Daily British Whig (1850), 13 Dec 1919, p. 19

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

ITISH WHIG PAGE NINETEEN = THE DAILY BR hy Afte/ Three Years of Suffering, "FRUIT-A-TIVES" Brought Relief Ba MADAME HORMIDAS FOISY 624 Champlain St., Montreal. "For three years, I was ill and exhausted and I suffered constantly from Kidney Trouble and Liver Disease. My health was miserable and nothiog in the way of medicine did me any good. Then I started to use 'Fruita tives' and the effect was remarkable. | I began to improve immediately and this wonderful fruit medicine entirely restored me to health. All the old pains, headaches, indigestion and eon- stipation were relieved and once more 1 was well. To all who suffer from Indigestion, Constipation, Rheumatic Pains or great Fatigue, I advise the use of 'Fruit-a-tives'."" Madame HORMIDAS FOISY. 5c. box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 23¢. At all dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit-adives Limited, Ottawa, Ont. WE SELL ON EASY! TERMS Ladies' Suits, Dresses, Skirts; Men's Suits, Overalls, Jewelery, Suitcases, ete. N. Morris, 374 King St. OPEEO® ® Fe Old Recipe No. tor r Cough Syrup Esslly and cheaply made at home, but it beats them all for } resuits, POCO OPE Thousands of housewives have found that they can save two-thirds of the | money usually spent for cough prepara- tions, by using the well-known p for making cough syrup at home. It is simple and cheap but it has no equal for prompt results. of a cough aud gives immediate relief, usually stopping an ordinary cough in 24 hours or less. Get 2345 ounces of Pinex (50 cents worth) from any druggist, pour it into & 10-02 bottle and add plain. granulated sugar syrup to moke 18 ounces, If you prefer, use clarified molasses, honey, or corn syrup, instead of shgar Either way, it tastes good, keeps per- fectly, and lasts a family along time. It's truly astonishing how quickly it acts, penetrating through every air paseage of the throat and lungs--loos- '| ens and raises. the phlegm, soothes and heals the membranes, and gradually but surely the annoying throat tickle and dreaded cough disappearentirely, Nothing better for bronchitis, spasmodic oroup, hoarseness or bromchial asthma. Pinex is a special and highly concen- trated compound of genuine Norway Jine extract, known the world over for ts healing effect on the membranes. Avoid disspointment by asking your Sraggist for "214 ounces of Pinex" with full directions and don't accept anything else. Guaranteed to give absolute satis. faction or money promptly refunded. e Pinex Co., Toronto, Ont. hs 'Here's Proof That ZUTOO Cures Headache Mr. E. F. Tomkins, Ex-Mayor of Coati- | cook, proves it, Asi ¥ "Your Tablets are a safe and effective remedy for h he" Mr. Geo. e, Editor of the *G for-Mail® provesdt. ma "Your Zutoo Tablets deserve tobe wide Jy known as a cure that will cure," A.C. Hanson, B. Colonel of the Hussars, proves t. "I use Zutoo Tablets and find them 3 very satisfactory cure for Headache." 25 cents per bor--at all dealer< Tein ri oe King and Princess Streets. Just arrived a large consignment of new' Xmas. Fruits and Peels of the finest quality. W. H. HALL, ] Manager. "The Home of Goad Things to s + Eat and Drink" Phone 469. Delivery Service. L uuvrwear, | d recipe | It takes right hold | syrup. | The Trouble With - Tommy he By WILL T. AMES 1918, by the MeClure News- (Copyright, paper Syndicate.) The trouble with Tommy Ellis | showed itself from the first day he went to school. It was a little school, and there were just fifty hooks on the walls of the boys' "entry," with fifty. ove boys to hang their hats on them. { Half a dozen of the new boys were | younger and smaller than Tommy, who | had reached the ripe age of seven: | but Tommy it was who had fo lay his i cap on the floor in the corner because | he let the other feilows grab while he | held back. Tommy didn't like having to put his cap on the floor any better { than the other boys. But somebody's had to go there, and so it was Tom- | my's. [ey It wasn't because he was slow or stupid that Tommy, from that time on, | took' the dust of his schoolmates and | later on the cholce of whatever was | being given out in the way of favors or { Jobs or opportunities. On the contrary, | Tommy was brighter and quicker and | oaturally more skiliful and clever than | the majority of boys. But he was ute | terly lacking in selfiassertiveness. The only occasion on which Tommy's | hand went up In time to be recognized { by the teacher, when she was showing off her pupils to visiting parents or ctommitteemen, was when he was the only child in the room who knéw the answer to the question. If one or two or a dozen of the others were prepared with the desired information they were til sure to beat Tommy to it. There was a little girl whom Tommy worshiped in his secret soul. One { day her hat blew off. She was the school beauty, so five boys put chase { aftér the hat. Tommy, as usual, got started last, having been bumped out of his stride by another boy. It was a freak wind and of a sudden the hat shifted its course and came straight | at Tommy and a mud puddle. Tommy headed it off and, all blushes, took a single step toward his inamorata. Then another boy grabbed the hat away from Tommy and himself bestowed it upon Its owner, with the air of one having rescued it from the puddié instead of purloining it from the abashed Tom- i my's worshipful band. The little girl, whose name was Annabelle Hester, | smiled benignantly upon the other boy, | whose name was Floyd Cushman, and | never even gave Tommy a glance, | And 'so It way. At twenty Tommy was holding down the worst possible { Job in the gift of the superintendent of { the one-horse Interurban trolley com- peny, a job which no one else would | take, and which necessitated his. get- | ing up at an unconscionable hour in the morning, and walking a mile after | taking the last car into the barn at | night, with all his leisure time in the | middie of the day----and what use can | a young fellow make of the hours from ten till three? The use that Tommy made of them was to think, hopelessly and with a | sinking heart, about that same Anna- | belle Hester whose hat he saved from | belong muddied when he was a little boy. Annabelle was a stemographer in jown now, but she still lived in the su- burban village, and very often rode | out on the car on which Tommy col- | lected the fares. She was always friendly and nice | to Tommy, and now and then he ven- { tured to talk to her a little, but only | now and then, beciuse Tommy fan- | tied Annabelle seemed a little nervous and lil at ease at such times, perhaps as though she didn't just care about | getting too intimate with a conductor. | Another reason was that Floyd Cush- | man, Who was in college now, and go- | Ing to be a lawyer, rode out with An- | nabelle whenever he came back to the village, which was pretty often, and | quite took possession of her. Yes, Tom- | my felt altogether "out of it" with An- ! nabelle, Then. the war came. Tommy went as | & buck private and came back as one. | He wasn't, it appeared, of non-com ma- | terial, though an intelligent, studions | and consclentious soldier. Floyd Cush- | man,. jamming his way in the atten. | tion of his superiors at Plattshurg and | later in France, attained to a captaincy before he met his finish above Verdun. | When Tommy was demobilized they | gave him back his old run, and it was | the third evening that he saw Anna. {belle Hester. The girl liad climbed to | the platform of the car and was on the point of enfering when she glanced up || snd saw Tommy. She went white, then The Hacking Cough | The terrible, hacking, lung-wrack- that sti to you in spite srything you have dons to get t is a great source uf danger, health and the longer it is | stick the more serious the | ymes. i to your allowed menace You can easily get rid of the | ough or cold at its inception by us- ng Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup, ! a remedy that has been universally * used throughout Canada for the past 30 years. Mrs. Samuel Matthews, Portage, P. E. I, writes: "Last winter 1 caught a heavy cold, and was laid up. for sometime. [| had such a - hacking cough I could not sleep at night, and | did not think I could ever get over it. One day a friend dropped in to see me, and was surprised to see how bad my cough was. She advised ime to use Dr. Wood's Norway Pine { Syrup, 80 the next day I sent for a bottle and soon got relief, and by th: time I had taken two bottles * my cough was all gone, : 1 doub there ip anything to equal it." Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup i= put up in a. yellow wrapper; 3 pine. trees the trade mark; price 25c, ant" 50c. Manufactured only by The T Millburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont ---- -- ---- roey. "Why, Tommy---Tommy Ellis!" she exclaimed. "When on earth did | you get back? I didn't-*I never heard--" Annabelle was becoming in- | articulate. a : Tommy Ellis bad been through what | no man can go through and still be quite as he was before. Much of his old self-consciousness was gone. "Anngbelle," he sgid in a manly, di- rect way. "I'm.'dreadfully sorry about Floyd. I'm the only one you know who was there when it happeped. All the way back I was thinking you'd want to know, ad that. the first, thing I'd do would be to tell you. If you'll let 'me | know when, I'll get off and come over | to your house and tell you." "Do, Tommy ; come tomorrow In your | off-time. I'm going to be home. And} | do want to hear--everything." Tommy didn't notice the odd, sjudying look the girl gave him. Bat he promised to go; and next day he went. Tommy told Annabelle about the speed and rush of the great move ment when the Americans cleaned ou | the Verdun salient: how most of the doughboys were racing to get in tomch | with 'the enemy, but now and then coming unexpectedly on the deadly ma chine gun nests of the rear guard: how | Captain Cushman. commanding Tom my's own platoon because of a short age. of lleutenants, liad stormed one. of these enemy positions and had been shot leading bie men across an open fleld. "He died bravely, Miss Anoa belle," said Tommy, in conclusion. "1 wish he could have lived to come back." And then, after a little, the" new Tommy asserted himself enough to venture--"to you." - Annabéile looked straight at Tommy. | "As a soldier," she asked, "do yon | think it 'was necessary for Cuptaln | Cushman to lose big life at that time and place? Do you think those Huns canld have been driven out without a frontal attack? Was it good leader- ship to do what he did? "Why. Miss Annabelle" exclaimed Tommy, taken wholly by surprise by this questioning, "what--what makes you doubt it?" "Because," replied the girl, "I know all about it. You are not the only. per- son I have seen who was there. Ser Eeant Fanton of your squad Is my * scale. The present methods in Chile | forestry, particularly with reference | the general | "woodland" or "woods" instead of the | of the country, fenced tract. | applied { shaped tracts, it is obvious that the | | ditions. grab-- Annabelle was lpughing | and crying at once. But she cried a) together, and shuddered as she sobbed : "And almost threw your life apay!" The war helped some. Annabelle helped a great deal more. Tommy got A better run next day, Last month he ! you ant division superintendent. | If you | | push Tommy now you'll get pushed back. 2 i Fish Plentiful in Chile, Along the coast of Chile, many sections of which are practically un- | inhabited --at present, graves of aborigines are found In great num- | bers, and they invariably contain | implements for sea fishing. From prehistoric times the coast of Chile | has been noted for its diverse and" | extensive fisheries, The fishes are so | plentiful that sea birds by the mil- Hons, feeding on them, are found along the coast, and the numerous guano islands indicate the Xreat | length of time the birds frequented | | these waters. With methods Similar to those used in other countries, the fishing industry could be revolutions ized and established on a very large are-no more advanced than' rhey werh thousands of years ago. The need is felt by thé Chileans themselves. The lack of sea food was recently the subject of a demand from 'the labor ers to the government. DROP THE TERM "WOODLOT" | i the | Government Authorities Favor Word "Woodland" When 'Used in Reference to Farm Forestry. The increased interest in private to farm forestry, has brought about acceptance of the term | original one of "woodlot," Recording | to the forest service. ¥ A large proportion of the woodland | in the eastern United States is in ir- | regularly shaped tracts, spreading out | over ridges, ravines, stobes, swamps, | and poor lands, whereas "woodlot" | carries the idea of a small-sized, reg- | ularly shaped, and. in a large section | When | to the large or irregularly | word inadequately describes the con- | "Woodlot" probably origin- | ated in New England and seems fairly | well established there. So long as on- ly conditions like those in New Eng- | land "were considered, "woodlot" was | accepted as adequate, but in the last | few years farm forestry has been de veloping rapidly throughout the coun- | ! try. {4 "Wdodiand" and "woods" are more | « tory, more expressive, and | an the possibility of creating con- | fusion in the minds of the people over {1 most sections of the country where the | i word "woodiots" has never been in lo- | | cal use, | Cleaning Your Plow. Many plows, even those that have | been well covered with oil or axle | grease; fall to scowr readily when first taken Into the field, The tollowing | method is belng used by many farmers to overcome the inconvenience attend- ing the use of a plow that fails to ¢lean | oft quickly: The plow is taken to the nearby branch or creek and drawn a few times through the sand or gravel beds that Invariably are found along water courses. It usually takes but a | few turns to cut off the rust or hard- | ened grease. Under no circumstances cousin. He told me about it, It was A does the sand stick to the plow, no | mad, blundering, headstrong piece of thoughtless bravado, and it cost many lives besides his. Tommy Bilis, I know something eise. I know you didn't like Floyd Cushman. I know he al- ways treated you contemptuously. Then why did you, when he was strick down, leave the cover Fanton had or- dered you to take, and go out there foto that rain of bullets In a dear, wonderful, foolish. crazy attempt to save him and bring him back to the rocks? I khow all about it, T tell you! But why did you do it--what made youn?™ "Why--why--why, Annabelle. There wasn't anything else to .do--when I thought of you, waiting for him to . come back." "But, Tommy! I wasn't waiting for Floyd to come back. You dear, seif- effacing, modest, morbid old Tommy--1 was waiting for you. And I've always been waiting for yon all my mortal | life. Tommy Ells, are yon going te ; live the rest of your existence in the old way, latting everything go for want of enough cruelty or wickedness or ----gumption--or whatever it is to reach ont nd grab? Or are you going to rk 'ONLY TABLETS MARKED ~ "BAYER", ARE ASPIRIN t Not Aspirin at All without the "Bayer Cross" ms for over years and now made in Canada. Allway an unbroken ! in ¢ oy TE a !a few vents. Larger Matter how rusty it may be; and If the | gravel doés not contain large stones | the plow will not be dulled. Progressive Finance. We were curious to see just what | ideas our twenty-eight-month-old ur- | chin has about money. We showed him some. pennies and asked him what they were.- { "That's money for the organ maa," || he sald. We showed him a nickel. | the | | | beat out three candidates for assist i T The Place Where Santa Claus Buys His Phonographs, Records and Supplies Look for Him every afternoon In our window er A et te Nt es PN Peo ats i "That's big money," he said, and | then added, "That's Hessia's money," | Hessia belng the delightful person who | honors our kitchen. | Then we showed him a 'one-dollsr | bill, There was no doybt at all in his | mind as to where that belonged. } "Mother's dollar," he sald.--Philade]- | phia Ledger. ! i © Passed the Test. | A young man from our town had gone into a training school as an auto- mobile mechanic. In one of their tests an automobile was taken apart and It was his duty to assemble each part to its respective place. He had done this with the exception of one plece, which was missing and which Be could not find. The C. O. told this young fellow that it was up to him to get this piece, so, taking his superior officer &t his word, he proceeded to. take the missing part from the com- manding officer's own ear and he was one of four out of a c¢lass of 190 who passéd the test.--Chicago Tribune. } O the young student of the violin nothing can prove more beneficial often the playing of the world's greatest violinists. Of ¢ourse hear them often in person, because Kingston is seldom blessed with the visit of such artists as Kubellk, Thibaud, Heifetz, Seidel, K¥8lgler, Elman 'aid others, their Phonograph brings playing to the student. ~The Violin Lesson The violin student who possesses a Phonograph, and particul- arly a Columbia Grafonola can hear all the great violin- ists of the day whenever he The Columbia Gras likes. fonola reproduction of playing of the violin i near perfect as it made, the artist's phrasing, quality and technique-- can be It gives the student the 8 as tone - his music soul in all its beauty. Then again the "student, in the absence of his teacher, may play in duet. with the Columbia. Aside from pleasure, just think what can be learned in this way. If you are a violin student, come in, bring your violin, and let us demonstrate " Columbia to you. LINDSAY' Also Sel Columbia Records (90¢ to $8.00) andBubble Bool simplicity and beauty of Ii the Columbia Grafonola is tion, quick service, terms, your choice should courteous the the But the Choosing ~THE- Phonograph "» In choosing the edu- cational Phonograph great care must be taken that its re- .production be wper-' $ if the fect, true and mus- ically correct. mistake is possible No {COLUMBIA GRAFONOLA is chosen. For qual- ity of tone, faithful- ness in reproduction, ne, and perfection in mechanism unequalled. For facility of selec- be made at . Lindsay's. GRAFANOLAS FROM $32 TO $8360 i I i <Low LiND 121 Princess S Montreal, Ottawa, Quebec, and Three Rivers wen SAY LIMITED treet, Kingston Brockville, Belleville, Cornwall attention and satisfactory Growt! The canninglin few years grojvn to colossal propor tions. It is afl art that dates back a little more thin 100 years. We owe this art of prdperving foods through gf fainers, to a Frenchman. Nicholas Ap- nere, who began his experiments in anning in 1795 at Chalmons sur Marne, He worked and experimerit- d for 15 years and in 1810 had prac- tically perfected his system. "The 'first canning In the United States was for the preservation of sea foods, It was not until the decade following thé Civil war that the superiority of canned foods over those which wePe preserved by salting, drying and. , | recognized. 1 If the report be true, rejoice. Tt is a great stride forward Any invention that Of lessens any of the noises of thie world is dis tinctly an achievement. : Charm Black Tea Sold in Packages Only GEO. ROBERTSON & SON, Limited TN | pul 8,385, rousing ing stow thos in you have & PENS ingle ea mip J Et 3D i sed . 2 ii : i : a

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy