Daily British Whig (1850), 11 Jan 1918, p. 10

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PAGE TEN WHEN YOU WAKE UP DRINK GLASS Wash the poisons and toxins from system before putting more ~ food Into stomach, Says Inside-bathing makes any one look and feel clean, sweet and refreshed. Riers gi rk: _ Wash yourself on the inside be fore breakfast like you do on the outside. This ig vastly more impor- tant because the skin pores do not absorb impurities into the causing illness, while the bowel pongs do. For every ounce of food and drink taken into the stomach, nearly an ounce of waste material must be carried out of the body. If this waste material is not eliminated day by day it quickly ferments and gen- erates poisons, gases and toxins, which are abkorbed or sucked into the blood stream through the lymph ducts which should suck only nour- ishment to sustain the body A splendid health mes re is drink, before breakfast each day a glass of real hot water with a tea- gpoonful of limestone phosphate in it, which is a harmless way to wash these poisons, gases and toxins from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bow- els, thus cleansing, sweetening and freshening the entire alimentary ca- nal before putting more food into the stomach A quarter pound of limestone phos- phate costs butf ve little at the drug store but is sufficient to make anyone an enthusiast on inside-bath- ing. ao re to For the Boys at the Froat CHOCOLATTA "The Ready-to-use Chocolate" Containg the Chocolate, Milk and Sagar, Prepared Instantly by Adding Belling Water Only. Rl « Peaking or Milk Required. For Sale By D. Couper, Phine 76. 841.3 Princess St 3 LADIES! LOOK YOUNG, DARKEN GRAY HAIR Use Grandma's Sage fea ynd Sulphur Recipe and Nobody Can Fell. Brush It Through Hair. Gray hair, however handsome, de- " notes adyancing age. e all know the advantages of a youthful appear- ance. Your hair is your charm. It makes or mars the face. When it fades, turns gray and looks streaked, just a few applications of Sage Tea and Sulphur enhances its appéarance a hundred-fold. Dont stay gray! . Look young! Either prepare the recipe at home or get from any drug store a bottle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com- pound," 'which is merely the old-time recipe improved by the addition of other ingredients. Thousands of folks recommend this ready-to-use preparation because it darkens the hair beautifully, besides, no one can possibly tell, as it darkens so natur- ally and evenly. You moisten a sponge or soft brush with it, drawing this through the hair, taking one small strand at a time. By morning the gray hair disappears; after an- other application or two, its natural color is restored and it becomes thick, glossy and lustrous, and you Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com- pound is a delightful toilet requisite. appear years younger. It is not intended for the curse miti- gation or prevention of disease. Have Your Car Over- hauled and Stored for the Winter AT T™HR Ranks Parwrance ON Say TIRE AS URANGE es EET Ww WH. GODWIN & SONS AGENTS. KINGSTON. ONT. & OF HOT WATER | blood, | i the camps. 'I Who Fought and Won,' 5 convoyed. Heart of Harry Lauder Displayed in His Work Since Death oi His Son a ARRY LAUDE R two continent i | ! i Lod i oir ST great Scotch comediar in both rL, Eurepe and Amer 1 yal x lightened the burden of life for an hour or two and left a happy memory for thousands of people Many who never have seen him know him and his clever wit nave come through life. Dr, George Adams, . of Edin- birgh, a staff officer of the Minister of Munitions, says Christian Advocate; who has been a frequent speaker at the Young Men's Christian Association huts in the war zope with Harry Lauder, gives some intimate, glimpses into the life of this man, and the follow- ing is published by courtesy of As- sociation Men: "You remember how the world wept with Harry Lauder when his only boy died upon the field of honor and left him childless. The Syhday after the announcement of¥ that tragedy I happened to be preaching in the City Temple, London, and Mr. and Mrs. Lauder were in the con gregation, After the service they came into the vestry to see me. My heart went out to them both, but the courage of their bearing conquered much that was, sympathetic I felt like saying. Words of admiration rose to my lips instead. 'Harry, we are all pfoud of the wonderful way you have borne this heavy blow.' "The answer came quickly. "When a. man has .been hit ag I have been there are -only three Ways open to 'him----drink, despair, or God! and I am looking to God for the consola- tion and the ¢ourage I now need' "On a ent Sunday, although working at full pressure during the week in the play "Three Cheers," at the Shaftesbury Theatre, he gave up his rest day gladly to go away down to two of the great Canadian camps with me. "Some one in London - asked the little man why he was going down to Why not join them in a quiet week-end on the river? Laud- er's reply was quaint, as usual. 'The boys can't get up to town to see me, sol am off to the camps to see them." A right royal time he gave them, too. Picture 10,000 men in a dell on the rolling Downs with a little platform in the center and there Lauder singing the old favor- ites you have heard so often and the soldiers love so much, 'Rocked in the Craslle of the Deep," 'The Laddies 'Children's Home," and others. "This was not all; his soul must have been #tifrgd by the sight of so many dear; brave men, for when the meeting seemed over Lauder began, to speak to the soldiers. And a Teal speech hé made, full of imagery, try, and fire. May I just tell you how he closed? 'One evening in the gloaming in a northern town, I was sitting by my parlor window when I saw an old man with a pole on his shoulder come along. He was a lJamp- lighter and made the lamp 'opposite my window dance into brightness. Interested in his work, 1 watched him pass along until the gloaming gathered round and I could see him no more; However,; I knew just where he was, for other lamps flash- ed into flame. Having cempleted his task, he disappeared into/ a side street. Those lights burned on through the night, making it Bright and safe for those who should come bdhind him. An avenue of lights through the traffic and dangers of the city.' "With passionate earnestness Lau- der cried: 'Boys, think of that man who lit the lamp, for you are his suc- cessors, only in a much nobler and grander way. You are not lighting for a few hours the darkness of pass- Ing night. You are lighting an avenue of lights that will make it safe for the generations of all time. Therefore you must be earnest to do the right. Fight well and hard against every enemy without and within, and those of your blood who will come after you will look up proudly in that light of freedom and say: "The sire that went before me lit 4 lamp in those heroic days when Britain warred for right." The first burst of illumination that the world had 'wad' in the lamp lit by Jesus, or rather 'He' Was: the Light Himself. He gaid truly, "I am the .light of the world." You are in His succession, Be careful how you bear yourselves. "Quit ye like men! Be strong." '"" . Rule, Brittania! Between 40 and 50 per cent. of German submarines bave been su Germany's * submarine losses tor last quarter exceeded those for the whole of 1916. Displacement of Britain's feet to- day t& 4,104,000 tons as compared with 2,400,000 tons in 1814. Personunl of fleet before was 146,- 000; to-day it is 390,000. | Britain had 1% mine-sweepers and patrols before war; to-day there are 8,366. One million ship's miles steamed and over six in one month, In September 480 per cent. ot total vessels sailing Atlantic were Germany' s mercantile by nearly 50 per cent, fest rituces nes ce Fith 'British reduction wt 14 per Assyrians Used Sulphur. Sulphur known elements! the ancient rian alchemists vegartled it as f principle of combustion of aceount of its own inflammability, and term- ' ie, peopie-~are saddest whe sing and there's a reason why. It doesn't pay to bunke a woman SO DBGDSPOGI SOOO O00s | A 3 known on | ca he has | to' the phonograph records of his songs. | { However, few have known the more | serious side, of this great Scotchman's | British | the | od tit "brimstone," meaning liicraliy | stone." THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, F RIDAY, JANUARY 11, 1918. THE TANKS. ' } 'How Crew Escaped From stranded } Ship in Enemy Lines. | i How the tanks.won a battle north | of St. Julien i though . the Crews, some now old kh experiences of among the most in the war, are as-yet untold One of the best of these 1 yesterday within the body of one the very tanks that had gone thro: {the battle, The hide of the mach { bore many of the marks ofl battle, { was dinted and many nuts were shav ed off, but it had been mended « the field and went as well as ever, I can testify after travefing back in it from the old German trenches across rough country and, modest bridges. It was comfortable ney, varied only one little affair with a pollard willow that caused : momentary retreat, a brief excite- { ment produced by a gust of machine officer by the-sudden tightening of a steel rope during an irterval in salving a sister tank. All the tanks, of course, 80 lucky as this. One in front of our latest vance, and the story of escape is charaeterigtie warfare. Goliath, for its name, unattended strong place rattle of his shell sent some of the enemy running, while a few, more daring than the rest, him with bomb and rifie. line its of crew's serpentined to 'attack a At this produced paralysis, reduced to the condition of a mo- tionless fort of steel instead of con crete, and the crew held their steel fort till dusk in fighting the rival and bigger defence in concrete, They were marooned in the enemy's territory, but, taking - out their Lewis guns and destroying the interior of the machine, they slipped out and #tarted on a pilgrimage home. It was dusk, and directions were hard to keep. The rendezvous in a certain shell-hole was lost by some of the first 'stouts sent out to prospect, and so it came about that many of the grew were soon separ- ated. Neither force 'thereabouts has a regular trench line, but the Ger- mans were in possession, thickly enough scattered round and about in shel-holes. . A young officer, scouting alone, found 'himself suddenly in the midst of one of their little garrisons, but in spite of the surprise he had time to nip a bomb out of his pocket, re- lease the pin, jerk the bomb into the enemy's midst, and bolt into the darkness again. He had now quite lost direction, and at dawn was still well within the enemy's lines. There was nothing for it but to lie doggo in a shell-hole till darkness came again. Next night luck was with him, .He avoided all Germans, was shot at only once by.ones of our pa- trols, and after much trouble per- suaded his friends that he was not an enemy. Others bad other experi- ences, but every man. of this crew came safély home, Such fortune is rare, though this sort of experience is not uncommon in this in-and-out fighting, Some of the Surreys, for example, 'who have come through many of the hottest engagements fn the war, and have surpassed themselves lately, had a much less fortunate adventure, A sprinkling went straight through to their objective and sent back a guard with their prisoners. They had gone some way on their journey, when a hidden fort opened fire on the guard and the prisoners ran off to the friendly shelter so unexpectedly opened, and escaped almost without loss, To return to the salved tank. came back from the jourmey in it through Ypres in order to revisit that city of sacrifice. Imagination could not paint a more poignant emblem of ruin, The bleached and | shattered ribs of the cathedral and the Cloth Hall:shining against & very blue sky have gonserved by some mi- racle of individuality the live beauty of old whieh the artists-gave them, and one rose window in fhe cathe- dral keeps intact its delicate tracery to assert the wickedness of destruc tion else complete. In one of the houses holding . three 'of its walls erect a flourishing fire had been lit among the fallen heams and dusty rafters by some stray shell. It was almost more than one could beliave 1 life in such a field of skeletons, LA Hitle later a thundercloud setf- skulls and the sun was still bright in the west, and Ypres was invefited with the halo of as vivid a rainkew as ever I saw. Can it be that the home fires will ever burn. again in this place of ruin, or was the promise in the heavens that day a main emblem? -- Cor. 1audon cs Mail, Battle of Hastings, . The Battle of Hastings, a London paper announces, begin at 9 o'clock in the morning, on the 14th of Octo- ber, 1066. AIT this appears to be his. torically accurate, The questionable pagt of the announcement comes in the following semience, to the effect that "it is proposed to commemorate thé anniversary of this t 0 week's festival on beh wounded." It seems rather a one 3 {0 have waited to collect money million, wiles patrolled fre the wounded, until the year hn 'small Salculation will 51 years a the event. 1 2 A youngest vetéran | "at the' time of 18° one of ithe oldest}? that "their quick flames had come to | hear:i of } i { | ol as | i jour. {gun fire against a low German air- | man, and the upsetting of a young | spent | were not | lies moribund of ad- | the new | which will serve | forward German | His approach and the vainly attacked | crisis sonfé wound or some accident | and Goliath was | i i tied over the back of the city while | T ary & Practical . TH Home Dress Haking th - Lessons Newspaper Prepare? Specially for This By Pictorial Review IR % For Graduation and the Summer Dance. A pretty frock for ments, made with. tunic skirt and round bodice with kimono slcevea and a girdle that may be straight at both edges or raiscd-to a point at the. left sic. summer require. "Here isa charming frock h at may be used first for graduation and later for summer dances. It features the fashionable jumper with short ki- mono sleeves. Both the gathered skirt and tunic have a straight {ower edge. In medium size the model calls for 55% yards 36-inch material, with 3; yard 36-inch lining for the under- body and 1% yard for upper part of skirt. As a foundation, take the under. body and close the uhder-arm and shoulder seams. Turn hem in back an face the neck. Plait lower edge and tack, then adjust 2inch belting to position to lower edge for a stay. Ne thrbugh the fold in back, which is indicated by large "0" perforations, from neck' to lower edges. Under face right back edge and sew an un- sderlap to left back edge, then finish for closing. Close underarm and sleeve seam, then gather neck and lower edges and sleeve between "T" perforations" and 2 inches above the lower edge. Draw gathers at neck and sleeve to the desired size and h with narrow straight frills and bands. Arrange on underbody. ES iT DACK AN SLEEVE '@ CONSTRLC ding | EAR x To make the skirt and tunie, close back seams from large "0" perfora- jons to lower edges and finish edges above for plackets. Gather upper edges between "T" perforations. Ad- just skirt and tunic to position, stitching upper edges over upper row of gathers in waist and bring large "Q" perforation at upper edges of tunic and small "0" perforation.at top of skirt to underarm seam. The girdle may be made with straight upper and lower edges. ot draped with a point near the left side-front. Catch the material up at slot perforations and tack % inch from folded edges. Arrange around the waist and fasten on left side. Sin- gle large "QO" perforation inicates cen ter-front of girdle and the lower edge; single small "o" perforation, centenhack. Developed in embroidery fiouncing, with the tunic omitted, this model is dainty for mid-fummer. & Pletorial Review Costume No. HINTS TO HOUSEWIVES. | Milk, fruit and vegetables are the last articles to save on. A kitchen in good repair inspires the codbk to-keep it neat, War bread can be made either with or without potatoes. A good fresh cocoanut is light brown in color and you can hear the liquid inside when you shake it.. ! Delicious muffins as well as grid- dle-cakes can be made with bread grumis, dried and run through a meat chopper. : When sifting flour several tinies it is convenlent to sift iy on pape". The papers can be lifted and the flour poured back into the: sifter in less time than when using a pan. Not a bit of celery should be wast- ed, The leaves can be dried for flavoring. The undesirable parts can 7233. Sizes, 14 to 29 years Price, 20 cents. A A, be used fot soup and, of course, best will be served raw. the When the heater. fire has reached its hottest do not allow it to burn on until the coal is exhausted, but shut off the draught and the coal will] hold the heat it has made for a long time. LAURIER: WILL STAY ON. Official Declaration - Issued Messrs. Lemieux and Casgrain, Montreal, Jan. 10.--The following declaration signed jointly by Senator Casgrain and Hon. Rodolphe Le- mieux has been issued here: "Sir Wilfrid Laurier will always be head of the Liberal party and cer- tainly would not think of retiring to-day when he has tire majority of the people behind him." A---- by Shortly after marriage a man dis- covers he has been courting a lot of trouble. Must of the bitterness of lifé comes from swallowing one's own words. It's love that makes the postman . get around with a lot of silly letters, Papin take the outerwaist and slash | "BLUE BONNETS" -- A New Fabeis wth Nea Features. Bonnets" meets the needs woman wants a beautiful, durable ue Bounuts mech the eb he wep who weiss 8 Admanably adapted for tador-made dresses. sport coats and skirts, ete. Alsodra eres, furniture coverings elc. Cranston dre fon ed de ra aa durable talvic | What Is 'Well-Favoured" ? "Leah was tender eyed, but Rachel was beautiful and well-favoured." Bacon says "Beauty of feature is renter than beauty of favour. But as a matter of fact, most people find the fine complexion (beauty of favour), the' more "attractive. It means health and a body sweetly clean. How splendid to think that anyone may have beauty of favour! The face exposed to dust of every day life should be cleaned with a pure soap. The right Soap should dissolve readily and have creamy, sooth- ing softness, owing to rich oils, while strong enough to clear off grime. VIN LIA LIRIL SOAP -< There is'one Soap which proves perfect for daily toilet use and is made entirely from pure, sweet Vegetable Oils which are aids to a ciean and beautiful complexion, Itis the'moderately priced Vinolia Liril sweetly garden scented with Violettes de Parme. On sale at all druggists 10e a cake Royal Vinolia Tooth Paste + 25¢. Royal Vinolia Face reams 250 and up, Vinolia Face Powde 50¢ and up. pPPOINTHE, - vINOLIA co. § > TORONTO LIMITED Londoa | body's Favourite Table Syrup minh and "Perfect Seal" Glass Jars. Write for Free Cook: Book

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