Daily British Whig (1850), 19 Apr 1921, p. 13

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19, 1921, TUESDAY, APRIL EE -- THE DAILY BRITISH wv r1G, NICKEL PLATING | NO FEAR OF PAINS NOW. AND BRASS FINISHING Now prepared to do this work. Manufacturing Wire Fencing, Flower Border Guards, ete. 02 KING 1 Ww. . . 380, onde MEMORIALS and REGUILDING A SPECIA LTY. J. E. Mullen 161 FRONTENAS STREET Phone 1417. WATTS People's \ Florist 177 Wellington street, Fresh flowers and plants daily Funeral designs, and wedding bouquets to order. Phone 1763. | Res, 1137, | Grow Your Hair [CIYDECUITSRRER oer vs reer | . AGENCY | FOR ALL STEAMSHIP LINES | | Special attention given your family | | or friends going to or returning from | | he Qld Country. | | For information and rates apply to J. P. HANLEY, | i CP. ana 2. A. ar. Ry. Kingston, | Ontario. Open day and night Choicest quality of Scranton Coal. No other kind sold by us. Indigestion is one of the | forms of stomach trouble, and pany people suffer terr.bly after every meal they eat. The rising and sour- ing of the food, pains in the stomach, heartburn, water brash, belching of | wing, vomiting shortly after eating, ote fire some of the symptoms. } There is no need for any person to be troubled with indigestion, dyspep- | | 8a Or any other stomach trouble if! Hitters, which contains a combina- tion of nature's roots, kerbs, barks | and Lerries; a combination that can- not help but put the stomach right. Mr. .H. H. Collins, Norton, N.B,, | writes: --"I was with the overseas forces for four years and two months, | | and in October, 1916, I was unfortu- | | nate enough to be wounded and taken | ! prisoner. I was a prisoner for 21 | | years, and the food they gave us was | not good, at times, and after a few | | months I found I was suffering from | | Indigestion. , When I came home in | July, 1919, I was nearly a wreck. 1 was told to use Burdock Blood Bit | [ters. I did so and found great re- | llef, and can now eat without fear | | of pains and sickness. I would | | recommend B.B.B. to all who suffer | | from indigestion." Burdock Blood Bitters has been on | the market for over forty years, and | during that time has made a repu- | tation gecond to none for relieving a'l | | stomach troubles. Manufactured only, { by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, To- | Yunto, Cnt. h a genuine Indians' recipe, which will be mailed you free with a proof box of the wonderfully deus cint. ment, Kotalko, if you send only 10 eta, (sil ve or stamps) to Pay the cost of this notice, to Kotal Company, Ltd., 866-R Adelaide Bt. W. Tereate, Ontarie. | BOOTH & CO. || Grove Inn Yard Phone 133 Parttidge Wire Works '"Wiicesion STL TRADE IM SNES ~ they ould-only take Burdock Blood worst The Traffic Flourishes in the of Unconquered Districts of Morocco. Melilla, Morocco, March 26-- (By matl)---8lavery and trading in slaves still flourish in the unéonquered dis- tricts of both the French and Span- ish -zones- of "Moroso == There "Have been stories that some of the slaves are white people, but these reports | re not borne out by inquiry. Threats by the turbulent Moors of the Riff coast to sell into slavery a Spanish sgilor boy, Francisco Sallud, unless his father with whom he had been wrecked, captured, paidaransom of 4,000 pesetas, led the Associated Press correspondent to make an in- quiry into the question of the ex- istence of enslaved white people in 'nor¢hern Africa. * The result of his inquiries shows that of recent years instan¢es of white people being sold into slavery have been very rare, but there are slave markets for the sale and pur- chase of colored people in the dis- tricts to which French or Spanish rule have not reached. The traffic varies according to the economic sit- | uation of the tribesmen who, when | they are in funds, do not hesitate to | give high prices for slaves to be used | as servants. Slaves 80 purchased be- come personal property of the family into which they are bought and are disposed of by testament when the proprietor dies. However, it is customary for the | purchaser to make a formal agree- | ment before a competent legal au- thority to grant his slave his liberty | on his master's death, when the heirs have to give up all claim and at the | same time to allow the liberated slave | to live on and cultivate any portion | of his dead master's land which may | have been left to him as one of the family. A slave-owner may give his slave | a wife among his other slaves bought in the same way and the <hildren of these marriages become slaves of the | | same owner unless he has signed the | agreement already mentioned in con- nection with their parents, | MOHAMMEDANS AT BURIAL | | Talaat Pasha, Former | Turkish Grand Vizier, in Berlin. -- | Berlin, April 19.--Mohammedans | fror: every important Islamic coun- | try attended the funeral of Talaat F'asha, the former Turkish Grand- Vizier, "who was assassinated in Ber- lin by Soloman Teilutian, a young Armenian, who declares his act avenges tlie death of his parents and hundreds of the deportations and massacres ordered by Taloot Pasha. | Bitterly as most of the Christian | world has reviled Talaat and his pol- | icy of exterminating the Armenians | in Asia Minor, Isiam gave him a clear title to im:cortality. ] The funeral of the Turk, who rose f=om the position of mail carrier to grand-vizier and wae even a more important figure then the sultan in | Constantincple during the war, was| held in his aparcuent in the west | end of Rerlin, where he had been liv- | Ing under an assumed name for two | years. After the ceremony at the | houso his nurimified body was taken {to a cemete:y where another service | was held Lefore the body was placed | in a vault to await final interment in | Turkey. i Egyptians, Turks, Kurds, Persians, | Azerbaijanese, Aghans and Arabs, | all wearing their native costumes and | the fez wrapped in a scart indicating | that they hud Leen to Mecca, group-| {ed about the coftin while the hodja | of the Turkish Embassy sang the Mohammedan prayer cry, "Allah Ak-| ber * ("God is good!") Then the hodja read the prayer for the dead | dnd held the ttratige Mohammedan | ceremony of tbe dedth tribunal. | "Mehmed Tulaat Pasha,, who lies | before you was ¢ man of high virtue, | a servant of God. Ic there anypne amoag this assen.bly who denies it?" | the hodja demuuded. In chorus the strange circle of be- | llevers answered "No. No. No." | The hodja then pronounced Mehmed | Talaat '* great and pure," and de-| livered a long funeral oration. At the cemetery there was another | | ceremony. The hodja again called | your time go farther, Use "Long Distance." "Station-to-Station" Long Distance Call? HEN you ask the 2 certain telephone number Station call. That is, on a Station-to-Station call you do not specify a particular person to be reached, but give only the num- ber of the Selaphone or the name or address under which that 8 . telephone is A Station-to-Station call costs less than a call for a particu- because less operating labor and less circuit time , particular person has to be located lar person se are required than if a and brought to the telephone The evenin inhi apace asoncalle ade between midnight is approxima y one y midnight and 4.30 a.m. the rate on calls is approximately one-fourth the 8.30 and 12. rate, Between 12.00 Station-to-Station day rate, If there is anything about our rates and to explain. Every Bell Telephone is a Long Distance Stgtion. The Bell Telephone Company of Canada Long Distance operator to get and, whe ted o B exans tha » When connected, you speak to anyone at that number, you have made what is described as a Station-to- practices you do Jick prigertand; please call our Manager and he will be glad | The prices paid for slaves vary con-| for an wcknowledgment of Mehmed | | -------- { siderably. Generally the age is the Talaat's justice and the faithful af-| | | chief consideration but, girl slaves, | firmeq in chorus. Bulogies were OUCH! ANOTHER beauty calls for the highest prices. | then Miprovacdl by the Turkish poet, | | Seven hundred and fifty pesetas | Ahdul Kadir, $nd many other Is. RHEUMATIC TWINGE (about $100 at the present rate of | lamic leaders, | : ™ Pa | exchange) is about.the maximum fig- | : Sy Se 8 Bn | Wh Thi Hasty tess of "12 | ure ever paid and this only in' the | ERECT BRONZE GATE R s case of a very young and handsome a Sloan's Liniment. 1. Should the i Sindisel AT VERDUN FRANOE | \R/ FIAT Sour doe, dos tn rk, Shout the human merhanaie u --- penetrate: vithout | ? 2 y . pu Hy re i thout | price paid is round about 400 pesetas, | At the Entrance to the Mis- and promptly relieves most kinds of | never more. toric Trench of External Sid non akin staining. Kes All purchases are made condition- Bayonets. it'handy for sciatfea, lumbago, ney- | ally on the slaves proving satisfac- : ralgia, over-exerted muscles, stiff | tory. A close examination is made| Verdum, April 19,--~An impressive joints, saskighe, pains, bruises. | of the slave's mouth to see whether | bronze gate will soon be added to| Teory ™ Sprains, bad weather after! | ne or she possesses a vompiate set | the. Rand memorial monument over For 39 years Sloan's Liniment has | Of teeth. Proofs are required that | the famous "Trench of Bayonets" at helped thousands the world over. | the slave is neither weak-sighted nor | Verdun. The gate has been designed Jon sient kets do Je an exception. | deat and dumb, while limbs are test- by Andre Ventre, the Pails archi- All Drags J le. ed and muscles tried .and every part | tect, and now 1s on' exhibition in | ) : Bf : [ot the body subjected to minute in-| Paris. Like the memorial itself, the spection in order to discover physical | gate is the gift of the late George F defects. | Rand, Buffalo, N. Y. For women slaves three days'! The gate will be erected at the trial of their domestic aptitudes is | entrance of the historic trench about | demanded before the purchase is| 50 feet from the 'memorial which | completed. | covers the bodies of the French Such are the conditions pt the | soldiers, who were killed in the | slave trade in Morocco at the present | trench leaving their bayonets expos- | day, and this is the fate from which i ed above the ground. The gate 18 of | Francisco Sallud escaped. probably | thick bronze, about twelve by eight | by the payment of part of the ran- | feet. + som demanded, although exact infor- A massive sword entwitied with | mation as to the transaction is un-| bronze leaves extends from the top | available to the bottom of the door, | ------ Ohi dg i Battery Inspection Week - Free examination and unbiased advice at Phrest Ofte S | | | "a Re M ae Ras da as | | TO LIVERPOOL AND GLASGOW From Portland From Halifax Saturnia--Apr. 20 SUMMER SAILINGS MONTREAL--GLASGOW May 6|June 11/July 16 ...Cassandra| | May 27|July 2jAug. 6 ..... .Saturnia HALIFAX TO Ply, Cherbourg & Hamburg T8S Saxonia 28 N. Y{ GLASGOW, (vin Moville) ®Apr. 23|May 21/June 18 ......Columbia May 14'June 2 .Algeria June 1lJuly 2 30 Camerpnia NEW ¥Y LIVERPOOL, svese.. Vauban ..Caronia Apr. . Apr. 30[June {July 2 May 14 .... May 17|June 1 1 June 7(July :Albania 1 Sept. 3/0ct ...8cythia Heaton te Liverpool & Glasgow Agr. 28 . Massifia ay 14{July 9 \'N, ¥Y eee a*Castalia be Yo ( nrg, Shmpton Apr. 28/June 2/June 30 .Herengaria May S(May 24/June 15 vas May 12|June Si July 14 CHR: ervice Stations ..Carmania ...Aquitania | Mude in Canada. N.Y. PLY, .... Mauretania HAMBURG Apr. 28|June 2(July 14 ++... .Saxonia Vige, Gibraftar, Patras, Dubrovaik, Trieste a Finme May 17 .... June 4 . . | * From New Yo ! (0) calls at Corunna instead of Vigo. | For retes of passage, freight and further Particulars ap, 10 onal aa fur THEROBERT REFORD CO.,Lmiten GENERAL AGENTS #0 KING STREET EAST TORONTO, ONT. | The Telgmann School of usic {| Plano, vielin and other stringed ] instruments; elocution and dra- LTT Ki INTE matic art. Pupils may begin at | any date. Terms on application. Fr A J Engagements: for concerts ac. LTTE depiod To Develop Electricity. WILL BE AMONG RELICS. | s Paris, / April 19.--Plans now in| -- Make Reservations Now TO course of preparation by the French | The Hat That Napoleon Were at Eovernment contemplate the develop- : Waterloo Battle. EUROPE ment of a yearly average of 4,000,-| Paris, April 19.--The hat that Na- . 000 horse-power by 1934 through the | Poleon wore at the battle of Water- SHORT OCEAN TRIP Twe delighttal days on utilization of the rivers of the coun-|100 will be among the relics of the ST. LAWRENCE RIVER try for the manufacture of eleetri- | Breat Corsican to be displayed at the MONTRELY. AND au EBE( city. | Are de Triomphe on May-§th, when 3 oA) BE } ; n : The creation of energy for the the 100th anniversary of the Em- LIVERPOOL, GLASGOW, » ; SOUTHAMPTON electrification of the raliways and the | peror's death at St. Helena, will be Be a .. big industries of France, has recdiv- | celebrated. 3 standard, ed tremendous impetus since the| In the rout that followed the NONE BETTER armistice. Reports just completed | crushing of the Guard, Napoleon ete ee Sailings every few days | ADPIY to agents « verywhere, or 1 King Street Hast, TORONTO Rive around to the rrest-u-c... "mice Station this week and let experts give your battery the once-over. Get ready for the motoring season just ahead. No matter what make your battery is, the service station's job is to examine it and advise you intelligently and honestly. Maybe it doesn't need so much as a drink of distilled water. Anyhow, it won't cost you a nickel tp find out. And now's the time to do that. Some little five-minute ad- justiment NOW may 8ave-you the price of a new battery ater. You are careful to see that your car has gas, oil and water. Don't overlook that equally important element --battery-juice. Every Prest-O-Lite Service Station is a life-extension dispensary for batteries. noL0s LICTIONS, FOR STIFF MUSCLES, SPRAINS AND STRAINS AND NUMEROUS OTHER DE THOMAS® inHERE > show that within the last three years | ame very near being captured by. 450,000,000 franes have been invest-| Blucker's uhlans, leaving the farm ed in ten power plants throughout | at Hougenont a few minutes before France by French investors. {the uhlans arrived. Fleeing through | the night in & downpour of rain, Na- -- A Storage Bat Uses less than one four-hundredth of its power-reserve for a singlé start--and the generator quickly replaces that. Warning! Take no chances with Substitutes for genuine "Bayer Tab- lets of Aspirin." Unless you see the fame "Bayer" on or on tab- ' CANADIAN iri ory AY od i - {Portland, Ore., is preparing to hold | PoJeon's hat suffered greatly and : When you do need a new battery, you'll be glad to - -- \ 7 May. : to his hatters at the Palais Royal to ASPIRIN -- have it repaired. 'that examination now, . : 5 Ai oy : | the hat was repaired and ft remain. BLUE GARAGES, LIMITED : wr 1 'Bayer only is Genuine |ed wita the hatters, who presented it ) BRANDON, Offer : J )tering American Coal, REGINA, SASKATOON, being oftéred for industrial plants in VANCOUVER, VICTORIA that section at a price twenty marks ------------------ THE " NATIONAL" be suffering from a coal shortage, * on package Owing to the efiormous monthly de. -------- lets. you are mot rin at : via Parry Sound and Sudbery Bayer Dackese aro Leave Toronto 8.45 p.m. Dally except Suaday gia, Rheumatism, e, Tooth- | is gradually developing into a prom- ache, Lumbago and for Pain. Handy | ising market for American coal in RAFFIC AGENT L | v hen Ek J) . . {2 two-day motorcycle racing meet on | en Be reached Paris on the morn- | know that Prest-O-Lite is back to pre-war prices and Livents urecipitated with such ra. . v yO = ge' To to the Museum at Sens, where it still Cor Queen & Bagot Sts. Berlin, April 19.-----a report from per ton below the present German LEAVES TORONTO 11.00 P.M. DAILY By liveries to the Btente. -------------------- - STANDARD TRANS-CONTINERTAL TRAIN EQUIPMENT | ta Of twelve tablets cost few | yigw of the prevalent aversion to pur- AeA nnn CCU ------ = ~~ | the Rose City speedway at the ond of | ing of the 2iith Tyne he sent tite hat : that an allowance wil] be made on your old battery. Get | pidity that Napoleon {eft Paris before z WINNIPEG, | : i= Liban WCALGARY, EDMONTON, PRINGE RUPERT, ee castes that American coal is figure. German industry is said to vie 0.7, T.84 N.0. and C.M.Rys. er def 0S or Colds, Headae) a The dispatch adds that Germany matism Tiekets aad ful lon nearest Canadian Nitiens! or Bread Frond Boma He ey chasing the English product' es istics z Ad Santal, the old-time wrestler, is making an exhibition tour of Japan. ~ da), of Bayer Manufactore of Mono- | acetic-acidester of Salicylicactd.

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