Daily British Whig (1850), 9 Sep 1915, p. 7

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. 'PAGE SIX THE DAILY BRITISH 'WHIG, THURSDAY. S EPTEMBER 9, 1915. Gary & Practical Fome Dress Maing Lesrons 2 = = LAUGHERN BECAME DIZZY IN HOT SUN. JAMES And Lost His Balance--His | And Forehead Were the Fall. On Thursday afternoon shortly | before two o'clock, James Laughern, | who resides at 99 Rideau street, had | the misfortune to fall off the roof of { the gun-shed at Tete de Pont Bar- | racks, receiving a deep gash on the i erown of his head and another bad gash above the left eve. i picked up by some of the i standing nearby. James Head Gashed By . Prepared Especially For This Newspaper by Pictorial Review . A SENSIBLE, INEXPENSIVE AND ATTRACT short sle a lawn soldiers truction * the Reid's ut by turning {ambulance was hurriedly summoned | { and removed the injured man to the { Hotel Dieu, where several stitches | front. Gather | Were required to close both wounds. | se under-arm Mr. Laughern was at the time of ched. If long { the accident repairing the roof of | asing 3% inch | the gun-shed, and it seems from the | d back, cen. | NOt sun that was be aming down he | single small | became. dizzy and lost his balance, al I | rolling Off the roof and falling al- ILE 6358 most twenty feet to the hard ground. | A projecting 'board caused the | | ashes. | t perforations, v8 "0" perfo- PITH OF THE NEWS. From Near And Distant] Places. British workmen in congress --at| Bristol passed a resolution jus stifying | the Allies' part im the war. | Four pred from four to ten {¥yeark of age, were roasted to death in tN¥IF Home near Lorette, Man. English-speaking, parents are evi | dently boycotting Ottawa University, | as shown in first form registrations. | Mrs. R. C. Drew of Smith's Falls was drowned while fishing near her , | summer home on Star Island, Ri Ts de. | deau Lake. ; | The Royal Canadian Regiment, Perlorations; 1,086 of all ranks, are now encamp- 'a pl {ed at Shorneliffe, Eng., after a voy- tanding TE age in perfect weather. dge as notch. | Six American papers and seven- small. "o™ per. teen pamphlets and other publica- Ale tions of a pro-German character have s notohed." Gaths oon refused the privileges of the , double "TT | Canadian mails. o lower: edge "A French soldier has informed the : | British authorities of a German- } ind sleewv 8 > : oy i. Seu ro. bands American plot to destroy the Cana- There Is quite a formidable array of as | dian harvest. He heard it from a sensible and inexpensive models among sleeve hands tohed, seams even. German prisoner the advance models in children's frocks. S as notched. | Sir Rod 1 R blin and his three The design shown here is a guimpe ef- 'm of dress as | oo 0 rd. no op ana his tutee fect, the guimpe being in two lengths, t lower edge on 6 rm Sar used of cop- with two styles of collars. The dress sn ns. If shoulder | SP Re oo FAN ne rrovince, were with . two styles of collars. The in straight out- | rrianded again at Winnipeg until dress slips on over the head and 0" perforation, | Monday. Dr. Montague was too ill closes on the shoulders. It is made m single per- | © appear. i ) % of blue gingham, the guimpe being of nt to small "o" | There was 'placed to the credit of white Jawn. The frock for a c of If desired with | the Finance Department on Wednes- day the sum of. $125,000, an instal- ment of the Province of Ontario's four years requires 13% yards 36-inch aed houlder edge lap back on gingham. "If a short guimpe is made 1 small "o" perfo- | M with long -sleeves 1% yards 3% h buttons and but- | £ift of money to be used for the pur lawn is needed; for short guimpe and chase of machine guns. Pictorial Review Dress No. 6338. A Tribute To Father. cents, - i . American Maga e. Because my mother Xnew that | from the day he first met her until | he' died, or for all the days in fifty i years, she was the woman he loved, {1 should like the woman I marry to know the same thing of me, all our lives long. Because he loved all flowers in cool woods ands in sunny fields and by dusty roadsides, and brought them home, gathered Yo clumsy {| bouquets "for mother," if she could not go herself to see them in the places where they held up their shy faces. Because he loved all children and let them climb over his shoulders apd pull his hair. Because his eyes twinkled and his i face was jolly. Because he smiled at us children even in the days when he was hiding' black despair in his heart. Because although his work kept him away from home for so many weeks at a time he wrote jolly let- "ters every time to Mother and us. {{ making jokes out of icy winds and béds covered with snow that had drifted in through farmhouse win- dows, anc of all hardships. Because he was deep-chested and strong and because - his strength came from work in the fields in spch days as he could find no work in his owid profession. Because he thought ino work of his hands béneath him if it brought us food and a shelter. sBecause he talked to farmers and carpenters and to learned men and to diggers of ditches and to little girls and boys and to presidents alike and all. loved him, Because he wore his overcoats for ten years and his. shoes for two years and called his coat "as good as new, with a little fixing of the lining." 'Because he thought no sacrifice of any importance if by it we were made 'to. love mo and beautiful and true fn life: Because he used to put his arm { around Mother and tease her until | her eyes twinkled and she said, "Go away, Boy!" Because everybody missed him when he went away Somewhere Else --and will always remember him. That is why I should like to be such a man as he was, R. N. W, M. P. Will Need Men. Ottawa, Sept. 9.--Some difficulty is being experienced in keeping the North-West Mounted Police up to strength. The enlistment period of the men, however, was for one year, and inside of a month about five hundred of them will be ready to leave, and many want to enlist, Tuesday afternoon's reports from the Dardanelles and Flanders indi-. change. Sale ne aeroplane builders have i Summpleted enormous airships to fight Zeppelins The | i Despatches | | Any desired tr nming may be added to the dress, but it is very effective without any ornam@éntation other than is provided in the illustration. years. Price, 10 | Above Patterns can be obtained from NEWMAN & SHAW, Princess Street. Fall Millinery Opening Friday, September 10th AA EN ANS Made-in-Canada Goods Our Specialty. 'OPEN TUESDAY AND THURSDAY, 7:30 P.M. TO 9.30 P.M. A cA tr tt ema Miss Hamilton, 370 PRINCESS ST. oy 1267 Frontenac County Council Patriotic Nett | CITY HALL, Tuesday Evening, Sept. lath ; © At 8 pm. Gitisens. and residents of the, , County are invited to atten hair will be occupied by Dr. JW Edwards, MP. Will B Be Given By aman who makes good doekn't his time boasting of his ances ere Is more datarrh in this section country than all other diseases her; and until the last few was sup "30 be incurable J yéars doctors pro- local disease and pre- oat remedies, y con- local It = Science has to be a constitutional and therefore re- res constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. Cheney & Co.. Toledo, Ohio, tutional cure on the market It js. taken intermally, It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of ithe sys They offer one hundred . By kind permission of Col. Ogilvie, the. AGHA. Band will be in attendance. Solos, « t Lit 'A cordial invitation is eric to all GOD SAVE THE KING. KHigSEOn, September 9th, 1915. - oom "Ohio. A ( ema by Drugxists 7 Hall's Family Plils for consti- Fade | tered the city mere He was' truly whatever is good | JAIL WARSAW Ri SIDENTS. Leading Citizens .. seized Without Warning or Questioning. Petrograd, Sept. 9 London, )-- A prominent Polis wwyer, who his escape fr¢ aw after its capture by the Ge 1 made the following statement "Two days alter Germans en- 400 of the who re- hout warn- ent to Ger- most prominent ci mained were arrested ing qr interrogation many. About 700 5 were de- prived of their head: and of know. ledge of their whereabouts 'Arrests continue daily known reason was tl > names of: the victims appeared on a list com- piled by infermers 1 sent to Ger- many months ago. The only CORP, THOMAS ABRAMS, the Hesperian + ed. He was sav THE SPORT REVIEW The game of amateur Ontario is giving freely ers for the front. hockey in of its play- Two moregof ott: wa's tennis stars have enlisted for act service. Paul Armstrong of the R u Club, the y. champion for t year, and J. V. McKenzie of the Ottawa Club. -- Toronto Star: Haldena led across the line. but Kiota III, of Kingston, "had 'em all beat" when her engine cut up didoes ant she was forced to quit. The Detroit Baseball Club" is strengthening up for the final dash. The Tigers have purchased pitcher Grover Loudermilk from the St. Louis Americans. "Johnny" Poe, former Princeton football star and soldier of fortune, is now fighting with the Allies in the trenches, and has been transferred from the artillery to the Black Watch. The English soccer league open- ed last, Saturday with the attendance Just as large as before the war. The league is divided into three sections, and all the players are performing without salary. Rosedale arc the cRampions of the Queen City Lacrosse League, and will now play the Nationals, N.L.U title winners; for the honors in the East. Edouard Fabre, Montreal, is go- ing to run in still another Marathon race shortly This race is to be held in Chicago, but its date which was originally set as being in Sep- tember may be changed to October. ] Dr. Joseph Bricker, once of Tor- onto Varsity, now Coronation, Alber- ta, established a Dominion record for the pole vault in the Labor Day sports, when he cleared the bar at eleven feet three inches. Montreal Star: The Governors of the Inter-Previncial Rugby should consider carefully before they abandon Senior Rugby this season. The argument that war-time is not the time to play games like this, and that it- may prevent players from en- listing, does not hold; the implied ar- { sument that -on-A¢count- of the -war having crippled their teams some clubs will be unable to make a bril- liant showing holds even less. The City Baseball" League has al- most concluded the season. Probably the last game will be contested on Saturday afternoon when torias will meet a strong aggregation from the 38rd Battery, Barriefield Camp. Lieut. Huycke will piteh for the Battery. The game will aff a splendid close to the baseball sea- son in Kingston. Next year may seo the elimination of the:City Baseball League and a league composed of Kingston, Ganan- oque, Clayton and Alexandria Bay. + A Responsive Aviano ' Chating about the varied work of chaplains at the front, and the strange places in which sermons have been preached to the troops, the Rev. bis holiday among the British sol- diers in Flanders. told of an amus- | ing experience he had when going over to America for kis last" tour. While oi board Mr. Campbell was asked to give a Sermon, and as he was preaching a suddén rolling of the ship threw the whale congrega- tion te the. deck. "That was the' most rocky pulpit 1 ever occupied," he, remarked, "but ne tion was ever more quickly moved." ---- Sare Mrs. Bacon--This paper says that according to an Ialian | love causes an intoxication of the ner- ous cegters, Producing a hat. if mot cured. may lead to: men- radiuenia and even insanity. Do you think that is so, John? Mr, Bacon (busy with the kid)-- Oh, how should I know! ; professional |® Union}: the Vie-}' R. J. Campbell, who is going to spend | Treaty Made Between Turkey And Bulgaria (Special" to the Whig.) Sofia, Sept. 9.--The Bulgarian] Premier has stated in an interview that the Turco-Bulgarian agreement! for the cession of the Dedeagateh Railway has been concluded. The concession consists of the railway line with the Karagatch station, and | & Strip of territory two kilometres deep along the left band of the Mar- itza. Tke rght- bank "of the River Turndja has not been ceded. The Premier states that the occupation of the ceded territory will take place in fén days. ' The ceremony will be conducted in the presence of the Bulgarian Ministers and the Turk- ish Pashas. | INDIAN WAR PANCE. Different From Hugs and Trots of Modern Civilization. i Writing in Recreation, Leonard | Dewitt Sherman describes the Nava- go Indian dances of the South-west: If you have wearied of the various trots, walks, hugs, sinks, and tan- | gles as exemplified in modern danc- ing, I would advise you to stop over | RAILWAY AEA IAD TRUN Exhibition 'Ottawa, Sept. 10th to 18th. {Have You Tried GYPSUM WALL PLASTER? It Baves Time P. WALSH; Barrack Btreet. Just Apply This Paste ¢ » i Round trip tickets will be issued | good going on all trains Sept. 15th | and AM. trains Sept. 16th, valid for |etain | Sept. 16th or 17th, at $2.60. Good going Sept. 17th inclusive, {in five days from amd including date of sale, but not later than Sept. 20th, at | $3.40, For full particulars apply Ean ELS wi LIC PACIFIC 'entral Canada EXHIBITION. jou Sept. 10th to 18th. 10th and Sept. te. J P Johuson at Sone of the South-Western pueb los oil your way to or from the Paci- fic Exposition this fall a dance, see a real | Among the best-known are mingo, the Nopi Snake dance, the Feast of Acoma. = While the dancers are the spectators are kept amused by the antjcs of two clowns. The per- formers are divided into two parties. One-half young women and half young men dressed in their finest be- low the waist, and painted in their durndest above it (in the case of the and might be said to be the princi- pals. About twenty men in ordi- | nary clothing form the chorus. These | take up the burden of the song, all | chanting to the trump of the drum, liar kind of clog step, keeping per- | fect time. The words themselves | consists merely of the syllables "Ho! 00-0-oh! Ho! Ho! Ah-ho!" but the chant is melodious enough, and of a peculiar undulating quality that is indescribable, and which, joined with | the quick tom-tom of the drum beat- en in about 6-8 time, fairly clogs the ears with its regular deafening pro- perty. The dancers continue with- out a halt for half an hour, when an-. other set takes their places. i "Parley-vous" Is Best For "Phone. | The French language has' been | found much better adapted to long-! distance telephoning than the Eng-| lish, and expert operators in Paris| have succeeded in trhnsmitting mes- sages to London at the rate of 130! words a minute. Hawaiian College Athletes. | Oahu College, Honolulu, T. H., is| soon to celebrate its seventy-fifth an- | niversary. This college has sent| many famous athletes to mainland| institutions, the Withingtons, of Harvard. Yet Crisco of lard. A the Green Corn dance of Santos Dos for the and pairs from your follows: preparing wate the hairs are treatment is unfailing and or inconvenience attends its use, hut| to avoid jumping up and down with a pecu- ITE and the Hairs Vanish (Helps to Beauty) reliable A safe, quick removal of superfluous | face or neck is as| Mix a stiff paste with some | r and powdered delatone, apply | to objectionable hairs and after 2 or! 3 minutes rub off; wash the skin and | gone. This simple | no pain disappoihtment "be men) are decorated with evergreens YOU S¢t genuine delatone. ~~ home-treatment | certain { | Round trip tickets will he issugd g 1 going on all trains Sept. 15th and AM trains Sept. 16th, valid for returd Sept 16th or 17th, at . . $2.55. Good going Sept. 10th ive, returning withiy dat e of gale, but no 20th, at . $3.40. to Rin inclu- from F. CONWAY, Cp corner Princess Phone 1197, Partic ulars City Ticket Offiye, |* d Welli ngtogh streets RIDEAU STREET CONVENT. STIMONIAL Lindsay, Lad, P ia which s another 1e of y and we would like Just selected fre to furn m your. s delight and satis hich we tion In the already have in use, of Shroughont ¢ x 8, Bs are all that could b and institution where the is re desired, and we have no hesit man & Co. as Canada's best Yours very The Heintaman & Co. Piano--the piano you will eventually buy. and endorsed by the most prominefit musicians and {from coast to coast. SOLE AGENTS FROM RIDEAU excellent In purchasi ing this piano, we ac STREET CONVENT Ottawa, Ont, Aug. 21.15 lana Deaers, to replace we have « Helntzms n ish us with one at your pianos, whic h we have warerooms w"sh to express to you our se veral Heintzman & Coe pianos pure hased from you some time ction, the well evenness of fone as the quality and volume as a piano for a home or an quired, they are ali"that fan be ation in stamping the Heintz- piano. tru SIST ER "ow IER, Superior. Usd musical institutions FOR KINGSTON, C.W. Lindsay, Limited., the best known being) 121 PRINCESS STREET, : Wipes For Shari rok Making 4, M. 8. GRACE, MANAGER Better Foods for Less Money If you use both lard and butter in your cooking -- lard for ordinary occasions, and butter for the things you want especially rich and appetizing -- you will find Crisco a welcome economy. > costs less even than the ots de ed ado st cv flavor of those made with' Crisco--rniot to ee the superior digestibility of the latter. pays {6 1138 Crisco---pays in dollars sisd cents' as well as in food that tastes better and digests easier. valid for return with- - El EE iE a EE ER a A

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