Listowel Banner, 4 Mar 1920, p. 6

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se Hr wleeesbti ak Us eeomian ad should be treted as such bt of ome rch ook upon i a8 an epee ag ti Pesharl the misconception arose from the fact that in bookkeeping it ins bss the ai is a advertising to Advertising to new business—it. swells the volume expense. therefore it is an investment. Only the man who looks upon pei: tah - who is afraid of it, predjudiced against it, loses money in wdvertanate” The man Aen bass ser see ' tising.as an investment and gives it the attention an investment rightly invested in this direction yields compound interest—and more. Give The Banner an Opportunity to Prove the Value of Your Business : requires---knows that every dollar Fe oF REAEFAST with the average Englishman is one of the four or five chief meals of the day, and so he usually makes it a substantial one. He begins the day about an hour or so before breakfast, when he is awakened by a servant, who enters with a tray containing 2 large pot of tea and rolls or toast. After drinking a few cups of tea, which is almost invariably good, and water from the hall, shaves, baths and goes to the diming-room. The Bangiish do not eat oranges or grape- fruit as commonly as would Amer- jeans or Canadians, and are likely te begin the banquet with a plate of- If you are a native of Cuz. beriand you then prepare to-have is ea 4-8 hunter’s” pbreak- men ould have = breakfast or and +e at f BS ait: ti WeEK, save what they could derive the 2 herbage of forest. porri e pretended ral bfx! fia. 5 é i pai : taining 2 poached egg, rashers of bacon, and a large, real sausage. He may eat his potatoes. this dish-or he may prefer to them with ‘the pork pie that lows. The pork pie may er hot or cold and jellied. “Tt has a thick crust, and as it is a. great favorite with hunters, nen aes sag “a ale. The h ae a trifling of ale e hun then a bie able and ,| satisfactorily abated. he | and works its way dbwn through fish, game, roast; two or three kinds of potatoes and other S wanetabion pud- ding, sweets, fruit, tea or coffee, and probably whiskey or beer. As a rule the coffee is drunk anywhere but at the table, and the invariable custom is to serve it-in the smallest of, cups. You may have as many small cups as you like, but apparently you can- not have a real large cup of coffee. Probably it is contrary to the provi- luncheon and tea-time, may have a drink or so, and an Eng- lishman is more likely to do his ser- ious drinking either with his meals |, or after them than before them. Due to this fact he can absorb a consider- able amount of alcoholic beverages in the course of the day, and skow no sign of it either contemporan+ous- ly or by an early death, Tea-time is about 4 or 4.30, and is designed not as a real meal, but as something to stay the ao mane before dinner. There is tea: uits, and sev- : Cigarettes are Plegsantest p=ti-hour of the day be- gins. Women appear to smoke as genera", as the men. It is not con- if they should find a substitute in a decanter. The hunter’s dinner is likely to r 8, and continue inde- to the attack at supper time. Then if his appetite is still not can take a sandwich or the leg = a chicken ‘before going to bed, Ps a. confidential servant will ide | fs lunch under his pillow. The d is like the lunch, except that there are more courses, the portions are larger, if the plates are larger, and there is likely to be a bottle of wine, and liqueurs. After the dinner pro . the tho crosses e mind of the hunter that hunting is dry work and a bottle of port is open- . The action is frequently pilagiar- ised, and the hunter and his friends settle down to quench the hunter’s thirst. This is no mean task, but to Englishmen the more difficult the problem the -greater the determina- has acquir- ~etite for his breakfast the CONSTIPATION By the term.CONSTIPATION is meant either oo dificult or in-~ evacuation of Lower Bow: of the contents The ptoms are Headache, Dizziness, Mental siserbGane Lack of ee oe Lassitude or a feeling of General Indisposition, Bad Breath, e, Loss of Appetite, Sallow Skin which may become dry and Seated Tongu tough and Pimples may So: Hysterical Spells and Nervétts Exhaustion. Careful 1 ary. Cathartics and Laxatives have a ‘mene Gripe and Purge and "tiineral Oils, secretion of the peels juice and ne interfere with the obsorption NEY AND LIVER PILIS form an ideal tonic— sf food. HACKING’S Casares for Constipation a ane its evil results. We give herewith the medicinal action of the ingredien KIDNEY AND LIVER in order that you may form your own opinion as to the value of this wonderful medicine. A — Laxati use ag: or unpleasant} pond for Chronic Consti- : ’ vigor P ‘ secretive apparatus of the sys- Sa as Tecan ote Spasmodic is Heart Palpitation, a@ proper. réimeay; ordin- effect upon the system, a day may se bigeye ts of HACK- with Intestinal Torpidity. This atts best when used in combination with other drugs and herbs. gang“ orate > a CAPSICUM—Stimulant and Stom- ache, useful in Feeble next day. But in order that his cray- ings for food may not overwhelm him in his sleep he is likely to take a few “spots,” not as whiskey but as waters of Nepenthe, before finally consent- ing to go to bed, and permitting the game of the islands to roam -unmo- lested until the horn sounds the next day and*he swallows. it—J. ¥. McAree in the Mail and Empire. Bird Sings to Music. Before ‘‘the time of the ee - birds” is over—and the ni s. sige rng already to jug don” than to launch Tennyson’s 4 riiyeid note’’"—some musicicn ought ‘to do fuller justice to the blackbird. He is the most intelligible of all birds—that is, he has intervals like those of our human mustfc; his phrases may be, and have been, put down on our five-lined music paper. There is a West Sussex blackbird who sang all “last May the first five notes of “The Campbelis Are Com- ing,’”’ and he is _ id again, in the same garden, Other blackbirds —— composed prettier phrases, but all sound equal- ly jolly and sweet in their trolling.— ‘London Chronicle, Since Japan assumed contro! of osa a dozen years ago, the an- nual sugar production been ‘> creased. from — to 530,000 tons. Old Roman Strikers. at On the word of a decipherer ces ancient records, there was, in’ year 309 B.C., a strike of the nsaat cians’ union in Rome. The officials of Rome, it, appears, thought that the musicians, @hould play without pay at a forthcoming a in honor of Jupiter. The usiclans thought otherwise, and although Rome, then gaged in one of the Samnite wars, had little money to spend for music, decided not.to “do their bit’ by per- forming bys ange pay. Apparently the argument that they were really piay- ing for Jupiter himself was tried without effect. So the city officials decided on an appeal to public opin- ion; they evolved a stratagem * which they decoyed the striking musicians to the scene.of the festi- val, and, with all Rome looking ex- pectantly at them, the musicians changed their minds and there was “music ag usual.”—Christian Science Monitor. Insects Give Us Shellac. Shellac is the joint praduct of in- sects and plants and comes from In- dia. The lac insects are about 1-25 of an inch long,.a bright red in color. They suck the juices of plants, di- gest them and exude them in the form of resin, which soon encases th: whole insect. When the young in- sects have swarmed out, the resin is scraped from the branches, ground, washed, mixed. with colophony and orpiment, cooked slowly and drawn out into the thin sheets we know as sheliac. Sal —* a ¢ THE ANGLO-JAP. ALLIANCE. Tokio Wonders If It Will. Be Renewed. Whether the Aftigio-Japanese al- liance, which expires this year, will renewed is a subject of consider- able speculation in Tokio diplomatic cireles. It is pointed out among the Japanese that the. world conditions have so changed since the ce was inaugurated that-both parties, particularly Great Britain, may no longer see the necessity of such an agreement. The victory over Ger- KARN-MORRIS PIANO & ORGAN co. 4 LIMITED. Manufactabérs of Pipe Organs — Morris & Player NOTICE TO EVERYBODY ! ALBERT IZEN WILL PAY CASH for Beer and Whiskey Bottles, Rags, ! Rubbers, Newspapers and Magazines, Iron and Scrap Metals ot all kinds. Highest market prices also paid for Furs, Beef and Horse Hides, Wool and Poultry. PHONE 65,: LISTOWEL i many, for instance, makes it possible for Great Britain to maintain a far larger naval force in the waters of the Pacific, without further depen- dence on Japan. Vv unt Kato, who was Japanese Ambassador to London when the al- Hance originated, recommends the continuance of the alliance. In the Jiji Shimpo he says “In my opinion there seems to be a similarity in the object of the Anglo-Japanese alliance and the Léague of Nations, but dissimilarity in-form and the methods of attain- ing the object. “The form of the existing alliance, as weil as its substance, are incom- patable with those of the covenant of the League of Nations. “But there can be no doubt that the alliance has for some twenty y had a. influence, Teer and t, “on ‘the anti iA song the two nations and it is not advisable that the alliance, which has this great history should be abol- ished as a mere relic of the past. It is practicable to continue the aHi- ance if both cont & powers de- “T believe it is of vital necessity, and opportune, that our government should lay great stress on this ques- vi wi the alliance, if Great Britain is of the same opinion.” 4 PALE, WAN CHEEKS A SIGN OF ANAEMIA Have Good Color and Health the Blood Must be Kept Red and Pure. To i sire it. Even if it becomes merely | an agreement, or a mutual declara- ets tion, it would be better than nothing: ° be : | Stationery Genuine The Original and Only Livingstone’s School Supplies Get them at | ; “ PINAR \ The Druggist Phone 59. Many women who had good color and bright ¢yes in their girlhood grow pale and colorless and lose much of their charm when they become wives and mothers. Why is it? When the fading color in the cheeks and’ lips is accompanied by a loss of brightness} in the eyes and an increasing heayi- ness in the step and a tendency to tire easily, the, cause is to be sought in the state of the blood. Many causes may contribute to the condition of the blood known as anas- mia, Care of the home, overwork, 4 lack of outdoor exercise, insufficient! rest and sleep, improper diet, are a few of them. The important thing is to restore the blood; to build it up so yythat the color will return to the } cheeks and lips, brightness to the eyes, and lightness to the step... To do this, nothing can equal Dr.’ “Wil- -ltams Pink Pills, They begin at once to increase the red corpuscles in the | Main St.. Next to Zurbrigg’s. . from Jan. 5th Western Ontario's largest and > best Commercial School. We and © mercial, Shorthand, and . : -< graphy departments. We as- - ‘Plumbing cist graduates to posttions : Write for our free Catalogue. If you purpose doing It may interest you. give thorough courses and have D. A. McLACHLAN, (Princigal.) Carl Ross 5 2h tte

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