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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 23 Oct 1913, p. 6

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OLD LONDOS HOTELS GOING OF CANADA Over forty years age Dr. R. V. Pierce, chief eeaeoltiag physician to the Invalide* Hotel and BarglcelInstitute at Buffalo, N.T., used the powdered extract» as well ae the liquid extract» of native medloâaal plant», »oeh a» Bioodroot and Queen'» root. Gelden Seel and Stone root. Cheery bark and Mandrake, tor the cure el bleed di»»i»ee, This prescription a» pot up in liquid form wee called DR. PIERCE'S (golden ' Medical Discovery and haa enjoyed a large sale for all these y land. You can new obtain the powdered extract in sugsr-eoal our medicine dealer, or send Me in in every drag «tore in the eted 1 tablet form of r your medicine dealer, or send Me in one-ceot postage stamps for trial box w Dr. Pierce's Invalida' Hotel, Buffalo, N.Yi and tahleta will be meiled, postageprepaid. The "Golden Medieal Dieeevery" makes rich, red blood, invimratea the lyeteea. Skin ■tomseb, Hver end bowele nod through them the whole eyi étions, blotches, boils, re eradicated by this el affections, blotches, boils, pimplee sad eruptions--result of bed blood terative extract--ae thonaands have teetifled. Seed 80 os ▲. e. McLaughlin. Barrister, Solicitor and Conveyance*» Ottce:--Bleaklsy Block, King Street. Bowman ville, lieney te lean at reaeew tUi • rates, 4S4yr. B. J.Hazlewood, M.D.,0.M BOW MAN VILLE. . OIT. /2i OLD MEDALIST of Trinity Uo V iverelty, Toronto! Four years Attendit» Physician and Surgeon stMt. Carmel Hospital Pittsburg, Ks, OR re and Residence Wellington *t. Tel tone No. 16?. THE WHIP" FOR TORONTO. Mammoth Dramatic Spectacle From the Drury 'Lane Theatre, London, London, Eng., Coming. In all countries. Ask for our INVENTOR'S INVENTOR'S ADVISER,which will be sent free. MARION & MARION, 364 University St„ Montréal. WHY WE EXCEL We hare the most modern, the most practical and the best equipped school lu Eastern Ontario. The courses are thorough thorough and fascinating. An entirely Caned Ian Business Procédure for the training of the ambitious young people of our country. Our Graduates are successful. Ask any student or ax» student; they are our best advertise» ments. Howe Study Courses» LINDSAY BUSINESS COLLEGE, C. B. BOWER, Principal. Eater Any Day 18-y W. H. SPOTTON, President. Which School Shall I Attend? An important question! All business Colleges are not alike, ment is abso'utely necessary od ay for the Catalogue of the Careful judg- . Write TORONTO, ONT. It will help you to decide. This school is conducted on the highest plane of efficiency. We are proud of its record. Students admitted at any time. Cor. Yonge dk Alexander-sfcs., W. J. ELLIOTT, Principal. TIT wrian ns' J >itT71iTf? -- «■? TELEGRAPHY and all the duties of a Station Agent are easily learned at home by means of our New Home Study Courses. We invite you to write for particulars particulars and sample lessons. It will pay you well to learn these things. & Write Shaw's Telegraph and Rail- jjf road School, Yonge-st., Toronto. W. H.SHAW, President. A GOOD BUSINESS COLLEGE For over 52 years the British American American Business College, Toronto 1 has trained successful business men and women. If interested in the courses we give, it will pay you to write for a copy of our latest catalogue. New Term begins Jan. 6, 1913^ T. M. Watson. Principal. IS YOUR MONEY EARNING 15-PER CENT? AN AGREEMENT OF SALE for $3400, on a house In western city worth $7000, can be bought for $3000. This is" re-payable $73 a a month, with interest at 8% on $3400. This investment will pav the purchaser purchaser of the agreement about 15% per annum, providing an income of $900 a year for about five years. Title is clear and will be investigated investigated by Trust Company, which will also handle collections if desired. Apply to Drawer B, Bowmanville. The greatest production of the decade in the way of varied thrills and startling stage effects is "The Whip," the Drury Lane sensation, which will he the attraction at the Royal Alexandra Theatre, Toronto, week of Oct. 527th. This new entertainment entertainment by Cecil Raleigh and Henry Hamilton, conies to Toronto after a two years' run in London and a season's stay at the Manhattan Manhattan Opera House, New York. It comprises four acts and thirteen scenes, and the massiveness of the production may be gauged from the fact that five special trains are necessary necessary to carry the scenery, not taking into consideration the company company of one hundred, and the horses and dogs used during the performance. The story of "The Whip" is based based upon a race horse bearing that name who has been bred by a titled nobleman. It shares his affections with his daughter who insists, however, however, upon sharing her affections with a certain lordling. Various things happen to interrupt the course of true love. An adventuress adventuress who loves him goes so far as to make a captain, a disappointed suitor for the hand of the heroine, marry her, pretending he is the lordling in order that there may be no marriage with the daughter of the titled sportsman. Their engagement engagement is announced, but the adventuress adventuress here brings forward her proofs of marriage and they are therefore separated. The ruined suitor for the heroine's heroine's hand is interested in what, horse will win the great race at Newmarket. In the meantime the heroine gives the hero a tip that "The Whip" will win and he plunges heavily with the bookmakers. bookmakers. The villain now sees that the only thing to do - is to render it impossible impossible for the horse to win this race. So he plots to have the oar in which the animal is to be taken to Newmarket Newmarket uncoupled from the train and wrecked. The faithful trainer of the horse gets wind of the plot, but too late to take immediate action. action. But the train is pursued by an automobile and the horse is rescued rescued just as the following express express comes along and smashes the box car into splinters. The villain then decides to have the jockey ;< who will ride "The Whip" arrested just as the race is about to start. He does this, but the sporting spirit of the crowd at Newmarket stands in-the way, and the jockey, is dragged away from the detectives and thrown on thé horse. He wins the race and makes a rich man out of the young lord who aspires to the heroine's hand. Now only the fraudulent marriage stands (between him and the girl of his choice. The clergyman who performed performed that ceremony ackowledges his guilt and everything ends happily. happily. As regards stage spectacles "The Whip" has been proclaimed unsurpassed unsurpassed by press and public. There are in all three gireat scenic effects, effects, any one of wÈioh would make for the success of anvordinary entertainment, entertainment, namely, an--automobile an--automobile accident,= a traip wreck, and 'a great horse race scene. The cast of one hundred is an imposing one. Matinees will be given on Thursday and Saturday, Famous Hosteiries Disappearing in ^ t, - Face of Progress. . - - London, England, ts being transformed transformed in no sphere of its busy life more markedly than in its hotels. Within the last few months a number number of well known hosteiries have disappeared, and several ambitious schemes have been proposed to replace replace them. r Among hotels that have recently closed their doors are the Gaiety Hotel and Restaurant, the Inns of Court Hotel, the Capitol, in Lower Regent Street (formerly called the Chatham, and further back still the Continental), while the Old Ship at Greenwich, the Star and Garter at Richmond, the, Tollard in Eagle Street, the Albion in Alders Alders gate Street, and the Bedford Hotel, Govent Garden, have also been closed within\tbe past year or two. The Salisbury Hotel, off Fleet Street, is to be changed into an International Roman Catholic Club, but it will still give hotel accommodation accommodation to its members, together together with an oratory as part of its equipment. But the closing of old hotels is interesting no less for the sequel-- the opening of new. Architectural splendors and modern luxuries are nowadays aimed at everywhere. The development of the hotel has gone hand in hand with the development development of travelling facilities. During During the past ten years, it has been computed, a sum of no less than $60,000,000 has been expended on hotel building in London? -- The biggest hotel in the work will be erected at .a cost of $8,000,- 000 on the site of St. George's Hospital, Hospital, Hyde Park Corner, which has been purchased for the purpose by Mallaby Deeley, M.P. By Common Sense Suggestion*. Old Folkes' Coughs Permanently Cured A girl with clever fingers can make good little shirt waist bows out of her brother' s càst-off ties. Mrs. Younglpve--If I wasn't afraid baby was sick I do believe I should spank him. Younglove-- Well, let's ma^e sure. You» begin spanking, and I'll go for the doctor. doctor. The Public Is Loud In Its Praise of the Modern Direct Breathing Cure. Elderly people take cold easily. Un like young folks, they recover slowly, If ever. That is why so many people past middle life die. of pneumonia. Even though pneumonia does not develop develop and kill, coughs certainly weaken weaken all elderly people. Cough Syrups seldom do much good because they upset digestion. Any druggist or doctor knows that a much more effective treatment is "GA- TARRHOZONE," which heals and soothes the irritated surfaces of the throat. In using Catarrhozone you do not take medicine into the stomach--you simply tyeathe into the throat, nose and lungs rich piney balsamic vapor, so full of healing * power that colds, catarrh and bronchitis disappear almost almost instantly. "At sixty-eight years of age I can testify that I am never troubled with coughs or colds," writes J. E. Pilgrim, of Kingston. "They used to be the bain of my life, and that was before I used Catarrhozone, which was re- oommended to me by C. L. Prouse, druggist. To use Catarrhosone is just like being in an immense pine woods. The balsamic vapor of Catarrhosone is like a tonic, it is so stimulating to the breathing organs, so soothing to sore spots, ,so full of power to drive out colds and congestion. I will always always use and recommend Catarrh- ozone aa a' preventive and cure for coughs, colds, bronchitis, throat irritation irritation and catarrh. , (Signed) "J. E. PILGRIM." A Catarrhozone Inhaler In your poc- et or purse enables you to stop a cold with the first sneeze. Large size costs $1.00 and supplies treatment for two months; small size, 50c.; trial size 26 c.; all storekeepers and druggists, or The Catarrhozone Co., Buffalo, N.Y., and Kingston, Canada. Must Do It. ; A man must do his duty, if he would be a free man, whether he likes it or not. But if he can regard it as the will of God, the work not fallen upon him by chance, but given him to do, understanding that everything well done belongs to His kingdom, and everything ill done to the kingdom of darkness, surely eyen the irksomeness irksomeness of his work will be no longer Insuperable.--George McDonald. Miller's Worm Powders will, not only expel worms from the system, 'but will induce healthful conditions of the system under which worms can no longer thrive. Worms keep à child in a continual state of restlessness restlessness and pain, and there can be no comfort for the little one until the cause of suffering be removed, which can be easily done by the use of these powders, than which there is nothing more effective. J Don't Put Off seeking relief from the illnesses causeob] a by defective action of the organs organs of digestion. Most serious sicknesses sicknesses get their start in troubles of the stomach, Hver, bowels---troubles quickly, safely, surely relieved by BEECHAITS PILLS Mistress--"We" generally have breakfast about eight o'clock." New Maid--"All right--if I ain't down don't wait." Mrs. Stronr»--"Don't you think otrone-- i>on t ye woman's band has played an important important part in the great work of civilization 1' ' Philosopher--- 1 'Un doubtedly; but I don't think, her haqd has been quits so effective as her slipper 1". SeU mrprkm, j The engagement was pretty stiff ; ! in fact it looked hopeless to the captain. However, he said cheerily cheerily to hie men: "Mv brave fellows, fight like heroes till your, ammunition's ammunition's gone, then run for. your lives. I've got a sore-foot, so I'll •tart now. Au revoir, my hearties." Women suffering from any form of female ills are invited to communicate promptly with the woman's private correspondence department department of the Lydia Lydia E.Pinkham Medicine Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. A woman can freely talk of her private illness to a woman ; thus has been established a confidential correspondence which has extended over many years and which has never been broken. Never have they published a testimonial or used a letter without the written consent of the writer, and never has the Company allowed these confidential confidential letters to get out of their possession, possession, as the hundreds-of thousands of them in their files will attest. : Out of the vast yolome of experience which they have to draw from, it is more than possible that they possess the very knowledge needed in your case. Nothing Nothing is asked in return except your good will, and their advice has helped thousands. thousands. Surely any woman, rich or poor, should be glad to take advantage of this generous offer of assistance. Address Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., (confidential) (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Every woman ought to have Lydia T3. Pinkham's SO-page Text Book# It is not a book for general distribution, as it Is too expensive. It Is free and only obtainable by mailt Write for it today. The Lost Day. To-night I know that I have lost Somewhere between the far sun rise And this the dark, a jeweled day That God hath.given me to prize, I lost it, for I failed to note ' The tender beauty of the dawn, I failed to breathe the sun-drenched sun-drenched flower. Echo re the sweet, wet dew ^ Igone, I failed to turn my cheek to catch The cooling breeze I needed so : I did not pause to noté the while How wondrously the new leaves grow. was / For all the day was full of cares, I only looked me dowmto see The briars that beset the way To hold and fret and hinder me. But now to-night, Q Lord, I lie And see with weary, world-tired eyes > The tranquil splendor of the night, The wonder of thy lighted skies, And know some better thing is mine Than this lost day,--and I will go No more forgetful of thy way Nor walk no more with eyes cast low, But looking,--live and laugh and sing,-- Knowing thou would'st have it so. --Grace G. 'Crowell, in National Magazine .for October. SUFFERED 20 YEARS With Kidney Trouble. Cured by CIN PILLS Mr. Daniel F. Fraser, of Bridgeville, N. 8., says about GIN PILLS, "For twenty years, I have been troubled with Kidney and Bladder Disease, and have been treated by many doctors but found little relief. I had given up all hope of getting cured when I tried GIN PILLS. Now, I can say with a happy heart, that I am cured after using only four boxes of GIN ÇILLS." ( 60c. a box, 6 for $2.60. Sample* free if you write National Drug and Chemical Chemical Co. of Canada, Limited, Toronto. USE OF MIDDLE NAMES. Distinction Permitted Only to Royalty Royalty 400 Years Ago. people have not always been allowed allowed the pleasure of having ae many names as they wished; indeed, indeed, 400 years ago pot even a middle middle name was allowed in England. It was illegal. The old English law was definite and admitted of no infraction infraction of its ruling. The only exception exception in this ironclad regulation was in the case of persons of royal rank. If they really wished it, iney could boast of à middle name, but woe to the person of ordinary rank who was sufficiently unwise or obstinate obstinate \to insist on having more than two appellations. For the first offence he would very likely be tied to a whipping post and severeBy lashed. For a second offence he would endure some more lasting punishment-- perhaps the removal of his thumbs The Gouty Age. Whenever uric acid is retained in thé body instead of being regularly-carried regularly-carried away by- means of the action of the healthy liver and kidneys kidneys some form of gouty suffering follows. It is not always the same ; one man may have periodical attacks attacks of acute gout in the great toe point, which becomes much inflamed inflamed and the seat of sharp pain. There is gouty rheumatism, or lumbago, lumbago, with stiffness and pain that is brought on by every movement. Even worse are sciatica and neuritis, neuritis, in both of which sharp needle- pointed crystals of Uric acid penetrate penetrate the protecting sheaths of the nerves ; in sciatica it is the nerves of the thighs and legs that are attacked, attacked, in neuritis those of the arms. Other ^ troubles to. which gouty people are very liable are certain skin diseases, chief among which is gouty eczema. The finger joints and even the tips of the ears frequently show small white lumps under the akin, and these are nothing' nothing' but solid deposits of uric acid.. During youth and early adult life the elimination of uric acid goes on properly, as a rule, but by the age of 40 men and women are much more likely to suffer, perhaps, for some time without knowing it, from one or other of the forms of gout already outlined. It may be that they take less exercise and go on eating just as much food; it may be that the liver and kidneys are less well prepared to carry out their proper functions. As a preventive preventive measure people should eat rather less and should not neglect exercise in whatever form may be most agreeable or most easily taken, taken, More water should also be drunk daily, a quart taken, half a pint at a time, between meals, will be found to be a relief to the body, as it will wash away the uric acid and prevent such accumulation as would only yield to the action oE drugs. Quarterly Dividend Notice No. 92 Go Slowly, Another step in the direction of taking life easily is to allow ample time for those actions which have to be performed daily. Get up slowly, dress slowly, don't bolt your breakfast and rush off jwith it in your throat. It will probably mean getting out of bed à quarter quarter of an hour earlier, but after a week you will. not notice that, while the gain in comfort will be appreciable. Diet is dealt with also in a recently, published little book, stress being laid on the value of judicious feeding in the case of anyone called on to - bear nerve strain, as brain worker» of all classes are. A mixed diet, of course, is the best, and a suggestion for a good lunch onty a light meal can be taken at midday,.is two poached eggs (without the toast on whichjthey are always served) a roll ^nd butter and a cup of coffee. coffee. A good word is said for sugar ae containing energy-producing material. material. "Chocolate, for example, contains a large amount of sugar and makes an excellent tabloid meal for the tired worker who was unable to give up enough time in the day to get sufficient mixed food." The danger of constant nerve tension was never greater than at the present time, but it is quite possible for even the busiest to do much towards minimizing this danger, danger, by following out a simple plan of action. The great thing is to begin begin before it is too late. There comes a time when simple measures are no longer of any avail.--A Physician. Chinese Burned Opium. Opium worth $60,000 was burned in front of the Nankai Middle School, in the native city, Tien- Tsin, China, recently. Nine great pots were filled with the drug. The students of the school and at least three thousand other spectators cheered when the big cauldrons were set afire shortly after noon. Among the onlookers were more than one hundred foreign soldiers and their officers, to whom the enthusiasm enthusiasm of the Chinese ae the drug went up in smoke was a revelation. or ears. And if he still persisted Jn his stubbornness he would be hanged. There is a ease on record of a oor man-rdi) aU probability halt emented-4-who inflated on signing four namea.every time he wrote his signature So any' paper. Of course, he pasàed through all the legal stages of punishment until he was finally banged. , Chas. B. Binta»e. 'For years I hare , W. 17th St, write»? en Buffering from asthma and. bronchitis. A week ago I" purchased a bot» of Badway'e Beady Belief and hare taken tie à teaspoaeful In water before retiring night The relief I bare experienced Is man. bare t heartily lnd _ each Mended B. R. R." be for this Ilswne are Radway' «solvent and rubbed on the chest and thfoi m until a burning sensation 1» produced, and the " * * * «fitly, to keep the Bills must b« taken frequently, to bowels thoroughly 'open. The Resolvent must be glven at short intervals, : In small doses< and » dessertspoonful on retiring to. rest Give a-teaspOonxql of the Resolvent whenever a paroxysm occurs, BADWAY & OO., Notice is hereby given that a dividend at the rate of THIRTEEN PER CENT. PER ANNUM upon the capital stock of this Bank haa ) been declared for the quarter ending 31st of October, 1913, and that the same will be payable at the Head Office in this*city and its Branches on and after Saturday, the first t da-y of November, 1913, to shareholders of record of 23rd of October, 1913. i By order of the Board. iC GEO. P. SCHOLFIELD, General Manager? Toronto, 16th September, 1913. £53 I HAVE NEVER SEEN GOD 99 But Unnumbered Thousands of Brave Men and Pure Women Have Walked With Him "The fool hath said in his heart, There .is no God."-- Psalm xiv., 1. Just why the Psalmist concluded in his day that the man who denied categorically the existence of God was a "fool" we .cannot say, but it is pretty evident in this much later day that there are very good reasons reasons indeed why this sweeping assertion assertion is correct. We know something something to-day about the conditions of knowledge and the possibilities of ultimate experience. And when, therefore, we encounter a man who says in so many words that "there is no God," we feel, ..with the Psalmist, that we can classify him with a good deal of accuracy. Some very pertinent questions must at least be put to this philosopher of atheism. When was this revelation of the non-existence of God given to you and by whom was it spoken ? When did you mount to the. sources of being and discover that the fountain was dry? When did you penetrate to the Holy of Holies and find, like another Pompey, that the shrine was empty? When, in short, did you yourself discover as & fact of real experience that "there is no ' God" and thus gain reason for yo^X proclamation of denial ? the' lily of the field, or the dull peasant gazes with heart untouched untouched upon the vale which Wordsworth saw above^xTintern Abbey. Against the failure of ou-r^atheist to meet God and cumrntme with Him and work with Him must at least be set the living testimony of unnumbered unnumbered thousands of brave men and pure women who have walked with God as with a friend andjNroiled from day to day as fellow workers., with His spirit.. What is the value of the failure of any number " of souls to see, and hear, and know, when matched against one soul which has succeeded ? What care we for the vote of the Athenian Assembly Assembly as compared with the word of Socrates ? And how shall we dare to summon' the resolutions of a whole congress of atheists against like one life like that of Christ? "I do not Kriow 7 ." No Adequate Ground. For any positive assertion of this kind, after all, must have> its basis in actual experience, else must it be accounted of no avail. Nay, in the case of negative assertions, we can go farther than this and say that the absence of actual experience experience cannot in itself be regarded as adequate ground for the denial of anything. It may be true that this man can say "I have never seen God," but this may be for the same reason that the blind man has never seen the sun. He may be able to declare with perfect truth that he has never heard God's voice, but this may be for the ,4ame reason that the deaf man has\n €ver heard the skylark or the waters at Lo- dore. He may be obliged td" confess confess that he has never felt the presence presence of the Divine, but this may be for the same reason that the Palestinian sheep behold unmoved After all, the most that we can ever say in the way of doubt or denial denial about things ultimate is simply simply this, "I do not know !" The farthest limit of possible negation in this age is no longer that of atheism, atheism, but that of agnosticism ! Something Something may perhaps be said for the man who, making confession of his own experience of God,. declares "I do hot know.'»' But nothing can be said for the man who, with an- arrogant presumption never matched matched by any victim of superstition^ declares "there' is no God," save the verdict long since pronounced by the ancient Psalmist. To assert that the problem constitutes an open question, I say, is the utmost limit of denial that we can reach. And when this is said, the believer in the reality of the Divine is well content. For the experienced of yesterday and to-day are sure, and in the face of these experiences the question can remain an open one, only like many another question, for the sake of argument !--Rev. John Haynes Holmes. "Have you a spare cigar about you, old chap?" "Certainly. But I thought you were going to stop smoking?" "So I am, but not too abruptly. I've already stopped smoking my own cigars." Why doesn't she take NA-DRU-CO Headache Wafers a headache promptly, yet do not contain any of onfnT mgenrua drugs-ooramon (n headache tablets. Ask your Druggist about them. 28c. a box. National Bavo aw Cmemoal Co. or Canada, Lmmco. 122 Perfection SWQKEUt* Gives quick, glowing warmth whére and when you want it Easily portable. portable. No smoke. No smell. Safe, clean, convenient. Steady heat for nine hours on a. single gallon of oil. Stock carried at all chief points For best results use ROYAUTE OIL THE IMPERIAL OIL CO«, jLimitedL Toronto Montreal Winnipeg Vaneofe. Quebec Caleaay Edmonton St. John Waartne Saekatoon Halt*

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