SATURDAY, JULY 15, 1022, Husband and Nearly Dead With CHOLERA The chief symptoms of cholera are vomiting, and purgings occur either... simultaneously or alternately, and are usually sudden and very violent, and the matter ejected from stomach has a bilious appearance and a nasty bitter taste. On the first symptoms appearing, Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Straw- berry should be taken and the trouble checked before it becomes serious. Mrs. Isaac Smith, Campbellton, N. B., writes:--"We have been using Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Straw- berry for cholera. I were pretty nearly dead with it un- til we started to use your medicine, * and thanks to it, we have found great relief, and are recommending it to all our friends." 77 years' reputation stands be- hind "Dr. Fowler's," therefore you are not experimenting with some new and untried remedy when you get it. Price, 50c. bottle; put up only by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. 'H ERAPIO N No. 1 Skin Diseases, No. 3 for Ohromic Weaknesses SOLD BY LEADING CHEMISTS. PRICE IN ENGLAND, 3 x ed Co. Ws. EE I eat WL 33 HAVE A WARM PLACE IN THE HEARTS OF MOTHERS FOR THEY HAVE PROVED THAT THEY ARE ONE OF THE MOST EFFICIENT AND BENEFICIAL REMEDIES THAT CAN BE GIVEN TO A CHILD, THEY ARE SWEET AND EASILY TAKEN AND QUICKLY ERADICATE THESE WRETCHED PARASITES FROM THE SYSTEM. CONTAIN NO NARCOTICS ------ A Bad Case Eczema All Over His Body -- His Legs --His Arms Covered | John Clark of Brookville. N. B., crowds a | SOC OF £1eah cnttoring tics Nop Bier a In Centre of Shoppi and Business Disir: 100 . WINNETT THOMPSON. MAN'S. DIR. EET M. J. MALLEN is still conducting the Automobile Repairing Business at corner Col. All re- pairs will receive persomal atten. tion. Large cars washed, $1.00; | small cars, 78¢c. TELEPHONE 1005J, Wife! the | THE DAILY ERITISH WHIG. Sunday Services in Churches {mecluding his wife's temper. There's no particular pleasure in {serving a mea! under such circum- | stances, and if the wife either hasn't i | St. {and visitors cordially welcome. | -- | | la.m {in month at 8 am | | wright, M.A.,, B.D, rector. {Sunday after Trinity. 8 a.m., communion; 11 a.m, morning pray (er; 4 p.m., holy baptism; 7 p.m. evening prayer. NN > Holy communion on last Sunday Fifth holy | *.Corper Charles Zion Presbyterian Church, Pine | services. Seats free. welcome. Sunday school at 3 p.m. Presbyterian Church Cooke's Andrew's, -- Rev. John w. |noly cogimunijon. Stephen, minister, will conduct both |E. Kidd. | services. 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Students |p.m., evensong St. Paul's--Canon W. F. PitsGer. | ld, M.A., rector. Morning service 11 | Evening service, 7 p.m.--Nota | can, | Subjects, "A Memorable Hour," and | "Caleb's Title Deeds." Young men's | bible class, 10 a.m.; Sunday school, [ference between "ready Mon- | dishes in a restaurant and dishes that | io . . {3 p.m.; Christian Endeavor, St. Luke's Church. -- Rev. J. de P, | day, 8 p.m. Prayer meeting, Wednes- My husband and |street, Rev. Edwin H. Burgess, min- | ister. 11 am. and 7 p.m. Rev. John | P. Mackie, M.D., will preach at both | Everybody | | | | holy baptism; Preacher, Rev. W. 4 p.m. |E. Kidd. Services, day, 8 p.m. | i rie street. Phone 1806W. Sunday, 10 a.m., Sunday school. 11 a.m., subject .m., Christian Endeavor; Wednos- day, 8 p.m., prayer meeting. Every- one welcome. look in bathing suits, First Baptist Church, Sydenham | have much time to eat my lunch, and | ie sh | | ith for | Calvary Congregational Church.-- | Ing a long time waiting and Bagot streets. | Whereas the latter come | Pastor, Rev. A. F. Brown, 144 Bar- Off the fire, cooked just the right | anything to say. or says too much: Preacher, Rev. W_|You can't blame her__if you'd stop to | 7 |think that you haven't given her a | i fair show. The Business of cooking isn't like {a carpenter's job or a machinist's or | and Bethel Church, Barrie and Jolin. 8 clerk's--which may be left at any ndles, the church denominations make son streets.--Pastor, A. Sidney Dun- | time and gone back to with the assur- 11 am. and 7 p.m |ance that it, will be just as you left it. Figure it out for yourself, You know that there's a lot of dif- to serve" lare "cooked to order." T The former are apt to be tasteless |and cold because they've been stand- you, 0 you right | length of time. ! When you're tempted again to yourself whether you're a good eater. . . . I was in a hurry to keep an en- | agement the other day, and I didn't | Brock Gg a fou Wa and Johnson streets.--Rev. J. S. La-|I was in a city with whose eating | Queen street | Cooke's church, Rev. W. 8. Lennon | Flair, pastor. 9.45 a.m., bible school: {D.D., will conduct both {Helpful discourse, bright singing and [a warm welcome to all. Come. Queen Street Methodist Church-- Rev. W. 8. Lennon, B.A., B.D., pas- | tor. Services at 11 am. and 7 p.m. {7 p.m., public worship. {in Oooke's Presbyterian | church. Queen street church, dially welcomed. and Montreal preaching, cess [ service 7.15 p.m.; na i. streets--Song services. | Who." theme, sermon am. sermon T pm, | places I wasn't very familiar, so I "Who's [Tushed into a restaurant close by to [committee thems, crder the "simplest" thing on the eon to m [costumes to see that they are the | "Storms in the Night." Services con- | Menu card. | church, | Preacher, the pastor of Queen street | Sunday school at 3 p.m. in Strangers cor- ducted by Pastor LaFlair. Union street church.--George Cowie, B.A, student pastor. 3 p.m,, bible school: First Church of Christ Scientist-- |Johnson street, between Bagot and | appointments," the linen, and | Wellington. Sunday services, -11! | lot | rant, I should have called it the 'bili fare." But it wasn't a regular restaurant, {as 1 discovered by glancing at said {menu card. Also, there were the the music, and the (crockery, and lam. Subject: "Life." Public read- | Waiters--and the HEAD WAITER ing room, same address, every after- to 5 o'clock, and Thursday from 7.30 Wednesday, 8 p.m. All are cordial- to 9.30 p.m, testimonial meeting. p.m. Speclal speaker, Prof. K. L.| 5 h vi and to the Gant, president Oshawa Missionary |» lavited 10 the 'services 9 th College. inspiring and soul-upMfting. him. Seats free. St. James' Church, corner Union jand Arch streets. T. W. Savary, rec- | tor, the rectory, 152 Barrie street. | communion. Preahcer, | Austin Smith. 3 p.m., Sunday school. in jd | Preacher, the Dobbs, M.A. 11 a.m., morning prayer and holy Rev. Canon p.m., evening prayer and sermon. Ven. Archdeacon | | Love." His discourses are always | Hear | | { | | | | | reading-room. Chalmers Presbytérian and Syden- ham street Methodist Church Union services in Chalmers church. Rev. Prof. A. J. Johnston, B.A, of Victoria College, Toronto, will preach morn- ing and evening. Subject, 11 a.m., |The Parable of the ElMer Brother. subject, 7 p.m., The Groundwork of Spiritual Life. Morning services anthem by the choir, "I Lay My Sins on Jesus." Evening. Solo by Miss Anna Mitchell, "Saviour Thy Pyrag St. George's Cathedral--Very Rev, | welcome. 1G. and rector, 78 Wellington st., 2156. Rev. W. E. Kidd, M.A, M.C., | | } curate, 7 Wellington street, phone '10.15 a.m. 869w. Fifth Sunday after Trinity. 8 am, holy communion; 11 am. | Lothrop Stari, M.A., D.D., dean| phone |Chown's class, 9.45 a.m. Bible class, In Sydenham street church--W. W. Primary and beginners, Prof. Johnston will ad- A good at- 2.45 p.m. dress the Bible school. endance is requested. By the Rev & Some men are old at thirty, others ire young at sixty. "It's a good thing You've got the ambition to start in again at fifty," said a workingman chum of the same age to a semi-pro- fesstonal man who was practically beginning his life's work over and doing it with enthusiasm. But the "ambition" was due to a mind kept fresh because of contact with live, new things--wheseas the working- man who was offering his congratu- lations to his friend was old and "logy" because his life had consisted of dull routine. If your mind is kept young by reading study and by mingling and talking with live people, your body is sure to respond to its freshness. If your mind is not fed upon the vital things of life, it is bound to grow old and die before its time.--It is general- ly true thet workingmen as a class "dle" sooner than professional men --physically as well as mentally. This isn't altogether due to the fact that workingmen's jobs are more danger- THE MATTER OF EATING . Charles Stelle. ous than other men's jobs. It is due principally to the workingmen's at- titude, toward life. He assumes that when he's fifty he's an old man with nothing to which to look forward Among the so-called "upper classes' a man is at his best at Aifty--and he does some of the finest work between fifty and seventy. Feed your mind to keep young. * . There's many a man who brutally tells his wife that she can't cook. But there's many a woman who don't know HOW to cook because she don't know WHEN to cook. Her. husband comes home any old time--and, of course, he expects his supper to be ready on the dot, no matter when he arrives, and even though he never told his wite when he'd get home. And, to be sure--the potatoes are soggy, and the meat is fried to a frazzle--or otherwise spoiled--and the coffee has lost its freshness--and about everything else is overdone, ---- on in the streets of Dublin during the recent fighti RX -| I pt d tidays, 3 Present Truth Hall, corner Prin- toon, except Sunday and holidays Students and--strangers are'}" And the boy who checked my hat and coat, Here's what I paid for my lunch- jeon: { Corned beef hash Coffes ... ... Bread and butter Pie PR Tip to waiter Tip to hat boy ... Total vs meena $1.95 I couldn't help comparing this meal with those I used to eat regu- larly every day for years, when I was machinist. Here's what I then ate, and what I raid for it: Bread ... ... ... Bologna ... Apples . | 03 07 .03 Tolar]... wa. .13 THEE very simple meal was eaten on: thie top of a work bench, with a neWspiper for a table cloth, instead of 'ite-jinen; humming machinery for music, and never a waiter or hat boy in sight. Just, a bunch of hearty, joshing machinists to joke with, and some- times a bit of a wrestle or "rough (house engaged in good-naturedly, to {produce a laugh and to make the | blood tingle. But, oh boy! how'good that hot, jucy sausage tasted, dipped into a dab of mustard spread on brown pa- per--for which the butcher made no extra charge, Now, mind you, I'm not advocating rye bread and bologna sausage as a I steady' diet, nor would I dare say that | a working man should always be con- | tent with this very simple meal. I've never been an advocate of any scheme which will teach a work- ingman and his family how to live | on a dollar a day. I'm more concern- ed about schemes that will help him earn TEN dollars a day. But, take it from me, there were certain distinct advantages in that machine shop "dinner" over my sim- ple "luncheon" in a swell restaurant, and I would gladly have paid $1.95 for it if I could have bought the fun and the freedom and the solid com- fort that I got out of that thirteen- cent meal which I used to enjoy when I wore the overalls. Don't waste a dollar's worth of time looking for a lost penny. If it had been an ordinary restau- | | burning the body on an altar. | | ' | i |THE MAN ON WATCH Well, the Birmingham car is a jim- | dandy anyway. { | Syrup oF TAR & Coo Liver ExTrAc Stops CoucH Sold e. THE J. L. MATHIED CO. jize Sot es by all dealers SHERBR .Q. Makers also of Mathizu's Neroine Powders the re Q for Headaches, Neuralgia and Feverish Colds. 1 Like the Scotchman and the pern- | | the little things count in their differ- | ences. | | Kingston has had its 249th birth- | |day anniversary, and such an auspic- | us occasion can only be properly | celebrated by the use of very oid | | wine. Why we hadn't even good beer | [tn do the celebrating. | | Personal liberty is to be given To- | |ronto and Kingston teachers in re- 1 gard to bobbed hair, but what about { "The Unknown Christ." 7 p.m., sub- charge your wife with being a bad [Personal Mberty in the choosing of | ject, "The Great Trial." Monday, 8 | cook, it might be a fair thing to ask |Our drink? | Many people go to Macdonald park Just to see how bobbed haired giris | | THIS YEAR SEE THE CANADIAN PACIFIC Does the chairman of the parks intend to appoint any per- | easure the girlfes'. bathing i proper distance above the knee? The Quebec province mah who | |traded h's son for a horse was no | worse than the patriarch Abraham, | | who according to bible story, con- | the | ceived th | e idea of killing his eon and | | ¥. CONWAY, City Passen- ger Agent, 150 Welling ton St. Kingston, Ont Phone 1187. The Constantinople harem attend- | ants have gone on strike. Has King- ston any unemployed young men who | would ltke a journey to Turkey? | Yes, sev- | "Unseen and yet seen.' | : 2602 Le eral Kingston young women were ob- | Canadian Pacific Railway served in the vicinity of Sandy Bot. | . tom one day this week peeping out | from thetr resting place at some nude |More than one of the teachers wore Mrs. T. E. Wagar and Mr. and Mrs. young men going in for a swim. | bobbed hair. So it may have been [F. W. Wagar at Earl Storms', Wagar- ' that Kingston was the birthplace of )wille. Mr. and Mrs. Amey and Mr. g téachers and Mrs. R.- Coty at B' Cornwall's. gr Miss Nellie Steele at J. C. Hartman's, A number from here attended the dance at Sharbot Lake, Saturday evening. Mrs. B. Lappins and chil- IN YEARS Now that the government is get- | bobbed hair amon ting after the doctors for their poer | nie penmanship, let it alsc give the la v- "Ant we got fun?" must have been yers, the bankers and in fac: some | ROW the street failway people felt on of their dear selves a reminder tha: | Wednesday night at Lake Ontario all people are not mind-readers | Park. You know it is a "most pleas- dren, Kingston, are visiting friends {ant thing' for a street railway com- |i, Parham. C. K. Smith and family Why do people insist upon staring |Pa0y in a small city to have a big {and Mrs. Simpson also Mrs. F, Chari- at girls in riding habit? This question | °TOWd on its hands at a summer park ton and children, Belleville, are at was asked of the Lampman and he | When a storm cuts off its source of J. M. Smith's. Ernest Bertrim and gave it as his view that riding habit | e}ectric power supply, and it hes to i family are in the city. Is more decent than the average sum- {hire taxis to get the people home : -- att Is Your Blood Good mer attire and permits of less dis- | "hen you figure out the cost of such play of the form. things, say a prayer for the company [that it may not become broke. --THE TOWN WATCHMAN. Bobbed hair in Kingston schools is nothing new. A Bagot street resi- dent tells the Lampman that when Many Visit at Parham, Parham, July 10.--Farmers have ttarted haying. The ball game on Saturday between Tamworih and Farham was quite exciting and re- sulted in a score of 6-1 in favor of tingling with health for eve; organ. . You need it if weak and tired da in and day out, if your appetite is r, sleep un refreshing, -- for _ boils, eruptions, scrofala, tien, headaches, nervous y It is simply wonderful give strength to your whole body, It is agreeable, pleasant and con- venient to take, and embodies a long-tried and found-true formnia. ---- he was a boy over thirty years ago ---- --_------ ou are po ex periment ng when nt. ment for Eezema and Skir Irrita. |Tamworth. C. D. Godfrey and fam- tons, I relieves a: once and grad. ily were guests of Mr. Black at camp Chase's BE a aioe or mp Jot Pogiage. Py Visitors: F. H. Howes and family at Jmed. Toronto. George Howes, Wagerville. Mr. and x ) use br, Lhase's ola all s y niment free if you diention this | Kill Kare, Eagle Lake, | on Sunda. ~-- Beatty Would Not Load Naval Guns With Shot WOULD Admiral Beatty permit the six-inch projectile for a naval gun to be replaced by its equivalent weight in bird shot? Nothing could result but waste. The effect is the same when an advertising appropriat- ion is divided into nickles and blown against the map of Canada through media of general circulation. When you attack a certain market in Canada vou must hit the bull's eve. The daily newspapers in that market are your high power guns. Your own advertising is the projectile. Your salesmen. samplers, distributors, ad- vance under the barrage. Successful merchandizing manufacturers know how to make their products a household word. Mr. W. M. MacKay of Lever Bros., Ltd. has write ten: "When we inform you that the greater part of our advertising expenditure, - year by year, has been in the newspaper, that is the best answer as to the suit ability of the press in Can- ada as one of the best means of advertising any household or other commodity." The circulation of the daily newspaper in our terri- tory links your product with our merchants and retail- ers of sound reputation in the eyes of our readers. You can train all your guns on this target and use no powder | i [ elsewhere until you need to advance your line in other dis rections. Issued by the Canadian Daily Newspapers Association, Toronto