Daily British Whig (1850), 7 Jan 1921, p. 13

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JANUARY 7, 1021, FRIDAY, BCT) TTT Ya RL o 2 Led \ LIMB SAVED by ZAM-BUK ! **A stab from an ordinary sewing needle started my poisoned arm," writes Miss S. A. Wernicke, of Hilton, B.C. Doesn't this prove again, how easily poisonous infection finds its way into the tiniest cut, scratch or abrasion? Don't run into similar dangers! With Zam-Buk as your everyday healer you are prepared for any injury or skin trouble. Zam: Buk promptly ends pain, swelling and inflammation. It purifies and safe- guards the damaged tissues against disease--It means perfect antiseptic healing every time was not long before grew less. Wil the inflammation ar matter the pain severance all poisonous Ia her letter Miss Wernicke says :--" This needle went so far into my"finger that it pierced the bone. My hand became so stiff and swollen that I could not use it I naturally tried every remedy I| knew of, but it only got worse | and herbal tir Bload-poison developed and ex-! fais, no crt tended right up into my arm Ihefuay you get in ordinary © pain was intense and I certai Zam-Buk for sore hands, thought I would lese t imb, for! 1a, chilblaine and also in burns and lceration, abscesses, scalp gworm, and for piles, 1, and sweilen joiats wis dra eczeq ite swollen state, and literaliycovered with lumps. A friend advised me to use Zam-Buk which I did, and/| You can get Zam-Buk from any druggist or dealer SEND at §0c..3 Boxes for $1.25, or direct from Zam-Buk Co., Dupon Tercate. A trinl sample will be T sent vd iy BD if you name this paper. 0-DAY! rey TRE DEERE A PP PP cl A Alumninum Wares Specials SATURDAY + i COMMENCING we offer a 13 quart Aluminuin Double Boiler for (regular price, $2.50), and A set of 3{<-1 and 2 quart Lipped Sauce Pans for (regular sprice, $2.50. THESE ARE "VERIBEST" ALUMINUM-----guaranterd equal to the best. A full line of ALUMINUM and PYREX COOKING UTEN to be had at:-- VSILS Cp Een LEMMON & SONS 187 PRINCESS ST. ® M ILLER'S oO BELIEVE WY RESTLESS CONDITION BROUGHT OR BY THE PRESENCE OF WORMS AND RESTORE THE CHILD TO NORMAL HEALTH. NO NARCOTICS ~PLEASANT AS SUGAR ~ Rural Service Department | Special attention given to Farmers' problems. Use our Rural Exchange Service. | If you have Kvestock, feed or seed grain to sell, or wish to purchase, list it on our Bulletin Board. Auction Sale Registers furnished free of charge. Have you received one of our Farmer's Account Books? Have you been My lied with a "Breeding and Feeding Chart'? THE i Head Office : Montreal. OF NADA Established 1864. H. A: TORE: Manager. NT, Manager. FARA VERONA AND ARDEN BRANCHES, J. W. McCLYMO + Mountain Grove spen Fri Es Grr sven Filer, , =The Modern Method of Treating an Old Complaint Nujol works on an entirelymew prin- ciple. Without forcing or irritating, it softens the food waste. This enables the many tiny muscles in the walls of theintestines, contracting and expand- ing intheir normal way, to squeeze the food waste along and out of the system. It is absolutely harmless and pleasant to take, Try it. 01 ST -- THE DAILY BRITIS SH WHIG. Graves of Brave Exil | 00600C4OGOOOOVOOTTIOTLND HE tiny graveyard at Moose 'Factory on James Bay Is a patch of neglected ' wilder- ness, unkempt as the tangled bush that starts within "a stone's throw and stretches uniended and untenanted for countless miles, less , natural and not nearly so old. The snow of a long, drear winter now covers it in a shroud of soft white beauty, burying dead weeds and hid- ing the tragedy of fallen tombstones. But when I saw it-- Weeds, a fine, full crop of them, the height of a Juan's waist, lay on the face of it like a noxious growth, turning what might have been a trim treasured little "God's acre" into a neglected dump heap. A rough wooden railing encircled it with an ashamed hall-heartedness. Some of the stones lay prone on their faces or backs as if trying to hide. Others leaned forward or sideways as if looking for support. The only pretty things about .it were a profusion of red berries, the seed of the wild rose, and a few scattered daisies, which seemed to apologize for their failure | to beautify entirely this dead patch of death. Yet some of the dead had lain | there for more than a hundred years. And many of them were brave ser- ! vants of a great company, who had ! given their lives in the harsh lone- liness of long winters and far away exile, Just inside the gate to the left is a fine white stone, the finost and the whitest of the whole collection, a monument of note. By peering through the weeds the following in- scription could be read: "Sacred to the memory of Alex- | ander McDonald, factor, Honorable Hudson Bay Company. Obit. Tth | July, 1875. Aetat 44 years. 'Sown in corruption, raised in glory." This monument has been erected by his personal friends of the Honorable Hudson Bay Company." May you sleep sweelly Alixander McDonald in your bed in the shadow of your fine white stone! Scotsmen have sometimes found less. gentle graves than a wead-patch on the edge of the Arctic Circle, and have oft times lacked a marking for the spot where they died. Here is another: "In memory of Robert Story Robe ins, some years surgeon at Moose Factory, who was born the first day of April, 1779, at Itteringham, in the County of Norfolk, in Great Britain, and died the eighteenth day of Octo- ber, 1807, much regretted by all who knew him." It is a long trail from an English home of a century and a half ago to a present day grave at the edge of the northern sea, a great long trail of years and years, of .an ocean, of rivers and bush -- and there is nothing but weeds at the end of it. Still Englishmen during the centuries have passed out in stranger places where even weeds won't grow. And another, the greatest perhaps, and the saddest of them all, the story of the death of four little children told faintly on a weather-beaten stone through the maze of creeping weeds: "To the memory of "Edward Thomas. He was born Feb. 18, 1801, and died July 25, 1802. "Such is the Kingdom of Heaven. "Mary Thomas, born July 28, o1 "Lost among the ice together with an Indian family, Oct. 24, 1802. "From spdden death Good Lord | deliver us. "Richard Edward Thomas, | Feb. 13; dled Dec. 13, 1802. "Buffer the Little Children to come unto Me. "Jane Thomas, born Oct died Sept. 1, 1806. "The Lord giveth and hath taken away." Four babies all dead | years! | strong enough to face the rigors of | their birthplace. And so their un- | soiled souls passed out in turn, unto | | the smiling beauty of God's Great Garden, and all that is left of their | dust clings to the roots of weeds, | born M1804; the Lord |! from which they are manufactured, | tion, inside five | Their little lives were not | | i | What a pitiful tragedy of over a cen- | | tury ago! And I had to kneel down | and brush aside the tangle to read | of the courage that wrote after the | | fourth . baby's death: giveth and the Lord hath away," and with dim eyes taken and a "The Lord | | I tried all sorts of cures, which did | throb in the throat, I wondered why | | they did not finish the text and add | "Blessed be the Name of the Lord." Perhaps they knew that years to come the choking weeds would prevent it being seen at the bottom of the stone.-- Fred. G. Gril- | aa ia Toronto Star Weekly. i i Niobe Is Sold. One "of the interesting deals re- | | cently. consummated in Eastern Can- !ada was announced by Joseph A. Garson, | New Brunswick Rolling Mills. It | includes the purchase of H.M.S. | Niobe and two submarines, the C.C.-1 | and the C.C.-2, now at H.M.S. dock- | yards at Halifax. The submarines | will be towed to St. John, N.B., and | docked at the rolling mill wharf, | where they will be dismantled. I is not yet certain what will be done with the Niobe. ------------ Trans-Canada Air Route. With alrdromes marked out every | fifty miles and with wireless coatrol | nig to prevent a alr service between Halifax and Van- couver, according to Gen. A. K. Tylee, alr commodore, who has just com- pleted a trans-Canada flight. Gen. Tylee flew from Winnipeg to Van- couver as a passenger during the re- cent flight, and was greatly impressed with the possibilities of eloping a commercial cross-Canada servige, By using the circulating brine sys- tem refrigerator motor truck bodies bave been perfected in whith less than 10 per cent. of the loading space is 'required for the Igeietation ap- paratus. According to British engineers, by utilizing the available water supply Mesopofantia could irrigate 7,000,- 000 acres for winter crops and from 1,000,000 to 3,000,400 for summer ones. he | taking only a few doses." 4 | managing director of the | | of the planes, there would be noth- | ular forty-hour | poet te er ee etn A HUNDRED YEARS AGO. ! Unrest In England After Napoleonic | y Wars. i Sir Sidney Lee recalls in the Lon-| don Daily Telegraph a #hifeing par- allel between the social cdhdition of England to-day and the pefiod the Napoleonic War. The ver language was used. Here is an ex- ampie from a century-old Loudon paper: { "During the patriotic fervor common danger for the checked in England domestic tion, whether in political, social, in | dustrial, or economic spheres. But no sooner had the Battle of Waterloo brought the prolonged military conm- | fliet to a glorious conclusion than political, ¢oeial, industrial, and] economic dwscontent, which had besn temporarily stifled, found trumpet- tongued expression. | "The temper of the middle class, within eighteen months of the stir- ring victory of Waterloo, may be gauged by the action of the Common Counteil of the City of London, which, | in December, 1816, addressed the Prince Regent in térma like these: ' 'Distress and misery are no long- | er limited to one portion of the Em- | pire, and under their (rresistible | pressure the. commercial, agricul- tural, 'and manufacturing interests! are equally sinking. We can, sir, no longer support out of our dilapidated | resources the overwhelming load of | taxation. Our grievances are the natural effect of rash and ruinous wars, unjustly commeneed and-per- tinac'ously persisted in, where no rational object was to be attained; of immense subsidies . to foreign Napoleonic wars, and the sense afpa most part agita= | powers to defend their own terri- | tories or to commit aggressions on those of our neighbors; of a delusive paper currency; of a long course of the most lavish and improvident ex-! peaditure of the public money throughout every branch of the Government.' "8ych' was the language of re- sponsible citizens. Incendiary agita- tors improved on ita resolute .tones. Prophets foretold a social upheaval | in England corresponding with the French Revolution of 1789. storm was in due time weathered," says Sir Sydney Lee, settlement was gradually reached by the conflicting interests. The grained ple for law and order finally rejected extreme counsel, while conservative suspicion of all innovation was over- ruled." A Good Silver Polish. The basis of 'most prepared silver { polish is Ireiich whiting, a fine white | powder. It Is much cheaper to buy the whiting and make your own silver pollsh. Wash the sliver In hot sonp- suds and wipe it. Lay a paper on the table. Put some of the whiting in a | saucer 'and add enough ammonia or diluted alcolicl to make a paste. ' Rub this over the silver with a soft cloth | and lay the silver on a paper to dry. When you have finished this rub the whiting off with a clean soft cleth Then polish the silver with a camels alli, It is sasy to be gencrous of an- 1 Pill a Laxative, gi 2 Pills a Cathartic, 3 Pills a Purgative This is the Way Milburn's Laxa- | Liver Pills Work. You will never use any of the old | griping, nausegying, sickening, purg- | ing pills, containing as they do calo-| mel and other drastie mireral ingre- dients, once you use Milburn's Laxa- Liver, a pill that is purely vegetable, Owing to the great care used in procuring the highest grade of drugs | they are as near perfect as it is pos-| sible to get a laxative .remedy. They work gently and effectively, | without a gripe or pain. if you are troubled with constipa. biliousness; driven to distrac- tion with sick headaches, if your tongue is coated, your breath bad, your complexion muddy, your eyes |'yellow, have floating specks before the eyes, jaundice, itching, bleeding or protruding piles, stir up your slug- gish liver with a few doses of Mil- burn's Laxa-Liver Pills. Mrs. Roy Mackie, Orillia, Ont. writes:-- "I desire to, express my thanks for the relief I have had by using Milburn"s Laxa-Liver Pills. I had been suffering for some time irom constipation and bad headaches. me no good, until I was advised to try your pills. I got great relief after Price 25¢. a vial at all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of price by The: T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toron- to, Ont. ToCure aCold in One Day Grove's Laxative Bromo wu Quinine tablets Be sure its Bromo =g Yet the | ""A peaceful | in- | respect of the English peo- | | | | other man's money. | I Sr i A A AA A AA A A AA AA AA AAA AAA "VETCRAFT" (The Handiwork of Disabled Veterans) E. WARBURTON 79 Princess St, Opposite Bibbys from our superb floor lamps, complete consisting of :-- etc., etc. We are carrying a stoc BASKET WORK, KEWE IES, etc, etc. Shop Early. Compare Prices. Invited. Walk Down the Street for a Change. Everything suitable for Xmas. presents $27.50 to little flaxen haired dolls at 20c. In additior to genuine Vetcraft products REED and COPPER WORK, LAMPS, SHADES, LEATHER WORK; TOYS, k of JAPANESE Inspection Williamson & Wellwood Tailors -- | { | | Try us for your next Suit or Overceas { Style and fit guaranteed. | Our own personal attention is given | to all orders. | 30 MONTREAL STREET | Two Doors From King Kdward Theatre { -- Cadillac Electric (leaner STILL ON TOP ~The only machine on the market, with a galf-cooling motor. J. R. C. Dobbs & Co. 41 Clavence Street, Ki Typewriter Headquarters, Phone 819. at { | All parts of the belladonna plant are poisonous. --Our'second Annual Sale. 184 Princess St. A TT i SNA i rT Big Reduction Sale ---Your opportunity to buy good Shoes at reduced prices. . ---We must reduce our big stock of Boots and Shoes. - -See our windows. The Sawyer Shoe Store Phone 159 TREE CETERA ERR | -- the requirements of the motor car car he drives. ly guarantee. BOYD'S GARAGE handling of cars of any make, turns out THE GOLD STANDARD OF VALUES Our stock room carries a full line of Reo replacements, parts, which insures the ownersof this car prompt service at all times, and our accessory department is fully stocked to meet owner, regardless of the All battery work is carefully and efficiently attended tc, --2nd our repair shop, which is fully equipped to facilitate the work which we absolute-

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