Daily British Whig (1850), 6 May 1915, p. 7

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PAGE SIX How Zam-Buk Cures Skin Diseases Assoon as applied, Zam-Buk penetrates right to the very root of the discase and kills the cause thereof. The rich herbal essences then so stimu- late the cells below the surface that new healthy tissue is formed, which, as it grows, forces out the diseased tissue. Zam-Bukcures from the bottom up. This is the reason that sores 'and skin diseases cured by Zam-Buk, do not return. Zam-Buk is 'entirely differ. ent from sll other ointments. It does not cintain harsh min. erals; or peisonous coloring matter. IMe9 does it contain coarse anize! fats, which, in a short time, go rancid. Zam- Buk will keep indefinitely. Many people have beencured by Zam-Buk after having suf. fered years and spent hundreds of dollars trying various reme- dies in vain. If you suffer from any skin disease or injury, benefit by the experiences of others. Try Zam-Buk first. Don't trouble with useless remedies. Zam-Buk is unequalled for eczema, piles, pimples, cuts, burns, bruises, cold sores, frost bites, chapped hands, and all skin diseases and injuries. We are so convinced that a trial of Zam-Buk will prove to You its superiority, that we will send you a FREE TRIAL box on receipt of this article, name of paper, and lc. stamp to pay return postage. Address Zam- Buk Co., Toronto. ) All Druggists and Stores sell Zam-Buk at 50c. box The Great English Remed| Tones and invigorates the Be nervous system, makes new Blood in old Veins, Owres Nervous Debility, Mental and Brain Wi 7! dency, I oss of Energy, Palpitation the Heart, Failing Memory. Price $1 per hox, sia for$s. One will picass, six will cure. Sold by all druggists or mailed in plain pkg. on 1 veipt of MAASAI AAMNSSANS/ AUTO LIVERY Bibby's Garage A-1 Auto Mechanics Agents, Dodge Bros. Phones: 201, Garage; 17, Residence. Zbar'slce Cream Parlor Ice Cream in bulk delivered to all parts of the city. Phone 1128 or call at 280 Princess Street Choice Fruits and Candies of all kinds. ) "KINGSTON CEMENT PRODUCTS Can supply Cement Blocks, Sills, Lintles, Bricks, Flower Vases, Tile, Caps, Per Blocks, ete. We also, manufacture Cement Grave Vaults. Estimates given for all kinds of Ce- ment Work. Kingston Cement Products. H. F. JORMAN, MANAGER, Office, 177 Wellington Street. Phones: Office, 730; Factory, 1204. HOW I DARKENED MY GRAY HAIR Lady Gives Simple Home Recipe That She Used to Darken Her Gray Hair. For yearsel tried to restore my gray hair to its natural color with the pre pared dyes and stains, but none, of them gaye satisfaction and they were all ex- pensive. I finally ran onto a simple re- cipe which J mixed at home that gives wonderful results. I gave the recipe, which. is as follows, to a number of my - friends, and they ave all delighted with it. To 7 ozs. of water add a small box of Orlex Compound. 1 oz. of bay rum and 1-4 oz. of glycerine. These ingredients can be bought at any drug at little cost. Use every other until the hair becomes the requir- ed shade, then cvery two weeks. 1 will not only darken the gray hair, but removes dandruff and scalp humors, and acts as a tonic to the hair. Tt is not sticky or greasy, does. not rub off and dogs got color the scalp. BUILDERS !! Have You Tried G1PSUM WALL PLASTER? It Saves Time t!as known the first casualt, w ROBT. ROGERS" SPEECH LATEST PRONOUNCEMENT MINISTER OF JUSTICE. Regrets the Attiude of Some Minis- ters--Must be Regarded With Mix- ed Feelings by all Dignified Can- adians. Ottawa, May 6.--The Ottawa Citi- zen { Independent Conservative) comments In scathing terms upon a portion of the speech delivered by Hon. Robert Rogers at Montreal this week The extract picked out. for comment is as follows "Who will deny the strength of the press of Canada of to-day, that re- presents Grit graft, Grit loot, and Grit plunder? X pre®s that in their desperation descend to the very low- possible level,'and when I make this statement [I frankly acknow- ledg that I am thinking of the Mon-! treal Herald, the Toronto Globe and Winnipeg Free Press, all papers that | have prospered in one form or an- ther by the purchase and sale of influence with Liberal principles, or by pure and unadulterated graft dur- ing the reign of the late administra- | tion. It is to be expected that a press of this degenerate type will oppose * the present Government for reasons that are obvio®s no matter what they do." The Citizen says: "The Canadian who reads this may well feel that the Dominion has no- thing to be protd of in the mental attitude of some of its Cabinet Min- isters. Hon. Robert Rogers who, ac- cording to reports in the press of his own party, made the above statement in Montreal in addressing the Con- servative Association, affords in this, instance a sad contrast to the ac- cepted appeal of a Cabinet Minister under the British Crown. As a Tam- many oration it might pass, but as a dignified statement of the motives and tactics of the Opposition press by a member of the Cabinet it must surely be regarded with mixed feel- Ings by those Canadians imbued with old-fashioned ideas of dignity and responsibility attaching to the publie | press and of our Minsters. An at- tack of this scrt on the press of the Opposition is what might be expect- | ed only from irresponsible and shirt- | sleeved orators in the heat of a mid- i symmer election. As the calm and | considered utterance of a Cabinet | Minister is is a distressing symp-, {tom for thoughtful Canadians con- versant with the political history of their country, and the calibre of her legislators in the past. BY ~ ASQUITH FAVORS MINERS Decides They Should Get Increase Of Ten Per Cent. (Special to the Whig.) Manchester, England, May 6.--Pre-! Imier Asquith has decided in favor of {thé demand of the miners for an in- {crease of pay better than ten per cent. {Unless the amount can be immediately agreed on, within a wétk he will refer the question to an umpire, War Tidings. Another grandson of Gladstone is| { mentioned in the latest casualty list. | He is Lieut. Charles Gladstone of the | Flying Corps, and is reported as missing. German is concentrating an en- ormousr force southeast of Cracow | and a giganticgbattle is developing on | the Galician side of the Carpathians | up to the banks of the Nida. The British naval losses in the en- | tire war, up to April 1st, are 452 offi- {cers and 8,141 men. i | The heavicst concentration of Ger- | man troops at present is in the Roul- { ers-Courtral area, although there | have been great increases .in the {'Lille, Roubaix and Tourcoing areas. { Another Krupp 16-inch howitzer is | reported at Lille. 1 THE DISTRICT NEWS, { Clipped From the Whig's Many Bright Exchanges. It is doubtful if Governor Whit- man will sign the Hewitt bill de signed to increase the New York State tax on motor vehicles and place a $2. tax on motor-cycles. Mr. Froats sues the Ore Mountain Mines Company, for wages and dam ages. he being prevented from €arry ig out a contract he made for the construction of. a shaft, The case settled. i Mrs. Klyne," Athens, passed away Monday. She was over eighty years of age and is survived by one daugn-| ter who resided with her and one; son, Rev. Samuel Xlyne in British Columbia. | 'James Freeman, Belleville, ap-| peared on a charge of abducting Violet Parcels, Havelock, taking he: | to Port Hope and marrying. her. As no satisfactory, evidence could be produced the charge was dismissed. | As Freeman had a wife living at the time 'of his second marriage, a charge of bigamy was laid. He was found guilty and sentenced to eigh i teen months. { i ! i FOUR GANANOQUE MEN Are Among the Latest Announced Canadian Casualties. Gananoque, May ~ 6.--Mrs.. John LaSha, St. Lawrence street, received. the intelligence from the Militia De- partment at Ottawa that her son, Kenneth LaSha, was reported as missing. He wis one of the Jocal young men who left here with the First Contingent. This was so far reported among the men from th ies. Later reports received during / the day gave the names of Ewart Rich- ardson, Charles Watson, and William Chidley, three more casualties among local men... . -- { = a ' the last year or two increased in al | tea-drinking = public THE DAILY BRIIISH WHIG, THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1915. 1 FUMES THAT PARALYSE, { nch Make Successful Experiment | With Chemical Hand Bomb. With the French Army, Chalons- sur-Marne, May 6.--The Germans succeeded a few days ago in seoring| to a certain extent -by the use of as-| phyxiating bombs. The French have} not been long in finding a reply to} these weapons. If the Germans mean! to use poisonous gases in warfare, the French are ready to retaliate! with a weapon which should prove very effective, though..: is no way! contravenes the rules accepted by ci-| vilized naticns. This consists of aj hand grenade filled with certain che-| micals, which, when released, pro-| duce a gas that has no deadly effects, | but is powerful enough to paralyze a mh for several minutes. As an experiment, two of these grenades were thrown into a narrow lane between two walls that may! fairly be taken to represent a trencn. When the gases had been released a company of infantry were ordered to advance up the lane. When the first] ranks came within the zone of the] fumes they stopped suddenly and] beat a hasty retreat, fighting their way through the men behind them] absolutely blinded by the tears run-| ning down their cheeks. The smell of | the fumes is not unpleasant, It pro- duces such a violent smarting of the| eyes and nose that it would be hope- | less to try and use a weapon while under its influence. Fre An Effect Of the War. The London Grocers' Gazette, April 3rd 1915 This war is doing an enormous amount towards encouraging tea drinking all over the world, and it looks as though in countries where | tea has up to now been more or less an experiment or a luxury it will in| the near future be in a fair way of becoming a national beverage. Once) attract a taste for tea and it will come to stay. Thee Russians have of course always been large tea drinkers| apd with the Government's action in| closing down the State-run vodka | cabarets an even larger consump-| tion is bound to follow. France, hi-| therto a. yery small eonsumer and] essentially a coffee country, has been | adopting tea to fight upon, and ev- ery French soldier who returns from the field will take the taste back to his family. It will all spell extra | consumption and a continued range of high prices. Consumption -has in| far greater ratio than has produc- tion, and fresh planting owing to various causes, chiefly the labour difficulty, has been handicapped. New land takes some years to come into full bearing, and young gar- dens require to be treated tenderly at first. Of course China could, if she would, produce countless mil- lions, but unless British grown tea goes to absolutely prohibitive prices there is not much prospect of the reverting to China Tea. TROUBLE FROM WITHIN. Toronto Telegram). A premier's foes "are those of his own household." The Conservative party was driven out of power in 1896 by gentle- men who imagined themselves smart enough to maye Conser- vatives swallow the Remedial bill, The Borden Government is being hurried to the country by smart politicians who imag- ine that they can make Conser- vatives swallow their objections 10 a General Election in 1915. &/| | | SEP EB F000 + » PEP PP FPP EPP FI PEO | | aT \ Secured a Foothold Paris, May 6--The Germans' by us-| ing poisonous gases secured a Toot-| hold on Hill 60 and desperate 'igh'-| ing is now going on at various points mear Ypres. | ---- | Rummage sale, Friday and Satur-! day at 232 Princess street. Capt. Charles Martin. Balaclava street, is having a verandah built to the front of his residence. This will be quite an improvement. John! Mayell is doing the work. EE ------ ---- = | Letters To Editor | High School Entrance Examination! Oso Station, May 4.-- (To the Edi-} tor) :--If you will allow me I will occupy a small corner of your valu-| able paper, as I should like to say a few words concerning the Junior! High School Entrance Examination | for 1915. been the custom in Frontenac eoun- ty and, 1 believe, in the other coun-! ties, as well, to hold some tfme dur- ing the month of May, a test examl- nation on the subjects of Group I! | viz; Art, Nature Study, History and | Hygiene. 1 understand that the ex- amination was held at the. school! which the candidate had been at- ténding, and that the papers were | examined by the teacher and after-| wards by the Inspector of Public Schools. If successful the candi- date was allowed to try the examina- tion held at the different Entrance centres in June' I do not think a bet- | ter method than this could" be used | unless it would be to abolish the En-| trance EXdmination entirely. i This year a different arrangement has been made for Frontenac coun- ty. Instead of being allowed to write oh the subjects of Group I in his own school, the candidate must £0 to the Entrance centre to write. Why is this thus? Is it pecause our public school teachers cannot be | trusted to test tlieir own pupils on the few subjects of Group 1? It cer- tainly must be, for I fail to see how | the candidate is in any way benefited | by this change. In fact I know of se-| verdll cases in the back schools where | the pupils who intended to try the Entrance have quit school they could not see their way clear to make two long trips to the Entrance | centres, and while there pay their! board for at least three days each time. Of course the examination on | the subjects of Group I is held on Saturday May 22nd, and only lasts one day, but it will not be finished | till it is too late for the pupils to get | a train back north. This will mean | that they must stay at the Entran-, ce céntres till the next Monday. If,! as I said before, we cannot trust our public school teachers to examine! their own pupils on the subjects of Group I why not at least allow the pupils to try all the subjects at the some time in June? Just a- word concerning 'History. This I think is one of the most diffi- cult subjects on the curriculum and | it is not an easy matter under any conditions, for a child to pass an ex- amination on this subject. Just con-| sider for a moment what it will] mean for a nervous, excitable child, to write on this examination paper, | in a strange place, and sufrounded. | by strange fates. Surely any one can see that it is next to an impossibility for the child to do himsell justice at all. Whereas if he were allowed to try in his own school this nervous- ness and excitement could be avoided Let us hope that next year a bétter arrangement will be made--THE] PUPIL'S FRIEND ' ! Easily Charged. New Haven Register, | "Come in and have it charged," | was the inviting sign in front of a p.ace of business in a certain town | A stranger, being somewhat low in funds, walked in brisklr. "I under-| stand that I can get things charged here," he said, addressing one of the | | employees. 'Only storage batteries," replied the other man. A Simple Statement. "My house is so well organized," said Mrs. De Graw, "that I don't go into my kitchen once in a wéek." | "That's the pleasant way she put! it, her husband explained. "As a matter of. fact, 'she's afraid of the cook." Sign of Affection. Pittsburgh Post "I'm certain he loves me," said the suburban girl. "How's that?" . | "It is a four-mile walk to town. He misses the last car about twice a! week; but he still keeps calling." The military camp now at Guelph | is to be transferred to London. EE indigestible food, but food same time hi ment is sple a body and brain. Quick, Accurate Thinking , requires mental faculties ~ Energy comes from food--right food. Not heavy, ly nutritious. idly combined in Sn rapeNu Made of choice wheat and malted barley, this famous food retains all the nutriment of the grain, | including those priceless mineral elements that must be furmished the system for the best activities of od s thoroughly energized. easily digested and at the: || This double require- {| ts i i | Up to this year it has _ | isfactory JG, : KS Cd TT Jov7% BROS aa Nel La ey John Lemmon. Phope 1348. . Plumber and Tinsmith. Estimates given on request. All jobbing prompily attended to. Phone 1345, or address 4¢ Barrie street Action of Single Spoonful Surprises Many Kingston people who bought the simple mixture of; buckthorn bark. gly cerine, ctc,, known as Adler-i-ka are surprised at the INSTANT effect of a SINGLE SPOONFUL. This remedy 1s so -complete a bowel cleanser-that it is used successfully in appendicitis. Ad ler-i-ka acts on BOTH upper and lower bowel and ONE SPOONFUL *relieves almost ANY CASE of constipation, sour or gassy stomach. ONE MINUTE after you take it the gasses rumble and pass out. G. W. Mahood, druggist, cor Princess and Bagot streets. because | |= COAL The kind you are look- ing for is the kind we sell Scranton Coal Is good Coal and we guarantee prompt de- livery BOOTH & CO. Foot of West St. Pure Marmalade Crosse and Blackwell Chivers and Son's In 7 Ib. tins 841-3 Princess St. D. COUPER Phone 76. Prompt'Delivery. (Coast Sealed Oysters) NO PLACE LIKE HOME--IF YOU OWN IT. Six room brick veneer house on the west side of city, for $23,150 for quick sale. § Six room frame house, mear Frontenac Park, with improve. ments, for $1850, Solid Brick house on Clergy Street, with hot water furnace, all improvements, stable, $3,250. Frame house on a corner with good stable, suitable for earter, must be sold by May 1 $1,200, Rough cast house, six rooms, on Very ensy terms, $1,300. e-em aessaam HORACE F. NORMAN Real Estate asd Insurance Office 177 Wellington St. Gananoque May 6.--The Quarterly Official | Board of Grace Church' met last even- | ing. The reports from the various; church activities were of a yery sat-! nature, considering the financial stringency. 4 | Mrs. James T. Bosher, accompan-] fed by her daughter, Miss Verona, and son Master Theodore, en route | | for home in Wales, arrived in town | | yesterday for a fuw weeks' visit with! | her unele, Wiliam Pratt, King street. | | Mrs. Bosher was on her way to Mon- | | treal to take passage on the Meta-| garda this week for the Motaer:ane, | i but the chartering of that and other | vessels for transport purposes made it necessary for her to remain till! later on. "Mrs. Bosher is of fighting | stock. Her brother, a lieutenant in| the British Navy, was wounded in| the first North Sea fight under Ad-| miral Beatty at Heligoland. Mrs. | Besher's husband fs at the front with {the Hamilton Battery of the First | Contingent. | Mrs. Harry Chidley, who has been ' spending the past few months in | town with friends, left for Brockville | yesterday and will leave later in the jinGak for New York, from which port her passage is booked for. her h lin England. | An Optimistic Premier. {Hon, Mr. Asquith: { "I am an optimistic because I be lieve in the righteousness of our cause and because I am ) Canadian Casualties. (Special to the Whig.) Ottawa, May 6.--Six dead and | forty- eight injured constitute the | casualty list this afternoon. Most {of the deaths were the result of as- | phyxiation or gas poisoning. | These naiiés are semt from the front: & Wounded--Lance-Corpl. F. E. Sla- iter, Belleville. Missing--Trumpeter W. Chidley, Brockville. - Q people everywhere. Visit Dutton's new grocery de- Sydenhom, near The delicate nut-like flavour of Grape-Nuts, its concentrated energy and ease of digestion make this wonderful food a standby in the homes of thoughtful rT Ap " "There's a Reason MADE IN CANADA. Sold by Groeers everywhere Canadian Postuym Cereal Co, Lea, Windsor, Out. h 4 fort and self-sacrifice there is notn- ing that we shall leave undine wo ibring that cause--be the struggle {long or short--to a decisive "and | glorious issue." + op mienined i sa' ' Cheese: Markets. Stirling, May 4.---At i to-day's | Cheese Board 280 boxes were offered. | All Sold at 17% cents. | Campbeliford, May 4.--OCheesel board met here today; 271 eh offered all sold at 17% cents. Boot Sale! Sizes 244, 3 from $1.- { 100. Dutton's. {of repairs and new work: . ®eccosonsnes ss THOMAS COPLEY Telephone 987. Drop & card to 13 Pine street when | sR ? wanting anything done in the carpen- " : tery line. Estimates given on all kinds OY all drugs oF Sent also hard- ¥ heeipt San wood floors of all kinds. All orders will receive profupt attention. Shop 40 Queen Street. -- The Key To Success Many a man owes his start in life to the purchase of an endowment policy. This has proved the beginning of many a fortune. Start a good thing going at omce by purchasing a policy in the Mutual Life of Canada. Rates on request. S. Roughton, =, Phone 610 or B61. GENERAL Brock St. 3 Res, 061, AGENT, Kingston. Office Phone,' Harry Sharp, Special Agent. TRFSonaT aiT Eo Tera THE ORIGINAL PND ONLY GENUINE. Acts like a Charm in DIARRHOEA .... specie n (AHOLERA .. DYSENTERY. Checks and arrests thoss too often fatal diseases-- FEVER. CROUP, AGUE. The beat Remedy known for COUGHS, COLDS, ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS. Effectually cuts short all attacks of SPASMS. "3 the oaly palliative in NEURALGIA, RHEUMATISM, TOOTHACHE \Alorodyne is a liguid taken in drops. graduated according to the malady, It sirariably relieves pain of whatever Rind ; creates a calm refreshing sleep; allays irritation of the nervous system when all other remedies fail leaves no bad effects; and can bs tazen when no other medicine can be folerated. INSIST ON HAVING CONVINCING Pr. J. COLLIS BROWNE'S MEDICAL TESTIMONY CHLORODYNE. WITH EACH BOTTLE. Sold by ali Chemists. Prices in England: Ui, 29, 46. Sole Maaufacturers: 1. T. DAVENPORT, LONDON, SE The immense suciess of this Remedy has given rise to many imifationa. N.B.--Every bottle of Genuine Chlorodyne bears oa the stamp A the same of the iaveator, De. J. Collis Browse. a Wolegale Sgent. Lyman Be 3s. Co.. Limited. Ti..ontn -- RAS Women's- Fine Low Shoes and. Pump In Patent, Gun Metal and Dongola Kid, latest lasts and heels. 250 & $3 H. JENNINGS, - King h, fry") I) ' If > J A HA Street sn sess GASTORIA For Infants and Children, sisi0no ess J NOT NARCOTIC. rc ------ Decal oid. Sd ~ > Des (Thirty Years ate

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