Daily British Whig (1850), 21 Jun 1916, p. 3

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ll, -- "I suffered from a bad lemaleills. Lydia E. Pinkham's - Vegétable Com- ondition -- pain 'when walking, irri- tation, bearing down pains and backache, "hes nervousness and dis- #oon passed away. 1 look much better now than I did before, and I recommend the every time for female troubles, as it did for me all it is claimed to do. Youhave my permission to pub- lish this letter." Mrs. J. May, 3548 S. Lincoln St, Chicago, Ill. If you haye any of the symptoms men- Mrs. May's letter, remember what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound did for her, and try it your- self. It is a good old-fashioned medi- ¢ine, made from roots and herbs, and it bas helped countless numbers of women. If you need special advice, write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine. Co. (confidential), Lynn, Mass. Xour letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman, and held in strict confidence, "Ranks with the Strongest' HUDSON BAY Insurance Company FIRE INSURANCE Head Office, Royal Insurance Bldg MONTREAL PERCY J. QUINN, Manager, Ontario Branch, Toronto W. H. GODWIN & SONS AGENTS, KINGSTON, ONT. Tanked Our moder 0 galion Sialeced Tanks are cupable of handling Any number of imeem a day. We are now putting through from 50 te 55 rolls, and with increased " of operators cum promise Same prompt service at 10 ® a roll, Films We guarantee to sell you the best films made und will replince any which are defective. Supplies We ean supply the most satis factory and developers uned to Unmeran of all makes sold, ex- changed, rented and repaired. we A Toren Best's The » OVEN opuiar Drug Store. SUNDAYS, 1 (I E.P. Jenkins Straws & Panamas IRded "MATCHLESS IN DE AND QUALITY matehless SIGN i Ladies feel a air when wearing one of our artistie dapaunas, direct from New York. Ladies' white felt with faney bands, attraetion. Men's Panamas and Straws to meet the tastes and poe. kets of the best posted buy ers. EP. Jenkins Clothing Co. frm v hats, another i i E ------ "7 Ishe WON BY CHILDHOOD FRIEND will revert "© AFTER MANY YEARS { Lol. x Lh d---- je { He is a Millicasire--Engagemeut a Close Seeret--Maine Tak Delays ' Nuptials New' York, June 21.-=Mrs. Made- remain single. © William Vincent Astor, ; Astor's son by his first mar rlage.~ Col. Astor also created a trast fund of $3,000,000 for any child who might be born after his death. The present John Jacob As- {tor was born four months after his [father was drowned. If he dies be- ling Force Astor, widow of Col. John [fore reaching the age of 21 this Jacob Astor, who lost his life in the | fund also is to go to William Vincent Tianic disaster four years ago, fs|Astor, » 800m (0 be married 'to Willlam K.| William K. Dick lives with. his Dick, vice-president-¢f the Manufac-| Parents at 20 East Fifty-third street. turers' Trust Company. Mrs. Astor, | He has a fortune between $2,000,000 renee jand $3,000,000 inherited from his | Ezandfather, William Dick, one of thd pioneer sugar refiners of the | country, ---- Romance in Wedding Madeline Force was in her twen- tieth year and Col. Astor was 47 when their engagement was an-| | nounced in August, 1911. The in- terest was intensified by the fact | that only sixteen months previously the Colonel's first wife, Mrs, Ava | | Willing Astor, Hh&d obtained al divorce. i An interesting story of the first] | meeting of Col, Astor and Miss Force | { has been told. It was said that in August, 1910, Col. Astor and his son | | went to Newport on the yacht Noma | { when they learned that the first Mrs. | | Astor was intown. They decided not | W remain there, and a few days | | later made a trip to Bar Harbor. | | While strolling pygst' a tennis court | | on the day after their arrival they | | chanced to see the Misses Madeline] | and Katherine Force at play, and | | Col. Astor lost no time in seeking | {an introduction. That very after- | noon MiSs Madeline was Col. Astor's! | partner in a game. Because of the { divorce and the difference in the ages | of the two, considerable difficulty | | was experienced in getting a clergy- | man to tie the knot The couple | were returning from Egypt when | { Col. Astor placed his wife in one of | the Titanic lifeboats, saying: "Don't | worry, dear; all will be well.' | FIGHTING BISHOPS, | | Days When They Went Into Battle Armed With a Mace. I'he discussion whether the clergy should join the colors has prompted i correspondent to send the follow- | king interesting cutting from Notes and Queries, of July 26th, 1890: 'Churchmen in Battle.--What was ®|the last occasion on which church- | | wen fought in battle? I do not mean | as volunteers, as in the case of George Walker at Londonderry and the Boyne, but as part of the regular forces, ! | 1 Dick nd living year is 28 when in | are said for two recording to Scott, 'Tales of a hey guard | C randfather,' chapter xxiv.,, the intimate | Seoteh at Flodden (1513) left on the when | field two bishops and two mitred ab- edding plans | bots. Also is it the case that church- nied her | men went into battle armed only » now nearly 4| with a mace, in order to avoid the | ~~~ | text, 'He that taketh the sword shall | perish with the sword'? At the Bat- | tle of Bouvines (1214), 'the English on the right were broken by a fierce onset of the Bishop of Beauvais, who charged mace in hand, and struck the Earl of Salisbury to the ground' (J. R. Green, 'Short History of the English People,' ed. 1889, p. 126). "If the following is to be under- stood literally, it would seem that if mediaeval bishops did not take the sword, they had no scruple about tak- ing the lance. Mr. Green, in his ge- count of the peasant revolt in 1381, says, 'The warlike Bishop of Norwich fell, lance in hand, on Litster's camp, and scattered the peasants of Norfolk at the first shock' (Ibid., p. 254). What badge or crest, if any, did churchmen wear in battle in order-to distinguish them from lay warriors?" Vanquished Rival. "Oh, halloa, old chap. Just the man I'm looking for. Come and have dinner with me," bubbled Dog- lett Loose. "Huh! What's the occasion--why the joy?" doubtfully asked Cozie Nooks. Good reason he had, too, for it was known all over the town of Chizzlewutt that Doglett Loose was a mean man, Why, he was so mean' that he'd drop a coin in a blind man's cup with a string tied to it, so that after he received a blessing he could jerk #t back again, So, of course, Cozie Nooks knew that some- thing wonderful had occurred for Doglett to treat him to a dinner. "Occasion?" asked Doglett. "Why, the greatest in the world! My rival is dead!" and he laughed demonia- cally. "Rival? Why, you're married!" shouted Cozie Nooks, "Certainly I am. But I had a rival until to-day. He's dead now, Died! Now you comprehend my joyful de- | meanour," "Good heavens! And you stood for that. What a simpleton you are!" "Well, she loved him before we were married, and she brought him to live with us. Of course I object- ed, but all to no avail. After that he and I became the best of friends. And he died this morning!" "For the love of Peter! Well, you were & fool! What was his name?" "Fido." : And the two friends skipped off, snickering. i Were two 1 frie fam oklyn yea They rd } d n fo have month t er Ve Irprise i by » ITAVE NEW r and Made- years old, lef day Mr there The will be r Harbor Thurs i ceded . her inderstood; marriage I inattended at the ceremony To lay, it Is wedding was made la by state d but, was set for postpone- | under -a idents of o Maine to i lays after before re ceiv- reporte the ment recent day, ne a Ren re \ which another t be marr applying ing the do iment, Surrenders Fortune By her relinquish DIVER AT WORK Claims That He Has Found the Miss. ing Steamer Regina Sarnia, June 21.----A Port Huron diver'by the name of Houle is credit- ed with the discovery that the sunken steamer on which the Great Lakes Towing Company is working in Lake Huron is not the steamer Charles S. peared with the former in the storm of November, 1913. The Price float- ed bottom up in the lake for some time, and, after being identified, sank about 14 miles out in the lake from here in about 60 feet of water, and it is claimed it came to rest only only a few hundred feet from the WILLIAM K DICK, hull of the Regina. George Patterson, a well known farmer, and stoek raiser of North Ox- ford, died after a brief illness at the ge of seventy-one. and marry th week rn AAA i mansion at the north-east corner of Fifth avenue and Sixty-fifth street, | end {| Strachan, at the Custom House. | guest Fstreet, Price, but the Regina, which disap- | Miss Alma Price, Sydenham street, on Monday entertained for the two brides-eleft,' Miss Cora Watt and Miss § Aileen Wright. { La ! Miss Dorothy Berteau, who has been the guest of Mrs. J. H. Birkett, Bagot street, left to-day for Toronto to resume her training at the Toron- | to General Hospital, Carroll Ashby, Brockville, spent the week-end with his mother, Mrs. MH; L. Ashby, William street. ' Mrs. Chapleau, Ottawa, has rent- Mrs. E, H. Pense's house on Wel- lington street for the summer. Miss Jessie Smith and Miss Doro- thea Bidwell are leaving to-morrow! to viist Miss Nan Skinner at her sum-| mer home, "Cataraqui Lodge," near! Gananoque. i Lieut. Jack Hannaford is spending | a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Mait land Hannaford at Oxford Lake. Mrs. Cyril King spent the week-end in Peterboro. - | | * + a Mrs. Shorey and Miss Susie Shorey, Sydenham, are the guest of Mrs. H.| W. Richardson, "Alwington." | Mrs. R. C. Carter, Mrs. Hansord Hora and her small son, West street, left on Monday to visit Arthur Car- ter at Hudson Heights Mrs. J. O. Crisp and Miss Kathleen Crisp, Portsmouth, left to-day for Halifax. Mrs. E. J. B. Pense, West street, left on Monday for Halifax, where she will be the guest of Mrs. Stuart Macdonald Howard Asselstine was in from Brockville for the week-end. Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Hart, who have been spending some time in Kings- ton, left for Toronto on Monday, and | town i | | during their absence Master Lancelot | { will be the guest of his grandmother, | Mrs. W. J. Savage, | . | Arthur L. Clark, who has| Holland for the past two| sailed for home on Satur-| Montreal street . . Prof been in months, 2ft on Monday for New York, where| sailed to-day on the 8S. Baltic| England to visit Col. Ross, M.G Miss Jessie Mackenzie, Brockville, | is the guest of Prof. and Mrs. Wil-| liam Nicol, Albert street T. B. Caldwell returned to Lanark on Monday after spending the week with Mr. and Mrs Ar hibald | Field, is Ww. Jack of Mrs Mrs Cobourg, S. Ellis, street, Mrs rived in town yesterday and Mrs. C. E Taylor, to visit Mr Johnson * Mrs. Maclennan, guest of her sister, the Duff, is 2 Téronto Mrs. H. } | Princess street. George Sanderson.and Miss Besise Sanderson, Barrie street, went to Montreal yesterday to see Miss Trixie Sanderson, who is sailing for Eng land this week with the London Hos pital unit. Miss Myra Dyde, Johnson street, | entertained informally at tea on| Tuesday in honor of Miss Aileen | Wright. If the weather should prove unfa- vorable for the garden party at "Al- wington" to-morrow, Mrs. H. W.Rich-|¢ ardson has very generously offered | her home to the Daughters of the | Empire for their tea and sale. Lieut, and Mrs. Minguay, who have recently arrived in town from England, are en pension at Mrs. Kav | anagh's, King street. Lieut. Min guay, who was formerly with the 8th C. M. R., has been appointed grenade instructor at Barriefield camp. a» » | Mrs. R. E. Kent and Mrs. P. G. C.| Campbell presided at the tea table at the tea at the Country Club on Sat urday;, and some of"the guests were: Mrs. Jeremy Taylor, Mrs, Newman, | Mrs. Campbell Strange, Mrs. R Keith Hicks, Mrs. Boyd, Mrs. Wal lace (Toronto), Mrs. Charles Kirk patrick, Mrs, M. V. Plummer, Mrs Iva Martin, Mrs. Harold Lewis, Miss Ross, Miss Alice King, Miss Alice Macnee, Miss Lilias Sanderson, Miss Charlie Shortt, Miss Nan Paterson, Miss Charlotte Worrell, Miss Aileen, Miss May and Miss Rose Rogers, Miss Mary Strange, Miss Gwendoline Wad dell, Miss Elinor Lyman, Miss Laura Kilborn, Miss Mildred Jones, Miss Loretta Swift, Miss Bessie Smythe, Miss Lilian HKent, Miss Margaret and Miss EtheldKent. - * - Mr. and Mrs, Spencer Over, Provid ence,"R.I.,, and Mrs. White, Toronto, who have been with Miss H. Whiting, Clergy street, left yesterday for To ronto, Mrs. Hubert Ryan asked a few of the younger girls to tea on Tuesday to ineet her sister, Miss King, New York, who is her guest. Rev. and Mrs, Samuel Sellery, who have been living in Napanee, are leaving this month for Cobourg, where they willl reside. Mrs. A. F. Chown and Miss Daisy Chown, University avenue, and Miss Rowell, Toronto, left to-day {o spend | a week at Mrs. Clark's, Collins' Bay Lieut, and Mrs. Hugh Ryan are at 11 Clifton Gardens, Folkéstone, Eng land, | | . . . Mrs. R: * Widdifield, Peter- borough, has been spending the week in town with her husband, Captain Widdifield, of the 93rd Battalion. | Mrs. James. Third, Wellington street, is in Campbelltord for a week. Miss Martha Neilson, who js-at her summer home at Conway, motored to! town yesterday. Mrs. W. G. Anglin, Miss Mamie and Miss Ruth Anglin are leaving to-! morrow for St. John. They have tak- én a cottage at Duk's Cove, near] there, for July, and Lieut.-Col. Ang- lin, who has been granted leave, Is expected from England to spend the] month with them. i Mrs. Francis Botterell, Montreal, | is the guest of Mrs. Walter Macnee, Union street, Mrs. Robert O'Hara is on a visit to her son, Frank O'Hara, Ottawa. ' The engagement is announced of and the | Payne, Jellyby Albert | tape T. F. Harrison, Cobourg, ar | THE WORLD'S NEWS | war year. pastor i pital at Shorndtiffe: | three-fourths inches, Thursday Morning Table 225 vards guaranteed pure linen table da- mask, full bleached, 66 inches wide, in an assort- ment of five new patterns for your choosing, At today's price this cloth is worth from $1.35 to $1.50 a vard. Morning price .... In sizes 2 to 8 years 108 Sample New York dresses made in nov- elty and checked gingham, striped print and percale, colored whipcords, ete, ete. A large assortment summer styles, Morning price On sale from 9 to 12 only. Regular 75¢ to of newest and smart- 49c TEACY Rev. Seymour Ross Tackaberry, B.A.,| Miss Pearl Payne, B.A, second | laughter of Mr. and Mrs. George| The marriage will place quietly at the end of June, | IN BRIEF FORM. | Tidings From All Over Told In| a Pithy and Pointed Way. | Cuban senators had a- pistol duel] Monday. 1 Michael Hambourg, Toronto, tied suddenly of heart failure | Major Hamilton Gault, Princess| Patricias, has had a leg amputated | Proposed pensions for U. 8. Civil] widows will cost $9,000,000 al | former principal | Toronto, is| Thomas Hogarth, ff Leslie street. School, lead | A be estab station at maiket-will old C.PR farmers' ished in the North Toronto. Brigadier-General Earl reported wounded kiHed American steamship mine and was lost, ac- Lloyds dispatch. Allen, for five .years Aurora Presbyterian enlisted as private Battalion, died in hos-| Longford previously and! issing, has been I'he struck a to a H. H. of who 81st Seacon- 1et ording Rev 'hureh, i inn the | The tr of Kelly, con-| tractor, on charges of theft, perjury,| and false pretences in connection | with the Manitoba Parliament build- ings, is going on without defense al Thomas counsel, Fred of in Mrs young Stafford, Scott Charles E and Mrs. Leonard Elora, were seriously injured C.P.R. train accident, and Muir of Fergus and her were also hurt No further court eld in Ireland luring the recent ges already of will of Rey Hunt 1 John son martial will be Per arrested rebellion not been disposed under the de sons whose be wigh the realm act. The Allan liner irought to Quebec fifty icers and men of the three officers and the 1st Newfoundland about hundred men deal ence Scandinavian returned of Canadian for eleven en Battalion from the} e of and navy A the death of lieni, France, dus murderous attack fficer high rank, treason, and pot 1 a is that told in New York General Joseph Minister of War > to the result of a by a French army | under charges to natural eau story Gal former of was of of S08 CHAUMONT MEN CATCH 15 65-POUND STURGEON. | Thinking They Hooked Log, ; Sight of Big Fish Sur- prises Them. Giles They Chaumont, N.Y., June 21. brothers are lucky fishermen. | fish with nets and lines and with a night line set for eels yesterday made a big haul. Thinking they had a log from the bottom of the bay, they were surprised to find that on a twelve-thread simming twine line | with a two cent hook, they had a] | sturgeon weighing sixty-five pounds | and measuring five feet nine and | The fish was shipped to New York city today. They are occasionally] caught in nets, but seldom, if ever,} caught in this manuer, and if a usually succeed in getting away. This one was well hooked and care-| fully hauled, | Western Beef Specialle selected by our own buyers, therefore always tender and of the finest qual- ity. This week: Oven Roasts 20c Lb. Choice Steaks 22¢ Lb. The Wm.Davies'Co.Ltd. Phone 597 | known to se To Put on Flesh And Increase Weight | Most people at from four to. six | pounds of good solid fat-making food every day and still' do not Increase in weight 1 while on the other hand man plump, chunky folks eat very and gaining all the time say that this is the natur Individual. It isn't Nature's Most thin their powers tive, They food The kind you are looking for is the kind we sell. Scranton Coal Is good Coal and we guarantes prompt delivery. BOOTH & CO,, Foot of West St. y lig | | | | D because | thin a strength. | A dozen make them gain pound All the I their food | p Intest body ed al and Stuffing them meals a a single fat-produc just stay they pass What suc ne that will prépare elements so that the ab sorb them and deposit them all about | the body---something too, that will mul- tiply their red blood corpuscles and in rease their blood's carrying power For such a condition it well recommend eating a Sargol tab with every meal Sargol is not, me believe a patented drug, but js simply a careful combination of six of the most effective and powerful similative and flesh building elements chemistry It is absolutely has been wonderfully ef-} yle tablet eaten with} according to reports) increasing | or won n from three to five poumls a week. Sar- gol is sold by all good druggists every wher on a positive guarantee of ght increase, or money back. If von a druggist who mahle to supply send $1.00 mon order or regis- the Labora- Antoina St Montreal, and lete ten days' treatment will be you postpaid in plain wrapper won't day i in the here fram people NEW METHOD Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing Neatly done. We make a speciale ty of Ladies' Work. to as M. F. PATTON, Prop. 149 SYDENHAM ST. (Near Pring ecan St.) Phones 314. I | You may buy friends with borrow- ed money but they seldom lend you the cash to pay back what you bor- rowed. For and Boys We are showing the best values in high grade Men's and Boy's Boots for spring and summer. Men's Rubber Soled Oxfords . ............. $5.00 ie ey ~--

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