Daily British Whig (1850), 12 Feb 1924, p. 4

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Sonepat SR ps em VWHETHER it be a cut, a bruise or sprain, burn or scald," Zam-Buk provides the handiest, surest means to quick perfect healing. It is from certain rare herbal extracts that Zam-Buk gets its power for subduing pain, sore- ness and inflammation, and its fine skin-growing property. Be sure and keep a box of &%am-Buk on the handiest shelf, geady for every emergency. MIGHT NAPPEN ANY DAY! Mrs. A. Riseley, 416, St Timothy St., Montreal, writes: --" The kettle boiled over and badly scalded my band. Though the skin blistered and peeled and pain was intense, yet the first dress- ing of Zam-Buk cooled and soothed in a surprising manner. A fine new skin speedily covered all the scalded surfaces #8 I continued with Zam-Buk." ZAM-BUK Soothes, Purifies Eight Ladies In Commons | ve The spotlight of attention used to be focused upon Lady Astor as she sat in the House of Commons--one little woman in the midst of six hun- dred big, little and middle-sized men --has now to diffuse its beams to ali sections of the chamber when Parlia- ment convenes, for there are sight women to answer the roll, three Con- servatives, three Laborites and two Liberals. y Lady Astor talked her Plymouth constituents Iato sending her back to Westminster in the last election, and #0 did the othertwo women who sat in the last Parliament, Mrs. Margaret Wintringham, Liberal, and Mrs. Mar garet Phillipson, Conservative. No longer is Lady Astor the only "noble lady" among the commoners in the House. Two other peeresses won their way to Westminster--her Grace, the Duchess of Atholl, the first woman to be sent to Parilament from Becotland, and Lady Terrington, who, like Lady Astor, is witty and viva clous, but who, unlike the member from the Sutton division of Ply- mouth, says she is going to wear the beat clothes she has when she eaters the House of Commons. The Vir ginia-born lady always satisfied her self by appearing in her seat in a plain black frock with a demured white collar,/ Lady TerFington has another point of similarity to Lady Astor in her love of horses and her ability to ride well. She made her campaign among the villages of Buckinghamshire in the saddle, riding one of her fav- ~Y VY orites from the stables on her farm. It was her second experience of run- ning for Parliament. Her victory was the first the Liberal party had won in her constituency since the free THE ~~ A DAILY BRITISH WHIG eee me AN AWFUL ATTACK OF PIMPLES ALL OVER HIS FACE, Pimples breaking out on the face and other parts of 'the body is a sure sign that the blood is not in proper shape, While the skin is the object of the attack the real seat of the disease is in the blood on account of the entire circulation being po.soned. Burdock Blood Bitters quickly and effectually banishes pimples and all other skin diseases as it goes right to the root of the trouble by cleansing and enriching the blood. / Mr. Conrad Anderson, Sask., writes:--"A year ago 1 had an awful attack of 'pimples. They broke out all over my face and I could rot get rid of them in any way. Une day a friend told me about your Burdock Blood Bitters and let me have a bottle he had to spare. Kelfleld, bought three more bottles, and now I don't know there is such a thing as pimples." B.B.B. is manufactured only by The T. Milbura Co., Limited, Toronto, nt. A es PPP a rg Forest Resources Weakened. "The popular dogma of 'making the lumberman plant as much as he cuts' will never remedy the decadent tendencies of Canada's forest re- sources. In the history of this coun- try we have only planted six thou- sand acres of timber areas, while for- feiting to human-set fires more than six hundred thousand square miles of original forest." This statement formed part of a public address delivered by Mr. Rob- son Black, manager of the Canadian Foreatry Association at' Ottawa. "The most alluring and substantial commercial opportunity before the people of this country to-day is jeal- | ousy to look after an' estate of young | forests, all on public-owned land, totalling 50 million acres in extent. After | using it. I noticed a change, so I nis ni Observer Tells of Shipbuilding Century Ago--Thirty=five 8chooners Built. On-the-St. Lawrence, Clayton. N. Y. But few of our residents who have come in recent years to dwell among us know that Clayton was once one of the liveliest, hustling, ship-build- ing stations along the great lakes route. The prosperous, or "ag we now would say, boom times, were from 1845 to 1865, during which period more big salling vessels were con- structed than at any other place of its size between Ogdensburg and Chi- cago. And besides, there were sev- eral steamers that with the sailing fleet numbered forty-five in all, and all built on the site of our present town hall. Five big sidewheel pas- senger steamers were successively launched from the same place, thelr names being Bay State, Ontario, Cataract, Northerner and New York. all owned by the Ontario Steamboat Company, of Oswego and valued at 20.000 dollars each in those times when labor and material were 80 per rent. cheaper than now. The Bay State, Ontario and Cat- aract formed a regular da'ly line be- tween Charlotte, on Lake Ontario, and Ogdensburg and for some years did prosperous business unt!! com- pletion of the railroad along the lake shore brought about the decline of water transportation, and the three hoats were sold to a Canadian navi- | gation. company and rebuilt and re- mained Abysinjan and Athen'an. The names of the thirty-five safl- fng vessels constructed at Clayton were American, Adirondack, Brook- lvn, Clayton, Creole, Clayton Belle, Nashing Wave, Dawn, Eagle Wing, DAYS OF CLAYTON'S GLORY A Toilet Soap made J 49% only from' plant fruit and flower oils. The purity of its ingredients imparts exquisite cleanliness to the skin. Just try Plantol im its pleasing new shape and wrapper--you will find it the same superb soap, made with the traditional British standards of purity and excel- lence that have given it fame the world over for more than a quarter of a £7 CY Qn Exquisite Joilet Soap A SMALL outlay on Seaman-Kent Floor- ing, and a little of your time in laying it will sub- stantially increase the value of your home, At the same time you will add tremendously to your personal comfort, lessen household drudgery and actually save money in the end. Get an estimates for a Seaman - Kent Flooring, based upon the size of your rooms. We will supply full infor mation for laying the floor, ALLAN Lumber Co. VICTORIA STREET 'PHONE 1042, Read the Advertisements THEY LIGHTEN WORK ceas. Won't be popular, ------ The new talking movies are a suc- They will drown out the audience. trade fight against protection ia These young forests are the sole Mexicans eat hot tamales, chile 1906. hope of the future, not only for the The Duchess of Atholl is one of ' making of lumber and paper, bug the best women linguists in the land | for providing essential materials ' and is a fine platform speaker. | without which agriculture, fisheries, | The three women who will sit with | mining, power development and all { his Majesty's Opposition on the Labor | other constructive activities will have | benches are all converts to the Labor | & struggle for survival." cause. Miss Susan Lawrence joined the Labor ranks in 1913 as the re- sult of the appalling distress she had seen in her investigations of living , Flying Cloud, Glenarvon, Grevhound,| captain Joseph Bernier, who plans | Polar regions, has artived mn Lon- Kearsarge, Lawrence Saint, Medora, | 4, ,p¢igipate, on Canada's behalf, the | don. He has come to make arrange. | and tortillas and would like to eat Madison, M. F. Merrick, Mediator, Mountaineer, Montano, Monticello, flight of the Shenandoah to North { ments for his Polar expedition. other Mexicans. : Northern Light, New York, North- ern, Oneida Chief, Northern Belle, Portland, Republic, Reindeer Sover- eign of the Lakes Senator, Snow Bird, Watchful, White Cloud and White Squall; and besides those there were the Marshfield, and Omar, Vv WA Sr HEMLOCK PARK It has been asserted, and the state. A Health Food Le IN Te ARN SCOTTS p= 4" I TENTe]] | C. A. MeCurdy, Liberal. She has had i ceeding 'by séientists that some 20,000,000 and working conditions among the | poorer, perspiring classes. She is a | middle-aged woman, (sed to sit as a | moderate on the London School | Board, and since joining the Labor | Party has been a member of the Lon- don County Council which rules the great metropolis. Miss Dorothea Jewson, most prpm- inent of the younger women in the Labor movement, is the daughter of a wealthy Norwich farmer and a gra~ duate of Girton College, Cam! To acquaint herself with the joys and sorrows of domestic servants, she filled the post of chambermaid in a large London hotel. Miss Margaret Bohdfield, in wine ning the seat for Northampton, de feated the former Cabimet Minister, a wide experience with industrial lls and was the first woman member of the Trades Union Congress, of whose eral council she now is chairman. 'ws largely through her labor and influence that the recent bollermak- ers' strike was brought to an end. Like Miss Lawrence, who ran for Parliament three times before suo- in winning a seat, Miss Bondfield achieved her political am- bition by trying again, the recent, contest being her second for a place in Parliament. Moteor Hits Statue. .e A meteorite fell at Abingaon, Eng- land, recently which damaged a sta- tue. It was an unusual large speci- men and it was fortunate that no- body was hurt. It has been estimated enter the earth's atmosphere every day. Their average weight is about one-fifth of an ounce, and each year over 40,000 tons of meteoric -dust falls on oarth's surface. Analysis of meteorites found after falling shows them to be composed of a kind of iron, about the some specific grav- ity as wrought iron. Fortunately nearly all big meteorites have fallen in sparsely populated districts. The biggest known to have fallen in Great Britain, fell in a field at Rowton, 8hro, oa Avr 30, 1S. It seen the Natural ry Soath . Variegated The Burmese railway officials have solved the question of the illiterate traveller by painting their first car riages white; second class, Sreea; brown. Of course they aStared, first, second and {PELE il Wa don't know how Russians seep the wolf away from the door, unless they eat him. : It I make my bed fn hell, behold art there, 4 ment has gained considerable credence, that makers of vielins often break the finished product into pleces and put it together again in order to im- prove the guality of the violin. This ingenious principle of manufacture is pronounced absurd by every author. ity upon the violin. If these super- stitions had any foundation in fact, it would be an almost hopeless task for a maker of volins to try to sell his pro- duct. He would find himself forced to lend his newly made fiddles for a year : or so to some such organization as a boys" boarding school, where they would be certain of rough treatment. At the end, of this "conditioning" period he would reclaim the instru- ments, put them through a first-ald treatment In the repair shop, and sell them as old masters. * Famous Alredales. The first dog under the classification Alredale to win a prize In a regular and formal! English bench show was Neighley Crack. That was In 1885, and the classification Airedale ap- peared in the English stud book In 1886. Some of the great and famous show Alredales of those days were Newboll Test. Coine Test, Cholomon- deley Briar and Cholomendeley Brides- maid. From these Airedales came Clonmel Monarch, a great Alredale, who, or which, was brought to the United States and became the head of the first line of American Alredales. Clon- mel Bedrock was brought over from "ngland with the idea that he would eat Clonmel Monarch in a bench 'how, but Menr=r' ~ar the decision Sm A Mexican looks like a mushroom from an aeroplane, but some of them are very poisonous. The Mexicans are fightlhig again. They should call this their N Year Revolution. Some claim Russians throw the soap away and use the soap boxes for making speeches. built by the Piersons company, at Wells Island, opposite Collin's Land- ing, within a few rods from where the lake passenger Akron was burn- ed in 1871. A long story might be written of the career and fate of Clayton built vessels, many of them seattered along the large bottoms all the way from Cape Vincent to Chicago. There was temptation to owners and mas- ters in the high freight rates, and there was temptation to crews by ab- normal wage offerings, to take des- perate chances, and one more trip even when winter was upon them, and hardly a home in Clayton but there was mourning for those who could never return, more of them frozen to death than drowned. Extfaordinary ' Reduction in Con. sumption in 80 Years. London, Feb. 12.--Consumers of alcoholic lignors in Britain have either not been so thirsty during the last two decades or have lost the desire to drink, for the consumption of beer, spirits and wine in the Unit- ed Kingdom has undergome an im- mense reduction since the end 'of the last century, according to the Allance Year Boek, the temperance reform handbook, just issued. Beer consumed in 1899 per head was 32.53 gallons; in 1922, 15.80 gallons; spirits, in 1899, 1.09 gal- lons, in 1922, 0.36 gallons; wine, in 1899, 0.41 gallons, in 1922, 0.26 gallons. - A contrast is made between the amount of beer consumed in 1922 and 30 years ago. Then a popula- tion of 20,000,000 in England and Wales accounted for 27,600,000 bar- rels. In 1922 the. amount was 21, 000,000 barrels, though the popula~ tion has increased to 38,000,000, The king slipped in Greece, A. H. FAIR, Sole Proprietor. Clean, pure milk from heal 8 ro ized in any way. Herd Tuberculin tested. . Purveyors to the Kingston General Hospital, an "which only buys the best. Health of attendants, Sanitation, Sterilization, etc., under the personal supervision of Dr. Miller, Professor of Pathology, Queen's University. 3 Delivery to all parts of the city, TELEPHONE 1105 R-3. 3 thy cows. Not pasteurized or steril- We guarantee that every bottle is from our own stable. HEMLOOK PARK STOCK institution FARM AE EE EEE EE RR EE RRR ER EF RRR A ERE RRR RE REN RN tio A v RE EE EE EE RE EE EE ER EE RR RN RRR RRR RNR RR RRR RA RENE NREL Sole Agents for Canada: HAROLD F. RITCHIE & CO. Limited, 10 McCAUL STREET, TORONTO, SR ER RRR EE EE EE ER RR ER ER RR RN REE RRR RR RN RR ARN R RRS RENNIE (EE EE EE EE EE RE EE EE EEE ER RE A RE ES ERE RR RRR EERE RN 1924 . Jhe Pen that fifs "a % your hand ;

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