Daily British Whig (1850), 4 Feb 1916, p. 10

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If you were told of anew discovery forthe 3 treatment of co gis, colds and bronchitis, as certain in its Bebion on #1 ees! troubles as anti- 10Xin is on diphtheria, or vacoination om smali-pox, wouldn't you feel like giving ta trial? Peps is the discovery! Peps are littie tablets, containing certain, medicingl ingredients, w hich, witen placed tipon - the fongie, immedi. ately LIFE into vapour, gud are at chee freated down tie dir passages 15 the © Jute. Ou-fheir journey, thes soothe the. imflaioed and iwitated membraves of tie browehial tubes, the delicate walls Of Log air, passages, and Hoglly euler andedrry relief aid healing to the lungs. in & word, while no Mguid or sold Cin get Lo the johks aud air passages, these Peps fundies get there direct, and al ukce coummenes their work of heal ng, FREE TRIAL Cot cut this article, write #er383 it the name and date 6f this paper, aud mail it (with le. stamp to pay return postage) to Peps Co, Toronto, A free trig} packet wil} then be sent you. All draggisis and stores sell Peps, Soe, box, Peps LADIES! LOOK YOUNG, DARKEN GRAY HAIR wi wd Use the Old-time Sage Tea and Sulphur and Nobody Will Know. Gray hair, however handsofue, de fhiotes advancing age Wa all know fhe advantages of a youthful ap. pearance, Your hair 18 your charm. Bt yuakes or mars thes face, When it fades, tgrns gray and Yooks dry wispy and scraggly, just a few appli eatfons of Sage Tea and Sulphur en haiices its appearance a hundred fold. Don't stay gray! Look young! | Either prepare the tonic at home or | geét from any drug store a bottle of "Wyeth's Sage and S I ri Conipound." Thousands of folks re | commend this ready-to-us prepara tion, because it darkens the hair beautifully and removes dandruff, | Stops scalp itching and falling hair; besides, no one can possibly tell, as it darkens so naturally and evenly You moisten a sponge or soft brush with it, drawing this through the hair, taking one small strand at time. By morning the gray hi disappears; after another a pplication | of two, its natural color i restorer and it hecomes thick, gle and lus- trous, and you appear years younger, non on, DRUGS EXCITE YOUR KIDNEYS, USE SALTS, It your Back hurts or Bladder! bothers, drink lots of water When your kidneys hurt and your { back feels sore, don't get scared and proceed to load your stomach with : | lot of drugs that exeite the kidneys | and irritate the entire urinary tract | Keep your kidneys clean like you keep your bowels clean, by flushing | them with % mild, harmiegs alts | which removes tt body's urinous waste and stimuldtés them to their normal activity. The function of | the kidneys is to filter the blood. In 24 hogrs they strain from it 500 | Brains of acid and waste, so we an readily understand the vita import ance of keeping the kidney 'tive Drink lots of water -- you can t drink too much; also get from any | . pharmacist about four ounces of Jad | Salts; takea tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast each morn ing for a few days and your kidneys will act fine. This famous salts is | made frem the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to clean and stimulate clogged kidneys; | also to neutralize the acids in urine | 80 it nc longer is a source of irrita- | tion, (hits ending bladder weakness Jad Salts is inexpensive: cannot injure; make a delightful efferves cent' lithiawater drink which every one should take now and then fo keéep their kidneys clean and active, | Try this, also keap up the water | drinking, and no doubt you will wonder what became of your kidney | trouble and backache { Dandruff Surely "Destroys the Hair | Girls=if you want plenty of thick, | beautiful, glossy, silky hair, do by all leans get rid of dandruff, for it will | starve your hair and ruin it if you | don't | . It doesn't do mueh good to try to | brush or wash it out. The only sure | way 32 get rid of dandruff is to dis solve it, then you destroy it entirely. To do this, get about four ounces of ordinary "liquid arvon; apply it at "night when retiring; use enough to! maisten the soalp and rub it in gent- 1y with the finger tips. ei By morning, most if not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more applications will com- pletely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it. vYou will find, too, that all itching | and digging of the scalp will stop? and your hair will ook and feel a hundred times beter. You can get. liquid arvon at amy drug store. It | is inexpensive and four ounces is all You will need, no matter how much dandruff you have. This® simple remedy never fails. FN A i, It is rumored that the German | cruiser Roon, which captured the Steamer Appam, is off Hampton Roads, and may he, going 'In to in-' tern. 3 | J. Pierpont Morgan, 'who sailed | from New York on Wednesday is ex. pecied to return with a hundred mil gions in war contracts. { hood | to go, really had to and fry i Go ~ PATTY, THE BRAGGER. Once upoii a time Fred had as a visitor a cousin named John who liv- ed in a very distant city He was called Patty for he was very much fatter than any boy you ever saw | { &m sure, and he also was an awful | bragger He about his home, his playmat s, Ris toys and how he was smarter than any other boy and conld do things like wen did. The boys of Fred's n zirbor-, did not like Fatty. Very much for he was always wanfing to fight and was always pushing and slapping bragged | the boys smaller than himselr One day, the boys planned a skit- ing party, and asked Fatty to go with them. "Of course I will go," he said, "and I will show you all how to skate I am the fastest and best | skater out home and have a lot of prizés 1 have won in skating. 1 show you how to do the big and lots of other tricks or He bragged most will jump skates." 0. much the boys al wished they hadn't asked but being Fred's guest, When they go pond they found it him they to the good Z Over ------, most of it but at one end there were several holes and they were very careful not-to rush into danger by going near the holes, Fatty, however, thought he would show them how brave and smart he was and immediately skated toward «lhe thin ice and holes. "Come on." he cried. "Don't be babies. Lets do something to show how brave we are. Come, T will show you the'big jump. He skated up to the biggest hole dnd with abi spring tried to jump with his skates on. He landed right in the center and. the thin ice over it crashed in and let him down into thé icy watér How he did howl and yell for help, but the boys, knowing that the wat er was wnly about two feet deep, thought they would teach him a les- son and did not go near him to help. He cried and blubberad, hut final- ly got o oply shallow and he , he was very much 't brag so much af- for all the boys had to say lp, help," and he immedis ly stopped bragging ~, "Low Cost of + . apts ------ enu for Saturday BREAKFAST Oranges Plaked Finoan Haddie German Potatoes) Coffee LUNCHEON und Fried Cream Tonge on Brecon Apple DINNER Corn and "Toma lam and Potatoes ean Balled Parsnips, Cre Pru Frule Soup nus BREAKFAST. German. Potatoes--7p py Ww potatoe Fry brown Season and serve LUNCHEON, Bacon and Fried Apple --Pare and core the apple Cut t 1 butter and TO RECLAIM CHILDREN. wl Former Fentale Pickpocket £35,000 For a Home, Detroit; Mich. Donates Feb Lyons, with an international reputa-| tion as a former exceedingly clever criminal, wife of the notorious Billy Burke, and author of the book, Crime Does Not Pay," has mm. Sophije 'Why | offered | Living" Menu cooked ba ? es of DINNER Corn and Tomato Soup--noili to ther a cup of corn, the same of to- Add and boil fifteen mi- toes and two cups of water ion Strain, add a t cap of milk tod boil one minut Ham and Potato--304k a an n wiler casslerols warm naif an addtwo potatoes, pour over pour ov of milk and bake in a an Hour UTicover an hour, longer. 3 Prune Salad--pit fill with cream chee {ettuce with a French dressing Fruit Cheese Pie--Mash se 10 make a Cup, é i 1 Mix the beaten 5, three tablespoons of sugar, half a cup of chopped nuts, haif a cup each of currents and rais- ing, and the stiffly beaten whites P nto a pie plate lined with pie and 'bake half an hour cooked prunes * and serve ty. property valued at ran establishment for a home f reclaiming of children with minal tendencies, Sophie Lyons, now said to be worth half a million dollars, reform- ed several years ago. She was known the international 'queen of pick- kets ind shoplifters and confiden- * women Gary & Practical TH Home Dress Makin gt Lessons nn ® = Prepared Especially For This Newspaper by Pictorial Revien co§TUME IN B -- ote, * Modish frock trimmed with in brown chiffon pop- yelvet The applied ndMback sections have pointed CUTTING x Back M | BACK LOUAR es bust PP ioe, 13 celts. ROWN POPLIN. ' sjons held dres used gives K! velvet he elvet revers ns on either side of tl at any simple n Ly or and buck pointed extens tid fastened gn the left s skirt is a four-piece el. with a he ough 'a bar sed, if preferred A detachable vest, with high oliar, Is recommended for the fr the ess because it can be ily and affords "an opportu ty In mediun o 45 vards 5 A se ode] re box-plea velvet may ® the mater $ cutt shows that the material is divided single and double folds, in orde A the sections of the pattern may be placed upon them to the be: advan- tage. As the poplin i= not w enough for the side gore, without plecing, it will be necessagy to &¢T the" required piecing from ga n f the poplin' half the side gore is first placed it, the large "0" perforations being ar- ranged on a lengthwise thread Di study of the spare se upon rectly on the lengthwise folds, howey. | er, are placed the applied back and the waist back, the collar, the applied front and the belt The sleeve, front. cuff and skirt strip are laid on popiin: The material is folded in quarters for the skirt, but the fold is so made that the selvages shown on cutting guide 3oth the back gores are laid on the goods. The mode! may @® varied, if § 3, for the afplied frfifit and back ma¥ be of satin or velvet" stay, the meet, as the und front lengthwise fold of a s BORED ¢ Wy TALWITHOUT NAP © Fava IN 0 Pictorial Review Costume No, $424. Sizes 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46 inca- {undeserved praise than merited eriti- his feet and wheg he found) -1 des Lilas, a he withoyt that." After folding the material in| 1 lengthwise thread of the | . FEBRUARY 4 1916. TROUSERS. They Led to Edicts Against Their Use In Some German States. The latest instance of a European country enacring laws « oncerning dress occurred at the rime of the French revolution. when some rulers of Ger man states forbade their subjects to wear trousers, these peing held to indi cate revolutionary wh ih The elec tor of Hesse Cassel, besides prohibiting the obnoxious garments. bad the con- victs employed on road sweepiug dress. ed in trousers so as to inspire disgust for sans-cnlotte fashions, The term "sans-gijotte" means "with- out breeches," ada dififng the Frepeh revolution the "sans-culottes," who de- nounced every one who wore breeches, finally went beyond their opponents and "wore twice as mueh cloth around their legs--in a word, adopted the mod- ern trousers and made. them the badge of a party, Napoleon wore trousers on state oc- casions after he had been crowned emperor. His army was the first that adopted trousers, and they kept prog ress, step by step. with the march of the French legions. © The Duke of Wellington would insist on wearing pantaloons--or trousers, as they are now called--when he attended certain social functions, although he was al- most alone in so doing. This was about the year 1814, but by 1830 trous- ers were worn by almost everybody. ------ A Literary Waiter. James Stephers, a literary Irishman, author of a number of novels, sketches and poems, is somewhat noted for his | absentmindedness. In Paris he wrote his imaginative verses in the corners | of cates and never noticed which of these had been the environment of his muse. Once he left the manuscript of "The Demigods" in oue of them, but could not remember where Days aft er, wandering iuto the Cafe Closerie waiter banded hit the | lust sheets A five franc piece was | offered. The waiter with much diguity refused the reward. "I am." he said a man of letters myself when I have in bour to® and I know what it I8 to lose the fruits of one's brains." No Vowels In It. Many places have curious names, but apparently there is only one place which has a pame without any vow That place is the little hamlet of Ws, near Paris. Ws being an unpro nounceable name, the inhabitants of the hamlet have transformed it into "D'Us," but this change has not been sanctioned legally. and op all the offi cial records the name Ws's{ill appears. The bamlet has only about)a hundred inhabitants; and its s6te attractions are the Chatean 4'Osuy, which has been for many years inthe possession of Edmond About's family, 'and the Cha- tean de Vigny. which is ome of the very best specimens of the renaissance style of architecture. els, Natural Protection, | It has been. pointed out that to some | ground animals nature's color scheme for concealinent furhisggs almost com- Dlefe protection. The quail crouching on the ground looks. like a bunch of dried leaves. Many snakes and fishes | take the precise color of surrounding I sand' and water. A mackerel from | above looks like a fleeting. ripple, while to fish enemies bepeath his white belly { will not show against the higher col- ; ors of sky and water. The wonderful | I¥ beautiful changes of dolphins and | chameleons were not evolved to please | the eye, but to protect their lives, -------- Precedent Adhered To. "Will you marry me?" The fam lady 'at the man's side drew away" with' a movement that | seemed almost prudish. Her breath came and went in little explosive jerks. She tried to speak, but no sound came | from ber lips. She tried once more, "| and then, with sweet tremulousness, she gave her answer, "1 will marry you if you get papa's | consent," she said. "I never marry -------------- Nicely Settled. Lady--What will you, charge me for "| the use of horse and buggy for a few hours? Liveryman--It will cost you $2 for the first hour and $1 for each addi * tional hour. two additional hours. I've got some shopping to do and will not require it for the first hour. A ------ . t Topaz. The word 'topaz comes from the Greek verb signifying to 'guess. The Jewel { Was brought from the east and was re- { ported to have come from an island, and men then guessed nt th location of the isle which produced sufh beaut: ful gems, i es ---- - » { Origin of Comets. " | Professor Elis Stromgren, director | of the Copenhagen , observatory, bas | carried out, with the aid of J. Braae. an investigation to determine whether coulets come originally from interstel- lar space. as has been commonly sup- | posed, or originate within the solar sys- | tem, His method of research inrolyes the backward computation of planetary perturbations fer eight comets. The conclusion reached is 'that all comets beretofore observed have odiginated | Within the solar system: 1 -------- { 2 An Unfortunate 'Accident. | "Goodyess, little boy!" exclpimed the I 'Elodly old gentleman to the weeping. | Fouth; "what on earth is the matter" { "1 had a turrible accident," bawied | the boy ' | "Gracious! What wes it?" 1 met pop when | was a playin hookey." 4 Fortune knocks once at every man's door, but misfortune crawls ia at the open window. ' * Most people would rather listen to cism. Lady~Well, I'll use it for Velvety and delicious-- Simply makes the moyth water. Not a mile' chocolate, Protect Your Teeth A most agreeable and pleasant way is to give them the benefit of frequent cleansing and whitening with - WRIGLEYS (Made in Canada) r A noted dentist says "We eat more than our early ancestors but we chew less. Our jaws don't get the exercise they ought te and don't develop to allow sufficient room for . big, strong teeth. » Chewing gum is one of the RIGLEYS, J things. It exer- W Resell cises the gums, rubs off food particles that cause trouble. to" teeth and strengthens 1 the saliva glands." Get this Perfect Gum in the-sealed package " --clean, full-flavored and good for you! Write for free copy of "WRIGLEY'S MOTHER GOCSE" Wm. Wrikiey "Jr. Co., Ltd., W rigley Building, Teronto RIGLEY'S, Cai best possible SR HA ERE: Tle]e FAR LAEETRCEIESECEEECNTE ed

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