Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 6 Oct 1923, p. 7

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SATURDAY OOTOBER 6, 192% Fall Colds QUICKLY YIELD TO DR. HICKEY'S TREATMENT Dr. Hickey's Speedy Mixture stops a Cough in a few doses.. Dr. Hickey's Cold Capsules dry up the head cold over night. Dr. Hickey's Chest Raub quickly removes the congestion and draws out the pain. This combination is the best 4' ubtainable. 25¢ each L. T. Best Druggist There can be 0 | more appropri- | ate gift than a | Tea Service. | Throughout the 4 years to come it will be cherished as an heirloom by future genera- tions. Farms For Sale 200 ACRES--100 urder cultivation, 12 miles from Kingston; frame house, good condition; 2 large barns, newly shingled ~--with or without implem@is--~would exchange for city property. 190 ARES--8 miles from Kingston-- 316 acres under cultivation--§0 acres vod bush; good, stone house, large Tr and drive shed; well watered, Farne a stream; well adapted for mar- ket gardening; 1 mile from church, school and factory. 125 ACRES--100 acres good soil; bal- ance good pasture; good frame house; 2 barns; never-failing spring. 12 miles from city. 66 ACRES--Garden and truck farm; double brick house; sll conveniences; close to city. 85 ACRES -- 25 acres good garden nd; frame house; barn and cow house; close to factory, school and chureh; 12 miles from Kingston; on easy terms or exchange; Crop on easy terms for quick sale, Bateman's Real Estate 136 Wellington St. Our stock is at all times well as- sorted and rea- { sonably priced. SOWARDS STARTS WITH SERVICE, ENDS WITH SATISFACTION SOWARDS KEEPS COAL AND COAL KEEPS SOWARDS PHONE 155, UPTOWN OFFICE: McGALL'S CIGAR STORE. PHONE 811. "FOR OVER FIFTY YEARS HAPPY THOUGHT RANGES have given satisfaction to the house- wife. They are still giving the same satisfaction and have the same good qualities. Buy one for your wife to- day. You will enjoy the comfort. 4 » McKelvey & Birch, Limited General Contractors, Heating Specialists, Steam Fittery and Plumbers, Jobbare of Plumbers' and Gas-Fitters' Supplies, Stoves, Belt, Dav rors uaiing Haravare. Fools, lis, Bewt Supplies, Sheet Metal ork; Kieetric werk; Painting and Paper Hanging. Special Mah 86 1 Mints ndeouien. 3 1 > FURNITURE SPECIALS we AE hv bo te DRESSER, BED, CHIFFONIER Regular price $135.00. Special . . . $92.50 | . Regular price $133.00. Special . . . $90.00 ; vom THE WEEK ONLY--HURRY IF YOU WANT A SNAP. LR Harrison Co., Limited Pm 0 | 1¥ that is contained no date. Other without | Chapter 1567 -- The City of Car- Carthage is also shown. Notice We must now leave Japan, China| ancient coins were also and India, so we can go back to the Mediterrnean sea, If we really made such a trip, it would be eight or ten thousand miles long and would take many | days; but to do it in thought takes only an instant. In the past we have spent quite a while in Egypt, Greece and other countries on the eastern end of the sea. From now on the center ot power goes westward, and is mossy {in Europe. For a time, however, great pow- er was wielded by a great city in Africa. This city was Carthage, and it was located on the sea coast across from Italy. Carthage wags started by sailors The chief .god worshipped by the and travelers from the aity of Tyre people of Carthage was Baal, in Phoenicia, Some of these men brought their wives along, and al- most all kem: the ideas of religion they had learned at home, The chief god of the people of Carthage was called Baal. A statue of this god is 'pictured. It is very queer to look at. Baal was the Carthaginian name for Marduk. You remember that Marduk was wer shipped in the Land of Two Rivers. A ooin used by the people of "SANITARY BABIES + (Continued from page 1.) glouring down upon our safety corps heroes of to-day, exclaiming, "What | a hell of a mess you have made of the name pioneer." Two sides of a Carthaginjan coin. Next---Walls and Gates of Rome. | PROBS: --Sunday, fine, cool, frost at night. " = 2 | TO-NIGHT | CANADA HEIR OF ADVERSITY. ! Canada, like Scotland, is the heir of adversity. Her geographic and | climatic conditions are a perpetual challenge to the philosophy of softness. | The story of "our true north" has been a living treatise on that strife | which is 'the law of life. : ' | What Canada accomplished in the war was not -a thing of chance | The country was merely running true to form, and this is what some fail | to see. In 1914 many Americans regarded their northern neighbor with | indifference; in their ignorance they would have dismissed us with the contemptuous phrase of Voltair, "Oniy a few arpents of snow." But the spirit of the country was the same then as it is now. | The war gave the Dominion a chance to prove her spirit, and in the proving she was seen by all the world. Henceforth, Canada, an appendage | of Empire, has assumed proportions as a nation. Her fame of a mo-| ment rests on no ephemeral basis of material splendor, but on that quality | of soul possessed by her people; a quality of soul deriving its strength | from the struggles of the past. It was no mere chance that lads from Canada upon the battieflelds of Europe proved their nettle. The Gaelic Highlanders of Cape Breton, | and the "Little Black Devils" of Winnipeg exhibited to all the world at | Langemark, the same qualities which their fathers developed in unseen | battles of the 'forest and wilderness. Those who know her past realize that there is a continnity in Cana- dian history, and that in her splendid record of the war the country was | merely running true to form. : y In 1914 the ignorant might laugh about the "jumping-off place of snow and ice." But the wise observer always recognized that the old Canadian belonged to the iron breed of the pioneer. DEFEATS, BLESSINGS IN DISGUISE. 8ir Charles Lucas, the veteran colonial office administrator; says in an illuminating passage: 'Read the chronicles of New France, told with so much force, gnd such singular attractiveness, by Francis Parkman, from Champlain to" Frontenac, from Frontnac to Montcalm; note the heroism | and self-sacrifice of the early French missionaries; the transplantation | of the Old World into the New; the imported feudalism so artificial on the banks of the St. Lawrence, yet so long-lived and tenacious; the sharp contrast between the habitants rivetted to the soil, and the roving voyageurs| and coureur des bois. Follow again the fortunes of Canada under British rule, from 1763 onward. Hold Quebec with Carleton against Arnold and (Montgomery, stand with Brock by Queenston 'Heights, or with Gordon! Drummond at Lundy's Lane. Accompany Lord Durham and Charles Bul- ler on their healing mission, and trace all that came in its train. "Where is the making of a nation so manifest, so marked by clear and unmistakable milestones, as in Canada ? Note again, that as it has been with British history, so it has been with the history of Canada; defeats and misfortunes have been blessings in disguise." The history of Canada unfolds a perpetual climbing up those alter stairs of sacrifice. But the sacrifice itself has borne its own reward. A BASIC PRINCIPAL BY CANADIANISM. A 'wise people may count as their greatest asset no material posses sions, but obstacles met and ¢onquered. Canada is rich in such posses- | stons. Her cold and rigorous climate may be included among her. bene-| fits. Her winters allow no place for softies, hobees, and loafers. A man! must work to keep warm in this northern air. Cold tends to cure or xin the shiftless or improvident. Out of such conditions must come forth a| hardy, striving people. To keep up the promise of our past, our whole Dominion to-day is in need of more of the Spartan 'virtues, of more courage, of daring, of stout- ness of heart, This Is a time that calls for the homespun virtues of the ploneer, for his stern and resolute resistance. Let us repeat In closing, a basic principal of Canadianism is Individual Effort and Individual Reward, leading up to that grand old text, "God helps the man who helps himself." IOWA PHYSICIAN WAKES|Looters of Simcoe Store STARTLING OFFER TO Sent Down for Five Years CATARRH SUFFERERS Found Treatment Which Healed His Own Catarrh and Now Offers To Send It Free to Sufferers Anywhere. Davenport, Towa.--Dr. W. O. fee, Suite 2032, St. James Hotel in the central west, announces that he found a treatment which | | ef i i ih} | £ is: | AT STEACY'S An attractive list of worth-while bargain opportunities-- wanted seasonable merchandise at popular prices. Store Open Till 9.45 p.m. LADIES HOSIERY {| SILK AND WOOL HOSE 200 pairs plain and ribbed; all sizes --Black, Sand, Brown, Grey, Suede. Regular $1.50. «+... To-night $1.19 CLOCKED CASHMERETTE HOSE 190 pairs Brown and Dove shade Cashmerette Hose--all sizes -- fancy Silk Clock. Reg. 65c. To-night 50c. ENGLISH RIBBED HOSE--300 pairs Brown, Suede. Navy, Fawn, Sage; all sizes; all wool; wortht $1.25. To-night $1.00 .CHAMOISETTE GLOVES 250 pairs fine French Chamoiset- te Gloves; all sizes and colors: Black, Grey, Brown, Sand --reg. 75¢) | To-night ... 59¢. to 10; BOYS' SCHOOL HOSE 10 doz. Boys' Rib- bed Hose; sizes 6} excellent wearing qualities, Regular 35c¢, To-night .... 25¢. FLEECE-LINED HOSE 10 doz. Ladies' Black Fleece-lined Hose; all sizes and special at 50c. To-night . . ... 39. TABLE CLOTHS 12 only, all linen, patterned Cloths--size 2x2--bor- der all round. Reg. $6.50 each. ....... . To-night $4.50 UNION HUCK TOWELS 10 doz. Hemstitched Union Huck Towels. Size 18x32. Regular 50c. Tonight ....i.. ..o.. 35¢. FLANNELETTE White Flannelette; soft, fleecy finish; good width; worth 30c. yard. To-night . . ....... 22¢. yard LINEN TOWELLING 100 yds. Linen Crash Striped Towelling, pure linen. Regu- lar 25c. Tomtight . .......ove viii 3 308, LADIES' WOOL SWEATERS 36 only, Ladies' Wool Sweat- ers; all colors and styles. Reg. $2.50 to $6.50. Tonight .............. $1.98 COLORED FLANNELETTE 300 yds. Colored Flannelette; 27" wide and special value. Tonight ............. 23¢. KNITTING WOOL 2,000 balls 2 and 4 ply Sweat- er Wool--18 colors --~1 oz. balls--regular 15c. To-night .........2 for 25¢. MEN'S PYJAMAS 10 doz. Men's Colored Flan- nelette Pyjamas--sizes 36 to 44; full sizes. Regular $2.75. Tonight ....... ves ve $2.19 MEN'S NIGHT SHIRTS 60 only, Men's Colored Flan- nelette Night Shirts; all sizes; regular $1.75, Tonight .....". ..... $1.49 English Heather Coating | * 50 yds. only English Heather Wool Coating--Green and Brown mixtures--56" wide and extra special value. To ClERY. siaivinininis vieisieis nn vv chosmrsigistacs s + To-night $1.48 i 3 HE 5F A # 4 Ii g Ep ts representati i ji and

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