Daily British Whig (1850), 7 Jan 1916, p. 10

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~ JPAGE TEN X Hairs * . Can Be Quickly Removed ( uty Culture) Hairs can be easily banished from the. skin by this - quick, painless method: Mix into a stiff paste some powdered delatone and water, spread | on hairy surface and in 2 or 3 min- utes rub off, wash the skin and it » will be free from hair or blemish. | Excepting in very stubborn growths, one application is dnflicient. To "avoid disappointment, buy the dela- tone in an original package. "HEAVY MEAT EATERS 'HAVE SLOW KIDNEYS Eat Less Meat If You Feel Backachy Or Have Bladder Trouble. v No moan or woman who eats meat regularly can make & mistake by Bushing the - Kidneys 'oceasionally, says a well-known authority. Meat forms uric acid which excites the kidneys, they bhécome Aver worked from the strain, get sluggish and fail to filter the waste and poisons from the hiood, then we get sick. Nearly all rheamatism,. headaeh®s, liver trouble, nervousness, dizziness, sleep lessness and urinary disorders come from sluggish kidneys, The moment yon feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back, hurts or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, ful of sediment, irregular of passage or attended by a sensation of scalding, stop eating meat and get about four ounces of Jad Salts ro phar mary; take a tablespoon in a glass of 'water before hreakfast and in a few days yonr kidneys will act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon Juicé, combined with lithia, and pas been used for generations and stimulate the kidneys, neutralize the acide in urine ionger eaunses irritation, thu bladder weakiess.: Jad Salts is inexpensive and can- not injure; makes a delightful effer vescent lithja-water drink which ev eryone should take now and then to keep the kidneys 'clean and sctive and the blood pure, thereby fivoiding serious kidney complications. LADIES! LOOK YOUNG, to also 6 it no ending } DARKEN GRAY HAIR Cse the Oltime Sagé Tea and Sulphur and Nobody will Know. Gray hair, however "handsome, de notes advancing age. We all know the advantages of a youthful ap- pearance, Your hair is your chafm, It makes or mars the face. When it fades, 'turns. gray and looks dry wispy and seraggly just a few appli cations of Sage Tea and Sulphur en- hances its appearance 4 hundred fold. Don't stay gray! Look young! her prépals the tonic at home or get from any drug store a 50-cent hottle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur | Compound." Thousands of folks re- eéommend this ready-to-use prepara- tion, because it darkens the hair beautifully and removes _ dandruff, stops scalp itching and falling hair; hesides, no one can possibly tell, as it darkens so naturally and evenly, You moisten a sponge or stft brush with it, drawing this through the hair, 'faking one small strand at | time. By morning .the gray hai . disappears; after another application or two, its natural color is restored and it bécomes thick, glossy and lus- trous, and you appear years younger. AA AAA AA - -_-- Then and Now lo. January, grandmother used to lay in several bolts of « muslin and begin the long task of making underclothes for thy fargily. adi 3 Now, grafiddaughter puts on her hat and trips forth"io the White Sales. She lays .in an entire stock of very much finer articles of apparel than - grandma ever dreamed of. - She pays: felis than grandma did and eBatributes nothing in the way ef ddhor. : And, being altogether an up- to-date young lady, grand- daughter theroughly posts her gelf by redding the "adfertis- ing 'in The Whig before s she flush. to} IN PLOTS OF GERMANY | FORMER CONSUL GENERAL FOR { CANADA AT MONTREAL. { . ---- | Time Club Was Applicd--Mr. Bopp, Who Represented Kaiser Here When Surtax Was Infposed. The Journal of Commerce, Mont- real, of which Hon. W. 8. Fielding is editor ois reminiscent .of 1897, It says: In the disclosurek recently made of alleged plots at San Francisco to | destroy" bridges and tunnels on the + Canadian Pacific Railway, Canada i hears again from an old saan jee. The plot are said to have Wad their origin in the office of the Ger- i man Consul-General at San Francis- | co, Franz Bopp. Mr. Bopp was Con- sul-General for Germany in Canada ja few years ago, with headquarters | at Montreal. He is was who represen- ted the Kaiser in the Dominion when the commercial war between the two 'countries began, The German Gov- ernment undertook to punish Can- ada for the granting of the preferen- tial tariff to Great Britain. The step then taken by Canada was, it is true, a departure from the then] existing relations between Canada and Ger- many, but it was not a step that gave Germany a good cause of complaint | Germany and Bélgium had old trea- ties with Great Britain which not on- ly assured those nations of what was commonly known. as "most favored nation treatment," but went further, guaranteeing to Germany and Bel- gium the same tariff treatment as Great Britain herself. received in the British colonies. 'Phese treaties, made at a time when the wishes and opin- ons of the colonies were not deemed worthy of consultation, really stood in the way of freedom of commer- lal.arrangements 'within the British Empire Petitions and resolutions seeking thetermination of these trea- had. proved of no avail. It was when 'the Canadian "Govern- ment, taking the bull by.the horns, decided ignore the treaties' and grant a preference to Great Britain, that a change was effected. This vi- | gorous action led the British Govern ment 10 give notice to Germany ana Belginm that the treaties would, be denounced, Belgiom saw no cause of complaint in what Canada had done, but Germany took offence and imme- diately penalized Canadian products by suhbjeet then" te the higher Mr. Bopp as then I-General in Can t S were made 0. through oth- We | | only German Ww Ger Rep through him, r channels, to the German Govern- ment the Government of Canada, setting forth that Canada still grant- ed to Germany all the tariff conces- sions that were granted to any for- eign nation, that, therefore, Germany hould not feel offended, and inciden- y pointing out that in event of a tariff quarrel between the two coun- tries, Germany stood to be the loser If: Mr. Bopp was himself favorably impressed . by this/ argument, it certain that his chiefs at Berlin were not, Cdnadian trade with Germany continued to be handicapped. Then, fiading 'that the Germans would not be reasoned with, the Canadian Gov | ment applied a club in the form of a { surtax on imports from Germany, which speedily shut out the products of Germany, and brought the Ger- Man Government to sue for commer- tial peace. Mr, Bopp had in the mean time passed out of Canada, leaving to his successor the task of readjust- ing the relations between the two | countries. Now Mr Bopp reappears rat San Francisco in a role which, if { the allegations are well founded, is { decidedly hostile to Canada ada by ta \ Some married people would hitch up better and pull together more ev- enly, like true horses, if there only one tongue between them That man comes mighty near be- ing a fool who sits down and expects that hoping is going to put bread | and butter in his mouth, Somehow we all 'agree. that it As right for the other fellow to practice economy A lot of times it is wicked to kill { the calf to feed the prodigal. was | | BB 0B Beles Bs BS { To Remove Dandruff | | tad { Geta 25-cent hottle of Dandefine fat any drug store, pour a little into {veur "hard and rub well into the |sealp with -the "finger tips 3y morning most, if not all, of this aw- ful _seurf will have disappeared. : * begins shopPni Ae amikacin] Two or three applications will des- troy bit of dandruff; stqp sealp itching and falling hair. every WOUNDED AMERICAN AVIATOR & HIS CAPTIVE. .* Although wounded while of the Russian returned with x 'prisoner' sian hospital.' His prisoner erie in Warsaw when her brideg ance. . . . - : serving in the aviation corps army, Negly Farson, an American, recently whom he captured in a Rus- is Miss Anna Goerz, an Am- girk who was nursing in the Russian war hospital room-to-be made his appear: . THE DAILY BRITISH '| selves "UNDER THE SNOW. Meadow-Mice Seen Happy When the .Bnow Covers the Ground. Where the shambling: mink, the leaping' cofton-tail, and tbe nimble aquirrel were eager to imprint the first inviting sheet &f snow with many records of their varied activi- ties there is now only a colony of feeble, timid meadow-mice, hurriedly laying out ramified tunnels under the snow. They must find * joy in the transformation of the landscape. Be- fore the snow made all things white no trace of them could be discerned. The marsh hawk flapped and sdared 'low over the matted rushes and pros- trate grass, but his keen scrutiny did not detect the careful, silent, shrink- ing little hiders, Where fire cleared the ground last Year's runways were still traced, and a small sunken dome of moss and fine grass here and there marked the brief habitation of & young brood. Only the abandoned nest could he found under the dome, with an entrance to the protecting marsh vegetation not yet converted to 3o0il by successive yearly inunda- tions. Through summer snd fall ihe meadow-mice revealed no frace of their existence, but the first snow brought them eneigetically to life. Though affording but meagre shelter where it clings on the entangled grass, they dart thrdugh it along the newly-constructed runways, moment- arilly displaying their black backs | where® the White covering is broken, }/. A SA NAME NL SN AN IN ANANSI SE NNN NS i and again.disgppearing where "the matied vegetation sustains the long, irregular canopies These preparations for winter would be covered and concealed by a few more inches of snow Another fall' 'would hide the diminutive world, leaving (he nimble-footed and silent inhabitants (0 burry unseen along {heir devious. paths. They must enjoy the "protection: of the suew, When impelled by hunger Go feast on the innet bark of small sap- lings they work up almost to the gur- face, but never out into the daylight When small thickets or entangle- ments of sumach, sassafras; or maple are covered with mounds of snow they seem to mock the silent majesty of burdening winter by improving the opportunities of. js voncealment, Climbing to the smaller Iwigs and branches and Stripping the bark with their long, paired incisors, they never venture (o the surface of the white mounds, A round breathing:hote may reach the surface, but there. is never any indication about its edge of curiosity regarding the outer world Spring reveals - the barked twigs, girdled trunks, and confused intricacy of runways through frozen grass, mosses, and matted weeds: Young fruit trees and other nursery stock may prove a temptation in win- ter. There may be serious depreda- tions, for meadow-mice ire very pro- lific and sometimes move in large swarms in search of more. abundant food. Judging by their speed' along the newly-designed runways, they may be extensive travelers The first snow promotes a time of recklessness 'between the summer concealment of low vegetation and the safety of the burying depths of winter. | Between the beds gf lightly- covered grass, where the hard ground Is thinly: coated, they dart across in | startled lfaste, their short tails curv- €d in outline against the background of white In these open exposures the prints of thei: expanded toes: seem ridiculously large for such small dnimals, There are enemies abroad. The marsh hawk is eager to take advantage of the unusual expos- ure. The invader who causes so much alarm in the snow and frozen grass may be in reality an assurance of safety. The strong-winged enemy flaps and curves threateningly at a distance, showing that he has fea: and caution as well as rapacity. And the scurrying meadow-imice continue their preparation for winter, 'the feeble' violence of their haste sug gesting terror at the prospect of be ing found unprépared.---S. T. Wood in Toronto Globe. Aliens Poured In. Scores of alien enemies, chiefly Bulgars and Austriins, many of whom knew nothing of the events of the past sixteen months other than the fact that their countries were at war, were brought by more intelli- gent fellow-¢countrymen to Toronto just before Christmas for registra- tion. © They poured into the eity from the northern parts of British Columbia, Quebec, and the more set- tled portions of Northern Ontario to spend Christmas with feltfow-country- men' Unable to read or speak English, isplated in shanties and construction camps, many of the new arrivals had no knowledge of the past evenis of the war. In some instances, in spite of the posters Bcattered over the eodntry calling upon subjects of (enemy countries to report them- to the nearest registrar, the men, until their drrival in Toronto, did not know 'they were regarded. as alien enemies, . The co-operation of the more re- spectable members of the Teronto colonies frequented by Bulgars and Austrians proved un assistance to the police. Unregistered new arrivals were refused shélter in the lodging houses until they could produce the card given by the bureau. Institutions of. Western Provinces. The Cabinet ern 'Provioces Ministers of the west- decided that institu- tions for joint uso shall be provided as follows: Manitoba, incorrigibles and deaf mutes; Saskatchewan, blind asylum; Alberta, mental defeclives: British Columbia, imbeciles The capital cost of each institution will be borne by she Provineds individual ly, but thé main{enance will be shar- ed among the four. i Oxer Century Old. Martin McDonald, whose home is in the House of Providence, at King- ston, Ont. Mis Just celebrated his 101st Christmas. While he is around avery duy and enjoys life, his ankle bas never recovered fully from .a break of several years ago. - A half a loaf is too much for the man able to work and is idle. The {unfortunate demands our as sistance as well as our pity. WHIG, FRIDAY. JANUARY 7, 1916. ° a a E-------------- a BOBBY'S PICTURE. he Once upon a time BobBy's mother asked him to stay in the honse after he came home from school and take care OF Nis ttle sister e, as their mother had to go down town on an errand. Napey was always 'glad to have Bobby to play with for he thought up such nice games to play and always was good to her. Their mother had not been away very long before Bobby thought up a néw game and told Bessie that' he would draw for 'her any pietura she wished. Bessie thought a cow would be fine and so Bobby drew what -Bes- sie thought was a wonderful animal. Ar last Bobby said: "Shut yeur eyes Bessie 4nd 1 will draw you a surprise." Nancy shut her eyes as tight as ever she could, in a few mi- nutes Bobby shouted: "All ready now you can look." 5 , Beggie looked all around the room but sow nefther her brother or any picture. All at once she heard a noise as though some one was laugh- ing out on the porch and she turn- ed towards the window to see who it was "Low Cast of She didn't see Bobby but some one was surely 100king in at the window, She could "just #e his hair and eyes above the windowsill. Bessie didn't dare to go to the Window, 10 sce who it was; 80 she cried to Bobby: Cone, come: Someone is looking in 4t (ne window. i Just then her brother came iy the front door. "Goosie, don't you know that is the surprise I promised you. It is only a pieture of a boy," he said. Bessie went €lose to. the window and, sure-enough, there it was a fine picture just as thought some one was looking in from the outside. Bessie wanttd Bobby to leave it on the win dow until their mother camq #0 'she could see it. Bessie could hardly wait untii her mother came and before her had a chance to take off her things, she led her to the window 10 see the pie ture. Their, mother thought it was very fine and told Bobby that he had taken very good care of his little sis- ter and she didn't say a word unplea- sant, even though heshad drawn the picture in her nice, clean window 'pane, home Living" Menu | Menu for Saturday BREAKFAST Apples Hominy and Cream Hot Wigewdt Coffee LUNCHEON Creamed Tongue Spliced Cup Cakes Toast Cocon DINNER Kidney Bean Soup Mack Chicken Fle Baked Heetn. Olive Salad Apricot Jelly. ~ A Hot Bisewit--Mix four cups of flour . with one heaping tablespoon of lard, two cups of milk and two teaspoons of baking powder. Roll out an inch thick and cut with a small biscuit cutter Bake in a hot oven. - LUNCHEON. Spiced Cup Cakes--Mix one cup of sugar with a scant half cup of but- ter, a cup of sour milk, one beaten egg, a cup and a half of flour, and a teaspoon each of clove,. cinnamon and allspice. Bake in small tgs in a moderate oven, Lerrons rn =n Prepared Especially For This \ by Pictorial Revi A gown for summer formalities fashionably carried out In Pompadour CCU cine. 6282 - Pictorial Review Walst No. 6282 bust? Price Thcents The dollar worshiper is equally fond of dimes and pennies, Skirt Nu. 6298. Sizes 22, 24, 26, 28, cents. : A A A A A AA ASN Ps at Bary & Practical JFomé Dress faking - terials, it makes a dressy accompani- DINNER. Kidney Bean Soup--Simmer slow- ly two cups of beans with six cups of cold water; half an onion and a, level teaspoon of salt When thor- oughly done strain through a coarse sieve, return to the fire, add ' the juice of half a lemon and boil one minute longer. Serve with thin sli- ces of lemon covered with chopped parsely : Mock' Chicken Pie-- Cut pork mall pieces and boil Place iu a baking dish 'with any left over gravy Pare small white potatoes and add to it. Cover the baking dish with a pastry made by mixi one cup of flour, a quarter of a cup'of shorten ing, quarter of a cup of water, and half a teaspoon of baking pow- der Brush over with melted but- ter and bake in a moderate oven. in ice Baked Beets--Wash carefully and bake for an hour or until tender, in a hot oven. Plunge in cold water to remove the skins and serve at once Apricot Jelly--Dissolve half a pac. kage of powdered geletine in a little cold water. Add two cups of stewed apricots cut in small pieces and en- ough liguid to make. a cup Turn into a mould Yo coo) Y | | €llk, with chiffon. 4 surplice unde: The woman who wints a lovely frock for formal summer wear & material "that will be thraugh a coming season sually seeks fasllonable This model Inompadour silk, with surplice waist draped to-form its own girdle, Is m desirable. Three sections compose the SKIrt. The waist crosses over a sur- plice underbody cut in one with the sleeves. If chiffon is used for the un- derblouse 1 yard 44 inches wide will be required. Seven and one-half yards 38-inch silk makes the dress. The usudl method of cutting is de- parted from In today's dressmaking lesson. By referring to the guide ft will be noticed that the material Is laid first in an open width, then it Is folded, and then there 1s a 3% fold, which is || used in case the shield and collar are added and made of net or some con- trasting material. © The underbody front, back and sleeves are cul from the open width of the goods, as are also the back and outer front . Now, folding'the material, place into position first the peplum, then the lin- ing front and, lastly, the back. None of these sections, however, is laid on & lengthwise fold of the materials, as the proper line 18 gained only by 'plac- Ing thy parts of the pattern on a lengthwise, thread of the goods. When it comes to the % Inch folds, how- ever, it will be noticed that the shield is laid along the lengthwise fold-that is, the front seéctfon-with collar and back section on a lengthwise thread. he waist {s a model of unusual and may be uked independently. 'eloped in chiffon, crepe de Chine, or any of the semi-transparent ma- DRY silk ment to a skirt of silk. voile or ehiffon broadcloth. The idea of chiffon flounces, stik bordered, on a silk skirt is popular; as is that of silk flounces on a chiffon skirt, and such combioa- tions tend toward fullness without too great bulk. Flounced skirts of chiffun with just the borders of the flounces =a taffeta are liked also. \ wD OF JETTRIAL ? i Sizes 32, 34, 36,-38, ¢0. 42 and 44 Inches fi 80, 32 and 34 inches waist. Price 1§ | Tender Healthful _ Order a dozen or a box today. Serve this haklth. ful fruit at every meal. : All first-class dealers now have a plentiful supply. Save Sunkist tissue wrappers for beautiful silverware. CALIFORNIA FRUIT GROWERS EXCHANGE Co-operative -Nep-profs 105 King Street, East, Corner Chateh, Tosqnto, Outario £4 "LABATT'S STOUT | fhe very best for use in ill-health and convalescen. . 3 = Awarded Medal and Highest Points in America at World's Fair, 1893 PURE --SOUND--WHOLESOME JOHN LABATT, LIMITED, LONDON. CANADA &f 3 " KITCHENER" Is the name of the new Electric Iron made by the Canadian General Electric Co.. Under the new power rates, it will cost only 2 1-2 cents per hour to operate this Iron. --FOR SALE AT-- liday' i i Halliday s Electric Shop, -- Phone 94 . {a NAA A AN lA AA A, NEW YORK FRUIT STORE Sunkist Oranges, 20¢ and up to 50c¢ a dozen. Grape Fruil, 3, 4 and 5 for 25e¢. Malaga Grapes, 20¢ a 1h. Pineapples, 20¢ each. Bananas, 15¢ and 20¢ a dozen. I'resh Mixed Nuts, 20¢ a Ib. New Figs, 20¢ a Ib. > New Dates, 20¢ a Ib. : Fresh Homé-made Choeolates, 15¢ and 20¢ a 1b. 314 PRINCESS STREET. Phone 1405 ry > . L ee] KINGSTON THE CITY C NOW» cautiful (radian. (hv. est University and RG est Military Aeadenn toest Summer ort inest CHishing Gr , On the St Jawrence iver 55 abe Stare Yai, 1000 9 3 Hills 45 Heres of Seautial Sart lest- Place in_(drada, cellent-Sites for Chactories, An Heal all round Gyr > * i ' UP KINGSTO Keep in mind the "Community Build- er' cartoons and articles which appear each Saturday. : % yi ® ) ©

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