. 12 COULDN'T DO HOUSEWORK | HEART WAS 80 BAD Many women get weak and. run down and unable to look after their household duties owing to the heart action becoming impaired or the nervous system unstrung. Nature intended. women to be | strong, healthy and happy instead of . sick and wretched. But how can a 'woman be strong and healthy when day in and day out she has to go through the same routine of worl, sweeping, dusting, cooking, washing ete. Is it any wonder that the heart becomes affected and she gets irrit- s Able and nervous, has hot flushes, Sinking spels nd can stony a nicots chile. She admitied thas night, Carol seemed to have affection To all women whose heart is weak and immaculate care for the baby, and whose nerves are unstrung we [but she began to identify herself would recommend (now with Kennicott, and in this ? MILBURN'S phase to feel that she had endured HEART AND NERVE PILLS jauite too much from Carol's instabi- a8 the best remedy to tone up the fiey ' . system and strengthen the weakened organs. Daniel Bezanson, Loganville [who Nad come from the Outside and N.S. writes:-- "As 1 was troubled | Bad not appreciated Gopher Prairie with a weak heart for nearly two She remembered the rector's wife years I am writing to tell you what | who had been chilly to callers and Your great remedy, Milburn"s Heart, who was rumored throughout the and Nerve Pills, has done for me. town to have said, "Re-ah-ly I cawn't My heart was So bag » night 1) endure this bucolic heartiness in the pip a a was 8p weak I could M'esponses." The woman was positive- not do my housework. I tried two ly known to have worn handker- Rdvisd mo & ry youn. phils. I ied | chiefs in her bodice as paddingoh, Six boxes and am completely reileved. the town had simply roared at her. E ink they ale the beat remedy 157! Of cours the rector and she were Price, 50c. a box at all dealers, or got rid of in a few months. Then there was the mysterious mailed Slect on receipt tos. price by] , ey oronto, | : The T. Milburn Co. Limite | woman with the dyed hair and pen- | ciled eyebrows, who wore tight Eng- Ont, ' {lish dresses, like basques, who smell- EP Geer 4 But the birth of Hugh revived the transcendental emotion. She was ia- dignant that Carol should not be ut- terly fulfilled in having borne Ken- { | SAGE AND SULPHUR | DARKENS GRAY HAR It's Grandmother's Recipe to Re- | dred dollarg she had borrowed. Sony Color, Gives ang | Vida insisted that she loved Carol, Almbst éveryone ¥nows that Sage | Put With some 'satisfaction she com- Tea and Sulphur, properly com- | pared her to these traducers of the pounded, brings back - the natural | (OW. color and lustre to the hair when | faded, streaked or gray. Years ago | the only way to get this mixture was | to make it at home, which is mussy | and troublesome. the men and got them to advance | money for her expenses in a lawsuit, | who laughed at Vida's reading at a | school-entertainment,. and went off | owing a hotel-bill and the three hun- IL. Ftda had enjoyed Raymie Wuther- spoon's singing in the Episcopal b {choir; she had thoroughly reviewed ing at any drug store for "Wyeth's " | the weather with him at Methodist Safe afta BB compould, fam. | sociables and in the Bon Ton. But ous old recipe, improved by the ad- | she did not really know him till she dition of other ingredients, at a moved to Mrs. Guerry's boarding- 'small cost. { house. It was five years after her af- , Don't stay gray! Try it! No one | fair with Kennicott. She was thirty- . ean possibly tell that you darkened | nine, Raymie perhaps a young young- your hair, as it does it so naturally | er. and evenly. You dampen 4 Bponge or | gho said to. him, soft brush with it and draw this Fy) ag 50. utr, taking ove mall | brains and tact and that hea- gray hair disappears, and after an- | VeDly voice. You were so good in other application or two, your hair |'The Girl from Kankakee.' You made becomes beautifully dark, glossy and | me feel terribly stupid. If you'd gone attractive. on the stage, I believe you'd be just "| as-good as anybody in Minneapolis. BREAK CHEST But still, I'm not Sorry you stuck to ' business. It's such a constructivs career." ; "Do you really think so," yearned Raymie, across the apple-saucs, Ease your tight, aching chest. Stop ¢ the pain. Break up the congestion. | wife, Feel a bad cold loosen up in just a slangy traveling man, and the rest Short time. 2 Ub" 14 the cold rem lof Mrs. Gurrey's unenlightened e Ol Bm - edy that OD . quickest relief. It Eueats, They sat opposite and they cannot hurt you and it certainly |S2t late. They were exhilarated Seems to end the tightness and drive [find that they agreed in confession of the congestion and soreness right | fatifi: out. Nothing has such Nowadays, by ask- and sincerely, It was the first time that either of them had found a dependable intel- lectual compandonship, They looked | down on Willis Woodford the bank- {clerk, and his anxious babycentric the silent Lyman Casses, the concentrated, ry Haydock aren't earnest about _ penetrating heat as red peppers, and music and pictures and eloquent ser- when heat penetrates right down in- mons and really resaec movies, put "to colds, congestion, aching muscles | 'then on the other hand, and sore, stiff joints relief comes at | Carol 'Kennicott put too much stress oo moment you apply Red Pep- | °1 all this art, Folks ought to ap- | per Rub you feel the tingling heat. In | Preciate lovely things, but just the | three minutes the congested spot is Same, they got to be practical and-- Warmed through and through. When | they got to look at things in a prac you are suffering from a cold, rheu- | tical way." matism, backache, stiff neck or sore muscles, just get a far of Rowles Red | Pepper Rub, made from red pep- Wm She recalled certain other women | | ed of stale musk, who flirted with | You can do anything, with | to | | "People like Sam Clark and Har- Smiling, passing each other the | MAIN STREET | The Story of Carol Kennicott By SINCLAIR LEWIS 3 | pressed-glass plckle-dish, seeing Mrs. | Gurrey's' linty supper-cloth irradiat- {ed by the light of intimacy, Vida and | Raymie talked about Carol's rose- | colored turban, Carol's sweetness, | Carols new low shoes, Carol's erron- | eous theory that there was no need | of strict discipline in dchool, Carol's Jamiability in the Bon Ton, Carol's flow of wild ideas, which, honestly, |Just simply made you nervous to | keep track of them; SAbout the lovely display of gents' shirts in the Bon Tom window as dressed by Raymde, about Raymie's |oftertory last Sunday, the fact that there weren't any of these new solos {as nice as "Jerusalem the Golden," end the way Raymie stood up to {Juanita Haydock when - she came Into the store and tried to run things and he as much as told her that she | Was 60 anxious to have folks think |she was smart and bright that she |sald things she didn't mean, and {anyway, Raymie was running the | shoe-department, and if Juanita, qr { Harry either, didn't like the wdy he {ran things, they could go get another | man; | About Vida's new Jabot (made her look thirt | estimate) or twenty-two (Raymie's jestimate), Vide"s plan to have the | high-school Debating Soclety give a | playlet, and the difficulty of keeping | the younger boys well behaved on the playground when a big lubber |llke Cy Bogart acted up so; About the picture post-card which { Mrs. Dawson had sent to Mrs, Cass {from Pasadena showing roses grow- {ing right outdoors in February, the change .in time on No. 4, the reck- [tess wily Dr. Gould always drove his lauto, the reckless way almost all | these people drove their autos, the [fallacy of supposing that these so. | clalists could carry on a government | | for as much as six months if they {ever did have a chance to try out [thelr theories, and the crazy way in | which Carol jumped from subject to subject. Vida had once beheld Raymie as a {thin man with spectacles, mournful | drawn-out face, and colorless stiff hair, Now she noted that his Jaw was square, that his long hands mov- od quickly and were bleached in a refined manner, and that his trusting eyes indicated that he had "led a clean life." She began to cail him Prec er Indigestion Sourness THE DAILY ERITISH WHIG. WHEN HAIR THINS, FADES OR FALLS, USE "DANDERINE* 35 cents buys a bot- tle of '"Danderine.'" { Withip ten minutes af- | ter the first application | you can not find a | single trace of dandruff | or falling hair. Dan- { derine is to the hair | what fresh showers of | rain and sunshine are * | to vegetation. It goes right to the roots, in- | vigorates and strength- ens them, helping od i hair to grow long, jp F thick and luxuriant. * a Girls! Girls! Don't let your hair stay lifeless, colorless, thin, scraggy. A- single application of delightful Danderine will double the beauty and rediance of your hair and make it look twicy as abundant. A] "Ray," and to bounce in defence of his unselfishness and thoughtfulness {every time Juanita Haydock or Rita {Gould giggled about him at the Jolly Seventeen. On. Sunday afternoon of late aut- fume they walked down to Lake Min- | nlemashie. Ray sald that he would {like to see the ocean; it must be a | 8rand sight; it must be much grand- jer than a lake, even a great big lake. which | Vida had seen it she stated modestly; | You don't mind. y-two (Vida's [she had seen it on a summer trip to [AWful if a lady goes on a walk with | | Cape Cod. "Have you been clear [Cod? Massachusetts? I knew you'd | traveled, but I never realized you'd | been that far!" | Mdde taller and younger by his iter she poured out, "Oh my yes. [It was a wonderful trip. So many { points of interest through Massachu- Setis _istoficay. There's, Lexing- ton wherd we turned back the red- |coats, and Longfellow's home at | Cambridge and Cape Cod --- just everything--fishermen and whale- | ships and --sand-dunes and every- | thing." 1 She wished that she had a little | cane to carry. He broke off a wil- { low branch, "My, you're strong!' she said. "No, not very, I wish there was 12 Y.M.C.A. here, so I could take up regular exercise, I used to think I could do pretty good acrobatics, if I had a chance." By "I'm sure you could. You're un- usually lithe, for a large man." "Oh no, not so very. But I wish we had a Y.M. It would be dandy to have lectures and everything, and I'd like to take a class in improving the i | OLE] In five minutes "Pape's Diapepsin" ends Gases Flatulence Heartburn Palpitation | "Pape's Diapepsin" "really does" {put bad stomachs in order-- 'really | does" overcome indigestion, dyspep- | sla, gas, heartburn and sournese in people lke | five minutes -- that -- just that -- | makes Pape's Diapepsin the largest selling stomach regulator in the world. If what you eat ferments into stub- | born lumps, you belch gas and eruc- | : r : tate sonr, undigested food and acid: 1 | pression that there was no risk concern- remember | most efficient antacid and stomach head is dizzy and aches, the moment '"'Pape's Diapepsin" | comes in contact with the stomach all { such distress vanishes. It's truly as- j touishing--almast marvelous-- and | the joy is its harmlessness. A large sixty-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin iz worth its weight in gold to men and yomen who can't get their stomachs | fegulated. It belongs in your home | --should always be kept handy in | case of a sick, sour; upset stomach {during the day or at night. It's the | regulator in the world. pers, at any drug store. You will have the quickest relief known. Al- ~ Ways say '"Rowles." RE IVMML| mre] APPLY SULPHUR TO Copryrighe 1922 Amociated Editors 0 I oh Hit 1 i BEAL UP YouR sry PRY ITP Broken Out Skin and Itching Eczema Helped Over Night -- | For unsightly skin eruptions, rash { Or blotches on face, neck, arms or r » You do not have to wait for re- | lief from torture or embarrassment. | res a noted skin specialist. Ap- Ply a little Mentho-Sulphur and im- 'provement shows next day. Because of its germ destroying pro- _ perties, nothing has ever been found "to take the place of this sulphur on. The moment you apply healing begins. Only those who have had unsightly skin troubles can know the delight this Mentho-Sul- phur brings. Even fiery, itching ecs- ema is dried right up. Get a small jar from any good and use it like cold cream. pe brurses THE PLAY MAN'S GAMES By E, D. ANGELL I fp 4 iy | Ji i my, il, Ege § Ht gist H LE AW 1 g i i i f | 1 I ; i £ ; ¢ £ i Th pEEciE fii Fe Eig §F Fe i ie Hs i ! ¥ i § Bo NY Lol TH =| I i wl etn ala ------------ | The photographer naturally ex- | Pacts his patrons to take him ser. | ously when he asks them to look of i i § a § £ 7 ? i ws g » { Thai i ii i ! i BE i f { i s28515 fi i t t i it E k ik » ! i : 3 lt ii] | . i £ ; fis § Tllustrated by C H. Winger fh to Cape | 4 ---- at on | memory--1I believe a fellow ought to go on educating himself and im- proving his mind even if he is in | business, don't you, Vida--I guess' | I'm kind of fresh to call you 'Vida'!" | "I've been calling you 'Ray' for | weeks!" | He wondered sounded | tart, | He helped her down the bank to] the edge of the lake but dropped her | {band abruptly and as they sat on a | {willow log and he brushed her sleeve, | | he delicately moved over'and mur- mured, "Oh, excuse me-----accident." She stared at the mud-browned chilly water, the floating gray reeds. "You look thoughtful," he said. She threw out her hands. "I am! Will you kindly tell me whatis the use of---anything! Oh, don't mind | me. I'm a moody old hen. Tell me | about your plan for getting a part. | nership in the Bon Ton. I do think | you're right: Harry Haydock and | that mean odd Simons ought to give you one." . He hymned the old unhappy wars in which he had been Achilles and | the mellifivous Nestor, yet gone his righteous ways unheeded by the cruel kings. . . . "Why, i I've told 'em once, I've told 'em a dozen times to get in a side-line of light-weight pants for gents' summer wear, and of course here they go and let a cheap | kike like Rifkin beat them to it and | grab the trade right off 'em, and then Harry sald--you know how Harry is, maybe he don't mean to be grouchy, ; [but he's such a sore-head--" | He gave her a hand to rise, "It I think a fellow is why she | [him and she can't trust him and he | tries to flint with her and all." "I'm sure you're highly | worthy» she snapped, end she | Sprang up without his aid. Then, {smiling excessively, "Uh__don't you thiak Carol sometimes'tails to appre- ciate Dr. Will's ability?" f (To be Continued.) trust- r------ { | Lessons From Newspaper Failures | Sarnia Canadian Observer { { .. The announcement that the Detroit [News has abandoned the morning field in that city is somewhat surprising in- itormation. Coupled with the declara tion of a few days ago that the new | Paper in Port Huron had gone into tha thands of a receiver, the incident sug- | ests that the process of elimination of {superfluous newspapers in continuing {and that it will continue. The facts seem to be that there have | been too many newspapers. The stress {of hard-headed business has compelled | | the unwarranted ones to sticcumb. i | Some years ago many villages, towns | {and cities had at least two ne wspapers. | | Most of us can recall what ill-support- | ed, miserable affairs the majority of | {them were, neither a credit to those who | were struggling to keep them in being, nor to the communities they represent. ed. When the war came on the pressure of "financial condition drove the weak papers to the wall or into amalgama- | tions which gave one paper of some | standing where two or three had exist- fed in an uncertain fashion before. The | |result was that the surviving papers | were able to maintain a glecent standing {and serve their patrons better and at | {less cost than had been the, case where | the community had to support two or | more. The outcome has been that the | | whole tendency in places under fifty | thousand population is toward one paper. The people under such condi- f tions are convinced that one paper-is all |they can afford to support' and they | { have demonstrated on numerous occa. | | sions, where there has been attempts to { inaugurate the second newspaper, that ! the advertisers who pay the shot are not favorable to newspaper duplication jin a field that does mot Warrant such. few years ago there appeared to exist among some of the public an im | | [ed about an investment in a newspaper. So many of them have discovered to {their sorrow that no commercial enter- | prise can' lose money faster than a bad- {ly managed newspaper that there is no ! | longer the craze for the kind of glory | that was supposed to accom i i Aalistic ownership. Man {ada have lost imme ox! {in modest: newspaper ventures, They | were usually outsiders who before the | | incident that gave them their unhappy | €xperience, saw only the glamor of the | game and the successful exterior ap- pearances of the newspaper. They had | no conception as to the magnitude of |. | the wage bills, the excessive cost of ma- { chinery, white paper and news services, [the strain and worry of training staffs to perform the intricacies of the task | which any newspaper must accomplish if it hopes to rise above the status of a ' | journalistic mediocrity. However, the | testing time through which newspapers | passing have succeeded in educating the | public to the recognition. that the news | paper game is not one for amateurs | | that years of trainihg often fail to pro- | duce successful executives and that the business can readily prove a sinkhole | for large amounts of money without ; getting the investor far on the-road to success. The newspaper business is to- {day a highly-specialized calling in | I which the examples of genuine sticeess | are so few compared with the list of failures that no man except a gambler of the most foolhardy t would risk his money in it. Successful production of a newspa, means unceasing toil, watchfulness anxiety on the part of those directly concerned. responsibilities that the average man accustomed only to commercial lines js not willing to undergo because he must conclude that other lines of business offer greater rewards at less sacrifice. | | It imposes | SATURDAY, MARCH 18, 1022, When raw cold winds blow DRINK 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. It is absolutely pure and of high grade. . ~ MADE IN CANADA BY ' WALTER BAKER & CO. LIMITED Established 1780 "MONTREAL, CAN. DORCHESTER, MASS. Booklet of Choice Recipes sent free REGISTERED TRADEMARK a x STARA AAA tA A tt tna natant Mastin's Yeast Vitamon Tablets Make Skin Clear and Flesh Firm Easy and Economical To Take--Results Quick. Every woman who has heard of the wondrous health- and beauty- making power of the vitamines in yeast, fresh vege- tables and other raw foods will be glad to know of the amazing re- sults being obtain= ed from the highly concentrated Mas- tin's yeast VITA- Tablets. These supply a proper dose of all / three vitamines (A, NB and C) and ave now used by thou- sands of men and women who appre- ciate their econ- pa- tion. Pimples, boil, and skin erupts seem to vamsh if 'by magic, leav- ing the complex- ion clear and beau- tiful. So remark. able are the bene- fita from these highly concentrat- ed Mastin's yeast VITAMON Tab- lets « that entire satisfaction is ab- solutely guaran. small teed or the "amount you for the trial Nl promptly refur.ded. Be sure to Temes y i ber the name--Mas- omy,convenience J A and quick results. Mastin's VITA- | tin's VI-TA-MON Tablets -- the orig- MON Tablets mix with your food, help | nal and genuine yeast-vitamine tablets. it to digest and provide the health-giv- | There is nothing else like them, #0 do not ing, strength. building nourishment that | accept imitations or substitutes. You your body must have to make can get Mastin's VITAMON Tablets tissue, strong nerves, rich blood and a | at all druggists, keen, a They will not cause 83s or upset the stomach, but, on the = The Beautiful Clear Vitamon Skin The Ugly Blackhead Unhealthy Skin Mastin's VITAMON Tablets are Fully Guar- EAST anteed in Every Respect. TABLET 1f 1t isnt MASTINS ii ¢VITAMON TheWorlds Standard-Used byMillions Suisiributor, Duncan-Kershaw & Co., 207 8t..James St., Montreal, Canada" TTR THR AGENCY FOR ALL SHILOH STOPS THAT COUGH For grown-ups or children. Safe, sure and efficient. Small dose means economy and does not up- set, the stomach. At all dealers, 30¢, 60c and $1.20. 3 OCEAN STEAMSHIPS . For particulars apply to:-- Fine Spring Tonic Says The Druggist There is no hesitation about recom- mending this blend of pure herbs and roots, so safe and sure-for all, CELERY KING drives away . feverish colds, dull headaches and skin eruptions. Brew it yourself, costs only a few cents, Gentle 'and pleasant to take, All Aruggists, 30c and 80c. | | | J. P. HANLEY TRANSATLANTIC STEAMSHIPS St. Lawrence Route, Senson 1922 Sailing Lists Now Ready. C. 8. Kirkpatrick - 36 Clarence Street Agent a [jr <a. 2 RES 7 TLR al) N. Y. & Boston Services CUNARD LINE N. ¥. to Quecastown and Liv 1 Apr 17{June 14 | Apr. 26/May 24/June 21 .. Caronia | May 10\June 7/July § i 'N.Y. Cherbourg & Southampton Albania | Mar. 21]Apr 11 May 2 Aquitanie Tyrrhenia| Apr 4/Apm 251 May 16 .. Mauretania Berengaris May 36 June 20 July 11 A usonia | x Piy. Cherbourg and Mamboury ' a 1a ia S od Canadian Services CUNARD LINE Halifax, Plymouth, Cherbourg and , 10 . Montreal te Liverpool May 6!June 10{July 15 May 20[June 24 July 29 July $iAug. 12!8ept. 16 Apr N,v. | April §1May 13idune 17 | Apr. IR May 26 July 1Aug. Boston, Liverpool, Queenstown May 3 May 31 June 28 .. Laconts ANCHOR LINE N. Y, to Glasgow (via Moville) Mar. 20 Apr. 8 May 12/June 10 *Apr. $iMay . 6 June 3 .. May 27 June 24 July 22 ' *Also calls at Liverpool. BOSTON TO LONDONDERRY 'LIVERPOOL AND GLASGOW Apr. 18|May 23/July § « Assyris une 181*Jul : New York Via New Bedford te Asorves May 181 ne 3 Stu y 3H and Mediterranean *June 23(July ug. Frgm N. Y. From New Pefpitors r. 28 gents or ' ' Montreal to Plymouth, Cherbourg and London May 12iJune 17Jaly 22 .... May 27\July 1jAug. § +... Andania Antonia ANCHOR-DONALDSON LINE Pertiand, Halifax, Glasgow Yrom Portland From Halifax Mar. 30 ..,....Cassandra Saturnia 4 . Columbia May 5/June 2 June 30 * Calls at Moville (Ireland) Mer. 24 Italia For rates of passage, freight and furth er particulars, apply to local a THE ROBERT REFORD CO, LIMITED, GENERAL AGENTS, 0 King Street East. Teronte, Ontarie