Daily British Whig (1850), 9 Dec 1922, p. 19

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= tng SATURDAY, DEC. 0, 1922, Listen, "Her Heart Skipped + Every Third Beat Mrs. James Burleigh, 248 King St. | E., Chatham, Ont., writes:--"I think it my duty to let you know what Mil- burn's Heart and Nerve Pills have done for me. : 1 suffered for years with palpita- tion of the. heart, my negves were very bad, and I could not be left alone at any time. 1 doctored for over a year, and the doctor said my heart was ep bad as it skipped every third beat. I gave up, jast at this time, and then my mother advised me to try Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills, say- ing my eldest brother had been re- lieved by using them when he was very bad with his heart and nerves. I got a box and started to take them, and when I had used it I felt a lot better; gould sleep a little and felt stronger.' 1 continued taking them for about three months, and felt bet- ter than I had for years. When I think of the misery and suffering I went through before I started Milburn"s Heart and Nerve Pills, I feel like letting everyone know what they did for me." Price 60c. a box at all dealers or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. RED PEPPER HEAT ENDS RHEUMATISM Red Pepper Rub takes the "ouch" from sore, stiff, aching joints. It can- not hurt you, and it certainly stops that old rheumatism torture at once. 'When you are suffering so you can hardly get around, just try Rec Pep- per Rub and you will have the quick- est relief known. Nothing has such concentrated, penetrating heat as red peppers. Just as soon as you apply Red Pepper Rub you will feel the tingling heat. In three minutes it warms the sore spot through and through. Pain and soreness are Bone. Ask any good druggist for a jar of Rowles Red Pepper Rub, Be sure to get the genuine, with the name Rowles on each package. DOCTORS STOP MEAT IN KIDNEY TROUBLE In Your Back Hurts or Bladder Both- ers, Begin on Salts. No man or woman who eats too much meat can make a mistake by flushing the kidneys occasionally, says a well-known authority. Big meat eating may develop uric acid, which excites the kidneys; they be- come overworked from the strain, get sluggish and fail to filter the waste and poisons from the blood; then we get sick. Rheumatism, headaches, Itver trouble, nervousness, dizziness, - sleépiness and urinary disorders of- ten come from sluggish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys, or your back hurts, or if the ne is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, irregular of passage or attended by a sensation of scalding, stop eating meat and get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any phar- macy; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast, and in a few days your kidneys may act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, com- bined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate the kidneys; also ta igutralize the acids in urine so it nger causes irritation, thus often ending bladder weakness, Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot injure; makes a delightful' efferves- cent lithia water drink, which every- one should take now and then to help keep the kidneys clean and active and the blood pure, thereby' often avoiding serious kidney complica- tions. . ROI ALIN Pain is Nature's sig- nal that something is wrong, and unless it is quickly righted it may easily become serious. : If the aches are in the joints wil ohne ick] TT roite former healthy condition. Swellings which so com- monly Jocompany are quickly reduced brisk Absorbine, Jr. rub. $1.25 a bottle at most druggists' Fal 344 St. Paul St. | | | | I'am against Cupid. As an entree {he may be a riotous success, but 1 |steadfastiy maintain that as the plece de resistance he is the bunk! I realize that I am attacking a hitterto unassailed great American institu- tion, But I like to attack hitherto unassailed American institutions. It may result in my destruction but it will be a glorious death, so here's where Cupid gets his. Let's go. The Americans arte a progressive people. In all mechanical lines they display tmagination and originality. Industrially they have a healthy con- tempt for precendent and prejudice and hurtle ahead, defying time-worn | traditions: But when it comes down to matters pertafming to matrimony, they're still wobbling around in the Paleazoic ooze of sentiment. And nothing short of a spiritual earth- auake is ever going to blast them out of-4t.- I think, however, that the spiritual earthquake is beginning. Its name Is Divorce. Did I say Paleazoic ooze of sentl- ment? I take it back---thé Paleazoic pollywog had the correct idea of mar- riage. For them it mean' partner- ship. Somewhere, since the cave days, we have lost the vital signific- ance of the mating between men and women and have sold our birthright of splendid union for a mess of French pastry. Romance {is the bright etar of our sex axistance. Romance is the slogan of our sex 'raining. Romance heads the pros- and the lack of romance is the rock cn which we break. That's all wrong. We've no right to substitute romance for fe. We've no right to substitute love for ser- vice. We've no right to substi'ate emotion for intelligence, Yet that is what we do with all our blithering about love matches, I do believe that there is nothing pectus which lures us into wedlock, | lle . ymore beautiful in all the world than wedded affaction, and nothing half as important to social progress. But I do not think that the success of such unions is based mainly on love. 1 man partnerships. On-- Honesty Generosity Humor Fairness Patience Grit THE DAILY B orld! THIS TALK IS ABOUT Common sense Tact Seif-restraint L These things are infinitely more by emphasizing these qualities, by {teaching them, by insisting on ¢hem, EE WR ILLUSTRATED DY ELS OVE | the platitudes of philosophy, all the | conventions of society, all the re {straints of the law, yet you will never {chain Cupid to his job, {chain Cupid because Cupid, as we think it 1s based on the qualities and | Fecessary than the emotional actions {know him, is a creature of the emo- reactions which underly all good hu- | ¥e usually call love. And it is only | tun, fe 4s evidenced by hear: throbs jend thrills, by chills and fevers, be You cannot hungers and lassitudes, by all that {that we are ever going to give per- |ymdependable panoply of moods un- rianence or dignity to marriage, Love, in its emotional pense, fails us. That's the true indictment against Cupid. You may invoke all (the mysticfsm of the churches, all 'WHERE'S THAT NOw SOME SELL AND SOME FOLKS SALT A MINE WHILE OTHERS HAND You GILDED DRICKS, OR FLASKS OF BOOTLEG WINE. WHOSE CON GAME MAKES ALL THE REST SEEM PALE, YET STRANGE TO SAY, DESPITE HIS CRIMES, HE'S NEVER BEEN IN JAIL! HIS NAME 15 DANNY CUPID, ? FLOCK TO I3ALY aF LOVE! o TOGUS OIL WELLS, BUT THERE'S ONE CHAP HIS WATERED STOCKS 100% YOU GUARANTEED ON MY INVESTMENT? HES GENTLE.AS A DOVE AND ONE AND ALL WE * WHERE'S THE-LITTLE-DIT-O HEAVEN WITH ALL MODERN der which the Emotional Nature mas- querades as a Vital Power. These manifestations are desirable and delightful--but they are not per- manent and they can not be taught. IMPROVEMENTS YOU PROMISED ME 7? rl ITTEN AND TRE, ~ Celery King Is the thing | to stimulate the liver, cleanse the bowels, purify the blood, banish headaches and make you feel the &r of better health and strength. ature's own laxative and tonic roots and herbe in Celery King.) Are You Coughing? Why not cure it this very day? A few drops of Shiloh relieves that tickling in the throat that maddens you. few doses heal up the sore and inflamed tissues in the throat and really banish that cough. 80c, 60c and $1.20. All druggists. IE ROBINSON | That is why marriage should not be based upon them. But the qualities of Honor, Gener- c¢ity and so on which I have listed, are not based on the emotions. They | are omanations of the intelligence, they are con'rolled by the will. They can be taught and they do endure. And they alone can form a guarding wall about marriage, I believe the American marriage is crashing because it has been built on the shifting sands of emotion and because we have followed the will o' the wiap of romance. We have often boasted that we have the hest sort of marriage. In truth, I think we have the silliest .sort of marriage. With shame, I, an American, confess it. We started out on a hard, high trial for the stars--we have ended by going wading in the mud puddles. Marriage isn't an easy job. It's a stern job, Despite its manifest un- fairness, the continental marriage is a more sensible scheme than ours. So is the oriental marriage. Perhaps it's hard on the individual, but I truly think it's a more dignified so- |cfal performance and, in the long run, ¥ means greater happiness for , the majority. I can hear your walls of anguish. | Stop walling and look at the facts | before you write to your editor ande discontinue your subscription. How many truly 'happy marriages do you know? How dependable #s love ex- cept as a subject for spring poetry? Let us have love by all means--but let it at last be something worthy of the human evolution of 1922. Let it at last arise above the mating urge |of a bullfrog Into a spiritual fune- | tioning that yokes man to his God and makes a home in truth the do- mestic court of Heaven, THERAPION No. THERAPION No 2 JHERAPION No.3 R Misases, No. 3 for Chronic Weaknesses LEADING CHEMISTS. PRICE IN ENGLAND. LECLERC Med Co. Haverstock Rd..N Wit ening 'SRE TRADE MARKED WORD 'TMERAPION' iS OB AFFLIED TO GENLLAE PACESTD A A rr A a eat ta at aN oughs Many do not realize the significance of the all too frequent cold or cough. Care | | | Folks Back "I reckon you done heard about the Hil boy," sald Uneole Gus, as he moved over to make room for me on the goods box near the stove. '"Ghot arrested fo' stealin' a car up at the county seat, The' was a time I'd o' felt lke cussin' him an' sendin' him to jail fo' lite, but the older I git the mo' sorry I bw feel fo' folks, 2 "Sometimes 1 think a feller Is born to be what he Is, an' the ain't no sense in condemnin' him. impo'tant of course, an' a lot depends on the kind o' fellers a boy is raised with; but it looks to me like what's in a feller is a-goin' to "come out. "I reckon it's common sense to bock up sorry fellens so's they won't do no mo' meanness; but I don't want to eee nobody a-pointin' the finger o' scorn unless he ain't never done no meannes hisself, an' I don't know nobody what aint. An' what's mo'. it's my notion thet folks what does the most condemnin' is the ones what's hidin' the most secret sins o' one kind an' another." / Aunt Het. 'When I 'was a girl, IT thought a body had fo know how to play the or- gan to interest a man; but after I got married I found out men ' folks ain't much interested in no kind of organs except digestive or sans." Trainin' is right - Home . At times one i# tempted to believe that the most convincing proof of man's stupidity Mes in his conviction that certain things are impossible. The cynic hears "hat God created the universe In . seven days, and laughs. 'The thing is manifestly impossible," says he; "and eciéntists agree that our earth wae millions of (years in the making.) . Does the element of time make the creation either more or less wonder- ful? It in the beginning there was nothing, and Chance or a Supreme Sketches by J. H. Striebel fashioned the intricate marvel that is ! our earth, what matter whether it was made in seven million years or seven minutes? The thing that stuns he mind is not that the earth should be made to exist in seven days, but that jt should be made to exist at all, "And why should the cynic have |@doubts- concerning immortality? Is [it more dificult to believe that life is everlasting than to believe that man and woman can bring into exist- ence a new life, endowed with.intosl- ligenoce and the power to reason? If one miracle is possible, what w'ter The Girl Across the Street. The girl acrqss the street came over after supper last night and eat in ¢he corper among the cushions to talk with Daughter ¢oncerning Hir< am, the butcner boy, and her bond- age to Jove. "Love is funny," said she, "and it makes you change your opinions about a lot of things; but it's nice. Before I fell in love with Hiram, 1 liked thin boys best; and if I knéw a boy would 'lie to & girl, I didn't have a bit of use for him.. You see, if you're not in love, you can lke all she mice boys and despise all the others; but after you get in love, it doesn't seem to matter much whe- ther thé one you love is lke you'd like to have him or not. "Hiram lied to me last week, and he knows I know it, but he won't admit i, and somehow I can't stay mad about it. I suppose I'll just have to pretend like I thou he didn't lie, after all, and forgive him. If I didn't love him, I'd despise him for lying; but i doesn't seem to make much difference, somehow, "I reckon if it wasn't so nice to be in love, it would seem like a kind of slavery." By Robert Quillen folly to doubt thet another may be possible also. Courting. Jt is strange, indeed, if the floor plan of the modern house occasions Jinmortality and sends young folk to the devil, but the reformers would have us believe this to be true, The seat of the fault is the living room, The swain who would a-woo- ing go hangs his bat in the hall, if there is a hall, and at once he is in the living room where the family sits about !n a comfort that evidences its intention to stay put. Here is an atmosphere of good fellowship,not an atmosphere of romance. There can be no hand-holding, no exchange of soft @ompliments, To be eure, Mother might retire to the kitchen and Dad might finish his pipe in the bathroom; but the notions concerning their rights. Tunning and sits on the edge of a chair only long enough for Daughter to wriggle into a coat and give her nde one final dab of powder. It 4s a ead state of affairs, and the architec: is to blame. He must be persuaded to look among his dusty designs of yesteryear and bring forth the ancient floor plans that gave place of honor to a parlor. For a parior there must be if the whole of courting Is not to be done along the highways. Willle Willis, a oh . An We thought that maybe Katie Eo- cles would yet sail down Kingston harbor after being lost and found 80 frequently after storms, but this time #t looks as though Katie had her last sall on top of Lake Ontario is i Well, the people did what the an advised---voted in favor of daylight saving. It must be admitted that all the street talk was that the referendum would be badly defeated, tut the aristocrats of the town are given credit for saving the day. It was thought, strange to say, that the women would give the day- light saving measure a black eye, and has gone into the depths. butLit must be remembered that very few women Have votes in a munieip- o| al election, and those who have are not the ones with young children who will not go to bed at eight by the clock in summer time. /The posties think, they have as much right to a holiday on Satur day afternoon as the bank fellows and the plumbers. That Edmonton rugby team ap- parently thought that Queen's was going to bow down and worship them Ww they arrived in Kingston. But their coming was no novelty, Queen's have travelled much and never had any longer. There are people from our own | any organization meet them at he what you want and what you get-- eveu from Santa Claus. The city council still retains' its time-honored custom of having a poi- foe sergeant present at its meetings as honorary sergeant at arms. Oaly a full sergeant will satisfy the coun- cil at that--an ordinary policeman would not fill the bill. And yet there are no longer any unruly counell members, and the spectators are as meek as lambs, When Kingston gets its purer wat- train to give them a welcome. They never expected such a thing, and Bi- monton after a while will get used to eastern ways. ' ps ¥ -- AR Word comes from Queen's univer | {sity that the little cub bear, Boo- + Hoo, refuses to dig in and go to sleep. He Is evidently waiting for Santa Clews:to pay him a visit, Jut like the Kingston kids are doing. Boo-Hoo may make it lively for old Santa if he goes up around Queen's. The farmern want snow. Well er supply, the rates must of neces sity take a jump. You cannot ge: superior articles cheap, and when 'you improve the quality of even wat- er, you must pay the price. A fifty per cent increase in the rates may follow, but we are getting very cheap water and we must have the dest. --THE TOWN WA A ------------ - 4 Landlady (knocking at the Ded- room door)---Eight o'clock! Eight o'clock! Frosh (sleepily)---Did you? Bet- Share is stil a difference between tar call a doctor. é Burr. other girls and little Bill have fixed | And so the swain leaves his motor | should be taken to build up the powers of resistance. abundant in health - building vitamine factors, helps build up a re- serve of strength and 1 and ask your drug- ---- ist for Scott's Emulsion ! Next Week--"This Talk Is About | efieimpads Ont. 22-20 Babies." ee Adams.) Cook's Cotton 0 | o A ; be ------ ge toi o Poet and Pugilist. | of re o. 1, 813 Just as they tell a young boxer to pri stick to his left and forget he has a | Free Bi He Wale, to stick to his nouns and verbs and | TORONTO, ONT. (Permerty Windeor, forget he has a dictionary full of | = ENN AME MER adjectives. Of course, there's the difference that the right hand 4s the but the left jab that straightens up PE RI 2 the reader for the impact of the noun. However, it's pleasant at times to watch a lad with a pretty right ) ". .the solemn thurifer, The mightysSpirit unknown That swingeth the slow earth be- | fore the emBannered throne.' to the adjective on points. > ; : Plain Miss Fortune. Compressed Air From Truck. "Are you Mrs. Fortune?" asked A Denver garage has equipped a| Judge Cluer of a woman at Shore- tuck to supply compressed air to] ditch. and also to see the chap who packs its customers as well as gasoline and Woman (with a curtsy): "No ;I Scott's Emulsion resistance. Be sure (Copyright, 1922, George Matthew Shien Root a Compound, right, so they tell the young writer | THE COOK MEDICINE CO. bone-crusher, while the adjective is sudden adjective. When you read: you feel that that round at least goes | oil. * am plain Miss Fortune."--Tit-Bit, -- Fe What Did You Give = Last Christmas ? @ors for the kiddies--all broken now. "Something useful "* for the grown-ups--now worn out or for- "Botten. A cash bonus for your employees--Ilong since spent. Other "last minute" presents--expensive but unsuitable. Are they remembered now? € This year give them a Bank Book--make their first deposit and urge them to add to it regularly. Could anything be more suitable and enduring? : The Royal Bank of Canada GRAVES BROS. PLUMBING, TINSMITHING, STEAM HEATING, HOT AIR AND HOT WATER HEATING All work given our personal careful attention, HOUSE FURNISHING HARDWARE 211 Princess Street Phone 332 We are now fully equipped to take care of your Auto Repair needs--First Clasg Mechanics fo do your work, and all work guaranteed. CAR OWNERS ATTENTION Car Washing, any type Gasoline and Oils. for Sale. Distilled water always én hand HONE 5465. TANDARD AUTO SERVICE: QUEEN STREET (Behind Standard Office) The Kingston, Ont. is the time to obtain a policy. Insure to-day in Dominion Life Assurance Co. * To-morrow it may be too late. ARCH. THOMSON, BRANCH MANAGER. Office; 56 Brock St. Phone 68.

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