Daily British Whig (1850), 26 Nov 1914, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Tekin you ar og te id we of 'Scranton Coal Is.good cou' and gate ou Booth & Co. Foot of West Street. CD Beemels al a . Removal Notice I have removed my office to 60 Brock Street, next door to Metcalfe's meat store, opposite Henderson's, Satisfies A The Longing for a Perfect L Thomas Copley pen- timates given on all ki T repairs and new Be: also pn wood Jogrs All orders receive prom oy rece ze DN Pt attention. Shop, S. Roughton, Manager, the Mutual Life As. surance Co., of Canada. Phone 610, WHILE SHOPPING Enjoy Afternoon Tea ab MARBLE HALL 238 Princess Street. Dainty Refreshments and Pure lee Cream. George Masoud, Prop. "Phone 980. REAL ESTATE For Sale improvements, stabling, good house suitable for a carter, with $400.00 t invest, Cement block house on Road, $1950.00. honse on Stanley Street, improvements, renting ior $18.00 per month. $200. will. handle this proposition. HORACE F. NORMAN Real Estate and Insurance Office 177 Wellington St. HAVE YOU A CHILD? Many women long for children, but Because of Some curable pliysical derangement are deprived WESTER PRR " "I took your Com- pound and have a fine, strong baby." -- Mrs. dl JOAN MiTcHELL, Mas. sena, N.Y. ad E. Pinkham's ii] expectant mothers," -- § Mrs. A, M. Myers, Gor- doaville, Mo. "I highly recommend Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg- etable Compound before child-birth, it has done so much for me.""~Mrs. E. M. Dokrr, R. R. 1, Con- shohocken, Pa. "I took Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Com- pound to build up my system and have the dearest baby gir! in the world." -- Mrs. Moss BLAKELEY, Imperial, Pa. 1 "I praise the Com- pound whenever 1 have a chance. It did somuch for me before my little : was born."' -- Mrs. "I took your Com- life to it. "'~--Mrs, Winn1n Ties, Winter Haven, Most Valuable Medicine ever diséovered. The best known Remedy for F Cougs, CoLps, LAAT § = DIARRHCEA, DYSENTERY & CHOLERA. Elly suis short alt attacks of SFASMS, wad arrests those too Checks i fata} diseases-- FEVER. CROUP and AGUE. The holy paltintive iy NEURALGIA, GOUT, RHEUMATISY. is a Liquid taten in drops, graduated aces bet according fo the malady. i i SE vo other medicine cum be : re CONVINCING TESTINONY © WITH EACH BOTTLE. Lampe Sole Maanfactuices: T. DAVEXPORT hd, before baby was Bound b feel I owe my ' DO NOT DESPERATELY ATTACK THE GHURKS™" TRENCHES. - Quite Easily Repelled----When Enemy - Has Captured Indian Trench it Always Has Been Retaken. London, Nov, 26.~The life of the Indian troops in the trenches is des- cribed in a bulletin from the front which was issued by the Official Press Bureau : "Nothing sensational has happened in the Indian lines," says the bulle- tin. "There has been trenching, coun- ter-trenching and a good deal of hand-to-hand fighting, but no Gurk- ha regiment has penetrated behind the German lines and blown up a pow- i der magazine. The report says that the Germans have not attacked the Indian trench- les as desperately as they have the { other parts of the line, and have been | repulsed without difficulty. When the | Germans have -captured an Indian trench it has invariably heen recap- tured, usually at night with the bay- onet. s Despite the cold weather the health of the Indians is better than that of the white soldiers who accompanied them from India. While feeling the hardships of the trenches acutely they have not complained. {| The officers of the Indians are ex- traordinarily well-informed regarding the war. In describing German at- tempts to seduce the Indians, the ro- port says that the operator of a Taube Wéroplane threw down over the trenches many leaflets bearing the announcement by a German pro- fessor that Sheik-ul-Islam had pro- claimed a holy war. All the leaflets fell into the hands of white soldiers, who were puzzled by them. Two Indians were creeping to- wards a German trench on a scout- | ing expedition one night when a | searchlight was thrown upon one of them, "Ho was quick-witted enough to realize that no ordinary resource his life," says the re- port. "He immediately rose to his foot amd advanced, salaaming to the German trench. Its occupants ceas- ed to fire, disconcerted." The Indian, by signs, indicated that he wanted to kill the British, and as | a result spent a luxurious night in the | German wg In the morning, on | making signs' that he could bring other Indians, he was allowed to re. turn to his own side. He was pro- moted for this exploit. War Tidings. The Turkish government has notified American cable companies that mes sages from or to belligerent countries will not be admitted to. Turkey. The Turkish government has forbid den all subjects of: the triple entente powers with the exception of women and of children under eighteen years of age to leave Ottoman territory. A number of Americans in Munich have united in a protest to their countrymen in Washington against the use by Great Britain and krance of "occidental and African savages to fight her battles in Europe," accord: ing to a wireless message from Ber lin. General Louis Botha is elose an Gen: eral De Wet's heels, and that the cap ture of the' rebel leader and the rem nant of his followers is now consider ed. imminent. The eighty-third German official list of casualties brings the total killed, wounded and missing, officers and men, to 601,438. This figure does not include the fifty-eight lists for Sax- ony, filty-six for Bavaria and sixty one for Wurtemburg- Livet. Graham, whose name appears among the wounded, is Alan Charles Graham, formerly A.D.C. to the Duke of Connaught. Italy will not tolerate the closing of the Suez canal, that she will hold Turkey responsible if such a situation should result and will resort to force if necessary. Two million German soldiers for six weeks have been striving to break the allied line in Flanders and France, and these two million in their entirety j are still in the western war theatre, 1 as against six hundred thousand Ger- mans, and an unknown number of Austrians facing Russia in the east. Field Marshal Earl Kitchener, secre- tary of state for war, has issued a de. cree reserving all the hides of full- grown cattle for military purposes. | _ A German tried to blow up the Brit- ish gunboat Dwarf with an infernal machine in a West African harbor re | cently, according to a report to the i colonial office. It was discovered that ihe was a missionary. British steamers are being held at Montevideo for orders. The German fleet is reported offi the River Platte, a } British fleet is offi the coast, and a naval hattle is expected hourly. New rates of pay for the British army officers, showing increases of { from ten to twenty-five per cent., are | announced in an army order. The new daily rate for a captain is raised from $3 to 8.50, and for a lieutenant from £2 to. $250, These increases also are augmented by various special allowances. Rudyard Kipling, who lms written many good things about Canada's pa: triotism during the present war, on Tuesday went down to Salisbury Plain, Eng., to see her troops at work, Ta charge of Col. Turner, V.C,, commander the third brigade, he visited most of the camp centres and ared much impressed with the 1 ughness of the training and earn estness with which the men tackle their strenuous duties, a Allen, Ren Zealand minister of lense, says that, acting on informa. tion, the dominion will not send a se cond expeditionary force to Europe, but - reinforcemenis representing at first twenty por vent, of ihe original contingent amd . then, five per cont. monthly, > Preumonia hus caused the death of mete than fy horses. out of 742 bronght to Montreal from Texas, and it is feared on equal number may fur. ther svepmsh. he animals' pur. chased by agents of the Fredeh gov: service. ermmons for light cay rvice. Mughines Fo phn 8 for Bure. of éd Gottlieb von Jagow, the German minister of foreign affairs, to notify all the German diplomatic agents who hitherto have been employed in the countries now at war with Ger- many that they can consider them- selves free to choose another (career. Newspaper -eritics, the nigssage adds, state that this seq ms to indicate that German diplomacy is lield responsible for the war, The Germans have arrested 300 British subjects, who still remain. ed in Brussels, William H. K. Redmond, a mem- ber of parliament and a brother of Jobn Redmond, the leader of the Irish nationalist party, has joined the army. : At Cattaro, Dalmatia, three Americans, resident in California, a boy and two men, have been put to death as spies by the Austrians. The hungersstricken Belgians on the border of Holland are pictured as resorting fo brigandage. An official despatch from Pre- torin announces the capture of 100 more Boer rebels, including Com- mandant Jordaan and four other ofil- cers. SRPPPPEPPPPEP PEPE P REP * WAR BULLETINS. Authoritative Rotterdam ad- vices say cholera is rampant in Antwerp. te * +> + * + Premier Radoslavoff on Wed- nesday reaffirmed the strict neutrality of Bulgaria. With the ground frozen over and the weather clear the Ger mans in north Belgium Wed- nesday night resumed night at- tacks on the allies' trenches, losing many men, and gaining no territory of any account. The allied fleet Wednesday afternoon battered down Ger- man defences along the north Belgium coast, and the Ger- mans were compelled to. retire. An official London report says the weather. is so cold in north Belgium that the men, 2, PRP PEP RETR P PPP EIP SIRT EIS r re of 4 > +> * * + * + * +» Ld +» + + + > + * + * * > + # stiffened by exposure, have to be 4+ lifted from the tremches. + o* * + + + * +» * + +» + * * * + + » * +* * * * % v * | a --- It is reported that an entire German. army corps was cap- tured by the Russians in Po- land, some fifty thousand men. Reports from Berlin indicate that the Germans recognize their defeat in Poland has been decisive, i In the Heuse of Commons members criticize the govern- ment for giving allowances to blue blood families whose rep- resentatives are fighting in the German army. The fourth Russian army has marched forty miles into Hun- gary without opposition. The French have made a new advance tn Aliacecatfame Britain has named a new kbedive of Egypt and the cam- + paign against the Turks is pto- + gressing satisfactorily. * + +» PPP bib hI Rd PEP Pr Lg Severely! wounded in the fighting in Pol recently. OTTAWA LK Guest of Honor at State Ball Last January. Ottawa, Nov. 26.--A former social star, one of the "brightest that ever shone in the society constellation at Ottawa, has been proven by the offi- cials at the militia department a Ger- man spy: $ When "Count" Max P. Lynar Von loudon was here during the latter part of last January and the darly pert of February, he was a jveritable ion amongst the Four Hundred. He was one of the % of honor at the state ball at Government House last January. He entertained several of the elite and - was, in ED A SPY. CRIB R PEIN SEP GERMANS COMMITTED A MOST ATROCIOUS ACT In Sinking a Refuge Steamer----Brit- ish. Admiralty Makes Charge "Against Germany. London, Nov. 28. --The steamship Admiral Grantéeaume, loaded with} rofugees, which was sunk in the channel on October 26th, was the vietim of a German submarine, the British admirally declared to-day. In making the announcement and charge that she was sent to the bot- tom by an enemy's war vessel, the admiralty published a picture of a fragment of a torpedo, bearing a German label. "The discovery of the fragment of a German torpedo lifeboat proves conclusively that Granteaume was destroyed by a sub- marine," the admiralty annoumce- ment states. "This action of de- liberate destruction in 'broad day light, of a defenceless passenger ship, filled with refugees, is the best epeciment of German methods yet recorded." It was reported at first that this refugee ship struck a mine and lat- er that her boilers blew up. This is the first intimation that a German submarine was guilty of it. Two thousand people were safely rescued by passing steamers. Many others lost their lives in transferring from the sinking ship of others. "MADE IN GERMANY". Scurrilous Postcards of Kaiser Sold to Swiss, Berne, Nov. 26.--The Swiss gov- ernment has just received a. remon- strance from the German govern- ment for allowing the sale of what was regarded as particularly scur- rilous postcards of the kaiser. In- quiriés showed that the post card was made in Germany and was placed on the Swiss market by a German Stop the Thing that Cuumses It and the Cough will Stop Itself CA Sough is really one of our best friends. It warns us that there is inflam- mation or obstruction in a dangerous place, Therefore, when you get a bad cough don't Drovend to dose yourself with a lot of drugs Ahat merely "stop" the cough tempordrily by deadening the throat nerves, Treat the Suns heal the | inflamed membranes. Here is a home- made Jomedy that gets right at the cause and will make an ol stinate cough vanish ore Quickly than you ever thought pos- sible, Put 2% ounces of Pinex (50 worth) in a lé-ounce bottle and fil bottle with plain frapulated SUgar syrup. his gives you 18 ounces of the most pleasant and effective remedy you ever cents 1 the "| used, at a cost of only 54 cents. No bother to prepare. Full directions with Pinex, It heals the inflamed membranes so gently and promptly that you wonder how it does it. Also loosens & dry, hoarse or tight cough and stops the formation of phlegm in the throat and bronchial tubes, thus ending the persistent loose cough. Pinex is a highly concentrated com- pound of Norway, pine extract, rich in guaiacol, and is famous the world over for its healing effect on the membranes To avoid disappointmen sk pr druggist for "23 Ounces pik , out don't accept anything alse. A guarantee of ablolyte patisfaction, o money prompt- v refunded, goes wi is prepar As The Pinex Co., Toronto, Ont. A the Admiral}. {400 Drors T NARCOTIC. er p---- fA OT DG RARE 5 La For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA THE GRNTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK SITY, Overcoatings See ------------------. Fall Suitings I -- Prices Reasonable Crawford & Walsh, Civil and Military Tailors, Princess and Bagot Street Be aii ohn? goon §* Get him face to face--by Telephone OUR CUSTOMER, ' your salesman or other business associate may be allowing things to slow down just » for the want of a reassuring word from you. Get him on the long distance telephone and have a short talk. Point him to the abundant harvests and the unmis- takable signs of a general brightening up in business. He has confidence in you and your assurance will help mightily. There is nothing like the sound of the h stimulaté to action. uman voice to reassure and A systematic study of the possibilities of the long distance lelephone as applied to your business in all its branches will repay the time it takes. . As a real economy it has no equal. i Beery Bell ¥

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy