nN . Property. 1 im -- PAGE FOUR. +s FRATERNAL PRESCRIPTION FOR NERVOUS WRECKS, {From Medical Reports') Thousands of men, 1 wrecks, have found the "fraternai pres rig i ing and a booh. . Suck aggressiveness. they tid nervous, easily discouraged. Ia i ing in self esteem and confidence They suffer from cold extrem- ities, thin watery b ¥ 8 ness, sieeplen dreams, trembily limbs suiute luabl ordinary 4 acts or healthy normal ma A vigorous man works, plays ets and siceps always with the keenest enjoyment. The greater his exertions are, the stronger becomes his appetitite and sium- bers. The Rervous mau seems always tired and worn out Retiring brings no relief. Sleep brings no lood, ne utisiea dy s00se4040000s0sssertsritl iE WHIG, 77th YEAR hb Bs {o'clock ---- DAILY BR TISH wa. published A 306-219 Kins ce ngston, Ontario at $6 Yer oe adit ions at 2.30 and 4 m. WEEKLY BRITISH WHIG, 16 pages published in 'parts on onday and Thursday morning at $1 a year. Te United States, charge for postage had to be added, making price of Daily $2 and of Weekly $1.50 per year. Attached is one of the best Job Print- ing Offices in Canada; rapid, stylish, and cheap work; nine impreved presses The British Whig Pablishing Co., Ltd. EDW. J. B. PENSE, Managing Director. TORONTO OFFICE. Suite 19 and 20 Queen City Cham, bers, 32 Church St, . Toronto, H. Smallpeice, J.P. representative. Daily Whig. refreshment, all because of an abnormal condition of the nervy ous system, brought about by well, no matter what wire Is four relief and with rich, red blood rs through the body supplying the sensitive nerves with all the power of sensation, so that sleep in refreshing, food is delicious work 8 play and play .is pleas- ure. en This treatment thoough, simple and correct. The ingred- jentg are used in filing various prescriptions and can be obtained of any well stocked druggist and mixed at home without embar- rassment or questions Obtain three ounces of syrup sarsaparfiia eompound in a six ounce bottle To this, add one ounce of compound. fluid balm- wort and let stand two hours Then add one ounce of tincture cadomene compound (not carda- mom), and one ounce of com- pound essence cardiol Mix, shake well and take a.teaspoon- ful after each meal and one when retiring until a vigorous, bound- ing new-health tages hold ok the tired, exhausted nerves. Only a few weeks treatment will aston- ish, and rejuvenate because the treatment is the right thing at the right time, and conta'ns no deceptive oplates. is S44 299904 PMI PMI FIRE FEF FAI FI EFF P RENIN LH HI SIAR RPA PPR He + heb EP E PPP ebb bbb bbb bbb | Is buzzing every day cutting Hard Elm and Oak Timbers and Saw Logs, making lumber, not butchering it, but sawing it square and straight. We give close attention to details, and when you buy Lumber and Timber | here you know It is manufactur- ed right. S. Anglin & Co. Wellington St. North, I | procure a ALTERATION SALE have to make more room in bur store to accommodate the Stock. Before the carpenters get busy we will clear oul 'our best lunes of CLOTHING, FURNISHINGS, BOOTS, SHOES AND RUBBERS at A BIG SACRIFICE Come and see the unexcelled Bar- gains. | A straight, genuipe Sale ISAAC ZACKS, 271 Princess St, "IMPRESS" Upon your mind the fact that for Cholee Wines and Liquors you can get the best that ean be had at R. J. Law- ler's, Golden Lion Block Agent for Me- Carthy's . Ale and Sanitaris Water 'Phone 757. Cliffs Real Estate Agency ESTABLISHED 1882. Where you can Bay or Sell Also Insurance written in best companies, 4 GEO. CLIFF, 93 Clarence St. -- » RAISED COAL STANDA SI RAE AE aordmary 3T cening 2] SLA EIR ES \ Crawford | Foot of Queen St. Phone 9. | i 43440 FEAR EE FE EPR F RR SER RARER FERRE REEF RST RR REN Sed dditee __|it will be missed in the commons, and OUR saw] table and 'v ~ -MILL. | ll Some days {ill as an assurance {ll the harbour, the Whig suggested that § | the council might consider the advan- i tages of ; been revived iil water tawa"s water has not been pure, i . Allan Hazen, beea "he i most Owing fo fheredsing busiiess, we | Allan Hasn, husasse "Be ia. the : I ity Engineer Rust, of Toronto, who { | | WHAT'S IN Herbert A NAME? Gladstone a peer! He is than his father, and the grand old man declined to be given#s the seednd cham- that South Africa, new peer goes as gover- nor-general, will appreciate the new diguity that has been conferred on the former home secretary, but it will not add zest to the movement which radi not better title and a~seat *in ber. It may be whither the cal minds endorsed and the meaning of which was so much emphasized in the late election. The hardest thing said against the liberals in the ecam- paign, and as a taunt Lloyd- George, was that the making of a peer was the first step to the conver- sion of the man into a tory, and some will think of this now in con- nection with the Gladstone elevation. What's in a name! Some times not very much. But the name of Glad- for a great deal, and to stone counted with it may go some of the affection which for years clustered about and had its roots in the heart of a vener- ery distinguished man. COST OF FILTRATION, ago when it was an- the water department, of pure water, pro- nounced that posed to lay an extra pipe out into The subject has by the action of the Ot- with regard to their purposes. Ot- In health it has been For some time the bacteria en- the cooked filtration. people for tawa domestic of the interest boiled. tering into the consumption of people have been taken in a condition. The recommendation is that (Ottawa filtering plant, and the provincial health officer, Dr. Hodgetts, recommends that the capital consult | compelent authority on the subject. | Dr. Hodgetts' advice is endorsed by writes to the vity engineer of Ottawa: "Mr. Hazen has an agreement with {Toronto in which he is to provide at the necessary plans, specifications and { details, the charge being at the rate of {two and one-hali pec cent. upon the (vost of the construction, except en- | gineering, but in 'no event is the jcharge to exceed 818,750. The city is {to pay a resident engineer to be ap- proved by the engineer. The engineer or one of his partners is to visit To- ronto at least twice a month and ad- vise the city engineer on the work." The vost of the the people dissipations x The church can do a great desl to invite the co-operation of the people, and enlist them in wholesome occupa- tions, but it felt that it never divert the masses from the leged "worldliness" which creasingly getling the possession and almost entire control of them. " can al- in- i. is A VERY TIMELY WARNING The movement of the last ten years that is to be lamented, that is to be contemplated indeed with some alarm, is of the people from the country to the towns and cities. It not a movement that is confined to Canada, but is continental in its effects. Josiah Strong, in his "Challenge of the City," dealt with some very im- portant facts, though in passing he bad in mind what should' be done to evangelize the cities. The tide of popu- lation was away from rural life. So he said. In Europe is ' i there was an attempted revival of agriculture, and to some ex- tent it was succeeding. If it failed the | imrhigration would in-! the larger num would | settle in the towns and cities, Already | the United States was feeling the in- | fluence of the displaced power in agri- cultural life. In eighteen states the majority of the people lived in the towns and cities. In Canada the con- ditions were changing rapidly. | C. C. James, the deputy minister of agriculture in Ontario, addressing a meeting of persons who were interest- | ed in fairs and exhibitions in Toron- to, said that in the last decade the farms had lost over 61,000 persons, while the urban municipalities had gained nearly 300,000. The result was startling. People talked of higher prices for the commodities of life. How could it be otherwise when there | is a steady decrease in the producers, in the men who are providing the foods. There is no philosophy which explains the high prices but this: That the tillers of the soil are leav- ing it, and it the source of all wealth. Against tered a to America crease, and is two things Mr. James ut- warning : (1) The people towns agd cities will the importance in wake up as to of farming, and (2) | they will realize that they have been wasteful and extravagant. Referring to Toronto, he said : "There probably food wasted in the city to feed any good-! sized city in many different countries in Europe. "We don't know how to buy, keep, prepare or use food. This means mil- lions of dollars of waste, and all these * things should be given atten- tion." - Mr. James added that it was a good thing the people were feeling the pinch of high prices. The more they were pinched the more they would realize the need there was of a cultivatiop of | the soil, and the movement in time might be of people towards the coun- try in place of fram it. EDITORIAL NOTES. is enough and lure them from ee | {engineer's scheme for constructing expensive form of persecution ! hitration plant is j less, much less, than any one here has | Imagined If has been estimated all | the way from 825,000 to $50,000, and jvet, if Toronto can get along with : less than $20 000, should An extra pipe would ensure a constant supply {of water, but it will not ensure | purity which { Blter | It might be to the advantage of this jeity to invite Mr. Hazen to visit it and advise the water committee, fan outfit worth { Kingston's necessities be met for a much smaller sum, the can be secured by a THE CHURCH ON TRIAL. A young preacher in Toronto has enunciated the idea that if the church is to be a centre of light and life, if it is to attract and hold its people, it must be social centre. In other "words it must be open all the time. {| At once the preacher runs counter with those who regard the church with a sort of religious awe. The building , has been sol fy dedicated for a cér- i tain purpose. Within it the thought and conduct of the people should be dignified. Apything appealing to hilarity and levity is not to be toler- ated, not even when it is accompan- jed by an air of entire innocence. The church, according to the mind of this class, must be as exclusive in its uses as ihe heathen temples. They may be approached and entered gravely, de- corously, religiously, but once the devotions are over they are to be vacated and securely locked. Agnin and again there has been a kind of trespass when the younger peo- ple have essayed to entertain them- selves. to a limited extent, but there ix a long way between this and the { condition that must prevail before the {people who idle dsewhere will visit { the church and make it a common | rendezvous. ; i Rev. Dr. Rainsford, well-known in Canada, made 'an heroic sffort to : the secular Mffmirs of the a temper [and lost is health in the service. Dr. of the ' tbe voted on by the property owners con March 15th, It should be heartily endorsed. ! | t { How soft and fleecy the snow, beau- {tiful snow, looked in the sunshine to- iday 1K ! 'A typical winter's day was cu- wed here on February 15th. Mayor MeLaren, of Hamilton, says that city is not ready for local' op- Rather the mayor and alder | men, or rather the majority of them, are not ready for either local option {or license reduction. j tion. The Kingston soldiers by the trek to the north have shown their mettle. They are not made of the same ma- terial as some of their detractors, whe aro spineless, and who think every: body else is like them. ---- "revenue by over a million 5 year itis time the Whitney government re- trenched. Mr. Matheson will never consent, of course, to sell the.grown lands and squander the capital of the province. Trade between Canada and the Unit: the calendar year just ended, and has (more than doubled in the last tes !vears. In no earlier year have either imports from, or exports to that coun: try equaled the record of 1908, Surely there is a man in the Ontario legislature to second the motion of Allan Studhojme, to give the franchise fo women. The question is worth dis cussion; even if it cannot carry just vet. A seconder might be gallant en- even though he cannot vote for if. In the United States there ix no law jto prevent preachers from bolding po- litical offices. Some of them have sat (in congress and the state legislatures. Rev. Ira J. Chase was governor of In diana and often preached from church {people with religion, in New York. | pulpith "in that state during his gov-igs # ernorship. Another Indiana preacher, Rev. Henry A. Buchtel, DD, u Meth : Colorado, An evangelist, near Smith's Falls, was ; pelted with eggs. What a dreadfully |carry. The people had turned down a "The dry dock exemption scheme will | t i With the expenditure exceeding the | ed States made its highest record in ough to let the subject get an airing, | down ; & THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1910. A SYSTEM OF ROADS TO BE BUILD OF MACADAM DUR. ING NEXT FOUR YEARS. . r---- Board of Works Adopts Report of City Engineer--8$30,000 to be Ex. . pended Under Local Improvement System---Nearing a Decision as to Paved Roads For Business Section, The board of works, at its meeting, yesterday afternoon, adopted the city a system of macadam roads in the resi- dential sections of the city. during the next four years, beginning in the com- ing sprigi. It also deci to recom- mend to the city council that the work be done Wider the locakimprove- meut system, charging pr own- ers directly intergsted sixty cent. of the cost, the city pafing other forty per cent. Duritig this year the city engineer proposes structing about nineteen blocks. Fifty thou- sand dollars will be expended during the four years, or about $12,500 each year, : The engineer in outlining his scheme to the board of works, stated that the work could be done by submitting a by-law to the people for the raising of | $50,000 by débentures; by adopting the | local improvement plan, or 'by in- creasing the rate of taxation by one one-third mills, so as to provide for the yearly expenditure of $12,500. The engineer recom the adop- tion of the local improvement plan as the most satisfactory and equitable. It would coset property owners only four cents a foot a year for tem years, a very small amount. The engineer recommended that three or four blocks of limestone macadam be treated with tarvia, which had giv- en great satisfaction in cities of north- ern states. Macadam would gost about thirty-two cents a square yard. Tarvia treatment would 60st. about eight cents a yard eXtra. further treat- ment a year afterwards would cost about three cents a yard. A schedule was submitted showing the streets that would be rebuilt each year for the= next four years. The blodks were divided fairly among. the various wards, and constituted the most important arteries in all sec- .tions. Ald. Harty thought that the local improvement plan seemed to be the best to adopt. Ald. Carson was rath- er in favor of paying the cost out of the general revenue of the city, as the streets were used by all. Ald. Chown pointed out that the board of works gouldn't get a large enpugh appropriation for even keeping the streets in repair. The taxation would have to beiraised if the local Improvement scheme was pet adopted. "Theft let us raise "the taxes," said Ald. Carson. "Well, what benefit would that be?" asked Ald. Hoag. 'It would mean that all would pry for, the roads, instead of a pyrt of the people," replied Ald. Carson." Ald. Hoag held that the immediate locality in which new streets were built received the benefit, People in the outlying sections wouldn't receive as much benefit as property on streets where new roads were con- structed. Ald. Chown {favored the local im- provement system, as being the fair- est to all, The whole city paid forty per cent. of the cost and those more directly interested . paid sixty per cent. Ald. McCartney was inclined to fa- submitting avby-law for $50,000 to the people, Ald. Chown said that it was not worth while losing time on this, as he was pretty surt the by-law wouldn't 217,000 by-law a year ago. Ald. Hoag: moved that the city en gineer's scheme, regarding macadam roads, be adopted, and that the local improvement plan be followed; also that an experiment with tarvia be made. This motion was earried. The blocks to be rebuilt this year will be the following : Wellington street, from West to Wil- iam. dl | William street, from Sydenham | Wellington. Barrie, from Johnson to Brock. Clergy, from William to Brock. Wellington, from. William to John: € ho. el outrenl, from Brock to Princess. Barrack, from Wellington to Rideau. to dithn't think the citizens would be sat- isfied to pay £75,000 for a brick pave. ment. He didn't think much of the brick himself. "The city engmeer said that sixty per cent. of the pavemculs coustructed in the greater part of the United States was vitrified, brick. This showed what engineers thought of that material for paviag purposes. Toronto had between ten and fifteen miles of brick pave ment and was still using it. AM. Harty said that all seemal agreed that Kimgston should bave question at issue seemod to be one of faance. Ald. McCartney said that he . was satisfied _that brick was the proper pavement to use on Princess street. Akl. Carson's view was that lime stone macadam was the best thing for Kingston to use on all its streets. I it was properly laid, with concrete water tables, it would last well. The city engineer 'said that the people would never be satisfied until permanent pavement 'was put on the wn (own streets. Primcess street, he said, could be done better with maca dam than it had been done in the pst, however, because there were not enough grates on that roadway to carry off the water. About , dozen more grates were neoded as weli as concrete gutters, if macadam was to be used. There was ome stretch of road on Princess street where there was no grate for a distalece of over 700 feet. Another thing he would re commend, if macadam was used on that street, would be the extending of the granolithic walks out to meet the curbing; then the telegraph poles woull be inside the curbing. Unless this was done, satisfactory gutters conld not be comstrueted The committee then decided to post- pone final action on the paving cles tion until its next meeting. 1t felt that it had grasped the essential points and that all that was required was a little more time to consider the financial side. . The Board of Education communi oation asking if the by-law respecting sanitary improvements can be enfore- ed against public schools, and if it can be mforcad if the drainage is in- sufficient was referzed to the eity solicitor and the. City Engineer. It was decided to shovel two diag onal walks through Vietoria park. In attendance were Alds. Chown (chairman), Carson, Harty, Hoag and McCartney. ATHENS PEOPLE MOURN -- The Departure of Entertainers Who Didn't Pay Up. Athens, Feb. 17.--~The 1.0.0.F. "at home," on the 10th was most enjoy- able. A short"programme was pre- sented, games were indulged in and refreshments were served at the close, The first carnival of the season is billed for to-night. The Lansdowne baml is to be in attendance. Athens defeated lum Hollow 8 to in a game of hockey on Monday. Mrs. William Johnston, Mrs. A. R. Brown, Mrs. T. 8. Kendrick, Mrs. F. A. Rend, and Mrs. Tribute entertain- ed recently. Mrs. W. G. Towies as- sisted in the programme at the valen- time box social in Plum Hollow Men: day evening. The May Amusement €o, gave "The Passion Play" in moving pictures ut Hard Island school house gecently. Some entertainers struck town swd- denly last week, gave a free pro- gramme, sold some gods and left as suddenly us they arrived. Several vic: tims are awaiting their promised re turn, Elmer Smith, blacksmith, of Frank- ville, has leased the shop ocoupidl by 0. L. Monroe, an! will move his family here the first of next month. Frederick Booth, of Morton will move to the residence formerly owndd by the late Thomas Henderson. Miss Edna Steacey has gone to Toramto. Alexander (ireen, Jett Kelly and Norman Hagerman left last week for the west. Charles Arnold after several months absence in the west amd ip Montreal, returned home last Thurs day. Mr. and Mrs. Arza Sherman have returned from an extended trip through the southern states. There was no service in Christ church last Nunday evening, owing to the iMness of the rector. Rev. R. .B. Pattersom, Rev. Westell, pasto: of the Baptist thurch, conducted services in the In- dustrial Home last Sunday, Bibby's 30 doz. more 3 . new 69¢., Saturday morning. shirts, Montreal, from Ordnance 46 North. Wellington, from Princess to Queen. Wellington, from Queen to Bay. Clergy, from Princess to Queen. Montreal, from Ordnance to North Queen, from Barrie wess 525 feet. Division, from Princess to Ellice. Queen, from Division east 75 feet. Princess, from Division to Alfred. King, from Collingwood to Albert. Unlod, from"Barrie to Alfred. 4 a SER ) & . The Road Paving Question. The board at its next meeting will come to a decision reganding what kind of roads will be built i business ection of the city. details as kaeout. ami materials te been mastered, all that rem for the to do is jo roped its decision. gem! *y yal ternoon, after goi ver the groum {carefully decided that they would like another fortuight to think Peer the matter and disouss j¢ with prominent citizens. The question has simply re- solved itself into this "Will the line of the street railway from the corner of Princess and Barrie streets to' the corner of Johnston and Ontario streets be rebuilt with limestone maec- adam treated with tarvia or some other. like substance, or will it be re built with permanent pavement * The question has been reduced en- tirely to one of cosi. To put down pavement will cost $75,000, wo put a sat Lady Dudley will shorfly visit Can- 'ada gy obtain information regarding nursing orgunization in connection with a sugPdsted scheme for Austral- | asia. | Bibby's sale shirts, 69., Saturday. The eighty-eight passengers and sail- ors left on the wrecked British steam- er Lima, in the Straits of Magellan, have been rescued. | A company Jas been formed at i Montreal to construct a boulevard ten {miles long to Bout De L'lle. i Bibby's 30 doz. wore pew shirts, | 8%, Saturday mornipg. = [SATURDA i permanent pavement if possible, The To-day we received, Manufacturer, 30 Do styles. taken care of. sizes. 14, 14], 15 to Blue, Mauve, Green, On Sale FARMING THE BACK LAWN, It fis Really Not What it is Cracked Up. Toronto Star . Living will not be cheaper until the people put more muscle into gardening and less into rowing 'and golfing and automobiling. The man with a bit of land behind his house should cultivate dt.--Kingston Whig. This is all very well, or it will sound very: well to those who have not teed it, Perhaps householders in Kingston have larger plots of greund behind their houses than are usually found behind Toronto homes. After making several efforts to "farm the it of land' behind his house in Toronto the farming editor of the Star is prepared to admit that he has been unable to produce ary desirable effect on the cost of Mving by his agricultural of forts. He has gome in for rotatjon of crops, fruit raising, market gardening, horticulture and vineyarding, but year after vear these makeshifts have fail ed. Nature intended that plot land for a croquet lawn. When a man plants an apple tree and watches it in vain for twelve years for the sign of a blossonr, or when his ons peach tree arrays itself in blossoms and in the fall bears adamantine fruit that a dog couldn't bite, it useless for the Kingston Whig to tell him that he cam reduce the cost of living by cultivating his back vard He can increase the disappoantmenis of life. He van make himself disliked by his neighbors, who are reproachad by thor wives into showing a nar dening industry aqual to his , own But as for finaeigl results, he will find at the end of the year that he has thirty-five esnts' worth of toma toss and a bed of mint that he can- not kill with a hoe These are the paltry proceeds of a man's labor and the money he has invested in' garden ing utensils which, no matter where he hides them, bis famkly will produce in the following spring and leave leaning teously against the jcnee. What we need. in Toronto is mifleading advice from Fi agston how to get rich with a hoe on croquet lawn--what wie really need a Married Man's Anti-Gyrdening ciety of not on n | js sO The steamer Yucatan, sunk in Icy Straits, Alaska. The sixty-five pas sengers were saved BIBBY'S STORE CLOSES SATURDAY EVENINGS "AT 10 O'CLOCK. . « * AAA Aer pg eng tnt Selling Agents for Peabody's Union-Made Garments. from a leading Shirt zen Shirts, soft bosom All this season's models. They are Tiavellers' Samples that have been well Everyone a beauty. All 18. Neat Black and Whites, dainty patterns in new shades of ete. Saturday -69c. Sale of 50c Neckwear for 25c. | 'The H. D. Bibby Co. ; born | When in the Market for A Gasoline Launch We can supply you with one equipped with a Davis 1910 Model Gasoline Engine is guaranteed satisfaction Exhibit of Engines at H. W. NEWMAN'S, 79 Princess St. And be sure you get our prices on Motor Boats, Gasoline Engines, Gaso- line Engine Bupplies, etc. before pur- chasing elsewhere. All Gasoline En- gines guaranteed to give satisfaction. Call at our Works and see them run- ning DAVIS DRY DOCK COMPANY "Phone 120. Which to give you See our MeGILL UNIVERSITY. Examinations in Music. Local Examinations in Theoretical Music for all grades will be held on [April 13th, 1816 Local Practical Examinations con- | ducted by Dr. H. C'. Perrin and an As- isociate Examiner (for ail centres in On- {tario, Quebec and Maritime Provintes {from May 33rd to the end of June) Application forme filled in and ac. companied by fees must reach the central office in Montrea 1 or before April 1st, 1810. Forms are obtainable from the lgeal Representative, Prof Tas. Cappon, Queen's University, Kings. ton, ow from C. M. MacFarlane, General Secretary, 323 Sherbrooke Mt. W., Mont. real information about the Yearly examin- ations for Diploma of Licentiate and jdegree of Mus: Hac. can be obiained | mw the General Secretary Dr, Workman's 8etion agninag Prin cipal Shaw and the corporation of Weslevan (Bllege, Montreal, opened on { Thursday. Hi c's 48 soz. more Ln ea: morning. 1 A warm exchange between the lead {ers marked the closing of the debate {om the budget iu the Ontario legisla ture, new ®hirts, SPECIALS AT y . ABERNETHY'S. All Men's $5.00 Shoes. .$3.08 All $4.50 Shoes. ....... $3.49 All $4.00 Shoes. $2.49 Men's Real Box Calf Bluchers, leather lined, real good value. Sale Price. . . . $2.49 $1.25 Little Boys' Box Calf Bluchers, sizes 11 to 123 . Sale Price. . $1.25 so+- Rubbers A few Men's at A few Women's at A few Girls' at A few Childs' at A few Boys' at. . ws Little Boys', 11 to 13, at Many other Bargains in Shoes, - Moccasins, - Slippers, Suit Cases and Trunks. $1.98 Special Bargain fn Ladies' $2 50 and some $3.00 values k s1.08 Girls' Kid Laced Boots, sizes 11 to 2, regular $1.35: 98 All. Baby 59¢ Boots. Sale Price ... ... ...... 380 AB Fl A 2) § Ra FR -~