Daily British Whig (1850), 31 Mar 1922, p. 9

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YRIDAY, MARCH 31, 102s, LIVER TROUBLE * Bad Bilious Attacks When your liver becomes sluggish and inactive your whole health suf- fers. Your bowels become constipat- ed, the tongue coated, the breath bad, the stomach foul and sick, and bilious spells occur on account of the liver holding back the bile which is 80 essential to promote the movement of the bowels, and the bile gets into the blood, instead of passing out through the usual channel. The only way to keep the liver ac- tive and working properly, and thus get rid of the nasty bilious attacks, is to keep the bowels regular by us- ing MILBURN'S LAXA-LIVER PILLS They ars purely vegetable, small and easy to take, work smoothly and Kently, fects of the old-fashianed purgativea, Mr. John 8. Caron, Donavon, Sask., writes: --*"I was troubled with my liver and had severe billous attacks. A friend advised me to try Milburn's Laxa-iiver Pills, so I took two vials and I have had no more attacks." MILBURN'S LAXA-LIVPR PILLS are 26c. a vial at all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T, Milburn Co., Limited, Toron- to, Ont. A dependable laxative is a necessit fame logy eden ned Phenol 'alers are -- an At All Druggists Wi @ McLa te Toronto, tones the blood and 20-8sk LOGICAL ADVICE! helps build strength. Recs semana Strike at the root of weak- | thos on own vial. Scott's Emulsion | Scott & Bowne, Toronto, Ont. ¢ ALSO MAKERS OF | Ki-MoIDS | (Tablets or Granules) WOMAN COULD NOT WORK Made Strong and Well by Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg- nourishes the body, For INDIGESTION etable Compound peri up my . 2 it. 1 my work I rec- can use -- Mra, Saturday Next Week White Fish .. ..15c. Ib. or and Wi 112 Clergy St, Pjone 2011. = | and there is nothing of the | griping, weakening and sickening ef-! Diary of a Fashion Model By GRACE THORNCLIFFE Lb ( i ~ w | She Describes an Afternoon Outdoor | Costumé of Printed Broadcloth. Today, I had a wonderful time in the country, which was an added {treat because of its unexpectedness Things we don't expect are often so {much that way, "Will you come down early and be ready to leave with me for Tuxcdo {at 9 o'clock in the morning?" Mad- {ame had asked late yesterday as I | was leaving. "Yes, indeed," I answered. "Miss Wolverton is on a commit- tee for the golf-club opening, ana is 80 busy she can't come in, hat says she must have a frock, and wants to buy one of our medels already made up for exhibition." "I should think one of those fresh new ones just. down from the work- room would suit her," I suggestesd. "That's why I want you to go," | Gray Stribes Distinguish This Cape and Frock of Lighter Gray, sald Madame. "Her measurements |are exactly the same as yours, au | you can model them for her." "Which ones are you sending cut to show her, Madame?' I askad. "Only two," Madame answered. "She has left all to me, and I'm tak- lng the yellow kasha along, but I [Laat her to have the gray broad- | cloth for this event, I'm sure she'll want it." "Nothing could be smarter for an afternoon outdoor occasion," I as- The hats will be more difficult. | There are several bright-colored ones j Bich could be worn with the gray, and I think we shall take them all," Madame planned, I could tell plainly that Miss Wol- verton was a favorite customer, for Madame did not part with models for the showroom unless she wag anxious to do some one a favor." "How very attractive!" exclaimed | Miss Gray when I had donned the | broadcloth costume in the club dress- Ing room and walked out in the lib- rary for her to see it, "You say it is broadcloth? I have never seen that materidf striped be- fore," she added. "It is very new," explained Mad- |ame, "We have been using it since [the makers brought it to show us | their wonderful new way of printing broadcloth." I slipped the cape back so she could see the straight little frock of (lighter gray with its battleship-gray stripes down the front. The neck | was slit and finished with turned- | back refers, showing plain gray next | to the face, while a gray tie belt con- | fined the waist, | "Those stripes down the front of {the frock and cape 'are stunning," {Miss Wolverton sald in a pleased | tone, I | "I think the long Tuxedo cape col- | lar is very smart," I agreed. "I know {| how you like simple things, and I | believe you'll love this." "That's a cunning little hat, and 1 { hope it's becoming to me," she said, slipping over to the mirror to try it jon. "Perfect", I remarked st her re- flection in the mirror, noting how the rose color offset her loyely brown hair and sparkling brown eyes. The hat was~of rose with a straw crown and cloth brim, the latter overcast in gray wool. We stayed for luncheon, and after- ward Miss Wolverton donned the costume, as guests for the festivities were beginning to arrive. / "You were fine to work such litte ify i | ol | E TH | wonders for me in such remarkably | short order," she said to Madame gratefully, as we left. She was a stunning figure as 1 dy lawn, YOUR HEALTH. By Raymond 8. Copeland M.D | Comissioner of Health New York City.) | { |e { | - rete i Why Pure Air Every Day and Night! | Is Vital to Health, ! | You cannot pick up a newspaper {these days without reading some- thing about the bad housing and | overcrowding of the cit | Thousands of families in New {York City live in three rooms, as | |many as twelve persons crowd to- | gether in these cramped quarters, jand four may sleep in the kitchen | h |every night. Many families live in | | Inside rooms without light or direct | outdoor ventilation. { It requires no argument to prove | the harmfulness of such over-crowd- |i You cannot have health or good | ing. such | citizenship where exist, A baby born in a home of four || rooms has four times the chance that | a baby has who is born in a home of | one room, 1 There must be sunlight and an ample supply of oxygen or physical | prosperity is impossible. 1 | Expired air--that is, the air which is expelled from the lungs--is filled {with carbon dioxide, or "carbonic acid gas," as it is commonly called. | In a room overcrowded with liv- | ing beings, the air becomes filled | with the carbon dioxide, so that the | | air taken into the lungs is not pure | oxygen, but is a contaminated and poisonous mixture of oxygen and karmful compounds. | | You know how the fire in the stove | | smokes and smoulders if the damper |1s closed, It must have air--oxygen --If It is to be made to burn freely. | Perhaps you have seen a chemical | engine or fire extinguisher pour chemicals on a blaze, You have ob- [served how quickly the fire dies | down. This is because the gases act jas a blanket, preventing the oxygen | of the air from feeding the flames, | | There can be no fire or "oxida- | | tion," as it js called, unless the lungs | carry free oxygen to purify the blood, i | Otherwise, 'food is just as useless as | | the coal or wood is in the stove with- | | out oxygen, Impure air is responsible for many | | diseases, | Impure air cannot cause scarlet | | fever, or typhoid, or infantile paraly- | {sis, but it can so lower the vitality | {and resistance of the body as to per- | mit the entrance of these germs, | | Indigestion can result from lack | |of oxygen, because food is the fuel | | which has to be burned up by the | oxygen, Without an abundance of | oxygen the furmace pf the body is clogged and trouble follows. Every farmer recognizes the im- | portance of the air supply, and is at | great pains to have plenty of space | for his horses, cattle, sheep, pigs and | poultry, the amount of air 'space that the | laws and ordinances require that hos- pitals, jails, schools and all institu- | tions shall have a certain minimum | of cubic air space for every inmate or pupil, Headache, nausea, faintness and | éizziness are the immediate symp- | toms of poor air. If one continues to live in such surroundings, paleness of the skin, lassitude, loss of appe- | tite, anemia and diseases of the skin | follow, The open window at night and fresh air all the time will go far to keep you well and to give you a long life of usefulness, T0-DAY'S FASHION By Vera Winston, 7 her last, gazing out over the] - ies. nw conditions _ ft The three-piece suit has come into its own for spring, and it is especial- ly attractive when in one of the loye- ly fresh colors which one associates with this time of year, The model is E DAILY BRITISH WHIG. TIN TL " ana rrdll i i JUITS 4 CLOAKYS SELECT YOUR NEW ER SUIT AND C0 PRICED SPECIALLY FOR SATURDAY AT | NAVY Tricotine SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY All Wool Navy Tricotine Suit made in this season's tailored or belt can be put on straight for back style, They come embrojdery and braid trimmed for back with narrow belt, in a very effective style, 21.75 Velour Coats Light and Dark Brown---various e with loose hanging box back; Popular shades of Reindeer, Tdupe, styles and lengths--some are mad others have pleated or inverted pl some have very neat embroidery t eat i *17.50 rimmings. Special Value! WOMEN'S UNDERWEAR Specially Priced! VESTS--Cumfy cut: fine ribbed Cotton «+ + ove +4 for $1.00 VESTS-- Cumfy cut -- Sizes: Women's large size and 'extra large. «+. .35¢., 3 for $1.00 VESTS --Cumfy Gut -- medium weight; fine weave Cotton. .45¢., 2 for 85c. Suits style-- inside, giving n backs--narrow belt--also Made with elastic waist and knee; in good, strong wearing quality; fine, ribbed Cotton. Specially priced, Polo Cloth Coats Made in this well-known Cloth for Sport or serviceable every-day Coat--styles vary, in belted models to loose back coat so much in demand this season... NOTE PRICE, THEN SEE MERCHANDISE, 50c A Glove Opportunity! Clearance of CHAMOISETTE GLOVES $ 11.50 Pleated Sport Skirts An exceptional offering of stylish Skirts--smartly box pleated and finished with narrow belts--secured from manufacturers at less than regular cost, Shade two toned Brown, Brown and Orange, Navy and Sand. 75¢ There is no need to comment upon the value cffered at this price. Suffi- cient to peint out that they are pers fect quality KAYSER GLOVES, with two domes and matching and cone trasting points. Colors: White, Grey, Sand, Mode, Mastic and Brown, 6.95 JACKSON-METTVIFR LIM] Ha cut in points which extend out over the green. The straight-line frock has the same trimming at its side seams and is finished at the top with with a simple, bateau neckline. The youthful, rolled-brim, white felt hat shows a feather of green. | Three Minute Journeys Where Jockeys Carry Handkerchiefs | for Their Race Horses. (By Temple Manning.) Very few travellers penetrate into Mongolia, the bleak and almost un- civilized table-land of Central Asia. This vast country does not even boast of a single mile of railroad, so that the people have remained almost the way they were when they were the powerful Tartars of the Middle Ages. If a daring adventurer braves the ish, For the races in Mongolia are dangers of a trip into Mongolia he 1s | thirty miles long! fascinated by the natives at the time | The Mongolians are great horse- of their summer festivals. Then, | men, and learn to ride at a very eariy every Mongolian family puts: on 11s age . Their lives are spent with and best bibs and tuckers and goes to the op horses. The women ride as well as fair, much in the same way the peo- the men, and by the time a boy has ple in our own country sections go to reached the age of 10 he is an ex- the county fair. pert horseman. In fact, the Jockeys owever, at the MongoHan county [are 10-year-old boys. fair you do not "hit the baby" and| These little fellows are mounted get a 5-cent cigar, or throw rings at on the very fast Mongolian ponies, canes to obtain a prize, but you do| without saddles. Their only trappings see horse races. are a bridle, a whip and a bandker- Instead of sitting in a grand stand [chief and watching the entire race as you| They start on their wild ride over do here, you see only the start or fin- {the steppes with the courage and spirit of men, whipping their horses fiercely, but often reaching over kindly to wipe the dust from the eyes and nostrils of their ponies. Yes, in Mongolia the inhabitants don't use handkerchiefs, but horses do, The Jockeys Are Little Boys. AUTHORITIES CLOSE ILLEGAL "BABY FARM" Were Accepting Infants With No Questions Asked as to Identity. * Cobourg, March 31.--The death of an infant last #veek under rather suspicious circumstances called at- tention to the existeme> of an unif- censed baby farm In Northumber- Attention had been attracted to place for some wi past owing the number of infants that were be- ing brought to it, and when it was rumored that one had died withomt the doctor's help the matter was re- ported to the Inspector of the Chil- Without revealing his identity, ne RINCESS land county, not far from Castleton. | {dren's Ald Society, James T. Daley. | TED STREET 'that no questions were asked it pay- INFECTION BY CORN ments were made promptly ae many as six infants were cared for | at one time, but as business was {n- proving the house would be enlargeq and then a dozen could be taken, i» Inspector Daley informed the peo- ple that the Children's Aid Soctety was the only organization authorized to look after children for this dis- trict, and that unless they closed up they wduld be prosecuted, They ag- reed to quit,~and no farther troubie is anticipated. Neighbors arg very {much pleased over the society's | prompt action, ---------- STUDENTS' DECISION RESULTS IN DEATH | ---- |The Chairman of the Kitchen= er Light Commission Dies After Amputation. Kitchener, March 81.--Georgn Lippert, Chairman of the Kitchener Light Commission, died at the K. W, Hospital. On Monday morning Mr. Lippert underwent an operation at the hospital, when one of his legs was amputated. Several weeks ago an infected corn had started blood poisoning throughout his system and the amputation of his leg was taken as a last-minute measure to save his life. The deecased for many years was a leader In civic affairs. : ' The escape from-all the fret and jfever and hurry and unrést of the world is to be achieved not by run ning away from the difficulties, buc by deepening the life. o That the sailor hat will come back to us this summer in a smart shape of medium size. Nothing looks quits 80 chic with a tailored suit as a straw sailor, If you are afrair of being found out leave it alone, | Dickens Best Novelist, Lloya George Biggest Figure. New Haven, Cann., March 31. -- Votes of Yale seniors for their fav- orite novel yesterday disclosed "A | Tale of Two Cities" easily the win- ner, "Crossing the Bar' was voted the favorite. poem. Dickens won the vote as favorite author with Lincoin the favorite character in history and D'Artagnan the favorite character in fiction. The class contains 120 re- publicans to 30 democrats, Lloyd George won the vote for the greatost world figure. | Yi recommended for holesomeness. It is the purest, the mostconven. Jet ang economical yeas lure. the mas to four Royal Y. Cakes a oR a ast Callen 4 sri pared at one time by using one glass . water and gar

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