Daily British Whig (1850), 11 Nov 1916, p. 18

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CE---- HOTWATERTHE BESTLIVER AND BOWEL MEDICINE Bays Glass of Hot Wuer Before Breakfast Washes Poisons From System. Physicians the warld over recom mend the inside bath, claiming this is of vastly more importance than out side cleanliness, because the skin pores do not absorb impurities into the blood, causing ill health, while the pores in the ten yards. of bowels do. Men and women are urged to drink each morning. before breakfast a glass of hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it, as al harmles means of helping to wash | from the stomach, liver, kidneys and | bowels the previous day's indigestible | material, poisons, sour bile and tox-| Ins; thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary canal | before putting more food into the stomach The Whig's Serial Story | a y-- LAA THE DAILY BRITISH { proms proces The "He gave you sixty pounds ror rc | Just as soap and hot water cleanse because he thought it was hundreds and freshens the skin, so hot water Of years old," she went on. Suddenly and limestone phosphate act on the ® thought, awful in the illuminating eliminative organs. Those who wake up with breath, coated tongue, nasty taste] or have a dull, aching head, sallow, | complexion, acid stomach; who are subjeet to bilious att pound of limestone phosphate at the drug store. This will cost very little but is sufficient to demonstrate the value of inside bathing. Those who continue it each morning are assured of pronounced results, both in re- gard to health and appearance, Clean, Soft, Unchrunken {Hght that it flashed into the work- bad shop, came to her. "Do you mean to {say that you pretend all these things Never rub woollens, It thickens and hardens them. Just soak and i stir gently about in tepid LUX | suds-- rinse and y Ph . - become a ysician Medici Surgery, actertology, hie Hetlth, Chemintry and Aliled nees offer the greatest Bpostun- portunities to work way through. Jon to ampltious men and women The Chicago Honpltal College of Medicine, located In the reatest medical centre of the wor with wacurty, factiities and equipment un- surpassed, offers a recognized four or Ree vear course leading to the de- gree of Decter of Medicine snd Sur. sery. For catalogue wddress: Beors- a it tary, 3830 Rhodes Ave. Chicago, Ill Jous EE ANNOUNCEMENT No. 3 India Pale Ale ands 8fe so strength, old quality has been re- " will find them fully light up fo the famous PRICES arepractically the same as before, | orders dre shipped the same All day they are received. Special care is taken in this de- partment to insure satisfaction. ' Be sure to write to J. GRATTON 8 WELLINGTON STREET HULL, QUE. e-- now brewed | you make are old?" she cried. "Oh, timus, do you sell them for real | | others! oq things? Oh, no, you can't mea acks orithat you do that. constipation, should obtain a quarter | wicked--criminal--horrible!" It's a fraud! It's "What on earth do you think I| do?" he answered somewhat roughly, but quite openly.. "Really, Vanessa, you should have more sense. Do you suppose we label our things--'Couch | of the time of Francois Premier, made Or 'Florentine cabinet, inlaid with designs, after Cellini, manufactured in his workshop by Septimus Smith!" My dear girl, don't | be a fool!" "It's so dreadful," she said, her voice'| faint with horror. ! "It's just as well for you to under- stand if," he said, fixing her with a look, the sulky gloom of which was remarkable by reason of the extreme | paleness of his eyes. "I thought you'd i found it out long ago. I didn't take | you for an idiot. But. it's much more | convenient for you to know. And, | mind you--a word to anyome and I'll | wring your neck. Secrecy is the life | and soul of my job." | "I wouldn't say anything, of course," | she murmured. "But it's awful!" | All the the next day Vanessa went | about with red eyes. The morning | after that Septimus met her when she | came down to breakfast with a letter | in his hand. He was laughing im- | moderately. | "You needn't worry about the man | who bought the chair, Sis," he said. "Who do you think it was? I have st had a letter from him. It was vernier, from Bond Street. He's the most famous dealer in the worla 4 man who often makes twenty thousand over a single deal. And he was quite taken in. You see what kind of work I do! You ought to be proud, instead of looking at me as if I'd murdered someene. - He writes to ask me to let him know if 1 come across of the Sage class again. He's mighty Jlsased with his bargain 1 tell you. "ll probably sell that for two or three hundred " "Oh, but Septimus," the girl said, ®it he found out. The shame of it!" "If he found out he'd send me an er for a few more," cried the step- her, roaring with unconstrained mirth. "Oh, Vanessa, what a funny Si) Jus ars To think that that was vernier, and I never-knmew it. I might have sold him a few more little things." He was exuberant; he positively swelled, with pride and triumph. It was that day that Vanessa made her decision to go out and find work in Blackport.' She spent about a month in a fruit- search. Blackport was not like "But I want work," she said in an. Sher vs protests. "I hate to be o." But she grew red, and hesitated be- fore she poke. "Oh, Septimus, I hate to say ft, because I am living in your house and you are kind to me. But I can't do that kind of work. i 3 2s 2 ii | Glare's ways ever so quickly. | those figures that I couldn't under way | brother," she answered. door to Lie great man's private office, he told her that Sir Glare had gone to London that morning for a couple of days. { "lI don't know whether there will be anything for you to do, Miss Smith," he added, "but you'd better wait, any- how, until Mr. Lorion turns up." Lorion had been sent for to' Dun- bury very early in the morning to confer with his chief before the lat- ter's departure by the breakfast train. Vanessa sat and contemplated her quarters and her brand-new Reming- ton machine. Compared with the bare lodging in | which the famous author had dic tated his immortal works to her, Vanessa's new workroom was quite a palace, and she was accordingly very much impressed. She had barely taken it all in | when Lorion came into the room with & courteous greeting. "You have heard, Miss Simth, that Sir Glare has been unexpectedly called to London?' he asked. : "Yes--I was told when I came in," she answered. "I have nothing to do," she added, her desire for work not to be controlled even by the absence | of the great man. "Are you fond of your work?" asked Lorion with a smile, remembering the Niobe of yesterday. "Oh," she cried, with a flush, "you are thinking of my silliness yesterday. | But I really want to work. And I'll try as hard as I can to get into Sir It was stand. And it made It so much worse feeling how stupid I was." "I don't expect you're at all stupid," sald Lorion reassuringly, smiling into { the beautiful, steady grey eyes. "And I think you will ind your work here very congenial. But I'm afraid I can't give you any to-day. The chief went off in such a hurry that he didn't say anything about you, and I don't know yet what he means you to do. His own letters were all sent up to Dun- bury this morning. So I really think I Ee? as well go home, Miss 8 ' This was distinctly danipiag to Vanessa's ardor. She had set | out with such tremendous resolves, and now she had nothing to do but go back to Grange Row. "If you will leave me your address," Lorion went on, "I will let you know a8 soon as Sir Glare returns." Something in the young man's bear ing made her shrink as she gave him the address of the curio shop. He was so tall, so fresh, so upright; his eyes looked into hers with such a pleasantly candid gaze. He was ut terly dissociated from her step brother and his mode of life. Lorion wrote down the address: but he still. lingered. There was some thing about the girl that gave him feelings such as he had never had about any woman before in his. life, There was an appeal in her beautiful steady eyes, and yet he was sure that she was not a weak clinging creature. There was character in her mouth and in. her square little chin. And how like she was to the portrait that hung on the wall of Sir Glare's din ing room! In the clear morning light the likeness was absolutely startling. "Isis this your home address, Miss Smith?" he asked as he looked at what he had written down. And then, suddenly realizing that the question might seem impertinent, he od: "I mean, will it always find you? "I live with my stepbrother," she answered. "But--but I shall soon be leaving there." She did not know why she said it; she only knew that she suddenly could not contemplate staying in the place wl these frauds were dally pe . "Oh, why Is that?" asked Lorion. "Oh, it's such a long way from here," she answered. It was a feeble excuse, for the tramcars covered the distance in a very short time. "All the same," said Lorion gravely, "I: would advise you to stay with your people, Miss Smith. Nice lodgings are. very difficult to find in Blac and, you know, I don't think it will be necessary for you to get here so very early of a morning." "l have no people--only my step- "He keeps rie shop." She Joaked up, half to see suspicion in his eyes; but he merely looked interested. "On. "he sald. *T didn" know anybody had time to buy curios in Blackport. I hope you will allow me t ocome and see it?" "Oh, no," she exclaimed, and then flushed to the roots of her hair. "1 mean, it's a very poor place--only odd bits of china and a few odd pieces of furniture and cheap prints. There's nothing interesting--really." Lorion was deeply interested; 'his curiosity was piqued. How could a girl like this come from such sur roundings as she described? He drew her on, and she told him her lite, and he soon realized that she WHIG, SATURDAY, N Sent Don't From the battle front ig Europe Condes a letter writien by Private John Carter, whose home address is No. ? Shaw View, Flixton, telling of his com- plete cure of rupture from wear.ng the Brooks Appliance April. 18th, 1916, E. Brooks, Dear Sir 1 rece"ved your letter by first post this morning. 1 beg to thank you for your appliance which was instru- mental in the way it cured me of my rupture I have now heen in Kit- chener's army " ven months and 1 have gone through all the training and I have never i felt anything and not had the eli-2 ghtest trouble. 1 remember when | passed the doct 1 he remarked: 58 "There is ncthing "°F wrong with you, young man, you are in the best condi- tion," and he sounded me all over, and I again thank you for the same, and 1 g've my consent to use my letter as a testimonlal to anyone ag 1 haye been Hoping you and your firm much Cc, hw eured BUCCESS. Yours truly, Foz fz. Cos Wouldn't Take $100 for Appliange Cranworth, Ont Dear Mr. Brooks---I am pleased to write vou and let you know what your Appliance has done for me, I think I am all right now, as 1 have not seen 'the first sign of it since last fall I can now run, jump and lift all I Ske and 1 would not take $100 for it if I could not gel another I do nct wear it except at hard work. Your appliance is just as good as ever. You can use this let- ter as you like for the benefit of others Yours =inecerely, GEO. KENNEDY. [ send my Appr'ance on trial to prove what 1 say is true. You are to be the Judge. Fill out free coupon below and mail today, 0 the varlolll stereotyped piotests to which she had long ago become ao © How he wished she was settled in Blackport, and that there was not such a place on the face of the globe as London; and how it hurt him so to know that her heart was not in his home, which surely ought to have been her home. Of course, he could not, at this crisis, afford to spend many hours sway from Pole Street; but those few hours gave him strength for the fight and put iron into his nerve. Must she really go? Could not she possibly make an exception of it this once, and postpone it for a day or two? Then again--for Monk used every argument at his command--this un- expected and, as he frankly admitted, ridiculously inexcusable and inex: plicable return made their position in social Blackport particularly re- marked upon. Surely she must see that. She was a publis personage they were both in the public eye, and neither of them could afford to allow private interests to rank first. As a matter of fact, he particularly wanted her to preside at a small din- ner party to-morrow night, and to go to two other dinners with him. Besides, there was that big recep tion at the town hall, at which royalty was to be present. He would have to go. She really must come with him. Under ordinary circumstances Theo- dora would have seen the point of many of the arguments advanced, and, would have arranged her immediate plans accordingly, sent a few wires to town, and made a martyr of her self; but the circumstances were any- thing but ordinary. (Continued next Saturday.) 3 Sun's Hem. Scientists have estimated that the heat received from the sun by the earth in a year is sufficient to meit a layer of ice 100 feet thick, cover- ing the entire globe. 4 A Genuine Rupture Cure Even Soldiers from the Trenches of Europe Write to Tell How the Wonderful Brooks \_ Cured Their Ruptures, r AF OVEMBER 11, 1916. eam PAGE NINETEEN = On Trial To Prove It Wear a Truss Any Longer Appliance Sound and Well. Sent on Trial to Prove It. : nd here is a letter from a mother who tg shankful because a Brooks Aps pliance cured her bov so he could go and serve hig country. send on trial to prove what I say i. true. You are the judge and once having seen | ow my illustrated book and read fi vou wili be as enthusiastic as my hun- dreds of patients whose leiters you can also read. Filicout free cou- pon below and mail to day. It is well worth your time whether vou ry my Appliance or not Make up your mind right now that you will never pay out another dollar for trusses. They are expensive, uncom- fortable and actually harmful. And when you once try a Brooks appli- ance you could never be persuaded to ever again wear a truss, If you have (ried most 1 everything else, come to me. 'Where others fall is where 1 have my Breates; success Send attached coupon today and | will send you free my illustrated book on Rupture and its cure, showing vou my appl.- ance and giving you prices amd names of many people who hdvé tried ii and were oured. It is instant relief when ail others fail. Remem- ber, 1 use no saives, no harness, no, lies 2, Orchard Road, Richmond, Surrey 1915 April 11th i. Brooks, Mr. C. E Dear Sir A Mne to thank you for what your appliance has done for my son After wear- ing it from Dee- ember to the fol- lowing September { can say he | quite cured and is 5 now serving his } country in France at his own trade, a shoeing. smith. You can make § what use you like of these, my thanks Am, Yours, PI Bt htt, (Mrs. E. Whittle) gk ® Bio re. Child Cured in 3 Months Brantford, Qpt., Feb. 18 1914 11 Richardson St Mr. C. BE. Brooks, Marshall, Mich. Dear Mr. Brooks---Just a line in vou know yeur Appliance has , come pletely cured our ile boy and Wwe are very well pleased with it We had it on him for about three months and since we have had it off the rupture rit oo has not showed at all truly yours, Yours truly, REV. H. A. SIESON « MRS G sUDDARY MR. C. E. BROOKS, State St., Marshall, Michigan, U.S.A. The above is C. E. Brooks, Inventor of t he Appliance, who cured himself aud who is now giving others the be nefit of bis experience, If rup- tured, write him today at Marshall, Michigan, Thoroughly Healed Cured Me Completely Perth Centre, N.B., April 26 Feb, 6, 1914 Mr. C. £. Brooks Dear Sir:--l received vour le re garding the Appliance you sen eI was a complete success and v don't know that I ever had a rupture It has cured me completely and | than! you very much far it Very Rupture 1914 ingersoll, Ont, Mr. C. E. Brooks Perhaps you will be hearing what yur Appliance for me I know without doubt miy rupture has thoroughly healed - for a term of sixteen years suffering, and I attribute my restored and healed condition to the wearing of your ap pliance, which 'held the bawel firmly and painlessly during the healing pre cess. 1 have not worn it for month neither do 1 feel in need of it Yours trul F let interested in has done that '. NOXON 22 Years; Now Cured ke, Ruptured pt Please send me by mail, in plain wrapper, your illustrated book y 1833 and full information about your Appliance for the cure of rupture. Que an, 27, 19 J ~~ am very glad to hear and happy to be able (nn tell rupture was cared some your appliance I now after twenty-two yodis from you, you that my time ago by need no truss of torture Yours truly i LEMAY nourishment your nerves noed. Dr. Cassell's Tablets Nourish your Nerves. Neuralgia and Neuralgic Headache simply indicate that your nerves are weak and underfed. Why drug them into insensibility when it is nourishment they need ? Drugs cannot Supply that nourishment, they can only deaden the pain for a time at the cost of bad after-effects--heart-depression, faintness ; and if persistcd in a drug habit may be set up. In Dr. Cassell's Tablets you have true nerve nutrients. The active principles in them are preciscly what a specialist would prescribe in cases of Neuralgia Neuritis, Neurasthenia, and other forms of nerve weakaess They nourish every nerve-centre in the body and give to the entire svstem, that strength and vitality which make nerve /t impossible. Read what a Scientist says about Dr. Cassell"s Tablets. Dr. Chas. W. Botwood, D.Sc. PhD. etc. of York, England, says ----* As a safe and reliable remedy for loss of flesh and vigour. nerve a"ections and bodily weakness, Dr. Cassell's Tablets appear to be unique. | have ne hesitation in recommending them.' Dr. Cassell's Tablets are Nutritive. Restorative. Alterative, Antispesmodic, of proved therapeutic 0 all run-down conditions, and 'L. recognise | remedy for NERVOUSNESS, SLEEPLESSNESS, Dvyse A NERVOUS BREAKDOWN, ANEMIA, PALPITATIAN, NEURASTHENIA, MALNUTRITION; KIDNEY WEAKNESS Specially valuable to Nursing Mothers and Women of Middss Life. Sold by Druggists and Storekeepers throughout Canada. P i Oar tube 50 © " Bix tubes for'the prios of five. War tax cents per tithe rn he tube 30 ota Sole Proprietons: Dr. Cossell's Co. Lt., Manchester, Encland, FREE sam PLE. of 5 cents to | cover wailmg and pack. | ing a generon: free sam. | ple will be sent st once. | Address: Harold ¥. & Co. Ltd, 10, | Toronto. - -

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