Daily British Whig (1850), 26 Nov 1920, p. 9

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+ other ingredients FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1020. Mean More Coughs? With coal so dear, no one wants to light the furnaes early in the season, in spite of cold, bleak days. The ré- suit is, hundreds have canght ecld,, and now have bronchial eoughs. If you'would just realize it, no man, woman or child needs to endure the misery a daylonger.. Buckley's Bron. chitis Mixture is the .one remedy which never fails. It works like magic. Actualiy one dose brings relief, even in the most obstinate cases, and starts you immediately on the road to health. Tt has succeeded in eases where every other remedy known te medieal seience has faiied. Buckley's Bronchitis Mixture is not a syrup, but a seientific mixture, with twenty times the healing quali- ties of other remedies. You don't have to take our word for it. Every bottle is sold under a cast-iron, money- back guarantee if it does not stop your cough. Price 75¢c. a-bottle. Taka no substitute. For sale at all Drug Stores or by mail from W. K. BUCKLEY, LIMITED, 142 MUTUAL ST, TO. RONTO. Hn ACDS IN STOMACH ~~ CAUSE INDIGESTION Create Gas, Sourness and Pain | How 'To Treat. . Medical authorities state that near- | ly nine-tenths of the cases of .stom- ach trouble, indigestion, sourness, burning, gas, bloating, nausea, etc. are due to an excess of hydrochloric acid-in the stomach and not as some believe to a lack of digestive julees, | The delicate stomach lining is ir-| ritated, digestion is delayed and food | sours, causing the disagreeable symp- | toms which every stomach sufferer knows so well. * i Artificlal digestents are not need-| ed in such cases and may do real] harm. Try laying aside all digestivé alds and instead get from any drug- | gist a few ounces of Bisurated Mag- | nesia and take a teaspoonful in, a | a quarter glass. of water right after eating. This sweetens the stomach, prevents the formation of excess acid and there is no sourness, gas or pain. Bisurated Magnesia (in powder or tablet Jor Nevens dul or milk) is harmless to the stolach, inexpensive to take and is the most efficient form of magnesia for stomach purposes. It is used by thousands of people who enjoy their meals with no more fear of indigestion. . SINCE do § | 305RCOUGHS COMB SAGE TEA IN HAIR TO, DARKEN IT It's Grandmother's Recipe to Keep Her Locks Dark, Glossy, Beautiful. The old-time niixture pf Sage Tea and Sulphur for darkening gray, streaked and faded hair is grand- mother's recipe, and folks are again using it to keep their hair a good, cven color, which is quite sensible, as we are living in an age when a-youth- ful appearance is of the greatest ad- vantage: Nowadays, though, we don't have the troublesome task of gathering the sage and the mussy mixing at home. All drug stores sell the ready-to-use product, improved by the addition of called "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound." It is very popular because nobody edhgats- cover it has been applied. Sifhply , moisten your comb or a soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a | time; by morning the gray hair dis- appears; but what delights the ladies with Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com- pound, is that, besides beautifully darkening the hair after a few ap- plications, it also produces that soft lustre and appearance of abundance Will Dearer Coal |: | Necropolis In Toronto. which is so attractive. A BEWARE OF TENDER GUMS Unhealthy soil kills the best of wheat. Ybealthy gums kill the best of teeth, To Saep? e teeth sound keep the gums well. atch for tender and bleeding gums, Thisisa symptom of Pyorrhea, which afflicts four out of five people over forty, hea menaces the body as well 2s teeth. Not only do the gums recede and cause the teeth to decay, loosen and fall out, but the infecting germs lower the y's vital- ity and cause many serious ills. a avoid PYorhea. visit your dentist uently for and gum inspec- tion. And use Forhan's For the Gums, Forhan's For the Gums will prevent hea--or 'check its used in time and used consistently, Ordinary dentifrices cannot do this. Forhan's will keep the gums firm and healthy, the oe uh te ad clean. tart using it today. If gum-shrinkage has set in, use Forhan's according to directions, and consult a dentist mediately for special treatment. 35¢ and 60c tubes in Canada and U.S, If yourdruggist cannot supply ' oX $54 Ge tubes in Samadn sod . 8, r druggist cannot sy you, send BHR 10 a direct and war oil mail tube postpaid, FORHAN'S, LTD, Movivesl forhan's FOR THE*GUM Landmarks of Mackenzie INCE William Lyon Mackensie King, the Liberal leader, has been visiting some of the shrines of his llustrious fore- | bear, from whom he gets his Chris. | tian names, it is permissible for the | average citisen, regardless of his poli | tics, to do the same. i The remains of the rebal leader | rest beneath the low spread branches of a mountein ash in the Within a | emall plot, bordered by a hedge, four | little stones, only a few inches high, mark a row of graves. One bears the word "Father" and below "Willlam | Lyon Mackensle, next to it is a stone marked "William Lyon and George | Mackensie," and the fourth "Barbara and Helen." A substantia! monument has been erected to Willlam Lyon | Mackenste in the same God's acre | where a granite shaft commemorates | Lount and Matthews, two of his chief lieutenants, who gave up their lives for the faith they had in their leader | and his cause. | Parts of the basement walls of the | old Tor6nto Jail, in a cell of which | Lount and Matthews were kept till their execution, are still traceable In the office building at the southeast | corner of Toronto and Court streets, | From the Necropolis we pass to Bond street where at No. 82 stands Bis strenuous lite, which was one of i almost continuous opposition to things as they were, some of ® | rebel leaders' friends, moved | sympathy for his condition, presented this property to him, though against | his will, for his native Scottish in- dependence never forsook him. | Here he spent his closing vears-- | years of gloom and despair, it is said, and with a consciousness that he had | not. achieved all he sought in the | realm of reform. After sixty-six years of strenuous struggle he passed away, | and with his passing a page of Cana~ dian history was closed. As one sits at the old desk, used by ! Mackensie when a member of the Upper Canada Legislature (now pre- served in the cabin of the York Pio- neers in Exhibition Park), it is easy | to conjure up the exciting scenes in which he figured and of his five suec- cessive expulsions from the old Front | street chamber. It must be admitted | that he drew fire as when he wrote | that 'the House was an assembly of sycophants" and the Gevernment "a | band of public robbers." "If a Gov- | ernment emanating from England can | cherish such a corrupt star chamber | crew (as the Family Compact), then | the days of the infamous Scroggs and Jeffreys are returned upon us! They were tools of a servile power, official fungi more numerous and pestilential than the quagmires and marshes that encircle Toronto!" No wonder there was a "come back" "William Lie-on Mackenzie" Was a comparatively gentle re joinder. He was, according to his enemies, a reptile, a spaniel dog, a seditious little liar, a firebrand, a political mountebarnk, a squip scrib- bler who began to feel his import- ance among small people and, like the frog in.the fable, to swell with pomps and vanity. Another Mackensie reminder in Toronto still exists in the oid Doel house, on the northwest cormer of | Adelaide and Bay streets. John Doel | became associated with the leaders of "the Party of Reform." During the exciting days preceding the actual outbreak of the rebellion at the skirmish at Montgomery's Farm, the house was a rendesvous for Mackenzie sympathigers, while larger gatherings were held in the adjoin ing brewery where "The Canadian Alliance Society" was probably dis- cussed if- not formed, and other | plans laid for the raisi of an armed force, and where tN&ir leader | no doubt frequeatly met with them. | Yet another visible reminder of | Mackensie is a pleasant one in his portrait, in the City Hall, as the first Mayor of Toreato, im 1834; indeed, as the first mayer elected in Upper Canada. It was during his year of office that the "little mountebank" proved to be a hero in personally risking his life during a cholera plague; in fact, he was gtricken with the disease, but fought it successfully. Among the Mackensis relics in the John Ross Robertson collection in the | Toronto Public Library are some of the military orders issued by Maue- kenszie and his rebel army, as well as the proclamation offering £1,000 for his capture. A curio ia the No School Muaseuri is a came apparentl given to Mackensie by some political enemies in a spirit of irony, the lot- | tering reading: "This vine was cut on Navy Island, C. W., after the Lion (Mackensie) and his pirate followers fled to the on January 18, 1838, JAnding the pe of too | patent for their relish." (Signed) | "HEMP." More than one old Ontario farme |. . house has legends of having given hit sanctuary during his Sight. A cave near Dundas Is still polntsd out | as one of his hiding places, while, in the same town, the building which | he onco occupled--the Leslie House, | has survived the passing of the years, | Queenston also holds a pathetic re- | minder of the turbulent Beot in the ruins of hia old printing office, in | which the Colonial Advocate was first printed and which 30 exasperated Sir Peregrine Maitland aad wll the Gov- | ernmont rulers of the day, and, gene | ally, a glimpse of Navy Island, in the upper Niagard, tells its story of the short-lived Provisional Government thoro set A by Mackensie, ere he finally cscapod to the Amer share, | ~Frask Yeigh In Star Weekly, | : Thoughtless, Quide: "This castie wes built by Henry thes sighth." Parepiring Tourist: "Wall, why on earth did hp build it so far from the rallway Station" i SE PCT BEADS FEDERATION. | ------ ; | London, Nov, 25.--J3, H. Thomas, | general secidtaty of the Nat'onaf | Ukion or Rall¥aymen, was elsoted Haest 6f the I3teriational Feder: tien of Trades Unieag at tig oon: | 'a¥aiice of that Yay have, (an fisces- nda to W. A. Appletoh, whass pa- vEIalien was anndunedd Guring (he - CHURCH UNION WILL BECOME BIG ISSUE To be Fought to Finish at the Next Presbyterian Gen- eral Assembly, Nov. 25 ecome once more the big- fC > Presbyterian inations in Can- semi-official state- Methodist chureh a, according to ment made at the offices yesterday been received assembly: Word has also been received by the i Methodist general conference officers in Toronto that a provincial confer- | 'ence of the Methodists of Saskatche- | wan on church union has been called | It is expected 'that | for next January. a general conference officer from To- ronto will attend. In the west, church union of the Methodists, Presbyterians and Con- gregationalists is reported $0 be mak- { ing such rapid progress that a gen- eral council of union churclfes of western Canada is an accomplished fact, with Rev. J. Irvine Walker as chairman. The union churches are dividing their mission funds between the general mission boards according to the proportion of membership, RECAST EXPRESS RATES Urged That They Freight Rates. Winnipeg, Nov. 25.--TBhat express rates be recast on the basis of freight rates, so that any decision fssued by { the three-storey dwelling in which | the Board of Railway Commissioners | Mackenzie died. Toward the end of in connection with freight rates may be immediately effective in express rates, is the suggestion of the ex- press committee of the shippers' sec- | tion of the Winnipeg Board of Trade, in_a statement sent to the Board of Railway Commissioners today. To care for the increased clerical costs involved, a surcharge of fifteen cents on shipments up to 100 pounds and 25 cents on shipments over that amount is suggested. The opinion of the board is stated to be that with the tendency toward lower prices any scale of express rates should approximate those now in existence. Per of AA et a Poison in the system cause pains, sches and stifinéss. Th: polsons are quickly removed by the use of Dr. ' Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills. One pill a dose. 250. a box, all dealers. THE DA Assurances have | by two chairmen of | Methodist districts that the issue is | to be fought to a finish at the' next | meeting of the Presbyterian general | ILY BRITISH WHIG. Fi od Church union ! Take Peps at Once! Peps will safeguard you against more serious ailments of which "sow: throat" is Meuslly ust the beginning. By keeping a bax ps oa hand, therefore, you can avoid much unnecessary suffering and needless expense. ; Peps Pastilles, dissolved on the tongue, throw off a. medicinal Pine vapor, which is neh § pavartal Jisinicctant tha it do- stroys germs and preveats the soreness At the same time the heali soothes the inflam: quality of the 'vapor membranes | Peps are equally beneficial for laryng- | itis, asthma, bronchitis, s and colds. Correspond With | Rub Backache, Lumbago, Soreness and 4 Stiffness Away--Try This! Pr | aula ' . «had L ola ieCliy HaiiuiGes up without feeling sudden pains, | discolor the ekin sharp aches and twinges? Now lis- Limber up! Don't suffer! Get a ten! That's lumbago, sciatica or |small trial bottle trom any drug store maybe from a strain, and you'll get [and after using it just once, you'll blessed relief the moment you rub your back with soothing, penetrating lumbago, or sciatica, "St. Jacobs Oil." Nothing else takes | back will never hurt or cause any out soreness, lameness and stiffness | more misery. It never 80 quickly. You simply rub it on|and has been recommended for 60 and out comes the pain. It is per- | years. HAVE YOUR AUTOMOBILE Put in good shape for cold weather driving. Book your erder for winter overhauling now. Satisfaction guaranteed. MCALLISTER. & DRAKE 7 PRINCESS STREET Phone 1750, Phone Res. 1246). Slide u Uussu ¢ wun or because your ET -- forget that you ever had backache, | disappoints | 9 ET ree IRAE SPRUCE We have ofi hand a well assorted stock of choice Spruce .in square edge, T. & G. V-joins and coped siding. : |ZHH------ 7 Allan Lumber Co. Phone 1042. Victoria Street HH. $d 3 3 SER A | The Fora Coupe is one of the most useful cars built. Its convenience is readily ap= parent--a roomy, yet compact body, super- ior riding qualities, comfort in all weather. | Among its special distinction the Coupe has a distinctive appearance that makes it an outstanding car. . You may purchase lll one on a monthly payment basis and enjoy it while you are paying for it. Ford Sales and Service 34-38 Princess St. Phone 1609. VanLuvenB ros, | re HE r We often think that justice means | The work of the true Christian giving us what we want--not what | not circumscribed by the fence we deserve. | church creed. FN A ar a | hi 8 1 | | po Ha | ts ich Su Spirit of Hos GAINST a back nd of fine A os damask, under the glow of soft- at the ly shaded lights, rich silverware gives added charm to entertainment. "Holmes & Edwards silverware is silver of the most enduring sort. The beauty and dignity of its lines, HOLMES & EDWARDS--as ler will explain--is protected gs points. In SILVER-IN- LAID blocks of solid silver are fused into the back of the handles and bowls, guaranteeing the hardness of silver wherever friction comes. In SUPER- in cither Jamestown or De Sancy, are the last word in taste. Either pat- PLATE these points of wear are pro- an extra deposit of pure HOLM oq tern is ong of which you will never tire, ¢ ; : Monufuciured sadluriody in Conada by The STANDARD SILVER CO. of Toronto, Limited ESFEDWARDS Da Bawcy

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