Daily British Whig (1850), 19 Jul 1920, p. 8

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~ | 5 MONDAY, JULY 19, 1920. fs the time to got yous lawn I Dow t Walt ine fi is ahead of YOU and SATOEr til the grass All 'makes repatred sharpened promptly. . J. M. PATRICK : 140 SYDENHAM ST. Phone 2056J. "Froif-a-ives" Conquered Nervous Prostration R. R. No.4, Gusexr Pranvs, Max. "In the year 1910, I had Nervous Prosération in its worst form; dropping from 170 to 115 pounds. The doctors kad mo hope of wy recovery, and every medicine I tried proved useless until a friend induced me to take "'Fruit-a-tives". Se I began to mend almost at once, and mover had such good health as 1 bave enjoyed the past eight years, Tam mever aithout * Fruit-a-tives™ Is ihe house". - JAS.'S. DELGATY. 80c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial sise 250. At all dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa. PICNIC & CAMPING SUPPLIES Cooked and Canned Meats. Pickles, Relishes and Jams, Canned Fish a Fruit and everything help make your holiday enjoyable, at... C. H. PICKERING 490-492 PRINCESS STREFT Phone 330. AN OLD TIRE With a blow out fitted | with an INSYDE TYRE Ran 3,000 miles. Cost less than $2.00. Have you tried ome? J. R. C. Dobbs & Co. Tel. 810. 41 Clarence St. Every 10¢ Packet of WILSON'S | { [ | | 1 Clean to handle. Sold by all Druggists, Grocers and General Stores Se JN WE q Ais v > A healthy body means healthy arteries: The rasiways are the arteries of Canada: IN the operation of railways Canadians hold high reputations. The chief Canadian systems are operated over great stretches of territory presenting widely different problems. Their traffic obligations fluctu with thelseasons. Climatic conditions are sometimes difficult. Unusual foresight, skill and determination are called for. ate rapidly Yet the only unfailing highways for the heavy traffic across the New World from China to France during the war--were Canadian railways. > -_ Canada alone among the allied countries had no war-time transportation ' crisis. When foreign roads €r cargoes at the docks. To-day the Canadian producer still commands the fastest, the most dependable and the cheapest railway service in the world. But the foresight that made this record possible could do nothing without MONEY! The skill that kept terminals uncongested had to be back®d with MONEY! The determination that drove crippled en- 8ines ahead in the face of 40-below gales and mounting snow would in the long run have been useless without MONEY ! : Thus to-day the alarming fall revenues-of . the railwa railway efficiency. in the net ys is a menace to It injures railway credit. It dissolves the reserves needful to meet the expanding needs of a growing country. imperils national prosperity. Increased freight rates are imperative there- fore, not merely on behalf of railways but in the interests of Canada itself! y Assoc formerly the CANADIAN 2a iation of Canada ILWAY war BOARD « My Chauffer Gets His Orders. It seems to me that the voicing of m¥ decision to make an incident an n¢ideat in my instead of my Whole existence had given me a new utiook on life. 1 felt my spirits rise In a way I seemed to be buoyed up Much to my surprise, I found my- self dancing towards' the window with a little song dn my lips. I reached the window Just i- time 10 wave to Alice, and I knew that she was delighted with the course 1 had taken in coming to the hotel and ietting John and Elizabeth Moreland Gght it out between them. Miss Parker was evidently surpris- { ed to behold me in such spirit 1 Why; Mrs ordon," she said, are just like a girl again!" en life { "you oh Miss Parker, *I wouldn't go back to my days as a girl, as a sweetheart, asa &ride, if 1 had to give up this blessed bunch." {and I picked Mary up in my arms {and went waltaing around 'the room with her Aren't you afraid you will awa- | ken her?" asked Miss Parker "She is awake--the darling! And look, she is smiling! That is the first time I have seen her smile You do love your mother. don't you darl ing? And you love to see her happy and gay. She is going to: be happy answered. 'But, and gay until you grow up big en-| ough to dance and sing with her." Babies Like Thrills, She certainly seems to act as though . she likes it But you will spoil her, Mrs. Gordon Babies like thrills as much as anybody else, but you know thrills are not good for them." In July 1918 the Canadian roads were threatened with a general strike. To prevent this public catastrophe they agreed to follow the American scale of wage increases The Government of Canada meantime allowed freight rate increases intended to, make up the cost of these new wage rates. Leaving aside all question of increased cost of material, the new wages cost the rail- ways of Canada an extra eighty million dollars for the first year alone. The new rates yielded them an additional forty-three millions ! The annual deficit on wages alone was, thirty-seven mill- ions and is constantly growing | Yes I feel like a girl again," I j very light. "Oh I think one little weeny thrill is good for a baby once in.a while. You know, my dear Miss Parker, I fiever could understand just why one is always being told the glories and ldppiness of a monotonous and com- monplace life." . i "Perhaps, Mrs. Gordon, it is be- fause most of us try to make the yonotony of our lives seem. to be | happiness, and besides, the person | Who is always on the lookout for a | thrill may run up against the agonis- | ng kind instead of the glorious | kind." « "Well, even so, I would not com- | Plain. 1 do not believe that any man Or woman has really lived who has not suffered. I would rather suffer | most intensely than have one of those temperaments that can not feel. I do | | not consider it a mark of superiority to go on one's way In a kind of sup- erhimanness which makes one able to be all in all ko one's self. I want to enjoy the fragrance of the roses, the feel of the warmth of the sun- shine, to hear the hum of the busy world or the song of birds in the morning. To see, Yes to open my eyes wide upon the Joy and sorrow of those about me, to taste all the great emotions that may come to me. "Why Mrs. Gordon You are poet!" | Just a Woman. | my dear Miss Parker, I am.) 4 woman, but perhaps'a woman i$ a little franker than most of | the others. You see. ever since that | old reaction from Greeks when the whole world was a beauty cult and one literally swam | In a sea of senses, woman has been | asham~* 'o tell herself that, after feat love of this' world § through feeling. The in- coid bit of interesting | id the an- | that Sir "No | Just who m 5 Wa aiyst B €aa you im Isaac Newton, when made his | | reat discovery of gravity," enjoyed | even for a moment the estatic bliss that comes to me from the feel of this little head upon my breast, its | little aimless hands futtering agains: | | mine. 'Oh, Miss Parker, Miss Parker, {1 am awtully glad to know that this | Joy can come to any woman---that it | is not brain, that it is only heart; that a woman need not read or white, | she need not think; she needs only | | to feel." \ | | © Miss Parker came toward me and | | silently tqok my baby, who had fal- | | fen asleep in my arms. She sald no- | { thing," but IT noticed her eyes were | suffused with tears and I knew that | she, too, had joyed and suffered. As she went into the other room there came a knock at my door and at my invitat¥Y Charles the chauf- | feur, opened the door. "l hope you will pardon me, Mrs. Gordon," he said, "I just wanted to Say to you that it will be impossible | for me to take orders from Madame | | Gordon. Miss Moreland and yourself | | during Mr. Gordon's absence. orf | course you understand I would glad- | {ly do it if I could: but you see if you | | should all three happen to want the | j car at the same time I shall have to | | know to whom I am to give prefer- | | ence." | it | "Hasn't Madame Gordon her eleec- | tric?" I asked in surprise. \ | "The electric is laid up for re-| pairs." | { "I thought Miss Moreland had an | electric of her own." | "L soll it for her the other day. ! She seemed to think you were going to stay away all sumimer and it would be foolish for her to keep her own car when yours was not in use." | "Well, you see I am here now, Charles, and I believe Mr. Gordon has told you that the car is mine and that you were at my disposal. You will in the future pay no attention Yo any orders except mine." | Tomorrow--A Clash With Madame | Gordon. ---------- i BORN AT CATARAQUI How About the Electric? i | | | { | | | TWINS To Mr. and Mrs. James Stafford, a Boy and Girl. Cataraqui, July 16.--The Metho- dist Sabbath School held its annual flower service last Sunday morning. | Rev. E. R. Kelly gave an address which held the interest of old and { young. A programme of songs and recitations was given by the child- Ten and older members of the school. the church was prettily decorated for the occasion. The whole service | Was one long to be remembered. | Mrs. Richards is visiting her grand- | daughter, Mrs. W. Hooper at Sun- nyside. Rev. E. R. Kelly, Mrs, Kelly | and son Craig, are at their cottage | at Ivy Lea. Miss Helen Morris, ot-| | tawa, is a guest at the rectory. i { Mrs. Saunders is to becongratulated | on the success of her pupils at the | recent examinations for entrance to} { high school. Maude Bates, Alfred | | Morley and Willie Purdy were suc- | cessful in passing, the first named winning honors. Mr. and Mrs. W.| | Spooner, Montreal, have been visit- | ! ing at the home of Thomas Guess, | | and H. Powley and family, Toronte, | {at E. Cooke's, Jesse Edwards is] confined to his home by illness. | Mrs. John Riley has returned home | from Alberta, where she was spend- | ing some weeks with her daughter, Mrs. F. Ayl i The hay crop esworth. in this vicinity a { Born to Mr. and Mrs. John Mor- | |§aW; a son, and to Mr. and Mrs. | | James Stafford, twins, a boy and a| | girl. 5 WHISKEY IN POTATOES Two Barrels of Tubers Contain 34 | Bottles of K A | Brockville, July 19.~At a local ex- Press cflice, License Inspector Taber | seized two barrels consigned to a' { local party as potatoes," but which | j contained fifty-four botties of Ken- je whiskey. Eighteen bottles had been purioined in transit. The whis- DYE WORKS (Late Montgomery's) Kingston's Only Dyer. Dry Cleaning a Specialty. Phone 214. 349 Princess St. During Strawberry time we will have fresh berries arriving dally--at lowest market prices. Domestic and imported Frults of all kinda. Phone 904 if you want the BEST tea' Go to the firm that CROWS it LIPTON'S ------------, MATTRESSES Deo n't throw awa. 2 ue y Your eol8 resses. © We renovate all make them as good Get our prices. Frontenac Mattress Co, 17 BALACLAVA STREET TEA Corer os oe] Canadian Chie! Offices 24 Front St. West. Toronto --Fresh Maple Syrup. ~All kinds of Oleomargarine J Telephone 469. Deliveries daily. Closes at 1 p.m. Wednesdays. ~ B. O. SMITH, the 'lité of the | GROCERY TABLE DELICACIES Just received a large shipment or > Ee NIAGARA GRAPE JUICE Extra good quality. A very refreshing drink dur ing the hot weather. Whipping Cream always in stock. Webster's BAGOT AND' EAM) NTRRET ~---- - § ond 203 press | CSR CE J yr / PIS Pr vr ar Ideals of purity and value We are soapmakers with an ideal--our ideal is. to make a Soap which shall have no equal for Purity and Efficiency throughout the Dominion--no superior in all the world. We realize our ideal in which is manufactured SUNLIGHT SOAP is made from the sweetest and choicest of edible oils and fats. It is the purest and most efficient of soaps and, if used judiciously, the most economical. Insist on getting the Soap you ask for Sunlight Soap ? ° key, the first of its kind ever sent |cut of the country, especially from through here, was enclosed in po- | Ontario points, to the United States. tatoes. | Joseph Lamothe, Sudbury. --. | timber inspector, has given potice Removal of restrictidhis on the ex- | that he will apply at the next session port of sugar is causing great quan- | of Parliament for a divorce from his tities of Canadian sugar being sent | wife, Wilhemine every tablet of Sunlight Soap lb ~ G. H. Winsor, postmaster, Sud- bury, has resigned, the small salary of $1,500 a year is given as his rea- son. The French have begun operations In Syria, moviag toward Aleppo and Damascus, : , Sudbury,

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