Shader - FROM THE WHIGS ! BRIGHT KXCHANGES., In Brief Form the Events In" the Country About Kingston Are Told ==Full of Interest to Many. Miss Cora Grey, Brockville, has 0] a millinery store in: Athens. oi. M. London, Lyndhurst, has - Miss Ney, Athens, has resigned as art teacher of the Athens high school. e family of George Baker, Mer- rigkville, are removing to Brockville. R. F. Fraser, Renfrew, underwent! a sbecesstul operation for appendi- citis on'Tuesday. ye Mountain Grove with an elevation of 751 feet ie the highest point be- tween Tweed and Smith's Falls. . Miss Stella Sager is now chief op- erator at the Bell Telephone Central, | Tweed, Miss Libbi signed. ©. A. Crawford, formerly of Dese- ronto, flow of Hamiiton, Montana, sent $60 to the 155th Battalion, Belleville. : Pte. George Kane, a member of the 166th Battalion, ' stationed . at Westport, is ill with smallpox. His illness is not serious. A resident of Brockville for fifty years passed away on Tuesday in the person of Mrs. Joseph Redgate, aged seventy-one years. A The death occurred in Brockville of Willlam O'Keefe, forty-four year of age. He was unmarried. ie Way having ra- Rev. A. H. Ranton, an evangelist, | known to many in Belleville, has been compelled to retire from active work owing to illness. : E. McGowan, Belleville, was at- tending hig horse, when the animal kicked him, with the result that three ribs were badly fractured. Miss Harriet Solmes, Picton, left Thursday for California, to be the guest of her sister, Mrs, Benzon till after the summer holidays. News From Eastern lin House at Athens. | a) He came from Throoptown. | 3 F Ld] Death came suddenly, 'tier week's sickness, 5 5 Mrs. Mary Spicer, widew of the late Joel Spicer, aged' 69, died| Saturday at the home of her daugh-| ter, Mrs. T. W. Griffin, Syracuse, N. | Y., She came to this city six months | ago from Newboro, A well known former resident of Belleville, Mrs. Mary #Vhite, passed | away Sunday at the home of her! daughter, Mrs. W. W. Pope, Toronto, | at the ripe age of eighty-six years. | She was the widow of the late E. J.| White. | On March 13th, at the home of] Rev. C. G. Smith, Belleville, Charles Hugh Lyons and Miss Jetta A. Olm- | stead, adopted daughter of Mr. and] Mrs. Peter Gould, Napanee, were un-| ited In marriage. The happy cou- ple are leaving shortly for Saskat-| chewan. | The death occurred at Trenton on | Monday of Joseph Frost, who form-' erly resided in Havelock and in the | employ of Swift and Co. as their] agent. Deceased was fifty-six years of age and leaves a widow and three! children. ! Mr. and Mrs. L, F. Sprague, Pic. ton; announce the engagement of their daughter Adalene Eugenia to Ben. Y. Anderson, son of Mr. and Mrs, James R. Anderson, Mountain View, Out.,, The marriage will take place the latter part of March. The death occurred en Thursday of Mrs. Patrick Dempsay, Barryvale. Deceased was fifty-two years of age, and was going about on the morning of her death, apparéngly in her usual health, yvhen she was suddenly strie- ken with apolezy, and died in about | two hours, "oniyoh] ii TWO ARRESTS MADE. | Suspected of Having Attempted to Destroy Military Buildings. Carleton Place, March 14.-- Acting on instructions received in a telegram from Capt. Moffat, of Pembroke, Chief Wilson, with a squad of mili- tary police, searched 'the train from | | Pembroke on its arrival on Monday, | and arrested two men on suspicion! rox DAILY BRITISH WEIS, WOODEN STREETS | Remarkable. Physical and Civic Per DIFFICULT TO DRIVE LOADS FROM WOLFE ISLAND TO | KINGSTON Owing To The Slushy Roadway -- The Wolfe Island Ferry Steamer Made a Profit Of $2,235.45 Last Year, 'WoMe Island, March 13.--For the past two weeks loads have been haul- ed to the ciyy under conditions that seldom So The great quantity of snow 'fis caused the ice to settle and the result is about a foot of water upon it. This makes traffic almost im- possible and those who reach terra firma with their boats without hav- ing any difficulty are considered lucky. It is not an uncommon sight to see Joads upset and others fast in the slush which necessitates unload- ing. On Friday three citizens who made the trip to the island in a | single cutter vowed that never again would they make a similar trip. Their horse got down in al slush hole a couple of times and in trying to get him up they got wet to their knees. The Kingston-Cape Vincent stage has been having a hard run of it for the past couple of weeks owing to the tieavy roads on land and condition of ice. It takes between three and four hours to make the trip. Robert Boyd, who was assessor last year, gave such efficient service that he was re-appointed and is again on his rounds. The auditors' report of receipts and disbursements of the township, together with the auditors' report the steamer Wolfe Islander, have been published and a perusal of the above makes it very clear when every dollar has been spent. The auditors' report of the steamer shows the revenue for the past year of $10,628.29; expenditure, $8,392.84; leaving a balance to the credit of the steamer of $2,235.45, This is considered a good showing for the management. It is stated Dy those in command that she will go into commission at the opening of Mrs. Ellen Cook, wife of Charles | of being implicated in an alleged at- | navigation without the expenditure Cook, Belleville, passed away after| tempt to destroy military works or |of a single dollar. only a brief illness. Deceased was born in Belleville forty years ago. G. W. Bartlett, Superintendent of buildings at the county seat of North | Renfrew or Petawawa. { |, The men taken into custody are, Capt. McDonald who has given the best service for the past couple of years, not meet- img with a mishap during all that Algonguin Park, attended the fun-| Edwin Bartscher and Arthur Zinker.|tinie has been re-engaged as has also eral of his mother, Mrs. Elizabeth | They rave been lodged in the local | John Gray, the efficient engineer. Bartlett at Actinolite on Friday last. | lock-up awaiting further information | fer fireman, George Taylor, will ful- Rev, J. 'G. Fulcher, secretary of the Sunday school Association Quebec, has received a call to be- | from Pembroke. Their baggage wa of falso taken off the train, but has not | salary. | yet been searched. The baggage 1 the same duties at an increased Dr, W. Spankie Reeve, who is ever ¢n the alert in the interest come pastor of Iroquois Metholist | was cliecked through to Galt, Ont, |,¢ the ratepayers, secured twenty-five Churgh, in Tamworth with these ps: Mrs. Maude Woods, president; MTs. L. P. Wells, secretary; Mrs. James Dono-| van, treasurer. : The "At Home Ven by the offi- cers and members of the Tweel Lodge No. 280; 1, 0. O. F. on Mon- day evening, w§s a very enjoyable af fair. 2 Ernest 'W. Mooney, son of Chief Mooney, Prescott, has enlisted in the Canadian Medical Corps in Calgary, Alberta, and expects to go overseas shortly. = Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pollock, Win- nipeg, have just celebratéd the fifty- fifty anniversary of their marriagé. A good portion of that timo was spent in Almonte. An aged résident of the Third Concession of the township of Sidney passed away on Saturday in the per- son of James Sutherland. He had been a victim of paralysis. The marriage took place at Pres- cott, on March 1st, of Migs Anna Maud Reynolds, daughter of Mrs. George Reynolds, of that place, to 'W. Albert Ferguson, Biggar, Sask. "Owing to the shortage of labor on the farm at the Darenth, Eng. Col- ony, the Metropolitan Asylum Board has arranged to train some of the feeble-minded patients to mflk the cows. Thomas Shipman, of Ivy Lea, and Dyce McAvoy, Brockville, charged with fraudulently selling on misre- presentation, pleaded guilty. Ship- man was $10 'and McAvoy James McGrail, who for the past three years has held the position of accountant in the Brockville branch of the'Bank of Toronto, has been no- tified of his promotion to the head office at Toronto. A pretty wedding took place on March 7th, at Prescott, when Myrtle Gertrude. youngest daughter of Mrs. George Heynolds, became the bride | Smith, highly respected resident offand Mrs: John Langhlin. i { { The prisongrs made no statement to| gollars from the city A W.C. T. U. has been organized | the local authorities. The arrest | has created keen excitement in the] town. ! BACK TO FARM. Retire From E i Work. -~ { Ccbourg, March 15. tev. Simon | (Gypsy) Smith, the well-known ev- angelist, had decided to retire from evangeliscal work, and has leased the 'farm of Fax Gifford at Hull's Corn- ers for a term of years. Mr. Smith spent several of his boyhood years in this vicinity, and has always. since expressed a desire to return here to live permanently. He is an author as well as a preacher. | Decided To F ivangelical | { > | Married In Kingston, Godfrey, March 23.--A quiet, but pretty wedding took place in Kings ton on February 23rd, when Miss ida J. Kennedy, eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. |Almer Kennedy, God- frey, became the bride of Stanley Flynn. Mr. Flynn is the eldest son of T. H. Flynn, Fir Mountain, Sask., formerly of Mountain Grave. Rev Alfred Brown, Sydenham Street Methodist Church, performed the | ceremony. The bride wore a gown {of rose silk with a 'white silk net | vest. Her travelling suit was of | | King's blue serge a white blouse and | hat to match, The following day la reception was given at the home of | the bride's parents, where the near; relatives were present... Mr. and | Mrs. Flynn received many useful | { and costly gifts, showing the esteem in which the bride and groom are held. After yisiting friends and { relatives here, and other points they | intend leaving for their new home in the west, | Rxpired Very Suddenly. Belleville, = March 15,--James | | home after a visit towards the erection of the slide at the foot of Clarence street. He also had the bridge placed over the crack for the | convenience of the Islanders. Gecrge McDonald has secured the contract for the crushing of stone for the next three years ~for the council. The contract price is $8.25 per teisé; he to furnish and deliver stone where required and also to pur- chase the stone crusher from coun- cil at the contract price. The coun- ci] are to be commended for their advanced ideas along these lines. Mts. 'Thomas White's many friends are glad to. learn that she has re- turped home from hospital fully re- cuperated in health. Mrs. Monty Wiggins was removed to the General Hospital last 'week erd cj.erated on for appendicitis. Her condition is improving. Richard O'Shea underwent an operation in the Hotel Dieu Hospital last week for' appendicitis. ' Mrs. Henry Hall is seriously ill. Little Miss Anna, only child of Mr and Mrs. Richard Kane, who has been seriously ill of pneumonia; is improving. The listle girl's many friends are glad to learn this. Master Gerald Green is il] of measles. A | little girl has come to brighten the ¥ ! ome of Mr. and 'Mrs, Austin Me- Donald. ) Miss Molly McGlyn has returned in Watertown, N.Y. Mrs. Richard McReady is vis- iting her former home in Sydenham. George Boyd spent last week sojourn- lug among friends in Pittsburg, David Laughlin, after an absence of thirty-five years in Wisconsin, re- turned here this winter to visit the scene of his boyhood days. He is the | owner of a large tract of land in the | above "place. Harry Davis, Ganan- oue, was a' recent visitor to the is- land. Harry Corvair, Rosieu, N.Y, spent the week-end the guest of Mr. Henry culiarities of Prince Rupert. The three principal water gates to Alaska are Seattle, Vancouver, and Prince Rupert, the new terminal of the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway, Writes Frank OG. Carpenter. « The farthest north is Prince Ru- pert, destined to be a link in the shortest route around the world as Soon as the coming of peace permits the projected establishment of new steamship lines tothe Orient. This scheme has been held up by the war. Prince Rupert eventually will cut down the present steamship trip across the, Pacific more than 300 miles. . Seven years ago the site of this city was a forest. Pines and cedars covered the mountains and to-day the stumps rising out of the sloping town lots look like the black bristles on an unshaven chin. The town has 6,000 people. I venture it has more than 60,000 stumps. The Stumps are rooted in the crevices of the bed rock and the space between them is matted with muskeg, a mossy vegeta- tion two or three feet in depth that holds the water like a sponge, and makes it impossible to go across country without thick boots or rub- bers. The muskeg covers the whole region about it and was one of the difficulties that had to be conquered in laying out and building the city. Another and still greater dificnity was blasting the rocks from "the sides of the hills and making level places upon which streets might be laid and houses be built. The site was all rocky mountain and every bit of the town is founded on the bed rock. The sewers have had to be blasted from the sides of the hills and built up in the valleys. The same is true of the roadways in the business part of the town, the whole-having required proportion- ately almost as much grading and blasting as the Culebra Cut of the Panama Canal. The place is so rough that--to build solid roads through it would bankrupt the city many times over and 80 the roadways are wooden, looking like lines of bridges. . The town believes in municipal ownership. It has a hydro-electric plant that cost more than $500,000, from which it not only supplies the several public utilities, but it also sells power to factories and individ- uals at $13 per. horse power phone and electric light plants. The telephone rates to business louSes are $4.50 per month and the plant pays a profit to the municipal treas- ury. Prince Rupert believes single tax amd the -most of the rev- enues of the city come from a tax on land only. Improvements pay no- thing. The Prince Rupert Hotel, for instance, cost $125,000 to build. It is on a lot 100x200, and. this Jot is valued at $50,000 The tax is levied on the-lot only. There : is nothing paid on the building. Just across the way is a vacant lot of the same size and it pays just as muck taxes as the big hotel. The result fs that people cannot afford to hold valuable real estate without théy improve it. Prince Rupert, started with a boom. It was all p ally developed before a single lot was offered for'shkle. © The - 'Grand Trunk Pacific Railway decided upon a site and sent its engineers to clear the land, level the hills, and lay out the city. ' There is no doubt ¢hat Prince Rupert is bound to bea ¢ity of con- siderable size. The people believe that it"will be a great port and- that within a short time after 'peace is de- clared it will start on its way to be- coming a city of 100,000 or more, A Foresters' Battalion. A Canadian forestering® battalion has been asked for by the War Office, and steps have been immediately taken by Major-General Sir Sam Hughes to form it. It will' be in command of Lieut.-Col. Alexander McDougall of Ottawa, the well- known railway contractor. The Majors of the battalion will probably be Gerald White, M.P. for North Ren- frew, and B. R. Hepburn, M. P. for Prince Edward. Canadians woods- men are wanted at once in Great Britain for timbering operations in connection with war requirements. Lumber is now at an almost prohibi- tive price in the Motherland, and ocean rates on lum from this side are 80 high as to pracrically stop ex- port from here. In Giwat Britain there are still large resojrces of standing timber which can be cut down and utilized for building oper- per | annum. The town has its own tele- | in the | tanned and parti- | WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15, 1916. and beyond are mourning bme to whom they owe 'a great deal--Joseph Octave Dion, curator of the fort at Chambly, bee, whose mains were laid Huy > th hy . He of the fort for 35 years, servation was: the That anything of 'mains at all is in 1881 that es! his which dates back to 1665, less relic of New France. A time the fort was in a state repair, and the stones were being carted away by' the waggonicad, Some to' be used as fo houses, others to be brok: roads. All that ceased .when A Dion became guardian and took up his residence in the picturesque little addition that was built agalust one side of an interior wall of the fort, there to live alone for the rest of his life. Everything possible in the way of the fort's restoration was accom- plished without spoiling it as a relie of the past. Mr. Dion was a Frenchman of the oldnschool, a fitting suceessor to the courtly gentlemen who of old ruled within the fort. Tall, with piercing eyes and snowy beard and hair, he became all fire and enthusiasm once 'he began to talk about the fort and the early history of Canada. Steeped in the traditions _of New France, he had spent years in the study of all pertaining to the fort and the sur: rounding country, and had acquired a wonderful knowledge of old Can- adian families, their deeds and their glories. To him apparently the past Was a reality and the present a sort of dream. The interior of his little home became a veritable museum of priceless relics closely associated With the early history of the-country. Mr.. Dion was responsible for the erection: of the monument to Colonel Salaberry, the hero of Chateauguay, at the fort. Last July he was sue- cessful in organizing a big demon- nt J n the old building owing to him. It w he succeeded | historie | This Advertisement "may induce you to try. the first. packet : i We will even offer to give f .you will drop us a postal to Arrivals in Boys' Suits New models in Norfolk and Reefer Coat§-- English Tweeds, Fine Worsteds and Fast Color Blues, We carry the best variety in this city. Priced from $3.50 to $10.00 stration in honor of the 250th anni- versary of the founding of the fort. Death came suddenly to him. He | had been unwell for two months, but | refused to take to his bed. Ordin- | arily he. lived alone, but during his illness a boy from the village stayed as a companion, while a neighbor called every miorning to light his fire. | On Sunday, February 12, about six o'clock, the boy heard a noise, but thought nothing of it and went to sleep again. Later when the neigh- | bor came in he fotind Mr. Dion lying | dead on the floor of his living-room. | A~doctor was summoned, but found | that life had been extinct some time, the noise heard by the hoy evidently | having been the sound of his fall. = | Mr. Dion is survived by. two bro- | thers, Dr. Charles Dion, of Paris, | and J. E. Dion, of New York, and several nieces and nephews. »'Karl and Otto" Reinstated. "Karl and Otto, the: Bomb 'Hurl ers," the threatening letter writers | who recently made a sensation in | Toronto, happens to be an innocent- looking but keen-witted Irish boy, | with, a dangerous penchant - for ad- dressing letters sto such persons as | President Wilson of the United | States and Mayor Thomas Langton Church of the City of Toronto. A letter, threatening all kinds of dire calamities in which the city fatgers and the City Hull were to figure very largely,, was rceeived by Mayor Church while the City Council was in session, and the business address of the author was "-- Department, | City Hall, Toronto, where he wag en- gaged ia the humble capacity of office oy. The Mayor was' much perturbed when he received the letter, but the | boy's merriment bubbled over, and | he took the other boys of the depart- ment into his confidence, with the re- sult that he was brought on the car- | pet before his Chief. The official took the boy to the Mayor, who. con- sidered the matter & joke, 'but ° fhe | participation in a joke is not the | habit of thix official, who conducted | the boy to the office of Chief Grasett of the Police Department.' Thé Chief | of" Police at first wanted to make the | | boy suffer the penalties of the 'aw, | | but" finally suggested that he be | "fired," which 'appened. Later the Roney's, . 127 Princess 8t. "THOUSANDS OF HOMES "Are gladdened by the beautiful melodies and the artistic rendition of every kind of music on the Frintzman & Oo. Player-Piano "The Different Player-Piano™ And the Beauty of it is that anyone can play this wonderful instrument without knowing a note of music. Have a demon- stration, today, of its ex- pression capabilities, its exquisite tone, its patented "weather-proof" and "wear-proof" action. C. W. LINDSAY, LIMITED, 121 Princess Street. ations, trench construction work, ete. i boy presented himself at the Armor- The men from Canada know the | ies to enlist as a bugler, but was business and will get to work within {turned down. a month or so on the job. Hearing that the bgy is an orphan Even Presb, i | y yterian ministers with | It is planned to raise companies of | being kept by friends Tn the city, the 'Scotch names make jokes occasional- | Eye- experienced woodsmen from British {members of the Board of Control are ily, sometimes unconsciously. In Selvmbia, Hom Alberta, 304 ngrth. {taking steps towards having him re- Peterborough one Sunday morning, | atehewan, from the awa |instated in his position, on condition recently, notite was handed the min- | ree ipti Valley, and from Quebec and New that he direc's his humor into differ- |ister, written in one of those educat- | AF Prescription V' y ye ~| Halliday was re he Gener- cis Walter Carley, Kinders- | Thurlow township passed away al-| Halliday was remjoved to t Fe Apt y mest instantly . Sunday morning. | al Hospital on Sunday to be operat- A highly respected citizen of | With pig Smith, he went on Sat-|ed on for appendicitis. lyde Forks passed to t reat Be- | yrday to the home of William Far. | ap at an early hour on Feb. 24th, | rell, who "resides about three miles Howe Island Keown, Slsard in the person. of Mrs. William Henry. | west of Stirling, to visit over Sunday.| Howe Island, March 13.--Edwar AAA A A Soldiers Would Agree With This. way Your husband who seemed to be in great real, was visiting relatives and friends Bruuswick. * A number of prominent {ent channels. agony. He expired almost before she could alarm the household. The late Mr. Smith was a native of Thurlow and was sixty-one years of age. } About four o'clock Mrs. Smith 'was, LaChanc¢é, the second recrait from 9 ) Why Hair Falls Out i awakened by the struggles of her |the island, and who enfisted in Mont- Dandruff causes a feverish irrita- of the scalp, the hair roots Hn loosen, and then the hair comes out fast. To stop falling hair at once and rid the scaip of every particle of dandruff, get a 25-cent bottle of Danderine - any drug store, pour a little i r hand and rub wéll into the scalp. After a few applications all dandruff disappears prt the hair stope coming out. -D. A Woese wishes Xo notify the publie that he has moved his entire business to the store next to Laidlaw's. _. For Pictures, Frames, gte., give him a eall, The turns thers {for t | for a few days prior to leaving for the front. Frank Baubien moved below | Gananoque during the past week. | Alexander White, of Gananoque, vis: ited relatives and .friends for a few | days. The crossing on the ice is very bad, due to the heavy snow and deep slush, Several teams had tc | leave their loads on the ice on this | way to Kings- { account while on their ton. If Club Officers. Belleville, March 13. at a re- cent meeting of the Belleville Golf { Club the following officers were el- , ected for the year: Hon. Pres--Dr. Farley. Pres--F. B. Smith. 5 Vice Pres--Dr. Coughlin. Sec. Treas--F. 8. Kent. Men's Capt.--=A. G. Bennett, Ladies' Capt.--Miss Milburn. A NN Goats' Milk For Coughs. "Go to the Hills and drink goats' milk" was the prescription given by Hippocrates more than 2000 years ago for coughs, colds and bronchitis, but nowadays our local druggist, George W. Mahood, has a non-secret constitutional remedy just as certain which can be taken right at home. It is Vinol,--composed of the heal | ing, medicinal extractives of epd lv. ers, without, oil, peotonate of Iron blood ,and the nourishing propeft f peptone. It goes to the seat of the trouble, removes the cough and cures the cold. Vinol is a very reliable preparation. ( Jumbermen and contractors have | to co-operate in the recruit- | It was announced on | ing of the new Battalion. These mod- | the British ae hytcstay in ern coureurs de bois will form one | horses would be purchased in C of the most picturesque and at the | ada for War purposes 2% same time most serviceable of the | Mary Garden Talcum Canadian battalions for overseas ser- | Gibson's Drug Store. vice. Premier Asquith's | slightly better. | severe. "IO SPRING LS Purify and Build Up 2he Blood with Hood's Sarsaparilla. Jn the spring your blood needs cleansing and enriching. You feel poorly, and there is more or less eruption on your face and body. Your appegite is not good, your sieep is broken, and you are tired all the time, : : You need Hood's Sarsaparilla. It] is the one safe and effective tonic that has stood the test of forty years. It makes the puré red blood that will make you feel betdr, 'look better, eat and sleep better. It is the old standard tried and true all-| the-year-round medicine for the] blood and the whole system. | Ask any druggist for Hood's Sar-| saparilla, and insist on hdving it. Nothing else acts like it, for nothing else has the saine formula or ingre- dients, and so there is no real sub- stitute. Get it to-day, Powder at! » 5 condition is| Heaviest Eahstment. His illness is not | British Columbia' holds the record { for sending more men to the Allied i armies than any other division of the Empire of Great Britain. In one, month 1,200 men came up the Fraser River from points on the old Cariboo Trail to join the regiment there. Wallachin, a town on the trail, sent forty-seven men to the Front out of sixty-seven eligible citi- zens of the:town. Vancouver sent 10,000 men out of its population of 110,000. Prince Rupert went ov this ratio. Every settlement in Brit- ish Columbia bas its soldier In" the rans, In | ree a Motor-Cycle Reford. Erwin Baker, the American motor- cyclist, has covered 930 . miles in twenty-four hours in Melbourne. This ls claimed to be a world's record. $1,000 More Needed. The Y. M. C. A. needs $1,000 more to complete its 1516 budget. Have you done your share? : tinier Mary" Garden Talcum Powder at Gibson's Drug Store, | ton Transcript. ed bands that are hard to make out. | You Can Have Filled and Use at Home. This notice was from an officer of thg' Snir local battalion, and was gravely read: | Do to the congregation in the following | vietim a" ors, Aud Wie oF. Mitten? 17 Ju yl mah be Bad to oon the 'n attalion are very graeful to | i gy hy xiey. Ta) the ladies for what they have done, ar eyes a rad pi: and wish to take this oppertunity of ple of this wonderful free pre- informing them that they are in need |g ne in > a of more Janes, and will the ladies | to read nt ell. Now I cay read every- please deliver them at headquarters." | thing without any glasses and my eyes It is almost obvious that the minister [9° Bot water , At Bist they Jad misread the word "jams," but it was too late to recall the error. glasses? Are you a of eye-strain or other eye-weak- you wear princi wwould pain "Ny nosy they feel fine all the It was llke;a miracle to me™ A lady who used it says: "The atmosphere seemed hazy with or without glasses, but after using this for fifteen days everything I can even read fine print a It is believed that wear glasses can now in a reasonable time and multitudes more will he able to gthen thelr eyes #0 2s to be spared the trouble and expense of ever getting El Eye troubles of many descrip- tions "May 'be wonderfully benefited by following the simple rules. Here {is the prescription : to any active drug store and get a_ bottle of Bon-Opto Dn one Bon #4 glass of 8. Top "Opto tablet , in i oO yar and allow to dissolve With this Hau ' dally, . 3 hnthe aren two to . | four times ou should notice your SOIUIEr | eyes élear up perceptibly right from the . Don't you know | start and inflammation 1 er of getting kill; | Appear. If your eyes Town's Savings for War Loan. Tunbridge Wells Corporation has idopted a recommendation that the um of £10,000, which it is estimat- 3d will be available on March 31st 8 the result of economy, should be avested In natiomal war Idans In- stead of being used for a reduction of. 'ates in 1916-17. - pepe On The Safe Side. "So you intend to be a When you grow you'll be in da ed? wil Joickly dis- are bothering you, even tle, take steps to save them now i before it is too late. Many hopelessly "Who by?" + blind might have been saved If they "Why, by the enemy." tad < ca: for thelr eyes in time. The "Then I'll be the enemy."'---Bos- almas Drig s Of Toronto, will fll the abqve prescrintion by mail. + our druggist cannot, A prominent: Giving a hungr advice 1a | remedy : Bar ving a Ungry man dvice 13 4 about as satisfactory as feeding ice | jfemnbet an Dy thom eream to a wax doll. NE ea aT Tit Set Goulll he beption band Talk is so cheap that many a man | = (eo has to take it back. W. Mahood fills many Bon-Opto | preseriptions and wil gladly All yours,