Daily British Whig (1850), 1 Jul 1916, p. 13

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oo o' Heart" ran 19 months in ay or Isadore Duncan is dance. going to Buenos Alres to. y Helene Rosson fs planning a tour in of Japan this summer, - Ethel Barrymore will play a dual role in a new comedy. William Gillette will appear for twenty weeks in a new play. Ois Skinner will act in a comedy of American life by Booth Tarking- on. E. H. Sothern gave two weeks' pro- fits--$15,261.39---t0 the actors' The Criterion and New York thea- tres in New York are to be made into one playhouse, seating 5,000. It Is the duty of an actor to make the spectators see the part from his point of view and not from theirs. Blanche Bates will open her season early in October in a play now being written by William Somersea Maug- bam. idison hopes to make a cameta and projection machine fit for home work. He already has a model com- pleted. ' Picture shows are given in sections in Argentine. You pay every half hour at the rate of six cents per sec- tion. * Charles Chaplin is a skilled violin- ist. He is also a writer of music, and has had several compositions published. Owen Moore and Hazel Dawn are to be co-starred in a Famous Player screen production of 4 wellknown stage success, the title to be an- nounced later, "Tess of the Storm Country' considered to be Mary. Pickford's greatest screen success, is enjoying a successful second run at the Strand Theatre, of New York City. Pauline Frederick appears as a dance hall girl of a Western mining camp 'in fer next Famous Players release entitled "The World's Great Snare." Margaret Illington has accepted a playlet written by Ethel Clifton and Brenda Fowler, Miss Illington plans 'to make a brief vaudeville tour in the sketch shortly. Julian Eltinge will resume his suc- cessful tour in "Cousin Lucy" next! season, The play, written by Charles Klein, is the best vehicle in which Mr. Eltinge has appeared, and met with unbounded success last season, both ih New York and on the road. Mrs. Fiske will begin a tour of the principil cities next season in "Barstwhile Susan," opening in Boston in September. Her New York engagement at the Gaiety "The Eternal Magadalene," has ac- quired the dramatic rights io James Whitcomb Riley's famous poem, "An Old eart of Mine," and will make it into a play. The characters the cast will include, "Little Or- phan Annie," "Rageddy Man," "Squire Hawkins," "Doc Sifers" ands others which Riley's poems have made familiar. The premier is ex- pected to take place in Indianapolis on October 2. Before the year closes gossip has it that Miss Marguerite Clark will either be the most Famous Player, or she won't be Famous at all. With Mary Pickford posing under the same roof, there has been no opportunity of featuring Miss Clark in proportion to her merit. Ever so many actor folk whose only claim to fame lies in the fact that they've had a lot of portraits taken for the trade journals get more mention than petite Mar- guerite. So if Little Mary remains Famous next year, Miss Clark pro- bably will become Mutual, Winthrop Ames, who has been ill during the recent thedtre season, will return to management in New York next He will open the beau- titul playhouse known as the Little Theatre, which has been closed ever since "A Pair of Silk Stockings" spent its successful year there. His alm during the coming season will be to present five plays. Those which are successful in New York will be sent on tour. Mr. Ames' object in this procedure will be to make on the road the profit impossible in such a small auditorium as the Little The- atre, eae AR James Barrie tion. directed the produc- If local color lied in shades can 'bring a to Pastel plays as "Bunty Pulls the Strings," why should it not in deeper tones bring even more success? William Harris, jr., wants to know and will put the problem to the test when he nroduces the new play which Lau- rence Eyre has written for him. All its characters are negroes. The ac- tion passes in the South and in New York at the present time, Although the play is a comedy, Mr, Harris Promises that the dramatic interest will never grow lighter than cafe au lat, while it will range through cold gravy down to deep chocolate. It is not true, however, that the climax of the piece shows the heroine trying to find the ace of spades in a coal cel lar with all the lights turned off. Edna Aug, Marion Abbott, Mrs, Stuart Robson, Olive May, Lottie Alter, Harry Blakemore and Walter Walker are among the actors en- gaged! A WOMAN'S HEALTH NEEDS CONSTANT CARE When the Blood Becomes Poor Disease Specdily Follows. Every woman's health is peculiarly dependent upon the condition of her blood. How many women suffer with The Newest Notes of Science | children, headache, pain in the back, poor ap- petite, weak digestion, a constant | feeling of weariness, palpitation of | the heart, shortness of breath, pallor | and nervousness. Of course all these | symptoms may not be present---the| more there are the worse the condi-| tion of the blood, and the more ne-| cessary that you should begin to en-| The Manchester Guardian, noting the recent death of Mr. Farkoa, of the musical plays, assérts that it was he who first wore on the stage knee- breeches of black silk for evening dress. 'His practice," the Guardian continues, "confirmed King Edward in his personal predilection for this garb, and inclined him to make it etiquette for his private parties. Mr. Farkoa also wore a red evening til- coat, and King Edward actually had one made, but did not care for it. The color was not satisfactory for a man of robust proportions." Sir Herbert Tree will not return to England this summer, but will visit California and do another moving picture there. Then after a brief tour he will return to New York to revive plays in which he has recent- ly been most successful at his theatre in London. Thers may be more Shakespeare, but it is definitely set- tled at present that several costume plays in which Sir Herbert has won renown abroad will be seen in Amer- ica next winter. * This is the most successful visit that the famous Eng- lish actor has ever paid to this con- tinent. The run of "Henry VIII." might have 'been extended until late in the season, and "The Merchant of Venice" has drawn larger audiences than any recent revival of the season. Since Mme. Sembrich first saw King Alfonso of Spain--in 1888, when the latter was three years old-- she has invarfably sent nim a coun- Theatre has been brought to a close. Gaby Deslys arrived in London re-| cently, and, after a brief visit to her | home at Kensington Gate, left for| Marseilles, France, to attend to the affairs' of her 'father, Hippolyte| Caire, who died while she was in| America. Sir Herbert Tree has postponed his | return to London indefinitely. He had planned to sail last Saturday on | the New York. It is possible he will | not leave the country this year. He expects to resume his motion picture engagement this summer and to | present "Richard II." and "The| Newcomes' here in the fall. | | Kathleen Parlow has cabled Lou-| don Charlton of her safe arrival in| Meldreth, England, where the violin- ist and her mother will spend the summer. Miss Parlow's next Ameri- can tour will begin in January, fol-| lowing a long series of Sagagements | in Norway, Sweden and Holland. | Formation of the Margaret Anglin Picture Corporation, which will im- mediately begin to make a series of motion pictures, with 'Miss Anglin in the leading roles, has been an- nounced, James D. Barton is pres- ident of the firm; James Shesgreen, first vice-president; Arthur Voetlin, second vice-president; Isving J. Dit- tenkoeffer, secretary, and Edward W. Fuller, treasurer. gratulatory message on his birthday, May 17. "Invariably the King has re- | plied through his court secretary, but on his last birthday he replied in per- son and couched the message in Eng- lish, as follows: "Thanks for kind messages. Re- membrance.--Alfonso R." Mme. Sembrich knew the King's grandmother, the Archduchess Elisa- beth of Austria, and also his mother, the Queen Dowager, and while filling an engagement at Spain's foremost opera house, the Teatro Reale, at Madrid, in 1888, she was received at court and met the youthful Prince who now reigns as King. Shakespeare's birthplace was visit- ed by only about 23,000 persons dur- ing the past year, as compared with 37,000 in Ye preceding year and ap- proximately 50,000 in years of peace. The diminution of visitors from Am- erica was most marked, only 254 having signed the register album, as against 8,000 the year preceding, and an average of over 11,000 during | the five years prior to the war, * Henry Alnley, Sir George Alexan- der, Gladys Cooper, Mlle. Dorziat, Dennis Eadie, Lily Elsie George Grossmith, Charles Hawtrey, Ellis Jeffreys, Gerald du Maurier, Ellen Terry, Lady Tree and Lady Wynd- ham were all in the cast of "The Ad- mirable Crichton," presented at the Coliseum before Queen Mary in be- half of a hospital building fund, Sir Nerves Were So Upset . Could Not Endure Noise RAPE LY Nouralgic Headaches and Extreme Nervousness Caused Keenest Suffering--Lasting Cure by Use of Dr. Chase's Nerve Food. Once the nervous system gets run down everything seems to tend to make it worse. You worry over your condition, are unable to get the re- quired rest and sleep, noises excite and irritate you and the future is most discouraging. . The nervous system does not get the proper nourishment from the food you éat, so you mrust have some- thing also to lift you out of the run- down conditisn. You may find that 'your experience coincides with the writer of this letter and be encour- aged to put Dr. Chase's Nerve Food to the test. You will make no mistake in em- ploying this food cure, for, acting as does hand in hand with several months so bad that I could not get a night's rest. I used sev- eral medicines recommended by the druggist. My doctor also prescrib- ed, but nothing he gave me brought any relief. Instead I got worse and worse until I could scarcely do any- 'hing or bear the least bit of noise. My nerves were all upset. "My husband read about Dr. Chase's Nerve Food and got me some. Although I had no faith in it, T began its use, and after a few doses began to sleep well and the neuralgia left me entirely. I used six more boxes and have never had any troubles from neuralgia or the nerves since, "This is to certify that I know Ms. Heusen aud believe this state- men rue and correct. Fred Freeman, J.p." d Dr. Chase's Nerve Food, 50 cents a box, 6 for $2.50, all dealers, or rich it without delay. Dr, Williams'| Pink Pills are beyond doubt the | greatest blood-building ionic offered | to the public to-day. Every dose | helps to make new, rich, red blood | which goes to every part of the body | and brings new health and strength to weak, despondent people. \Dr.| Williams Pink Pills are valuable to all women, but they are particularly | useful to girls of school age who be- | come pale, languid and nervous, Thin blood during the growing years of a| girl's life usually means a flat-chest- | ed, hollow-cheeked womanhood. | There can be neither health nor beauty without red blood which gives brightness to the eyes and! color to the cheeks and lips Dr. Williams' Pink Pills do all this as is| proved in thousands of cases. Mrs. Wm. Rowe, Carlaw avenue, Toronto, says:--*"I have received so much! benefit from Dr. Williams' Pink Pills | that I feel it my duty to recommend | them to others. I was about com- | pletely prostrated with anaemia. 1] had no appetite, was terribly weak and subject to fainting spells 1] suffered greatly from dizziness, and the various other symptoms that ac- | company a bloodless diton. Re- medy after remedy was tried but to | no avail until a friend advised me | to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Be- | fore completing the second box, I] was again enjoying" splendid health, | and have since remained in that] happy conditions." You can get Dr. Williams' Pink Pills through any medicine dealer or | by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont, To Advertise Canada. The nion. Government is go- ing into the mqving picture business. | It is not doing so with the idea of | making money, but with the object of interesting people, both in and | out of Canada, in the natural re- Sources of this Dominion. Arrangements have, it is under- | stood, been concluded and camera men have already started at work filming scenes from one end of Can- ada to the other... These will com- prise views of the country's scenic beauties and pictures of various of its | industrial systems. They will be carefully chosen so as to present the Dominion not only as a garden of nature, but also as a land of oppor- tunity. They represent the applica- tion of the most modern and popular of pictorial devices to the work of | promoting immigration dnd interest- ing capital in, this country, and | will be of use in a variety of ways and by many different branches of the | Government service, | Mr. Francis Holley, Director of the Bureau of Commercial Economics, Washington, now recognized as one of the greatest modern educational | institutions in the world, was in Ot- tawa recently in connection with this matter, It is understood Mr. Holley S52 Jutesesiad the Canadian Govern- ent in the project, and that he has offered to exhibit any views that may be taken free to millions of citizens of the United States throughout the medium of the bureau. The offer % one which, it is likely, will he rratefully accepted by the Govern- nent, The use of maving pictures with a siew te promoting in.migration and rade is in line with the Govern- nent's desire td use every means to yrepare now for the development vhich it ie expected will come after he war. May Daulk Plan, There is an exprelation at Otiawa bat the bill which bas been intro- luced in Waskingion to restore the halibut trade from Prince Rupert anid canadian railweys to Seattle and United States' railways, wili aot be: some law. The bili proposes that the shipment 'of goods in bond through a foreign country (Canada), bs recog- nized only when the shipments are Jonded from ene Uniled: States port to another, Canada bas taken a third of the North Pacific halibut trade, be- sause of the marketing facilitios at Prince Rupert where the-fish is ship- ped in bond for points in the central and eastern States. The effort of the legislation now proposed would he to turn this trade back to Seattle and the Government is watching the sit- uation with considerable interest. Justice Britton says that when he retires from the bench he may locate : Bates & Co., Limited, A | handles. | patented. | of a limestone and silica in the Phil- | patented. | largest and best equipped veterinary {| colleges in the world through the ef- i successfully for | within_a cathedral, | BACKACHE, LUNBAGO AND I suffered greatly from backache, lum- used in Cobourg. BRITISH WHIG, "SATURDAY, JULY 1, 1916. - A tiny watch is set in the "bandie! carries four of a new lorgnette ! persons seated ahead of one another and is control Synthetic milk is being produced man on the back seat, fed by the from peanuts by European chemists.| German experts after tests have A patent has been granted for a|decided that ivy benefits rather than clip to hold a pencil to a person's | injures stone or brick walls on which ear. {it grows b; drawin Two Pennsylvania inventors DAYS] Mom om them. e _Supsriuous patented a sling-shot with a sight to] Automobile service for both pas- aid in aiming it. | senger and freight over the Andes Telescopic spectacles have been in- mountains between Chili and Argen- vented by a German for persons with | tina is contemplated in opposition to extreme nearsight, | the present road. Operated like a pair of sheers, a Electrical apparatus has been in- new implement revolves a buffer to vented automatically to give warning polish tne finger nails. when a chimney smokes by illumin- The production and distribution of ating a sign and, if this be disregard- electricity in Edinburgh bas been ed, by ringing a bell, made a municipal monopoly. | It will cost Australia about. $25, A stand to hold ice cream cones (000,000 to open the Murray river to erect, made of stiff paper, is the in-| navigation snd to construct an irriga- vention of a New York man. tion system that will develop 1,500,- Russia maintains at Moscow an ex-| 000 acres of land. periment station for the study of flax To attach metal to wood there has cultivation and manufacture, been invented a galvanized steel nail Helmets for aviators have been in-| with a lead head, the latter spread- vented with wireless receiving tele-| ing to exclude moisture from the phones built into the ear flaps. hole the nail makes. According to a British scientist! French bakers have found it eco- X-rays are the most éxtreme rays at nomical to heat their ovens by port- the ultra-voilet end of the spectrum. | aghle gas torches of various sizes, Rubber-covered canvas disks that with which the heat may be regu- prevent slipping are attached to the | jated as to place and degree. soles of new shoes for very young A Missouri inventor's stump puller is featured by a curved fulcurm that enables all stumps not large enough to require blasting or burning to be removed by hand, Spectacles with double lenses, hav- ing air spaces between, and with pneumatic rings to make them fit tightly, have been invented in Europe ! to aid divers' sight under water. | That he can produce one horse-| power for each pound his engine | weighs is the claim of the French in- ventor of a motor depending upon the explosive force of gunpowder for power, % Fastening a spring to the side of a nail set, a Massachusetts inventor has patented a tool that will hold a nail in a place difficult to reach until | the point has been driven in. | In a smoke consumer of European invention for factories the smoke is driven by fans into a porous recepi- Experiments by German scientists have proved the truth of the old theory that tightening a man's belt lessens hunger. A wire clip, to be s€rewed in to a door frame, has been invented for holding milk bottles out of the reach of cats and dogs. Next to the United States, Ger- many has the greatest number of telegraph offices and the largest line i re among nations, Waste steam from its municipal water and light plant is used by an Indiana city to heat its courthouse and two public schools, In Europe the hydrogen, which is a by-product of the manufacture of oxygen, is utilized to harden oils for use in the soap industry. A power loom has been invented that is said to weave Oriental rugs Ns -------------------- HAROLD F. RITCHIE & CO., Limited Sele Agenis-- TORONTO --ior Canada FERROViImMm , Makes Rich, Red Bioes Gives Strength and Vitality $1.00 per bottle, Davis & Lawrence On, Montreal Coal 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, MADE IN CanaDA Dusts, Cleans, Polishes, 25¢. to $3, CHANNELL CHEMICAL that so closely imitate the genuine hand-made ones as to defy experts Paper dust exploded with fatal re- sults when workmen carried lighted lanterns into a room filled with it in a paper-tube factory in France. A semicircular top for automobiles that drops down out of sight behind the seat when not in use has been patented by a Colorado inventor, Russia is the home of nearly one half of the world's Jews and is the only country with a larger Jewish population than the United States In the last fifteen years electric street railways in the United States have increased at a very nearly steady rate of about, 3,000 miles a year. A new tooth brush has a hollow head and can be connected with a rubber tube to an eletited resorvoir for liquids to make it'a fountain af- W i fair, t ting blades, For 'propelling bokt§ & Frenchman! For the swiftest photography an has invented paddle Sheels which electrical device hus been invented may be attached to any boat and re- | that ignites flash light powder and | an by a man pulling at oar like | snaps a camera shutter when the light is most brilliant. In the opinion.of a French scientist | the swinging motion that often | breaks electric transmission lines is! due as much to terrestrial magnetism as it is to wind. A chemical process renders non-in- flammable all the woodwork a ed in the construction of the rolling stock for London's underground rail-' ways. An electric fan that can be packed in a suit case and which will furnish enough breexe for one person when connected with a light socket has been invented for travelers. ! In Persia there grows a weed the seed pods of which have long horns that enter the nostrils of grazing animals and frequently kill ghem by preventing them from eating and drinking. . A novelty for smokers is a re ceptacle for ashes in which they machine that a Pennsylvanian has in- drop out of sight and which even vented. prevents their odor or that of cigar The entire equipment of a wireless | stumps from premeating a room. | station in Italy which has worked Earthquakes cause electrical waves | long distances, in- and an Italian has invented appara- cluding the antennae, is enclosed tus which has registered them sev-| eral minutes before seismographs! have shown earth movements, | An Illinois inventor's pencil sharp-| ener consists of a hollow shell carry-: ing a knife blade over which a pen- cil is drawn, the debris being collect- | ed within the shell. | Parchment manuscripts nearly 860 years old, from which the ink has faded from view, have been read by a Berlin scientist who photographed them with ultra-violet rays. . A Philadelphia electrician ths inventor of a portable, motor-driven * Anuric Tablets" to anyone suffering pipe threading machine which is sup- from of these maladies. plied with current by the storage ours uly batteries of an automobile. | Ny J. F. Garman, Shears for trimming grass, mount- , A SR {ed on wheels and with the handles A how r ih co | 0 extended that they can be used by | are eradi- | & person standing upright, have been - » patented by a Canadian woman. An electric heater to be placed in' £ on ia bathtub after it has been filled, to Which It comes in contact | 14ise the temperature of the water the body. It will ward off back- | § d has b t- headache, and the darting pains and |to any desired degree, has been pat- of articular or muscular rheuma- | ented by an Ohio inventor, which are cansed | A spark plug with two gaps, pro-, uch uric acid, such as gout, | ducing the sparks at once, ig finding {favor in England, the idea being because old USB | hat one gap is sure to work even if | caleulu., I0% Ana Mickenin | the other becomes clogged with soot. | the blood and | For fieasuring cloth in a roll with-! {out unrolling it there has been in- rector and chief | vented a device that passes a thread ids' Rotel and | fetween its folds and at the same slo, N. Y., ful medic: ne l33 | time automatically measures the | and weakened | thread. ned by Sufferers | By a series of interesting experi-. t he deter- | ments with chickens, beginning be- | ore they are hatched, a Paris scien- icine, | tist has demonstrated that bacilli are | mot necessary to the life of verte- | brates. s y which cause 80 | A New York electrician has invent- | pain 37d misery. Seon | ed a device, sma!l enough to be car- ig Aad iried in a pocket, which enables a person to use a telephone without tation as | persous near him overhearing his | Buore ae acle over which petroleum flows and is converted into conbustible gas | Horses imported into Argentina | are taught to avoid a poisonous weed that the native animals shun natur-] ally by forcing them to inhale smoke | from burning piles of the weed. An electric fan has been invented | in which the vanes are covered with | gauze, which enters a tank of water| at each revolution and helps to cool | the breezes the fan creates. In & German steelworks a hydrau- 1',000 tons has replaced a long distance every time it was used. | An absorbent pad to hold water for moistening postage stamps of envelopes flaps that is fastened to the back of a person's hand has been Discoveries of extensive deposits ippines have led to the formation of a company to manufacture cement there. Powdered rosin and gypsum are the chief ingredients of a fusible in- sulaeing and filling material for electrical purposes which has been Uruguay has been given one of the forts of an expert from the, United States. The surfaces of roads are planed, scarified, rolled and made ready for use in a single trip over them of a Driven by a kerosene motor, a mo tor- cycle has been invented that RHEUMATIC TROUBLES. Dear Mr. Editor--I wish to state thas bago and rheumatic troubles. I * Anauric,% the latest. discovery | Buoys that make a flapping noise | {as they pass through the water and'! 2 | leaves a plainly seen wake have been on regulator, | invented in England to be towed be- hind vessels to guide following ones boo = | in fogs. x \ of feeling ashamed of your freckles, lic press that can exert a pressure of | a8 ] steam | Mtrength--is hammer that shook the earth for a |these homely spots. As a new sewer-cleaning machine doiible strength is hauled through a pipe by a rope Co. Limited, or any druggist, and attached to a windlass, fire hose con-, apply a little of it night nected to its rear and operates a lng water motor that drives spiral cut-|that even the worst FRECKLES Now is the Time to Get Rid of These Ugly Spots There's no longer the slightest need othine--double to remove | the prescription guaranteed Simply st an ounce of othine-- | from Mahood Drug and morn- | should soon see | freckles begun to disappear, while the lighter | ones have vanished entirely, It { and you 8 | seldom that more than an ounce fs | needed to completely clear the skin and gain a beautiful clear complax- ion. Be sure and ask for the double | strength othine as this is sold under | guarantee of money back if jt falls | to remove freckles: | have | If you desire to spend a really enjoyable holi- day, take along a pair of good shoes. The ones you have may be all right, but to get into the spirit of the day, you should *'fuss up' a bit, and what would be more appro- priate than a new. pair of shoes. ' INVICTUS OXFORDS with rubber soles, are the ideal holiday shoes. The Sawyer Shoe Store 212 PRINCESS ST. JOHN M. PATRICK Une 149 SYDENHAM STREET. 'FOR HOUSECLEANING CARPET WHIPS BROOMS BRUSHES RE-NU-ALL LIQUID VENEER D. COUPER | mma AreYouBald? Have You Thin & Faded Hair Is your appearance wot what it should be bLecause of the lack of Hair? Then come and see latest productions in The PADOURS, PEE art of ance server cannot be removed wearer's wish BUT WHO IS Head Office and Showrooms mn Prof. Dorenwend's display of Fine Hair Goods at the Hotel Randolph, ( : day, July JADIES WAVES, ETC, and "FOR MEN WHO ARE BALD" THE DORENWEND TOU- which pepresents the highest achievement in the hair-constructing. Featherweight, and so natural in appears that the closest ob« could not from your own hair. They disturbed except NOT A FAD AN ABSOLUTE CESSITY TO EVERY BALD. Have a demonstration on Wednesday, July 5th, (one day only) at Hotel Randolph. Dorenwend's THE LIGHTS OF 65 YEARS AGO are still doing duty in the shape of EDDY'S MATCHES Sixty-five years ago the first Canadian made Matches were made at Huli by Eddy, and since that time for materinls and striking qualities, Eddy's have been the acknowledged best. WHEN BUYING MATCHES SPECIFY EDDY'S ve n), on Wednes- TRANSFORMATIONS, POM- hygienic, tell it at NE- MAN 105 Yonge Street, TORONTO

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