Daily British Whig (1850), 24 Mar 1915, p. 6

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rr PAGE BIX™ I WS °K; VERDI WRECK Ay ER vad Interest Every Weak, Nervous, Rundown Woman, Louisville, iIKy.--"I was simply a nervous wreck, and in a weak, run-down condition when a friend asked me to tx Vinol. - I did seo, and received so eh benefit from the first bottle 1 decided to keep on taking it, and as a result 1 have gained in health and strength right along. I think Vinol is the best medi- cine in the world for a nervous, weak, run-down system and for elderly pec ple, and I cannot praise it too hishiy to for what it has done for me," < Mrs. CLAYTON, Louisville, Ky There are hundreds of men and women in this vicinity who are on the borderiand of nervou 5 prostration, over- worked, run-down and nervous. We ask every such person to call at our store for a bottle of Vinol, our delicious cod liver and jron tonic Withe ut oil. Vinol is not a patent secret nostrum, but an honest, tried and true body builder and stre nizth creator of world-wide fame, delicious and easy to take, Our guarantee to return your money if Vinol does not benefit you should give you confidence to try it. Geo. W. Mahood, druggist, ston, Ont. King Meats a: and Groceries You can get the bese in the city at the Unique Gro- cery and Meat Market. Try our Coffee. C. H. PICKERING | 490 Princess St. Phone 530 SOL LELD, 866665 POPPIN PP0P009990009000¢ OPEN NOSTRILS! END A COLD OR CATARRH How To Get Relief When Head and Nose are Stuffed Up. a © SOE DOOLl Ll POOP 6P SBOE OOOOH 8 SEODGP $4090 HEPS ® Count. fifty! Your cold in head fox | catarrh disappears, Your clogged nostrils will open, the air passages! of your head will clear and yéu can breathe freely. No. more snuffling, hawking, mucous discharge, dryness or headache; no struggling for breath at night. G&t a small bottle of Ely's Cream Balm from your druggist and apply a | little of this fragrant antiseptic cream | in your nostrils. It penetrates through every air passage of the | head, soothing and healing the swol- len or inflamed mucous membrane, giving you lustant relief. Head colds and catarrh yield like magic. Don't | stay stuffed-up and miserable. Re- Hef is sure, |Carters & Teamsters Good frame house on Division Street, all improvements, furnace, gas, good stable and poultry houses, good ser $2,550 teamster, Street, nine rooms. improve- Price ovveies, ments, furnace, $3, 400 || } | sisted in the defeat of the Ross Gov- gas and electricit FOF ioS iv iavin "530 Rows Take a Glass of Salts to Flush Kid- © meys If Bladder Bothiers You. Eating nieat Ln kidney trouble in some form or other, says a well-known author- © ity, because the uric acid in meat ex- cites the ki they becbthe over- worked; get distress, particu- cause all sorts vo backache and misery in the kid-) aad. 'ney region: rheaumatle twinges, se- i id stomach, vere headaches, Be | ease being { be known as the | case. | "The case is remarkable eventually | n BIG ATTA On Dardanelles F Fortifications - J to be Undertaken. ARRIVAL 1S AWAITED ; OF FURTHER BRITISH AND FRENCH WARSHIPS, Which Are Now On the Way to Join the Attacking Squadron--Bom- bardment of Fortifications Is Con- tinuing. he Whig The * bom bard- ment of the Turkish fortifie ations in the Dardanelles was continued to- day The warships were accompan- ied into the straits by a number of mine sweepers. A force of Allied troops was land- ed on the Peninsula of Gallipoli yes- terday from transports in the Gulf of Saroe, A general attack upon the fortica- tions of the Dardanelles is to be un- dertaken immediately on the arrival f further British and French war- ships, now on the way to join the ittacking squadron The last. concerted effort against the Dardanelles' pesitions occurred yn March 18th. . The Gallipoli peninsula the )orthern or European side of the Dardanelles, At its head it is not than three or four miles wide. pecis Athe ns Hi h 24. is nore MURDER CASE IN LONDON ---- « Man Charged With Murdering Three Wives. London, March 24. the murder of three women, George Joseph Smith, in the Bow street court, heard Public Presecutor Bod- kin declare he had made away with three of his wives; the crime in each commiited shortly after he had married them, Each of these women was found dead in her bath; onsequently the case had come to "brides in bath" --~Charged with The prosecutor gave the names of the three women and the dates df the alleged murders as Beatrice Mundy, July 1912; Alice Burnham, December 1913, and Margaret Lof- y,- December 1914. Smith, according to the police, was born in London, the son of an Insurance agent, and is 45 years of age. Presecutor Bodkin said the aceus- | ed had been married five times in| alli His first wife was Caroline! Beatrice Thornhill, whom he mar- | ried in 1898 and who now is on her | way to London from Canada. 'The prisoner will now be charg-| ed with the murder of three of these! five women," Mr. Bodkin continued. | for the! greed for wealth which was the ma- | {tive in the taking of there lives. We shall show at the death! of two of them £2,800 ($14,000) was cbtained, and that the prisoner! when arrested was in a fair way to] { obtain £700 ($3,500) more.' DEATH oF JOHN W. HYATT, | Was Well Known Farmer and Fruit Grower. Picton, Ont, March 24.--The | death occurred Tuesday, at his home {at West Lake of John W. Hyatt, a { well known resident of this distriet, {aged sixty-nine years. Mr. Hyatt i was a familiar figure at the annual | gatherings of farmers' organizations. | {In the days of the patron movement { he was one of the speakers and an | organizer. He was a good plat { form speaker and a man of forcible { personality, He was a Liberal in | politics, but during the provincial { | | | { campaign of 1906 he took the stump 98 | for the Conservative party and as- | ernment. He was a large fruit | grower and was also extensively en- | gaged in the canning industrty. Was Visiting Brother. Chicago, March 24.--G. W. Me elastic iy. has about ed from the fact to | on TWELVE E MONTHS REQU IRED TO MANUFACTU RE BIG GUNS. Many Intricate Processes Involved In | Building Large Weapons--Cov- red With Miles of Wire, MgO Jd nal A fasemating wight is to watch the first stages in the manufacture of the | big guns which are proving 80 de- 'astating in the war. A solid ingot of, steel, fifty feet in length and cighing about 100 tons, is em- ployed 1m 'the makipg of a thirteen: | inch gun. After being forged and then allowed to cool, so that it may be toughen- ed for the heavy work, this gigantic bar of steel is pressed into cglindri- cal shape by a power hydraulic press which exerts a pressure of anything between 5,000 and 10,000 tons to the inch. Later known as the trepanning opeggation is carried out, namely, drilling the bore irom end to end. Next the bore is rifled. The most impressive sight, how. gver, is the hardening process, when the rough weapon is heated to daz- zling white heat and plunged into a well full of oil. If the operation takes place "in the night time the sight 3 this big, glowing bar of me- tal being lowered, apparently into the | bowels of the earth issuing leaping ) of flames from the burning oil, may be likenéd to a scene from Dante's Inferno. The gun is left: to cool in the oil bath, ont of which it hardened, toughened and tempered, some square what 1s tongues comes Now follows the wire-winding opera- tion to make the weapon stronger and impart to it some measure of | This wire winding is much the in principle as the whip ping on the handle of a cricket bat. In this case, however, the whipping takes the Torin of a strong steel rib- ron, which is wound around the body f the gun. Every thirteen-inch gun 120 miles of this steel rib- hon wound about 'it. ~ Some idea of the: labor involved in the manufacture of one of these guns may be gather that from the start time occupied same finish the months. is twelve NEWS OF DISTRIC T . Found in Exchanges. Curfew is to ring in Belleville every night at 4.05 o clock. J. Alley died in the front of Thur- | low on Monday. He was a native of | Mayo. He had lived in Sidney for several years, William B. Dockstader passed away Tuesday in Thurlow, after an ill- ness of two weeks. He was born $n | Sidney in 1846, John R. Dargavel, MPP. for! Leeds, has been appointed Chairman | of the Agricultural and Colonization Committee of the Untario Legislature. | The death occurred at Council | Montreal of George Grant, a former | well-known resident and merchant of | | Belleville. His demise was due to | pneumonia. On 17th inst., Mrs. Ketchum Passed | peacefully~ to her reward at the Toul dence of her step-daughter, Mrs. { Pratt; Toledo, (he direet cause ul What Is .The .District | { three! death being acute pneumonia. She was | was present. born in 1831, The death occurred at Council | Blufis, lowa, recently, of Dr. Smith | W. Bellinger, husband of a former { Brockville young lady, Miss Edyth | { MeCallum, daughter of the late James | McCallum, coal dealer. FORMER KINGSTONIAN DEAD. William J. Naylon Passed Away At Buffalo. The death occurred, at March 18th, of Wiliam J. Naylon, chief engineer of the steamer Michi- gan, after an illness of two weeks. Deceased is survived by three child- ren, Thomas, Frederick and Cather- ine; one brother, Police Constable John Naylon, and two sisters, Mrs. | Lawrence Joyee, Kingston, and Mrs. { Thomas Gunllagher, Buffalo. Inter- ment took place at Buffalo on Mon- Constable Naylon and Mrs. Nay- lon returned home on Wednesday morning from attending the faneral. Only One "BROMO QUININE." Whenever you feel a cold coming | om, think of the full name, LAXA- TIVE BROMO QUININE. look EE a Mullen; seventy-one years old, of Ont., died of heart disease {on a North-western Elevated rail-| road train on Tuesday. Mr. Me- | | Mullen and his son, G. P. McMullen, | ! had been visiting his brother, R. B.| McMullen, 1021 Grove street, Evans; rton. On Tuesday morning Mr. Me- cago on-an elevated train, but after travelling a short distance, Mr. Me- Mullen became ill. His son assist- to a north-bound one. the Davis street station in Evanston. The body was taken to the home of hi brother. Fhe deceased. was prominently identified with many enterprises; in of whieh improved Processes for tion of the and for ev also the o Mullen and his son started to Gui. red about 15" 'ed him from the south-bound train | McMullen | fresh Oted as they were about to alight at Many seientific Fesearch, He had patented | What Chris Did "Johnny," the teacher asked, "can you tell me anything about Chris-| topher Columwus?' "He discovered America." "Yes." - What else did he do?" "I #'pose he went home and lec TF Bell, passenger traffic manager of _ Grand Trunk, has returned rom 4 trip down south, ooking Ww and The G Roads Co . urged | that the question of road mprove- | ment be taken out of politics. "Woodbury Soaps," at Gibson's, rent seal yeir amount to 236, ing mariana a Con we Ot Is a matter of civic pride ft 'the 'manutacurer merchan! | TE { nally baffles the British public whom | | these months of experience of the | | disastrous | like children, is not this done? | was | contingent, Buffalo, on | for | Provincial estimates for ¥. cur- | THE DAILY BRITISH WHIc, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1915. CENSORS ARE BLAMED BRITISH FAIL TO REALIZE NATION'S PERIL. | Information Is Concealed, Not From Enemy, But From British Public ~Should Tell All Truth. London, March 24.---The Daily | Chronicle in an editprial says: "A good many recent events of | varying importance, from: the Clyde etrikes downward, have warned us that large sections of our-pyople do | not even realize .the desperate na- ture of the life and death struggle | in which we are involved. And how should they, with the censor- | ship constantly exerted to conceal in- | ormation, not from the enemy, but from the British 'public, and a War Office which prohibitst all regular ge rvices of war correspondents? "Brief and eccasional visits to the | Allies' lines, which are permitted at intervals to a few trained journalists | under official guidance, have done something to show us the character of the tremch warfare day by day, but these writers have had no oppor- tunity of describing or reporting any actions. We hear of successes, and in general terms of the gallantry of the men, hut their losses and the names of the units engaged we only | learn from the casualty lists. The last are served out to us in strag-| gling daily instalme ents, and lack of | Proper presentation hides nothing from the students, let us say, of the | German General Staff, whose busi- ness it is to add figures, calculate | units and compare dates, but effect- | alone it is entirely calculated to he- wilder. "Ours is not a nervous nation, H- | able to be stampeded into panie. Nothing does us more good than to | be told frankly of the difficulties be- | | fore us and of the course of sur-| mounting them. Why, after all unwisdom of treating us| It the knowledge of our men's | trials, not of their triumphs, that] brought recruits flocking to our new | armies. It is only by the knowledge that the whole energy of our manhood, in the workshops | less than in the trenches. can be | kept concedtrated upon the achieve- | ments of our national safety." Wait Till He Gets Home. | One of the recruits with the first | who promised to send! half his pay to his wife, had been re | mitting a certain sum regularly each month for some time. His wile, | | learning from a friend that a more] convenient plan would -be for her "man" to leave half his with the paymaster and have it sent through official channels, as was done in oth- er. cases, ordered her husband to fol- low this course. A day or two ago she received the first remittance under the new plan | from Ottawa. When she opéned the envelope she found $16. She look- ied at the money and her face | Clouded over. "What's the matter; ain't it right?" asked a friend who "It isn't that it's not right." said tite woman, "but all along he's been telling me his pay was only $20 a 2 Specials?" 4 CANS PEAS 2 DOZ. ORANGES . same | 254 Montreal St. Rallway m XT TI SYSTEM Double Track Route The International Limited - No 1. Daily - WESTBOUND Lv. Kingston . Toronto ,... . Hamilton .. ndon .. . Buffalo , . Detroit hy cago The International Limited | BASTBOUND tv. Kingston ........... . Ottawa Ar. Montreal , TORTURED BY CONSTIPATION "Frift-a-tives" Gured Paraly- zed Bowels and Digestion ST. BONTFACE DR SHAWINIGAN, QUR. Feb. 3rd. 1914. "It is a pleasure to me to inform you that after suffering from Chronic Constipation for 234 years, I have been cured by *"Fruit-a-tives", While I was a student at Berthier College, I became so ill 1 was forced to leave the the college. Severe pains across the intestines continnally tortured me and it came 10 a point when I could not stoop down at all, and my Digestion became paralyzed. Some ane advised me to take *Fruit-a-tives" and at once I felt a great improvement. After I had taken four or five boxes, I realized that I was completely cured and what made me glad, also, was that they were acting gently, causing no pain whatévertothe bowels. All those who suffer with Chronic Constipation should follow my example and take " Fruit-a-tives"" for they are the medicine that cures", MAGLOIRE PAQUIN "Pruit-a-tives"' are sold by al! dealers st soc. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25¢. or sent postpaid on receipt of price by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa. Dining Roo Furniture we Ponte pm, pon, pom, p.m, P in, Sinres Paniitd SosanES kl oy 4 Daily je 1a Ven yrs + 5 be 28 PST RNO® \ Dartford : For full pa | LEY, Rail cor. Johnson and Ont apbiy J. B. HAN: Steamship Agent, ario Sts rticulars road an CANADIAN Widadolldly Improved Service O-MONTREAL OTTAWA : Via "Lake Ontario Shore Line" Fast time te Whithy, Oshawa, | lowmanville, Port Hope, 'obourg, | Belleville, Trenton, ete. { Particulars from FF. CONWAY, ©, | P.A, City Vicket Office, corner Prin. | cena and Wellington Streets. - All the latest designs and| | finishes. Buffets, $15, $20, $23 and up. Ex. Tables, $10, $12, $15 | and up. BL $1.50 TORO | $2.50 and R. J. Reid, Leading Undertaker. 1197, (No. Quality). OURFRESH GROUND COF- FEE AT 40c. CAN'T BE BEAT. Try a sample order and be OM NOLAN'S GROCERY Princess St. Prempt Delivery .25¢ (Sweet, Juiey, See dloss), J. R. B. Gage, ok For The Finest Quality | BEEF, LAND, MUTTON, PORK AND VEAL, CALL AT PARKER . Phone 1683 Round Steaks Sirloin Steaks (CANADIAN SER\MIOR) Sailings from Halifax to Liverpool ORDUNA (15,500 tons) April 19th Apply Locnl Ticket Age aos T REFORD .CO, . LIMITED, ! Seneral Agents, 50 King St. Bust, Tore 'Wood's Fhosphodine, The Great English Bemedy. Tones and omgtish the who Herveus stem, makes new Blood M in ad, Fei a C ures hong Sonos," assaf | JENerOls Faipiter elim Heart, Railing Memory x, the ease, six he es Paola oldby al I Er or mailed in plain pkg. Bian Aa a ey Bes Phone 7: son (Formarly Windy ~.) i { Have You Tried GYPSUM WALL PLASTER? It Saves Time P. WALSH, month. Wait till he gets home! If the Germans don't kill him, I will." A 'Chance to Rise. i "Turkey raising is am arduous | business,' said a whilesale poultry | dealer to a friend. "Day and night | you must look after your birds the i same as you look after horses. "California turkeys are very fine. They are well taken care of. It's] i ao 8 | 1 } key farm. "1 was visiting a California tur- | key farm last month when a "boy |j | applied for a job. { "Your references are good. {try you,' said the farmer. I ""'Will I have a chance to rise, | | sir? the boy asked. | chance. nap to vork on a California tur |§ Hl Ph i} The Suit | House Thursday, Friday ant Saturday 'Yes," said the farmer, 'a grand |} | feed mixed up by 4 o'clock every | | morning.' i i Some Choice Woods. Rosewood is | the wood of diferent: trees in theit| I respeetive countries, so the ia he rosewood of Brazil is considered | t the finest in every way, sod i made | into beautiful furnituie, | { The 'myrtle tree, a common one in| | Palestine, is useful ecause its leaves | | are used for sachet powders, and from jit an oil is obtai which is used in perfume. The myrtle is an emblem | -4-0f_the Jewish feast of the passover | j and is mentioned several time in the | i Bible, © It is not a large tree, for | [twenty feet is sally its maximum | | height. i | eu vitae, another very hard | comes also from the West In-| | i i id heey for making pestles, pulleys and other | things tha uire ey. strength. It has a Rower Tine the the hepatica, which comes in clusiers, soning med en or, "Bill," the t gasped, staggering | fu nto the friend's room. "Why, a & wigng + the friend | enquired, 'starting as he grasped hold | oi the tottering man. AE ole a a my hit- lo boy: 1 began the first verse with Sines 4 'My won! My pigmy par "The poet drew a Jong breath as he took wspaper from h ie pocket, "Read he blazed suddenly. I'll want you to have the Hi i the name applied Wo} i commer- |} signature of E. W. Grove on box. 2c. | tial rosewood is not always the same. | Hi "Lis 80, hard thet it is useful § Special 3 Days Sale SAMPLE SUI NN.» . Suits $12.98 All sizes for misses and ladies. Grey, brown, putty, sand, navy, fawn, ete., ete. Best of trimmings, silk and "satin lined coats. The newest spring dels Values to $25; "$12. 98 Visit our ill Tt is a busy place just now. rowded e Hundreds of the latest creations for ladies, ready for you. Compare our prices. We sion. Call de-martow---q Pleasure ito Show § Singh Coats $7.45 New spring models for misses and ladies, Navy, - black and. brown shades, ser, es, Cheviots and faney Tiveeds, 'orreet in every way for present oy eATIng; good value, regular at $12.50 + $15.00. $7 45 ¥orieaeh ;............ Department ry day with eager buyers, , girls dnd children now are ath, 23 to abide by your deei- you, : i | bi {| i 1 11 i 1 $12.98 ||} C--O SS US Sa

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