Daily British Whig (1850), 4 Nov 1919, p. 13

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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1910, -- / 'Walk inside and Save Ten' |.» Some People Like to Gamble | --Even when they buy Clothes garments q You know them--men who buy their "any old place" and trust to . DAILY BRITISH WHIG 3 : | PLN DPA LOR | An American Who | Became a Peer | | BODOG IOODIAIABALANNASSS | f | ILLIAM WALDORF AS-| { TOR, Viscount Hever, one { : of the richest men in the | world, and at one time | | one of the most discussed, died on | October 19. This was the Astor who | shook the dust of America from his | | feet and became a British subject. | | : i i For nearly thirty years he pursued | his ambition to enter the peerage, | despite any discouragements and re- buffs. It was not until the war came | and he opened his deep purse to his | adopted country that the King saw | fit to honor him, and it must be said | | that Viscount Astor was deserving of | | honor, He gave millions, and not | only gave but showed that here was | at least one British subject of Ger- | man blood who was intensely loyal | to the land of his adoption. Never! theless, when he was created a baron | there was much criticism of this act | of royal favor, on the ground that | other men equally generous had been | passed over. However, the country | was then in the throes of the Wwar| and not a great deal of attention was paid to an incident so- trifling, but | the! comment showed that the old | prejudice against Astor had not died, | though it was far from being as | strong as when it made life in Eng-! land not much more pleasant than | it had been in the United States. William Waldorf Astor was the! son of John Jacob Astor, the third, | and inherited the bulk of his for-| tune. He was probably the richest of the Astors. From boyhood he was trained in the management of the huge estate that was one day to be his, but this was irksome to him, and he turned to politics, He was elect ed to the New York Assembly and later to the Senate. When he of- fered himself as a candidate for Con- gress he was defeated, and it is said that this was a blow from which he took a long time to recover; but his pride must have been appeased when shortly afterward President Arthur appointed him ambassador to Italy. While there he amused himself as an author and produced a couple of novels now forgotten, but probably PAGE THIRTEEN Tartar on Teeth Shows You Leave the Film All Statements Approved by High Dental Authorities Free A 10-Day Tube of Pepsodent to show you its ef- fects. See coupon. teeth look dirty. It is film that is the source of most tooth troubles, Remove the Film' Film is the basis of tartar, It is the sofrue of dise colored teeth and decay. In brushing teeth you leave a slimy film. You can feel it with your tongue. It clings to teeth, enters crevices and stays. Your tooth paste cannot dis- solve it. Most tooth troubles are now traced to that clinging film. _ That film is what discolorss=fiot the teeth. If holds food substance which ferments and forms acid. Id holds the acid in contact with the teeth to cause decay. | Millions of germs breed in if. They, with tartar, are the chief cause of pyorrhea. So the one great ,object in cleaning teeth should be to end that film; , Dental science, after years of searching has found {a way to do that. For home use the way is now ,embodied in a dentifrice called Pepsodent. The results are known. Convincing, clinical and faboratory tests have proved them beyond question, Leading dentists everywhere now advocate its use, A 10-Day Test Supplied We now send a 10-Day Tube to anyone who asks. Thus Wwe are starting countless people toward cleaner, safes teeth. 3 ! } Peprodent is based off pepsin, the digestant of albumid, The Rim is albuminous matter. The object is to dissolve the film, then to day by day combat it. The way seems simple, but pepsin fust Hé Sctivated: {The usual method is an acid harmful to the teeth. It is the invention of a harmless activating method which makes pepsin possible, That, with other ent ingredients, is doing now what was never done before. Send the coupon for @ 10-Day Tube. Note how clean the teeth feel after using, Mark the absence of the slimy film. See how teeth whiten as the fined film disappears. Read the hock we sd you. Lorn the reason for these things. en e for yourself if you want your teeth kept in that way always, Cut out the coupon now; uck that they'll get their money's worth. q Fortunately, men who purchase clothes on a "pot luck" basis are few. The majority buy where they can depend upon Reliability and Value of the merchandise. Ne That is why the majority wear Robinson's Clothes, what one might have expected from a millionaire. He also showed some | interest in art, which he had inherit-| ed from his mother, she being a wo- | man of unusual culture and charm. After his term of office he returned | to the United States and suddenly displayed a keen interest in society. He built a great establishment at! Newport and made no secret of the] A Ten-Day Tube Free THE PEPSODENT CO. 1104 5. Wabash Ave. Chicago, BL. * ziail Ten-Day Tube of Pepso- dent to Pepsadénd REG. IN. The New-Day Dentifrice That is why I sell more clothes than any other clothier in Canada. My 200,060¢atisfied custom- "ers know froth experience that I have the largest assort- * ment of men's fine clothes in Canada--that every suit and overcoat I sell carries with it a guarantee of $10 to $15 saving. My economical upstairs method of selling allows me to give the greatest clothes value on the conti t-- smart, snappy styles Jfperior in quality and unsurpassed in workmanship. My Standard Price at a Saving to You fact that he and his wife were the | dictators of American society, and Were prepared to meet all comers in defence of their title. It was about this time that he ran | foul of the American newspapers. It appears that another Mrs. Astor was the pretender to the social throne, and she alse lived at New- port. One day Mr. Astor informed the postmaster that all letters that came addressed simply to 'Mrs, Astor" should be forwarded to his wife. The newspapers commented der'~ively on this news, and also on the . \ct, or alleged fact, that Mrs. WilliaN Waldorf Astor had actually copyrighted the name 'Mrs. As- tor." Another cause of offence and one which more readily . entitled Mr. Astor to sympathy was when | the Charlie Ross case was recalled as the result of an alleged confes- sion, and a New York newspaper in- dulged In speculations as to. what ransom would be demanded if the eldest son of the Astors should be kidnapped. This story was widely ployed by leading dentists everywhere. An eff He mtr iy abae Cr eRcent im comaat, Where desirable, ial Potartng end are Rew a res are the last link in Imperial distribution and service copied and gave Mr. Astor deep an- ger, because he and his wife both feared that thé idea of kidnapping their son might be thus planted in the mind of some desperate man. Indeed, it was said that worry over the possibility seriously impaired Mrs. Astor's health, Then it was thar Mr. Astor an- nounced his intention of going to England to live, because 'news. papers made the United States unfit for a gentleman." His remark was| treated with jeers, and it is to bel. admitted that when he established B-- himself in England vertain news- Qe ; papers there were not more kind. \ The Astors, however, n introduced ie Largest Exclusive «#8 \s A A aaa Japenese There's no gamble at Robinson's--it's a sure thing you save $10 to $15. Come up. "There's a Verdict' themselves to Englisi® society, and bade fair to enter upon a brilliant career when Mr. Astor had the mis. fortune to get himself 'in Dutch, as he said, with King Edward. 1t pemeat. BU SRERE REESE PE HOP LARK L10 AM =] that one of the King's inti RII RS al sogteds | ENE | i) { il i mates was Admiral Sir Barclay Milne, a ns . ; : - : : get what you want when you a DAY th Imperial Sistribution jo 3s certain as Jnpesial quality. : miperial 'olar ne ubrica tes engine 5, gears, - : be ged 1 | friction' surfaces with an indestructible oil film. Its Jour Sold develop into an : : made. Contains no acid to score cylinders and eat away Re nza and Pnemuonia, or Mi it forei ¢ bliin. 4 VR NY " U.S.L. Storage Battery . Expert Storage Battery and Self Starter repairs, All size Batteries for all ears. a PHONE 1818. w» 2h The Value Of The H The ohm afford te own 8 héme--and (he pyers he pe Cs ES en AS SL family and Dia atte: i a an werviny, hima home fo rally around." gly fo | Tablets (in the red box) 25 conte. § Ss 3 ; v ---- i om 3 : i - Jy the Sim hn dat tare If a he was 17 on o the f He Got 20,000 Crowns for Killinglof the former ger I % So ; { Tisza. A Dobo, admi 0 Vext Year's Orop to : : 10,000 crowns from War Honolulu, Nov. RT Lindner after the murder!sy record. General . and that two weeks | sur : . received nother rw rom Secretary Dobo said. however, he was|asainst 601.000 tons this year: The pon 1s mauy times made the Weapon of injustice. The dude may have lucid intervals crowns { ~when he's asleep. ° i Lane,

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