Daily British Whig (1850), 4 Dec 1920, p. 9

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CRE THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. 0S UFE ROME) BY DYSPEPSIA Until He Tried '"FRUIT-A-TIVES" | Helping the Other Fellow By the Rev. Charles Stelzle. State SOLVE THESE RIDDLES When a bear What is that FEE Aiming ..Waxe been told that there's no [doh thing as "the golden rule" in! business--that it's all a question of doing the-other fellow, and doing ft | first. Apd those who havé-quoted this | saying of David Harum's have thought it clever. Well--it sounds | smart, and there is-a certain type of | men who think it's smart. But they have another guess coming. i It wo.ld be too much to say that | the golden rule--to "do unto others as you would have them do unto you'---dominates business life. But there's more kindliness and manhood and square dealing in business than! most of us think. | For instance: some time ago a big paint maker's plant was burned | out--just as the season was to be- | gin. It was hard luck, for there wasn't time to secure and equip an- other building which would be at | all adequate. . i But the chief rival of this con- | cern notified its compittors that it | had a buflding which was not in | use, and to which the unfortunate | firm was welcome, ~ | This immediately brought relief and the business went right on with- out very much intérruption, re A Answer SLIM NU What is the di : Aa 1990 an 1899 cent? , ICE LENS DRY E YEAST ERE are four riddles for boys aad girls with What Others wise heads. We told the artist to draw the J hat Othe U Can Do ad 2 to represent the riddles, but he A , the right answers--and put them in tool Here are the names of only £ we barred him from the contest and told him | ® few of the boys and girls to to keep it a secret. Luckily, he got the answers | whom we have.already award- all jumbled up, 80 you won't be an the wiser, ed big prizes: it you can unscramble the jum letters be- neath each riddle picture and put them in their right order to spell the right words, you will have the right answers. It isn't an easy task. Good thinking, patience and perseverance may find you the answers. Try it. : If you think you have found the answers, write them carefully on a sheet of white paper. Put on notu.ng but your four answers and your name and address in the upper right-hand corner of the e. Handwriting, spelling, punctuation and general neatness will count il "more than one answer is correct. ; We will write and tell you immediately'if you are correct, and send you a 'handsome illustrated) list of all the prizes that you can win. : mn BR, FRANK HALL Wyevale, Ontario. "Por some two years, I was a sufferer from Chronic Constipation end Dyspepeia. I every remedy I heard of without suy suocess, watil the wife And the firm that had been so | 8 local metchant recommended generously assisted by its rival, with | wes', equal generosity purcnased pages of | + I procured a box of 'Fruit-a-tives' | advertising matter in trade journals | y telling about this spirit of the golden | Began ihe eatment; ue ™7 lrule which had been exhibited in i PTOY® | such a practical fashion. ° Don't you supose that this entire | The Dyspepsia ceased to be the | transaction Date a fine impression Second Prise, Real Typewriter... T'hrd-Prize, Genuine Autographic Kodak Folding Camera........... Fourth Prize, Magnificent Gold Watch and Chain or Girl's Fifth Prise, French Baby Doll and Wicker Carriage.........e....o...... Sixth Prise, Moving Picture Ma- chine, with Film Seventh tg Tenth Prises, Self-filler Fountain Pens. each...__8. _.. tar Watch ony and Cart .. $15.00 Bracelet Watch «+72. ...$10.00 Doll and Carriage une 20, 1921, 8t 5.30 p.m. Answer NICENETS N © a at a aI iat er may send answers, and each to perform a small service for ne. very evening to THE RIDDLEMAN 283.259 Spadine Ave.. Tarenta. Out. w Thomas A. Edison 'Wants To See An Amberola In YOUR Home This Christmas! upon the trade\and that it brought to the surface the better instincts of everybody who heard or read | about it? Don't be deceived Into believing that the comparatively few sharks in | business life are typical. They | aren't! There's more down-right | | good fellowship id decency among | | the mass of men than we know. | | It isn't preached about or exploi- | ted, mor is there a pietistic attitude | | assumed by those who might be cred- | I was froed of Constipation. I feel that I owe a great debt to Fruit-a-tives' for the benefit I derived from them." FRANK HALL. #0c.4 box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25¢. At all desl or sent postpaid by | ------- wv (> rd i | 7, ope imagine that God deals with His | 77 children less tenderly? | If we belong to this great brother- | hood, how can wo engage in unso- | cial actions? When the <mployer | avails himself unfairly of an oppor- | tuaity to so manipulate the market | or to control an industry as to throw | When | there! -And the rest of us may be things you ever did- | In2.\ Ils 4 poor observer of the tend- | 'mixed you Pills. Your mouth is a good indication |Praver--but do you know what it condition and single "I" or "my" in it. It is "Our" | se everrwhere PIL | into temptation, deliver "us" from | lis implied. that we belong to a great tea, | some wandering sons and daughters dren of our Fathér. We do not . . Healed Little Girl regard them ter .erly. "If ye then, | her head aiid they spread and they itched and' Fruitadives Limited, Ottews, Ont. | ited with the real stuff--but ite | our mout glad. . ike al » Taatey | "Good-will among men' is increas- together, then |©ncy of the times who doesn't see it. | need Beecham's You've often prayed the Lord's | of the of stomach bowels, | means? It is a social petition--it i a united appeal. There isn't a{ BEECHAM'S { Father, give us "our" Jaily bread, | | forgive us "'our" gins, lead "us" not | manda, j<--il. In boxes, 28¢., §0c. When men pray "Our" Fathe:, it | Smut Sule of Any Medicine in the Warld | 1, (TOF IP0o0 8% WE DRONE 10 a Front Father of us all. There may be i Mrs. A. Crawford of' in the wilds, but their wander- T i H v ing makes them none the less chil- els ow Cuticura disown our children when they have sinned. We love them still, and we | - being evil, know how to give good | My litle girl's trouble started gifts unto your children," does any- | with small pimples on the back of down her back. The pim- ples were bard and red burned terribly. She scratched and irritated them and they later de- *' veloped into sore erup- tions: Her hair fell vut and became thin and dry, and scales fell << on her clothing. 'I used a free sample of Cuticura and the pimples commenced to dry up. I bought more and when I had used one cake of Cuticura Soap and one box of Cuticura Ointment she was healed." (Signed) Mrs. Alonso Crawford, 83 Parker St, Bangor, Maine, Jan. 22, 1920. For every jose of the toilet and bath Cuticura Ointment and Talcum are wonderfully good. Last year many thousands. of families enjoyed an Amberola on" Christmas as the result of Mr. Edison's expressed. wish to bring music to every home in the land." This Christmas will witness more thousands of Edison's Amberola Phonographs in happy homes on Christmas morning, because you again have the oppor- tunity te own an Amberola practically on your own terms/ Just think what this means! EDISON'S NEW DIaMOND AMBEROLRBA it is up to us to make it possible for you to own sn Amberola right away! We are ready and willing to do so. We know the Christmas season is a drain on your resources--at this time you can- not make any big expenditure. Well, you won't have to! You can have an Amberola practically on your own terms! Let us know just how much or how little you can pay now, and what fu- ture payments will be most convenient and easy for : you--and we will work out a satisfactory arrange- ment. We insist on only one condition-- NS men and women or unduly increase | This is the christian way of getting to the mistress, the duty of the mis- | giveness of our sin, how can we be 1 want to help you if you are suffering the cost of living, the new testaient at the social problem. It isn't a | tress to the maid. unforgiving toward our brother? from - bleeding, itching, blind or pro- truding Lo does not say to him that he is depriving the' workingman of 3) question of rights but of duty--the duty of the employer to the em- | When we pray unitedly for daily bread, ..ow can we do anything that When we pray unitedly to be kept = | from temptation, how can we delib- Piles. I can tell you how, in pour own home and without anyone's out of employment large numbers of | rights--it insists that he has violated the law of love and of brotherhood. ployee, the duty of the employee to | the employer, the duty of the maid | - will deprive our bro .uer of his bread? RELIEF AT LAST When we pray unitedly for the for- erately put temptation in the path of our brother? wmssistance, you ean apply the best of . all treatments. . BAN No man can pray the Lord's pray- er and be-an individualist--he must be a brother, he must have the so- cial instinct. And yet, all these years perhaps, some of us have thought that this wonderfully perfect prayer was in- t>aded merely for ourselves and for | the supplying of our exclusive needs. | It was really given so that we might | help supply our brother's needs. Give us--forgive us-- lead us--de- liver us--this is the petition of true brotherhood and neighborliness. LJ -. » * I PILES Wout" 4 promise to send you a FREE trial of Re. ive ea 1 Tou | ferences own if you wi Eri ah cate 1 assure you immediate relief. Send mo money, a a ad is the world's gremtest phonograph value--per- fected in every detail by the inyentor-of the pho- nograph! The Amberola has proved its superior- ity over high-priced *'talking machines" and com- mercial phonographs in numerous public tests! And you can own this wonderful Phopgers you and your family can enjoy its exq music this Christmas right in your home--eventhough you haye felt you could not yet afford a phonograph! Remember, as Mr. Edison's authorized dealer, we are bound to carry out the spirit of his wish-- Immediately. to ofir store or write t9 us at once--every minute is valuable. E Ast fr our A te we be exhausted and we may have to disappoint you. - If {7 you want an Amberols in your home Christmes mortiing, call or write today--tomorrow-- pleas The J. M. GREENE MUSIC CO. LIMITED : "The Home of Good Muse™ Pancess Ries. Most of us have a sincere desire to serve others. But ths equipment to do so effectively doesn't come merely through the processes of edu- cation. We may have earned the right to use a slice of the alphabet as long as one's arm after one's name, but something beyond even this is required. Omnce there was a man named Moses. He was very wcll éducated. He was "learned in all the wisdom, of the Egyptians." And that was some "learning," even for those days. Maybe they called him "Dr." Moses, too. He was a prince by adoption, and no doubt the faculty gave him every possible chance to push ahead. When he finished his course, Moses was just as ambitious to succeed as most men to-day. But, unfortun- ately, he killed a keeper whom he saw abusing a brick-maker--a fel- Jow-countryman of his. It isn't | likely that Moses actually planned | to' commit 'wmurder--he was carried away by his feelings. So God spoke to Moses. He sent Eim away behind the mountain to become a shepherd; and re- mained there forty years, just tend- | Y p : lug little Jamia. Suite a come-down > LE . " or 4 man with a lot of colloge da Ton, Roh} S gros, wast it. But Moses learned - = his lesson. He needed to learn the . Lp value of humility, of patience. And . hg learned his lesson well. . There are some great truths that { - UNIQUE GROUERY AND MEAT MARKET RAISINS-CURRANTS-PEELS FIGS--DATES -- PRUNES -- WINE -- MEAT -- CANNED SCN pr. 1, N PS At Bunker's Hill, left for the mica mines. Sanford) An seroplané thet cam be used Bunker's Hill, Dec. 3.--Mr. Greg- through. Every ome of us should 8 5 Leeman is drawing up his winter's | either as 'a monoplane or biplase ness, and thus through our tempor ed covet this process of completion. ary h we become FRUITY amd VEGETABLES, Co PICKERING, Prop. 170 wad 492 Priniess Street. Phose 330. come 0 @s in thd stress of life. kat there are others--and perhaps they count for most in the ¥nd--that are ! borne in upon us in solitude, Sonie- { times the only way that thess truths | come to us is through a period o* ili - But once 1h a while it is givea to men to go amide awhile for quiet thought, free from the rush of our artificial life. And from their soli- tude they come forth leaders because ~ Whether it is college training or con- ceit or success or fatigue hat is handicapping us--it's a good thing to follow the example 9! the grest leaders of every age, and go aside i they've bad a chance to think things' for undisturbed meditation. ory held a meeting at Smith's Cor- ners last Sunday. Warner Switzer is down fro.a Latchford on his vaca- tion and is with his sop Pliph. Mr. {ana Mrs. Sanford Leeman are at Ralph Switser's. Richard Wilson has (to establish a ladies' rest room.. wood. The hunters are all back {has been designed by a French suto- from their deer hunt. : B. Hoppin | mobile bujider, and wife are at Richard Wilson's. B 3 3 A shears attachment for sip joint The Smi's Falls U.F.O. proposes | pliers that will cut fairly heavy metal I bas been invented. ; >

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