Daily British Whig (1850), 11 Jul 1914, p. 12

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AAR. ERUPTION ON HEAD HAD T0 GUT HAIR Formed Pimples and Matter Spread, For Three Months Did Not Go to School, "Cuticura Soap and Oint- ment Cured in Ten Days, ------ nen 60 Rue Derazilly, Ville Emard, Montreal, Que." Cuticurm Soap and Ointment cured my little gigl, aged eleven, of iteh of the head 1t formed a pimple and that pimple brokeand the matter spread and ov: r the t tor want another formed. She bad large -scibs on her head and at night she scratched until the blood came, I was obliged to cut hoe hale. all around tho erug 11, three months she did to school and I cared for it during t without result, "I was told to wash it and tc ointment of she was Worse, no cura Soap and Ointment an! ones, After recelving th mediately washed hor heat cura Soap, then T put the ment on. I did that twice ovenin and mdroing. From the ti I commenced using the Cuticura Scap and Ointaens that night ghe did not scratch I stopped the itehing from th ng After buying some Cuticura Soap and other hox of Cuticura Sint t. she was completely cured.' Arthur Poirler, July 5, 1913. Cuticura 8oap and Cuticura Ointment are sold by druggists and dealers everywhere. A single set is often sufficient, For a liberal free sample of each, with 52-p. book, send post-card to Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Dept. D, Boston, U, £. A, im he Cuti- Ginter "COBRA" BOOT POLISH Thousands will be Sid to know they can buy "Cebra" Polishes in Canada, as they er in the habit of using them at home, and are now being sold by the following: The A. M. Reid Shoe S{ore Abernethy Shoe Storey wekett Shoe Store H, Jennings, Shoe Store J. A. Scott, Shoe C. BR, MeLeod WwW, Gilbert, Grover i . . to. 0 Minimum Rub~-Maximum Shine For 2¢ in Stamps to cover postal will send you a p80 ample of * Boot, Fugsiture and Floor Polish. THE BLESSING OF MOTHERHOOD Healthy Mothers and Chil dren Make Happy Homes Motherhood i is womans high hest sphere In life. It is the fruition of her dearest hopes and greatest desires; yet thou sands of noble women through some de. rangement have been denied this blessing In many Homes oncé childless there are now children because of the fact that Lydia E.Pinkham's Vegetable Compound makeswomen normal healthyandstrong. This is evidenced by the following letters which are genuine and truthful : London, Ont. --*'I wish to thank you for the benefit I received by taking your famous medicine, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetdble Come Before my baby was born I was so ill I could not stand long or walk any distance. I had to lie down nearly all the time. After 1 took your medicine I felt like a new wo- man. I could work ak morning till night and was happy and well, I certainly think it relieves pain at childbirth and recommend it to every woman who is pregnant. Youmay| use this testimonial if yop like. It may help some other woman.' ~ Mrs. FRANK | Corry, 132 Adelaide St., Landon, Ont. Brooklyn, N.Y.-- "1 was ailing all the time and did not know what the matter was. 1 wanted a baby but my health would not permit it. I was nervous, my side ached and 1 was all run down. 1 | heard that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound was and took the medi eine. I have now: a beautiful baby and your Compound has helped me in every way." Mrs. J. J. STEWART, 200 Hum. boldt St., BrooKlyn, N.Y. . Taxes are indeed genuine trouble to the man who is inordinately fond af money. o in} Week day methods are often direct coutradiction to Sunday jentions. pre ISSUES Executive o1 selinintor Extravagance of Mowat A ible P.P.A. and Seldom or never has the main is- sue at an Ontario election been so clear-cut and unmistakablé as it was at the general election just over. Sir John 'A. Macdonald chose as the first premier of Ontario the Hon John Sandfield Macdonald, who had been a determined opponent of the Federal scheme. In the first tion after Confederation the twe pre nmuers, Sir John Macdonald and Sand field Macdonald, adopted the same platform, and "hunted In couples." For Sir John had always preferred legislative 10 federal umicn, since the foxmer would have enaoled him more easily to control the adminis tration of affairs, and he colitinued to show his preference for it even after the new constitution had been adopted. * At the of 187+ the question as executive control should Jed for parliamentary really formed the main, issue. liberals, under Hdward Blake and Alexander Mackehzie, who were strong for parliaments control as an essential part of responsible gOVv- ernment, .concentrated on this issue. But Sandfield Macdonald had really himself to blame for the raising of this issue at all He had induced the legislature to place at the dis posal of the government $1,600,000 for the purpose of aid to railwa And he had been instrumental causing to be voted down a re tion moved by Edward Blake de ing that every Order-in-council granting railway aid should be sub- Jeet to ratification by the legislative assembly. As Alexander Mackenzie saw it, the 1871 election was mainly elec- provincial general election whether e substitu control The in ATURED ~ ELECTIONS OF OTHER DAYS Control in 1871--Aleged dministration--The Patrons of Industry Ross' the in tion again raised the isste of government's extryagance, and, addition, bitterly attacked Sir O} Mowat, who, it was said, had "laid aside the pure ermine of the judge to gird his loins with the tattered and unclean raimgnt of a trimming politician." ' - Notwithstanding this rhetorie, the government increase majority 5 At the general election of the conservatives again rais "extravagance' cry, but they also made the first of their appeals to sectarian prejudice, ma k- ing a strong bid for.the Roman Cath- olic vote in a camgaign shed, calloe "Facts for 'the Irish Electors," in which it was claimed that 'the Cath olics of this province can wéver hi any confidence in the Hon Oliver Mowat. The liberal majority was cut down to 12. ye ss----_ The Ross Bible, At the general election of 1886 the conservatives again raised the sec tarian issue, but this time they strove to arouse Protefitant, and not Roman Catholic, feeling against the govern ment, declaring it to be the "slave of the hierarchy" im respect of |i policy in administrating the ate school systey , and of its aut jzation of © ok of ccriptupe' tions, nic Zmed tha "Koss Bible," > of its having been com ; the Hon. G. W. Ross, which was alleged, had been dictated by the Roman Catholic archbishop In the result the government's 5s majority was increased to 28.7 During the remaining ten years of the Mowat -premiership the conserva- tives practically de spaired of success 8510 ought on the question of whether or not the government of Ontario should continue to be what he styled '"'the mere creature of the Dominion gov- ninent, existing by its sufferance ubject to its control." The Liberal Position. Thus early in the history of the Ontario legislature the liberal posi- tion was defined. It was opposition to the contralizing policy of the con- servatives, And, in greater or less degree, the two partis have ever ince been divided along these lines \nother big issue at the 1871 elec- tion had been raised by what Mac- kenzie called the open avowal of the conservative government "to locate lic. buildings and jpgmblic works \ it receives the greatest ¢ mount of parliamentary support." The electorate pronounced in favor of the liberals on these issues, though not very decisively, for, on the re assembling of the legislature, it was only by a majority of one--the vote being thirty-seven to thirty-six--that a liberal administration replaced that of Sandfield Macdonald Edward Blake became premier, to succeeded very shortly after by : Olive r Mowat. In January, 1875, latter's government appealed to he province on its record, particu larly in regard to the passage of acts amending the me § laws, for simplifying land a and for consolidating the insurance cowm- pany laws. The conservatives' chief line of attack was the alleged extra vagance of the government, but it was easily shown that the addition- al expenditure had been more than | rounterbalanced by an expanigpg re- | venue: The electors showed an ny ho ereased confidence ih Sir Oliver Mo- watl's administration, ich until the | lext election in 1879, continued to] id a majority of 23 or so. | ond general ciion under | Mowat's rship tool | 1879 opposi Sec Sir Oliver place June, Amon a ON THE RURAL || LINE in | break somewhere on lines; hente the | threatening state of atmosphere ime | the telephone office. It was distinct- | ly charged with electricity. Central---the most patient and officient central f the office= ams wered angry queries w th an omin ous note in her voice this goes | on much longer L leav she bu | out heatedly to her neighbor at switchboard. "Find out where that break: i and send a man out to repair it at once!" thundered the head man he was leaving his offices. Ward patiently pouring directions into the he was holding, paused to sharp retort. "Did you think," he flamed, that these inqui: jes were merely a pleasant diver- sion on my part?" > The angry emphasis of the retort was still in his, voice as he agaln turned to the 'phone. 'I will repeat this once more. Put up your receiv- ers," he ordered "every one on the line, until we can find where the trouble ia' Then, after a period of experimenting, "There is still a re epiver down somewhere," he fairly barked. "Put it np at Once!" He jumped from his desk a ment later to answer a sharp query from the man at the information desk, in turn, had received a shar + one from an irate patron. The irate patron 'had a big business deal on with™T man on the toll line. "Gee!" exclaimed Wafd. "this gives me the willles! I must get ont of here before there'san explosi- on." He paused to give an order. then shot out of the room and into the office of a friend next door. "1 could find that confounded break," he exploded. "if any atten tion was pald to either requests or orders, A call for any one on tha' line is a signal for all receivers a: ong to come down. We've had t send 4 man out fn the teeth of thi: storm to hunt the break. "The office force-has been nearly disrupted and all 'for the grant of a horseshoe nail," he quoted. "If L {could get hold of the stubborn party There was a one of the toll st | receiver flash a mo Ate ( | news that | the | pu | the could dis | der In 1890 they renewed the cries . of "extravagance" and "Romish supre macy." But their novelty was gone, and the government got a majority of 23. In 1894 the issues we® complicated by the interposition ol "Protestant Protective associa ' and of an"association. of farm ers called the 'Patrons of Industry" The Mowat administration obtained a majority of 12 over all parties, al though it was soon shown that the "Patrons," who numbered 15, were not among its opponents Sir Oliver Mowat retiring from the premiership in 1856, the Hon. A. S. Hardy re placed him. Ontario was becoming more conservative, and the chief is sue at the general election of 189% was the insidious appeal that it wa: tion' he HED it) he had been kept on 4 very short allowanee of Sylvia, but even the sound of her voice and the assurance that all was well with her would have been soothing to him to-day. Poor, little orphaned Sylvia, ac- customed to feather-lined luxury, and now, by a swift turn of affairs, ent to teach the dreary Crabapple school! | Her letter lay in hig pock- at Such a brave little letter! She was getting along veXutifully, -she declared But then, she would say that in any circumstance There was never the least bit of whine in 3vivia's nature." To Ward there omething radically wrong in the thought of her battling with the cold winter in this desolate region. "And ghe has no more idea than a Kitten about how to take care of herself," he groaned inwardly. Some way it was bard to disassociate Sylvia Ache- son in hig mind from the thought of high-heeled pumps, silken hose 1d thin, futile little lace coverings + neck and 'arms. And it would a year at least before he could take her out of this. He fairly grit- ted his teeth over his impotence Lo be of service, At Sylvia's boarding place, a little brewn. house by the roadside, he stopped his horse. He wddild wait till 4 o'cloek and then drive over to school for her. A plump butter ball of a girl answered his knock, and a red fire gave him cheery greeting. "Excuse me for not getting up," apologized Mrs. Teter from her rock er by the window, when he made bothers me consider himself known; "my rheumatism bothers me considerably this Kind of weather, so I sit a good deal." "Qh, - certainly," he answered, crossing the room to shake hands with per, *}---*" He suddenly stopped short. 'Great Scott!" he exclaimed, for the little old lady sat placidly darning a stocking which was stretched over the telephone re- ceiver. "Look here," he burst forth, "I'll send you a darning ball when 1 g0 back to down!" "Oh, no," she smiled, serenely, "this is every mite as good, and al- ways hangs here right handy." Now was Ward's tie to give Mrs Teter the promised hair raising ex perience. He opened his lips to give utterance to a sarcastic remark, but at that moment his eyes fell on the stocking she was darning. It was of silken texture with a gay liggle vine creeping over the instep The wildest-imagination could--nol conceive of plump Mrs Teter or Ellen, "the help," in that slender footed, dainty stocking, = "I've her to wearing heavier ones now," Mrs. Teter explained, in- got "time for a change." In addition, cross-currents with regard to separ ate schools and prohibition bad se in, and the libgrals got a majority of 11 only. AT the election of 190 with the Hon. G. W. Ross as premis the liberal majority reduced to four, and in 190: vanished alto gether, the successful issue ra b Sir James Whitney and his party be- ing largely that of "cleaning up" conditions, electoral and administra tive, in the provinee, following t iamey charges against Hon. J, Stratton, was it The Whitney Rule. In 1908 the Whitney governme: appealed to the electorate on its g ! eral administration, particularly ir } respect of the reconstruction of the} provincial university and of the com-1 mencement of its Hydro-Eleetric } scheme. The Hon. A, G. Mackay sub jected ie government te much} searching eriticism on account of the allegad .inefficiency of its education- al policy. But yhe electorate gav« it a huge majorify, as it did again inj 1911, witen Mr. Rowell raised standard of reform, especially gardsg temperan Sir James jority of to-day the hi ever obtained by Oliver Mowat is- double Sir halr-raising be a worse experience € blizzard than | the that's raging outside." '"Basy, Easy, Ward!" friend. "Remember comes over one ! | counselled that the the line is] paper, theater and lecture vellers in remote | Think of enduring ow daily course coun mMonot that droaz Crabayjl instan "Think of il Ward little else in the unoccupied of that jangling morning. The strengthened a "half formes pose in his mind He strode to window and stood looking out on | storm. It_was early afternoon | the mereury constantly nd- | "Whew!" he e ejec ted, "what | Then, aftei a horse and | a drive to l m ' for pl of mo nent words the and desce bitterly | it would he only istent offen of And, more import end of the long ride th was Sylvia Sylvia was, indeed, ti why that inopportune been partie ularly irritating to him. The with her to-day rative Since sho dat against tender t were shared by CHECK i ME RHLUMATIGH NOW RHEUMA Thoro: ¥ Deep-Seated Uric There is only from Rheumat impurities « Acid poison was i mg i ar y eld. or be worth if COVE the nuon at the chief break had reason had seemed had admon Drives Acid Poison. free ated X¢ Uric expelled from he body, at. RHEUMA will do and it thovou 1ghiy. If you suffer from any form of Rheumatism ~Scintica, Inflammatory. Arthritis, Muscular, Lumbago or Gout----get.a bottle of RHEUMA from J. B. Me- 0d for 50 cents----it is guaranteed. "For years | suffered with Rheu- matism' in my arms and shoulders. My kidneys and bladder were affect- out ane | he r {telephone system if she wishes! {not nowed up out | tio She distriot. | had thought |! { children terpreting- the glance, "and good warm clothes all through. She isn't in a steam-heated house any more, and you know, she's just a slip of a 1 and hasn't any one to mother {her but me." Mrs, Teter paused to wipe her motherly eyes, which had grown misty. Ward could have hugged her in a sudden revulsion of feeling The scene at the office that afternoon suddenly occurred to him. All through those jangling hours, he smilingly reflected, Mrs. Teter had sat, peacefully darning. "Why, let use the receiver," re declared to himself "IL.et her use the whole For what to Ward was a disar- ranged service compared to the su- preme fact that some one was tend- ly and beautifully mothering Syl- { ed his heavy.freight wagon over GHOT WEATHER AILMENTS children | = « A medicine that will keep | great hoon to every mother hat Own Table An ioceasional dose keeps the lit ind bowels right and pr sickness During the hot stomach troubles spediiv | diarrhoea or cholera in if Baby's Own Tablets ¢ uand the child may die wi hours Wise mothers always | the Tablets in the house and | ive their children an occasional dose to clear the stomach and bowels | id keep them well. Don't is ill--the delay may life ( the Tablets nc feel reasonably ! who the Tablets pr that is the best no other -medieine I'he Tablet medicine 'dealers or bh mai a box from The Dr Wil Brockville, Ont. : The Warming Light omach nonths to fata um and atv a few fant keep out Is | wait cost w may safe nother uses wind there em that is | are so good al old by wms Co., "a Ht Freedoms freq! not thy name mockery | the poverty-crushed and la i land mob, { Wha 'neath the | lie prostrate from And moan and sob. Oh Tan, look to [ot he I'o pall of ornate w fang ! injustice's i Blood of the hlameless on thy hand, Revenge within their hearts hath fanned, [ill they themselves, bereft of mind, | To hatred turn, a brother's love, | 6 Who kill, destroy, and wot not that They: maim their Kind. IF'rom .o'er the hills and out the A clarion call for liberty Comes dank with th8 sweat of hon- | est toil, trenchant, 'brooks no calm de lay, { Jut rings, a voice that will not -down, "Release the soil! Heed that:ery, oh, Freedom's Land ! Before the people are unmanned And reason falls before theirmight; | Soothe their troubled tears and fears, Rise to stature bold and proud And calm the strife. sea, | | That, ! yr | ise in thy righteous majesty-- 3 Restore the true democracy; Preserve her pure, untainted "name, LikeNgold that lies within the. soul That the richer need" and the poorer | have; May it never wane ! { | | sl, and T rapidly lest flesh, After five weeks' use of well man."--Wllliagt Fry, who is glued to his receiver I'd give i¢, Ont. RUBIMA I was a Fort Er-| The wavs a tailor -- man financial sncoess. for a brief period, { ish Columbia N 11912, | each of the three vears during/which i such steps have | dike ! sodn Owed for style stands upright only | | THE MOUNTAIN FREIGHTER Picturesque Figure Fgst Disappearing From British Columbia. p disting guishing marks of a real inherent love of the horse, over which he holds strange dominion. He loves to tell his ex- periences and adventures tive trail, but he will always incl the horse in his recital. Chief among the o of British Columbia boo. It can be seen loned seats of the C, coach as it winds the mountains, and rivers to a on ude iss > 1 historic 8 the trails old. Cari- from the .cush- P. R. passenger along the edges of the itself among ISBE8 lose valleys | the hills. , It now shows the devas- | tating hand ted bridges and crumbling cuts. The lure of gold is a call with a ready response. The rough, of time in its rot- | rock | hardy | elements of mankind are ever found | in the game of hazard. men who take life as a gamble, who penetrate the distant unknown, and trumpet the call to the rest of their kind, They were physically strong men, endowed with imagination. They, too, have mainly gone as the old trail is going. They trod the trail In the days of the gold rush with the "unreasoning passion for gold, or the careless quest of adventure. But with them 'were the horses of the pack trail. Romance was alive; they sang of their heart's desire: Oh slowly then I paced the deck that boré me from my 'home. There were strangers all around me, and I found myself alone; There were strangers all around me, I knew not what to do But I still kept up my courage for the gold in Cariboo. In speaking of the miner we say: "The lure of gold." In speaking of the freighter we can as truthfully say: "The lure of the trail." Many men cannot break away from the ci- ties, while others desire the pathless forest. The freighter drew a happy medium. - He spent a day or two in town, but weeks or months on the trail in one trip He drank John Barleycorn in town, and fought and cursed under the influence. On trail he lived a normal life thgt neu- tralized his brief sojourn in town He sang from the fulness of his heart, and ate his meals in the open, under the broad canopy of heaven Like the ancient bards he told strange stories of prowe but it was the prowess of hi He may have been a man of common intelli gence, from his own view point: his horses were uncommonly gent. He was a freigl When the Ashcroft tr zenith of its "Zlory stood hitched to the on and its trailers jerk-line train; freighter. The'fr mean man of affal in the expert management of freight train that no y presi dent ever felt. Unlike g the railway, the freighter's tra almost human---no doubt horses » day of the of the » had a pride his far tke jerk-line tr in the game. ( pull, the leaders trait of intellige a word, the wheelers forced the ons, into the desired position, the string would leap over the chains at the word of command The lesser freighter had his honor also! He had no camp following, but alone with his six or four-up he haul- the srned rm len wag while lead hills and through the vall He 1 each trouble as it came. 'He did breakage rep mainly with an Even when trouble was hevond repair he knew the tricks of his tr With a tongie broken he knew { to lock so that he could reach a ance, Undaunted had no sueh The le the different The freight trail s | the railroad; the | mai Iroad is kng trail -- the estat li tions and social restrict individual--the death of the olJ der of romance in the birth of cc mercialism.--Orville Devilie axe the ad ade how the forerunner of comple n 11 of hme the Organized Labor Grows. The third annual orgahization in C year 1913, | Department of Labor. At of 1913 the sirength of organized abor in Canada stood approximately at 176,000, an increase of nearly 16, 000 over the figures at the close of The estimated membership for report anada, cove heen issued on the the ring by the cl has | reports on 218: anized labor in Canada ed, has been as follows: 1912, 160,120; 1913, 175,799. Of the total numerical strength of organized labor: for 1913, the mem- bership owing allegiance to interna- | tional organizations reached the large proportions of 149,577, leaving for | all other organized bodies a member- { ship of 2 29 0322, Toronto leads with 121 unions and | a membership of 20,992. Montreal is second, with 121 unions and 13, 56 members, Advised Not To Come Here. The congested conditions in the Canadian labor market, and the fact | that in some parts of the country there are large numbers out of work, | has caused the Government, through ithe Immigration Department, to be- gin advertising in British papers ad- | vising mechanics and laborers not to come tp Canada. Only agriculturists | are for the present encouraged to emigrate. i It is the first tie in histdry that en taken, and a ~er cent. in ilmmi- is estimated by decrease of fifty gration this year Supt. Scott, Town'. Has Dwindied, Only seven people now live at { Dyea, which in the days of the Klon- had a population of 20,000. Of the seven it is said only two are whites, aly seks other quekters just as dissatisfaction reaches chronic state. In a lot of homes the Bible is least soiled book, Peace se as the the the | ry | { They are the | | labor "With Fleece a: *So clean and white-- Sunlight." White as Snow" 7 OU may wash your choicest blankets with never a fear as to the result if yon use Sunlight Soap. They will come from the tub as clear and sweet-smelling as the day they were woven,and they will dry as soft as the fleece on Mary': amb. Sunlight sav& all the rub and wear and doesn't do the slightestinjury to fabric or hands. A $5.000 guarante 'the absence of any adulterant or for. Sunlight and you receive proves impurity. Ask satisfaction. A BAR BUSINESS COLLEGE - hand, gemeral commercial subjects. free. H. F. Metcalf, Principal KINGSTON If You Are Thinking of Buildin this year it will pay you te i our prices fof cement, bloc bricks, ete., as you-will save $260.00 between solli briek and cement blocks. We alse have all sizes In sills, lintels, pier blocks, caps and vases st reasonable prices. Kingston Cement Products Factory Factory Cor. of Sank and (Limited) Head of Quecn Street Courses in bookkeeping, short typewriting, civil service, improvement, and all Rates moderate. 'Informatiom Barbers give 10c. applications of Adonis drugs Zxists in 50¢. & $1 sizes. ADONIS HED-RUB --is a most delightful hair dressing. Adonis will render the hair soft and lustrous. It is an invigorating hair tonic for men and women ; cooling and refreshing, and contains no sédiment or grease. Manufactured by the SOVEREIGN PERFUMES (LIMITED, Taresto, Ont. MAHOOD'S DRUG STORE AAA A a v a ia MOTOR TRUCKS Capacitie , 2,3, 5and 735 tons. "What kind of service may I expect a I have purchased a motor truck?' to consider, Mack service hegi from the i Au important question problems, garding the are accurate ness mem w Llems s yours, And Mack service ends when the tr we this will be we 'do not know, he Mist 14 years ago, is. still doing reliable work at The strength of the company behind the truck should be as care. fully investigated as the strength of the tuck isc, Address Dept. 28 Canadian Fairbanks « Morse Co., Limited EE EE = long k built, Tucson, Arizona. {iomontun, ig EE En Canada's AEN Hens rfor: 508 ah en

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