THE DAIL Y BRITISH WHIG. SACURDAY, JANUARY 28, 1022, SORES SPREAD ALL OVER FACES AND BODIES Mrs. Howard Houlette, Waskate- | nau, Bask., writes:--"I wish to tell you of the benefit we have received by using your valuable Burdock Blood Bitters. My children started to break out | on their faces in small white pimples which kept getting' larger each day. Pus would form under the scabs and they would come off, and each time the sores would be larger; some were as large as a twenty-five cent plece, and would spread all over their bodies. I was nearly in despair and sent to the village for a bottle of good blood medicine. The druggist sent me a bottle of Burdock Blood Bitters, which I commenced giving them at once. In about ten days I saw an Im- provement and they grew steadily better each day, and in one month the sores had all disappeared." All blood and skin diseases are caused by bad blood, and to get it pure and keep it pure you must re- move every trace of the impure and morbid matter from the syste®by a blood cleansing medicine such as BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS & remedy that has been on the market for the past forty-five years, and one without an equal for all diseases and disorders of the blood. Manufactured only by The T. Mil- 'burn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. AMBEROL RECORDS f or February 'Have Arrived! " Come in and hear them ARERL "RECORDS You'll always find the latest hits on Amberol Records. This new list contains some very pop- ular dance and vocal 1 By SINCLA MAIN STREET The Story of Carol Kennicott | t : WHO PU IR LEWIS EA Be Segre Bo meekly did Carat give attem- { tion, so obviously was she at last de- [sirous of being one of them, that looked on her fondly, and en- couraged her to give such details of | her honeymoon as might bs of in- jterest. Bhe was embarrassed rather | than resentful She deliberately | misundenstood. 8he talked of Kenni- cott's overshoes end medieal ideals till they were thoroughly bored | They regarded her as agreeable but | green, - 'they THR the end she labored to satisfy |s the inquisition. She * bubbled at { Juanita, the president of the club, | that she wanted to entertain them. | "Only," she said, "I don't know that I can give you any refreshments as nice as Mpa. Dyer's salad, or tha: #mpiy deMcious angels-food we had | at your house, deag." "Fine! We needsa hostess for the seventeenth of March, Wouldn't it be awfully original 4? you made it a St. Patrick's Day bridge! I'll be tickled to death to help you with it. I'm glad you've learned to play bridge. At first I didn't hardly know it you were going to HMke Gopher Prairie. Isn't it dandy that you've settle] down to being homey with us! Maybe we aren't as highbrows as the Cities, but we do have the dais- lest times and--oh, we 80 swimming in summer, and dances and--oh, lots of good times. If folks will just take us #8 'we are, I think we're a pretty good bunch!" "I'm sure of ft. Thank you so {much for the ddea about having a St Patrick's day bridge." | "Oh, that's nothing. I always think | the Jolly Seventeen are 80 good at | original ideas. If you knew these | other towns, Wakamin and Jorale- | mon and all, you'd find out and real- | ize that G. P. is the livelles:, smart- | est town in the state. Did you know that Percy Bresnahan, the a] auto manufacturer, came from here and--VYes, I think that a St. Patrick's day party would be awfully cunning and original, and yet not too queer or freaky or anything." CHAPTER XI. I. She had often been invited "0 the weekly meetings of the Thanatopsis, the women's study dlub, but she had put it off. The Thanatopsis was, Vida Sherwin Promised, "such a cozy group, and yet it put you in touch with all the intellectual thoughts that are going on everywhere." numbers. We woulden- Joy playing these Feb- ruary Records for you and suggest that you come in any time and hear them. |ed into Carol's living room lke an Barly in March Mrs. Westlake, wife of the veteran physician, march- amiable old pussy and suggested, "My dear, you really must come to the Thanatopsis this afternoon, Mrs. Dawson 1s going to be leader and the poor soul is frightened to death She 4433 Brazil--Pox Trot Max Fells' Della Robbia Orchestra 4434 Jane Crescent Trio Sadie's Birthday Party-Vande- 135 ville Specialty Julian Rose 4436 O Happy Day Metropolitan Quartet 4437 Hugs and Kisses--Fox Trot Broadway Dance Orchestra 4438 The Waggle o' The Kilt ud ay Glen Ellison 4439 With All Her Fauits I Love Her Stil Walter Scanlan and Chorus 4440 Carolina Lullaby--V joi; Sole Rae Eleanor Ball Sliver Sandsof Lov Elizabeth "i Spencer andCharles Hart 4442 Rosy Cheeks--Fox Trot Club de Vingt 4443 | Wants To Stand On D i Ta Te 00 Al Bernard LAint Nobody's Fool 4444 LAin't Gouna Be ie THE J. M. GREENE MUSIC CO. ED, says she's sure you will bpighien up | the meeting with your knowledgo of | books and writings. (English poetry is our topic today.) So shoo! put on your coat!" "English poetry? Really? I'd love to go. I didn't realize you were read- ing poetry." "Oh, we're not so slow!" Mrs. Luke Dawson, wife of the | richest man in town, gaped at them | Ppiteously when they appeared. Her | expensive frock of beaver-colored sat- | in with rows, plasters, and pendants | of solemn brown beads was intend ad | for a woman twice her size. She stood | wringing her hand front of the nine- | tee folding chairs, dn her front par-| lor with its faded phosograph of Min- | nehaha Falls dn 1890, its "'colored en- largement" of Mr. Dawson, its buib- ous lamp painted with sepia cows and mountains and standing on @ mort- uary marble column. She creaked, "O Mm. Kennloott, I'm in such a fix. I'm supposed *o lead the discussion, and 1 wondered would you come end help?" "What poet do you take up to- day?" demanded Carcl, in her library tone of "What book do you wish to take out?" "Why, the English ones." "Not all of them?" "W-why yes. We're learning all of European Literature this year. The club gets such a nice magazine, Cul- | with which to MH | the Thanatopeis with the discussion today? i On her way over Caro! had decided i to use the Thanatopsis as the aralizé. the town. | woddately ¢ eived enor- | mous enth i she had chanteq, ! "These are 1 people. When the | housewives, who bear the burdens, | ar) interested in , poetry, it means | something. I'll work with them--¢. ; them--anything!" Her enthusiasm had become wat- | ery even before thirteen women re- | tool She had imn 'MON' IN MonNDAY I Who put the mo : Ak d Lute amy | tried Lo thinker Why hes Who bral the. ed ye ee -------- HE'S THE GUY Tw ub' tHe mon' nm Monday, dad? Q Sint ur tn Gunde." DRINK ; You'D LIKE To FIND Hit, En lutely removed their overshoes, sat down meatily, ate Peppermints, sted thelr fingers folded 4 | hands, composed their lower f thoughts, and invited the naked | Se of poetry to delver her mos: improving message. They had greet- ed Cardal affectionately, and she tried to be a daughter to them. But she felt insecure, Her chair was out in the open, exposed to their gaze, and it was a hard-slatted, quivery, slip- pery church parlor chair, likely to | callapse publicly and without warn- ing. It without fold ing piously. dus Adams here, She wanted to kick the chalr and [GItY. Mr. and Mrs. Charles ardt, Hardwood Lake, 1 ast week to some of their many re run, It would maké a magnificent clatter She saw "hat Viena Sherwin was watching her. She pinched her wrist, as though she ware a noisy child in | church, and when she was decent ana cramped again, she Mstened. Mrs. Dawson opened the meeting by sighing, "I'm sure I'm glad t you ail here today, and I under that the ladies have prepared™a num- ber of very interesting papers, this is such an interesting subject, the poets, they have been an inspirati for higher thought, dn fact v 1't Raverend Benlick who said that of the poets have beeri as much an | inspiration as a good many of the | ministers, and so we shall be glad to hear-- The poor lady smiled neuralgically, panted with fright, scrabbled about | the small oak table to find her eye- glasses, and continued, "We will first | have the pleasure of hearing Mrs. | Jenson on the subject 'Shakespeare | and Milton.' Mrs. Ole Jenson sald that Shakes- | peare was born in 1564 and died | 1616. He lived in London, England and in Stratford-on-Avom, which | many Amenican tourists loved to visit | a lovely town with many curios and | old houses well worth examination. Many people believed that Shakes peare was the greatest pRywHget) who ever lived, also a fine poet, Not | much was known about his life, but | after all that did not really make so much difference, because they loved to read bis numerous plays, several of the best know of which she would now orfticize, Perhaps the bes: known of his plays was "The Merchant of Venice," beving a beautiful love story and a fine appreciation of a woman's brains, which a woman's club, 'even thosa | who did not care to commit them- selves on the question of suffrage, ought to appreciate (Laughter) | Mrs. Jenson was sure that she, for | one, would love to be lke Portia, | The play was about aq" Jew named Shylock, and he didn't want his dau- ghter to marry a Venice gentleman named Antonio-- Mrs. Leonard Warren, a slender, | gay, nervous woman, president of | and wife of 'he Congregational pastor, reported the ! birth and death dates of Byron, | Scott, Moore; Burns; and wound uP: | "Burns was quite a boy and he did | Lot enjoy the advaniages we sajoy | today, except for the advantages of | the fine old Scotch kirk where ha | beard the Word of God reached | more fearlessly than even in the fin- | est big brick churches in the big and so-called advanced cities of today, but he did not have our educational advantages and Latin and the other treasures of the mind so richly sirewn before the, alas, too ofttimes inattentive feet of our youth who da not always sufficiently appreciate lie privileges freely granted to every American boy rich or poor. Burns had to work hard and was sometimes latives here. away on a visit some | Headache Colds Dizziness Wm | i i i ture Hints, and we follow its pro- grams. Last year our subject was Men and Women of the Bible, and | next year we'll probably take up | Furnishings and China. My, #t doas | make a body hustle to keep up with | alll these new culture subjects, but it | is improving. So will you help as ------- ----. "The a Muale" Princess Street = . ind Reduction in ' 1 A, ' a ° ~ sleigh Prices lemainder of stock will be sold a rl prices to clear out. P. B. McNAMEE, 118 Colborne se. at co ncess and- Al- streets. e 2372w. f A. Watts, McKelvey & Birch, san Boys and many others if they 'the best Sleighs they ever used. x i | faded hair to THIN, FLAT HAIR GROWS LONG, THICK AND ABUNDANT ! "Danderine" costs only 35 cents a bottle. One application ends all dandruff, stops itch- ing and falling hair, and, in a few moments, you have doubled the beauty of your hair. It will appear a mass, so soft, lustrous, and § easy to do wp. But what will please you most will be after a | few weeks use, when § you see new hair---fine and downy at first -- 4 Bair growing all over - tho scalp. "Danderine" is to the hair what fresh showers of rain and sun- d shine are to vegetation. It goes right to the roots, invigorates and strengthens them. This delightful, stimulating tonic helps thin, lifeless, grow long, thick, heavy led by ew companionship into low habits. But it is morally instructive to know that he was a good student and educated himself, in striking contrast to the loose ways and aristo- |- cralic society-lite of Lord Byron, on which I have just spoken. And cer- tainly though the lords and earls o? his day may have looked down upon Burns as a bumble person, many of us have greatly enjoyed pleces sbout the mouse ' and r rustic subjects, with their message of hum- ble beauty--I am so sorry I have not got the time to quote some of them." (To be continued.) ------------------ BEGINS THIRTY-SIXTH YEAR -- As Clerk of Townsh P of Denbigh, . Abinger and Ashby, Denbigh, Jan. '24.--The members elect" for the municipal council of Denbigh, Abinger and Ashby met on the 9th inst. and organized for bus;- ness. P. Stein entered on the thir. tysixth year af his office as township clerk. Dr. J. Adams was Ppoinied medical health officer and he and | ard W. Petzold were appointed auditors of the treas books. Who but the 'wed. ly old we > bn ted. {o Hoes W hy he's He That You've so long, desuad", Nr DA, Sopa nin | Visit to his mother and other rela- tives here, Joseph Adams, Kingston. wh Was impossible 0 st on jt i Wio also enjoyed folding the hands and lister.. | With his parents, | R. Jackson, Hinohinbrook. F. CASCARETS 10* For Gonstipated Bowels--Biliou$ Liver The nicest cathartic-laxative to phy- sic your bowels when you have is candy-like Cascarets. : D8 THOMAS' ECLECTRIC OIL AND 15 BEFORE 18 A nm Wedresdsy dar 7 Aunt TnQuLred.. Snie TAL REGISTERED BOrs, reeve, is in Napanee atten ng 8 i ' > di TRADEMARK the meeting of tho county council. a pleasant visi: Most of the farmers are busy now Dr. and Mrs, J. drawing fodder, getiing firewood or returned to the getting their supply of ice Owing to Marqu- | the heavy snow drifts, the roads have visit { been very heavy here lately, MADE IN CANADA BY has Established 1780 paid a MONTREAL, CAN. : Booklet of Choice Recipes sent free. Mrs. Charles Both is| Andrew W. Bowlby chosen judge to her daughter, Mrs. [of Border Juvenile Court at Wind- When raw cold winds blow Baker's Cocoa It imparts a cheering warmth, valuable nutrition and has a most de- licious flavor. The very odor of a steaming cup is appetizing and attractive. tis absolutely pure and of high grade. WALTER BAKER & CO. LIMITED DORCHESTER, MASS, Rod- | sor, tonight will empty vour bowels com- | pletely bx morning and you will feel | splendid. "They work while yon | sleep." Cascarets never stir you up| or gripe like Salts, Pills, Calomel, or | Oil and they cost only ten cents al Biliousness Indigestion 2 74 RINCESS STREET - - Sour Stomach - fs ak ON ALL PORTABLE LAMPS 10% REDUCTION ON ELECTRIC IRONS AND TOASTERS Burke Electric Company - PHONE 423 One or twol box. Children love Cascarets too, i sn ne UG HE Internal and External Pains are promptly relieved by ROYAL OAK GREETS 1022 With a better tire than ever, tire; weight, 16 pou pany); price, lower THAT IT HAS BEEN SOLD FOR NEARLY FIFTY YEARS TO-DAY A GREATER SHILLER THAN EVER TESTIMONIAL THAT SPEAKS FOR im NUMEROUS CURATIVE QUALITIES, A. NEAL, Manager 284 Ontario Street. The new Royal Oak, 30x34 fabrie i mileage 6,000 miles (backed by the come B ever before. See them before buying at: EASTERN CANADA MAXOTIRE & RUBr ER Co. Phone NAA AAA AA rt tmnt rat Canadian Postum Cereal Co. Ltd. CW. PosT,; Founpem - i$ CARROLL L.POST, Pregidens SH.SMALL, Vice President HC. HAWK, Secretary AB WILLIAMS, Teasurer d ~~ ' Factory at Windsor, Ontario Battle Creek. Mich, usa. October 27, 1921, Canadian Daily Newspapers Association, 902 Excelsior Life Building, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Gentlemen: The results which can be obtained by news- paper advertising are reflected, in a large way, in the growth and prosperity of the Canadian Postum Cereal Company, Ltd. Prom the start of its advertising experi. ence, the Postum Company has been a consistent user of newspaper advertising space. During these years, our newspaper schedules have constantly inoreased in volume and have been carried through with practically no inter- ruptions. It might be said, in a general way, that the advertising policy of this institution is founded on newspaper publicity. It is the belief of our organization that the present world events have increased the value of the newspaper as an advertising medium. Newspapers are fol- lowed closely for developments with regard to foreign Policies and the settlement of the many international problems, Such a reader interest cannot help but put newspaper advertising on a more substantial value basis than ever before. . In keeping with our past policies paper advertising schedules are being steadily maintained and we are looking forward to active campaigns during the year 1922, Yours very truly, --~ . hn and luxuriant,