Daily British Whig (1850), 20 Jan 1915, p. 6

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

_PAGERIX AFRAID SHE WAS DYING Suffered Torrtly Until She Took "Fruft- fies" ST. J2AN DE Matus, JAX. 27th, 1914. "After suffering for a long time with Dyspepsia, I have been cured "Prnta-tives", 1 suffered so much that I would not dare cat for 1 was afraid of dying: Five years ago, I received samples of "Pruit-a-tives', '¥ did tot wish to try them for | had little confidence in them but, seeing my husband's anxiety, 1 decided to do #0 and at once I felt relief. Then 1 sent for three bones and I kept impror- fog until 1 was cured. ie sick, 1 Jost several pounds, but after takin ""Pruit-atives", 1 quickly regain what I had lost. Now I eat, # and ~ digest well--in a word, lam completely cured, thanks to *Fruit-a-tives", MADAM M, CHARBONNEAU "'Proit-a-lives" {is the greatest stomach tonic in the world and will slwayscure Indigestion, Sour Stomach, "Heartburn", Dyspepgia and other Stomach Troubles, soc. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25¢. AL all dealers or sent on receipt of price by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa, MADE-IN-CANADA ™ A Message To Thin ; Weak, Scrawny Folks An Easy Way to Gain 10 to 30 Lbs. of Solid, Healthy, Permanent Flesh Thip, vervous, undeveloped men and fl everywhere are heard to say, 1 Why 1 do not get I eat plenty of nourishing food." @ reason is just thie: You cannot get at, no ater how much you eéat, un. your estive organs sssimilate the fat-making elements of your food of passing them ost through v as e. t 1s needed is a means of gently gL °o ve functions of 4 ohh an testines to absorb Lhe nd fats and hand them over to the where they may reach the slars luke rusdewvn, tissues and ng Al up. The thit person's body 1 a dry speuge---~ edger and hun. BRR 6 Si "Ee i Sh IS. 5 nts and to t day, the number of persons killed in | Dazely, a widow, was killed A NIGHT RAID by Gorman irshigs an En: lish Coast Towns. SOME PEOPLE. KILLED THE AIRSHIPS MADE A SAFE ES- CAPE. _ * Raiders Did Not Visit London --Eng- land Stands Aghast That the Capi tal Should Have Been Threatened. London, Jan. 20 --' "The Zeppelin chill" froze Umid hearts in Loudon to-day. The cily stood aghast at the news that a fleet of German aircraft, presuinably Zeppelins, swooped down on the east coast during the night, bombarded nearly a dozen cities, within scarcely one hundred miles. of London, ahd actually threatened the capital itself. All the raiding air- ehips are belleved to have escaped. Despatches from Hunetanton, near the raided area, to-day deny the r port that a Zeppelin was brough down there by the fire of warships off the const. On the, contrary, it is statel that an airship was - sighted drifting leisurely seaward: early to- day, apparently returning to the Ger- ma aireraft base of Cuxhave:. Unofficial reports from Amsterdam brought word that three - airships, fiying eastward, were sighted off the coast of Holand carly to-day. They are believed to have been returning from the attack. | In absence of official reports to- the night attack by the German air- ships is variously placed at from four to nine. Reports concerning the number of aircraft range from three to six, with the latter figure gencrally ac- cepted. Executed In Darkness Because the rald was execuled in darkness. reports are most conflict. ing. Two persons are known to have been killed at Kings Lynn. Mrs. while paying a visit to a neighbor. Her body was recovered from the debris this morning, when her relatives slarted a search. A seventeen-year- old boy uvamed Coal, was killed in bed when a bomb dropped through 1 tion, 11it (has yet to bu demonstrated that Zep me | curious crowds. cal four-inch bate. . irotary, has issuéd a ecireular the roof of his home. Three others were hurt in this house. Other despatches from Kings Lynn place the number of dead there at four, but give no additional informa- Yarmouth correspondents also report four dead. The alr raiders did not visit Lon- don. After throwing terror in the hearts of residents of the east coast towns, the fleet a raed! ws pparently tu eastward shortly after midnight, sped back across the North Sea, Were Not Zeppelins. There is considerable doubt that the German raiding air gal were Zeppe- lins, after all, No official report. bas do far issued by the war diice. The police at Yarmouth assert posi: tively . that the outlines of the st- tacking craft were clearly visible there, and they were all aeroplanes or hydroplanes. It seems reasonable fo suppose that damage to life an perty would have been done at oF i owing to their greater carrying capacity for crew and ammunition. On the other hand, some of the residents of Giro- ek are sure * that they saw Zeppe- ins, "In the opinion of many experts here, pelins can sally attack Britain, Damage at Yarmouth $15,000 The property damaged at Yar- mouth where most of the damage cc- curred is estimated at nol to exceed $15,000. mbs were dropped on the race track, it was discovered to- day, wrecking the grand stand. Much damage was done at the cify fish wharves. Two uni ed bombs, fo bi Pp on n a store window, imiediately excited Fach weighed six pounds and was shaped with a coni- Hotelmah Given Advice = Hon. W. J. Hanna, provincial sec- to al the license holders of the provin asking them to exercise in their power in sale of liquor to. sd ing that the qb if they had been Zoppelins, fpr move | rest -_ vs mo, STRUCK THIRTY SIX TIMES. Before Foe Was Vanquished In the Falkiand Battle. London, Jan. '20--- Captain J. D Allen of H M S Xent, which sank the German cruiser Nurnburg off the Falkland Isiand, describes in'a let: ter to a friend exactly how the Kent chased, engaged and sank the Nurn- Yurg, He rays. "It was a single ship. action as thete was no other ship in sight at the time, The chase cominenced sbout noon and (he action commene- pd at 5 pom. After a sharp engage- ment in which the Kent was struck Uy no fewer than thirty-six of the enemy's shells the Nurnberg sank at 1.36 p.m. : "The Nurnburg was a faster ship than the Kent but l appealed to the engineers and stokers to do all in their power to catch her and finally they responded to my appeal. The Kent went faster and faster until she was making twenty-five Knots, more than a knot faster than she had ever gone before. i "We came nearer and nearer until we got the Nurnburg within range of our guns. Soon our shells began falling thick and fast around her and she was struck many times until at last she was In flames. The enenty continued firing their guns until the ship was sinking and as she disap- peared below the surface some of the brave men on' her quarter deck were waving German flags." The captain's letter expresses re- gret that he was able to fave only twelve of the Nurnburg's crew owing to the heavy seas and ice-cold water. PALE AND SICKLY BOYS AND GIRLS Need Mrthe Strength That Good Red Blood Can Give, Youth is the time to lay the foun- dation for health. Every boy and girl should have plenty of pure, red blood and strong nerves. With thin, impure blood they start life with a handicap too great to win suecess and happi- neds. Pure, red blood means health- ful growth, strong nerves, a clear brain and a good digestion. In a word, pure blood is the foundation of health. The sigas. of thin, impure blood are many and unmistakable. The pale, ir. citable boy or girl, who has wo ap- petite or ambition, is always tired oul, melancholy, short of breath, and who does not grow strong, in the victim of anaemia, or bloodlessness-- the greatest. enemy of youth. There is just ome thing to do these boys and Jirle=huiid up the blood with Dr. Williams' Piok Pills for Palo People. You can't afiord to experiment with other remedies for there must be no guesswork in the treatment of apaemia. Through ne- gleet or wrong treatment ansemia gradualt develops into the pernicious orm Ww. Dr. Wi for Bich is, practically meutable. illiams* Hak 1 Pills work directly on the blood, giving it just the ele- ments which it lacks. In this way these Pills build .up every organ afd nerve in the body, thus developing strong, rugged boys and girls. Mids Anna Loseke, ; Grand Forks, B.C. cays? "I think that before takin, Dr. Williams' Pink Pills I was one 0 the most miserable girls alive. 1 wad hardly ever free from awinl headaches, was as as a ghost, and could not go upstairs without stopping to Now siuce taking the ills "have gone, my appe- tite' is an equal to al most any exertion, and you may be I sire 1 will always recommend Dr, Williams' Pink Pills." Sold by all medicine dealers or sent by mail, post Fad, at 50¢. a box or six boxes for $2.50, by writing direct | to The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co, Brockville, Ont. ------ SIXTY WIDOWS ON STREET. They. Suffer Their Bereavement With Splendid Fortitude. Chatham, Jan. 20---There is a rbad in Gillingham which deserved to be called the Street of Sorrows. There are 139 houses in it--two monoton- ous rows of small, -plain houses a CES a ; drak street, with oniy Its" name Chaucer road, to distinguish it in peace from a score of others in this unlovely neighborhood. Now it bas a sad distinction, The war has made sixty women widows in that street. Sixty widows in 139 Howes, It is a ut example of Chatham and the district near, ERE gs beres a, Shien us all." 3 eh . Lins ABOUT BRITAIN AND THE. WAR ARE VERY FUNNY. Dr. E. J Williamson, Of Hobart Col. lege, Writes the Whig An Artigle Based On Extracts From Hamburg Newspapef. : Dr. Edward J. Williamson, professor of modern languages .in Hobart Col- lege, Geneva, N.Y., gives the Whig sone extracts from a copy of the srepkly illustrated edition of the Ham- burger F tt, of December 20th, which he zeceived from a friend in Germany. Dr, Williamson says : In a lengthy suwnunary of the war situation, consisting largely of on endless recital of Uerman successes, in which so many of the allies are killed or taken prisoners thal ona wonders that there are any of them Jeft, the subject of the probable length of the war is commented upon. Lord Kitchener is quoted as. having stated to an American journalist that the war might last thrée years. This évidently was. not very comforting news for Germany, and the poor de luded reader of the Fremdenblatt is assured by the military eritic that this is the wild utterance oi a mad- mao, and that a decision way coms this month (7) or at 'all events in the spring of the year. ""T'he- allies will not able to hold out longer than that (1!) The frost may hold together their crumbling resistance, but under the first rays of the spring sun it will melt away." Wo are further assured that Ger many did not wish the war, but that now {hey wish to become a world pation {weltvolk) through the war; not a world-nation like the Eoglish, however, who long: ago sacriliced all higher values and lofty strivings to a narrow-minded, brutal egoism. '"The world desires now a newer .and higher kind of weltvolk, rich in power and intelligence, but also rich in charity (!1) and genuine humanity" (!!). German Hysterical Joy. A coopsiderable part of the paper is devoted to accounts of the bombard- bment of the English fortified (?) const towns by the German fleet. "To judge from the joy which this incident hag occasioned in Germany, the people must have been suflering from a se vere state of depression and have now become hysterical, for their jubilation over an act which the rest of the world condemns as infamous is almost pitiful. "What a blow for the conceit and mad presumption of England! The dream of gn England whose shores no enemy can approach is dissipated. « « « The neutrals must now see clearly that Britain's claim to abso- lute dominion of the sea is an idle 'bluff,' etc., etc. As compared with this astounding feat the sinking of lantic pales into insignificance. The destrueticn of a few ships by "an ov- od gel the German cruisers in the South At- | bees erwhelmingly Aaperior foree of Bug- | ee mg ay er rather hard to understand, but the story was evidently lutended for Ger- maus only. He, excuses himself for having said anyéhing to his infer viewer® which might seem personal, but goes .en fo assure him that the Belgian: never did lke the English England had brought about their de- struction, and, "if it ia the will of Fate, they would. rather commit themselves ihte the hands of Ger. many than into the jaws of England. The Englishman has no respect for other nationalities, but it is a well known fact that the German respects (!!) the foreigner and possesses conscience and homor'" !--E. J. W. | BLOWN UP BY MINE . Rome, Jan. 20~~The Tali an freighter Varescw was blown . up and sunk off Pola, an Austri- an naval base in Adriatic. The freighter stick an "Austrian ne, and Wweht down with all board, The Italian govern. Jwns made a strong. pro- st to Austiia, DE a CE phpbb ri deed | | hvaeh The good Lord ' Dever intended that you should study ie please your- sell to the displeasure and discomfort of others. ¥ f CHILD'S CONDITION. WORRIED PARENTS Little Daughter Very Delicate] --Had No Strehyth--Made One of Healthiest Children in Town by Vinol. Crestline, Ohio.--*'T contracted a hard, chronic cough, and was in a weak, nervous, run-down condition for years. I was losing weight all the time and bad no ambition. have a small family of three, and it was hard for gue to keep around and do my work. I toak different medicines, but they did not ra. lieve me to any extent. Finally I hea about Vinol and tried it, and [ am happy Hi to say that it has restored me to bealth and strength, and my cough is all gone and I feel fine now. "--Mrs. H. H. CAR- 1asLE, Crestline, Ohio. 1t is the healing a. | strengthening pronerties of the extract of cod's livers toni: iron in Vinol, which bui't up Mrs. Carlisle's heaith, and her J hd red as a natural result, If Vinol fails to help all thoie who buy it for chronic coughs, colds, or weak, fervous, run-down conditions, we agree to return od mohey. i i People everywhere are praising Vino -- they have fond 1t just what they n to drive Away lingering | coughs and to build up their health and } strength § Geo. Ww. : Mahood, druggist, Kibg- | ston, Ont en | | | forty atid re Churchill as giving the Japanese--appeals to the Ger- mans as an act of™wewardice - (ein feiger Akt). The coolness and eour- age and bold daring displayed by them in thelr latest achievement, they believe, will raise their fleet in the estimation of the meuttals, who will now be able to see the other side of the Falkland 'Island affair and give the Germans their due... The Neue Frele Presse is quoted as fol- lows: "The German fleet has to-day its day of honor, It took bloody re- venge .(blutige Rache) for the sad fate of Admiral von Speo's squadron. It succeeded in accomplishing some- thing which must cast England into a state of deepest consternation, something which must be rated am- ong the greatest catastrophes which have befallen British sea-power. The German fleet does not hide itself, but proceeds directly te its goal. in bright daylight (! !) they storm the English coast and teach the haughty enemy what it means to threaten the existence of the Gorman people." The Neue Freie Presse concludes its ac- count by assuring the Germans that "the army, about speaks, cannot be raised" because which Kitchener] trouble, th Hl | re cause acid ita and inflames : Uindering if pn FL o prove | ey nite onthe of 1 dealing 3 Stomach troubls if which Suffer. ein; cial treatments &re useless ju . such cases. for they leave the source of she u Common ihe Advice by » acaPaRaEG el t th eh eo ackd dn tbe stomach, us as ever. The acid must rd | me £3 | The PRESENT FINANCIAL DEPRESSION HAS . CAUSED A FALLING OFF IN SALES OF EX. PENSIVE JEWELRY, HIGH GRADE WATCHES AND DIAMOND ORNA. MENTS, A CLASS OF TRADE WHICH wu THIS ESTABLISHMENT HAS +, AR > ALWAYS ENJOYED. IF al] ------mmmmn Inventory after Christmas shows that we are very much: overstocked in these expensive goods and we have engaged the services of P. E. Pope, one of America's most expert jewelery salesmen, to place our stock of £50,000.00 before the public at Auction Sale 'The Opening Sale Will Take Place on the Afternoon of Thursday, January 21st at 3 o'clock and will continue daily We avish to emphasize the fact that during this sale there will be nothing sold but our regular stock of high-class guaranteed goods. A chair will be reserved friends. May we have the pleasure of your attendance? During this Special Sale every department will be earr:ed on as usual and after the sale is over busi- ness will be conducted as usual. We are not retir- ing from business. for you and your PE Tro R. J. Rodger, %_ THE KING STREET. JEWELER, 7 3 "Witere the*Olock Is on the Walk' . wy awl on 4 » POR a BEEF, LAMB, MUTTON AND PORK OF THE FINEST QUALITY ALWAYS IN STOCK SPECIAL PRICES vo, . 12¢ per 1b.. Tongue (beef) 8c Ih, hs a 10¢, tic, 12¢ per th, Home-made Sausage 12 1.8¢ 1b. 2 Ibs. for Bc PARKER BROS. KINGSTON'S LEADING BUTCHERS 217 Princess St. Phone 1088, Opposite Opera House, Pork Sausage . . .. . 16c Ih, Ground bone for chicken feed... | Wa ly: newt: I » which but a which te: Ta Ss the: y is devel 'Foods iy cay - the opas 1a. Foltovcatk with a.) ' ain ch ean be of - ed fram any and " ways be kept ho p WE STILL HAVE THE dis A n al & : "is an inspiration to a ralized and its forwation prevent. wie bb 3 rated magn a a simp! p

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy