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Daily British Whig (1850), 18 Mar 1920, p. 11

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: A _ tured only by The THURSDAY, MARCH 18, 1920, Got Rid Of ~The Coug That Sticks Some coughs seem hard to shake off --stick right to you in spite of all you do to get rid of them. Those are the kind of conghs that are dangerous--that weaken the lungs so that the germs of consump- tion find a ready foothold. : We know of no remedy that will eure stubborn coughs==¢sughs that won't let go--like Dr. Wood's Nor- way Pine Syrup. | 4 It allays the inflammation, soothes the irritation, and heals the diseased mucous fining of the lungs and bron. chial tubes. Mrs. LeqsAlfen, Petite de Grat Bridge, N.B., 'writes:--"Last winter I had an awful cough that kept me in theVhouse for overviwo months. A triéd several cough, remedies, hut got no relief. I was almost discouraged when a grocer here offered me bottly of Dr. Wood's Norwdy Pine Syrup, After taking that one my coughing began to cease. I took two more and they cured me cOmplete- gil Get the genuine Dr. Wood's Nor- way Pine Syrup; put up in a yellow wrapper; § pine trees the .trade mark; price 35¢. and 5c; manutac- T." Milburn Co, Limited, Toronto, Ont. nn cmt i If What Women In Their | | "Forties" Need BY A SPECIALIST Many women approach t changing period of their comes between the ages of fifty, unmindful of tre importance to thelr future happiness. Not ur ] functional changes their bodies, they work b strength, often break do nervous wrecks, their . ing with fatigue and t nerves trembling at every in their weakened co hemorrhage becomes excessive, added drain compelling them to take to their beds from nervous exhausA tion. What these women need is some- thing that will instantly relieve the pressure on the overworked centres and give them its become 8s suffer. ality to g straia. uits are of fons by the Wonderfully effective r ten given in such cond simple use of Wefro-Peptine, & §kill- ful combination of six of the best izing elements known istry. These little tab- iets contain no dangerous habit-form- ing drugs and are entirely-harmlesd in their action® Thousands of women can testify that Ferro-Peptine sirengthens the jaded nerves, revives the tired brain and puts the energy and ¢yurage into the body that enables one to stand up under the unusual strain of the changing period. Ferro-Peptijne has to do these thingssr i* <osts nothing, as all Tealling druggists sell it'on a ' positive guarantee of relief or money back. IAA, A AAA IAN NG AAAI COLDS BRING °FLU;" "CHECK THEM NOW! Take Grip-Fix and Avoid, the Chance of Severe and Dangerous Com- , * plications. "Jump right on every cold when it first appears and your chances of es- caping 'flu are good" "Take care of Yourself and you are safe," Thege ex= pressions sum™p pretty well the ad- vice that physicians are giving their patients just nowt ¢ Suppose you could find & remedy that would knock a bad cold in a single night and do the work safely and sure. ly, you would feel fairly safe from the flu, wouldn't you? remedy has been found. Just walk «into any drug store. Say "Grip-Fix" and' get the box that contains the re- liable iittle capsules that always do the trick. Grip-Fix is prepared from a formula a well known physleisn has been using for many years to check colds, its contents are plainly printéd on every Box. If you are afraid of 'prepanrg- tions sold over the drug counter, su mit the formula of Srip.Fix to your family doctor and ask him what be thinks of the combination of drugs it eontaing, | - Grip=Fix 'has a record behind it Thousands of serious colds have van- sished through Hs agency. It is put Pp in form and ¥s perfectly safe to 'take. Just follow the directions carefully--- Grip-Fix will do the rest. You can get Grip-Fix from druggist at 35 cents per box. Well that any aj | signed © nerve | toi the easily assimilated capsule! By H. F. | Keeping Track of the Straws ew build- n to the It was ved how {The division i Jed tends to [ until it uxion of time. It is 1 3 ink and be merry for the day after to-morrow it may get better. Wait and see--that is the Lene Its tired heart.may be beating funeral marches to the grave, but the expectatic are that the funeral twill not reach the cemetery for two {years vet » The Govern jority of i still + betw has' a ma- a it and little ® melt way : e. is thirty-four will i ause they { Government goes they go. Conse- quently they stick until death does hem part. It is Hobson's choic heir friends expect them to be | ve and to do certain ne i oable things: whic only a t dedicated to death can For instance they can ise Act, neatly p for the cities and { proportional representatives 'for the {'country, which will take most of the fever out of the farmer's nlovement by making the. city man's vote of a1) properly. do. frame a Frane ed of rep-by-p tl equal value with his country broth- nthise Act | stribution ot | er's. To build such a Fr and accomplish the redi i based upbn it eans waiting on the decennial \lensus next year which gives the Government an ex- cellent, excuse for 1 ering a after that. The G¢ laim '""The far saves our life." _ With two years of pr tence ahead of it a de on the Government h is reflected in the faces of . Meig Rowell and Calder who begin to ve- |alize. that, whoever comes out on | top, what he leads is nothing but a { case of suspended animation, Broth. jer Caldgr is probably "the the three. Feeling that his the west largely past ts year well gloom settl Mes: | future in is { idea that a | the east will his career. which fate w big Government job in be 9 hedrt advertisés a es Frank Carvell's. Jim is full of sunshiny, bes silence," serenel pad that he will go the cause he knov all good Lib 1s g0 who leave Union Government for the higher life _on some Royal Commission or other, , Great Hopes Blasted. .. Not so Leader Rowell, who cher- ished at.one time the ambition to be premiey if only for fifteen minutes. But pat is that premiership now? | Ash in the mouth! Dead Sea apples! Nothing to it because the Unionist party ib-appointed to die. It lives only so long as Sir Robert Borden says so. © It hangs on his breath, so to speak, snd when his breath gives out or goes on strike, Union Government is at liberty to tng itself somewhere else. There is {no great 'pleasure in acting as the central figure of a funeral procession and that is the most Leader Rowell can aspire to now, ! There is no home for him in the { Liberal party--thé home having i moved in the direction of the Farm- ers' party which leaves even such a militant crusader as Mr. Rowell a long way behind. Mr. Rowell is sad and dispirited and does not show a cheerful countenance to the world. He lacks Mr. Calder's adjustable phi- losophy. His zeal for public life is not surfeited with six years in the | imelight, He would fain have more | of it. A judgeship in the Supreme { Court is worse than burial for such a | flaming patriot, and yet what else is { there when the Liberal party waves | %good-bye" - and the Conservative | party says "What's your hurry? { | Here's your hat.' ? Beyond doubt Mr: Rowell is down- hearted. So is Arthur Meighen-- though not quite so downhearted as Comrade Rowell, For Mr. Meighen there is still shelter in the Conserva- tive party, though not as leader. That proud eminence goes to an eastern man of greater vision and more popular gifts than the mefber for Portage La Prairies. Mr. Meigh- en had nourished the project of { contiduing the Unionist party, not | 80 much for the party's sake as fo: i hig. own, He had his eye on the job {of first fiddler and hid the party showed stamina he might have car ried his plan through and landed the, job. Even yet he may be leader o: the Unionist party, but what's fle use when the word has already gone out to kill ft. the end of two years or sooner Mr) Meighen would be dragging a corpse around. He kk a young man with a future and he can't afford -to be balled up with a corpus delicti that way. Mr, Meighen's project was well conceived. He was going to disinfect the Unionist party, pack it in moth- balls and call it the Moderate Party, tut all this went glimmering when the Big Fellows put up their man to say that the party they intended to evive was the Liberal-Conservative arty and thaj the best the Unionist arty could expect was a two years' % no, YOUNGSTERS! When ybur ¢hild is bilious, consti- ted, sick or full of cold; when the ittle tongue is coated, breath had and stomach sour, get a box of Cusears and straighten the Httile onMeight up. Children gladly take this' less candy cathartie and it cleanses the y know that when Union | sary but | blend- | ent | i most re- | he seems to have settled down to the | fitting crown to | There is that in his face | 3 for any | fch will draw a salary as big" THE | GADSBY. reprieve. Thus and so were Mr. | Meighen's great hopes crucified, He | 1 has a career in the Conservative arly Put it is as Able Lieutenant. | he Captain will be somebody. else. | Enter Bir Thomas, i he Captain I i declared | sclaration was the gnd significant thing in, the de-~ @ on the address. it was dofie vard the end of the, debate and | was regarded by ail wise men in the | house as Sir Thoms White's straight | tip as to what party to bet on. The Liberal-Conservative party, with its girth let out to take in the tariff | | Liberals--that's the horse for your | | money; gentlemen, The Liberal-! Conservative party with Sir Thomas White up. Make your bets, gentle- men, i Not that Sir Thomas said it just | that way. It is not'in him to be | i-brutal. He was gentle enough, but eady | firm withal, "and though Mr. Meigh- ! | en's face dropped with a dull siek- ening thud as he listened to the { words which stopped all new parties | or sprightly disghises for old partie {80 long as the Liber Conservative party was ablé to do, business at the | old stand, Sir Thomas went thrbugh { wgh his task, He was cruel to be 1d. I think Me. M en fhing & away ambition right there--at any | rate the ambition to break his head gainst the stone wall the interests | to hide his dismay. Other Unioni applauded wildly their impend doom, but Mr. Rowell never lifted a finger by way of praisés. Mr. Rowell is i ard luck. One day he gots : | facer from Sir Thomas White and | next day the Hon, Charles Murph strips him to his Nessus undershir { of Uplift which he finds was finance 1 by Toronto philanthropists. It would perhaps 'be better for Mr. Rowell i he said less about the sacrifices he | made to enter public life and stood { by the goed Old Testament doctrine that he who serves. the altar lives by the altar. ' If he did we should prob | ably hear less of this Murphy-Rowel! feud which, sooth to say, we irk | some, A Triumph of Tactics, The third was the farmers' attitude toward the | MacKenzie King amendment, The amendment was a triumph of tac tics. It shows Leader King either fine strategist or well advised----pe haps a little of both. The amendme: was vised for that very purpose to line the U.F.'s up where they be longed---with the Liberul party. A immediateslection? That was a ruse It was gp pit that the farmers wer bound Fo fin ato becagse they ar the pnly people who ould benefi by an election at this moment, have been "watching the House c¢ Commons from the Press Gallery fc twenty years and never 'in all tha time have 'I heard a speech that changed one vote, much less an am-| endment to the address 'in reply which jolted twelve reluctant politic fans into their right place. Reluc- tant? Of course they were! Didn't Dr. Michael Clark wipe his boots on the amendment before he admitted that he jgould vote for it 'on gen. eral principles." ? His action was typical of all Mr, Crerar's little band, They hated to do it----but they did it. They were dragooned into recogniz. ing their real friends. ) This vote on the amendment is the first step--and a long one--toward the rapprochment between Liberals and Farmers, a natural alliance in view of the fact tifat the Liberal tariff policy was good enough for the farmers before a little success at the polls turned their heads.. The Lib- eral tariff policy is likely to be the tariff policy of the Liberal-Farmer coalition because it more nearly represents the common sense of the rariff issue, and the Farmers are & adually learning common sense. 1 say it advisedly----the Farmers are learning humility. Five months ago they knew if all--to-day they are not 30 sure, Five months ago they were evangelical : to-day, from a Liberal point of view, they are almost ortho- dox. If you don't believe me read their speeches in Parliament---parti- cularly Mr. Crerar's latest one. Few threats and less slaughter there, i 'From The Countryside FRONTENAC a ¢ ARDOCH, March 13.--A little boy arrived at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. Weber on March 3td. Lorne McDonald and Guy Watkins are filling the ice house for the Ardoch cheese factory. John Fraser who spent the past few weeks at Cananto, spent Sunday at his home here. Mrs. M. Weber, who was -called to Glenburnie on account of her father's illness, has returned home. Joseph Hermer and George Jeannerett are hauling wood to Dr. C. J. Parson's. Samuel Gray and cou- sn Miss Mamie Smith are enjoying a 1 visit with friends and relatives at Tamworth. = The Misses Kathleen Keeley and Lizsie and Mary Gunsin- ere Sunday visitors at M. We- Plevna gpent tie week-end under the parental roof. Mrs. Wesley jis in Kingstoh General Ho o . Watkins made a business to nonto en Saturday. Little White, who was {ll of bronchills, is recovering. : : CU I, March 16.--The roads ara very bad again. Mrs, Clinton Wagar had & paralytic stroke on Sunday last. Mrs, Fran Wagar "st Tithborne. Mr. Mino: is in the city. ar and Mrs. . Kirkham, Wagarville, at M. Cronk's. Hazel Wagar has returned to the city. Mrs 'Ayerst called on friends in Parbain. Mrs. Alton is on ° [Mr. C. B. Brooks, Ma matter of significance | DAILY Don't Wear russ Any After Thirty Years' BRITISH a ------ Experience a Rupture Appliance Has Been Produced for Men, WHIG re -------- ant ------ I ------ ger Women 'and Children That + Does Awav With Truss Torture. i i . Sent on Trial to Prove It = » if you have tried myst everything else, come to us. Wheres others fail is where we have OUr greater Success. dA ocounon today and we free ar illustrated book pn Rupture and its cure, showing our Appliance and giving you prices and names of many people who have tied ; jt and were cured. It 18 instant relief when all others fail. Remember, we use no salves go harness, no lies. We send on trial to prove what we say is true. You are the judge and once having seen our itiustrated book and read it you will. be as enthusiastic as our hundreds of patients whose let- ders you can also' read. - Will out free coupon below and mal] today. Tt's well worth your ti Appliance or not. Pennsylvania Man Thankful rehall, Mich. - terest you to know ruptured six years Perhaps it will in ave been had trofble {that 1 have and have alw tid I got your Appliance. It $s easy to wear, fits neat and snug, and is not in the way at any time, day or night. In fact, at times I 44d not know I ad #t on; it just edapted itself to 1¢ shape of the body and seemed to » @ pant of the body, as it clung to Whe spot, no matter what positon I was in. It would be a veritable (iod-send to wito suffer from rupe- . procure the Br ks {Rupture Appliance and wear {t. They {would certainly nevee regret it. My rupture is now. all healed up and mothing ever did it but your Applarnce, Whenever the opportun ty presents ite solf 1 will. say a good word for your {AppHance, and also the honorable way fn which you deal with ruptured peo- ple. It ja a pleasure to recominend a 'good thing among your friends or Slrangenrs. 1 am, i Yours very sincerely, JAMES A. BRITTON. 426 North Ave. D. Bathlehem, Pa. Soundly Cured at the Age of 81 Mr. C. B. Brooks, Marshall, Mice {Dear 8ir:-- | Less than a year ago I sent to you for an appliancy which came promptly. IT at once put it on and it fitted per. {featly. I have worn the appliance not {quite ten and one-half months. It has {cured my rupture. i Itried the other day while the appli- {ance wae off, to see if 1 could 'ivre {anything out of the opening to make a {break there, but I could mot, though I jtried hard. * 1. Now I think this quite remarkable as II am in my eighty-first year. I am an lold veteraa of the Civil War, born and raised in the town of New Boston, N. H.; from where I enlisted in the 10th WW. H, vol inf. in Co, GQ Wagar, Tichborne are at Mrs. M. Wagar's. Born to Mr. aud Mrs. Milo Teal a daughter. Clayton Wagar of North Dakota, spending the winter with relatives, has returned west. Mrs. Evelyn Bertrifh has returned home after spending some fime with her mother, Mrs: Grant, at Verona. Mr. and Mrs. M. Cronk at Wagar- ville, J. Howes at Echo Lake, Earl Howes at Ross Howe's: Mr. and Mrs. R. Goodfellow are leaving for King- ston where they have purchased a store. Mr. and Mrs. J, C. Hartman at William Clow's. > FERMOY. March 16.--The roads are bare in many places owing to the thaw. Me. and Mrs: Robert Barr and Miss Stella were Burridge visitors Sunday. G. Lewis, who has been ill, im improv- ing. Miss Eva Burr spent the past week with friends at Burridge. Miss M. Conway has returned to West port. W. Jones and BE. J. Quinn have gone to Westport, where they are kept busy sawing wood. . LEEDS JONES' FALLS. March 15.--The thaw was much needed as wells and cisterns were nearly dry. There is plenty of water now, but 'the rodds for a few days were almost impassable. An épide- mic of the flu passed over this loca- i lity and almost every house had its | victims 'but the stricken ones are all | mproving. Mr. and Mrs. Adelbert Hutchings have moved to Seeley's Bay where Me. Hutchings is engaged at cheese ma . Mr. and Mrs. W. Winge of Lyndburst were at W. Glo-, ver's, on Sunday last; Mr. and Mrk. Orpran Baxter of Keelerville at H. Baxtér's; Miss Keitha Gamble of Seeley's Bay at Lotan Burteh's; Mr, and Mrs. Thomas Wales of Lynd- hurst at F. Wales'; .Lloyd Baxter and Gerald Cannon at Joseph Bar- low's, Delta; Miss Florence Hutch- ings has returnedrhome after spend- ing the past week with relatives at Millburn. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bax- ter spent Bunday with relatives at Chaffey"s Lock. Mr. and Mrs, Chan Bennett and family of Millburn were WE ty waar me The Grip, Fevers and Other Poison- It is absolutely necessary that the Fae yed or ven out, restored stored 'and the kidneys and liver restored to perfect regular ac- tion. Hood's Sarsaparilla has been be- 'Hood's Sarsaparilla it to thelr own children and grand. childrén wit ¢ whether you try our the sick lst. Mr. sad Mis, W. R. 5 CT Ten Reasons Why You Should § RuptureY / for Brooks pliance - Tt 1s absslorely the only Apnlla 'a of the kind on the mifKet toda and in it ede er 4p that inventors h on Years 2. The Appliance for retaining t rupfure cannot be thrawn out of tion Deng an afr cushion of soft rub 1g clowely to the day, auses irritation. ordinary ao- called) russes, it la v $ : soft and® pliable, an positively ot be detected throug! the clothing. « fT soft, pliable bands holding} 02 fance do nit give one the une! y nt sensation of wearing a There is nothing about it to b+ 1, and wh it becomes soiled It oan Cg i without injuring it inj the ; metal springs in ture cone by cute and t re fare no ial of which thei is of the very, r. making it 8 Anes to wear. > honesty andj thefoughly estabe' or over thirty the public, andl = nable. our terms air, that certainly should be hesitancy in sending free coubami today. R £0 no The above is C. FI. Brooks, Inventar of the Appliance. Mr. Brooks Ciired Himself of Rupture Over 30 Years Ako, and Patented the Anpliance! from His Persona! Exprerl ence. If Ruptured Write Today to the Brooks Applian ce Co, Jlsrshall, Mich. Remember Rupture .ieuied in Four Months. 21 Jansen Sv, Dubuque, Towa; 8 i. Ems . Marshall, Mich. . he haby's rupture is % Me. Co ¥ ¢ v he 3 I cannot feel but that I owe you this Dear Bir testimony for I ha® never ekpected to be cured. However, thanks be to God, I found a cure through the valuable Appliance you made for me Your friend, E! A. Richards ht Holly Hill, Others Failed Bit The Appliance Cured Mr. C. E: Brooks, Marshall, Mich, Dear Siri-- Youg Appliance did all you claim for the Mitle boy and more, fbr it cured iim sound and well. We det him wear it for about a year In all, although it cured him 3 monthe after he had be- gun to wear it. We had tried several other remedies and got no relief, and I shall certainly wecommend Ht to friends, for we surely owe it to you. Yours respectfully, . - WM No. 117 8. Maia ar ps together thanks ¢o your gAp= pliane d are so thankful Ap It we id only have known of it sooner, our Mitle boy would not he nd to suffer nsar as much es he did. He wwre your brace a little over four months. Yours very temly, ° ANDREW BEGGENBERGER. We send our Appliance on trial prove what we gay 4s true. You are to be the judge 411 out free coupon be- low and 'madl today, - to Fla. FREE Information Coupon Brooks Appliance Co., 52D. State St., Marshall, Mich. Please send me by mail in pidth Wrapper your illustrated book and fgll information about your Appliance for the cure of rupture. Name . . ony at Charles Hutchings on Saturday last. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Dier are spending a few days with relatives at Westport. Millard Simpson at B. Burteh's; Miss Hilda Burtch at Sey- mour Baxter's; Oliver Simpson at Charles Hutchings'; . Mr. d Mrs. Buell; .. and Clarance Churchill at A. Churchill's, Phillips- ville. School Closed, Teacher Hurt. ® *Myer's Cave, March 15.--The rain on Friday was very much welcomed, as a few of the wells were very low, Mr. and Mrs. T. D. Derry and son Ebby, spent Sunday at John McCaus- land's. J. Head is now working in the bush with W. Bauder. PF, Yaneh, Riv, Road, spent Sunday at the Cafe. Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Perry and baby, accompanied by Miss Hilda Curtis, at C. MacGregor"s Sunday. School has been closéd for a few days, the teacher, Mrs. Bella Rod- gers, had the misfortune of falling and hurting her arm. She is unable tot use it. ¢ hope for a speedy re- covery. C. MacGregor spent' last week at Kingston, T. Delyea and E. Delyea rcturned tu their homes Fri- day after working a couple of months at Gilmour in the mill there, E. Mar- tin and Mr. Lyons, who have been working at the Golden Fleece mine, called bere Saturday on their wal - to their home at Fernleigh. A few late B. Snider at Cloyne Thursda from here attended the funeral of the | last. I -------- - -- es x ---- aon determine the valueof a paper's circulation to the adyertiser--quality and uantity. be judged by the methods of obtaining subscriptions. ' The quality may The quantity may be known absolutely by an independent and expert audit of the circulation records. } Both points are covered by the reports of the Audit Bur- eau of Circulations. i The advertiser who buys space on a business basis asks for an A. B. C. statement and studies it. yd If an advertiser who does not demand an A. B. C. state- ment conducted the other branches of his business on the same method, he soon would not have any business to conduct. te fon ; An advertiser is entitled to the facts. An A. B. C. paper "i hasmothing to hide. e A. B. C. report of the British Whig will be sent to ad- vertisers on request.

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