Daily British Whig (1850), 15 Dec 1915, p. 12

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A THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 15 1915 ANGELS Al TWELVE _ HUMILIATING MEDICAL PA A a eg Balk Oysters Dominion Fish Co. MONS? BBB BA BBR RB Bed Canada Hundwed f Spirits Did Appear { s Tegend nturies ago saved | ucourt gain ap- {, Mon Did 'sold- Persons fos TORTURED BY "© RHEUMATISH ie spn Fr emery 7 Ad 1d fad aca SUNGay School Supt, Tells Sob he Ira ou of tnurr= A Lonaon sournatist <0 HOW "Fruit-a-fives" Relieved journalist so | c retreat | from Mons t was a fie-/ l'oronto, Ox ) 1st, 1913 tion I But letters from 1 recs of per- t ually happen- oo of St. George ONTARIO v CONTHOI ce Sould Be Ea Savs President son who ed have been printed in the past | ten months Mothers of sons whol | fought at Mons have told the story over and over again as "actual faet.".| «yp, No one has come forward who actu ally saw the vision Corresp lents have written of a band of angels with | | luminous halos grouped against the horizon at the apex of ithe battle. A silent band of horsemen clad in an-| cient mail trod their silent way as, the valiant British fell back The highest authority to vouch for the shadowy evidence is a lieutenant- | colonel in Northern France who "'ae-| tually saw" the phantom norsemen, | . and who pointedly refutes the alle | gation of the author of the "Bow-| men" that no one has yet, first hand, | testified of the most amazing event!' of his life The lieutenant-colonel' writes | I tell you my experience during|| the retreat without exaggeration, | without embellishment | "On August 26, 1914, was fought | 100 the battle of Le Catean We came || into action at dawn. We fought until | dusk. We were heavily shelled and had a bad time of it, but our division retired in good order We were on the march the night of the 26th and stag and leader of the 141 pm y on the 27th, with only two hours' 3 of peace brought on the German Chancellor's speech, outlining peace plans, 5.84 pup "| "My brigade was roareusrd. wall W. H. GODWIN & SON [i| No: sia', v6 [000 Phone 424. 39 Brock St || Gulag Brviy took up many positions to cover the || Trustful Humanity retirement and by the night of the 1 40 a.m Taken acutely ill in the midst of 8 27th we were worn out bodily and long journey, we accept the ministra- mentally fatigued | 15 » ; 3 1881 * 4 tious of a fellow traveler whom we No doubt we suffered from shock: | NN eee ise \ Mal . 12 20 : have never seen before, but who says | but the retirement continued in ex- 1.08 pm Sve pn re. ellent raer 4 t Rl » Even the pre cellent order and I fel ire our 7.37 pm | i | J 2 Local to 1 ockvl 66K pr mental faculties were still quite J Nos. 1 7 s i 16 sip 19 run dally, sound | sthe r = dally except Sunday "On the night of the 27th, riding ¥ rect route to Toronta, ZJeterboro, along the column with two other of- | | Samiitor Bal La, Baaasan wo rt ; ficers, talking and doing onr best to | | Ottawa," Quebec, Portland, St. Joba, hands us in bottle or box We hail keep from falling asleep on our ACHES AND PAINS | Halifax, Boston and New York . cab to take us to our desti- | horses, I became conscious that in dal an Particulars Spnly 3 P SAL nation in the middle of the night, feel- | the fields on both sides of the road H - Fag . | SOT Fora eR haa A ent, ing no alarm lest the driver be in | along which we were marching, there | Klave All Gone Since Taking | mn league with a gang of footpads. We | were large bodies of horsemen. L 2 E. : 's Ve - | ydia E. Pinkham g | . : - They had the appearance of send our cash deposit to the bank by the hand of a messenger concerning | Squadrons of cavalry, and they seem- | etable Compound. Terre Hill, Pa.--" Kindly permit me Ad co ite § | ed to be riding across the fields and | whose virtues we have no guaranty : . : | t : going in the same direction keeping | beyond the fact that thus far we have level with us f vo give you my testimonial in favor of not found him light fingered. We a "The night: was not dark, and I| Lydia E. Pinkham's | our names to this and that petition on } saw squadron after squadron of these | Vegetable 'Com- } \ m ba \ ¢ P | the say so of some one who may or. cavalrymen, distinctly und. When [first ] 3 2 t the race Ly rise the pir i 1 t f 1 may not, for all we are aware, have "I said nothing about it. I watched fo 4 tak t I of know RE Wire : | an ulterior and illegitimate interest in | them about twenty minutes The gan TT ing o of making 1 | swelling his list, and we sign letters | other two officers had stopped Rik as su bin om ) aking h dq 2 a his oven at } : . aria whi a hire ing 2 y ol There ih : and other documents Wehicy We Rave "At last one of them usked me if] some time and had Tiiuruiny, Sulurdny and Nvnday examination Ib wiore which th | busit only hurriedly skimmed over in® their I saw anything in the fields I told almost all kinds of Connecting at Winnipeg with A final draft and in which our tired | yp vou" The third officer then con aches--pains in low- G. oT. P. train lesving 600 pa | copyist may have embalmed an error | essed that he, too, had been watch- | er part of back and SS oar SEIN, Saskatoon, Bo fatal to our purpose.--Atlantic. ing the horsemen for nearly balf an in sides, and press- Through Tickets to hour i i " "So convinved were we that they ing Gown Bo Prince Geo were really cavalry that, at the next Sad no tte, Since 1 have taken Prince Ru ri, Alaska halt, one of the officers took a party Lydi appe ' rr Vancouver, ictoria, Seattle jydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com 3 ; and San Francisco of men out to reconnoitre They Timetables and all informatiop J] Know it ac The Kind you are looking for is the Kind we sell. Scranton Coal Is good Coal and we guarantee prompt delivery. BOOTH & CO, Foot of West St. A. WAUGIH SYSTEM || Local Branch Time Table. IN EFFECT MAY: 30TH, 1918. Farm forSale acres, 12 miles from Tralns will leave and arrive at City buildings, plenty of Oepot, foot of Johnston street wood, $4,750 | ing West. Farm 300 acres, | Lv. City. Ar. City { 19--Mall «rr112.20 am. 11.6 268am 9.20 am city; good water, easy terms log house and barn, on shore i of a beautiful lake; good fish- | N . l. to Tor ing and hunting, $450. { some SOCIALIST, WHOSH BROUGHT OUT "PEACE reERMs" Dr. Philip Schifderman "(on right) GERMAN QUESTIONS SPEACH member cof the German Reich- Social Democrats, whose questions as to the terms that he is a physician | scription given us by our family doe- filled by an un yet we tor is liable to be compounding clerk swallow unquestionably whatever he known a passing Madi final exam Was Necessary New Route to Western Canada TORONTO -- WINNIPEG 1} Via North Bay, Cobalt and Cochrane |i Finest Equipment-- Splendid Road Bed [od w. Toronto 10.45 5: Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday ar. Winnipeg 3.50 |: after his University he stgdaen m Fighting at Long Range ellicient for practice It ast | drastic test I'l Med Cour will do and re, I v la ' ¢ people admit ' aid that student has passed through weademic education, | WO mean hi as a milated at te mm capable I « the! 1 1 or Ww 1 rown must he impo common it pequires to tell attr wing « ithe to becoun £ Canada, ( i ng bolt { il 4 | 900 yard Lhe Phat keepeth faith, thoug! ) land of the race der ar t movement vil practitioner P| : ' " tclearer, although it is not until ga . Ne within ial Wie jan thoroughly Yruat | that the hands Gf ire derstan 0 ins and outs o be made out y ve all | ii ng and true | Ma eo all be rong an tainty I whom God can | get yards of eacl Dumas, Father ana Son. A story is told about the two Du. | mases, father and son, which fllus- | trates the pleasant relations between | the two. The son had written his first column with Lh hing Ke les he nu know en out I'ill Freedom reigns from sea to found no one there. The night grew Pound the aches and pains are all gone darker and we saw no more and I feel like a new woman. I cannot Senn, ne ~ . ~---- a rs Ah A Rheumatism and Lumbago Mr. Wm. Parker, 105 avuga street, Brantford, Ont tells in the following letter of his remarkable experience with Dr. Chase's Kidneyvdaver Pills My treated me for some time for Sciatica. Rhieumatisin, Lumbago, but to no purpose, for 1 had to lay off work. The visiting officer of Sick Benefit called to see me and advised the use of Dr Chase's Kidney Liver Pills, stating that he had been cured of the same trhuable use. - 1 asked the druggist about them and he recommended heing satisfied with this, I went back to my doctor, and when be said they were good | began their use. The promptness ggith which they enlivened the action of the bowels was wonderful, and Has not long before I was rid of all mv troubte I had awful, sharp pains in the lower part of my back and left hip, and was so bad that | could on'y walk by hanging on to a chair or the wall. My wife had to lace mv shoes Only those who have had this ailment can realize the wav I suffered. | am writing this letter to let people who have mv trouble know of these pills. You are at liborty to use this letter, and if anyone interested will call or write to me I will give every detail doctor by thetr them highh Not kidneys and When you have pains and aches put Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills to the test. By enlivening the action of liver, kidneys and bowels they cleanse the system of all poisons, and thereby remove the cause of 1heun- matism, lumbago and other painful diseases. One pill a dose, 35 conts a box, all dealers; or Edmanson. Bates & Co, Ltd; Toronto. 'AW.Chases idney-LiverPills | successful novel, and the father wrote him a letter of congratulation, which he began in the formal manner of "Dear Sir." This letter throughout read as though addressed to a total stranger and merely thanked the au- thor for the pleasure the book had given him. this manner Sir--I thank you most heartily for your | 1 the Praise from vou is especially | Plain the mystery kind lefter appreciated hy me, as I have always heard of you as the most enthusiastic ad mirer of my father, who also makes some pretension of being a novelist Man's Limitations. Man has done wonders since he came before the public. He has navigated the ocean, he has penetrated the mys teries of the starry heavens, he has harnessed the lightning and made it light the great cities of the world. But be can't find a spool of thread in his wife's workbasket; he can't dis- cover her pocket in a dress hanging in the closet; he cannot hang out clothes and get them on the line the right end up. He cannot hold clothespegs in his mouth while he is doing it either. He cannot be polite to somebody he hates. In short, he cannot do a hundred things that women do almost instine- tively. Another Denial. At a dinner of the Gridiron club in 1913 Thomas F. Logan of the Phila- delphia Inquirer was initiated as a member, and part of his hazing was to zo about as a young reporter and in- terview the guests. Then he was ques- tioned concerning the results, "Did you interview the secretary of war?" he was asked. "Yes." "What did he say?' "He denies it." "What does he deny" [ "Why, what I asked him, and be said | it dido't make any difference what; it | was the immemorial custom of the war | defartment to deny everything. --Ar- thur W. Dunn's "Gridiron Nights." The Eskimo Baby. The clothing of the Eskimo baby is often very scanty. In fact, one occa- rionally sees a baby being carried in its mother's hood with only a cotten shirt on, despite the fact that the ther- mometer registers 20 degrees below zero. The mother's hood is the baby's cradle. Being made of seal or deer skin, it is warm and wind proof. The infant also bas the benefit of the heat of its mother's body and is out of harm's way. If it were laid ih a bas- ket éradle in the tent it would be very much in the way and would always wolfish Eskim~ dogs that prowl round the door by day and night, ever ready to pick up a dainty morsel > Silent shes of the night are those we forget to wind. Dumas fils answered in | be in danger of falling @ prey to the "The legions were seen by many men in our column Of course, we were all dog-tired and overtaxed, hut it is an extraordinary thing that the same phenomenon was witnessed by S80 many men "I, myself, am absolutely con- vinced that I saw these horsemen. [| feel sure they did not exist only in imagination. IT do not attempt to ex-! I only state the facts." The officer's story is believed tn! many places, just as are the stories of the phantom bowmen and the angels Sober minds are beginning to ask Is it truth, or just fiction, as the author says it ig?" Cross of St. George for Nurse. For the second time in Russian history a woman has been awarded the officers' Cross of St. George. Un- fortunately, Myra Ivanova, sister of mercy upon whom it was conferred, did not live to receive it At a cri- tical moment during a battle she heroically led a charge of infantry- men, whose officers had been killed, and enabled them to defeat the enemy. During the achievement she received a mortal wound. The first female recipient of the Cross was the famous Trooper Duro- va, who fought in the war of 1812; she received the awapd, not as a wo- man, but as the officer Alexandrov, under which name she served; there- fore, strictly speaking, the late Siater Ivanova was the first woman thus honored Would Give Dreadnought. Major Sir Sajjab Singh, Rajah of Ratlan, who is serving in France, has written to the Bombay Press advo- cating the presentation of & Dread- nought by Indian prigces and peoples to the Imperial Navy, in recognition of what the Navy has done in the war, and also in return for the pro- tection of the Indian coasts and com- merce. "Should we leave it wholly to a little island like Britain to find the money spent for the safety of us all?" writes Sir Sajjah. Murder of . The murder of childrem for their ornaments is a common crite ia some parts of India. The Lieutss- ant-Governor of the United Provinces recently issued an appeal to the peo- ple recommending that small chil- dren should not be gllowed to wear valuable ornaments outside the home. By removing the temptation it is probable that the murders wonld cease. ef ------------------------ President at $15 a Year. The President of the republic of Andorra, in the Pyrenees, gets the smallest salary paid by any civilized government. Itisonly $15 a year. He thinks of asking for a 10 per cent. The trouble with tse manycthild- ren is that the education of leir parents bas been ne ) Love at first sight often causes the victims to wish they had comsulted an oculist. 2 2 from ony Grand Trunk, . Kd Govt. Rys, or T, & N. y praise your medicine too highly.' ---Mrs. x Ruallway Agents Augustus LYON, Terre Hill, Pa. It is true that nature and a woman's work has produced the grandest remedy for woman's ills that the world has ever known. the roots and | herbs of the field, Lydia E. Pinkham, forty years ago, gave to womankind a remedy for their peculiar ills which | has proved more efficacious than any | other combination cf d ever com- | unded, and today Lydia E. Pinkham's | Vegetable Compound is recognized 'rom coast to coast as the standard remedy for woman's ills. In the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn, | Mass., are files containing hundreds of | thousands of letters from women seek ing health -- many of them openly stata | over their own signatures that they have | I fun Mormatign apply Jegained their health by taking Lydia | = | Line. 95 Kink 50. Wo Fermin E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound; | pr From S71 London Liverpool London Liverpoo) Liverp'l TG | Corinthing { Pretorind Sicilian Corslean Seandinaying From PORTLAND Carthaginian Dec 20=--Glasgow and in some cases that it has saved them | ("HERE'S YOUR TICKET' WINNIPEG and the COAST 'our train leaves Kingston 2.30 p.m. Mon, Wed., Fri. w Sos CONNECTIONS TO AND FROM ALL WESTERN POIN' Electric lighted sleepers, dining cars and first-class coaches. M. C. DUNN. City Agent; K. H. WARD, Station Agent; BR. L. FAIRBAIRN, Gen. Pass. Agent, Toronto, Ont. CANADIAN NORTHERN LR JL [] \ XR 0 LABATT'S STOUT & Has Special Qualities /4 MILDLY STIMULATING, NOURISHING, SUSTAINING A Perfect Tonic TIME OF THE YEAR IT a. THIS IS THE NEEDED If not sold in your neighborhood, write JOHN LABATT, LIMITED LONDON CANADA BE --

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