Daily British Whig (1850), 7 Nov 1917, p. 11

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- - y In ---- THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1917, From The Countryside] Frontenac | KEPLER Nov. 1.--The concert given on | Oct. 30th under the auspices of the | and Kepler branch of the W.M.S. was a | decided success. was furnished by talent. moved in her new home, and R. D. Wartman has moved on the farm recently purchased from Mrs. Law. son. Stanley Donnell is moving to the city. William Horning and wife have returned from visiting friends in Canton, Oklo. J. Redmond and wife and daughter, Annie, and A. Orser and wife, spent Sunday at Bath Road. Dr. Gibson and wife, from lowa, are spending a few days at H. Buck's. Miss Elsie Bearance, Elginburg, is at H, Johnston's. Re. (cent visitors were: Miss Elsie Law- n, Sydenham, at Mrs. Katherine vans: Miss M. Grey and Mrs. +0. V. Hansen, Sydenham, at R. Orser's;" R. B. Gibson and family, Glenvale, at H, Buck's; Mrs. Waful and children, Carthage, N.Y. at J. Redmond's; Robert Curran and fam- fly at W. Horning's. we -------- NEWBURGH. Nov. 1.--Hallowen'en passed off quietly in our Mttle burgh. J. B. Aylesworth has sold his farm to J. M. Ramsay. The Newburgh and Strathcona people are to give an en- tertainment on Thursday night in the Standard Bank Hall in aid of the Red Cross Society. Mrs. George Samson, a former resident of this lace, died at the home of her daugh- ter, Mrs. Robert Lewis, Camden East, on Sunday, Oct. 28th. Her funeral on Wednesday was well at. tended, showing the high esteem in which she was held. Several from here have gone to the north country to hunt deer. George Paul, Toronto, is spending a few days in the vill- Leeds POOLE'S RESORT. ) Nov, 1.--The sympathy of the community goes out to Mr. and Mrs. Buell Dickey in the loss of their in. tant daughter, Gladys. The little one sickened on Friday, Oct. 19:h, and the following Sunday passed away, kissed by the Angel of Peace. The first snow storm of the season fell last night, covering the ground to a depth of about six inches. A Halldwe'en concert was given oa Tuesflay night by the school child- ren at the school house, Miss Celia McMillan, Lea Valley, is visiting at J. T. Week's. Mrs. Anson Andress visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Ferguson, at Moretown, last week, Mr. and Mrs. David Wildron; Escott, spent Sunday at Delmer Wil. liams'. local and outside | Women as Letter Carriers. Washington, Nov. 7.--The first women letter carriers ever to be em- ployed by the government will ap- pear on the streets of the capital to- morrow as an experiment by the local postoffice to meet the shortage of men. a! A good programme | these Mrs. Katharine Lawson has | stomac h | appetitite, ---- SHE HAD SUFFERED FOR 20 LONG YEARS, | Mrs. Morris Had Rheumatism 8o Bad She Couldn't Walk --Finds Relief at Last. "Words {the su ban Morris | ronto can only partially endured before I be ' said Mrs. Mary Johns Road, To- lays ago. "For y years," continued { Mrs, M have tried in vain to get 1€ m 8s | kidney disorders and rheumatism, when 1 began taking Tanlac was a confirmed invalid. years haven't been able to eat without suffering afterwards. was I bad no I simply self to eat and my food would | sour and bloat me up terribly. suffered all the time from indigestion and was constantly belching up my food sour and undigested My kid- neys worried me nearly and during the past developed rheumatism, which started Jiret in my shoulders and arms and 'then got down into my lower limbs,} and for more than two .and a half upset then walk, I couldn't even dress myself and the misery was almost unbear- able. knife cutting in, then again it was a dull, throbbing pain close to the bone. My nd hurt I could hardly move them. t times | had cramps in my legs until they felt like they would almost 'draw double and no one, unless they have suffered the same way, 'what T'had to endure. "Well, I have spent lots of money for medicines of different kinds, but I had almost but Tanlac has me one bit of good. given up: in despair, and I believe now I am going to get | und and well. 1 have just start- ed on my third bottle of Tanlac and 1 can tel] that I am improving every day. The rheumatism doesn't both- er me anything lke it did and I feel! stronger and more vigorous than I have in a long time. While I haven't taken Tanlac long enough to say it has done wonders for me, I can say it is doing me good and that's more than I can say for any other medi- cine I ever took. I am certainly well 'pleased with the results I have got- ten from Tanlac so far, and I'm going to keep on taking it as 'I believe my keliet will soon be complete. Tanlac is sold in Kingston by A. P. Chown. ~--ADVT, DESTROYERS THE CURE US. Senators Tour English Ship- yards and Munition Plants, London, Nov. 7,--Having complet éd their tour of the English ship- yards, Senators Kenyon of Iowa and Hendriek of Wyoming this morning went into conference with Vice-Ad- miral Sims, commander of the Am- erican destroyer spuadron. After the conference Senator Kenyon said: "We are convinced destroyers are the best antidote for U.boats. We can- not Have too many of them. The ad- ditional destroyers and the hundreds of thousands of tons of new shipping which * England and the United States are turning out will én time overcome the U-boat." Every facility was given to the senators for obtaining first-hand in- formation regarding England's ship- building efforts, which they said were colossal. They were especially dn- terested in the new standard ships, which are being turned out rapidly. On their way back to London the senators were taken to a munitions plant, where they saw a group of thirty-six Americans making muni- tions with American machinery. that started o 22 years and today describe 1| been ven During all! My | three years I} Sometimes the pain was like a! between the that seemed |" legs would | and puft up and my joints were so stiff {there is the 'smallest space--while was never able to find anything to do| already done me a world of 800d | 100 in Palesti ROME GREATLY -- BY THE PITIFUL L SIGHTS. IN THE, STREETS. Arrival of Wounded From Isonzo Front--A ' Picture of Suffering All Buildings Utilized. Rome, Nov. 7--One of the myst pitiful sights here is the arrival of the wounded from the front, with heartrending stories of their escape from the invaded towns. The Aus- tro-German advance was so unexpect- t no order of evacuation had to the towns near the rder, and thus hardly any convey- neces were available for the trans ortation of the wounded. Those who were able to stand were told to get to force my- {up and walk away, while those too {seriously wounded were left behind | with the doctors, nurses and others Who volunteered to remain. Others, who had attempted to walk, after a few miles had to give up through all the time| faintness and exhaustion. Therefore, in the torrential rain could be seen pitiful, forlorn groups of wounded, sitting worn out by the roadside and imploring already over- 'toaded mortor cars and trucks to give years | have almost been an invalid. | them a lift. 1 was so crippled up that I couldn't] All the hospitals convents, schools, municipal buildings, and even churches in the towns and villages Tagliamento and the Plave are filled with wounded, some ving on the floors, in the corridors in the courtyards--wherever the doctors are working indefatig- ably day and night, with a scarcity of surgical instruments and dressing, great quantities of which have been knows 'slost in the retreat, STARVATION IN JERUSALEM Bread Eleven Times as High as at the War's Beginning. London, Nov. 6.--Sufferings of the ne, particularly in { Jerusalem, are set forth in letters from the Hebrew teachers in that sec- tion which have been received here by leaders of the Zionist movement. { Hunger and the extortionate prices charged for food are the chief causes of distress. The price of bread has advanced elevenfold since the begin- ning of the war. Petroleum costs thirty times as much as in 1914, and milk five times the ante-war price. Concerning the situation in Jer- usalem, one teacher wrote: "The money evil has become in- tolerable. In Constantinople paper money circulates freely; here you must pay in coin or fourfold price in paper. The misery of the poor is unspeakable: The roads are lined with starving persons, who lie about begging for a mouthful of bread. The poor Jews sell all their belongings--clothes, linen, bed cov- ers--to the soldiers to get a few pence for food. Epidemics have some- what abated, but most of the pa- tients die, because, owing to the lack of nousishment they cannot resist disease." The headmaster of the Hebrew Boys' School in Jerusalem thus re- ports, "The condition of the Jewish ex- iles, who have been driven by Djemal Pasha out of Jaffa and the neigh- boring districts, is very much worse than that of other sections of the populace. In spite of the reports to the contrary launched by the Tur kish authorities, none of these thou- sande of hapless refugees has been allowed to return to his home, and whatever preparations have been made for transporting, housing, feed- ing, educating, and giving employ- ment to them have had to be made by the private chanity of the local Jews and their brethern in other countries." This is a sour world for the man with a sour disposition, growing faster than ever- | Over Two Million ORE than two million Ford cars have been made and sold, and more than 140,000 of this vast number have been "Made in Canada". The Ford enjoys the largest sale of any motor car, because it represents the greatest motor car value. Its name has always stood for low cost, and the car has everywhere given satisfactory service. Ford Endurance, Ford Dependability, and Ford Universal Dealer Service have made the Ford car universally popular. Every third car in Canada today is a Ford. The judgment and decision of these 2,000,000 satisfied Ford owners should convince you that the Ford is a superior car, and equal to your needs. £7 =m Touring - - - $495 Runabout - $475 . Coupelet - - $770 THE UNIVERSAL CAR Sedan - - . $970 F. O. B. FORD, ONT. 'Van Luven Bros., Dealers - Kingston and|Moscow G. H. RICHARDSON, TAMWORTH, J. A. GOODFELLOW, PARHAM PETROGRAD FEARS _ ANOTHER REVOLT The Provisional Government Prohibits Armed Demon- strations; Asks for Order Petrograd, Nov. 6.--The proba' bilities of the eventuation of the/ threatened Bolshevik outbreak are incalculable. The Provisional Gov- ernment has formally prohibited armed operations and has appealed to the garrison and the populatién to keep order. Government armored cars are in evidence everywhere. On the othér hand; at the Petrograd Soviet meeting Friday night the Chairman, Trotsky, declared a demonstration would take place and that "hé had commandeered 5,000 rifles from the Government factory "to fight a counter-revolution." Perhaps Petrograd has more to fear from eur handling of their} rifles and rtain ed bombs, and" armored cars carrying machine guns, than from desire de- liberately to produce chaos. 'When Tired and Nervous If the end of the day finds you weary or irri- table,with aching headand frayedrerves youneed something to tone and strengthen BEECHAM'S I'S PILLS which quickly hel, ch erand hovel conditions. EE nb pe liver bowels, oi 0 un he Shae a a Server: Bring Welcome Relief GAITERS Beautiful Bust and Shoulders possible if you will wear a scigntifically constructed Bic Joli Jolie Brassiere, The dragging weight of an unconfined bust so stretches the supporting muscles that the contour of the figure isspoiled. t the bust hick Shete jt, be longs, preven bust from having the appearance of flab- biness, eliminate hi Sntger of of § dragei BRASHIE I go of fle'she fhe Te Fsiving & an graceful line to the entire upper bod Thex are the daintiest and most Front, Surplice, Bandeau, ete, rustiess bohing-- permitting washing wi Have ou Bien Jolie Brassieres, if not stock- ed, ve Your Healer shane yor him, prepaid, samples to i you, . BENJAMIN & JOHNES, 51 Warren Street, Newark, N. J. ONTARIO POTATOES CHEAPER IN QUEBEC The Toronto Prices Are Twen- ty-five Cents Higher Than Montreal's. In All the New Colors ~~ From $1.50 to $3.00. The Sawyer Shoe Store 212 Princess Street. Phone 159. Ottawa, Nov, 7.--Correspondents of the food controller's office report the following: Wholesale prices for potatoes, all quotations being on the basis of a 904d. bag: Toronto--Ontario stock, $2-$2.15.} Sunwa Onlariy Stwek, $1.90. Montreal--Ontario and Quebec --. $1.90; Now Bruswis ick, Sie, uebec--Quebee wick stock, $2.40 to $2.50; ry scarce, Halifax Prince | Island stock, $3.15. to $2.25 St. Broonswick and JF Svante oes 32480 merican prices: 2, $2.45; New York, $2.40; 340; Butts: $2.40. VY Hes TNEN0 lain's Cough Remedy, for she makes a point of telling other mothers about it, and and they pass the 'news around. This has

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