Daily British Whig (1850), 19 Mar 1921, p. 9

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SATURDAY, MARCH 19, 1921. THE DAILY BRIT!SH WHIG. 8 TE 8) a cup of Cocoa" Good at any hour of the day Baker's Cocoa is especially dood in the evening a short time before retirind. lis flavor is delicious, its aroma most attractive, and it is condu- cive fo restful sleep wit being in any sense 73 of ihe word. a Absolutely p a 'Walter Baker & Co. 11d, ESTABUSHED 1780, ADA, DORGIESTER MASS. LHL _--- £0 LTT BOOKLET OF CHOICE RECIPES SENT FREE 3 EE SEET aero as amended Nov. 10, 1919 0 : ratify a new federal law, namely, the Canada Temperance Act, as recently amended by Dominion Parlia- ment. = =] HIS Referendum on April 18 is to If a majority of the people of Ontario vote in favor of the Canada Temperance 'Act as amended, then, in the exact words of the law, it follows: No Person Shall Import "No person shall import, send, take or e transport into such province any in- toxicating liquor. 1 or Manufacture or Sell for Importation 2 "No person shall, either directly or e indirectly, manufacture or sell, or contract or agree to manufacture or sell, any intoxicating liquor to be unlaw- fully imported, sent, taken or transported into such province. or Transport Save by Public Carrier 3 "The carriage or importation of intox- e icating liquor through such province shall only be by means of a common carrier by water or by railway and not otherwise, and during the time any intoxi- cating. liquor is being so transported or carried no person shall open or break or allow to be opened or broken, any package or vessel containing such intoxicating liquor, or drink, or! use or allow to be drunk or used any intoxicating liquor there- from." Except for Permitted Purposes _ NOTE.--This law does not prohibit importation of liquors to be used for sac- ramental, medicinal, manufacturing or commercial purposes, or the importation of such liquors as are permitted to be sold by the laws of the Province. The Question to be Submitted : "Shall the importation and the bringing of intoxicating liquors into the Province be forbidden?" Vote and vote "YES" Close the door to imported "booze" Ontario Referendum Committee i ter a et ses. A girl will marry a man because sue feels sorry for him. Then she'll prt in the rost of her time teeling | him. sorry for hersell. A lot We do not aa ¥ WMGca. But we. do, through haven't much to show. know that a man'sialibi never seems as plausible to his wife as it does to of the girls who show JUST COMMON FOLKS By the Rev, It was the hour when the streets | of uptown New York were jammed "with workers who have been disgorg- ed from big factories and monster department s t A slim little girl of one of the "workers" | stopped before a news) | both arms fun of papers, an" shoes laces were flapping about his feet, because he could not tie their | loosened end :. With a word to the boy which no {One else could hear, she bent over and quickly jerked up the dirty laces, | Bave them a twist, and knotted them about 15--- oy { firmly, and then passed on without | & word-- just as though she had done | { What was expected of her by a care- , less kid of about ten. And all through this little human i incident the newsbhoy stood without | she had finished, | never even looked at the girl nor | {a smile, and when { he | sald a grateful "thank you." There isn't the shadow of a doubt | that the newsboy had a mother who | | bad unselfishly been doing this sort of thing for him all through his life, | until be had come to expect it as a { matter of course. And the girl--well, she had the in- stinet which mothers every uncom-. | fortable, suffering being--the instinct | Which holds the world together, not through big deeds, but through little | tacts of kindness and gentleness-- after all, life is made up of such | things--without them, this world { Would be a hollow mockery. * . » Have you ever been hungry---real- | ly hungry hungry that you've been tempted to knock down another | Man who possessed that which would give you food? Have you ever been so poor that You hadn't a place to sleep, outside of a park bench, or over a warm grating? Most solutions of the social pro- | blems of the day are based upon the assumption that the I | well-nigh ideal |18 a 'system | new day-- the for, 80 that he needs to bring in the glad "millennial dawn." all Whatever may be the arguments | for or against this proposition, it's safe to say be some men who will drop by the wayside, beaten and discouraged. no matter what our economic system may be. Some of them were liter- ally cursed into the world! Nobody really wanted them, at any time in their lives. How could they ever have had a fair chance to make good? What are you going to do with | these men--allow them to go straight to Hell--every way? They'ra near enough to jt now---physically and mentally, Whatever else may be true of these | men with regard to their blood and | breed and burdens, there's no doubt | that their hearts beat like other men's hearts, and that in the main, their needs are just the sama But how can one who hasn't travel- led the rough road understand what these men are up against--the fierce temptations, the horrible pull of the old life, standing again and again on the brink ot perditfon, because they have failed and falied and failed. These men need strong arms about tl tet pm i --- TASTY RECIPES, Special Cheese Tarts. , One of the nicest cheese tarts that | I have tasted is made by mixing two | cups of cottage cheese with four | tablespoons of whipped cream, six | tablespoons seedless raisins, two egg | yolks, four tablespoons powdered | sugar, quarter teaspoon powdered cinnamon, and ground nutmeg, one | teaspoon grated lemon rind, two | tablespoons orange juice and two | tablespoons finely chopped almonds. | Place this mixture in pastry lined tart tins and bake in a moderate oven twenty minutes. Cool and sprinkle with powdered sugar mixed with a little powdered cinnamon, Special Tea Cake. For a nice tea pastry rub half a cup of butte. into three cups of sift- | ed flour, add four tablespoons pow- dered sugar, two tablespoons grated j orange peel, one lightly beaten egg | and enough milk to make smooth stiff dough. Turn out on a sugared thick and cut in pieces one and a half { inches wide and four inches long. Bake in a slow oven until crisp. Serve with butter and jam, hot or cold. | 5 | Old Style Orange Pudding. | An old very fine orange pudding is | made by sifting together two cups of { flour, two teaspoons baking powder, one teaspoon salt, and one tablespoon powdered sugar, Rub int) this one | tablespoon butter and two table- spoons of lard; make to a smooth stiff dough with milk. Roll into an obl sheet half an inch thick. Brush ith meited butter and sprinkle with sugar, Cover the dough with peeled oranges sliced thin, Roll into a tight roll and tie in a buttered and fipured cloth and cook for two hours. Drain and place on a hot platter, sprinkle over chopped al- monds and pour over a lemon custard made with one cup sugar spoon floul, two egg yolk and gratad rind of twe one and A third cups of A Favorite Pudd Another very good ° and one of the old receipts t.. . fiproves with age is made by beating to a cream one-third cup of sugar and one-third cup of butter, add two eggs, one at a time, and beating in each egg thoroughly. Add one cup sifted fiour, one cup bread crumts, one cub -suddenly | who had | whose ! a door-way or | average man is! that there will always | I urs pastry boayd, roll to one-half inch | = ECR re, or 0 Charles Stelzle. XD 3 1 | | | them ;<they need food and shelter and clothing--and friendship, and then more friendship, and when your poe- ketbook is open, don't forget to " your heart! Some of us are driving hard to change social and economic condi- tions so there will no longer\pe home- less men. But don't let's wait until that time comes before giving a boost to the man who is now down and out--no matter how he got there. How would you like to be a "pro- blem'? Wouldn't it make you feel kindly toward your imvestigators? It is assumed that any sort of a high-brow or a "sociologist" has the right to thrust his kid-gloved fingers into. your private affairs--but | wouldn't it jar them if you invaded their kitchens to find out how they cooked their food or if you pushed | your way into their bedrooms to see the conditions under which they slept? | The real "problem" of the. poor | | are the rich---those of them who are | enjoying wealth which rightfully be- | longs to the workers. Wouldn't it be a good plan to study | the rich, for a change? If you get the capitalists straight- | ened out, it would help immensely to | settle the problems of labor, | | re let's offer a resolution that the investigations of the social workers | be shifted from thie tenemen's to the | mansions There's lots of data lying around in swelldom that would be mighty interesting "dope." The rich sometimes complain that they do not receive enough-attention, ! Here's a chance to make them under- | stand how it [eels to have attention forced upon one. - Rd The war bit the 'Sociological sta- { tistican™ pretty hard--the chap who | had us all tabulated, averaged and | tully "doped out" For his em doesn't leave ntuch room for change. He estimates that | tnings which have happened will con- | {| tinue to happen---to the end of time. | . | He talks a lot about the "law of | ' | averages," and "groups' is his pet werd when discussing classified | { humans Along came the war and disturbed | 0 many things--food froducts, sick- length i life, richness and EAN ER ER ERE TRIS CRANE RAD BT teeters AAR A E can there be Eastertide. | i | SPOR ALIN Dawn of i | | | nes, | | poverty, the alcohol question, social | | customs, and clear down the line-- | that the "social expert" was com | | pletely flabbergasted. He had to take | {his chances with just common folk | | and guess, And somehow he never can quite | forget that human nature is a com- | modity so difficult to classify that you | can't gauge it With even the finest | micrometers ever produced. | Just about so often it shatters all | | the rules of the sociologist and makes | | { him feel like 1highy sgnts. Wi | Why cant we behave 'and settle | down, so that the experts can take | | our-measures? Maybe it's because the Almighty did want us all to be exactly | alike. He didn't make anything else uniform, not even leaves or grass or nevej inspiration and praise than in the wonderful Columbia music of Hear these Columbia Easter Records: Easter Chimes (Lake) Lost Chord (Sullivan) The Holy City (Adams) Memories of Easter--Partl. (Robert} lood Bowers) and Memories of Easter--Part II. (Robert Hood Bowers) Marie Contraltoiand Male Voices. Agnus Dei ' | . Salve, Regina . . Stabdt Mater. Cuius Animam (Lord, Vouchsafe 3 Loving Kindness) In Latin Stabat Mater. Inflammatus (To English . Largo (Handel) .1 iT 8 . The Palms at The Holy City Largo (Handel) Lost Chord Gatty Sellars, Cathedral Pipe Organ A Legend . : Sing Ye To The Lord | Treadgold's Boe Coot C Agents for Columbia Records Colum Faster Music As Christmas gives us the Music of Joy, so Easter gives us the Music of Triumph. Scarcely in any other field of special music found more beauty, A musical gift makes a beautiful Easter remembrance. Send your friends Col- umbia Records in the artistic Easter envelapes, Your Columbia Dealer will gladly play them for you «Prince's Orchestra Hope"{De Casella) Prince's Orchestra Columbia Stellar Quartette Columbia Mixed Quintette Morrisey and Columbia Stellar Quartette. Orch. Accompaniment. Paulist Choristers Paulist Choristers Thy Charles W. Harrison Thy Holy Care) In Columbia Oratorio Chorus Pablo Casals, "cellist « A-6179 $1.65 Louis Graveure, Baritone Louis Graveure, Baritone A-6004 Gatty Sellars, Cathedral Pge Organ Po A-2647 $1.00 Paulist Choristers Paulist Choristers New Columbia Records are out the 20th of each month COLUMBIA GRAPHOPHONE CO., TORONTO. " birds or elephants. Why run men | | and women through a common mold? A A AAA nn C. W. seedless rai._ns, one teaspoon demon juice and one tabl:;joon orange juice. Put miature in a well greased pudding mould and steam two hours Ba Lindsay, Limited Headquarters for Columbia Records Serve with lemon custard sauce, Brown Betty. While we are giving the pudding receipts, we will give ore for the old ! favorite. Brown Betty. Mix well | two tablespoons of melted butter and | two cups of fresh bread crumbs, Mix | one-half cup of sugar with two cups | The ) Columbia Records on sale at M.: Greene Music Co., Ltd. 166 PRINCESS STREET chopped apples, one .up chopped | seeded raising, one teaspoon cinna- | mon and a quarter teaspoon cloves, | Put a layer of crumbs in the Jottom | of a baking dish, cover with a layer of the apple mixture and alternate | until all are used, have the last layer Keep you: soul in the free and of crumbs. Cover tight and bake'| open wherever your body may be.-- forty-five minutes in a slow oven, un- | Out West. - cover and brown. Serve hot with | hard and lemon sauce, or cold with | cream and jelly. Seven Sentence Sermon. * - * A diligent man can always find lei- sure, a lazy one never.--Anon_ - . . | Self ig the only prison That can ever bind the soul; Love is the only angel Who can bid the gates unroll; | And when He comes to call thee Arise and follow fast; His way may lie through darkness, But it leads to light at last. ~--Henry van Dyke. - - Wyman's Sugarless and Heatless Candy. seeded raisins. seeded dates. figs. walnut meats. Zest and juice of one orange. Put the raisins, figs, dates and wal- | nut meats through the fine knife of | the meat chopper. Add orange zest! and juice; knead smooth, roll out in | Mrs. 1 1b, | ip 1b. % 1b, This above all: To thine own self | a long piece and cut in smgll rounds. | be true, and it must follow, as the | night the day, thou canst not then be false to any man --S8hakespeare. | LE And lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world.--Jesus, | Wrap in waxed paper. CZEMA ou ys nt | .. e . - : d and Biase ar | Some of your hurts you have cured, mens for iBtzema A dq Shin And the sharpest you still have survived; ally heals the skin. Sample Dr. | Chase's tment free if you mentl Bis : But what torments of grief you en- Coy dured send 2¢. stamp {OT pos! 80. ne ii eatery or Edmanson, Bakes & ---- in From evils which never arrived? --Anon. Tou : experiment. | ing when | are nos br. | what he says.--R. D. Hitchcock. Now Is the Time to Get Rid of These | Ugly Spots. { Do you know how easy it is to re-! move those ugly spots so that no one | will call you freckle-face? Simply get an ounce of Othine,| double strength, from your druggist | and a few applications should show | you how easy it is to rid yourself of | freckles and get a beautiful Sontpies- fon. The sun and winds of March! - have a strong tendency t¢ bring out | $0ing?" sald the golfer testily. freckles, and as a result more Othine i is sold in this month. Be sure to|am, do you?" a" ask for the double strength Othine, as "No, and I don't are to know this is sold under guarantee of money | "Well," was sthe reply, "how do back if it fails to remove the freckles, you know it's, me?" How Did He? ed his golf clubs beside him. A buoy- the golf clubs. » : | Freckle-Face | He is a man who thinks for him- uy | self, says what he thinks, and doés i On_a Scarbore train, a gentleman | | was seated and had comfortably plac- | ant fellow with a wealthy breath | came Into the car and lurched into | "Why don't you look where you're | "H-mphh--You don't know who I | t HATCHING EGGS From Guelph and Cobourg strain--pure bred Barred Plymouth « Rocks--can't be beaten for feather, size and laying quality. $2 A SETTING; 3 SETTINGS $5.00 , Also White Rocks-- Albion Price Stock $3 a SETTING; 2 SETTINGS $5 Orders carefully filled and shipped. ~ Gilbert's Grocery 194 BARRIE ST. PHONE 254, LTRS ALU OF TAR & COD- WAS RIT Coughs, Colds, Grippe, Bronchitis, hooping Cough, Asthma, Ete, MATHIEU'S SYRUP i igh tonic } the curative rties of TAR an the ay virtues of COD LIVER OIL. 2 Colds, when neglected or badly treated give rise $0 consequences of sucha grave character that youshould not risk using inferior preparations. SE a the vuly geutite terials Shateits ' ON SALE EVERYWHERE :

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