11 FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 1921 Canada Life Assurance Co. Established in 1847--*A Hous echold Word im Canada" L ! Rive any person of character and willing to «work a special canvass for life insuran ce, and at the same time Rive a free ip course--"Splesman™-- the power that helps to make good. TED--Two or three bright young men to join our forces on asis recited. If willing to ma ke your future satisfactory, apply now for & contract and take this w onderful course A personal inters view desired and application taken Dy i= 'J. 0. HUTTON General Agent, Canada Life Assurance Company, KINGSTON, ONTARIO THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. OHN H. BERNS, of Cincinnati, Joe vem Mr. Beaver--Dam and Empire Builder [TRE CARE Fine Wagon vite I . THAT COUGH a ------ ee -- ------ ee ------ a J 4 Bp | Some people get a nasty cough and | : - {don't pay much attention to it, say- "Oh, g: it will wear away in a hort time," but while it may wear | [, serious injury may have been | tone to the lungs and respiratory or- | | gans by the prolonged, harsh, rack- ing coughing. | On the first sign of a cough or cold | { Bet' a bottle of Dr. Wood's Norway | | Pine Syrup. It will stop that pasty, | troublesomg cough, ease the tightness | across the chest, and loosen the! phlegm. Mrs. Wm. Earnshaw, Apsley, Ont., 1 . = writes: --*"Last winter I caught a bad | 1 , : cold, had a sore throat and a terrible | hacking cough that I could not get | ° / rid of. 1 could not sleep at night. | I: tried quite a few remedies, but | they did not do me much good until | I got Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. | By the time I had taken two bottles, | my cough was all gone. I feel that | "Dr. Woodis has no equal." When you get Dr. Wood's Norw i Pine Syrup, you are not experiment- | Ing with new and untried remedy, | but one that has a reputation extend. ing over thirty years. | Put up in a'yellow wrapper; three | pine trees the trade mark; price 35¢. | 67 CLARENCE STRERT raone 708. WINTER WEATHER DEMANDS YOUR ATTENTION You cannot experiment with your car in winter weather--necessity demands prompt atfention to your battery and radiator. Your Battery, if not fully charged, will freeze up. ' Our Battery Dept. One ct the most up-to-date and efficient in the FACTS! "My friends are all astonished over my wonderful restoration to health since taking Tanlac," said John H. Berns, of 308 East Front 8t., Cincinnati, Ohio, recently. "I don't know what it is, but there is something about Tanlac that certainly does the work," he said, "and I firmly believe if it hadn't been for this medicine I wouldn't be here now. It completely restored my health and I have gained twenty pounds besides. I have a splendid appetite now, and can eat anything I want without being troubled in the least afterwards. "Before taking Tanlac my health was dreadfully rundown. My main trouble was indigestion, and I suf- fered misery night and day. I never med hungry and the little I ate upset my stomach. I was ner- vous and couldn't get a good night's sleep. I lost thirty-four pounds and was going down hill rapidly. H seemed like the more medicine I took the worse I got. 'But since taking Tanlac I am like a brand-new man. I sléep like a farm band all night and feel just | fine all day. In fact I'm a perfect- ly well man once more. Tanlac cer- tainly beats anything I ever saw .in my life." ~ Tanlac is sold in Kingston by A. P. Chown, in Mountain Grove by © James Macdonald, and by the lead- 4 Stomach, frequent ing druggists in every town.---Advt. PPP Pdr d bide i Catarrh 1Of the Stomach ils Dangerous ousands Have It and Don' Know It," Says Physician. Fre- quently Mistaken for Indiges- tion--How To Recognize and. Treat. TERE REPRO Rb bby '""Thotisands of people suffer more or less constantly from furred, coat- ed tongue, bad breath, sour burning vomiting, rum- bling in stomach, bitter eructations, gas, wind and' stomach acidity and call it #pdigestion when in reality their trouble is due to gastric catarrh of the stomach," writes a New York physician. Catarrh of the stomach is danger- ous because the mucous membrane lining of the stomach is thickened and a coating of phlegm covers the surface so that the digestive fluids cannot mix with the food and di- gest them. This condition soon breeds deadly disease in the ferment. 7 ed, unassimilated food. The blood is polluted and carries the .infection throughout the body. Gastric ul- cery are apt to form and frequently an ulcer is the first sign of a deadly cancer, In catarrh of the stomach a good |. * and safe treatment is to take before meals a teaspoonful of pure Bisurat- ed Magnesia in half e glass of hot water as hot as you can comfortably drink ft. The hot water washes the mucous from the stomach walls and draws the blood to the stomach while the bisurated magihesia is an excel- lent solvent for mucous and increases the efficiency of the hot water treat- ment. Moreover the Bisurated Mag- nesia will serve as a powerful but harmless antacid which will neutral- ize any excess hydrochloric acid that may be in your stomach and sweeten its food contents. Easy, natural di- gestion without distress of £ny kind ~ should soon follow. Bisurated Mag- nesia is not a laxative, is harmless, pleasant and easy to take and can be obtained from any local druggist. Don't confuse Bisurated " Magnesia with other forms of magnesia, milks, citrates, etc., but get it in the pure bisurated form (powder or tablets), especially prepared for this pur- pose. \ If a man happens to wake up two three times after he hits the hay Ro goes around next day and tells everybody that he didn't sleep a wink all night. Of course, it is none of our busi- mess. But the world wouldn't be missing much if a skinny girl would fasten her waist up over her more. or-less Perfect 36, change A measure, Columbus did not seek pelts when discovered Intellectuals on Bolshevism HANGING views of Labor and of social and political ecohomy are being illustrated in terma of the sea. Before the Russi... revolution of 1817 Maxim Gorky told a story of the first impression of the ocean upon a primitive mind. A young peasant from far inland stands for the first time in his life at the edge of the sea. The scene strikes him silent for a moment, and then his feelings find vent in the words, "'Q, if all that water were black soil for me to plough!" Pierre Mille, an "advanceq" French writer, tells of a similar incident when he himseif took a child to the 8¢éa for the first time. "The little boy was not surprised; he did not ex- elaim, but simply remarked that that water was a river with only one bank. "It is "La Revue des Deux Mon- | des," a famous French monthly, that ! tells the second incident. The Weekly Review of New York is surprised that the French journal | should publish the views of the boy | who considered the ocean a river with | only one bank, for, it says, the story | reads like a parable of Bolshevism, | in displeasing contrast with the ear- | lier Gorky story of the sea as an in- | spirer of Labor. { This is how the Weekly Review | figures it out, and what it thinks about such jdeas: | *"This sort of thing," it says, "is in the air. But we are surprised that | the Revue des Deux Mondes, paife- | dium of the future. of French culture by virtue of its reverent devotion to the great traditions of the past, should be accessible to this fashion. able toying with the primitive, which ie, in the sphere of art and literature, & symptom of that same sentimental- ism that sees in the unsophisticated moujik the political leader of the Western world." "To the Russian proletarian," con- tinues the Weekly Review, "the prob. lems of political economy are no less simple and easy to solve than was the geographical phénomenum of the sea to the child-teacher of the French author." Brought to the perception of that sea of misunderstanding and con- flicting interests which divid. 'Labor and Capital, the primitive ussian says, like Pierre Mille's little boy, "That water is a iver with only one bank, and that bank is Labor." And thus, he thinks, is belied the force of accustomed political economy. "The word reformers of Lenine's type," feels the Weekly Review, "trusting against their better knowl- edge to the primitive instinet, go to work as if the other shore did not exist and the dividing sea were not crossed by innumerable lines of com- munication binding Labor and Capi- tal as indissolubly together ss this continent is bound up with the na" tions on the other side of the ocean." The Weekly Review bemoans the in workers, Russian and others, from those who ed that the sea were land for plough- ing to those 'unproductive ph mongers," presuming to reform the world from. 'which they have isolated themselves by the fiction. that oppo- site Labor's shore there lies no other. A different attitude towards Lenin is shown by Frank Harris, in Pear- i son's, when he exclaimed, "Lenin and | Trotzky, by faith and fervor, in two years have changed the face of the world and tbe destinies of mankind, filling the poor and the outcasts and the dispossessed wii: the enthusiasm tismal certificate with the end of his tomahawk the St. Lawrence would Er ros aud. but or reaches which yammer- ed and screeched with beavers. The French founded Montreal with bell book and beaver skip--the ori i name of the city was Hochelaga. which means "Beaver Meadow." B'rer Beaver even became the med- fum of exchange, even as tobacco in the early days of Virginia, and no Indian could buy the coveted you or the necklace his Minnehaha longed for without the precious peits. Canada received its start as the or a great hope.' - The New Republic attributes to Lenin a quite unusdl "ability." Harold Stearns sees in Lenin 'cold logic and outright impersonality of | re- | expression." Norman "Hapgood fers to Lenin's unusually "powertul | intellect." | The Weekly Review is surprised {at the "many laudations of Lenin | which appear in insurgent books and | periodicals," and feels that those whe | sympathize with him are 'suscept- { ible souls." | The National Review (London) | says that love for the Bolsheviks may | be difficult for the average being eh- jdowed with the usual modicum of | brains to understand, but it admits {that it exists in a certain type of | individual, for all that. "The collective intellect of the | London Daily News," it gives as an | example, "extends to the Bolsheviks | that charfty which covers a multi- tude of sins; that of the London | Daily Herald--if one can call it in- | telligence -- feels for anything Red | passeth all understanding." | Dr. Frank Crane, referring to the { Bolshevik refugees disclosed by the | Polish advance as "human scum," | declares the scene furnished a shat- and revolutionary that love which | i tering proof of the abomination of | desolation underlying the theories of shevism. Stn For TENDER SKINS \ ND ¢ SORE HANDS K&N winds make the skin harsh and rough. Lips get sore; hands crack and chap; faces itch and smart and "break out into those blotchy eruptions known as winter eczema. 0 restore the skin to a clear, healthy flexibility there's nothing like Zam-Buk. "Rub it into the face, urms and wrists at night-- let it work while you sleep. Zam+Buk's hefined herbal essences soak into, and purify the tissues. soothe irritation and smarting pain; heal raw Sore surfaces and prevent 'infection "* of .the brakes Jin. Cold-creams with no di- land of furs and particularly beaver. Civilisation followed the trapper and trader, and as the fur trade worked ever northward, the white men went with it, developed new territory and established new outposts in the con- quest of the wilderness. : fmportan ge. Within the last year a at was erganind in Montreal with a capital of $5,000,000 to con- duct fur auctions and is becoming a t fur market as well as the world's great fur producer-- and beaver is still the staple of the fur trade. AMATEUR BOVIETS. Satirical Article Written by Well | known Canadian Humorist. What is the best weapdbn against | Bolshevism? A machine gun in your cellar, or a laugh on your face? | | There are some earnesi people in | Canada who, not long ago, were urg- ing the private machine gun method, | although somehow .ney did not look | [like citizens particularly adept in | shooting. i | Other Canadians believe in the | | "laugh" theory. There may be a middle. course.and neither extreme group may be right, but the "take it | lightly" contingent have the support | of Stephen Leacock. r= Stephen Leacock, in "Vanity Fair" | | describes, in his satirical vein, the | organization of "our little soviet* in i an apartment house. | The way they got the idea was by | hearing so constantly how the Soviet system us working, and the great things it Was doing. Leacock had a | friend who belonged to the same | mandolin club as he did, and who | always used to say when things went | | wrong, 'now under Soviet govern- | { ment this sort of thing couldn't happen." vind This idea was so prevalent that! | Leacock and his friends spoke about | the matter to a certain Globenski, | who told them how to organize a! | Soviet, and generously offered to be | dictator 'himself. ! | This Globenski used to mend shoes | | but he said he had grown sick and ! | tired of the capitalist regime and bourgeois society. He said he had | no wish to take part in capitalism | any more. ! Leacock and his cronies went to | Globenski, and said: "Globenski, do you hnow how to make a Soviet?" "I do." . "How much will a Soviet for us?" "I will take nothing. The Soviet is based on love. I will do it for love." » Then he rose from his bench and kissed them. "It was wonderful," says Leacock. Globenski moved into the apart- ment house chosen as the locale of the Soviet. The new communal! methods "effected a striking change of life. Instead of the nasty seifish- ness of each family living in its awn | little den, like hostile aninmls, the whole building was now open to them "We go where we like," explains the Montreal writer. "Only last night three of the comrades sat in my room beside my bed after I retired, and Sang Russian songs by the hour. Under the old, selfish regime, I should "have slept--as it was, I didn't." If a comrade, under this new sys- tem, wants food, he takes it. Three nights ago Leacock woke up and saw & comrade looking into his iée-box. 'What is it, brother?" 'he asked, mildly. - "Cold ham, comrade. Hast thou any?" : ke, and take gladly," Leacock replied, As a matter of fact, he had eaten 'all the ham before the comrade came up, but it illustrates the prineiple of the thing. ° When a brother feels that he can work no longer in bourgeois society, all that he haf to do is to go before Globenski and hold up his two hands and say: "Look, brother, I work no longer', And Globenski says: "1 notice that you doen't" To ledrn Russian is a but dificult. Globenski is teaching little oral phrases, such as, "Have I the property of my brother?" "No, bus I mighty soon mean to." ; is apartment house Soviet wrote to Comrade Lenine, and received the ivan letter. He said hé kissed them i | you take to make | a---------------------- Vanity of women looks like a olagged nickel when compared to the «nd 60c. a bottle, manufactured only | by The T. Milbura Co., Limited, To- | city, will give you .the maximum efficiency at a min'mui cost. ronto, Ont. AT CR Ra conceit of men. i Our Repair Shop Under our new foreman, direct from Moore's Garage, Toronto, will give you prompt expert re- pairs at the lowest possible cost, consistent with ex- pert workmanship. Est'mates given. NOW is the time to make arrangements fos winter repair work. All work guaranteed. Mahogany and Walnut Furniture not Ynly lasts longer, looks nicer,\and cost less in the long run. It will pay you to investigate, Winter Storage We nave room for a few cars. can be made by phoning 600. KINGSTON AUTO SALES C0 Limited Reservations CABINET MAKERS and POLISHERS on the premises--Mr. Frank Summerville, who remodels and repairs--he is an expert. LESSES, Antique Shop 507 Princess Street Phone ,1045w, Did His Best. . y The prison visitor was going her "Ah! 1 s@ppose if you had fought rounds. just a little harder you wouldn't be "Have you ever struggled against | here to-day?" the consequences of temptation?' she "Well, ma'am," said the prisoner, inquired of one ferocious-looking fel- | modestly, "I did the best I could. It low. took [ive policemen to get me to the "Yes, ma'am, I have," he answer- | station!" ed rans ATTEND TOMORROW OUR WEEK-END SALE Abramson's for best quality merchandise plus Unusual Values. Goods positively sold disregarding replacement cost. The Old Man Dollar ($) has worked its way back so pluckily that no matter what you'll buy in our establishment it spells. BARGAIN True Values That Cannot Be Beaten. | MEN'S WORK PANTS A fine range of Tweeds and Wor- steds; guaranteed good wearing materials, ~ MEN'S COATS The season's best -- a few odd lines left in Tweeds, Frieze and Meltons; made up in Ulsters, Chesterfields and Form-Fitting. Regular prices from $30.00 to $50.00. Sale Price: $19.50 to $33.50 "MEN'S SUITS In fine and winter weight mater- ials; in good Tweeds, Worsteds, - and Serges; made up in conserva- tive and form-fitting models. Reg. $25; Sale Price . . . . $16.50 Reg. $35; Sale Price . . . . $24.50 Reg. $45; Sale Price . . . . $34.50 -MEN'S MITTS and GLOVES Reg. $4.00; Sale Price . . .$2.95 Reg. $6.00; Sale Price . ...$3.95 OVERALLS Heavy-weight Demin in Black and Stripes. Regular $3.00 and $3.50. Saijiisice ...... $245 MEN'S FURNISHINGS Neat patterns; all sizes. Reg. $3. Saturday ............. $1.55 Socks in grey, tan and black; double heel and toe. Reg. 50c. Saturday . . . . .3 pairs for $1.00 Arrow Collars : Work Mitts, broken lines;; reg. up to $1.25 pair. Sale Price ......50¢c. and 75c¢. Heavy lined Mitts--Horse, Buck and Mule Skin; reg. up to $2.50 95c. to $1.45 BOYS' COATS - That old coat looks shabby. Get him a new one made up in belt- ed and plain models; in all Wool Frieze and NF oecde Don't miss this opportunity; only a few Coats left. Reg. up 20 $22.00. Sale Price . . . .$12.45 to $14.45 LADIES' FOOTWEAR High Cut Shoes in black and tan ve Cuban and Spool heels: in all lasts. Reg. values up to $12.50 Sale Price "ese $4.95 to $8.45 All shapes and sizes. Reg. 35c. Sale Price .).........../25¢ MEN'S BOOTS A splendid range of Footwear in blycher and long lasts, with lea- ther and neolin soles; reg. values up to $12.00. Sale Price . . ... $4.85 to $7.45 Men's Slippers in all' Felt and Kosey Comfort Soles. Reg. up to $3.00. Saturday .... $1.40 and $1.65 BOYS' SUITS A most complete range of Boys' Suits in all grades and sizes; made up in belted and plain mod- els with Governor Fasteners; reg. rices up to $18.50. ice ....35.95 to $12.45 eh " Louis Abramson, The Up-to-the-Minute Clothier and Furnisher, 336 Princess Street Next to the Royal Hotel.