Daily British Whig (1850), 30 Apr 1921, p. 16

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A -- ) WALK THE | U i | F O0R HOURS AT TIME University of Chicago has jus: nerves were shatter- gop Woman Was in Ter- cst fooic. i: Before She Be- for hours trying to gef 0 1 ¢ Tanlac--Now sleep. My head ached like Splendid. | burst and frequently | was | with such a' swimming in the enjoying good health I nearly fell I got to be terribly 'Srsl tim 0 years," said Mrs. weak and while tryin to. d athgate, 17 Belair street, | housework would often have to quit 2 : CY a ie y Lo *tagd 1 owe it all to and lie down could would head almost and "But 1 improved steadily fone years my- stomach was. from the t ot order : n .and bloated me up so I [lire I lly get my clothes on. » paius fn the pit of my | gestion, [that just seemed to go dizziness dose of Tanlac, have a ravenous nervousness, trouble. 'I headaches, or any other Bb me. My sufferings were {am so much stronger it never bothers I nev- er get tired of telling my friends me to do my housework now 'times that I bad to use hot to get relief, I had no id could only eat the light- Advt about Tanlac 'SHER--WILL--LAC VARNISH STAIN is the best Varnish Stain on Ten different choose from It vor can phone 2N§ market call, W. H. Cockburn & Co. Would You Bequeath ~~ Your Child to Charity? ¥ you should die, would your poor widow be so busy trying to make her own living that she would be forced to turn your helpless child over to the care of strangers or to a "Charity Home'? : ""%. Don't bequeath the child you worship, and st who is so tenderly cared for, to Charity. Protect your wife and "little one" with Mutual Life Insurance. . ? You CAN afford the Mutual Straight Life Policy, with profits applied to reduce the premiums. This policy provides low cost in- ~ surance that is absolutely safe. Ask the Mutual Life Agent for particulars. THE MUTUAL LIFE ¢i Canada: Waterloo. Ontario S. ROUGHTON;, ad IS Led. and. at-bightdowabiped-the-foor taken everything 1 ate now am as well as I ever was in my appetite, Iiand never suffer a particle from indi- Sherwin Williams the shades to . T temptations, and often they @ By the concluded a study pf the religious [the main, are better 8 nevertheless, men ary jus life of its students. ' It reveals tha: |ous and spiritualiy-minded a¥ 88 per cent. of the elbers -ol-tome distributed as foHows: 87 per cer Protestant; 12 per cent., Jewish; Catholic; 1 per cent rsligious per ¢ ¢: llaneoug Of the 2,065 students {rom the results were obtained, 1,26 en"and 797 werg women. The prising fact developéd that: were more women than men wit religious affiliations--15 per cent against 9 per cent. This raises the question -as ler women as a whole arg more yus than men. For centuries the poets and phii- osophers have been telling us that women are more "spiritually-m.a: ed" than men, out the poets and { philosophers were wrong . The other day a professor of psy. |cLology said 'the reason women dre more spiritually-minded than because men are more more virile than wcmen." Do you believe God wou id penali a man in the development of lity merely because hé is robust aad ile? Not much--God would si ly expect a man to express his sir man. . » -. It's because woman has comg to be the test'of religlon that so many men are oi side all the churches The express their religious instinets woman would hers And so taey | have decided that either there's something, wrong with religion that there's something wrong w themselves which they can't cha § ~80 what's the use, they've said. And the church has suffered. Bu {80 have the men. Not 0 much be- cause they didn't go to church, as { because they thought .that the heal- thy, glowing. aspirations spirie 2 gent ously on%a plain, every-day kind of a job, for the sake of thair | wasn't "regular religion." Then they've had an idea because they could nat get meeting and fluently use the guage of the 'regulars' 'that hadn't much. "religion." And thay were «wrong again. But so was the church wrong when it permitted this kind of an impression to grow in the minds of these men, but who lacked eloquence » -. i». up- in lan- they That there are about three times 4s many women in the church as thera are men doesn't necessarily prove that women are more religious than men. This situation is primarily due to the fact that the church has been practically the only institution which bas given women a chance to express their social instincts -- for it you were to carefully analyze women's work in the church, you would find {that it is not chiefly "religious" but social. Men have had the chance to express their social instincts in all kinds of organizations out side the church. That there are at least seven times 4s many men in jails and penitenti- (aries as there are women doesn't of | necessity indicate that men are more {criminal in their tendencies than wo- } men, * * - Women, for the most part, lead sheltered lives. They are protected from. the rougher things in- lite. Whereas. men are out in the thick of the fight subjected to all kinds of fall-- jEoatites for the sake of the women | whom they would continue to protect | from the struggles of tha rough way. | Women are gentler, more tender than men. Their religion may be | sweeter. more emotional than men's. | But--and this is said with full ap- | preciation of the fact that women, ir | gislation. THE MAN ON WATCH {Whence cometh the little moth ? {This is #8e question all housewives § fare nowstrying to answer. { Glénburnie voted "wet." Being ian old Scotch settlement, no jment is necessary. The Sons of England had to call Jor a Scot to address them the other night and tell them all about {St. George and the dragon. Now | Just imagine the Kingston Scotch | societies calling upon an English- {man to deliver their annual oration. Christie Graham has' become a resident of the township and is now Qualified for membership in the county council. Christy could put some pep into that body. ! {of its'age. It should rather brag about its pep. % i It is now in order for some Kings- iton prohibitionists, who are under {suspicion to offer $100 if any liquor ream be found in their homes. But such a challenge cometh not. If drivers and drovers think they can beat 'and ill-use horses and cat- '| tle on the streets they have another | guess coming. Some of them will be met with a police court summons if they do not mend their ways, warm-hearted | com- | students were | tes bihis-is-as-itshowntd tre to | great industrial readjustment. ™ | S$ the case with men, their la- m:n, [and specialized, so that an individual | robust, woman no longer finishes an entire | great m#&chine, Also, what was form- it-| ered men's work is often performed uality in his own way--not like awo- | by iyla large | to knit, 5 a | other d which | sand of women's suits, prompted them to strike out vigor- | makers and even milliners are com- { i fellows, | much of the work of the steam laun- | | that | Men, too, have 'learned to clean our ~they are simply different. Fear has sometimes been expresse tal women are now crowding men in 1dustry~--that they *are- asserting | themselves as never before. It is true who | that the wonien are gettifig the vote, .. but a study of industrial development indicates that women once monopo- lized many industries which have now gone into the hands 67 the men The history' of women in industry in the United States is the story of a | Not | only has women's work been carried from 'the home to the factory, but the | kind of work which they are doing | has been greatly changed, and, at the | same time, their monopoly of the tra- | ditiopal 9gtupations has Deen des- | T has been well said, a;ischool teacher has more influence in shaping the lives of her scholars than their par- ehis erie How necessary, then, is it that she should have a bright, clear brain, and be strong and vigorous in order that she may give them of her best. The worry and the work, the strain and anxiet; tell severely on the nervous system," Time a give up good positions on account of a weak he. tered nerves. To such Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills com troyed bor s been greatly systematized , -- product. She has.become part of a teacher's life are such as ain teachers have had to down health and shat. erly regarded as women's work ex- clusively is now being performed by men, and what was formerly consid- women, Under the old domestic system the work of the women was to spin, to do | part of the weaving, to sew, and in geperal to make most 'lothing worn by the family: | to clean and to perform the! ies of the domestic servant ines have now come in to aid in all these industries---machines sich fu some ca have brought in Lh nen operatives and in oth- ses have enormously increased i1ctive power of the indivf- dual making it necessary for many women to hunt other work. One kind of spinning is now done by men only. Men tailors make thou- Men dress- n and a blessing, Their purpose-is to make the weak heart stron 1 shaky nerves firm, thus build up the entire system to full stren m, and dtality. of the r to cook, Miss L. E. "Hopkins, Kirkton, Ont., writes Heart and Nerve Pills for weak heart. I wa ervous I had to leave school for two years. After I had taken five bog of the pills I was able to go back to my school again, feeling in £9 health." e used Milburn's But nu Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills argc. 2 box at all dealers, or mailed direct on zecei; of price by The T. Milburn Compiny, Limited Toronto, Ontariy mon. Men make our bread and do arty where our clothes are washed. houses by the vacuum process, so that $ it is not altogether fair to insist that women have been crowding men out | of industrial life. | - - * And now!--a genuine Semi-ready Special Order Very early in the history of the! United States the National Trades! Union was decidedly opposed to the employment of women' in jndustry. | One of its'leaders in a Fourth of July | eration before the Philadelphia | Trades Union said that he did not consider it possible for women to "recede from labor alk-at once," but urged them to form trades-unions and raise their wages until "half the labor" now perfornfed willsuffice to live upon . . . and the less you-do," he added, "the more there will be for the men to do and the better they will be paid for doing it, and ultimately you will be what you ought to be, free from the performance of that kind of labor which was designed for men alone to perform." A As a matter of fact, the opposition of men to the encroachment of wo- man in industry has been almost en- tirely due to the reason that when women enter the same occupation as men they usually receive lower wages for the same kind and amount of work. The labor union demands | "equal pay for men and women for equal work." They make this demand | not so much because they are inter- ested in 'having women receive as | much monéy ds they receive, but be- | cause they fear that unless the wo- men do receive as much money as Suit made to measure 30 Splendid range of new Spring Tweed Suitings 1 shown by_sample. You make your selection, and we take your measure on a Physique Type Chart which gives to the Cutter your physical photograph. The Suit is tailored in four days at the Semi-ready Tailor Shops. We satisfy: and we're on the spot to carry out our promise of delivery and guaranty. | i | | | | | | l | | sumer. they do that they will themselves be crowded out of the industry. But women have 'come to stay in industrial life and their economic position will be gradually improved, partly as the result of trades-union| activity, but also because of labor le- | George VanHorne, Princess Street. seem also applies to those who have wine cellars. { Uneasy lies the head that wears | the crown," and also uneasy lies the head of the house who has much 5) A liquor stored away against the evil 3 : day. . 2% aa Meat goes down by the ecarcase and up by the pound to the con- ; . 7 This rumpus over the management of the Home for the Aged is all un- necessary. The Kingston home, is a a. Prodi ii mh Sod The Kingston pastor who is allow- sense knows that old folks in their | 108 the young folks to dance in his dotage ahd some stubborn are not church hall, and who is being criti- easily handled. It is just as well |Ci26d by those who always have 2 that the investigation has taken tarte taste in their mouth, is right. place, as it will show the people that | U°t More pastors throw open the church halls for the young people, there is no foundation in the stories and good will Fosult. ~--~THE TOWN WATCHMAN. --------ems | expected to take care of fifty-two in- mates, some of whom are almost helpless. sn] IN * Spring Woollen S ABET TEI, NR IN Tl ST nw al I al, A a Ap] ~~ Ba DE PN SLA St. George's cathedral is boasting | What is needed at the cify's home | i for the old folks is an infirmary for {those who become 'ill and also more {help. A superintendent and his wife {with a little cheap 'help cannot be Men are filled with disconent be- | cause each' envies the lot of others 'instead of enjoying his own. Pind the work you like and you'll like the work you find. to Purify the Blood and Build Up Strength. Faw come to these trying spring days without weariness. debility, that "tired Jealing." caused in large part by Impure. de-vitaiized blood. Changs of season often "takes all the sirength out of me" as many people say. The tonic and blood purifier Hood's Sarsaparilla. It Now Nesded by Nearly Every One |3! Spring Medicine uickly dispels that eling, enriches the blood and ben- efits the mental, muscular and ne-- vous systems. In a word, says druggist, rille fri our most dependable restorative" mo the Dest tonic and purify § ingredients herbs, barks and clans often prescribe. 48 years su you A mild laxative, Hood's Pills. : ood's Sarsaparilla W THE IDEAL SPRING MEDICING exhausted "Hood's used. --ronats, berries. such as physi- A record of while not as large as some years ago, is very attractvie and we think we can meet your taste, Our prices are reasonable, consis- tent with high-class work. 4

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