Daily British Whig (1850), 27 Mar 1922, p. 11

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MONDAY, MARCH 27, 102A emer ---- ~ THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. Rt ett mms recom create casei 11 = He ---- THE JUNIOR BRITISH WHIG BIGGEST LITTLE PAPER IN THE WORLD STUDY SPORTS | a ------------ [rom ---------- S8C400L PLAY WORK | 'ONE REEL YARNS WITH THE AID OF THE WIND = "I've had the best luck!" said May- nard, overtaking Joe on his way to school. watching. "Why--why it looks like the ques- Haun for tomorrow's history exam," Joe. . "Not only looks Itke it--It is" de- clared Maynard, enjoying Joe's sur- | prise. . "Where did you get it™ Joe de- manded. "Out of the skies. Honest, though, it was just good luck. I went back to my study room seat for a book last night, and there right by my desk a plece of paper was fluttering, I pivked it up, and here it is." "Must have blown off Miss Ford- bam's desk," sald Joe. "Sura it did. You know she always gives out her questions on typewritten sheets like this, " "But you aren't going {o look at them, are you? Joe looking at Maynard wonderingly, "Look at them! What do yon sap- pose I'm going io do with them?! If the March wind offers to help me out, I'm not going to turn down the chance. Why waste time reviewing the whole thing, when I can work out these answers? I'll let you have a copy, if you want to save some time." "No thanks," said Joe shortly, turn- ing sthir red. Maynard put the pa- per mm his pocket and shrugged his shoulders, as another boy joined them. Ths next day Joe was at school early to look up some things on the big map. He felt nervous, for he knew the exam would be hard, though he had studied the night before. It seemed unfair to him that he should get"a low grade for being * ish." Maynard came in, looking con- fident, and gave Joe a glance which seemed to say, "I'll bet you regret bel ane. Mi Fontan paned Tha bell . Miss a typewritten sheets. Then she 7 stepped to the front of the plaftform. "I'm testing out two sets of questions," she announced. "One set goes to every other row. Rows one, three, and five should have questions marked A. The others should have questions marked B. Make sure you have the right ones.' One glance at Maynard's face told Joe that the trick of the March wind was a joke on Maynard. Jean: "If a burglar bresks into the cellar would the coal chute?" Joan: "No. but the kindling wood." , Vz. say iy . . Blue-jay to your druggist Stops Pain Instantly he simplest way to end a corn is Blie-jay. A touch stops the pain in- tantly, Then the corn loosens and omes out. Made in two forms---a ___kolorless, clear liquid (one drop does { it!) and in extra thin plasters. Use whichever form you prefer, plasters or the liquid--the action is the same, Safe, gentle, in a world-famed laboratory. by all druggists. Pawer & Toronto, Dept. 213 Ive, Boer Back, rns Dg IRE LTR; AGENCY FOR ALL OCEAN STEAMSHIPS For particulars apply to:-- J. P. HANLEY TRANSATLANTIO STEAMSHIPS 8t. Lawrence Route, Season 1932 Salling Lists Now Ready. C, 8. Kirkpatrick Agent ~ ~ 3G. Clareave Street "Look here what I've got." He pulled out a typewritten sheet from his pocket and showed fit tod Joe, taking care that no ong elses was REAL WRESTLING ' By FRED MEYER 175 Pound and Heavyweight. Champion Amateur Wrestler of United States ' Bway from your man, Lower your head. Then push against his throat with all your might. You will eithep force him so far away from you that he cannot retain his hold, or, if his hands do remain clasped, his body wil be bent so far back it will be an easy matter for you to slip from under his arms. Fearing a fall! should he rise to his hands and knees, a wrestler some times stretches face down on the mat and "hugs" it. It is extremely aime cult to work on a man in this position, To force him up, take hold of one of his feet and pull up on it as shown on the right side of the picture. To get greater leverage place your other hand on his back. A slight twist of his ankle will make the trick more effec. tive. Don't use too much force when pulling on the foot, nor too hard a twist on the ankle Whau I waa in grammar school one of the favorite playground stunts of our bunch was to grab some fellow around the walst, 'bear hi him, force him to the ground and A wrest- ing match was on hand. ( Maybe some one has tried the "bear hug" on you. Then you know how it saps your strength and how helpless you are when the very breath is| squeezed out of you. That same hug is used frequently in real wrestling matches. But the wrestler upon whom the hold is se- cured is not slow to break from it, and the break illustrated on the left side of the picture printed here is about the most effective I know. « 'When your aggressor places his armg around your waist, quickly put your fore arm against his throat. Take hold of the wrist of that arga with your other hand. Arch your back 8 TODAY'S PUZZLE TUBBY VISITS THE SWIMMING HOLE The letters in the title of a certain 2 || | book have been given consecutive numbers from 1 to 11. 3, 1, 11 gpell a space of ground; 4, 3, §, 8 spell a scene; 10, 7, 9, 6 spell to move. Whag is the name of the book? Solution to-morrow, '"This," said the young man, "is the engine bofler." "Oh," said the girl, "tell me, why do they boll the engines?" "To make the engine tender," h¢ replied "If you eat another piece of cake You'll surely burst," sald mother. "Then pass the cake and clear the way," Responded little brothas. nr MAIN STREET | The Story of Carol Kennicott By SINCLAIR LEWIS : Iv. prepared lunch and yawned. Carol The Kennicotts, the Elders, the |was a little resentful of the manner Clarks, and Bresnahan went fishing |in which the men assumed that they at Red Squaw Lake, They drove did not care to fish. "I don't want forty miles to the lake in Elder's to go with them, but I would like the new Cadillac, There was much laugh- |privilege of refusing." ter - and bustle at the start, The lunch was long and pleasant. much storing of lunch-baskets and{it was a background for the talk of jointed poles, much inquiry as to|the great man come home, hints of whether it would really bother Carol |cities and large imperative affairs to sit with her feet up on a roll of |and famous people, jocosely modest shawls. When they were ready to go [admissions that, yes, their friend Mrs. Clark lamented, "Oh, Sam, I |Perce was doing about ag well as forgot my magazine," and Bresna- {most of these '"Boston swells thst HAD BAD COUGH AND SORE THROAT: | Never neglect a cough or cold | | however slight. If you do it can] have but one result: it leaves the [throat or lungs, or both, affected. A of DR. WOOD'S | NORWAY PINE SYRUP will help to stop the cough, soothe {the throat, and if the cough or cold | has- become settled on the lungs the healing virtues of the Norway pine { tree along with the soothing and ex- | pectorant properties of other excel- | lent herbs, roots and barks promptly | eradicates the bad effects, and the persistent use cannot but help to bring about relief. Mr. Albert Marsh, Lower L'Ar- doise, N. S., writes:--'"About a year ago I contracted a cold accompanied by a very bad cough and sore throat. 1 sent for the doctor, but what he pre- scribed did me so little good I be- gan to get discouraged. A friend came to see me 'and asked me if [ had ever used Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. I told him I had not and sent him right away to get me a bottle. I started using it, and after a couple of days I found I was get- ting relief, and after taking two bot- tles the soreness in my throat seem- ed to be leaving me, 80 I resolved to continue its use, and after I had used five bottles both my sore throat and cough were gone. I would not be without "Dr. Wood's" for. any money." Price, 36c. and 60c. a bottle; put up only by The T. Milburd Co. Limited, Toronto, Ont. - AA rn Russian Jew, or one of these long- hairs! I can tell you, only you don't need to let: every one in on it, this is confidential, I got it from a man who's close to the State Department, but as a matter of fact the Czar will be back in power before the end of the year. You read a lot about his retiring and about his being killed, but I know he's got a big army back of him, and he'll show these damn agitators, lazy beggars hunting for a soft berth bossing the poor goats that fall for 'em, he'll show 'em where they get off!" Carol was sorry to hear that the Czar was coming back, but she said nothing. The others had looked va- cant at the mention of a counfry so far away as Russia. Now they edged in and asked Bresnahan what he thought about the Packgs#t car, in- vestments in Texas oil-wells, the com- parative merits of young men born in Minnesota and in Massachusetts, | the question of prohibition, the fu- {ture cost of motor tires, and wasn't [it true that American aviators put {it all over these Fregchmen? | They were glad to 'find that he | agreed with them on every point. As she heard Bresnahan announce, | "We're perfectly willing to talk to | any committee the n may choose, | single dose | but we're not going to Stand for some | outside agitato¥ butting in and tell- ing us how we're going to run our plant!" Carol remembered that Jackson Elder (now meekly receiv- ing New Ideas) had sald the same thing in the samé words. While Sam Clark was digging up from his memory a long and im- meénsely detailed story of the crush- ing things he had said to a Pullman porter, named George Bresnahan, hugged his knees and rocked and watched Carol. She wondered if he did not understand the laboriousness of the smile with which she listened to Kennicott"s account of the "good one he had on Carrie " that marital, coyly improper, ten-times-told tale of how she had forgotten to attend to Hugh because she was "all het up pounding the box"--which may be translated as "eagerly playing the plano." She was certain that Bres- nghan saw through her whey she pre- tended not to hear Kennicott's in- vitation to join a game of cribbage. She feared the comments he might make; she was irritated 'by her fear. She was equally irritated, when the motor returned through Gopher Prairie, to find that she was proud of sharing in Bresnahan's kudos 'as people waved, and Juanita Haydock leaned from a window. She said to herself, "As though I cared whether I'm seen with this fat phonograph!" and simultaneously, 'Everybody has noticed how much Will and I are playing with Mr. Bresnahan." The town was full of stories, his friendliness, his memory for names, his clothes, his trout-flies, his gener- osity. He had given a hundred dol- lars to Father Kiubob, the priest, and a hundred to the Reverend Mr. Zit- terel, the Baptist minister, for Ameri- canization work. At the Bon Ton, @arol heard Nat Hicks, the tailor, exulting: (To be Continued.) Wordsworth, Coleridge and South- ey lived In the lake region of Cum- berland and Westmoreland, Eng. and hence are called the "lake poets." This name was first applied in derision by the Edinburgh Re- view. Charles Lamb, Shelley and several others are sometimes includ- ed in the "lake school." That Dry Cough Is Bronchitis If neglected, it will weaken the throat and perhaps reach the lungs. Nothing surer to help you quickly than the healing, soothing vapor of Catarrhozone. It's action is magical, every- congested spot 4s healed, -4rri- tation is< soothered away, 'phlegm and secretlon are cleaned out, all symptoms of weak throat, Catarrh, Bronchitis disappears. Catarrhozone is a genuine, sclentific preparation. Sold everywhere in three sizes, 26c¢., G0c., and one dollar for a complete two menths' treatment. Prepared by the Catarrhozone Co., Montreal. on ~ 1 UNHCR), A i i HARDWOOD FLOORING Our Hardwood Flooring is unsurpassed in quality and manufacture. Get our quos tations on Beech, Birch, Maple and Oak. Allan Lumber Co." Phone 1042 - - . . Victoria Street I Cs A AA AAA AA AAA AAA ag Investment Standards The past record of an, investment banking house is eloquent of its standards. Have the founders always been watchful to associate their names only with investments of proved merit and known stability? Does the consummation of a sale mark the end of their intérest in the in- vestor and the investment, or only the begin- ning? Do they hold their reputation for fair dealing as the most valued of assets? By such standards may the investor distinguish the ine SN vestment banking house worthy of confidence ) and trust, onion Bond & Debenture Corporation LIMITED INVESTMENT BANKERS ROYAL BANK BUILDING TORONTO $50,000 Province of Alberta Due 1st November, 1936 Principal and half-yearly interest (1st May and 1st November) payable in Toronto Montreal or Edmonton Denominations: $1,000, $500. a Price: 104.02, Yielding 5.60% Wood, Gundy & Company Montreal 86 King Street West New York Winnipeg Toronto London, Eng. }% Bonds pe ble fats, The birth-riite in the United States is on the decline. - tal Whale oil 1s used in making dis OIRECT IMPORTERS OF v. . CEYLOMN,INDIA,CHINA.JAPAN & FORMOSA TEAS. esoes {Jnrar® CABLE ADDRESS. "THESTA" ST.JOMN, CORMILL & NQRTH STS. * stimulate all excretory organs. han bullied, "Come on now, if you women think you're going to be lit- erary, you can't go with us tough guys!" Every one laughed a great deal, and as they drove on Mrs. Clark cxplained that though probab- ly she would not have read it, still, she might have wanted to, while the other girls had a nap in the after- noon, and she was right in the mid- dle of a serial--it was an awfully exciting story--it seems that this girl was a Turkish dancer (only he was really the daughter of an Ame- rican lady and a Russian prince) and men kept running after her, just dis- gustingly, but she remained pure, and there was a scene-- While the men floated on the lake, casting for black bass, the women A Poison Storehouse In Every Home You may not think so, but that's what happens to everyone of us when the kidneys are affected. The kidneys are the filters that remove from the blood the waste matter that acts like deadly poison on the vital- ity and health of the system. Dr. Hamiiton's Pills stimulate the kid- selves--and they could take this for neys, expel fermenting matter from the bowels, restore the liver and No will clean up the system, tone the blood, make you feel fit and fine as quickly as Dr. Hamilton's Pills. Useful and needed in every home. Dr. Hamilton's Pills of Man- drake and Butternut. 25c¢. dealers, or The Catarrhozone Co., Montreal. think so much of themselves because they come from rich old families and went to college and everything. Be- lieve me, it's us new business men that are running Beantown today, and not a lot of fussy old bucks snoozing in their clubs!" Carol realized that he was not one of the sons of Gopher Prairie who, it they do not actually starve in the East, are invariably spoken of as "highly successful'; and she found behind his too incessant flattery a genuine affection for his mates, It was in the matter of the war that he most favored and thrilled them. Drooping his voice while they bent nearer (there was no one within two miles to overhear), he disclosed the fact that in both Boston and Wash- ington he'd been getting a lot of in- side stuff on the war--right straight from headquarters--he was in touch with some men--couldn't name them but they were darn high up in both the War and State Departments-- and he would say---only for Pete's sake they mustn't breathe one word of this; it was strictly on the Q.T. and not generally known outside of Washington--but just betwéen our- gospel--Spain had finally decided to Join the Entente allies in the Grand Scrap. Yes, sir, there'd be two mil- lion fully equipped Spanish soldiers lighting with us in France in one month now. Some surprise for Ger- many, all right! "How about the prospects for re- |asked Kennicott. v volution in Germany?" reverently The authority grunted, "Nothing to it. The one thing you can bet on is that no matter what happens to the German people, win or lose, they'll stick by the Kaiser till hell freezes over. I' got that absolutely straight, from a fellow who's on the inside of the Inside in Washington. No; sir! I don't pretend to know much about international affairs but one thing you can put down as sett- led is that Germany will be a Hohen- zollern empire for the next forty Years. At 'that, I don't know as it's 80 bad. The Kaiser and the Junkers keep a firm hand on a lot of these red agitators who'd be worse than a king if they could get control." "I'm terribly interested in this up- rising that overthrew the Csar in Russia," suggested Carol. She had finally been conquered by the man's wizard knowledge of affairs. Kennicott apologized for her: "Carrie's nuts about this Russian revolution. Is there much to it, Perce?" "There is not!" Bresnahan said flatly. "I can speak by the book there. Carol, honey, I'm surprised to find you talking like a New York Canadian Daily Newspapers Association, 902 -Bxoelsior Life Bldg., Toronto, ONT. Dear Sirs:= placed on the market, we selected the daily newspapers as the quickest way to *reach teas in bulk, while Red Rose Tea was, and is to-day, a blend of fine British grown teas from Indie and Ceylon, put up in Sealed packages, and count on results in building Red Rose Tea sales for merchants in small towns as well as whole sections, so we consider the daily newspaper gives us a definite service, years behind it, for Indie and Ceylon teas have almost complete- ly superseded China tess, and the daily paper has helped us make RED ROSE TEA, in its sealed package, known to Canadians from coast to coast, and our trade mark, "RED ROSE TEA 'is good tea'" a household name, ? A Monday. November 28/21. » Twenty-seven years ago, when Red Rose Tea was first the most peoples At that time grocers were selling, principally, China Because it goes directly into the home, into frequent close touch with the woman, the buyer of the family, we can y We are happy to say this with the experience of 27 \ Yours truly, : 00KS CO.Limited, ; PRESIDENT. may use this letter in any way you feel inclined. be There doubt about it--if want to make the name of your goods a i sin Daily As Mr. Estabrooks close 27 Jous "The Daily N per touch with the woman--the Por

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