Daily British Whig (1850), 28 Nov 1922, p. 4

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4 THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1927 The Telgman. School of | . Music Plano, violin and other stringed in- Struments. Alida V. Tel, mann, BE, teacher of Elocution and Delsarte sys- tem of Physical Culture. Puplls may begin at any date Terms on appiica- 484 BROCK ST. Phone 2217). DR. H. A. STEWART Dental Surgeon Wishes to announce that he has resumed his practice, cor. Wel- lington and Princess Streets. Phone 2092. ~ Dr. H. A. Stewart Corner Princess and Welllugton EVERSHARP PENCILS REPAIRED We are equipped to make any ronairs to above pencils. We carry a supply of parts. Prompt service. J. R. C. Dobbs & Co. 41 Clarence Street, Kingston, FOR GOOD BREAD TRY BURNS' HOME-MADE BREAD BUTTERNUT BREAD MALTANA BREAD W. BURNS, 61 Frontenac 8t., North Phone 1826w. Save Your Coal CHOICE HARDWOOD Cut 12" long and split ready for ranges $4.50 per load 168" long for Furnaces $4.25 per load Contains Soothing Balsams and Astringent Principles that allay in tion. Its efficiency prov by over 30 years' use. Wonderfully Jicasnt-- equally effective or Young and old. Try it yourself, then give it to children. - Removal-Notice W. H. FRANCIS, PAINTER Has moved to 438 DIVISION ST. Drop a card or phone 1886J and you wilk receive prompt attention. Workmanship guaranteed and prices right. NEN NN, A cy FIFTY DAYS SPECIAL SALE Furniture, Crockery, Stiverware, Glassware, Good assortment of Christmas novelties. N. A. JOHNSON, SEELEY'S BAY, Undertaking a specialty, Motor Hearse. SULPHUR SOOTHES UGLY, ITCHING SKIN The First Application Makes Skin Cool and Comfortable. -- If you are suffering from eczema or some other torturing, embarrass- ing skin trouble you may quickly be rid of it by using Mentho-Sulphur, declares a noted skin specialist. This sulphur preparation, because of its germ destroying properties, seldom fails to quickly subdue itch- | ing, even of flery eczenfa. The first { application makes the skin cool and comfortable. Rash and blotches are healed right up. Rowles Mentho-Sul- Brussels. AIRWAYS IN EUROPE. Commercial air ror..es in Europe are already well devel- oped, as the map shows. There are five air routes between London and Paris, three of which are British-owned. there is another British line from London to and Cologne, via phur is applied like any pleasant cold cream and ty 'perfectly harmless. You can obtain a small jar from any good | druggist. ] | | | POR SCALDS, CUTS AND BRU FOR COLDS. COUGHS AND Shon CHIAL AFFLICTIONS. FOR sTIFF MUSCLES. SPRAINS AND STRAINS AND NUMEROUS OTHER AILMENTS COMMON TO MAN AND BEAST, THERE 18 NOTHING SUPERIOR TO THAT OLD TRIED AND RELIABLE DB THOMAS® CLECTRIC Ol W. A. Mitchell & Co. 15 Ontario Stree Telephone 67. Why Fear "Xe Child Birth ¥ 5. J. B. Bye Medical Institute. Bo: 329 $4 Mary's, Oat. --_---------- -- Phone 2373m and have the following goods de- livered to your door:-- ~ 3 kimo Ples, DESECRATING HISTORIC GROUND. The steam shovel at work at { Burlington Heights, near Hamilton, which roused the indig- | nation of the Wentworth Historical Society. {mining the cemetery in which lie {unknown American soldiers who fought in the war of 1812. The.excavating has been stopped. - the gravel and sand pit at It was under- buried British soldiers and Cream, Es es, Confections, Tobac- cos, Patent Medicines, Magazines, Papers. Specials for 11 quart bagke! Nice, juicy Oranges..3 dos. 90c. Snow Apples, No. 1, ....e0¢ amd 70c. a peek Golden Russets, N Mixed Nuts «+. 30e. Ib, Walnut Meats ..vveevees.00e Ib. J. H. JARVIS Cor. Princess and Albert Streets. Phone 2373m. OPEN NIGHTS. J wen all JEAN EASTON WINS THE OARTER SCHOLARSHIP Also Low Medal For Highest Standing Made by- Local Student For Year. Renfrew Mercury. Renfrew Collegiate has scored an- other triumph in the departmental examinations, three of the students from here 'carrying off all three of tbe scholarships that were arranged for by the will of the late J. I. Carter, Sarnia. The winners are Jean Easton, Graee Anderson and Fred Wade. The value of the scholar- ships, three of which are given each Year to the student making the highest marks on the Upper school . examination, is $100, $60 ana paid in cash, regardiess the winner attends Qu. In 1914 Renfrew Collegiate also three of these scholarships for that year. Harold Cave, of Doug- 1as, a student here, won the first acholarship last year. - Jean Easton is du; the re- cord made by her elder sister, Kathe leon, who is now | {Tho iatter won a NO TIME FOR PEACE. Europe: "Go away, don't you see I'm getting busy? --Bystander, London a In closed season. Lawrence had in bis possession at the time of arrest, two beaver skins and a quantity of venison. He was fined $100 and costs by Magistrate Jarman, Ban- croft. Hig rifles and traps were con- fiscated. You may long for an automobile and the cripple may long for your private conveyance, your legs. Had Bad Pains In Her Heart Nerves Were Very Bad two different doctors, did not find much relief. I would have such bad pains in my heart, at times: I would be almost afraid to move or breathe, and at night I could not sleep. If the pains in my heart Were gone, my nerves would be so bad I could not lie still and would only get a little sleep by being tired My stomach was also very bad and 1 could eat but very little, and then only certain things or I would | distress which always | the above story in his "Irish and COULDN'S SPEAK TRUTH. | Some Anecdotes That Were Collected In Ireland. At a place called Banagher, in County Galway, Ireland, there is an €xpanse of sand to which peculiar properties are attributed by the Peasantry. For instance, it is believed that if even a tiny quantity be thrown at a horse when it is running in a race, that horse must fail to win; if thrown at a person, he or she for the time being becomes a liar, totally unable to speak the truth. At a recent trial in Derry a witness, when found to be lying, excused him- self with the following remark: "I cannot tell the truth; a man who is present threw the) Banagher sand over me.' The Duke de Stacpoole, who relates Other Memories," tells us also that amongst the Galway people fairies are still very real--beings that dwell in raths, and march in miniature armies amid the whirls of dust and scattering leaves under which they take refuge. Many of the people will confess to having seen these little creatures in green cloaks and scarlet caps, and no Galway housewife would think of leaving the hearth unswept when she "rakes" the turf fire at night, be- cause the fairies must find every- thing neat and tidy for their revels, should they honor her by a visit while she sleeps. The author tells a story of a cer- tain priest who was decrying the na~ tional failing from the pulpit. "Drink," said the preacher, * greatest curse to our country, It a ums to commit every sin, What makes you fire at your land- lord? Drink? And what makes you miss him so often? Drink!" It was probably, too, overmuch whisky that led to a certain "wild Irishman," a friend of the writer's, | creating a scene at his London club | because at an unearthly hour of the | morning there was no food available | for his consumption. { "Confound it," he said at last, "I | Saw a parrot in the hall, I'll eat | him." | In vain the waiter suggested re- | spectfully that the parrot would be | tough. The hungry man was not to | be gainsaid, and offered £5 for the | bird, doubling his offer on refusal; | only to ind when the wretched crea- | ture was at last killed, cooked, and ' served up to table, that it Was, as the waiter had predicted, unfit to eat. | The Duke de Stacpoole was well | acquainted with Lord Clanricarde, ! who died at an advanced age a few years ago leaving his Immense wealth And vast estates to his relative, Lord Lascelles, the husband of Princess | Mary. Lord Clanricarde was a well-known figure at the Travelers' and St. James' Clubs in London. He al- ways wore an ancient frockcoat, morning, noon and night, and an extraordinary "top" hat, which suf- fered from repeated oiling and ironing. He invariauly smoked a pipe, and, | deeming himself a poor man on the trifling income of about £80,000 a Year, could often be seen in the elub | smoking-room eating a frugal lunch Which he had brought with nim in| his pocket wrapped in a plece of an | old newspaper. Clanricarde's' father, the previous marquis, who died in 1874, was a man of a very differént stamp. He | made it a rule to allow any young | man who came to London from County Galway the use of a horse to ride in the park; but when the | author once ventured to remind his | Bon of these hospitable acts, the only | answer vouchsafed was, "What a fool!" ---- A Dickens Shrine. The Dickens Fellowship, of which Bir Frederick Macmillan was recent- ly elected president for the ensuing Year, has now added to its good work of helping to keep the great novel- ist's "memory green" the freehold of No. 48 Doughty street,. Micklenburg Square, with a view to preserving it as a Dickens shrime in London. Dickens' tenancy of the house in question dated from March, 1837, until the end of 1839. It is the only ome of his many Lon- don residences which still remain structurally intact and unchanged in every way. There it was that the greater . part of "Pickwick" and "Nicholas Nickleby" and the whole of "Oliver Twist" were written. Mr. B. W. Matz, the founder of the fel- lowship, has now in his possession the original letter foviting Samuel Lover, teh author of 'Handy Andy," to celebrate the publication of "Plck- wick." Written from Doughty street, it runs: "Talfourd, Macready, and one or two more will be there." After an apology for the short notice given, the letter ends: "Write me a line off-hand like a decent Irishman (it there be such a thing, and say you'll come." Here it was also that the novelist's daughters Mary and Kate were born, and the greatest grief of | his life:befell him in the death of Bis _beautiful young sister-in-law, No. 48 probably largely: occasioned Dickens' decision to leave it ----_---- gE g § gt ES i iH if fi --------a---- A RT S 21d BURN - am-Buk - | a cut, burn or scald with Zam-Buk and fiery smarting pain is stopped, inflammation disappears. Where skin is bls. tered or broken. the Zam-Buk dress. ing acts as a perfect antiseptic shield over the flesh. It prevents disease infection or any tendency to fester or become " mattery." Zam-Buk owes this marvellous heal. ing and disease-dispelling power to its refined herbalcharacter--its com- plete freedom from the crude drugs and animal fats found in ordinary ointments. You will find Zam-Buk equally valuable for healing sore cracked hands, frost-bite and chil- blains, and in winter eczema, ulcers, scalp disease, piles, pfisoned wounds, abscesses, and obstinate sores. Consider how often you've wanted just such a safe, ever-ready skin remedy as Zam-Buk Then get a box to-day and keep it always handy, 50 cents. all dealers. 3 for $1.25. FREE! To test this great healer send lc. stamp te Zam-Buk Co., Teronto, Sampie box mailed by return. Lo" \ Lg DURING GOOD The Dominion Life Assurance Co. Kingston, Ont. HEALTH is the time to obtain a policy. Insure to-day in To-morrow it may be too late. ARCH. THOMSON, BRANCH MANAGER. 4 Office: 56 Brock St. Phone 68. with Real Good Soap eee A Big Bar of Good Soap--Bright, solid soap fine lathering and cleansing qualities for the family wash and household use. For use in washing machines shave or slice @ portion of the " SURPRISE" bar direct to the machine--It will do fine work. 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