Daily British Whig (1850), 7 May 1921, p. 16

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Sate ER . obtain the desired results. | to nearly $55,000,000. 16 Those Nasty Little Pimples THAT COME ON THE FACE ARE CAUSED BY BAD BLOOD Many an otherwise beautiful and attractive face is sadly marred by the unsightly pimples and other skin troubles, caused wholly by eed E Many a cheek and brow cast in the mould of beauty have been sadly de- faced, their attractiveness lost, and the possessor of the "pimply face" rendered unhappy for years Their presence is a source of em- barrassment to those afflicted as well | as pain and regret to their friends. There is an effectual remedy for these facial defegta and that is Bur- dock Blood Bitters, the old reliable medicine that has been on the market for over 40 years. N It drives out all the impurities from the blood, and leaves the com- plexion 'clear 'and healthy. Mrs. James Williams, Waterford, Ont., writes: -- 'My face was covered with pimples for nearly a year. I used different kinds of remedies to get rid of them and finally thought there was no'relief. A friend drop- ped in one day and told me I should try Burdock Blood Bitters. 1 did so and used three bottles, and found the pimples were all disappearing from my face, and now I have a clear complexion again." B. B. B. is manufactured only by the T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toron- to, Ont. CUT THIS OUT " be . OLD ENGLISH RECIPE FOR CA- TARRH, CATARRHAL DEAF- NESS AND HEAD NOISES : If you know of some one who fs | troubled with Catarrhal Deafness, { head noises or efdinary catarrh, cut out this formufa and hand it to them ;#nd you may have been the means | of saving some poor sufferer perhaps from total" deafness. In England scientists for a.long time past have recognized that catarrh is a constitu- tional disease and necessarily requir- es constitutional treatment. i Sprays, inhalers and hose douches i are liable to irritate the delicate air passages and force the disease into the middle ear, which frequently means total deafness, or else the di- !sease may be driven down the air | passages towards the lungs which is equally as dangerous. The follow- ing formula which is used extensive- ly in the damp English climate is a constitutional treatment and should ! prove especially efficacious to suffer- ors here who live under more favor- able climate conditions. Secure from your druggist 1 ounce of Parmint (Dou strength). Take this home and add to it 4 pint of hot water and a little granulated sugar; stir until dissolved. Take one tablespoonful four times a day. This will often bring quick relief from distressing head noises. Clog- ged nostrils should open, breathing become easy and hearing improve as the inflammation in the eustachian tubes is reduced. Parmint used in this way acts directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system and has a tonic action that helps to The pre- paration is easy to make, costs little and is. pleasant to take. Every per- son who has catarrh or head noises or is hard of hearing should give this treatment a trial.--Advt. A ho. foot-bath containing a few drops of Absorbine, Jr. will have a delightfully . Make Rubber Products Rubber factories in Canada have more than doubled since 1916, and | represent an investment of approxi- mately of $43,000,000, according to information compiled recently. There are 32 plants in operation in oe Dominion, 22 of which are man- ufacturing rubber goods and 10 pro- ducing footwear. The total annual output amounts This indus- - "try gives employment to 13,000 workmen, and has an aggregate pay- * roll of $11,500,000, A lfrge number or animals wash 'themselves and bgthe. Among them . are elephants, stags, birds and ants. Bome animals get rid of their para- ites by using dust, mud, clay, ete. 'Those suffering from fever keep qui- et, seek darkness and airy places, drink water and sometimes plunge "into it. A man who has tried both tells us ~ that it is about ag expensive to main< tain a bootlegger as it is to maintain Perhaps all you require is a few doses of Chamberlain's Tablets. They reach the seat of your ailment and quickly banish the feeling of despon- dency which frequently has its origin in a lazy iver. Their action is mild, gentle and sooth- ing, vet the effect is certain. Take a 'Pablet To-night. ING TA various | rim stone kind of hell. THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. LIFE HERE MOST IMPORTANT By the Rev. Charles Stelzle. | Are men afraid of hell? I mean the'old-fashioned, fire and with a full appreciation of the +--Fhere's-been a lot-said-about-men+ | "putting off the day of salvation" |and then, while , on . their daath- | beds, crying out in agony for mercy. { No doubt there have been mainy {such cases, and there are some hap- |j pening to-day. but a rather extensive As we rise in the scale of life, let- | experience as a minister among {ting go of the things that decay the all kinds of people and a |power of death is gradually weaken- wide inquiry among other min- ed This is the secret of the "etern- isters convinces me that the fear |?! life" mentioned in the bible. : 4 | "How shall we escape if wa. neg- of Hell drives more men to repent- |, 5. comes straight from scripture. while they are healthy and | 1 | of strong than when they are suffering To netle Hs me Bigher thins is to in the last stages of a fatal illness. | Q The most cold-blooded indiffersnce | Somebody. ance seems scarcely necessary to add there are degrees of life in mon. e Inen see and feel more than And in proportion as a man and feels to that degree is he <n- more life than his neighbor. said: "I looked seen has beem in death-chambers, 5°°° before." this is true of most of ful things by which he is sur- | to the future life that I have ever {behind to find my past, and lo, it has | [form was it Talleyrand's. Men who go to the electric {ly this is because they are in full physical health or elsy have commit- ted some outrageous crime which haunts them, But tha average quietly in his greatly disturbed He will sometimes man who dies bed is not about hell. say to tha if he wishes to do so, but it reaily { makes no great difference to him! | This is accounted for by the fact | that at such a time a man is natura!- {ly below normal--mentally and | physically. He is simply incapable of thinking and feeling about things in a rational way. And-all this indicates a terribly significant situation. Men bardened as they approach death. no difference. They do not care to argue the matter. They are entirely careless as to what the future wor:d may be. Whatever else the scriptures tell us, they Unquestionably teach us that is not death but life! Here's where the race is to be run. Here's where the battle will be fought. Every day makes its impress upon our -characters--characters which we shall carry with us throughout all eternity. Remember the Spanish proverb: "Sow a thought, and you reap an act; sow an act, and reap a habit: Sow a habit and you reap a charant- er; Sow a character, and you reap a destiny." : "I want to .see life"--this is the of a young fellow in Chicago who had been suddenly killed, a thousand miles from home. His mother had telegraphed me tb hunt him up. Ambition had drawn him to the city on the lake. Youth and health had led him on with high hope. But in a month he was found in the "Levee'--a wreck. Some of us have an idea that see- ing "life" means to get. down to the depths. We say about the man with An unsavory reputation: 'Ha bas geen a great deal of life." ' But what is life? The biologists tell us that it is "Corres pondence with one's environ- ment." That's a phrage which would keep some of 'us guess- ing. In plain English it {means the ability to adjust oneself to one's surroundings. The man who cannot or will not adjust himself to changing condi- tions is not likely to enjoy very much of life, nor can he enjoy even a lit- tle bit of it very long. That man has most life who is | using eyes, ears, hands and feet to chair | usually beg for pardon, but ordlnar- | ling that I found in the note-boak jus. #8 iw | Maybe you're dreaming of the day {when tha mortgage is paid off and You shall become what you have "1 cannot understand why I could be considered so wicked, 'I never did but one wicked thing in my life." "When will that one come to an end?" Talleyrand caustically inquir- ed. 7 That Talleyrand had an apprecia- {tion of more lengthy forms of wit, even verging in practical joking, is demonstrated by the following: u3 AT one time Ggorge III or Eng- [land was reported dead. The news | seeped through the official and semi- | to the ears {for a" time, be affected. |to have definite information, so he j called upon Talleyrand, whom he | Without embarrassment) he | {stated the true reason for his undiplo- | | | knew, | Inatic request for information. | "Not at all. There is no indiscre- | 1 Have to give is of any use to you." This speculator rubbed his hands with delight and was profuse in his cager thanks. "Now, I must tell you," Talley- rand said, with an air of conveying la great confidence, 'some say that {the bills cleared up--the day when | the King of England is dead, and | you expect to settle down and enjoy | | the 'comforts of life. e | But now----it's night work and day others that he is not dead. For my |own part, 1 believe neither the one i report nor the other. I tell you this | work and nerve strain and heartac.e | in confidence, but for heaven's sake |--hoping that sometime you'll have | predcher that he may pray for him | a chance to appreciate thé things which are actually yours already. You're starving your soul. Yon never go to a concert or lecture. You | jon even go to the movies. Your wife goes, perhaps, and you | | eel that you are kind of | cause you don't. Once in a while you tell her in a | plaintive fashion that you never go a martyr ke - become [to such. "affairs." It doesn't matter |cases. that shy has pleaded with you to |and go with her. But no--you're too busy, and you j1eel grieved because she goes with- {out you--but therein she 'exhibits her good sense. Meanwhile, you're withering mer- | know it. You've been out the run- {ning for some time, but you havan't | found it out. Taken out of your jroutine job, which requires little ori- { ginality or mental effort, you'd be | lost. | What an absurd way of living! |And when you consider there aren't {many years ahead of you, it must |séem all the more foolish. It would | be very much better to get what you {can out your present possessions an: opportunities than to struggle for- evermore after bigger and more pre- tentious ones, and yet never be con- tent with them when they are won. And this should be remembered as you fight for many of the things ahead--the capacity for enjoyirg them gradually decreases. When your hand closes over the captur:d prize it seems to crumble in your grasp. And you say you can't enjoy a | book. Doesn't this prove that some- {thing has gon out of your life? You {haven't a desire to listen to music. There was a time when you were 'fond of both books and music. These still 'have the same value that they always had. You have changed---not books and music. When the love of music went out of .your soul you died by just so much, and when the desire to read good books passed away, you perish- ed in part, in a most vital sense. The man who possesses the most abundant life is he whose outreach on life is greatest--the man who ay preciates the greatest number of tie blessings of life. Tested by this standard, it should not be difficu't to tell to what extent you are actual- ly living . | The . Way Talleyrand Reproved a Talkative Friend. When Talleyrand, the "famous French politician, diplomat and wit, who survived so many changes of for- tune, was alive, all Paris listened whenever his name was mentioned, hoping to hear some new, witty thing he had said. That he, like many an- other famous wit, was credited with many brilliant things he had never sald, made no difference. Paris lik- One day Talleyrand was walking arm in arm with Narbonne, who was reciting some verses. Talleyrand was bored, but didn't know just how to stop the recitation without hurting the feelings of his friend. Suddenly he espied a short distance from them 2 man who was yawning. "Hush, Narbonne!" Talleyrand ex- claimed, pointing to the yawning man, "Not so loud!". At one time Talleyrand was deep- ed the flavor of a Talleyrand saying and' delighted to spread his fame For instance: ; None of the Talleyrand mets is more famous than "Speech was given man to conceal his thoughts." It is recorded that not even in its final Harel, the famous Inventor of clever sayings, himself confessed that he put the phrase into Talleyrand's mouth in order that he might claim it as his own after the death of the famous diplomat. : : Other sayings almost %s famous which were once credited to Taley- rand, belonged to less famous per- sons, it has been proved, but Talley- rand invented enough clever things of his own to hold a firm place among the most famous wits of all time, 'Hush, Nerbomne' Not So Loud." ly in love with Mme. de Stael, but there came a day when his affection began to waver and to fix itself upon Mme. de Grandt. At this eritical period these three, with other friends, were playing a game called "beat" Hoping to place him in a situation from which there could be no eséape without serious embarrassment, Mme. de Stael said: Suppose we were in a real boat, and it should capsize, which would you save, Mme. de Grandt or me?" "Madame," said Talleyrand, "you possess 50 much talent that you can extricate yourself from any danger, therefore 1 should save Mme. ds Grandt." A visitor to Paris, who had a repu~ tation for great wickedness, said in the Rearving of Talleyrand: {do not commit me!" 'A SPLENDID TONIC FOR WEAK PEOPLE | De. Williams® Pink Pills Act On the { Blood and Nerves.: Food is as important -to the sick person as medicine, more so in many A badly chosen diet may re- In health the natural {tard recovery. Whether there's a hell or not makes |take an evening or an afternoon off [aPPetite is the best guide to follow; lin sickness the appetite is. Often |fickle and depraved. Proper food and a good tonic will (keep. most people in good health. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are a fine |tonic medicine, harmless and certain {in their action, which is to build up the most serious thing we must face [tally and physically. But you don't {the blood and restore vitality to the {run-down system. For growing girls {who are thin and pale; for pale, tired "women, and for old. people who fail lin strength, Dr. Williams' Pink Pills lare an ideal tonic. Thousands have {testified to the benefit derived from . {the use of this medicine, among them {is Mrs.. William Gallie, Hantsport, IN.S., who says: "Before I began the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills I was so weak and run down that I could hardly do my own work. I often suffered from headaches and was very nervous. I then began the use of Dr. Williams'. Pink Pills and I can truthfully say I have found them the best medicine I have ever taken. You may depend upon it I will advise other sufferers to take these pills." You can get Dr. Willidms' Pink Pills through any dealer in medicine or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50, from The Dr. Wil- liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. It is the boast of the dairymen of Holland that in their country there is {a cow to every inhabitant, . Remember, the Lord does not lose sight of little acts of kindness. official circles of Paris until it. came | of a certain speculator. | He well knew that if the report were [true the bonds of England. would, | f He wished | tion whatever," said Talleyrand. . 'I | {shall be delighted if the information | Use 10) SHOE SATURDAY, MAY 7, 1921, IN; at REN =X lo al =r a MOTHER'S DAY NEXT SUNDAY, MAY Sth Lest we forget, this is a reminder to glve MOTHER one of dainty boxes of CHOCOLATES. choose from, including Huyler"s, Neilson's, our Several of the popular lines to Willard's, Lowney's Merritt's and it will mean so much to Mother. See the 'display in our window--then come your favorite package. in and choose Sargent's Drug Store 186 PRINCESS STREET. PHONE 41. Steamship Agent--All Lines Phone F. CONWAY / 1197 - 150 Wellington Street. Res. WATTS 177 Waellington street, Fresh flowers and plants daily Funeral bouquets People's Florist designs, to order. 1137. A and wedding Phone 1763. It one person eyes, has been estimated -that only in fifteen has perfect MONTREAL 6 QUEBEC SOUTHAMPTON. CLASCOW LIVERPOOL ANTWERP HAVRE w Ocean Voyage Shortened by Two Delightful Days on the Scenfe River and Gull 3 Apply 0 Agents Everywhere or 1 King Street Fast, Toronto, CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY Traltic Agents | ttt na a] We do not blame a young thing for giggling. If she doesn't gigle be- fore she gets married, she'll never get to giggle. : If you would have an ambitious boy, give him encouragement as well as food. LDR Ses A Change of Time Will Be Made om SUNDAY, MAY 1st, 1921 Standard time, not so-called Day- light- Saving Time, will continue to "| be used tor Schediiles of all trains on the Grand Trunk Railway System, For particulars apply to-- J. P. HANLEY, O.P. & T. A., G.T. Ry., Kingston, Ont. CUNARD ABGLLAN FERVIVAS SUMMER SAILINGS MONTREAL--GLASGOW May §/June 11[July 16 ....Cassandra May 27{July 2/Aug. § Saturnia N. Y., GLASGOW, (via Moville) May 14/June 25{Aug. 20 ..Algeria May 21/June 18!July 16 Columbia June [July 2{July 30 .. Cameronia NEW YORK---LIVERFOO Apr. 30|June 1[July 2 May 14 May 17/June 15/July 16 June 7 July 12/Aug. 20 Sept. 3|Oct. 1 ..8Scythia Boston te Liverpool & Glasgow May 21jJuly ® * Castalia N. Y., Cherbourg, Shmpton May 12{June 8{July 14 ....Mauretanis May 24|June 15{July 5 , June 30 N. Y., PLY. CHER. HAMBURG June 9{July 21|/Aug. 30 Saxonia Vigo, Gibraltar, Patras, Dubrovaik, wie and Fi May 17 Calabria June 4 ., re Pannonis * From New York. (0) calls at Corunpa instead of Vigo *Also calls at Havanna. Per rates of and further paruculars apply 4 Tol agents or THE ROBERT REFORDCO., Lines GENERAL AGENTS # KING STREET RAST TORONTO, ONT. (0) Via OTTAWA The ¢" CONTINENTAL LIMITED" Lve. Ottawa (Union Station DAILY for North Bay, T.& N. innipeg, Edmonton, Vancouver, Victoria. rane, Tickets and tull information obtainable at City Passen CHOICE OF ROUTES (STANDARD TIME) 12.20 Midnight National-G.T., 217 Princess Street, Kingston. Via TORONTO The * NATIONAL"? Lve.Toronto (Union Station) 10.30 p.m. DAILY 0. points, Coch- Jor Sidbury, Port ation ! Port William, Winnipeg, monton, Vancouver, Victoria. EQUIPMENT: Both Routes--Standard and Tourist Sleeping Cars, Library Cars, Colonist Cars and Coaches ining and Compar Ot : ger Office, Canadian J x § FAMOUS "WITS" OF HISTORY | By MARK STUYVESANT. a Gt Phug Tob aCco

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