Daily British Whig (1850), 18 Aug 1919, p. 11

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PAGE TEN WAS WORTH IIS | WEIGHT IN GOLD Mrs. Procter Values Tanlac Highly--Qains Twenty=- five Pounds. "x just think a medicine: that will do #8 much for a person as Tanlac did for me is worth its weight » gold," said Mrs, Sydney Proeter, 524 College street, St. James, Winni- peg, Man., Canada, while in the lig- gett Prug Store in Winnipeg, re- cently. "I 'was so badly run down and weak last winter I was scarcely gble to get about," continued Mrs. Proe- ter, "and this awful weakness al- though I tried all sorts of medicine in the hope of regeiuing my strength. xX n't able to do a bit of house- work; in fact, it was just about all I could do to move from one chair te al er and the condition my 'sto- mach was in had a great deal to do with keeping me weak. I didn't have any appetite at all and even the little food 1 did manage to force down kept me In misery, as it just seemed to lay in my stomach and ferment and cause me awful pain and the gas formed so badly at times my heart palpitated and I could hardly get my breath, Sometimes I had terrible dizzy spells and was so nervous I was easily upset by any sudden noise and I also suffered a lot with headaches jand a severe pain right across my | back, 1 hardly knew what =a good | night's sleep was like but would just lay awake for hours at a time, so restless and mervous that when I got up in the merning I was completely . worn out and felt worse than if I had dons a hard day's work. That was ; Just the condition I was in following Yan attack of the "flu" and none of 'the medicines I took seemed to do ! me a particle of good. "1 started taking Tanlac because I { had heard it highly recommended : wad it has certainly proved a boon to he I have already gotten bdck my rd t strength and can deo 'all my usework with ease now. My appe- 'tite is fine and my stomach is in such #004 condition I can eat and enjoy ing I want and never suffer with indigestion, gas or palpitation of the heart and don't have any of | those awful dizzy spells. I have been entirely relieved of headaches and backaches and my neryes are in such splendid condition that whem I go to bed now 1 fall asleep as soon as my head touches the pillow and I sleep as soundly as & all night losig and get up in the morning feel- ing bright and refreshed and ready for my housework. When I started taking Tanlac I was so thio I don't believe I weighed ninety pounds, but now I weigh something lke 115 pounds, having gained about twenty- five pounds in weight and I weigh nore than I la ators in my eI e a récom- mend and praise Tanlac to anyone." Tanlac is sold Mh Kingston by A. P. Chown, in Plevna by Gilbert Ostler, in Batterses 364 by C. 8. Clark, in Fern- leigh by Ervin John B. McDonald, aged sixty-five years, died In 'Belleville, on Thurs- |p . Deceased was formerly a resi. dent of Bancroft, and had resided all his life in Hastings county. 2d {From Our Own Correspondent.) Aug. 18----The government steam- er Lookout, formerly the Capt. Visger of Alexandria Bay, N.Y., purchased a few years ago.by § J. Munro, of this town, and recently sold to the Cana- dian government, has had her upper works remodelled and ran up to Kipgston on Saturday afternoon, where she will be inspected and thence proceed to Toronto and will be used as g geout boat in the depart- ment of flskeries for service om the upper lakes. Pte. Gordon Kane, who left here in the fall of 1914 as a member of the 3rd Battery of the 1st Brigade in the first contingent, and who saw service throughout the entire war, accom- panied by his young English bride, arrived in town the latter pant Of the week and were met and made welcome home by a goodly number. The Gananoque-Clayton ferry steamer Yennek IL, which was put out of commission on Aug. 7th, by breaking her clutch, has been repair- ed and resumed her trips to Clayton on Friday. There was a large offering of lve hogs on the local market on Satur day, all of which was purchased by local buyers for shipment. Revs. W, 8. Lennon and C. E. Kidd have arranged for a series of four weeks' union services of the congre- gatigns of Grace and St. Andrew's churthes. 'The first of the series was held in St. Andrew's church yester- day morning and evening and was ¢onducted by Rev. C. E. Kidd and attracted a large congregation on each occasfen. At the morning ser- vice, Mrs, (Dr.) BE. L. Stedman ren- dered an excellent solo in fine voice, and after the regular evening service John H. Loud, of Boston, Mass., ren- dered a fine organ recital. At the A.C.A. races at Sugar Island on Saturday afternoon, Louis Friede again demonstrated his right to the title of champion canoe sallor of Am- erica by winning that event of the race schedule, with Murphy, Britton and Kip following in the order named, Quite a flurry of excitement was caused at the railway wharf on Sat- urday afternoon as the steamer Yen- nek was about to leave on her after. noon trip to' Clayton. In taking =a horse aboard, the animal dropped dead. J.J. Bell, principal of Gananoque high school for the past year or more, and who recently resigned that posi. tion, has accepted te position of prin- cipal in the Streetsville Ligh school and he and his wife and family will remove there shortly A. C. Hudspeth, accountant on the staff of the local branch of the Bank of Toronto, is taking charge there for a couple of weeks, relieving the manager, L. S. Barr, Philip Heasler, who recently dis- posed of his farm in the Front of Leeds and Lansdowne township, near Gananoque Junction, to F, X. Bean- Plen, has purchased the fine brick residence on Riyer street owned and occupied by Miss Allie Fairman, the price being $2,200. r. G. 'W. Faulkner has sold his perty to H. C. Martin, and after Dele a resident of Stirling for about forty years, left' on Monday to be- come a resident of Belleville. CRYST. AL BOTTLING WORKS St. Lawrence Ale & of ETE rors con em We deliver to attention given lawn socials and picnics. Porter tb nada. Lite Assur Figures how man Tn TW dwn, , ¥ SRE RRA Re EE ar NY EN a ae THE WORLD'S TIDINGS in a Pointed and Pithy Way. Peer is now four cents a pint in England, There is to be a shake-up in the Quebec cabinet. date in West Kent. « Mayor Fisher, Ottawa, denies he will be a candidate for the Ontario Legislature in the Capital. The Premier of Japan says résti- tution of Shantung and Kiao-Chan wl be made without unnecessary de- ay D. J. Taylor, a farmer, of Wiarton, was nominated Saturday as joint U. F. O., and Labor candidate for North Grey. Thomas Hoar, Harbormaster at Bowmanville, was killed by lightning while lighting the lamps Saturday night. Capt. William White, Vancouver, B.C., has been appointed secretary of the board of commerce at a salary of $4,000 per year, Seven thousand men and women have been imprisoned in Budapest as a result of anti-Bolshevik raids by the Roumanians. Cholera is raging in many parts of China. Shanghai, Dairen and Tien Tsin have become {nfected, and there tare numerous deaths. Guelph ~ Junctien Railway, the city's municipal road, has yielded a twelve per cent. dividend for the Quarter, or $20,400. Col. Di Lernezzo has been appoint- ed military attache of the Italian embassy in Washington. He will re- place General Emilio Guglielmotti. Sir Robert Borden will be unable | to particighte in any functions ar- | ranged in honor of the Prince off Wales until Quebec is reached, least. Gen. Sir Richard Turner, . V.C., commander of the Canadian forces in| England, sailed for Canada on the Melita, which probably brings troops | also. ' Rev. Canon Hilliard C. Dixon has resigned from the rectorate of Little Trinity Church, Toronto, a charge which he has held for the past thir. teen years. The Dominion Football Associa! tion adopted a seven-day clanse,| which prevents players competing in a league game until a week after re- gistration. istration was notified on Monday that | the strike of shopmen was at an end demands immediately. A prominent abattoir man in Tor onto stated that the price of leather would drop much lower, and that there had been no justification for the prices in the past: A. EB. O'Leary, ex- President of the Torgnto Trades and Labor Council, issued a writ against James Simpson, claiming $10,000 damages, for char- ges made against him. Albert 8, Kasbaum, motor cycle po- liceman, was shot dead by one of two automobile thieves while jie was taking them to North Tonawalda, N. Y., police station early today. One at the men H. B. Judge, of Niagara Falls, is under arrest. HBTOOK MARKETS. Quotations Furnished by Bongard, Ryerson & Co,, 287 Bagot Street. New York Stocks. J : Opening, Close. Atchison . .. xu, 88% CPR, ad ovis Marine ... oii. Mazine, (ee Ronis ha awa Southern Pae, .. .. Union Pacific ... .. Andconda. | . Bethlehem, Steel. Int. Nickel ... .... Rep. Steel ... .. U.S. Steel... .... (read 4 Onnadiai Stocks. Brazilian ... ... . B55 Can. Cement .. ... 68% Can. Steamship ... 83% Can. Loco » 848. Dom. Steel ..: ... 66% 6B. Steel of Canada _ IN CONDENSED FORM | | | Tidings From All Over Told | R. L. Brackin is the Liberal condi-| The United States Railroad admin- | and it was asked to take up the wage | THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG MONDAY, AUGUST 18, 1910, Bo Bellis PPro PVIVOPOR0 Said PPPePPV Old Battersea | Has Legends | OOALIEAALLLLLALLL LEADED PEPIN MID the rush of modern lfe, with its innumerable calls and interests, it comes as a relief at times {0 glean some that we pass, aud of the memories that still linger round many a spot where no fragment of aught rhore tangible remains, London, England; where the trams rush through long, drear streets, en route for the more open spaces of Wandsworth, there stands what might be described as a landmark of modern elvilization. This is Price's ing stretehing from York Road te the rivery issuing from whose gates, toward even-time, may be seen a teeming crowd of humanity, as the hundreds of hands employed there pour out in a never-ending stream. Few as they pass by are aware that here is the site of two renowned old nglish manor houses, and also, it dition be correct, the scené of one of the most famous royal romances of history. Here, in the year 1478 (or 1480, to quote another historian) was erected by one, Lawrence Booth, Bishop of Durham, and after- ward Archbishep of York, York House, a residence designed for hime self and for those who were to come after him, should affairs of state re- quire their presence near the court. We again find this house mentioned {fin the year 1558, when Archbishop {| Holgate was committed to the Tower by Queen Mary, when we are told, | that, "the officers who were employ- ed to apprehend him rifled York House, and took away from thence, £300 of gold coin, 1,600 ounces of plate, a mitre of plain jold with two pendants set around with very fine pointed diamonds, sapphires and bal- ists," besides a lengthy list of other valuables. Agdin in the year 1580, a'letter among the state papers, from Arch- bishop Sandys to John Wicklife, | "Keeper of the York House" at Bats tersea, is of interest, wherein the archbishop commands Wicklife to de- liver up the house to the Lords | of the Council, "so that it might be | turned into a prison for obstinate | Papists." Under the Protectorate, | York House was leased to Sir Allan Apsley, and his brther-in-law, Col, Hutchinson. It was restored to the see on the return of Charles II, but did not again become an episcopal residence. Its most interesting legend, how- ever, and one which, though much discredited, is not altogether unsup- ported by evidence, is that the great Cardinal Wolsey was once in resi. dence at York House, and that there, at a reception given by him, did that world-famed first meeting take place between Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn which went far to revolutionize his- tory. York House, Whitehall, fierce- ly contests this point, as does Green wich Palace, and even the at Hever Castle, in Kent, sisim io being EE eam rst act n perhaps the drama that was ever played: never theless at the old Battersea Manor up to the end of the eighteenth cen tury the room was proudly shown where that meeting was supposed to have taken place. Lysons, who wrote "Environs of London," in 1792, speaks of York House, then only used as a private residence, and mentions this room; and some extracts, from "A Walk from London to Kew," "written about 1816 by Sir Richard Phillips, are in~ teresiing, though of no great his torical Yalue, In this Yao he says: -- "This a la wal me hy rEe Further on in his book, Str Riche ard again.tells us that, "The Re Dyan informed me (of York House) thing of the history of the places || In the purlieus of Battersea in Candle Factory, a huge gray build- |! _Star Fruit § Candy Store it you want te a good time ~ get your Tresn meassmable Fruit and Candy from the Star Fruit and Candy Stere. 68 Princess Street. Phone 272 Board dens; Candy, 11-410 Canada Food Fruit, 95-1020; ITS WRN Pee T'S all wrong, Mrs. House- wife, it's all wrong---this idea of sacrificing fifty-two or a hundred and four days out of the year In front of a hot | oven, that blasts the enjoyment of every week. We'll do your baking for Yeu -- and please pardon us madam, we don't mean anything personal-- but we'll do it better, top. ¥ LACKIES BAKERY HOME MADE eT & PASTR At the meeting of the Picton Col- leglate , R. H, Young B.A., Wal- iaceburg High School, was appointed to the position of science master in Last Week to Get C Cheap Tea I will sell the balance of my stock of 60c. and 70c. Teas for this week at «++ +.50¢c per lb. This § in face of two advances in wholesale place of H. H, Graham. Three Cakes For 29 gar SARGENT'S DRUG STORE Telephone 41 Cor. Princess and Montreal Sta. Is uniform day after day, has the flavor that leases; sends the kiddies off to school ed, anad hurries them home again for any 11 Cents a 1 1-2 1b. Loaf. Phone 467 and our salesman will call. Have You . pil tou, Vows at. itat valuation, a Piao in Your Home or an 0d A modern Player-Piano In its place would bring new life into the home. A Helntzman & Co, or a nll

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