Daily British Whig (1850), 30 Jun 1920, p. 4

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PAGE FOUR "THE CLUB" | | [One Great Essential To a - | Woman's Health | Summer | Is Her Nerves| Nature intended women to be) strong, healthy and happy as the! day is long, instead of being sick and wretched. But how can any woman | be healthy and happy when the whole ! | nervous system is unstrung. The | trouble is they pay more attention to Higa ll a "duties | | than they do to their health. Is it | any wonder then that they become ir- | ritable and nervous, have hot flush-| es, faint and dizzy spells, smothering | ! and sinking spells, become weak and | nervous, and everything in life be-| comes dark and gloomy? ! Milburn"s Heart and Nerve Pills are the very remedy that nervous, | tfred-out, weary women need to re-| | store them to the blessings of good health. { Mrs. P. H Ryan. Sand Point, N.| S., writes:--"1 have been a great | sufferer from nerve troubles. I was | so weak and nervous I could not] sleep at night and my appetite was very poor. I could not walk across the floor without trembling. I had | ! hot flushes and fainting spells. When ! I was on my second box of Milbyrn"s | Heart and Nerve Pills I began to | feel better and kept on until I had | used six boxes when I felt like a dit- | ferent person. I am never without [them im the house and recommend | them to all who suffer with their nerves." Price 50c. a box at all dealers or | mailed direct on receipt of price by { The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toron- to, Ont. COMB SAGE TEA INTO GRAY HAR ! Darkens Beautifully and Restores Its Natural Color and Lustre ! At Once. --Sport Shirts -- Wash Ties --Soft Collars --Flannel Trousers --Duck Trousers -- Athletic Under- wear --Belts --Straw Hats -- Bathing Suits cs 112 ess { Common garden sage brewed into | a heavy tea, with sulphur and alcohol added, will turn gray, streaked and | faded hair beautifully dark and lux- | riant. Mixing the Sage Tea and | Sulphur recipe at home, though, is | --~-- | troublesome. An easier way is to | get the ready-to-use preparation im- | proved by the addition of other in- | gredients a large bottle, at little cost, | at, drug stores, known as "Wyeth's | Sage and Sulphur Compound," thus | avoiding a lot of muss. While gray, faded hair is not sin- ful, we all desire to retain our youth- ful appearance and attractiveness. By | darkening your hair with Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound, no one | cam tell, because it does it so natural- | ly, so evenly. You just dampen a | sponge or soft brush with it ana draw | this through your hair, taking one | small strand at a time; by morning | all gray hairs have disappeared. Af- ter another application or two your PICNIC & CAMPING SUPPLIES Cooked and. Canmed Meats. Pickles, Relishes and Jams. Canned Fish and Fruit and everything to help make your heliday eajoyable, at... C. H. PICKERING 490-402 PRINCESS STREFT Phone 580. hair becomes beautifully dark, Robinson& Wiltshire {| Automobile Repair Shop glossy, soft and luxuriant and you Appear years younger. | Rich Fruit Desserts For a Trifle * A of Jiffy-Jell serves six | people in mold form, or twelve if | you whip the jell. It is a real-fruit | dainty. Each package contains a | wealth of fruit-juice essence, con- densed and sealed in/glass. 1! = No artificial flavor is "hsed in {]| Jiffy-Jell. No saccharine is used. |]! Every housewife who once tries it | will always anake sure to get it. Grills, Hotplates and Toasters, ! For this is the only quick gelatine dessert which has these bottled fruit flavors. Your choice: of ten ao aT). it. In Jiffy-Jell you get the delicious fruity flavor and goodness of the fruit itself. VARICOSE VEINS ° How To Get Prompt Relief with "ABSORBINE JR." Bathe with hot water Ein dans Rob tn ADSORAINE NE three times a day for the first two weeks--then i Do your cooking with elec tricity--quick, clean and eco- Bomjcal. See our three heat electric or let us instal an [Electric Range for you. : Elecric Wiring our specialty. . are a boon to women, be 'tions of all these organs | without any irritation or dis- agreeable effect. Largest Sule of Any Medicine tn the Weetd DOSARING; pos -- newspaper reader thinks of a cham- | may not be stolen from its rightful |e ds, must ever remain beloved of | | ment, David is easily first among the | champions. THE DAILY BRITISH A CHAMPION OF A FORLORN HOPE The International 8unday School Lesson for July 4th is "David in Camp and Court." --I1 8am. 17:40-49; 18:5-9. By William T. Ellis. Pugilism has robbed the knightly, danntlessness and devotion upon their word "champion" of "its good old oat ng No! the Ay | ANee-sure or-a-cause- fight! pion as a mercenary bruiser, who ranks well up among the profiteers. When there is real fighting to be done, the pugilist plays the slacker: he is a "champion" for revenue only. He would not know a noble czuse if he saw it. Still the fine all victories. A father wrote his son, "Never take an ignoble chance to live, | and do not miss a noble chance to | die." For life is worth while only as | it is risked for some greater end than | life itself. The war-time lesson of | the basic value and preeminence of | character 'of simple courage is writ- ten large upon the story of David's | duel with Goliath, | The wise men of the army--who | themselves had not the nerve to tac-.| le Goliath--tried to get David to! { wear Sauls armor as he went forth | to meet the Philistine's defiance. But | David had the good sense of an out- | of-door's man, used to meeting emer- | Jeavies on his own responsibility. So | e insisted upon going into battle | His battle with Goliath | with the weapons that he knew how is 'one of the familiar stories that |to handle. In other words he was de- | every child knows. Today it is the | termined to be himself. He was no | assigned theme of the Sunday School | second edition of Saul: he was just Lesson. There is enough of the eter- | David, who could weild a shepherd's | nal youth in all of us to make us en- | sling, but who could not handle Sauls | joy the tale of the combat between |ammor. Let us quit trying to be or word "champion" use by the sordid slugger of the jrise ring, who has capitalized his | rutish insensibility to pain. It is| a word with a glorious history; a word that calls up memdries of the chivalry of the centuries. He who fights for a good cause, and against man and God. | Of all the heroes of the Old Testa- | country's records. | Mili tancy in the realm of morals is might. |! Courage of heart is the foundation of || WHIG WEDNESDAY, JUNE 30. 19020. Strawberry Time During Strawberry time we dally--at lowest market prices. Domestic and fmported Frults of all kinds. will have fresh berries arriving FRUITLAND ALEAN "MASO' UD, "PROP, 848 Princess Street. : : 3 : W PERFECTION rdasabeiois ple A mt TT Phone 904 aera mnie sig FEZE the giant and the shepherd boy, when the brave young champion of his na- tion won a spectacular victory, and vindicated the faith of Israel in the eyes of the heathen. An Old Tale of Combat us read the story anew, as given in the Revised Version: "And he took his staff in his hand, and chose him five smooth stones out of the brook, and put them in the shepherd's bag which he had, even in his wallet; and his sling was in his hand: and he drew near to the Philistine. "And the Philistine came on and drew near unto David; and the man that bare the shield went before him. And when the Philistine looked about and saw David, he disdained him; for he was but a youth," and ruddy, and withal of a fair counten- ance.! And the Philistine said unto David, Am I a dog. that thou comest to me with staves? And the Philis- tine cursed David by his gods. And the Philistine said to David, Come to me, and I will give thy flesh unto the birds of the heavens, and to the beasts of the field. * Then said David to the Philistine, Thou comest to me with a spear, and with a jevelin: but I come to thee in the name of Je- hovah of hosts, the God of the armies of Israel, whom thou hast defied. This day will Jehovah deliver thee into my hand; and I will smite thee, and take thy head from off thee; and I will give the dead bodies of the host of the Philistines this day unto the birds of the heavens, and to the wild beasts of the earth; that all the earth may know that there is a God in Is- , and that all this assembly ma rae "== | know that Jehovah saveth not wi sword and spear: for he battle is Jehovah's, and He will gi%e you into our hand. And it came to pass, when the Philistine arose, and came and drew nigh to meet David, that David hastened, and ran toward the army to meet the Philistine. And David put his hand in his bag, and took thence a stone, and slang it, and smote the Philistine in his forehead; and the stone sank into his forehead and he fell upon his face to the earth." Finding Something to Fight For Lying on the surface of the old tale lies the summons to youth to select a worthy cause, preferably a weak and unpopular one, and then to fight for it to the limit. 'The knightliest life of all, the one yielding the deep- est satisfactions, is that of champion- ing a noble object. That way comes growth and® idealism and courage and unselfishness. The worker for some great end outside of himself draws the sting from life. For it is not the wickedness of people that stirs one to pity as one travels about, but the pitiful smallness and barrenness of their lives. They have no great ends for the attainment of which they live and labor and fight. t Only a few minutes ago, after I had begun work on this Lesson, I was called aside by a chance acquaintance, & man who lodges in the house where I am spending the night, to see his rise fupied by a huge ball of tin-foil care- fully made, and weighing at least twenty pounds. "That is how much tobacco I have chewed in seven years!" he exclaimed triumphantly. His great feat, the thing that set him fellows, was this tro- { seem what we are not, and return to { simplicity and genuineness. Other- | wise, we simply impair our power, { and make ourselves absurd. Once a {man called at my office and sent in { his card inscribed with his name and ' |the title, "The Negro Beecher." The | Just to refresh our memories, let | likeness consisted chiefly in Kis wear- {ing his hair after the fashion of the {famous Brooklyn preacher! | How Bolshevism Came. With a large part of the world | turning red, it is well to remember | that the Bolshevik movement had {its rise with one vengeful 'Russian | Jew in Switzerland, who had sworn {to avenge indignities he had suf- | fered at the hands of the Russian | aristocracy. That man has been the {Erains behind the whole Bolshevik | movement: he has played with na- tions and peoples as pawns in his | game of vendetta. How, dearly the {old order in Russia has paid for de- spising one Jew, whom it humiliated! Goliath made the same mistake; he came toward David hreathing con- | tempt and boastings. Goliath lost his head figuratively | before he lost it literally. He was {one of the long line of blunderers | who disdained youth: whereas the | wise man is willing to incur the en- mity of the old and powerful, if he may only have the friendship, 6 and support of the young. "Let no man | despise i youth," wrote Paul to | Timothy; but Goliath had no friend | to give him this counsel. It is the { basis of strategy to respect every enemy; politics is full of stories of how the despised have ultimately made the arrogant pay for their con- tempt. When the Cause is All David was a debonair hero, for he iad a great cause, which eclipsed into insignificance non-essential iact of his own life or death. He was the champion of his nation, and of the God of Israel. He was jeal- cus for the honor of his country, and for the fair name of Jehovah.. His brilliant deed was patriotism in ac- tion. He was courageous because he had that to fight for which was big- cer than himself. It makes all the difference in world whether a warrior's cause j great or ignoble. God always fights with hdiy. enterprises. Our soldiers were sustained in the rigors of the right was on their side. They gould not fight in that same spirit to sub- jugate Russia, or to put through to completion the imperialistic schemes now under way in the Near East. No ration that is seeking to impose its will upon another can count on the help of the hosts of heaven. David dared defy Goliath because he knew himself to be the champion of Jehovah. He was about to demon- | strate that "the Lord saveth not with sword and spear: for the battle is the Lord's, and He will give you into our hands." That is the victory that overcomes the world, even faith. There are no giants that can stand before the man who knows that he fights with the Lord's banner in hand. In tha ycorn; and by the W.C.T.U. David reminds us that the faith the battlefield is better than the fai of undisturbed ease. We should not pray to be kept from troubles; rather let pray i a) from his ee a Be aw IS his Hu them from his chewing tobacco. : ng . His pride was greater than that of any of the herces of the war whom 1 have met! Does the Yéader smile? Never- theless, that ambition is re Fegenty- warf- men, who have never learned to fling out their lives sibliiely 4 lorious emprise, some terest, some service, some engross- ing championship of a cause. The greatness of everybody's life is mea- sured by the i y pick up the daily T, to the sporting ae hecior of hers may be the news of the day. David | ies to us across the centuries to let 7 Jiterests be those of our £23 our Bi | 2 Ef i ; : It ii i ge fi 3 § 5 | 2 Ki 7 i i ir i £5 i in some rd, some EEE Lyndhurst, June 29.--Mrs, J. M. Somerville and little daughter, Mar- aret, Ottawa, visited at G. White's. { Mrs. G. A. Rooney and family, have | returned from Kingston, to their old home to spend the summer. A mis- sion house is being erected in memory of the boys who served in France. Quite a number from here attended the funeral of the late Mrs. F. Wells at Seeley's Bay. e King- Ston industrial fair is ted are and gveryone is working to help Mr. Butven Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Tate spsut Sunday with W. R. Glover at Jones' Falls. jwar by the conviction that eternal | "Here's The Reason --the Long Blue Chimney which supplies cheap, instant, s y, clean cooking heat whenever needed. It has won for the New Perfection Oil Cook Stove the appreciation of hundreds of thousands of housewives. With the Long Blue New Perfection Chimney, every drop of fuel goes into cooking heat--not into overheating the kitchen. 'The flame is applied directly under the utensils. There is no smoke or odors and pots and pans are not blackened. ' High, medium or low, the flame is always visible. It can be adjusted to give the heat desired and stays set. A New Perfection Oil Cook Stove and a New Perfection Oven and Warming Cabinet form the best combination for year round cooking. The New Perfection gives you more satisfaction in the kitchen and more time out of ii. Sold by good dealers everywhere. Ask for démonstration of the Long Blue Chimney or write for New Perfection Booklet. Made in Canada a HOME OFFICE AND FACTORY SARNIA ONTARIO The Long Biue Chimney which supplies the dean, white-tip- ped cooking Jame. BLS 2S SAA RAND TRUN A change of time will be made on SUNDAY, JUNE 27th, 1920. Standard time, not so-called Daylight Saving Time, will continue to be used for schedules of all trains on the Grand Trunk Railway System. bisa ROR TS For particulars, apply to:-- a av; J. P. HANLEY, C.P. & TA, G.T. Ry., Kingston, Ont. CUNARD ANCHOR ANCHOR-DONALDMY! July 3/Aug. 7!Sept. 11 July 17/Aug. 21|Sept. 25 N. Y., GLASGOW, (via Moville) July 3/July 3ljAug. 28 NEW YORK-- LIVERPOOL July 17/Aug. 14[Sept.'11 +. July 20 | July 2Aug. $1jSept. 18. os. N.Y. PLY,, CHER. & LONDON Oct. 18|Nov. 13 Caronia N.Y., CHERBOURG & SOUTHAMP'N July 1llAug. 5 Sept. 2 ...Mauretania July 15jAug. 12 Sept. 9 ....Imperator July 31 Aug. 28{Sept. 22 ....AqQuitanla *via Queenstown. Sor rates of Freight and furthe particular te local agente te July T7jAug. 4 ..Victorian July 14, Aug 11, Em France July 28, Aug 23, Pr. F. Wm. From Montreal Te y 2--Scotian, Havre Lon July 3--Minned'a, Liverpl July 8--Pretortan, Gk w July 8--Tunistan, Hav. n July 10--Metagama, Liver] July 17--Corsican. Liverp? 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Price otill remains ot $1-00. WEPAY THE PAX, inh i =i ie Any "His Master's Voice" dealer - ®ill gladly play any selection you wish to heer and demonstrate the Vicirols. np 1 Agents Victor-Victolas. MAHOOD BROS. 113 Princess Street. T. F Co. .229-231-233-235-237 Princess Street. * F. W. COATES We are always pleased to demonstrate Victrolas and Victor Records LTD. Phone 90. Lg AGENT VICTOR VICTROLAS. Phone 301J '

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