Daily British Whig (1850), 12 Nov 1919, p. 12

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_ PAGE TWELVE SUFFERED IF SHE WALKED A BLOCK Mrs. Smith Was in a Run Down Nervous Condition Before 1fals in behalf ac grows daily ers ard made. rer experience with the medi- cine, recently said: "For the last three years I have sufferad from indigestion, gas on my stomach, nervousness and constipa- tion, and, as I had used many differ- ent kinds of medicines and kept get- ting worse, 1 was beginning to think there was no help for me. had got- ten in such & run down, weak and nervous condition that I could not walk, a block without suffering 1d- tense pain and was in. no shape to do anything. "But I am feeling altogether dif- ferent now and I want to tell the peo- ple that it's all because of what Tan fac has done for me. It has helped me just like those whose statements I read in the paper said it helped them. I had mot finished my first bottle until I was feeling better in every way. I have used four bottles now and my stomach is in condition to where I can eat just anything with- out an uncomfortable feeling after- wards. My nerves are in better shape than they have been in years, Before taking Tanlac I could not rest well at night, but now I can sleep like a ¢hild and that tired, worn-out feeling Tas left me. Tanlac certainly is a grand medicine and I never lose an opportunity to recommend it to my friends and neighbors." Tanlae is sold in Kingéton by A. P Chown, in Plevna by Giibert Ostler, in Battersea by C.:S. Clark, in Fern- leigh by Ervin Martin, in Ardoch by | M. J. Scullion, in Sharbot Lake by W. | Y. Cannon. -Advt. Eat Buckwheats-- Yes, You Can| ---------- i Or Any Other Kind of Food Set Be- | fore You. But You Need a Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablet to Help the Stomach Move It Along. i biekwheats, rich | other tempting | | | Hot cake and biscuits, many {| want change, and if a rabbit skin | coat will only look smart for a yeaf; | it will be held to have given service. | Its cheapness is another advantage, "These Hot Cakes Give More Enjoy- | ment for Breakfast Than Anything Else Since I Discovered Stuart's Dys- pepsia Tablets," foods are declared to be wholesome, digestible and nourishing under nog 'mal stomach conditions. Many people, however, once got the notion they couldn't eat such things and have grown in preju- dice as a consequence. They have denied themselves almost everything except milk and water, But you will find here and there one of this kind eating onions, cu- cumbers, melons and other such ter- rors of 'he dyspeptic because he has found that by merely . giving -- the stomach a little assistance there are no after effects from such indul- gence. There is avoidance of gassi- ness, no. sour risings, no 'water hrash, you don't taste 'em hours af- ter. ¢ Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets are for both those who suffer after eating and for those who starve, for fear of suffering. + They relieve the dis- tress of indigestion and they also serve (o assist thé¢istomach to pre- vent indigestion. Eating should be one of our chief enjoyments. It is really the most at- tractive of social gatherings, and it is worth our while to realize that we may indulge freely by exercising the precautionary measure of aid- irg the digestive process. Thus you may eal your hot biscuits, buck- wheats, rich cake, onions, mince pie, sausage and so on provided you take a Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablet after. wards. | smaller, there was no' market for the | rabbit skin, { of a lifetime. Now, since styles have | seized upon silks, ladies get tired of {| rabbit. The muskrat, when dyed and | for several hundred dollars a suit. | {| There is also another difference not | long. As observed, a rabbit skin coat {Rar Now] HEART SO BAD in Demand ~~ §| Was Not Safe to anssnastacd Leave Her Alone. MOVEMENT is observable in rs the United States to page the Miss Eva P. Yateman, rabbit in an effort to come | dorf, Ont, writes: I feel that pete with the high price of | Must write and tell you of the great benefit 1 have received from Mil- foodstuffs. Twenty years ago there S co burn's Heart and Nerve Pills. About Was a tremendous boom In many | four years ago I was taken terribly parts of the continent, including | bed with my heart, nerves and Same nada glan Ing spells, and was down in bed for On 4 put the Bal hate by about six months. I doctored with the market. As most people are |... gyreron: doctors and seemed to aware, the Belgian hare is a rabbit | got better, although the fainting of a brownish red color, weighing ten | spells would not leave me. 1 hi {marily for take such terrible falls, wherever pounds oreudfs, Bred priests ot | Was, that it was not safe to leave t me alone at At last | coloring, and, secondly, ss a substi- tute for beef and other meats. Ia cines and took Californi glan i kinds, but seemed to ie oruia the. Bel hare. bogm { little benefit from them. must have reminded the old-timers { noticing the advertis | of the boom in 1849. Everybody took |}; ,n'g Heart and Nerve Pills I de | to breeding Belgian hares. The cli | cided to try them, and before I had { mate was eminently suitable, for the | taken more than : wo boxes 1 Soul ! i jee they were helping me. ave { hates could remain outdoors the year taken about tem boxes, and am al- round. Tremendous prices were | most cured of those terrible spells. 1 paid for breeding stock. Several | sincerely feel that your medicine has hundred dollars were freely handed | proved a blessing to me, and I ad- over for a prize buck. There were | vise any one troubled with their innumerable shows. Then the boom | heart to try them, as I am confident collapsed. It was found that to Fthey will find relief." breed successfully required much Milburn's Heart skill and attention. This discouraged | are 50¢. a box at all dealers or mailed those who had rushed into the busi- ness without any particular aptitude or training for it. In those days, too, meats were cheap, and there was "~~ ream practically mo demand for rabbit | fHE WORLD'S TIDINGS skins on the part of the Buntings. IN CONDENSED FORM The new rabbit boom 1s caused as At Tidings From All Over Told much by the insatiable demand for cheap fur as for cheaper food. ! in a Pointed and Pithy Way. the recent New York sales tremen- dous numbers of rabbit skins were sold. A few years ago, when wild = animal furs were more abundant, or The Bmir of Bokhara, in case of necessity, is preparsd to assist the White Russians against Turkistan when the demand for them was Jolshevists it tears easily. Two years of not too Hols 10Vista, RT careful use would make a rabbit skin | S8rnia is now receiving its water coat mot worth the moth balls that | *UPPY from Lake Huron after spend- preserved it from one season to an-| '05 about $500,000 and waiting near- other. In those days when one IE ea : bought a fur coat he, or rather she, | t Time in. the 'W est Indies is expected it to last for the best part | -on& at an alarming rate, Sa 5 e Krugers- any time. several different receive but One day Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. It is not a strong skin; in- in Prison regulations, seized upon furs as they formerly In the Bohemian Ersegebirge a i rems y fa SNOW s destroy a particular fur coat im a season | Premature fall of snow has destroy or two, Durability has no greater . three i ami attraction for them than piety. They " cotening famine. Archduke Max, brother, of ox- » the Faculty of versity in Switzerland. Bavarian farmers have 'unani- for a rabbit skin coat can be bought | mously «declarel that they will de- for from $65 to $150. | Ermine and seal are no longer available except for those of great | wealth, 'and every year finds mink | and otter and beaver and other furs that once were as common as the old fashioned buffalo robes, becom- ing more scarce. This has led to the advance in price and fashion of such furs as muskrat, skunk, eat and an revolts are started. Arthur Duplisson, mistaken for a Andrew, on Sunday afternoon near their home at Enniskillen, N.B. The bullet struck him in the jaw, and he died before he could be got to the railway line. Indignant at the attitude of Major Lee Redman, soldier M:P.. in the Commons for Calgary, on the mat- ter of the bonus scheme, Calgary ex- ecutive of the G.W.V.A. have express. {2d their feelings in a deunciatory re- | solution which demanded the resig- aation of Major Redman. With his windpipe completely sev- ered, John Laird, a blacksmith, who ittempted suicide, is still . living, Laird, who is thought to be mentally j deranged, had been under watch for | some time, but Saturday he evaded {the guards and, going to his shop, slashed his throat with a shoeing knife. The biggest deal in the history of the lumber business in Manitoba has just been negotiated, the Finger Lumber Company having disposed of 'ts 31% miles of tiniber limits in the clipped, looks very much like seal at a distance of a hundred yards and under the name of Hudson seal sells visible to the naked eye. A genuine sealskin coat would last almost a lifetime or even longer if it happen- ed to be a short and merry one; a muskrat coat will last about half as may last almost as long as a rabbit that lives next door to a terrier. It is to be' noted, too, as Frederie J. Haskin points out in the Pittsburg Gagzette-Times, that the skin of the American rabbit is too tender for use as coats and it is only the Euro- pean rabbit skin that cas be thus employed. THE DAIL 1] decided to résort to proprietary medi- | ement of Mil-| and Nerve Pills! direct on receipt of price by The T.} of governmental reforms in | >d all the corn and potato crops, | Emperor Karl, has matriculated in | «aw at Freiburg Uni- | liver no food to towns where Sparta- | leer, was fatally shot by his brother, | The tanning of rabbit skins is a brand-new industry, and a result of the war. With the great fur-produc- ing countries, Russia and Canada, en- gaged in the war; they were prac- tically sealed as sources of supply. This suggested to a Belgian in the United States that use might be made of tanned rabbit skins as trim- mings. In Belgium he had been long familiar with the process, and so he hired a barn in New Jersey, adver- tised for rabbit skins and set to work., In 1915 he is said to have made $250,000. This year he is advertising for 10,000,000 hides. As pointed out, the rabbit, unlike sev- eral other domestic animals, is use- ful both for its pelt and as food. The flesh is delicate and nourishing, and with the prices of pork and beef at their present altitudes, there is a greater demand for rabbit flesh than can be supplied. The rabbits are ex- tremely prolific, as everybody knows, except Mr. Ellis Parker Butler, who wrote an American classic called "Pigs is Pigs," under the delusion obviously that it was not a rabbit but a guinea pig that held the record in this respect. These domestic rabbits, whether Dutch, Belgian, Siberian, Lop Ear, English or Flemish, are not to be confounded with the true English hare, even though some of them are called hares. Nor is it to be supposed that their names are ved from "| varieties and a dozen more have the countries of their If the { hare ever saw Belgium, there is not much chance at least that the Siberian ever saw Siberia. All these been centuries, bred, some of them for times as domes- some for only short and D. M. Winton, of This includes a lange sawmill, plan ing plants and logging equipments. Pas district for $1,500,000 to C. J Minneapolis That the constitution of the G. W. V. A. should be amended to enable the organization to participate politics and form a national party in which would fight for a square deal for returned men and the dependents of those who had sacrificed 'their liv- 2s in the war was the plea made by J. W. Wilton, M.P.P,, at a meeting 'f Winnipeg veterans. "Never Come DOES this Hlustration pie- ture your experience? of : : 'Cardinal Mercier Visits Canada OOOOBLDEAS LSA oa ] HE visit of Cardinal Mercier { to Canada was an event Im | which not only his own | churchmen were deeply in- terested, but everyone who knows { anything of the sacrifices of Belgium in the war, and of the noble work the cardinal did, at the risk of imprison | ment in jail, to avert the effects of | German brutality. The name of Care { dinal Mercier has become almost a | household one on this continent, { through the searchlight of publicity | that was cast on the horrifying events {| German army. His protests during | the war both to the Germans and to ! the Pope against fhe harrowing mur- ders and abductions and confiscations i made him a potent moral force in the | war, and undoubtedly saved his { country from a fate far worse, | This is the first time Cardinal Mer- | cier has come to this continent, and | his mission is personal thanks for | the sympathy and help bestowed by | the people of this continent on the | cause he held so dear. The cardinal | has an old, youthful interest in Amer- ica, because his uncle, his mother's brother, whom he is said to resem ble strongly, came out in his boy hood, and took charge of the Grand- | ronde reservation in Oregon in the | sixties. The aud sanctity of this | uncle were 'duplicated in the young | priest who was destined, as Arch- bishop of Malines, to become world famous. Cardinal Mercier was born | in Braine-l'Alleud, a few miles from | Waterloo, in 1851. As a professor, he specialized on philosophical and scientific work, When the Roman | Catholic University of America was | established in Washington about | thirty years ago, an attempt was | made by Mgr. Keane to get Prof. | Mercier as one of the heads. Pope | Leo XIII. was asked to use his influ- | ence in having Mercier come, but the | Pope thought that Louvain needed | him more, and it was soon after this { that the professor remewed interest | in neo-scholasgie philosophy. He was then doctor of philosophy, theology | and literature, and later became | president of the Royal Academy of | Sciences, Letters and Fine Arts of Belgium. He was appointed Arche | bishop of Mechlin in 1906, and cre- | ated cardinal in 1907. i pupils of Cardinal Mercier have ever | been enthusiastic when they talked of his clear, convincing style of ime parting instruction. tent merely to lecture to students | in a body, but singled them out, dis- {cussed personally with them their views and their work, and encourag- ed them to private, deeper study. His metto was "Work and Virtue." The result of this was that students at Belgium's great school of philo- sophy might well have been termed the "Disciples of Mercier." One of the cardinal's strong points is a genius for understanding people, and gripping with sympathy their faith and purpose. No mere intellectual brilliance could have achieved what he did in his way over no fewer than two million and a half of Roman Catholics. One of his friends described him as a wonderful man, yet concerned with the smallest de tails; homored as few men have been, yet simple as a child: working from early morniig far into the night, yet always having time to listen to everyome. In his receptions aristocrat and the laborer, the on equal terms. according to their time of coming. Sometimes the whole day, from eight in the morning, is taken up with all Belgium, and to him Belgium pays homage as to a man truly great, At one time during the war, the cardinal was kept a prisoner in his palace by the Germans. After months of agony, seeing Belgian civilians murdered, ruthlessly im- mere loyalty to their own country, he broke away from the restraint placed upon him. One Christmas he published the famous message to the Belgian, people entitled, "Patriotism and Endurance," in which he called for stern patience until the time of deliverande would come. It was doubtful then, after the Germans had prohibited any more official' utter- ances by the cardinal, whether they would affront all the Roman Catho- merciless G glum felt that it wo Y SRITISH WHIC familiar with the greatest problems, ||| he knows no class differences. The! noble dame and the poar girl, meet | | They are received | [i these visitors, yet there is the same | | patience, the same fatherly kind- i ness for all. Cardinal Mercier's tall, | ascetic figure is a sight known by '|i prisoned, deported or punished for | I lies of Sermany and Austria by open- ly jailing him or not; But even the | German governors of Bel- | WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1919 in Belgium under the rule of the. Famous clerics who have been |i He was not con- | The Mulberry Model Saves you money Economize On Your Clothes Buy Here, where prices are from $10 to $15 less. M. C. ROBINSON HE best way to save money on your clothing is to buy your ercoats and Suits here. | sell for one-third less because my prices are not burdened with big overhead expenses. I can afford to sell for less because there are no fancy frills in my low rent shops: Its costs me les s--buying for 14 stores; low rents, i sJdredit or delivery systems; no book accounts. THAT'S HOW OUSAVE $10to $15 by buying your Overcoat or Suit at Robin- son's. : g Bear in mind that | AM THE ORIGINATOR OF UPSTAIRS CLOTHES SHOPS IN CANADA | saved over $2,000,000.00 for my customers in the last six years through my methods. it When you buy at my shops you are guaranteed reliability, I unusual quality and a saving of $10 to $15 THOUSANDS OF MEN BUY THEIR CLOTHES F ROM ME a "There's a Verdict" RR bi sil 9 8 ODINSONS SUITS ,OVERCOATS § The Lardest Exelusive J ==) = GPEN_SAE TILL 10 WML--b HR REIT Dir: Strage Fo Your Bir | The only proper winter care. Profit by past experience. J. W. Green, secretary of the Do-| K. J. Young, United States consuls mindon Postal Employees' Associs- | general at Halitax, received ine tion, stated that a nation-wide strike | str r from : Gavernment W

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