Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 22 Jun 1920, p. 12

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

eM UB i a ------ AA ---------- I Hm. 4 THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG TUESDAY, JUNE, 22, 1020. PAGE TWELVE STOMACH AND LIVER TROUBLE Once the liver fails to filter the poisonous bile from the blood, there is a clogging up and poisoning of the whole system, which causes many troubles to arise. Therefore, upon the liver, more than any other organ of the body, depends the general healt:. : - Ca-elessness and neglect, and of- tentimes wilful disregard of nature's laws will put the system oat of sorts. e bowels become constipated, the inactive and the stomach upset. To bring the system back to its nor- mal state, you should take Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills. They liven up the liver, get the bowels back to their proper condition and tome up the stomach. Mrs. G. L. Cackett, Enchant, Alta., 'writes: --"'I have used Mflburn's Laxa-Liver Pills and have found them 'good for both stomach and liver troubles. I have told others about r valuable medicine and they have them with good results. "They. are also good for ache." Milburn"s Laxa-Liver Pills are 25¢. a vial at all dealers or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. WOOD head- Sawed in Stove Lengths BOOTH & CO., Foot West Street Phone 133 Careless Shampooing - Le the Hair # THE SCHOOL CHILDREN'S PAGE Good Government FRANCIS ROLT-WHEELER »'In_the great Juventon controversy, the High School teachers had taken jagreed that the plan was possible, i jwell organized and under trained lead- ership. Accordingly, during the spring term, extra classes were given in {Economics and Government, and those who knew they were going to be mem- bers of the Camp went to those classes ke, hungry lumber jacks going to a meal. During the Easter vacation, a poll had heen taken of all those who were able to go. A printed application had been p asking the applicant's qualifications as a camper. These must be signed by both parents. Over four hundred wanted to go, but only seventy were accepted: seventy items f--- If you want to keep your hair look- | ing its best, be careful what you wash it with. Don't use prepared sham- poos or anything else, that contains too much alkali. This dries the scalp, | makes the hair brittle, and ruins it. | The best thing for steady use is | just ordinary mulsified cocoanut oil | (which is pure and greaseless), and | is better than anything else you can | use. i One or two teaspoonfuls cleanse the hair and scalp thorough- | ly. Simply moisten the hair with water and rub it in. It es an | abundance of rich, creamy lather, | which rinses out easily, removing | every particle of dust, dirt, dandruff | and excessive oil. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and it leaves the scalp soft, and the hair fine and silky, bright, lustrous, fluffy and | easy to manage.. You can get mulsified cocoanut oil at any pharmacy, it's very cheap, and a few ounces will sapply every mem- ber of the family for months. Special For Saturday while they laut, 100 Iba. Stewing Beef at 1Se. te a. 23e. a pound. Steaks. . ' All kinds of Smoked Meats, ete. Please put your orders in carly. QUICK'S ' WESTERN MEAT MARKET i ns guEmey Femur is the time to get your lawn mower ready. Don't wait un- til the grass is ahead of YOU. All makes repaired and sharpened promptly. J. M. PATRICK i409 SYDENHAM ST. Fhone 2056J. A Logical Conclusion, "Biddy," remarked the newly wed Irishman, 'go down and feed the pigs." "Faith and I will not," replied the bride. "Biddy," retorted the husband "Haven't I just endowed you with all my worldly goods, and if you can not feed your own property, then it's ashamed of you I am." This was a new point of view, so off Biddy went. Presently she returned. "Have you fed the pigs, Biddy! demanded her husband, sternly. "Faith, and I have not," she ans- wered. "1 have done a great deal bet- ter, As they were my property I have sold them, and shall not be bothered with them again." Ninety-nine per cent. of the women of India are illeterate. ' In Siberia it is colder on the ocean than on the land. | Theres aRich | Sony Haar INSTANT POSTUM that coffee | y= ER will § of young manhood and young woman- hood. Did they believe in themselves? To the limit! In the first week of the term, a formal political campaign was under- taken among the seventy. From the very start there were two parties. The Conservatives advocated the establish- ment of the eamp on a farm near the. town. The Progressives urged a site for the camp far from the town and. on the edge of the Big Woods. For the week of the campaign, the town was: in a ferment, for every one, old and: young, was interested in the Camp. en the vote wasitaken, the spirit of youth and optimism showed itself uppermost. Forty-nine votes were cast for the Big Woods, thirty-one for the Farm. The die was cast. The Juven- ton Independent Camp was to be really: "on its own" not a mere vacation- ground near home. : This meant serious business, and, as a heavy responsibility would fall upon. the leaders, the duty of nominating and electing these became of vital im- portance. (Tomorrow: Camp Departments.) -- her's wave oa TE ordered Colonel Baker, stationed at" Fort Shaw, to attack Black Weasel's' camp. At dawn, on January 1, 1870! Baker halted on a point jutting out: into the valley of the Marias River,: _ below which stood the lodges of a' ' (Aathor When, i jthered at the Missouri and Judith ivers, to make a treaty with Wash- ington, they signed it only because of the persuasion of Heavy Runner, a chief of the Pikuni tribe. The treaty recognized a 5 Blackfeet \ "When you are eager to criticise, just stop a moment and put yourself soberly in the place of the person you wish to criticise; reflect on his diffi- culties and on what you are sure _-tures--Keeping Flag D Blackfeet camp. The army scout, | Joseph Kipp, informed Colonel Baker that it was not Black Weasel's camp but that of, Heavy Runner, who wis' friendly to the whites. Baker answered that he did not care whose camp it: was, he was out to punish Blackieet, He ordered his men to shoot to kill} and to spare no one. { The first volley killed women | sleeping in the lodges. Heavy Runner, weaponless, making the peace sign with one hand and waving a sheaf of let- ters with the other, ran forward. He! fell, riddled with bullets. Not cne! shot was fired by the Indians. Men,; women and children were shot down, until all but three were dead, three: wounded men who escaped under cover of dense brush. : Thus _ perished brave, peacefull Heavy Runner and more than three hundred of his people. : ; (Tomorrow: My Town Adven. no ay.) : must be good intentions. Reflect on your own ignorance of the facts he has to deal with. You will be sur- prised to learn how much tamer your tongue grows." Voltage. The small son of a well-known electrical engineer is more familiar with the appliances of modern civil- ization than with the small things of nature, and when visiting the country, unhesitatingly picked up a hornet to more closely inspect fits 'mechanism. When his father hur .ried out to discover the cause of the commotion which immediately broke the peace of the summer day, the little lad was ruefully sucking a thumb, while tears streamed down his face. "Why, what is the trouble, son?' he was asked. "It was that bug," he managed to explain between sobs. "I think his wiring is defective. I touched him and he wasn't insulated at all!"--Philadelphia Public Ledger. A Little Child Shall Need Them. Mr. Daniels, the minister, was be- ing entertained at dinner. Littie Ralph was allowed to be present. "Do you always say your prayers at night, my little man?" asked the guest. "Yes, sir," was the boy's prompt reply, "and mother does, too." That's right. And father says his too, doesn't he?" "No sir," said Ralph. "He don't have to say any prayers." "Why, what do you mean?" asked the minister. "He don't have to," repeated the child, "because he never gets home till it's broad daylight, an' then what is there to pray about?" Pittsburg Sun. Early Hand Training. It takes skill to build a modern bridge, skyscraper or ocean liner. The world of to-day is exceptionally busy in enterprises of the kind which takes just this kind of skill. In fact, the man who has ability in the line of "doing things," is the man of the future. Skill can be acquired by nearly everyone through persevering effort, but the greatest skill - and efficiency comes to those who lay a good foundation of it before they are fifteen years old. There is no need to deny this fact. Plenty of proof ex- ists. Do you catch the point, boys! If your public school gives you good training, make the best of it. If not, get hand training somewhere in some way. People Like All-Around Fellows. It isn't always the boy who gets the most A's and 100's who makes the finest, biggest man later on. The reason is that sometimhes the boy who studies hardest doesn't do any- thing else, and then he is not an all- around fellow. It is ithe all-around 'fellow that people like and he is the one that makes the biggest success. . One thing an all-around boy must do is learn what is going on all over the world. When he reads the news- papers, and he reads them almost every day, he doesn't look at just one small corner. He looks at every- thing. People are doing so many unusual things to-day; it is very in- teresting to get in the habit of read- ing about them. Look again at the front page of this newspaper. The How Of It. Mary Wilkins Freeman, the fam- cus novelist, was talking at a New York luncheon about the terrible con- HAH Usurer and Ape And the Memory-Man said ; | There .was once a Miser, or Usure?, | who lent out money and had grown very rich. He lived in a perpetusl torment, because, nearly every day, he Yound that his count of the money he should haw had was incorrect This was because an Ape, which he had taken as payment of a debt, and which lived with him in the house, had the habit of snatching a piece or two of the money while the Usurer was not looking and throwing it out of the window. Then, one day, the Usurer found a fellow picking up coins outside *his window and took him to the Magis- = A LUMBER We have well-assorted Stocks in Pine, Spruce and Hemlock. Allan Lumber Co. Phone1042. : : : : . A A, AL A Victoria Street 2 ~--------m trate, asking that he should give back : the coins. : "Not so," said the Judge, "for you, who hoard your Hiaaey, and fo | nog good to anybody with it, are no better than your Ape. 2d The value of money depends on how it is used --R.-W. A Dress for Everything "Oh, Mother, 1 would like a sum- mer frock, one that I could wear for Charm Black Tea Sold in Packages Only GEO. ROBERTSON & SON, Limited almost and which really would last and look pretty as well. * What material could I buy which would suit all those purposes?" "You ask quite a lot, Winifred, but it can be done. some g fine-woven, all-wool flannel, white, or cream, or very pale gray. Make your dress very simple, falling straight, in one piece, no trimming at all, except for one large bright-colored scarf around your waist. It will be very. youd looking for an afternoon frock, or a dance or party, wear over it a' slip, gracefully draped, of light-col«. ored cotton chiffon. It will look really elegant and distinctive. For sport or work, a back satin or leather girdle will. be enough. Remember: el JUTE BAGS WANTED We will pay highest prices for all kinds of Jute Bags. Get in touch with us. A ---- ~a A. SPEIZMAN 60 QUEEN ST. KINGSTON sm can wash, never cracks like silk, keeps cool and warm at the same time, and you can dye it, next year." BEURET, "No, Johnny," said tt teacher, "hay fever doesn't come' from sleeping on : a straw bed." Er ---------------- Daily Twelve-Syllable Rhyme Just to cram An exam Means your work Is a sham. All men belong to one of two | With your uext grocery order ask your Grocer for a Glass Jar -- foe KINNEY AND COLLIVER Strawberry Jam Made From Pure Fruit and Granulated Sugar. PURE groups, those who lead the world . onward too far, and those who drag it back. Progress is made by neith- er group, but by the balance between the two. Ouija "Believe not every spirit, but tty ithe spirits whether they are of God; | because many false prophets are | gone out into the world" th chapter, latverse, troversy between President Wilson and Senator Lodge over the League | of Nations. DON'T WAIT TOO LONG TO BUY THAT NEW HOME---RUY NOW! 17¢ BARRIE STREET brick: hot witer 377 ALFRED STREET--brick; hot water. 415 JOHNSTON STREET---brick: hot water. 5 LOWER ALFRED STREET--brick; hot water. §35 BROCK STREET---brick; hot water, 254 KING STREET--brick; hot water. 23 MACK STREET--brick; hot air. 35 MACK STREET-brick; hot air. 37 MACK STREET--brick; hot air. 25 WELLINGTON STREET---stone; hot alr. 131 BEVERLY STREET---Concrete block; hot air. We also have a few very desirable homes, which we do not ad- vertise. Come in and see us. Best lots in the city---very reasonable. J. 0. HUTTON Apply to: 67 CLARENCE STREET Phone 703. A "Mr. Wilson," she said, 'had the' vision, but Mr. Lodge is determined to have the revision."--Detroit Freé Press. Thomas Edison has patents on more than 900 inventions. 1, John, the MODERN FABLES. Master Builder. nce upon a time, mot so many ye ago, there lived in the city of "the King, which lies on the shore of the lake of Ontario, a certain robust citizen, known to all and sun- dry as John the Baptist. Now this citizen was a man loved and respect- ed, and for many years he did hold an high and honourable place in the {councils of the city ,being elected thereto by "the good people of the neighborhood im which he dwelt. But, alas, the time came when his actions aroused the ire of those who toiled in the city, building houses of brick and of stone, and in their anger they turned and cast him out of their council in' one memorable election fight, so' he remained thereafter in the comfort of his own dwelling. This man John, whom no trouble had ever "lit on" was by profession one who built mansions for the weal- thy and hovels for the poer. By great business acumen he had gather- ed to him a goodly store of riches. His business gift secured for him many .a tasty morsel of architectural labour, none more tasty than that of building an edifice in which the poor war-torn veterans of the Great War had their gas burnt lungs revived. By dint of much foresight and ener- €Y, he therby raked in many shekels which are called "greenbacks." But, alas, this could not last for ever. One day came when John, the master-builder, met another, and in the battle of wits he was sorely dis- comfitted. It so happened that a certain edifice in the city of the king was about to be built, the building of which promised much return in coin of the realm. And as was the 'custom of the city in those days, a call was sent far and wide for dbuild- ers to vie one with the another for the h r of building it and there- by increasing their store of lucre. Prominent among those who heard the call was one great company with a two-fold name, one that of a man who in years gone hy had been the chief councillor of the city, and an- other that of the tall straight tree whose silvery trunk is a glory to be- hold. And this company, fearing this John the builder, who also de- sired greatiy to build the edifice, "John" said their spokesman, "we know that thou art a great builder. Few in this city of the king can equal thee. Tell us, we pray thee, how much in coin of the realm dost thou ask for thy portion of the work on this edifice?" But John answered not. In the vulgar parlance of this day which was grievously slothful and frivolous, he 'smelt a rat." "What assurance have I," he asked, ""tiat ye will let me do the work if, I give ye my price?" "Fear not," replied the spokes- man, "we are an 'honourable comp- any. Have we not built many man- sions for our kindly government? Thou shalt be given the work. Tell us the price, and the task shall be thine. Have no fear of that." So John the builder took counsel with himself, and forthwith set his price at four thousand pieces of sil- ver, each one of the value of one green back. Then he departed to await the commands of the hbnour- able company to begin the task. But the command came not, so once more John went into solemn conferencé with the spokesman of the company. "Why Is it," he asked, "that I havé not been commanded td' do this work, as was agreed up- on?" "Have no fear," was the re- ply. "Ye shall do this work, and for the efficient performance there- of, this generous company shall pay thee in coin of the realm two thous- and greenbacks." Whereat John was sorely vexed indeed twice, three times did he call to mind the pro- mise of the company that he should do the work. "Yes," said the comp- any, "thou shall do the work. None as a builder is more excellent than thou. We desire to have thee erect this edifice, but we will only pay thee two thousand green®acks. Dost thou not recall, we only asked thee thy price. We did not tell thee what we should pay. And so it was that John the mast- er builder met his masters swearing that mever again would he be per- suadegd to give his price to the great and honourable company, he depart- ed to his dwelling, to wear sack- called him into council. cloth and heap ashes on bis head for many moons. . - WHY HON. W. A. WATT drinkers like, and its more "healthful "There's a Reason" RESIGNED HIS OFFICE pany wi ; enipotentiary Powers of Fiessenger. London, June 23.--Hon. W. A. Watt, treasurer of the Australian i Cover ciali., =ha has Just re- ~ | signed' office' while on an official {visit to England, has published a ; statement which claims that he was ' seriously embarrassed regarding tne wool negotiations and finance by | the prime ministers' imterference. It soon became plain to the British authorities concerned and himself that as Premier Hughes was cabling {direct to the British government {propositions which differed from those presented by himself such ime portant negotiations could not be simultaneously conducted by tele- gram with the prime minister in Australia and by himself in person. Mr. Watt further says he was ad- vised by his government that he had been appointed Australian plenipo- tenlary in 'connection with the Spa conference but at the same time was naively directed not to agree to any alterations in certain matters with- out Premier Hughes. "I replied that I could not assume the garb of plenipotentiary with the powers of a telegraph messenger." Mr. Watt concluded by inviting Premier Hughes to publish the tele- grams exchanged between them- selves. Pembroke Bonds Sold. Pembroke has sold a bond issue of $37,439 to Asmilius Jarvis & Co., Toronto. The bonds bear six per cent. and are ten instalments. At the sale price of 96.50 the town borrows on a 6.75 basis. Eels migrate only in the dark. i For Business every day. For Golf 155 2ame say goon that you get by : wearing Fleet Foot on the links, you can enjoy down-town by wearing Fleet Foot The Business Man and Business Girl, who want te There are styles for men, women and children--for every occasion and every purpose--for every sport | and recreation--for every-day wear and holiday time. Our Tires and Accessories GIVE SATISFACTION Why? Because back of every success is a reason -- we're a Success in the Tire and Accessory Business. THE REASON IS THAT FIRST---we sell only what we know to NEXT---we don't figure that because a stand for inferior Tires or Accessories, and we only the best. be the best obtainable. man owns a car he will carry A Complete stock of CORDS, FABRICS and TRUCK TIRES. We can supply TRUCK TIRES ON SHORT NOTICE. GET GASOLINE from our latest and most-up-to-date VISIBLE Gasoline Pump. "To get the Miles per Gallon, get v the Gallon First" SUDDABY'S TIRE SERVICE Phone 1088 : 3 WE OFFER SUBJECT ¥ PROVINCE OF ONTARIO 6% 10-YEAR-GOLD BONDS Dated June 15th, 19200 Due June 15th, 1930. Payable Toronto and Montreal PRINCIPAL and Half Yearly Interest (15th June & December) PRICE .100 and interest--YIELD 6%. BONGARD, RYERSON & CO. "The Home of Good Investments" Phone 1728. - - . 237 Bagot St. J. Bongard, Manager. As Well As WHOLESALE 'AND RETAIL Flour, Feed and Seeds Wholesale Warehouse, foot of Princess St. . ~ Phone 51. Retail Store . ...117 Brock St. Phone 217

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy