Daily British Whig (1850), 6 Nov 1916, p. 3

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PREPARATIONS HAVE BEEN There is Bacon and ~ Bacon There ix just ax much differ. ence In Bacon ax there is in uny- thing else. i enre my Hacon en my Premises. | jook after ever | dress in Griffin's theatre Inkl wntil it is put on the €e ¥ \ ternoon to.a fair-sizéd audience, said i Fternal Damnation is Condemned, own ter far sale. N with & ro ira The result is a hacon the autos of to-day indi- | cation of the mellow flavor and good (6 eat. Fresh out of the Smoke House any . | Christ's kingdom upon earth, # ~ | answered one of the signs given by A. H d [the prophet Nahum that wouldher- . Hood, Cor. Earl and Barrie Streets. Phone 407. were an They | prophet cried: | rage in the streets, one against another | ways: they shall seem like torches, they shall run like lightning." The | speaker said he thought that that Was a true description of the autos. { Pastor Graham, who is a mem- { ber of the International Bible Stu- Still a few of ourfine line of { Jeet, "Christ's Kingdom." { ed from the word of God to show that {God intended to restore to men His | kingdom, which had been lost Preparing For Kingdom, During the past 100 or 115 years | God bad been preparing for the set- ting up of his kingdom. Ever since 1799 when Napoleon crushed the temporal power of the Pope, there bad been a mighty change in the | world for the hetter., There had heen | many material, mental, and spiritual] blessings. | In the material realm there were the inventions of steam, which made 'fast travel by water and land pos-| sible, and of the telegraph and the | telephone, which had gathered all na- tions of the world together. Peo ple were living better than they did L. 1. Best They were eating fruits and vege- The Popular Drug St tables from the 'troples. The sea- | e. sons had heen obliterated altogether. | The families of men who were earn-| ing not more than $15 a week were living in more comfort than Kings | | through the action of father Adam. A . | {ambitious and original, . [the good luck to attract the attention | to be sold at reduced prices. We invite the ladies' inspection of these bags. Autos Are One of Signs--Doctrine of | Rev. Pastor A. M. Graham, 1.B.S.A,| Brooklyn, N.Y., who delivered an ad-| Sunday af-| neay {Admiralty is Lord Lytton, who takes ushering in of} jmost magnificent of ancient {ald the coming of the kingdom. The "The chariots shall | they shall jostle! in the broad! {duty of making a rich marriage to fortunes. | dents' Association, spoke on the sub- During two be married the penniless | the opening of his discourse he quot-| | good enough for any society. and princes did in 1799. And what had happened in respect to material blessings was just a drop in the bue- ket ~ Other Blessings. 3 08 J Fase one thousand years, and doring mankind = to determine who were] pga | worthy of life everlasting. 'William Dinsdale presided. and in- GOING ON FOR HUNDRED YEARS] troduced the spéaker, ! NEW LORD OF ADMIRALTY. Civil Representative on Popular With the Public. The new Civil Lord of the British tke place of the Duke of Devonshire, nominated Govérnor-General of Can- ada in succession to the Duke of Connaught. Inheriting Knebworth, one of the English and small revenues with pay its up-keep, Lord Lyt- the second earl when he according to the clear estates, whieh to ten became was (ifteen and had, his.family and friends, rebabilitate the family With the features of a young Greek god and the romantic tempermsment of a poet, he was one of the best matches in the English matrimonial market when at the age of twenty- Miss Pamela Plowden, seven years older than himself, (he daughter of a small official in India. A Miss Plowden came of good fam- ily, she was pretty and charming, and she had of the then Marchioness of Granby, now the Duchess of Rutland, a wo- mae of many accomplishments and sweel disposition, who then, as now, held the democratic idea that = beautiful and talented woman was Lady Granby Was a member of the "Souls," that little coterie to which belonged Miss Margot Tennant, pow Mrs, Asquith, and Arthur Balfour and Lord Curzon, and in Lady Granby's drawing-room in Arlington street Miss Plowden was introduced into the charmed circle. Lord and Lady Lytton speut their honeymoon at' Knebworth, it being loaned to them by Ford and Laay Strathcona, who had it on a long lease, the Lytton family not having the money to live in it themselves. In its general exterior it is to-day much the same us it was left by Lord Lytton's grandfather, Edward Lytton Bulwer, the poet and novelistje who Inherited It from his mother gnd took her name as Baron Lytton in 1866, when he was elevated to the peerage for distinguished services to the State. ! POULTNEY BIGELOW DESCRIBES TWO INSTANCES OF NAVAL HELP | Admiral Supplied Coal--Demands "| That - Washington Clear Up "Am. Board { biguous Affair" Outside Newport. New York, Nov. .6.--Poultney Bigelow, in a letter addressed to the editor of The New York Times, | writes as follows: fn "It cannot be true that American naval officers assisted Prussian sub- | marines 'in their dirty work outside jot Newport. No doubt Washington will soon clear up this ambiguous affair. Meanwhile, pray permit me {to add my mite of testimony regard- jing the attitude of Great Britain Lt { 1898, when Imperial Germany sided with Spain and sought to bully our {gallant Dewey at Manila " "The tale of how the British Cap- | tain Chichester stood up with our admiral against the German Admir- {al has been told before, and finally {by Admiral Dewey nimself. This | story I checked step by step in Man- |ila by conversation, not merely with jour own admiral and his British colleague, but by other participants lin that memorable fight. Moreover, {the iritish authorities in Hong Kong, although legally neutral in- {terpreted. their duties in the manner | most favorable to the American | ships, and Dewey found no difficulty {in fitting out to the best advantage prior to steaming acrose to the en- emy in the Philippines. And as the | Yankee fleet steamed past that of | England in Hong Kong, the British | bluejackets manned the rigging and | cheered us heartily--a most unneu- | | | tral and yet most generous act, Incident in Chefoo. "After the war I. found. niyself in Chefoo, waiting an answer from the { Russian commander at Port Arc thur, to whem I had applied for permission to cross Siberia. 'The palace revolution was tn full swing at Pekin, and the fleets of the great powers™controlled every bucket of coal in the treaty ports. "Then it was that our consul, Fow- ler, ran up and down the streets of | Chefoo, wringing his hands and beg- | ging for a few tons of coal--but not [a lump could he buy. He showed {me the cable in which he was or- [dered to coal his: cruiser, expected {every moment on a hurry call to | protect American lives and property {in Tien Tsin. He told me he could} Probe: Tuesday, generally fair, rising temperature. 5 Th Sie of Thy Exclusive Suits at 1alf Price This small group of suits is the very finest that have been in one dept. this season. Each one is a masterpiece and in materials is of the - most exquisite beauty. All of these garments are of our latest purchasing, but must be sac- rificed before the season is further advanced. Formerly priced from $18.50 to $45.00; - now $9.25 to $22.50. : Variety in Late Style Hats The millinery dept. is showing a great many novelties, all exceptionally smart, indi- vidual and becoming. ' o/ SPECIALLY PRICED FROM 98. to $8.50. ----. 2000080080, 0 > S NN A i rns STEACY' ~The Weman's Store of Kingston. there wera other kinds of| The estate has been in the Lytton blessings. There were the open Bible | family since the {ime of William _ the and free schools. The result of this|Conqueror. Edward Lytton Bulwer"s was the freeing of man from the dog-|mother, a Miss Lytton, an old lady plenty of coal.' | mas sown in the Dark Ages---|48 eccentric as she was wealthy, " 'True,' said Consul Fowler, "LOOK AT CHILD'S 'Our consul, you see, was andther| TONGUE IF SICK not do anything--money could not [buy an ounce of coal. 'Nonsense,' said 1, 'the British admiral has But 1] WHEN YO ANNOT Si x : dogmas that the Bible did not teach.|Dulled down three-fourths of Kneb. | what of that?* One of these dogmas taught eternal {WOrth, saying that she couldn't { damnation. People revolted at that [afford to pay for Such a large estab- (or that strange species who think doctrine. They couldn't damn any- lishment. What is left of it is suf- | that good things can be bought by | pody eternally, and they didn't think [d¢ietly" commodious to house 8 | money only. Then 1 told. him to] they were any better than God. The|To¥al family. | state his case to Admiral Sevmour épeaker told of a man who was fined | After Lord Strathcona gave it up, at Wei Hai Wel, forty miles to the] $15 for cruelty to animals because|KBebWorth was leased 'at different [eastward. He smiled suspiciously; | [he set fi to a few rats he had lies to visiting royalty and A8PIr- | byt finally yielded and to ether we| I = | caught in i as b ing Americans. Mr. Ogden Mills of red (hd cable to heh in an! "When Constipated or Bilious Give {| "That man," he continued, "was "California Syrup of | New York rented it in 1909 as a {hour came the j to f0er- J a oyful news: 'Cer | fined for having a little hell in his Hume residence for his daughter, | tainly, help yourseif--as much as, Pigs. | backyard, and people who condemned |" Cauntess of Granard. Three | voy wish" or 'words to that effect. | en , | this cruel man's conduet could think Ars 2fs the Slane. Dute Michus [1 wonder it Ehgland has ever been| Look at the tongue, mother! If | with approval of God as, putting not the Car of Ras a: i o paid for that eeal, for I'm sure that| coated, it is a Syte sign that your ne | re ] no bill would ever be sent hy John|tle one's stomach, liver and bowels | Coase Jaman heings n heii aie worth from Lord Lytton as the home Bull" | need a gentle, thorough cleansing at ronnie tie ternity + © TO" [of his morganatic wife and children : | minutes, but for all eternity. when he was exiled from Russia at | TRE | once, | The quicker that men realized that the time of his marriage. "ais LATE. MRS. J. G. CAMPBELL | When peevish, cross, listless, pale, | God was love the better it would be was sald to be $22,000 a year for Was Ono of the Prater in Lanark | o | doesn't sleep, doesn't eat or act natu- Our work for them. three years. But as soon as war | rally, or is feverish, stomach sour, t ; - B, guaranteed = i broke out the Grand Duke Michael preath bad; has stomach-ache, sore Great Changes Coming. Was permitted to return to his na- | perth Courier. | throat, diarrhoea, full of cold, give Great changes would precede theltive country and take his family KEELEY Jr, M. 0. D. 0 - PRICES ARE HIGH ON CERTAIN FOODSTUFFS. ; In fresh and cured meats, we aim to Procure, and always hate, useful cuts: also nicely prepared meats, at reasonable Fresh Pork Liver :. .. 10¢ Ib. Kidneys . . 14¢ Ib. Hearts .. 121c 1b. © Side Ribs 16¢ Ib. 500 lbs. Green Windsor Bacon The County. Just one year and three optha a teaspoonful of "California Syrup - after the death of John G. Campbell, |of Pigs," and in a few hours all the Grea roubles. Wn hare vers mdr | Eady pion have he 50" | hs wine Bie Hoon Tosh ea om ay £0 Jour ai th cations that these. troubles were near | worth themselves, about "the oe | doch Campbell, followed her husband food and sour bile gently moves out | OPTOMETRIOY AND: OPPICIAN, Sations | At esl the blessings were [period since. thet marriage ny { to the haven of rest, at the advanced fot its little bowels, without griping, 328 Princess Street. controlled by a few who made many (they have lived there for any length age of eighty-five years and eleven and you have a well, playful child pay for them. Some one turned a|of time months. Her death occured on Oct. again. screw and.ip went the price of sugar] ° , --------i nt 21st. You needn't coax sick children to and meat. The great masses of the Cookery Curiosities. | Mrs, Canmipbel) came of a once well | take this harmless "fruit laxative"; p a b r love its delicious taste, and it al- people were wakening up, and were known and prominent family in the | they H saying that the men who had con- ws, English ry au Lanark settlement. Her father, the | ways makes them feel splendid. trolled these blessings. had had them late John A. Murdoch, born in Aber-| Ask your druggist for a 50-cent long enough. They contended that deen, and her mother Jean Hall, | bottle of 'California Syrup of Figs" [HH the government ought to own the from Clarkmannan, were among"the | which has directions for babies, child- telephones, the telegraph and the t pioneer settlers from Scotland, who,|ren of all ages and for grown-ups raflways and the steamboat lines. ends at when the ship Commerce brought so! plainly on the bottle. Beware of Clashes were bound to come hetween many in the memorable pioneer year, | counterfeits sold here. To he sure you the classes and the masses, 1820, from the old land to Lanark get the genuie, ask to see that it is ---- village and township, had to bear pany." Refuse any other kind with] the hardships of such conditions #s|made by "California Fig Syrup Com- the unbroken wilderness brought to|contempt. their lot, A A A tA Mt tm Pt sri i 'Her parents were married in Lan-| isti ark village shortly after the arrival Jaen the pristine glory had depart ed from this once busy hamlet, to re- of the settlers. Then, or soon after, | 3 h | eall their happy life in this romantic er father became the first Pustinas. corner of the world, where the flow sri anatk, and while yet in Youth | op pq failing waters of the sis and vigor the newly married couple, sippi over the Playfair dam and down went to live on a farm at Playtair-| po rapids was music to their ears. ville, Wiiith ue had 'bought, and Long ago, when education became Where both died. more of a factor in our public ad- Their family of tén children were! ministration, Mr. Muroch was ap born or brought up on this farm and : i pointed the first Public School In- it was their delight in after years, spector of this district, and being a AGED WOMAN graduate of Aberdeen University, was well qualified for the position. He Was succeeded in this office by the Run Down and ¥eehle =~ Made Strong by Vinol. late H. L. Slack, On June 16, 1852, deceased was So-miatly people In Kingston -and | married to the late John Gray Camp- vicinity are in Mrs. Wickersham's! bell by the late Rev. Thomas Fraser, condition we ask you to call at our, Preshyterian minister of Lanark, and Store and get a bottle of Vinol, and if | about 1870 they became permanent D.. aged 17 years, § > It fails to benefit we will return your residents of Perth. Her mother be- the. beloved daughter of Mr. ai you will find that pimples and boils|the common cause of our Es oney. longed to the Hall family of Lanark, anes larry E. Fralick, late of Nap- will break out all over the body, and | variably do their duty 18 a way that |> In her -eighty-second year Mrs, | many of whom moved to other towns GOODWN-iin Picton, Oct. 25th. Min. although they are not a dangerous | reflects the | possible credit jJohh Wickersham, of Russelville, Pu.,| about: Perth, Brockville and Peter- tha Goodwin. , trouble, they make you appear un-|08 themselves nh." isays: , boro, where they became prominent | HERRINGTON-{n San Francisco, Oet, Cars for Hire, - sightly both to your. friends and % 3 "I was in a run-down, feeble con- citizens, Surviving are a family of th core Heashington, son of Oils and on yourself. A An dition and had lost flesh. A meigh-{ four daughters and three sons: John 00, ae oF yo ngton, Welling. an oline, ad Gronses Always Burdock Blood Bitters will clea An English M., of Kingsten; Bower, of Edmon- TRVINB-IAt Deseranto, om Oct. 28th.| | We Store Furniture the blood of all the impurities ahd warned to ton; and Lorne, ex-Minister of Mines Mary E. Irvine, wife of Robert N.| poisons which cause the skin to break [any contvivances ¢ for British Columbia; Mrs, Mac-| ine. out in these eruptions. might es Lhe het abs Gillivray, of Kingston; Mrs, A. B. 100EY in Piéton, on Oct 28th, James Theodore, [ing S$ | 1 8 doers above the Opera House. Wo Doves FURLIONG-4At Fnterprise, on Oet. 23nd, | "Ry 2. to Mr. and Mrs. James | irlong, a cLaughlin Garage daughter. and Automobile Own. RELLIAR-A« Napanee, on Oct. 30th, to | Mr. and Mrs. James Kellar, a son Farmers ere, attention please! We han. 415 the best to one's ristmas was made like Take a turkey and bone it: take a goose and bone ft, and so on with =» chicken, a pheasant, a par- tridge, a pigeon, and a lark; then put the lark in the pigeon, the pigeon in the partridge, the partridge in the pheasant, the pheasant in the chick. dom just beyond this line of trouble len, the chicken in the goose, and the what was it going to mean? It goose in the turkey. The turkey would mean that God was going to|ghould then be placed in a dish with give the world back to mankind. |y couple of hares to 'fill up the crev- There would be no mortgages and no ices, and six pounds of fresh butter, rents. Every man would dwell un- covered and cooked. The recipe der his own vine and fig tree. Equity said this was 'an agreeable pie to and justice would everywhere pre-|sat cold vail. There would be no more sor- row or sickness or dying. Fellow- ship with God would be restored to mankind, the earth would be just what father Adam had lost. This millenium kingdom would The Kingdom of God. When God established His king- MALLETT In Picton. on Oot 29th, to] Mr. and Mes. Frank Mallett, a son { SAMPSON--4At Napanee, on Oct 29th, | o to Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Sampson, af daughter, i WILSON--AL Napanee, on Oot. 24th, to | Mr. and Mrs, Fred Wilson, a son. | MARRIED, ! LANDRY -BIGOS--At Napanee, Nov. 1, Mary Biggs, to Sergt. Joseph Lan- ry. : mm, YOUR DREAMS Of Apparel Correct in Style, Exclusive in Fabric Perfect in fit and tailor- ing, such as is possible when only done by mas- ter craftsmen, will come true in "Fashion Craft Clothes" 'We want you to see for youl he Repatring prom ate Storage by the day, Robt. J. Fursey, No. § Phones i. 1000-031, Downeys Garage Letter From Haig. General Sir Sam Hughes, Canadian Minister of Militia, has received a letter from Sir Douglas Haig, of which the following is an extract: I 0 'express my sincere uppre- t r PIMPLES AND BOILS [sti st" fustrte™ tera." is ALL OVER FACE etn oF" Sry Siac" AND BOD youres fication to you to know that the gal- lant officers and men who eome from When the blood becomes impure|Canada to fight for the DIED. BOWRRMAN---In Hil Tdward Bowerman. FRALICK--At Calgary, on Oct. Alleda r, on Oct. 29th, reason men | Miss Sylvia Swanson, Rudd and Mrs. W. T. Walker, Perth, ¥, aged 26 yoars. J al Sask., writes: "I am letting you know | wards on wearing them; why what great value your DBD. laa - old : r arted to en a2 : and the pastor conducted the es ey than satis- i p > are more grow pale and weak, the cause being |sense of an Se ae 4 a Tae believe ui Jovan Seti i, BIS GRAIL I fr eed SE Ke to wear : ave heen | ened run-down system ang = a 3: Pink. W. 5. Hart, James Allan 'and PRESTON At Point Traverse, on Oct. 22nd, Annie M., wife of Henry Pres. ton, in her 86th year. Z--At Kingston, on Oct. 260 tie Mabel Weiss, beloved wife! of WP. rpe, aged 40 years, i BPRAGUE--On Big Island, Ot 25¢h, "Wealthy Jane, wife of George Sprague, aged 17 years, YOUNG: Pieton, Oct 31st, Young, aged 58 years, and Mrs. James Burns, Galt, ' 1] Mrs. Campbell was a faithful mem- ber of St. Andrew's church, Perth, | ar S oi i a failure. I read about how good your B.B.B. glad beep 10 thoushids of people so a e al I had finished the second one pimples and boils had all disap ed. ' People thought it a miracle how million pe old Foinéa has "Your grand y sure been as good as gold And better, to Me me." ' ' ; Large Lamb Shipment. | il x Almonte, Nov. 6.--Mary's litle | jlambs were much in evidence on | Tuesday, when a drove of over eight d was driven to the stock are all moder- $15 to $25.

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