PacE FOUR. Easily Tired Exhausted DOES THIS PESCRIBE YOUR CASE?--THEN READ THIS LETTER ABOUT Dr. Chase's Nerve Food The accompanying letier feactibug, so well the condition of w person' : nerves are weak and exhausted that Inthe need be scided, I'he dangers of such a state of health is pometimes overlooked by persons who do not realize that the next step is some form of paralysis which leaves one helpless in mind and body. Mrs. Fdwand Sehwartz, Ladysmith; Que, writes =--'It is a pleasure to let vou know how | was benefited by Dr. Chase's Nerve Food. 1 was up down and weak, unable to do any' House work, was easily tired and exhausted lacked energy and ambition, was very nervous, easily irritated, could not conecnirate the thoughts, hands and feet were cold, 1 could not sleep, had frecuent headaches snd dizzy amd pal- "pitagion of the heart, ny "Nervous prostration was my trou- ble, but Dr. Chase's Nerve Food cural "oie wl awl Foeanmst- fod owolds toes press my thankfulness for this wonder- ful madicine."' The results achieved by Dr. Chase's Nerve Food are often more wonderful than words can tell. In cases such as this patient, persistent treatment is | necessary, but you are encouraged by steady armed natural improvement until the eure is thorough and complete. There is a satisfaction in knowing that each amd every dose is hound to be of ut least some benefit in rebuild- mg the wastad nervous system. Dr. A. W. ("hase's Nerve Food, 'Ble. n box, 6 for $2.50, all dealers, or Ed. manson, Bates & Co., Toronto, -Write for a free copy of Dr. Chase's Rechpos, OUR SAW MILL 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. 'Phone 66. - AT IT YET Alterations in, our Store are not yet completed. Meanwljile the Big 20 per cent. Discount Sale is Going SEE OUR Suits, $15, now only rr $10, now only ..... ; '$8, now only An Al $5 Boot for Strong Workmg Boots, $1.60 and $2, now. . | $1.40 and $1.65 "Good Solid Leather. 25" per cent, off all Fine Boots. 15 per cent. of all Working Boots. ISAAC ZACKS, 271 PRINCESS ST. EE 8L.75 Preserving Costly Costumes Ladies of high soclety send their delicate and costly costumes p hé cleaned by our French Cleaning Process---keeping throughout the season bright and new. : R. PARKER & CO., 4 Dyers and Cleaners, ® Princess St, Kingston, Ont. GPs Real Estate Agency ~~ ESTABLISHED 1882. Where vou can Buy or Sell Property. Also Insurance written in best companies. GEO. CLIFF, ¥ ! Deliver Your CUAL? : ought to, o give per- 0: 1a" "| a competitor ? THE WHIG, 77th YEAR DAILY BRITISH WHIG, published at 306-210 King Street. Kingston, Ontario, at is per year. Editions at 3.30 and 4 v'cloel mn. WEEKLY BRITISH WHIG, 16 pages, ublished In parts on Monday and hureday morning at 3 Te ! tates, charge for postage had be added. maki price of Daily $3 and of Weekly $1. fer yenr. Attached is one of the best Job Print. ing Offices in Canada; rapid. stylish, and ebheap work; nine lmpreved presses. The British Whig Publishing Co., Lid. EDW. J. B. PENSE, Managing Director. TORONTO OFFICE. Sulte 19 and 20 Queen City bers, 32 Church St, Toronto, Smalipeice, J.P., representative Daily Wibig. SITTING ON THE LID, The revelations in the public life of "some people are fast showing the obli- quity 'of the political parties. For over two weeks the New York legisla. ture has been enquiring into the scan- dals that affect iwo members--Allds "and Conger--and the circle of influence has been spreading out until it affects # waniber of 'others and the honor and rectitude of the assembly, While this enquiry is going on an- other shock was felt, and as a result lof the democratic quarrel in the state jcommittee. "'Fingay Connors," of Bul- falo, has been chaitman of this com- mittee, and when it was intimated {that he had to go he "boiled over," 'and charged that the state democra- { tio leaders' were crooks by choice and inclination. The way seemed to be open for | general house-cleaning, but it was ibarred by the chairman of the state committee. The body politic may be exceedingly rotten--the complete ex- posure of the parties might bring about at least a temporary regenera- tion--but the party will not permit of {it. Metaphorically speaking, the re 'publicans in the house are sitting on | the lid and the odours of rank cor- ruption are not allowed to escape. Cham- H E A REFORM IN SIGHT. Just "how it is to be accomplished is not quite clear, but there will be many, perhaps most people, who will applaud the proposition that the Cen- tral prison shall be made more than a place of detention. The prisoners-- on the great farm which has been purchased near Guelph--will be re guired to earn their own living, and in some measure contribute to the living ¢§ their families. It is, one of the saddest things of which the courts have had experience, that the wives and children of some ofienders have to suffer with him, and suffer as he does not, because of his crime. He is deprived of his li- berty, it is true. He is cut off from the companionship he should appre ciate, and the comforts of the home. But he is in warm quarters, and he He does "not skip a meal, though his dependants may go hun- gry and starve. The province is contemplating = new beparture in prison life and fare! The men who 'go to the Central prison hereafter will be expected to work in some remunerative way. The question of paying them, or their familles, is under advisement. Tf this scheme ean be evolved and sucessfully oper- ated the better day for which some people have hoped so long will at hand. Prisons will be as reforma- tory as now and without the terrors and penalties which imprisonment now involves. DOING A SPLENDID WORK. The Salvation Army will not suffer by the criticism which it has received in connection with ils prison rescue work. The Ontario governingnt has heen making a grant to it, snd ex- ception has been taken. Why ? Has it Is there any other religious body or organization which ie seeking to help the fallen and by sympathetic and effective plans? If 80 it deserves the same treatment, and the government will, no doubt, take recognition of the fact. The prisons and the jails would not be filled, and by an increasing popu- lation, if the men and women had the training which is their due. A touch ing case came before the police magis- trate of Toronto a few days ago. It was that of a young woman who had been reared in a home bereft of moral influence. The mother. was an aban doned woman, and she had no ambi- tion for her daughter, save that she should follow in the same downward course. She fell from grace, this young woman. What was more natural or fikely ? She came before the magis- trate, : Then a lawyer, 'who had, under the pleaded for the woman. He was read her record. He was told of ber THE DAILY BRITISH. WHIG, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1040. picion is not well founded. The Army is proud of its practical Christianity. It is doing what the churches are not doing, and it is to be warmly com- mended. THE MAD DOG SCARE. The report that one dog has gone mad in the city--that it suddenly de veloped rabies and had to be des royed--is enough to make some peo- ple timid and to look askance at every dog they see at large. The or- der has gone forth that all the dogs in Tete du Pont barracks must be removed or done away with, that there will be no danger of madness among the barrack pets. The cause of this order is not apparent. Its existence, however, is sufficient to cause some alarm. The western towns and cities have been protected by the general order that no dogs will be permitted at large that are not musmded. In King- ston a similar proceeding may be au- thorized by the council in the inter est of the public safety. An instruc tion to the police to the effect that the police must shoot every dog found upon the street unmuzzled, may lead to ap important discovery, namely, that the city is being over- run with vagrant turs. Only a small percentage of the dogs in the city are taxed or tagged, and hence the special danger which Col. | Massie pointed out in a recent issue of the Whig. One mad dog would transmit the rabies to scores of others, and with lamentable results, It is time the dog tax by-law was enforced. The dogs untagged or un muzzled shogld be trapped, impound- ed or shot. The assessor, in making his rounds, misses the ownership of many of them. He cannot find out who has an interest in some of the dogs that pass before him when he is making his rounds. , He does not see others, for with the coming of the assessor, book in hand, some pre- cious pups go into retirément and re main in it until the civic official Bas disappeared, EDITORIAL NOTES, American educators are using mov- ing pictures in the teaching of im- pressive lessons. Great people, surely. Goldwin Smith is not so well, and all Canada hears the news regretfully, No man could live more deeply in the affections of the people. The British politicians have aban- doned the war scare. The Canadian politicians, of the R. L. Borden type, continue it. What is the inference ? Pasteurization does not affect milk or the doctors of Toronto would not prescribe it, and the public charities would not be supplied with it, If milk is a food, it should be absolutely pure. But for the Lemieux Act the Cana- dian trainmen would join in the great railway strike, now affecting many thousands of people in the United States. And still there are some peo- ple who éay the act is no good. ------ The sufirageties of France are not willing to fight or win their way into the use of the franchise. They are {going to buy the right to vote, and of France may be for a the average man willing to sell his birthright mess of pottage. Ii pure milk is so essential to the health, aye and the life, of thou- sands of children annually, the people should see that it is supplied. When Canadians are as rigid in their in- spection as the Germans, they will get pure foods, and refuse the im- pure. The expected has happened. Joseph Martin, M.P., is alter the British goy- ernment, which he was elected support, because it does not at once make war upon the lords. Mr. Martin is not happy unless he 'is engaged in some revolution. He will be more troublesome to the Bberals generally than any opponent. A Very Severe Test. When the constitution is neglected, indigestion, nervous- ness wiil sure,y follow. A tonic is then needed, and she proper medicine te take is Wade's Iron Tonic Pills. They build up the system, improve the ap. futite and strengthen the nerves. joe 25 cents, at Moleod's Drug Stores. ------------------ Died on Road. ' Odessa, Feb. 23. William Gilchrist, ing and *lcause. He was a house carpenter and about seventy years old. If sick headache is misery, what are A company build docks at 00,000, Victoria to cost $4, MAN RUINED BY WHISKEY. ------ A Gananoque Resident Will be Placed in the Asylum. Gananogue, Feb. 24.--Edward Gag non, crazed with drink, became vio- het ae his homie on Tuesday, and had to taken in charge by the police and placed in the cells, when efforts will be made to have him committed to 'the hospital for treat- ment. Quite a large number were in at- tendance at the raffle for a fine new skilf, owned by Charles Wand, Water street. P. B. Whiteley, agent for the T.LR. Co., was the fortunate win A large leigh load of og drove down to the Bo oF rn an. W. J. Landon, Melcombe, on Tuesda ing, and were royally en- tertained, 5" Si Thomas Fields; "oti of the princi: als in the xiation at the armenter & Bullock Co.'s works on >» was so far recovered as to be out on the street y after- other victim, : to her home. T por family, resid- . on First yw BY effects re 7» Mr. Top- ving secured a situation on a ke Yhets. Mr. Topping filled the osition of engineer on the steamer herenow, and also on the Missisquoi last season.. Mies Mary Homan, trained nurse, of Chicago city hospital, spending ths past fortnight with her mother, Mrs, John Honan, Taylor, has returned to the Windy City to resume her duties, , Mrs. T. 0. "Middleton, King street, is spending a few days in Toronto. W. B. Carrol, Man street, spent Tuesday in Brockville. G. Scott, Stone street spent a few days during the past week with friends in the rear of the township. ing a few days with ber son, We) ing ton street... Mrs" William Carpenter, Charles street, is spending a chor time with Lansdowne friends. ---- SERIOUS KITCHEN ACCIDENT. What Zam-Buk Saved a Lady at Stratford, Ont. Mrs. Fredk. Bryant, of 169 Railway Ave., Stratford, spent dollars trying to get well, but failed until she tried Zam-Buk. It was this way: "I was in my kitchen preparing supper," she says, "whan 1 upset some bollmg water. It fell upon my foot, scalding it badly. Next day the skin came off the foot, and it was so painful J could not walk. I treated it, but instead of getting better it got worse, and final- ly I had to take to my bed. I was laid up for nine weeks, and in thattime 1 tried all manner of so-called remedies. | had embrocations, dozens of salves, I think, and lotions, but the scald de- veloped dato a running sore. I was about beaten by it, when a friend ad- vised me to try Zam-Buk, and 1 Wid so. A few ieatiots: had the effect of soothi what | hast Dot had. for weeke--a little ease. | persevered with Zam-Buk, and day by day the rumiing sore seamed to get less inflamed and less painful, as the Zam-Buk drew away the poison and reduced inflammation. In » very short 'ti healing eommenced, and, rapidly contin antil the sore was completely healed. I would hand- ly have believed thai any preparation could have dove for me what Zam- Buk did, and 1 shall never be without a supply in the house," When you have a scald, a burn, a skin scre, an ulcer, or any skin trouble or injury, try Zam- Buk. Made from the purest of herbal essences, it may be regarded as na- ture's own healer. Eczema, cold-sores, cracked and chapped hamds, children's rashes, chilblains, all yield to its soothing, healing influence. Tt * also eases the agomy of piles. All drug +iats and stores. 50 cents box, or post free from Zam-Buk Co., Toronto, for price. MANOEUVRES SCARE NATIVES, Filipinos Think Mimic War Means Invasion. Manila, Feb. 24.--~The natives in the vidmnity of the places where the mili- tary manoeuvres are being carried on have become terrified, and some Negritos and Filipinos, in hill vil lages are fleeing in wild alarm. Others are seeking protection from the mili tary. Despite the fullest warnings that were sent out in all directions that the manoeuvres did not mean war of any kind many of the ignorant natives are sure it is a Japanese invasion of the islands and are very much frightened, 'READY TO STEP ASIDE. if the Recount Does Not Show Fraud. Kansas City, Mo., Feb, 24.--Gover- nor Hadley, of Missouri, says he wil resign his office as governor of the state if a recount of the votes that elected United States Senator Stone does not show fraud. The governor also declares that he will pay all the cost of the recount. The controversy = ei A gov wrima ot, . is > has itive proof Governor F is the defeated candi date. Ogdensburg, N. (3. McLean, a promising young died of n A after a and twenty-six years of age. Extra Good Value. Mrs, Sly, Taylor, is. si: pain ant giving me | . 4 MAKES HAIR GROW G. W. Mahood Has an Invigorator antly or Money Back. If your hair is (hinning out gra dually it won't be long before the bald spot appears. The time to take 'care of the hair is when you have hair to take care of. For thin, falling hair the best re- medy known to mankind is Parisian Sage. It is compoundéd on scientific principles and furnishes to the hair Jroot a nourishment that acts quickly and promptly and causes the hair to grow, But remember this: It kills the dandruff germ, the pest that appro- priates all the natural nourishment that should go to the hair root. Parisian Sage is sold by G. W. Mahood under a positive gaarantee to banish dandruff, stop falling hair and Reling scalp in two weeks or money It gives to women's hair a lustre and radiance that is most fascinating and causes it to grow abundantly. Parisian Sage is now sold in every first-class town in Canada. A large, generous bottle costs 50 cents, and the ig with auburn hair is on every | BOTH VIEWS + It's Your Business to have the best Plumbing installed premises. It's Our Business to do just this very kind of Plumbing and--we do! modern in your it's Your Business to engage whom you please to do your Plumbing. It's Our Business to ask for your order and trade, and--we do! 'Phone 335. DAVID HALL, 66 Brock St. BLIP 0000008040400 044 GOME, JOIN THE THRONG ! And help the poor engineer with a balky motor. Give him a Davis 1910 Motor The kind that is always ready and sure to go. The Davis Engines Always run smoothly under all conditions, in any weath- er, in any sea. Put one in your new launch and you are bound to have success. Every engine tested be- fore leaving our shops, Every engine sold under guarantee. Write us or let us know the style of launch you re- quire for the coming sea- son, and let us give you our prices. They will interest you. DAVIS DRY DOCK COMPANY 'Phone 420. OUR LABOR BRAND yf Canned Salmon is choice. No finer fish ever wagged their talls in the Pacific Ocean. That Makes Hair Grow in Abund- | ANDREW MACLEAN. Ontario Street. Are You Going THE NEW SUITS ARE READY. A Spring Beauty! Here's one of our favorite new models in Spring Suits. \ There's genuine style in its every stitch. Just note the full chested effect of the coat, The snug. close fitting col-" lar, with slightly rolled liberal lapels. The natty d: clean. cut Wang of i Trousers. Our First Showing kof 1910 Suit 'Models. The Wentworth Made at Three Prices. $12.50, 15.00, 18.00. Materials are Fine Tweeds, Oheviots, Serges , and Worsteds. We make all necessary alterations fiee of charge. The H.D. Bibby Co. 78, 80, 82 Princess St, he Sob00 Buffets, Sideboards and China Closets A big variety of the latest and best for our big Clearing Furniture Sale " Our Ambulance is the best for private work, heated and lighted with electric lights and fitted with a Marshall Sanitary Mattrass. taker. Phone 147 SEPP PPP P EOP RI FPP PPP PPP HIGH GRADE Monumental Works 372 PRINCESS ST. OPP. Y.M.C.A. JAMES MULLEN Lettering in Cemeteries a Specialty. SNOW SHOEING ? We have Snowshoes at $3.00, 350 and 4.00 for Men and $2.50 and 3.00 for Ladies. "a Also Moccasins Ladies' sizes--75¢, $1.00 and 1.25. Men's sizes--79¢, $1.00 to 350. Boys' sizes 75c, $1.00 and 1.25. FETA | Carlo Giro, convicted of the mur ix last summer, when caught buciio oo ng th: Ftaber home, was elec.r.s wed at Sine Sing prishi. on Val wsdse morning. His last woxds were a pro- testation of his innocence. He walked anflinchingly to the chair. of Mrs. Sophie L. Staber, in Broo! lye | elected At Melville, Sask., Robert Garvin,| Hom. Robert Rogers denied, in ths mayor at the mumecipal = eloc-| Manitoba legislature, thal he was as- tions, has resigned, and the writ for insted in any way with the land a new election has heen made. ls with the late Dr. Montague. Pe, W. C. Dovey, Morrishurg, has! Domsld C ex-nm been chosen grand wuperimténiflent lor dor, CE) St. Lawronce district in the grand | terian oh in Ca i' died chapter R. A. M. London, Eng. "Is Good: Tea' NEVER VARIES IN QUALITY. EVERY PACKAGE IS GOOD.