Daily British Whig (1850), 19 May 1917, p. 15

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\ Bathe Internally And Keep Well ! Nature has mightily equipped ug all, resist "disease-~but old"and young, ib she requires th We give her a chance, We give her no chance #f we permit the Lower Intestine to be more or less clogged with accumulated waste, Yet that Je a universal condhiiion today as is proven by the number of laxative drugs that are consumed You can help Nature in Na effectual we by Internal Ba ig, and in an eas non-habit-forming way keep the Intestine as "sweet and clean fg Nature demands it 10 be for perfect health and surer defence against aon- tagion Over half a million keen, bright, healthy people testify to its re- sult Mrs. C. GQ. M, (name on request) of Strathroy, Ont, writes: I am pleased to have this opportunity of testifying to the merdts of e J. B L. Cascade. 1 have been using it now for a year with satisfactory results. am an old woman, but my health is so Improved that I have a renewed lease of life. You are at liberty to give my address tu anyone privately who may desire 10 write to me regarding the Cascade, Just call on F. J. Hoag and request free booklet, "Why Man of Today Is Only 50 Per Cent. Efficient" The most efficient devige for Internal Bah- ing, The "J. B. L. Cascade" will also be shown and explained to you If you so desire. If you prefer write for booklet to Dr. Chas. A. Tyrrell, 163 Col- lege ®t, Toronto, FRECKLES Now is the Time to Get Rid of These Ugly Spots. There's no longer the slightest need of feeling ashamed of your freckles, as the prescription othine-- double strength----is guaranteed to remove these homely spots. Simply get an ounce of othine-- double strength -- from Mahood's Drug Store and apply a little of it night and morning and you should soon see that even the worst freckles have begun to disappear, while the lighter ones have vanished entirely. It is is seldom that more than an ounce is needed to completely clear the skin. and gain a beautiful, clear complexion. Be sure to ask for the double strength othine as this is sold under guarantee of money back ¥f it fails to remove freckles. w 8. 8. Jackson, killed in action, was born at Harrowsmith on Noy. 23rd, 1876. He was a son of Mrs. Rachel Jackson( now of Watertown, N.Y.) and the late Harvey Jackson. He was with the 209th Battalion and 'was killed soon after his arrival at the front, He is survived by a moth- er, seven brothers and four sisters. Returned soldiers in Belleville and district have organized a club. do? PPP P ENSURE ESYEEEES PPP IPP PUBL EDY & a can join An j ad officéred largely by In the 1- Tuesday, is the date fixed for the opening of joy yourself this summer under c 7 Ott Glimps | rel BY 'H. F. GADSBY . J Ottawa, May 19.--Nemesis is o™ | in that delightful state of dubiety, he the track of the Borden Government. It postponed tlie blessing of free wheat until a general election was in sight and now it looksyas if the blessing had taken its flight. It seems that a time comes when the sinner cannot return, when the light which has held out to burn for six L} years fails for lack of oil and is ex- tinguished, To desert metaphor, the action of the United States Government in placing a minimum tariff of ten pér cent, on all articles now on the free list leaves free wheat, to say the least of it, in a very precarious con dition. Do we take ten cents a bushel off American wheat in order to have Uncle Sam put thirty cents a bushel on Canadian wheat? That is the question, If such is the case, then Fate has got good and even with an equivoeating administration. Free wheat has been having a hard time of it ever since it bloomed tim- idly a month ago. To begin with it was one of those war babies which the governmént wag half ashamed to father without explaining to the mil- lers that it was omly temporarily adopted. It was not of the regular tariff tamily. - For the benefit of the Opposition the Northwest farmer and the public at large, Sir Thomas White and Mr. Arthur Meighen ar- gued that an order-in-council was as 800d a guarantee for permanency as a clause in the Tariff Act; at the same time winking the other eye to the milling interests, who were told that it was an emergency measure. Mr. Meighen, whose knife-edge in- tellect is particularly keen at split- ting hairs, made a speech in which he proved that he loved free wheat and that then again he loved it not. He loved it as an election dodge, but as a breach in the tariff wall he loved it not. In short he stood between love and duty--and the duty, though unpleasant, carried the day, The duty, of course, was to take off the duty which was done accordingly. Being the neatest little prover and special pleader in Parliament, Mr. Meighen proved that free wheat was @ good thing and then he turned around and proved that it was no good at all. In fact he proved so much that he proved nothing and, th Regimen For Service Either At Home or Overseas. The war is very far from over and the men of military badly needed. Who can say what the Hun of the Hyphen will EINEI---- . . thé famous 21st for May 2 Barriefield camp. anvas and have the left the. question. Until further information is avail- able on the subject it Aogks ag if free wheat was like the famous Fin- negan, whose unhappy condition was to be off-again-on-again-gone-again Finnegan to the end of the chapter. Free wheat is said to come under a special schedule which is not includ- ed in the United States free list, but there is enough uncertainty about its place in Uncle Sam's new war scheme of things to warrant consid- erable anxiety ag to its ultimate treatment. Meanwhile it has no par- ticular friends in the Government, most of whom had openly expressed a wish that the Republicans would get in and remove the free wheat temptation from the Canadian Jfar- mer, Even if free wheat sticks its benefits will be perceptibly diminish- ed by the fifteen per cent. increase 'n freight rates. which the railways are asking. Another matter for comment Is the expense bill of the Davidson Com- mission, which is duly set out in the Auditor-General's report, It was in- deed a Royal Commission. Every- body travelled and spent royally, Even the messengers fared sumpt- uously every day, riding in parlor cars and eating three dollar dinners with that freedom of mind which arises from the reflection that the people of Canada pay for it all. The tips alone amounted to $170. The commission cost $16,000 for one year and is jogging along yet. Cap- tain Thompson, who patriotically Bave Kis services free as mm inves- $100 Reward, $100 The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is eatarrh. Catarrh being greatly Influenced by constitutional conditions requires conti tutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces: of the System there- by destroying the foundation of the dis. ease, giving the patient strength by bullding up the constitution and assist ing nature in doing fits work. The proprietors have so much faith in the curative powers of Hall's Catarrh Cure that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it falls to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address: F. J. CHENEY & CO. To- ledo, Ohio. Sold by ali Druggists, 76c. B ¥ v By By B B By y DEPP PEPPPIEEDD are yet Oth Wh y not en- of physical training, military training, rifle practice, health, pleasure, nd the sense of uty performed for your King and Country. You regiment for : Service at Home or Overseas Overseas company has just been authorized, which will be object is to composed help in eed I a living allowance of ten dollars ' | ordinary lawyer who has no special t THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, MAY 19, 1917 { | tigator, travelled for mnothing and a day so that his patriotism would fot hurt too much. Mr. ©'Connor, .C., who was hired to do some real work for thie commission was paid five dollars a day, which goes to show that the patriotism of a Con- | servative ex-premier's son is twice as valuable as the hard work of an | political pull. | Another little straw which gives an insight into the Government's professed anxiety to ease the food problem was the defeat of Mr. Em- | manuel Devlin's motion to divert the {grains now consumed ih, the manu. | fagture of whiskey and beer fo the | food needs of the people, In reply | to this Sir George Foster, that dis- tinguished temperance advocate, made one of his most beautiful speeches to the effect that so Jong as the war lasted the distilleries would have to remain open to make aleohel dilecterious to. the Hum in the shape of picric acid, or some- thing like that, ers Hayy into manufactuge of 8 : When Sir George had finished his defence of alcohol as something to shoot at the Germans there was not a "dry" eye im the House, i Another outstanding incident was the frest Mr. Crothers got from his colleagues on the subject of technical education. Although this is an. in- creasingly important matter and very complete and expensive reports have been filed on the subject, Mr. Croth- ers did not take it seriously enough to put more than $1,000 in his es- timate for, this purpose. Mr. Lem- iepx pressed the matter with his | it is hard usual jngistency with the result that Several members of the Conservative party had a sudden change of heart. One after the other they got up and, figuratively speaking, put the boots to Mr. Crothers' constitutional in- difference to the demands of labor. Sir George Foster, whose role now is that of alruist, promised that the matter would be attended to. From this it apears that some day--not just now---after the election, per- haps--the Government may do some- thing for technical education. The Public Accounts Committee hag had an interesting time tracing the present whereabouts of an ice- breaker which the Canadian Vickers were building for the Canadian Gov- esnment, The Canadian Vickers were allowed to sell it to the Russian Government instead, this clearing a net profit of $500,000, Thus Canada does her bit not only for herself and the Empire, but for the Russians too. . Needless to say, the extra profit accrued to the Canadian Vickers, not to the Canadian people. Talking of ships recalls the fact that for the last couple of weeks Ottawa was thronged with Canadian Contractors who were anxious to put up forfeits and go into shipbuilding for the Government, on the Pacific Coast. This new industry comes | under the jurisdiction of the Muni- | tions Board, which has handed the contract over to the Foundation Company of New York. An item in the public accounts which is arousing some comment fs $4,000 for printing a Round Table pamphlet which has been circulated as gospel to the faithful. The Round Table is a group of English Imper- Ialists who aim to bind the Emglre together by asking Canada to pay fifty millions a year to England as her part of the Imperial burden. Lionel Courtice is its prophet. What a Round Table pamphlet has to do with our politics Is hard to tell. At all events $4,000 is a stiff price to Pay for ome little pamphlet. --H. F. GADSBY. Saal CFL bah We have opened a of marble and granite, FALLON BROS. athieu's SYRUP oF Tar & Cob Liver Qil Stops CoucH Sold'in generous size Bottles by all dealers. Ee -------------------- MONUM Special attention giv MATHIEU CoO. branch of our monumen en to cemetery lettering, ENTS 139 Clergy St. ME t business with a large stock A THE ORDINARY Phone 637. der, which is the At the Unique Grocery. C. H. Pickerin 490 and 492 Princess St., G OUT OF A Ib. tin of Forest City Baking Pow- best made for 25¢. » Prop. Phone 330 Has Nothing to Hide Now that the Government the use of any artificial coloring matter in sugar, has absolutely prohibited We tell you again that we have NEVER USED BEETS NEVER USED NEVER USED NEVER USED in refining any of our sugars. The Lantic Pure Cane refinery s ou t when our nt Your grocer is pure and unco Sugar you b uy. today is Sxactly the same i de ULTRAMARINE BLUE ANILINE DYES VEGETABLE DYES his So why take chances? Why not insist on having Lantic--the sugars that have been pure--and cost no more than any sugar, ms in choosing wholesome, the same care and discrimi in- any other is to guar. anteed and .Lantic ar ae, It comes from always day. This shows what the ticularly those who 2 Look for the RED BALL TRADEMARK on every Carton and Sack \ The Lantic Standard is now the Canadian Standard Atlantic Sugar Refineries, Limited high quality as what means every pound in the other?. Pople of Catadauud par ST. JORN ---------------- MUST INCREASED. Ottawa Citizen, Con.) There is a very strong opinion among Canadian soldiers that pen- sions should be equalized. Certain it is there should be a general revis- lon upwards for the benefit of the rank and file. 'The maximum dis- abiliy pension for the rank and file in Great Britain is 42s. 6d. per week, acutal tuan the $40 per month allowed in Canada. Obviously no totally disabled sol- dier in ound on $40 per maonth, Jat alone provide PENSIONS BE for even tie mily, The un- married ge soldier, totally dis- abled, is virt condemned to y ually Spend a life of loneliness and penury On account of the heavy sacrifices he nas made. ted from ever earni a livelihood, enough Sons 3 vai win- ¥ i | "NBU-TONE". It cannot with soap and wane." 4 arg ee dlisy 3 Ris Bud eR

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