Daily British Whig (1850), 12 Mar 1910, p. 16

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PAGE SIXTEEN, [THE FNEST QUALITY Baker's Breakfast Cocoa The half pound can contains eight ounces of pure cocoa, of the finest quality, most delicious flavor, and possessing all the strength of the best cotoa beans, most carefully blended. WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd, : Established 1780 DORCHESTER - '. MASS. Braoch House: 86 St. Peter St, Montreal CHEAPER Your smart dresses and TO CLEAN tallored suits--your soiled curtains and draperies OR DYE will all look as fresh and THAN BUY it as new after we clean or dye them. 4 The cost is small and we pay the express charges one way on out-of-town orders, WRITE POR QUR NEW BOOKLET, IT TELLS ALL "My VALET" FOUNTAIN THE CLEANER 30 Adelaide St. W., Toronto, Dr*Martel's Female Pills SEVENTEEN YEARS THE STANDARD Presuribed and recommended for women's oll remedy of proves wrth. 9 The result from Bok use Is quick wad |, it will be found that there was a (it be fearlessly launches. He will meet wenmanent. For sale at all drag stores. Y Ne XN 0 PATER prone REAL] Chiver's Marmalade All sizes. Ready Cut Macaroni Fine dune Cheese, fresh Oysters. D. COUPER'S, 841-8 Princess Bt. Phone 76, Prompt Delivery We Want Every a It is economical, it is handy; ou «can have such infinitely utiful effects. Let us give you prices and advice. No cost to you. ' Our specialty is home lght- ing. H.W. Newman Bectic Co, 'Phone, #41: 79 Princess street. J.E. Hutcheson bara 2 Street oF & . 7 Alb $17 Albert h {5 addin on's or J. 3 ores will recelve given. WALLACE & PARKS, Florists. : Cut Flows -- an and Funeral oped to all parts BAROGAINS ring. All kinds of to i Jn 20d see b delighted with the result. ---- KCN 7) X © 2A IN Men at their some time masters of fates Fulius Caesar, Act I. Se. 2 In Shakespeare's time the world was. just emerging from the night of the Middle Ages. The new learning was illuminating the horizon, but had not wholly dispelled the darkness. As- trology was a favorite art. Shakes- peare's frequent references to "an- spicious stars," "good stars," "fort une's stars," indicate that the popular belief had some hold on him, How ever, s0 completely does Shakespeare sink himself in his character that itis difficult to tell just what he did he lieve, It was the belief of the time that man was largely ruled by fate, des tind. © This belief still elings, The un- scientific bold it, and the scientific cherish it under other names What after all is the fundamental meaning of the expressions, heredity, conform- ity to type, environment? Nothing more or less than that man is Inrgely {the creature of Circumstances, ances- tors and surroundings. For purposes of Kterary effect Shakespeare undoubt- 'edly used the beliefs and superstitions of his age, but, when he makes ome of his characters utter with emphasis a great modern truth, it can be | taken for granted that Shakespeare is 'speaking. Fate, destiny, mould the lives of mem, the stars guide their courses--so the majority of the Eliza bethans believed. But Shakespeare realized that man was an animal pes sessed of free will, that, through his intellect, he was master of his fate. U he became an underling the fault was not in his star but in kmself In recent times the words fate and destiny have been discarded, and in their place the word lack is used. 'In the great majority of eases the lucky man is the man who has known how to seize the psychological moment of hig life. Thousands have made for tunes 1n the great west. These men believed in the country; they took chatices), they mortgaged their future to be on the spot at the right mo: ment. In the mining regions there are many who are looked upon by theic fellows as ereatupes of luck Lucky ! They were energetic pro- spectcrs, for the most part enduring | toil, risking their lives, suffering un- Bre speskable hardship in their search af- ter fortune; and fickle fortune © re- wardud 'their perseverance. Study the history of anv man who has achieved jgreatnegs--a Carnegie or a Hill, an {Edison or a Wright, a Kitchener or 'a Dewey, a Roosevelt or a Laurier-- tritical moment in his Nfe, a moment that was to dacide whether he should remain in the ranks of humanity, obeying the commands of others, or Are Your Children Puny ? Suggestive Letter to Parents, Nature is not often at fault. Stupidity and thoughtlessness of parents are responsible for many of the half-dead men and women we meet. Their fathers and mothers did nor «up- ply the aid that would have set their body activities into full foree to de- velop vitality and rugged strength. Mrs. Timothy Bristow writes a letter that should set thousands of parents thinking. "My boy and girl, fourteen and sixteen years old, looked pale and puny. They seemed not to care for play like | neighbors' children. They {were too effeminate and lacked some {thing I would have liked to see them 'possess. 1 don't know what put it in- to my head, but I gave up making oookies and sweet dishes, and it didn't {take me long to see they were eating more of the right kind of food. I just thought I would give them some . of my own touic, "Ferrozone," and was Such an ap- petite it gave them ! They grew faivly fat and had a lovely pink color. I think when such a good tonic as Fer rozone is available, there is no exeuse for delicate children. Certainly lots of nourishing food, and Ferrozone, will give a child a great chance to grow wp hearty and strong." And Ferrozone is a good tonic for old folks too--it's full of nutrition and blood-building properties and makes the weak strong very quickly. Try one or two tablets with your meals. Difty cents per box, six for $2.50; all deal Acknowledged a Winner | Baturday Bvening Post. | Assemblyman Joha C. New York, recently told this story in a speech: "Iwas up in Rockland County last summer ind there wax a banquet given at a country hotel All© the farmers were there and all the village characters, | was asked to make a speech. 'Now, said I, with the usual apol {ogetic manner, © 'It is not fair to you for the toastmaster to ask me to speak. am notoriops as the ithe worst public. speaker in the state New York. My reputation extends lother one ond of the state to the Hackett, of other. 1have norival whatever when [it comes" I was interrupted by a lanky, ill jelad ingividual, who had stuck too jclose to the beer pitcher. Gentle , said he, 'I take 'ception to | what this here man says. e amt the worst je speaker in thestate. il am. You all know it. an'-l want it made a matter of wvecord that 1 took 'ception.' Et 'Well, my friend,' said T. = 'suppose we leave it to the guests. You wit down while say my piece and then IH sitdown and let you give 4 de monstration." The fellow agreed, 1 went on. I hadn't gone far when 'ne got up v8 all it, said he, 'you win; needn't go ne 1 Prisoners and Official Secrets. San Francisco Call SERMON FROM HAKESPEARE ){ NTAZATANINTANTANIANINGAG ATA ASTIN ASIST ANI INTININT 4 he isn't being treated right. : THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, eS OS 23s N -- to step ont and take Ms place at the head of the host. In every ome of Shakespeare's plays some truth is taught with peculiar em- phasis. In Caesar the truth that men control their own destinies is the dominating lesson. Uassius, in the passage under study, proclaims it, and later in the play Prutus reiterates the same thought. "There is a tide In the affairs of men Which, taken at the flood, leads on te fortune; Omitted, ail the voyage of their life Is bound In shallows and in miseries The successful men are the men who have taken advantage of the tide of prosperity at its flood' the unsuccess ful are those, who have allowed the tide to ebb while they feasted or slept. €f course, there are some who are more capable than others of seeing and seizing the right moment. The vir tues or vices of the parents influence, Call this fate if you will! Character and fortune have descended from an cestors. If evil character and ill for tune is a man's heritage he has in himself the power of overcoming the obstacles to his career. If he wins he is the stronger for having overcome natural difficulties. Mountam clunbing gives strength to the limbs and vigor to the lungs The belief in destiny is not without its evil effects on human society. Men frequentiy 'excuse gin in themselves and others = by "attributing weakness wickedness to their fate. That base} eynic Edmund in King [ear lashes such a belief in words that evidently are the expression of Shakespeare's own attitude, "This is the excellent foppery of the world : That when we are sick in for tune {often the surfeit of our own be haviour), we. make guilty of our dis the sun, the moon, and the stars; as if we were villains by neces- sity; foals, by heavenly compulsion; drunkards, liars, and adulterers, by an enforced obedience of planetary in fluence, and all that we are evil in, by a divine thrusting on: an admir- Julius or! aslars, ~iable evasion of mar to lay his goat. tish disposition to the charge of a star !" | No. the fates rule only so far as we ipermit them ! Habit may i fate, but there is no hahit that cannot be broken. Character is the key that unlocks the future. A man of well ibhalanced, energetic character knows { when the tide i= at its flood and become on ocks and shallows, enemies wii he in wait for kim; but, if he retain the strength of will which enabled him to embark on the "full sea," he will not lose his venture, | { } i of ever holding a higher position there. {One day the captain of the jute mill | called to Hoyle and said. "1 have a | good joke. The life termers who run] the looms along the back wall in the | mill were talking about you this af-| ternoon and I caught part of their conversation. They say vou are to be' the next warden,' Hoyle treated the statement as silly. Three months later the prison officers | received a Fiz surprise when the un-| expected ¢niouncement came that John | Hayle had been appointed warden. | The affable warden declares that neith. | er he nor the governor talked to any | one about the plan, and how the life termers got their information i a mystery to him. The Diagnosis. Rochester Democrat and Chronicle Tha disastrous results of interfer! ence hy relations in ths course of eourtships was woll exemplified in a case of a young Baltimore couple not long ago. They had been engag- ed for some time, when it became generally known that the at an end. "What was intimate ~ who, by | Jack?" an | =... youth, | is a recent med tha trouble, frien as the way, Well, as it was to Nan personally, why 1 shouldn't with a sigh. "1 suppose it was influence--~you seemed to fairly dote on her," his friend commented. | "I did," the dejected lover replied. ! "She is the sweetest little girl in the world, but terribly fond of her relations. Her old maid aunt from Kensas came along the other day, and annouhced that she was going to live with us after we were mar- ried, amdb--well she proved an antic dote." nothing k relating I don't know some outside Queen's Pear! Brooch. Queen Alexandra has a little pearl brooch which she greatly val- ues, It was the gift of her Hnje-| ty's intimate friend, the late Lady Cadogan. The brooch contains a single pearl of great size which was discovered in an oyster bed at Cli den, County Galway. It is of won- derful lustre. and was heautifully mounted for her Majesty by a Dub lia jeweller. ep ---------- Serious Results Follow. Cold, clammy hands and feet, and pains in the back result from impov- erished blood. Serious consequences follow neglect. Wade's Iron Tomic Pills make new, rich blood, tone up the system, add vitality to wasting 'tissues and strengthen weak nerves. Price, 25¢., at McLeod's Drag Stores. ---------------- Hard work never injured anyone: every nervous man will tell vou that he is 8 nervous wreck, because of un- Necewsarv amnovance from silly, and unfair people. . Steer the average man up against a soda fountain and he'll complain that -- and gave no sign that he had hopes aflaiy was . . I} ical graduate. i tel} you," he replied |i Beau Nash, though bat ferent churchgoer, not only went hear Whitefield preach, but a service at Bath hold by John Wes- y. The incident i= related in South- ev's "Life of Wesley." "While markable personage entered the room, came close to the preacher manded of him by what authority he was 'By that of Jesus Christ, me by' | Canterbury; when he! laid his hands 1 upon me. and said, "Take thou author. idle. ily to preach the : then affirmed that to contrary to the laws. 'Besides' enid | be. 'your preaching frightens people out MARCH 12, 1910. % \ NN) = N FJ NAAR SANNA \ a Sa RAN N N When you see this Trade Mark on any Medicinal or Toilet Pre an assurance to you that every ingredient entering into that preparation that money can procure. What is even more important, it is an assurance that to the best formule known, by expert the largest wholesale drug firms in the world, the Natio have been compounded, accordin experience, in the employ of one o Drug and Chemical Company of Canada. C3 HT ra Lg paration you purchase, it is is of the hehe. quality these ingredients chemists of lo As you have probably noticed, "NA-DRU-CO" is made up of the first parts of the 'words "National Drug Company". It is pronounced "NA-DROO-K (', with the accent on the second syllable, ; Being aware of the extensive use in Canada of simple household remedies and toilet prepar- ations,"we felt certain that Canadians would welcome a line of these goods, sold under a distinctive trade mark, that they could be sure were not only of the highest standard and guaranteed purity, but were compounded by expert chemists, from formula What The Laws Say For the protection of the public the law of each Province in Canada states that only thoroughly qualified men are allowed todispense prescriptions--these men being physicians or graduates of recognized Colleges of Pharmacy. Therefore if a doctor gives you a prescription the laws of .Canada require that it be dispensed by a duly qualified druggist and not by a man ignorant of the action of drugs. The logical conclusion is that as the laws are made by the representatives of the people, the people want protection, and should welcome the opportunity of being able to procure in any part of Canada medicinal and toilet preparations compounded by expert chemists and guaranteed by a firm of our standing. When you see the NA-DRU-CO Trade Mark you have thisopportunity and the guarantee for which you are looking. that had been well tried out. Source Of The NA-DRU-CO Formulae The National Drug and Chemical Company of Canada, Limited, acquired the businesses and maintains the honorable traditions of 21 of the principal Wholesale Drug Houses in Canada, from Halifax to Vancouver. All of these firms had long and successful careers, some of them for fifty to one hundred years, and during their exis. tence they had accumulated a splendid lot of formule Avhich all became the, property of the "National". After givin these formule careful study and practical tests for several years we have now brought out, based on them, the NA-DRU-CO line of about 125 medicinal and toilet prepa. rations. All the ingredients in these preparations are the best and purest that money can buy, and they are com- pounded by a staff of expert chemists, each of whom ranks high in his profession. We have such implicit confidence in NA-DRU-CO Preparations that we offer them with A Four-Fold Guarantee The First Guarantee is the firm behind the NA-DRU-CO Trade Mark. The National Drug and Chemical Company of Canada, Limited, is one of the largest wholesale drug firms in the world, having a Paid-up Capital of over Five Million Dollars. We have wholesalg/brauches in the principal distributing centres of Canada So that you canatall times satisfy yourself that there is such a firm. We are the largest buyers of drugs and do the greater part of the wholesale drug business inCanada. We employ a staff of about nine hundred people and distribute in salaries, dividends and other ex penses over One Million Dollars annually. We carry a stock distributed among our Branches of about Two Million Dollars, and in addition we own real estate and buildings which are to-day worth about Five Hundred Thousand Dollars, and other large assets. All this stands as a guarantee behind. each package bearing the NA-DRU-CO Trade Mark. The Second Guarantee of NA-DRU-CO quality is the NA-DRU-CO trademark itself. If we put this Trade Mark on one article only and proceeded to advertise it, plain common sense would tell us that we must make that article good or we would lose out-- for people will not keep on buying unreliable goods. Multiply that necessity for quality by over one hundred and you Have our position. On the quality of each NA-DRU-CO article is staked not only our investment in that article and our hope of trade in it, but oyr investment and our hope of trade in the whole NA-DRU-CO line. We know that the quality of the first NA-DRU-CO preparation you buy will practically decide whether you ome a regular user of NA-DRU-CO articles or not-- and for that trial you may select any one of the 125 prepa- rations. We welcome this because each article is fit to uphold the reputation of all. The Third Guarantee of NA-DRU-CO quality is the fact that NA-DRU-CO preparations are never, at any time or in any place, sold at cut prices. NA-DRU-CO preparations are so much better than the preparations whose prices are cut that discerning people prefer to pay full prices for the NA-DRU-CO goods, because they have the guarantee that every NA-DRU-CO article is compounded by expért chemists from the very best ingredients. ! The Fourth Guarantee of NA-DRU-CO quality is short and very much to the point, If after trying any article bearing the NA-DRU-CO Trade Mark you are not entirely satisfied, return it to the druggist from whom you bought it and he will hand back your money. He will do it willingly, too, because we guarantee to stand the loss and return to him every cent he gives back to you. . NA-DRU-CO Preparations Not "Cure-Alls" There isno NA-DRU-CO prepa¥ation that will cure every- thing, and we don't ask you to believe that there is. But there is a separate NA-DRU-CO remedy for each common ailment --a remedy that will command the confidence of the public. Consult Your Physician NA-DRU-CO medicinal preparations are not intended to take the place of your physician's prescriptions--far from it. When you are ill you need the physician's skilful diagnosis and treatment, and it would be folly to depend on your own diagnosis and any household remedy. But in emergencies when you cannot get the doctor quickly, and in many other cases, a reliable household remedy is a real blessing. To put the absolute reliability of NA-DRU.CO preparations beyond ® doubt or question, we ure prepated to furnish to your physician or your druggist, on request, a list of the ingredients in any NA-DRU-CO preparation. Ask these men, who are men of standing in your community, and in whom you place implicit confidence, all sbout NA-DRU-CO remedies. If your druggist has not the particular NA-DRU-CO pre- paration you ask for in stock, he can get it for you within two days from the nearest of our wholesale branches, listed below. The following is a partial list of the NA-DRU-CO preparations : Aperient and Laxative: For Children: (continued) Kidney and Liver Pills Worm Syru Little Liver Pills - Cascara Laxatives (Tablets) : Cascara Aromatic Tasteless Fig Sym Fruit Saline Blood Stomach & Liver: Herb Tablets Powders Foot Powder Lozenges, Chocolate * Sticks Hive Syrup Sugar of Milk Coughs and Colds: Baby's Cough Syrup Hive Syrup Linseed, Licorice and Chlorodyne Throat Gargle {2 sizes) * Pastilles ia and Indigestion : Charcoal Tablets Dyspepsia Tablets Eye Troubles: Eye Water Salve Foot Remedies : Cora Cure Liquid National Drug Kidneys: Healing Oit Mosquite Oil Plasters Blackberry Cordial Wild Strawberry Extract For Children Baby's C h Syrup Baby's Soothing Powders Baby's Tablets Soothing Carbolic Salva. Ec: Healing Salve Men Salve Foot Remedies: (Continued) Headache Wafers. 1 uch Juniper Kidney Pils iiduey Cure Liquid Liniments and Plasters: Ligiment, White Witch Hazel, Distilled Ointments and Salves: y zema Ointment Resorcinol Ointment Stainless lodine Ointment and. Cherrical Rheumatism: Eheumatism Cure Toilet: Camplor ce Cold Cream, (2 sizes) " * Theatrical, (3 sizes) Complexion Cream Cucumber & Witch Harel Cream Witch Hazel Cream Talcum Powder, Violet - ag Rose o . Flesh Tooth Paste Fowder Hair Restorer "Tonics: Beef Iron and Wine, (2 sizes) Cod Liver Oil Compound, Tasteless, (2 sizes) Cod Liver Oil Emulsion, (2 sizes) " " * ia flasks, (3 sizes) Tonics: (Continued) Quinine Wine > Quinine Iron and Wine syrup Hypophos, (egies) Celery Nerve Tonle) of Nervosone ! Iron Pills BlaudsPills Toothache : Toothache Drops y Gum Miscellaneous : Antiseptic Fluid Sanitary Tablets (Antiseptic) Santal Perles Marking Ink Extract of Beef, 2 piaes Renact Tablets Satmdilla (Dredge Boxes) Company of Canada, Limited {3 1a {3 #izes) Halifax -- St. Jolin ~ Montreny -- Oren es ax -- -- -- wa -- Kingston -- Toronto -- London Hamilton -- Winnipeg -- Regina -- Calgary -- Nelson ~--Vancouver --Victoria yon preach? 'No,' said ceremonies. "How, then, can vou jude of what you never heard?' Nash made answer. By common report." Nir," said Wesley, is not your name Nash? I dare not judge of you by common report. I think it not enough to judge by. Took Turns. Fruit Growers, ' Mrs. Rogers had the bareel of rus sei apples in the attic because | they were not quite ripe enoagh to eat and she warned her three hoys, whose ages range from five to eleven, not to touch them. i Then, one rainy day, when she sought the attic to get something from a trunk, she same full wpon her sons, surrounded by ¢ cores, over hear me indif- the mas of to attended an he was preaching this re and de made answer conveyed the present archbishop of acting. Wesley sy gospel Nash he wae acting of their wits.' "Bir, replied -- At her approach two of the bors | Gold Plated Lace. drew closer together, but the third, | A novelty in French Invention is a a little distance off, who lay on his | process for electroplating delicate laces stomach contentedly munching an ap- leo as to "give them a brilliant flexi- ple apparently paid no attention to ble surface of gold, silver, or other, his mother's entrance, metal, It is announce that a com- "Jack! Henry! Willie!" she ex pany has been fommed for the de claimed, reprogchfully. "Whatever are | velopment of the Process on an in you odoing? And those apples! Did- | dustrial seals. Bo. thin is the metal ot I tell you not to touch them? {io deposit that the softoess of the "Yes, mamma," replied Jack, the | lace is not destroyed. eldest, "but we're no# really eating! The fins suggested uses of watalliz- them; we're acting the Garden of [ad lace gre for furiture covers. wine: Eden. Willie and | are Adam and | roting, and the incrostation of waod, Eve. Heary, over there, is the ser | bhut it is thought that it may also pent, trying toldad us to urbe employed in the 'trimming of guar downfall by showing us bow good{ments and the ornamentation of the apples are." head dresses. "Oh, yes," returned Willie, the} youngest, 'we've all been taking! Over 600 patents were granted tuvns being the serpent." women in Po land inst vear. io "Is Good Ted All it's flavor and strength is retained in the sealed package,

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