverpool Mercury. To "Help Allies. A French decra: provides for pay- whose breadwinner: are serving with the alliad forges. v Still Raining. The patriotic Scotchman had ine} duced two Lancashire friends to go to Argyllshire for a heliday. On their return he met them. "Well, how did you enjoy your: wrapped in a woollen cloth and strap !selves? Was the weather good? "There was just a shower on our hours when the march came to an frst day," replied one of them. end it was found sufficiently cooked." | But, to cap this, there is the story lies about the Highlands being wet?" "Didn't I <ell you that it 'was all "That shower hadn't ended when meat "while galloping on herse-back lwe came he e,"" was the severe re- | tort. Fortify yourself agamst the days that bring sudden changes of temperature--the days that try the strongest bodies --by eating It will increast your powers of resistance and your physical and mental efficiency by ~ supplying - the elements that make rich blood and good muscular tissue. Poorly nourished bodies are most susceptible to climatic. changes. Shredded Wheat contains all the body-huilding material in the whole wheat grain made digestible by steam-cooking, shredding and baking the" best process cver devised for making the whole wheat grain digestible tn the human stomach. Ready-cooked, ready-to-serve, For breakfast hea! the Biscuit in oven te restore crispness and thea pour hot milk over it, add ng a Houle cream. Suit or swesten to sult the taste. Better than mushy porridges that are bolted down without chewing. A hor, nourishing breakfast fur a chilly day. Deliciously nourishing fer any meal with sliced bananas, biked apples or canned or preserved fruits of any kind. MADE IN CANADA From the Choicest Canadian Wheat by The Canadian Shredded Wheat Cenpasy, Lizited tiagara Falls, Ont. x. Toronto Office: 43 We'linston Sirect East ! 2 I RR er © oi

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