i | Be os Safe. Think of the germ-laden things your skin and clothes must come into contact with every day. Thea remember that there is a splendid antiseptic sosp LIFERUOY HEALTH SOAP Use Lifebucy for the hands, the bath, the clothes, and the home. Its rich, abundant lather means safety. The mild, antiseptic odor vanis bles | | The price "of "Lifebuoy Soap is not altered. It still retails at 5c per cake. yo---- | AAAAALA Ama essa ss VO VVVVVVIVYT TTT VV VT | CATARRH?! SANTA, BLADDI LADDER } i $ p | | mist cleared away, POOR BLOOD AND WEAK NERVES (By F. Roymond Word, M. D.) Lack of strength ia about the first sy: of violation of the laws of health. ere | come nervousness, unsteady Hands and limbs, skin eruptions, dizziness, ee hiotanoss, heart | {oipitstion, and with the feeling thatthe life | is being sapped comes complete pros- tration. In this condition the sufferer is indifferent %. all things--and looks upon lifc | with a globmy, melanchoNe view. It is given as a statistical fact that real out of every ten people in the United Sau! are suffering from nerve exhaustion, and o this number lesy than half realize it. They | know that they have gloomy thoughts, a dopregtion of mind, an impaired memory, wmizinkss and beadache, wakeful nights aud lls of extreme exhaustion, but abtribate it _to any other cause but he | right one. They feel languid, irritable a rostiess, the why and wherefore of which they ~ cannot i, They are® suffering from nerve exhaustion, & condition which ir | Badeubiediy the means of causing morc | mise and erushing more hopes than any other trouble that flesh is heir to. Nervous exhaustion will mot cure itself. | The sufferer who thinks that nature alone | will bring about 2 restoration of health ic | simply. de deluded LX false hope. He will | realize that (if power of realizing is | left him), when he mes a ho pion | victim to one of the many diseases Which | follow in its path. | Those suffering from nerve exhaustion | or loss of energy as a result of overwork mental yorry or violation of nature's Tas | are red sound health b: ard's special treatments. Dr ara A office is located at 79 Niagara Square, | Buffalo, N. Y., which is right o ite the | McKinley Monument. His office hours are | Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturdays 9 AM. and Tuesdays, Thursdays and | Ridags 303 to 8 P.M. Bundays . M. | to 1 P.M. Consultation and eration 5s | slwavs without ~hares 1 GLASCO'S Pure Scotch Marmalade and'Jam. In glass and tins. Baker's Fresh Grated Cocoanut wit the milk, 15¢ per tin, D. COUPER Phone 76. 341-3 Princess st. Prompe Delivery, | K at ------ FOR SALE 183 Acres, $6200 Four miles from city. | Good buildings; well watered. | W. H. Godwin & Son || #0 Brock {regulate and stimulate the | at | | tured in my | 1 had thoug | ready NH | staring with-wide-open l | him that | my apartment, | taurant, completed and | back after the impact, | before | cared to look, ! seeing only Sylvia, his | [1 ~ THE DAILY ¢ BRITISH WHIG, THURSDAY, MAY 3, 1917. {| THE CONFESSIONS OF ROXANE (By Frances Walter) § WE FIND EDWARD the McClu ndicate). yright re News p ing with Edward was not the meeting 1 had pic- imagination During the long evenings we had waited for him and on the thousand other occa- | sions when I had comstructed the scene 1 never had failed to give to i} a romantic, almost a dramatic tinge. ht about that first meet- ing so continuously that I had the whole thing before my eyes just as 1 supposed it would happen. "Our discovery of him, 1 imagined. would be while we! were sitting in the little restaurant, waiting for him to appear. A man would enter and' I would hear Sylvia uttered a smoth- ered cry, and there he would be to seat himself at a table or eyes in our direction. « Then it would be time for me to take matters into my hands 1 would go directly to him and 'tell he must come with us to Once there I would dismiss Sylvia and have it out with Edward But there was no such scene. We did not even meet him in the res- and what actually did hap- Our meet all like | | | pen was entirely different from any- | | { | thing I had conceived. Sylvia had needed a few feminine trifles and I had agreed to meet her downtown and go with her to one of the stores to purchase them. After this part of the program had been we were walking to the street car line we turned a cor- ner and ran plump into an elderly pa and a youthful man who were com- rere T os o==% ng toward us. Both men stepped and then I cry out. In another moment, thére in the crowded street the eyes of .every one who the young man held his arms wide open and Sylvia top- pled into them. It all happened so suddenly that I did not at first realize what it meant. Then, when it dawned upon me that she had at last found her lover, my senses reeled and everything turned black before my eyes. When the Edward, oblivious to the smiles of passers-by, his eyes every thought | centered upon her, was holding her at arms' length and looking at her with happiness beaming from every eature, despite the tears which had rolled down his cheeks. "Qylvia, Sylvia, is it heard Sylvia really you? [can it indeed 'be you?" he cried as | if he could nof indeed credit his | senses, An answer came, but not - from Sylvia. A ragged urchin who, more J { than ar 1eér witness, had enjoyed the sce imped twelve inches into | the led in a squatty position, rested hin upon his palm and his elb pon his knee and bawled out you mutt?" y But er Sylvia nor paid ghtest attention ragamuffin. although several tator d to think him ex-| cruciat funny. However, the youthfu was 'not content with their apr He wanted addit-! ional atter . "And e it wasn't Sylvia?" he went on 'pose it was somebody else a-huggin' this way, wouldn't both be awfully sur- prised? T 1e that, you bonehead!" The crowd applauded some more, but hi ism was unheard by either of : happy participants .in the public mbracing act. They were too nt.upon each other to realize as y¢t where they were, and it was only after Edward had folded her once more to his heart that they began to become cognizant of their surroundings Meanwhile think it is, you Edward to the! spec- you wit inte the elderly man had stood a silent speetator, his face be-| coming sterner and sterner as evi- dences of affections between Edward and Sylvia became more and more pronounced It was plain that he| was a very interested witness, and | my first thought was that he was| Edward's father. This suspicion be-| came more deep.rooted when, after. watching the' proceedings several| minutes with? rath which grew Sa ceptibly greater each second, he step-| ped closer to Edward and took him by the shoulder | "What does this mean?" he de-| manded angrily "How dare you do a thing like this on the public} streets!" The elderly man's manner was so| harsh that Edward, completely | cowed, retreated a step, but in an-| other moment he had regained his| confidence and faced his companion | unflinchingly { "I didn't really know what I was| doing," he declared, "but I am not} ashamed of it. | would do the same thing over again." Then he reac hed for Sylvia's hand. | "Come," he said, "we cannot talk here. Let us go where we can have | a little privaey.' He signaled a taxicab and ad he assisted Sylvia to enter it he looked | inquiringly at me But I paid no | attention to him. TI entered and seated myself beside Slyvia, while he | and his companion took the opposite | seat. (To Be Continued.) mem 'The. Whig's = Menu for Friday BREAKFAST Oranges or Stewed Fruit. Cereal of Choire. Asparagus Omelet Griddle Cakes and Syrup Coffee or Cogoa LUNCHEON OR SUPPER Rice and. Fish Mold Dandelion Satad Stewed Rhubarb Cookies Tea or Buttermilk DINNER LANKED sap toes, Parsley Hutter Tomato Gelatin a Orange Pufls. Materials--One cup flour, % cup | sugar, 14 cup milk, 1 egg. 1 teaspoon | baking powder, a little grated orange 'Was Troubled With Shortness of 'Breath. When the heart becomes affected, there ensues a feeling of a choking sensation, a shortness of breath, pal- | pitation, throbbing, irregular beat- |ing,. smothering" sensation, dizziness, wand a weak, sinking, all-gone feel ing of oppression and anxiety. The nerves become ungtrung, you dread to bs alone, have & horror of society, start at the least noise and are generally fatigued. On the first sign of the heart be- coming weakened or the nerves um- | strung, Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills should be taken. They are just what you require at this time. They heart, and strengthen and restore the whole | nerve system. Mrs. €C. M. Cormier, Buctouche, N.B., writes: "Since two years ago 1 | was "troubled with a shortness. of breath, and sometimes I could hardly breathe. 1 went to see sevéral doc- tors and they said it was from my heart and nerves, but they did not || seem to do me any good. One day | ' i I got one of your B.B.B. Almanacs and read of a case similar to mine. "lI Bought a box of Milburn's Heart 'and Nero Pills, hnd- after taking it 1 noticed such a change that I kept on | Sox Wie nil] 1 hag ag used Tour more Heart and N Nerve Pills « oS y yd Shree xes tor $1.25, at 0 dealers, al * Daily Menu | rind. Utensils -- Mixing bowl, flour sifter, | 2 measuging cups, teaspoon, egg'! beater, bowl for egg. grater, custard | cups. Direc ns-- Sift "flour and baking owder ito bowl; add milk, sugar! and a pinch of salt. the well beaten | eggs, butter and orange rind; beat | 10 minutes; brush custar dcups with! a little melted butter, pour in mix-| ture and bake 20 to 25 minutes in a| hot oven. Serve warm with orange! Sauce, | | | | Orange Sauce. Materials--Two oranges, 1 cup boiling water, 1 tablespoon lemon | juice, 2 teaspoons cornstarch, 4 ta-| blespoons sugar. | Utensils--Saucepan, cup. teaspoon, tablespoon. Directions---Put the water in| saucepan; add the cornstarch, wet] with a little cold water; add the su-| gar; boil three minutes, add the or-| ange and lomon juice measuring | ( = FORD DOING HIS BIT TO AID THE ALLIES At Halifax Arranging For Ship-| ment of Machinery and | Staff of Mechanics. ---- Henry Ford, who has Halifax for a couple of days, and will be here for a day or two more, told your correspondent to-night | that he was prepared to do anything | he could to advance the cause of the Allies in the war. Asked partitu- larly #f he was associated with the Government in an enterprise to build "wooden ships on land which had been leased at New York, he declined to say anything, refusing either to affirm. or deny, but re- Jeating that he would do whatever e could. Mr. Ford is sending a lot of ma- chinery to England for the manu- facture of tractors and with it half a dozen of his expert workmen are going. He has just perfected a valuable invention for farm work-- an implement ' very suitable for work on old lands, such as abound in England, and his present visit has to do with the dispatching of the machinery for mgking this imgle- ment and a staff of mechanics to the Old Country. The material will be forwarded at an early date. "It is a bad well into which you must pour water and he is a tiresome or mail rect on pt of by The T. Milburn Co, ato, Ont. k friend who is always loukmg to you for Sapper. been in deme A as 2% 55%; @alito A Vi CI wing By i | .C EIR 7, ANNETTE KELLERMAN, whose great phoio play, "A Daughter of the Gods," will be seen this year by millions, and who is appearing in person at the New York Hippodrome, says: Adams California Fruit Gum lives up to its name. All the delicious California fruits are surely responsible for its flavor. * ats AA ll PP tl A CANADIAN CHEWING GUM CO. LIMITED 5 AN OAM AA Pn STEAMER MEETS MISHAP | John Webster wads about to be |and new cribs erected. The boat was]! Webster was b { launched' at Morristown, when the! christened by Miss Clara Garxin, and | 000 and is named after Brockivillé's During Launching orbing Slips | cribbing of the 'ways slipped as the|short speeches were delivered by Federal member, She is 106 feet And Boat Settles. new craft was fifteen feet « toward | Mayor Wright, W. A. Lewis, Brock-| overall and 26 fest beam. Brockville, May 2.--In "the pre | the river. The boat settled on land, | ville; A. W, Gregory, F. W. Ames, | - - sence of 1,000 spectators Monday and all efforts to refease it failed. |J. V. Crawford, R. Nicholson and] People give to self love need fear aervosn the new excursion steamer] Jarks will now have to be secured | Rev. Mr, Hay of Morristown. The no rivals A ---------- r eo,- at a cost of n