Daily British Whig (1850), 19 Mar 1921, p. 17

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MINUTES ND 1 HALFACENT SAVES APOT OR PAN Isn't it worth spending two minutes, and half a cent, to save the cost of an expensive pot or kettle? That is all that's needed to repair any leak with OL-PEEK STOPS THE LEAK Ne wole--a0 hammermg--ao rmvets--ao washers--uo bolts---sothiag to rust Vol-Pock u bike putty ® use. aad hardens m wo mmules heating. wio a song. Mends Rischen wiensls of ali lunds, nchudhdg Granite-ware Alumaum, Copper Bras. Tw or Iron--smves housewrves thomands of dollars aanually Ask your dealer or send 25¢ to 00 NOT ACCEPT SUBSTITUTES VOL-PEEK MFG. COMPANY #. 0 80X 2024 HMONTPIAL QUE SON, KINGSTON. ~~ Wholesaled by EDWIN CH OWN & A. on - New Hair Growth After BALDNESS" On legal affidavit, John Hart Brittain, business man, certified to this: "My head at the top and back was abselutely bald. An expert said that he the hair roots were extinct, and there was no hope of my ever having a new hair growth. "Yet now, at an age over 66, I have a luxuriant growth of soft, strong, lustrous hair! No trace of baldness. The pictures shown here are from my photographs." INDIANS' SECRET OF HAIR GROWTH Mr, Brittain certified further: "Ata time when g I bad become discouraged at trying to sow my hair in, I came across, in my travels, a Chero- After hair growil}" kee hi 'medicine man' who had an elixir that Kale i he asseverated would grow my hair. Although I had but little faith I gave it a trial. To my amazement a light fuzz soon appeared. It developed, day by day, into a healthy growth, and ere long my hair 'was as prolific as in my youthful days." True Hair Grower at Last "That I was astonished and happy is expressing my state of mind Phot when bald, mildly. Obviously, the hair roots had not been dead, but were dor- mant in the scalp, awaiting the fertilizing potency of the then myste- rious pomade. I negotiated for and came into ion of the principle for preparing this, now called ALKO, and later bad the recipe put into practical form by a chemist. That my own hair growth was permanent has been amply proved. It has been proved in very any cases that hai roots did not die even when the hair fell out through dandruff, fever, alopecia areata, or certain other hair or scalp disorders. KOTALKO PROOF BOX XOTALKO GENUINE BEAR OIL and other potent ingredients. No aleohol no sh but a wonderful e . Safe and harm- even for a childs scalp and loss, hair. Positively KOTALKO is one delightfully reliable hair Pe N aration that succeeds upon genuine merit. Buy a box of KOTALKO : at the drug store. Or ask for Kotalko at the toilet goods or drug Kotalke is wonderful counter of any large department store. Remember the name. Accept for women's hair nothing else as "just as good." Money back GUARANTEE. Or if . . you send 10 cents (silver or stamps) to pay of mailing and advg. cost only, you will receive a PROOF BOX of Kotalko vith BROC RE, postpaid. We shall also 3 leased ou i of voluntary lestimon: 'om men and women. ermi SANDE TRF. to treat BALDNESS, to STOP HAIR FROM FALLING. KOTALKO, apply once or twice daily: watch in your mirror. For PROOF BOX gend te KOTAL COMPANY, Limited, 366-A Adelaide Strect W., Toronts, Ont. THE TRIALS OF A HOUSEWIFE How They Have Been Endured and How Overcome by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound And by D Experience of a Providence Woman Providence, R. I.--"I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for a female trouble and backache. Itbegan justafter my baby was born, and 1 did the best I could about get- ting my work done, but I'bad awful bearing-dowh pains so 1 could not stand on my feet. I read in the papers fl 0g about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and the it was doing other women, and I have got dandy results from it and will always rec. ommend it. You can use these facts as a testimonial if you wish." -- Mrs, HERBERT L. CaSSEN, 18 Meni Court, Providence, R. I. Ohio woman for three years could hardly keep about and do her housework she was so ll. Made well by Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound : Fayette, 0. --" For about three years i I was very nervous and had backache, sideache, dragging -down pains, could not sl at night, and bad no appe- do my housework. I got medicine from the saw Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com i good results, and am now able to dicine to my friends and you may A. Baw, R. 15, Fayette, Ohio. An Illinois woman relates her experience: IIL. --*'I was never very s and female trouble kept me 4 So interest in my house a wotlk had ach Ty backache y could a Cr sweep a room wi ing wi . Rubbing m with alcoho! sometimes eased the pain for a How hours, but did pot -- heard of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and six bottles of it have made me as strong and healthy as ay woman ; and I give my thanks to it for my health." --Mrs. J. A. MCQUITTY, 610 W. Walnut St., Bloomingten, II The conditions described by Mrs. Cassen, Mrs. Ball. and Mrs. McQuitty will to many women who struggle on with their daily tasks in just such con- in fact, it is said that the tragedy in the livesof some women is almost in and day ont they slave in their homes for their families ly routine of housework, Pie make Slothes for them- ir or work in their gardens, ail the while suffering bearing-down pains, backache, headaches, nervousness, the les whith = the very Joundation of Ble ntl Bate Somes a ture gives ow an opera! seems inevitable. such women would Birofie by the experience of these three ivortn. and remem- Lydia 's Yegetable Compound is the natural restorative condi tions it may save years of suffering and unhappiness. is hardly ny anborhood in any town or hamlet in the United States does not reside who has been restored to iH ering women to health and strength. B. s Private Text-Book upon "Ailments jo I rie Ete Be sent ta ou free Nihon reauest." Wilts This book contains valuable If Oration. : : Mps, Peter Sinclair, Madoe, died on | Her husband, Mr. Peter Sinclair, ag- 'Wednesday, aged eighty-four years.|od eighty-four years, survives with maiden name was Agnes Volume. § 'ive cfildren. i a floss by thay | . a i nd. J au 2 taking i | ed. | { he started off for the THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. ar at Cape recently are .the t lake it with Light, an by machiner The coal is delivered to the dock by cars, 'which dump their loads of sixty or venty tons into driven by electric motors and elevat- ed to the various compartments of the large trussel, at the rate one hundred r hour it can be di to port or I board bunkers at the rate of ten tons per minute Severa erected tp ut for delivery to Canac conveyors of From there ns p 1arged being to boats, boats were carrying on J. J. MORRISON IS ! ORDERED TO QUIT He Is Told to Go Travelling and to "Broaden Out." March 18 J. J. Morri. United Farm- n given notice 18 the secretary Toronto, gon, Secretary of ers of Ontario, has be to quit. Tired o orders which he repeatedly disobeyed the directors of the organization, iu session yesterday at the Labor Tem- ple, handed him an ultimatum. Mr. Morrison was again commanded to take a holiday, He bas not had one the U.F.0O. was organized some seven years agd. He refused. The meeting countered by declaring that, beginning April Ist, he would be sus- pended for one month and forced to take a vacation, whether he wished to or not Mr. Morrison replied that he had a meeting booked for April 2nd. "We'll look after that," the directors shout s.nce Repeatedly his associates have urged Mr, day. But more work was always wait- ing to be done and "J. J." did it. Just about a year ago the directors order- | ed him off for a month's rest Taking Mrs. Morrison with him, maritimes. He went to Nova Scotia, and for three weeks managed to speak at two mee*- | Prince Edward Island, and finished | out his holiday organizing the farm- i A | i | | i i i ings.a day. Then he crossed over to NEW COALING DOCKS Vinee nt, Morrison to take a holi- | N.Y, and up-to-date. feldspar York even hun- railroad graphite or trips to New ps pu After sey Captain Pyke has secured dred feet more of tne N.Y.C ones; y con- where deep Cape Vin- | he Pyke C¢ rol of all the docks draught boats can land at cent Besides the Pyke Company, the In- | | ternational Paper Company are | spending about $200,000 on dock and equipment, to supply the mills at Watertown with wood The Standard Oil Company are also arranging to build a huge supply station, unloading direct from | ats to tank cars and storage tanks. | Cape Vincent looks for, t prosperous season for some gether ers there. *'I had a fine rest," he said | when he arrived back in Toronto. Now the other U.F.O. leaders are| debating where to send him. Meetings are already booked for 'J. J." in Bri- h Columbia, so he can't be sent It is the general opinion that e¢ to be sen! to the States, r. Morrison apparently has an iron constitution, his associa- tes are genuinely afraid that his health will break down under the tre- mendous amount of work he has been j doing They have learned by experi- | | ence that #here is no usc trying to get i | iim to ease up on the burden he has | | been carrying. The only chance of | | making Mr. Morrison take a rest is| to send him far enough away. | eer rc aoe | The trouble with the members of | the Anti-Everything League is that | they act as though the Creator is (only running things temporarily until | the league takes hold. MARCH MAKES ROUGH SKIN. It's the same every year. March is raw, cold and windy. March is| the month above all others that | drives the average woman to the] drug store for something to heal the | roughness of her skin: Campana's Italian 'Balm makes rough skin smooth. It is the' most perfect com- | | plexion preparation known. It has been in use for over a quarter of a century, Every woman should have {a bottle on her dresser. Ask your druggist for it, or, upon receipt of 16c., a one ounce sample will be | mailed direct. E. G. WEST & COMPANY, Agents, | 80 George Street; Toronto. Bn EEC | I know that present troubles for O'er the past I' do not worry, for On the whole, could not be listed Which in the nearby future will I have figured on the matter 'till Long yei™ 220 when but a lad I And now I'm getting on in years The thing which worries me the I've. some regret because I lack I'd like to be an ambassador, if I'd willing be a Jewish priest, a I'd FUTURE TROUBLES Crawf. C. Slack. And that troubles of the future or the past don't cut no ice. But there is a weighty probiem how to solve I cannot see, How in blazes we shall manage in the future for a drink. I've courted long Dame Fortune's smile, but she returned a frown; To make folks think that I was it, I've tried; they've turned me down. My star is getting rather dim and just about to set, But all those things do not distress nor cause me much regret. 1s in the future how the deuce we're going to get a drink. If 1 were a stool-pigeon I perhaps might get a show, But then my "rep" ain't bad enough for that job, that I know. If I were an inspector I perhaps might have a chance, To haunt the cellars of the rich and get a smell or glance, Of fancy wines and whiskeys, all of the choicest brand. I'd make love to the hired girl and have things well in hand. If 1 had that I'd worry not of what or where I'd drink. Now I can't be an inspector, for my. politics are wrong; I'm neither of the privileged class, to them [ don't belong. But I'vé a friend, a bosom friend, he's just the man to choose, His politics are rigat and he's an expert judge of booze. He stands in with the stocked-up-lucks, and no doubt on the sly, As just a kind of hush-me-up. he' And when that luxury was secured I'd only need a wink, Then we'd go out behind the shed and have an old-time drink. I'd shave a ship come o'er the sea, and stock my cellar 'full. Or anything that booze and 1 could kind of chummy be, like to be a Wwhite-capped nurse and dealing out the dope, As long as there was plenty booze my patients might have *pe. I do mot worry over "rep" nor loss of "pep" nor chink. -- My worrjes are in future how welre going to get a drink, " | we mortals will suffice, I seldom look behind; with the trouble brooding kind effect both you and me. my mind is in a kink,-- lost my moral "rep," and losing all my "pep." most, on which I plan and think, the necessary chink; d get a jug of rye. but I had the pull; Doc., a druggist or M.P., SATURDAY, MARCH 19, 1921. False Claims. hope there is no Mother who thinks she can treat her sick baby without calling in a Physician, or with remedies that she uses for herself. Most Mothers 'know that Baby requires remedies especially prepared for babies, yet there are some who think that what is good enough for them is good enough for Baby, and it is to these Mothers we appeal to give nothing to their babies that is not specially prepared for babies or recommended by their Physician, False claims may kill, but false claims can never restore your child. For over thirty years Fletcher's Castoria has been aiding in the reduction of the deaths among infants as Mothers have become more and more acquainted with it. Always keep it in the house. Children Cry For Are You Prepared? A doctor in the house all the time would be a good idea." Yet you can't afford to keep a doctor in the family to keep baby well or pre-' vent sickness. But you can do almost the same thing by having at hand a bottle of Fletcher's Castoria, because it is a wonderful remedy for indigestion, colic, feverishness, fretfulness and all the other dis- orders that result from common ailments that babies have. Fletcher's Castoria is perfectly safe to use. It is a harmless sub-' stitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing ps. Children cry for Fletcher's Castoria, and mothers recommend it because they have found it a comfort to children and a mother's friend. If you love your baby, you know how sweet it is to be able te help baby when trouble comes. You cannot always call upon a doctor. But doctors have nothing but good to say of Fletcher's Castoria, be- cause they know that it can only do good -- that it can't do any harm -- and they wouldn't want you to use for baby a remedy that you would use for yourself. ¢ MOTHERS SHOULD READ'THE BOOKLET THAT IS AROUND EVERY BOTTLE OF FLETCHER'S CASTORIA GENUINE CASTORIA ALwavs ove di Bears the Signature of At Omoy Rs Ei a Exact Copy of Wrapper. THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY. et Pt Att at At wl AA, ttt at tt saat ang - Mental Diversion at a Profit You own a business. It is your "child." You have nursed it through infancy, poured brain and money and energy-- your life blood almost--into it, to bring it to its present position. And, if the truth be known, the ambition is still with you to carry it to greater heights; not altogether for profit, per- haps, because there 1s a streak of altruism in every great business man. Let us say, then, for the glory of achievement. If you were to ask what Daily Newspaper Adver- tising can do for you, we should answer: 1. It will enable you, if ~ necessary, to make a sales appeal --f o reach every possible Granting this, will you not buyer of yo goods, sit down after dinner this evening and figure out whether you can use ad- vertising -- Daily News- paper Advertising--to ac- complish your purpose? It is unfortunately true that a great deal of daily newspaper advertising is" not as well done as At should be; but, even 3 glow. ing for this, the oyerpow- ering commensal suc- cesses that Have been assisted in their achieve- ment by "the rsistent force of Daily Nev /Spaper Advertising are sufficient evidence to justify your earnest consideration. It will efiable you to get lofal or national sales action quickly. . XX will give you fre- 7 quency o f appear- ance, and flexibility in extent of space or character of message or price. . It will enable you to localize your sales efforts--to place your advertising in those territories and only t h-o s e territories where you want ac- tion, and where you can profit by it. Af you have ever thought you would like to adver- tise, if you could get proper advice cn how to go about it, write to this Association. We will give you the benefit of our-experience in starting you on the road to successful publicity. Or, consult a recognized advertising agency. A list supplied on request. : - Canadian Daily Newspapers Association. Head Office--T oronto. 5 Issued by the

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