Daily British Whig (1850), 28 Oct 1919, p. 4

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THE SAVIOUR OF PARIS LITTLE shepherd girl sat on the hills and watched her flock 4s they wandered over the green grass towards Paris. The Iittie girl was very fair t for a kindly 80ft eyes, and the smile that played about ber lips was born of love and sympathy. She sal thus, om the hill- side near her home in Nanterre, and dreamed of the saints, whose stories she knew. for but lately had the Christians come to Gaul, and she with many others had been won over and converted to the new religion. "Have done with thy dreaming, Genevieve, and bring in thy flocks to the fold," called her Grandmother, from tlie door of their amall cottage. "Very well, Grandmother," Swered the girl and rose to do the bidding of the old lady, who had been both father and mother to her since her parents' death. "But jt is still light," she said, when she entered the house. "What is thy will that thou hast called me 50 early from the hiir 7?» "There is spinning to be done, be- fore yet the light fails, and you hast 0 look upon light shown from her lady, an- | jBot carried the goat's milk to our | neighbor Gudule has been these threes days past." { The girl sat down to her homely | tasks, anxious only to please the good who had done so much for her. {80 all her life, Genevieve accom- | plished simple tasks and performed | her homely duties with such grace j that they became noble and worthy | efforts in the eyes of a!! who came in | contact with her. The iil and afflicted {awaited her coming, as the flowers {look for rain after a drought. Then to the ears of the Parisians | came news of Attila, the Hun. "The Scourge of God." as he was oalled. He was coming---sweeping all before |Bim--no one dared resist him--he threatened to take Paris and station | himself within the city. | The people were panic-stricken. | They loft their homes and their farms; | there was safety only In flight, they | thought, but when they reached the | bridge they saw Genevieve coming {alone, and unprotected /toward the | city. { "Go back," she cried. who [Puzzle FIVE SQUARE WORD SQUARE Stars indicate position of squares. "se . . "0 . ® FOOTBA LI, TERM li BY ALTER WELL. Ma | | find an abbreviated State. CON You GOES WHAT TRo%E FOUR. FOr po. TERMS Corner & 1 Upper left hand square: solid water a vehicle a period of time Upper right hand square: to slep in to see with found on the grass in the morning [Centre square: | { ------ | | it "Turn back | full view of the enemy but the | and find an abbreviated State | SOME ABBREVIATED STATES oF fics THE DAILY BRITISH W and pray to God for strength to Four homes against your foe. guard 1 | Would ¥ou leave all for him to find and | Turn back. Ged is on the ® of right. Turn back! Do not give Up your country to the Hun!" At first the people would not heed her words. They tried to push on and thrust her away from the end of the bridge which she was guarding. Just then a blare of trumpets sounded, and & messenger ran to the young girl and Placed a package in her hand, "From the Bishop Germanus." he id. "From the Bishop Germanus™ echoed the people. The Bishop had &cknowledged his faith in the girl before them. With shame at thelr earlier distrust. they now followed Genevieve back to the city, to pray and arm themselvesfor defense. But Attila never came. He had met defeat At Chalons. and had withdrawn from Gaul. But a siege was laid to the city not long after this by Childeric, leader of the Franks, and then it was that Genevieve showed her true metal, by slipping through the guards of the fortified town, all by herself, to beg food from the neighboring towns for her starving People. With food and Assistance she returned to Paris, in Franks | Plunder? { sid to give assistance anger home of an animal Lower left hand Square: & craze of the moment what you did at your last meal & river in Scotland Lower right hand square: to catch fish in HIG sam-- m-------- f R | thinking she was a messenger of God | (an indeed she was), feared to lay bands upon her, and she went on her [ | | { Parts, he had Geneveive banished | from the city, for he was afraid of her | Powar aver the townafolk. Word | reached the brave woman that her | countrymen were starving; and don- | Loti -- INSTRUCTOR, DRP'r OF Nin ae e Young, Peopl BY Frank LSoLar 'TOYS AND USEFUL ARTICLES ater aes conser cantared| [11ND TRRT Fr Boy CRN MAKE. ORL Thre, PUBLIC ScroousOPDRTROIT | Ring her old shepherd's clothes she went back to the city to mister to the sick. Parls was In an uproar. The army of Childeric had laid bands on all the goods they could plunder. The condition of 'the city apd the people was frightful. Genevieve summoned all her courage and appeared before the Frankish leader. "For shame," she cried, "Art thou 'No bellever in the Almighty Gad, that thou wouldst so devastate his fair lands, and so mistreat his children!" Childeric was an ignorant pagan and A bo of L - ls & a part of the head what you must do to guess answers these | AMERICA | Take a letter from a tangled bunch | d find an abbreviated State Take a letter from a girl's name and Take a letter from a filmy fabric and {find an abbreviated State. | Take a letter from "grade." and find ' an abbreviated State Take a letter from indifferent find an abbreviated State. Take a letter from a fish and fi abbreviated State. nd an| ' and |' OTHER usually received the, first thing made on a new work bench. A broom holder is a good model to start with be-| | cause it 1s not difficult to make and it} | will be greatly appreciated on account | lot its usefulness. A broom should not be stood up In} | "Go Back," She Cried. | 8% her words he trembled with fear. | ~ He thought her to be an avenging | {Ne corner as the weight of the handle angel of the Lo¥d. and fearing her |Scon turns the straws over, making | Il her requests. [an old broom of it. Many broom | 'eve saved the | hangers are so made that they "hold | aris from the hands of the the head of the broom. This requires! wos 85 Ea iouEh all Bw long fe | ype raising the head of the .broom | she do or others. er name + i af | | t to the level of the face was on the lips of young and old--her} from the floor to { chisel. | » t | image was in the hearts of all ho | 20d often above the head, this is not| the end of the handle; only requiring the raising of the head of the broom & few inches from the floor. Gum or bass wood are desirable ma terials for making the broom holder and will take a pleasing finish. The stock for the back when squared up .and finished should be %" x3" x 6". With a knife, marking gauge, rule and try square layout the one, inch hole in the center both on the front and back of the plece. remove the stock first bore a hole and then cut te line with a good sharp Do the chiseling from both surfaces to the center of the hole to { knew he {sanitary as dust and dirt are thrown| Take a letter from a small valley her, so today is her memory y | Take a letter from level and find an revered in France, where she is known | off the broom into the air. | The broom holder shown in the ac. prevent the splitting of the surfaces. Next locate and bore the 3-16" holes To | [sions locating it and boring half way from each side to prevent splitting. Bore hole for the dowl and them layout and make chamfer, the plant {can be used for chamfering all but the | distance from the corner te the sid( {of the tenon, this will have'to be don( {with a chisel #0 make the dow! plane up a plece | 5-18" square, then fasten the plane in the vise upside down, hold the plece in the handle and draw over the blade of the plane removing the corners of the pléce making 8 sides. In the [same manner plane the corners once | more, making 16 sides. Then drive | the plece through a 4" hole bored in {a piece of hard wood---use a hammer or mallet, and finish round with sand. {as the patron saint of the City of! { | x , i 14 | for fastening to the wall casing or door { paper | abbreviated State. aris. | companying drawing !s made to ho ] | | { ONLY- TABLETS MARKED "BAYER" ARE ASPIRIN Not Aspirin at All without the "Bayer Cross" The name "Bayer" identifies only ule Aspirin, --~the As 4 years Always buy an un of "Hager Tobiots of poien package There is only ouo Asbirin 1a the trade mark € manufacture, to , Will be stamped the ky AND & CHOICE SELECTION oF regist: Teed, While ®t = i Aesiat 6 pul ageinst imita With thelr general trade mark, GOOD VALUES directions for Colds, Toothache, Earache, Neu- hy Khsumation, Neuri- . in generally. i of 13 iabiats cost but Larger "Baver" packages. ~¥ou must say "Bayer" 248) of Bayer Manufacture of Mone- ! known that Aspirin means Bayer tions, the Tablets of Bayer Cempany "the "Bayer Cross." Can | Mo. 2. Alma-Ala. 3. Lace-Oal. 4 Rank- | Ark. 5, Cold-Col. | Del, | Down. ANSWERS ! FIVE SQUARE WORD SQUARE-- | ice hed ] car eye eraidew ire fadenet ole car dee try ABBREVIATED ESTATES Mop 6. Ood-D. C. 1. Dale | 8. Flat-Fla. FQOPRALL, TERMS -- 1. 2. Tackle. 3. Guard. 4. Center, | . SARASL SA The African Elephaats Are to be Exterminated To Protect the Settlers SSAA > Tee ° > DODO OBALSOEA SDA SA a Ad Lae F the settlers near Port Elizabeth, Cape of Gond Hope province, Africa, had not taken to estab- lishing wonderful irrigation ditches and farms at this point, the elephants of Addo Bush still might look forward to' attaining a ripe old ge, say a hundred years or so, be fore they buried themselves quietly beneath the ooze of a tropical forest and went to the heaven of all good elephants. But as it is, one of the greatest elephant hunts of modern times is about to be staged in Addo Bush, and unless Providence, in the ghape of tn imperial mandate from the British Empire or some similarly august proclamation, intervenes, my lord the elephant will roam no more in the forests of South Africa. Civilization has erept up 'and around and about in Cape of Good Hope province until now it has made its last demand upon the wilds, and that demand is that the wild eles BEEF, PORK AND LAMB, AT o's | Eush, where for years he has dweit in : For all new style, good wearing /Suits $20 up to $45 | phant shall be exterminated. lithe Addo Bush elephants must go. The provincial council has listened to the demand at last and has decreed that Strolling out of his forest in Addo freedom under the protection of the British Government, the big fellow has discovered the pleasing works of the settlers. ¥ In the first place, there were de- lightful mud and water baths in long TOWwS in every direction. leaves And turned their green to gold; The nestling flies from shelt'ring eaves Before the nights grow cold. The bunnies seek a moss-lined hut, The squirrel his winter's store ; Beneath the tree-bark floor. AUTUMN HE fairy breath has touched the The moths and caterpillars, too And flowers that in summer grew Touch | And packs with care each cherished nut For autumn b HE | Have sought their silken beds: | | Hang low their sleepy heads. To hurry from the park; rings the short'ning day And home is best at dark: {to line |the one | handle, giving at with round head screws. hole made, this hole received a dow! on which the movable arm is hinged. Use a pencil for laying out the %* | chamfer, do not make a mistake and | tse a marking gauge it will leave deep cuts on the finished work. Get out the stock for the movable i part and square to dimensions. Lay- | move the broom, . . . jout carefully with a knife and mark- | slowly. And little children leave their play | ing gauge the tenon which fits the hole in the back piece, remove stock inch hole for the broom R Dig harvest and a balance in the bank they were likely to awake some fine morning to find that somebody had been in the melon patch. And it wasn't a boy or a pack of boys who could be scared off by an irate farmer. It was My Lord the Elephant, who Was romping and raging about over the green. patch which had. cost so many patient hours, scrunching, up the delicious fruit which was to h¥ve been gathered that very day, perhaps, for transfer to the port and then to a hungry Europe. An elephant can get away with a lot of fruits of all sorts. He also likes green vegetables of any kind. He is very adaptable when it comes And His Family Medicines MOST people first knew Dr. Chase througn his Re- ceipt Book. Its reliability and usefulness made him friends everywhere. When he put his Nerve Food, Kidney-Liver Pills and other medicines on the market they received a hearty welcome, and their exceptional merit has kept them high in the publie esteem. ; One pill » dose, Se a box at 5il dealers, or Bdmanson, Bates & Co., Ltd, Toreats. to diet. The greet creatures eves eter the fertility Y tavelopine, i } like berries of ordinary size and will most painstakingly devour several tons of them in their patient determ- ination td get a full meal at any cost of time and trouble. So that is what the South African farmer had against the elephants of Addo Bush. They are a protected herd, between one hundred and two hundred in number, and they have long 'occupied a forest reserve of about six thousand acres in the heart of the bush, a district that until com- paratively recent years was regarded as possessing little farming value. It Was mostly scrub land, waterless and not fenced off. The farms that were developed there seemed of little value. But recently irrigation frem Sunday's River has greatly increased of the farms, and this a has increased the losses suffered by the settlers from the de- predations of their gigantic neigh- bors and has aroused them to a determination to win the consent of the Government to their destruction. A committee ' which investigated the matter found that it would take thirteen miles of fencing to enclose the elephant's preserve and that this would not solve the problem. They would bave to be provided with Water, as there would not be suf- cient within the enclosure, and it is probable that they would have to be partially fed also. doubtful if the enc) vide enough natura it $100,000 were and a system of wate: established at great Government of the Cape of Good still the elephants would not be free forest animals any more, They would be simply park orna- ments, pitiful survivors of the great Tace which once trecked so boldly and : freely through forest and marsh. The Addo Bush elephants are said by some scientists to be about the only surviving examples of a distinct variety. The tic elephant, reaching twelve feat at the shoulders. cldcumterence of the {ofefoot is Rall the height of the shoulders. -------- It is more than | osure would pro- 1 food. And even | spent for a fence | ring and feeding | expense to the | THE J Manufactured Specially for Also cleans bath tubs, sinks, not live where it is Layout and | ~ | bore the XK" hole through the square from white linen and Cotton Sandpaper all parts and assemble {10 be sure they fit well. Remove the dow] and finish with. stein or others {wise as desired. Assemble and fasten {in place with screws. To hang the broom push the handle | 8p through the hole and releass, as the broom : falls' the movable part ! drops holding the broom fast' To re- Ht up and let down If the wides of the hole wear | smooth glue a little strip of sandpaper {to the upper front edge of the hole. with a back or hand saw. Bore | Should the broom handie be turned { Bneven so it will not fit the hole, shape tention to the dimen-|it with a piece of brokea glass. Kingston's New Industry AVEL MANUFACTURING CO. Manufacturers of "KLEAN ALL" JAVEL WATER Contains--NO ACID--NO LYE Whitening and taking out Stains Svithout Bolling. copper, porcelain, marble tiling. ASK YOUR GROCER FOR IT--18c. A' QUART BOTTLE. Return bottle and save Se. To disinfect leave some in open container in room... Germs can- used. TRY IT PLEASE. JAVEL MFG. CO., 19 ONTARIO STREET, KINGSTON. : PHONE 454. hand, 90% constipation. the blood receives because constipation down condition readily gain foothold. disease, L its return. The action of Nujol The dangers of constipation are s0 far-reaching, because poisons and carries them direct] itself keeps the system in a so that Keep clear of constipation and you guard against serious i Nujol will remove constipation and prevent any other constipatio n remedy. softens the food waste and muscles to act naturally a bottle from your druggist today. Per valuable health bosiicr-- Thirty Nujol Laboratories, Standard Oi! Co, ( r . Warning: 2 The Nujol Treatment as 'Sickness Prevention Science, with anti-toxins, serums, and modern sanitation, has done much to prevent diseases so checked are comparatively few. On the other of all diseases have one common origin-- dangerous disease; but the from an infected mass within, y to every organ of the body; and run- any infectious germs from without is entirely different from that of It is not a drug. Nujol ncourages the intestinal iest habit in the Peet of Danger" -- fru, writs New Jersey | 30 Broadway, N.Y. 1 mid nly in maled lective bowving the Wjel Trade hewn Bore. Beware of produc mew

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