Daily British Whig (1850), 2 Jul 1915, p. 12

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4 ~ : Can supply Cement Blocks, Silla, Lintles, Bricks, Flower Vases, Tile, # pe HERE is no more reasen for serving poor coffee than for making omelets of stale éggs. Simply use rea- sonable care in making,and start Caps, P'er Blocks, ete. We also manufacture Cement Grave Vaults. Estimates given for all kinds of Ce- ment Work, Kingston Cement Products. H. F. NORMAN, MANAGER, Office, 177 Wellington Street. Phones: Office, 780; Factory, 1204. In Bulk or Bricks. Packed and delivered to any part of the city, GEORGE MASOUD, Phone 080, 208 Princess St. GREAT VICTORY The result never in doubt. GAS versus (COAL dur- ing the summer months. Unanimous Verdict in fa- vor of GAS FOR COOK- ING, "Phone 197, or drop a card to the Office of the Works, on Queen Street. Light, Heat, Power and Water . Depts. C. C. Folger, General Mgr. Tm, Pure Marmalade Crosse. and Blackwell Chivers and Son's In 7 Ib. tins 341.8 Princess St. D. COUPER Phone 76. ~ Prompt Delivery, Gentlemen, let us clean Hat. We ean save mosey for you. We call for and deliver. cleaning FIGURES IN TWO WARS WAS CONTENTION BETWEEN MONTENEGRO AND POWER. Captured Second Thme--Austrian Consul Lowers Flag and Montene- grin General Takes Charge of Oity. Paris, July 2.--Describing the oc- cupation of Scutari, Albania, by Mon- tenegrin troops, the Rome correspon: dent of .the Havas Agency says.: "Mussulmang, Catholics, members of the orthodox faith, the communal au- thorities, members of the Govern- ment, ; the police force, the schools and the population, preceded by flags and bands, marched out of the city. At noon came the triumphal entry of the -Montenegriis, preceded by an advance guard. Following the ad- vance guard were priests in the cere- monial robes, carrying the cross and religious standards; then came the main Montenegrin army led by Gen- eral Vechovitch and the Montenegrin Consul, and bands of irregular Al- banians followed. "The Austrian Consul lowered thé flag and placed the Consulate in the care of the Greek Consul. "The General Staff of the troops occupying Scutari have taken charge of the administration of * the city, declaring that citizens must hence- forth consider themselves subjects of Montenegro, and be judged according to Montenegrin law and that distur- bers of the new regime will be pun- ished by martial law. General Vec- "| hovitch addressed the Foreign Con- sulates, announcing that he was tak. ing possegsion of the city in the name of King Nicholas. Patrols guard the consulates and public buildings." Object Of Contention. « Scutari was an object of conten- tion between Montenegro and the Great Powers during the Balkan war. The Montenegrin forces on April 23rd, 1913, captured the city, after a siege which lasted from the preceding October. Prior to this the Powers had de- cided to include Scutari in the future state of Albania, and had offered compensation to King Nicholas in money and land on condition that he give up Scutari. The Montenegrin King announced that he would hold Scutari against the powers, and, asa result, thé international naval block- ade of the Montenegrin coast was extended, Eventually, on further demand of the powers, King Nicholas decided to evacuate Scutari, which was occupied by an internation] force on May 14th, 1913. A recent official note issued by the Montenegrin Government ex- plained that' strategic and political reasons impelled the Moiitenegrin descent on Albania, and gave as an additional reason that other powers had already occupied portions of Al- bania. TRAPPING SUBMARINES Novel Way In Which British Sink Under-Sea Raiders. New York, July 2.--Captain Ar- thur R. Mills of the Ameriean liner Philadelphia, which arrived from Liverpool, said that submarines had been in the River Mersey as far as the Bar Lightship, and had sunk a sailing vessel close by as he 'was nearing Liverpool on his last east- bound voyage. He met two patrol boats inside Holyhead going at full speed, and was warned by the Admiralty that submarines were near by. One of the submarines was sunk by a patrol boat, the Captain said, but nothing was printed about it in the newspa- pers on the other side. Two patrol boats go scouting to- gether with a steel wire net made fast to the stern of each which goes down about twenty-five feet in the water. When a heavy strain is felt on the hawsers, which are attached to the net, the patrol boats turn in- ward and steam toward each other. If the commanders believe the sub- marine is firmily entangled in the net they cut it adrift and let the net and its victim go to the bottom. Resigned To His Fate. Paris, July 2.--Burgomaster Max of Brussels, interned in the German fortress at Glatz, is resigned to his fate, according to a letter written by him to the Havre correspondent of the Matin in which he says: "I take no merit for supporting my fate stoically. Besides, I see ii my pa- tience only an application of he physical law that every being Rane himself to the conditions of life im- posed upon him. I have been shut un now 240 days and captivity has b a normal state for me." Dr. and Mrs. Donevan, Smith's Falls, expect to leave for the front. Dr. Donevan has enlisted with the Royal Army Medica] Corps, and his estimable partner, a graduate mili- tary nurse, wil] serve with the Cana- dian Nursing Sisters. Rev. F. Louis Brooks has resign- ed as pastor of the First Baptist Church, East Brookfield, Mass., hav- ing accepted the call to the First Baptist Church, Clayton, N.Y. Lerrons by Pictorial Review 6294 One-piece side pleated skirt designed for misses and small women. It is ef- fective developed In serge, taffeta or nongee, The grace and charm of a pleated ING GUIDE6 204 Ad a MATERIAL OPEN Piciorial Review Skirt No. 6294. cents. Prepared Especially For This Newspaper A SKIRT FOR SUMMER WAISTS. Sizes 14, 16, 18 and 20 years. Price, 15 THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG FRIDAY, JULY 2 1915. . ; ; Gary & Practical Home Dress Making skirt are never questioned, and this lovely model will not be courting popu- lar favor very long. It is cut in one- plece, being especially designed for misses and small women and has a "BICYCLES From $25.00t0 $45 AT H. MILNE Phone 543. 272 Bagot St. Cleveland Standard Model Falcon, RUSHED FROM CEYLON | "SALADA" TE .A B22 is electrically weighed, hermetically sealed and dispatched to your table fresh with all the fragrant odors of the Sunny Isle. Sample from Salada, Toronto. O liberty, what a lot of divorces | hide under thy cloak. straight lower edge and high waist- line. If desired, an applied one-piece circular yoke may be added. In aver- age size the skirt requires to reproduce 8%% yards 44-inch material. \ Since the fashionable width aboug'the bottom f¢ about 3% yards it will be necessary to piece the skirt, and in cut- ting the plecing is laid on an open width of the material. The skirt prop- er, marked (A), is then laid on a lengthwise fold of the goods. The yoke follows the skirt, being placed at the extreme right of the material, on cross- wise threads, but on a lengthwise foid. If the yoke is liked better in shorter length, or pointed at the center-front, cut off indicating double "00" perfora- tions, The lines of single small "0" perforations indicate how it may be cut'if the yoke Is to be pointed at the sides. The skirt is' made by first pleating it on creasing lines of slot perforations, bringing the folded edges to correspond- ing lines of small "0" perforations. The folded edge Is now brought near the center-back to center and stitched as desired. The pressing should be done very carefully and precedes the closing of the back seam. This seam is stitch- ed from large "O" perforation to lower edge, after which the edges are finished above the opening. Adjust the yoke to position on skirt, center-fronts, upper and back edzes even. Adjust belting two inches wide to position. Cream cored serge is extensively used for . arate skirts for summer se. of JAP 1%. 1907 ir : Bs . OF 44 INCH MATERIAL WITH A ; Patented April BY TORPEDOING OF FREIGHT LINER ARMENIAN Enroute Te England--The Armenian Declared To Be a Peaceful Mer- chantman With American Goods. Washington, July 1.--The Domin- fon freight liner Armenian, flying the British flag and carrying mules from Newport News, Va. to Eng- land, was 'torpedoed and sunk Mon- day night by the German submarine U-28 off Cornwall, England, and nearly a score of American muleteers aboard are reported lost, according to messages received by the State De- partment from Consul John 8. Arm- strong, jr., at Bristol. Twenty-nine men in all were reported lost and ten injured. , The news created a sensation in official circles, as it was the first case of loss of American lives since the sinking of the Lusitania. The gravity of the incident, however, and the ac- tion of the Washington Government depends almost entirely, on whether the Armenian was chartered by the | British Government and was, in fact, a transport of war aboard which Am- ericans would sail at their own risk or whether she was an unarmed mer- chantman. Was Peaceful Merchantman. New York, July 1.--W. W. Jeff- ries, General Manager of the Inter- national Mercantile Marine Company, said' that the steamship Armenian was'not under charter to the British Government, and that she was a penchtul merchantman. The Armen- an, hei added, was making the voy- age under the operation of the Ley- land Line, ind she carried a general cargo of American origin. CHARGE WITHOUT OFFICERS i ty Of Discipline, go 2.--Harry B. Free, formerly of Campbellford, who is at the f t In Fihce: says, in writing to a md: "Perhaps you have heard ; fhe Canadians had no dis- cipline. ' Well, Jet me tell you that one battalion, 4, made a charge without officers and pulled it off as vere on parade. Does that discipline? It was cer- and-go for ree s bombs were hellish, them two miles away. and gas hel- y "and there is little to fear ch- | investigation and that drastic action NEWSPAPERS IN INDIA. They. Seem to Be Run in a Happy- Go-Lmcky Sort of Way. Americans, accustomed to' the hustle and bustle pf-our newspapers that are enterprisihg to a marvellous extent, would be amazed, if not ex. asperated, with the papers of India. One of these sheets recently publish- ed this explanation: "This is only the beginning of our paper. We were not sure how much matter wag required to fill it up, and, thinking we had sufficient, we did not exert ourselves much to get any more. We therefore beg that our readers will excuse us Yor the space left blank and promise to do better and get more in the future." How many subscrifers would that paper have in this country? still more curious was the announcement of a paper that came out with two columus blank, the editer having the cheek to gay that a large quantity of exceedingly interesting matter has been left out for want of space. hen the average East Indian edi. ; tor wants a holiday he suspends! publication until it is convenient to resume, and, taking the public into his confidence, informs them plainly why the paper was not issued on the expected dates. "With the consent of our readers we now propose to take our annual holiday. We are sure none of them will begrudge us our relaxation --8t. Louis Globe- Democrat. BLEW HER TONSIL APART Member Of Ladies' Band Too Energe- tic At Concert. Baltimore, July 2.--While enter- taining the Sparrows Point volunteer firemen in their hall at Sparrows Point, Miss Harriet Arnold, a mem- ber of the Brooklyn Ladies' Band, blew so. energetically on her cornet that she burst her: left tonsil. Miss Arnold did not realize that she had injured herself until she arrived at her home in Brooklyn, a suburb, about midnight. Then she suffered severe pains in her throat. The tonsil was removed. Investigate Oil Companies. Calgary, July 2.--Early in July Judge Carpenter will begin the in- wgtigation of over one hundred oil es. were 485 oil companies formed last year. Of these 100 failed to. file any returns whatever, while others have sent in only par- tial return 8. It is expected that serious embez- zlement charges will arise out of the will be taken to clean up the whole oil situation. . A The Gananoque Eleetric Light and Power. FOR YOUR NEXT BATCH OF PRESERVES Buy good Fruit which must not be over-ripe, and what is equallyimportant, use good Sugar. The slightest impurity (organic matter) in the Sugar will start fermentation in the jam, and preserves which were well cooked and carefully bottled, become acid and uneatable after a few months. You are absolutely safe with the ST. LAWRENCE EXTRA GRANULATED SUGAR which is made from Cane and tests over 99.99 per cent pure. If you prefer a very fine grain--a medium one or one quite large, your grocer can sult your tastein St. Lawrence which is offered inthe'thres grades in 2 1b, and 5 1b, Cartons, and bags of 10, 20, 25 and 100 lbs, Buy in Refinery sealed packages to avoid misthkes and assure absolute cleanliness and correct weights. Sold by most good Grocers 5) TH BLE STRENG The Stone Age man held a pebble in his mouth for moisture and to prevent thirst, Forlorn makeshift of an arid land. Roots and herbs served better where plant life existed. : Early Spanish explorers found the Aztecs used "chicle" -- wholesome, pleasant and agreeably chewy--welcome relief from tropical heat. Refined Mexi Chicle, its merits proven by the test of time, is the basis of RIGLEYS == and the waxed wrapper ed air tight -- make it the Perfect Gum in the Perfect Package. a MADE IN CANADA Top eicious So PPP om ; C flavors -- and the toothsome tang v it after every meal -

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