Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 19 Nov 1910, p. 13

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EE Bdeb bpd FARE IV EPRI w WM, MURHKAY, Auctioneer. -- JUARE frice can. ott dd ee a . { They penetrate every corner of Highest Grades GASOLINE, COAL OF. LUBRICATING OfL. FLOOR OIL. GREASE, ETO, PLOLPT DELIVERY, W. BE K E LLY, and' Ontario Streets. ye's Building, a { and a lasting benefit. | Have white teeth--it pays, Clurenes Yorn Jtreesesesssssseseces Best by - Test ; mah M &, FEEL LAREVLBNERTEROSR: This Is proven in a Wormwith | Piano, ! Try One in Your Home hey are sweet toned igned, FRONTENAC (4)IAN & INVESTMENT ETL RLISHED 1568, "ee asonably priced. LEADING HOURE, KiXGSTOX'S MUSIC perties ires 'scelived Mortgages purchiised. and istorest allowed all in popular and eclagsie % . Tarence Street Rook and Sheet Form CANADA'S BEST 'op the (4 THE £8. Cathars I PIANO "Sora or ty by n J Lion Block. "Phone 7 moth nbout babies Orders promptly tilled. ThE Ri LIMITED, IBEPEBEBBERNTS #82 PRINCESS STREET. vei old peo; WEBER ISERIES BYE | to hove raised all right | rs 8. co The antiseptic power | of Sanitol Tooth Powder and Sanitol Tooth Paste cleans, whiteus and pre- | serves your teeth as no other dents | THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, ---- the 237% SOOTETY. | Fresideni-=Sir Richard Cartwright. Money lssued on City and Farm Fro- Municipal sad County Deben- | Deposits 8 C. Melitl,L, Manugiog Director. 7 Ea LAWLER, Goldes 5 | rs didn'¢ we » who seem £1 HAS ROUSED THE CURIOSITY OF THE WHOLE WEST Do you really think' one housewife will say to another "that this new flour can be better than the flour we are using? "' Madam, there is no doubt about it. 1 But there is just one way you can be convinced. You must use it yourself. Our claims will not satisfy you, but we back up our claims in such # way that you will lose nothing by trying Robin Hood. Your grocer will tell you about our guarantee which gives you y back your money if you are not satisfied. FLOUR MILLS CO. 3 LiWITED MOOSE JAW [VARICOSE VEINS CURED Be" NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. Cdhfined to His Home for Weeks. and avil habits in youth brought on When I worked bard the aching would bécome My pay Phiyicion told me an operation was my only hope-put I dreaded = "Heavy work, severe straint Varicose Veins. savers and I was often laid up for a woek at a Wme. + tried soveral speoialists, but goon found ont all money. 1oommenced to look npon all doctors ag little better mogues One day my boss asked me why I was off work so much | dm condition, Headvised me to consult Dre, Kennedy & cunody, 49 be had take treatment from thom Bimeeif and knew by were square apd skillfal. I wrote" thom and got Tax New eTaop Texarsest, My -Jeogtess was somewhat slow and duripg 3 fivat this t 1 was somewhat raged. However, treatment for three months longer and was rey, with a complete cure. I gould only earn 812 a8 weok in a machine T hop botore treatment, Noss Iam £31 and Dever loose a day. sufferers know of your h HENRY C. LOCUST. YOUR BLOOD BEEN DISEASED? Te sy Tht PE Mercury. I may suppress the symploms--our NEW o OR MIDDLE AGED NEN. --Impradent acts or Inter excesses have broken SR 0 ad Sa Souter Sadi Ave yon & ylotim? Have you lost hope? Are you to marry? Has BEADER ros Wheto atl as To anes a Hd fg Xe mate Re ee raed Fon, Sie {ote oh cP ho FCM EE Cal Cain it anATE, No pues on they wanted was my { mouth, leaving a refreshing coolness | f late lost all my mirth, fore. Custom of exercise Hamlet, Act IL, Se, 2 "All wark and no play makes Jack a dull boy," is a very old adage. Shakespeare was undoubtedly not a dull boy, but the most casual reading of his dramas will show that his boyhood days were not entirely spent in the Stratford grammer school and his father's shop. [lle was a very hu- man boy, familiar with every form of thoyish games and exercises. The writs of Shakespeare" would make Be volume if treated exhaustive ) He has npumérous allusions to bunting, coursing, angling, swimming; to tennis, bowling, wrestling, archery and other manly games and sporte. { His allusions are never fur-fetched nor {incongruous, They fit naturally into ithe warp and wool 'I'he allusions to coursing the hare; to fencing, as in 'Hamlet'; to swimming as in "Julius Ceesar," and the "Tem- pest'; to hunting 'and to hunting vogs, as in_the "Midsummer Night's Dream" and "As You Like It"; to howling, as in "Coriolanus' and "The Taming of the Shrew"--are the al Jusions of a man familiar with the {things referred to. One illustration will be {Howling is one of the most ancient sports, In Elizabeth's day it was al- most the national game of England. Shakespeare frequently uses it to en- force a thought. In "Coriolanus," he sive, "Like to. a bowl upon a subtle I have tumbled past the throw"; in "The Taming of the Shrew" he illustrates a point by saying, "Thus the bowl should run, and not unluck- ily against the bias." Much of the healthy outdoor spirit that pervades Shakespeare's plays is no doubt due to personal familiarity with | manly sports, No mere student or scholar could have written any of his dramas. Games play fees n I sufficient. ground, her an important part in national life. Study a nation's gamos land an excellent judgment can be | formed of its character. The Anglo- i cons are largely the result of these } sports; what other people can com- {pare with thd Anglo-Saxons in the s mitter of outdoor sports, and what {other people can compare with them {in adventurous daring and true man- liness? In their college and schools and on their village greens they have earned "to play the game," and it | hardened ths muscles and braced | their wills for tha greater game of | life The heroes of kn'dand have been {u ide on the playgrounds of such !nchools as Rugby and Eton. Foot)all { and cricket have taught the youths of Great Britain manliness and chivalry | towards opponents. It is necessary io | visit other races to find concealed POPE ON FASHIONS, | No Lovey of New Notions, Says Re. { port. A. P., London. Fhe pope, whose pastoral letter de- inouncing prevailing feminine fashions { had been widely circulated and preach- ted upon in Ttaly, has never been | lover of what Americans call new no- A vear or two ago some one {presented him with a motor car. When {it arrived in the gardens of the vati- jean his holiness looked at it curiously {for several minutes, examining minute {ly the various parts of the machinery. {Cardinal Merry del Val, who was pre- sent, suggested a ride around the gar- |dens in it, but the pope shook his nead. "You go," he said, "and T'll walk after vou." The cardinal, how- tever, persisted his point. "Why should {1 do that," was the answer, "When, fas it is, my walk in the garden is ovér {all too quickly ? Why should | use | this machine, which will shorten my {usual exercise still further ? No, 1 will not use it. but it will make a fine show in the vatican museum. We'll have it put into a glass case, my dear cardinal." tions, After Seeing Roosevelt. Washington Past General Collins, ex-congressman, who was not a warlike spirit in spite of hig title, once called at the White House, and tried vainly to switch Mr. { Roosevelt from his talk about a big army and navy. General Collins re- ferred to the recent bursting of a big gun aboard one of the man-o'-war's {men which killed several sailors, say- ling that it was a regrettable occur- irence. Mr. Roosevelt said that, of course, it was too bad, but added : few wenklings are making an outery aguinst it." Collins and Congressman Keliher stab. fel. the White dercoat and began to shake them vig- crously. something *' asked Keliher. to shake clothes, that's all." The Booming of Portland. Portland, Maine, has been variously and with a certain amount of truth termed the Forest City, the City by the Sea, the City of Longfellow, the natural sea , and the city of the Grand Trunk, and a writer points out that it has' more money invested in manufacturies and is actually Srning ont a greater variety and value manufactured articles than either of the "mill cities" or any other city in the state. That fact was recently brought ont by the Maine bureaa of lnbor statistics, and it is emphasized Portland Products Exposition, just been openad under the ites of the Board of Trade | * Association, and RK SD aN AS ed SN A a 25, SERMON FROM of his dialogue. | At the close of the interview General ted to walk back to the fotmer's ho- When they reached the portico of House, a cold, penetrating wind was blowing, but General Collins unbuttoned his overcoat and his un- "What's the trouble, general, lost "No," ssid Collins, "I'm just trying the gunpowder out of my SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1910. weapons or to fear a blow in the dark, Hamlet complained that he had lost { all his mirth, and followed it up by saying that he had foregone all cus- tom of exercises. The melancholy Dune would have heen less melaw- chioly had he mounted his horse and taken a brisk gallop with the hounds, or, instead of philoscphizinz om life and death, on friendship and action, had he played a neighborly zame of bowls , with" Horatio. or even old Polonius, he woull have seen the world and his itimes in a brighter light. At any irate he should never have allowed himself to get into such a physical { condition that he could be described {as "fat and scant of breath." That is { bad enough ia av old man, but for a young man it is disracelul: no won- der that he had of late lost all his {mirth Games and sports keep { spirit young and ths heart light. The {music of nature and the sunlight of | the Open fiekls become part of & man { who lives to some extent an open-air | life. The farrows ploughed Hy Father | Time come late to the brow of one | who enters enthusiastically into sports while he may. | Games are after all a species of { work, but they are work from which { ordinarily the element of gain has | been eliminated, They are played {usually for pleasure and honor. They, | too, generally give man a change of | occupation, and that is the highest form of rest. 1 hey give strength to | the arm, activity to the muscles and { keenness to the eye. An education in {sports is" as essentiil to a man as in- tellectual training. Without a sound {body, a sound mind is almost impos { sible. -- | Sporis give self-confidence and self- | control. The swim feels himself master of the sea; the hunter delights in his mastery of his powerful servant, i the horse. In contests in the field, the | playful battle, the mimic warfare { teaches the contestants to give and | receive knocks, to take victory modest- ly and bear defeat with a patient mind. There is of course danger of sports becoming brutal. Hunting is 'often mere slaughter: games are often prac- tically struggles of professional glad iators, But as a whole hunting is practised for the invigorating pleasure of the chase; games are indulged in in the spirit of friendly rivalry, and the cheer at the close hy victor and van- quisfied alike is the spontaneous ex pression of Liearts made manly by sports. The custom of physical ex- ercise gives health to the limbs and a mirth to the mind that is in" every way salutary. A nation of athletes cannot be but a' happy, generous ami a wise nation. TROUBLES OF A PORTER. Two Women Gave Him a Problem to Solve, London Opinion The porter was greatly perplexed. At High Polsover a lady with a lorg- nette entered the train. She was a middle-aged, tall, anzular, tailor-made woman, and she looked sterniy at the commercial traveler in the scat op- posite through her lorgnette. Belore seating herself she opened the carriage window, and sent it down with banz. At Hilsdon Cros: another man came in. She had flufly hair I an appeal ing look in her Blue eyes. She sat down and glanced at the open win dow and shivered pathetically; then she looked at the commercial traveler, "1 shall be frozen to death!" cried the flufly-haired lady. "UH this window is closed, 1 shal suffocate!" cried the other woman. The porter opened his wemth, He started to raise the window. Then he retreated. Dazed, he turned appeading ly to the commercial traveler. Both the 'woman also turned to the com- mercial traveler. That gentleman rose, passed Ly the ladies, opened the door to the platform, and went out, follow ed hy the porter. "And what, sir," 'said the porter, | "would you say as 'ow I should do, sic 7" "It's quite simple," said the com. mercial traveler. "Leave the window | as it is, open, till one lady is frozen | to death; then close it and suffocate the other. Tm woinr forward for the rest of the trip." n wo- T Needed Medicine, 'The late Frederick Remington," said "We are not going to stop teaching {a Philadelphia artist, "had 3 humor our men how to shoot just because a fous way of illustrating his arguments with incidents from real life. "He was speaking once on prohihi- tion. He described a trip he had once made in the prohibition state of North Dakcta. He told bow he rode | through Degroat, Maza, Penzoin, lola and other towns in the Devil's Lake neighborhood, putting up for the weelc-end at Minnewaukan. "As Remington was buying a cigar at the Minnewaukan drug store, Sa turday night a cowboy entered. Ile wore a red shirt and bearskin leggins, and he carried 4 two-gallon demijohn' J Jack,! he said to the drug eleck; with a loud laugh, as he swung the enormous demijolin on the counter, 'Jack, ill her up. Baby's sick." " Reasons for Happiness, William Muldoon, the noted trainer, was talking, apropos of the Jefivies- Johnson fight, of training. "In training." he said, "the strictest obedience is required. Whenever | think of the theory of training I think of Dash, who, after eighteen years of married life, of the best and t husbands in the world. EL - "1 once sod to bm, 'well man, how do you take mar io directivus,' he wo the | "Just a minute, Jackson!" The keen, quick, businesslike dire@tness of the GILLETTE. appeals to the man whose time is worth money. No time wasted in honing, @ropping or fussing with a complicated shaving device. e simply reaches for the GILLETTE and shaves. And such a shave | The Gillette blade, thin enough to fake a perfect temper, yet held absolutely rigid in the handy GILLETTE frame, and adjustable to any beard, shaves as no other razor can shave. The GILLETTE changes shaving from a time-consuming ordeal to a pleasant three minute incident in the morning toilet, Nearly four million progressive men use the GILLETTE-- do you ? Standard Sets $5.--Pocket Editions $5 to $6. At hardware, drug and jewshy Sores. Look for the big Gillette Signs--they show vou where to buy. GILLETTE SAFETY RAZOR CO. OF CANADA Office and Factory--63 St. Alexander St., Montreal. HITED WORLD OVER The Kellogg factory is as clean as your own spotless kitchen. The ellogg way is a thor- ough way, from the first motion to the last. Just as dirt is intolerable in your home, so it is at the modern Kellogg works. Besides this, Kellogg's has nothing added for appearance, Nothing is spared to make Kel- logg's the food of quality and strength, Puts vim in your body, and keeps it there. "The Sweetheart of the Corn" #ellogs TOASTED 10c a package At all grocers Good for clothes as well as a germicide-- both cleanses and HERE is only one way for you_to prove for yourself the full value of Asepto Soap Powder -- or you to Rory value not only as a germicide, but as a soap compound as well--you must try it! dishes, pour the Asepto laden ive rubbing--to wear out your the sink drain he y Vin can mao Asolo tabrics Difors ot dissane: With 'weakening NOLS Bt 15 wm ; a our waate- unsanitary sroms sad there is no fabric destruc SECC and a ---- as a : EPTO: Fit = Fo or and cleaner than fol 808p could wash them. oak | "A single package on POWDER Bos to 5 they are $00 delicate to trint to 5 Aunp-dainty laces ana beautiful waist, asd shirt to erything br ies ad ov i but an diseane of it will make two gallons of the best soft soap you ever saw, All good grocers poll Asepto--ie, for a large package. Ask for it. +

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