Daily British Whig (1850), 10 Oct 1919, p. 12

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A FRIDAY Ee ---------------------------------- na em ARE THE DAYS OF MIRACLES OVER? IS SUPERSTITION AND FALSE BR LIEF TO OVERSHADOW FACTS ANY LONGER? When a won for years he eartain scie It's th of othér RB tried T R.¢ up. ' booklet; it isis pletons. Tem mail HSECOUGHS an who has been sick OCTOBER 10 ariiest Rifle Known lo be of English Make al years with n and could Fn stairs, J e a box of Temple me story from hundreds om ra Ae fferera. 2's fixed them 3 them. Ask your Druggist or write us for resin, 143 King West, T.R.C's anywhere on rec to have been of f Queen on at the Anne Nat Has Recently Been Found made has ional meeting at Bisley e known to have sland and it is also h breech- I long, I'héy - * bell-moutt ifle made in 1 Willmore solid silver i fre utcheons and from' tis buit- eo NN PAA attra To the Voter ZO YOU .KNOW-- that the beer sold in Ontario previous to prohib®ion ranged up to over 7% alcoholic content by weight measure, whilst the "Beer of the Ballot"--the beer for which you are asked to vote October 20th --has a strength of but 2.51%p g DO YOU KNOW -- that such well-known beers manufactured in the United States as Blue Ribbon, Bud- weiser and Schiltz--always spoken of as "very light non-intoxicating beers"'-- ranged up.to 4.19%--sixty per cent. stronger than the "Beer of the Ballot"--the beer for which you are asked to vote October 20th? g DO YOU KNOW-- that in Maine, where pro- hibition has been in force over sixty years, the courts have held that beer of 3% alcoholic strength, was non- intoxicating--and any beer of under 3% strength was permitted to be sold as freely as ginger ale? DO YOU KNOW-- that in Sweden, Norway and Denmark--as a result of the findings of Govern' ment commissions ap- pointed to determine what was an intoxicating liqguor-- beer of pra ctically the same strength as asked for in the coming Referendum is re- garded as non-intoxicating and is sold everywhere, by anybody, without license, and without paving a Government tax® Qntario Brewers' Association 4 sound with the Chix Jy Wes} THE DAILY BRITI e pistol was the to the rifle, he same maker and de » same stile orians will be more date placed upon it $0 owing "Flappers" Work on Sewers. of two shillings flappers rouncer © asked whom 1» look mildly st rpri that he helping his 1f his rd from -him-recentiy The embryo admiral, red-hot cinder d appeare I > up up a QL CARES 10 the. fact "that i 8 were forbidden te wear gloves on the bench for fea: bribes being dropped into ther An Uniortunate Name. It is customary 'k number of chil pondering --==bi ily income, to 1 "Enough." Ac a, when the pon this supers stition, the Lee native Christian couple, presented their seventh child for baptism, relates World Outlook. "What is her name?" inquired the missionary pas "Enough! -an- nounced both p: 3 ervent 1 son. "That will nev ** the pas- tor frowned Think of a more fit- | ting mame!" But Mr. and Mrs. Lee were. smitten wit stage-fright and could think of . The Bible Woman sitting near whispered: "Call { her Dorcas!" > Dorcas she was { hastily named. But faney the dismay of Mr. and Mrs when they dis- j covered that De | the: native dia k ntical in rds, "Many More." | | Canadian Houses In England. | Agent-General Wade, of British Columbia, interviewed by the London Daily News, said that hundreds of thousands. of mill-cut fir-wood houses { could be imported from British Co- lumbia in a short time and erected in Britain within a few days of ar- | rival, and thus relieve the housing | problem. Mr. Wade admits that archi tects and builders would oppose the importation, but such houses, he | says, would be more damp-proof and cheaper than brick even aading the cost of freightage. B. C. Pulp Wood. A- Vancouver pulp and paper com- pany, situated at Port Alice on the coast of Vancouver Island, is nearing completion, and will shortly | be ready to manufacture 70 tons of { pulp dally. It is expected that over | 8C0 men will be required for the | various operations, Including logging | and saw-milling. Can See Behind Them, Hares, horses and 8igafles are bet ter able to see objects behind them without turning their heads than any other quadrupeds. 1 ee The smaller a man's mind, t longer it takes him to maka it up {A varisiy stage rransiorms actress {ato aa artist he "an ¥ rm 3 Plt ree ear SER RR ETT ; ERR SH WHIG PAGE ELEVEN --_-- -- M EMBERS of the Women's Christian =" Temperance Union did their best to prevent cigarettes being sent to Canadian soldiers in the trenches. Field secretaries of the Anti-cigarette League have been working all summer organizing a national campaigi. to banish all forms of tobacco. It is predicted the movies will be the next to be attacked. Professional reformers are in the ascendancy--and "the Devil loves nothing better than the intoler- ance of reformers", Now is the time to check the spirit of rabid intolerance and in- terference with personal rights. "Hell is paved with good inten- tions'. » Join with the Citizens' Liberty League in its honest, sincere en- deavor to obtain a fair and just solution to Ontario's vexed tem- perance problem--the repeal of the unsatisfactory On- tario Temperance Act and the enaction of new legislation that will permit the sale of light beer and wine generally and the sale of pure spirituous liquors through Govern- ment agencies only. : Vote "YES" to all Four Questions Mark your ballot with an X. 'Any other marking will spoil --every voler must vote on every question or his it. Remember, will be spoiled. CITIZENS' LIBERTY LEAGUE 1 MEMBERSHIP FEE, ONE DOLLAR o_ " ' * 5 Please enroll me as a member of the League, for which I en- | Citizens Liberty League close my subscription. 2 | PROVINCIAL HEADQUARTERS 22 College Street, Toronto | . T. L. CARRUTHERS, Secretary Hou. President: SIR EDMUND B, OSLER. Viee- President: I. F HELLMUTH, K.C. President: Lt.-Col. H. A. C. MACHIN, M.P.P. Hon. Treasurer: F. GORDON OSLER League to carey on its good work and schieve | its present purbose, setive members and funds sre required, Show your true spirit! Fill in the coupon end becomé a member of the Citizens' Liberty League at once. | T. L. CARRUTHEKS, Secretary 22 College St., Toronto HA AA GANA RIE 5 SH 0 i nes EN --a---- A A A rss A staat SENDS CHILDREN : TO A SLOW DEATH The Terrible Act of a Mother --Tired Attending to Them. Becuting attorney of Oakland countys She told the prosecutor she had h the poison in' her Bouse for a ould "- gelden-halred litile girls, Shirley, | March upon the heart, which it final | aged eight. and Edna ssix, "worried" i ly stills. Those so doomed to die feel her, because she felt too tired to at- | BO Pain, but a great lassitude They fend to their wanis at bedtime, Mra, | Yelain consciousneses to the snd. Hazel Leuksrt,-wged 29, who, with! Shirley, the elder, 1s-expected to Ther husband, lives on a small place | die within a few hours, Edna has but | Who took it % ii { bélween the village of Royal Oak | three op four days to live, declared ------ il and Peatiac, poisoned them both. Inthe doctors 1's camy to convince spinsters tha { capsules she forced each fo swallow | Mrs, Leukart was arrested and ta- kissing is usheaithy. 13 Pontiac, Mich., Oct. & ~-Giving asia slow, fnsidious poison that paraly-| ken to Detroit after she had made a Never judge a ring by A reason for her act that her two | ses its victims and steals With slow Null confession tn tha axslatant sro. af's name an the Hox aX time, and was aware that it woul bring slow, lingering death to thos Tia £ the jewalls w

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