Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 5 Jul 1920, p. 10

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THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG PAGE TEN HOTEL MAN PUTS TANLAC 10 TEST Says He Wants His Friends to Know the Results of His Experiments. SRY ORE AOR e IE RO MUCH et good that 1 want to let my many friends at Black Lake and here in Quebec, know about it," said Edou- ard Lecours, recently, to a Tanlac representative, Mr. Lecours well known to the travelling public, as he is the popular clerk at the St Ursule Hotal in Quebec, and was for merly proprietor of the hotel at} Black Lake. * «por six or seven years now 1 have suffered from indigestion," he | continued. "The gas would form of | my stomach and cause me great dis- tress. 1 used to dread going to the dining table, because [ knew only too well what I would have to go through afterwards, even although I | was very careful what I ate. As the i result of my indigi/Mon, my nerves | got very bad and I used to have ter: | rible dizzy spells while at my work Any little excitement Or exertion ! would make me break out in a bath | of perspiration. My 'sleep at night | was very disturbed, and I wou\l get up in the mornings feeling more | tired than when I went to bed the night before. I lost energy and am- bition in life. I was getting gradu ally weaker every day, and at last my conditon became alarming. "When I read of the wonderful | benefits people were receiving from | Tanlac I'decided to try it, and put it | to test. 1 have only taken three bottles, but already the change in| me is simply extraordinary. 1 never | would have thought it possible that any medicine could do one so much | good It gave me a tremendous ap petite. I'm always ready when the dinner bell sounds and I can eat any thing I want without being troubled in the least aftarwards. The gas no | longer bothers me, and I do not have | those dizzy spells any more. 1 sleep soundly every night and in the morn ing I feel full of Iife and vigor. 1 have every confidence in recommend ing Tanlac to my fellow citizens." Tanlac is sold in Kingston by A P. Chown_and by the leading drug- Zists in every town --Advt. "The Great French Tonic | "VITAL" TABLETS Makes Men and Women Strong. Go to Your Druggist and Get a Box and | | 18 Be Healthy. Since the introduction of VITAL into Canada the sale has been phe- nomenal. VITAL is purely a tonic- it builds up the run-down system | creates a new lease of "life. Every- | body should take a tonic. The only | question is what to take. You can | rely upon VITAL as one of the great- | est, if not the greatest, that man ever prescribed. Every Tablet of this wonderful French Tonic contains life Your nerves are toned up to their proper tension. The stomach and bowels are made healthy and strong, | while the kidneys and liver are cleansed and put in good working or- der. Headaches, biliousness and all blood impurities are at omce remov- ed. The skin becomes clear and heal- thy. VITAL, in short, will change your whole system, making it pure and healthy. - Your druggist will re- fund your money if it fails. Price 50c. a box. News of Barriefield. Barriefield, July 2.--The school has closed for the summer vacation and some of the children are looking forward to having a good crop of potatoes and some good poultry and fancy work for the Kingston indus- trial exhibition. Mrs. G. Medley, Jr., has left for Oswego, N.Y, to visit with his sister- in-law and daughter, Miss Alice, who is visiting with her uncle and aunt. Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Roven. Mrs. H. A. Saunger and son, Master Ray, of Chi- cago, are visiting with her mother, Mrs. William Anderson. Mr. and Mrs. F. Todd, city, spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. Le Heup. Mrs. Huggett, of Toronto, and Mr. and Mrs. G. Jer- man, city, visited with Mr. and Mrs Stanton. The Misses Honrsfall, city, spent Sumday with their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Radwell. Miss Connell, of Brockville, visiting with Mrs. Winden, has returned home The thief is usually on the lookout for his kind. A MONDAY, JULY, 5, 1920, THE SCHOOL CHILDREN'S PAGE F a Anemometer EDWARD THATCHER You know the anemometers, er wind-measuring machines that the Weather Bureau uses? You can make a simple one out of four bottle caps and two strips of tin. (See Fig. +) The two flat strips of tin for the supporting arms may be cut from a flat biscuit box, or a rownd can may be cut open and flattened out, and the strips cut from this. Each strip should be 34 inch wide and 5 inches long. With a small sharp-pointed nail, punch a hole exactly in the cen- ter. of cach of these strips, large enough for a very strong pin or a thin nail to slip shrough easily. Note that, word "exactly." Next, pick -the cork linings out of ase bs Soivew TE Sowge wo' the bottle caps with your penknife Lay a bottle cap on your work-bench with the crimped end down. Rest the edge of one of the strips on the bot- tle cap so that the end is just even with the edges of the cap and at right angles to it. Apply soldering paste to each side of the strip where it rests on the cap. Heat the soldering iron, place a small piece of solder in the angle between the strip and the bottle cap and melt it into place. Then place another bottle cap on the other end of the same strip but on the opposite side, as shown in Fig. 3. Solder 'two other bottle caps im the same way to the other strip. Place the strips together so that they cross at right angles and the holes in each strip are over each other. The bot- tle caps must all face the same way, turned from you.! Solder the strips together. Paint the inside of the bottle caps one color and the outside another. Mount the anemometer on the point- ed end of a slender stick. It will spin around no matter in which di- rection 'the wind blows, and, by its speed, you can tell how hard the wind is blowing. (Tomorrow--I ndian Chiefs' Life i ik-gi-kai-kwan.) i a | AN IRISH LETTER. By an Irishman. A correspondent of the "London Morning Post" who is investigating the extent and causes of Sinn Fein terrorism in the South and West of Ireland records a conversation he had with a Sinn Fein at the funeral of a policeman who was murdered The Sinn Fein asserted that it was not a murder but a patriotic execyt- jon, when he was reminded that some of the bishops had denounced the kil- ling of policemen as murder he re- plied: "Oh well! the bishops can say what they like but our priests teach us here that to kill the police no murder if it is- done with a patriotic motive." The correspondent also adds that ninety per cent. of the people of Cork believe the priests and not the bishops. responsibility of the United States going to war with Great Britain on the Irish question is one of the prin- cipal ideas of the priesthood, and he quotes a passage from the "Irish Rosary," in which it was said tnat such a war might be brougd® about within eighteen months. An inspector under the National Board entered a school in Kerry re- is cently and found the children writ-| ing in their copy books the sentence: "The King is our worst enemy," and | when the teacher was asked why she had given them that sentence write she replied, "that it was the Building Food --made in our own factory at Windsor from prime Canadian-grown grains Grape-Nuts The true food values of wheat and malted barley, perfectly blended into appetizing form. Ready-to-eat and rich in nourishment. Needs nosugar. "There's A Reason" for GRAPE-NUTS Canadian Postum Cereal Co., Ltd 'Windsor, Ontario Again he found that the | to | Cowhorn and Flute And the Memory-Mak said: One summer day a Russian cow- herd met a flute-player from the city. "Howdy. brother. said. , "1 see you knew But the flute-player turned up his nose. "Brother, indeed!" he sneered. "1 would have you kmow that when I play, dukes and princes damce at my music. At your horn, cows switch their tails, that's all" "Perhaps." agreed the cowherd, "but there wouldn't, be any food for your dukes and princes if it weren't for my horn. And hungry people, even if they be dukes and princes, don't dance I" It is not always the whitest hands that do the most work. --R.-W. Stripes "Oh, Cousin Anna, I got for my birthday a beautiful piece of material, striped taffeta, black and white. Look! How do you like it? Couldn't I make a nice afternoon frock out of it?" "Certainly,- Maria, but you must be careful about the way the stripes fall or you may spoil the whole effect." "I know. I thought, if the stripes were in the length, it would look pretty." "Well, the dress might look pfetty, then, but when you came to wear it, you would find it wouldn't suit you. You are slender, and vertical stripes would make you look too thin, For your figure, you ought to 'wear theth in the width, you would look fuller. Wear, also, a white girdle; not a black one, which might seem like half mourning. Do that, and 1 think yom striped dress will look quite distingue." ~--GEORGETTE BEURET. Why is a watch-dog bigzer by night than by day? Because at night he is let out, and by day he is taken in. Daily Twelve-Syllable Rhyme : Temper is In its prime, Which 1s gay Breakfast-time. _ Little Mark, aged five, was impart- ing to the minister the information that his father had a new set of teeth. s Jade fLyuid the good man, patron- izingly, "and what is he goi with the old one? Ew "Oh," replied Mark, "I suppose mamma will cut them down and make me wear them." --Breckenridge H. San Antonio, Texas. . By Many a man drifts on to shoals mply because he is too shiftless to .se the oars. how to pipe, r i | BUD DOES THINGS . The Clan of North America THE He Ingroduces Himselr.' I am Bu mpkins, which does not mean a whole lot, but I guess most people have a name which is the reason 1 have one. My father works in an office which he also owns. Father says that the more you own the harder you have to work. My mother tells me what to do, and what not to do, and bosses father. 1 gmess th¥& Is the best way, but when I get married I am going to be the boss. I am eleven vears old and in good health, which 1 have got by carrying a lucky stone around with me. Bill Peters lost his lucky stone and got the measles right away. The reason why I am writing this is because I am going to write for a living some day, only it will not be real: writing, I mean it will all be imaginary stuff about all sorts of wonderful thiigs." This is writing real stuff because it is the truth The other is not the opposite'but it is not the truth either Mother says that it is fiction,.and it is not a lie. So whenever 1 want to go any- where and do not want mother to know I tell her a lot of fiction, which s all right because it is not Maybe when I' write some more let- ters I will put a little fiction in them to make them more lively In the nc # one which will be about fishing 1 am going to tell the absolute truth lies What to Wear. "Something old and somethi Something borrowed and something blue." "Sorrow is soon in green." "Married in white, you have chosen right; Married in grey. you'll go far away; Married in black, you'll wish your- self back; Married in red, dead." "Yellow's forsaken, sworn, But blue and red ought to be worn." "If your eyebrows meet across your nose, Better not don wedding clothes." This has reference to the jeal- ousy which meeting eyebrows ape said to betoken. seen if you marry you had better be and green for- The Day. Monday for health, wealth, Wednesday the best day of all Thursday for the losses and Fridas for crosses, And Saturday not any at all. Tuesday for People who are long on advice ar as a general rule, short on experien RY ona ae ver FRANCIS ROLT-WHEELER "Hog-pen or dove-tail?™ asked Lars. "I doubt if the fellows are handy enough with their axes to tackie a dove-tail finish to the log buildings," said the Director, doubtfuily. "What's the difference between them >" queried , Barton. "Hog-pen finish has the log ends Sticking out, dovetail has the ends fitted and sawed flush." "Suppose we do the indoor first, hog-pen style," suggested Will "When we've a bit of practice, we can dove-tail." i "The logs are there already," said EroWail os Los Bun ore. "Then we'll begin, first thing Mon- day morning!" said the Camp. Cap- tam. Lars himself leveled and hid the of the fellows dug away the ground where the logs were to fit. The logt were then rolled into place. The first cross logs were rolled on these to "rest. Fifteen inches from the end, Lars notched the cross loge about 2 inches deep, or a little more, the notch corresponding in curve te the ridge of the logs on which they were to ride. This was done at each end, and then the cross logs were dropped into place. The butt end of one cross log was placed on the op- posite side from the butt of the other to keep the level placed true. Thus the corners were built. As, however, the gym was both big- ger and wider than any single logs they could find, Lars hewed some sad- dles (See Fig.) and spiked these into place, using a steel tape to keep them level with the rise of the cor- ners. In order to strengthen the con- struction, long short logs were used alternately. "But there aren't any windows! eried Will "We'll make them, now. You'R see," replied Lars. (Tomorrow--Putting wo the Gwvm.)' The school 18 priest who had done it." n which this teaching is given supported out of the taxes. Rev. Dr. Henry who comes from American and Dr. Salesby F.RS.E. of London have been conducting a propaganda in Ireland under the aus- pices of the Irish Temperance Leag- | ue. Speaking of a recent meeting in the industrial province of Ireland, Dr. Salesby remarked, "The English speaking provinces of Canada had de- cided on prohibition and it would be a stain on the ties binding the Grea! Dominion to the Motherland if the British Isles refused to rise to the same high level. The Canadians had not been pleased to find that while they were saving grain during the war it was being wasted in Europe | in the production of alccholic liquor. It may be stated that the official statistics as to the'amount expended nn Ireland on liquor per head of the ypulation does not represent the tual amount consumed, as in ad- tion there is a traffic in "home- aanufactured spirit" which is not by any means infinitesimal. A proposal is on foot for the estab- lishment of a war memorial club in the centre of Belfast so that members of the Ulster ex-service mens' assoc- jation passing through or staying in the city may have a suitable place in which to meet, and be provided with bedroom accommodation If re- quired. The club when formed will be self-supporting. A subscribers book is being prepared as a perpet- val record of the publics' appreciat- jon of the Ulster ex-service men. In ansewer to a question in the Commons as to whether martial law would be proclaimed "seeing that the whole of the south and west of Ire- land are in open rebellion, and the ordinary law has ceased to operate for many months" the chief secretary replied that the question was being -| considered. At the annual General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in Ire- land held during the second week in June the retiring moderator, (Major- General J. M. Simms), in his address remarked that the whole world was still heaving with ground swell of the great war. 'For them," he proceed- ed, 'the présent problem in Ireland was the most serious factor in the whole international situation and its importance to the British Empire particularly in relation to the United States of America could not be ex- aggerated. They dared not mortgage their childrens rights, but they had ac- cepted proposals which were distaste- ful to them for the sake of peace and they should work honestly for the .| good of Ireland with no otherthought than to mitigate the animostity of Centuries and to put an end to the deplorable strife which had cast so terrible a stain on the fair fame of their native land and he was pro- Baldwin Steel Company. feet in length. PROGRESS OF TORONTO HARBOR COMMISSION IS SHOWN. Above are scenes showing the work being carried on or promoted by the Toronto Harbor Commission. above, is the steam yacht "'Bathelma," purchased by the com- mission for $7,000, and now estimated to be worth $150,000. | At the right, above, the first-unit of the new plant of the The unit is one of three, each R00 The lower picture shows dredging operations At the left, | in connection with the new harbor wall. foundly convinced that the magnani- mity of Ulster would im-due time make .its impressions upon the { world." The new moderator, the Rev. H. P Glenn, M.A., who hails from the South of Ireland in a deeply moral and spiritual address said: "Where there was such a marked contrast as there was today between one portion of Ireland and another there was something wrong in the moral and religious teaching of those who set aside so flagrantly the plain teaching of God's holy law, on which all righteousness of character, and | i | all law and just Government must be | based." 'The condition of Ireland is the outcome of the preaching and teaching for a generation of the arid gospel of national hatred. | After several months of continued \agitation for the decontrol of Irish flax producers Association bewails the fact that only 5 per cent. of the that the Government decided to im-| troduce a bill for setting up a prodi- | cial tribunal in Ireland to decide whether there is sufficient evidence to warrant the detention of suspected persons. An Irish Judge is to pre-! side. Richard Walters, late of the Glen- ora Milling Co., has severed his connection with the company, and has moved into Picton. Without Pure Blood Health Is Impossible Owing to faulty action of the kid- neys and liver, the blood becomes fill- ed with disease germs that imperil | health. , The first warnings are backache, | | | dizziness, headache and lack of en-! | ergy. Act quickly if you woul | flax and when Irish Government con- | 3 a alg aval) trol is actually heing abolished the whole of the Irish flax crops has been | | graded number one. The Association ystates "the flax produce by not pro- | ducing a first cfass article is suffer- | ing heavy loss," and then the As- | sociation makes the frank admission | box "We bave no equals in our finished | Yet | farmer can beat our |i" article in the linen damask. the foreign farmers in the guality of flax he pro- duces for the spinners." culture earlier, force upon an gether exhorbitant price scutched article. If the only ad- vantage of Government control has been to indicate to the great majority of producers, that apparently have much to learn in regard to the culti- | vation and handling of flax, it will not have been in vain.. | It is stated on reliable authority It is rather | i a pity that the Association had not | given advice and instruction on flax! and expended less | endeavor to, compel | the Government to obtain an alto- J for the | the terrible ravages of chronic kid-| ney complaint, Get Dr. Hamilton's Pills to-day; they cure kidney and! liver troubles for ail time to come. No medicine relieves so promptly, cures so thoroughly. For good blood, cleat complexion, healthy appetite, use that grand health-bringing medi- cine Dr. Hamilton's Pills. Get a 25¢c. | to-day. i Carriage Repair and Black- smith shop, 54 Queen street, city; thriving business; big stock of material and tools. Fine chance for right man. Failing health reason for sell- ing. APPLY AT SHOP. PHONE 11TW. 54 QUEEN STREET AAR Lo i OE LUMBER We have well-assorted stocks in Pine, ruce and Hemlock. . Sp re em rs - cn aw 4 ORB t Allan Lumber Co. Phone 1042. Victoria Street AIEEE ACREAGE ty MILLER'S ® WORM POWDERS ® : BELIEVE THE RESTLESS CONDITION BROUGHT ON BY THE PRESENCE OF WORMS AND RESTORE THE CHILD TO NORMAL HEALTH. NO NARCOTICS --PLEASANT AS SUGAR JUTE BAGS WANTED We will pay highest prices for all kinds of Jute Bags. Get in touch with us. A. SPEIZMAN 60 QUEEN ST., KINGSTON BUY NOW TO MAKE SURE OF YOUR HOUSE FOR FALL Alfred Street--brick; hot wa ter Johnston Street--briek; $3 Wellington S wd Finest semi-furnished summer home on Wolfe Island. Also a few good farms Fup nished houses to rent. Apply to: -- J. O HUTTON 67 CLARENCE STREET Phone 703. Drink Charm Black Tea Sold in Packages Only GEO. RUBLKTSON & SON, Limited a ra cre ier -------------- KINGSTON MILLING COMPANY, Ltd. Foot of Brock Street, Kingston Our mill is equipped with modern machinery, driven by electric motors with current generated at Kingston Mills. WE MANUFACTURE: -- HUNGARIAN PATENT AND WHITE ROSE FLOUR, BUCK- WHEAT FLOUR, GRANULATED CORN MEAL, GROUND i, GROUND OA'"S, CRACKED CORN, GROUND FEED, BRAN, SHORTS, FEED, FLOUR. Our Products are good and freshly made FOR SALE BY ALL GROCERS Big With Comfort the walking low cut shown here. Put your feet into a pair and they will feel at home at once. Yet they are not clumsy looking or old fashioned. On the contrary they are smart and stylish ex- amples of footwear as cai be seen anywhere. Have a look at them and ask prices They'll satisfy you all right. The Victory Shoe Store Phone 480. are new shoes as Corner Princess and Clergy. SPRING CLOTHES OF THE FINER QUALITY For Men And Young Men SMART NEW MODELS IN SPRING SUITS AND TOP COATS $25.00 to $50.00 (All prices between) BEST WEARING CLOTHES VALUES --al TWEDDEL"S One Door Below Randolph Hotel. 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