Daily British Whig (1850), 23 Feb 1917, p. 10

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PAGE TEN 1 1 ro . he Road That Blows Away 1 QO uld not invest your money in a build & so constructed that it would slowly } evaporate. How then can yoii Bé tent to pay in taxes, for the ding and upkeep of a road that slowly buf sufely blows ; y? turns to dust and see the wheels of a horse-drawn vehicle or a motor car « hurning up clouds of dust in its wake, think what it means that is the road itself blowing away --Tyour money going up in dust. Thete is but one sure way to prevent this waste ~--and that is the way that guarczatees you against the discomfort as well as the wasteful ness of the dusty old-stylexoad -- build Yen evwn ve % a _ Permanent Hivhways of Concrete Every Canadian who pays taxes that in Concrete lies the only real hope of properly-paved Canada. : Concrete makes a real pavement--{free fro: ruts, ready for traffic in all scasons, low in mai tenance cost and inexpensive to build. ywnen y should reali; Ask for our Literciure on Congrete Roads Canada Cement Company, Limited 61 Herald Building Montreal "CONCRETE FOR PERMANENCE " ---- » wil | = b bY y - Bl. In "Perfect Seal" Glass Jars / These are t preserving Jars made; and } sll gq reserves, or J pounds of 'Crown Brand' Corn Syrup, the fir wn Brand" in glass, you get table syrup, in the perfect preserving jars. Ask your Grocer for them. Your grocer also has 'Crown Brand" in 2, 5, 10 and 20 Pound tins. new recipe book, "Desserts ipful and interesting, Write foritreal Offic, THE CANADA STARCH CO. LIMITED, MONTREAL, CARDINAL, BRANTFORD, FORT WILLIAM. Makers of "Lily White' Corn Sr tipo B. Corn Stavch--a Sitver loss"? Laundry Starch, 'Operations These Three Women Tell How They Escaped the Dreadful Ordeal of Surgical Operations. } Hospitals are great and necessary institutions, but they should be the last resort 'for women who suffer with ills liar to their sex. 'Many letters on file in the Pinkham Reriny at Lynn, Mass, women after have been recommended to submit to an operation have made well by, Lydia E. Pinkham's egetable Compound. Here are three such letters. All sick women should read them. TIN [I female trouble I 10k do anything, and our doctor mid {won hare to underg: St tio Vegetable Compound and what p 80 when i thought I ; it. 'I got.a bottle of Lydia £ Plabhoe Ve Ea 0s. DWYER, Milwaukee Ave., Bellevue, Pa.--~%1 Jflered mare thas longudcan in tell with terrible bearing dows paias and inflammation. I 3 al and they all told me the same story, that never ) an operation and I just dreaded the thought of that. also tried a » Waly other windigines that a to me: d none 0 3 Le LU them, elpod until a friend ved eS dia K Pink: -hiail's Vegetable Compound Sams Rott! dept & (THE CON prove that a great number of try Hokhan's Sanative Wash Dl pea snd directions : They helped me and Sodly Tom able todo al ey workond Tm : THE FESSIONS OF ROXANE (By Frances Walter) DAILY BRITISH WHIG, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY, 23, 1917. - -- " " : TE -------- SE A i EZEA PENDLETON DIES AND JANE IS LEFT PENNILESS known Pendleton Was enough mind ¢ ha treated me as wel capric could exp » Wer upon ni g I conid ; toward 1 in employee toward than However, taker } 1 bene tron C father family was ss of the Harry continued at the training school and later at the unive sity. Old, Mr. Pendleton's were marred by which rendered fearful that he violent act, He while - , first specie all of us § would commit was obsessed with the idea that someone wanted to take his wealth from him Undoubtedly 5 was the fruit ¢f his having ob tained hig fortune dishonestly, s01¢ 3 ------ 2 | well { Har at | had lit His | oney at first stocks and ime convinced 1spiracy | verted everythi home, into cash and I oin hers Then he designed : mysterious hay piled his money allow no one toe day of his death no « knew combination whicl open the door of th Str ge apart ment, | "I used toywonder what would happen if he should "die suddenly while in this room, fortunately death did not overtake - him there We found his body in the library' one morning when we arose Apparently he had been writing all night, for many letters lay sealed and address- ed on thé desk beside him. to the mentioned bequeathed a separate "My name was not his will. Everything was in trust to Harry, ang in €nvelope the old man left description this mysterious room and direc tions how to enter and leave it, But on the outside of this envelope was a written ivi for Harry not to open the letter til he was 21 years old. "The terms of Mr fortune uncertain, trustees of the estate chose to permit me to remain in ¢®® home, all and 'good, or it migh? be that would interest himself in the matter and insist that I be cared for, | Harry, beifig a minor, actually | © 10 say about the estate, and | [ believe that the trustees repeatedly proposed to sell this house and the outlying lands in spite of Harry's | protest. The place had a bad name! and the trustees segined to think that the best thing to do was to get rid of it once and for all, but Harry in sisted that it should be kept open as of will If | Pendleton's left my very the for the servants who had been in the family so long. The result was that | after Mr. Pendleton's thing went along very much as usual until I was married." (To be Continued), % 4 ---- | The Whig's -- ~ Menu for Saturday ABREAKFAST Stewed Fruit Cooked Cereal of Cholee Creamed. Eggs on Toast Rice Griddle Cakes Syrup or Jelly Coffee or Cocon LUNCHEON OR SUPPER Cold Sliced Lamb fapanese Salad tainin Bisenit Sliced Oranges ni IR Wor Smothered Round Steak with Oni Baked Potatoes Escalloped Tomatoes Grapefrult Salad Mack Mince Ple Coffee Xe J Scotch Scones and Marmalade. Materials--Two cups flour, 2 tea- spoons baking powder, 2 teaspoons Tena or Cocon sugar, 14 tegspoon salt, 2 tablespoonsg little cold milk, shortening, 'T egg, 1-3 cup, milk, » Utensils--- Mixing bowl, 2 measur- ing cups, teaspoon, flour sifter, bowl tn Ns mn. Daily Menu | { $ | | to beat egg in, edgheater, hake hoard, | rolling pin, knife, pastry brush. Directions--Mix and sift together | : | the flour, baking powder, sugar and | salt, rub in the shortening with tips of fingers; add 1 well-beatpn egg and! the 'milk... Place on floured board, | pat and roll out three-quarters inch | thick: Cut Tito squares, brush with | milk, sprinkle with a little sugar and fold into three-cornered shapes; { brush the top with milk and bake in | hot oven 15 minutes. Boiled Lamb, Caper Sauce Wipe the shoulder of lamb with piece of wet eheesecloth; put on with two quarts of boiling water, a piece | of onion and a small piece of carrot; "4-boil 1% hours; add 1 tablespoon salt and a dash of white pepper. Re-| move 2 cups of stock for the sauce, made as follows: To the stock add 2 tablespoons of flour which has been wet with al 2 tablespoons capers, 1 tablespoon finely chopped parsley; boil three minutes and serve with the boiled lamb. NN tS tt gn Invitations From Strangers. aa "What would you do if you were a working girl and had not the op- portunity of meeting many of the opposite sex -and you were introdue- €d to a nice young man Sunday and he invited you to a ball the following Thursday evening? Please answer in the paper right away? "MISS A. C." -- This is the query in a letter from a young girl which reached here too late to reply, On the heels of it comes a second letter. It is of such interest to girls the world over that "1 Bive It to my readers in' part: She writes: "Not hearing from yon I ac. cepted the invitation to zo to the ball. When the young man came for me mother answered the door, She hurried up to my room. I was tying on my hood. ("Paughter,' she said, 'I hope it's aly right, but the young man's breath smells of cloves.' The place was four miles off; we got there by trolley. I did not have a 800d time for he seemed to know so many girls there . with whom he danced that he actually forgot me. I wanted to go home about 12 o'- clock as the cars stopped running then. He remarked: 'Don't bother about that; there are always cabs to hire? eR pd "He danced through the'. supper hour, prdtsnding not to notice that people were going downstairs eat. At 1 o'clock the crowd had thinned out. By 2 most couples had gone out. I had to go and get my things on before he'd make a move. When we got to the street he said, 'By George, I haven't any money, have you? I said I hadn't.a® "Then it's walking for us, be snapped. "We walked -home four miles in the bitter cold and darkness. He didn't offer arm. 1 trudged along, having hard work to keep up with his Jong strides. At my corner he said: 'Guess you can get along by yourself now, long! I made my way home alot. Mother was watching for me almost sick with fright. I wrote this to tell you how it turned. oyt,- From this time out to [pack nervous trouble, pains in my og jr be mighty scared of young men." ¥ 1 wonder if the girls who read this will take warning, She was fortun- ate that matters were not worse--at the mercy of an unprincipled man, who showed he had no respect for this good girl. If young women will trust themselves to strange men, of whom they know absolutely nothing it may be the last that friends and home will ever see of them, Nery few young men take it upon themselves to ask a girl out on short acquaintance. It is wisest and best to ~follow the old-fashioned custom strange Kingston, Ont., Feb. 23.--1917.-- We have to report to-day an extreme case of nervous exhaustion. © This is not the day of miracles, and no miracles are claimed for Dr: Chase's Nerve Food, but to Mr, Moore is seems almost like a miracle been fed back to health and strength. W. E. Moore, No. 4 Lower Que- bec St, Kingston, Ont, writes: "About five years ago I was suffering back and general run-down condi- tion, and was next door to dying a couple of times. 1 was so nervous at. times that I could not get a cup of tea to my lips. Some times I would never close my eyes during the whole night, and if I did get to sleep would waken with a jump. Through seeing the effect of Dr. Chase's Nerve Food on a friend of mine I was in. duced to try it, After {aking a treat- ment I found a great rovement; could sleep well, and am enjoying in | | tually better acquainted ere you go | girl me for me and to provide a place | death eyery- [1 i stricken, { of Clayton, a son of Alonson P. and { had | becomes entangled in the net and the Almost Total Collapse | of the Nervous System Could Not Lift Cup of Tea to Lips--Rest or Sleep Was Impossible -- Attributes Cure to + Chase's Nerve Food. the way his worn-out nerves have| r 44 ! | f ! opossum fur rer -------------------- of having the young man call Yor some time that you may become mu- in public together. Sensible ung men will stand the uation and for rying out t Strangers rarely expect a going out with the ek's acquaintance refusal. under- spect a plap, rl to con- 1 upon a They sent to day or respect FARMER DIES SUDDENLY. Winfield Rogers, Clayton, N.Y., Vie- of Heart Trouble, N.Y., Feh. 23.---William well-known farmer living line road, died at his night. yes, sixty years of age. Death was due rt trouble. Mr. Rogers was in Willage on Sunday, and was in vith. He went to bed and 1e later he was suddenly dying almost immediately Rogers was born in the town tim Clayton, Roger on the east home Monday ven M1 Bétsy McClure Rogers. All his life een spent .in this section. He by his widow, four child- one Mrs. Joseph 3 3 ived oRt and Bub kirk. sister, LABOR ALDERMAN ELECTED. Anti-registrationist Wins a Contest in Winnipeg, Man. Winnipeg, Feb. 23.--Alex. Hume, Labor candidate, was elected alder- man over F. J. C. Cox, in a civic by- election in Ward Six, by a majority of 1418, Hume is an anti-registra- tionist, and upheld the same plat- form as Andrew Scoble, who was elected alderman in this ward at the regular civic elections, but who was unseated because of lack of qualifi- cations, Invents Torpedo Catcher. - Welland, Feb. 23.--Ciovanui Dono- varo, Italian consular agent at Wel- land, has invented a safety device to protect ships against torpedo ,at- tacks, It consists of double nets kept , moving in opposite directions by power supplied from a motor on the ship. The effect is that when a tor- pedo strikes the nets ihe propeller engine of destruction is rendered useless. Mr. Donovaro has been in Ottawa placing his invention before the British Admiralty Naval Board, and he has been notified -that-it has been accepted by the Commission and forwarded to England. An Appeal. en by G. C. T.. Reg. No. 835 the British. Whig Writ m----------, SL 'Rich Yet Delicate-- Clean and Full of Aro | is blended from selected hill-grown | teas, famed for their fine flavoury qualities. Imitated yet never equatied. a Ist A v7 + 3nd Itls- Efficient It's Economical Proven by 'its 47 The dose is small, years of steady and only one quarter increasing sales. the usual amount. 2nd 4th It's Pleasant It's Safe The children love Has been used even it. It tastes good, for Infants for over it gives quick relief. 47 years. " Cure your next Every druggist sells Shiloh, Cough with Shiloh « i POO. -- ei A : * E ' i . It maintains healthy hair, corrects unnatural scdlp conditions, and assists nature in restoring normal, healthy conditions, by Stimulating and renewing the hair-growing processes. [ HEALTHY HAIR NEEDS ATTENTION, and any disorder of the scalp or falling hair will grow worse by neglect. M. S. C. SHAMPOO contains pure Coceanut Oil and other hair health ingredients, which by constant use will keep the scalp and hair in perfect condition. Being in LIQUID form, it is easy to apply: You simply wet the head thoroughly in Hot water, then apply about two tablespoonsful, which will instantly work up oceans of lather that will thorouthly cleanse the scalp, and after thorough rinsing will leave thie hair beautifully soft. . Buy a bottle from your dealer and follow direc- tions carefully, and you, like thoudgnds of others, will be convinced of our claims. Price 50 Cents All Driggists, Everywhere, or if your dedler cannot supply Vou wilh the genuine write us, MUTUAL SALES CO. 32 Front Strget West . Toronto, Ontario at A ss Here is to all Canadians, That should be here with me, To help crush that country Known as old Germany, We are out here, Somewhere in France, Where the bullets they whistle And the flare lights dance. ~~ So come, all you ydung slackers, I know you have the nerve, So join that new battalion, And for, your country serve, It know it 18 hard To leave old Frontenac, But it will. not be long Before we come-s®arching back. - Dr. good health at present." At times if I am not feeling up to the mark 1 use some Nerve Food. I wish to re- commend | the use "of Dr. Chase's Nerve Food to persons suffering from nervousness, sleeplessness and run-down condition." x This is Nature's way of effecting cure, and this is why Dr. Chase's Nerve Food hag made such a reputa- tion for itself as a cure for diseases of the nerves. It is gentle in action, but wonderfully potent in restoring' to the run-down system the vigor and energy which makes life worth Ii : i Nervous headaches, indigestion, sleeplessness, irritability soon leave. once the nervous energy is restored Women's Low Heel Walking Boots a a . ; We are now showing the new spring styles of Low Heel Walking Boots in Black Kid, Black Calf and Dark Brown Calf Lea- These'shoes are the new 1917 spring models and right up to the minute in style . and quality. ($6.50, $7.00 and $8.00. J H.Sutheriand & Bro. THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES. by the use of Dr. Chase's Nerve Food, and the benefits obtained are lasting. 50 cents a box, a full treatment of 6 boxes, for $2.50, at Edmanson, Bates & Co., Ltd., Toron. | to. Deo not be talked into accepting wd a substitute. Imitations disappoint,' Boston, Feb, 23, all dealers, or Wael and Cotton Reporter will say; "Wool at $2 of, and it does noi seem at all op reasonable, --r . Msg {becoming exhausted. It is sald that every choice lot of fine wool in Bow fon either changed hands or had an offering made for it last Monday. All 'kinds of pulled wools from 99 cents to $1.65 werd sold." Wool at $2 a Pound. ~The American a pound .is now talk- Fine wools are rapidiy!

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