MONDAY, JANUARY Ne, 1922, MELTING "Men are said to be very suscepuble--even nelts at her touch! But can't you imagine the ut of this picture--hurries to catch a picture nelting man of snow and thie one whose cheeks f the heart which he adores? THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. : "By Juanita Hamel | | the grea of other and week a man of snow---wny, whe 1ce-heart of him frantic struggle of him--who, somewhere of these strangely contrasting two--the are snowy-white and crimson with the flag an Cen ~ XA | | 4 arp hit 'E | at HE: \ Cape of Duvetyn Trimmed Wick ld hi i York City. hundred million ¢ the Dener the country. three hundred with 8 totsl oiroulebion of wel issue used. newspaper sdvertising, deyelopment, we felt that the gener] information. IL iated thet feeling, but it would hsve teken us & very muoh longer newapspers of Censds made WRIGLEY'S Chewing Guma the time to have in the lend. well recognized mediums of s y the beat -- but, for the sre logicell there cen be no question tut that the deily WRIGLEY business, Press of Caneda hss been our telling the people about what we hed to aell, ' WM.WRIGLEY JR. COMPANY MANUFACTURERS or CHEWING GUM A -------------------- Oatober Twenty Sixth, Cenadien Deily Newspspers Association, 902 Excelsior Life Building, Toronto, Onte Gentlemen: For over ten years est newspepers, farm We heve built the we sare It 18 not my Yery truly yours, lssmed by The Cansdion Daly Newspapers Assocration, Heed Office, Tovente. usrter-page advertisements, every year, in pers of Cenaeda, and this, permsnent newspesper ocsmpaign in the history of Our advertising hes sppesred in spproximstely Cencdien WRIGLEY business on: -4n the initial stege of our Press was the grest medium of Long experience hes not only subatan- because, intention to belittle the forms of S4verintug -- perhaps for meny busipesses the reet-cer snd bill-boerd 1921. we heve used sbout two doubtless, hse comstituted epers, snd & few megezines, over three million for esch oonvinoed thet without the greatest sellers importance ubliolty developement of the greatest asaet in " - | Putting the Hist | Into History King Solomon did not write the Song of Solomon, Somebody else wrote it--when Solomon had been dead five hundred years. And we're just finding out about $t--so they say. Dear me, how maemy things I've known all my life thet turn out to be nothing but fairy tales. There's Shakespear--did he real- ly dream Portia and Nerissa and the little candle that shed its beams so far in such a neughty world? Did be envision Beatrice and Bene- dik and Romeo and Juliet? Where Queen Mab and her faithful messen- ger, Puck, born in his brain? Or did't he have a thing to do with it, Bweet Will Shakespeare? Was he just a common, ale-house gossip, without a' thought beyond his bread and cheese and the few poor limes he spoke in the Strollers' Theatre? And Now They Bay. Napoleon--wasn't he a great sol- dier, after afl, and a great intellect? Was it just some little nobody who er is Useful model was 314 yards, 36 iriches wide and 1/3 yard of the directions or the pattern I have drawn address me : TTL Ta ~ This Photograph was taken peently at ght: Princess Victoria, the King, the King of Norway, stood behind hin somewhera in the shadow, and moved him about itke a puppet? DO YOUR BOWELS MOVE. REGULARLY, OR DO THEY There is no nodiin thivagh which disease 80 often attac] e system as by allowing the bowels to become constipated, and there is wo other trouble which flesh is heir to that is Ha to be neglected, because d inconvenience may not be felt, at once, from irregular action of the bowels. When there is not regular action the retention of tho decayed and effete matter, with its poisonous gases, soon poisons the whole system by being absorbed into .|1t, causing violent sick and bilious headach: truding piles, heartburn, ja ete. MILBURN'S LAXA-LIVER PILLS will oer on the bowels, thus making them active and regular, and remov- ing the constipation and all its allied troubles. y ' 3 ler, Tatamagou- :--"For over a year I ME] Te KING oF oA wv ¥ : King's Cross Station, London. From left to the Queen of Norway and Prince i « es, internal bleeding or pro- |the undice, ly, when you come right down to #t? Cleopatra--they"re beginning to say mow that she had a long nose, and glant eyes, and could never have been cast for the vamp in any really successful screen company, She was forty when Marc Antony Jeft his Em- press and his kingdom to follow her --how all the women of forty have hugged that idea to their pathetic hearts for all these years--and now, they're telling us that Antony wasn't after Cleopatra at abl, herself, What he wanted was her kingdom. malicious, masculine--who can make 8 heroine of her? Mary Queen of Scots--how we all wanted to be Mary, when we played "Mirror." What! You don't know what I mean by '"Morror?" You got all the igce scarfs and bits of illusion and artificial flowers in the neighborhood, and went to one of the other girl's mooms, when her mother had gone to the sewing tircle, and you draped things over your head, and powdered your face, and somebody played slow music on the piano, and you flitted wraithitke before the mirror, and were Cleopa- tra, or Mary Queen of Scots, or Row- ena, or the Lady of the Lake, or the Lady of Shalot--oh, i was lovely. Only everybody always wanted to be Mary Stuart, And now--they say she wasn't even pretty, even if she did have a way with her, -------- Perhaps-- Last night I read a book about George Washington and the men F'who wrote it said that Washington had a very bad temper end a rather ugly trick of 8. . I'm afraid I like George Washing- ton a little bit better for hearing that--he was always so perfect be- fore. You could admire him, but somehow, you never felt close enough to him to love him. But if somebody's going to write a book and tell us that Washington cheated at cards, or pinched a penny before he spent it, I hope I'H mever fing book. £ It's bad enough to know that there isn't any Samta Claus--and that the rings fu the grass are made, not by fairies who dance in the moonlight, but by something perfectly common- Place and absolutely uninteresting. Maybe King Solomon did not Elizabeth of England, red-headed, || girt | (pretty ones, of course) YOUR GLASSES NEED CHANGING If you are not getting the com fort and satisfaction you formerly did from your glasses; if you mus{ hold print farther from you than usual; if your eyes burn, blur and tire easily, your glasses need changing. ; Recognized authorities agree that everyone should have their eyes examined at least once in two years, R. ARTHEY, R.O. OPTOMETRIST AND OPTICIAN . * 148 PRINCESS STREET Think It Over! How big is our own particular It: tle universe, which is smaller than a pin-point in comparisen with the universe itself? Photographs taken at the Mount Wilson observatory indicate that light, which travels at a speed of 186,000 miles per second, would take 1,000,000 years even at this pace to travel from one edge of it to the other, Mr. John Bray, a member of the Astronomical Soeclety of France, cal- culating on this basis, declares that our universe--relatively mieroscopie a8 it is--measures from edge to edge the unimaginable distance of 5,869,- 713,600,000,000,000 miles! He adds that, astronomically, our solar system is small, for it would take 4,400 of such systems placed edge to edge, only to reach the near- est star. Thousands are suffering to-day with a drawing pain shoulders, at times almost 4 them down to the ground. have a dead pain across the They let this pain go on, and all time the disease is getting a er hold upon them. Now there someth wrong, one cylinder not working. Redmac, the : acts as a new spark plug--after few doses the pain High Climbing Railroad. The high-climbing railroad that erosses the western cordillera at the Andes in Colombia was thirty-five Years in the building, for construe- tion had to be suspended ¥ery often because of lack of funds, says the New York Evening Post. Completed now, it is one of the great engineer- ing feats of the world. Seldom have the conditions of a terrain shown themselves more daunting than they must have seemed to the mem who under Francisco J. 8, the Co- lombian railroad pioneer, began work at Beunaventura in 1878. hr ride now, and y ok Bosom te ba -------- Two-Story Omnibus. Facilities which a two-story omni- bus affords sightseers bave finally been recognized In Rome, whose every corner has something to nt. traet the eye of tourist or pilgrim, says the New York Evening Post, Double-deckers similar to the famil- {ar ones of London and New Y. service in cient city, and it is promised principal monuments and ruins will be included In their goutes. Whenever we see two women kissing each other we cannot help bit feel de pressed ab such useless whste, "Saray bajrs.