Daily British Whig (1850), 19 Nov 1910, p. 10

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Gl Ready for use in any quantity Useful for five purposes. SOLD For Making Soap. For Softening Water. For Removing Paine. For Dhsinfecting Sinks, Closets, Drains, ete. SAL SODA. Use only the Beat. we . There is HEALTH and STRENGTH EPPS'S" I fine invigorating qualities suit people cup of Children thrive on "EFPS'S." all ages. Rich in cocoa butter, and rene COCOA GRATEFUL AND COMFORTING SHREDDED Costs Less Than Meat and Is Better For You A delicious, nourishing dish--for dinner, serg® biscuit smothered in creamed vegetables; for de cover with any seasonable fruit and add cream and sugar. At all grocers, 13. a carton, two for 25¢, 211%. Good Health is the Target of your aim----or should be--and first in importance. Get and keep good health and you can work with hope--find life worth living--rise after nights of restful sleep--have energy and ambition--know . content. If you are out of health, or in poor condition, see what BEEGHAM'S PILLS can do fof you. Your food will taste right and nourish you better ur bowels will be regular and your nervous system corrected. Your blood will be purer and you will feel more cheerful. Your whole system will be benefited and you will know why so many thousands have found that Beecham's Pills hit the target and Hit Right Every Time Prepared only by Thomas Beecham, St. Helens, Lancashire, England, Said everywhere in Canada and Us 5. Atserict. ~ 18 boxes 1S coors. Two Minute Talks About ANDORA RANGE Jor Goal or Wood HE Pandora Range is for those who desire to make a permanent investment. The high quality of the materials and the superior method of construction assure long life. The Body of the Pandora is very heavy. The Rods and Bolts are on' the outside where they cannot burn or rust out. The Expamsion Rings of the cooking section provide ample allowance for extreme expansion and contraction and eliminate the possi- bility of the metal cracking. ~ The Gooking Top is Burnished which toughens the surface of the metal and increases its strength. McGlary Oil Cement is used between the joints. Unlike cheap, ordinary cement, it will not dry out and need replacing. The Nickelling will not tarnish and is many times more durable than the single coat of nickel on ordinary ranges. ; The Semi-Steel Fire Box Linings are twenty per cent. heavier than cast or gray iron linings. Sulphur fumes, so destructive to cast iron, cannot penetrate the hard, smooth as glass surface of Semi-Steel. The Grates have Three Faces, which allows the wear to be distributed on - three sides, insuring triple durability. If you want a range of guaranteed quality get the Pandora. It's built to give you lasting service. r= M<Clary's : Stands for Guaranteed Quality ' THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY. NOVEMBER STRATHCONA'S IDEA] REGARDING MILITARY DRILL IN CANADA. His Gift of $200,000 is to Show That He Believes Every Boy in Canada Should be Able to Take Part in Defence. Toromto Mail and Empire Lord Strathcona's gift of $200,000 for the promotion of physical and military drill in the schools of Canada as aanounced Monday makes a total ob half & million dollars he has -de- voted to this patriotic pyrposes. Com- ing as it does from a man in his 91st year, in whom any emotion resemb ling excitement or jingoism has long ago disappeared, the gift is the more significant. It is no "war scare" that animates Lord Strathcona, but 5 rea soned belief that every man in Cap- ada should know enough about mili tary drill and the use of weapons to take Hart in the defesice of bis coun: try, shuld ever occasion arise. What was said in this column when the for- mer gift was announced may well be Prepeated, namely, that we hope lord Strathcona's muni ce will stimu- late governments. to carry on this great work 'of military training, in- stead of encouraging them to stand aside and leave it for private phiian- thropy. It should not be left for men dhe Lord Strathcona to launch ga | movement of this kind, any more than it should be left to bim to pay the salary of the governor-general. The gitt is what might be expected of him, for he has been practising philanthropy all his life, even when his offerings had to be like the wid- ow's mite. The first record of Lord Strathcona's appearance as a philan- thropist was when he was nine years old. The Findhorn and Spey : Rivers had burst their Houndaries, and flood- ed the surrounding country, driving many of the farmers for refuge into the little town of Forres, where $gung Donald Smith livé® Among fhese tervified folk were the parents of one of Donald's schoolmates who had bern drowned, learning of their plight, the boy sought them out after school was over, and asked if they would accept a slight token in mem- ory of a friend. Then he proceeded to bestow on them all his pocket money, amounting to a shilling and some odd coppers. Donald Smith's parents intended him for the bar, and there is no reason to doubt the reason of their belief that he would have made a good lawyer, and eventually have become a judge. In Manchester they had some wealthy kinsfolk, the Grants, and they offered to give the boy a start in commercial life. This he might gladly have ac- cepted had there not been a streak of romance in that shrewd Scottish na- ture, and to this romance' the letters of John Stuart, his mother's brother, strongly appealed. Stuart was a Hud- son's Bay company factor; and whea he came to Forres on a visit Ns nephew became fired with'a determima- tion to return with him to the grea: west. Through his uncle's influence he secured a junior clerkship with the great company, and at the age of eighteen set out on a journey 'that lasted the greater part of two mouths. He was appointed to Labrador, and there he remained for several vears, an unknown, unnoticed junior clerk. It is told of him that in Labrador he became afflicted with 'an affection of the eves, and since there was no oculist nearer than Montreal, he set out for that city, a journey of nearly 1.000 miles, much of which he tra- versed on foot. A Hudson's Bay com- pany courier informed Sir George Simpson, governor of the company, of what Smith was doing, and the auto- cratic master met the young man at the outskirts of the city. He demand- ed to know what Smith meant by leaving his post without leave, and on hearing his reason said, "Then, sir, if it's a question between your eyes and your service in the Hudson's Bay com- pany, you'll take my advice, and re turn this instant to your post." The young man turned then and there, and went back to Labrador without enter- ing the city. In time, Smith became factor, and at the end of thirty years' service in Labrador, governor of the company. The following year he was appointed special commissioner to investigate the causes of the first Riel rebellion, and the next year a member of the execu- tive council of the North-West terri- tories. Until 1896 he was almost con- tinuously in the Manitoba legislature or the dominion parliament. In the latter year he succeeded Sir Charles Tupper as high commissioner for Can- ada. Before he went to London Don- ald Smith was recognized as one of the great Canadians of his day; but since then, as Lord Strathcona, he has attained a wider fame as an imperial ist. On the occasion of his ninetieth birthday a few months ago, greetings and congratulations were showered on him to an extent previously reserved for crowned . His strong patri- otism and his princely benefactions have made his name as familiar in Auckland as in Montreal. In the Tg wnt Duma a place iri the financial world of London surpassed by none, if, indeed it is equaled by any. Family Hold Back. A young southern woman who late ly mov t EARTH SINKS IN GEORGIA. Water Rapidly Gathers in a Strange Depression. Another "sink" on Alachu Lake, just across the chain of "sinks" south of Gaipsville, Ga., developed recently, and as a result the trains over the Atlantic coast line were annulled for a time, The first report that reached the city was brought - by the conductor, Mr Frederick, who was advised of the trouble by the section foreman, who made the discovery early in the morn ing on his way to the south end of his section. When Mr. Thigpen, the foreman, first discovered the new sink it was not more than ten or fifteen feet in diameter, but it spread very rapidly during the morning hours, and by the arrival of the Leesburg passenger train it had grown to about forty feet, one large chunk of earth follow- ing (nfter another in rapid succession and the ground cracked for a space of several feet around the entire hole. At about noon the place presented a rather interesting scene! for at this time the great loads of earth were rolling in at intervals, and with them though it wgs hot iron being struck in place, says the Gainsville Sun. The great. pool also resembles. the waves of the seas for during the day it was in motion, sometimes being great- er than at others, and up to last night the earth was still falling. This sink developed some two hun- dred yards this side of the one that occurred there a few yéars ago, whep a local freight train with many cars fell to ithe bottom of the place, but fortunately there was no water in this one, and it was easily filled in, and is used to-day the same as the old the water would boil and sizzle as roadbed. To be Beautiful Drink Milk, Every normal woman wishes to he beautiful, consequently I am sure vou will be glad to hear about a new diet, which is warranted to give you a cla skin, glowing with the rosy hue of health, lustrous eyes, scarlet lips ao a svelt fizure. The diet 1 am refering to is the milk diet, and 1 do hope you wilt all become milk devotees, as in my oOpig- ion drinking milk--and lots of 1t--will put you on tne road to Beautylanl, If you are annoyingly thin, | would suggest your starting on a complste milks diet, as it will substitute ood, rich blood for impure, bad blo>d, in duce a healthy circulation, feed worn out, tingling nerves until they become normal again, and, last, but not leas: give you a gain in flesh of from tnree to six pounds weekly. There is no reason nowadays why woman should be mortified hb: a tlet bast, thin neck and bony arms. AM she needs to do to gain the covet od flesh is to drink milk. Fi A complete milk diet is althost sure to increase your Lust measurement one nck every seven days. If you will drink five quarts of rich milk daily, you ean look forward with certainty to the day when you will he letting out all you waists across' the chest. Milk acts in the capacity of a per- feet, or complete food, which fact is not known to mey people. It contains no refuse matter, and. scientists say it contains within itself almost all the different proups of nu- trients, the carbonaceaus ecleraents for the generation of heat hv organic compustion, the nitrogenous for growth and repair of tissue, while the complex saline substances and water form the mineral constituents. Tube analysis proves absolutely that two yuarts of milk furnish as much nour ishment as a pound and a hali of beefsteak. ~The New Idea Woman's Mazazine. ------------ Tarred Roads and the Eyes. London Dally Mall Several doctors have recently stated that the dust which rises from tarred roads has a bad effect on the eves, and a professor at the French Aca demy of Science has stated that un- less tar is given up everyone will, in order to save his eyesight, have to wear protective goggles. But the use of tar is rapidly in creasing. Wallace Riche, secretary' of the Roads . Improvement Association, stated, yesterday, that there are, to day, roughly ten thousand miles of tarred roads in Great Britain, as com- pared with. two thousand miles in 1908. The practice is extending ver; considerably," he said, "especially in the southern half of England." * "lI have heard something of this complaint before, but enly in the way of conversational remarks by survey- ors who are constantly passing up and down tarred roads. They say that the dust from these roads seems to worry the eyes more than does the dust from untreated roads." Dancing for Feeble Mi Dr. Farries, an asylum superinten- dent, has discovered that dancing awakens slumbering intelligence, and brings about a proper understanding to minds previously merely vacant. Cricket and football proved failures, but since he has introduced dancing in his institution among imbecile chil- dren, there has been an awakening of interest in - this and other pastimes. The children have gained 'in confi: dence, and much better behavior resulted. | has La £ 1 19, 1910. Do your baking with flour made exclusively the HIGH-GRADE constituents of the HARD-WHEAT berry more loaves to the sack or barrel than you have ever succeeded in doing before. The loaves will be more nutritious, too, because they coatain the high-quality gluten, starch, phosphates and other wus- cle-building and blood-enriching elements of the hard wheat berry. Naturally flour that consists ex- clusively of the high-grade consti- tuents of the best hard wheat has greater strength and nutriment, superior color, more delicate flavor. > If you'll just try to realize fully what it means to your cdoking- reputation you'll soon be using PURITY Flour. Of course, PURITY Flour will cost you a few cents more than lower grade hard wheat flour or soft wheat flour Have you ever baked with flour made exclusively of the high-grade constituents of the hard wheat berry? If you haven't, now is the time to try PURITY Flour. Only the cream of the Manitoba hard wheat--the best wheat in the world--is used for PURITY Flour. More than that, only a portion of the flour milled from this wheat goes into the sacks and barrels branded P p PURITY Flour consists exclusive- ly of the high-grade constituents or portions of the Manitoba hard wheat berry. Every wheat berry has both low- grade and high-grade constituents which are separated during our process of milling. Soexact is our process that it entirely eliminates all the low-grade portions from the flour which is finally branded PURITY. The greater strength of PURITY Flour makes it go farther in the baking. With it you can make "More bread & But PURITY is very econo- mical because it makes "More bread and better bread." The cost per loaf is no more than when using weaker flour, and the food value is much greater. Tell your grocer vou are in a hurry to try PURITY Flour. He will supply you promptly. When you see the .baich of beautiful snow-white loaves, with their soft, evenly-textured crumb and dainty golden-brown crust, you'll be proud of your success with PURITY Flour. When you taste and enjoy the superb flavor of such high-class bread you'll be prouder still If you don't want to buy a large sack or barrel, you can get a small bag. PURITY is packed in 7. 14, 24, 49 and 98 pound sacks. Also in barrels and haif-barrels, Make certain the PURITY trade- mark is on the sack or barrel you buy, for that is your guide to the strong, reliable, high-quality flour that makes UNDERWE li-fitting underwear ruffles the temper and irritates the nerves That's why people who know .look for the "sheep" trademark It's am absolute guarantee of comfort -- the mark of distinction in "CEEYEE" Underwear fits snugly and wears well, because--it i abd knit te the ferm-- comfortable from first to last Don't sim showing you "CEETEE." ® yn oll sizes for ® THE C. TURNBULL CO. OF GALT, LIMITED men, Ww oF on every hildren Established 1859 Fe garment of undérwear » finest Australian Merino Wool r "Underwear" -- insist on your Look for the "sheep" « GALT, ONTARIO Figure it out in dollars and cents." If you can make five tons of coal last as long as six tons and with coal at $6.00 a ton, don't you make $6,00 clear. range illustrated will save 20% of Now the cast iron your fuel when hard coal is burned. It is fitted with that greatest of modern stove improvements the GURNEY-OXFORD ECONOMIZER It is a device that is put on Gurney-Oxford Stoves alone, and in putting them out for. your inspection we feel i proud of the choice we have made in selecting this line of . satisfaction giving stoves. Look them over on our floors, Simmons Bros THE YELLOW HARDWARE STOR. BUT EVENTUALLY Will have a permanent place on your daily mena. ~ with bowl of hot milk and sugar--lunch with glass of milk - and chesse--dinner with soup or in place of bread. ity will win. Serve at breakfast

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