Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 19 Feb 1924, p. 13

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- TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 192%, Sm Had a Weak Heart Was Very Nervous For Three Years Zealandia, Miss Jessie Peterson, Sask., writes:--"1 w.sh to let you know how much good Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills have done for a Vi For fhearly three years I. was wind badly run down, had a weak Beart, and was so nervous that sometimes I would almost faint away, | I heard of many people who had | recommended your Heart and Neve, Pills, so 1 decided to give them a trial. After I had used two boxes I found they had done me good, and after having taken five boxes I was compietely relieved. I cannot recommend. your Pills enough. and I would advise anyone having a weak heart or troubled with nervousness to use them." . Milburn's H. & N. Pills are 0c. a box at all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of pr.ce by The T. Mil- burn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. Clears Skin Of Pimples with those on the scale of the instrument Remarkable Action of Stuart's Cal- cium Wafers in Ridding Face of Pimples, Boils, Rash, Blotches, etc. It is one of the wonders of the human system that certain natural{ elements have influences without] which there is decay. The skin is an | example. Take a complexion that is| all covered with pimples, blotches, | blackheads: and is oily and | muddy, feed it with Stuart's Calcium Wafers, and a marvelous change takes place. It soon becomes smooth and vel- vety. Pimples and other blemishes fade away. The blood in the skin is puri- fled, the waste matter is burned before #t reaches the skin and ero long the vomplexion lg girlish, refined and per- fectly lovely. Look closely at a wonderfully beautiful skin, and observe its soft delicate texture, the pink capillary blood tinting the cheeks, You see what is produced when your skin has been cleansed with Stuart's Calddum Wafers. Get a 60 cent box to-day of Stuart's Calclum Wafers at any drug store or write to F. A. Stuart Co., 637 Stuart K., Marshall, Mich.,, for a free sample package. STRUCK ACROSS THE EYE. ---- And a Serious Wound Inflicted by Hockey Stick. Odessa, Feb. 18.--Owing to the condition of the roads, since the re- cent storms, Mr. Anglin, the King- ston stage driver, has had to make the trips with slelghs. The freight Was held over for a couple of days but no trips were lost with the mail matter. The first hockey match of the sea- son was played Saturday afternoon between Albert school team and Odessa juniors. It was a draw. Vincent Kilgannon had the misfor- ¢ What the World Is THE DAI ----t & Doin CAS SEEN BY POPULAR c MECHANICS CMAGAZINB 2 Pocket Chart Tests Blood by Color Match Tests of the blood can be made by matching its color with those shown on 8 vest-pocket chart that has lately come nto use among doctors. In making the :xperiment, the patient's finger is first pricked with a sterilized needle and a drop of the blood collected on a piece of white paper. The color is then compared to determine the percentage of red com puscles. * East-Bound Ships Lighter Than Those Going West Scientific experiments to ascertain the sible effect of the direction in which a lip is going upcn its weight-carrying ca- acity, recently made by a prominent sientist, resulted in his 'conclusion that 2,000-ton vessel traveling east offers 400 ounds less resistance to the water cur-|' ent than it does when gest-bound. 'his calculation, it is said, is based upon he influence of centrifugal force, which is reater when a body is riding with the de in the direction in which the earth volves, than when headed the other way. + oe Safeguarding the Aerial Frequently a single-wire aerial is strung vetween the house and a near-by tree, and the swinging of the tree in a storm often breaks the wire or pulls it out of the sup- port at the other end. A good method of overcoming this trouble is to place an ordinary screen-door spring between the v1 of the aerial and the house. This will A A tt A AANA ttt a tune to meet with quite a serious ac- cident, He was struck across the eye with a hockey stick. The wound is healing nicely. The fice harvest has started and the quality of the ice is considered very fine, being about twenty inches thick and wonderfully clear. Mr. apd Mrs. Stanley Ball and family spent Sunday the guests of Mrs. Sanford Thompson, Lieut. Kingdom has charge of the Salvation Army. Charley Conway, of the Royal Bank Lot Le fbuseworde Kum Your flands T° heal chafing, soreness or that harsh chapped feeling of the skin caused by house- work, Zam-Buk is invaluable. soaks through the pores, This herbal balm soothing and purifying the whole tissue, killing and removing poisonous disease germs, and renewing the skin. There are soothing, healing and germicidal virtues in Zam-Buk, never found in ordinary fatty ointments and salves. That is because Zam -Buk is a highly-concentrated medicinal preparation of unique herbal origin. Zam-Buk is proved equally good for ending attacks of eczema, ulcers, ringworm, blood-poison or piles, it quickly soothes and heals all cuts, burns, chilblains, etc., and clears the skin of pimples and blotches. am-Bu FREE BOXES! We will Sadly mail any reader, Free and Post-Paid, a, small sample box of this t@amous herbal healer for trial purposes Send your esl for one on @ postal address d The Zam-Buk Mfg. Co ap. onto. Note the effect of Zam-Buk nn any Cut, Burn or Seve 2612 (Editorial Rooms) 2613 (Social) 2614 (Job Department) 243 (Business Office) Ei new ters eval tent BRITISH WHIG . NEW TELEPHONE NUMBE ~Editors @nd Reporters; news of all kinds; sporting news; accidents, wed- dings, deaths, funerals and anything of interest gladly received. Kinds; special attention to activities of women's clubs and societies. =--Fine Job Printing; bills and business cards; counter check ietier heads and business sonal stationery; periodicals wines priated; dance and othér so. --Advert'sing advertising; paid notices; information concerning accounts and payments; \ ditor of Woman's Page; social s and women's activities of all ; bouks and circulars; hand WH pring given the best Avi. Department; classified and all prevent its being broken easily. In some cases it may be desirable to have springs at both ends of the serial. scraper of this kind costes much less than a manufactured one, and, if properly made, serves the purpose just as well, * 3» Water Supply for Private Garage Rain water is ideal for use in auto- mobile radiators, as it is free from most of the scale-forming chemicals and salts present in well and hydrant water. Two convenient methods of storing rain water in readiness for use are shown in the draw- ing. The upper figure shows how a half barrel may be arranged on a shelf inside the garage, at a height that will permit the water to flow into the radiator. A gutter is run along the edge of the roof staff, spent the week-end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. Conway, Sydenham, WORLD'S WONDER TOWER, s Still the Highest Structure In ti Word. Boyhood memories of many a me vere stirred the other day when 1 vas cabled that the builder of th. Ziffel Tower, in Paris, had died ac the age of 91. When erected in 1889 for the Paris Exposition this great tower, reaching 1,000 feet toward the sky, was one of the wonders of the world. It is still the highest structure in the world, with the Woolworth Bullding, New York, next, at 792 feet, : : Alexandre Gustave Eiffel, the builder, had the experience of other pioneers, for the conservative archi- tects ridiculed his plan, and said it could not be done. He persisted, and succeeded by throwing out one more landing place after another until 7,000 tons of iron had gone into the structure. The many thousands of visitors since that day who have as- cended the tower have seen the won- derful panorama that spreads for fifty miles. The tower, built as a thing of beauty, became one of the greatest wireless stations of the world. - During the great war it is belleved the German "Big Bertha' was trained on it from its 76-mile range, for some of the shots came perilously close. A description of the tower at the time of fits' erection comphred the slender steel girders and network of cate wires to lace made by the ves of the Cyclops. A letter from Paris at the time sald: "All the iron network of bars, girders, sigsags, ete., with the border- ings of the different platforms, set one financing that after all the giant edifice ig not of the coarsest and com- monest metals. A great beauty of the tower is the light boldness with which it springs heavenward. One fancies that one almost sees it shoot- ing up. Then it stands so firmly on its feet, and it gives so strongly the impression of strength! When light- ed up on the opening night, with a three-colored lamp around one of the vast arc lights that shone on the sum- mit, it was a grandiose symbol of the march of progress since 1789, when Paris was dimly lighted at night with oil lanterns." Of Eiffel it has often been written that "he applicd methods peculiar to himself," and in writing of his tower after Its completion in 1889 he uses practically the same words: "The fundamental idea of these pylons, or great archways, is based on a method of construction peculiar to me, of which the principle ccnsists 'n giving to the edges of the pyramid a curve of such a nature that this pyramid shall be. capable of resisting the force of the wind without necessi- 'ating the junction of the edges by diagonals, as is usually dome." Speaker of U. S. House. The Hon, F. H. Gillett, whose re- "lection 88 House of Rep Ki. uiliett started the practice of che law at Springfield, Mass., in 1877. He was assistant 1 of Massachusetts House of ] Jdves from 1880 to 1891. rst elected Speaker of the 4 tatives at Washington May 18, 1919, keep the wire taut and at the same time | | Fo 4 BUCK ET- and a small tap pipe from the gutter is' brought through the wall as shown, so that the water will drain into the barrel. A short length of pipe, fitted with a valve, is fitted through the side near the bottom and a length of rubber hose is attached as shown. An overflow pipe is also provided. In garages where there is mot enough space to permit the installation described above, a barrel may be mounted on a stand outside of the garage as shown in! the lower figure. In both cases s fine | [sieve must be provided in the pipe leading | from the gutter, to catch any foreign matter. The inside of the container should be washed out occasionally, LE Drying Clothes in Cold Weather During cold weather clothes hung out on the line to dry becdme stiff, due to the frozen moisture in them, and in attempt ing to remove them they are frequently torn at the corners. This danger can be eliminated by hanging the olothes on wire coat-hangers of the kind used ex- tensively by cleaners. The clothes are hung on the hangers, which are hung on the line. To keep them separated evenly, a number of old yardsticks or liths are used, holes being drilled in" them about 3 in. apart, and the hooks of the hangers passed through the holes before they are hung on the line. The clothes are brought in on the hangers and allowed to thaw out before taken off. This method also obvi- ates the usual discomfort of eold hands. LY BRITISH _WHIG packages HEMLOCK PARK STOCK FARM H Clean, pure milk from healthy cows. Not pasteurized or steril- ized in any way. PUT STOMACH IN ORDER AT ONCE "Pape's Diapepsin" for Gas, Indigestion or Sour Stomach Instantly! dStui.acu currected! You indigestion or a sour, acid, gassy stomach, after you eat a tablet of "Pape's Diapepsin." The moment it reaches the stomach all sourness, flatulence, heartburn, gases, palpita- tion and pain d.sappear. Druggists guarantee each package to correct di- gestion at once." End your stomach trouble for few cents. The «THE never feel the slightest distress from . + Capital, $10,000,000 Herd Tuberculin tested. Purveyors to the Kingston General Hospital, an, institution which only buys the best. Health of attendants, Sanitation, Sterilization, etc., under the personal supervision of Dr. Miller, Professor of Pathology, Queen's University. ; We guarantee that every bottle is from our own stable, Delivery to all parts of the city. TELEPHONE 1105 R-3. HEMLOCK PARK STOCK FARM oh Ahr rom BUY ADVERTISED GOODS The Sure Way To A Square Deal ---- at a -------- a 7 i a a a ~~ re Growth of a Bank J\J INETY-ONE years in Canada covers a great deal of history in growth of population and development of business and industry. There have been many changes in Canadian banks since The Bank of Nova Scotia first opened its doors for business in 1832. But during all that period, through good and bad times, the Bank has steadily forged ahead. By decades, since 1832, this table indicates the steady and gradual growth of the Bank. At the end of the first year the capital of the Bank was £50,000, no reserve, and total resources £85,863. Resources 85,863 267,000 320,000 1,718,000 3,208,000 6,717,000 $ 10,441,000 $ 29,072,000 $11,000,000 $ 80,151,000 $19,500,000 $227,889,000 conservative and steady Capital Reserve 50,000 140,000 140,000 560,000 748,000 $1,114,300 $ 1, ,000 $ 2,000,000 Year 3833 cinisinsisnins 1943 1853 icici: 1863... nil 1823 viii 1883. ie 1893 iin 1003 icirecceremiseare 1913.....cccvicieeneenes $6,000,000 1923... csvereeaes $10,000,000 Growth of The Bank of Nova Scotia has been --almost paralleling the growth of population. Always, the Bank has been ready to take its share in the work of of commerce and industry, agricultural and manufacturing. The Bank's operations today are con according to the same principles as those by which the past growth of the Bank has been achieved. 2,568 5,335 80,000 80,000 470,000 $ 1,200,000 $ 3,100,000 $ 5 $ $ $ £ : $ $ $ $ ' a ank of Nova Scotia 301 Branches distributed throughout Be en hb fo a

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