ONTARIO BABY MADE STRONG Mrs. Jarvis Says Dr. Cassells Tablets Cured Her Delicate Child When No- ' thing Else Codld. Jarvis, Box JPenetang P. 0., Omario, writes: "It a pleasure to tell you what Dr. Cassell's Tablets have done for my baby. When only five months old he fell ill, and though I had medical advice for him he got worse I tried several special foods, but none of them would stay on his stomach, and he became so thin that he seemed just skin and bone. He only weighed 10 lbs. and we never thought he could live. But chancing torhear of Dr. Cassell's Tablets I got some for baby, and am thankful I did He is a bonny boy now, quite cured, and weighs 25 lbs. at twelve months old." > A free sample of Dr, Cassell"s Tablets wm receipt of 5 cents Mrs pu Ritehle & Co. , Ltd. 10, M'Caul- . Toronto. i . Cassell's Tablets are the sures home remedy Dyspepsia, Kidney . Anaemia, Ner- woug" A p Paralysis, Pair - tation jally luable for pursing mothers ana during the critical periods of life. Bold by druggists and storekeepers throu gh-{ 8: One tube, 50 cents; | | o e of five. Beware imdtations to contain phosphites. The composition Lassi} s Tablets In known only to the I pr rietors, and no imitation can ever be the sam or ' Sole Proprietors: Dr. Cassell's Co., 1ad., Manchester, Eng. ( Strawberries, ineapples, : Asparagus, Boston Lettuce, Cucumbers, Radishes, . Rhubarb, 1 At The special cars over the C and to his car about You Can Buy |; A. Kidd, were present HS EXCELLENCY VISITS KINGSTON Duke of Devonshire Inspected the Veterans \- a Cty Bud Buildings. CIVIC ADDRESS WAS READ BY MAYOR HUGHES IN THE CITY HALL. After Being Driven Around the City, The Duke Was Taken to the Royal Military College. His Excellency the Duke of Devon- accompanied by Lord Neville (comptroller of the house), Lieut. Col. L.. F. Henderson, military secre- tary, Lieut. Buckley, arrived n the city at 8 a.m. Monday in two P.R.. After accompanied shire, and breakfast the Duke, yy Col. Henderson took a long walk King Visiting the City Macdonald parks-and returning 10 o'clock. Mayor J. M. Hughes, Brig-Gen. D. R. Hemming, Col. G. Hunter Col. C. N>Perréan, Capt. T. and Capt. Wotherspoon to receive His Excel- being introduced by the mili- secretary the obsérvation ut street, dglivie, ency, tary ar. Drawn on up in front of the City Buildings were veterans of the pres- Bon Marche Grocery, |," : tpl os Cor. King & Earl Phone 1844 i Caverly & Bradshaw. ~~ PLANTS! || WE nre now _bookingt orders for (ahbage, Tomato and Celery plants, to be delivered when de- mired. Pansy plants, 12 box, now ready to plant. Leave your order 8t the store or at our wagon en the market « and you will receive our best at- tention, Friendship's ! || I Phone 3543 t « 210 Division St. a e unit in which the man served, to the In some his personal knowledge said: wars. and other wars, and accompanied 's the Duke inspect- showed particular at by his two A.D.C. d them. He tention to men whom he picked out as Tmperials. In was interested in the in the ame of his officer commanding, ete. passed remarks of the offi Territorials or ach case he cases he of ers mentioned. Addressed 'the Veterans. Following 'the inspection His Ex- ellency addressed the veterans. He "It is indeed a great pleasure 0 me to be able to meet the veterans of this great war and of other great There are men among you of eT re nr il age 1 ho | 1 "USED CARS FOR ull ager OR ee ra SALE J Ford .. .. 1916 Maxwell Chambers 1916 Snap for Quick Sale BOYD'S GARAGE 129 Brock St. Phone 20 A A At, Pure Clover t Honey |i 20c a Section At Thompson's Grocery 294 Princess Street, Phone 387. A A a, You will decide your Fruit Buying Problem Upon the event of your first visit to our store. Our' entirely new stock of choice griceries and fresh vege- tables is now ready for your inspec- Yon, UNITED GROCERY (Rigney & Mickey Bldg.) Phone 207. . . 1916 [ion Studebaker 1916 ' vou will be take up your usual work." to lughes read an address to His Ex- tellency to whitch the latter replied. The hall was well filled with people. 'With Mayor Hughes on the platform naking tremendous heir country. here are many sacrifices for In this great conflict who will never be to return to their homes. I however, that in the very near uture we will have a final and satis- actory peace that follows victory, but before that 1 hope every 'one of well and able to again Attthe close His Excellency called for three cheers for the King and in return the veterans gave cheers for sHis Excellency. Following this the party proe eeded the City Hall, where Mayor here were Alds. Corbett, Polson, Millan, Wright and Newman. Che civic address was as follows: The Civic Address. "To his Excellency the Devonshire, G.C.V.0., General of Canada, "Your Excelleney--As the chief magistrate of the City of Kingston, it affords me thé greatest conceiv- able 'pleadiire to be privileged to ex- tend to you, on this your first visit to fhis old and historic city, a most hearty and- sincere welcome. We greet you as the Governor-General of our great Dominion, and as the re- presentative of his Most Gracious Majesty our King, and assure you that during your term of offise in this part of the great Sfitish Empire no city. in our country's composition will make a greater effort to fill your personal and official life fullsof pleasant memories and sunshine than our own city. "We appreciate at this parsicular time your presence in our city. Fill- ed as your days are with a multitude of duties and responsibilities of the gravest and most vital character de- manding your attemtion and your presence at the Capital, we realize what it must mean for Your Excel- lency to leave your post of duty and administration, even for the briefést period. And yet, in response to the ECZEMA ON FACE Was So Bad Had to Stay - in House. All skin 4 such as eczema or salt rheum, itching or burning rash. es, eruptions, ulcers, boils, pimples, etc., are all caused by bad blood, and while noi usually attended with any fatal results, may sooner or later develop into some serious blyad trouble, and the entire system Le Duke of Governor- | come affected. Hon. G. Howard Ferguson, M Minis- ter of Lands, Mines, and Forests, left - New York on ' ihe =p through the "caribbenu Seu. © Burdock Blood Bitters, that cd and well-known remedy, will cleanse the blood of its impurities, and by this means cure skin diseases and other blood troubles. Mrs. Ernest Apdrews, Hamilton, Ont., writes: "My was covered with eczema and was s0 . terribly : in the house. I got Bitters, and it helped me go | kept on taking it. Now I 'oured, and have a lovely skin. "People who used to see me when I was so bad and see me now will not believe it, but I always tcil them that nothing cured me but 'Burdock Blood Bitters." nil is yg pa wishes of the people of -this city you have generously yielded a par your time and .made {it poss:t Kingston to enjoy this mark o and esteem. "In coming to the City of Kings- ton your Excellency m t be re-, minded of the fact that we are Di oud | of being one of the oldest military cities in Canada, out of w h some | of the bravest men me wo many battlefields, and fought and fallen for the flag pire. In the present con- | flict we hate made a contribution in| men of 'which we have every reafon | to feel proud, and many ou.' these have stained the fields of += Flanders with their life's blood, assure you, si and assure his Majesty thé King, City of determination to give he for the cause of Britain ane | of civilization. "During your Excellency's term of office in Canada we 'trust that shall be privileged to see Jou as of- ten as it may be convenient for you to leave your official residence, and come to our city, where we assure you the warmest welcome will al- ways await you, and where the warm- est hearts will always receive you. "We are as proud of our reputa- tion for hospitality as we are of our record of loyalty, and we shall deem it a privilege and pleasure to be per- mitted to extend to your Excellency at all times that hospitality which we have extended®to so many of you: distinguished predecessors. It was our privelege on one occasion to have in our city his Majesty 'King George the Fifth, and the memory of this visit lingers like 3 sweet 'incense in our memories. "We trust that during this visig every hour will be filled with pleas- ant episodes to your Exc ellency and that every joy and happiness we wish in thought will be yours in fact. 'Again, sir, on behalf of the eiti- zens of Kingston, I welcome you to our eity, and. peg ever to remain your Excellency's most obedient ser- vant, nave g have and the colossal we jas son he sake J. M. HUGHES, Mayor. Kingston, Ontario, May "7th, 1917. The Duke's Reply. e reply, his Excellency stated W regretted very much the fact In that that Mis wife had been unable "te o Kingston. Her time was pretty well occupied just at present, and fit was quite a difficult matter to make plans.so far ahead. He was very anxious to pay a visit to. Kings- ton, especially for the purpose of seeing the.cadets at the Royal Mili- tary Collgge before they moved away to the sutnmer camps. This was the first odedgion he had visited Kings- ton, and .he thanked the citizens most sincerely for their warm welcome. At some future date he hoped to have the pleasure of coming to the city with his wife, and making a further acquaintance of the city and the citizens. "We have been living under the shadow of the tremendous struggle going on in Europe," added his Ex- cellency, "and I can safely say that the City of Kingston has nobly play- ed its part in this world-wide con- test. "Kingston has every reason to be proud of her history, both as a mili- tary centre and one of the oldest cities in Canada, whose institutions have been playing a most prominent part in this great struggle. I shall undertake to say that your message to the King will be conveved to him, and 1 know that he will take the greatest possible interest in what Kingston has been doing. His Ma- Jesty visited your city, and I am quite sure that he recollects the happy and warm welcome he was given by the peonle of Kingston." Referring to the war, his Excel- leney stated that it was a tremend- ous one, but that nothing would de-- ter the nations from doing its part to bring it to a final and safe con- clusion. This war was a fight for those principles for which every true-hearted member of the British Empire stood. "And however great the call mav that the war shall be earried through to a successful issue in order that future generations may be able to say: that we played the part and did our duty. We have every reasom to hope and to believe that the struggle will result in complete victory. We shall be able in conjunction with our Al- lies to secure that peace which will last for all time." No matter how great the task the people were all of the one mind. Can- ada md already played a gredt part would continue to do so until the His Excellency expressed the.hope that the war would result in the de- went on to point out how the great struggle had been the means of draw- ing together the people separated by belonged to one tremendous power, to which every part is doing share. He looked forward to the time (he could not say just when) the war would be over. returned thanks for the civic address, duty. spoke a few words; pleased welcoming His for his address were given with great vim. Following he cellency, brought to a close. Driven About the City. Followi City Hall 10nor Em- | Ze and | and | Wisi you te | that the | Kingston is filled with the we | be in the future, we are determined, struction of German militarism. He long distances. They felt that they its > In conclusion His Excellency again which, as he pointed out, breathed the spirit of sacrifice and devotion to "Mayor Hughes stating that the citizens were unity o¢ at having an opportu o Excellency of hearing his address. On hae of the citizens, Ne thanked His Excellency Following this Mayor Hughes called upon the audience for cheers for the King and His Excellency, and the cheers those on the platform Wels introduced to His Ex- and the proceedings were were driven about the city, and then to the Royal'Military College where they were met by the commandant and the cadefs., Infantry drill was given after the royal salute and fol- Jowing this the party went to the were exhibitions of bayonet In every way hysical' training, machine Y, sighailing and field mili- | tary work., Luncheon was served at | the college and His Excellency gave | an address to the Kingston Canadian Club at two o 'clock. CHEESE MAKE TO BE LARGE levies IN PRINCE ED- | WARD COUNTY ON INCREASE Torrone o 'stn' Lack of Labor--C(lities Must be { Prepared for ~ Higher Level of Prices-- What a Live Ontario County is Doing to Meet Food Crisis, Taronto Globe Picton, May" 3.--At Saturday's cheese board in Picton 469 cheese | were boarded as compared with 249 | for the same week last year and 340 in 1914. This is hardly, a fair illustration of the increase in cheese production in Prince Edward county over the records of previous years as one or two of the factories that boarded on Saturday held back at the same per- fod in 1916. But at Cressy cheese factory a collector on one milk youte reported that he is gathering more milk now than he was collecting at the end of May a year ago. G. G. Publow, Chief Dairy Inspector for Eastern. Ontario, who was over the whole county during the past week, says, Yoo, that six or eight cheese factories which did not operate at all last year are now running every other day and that all factories in the county will be running full blast this week, He reports further that there are more cows 'in Prince Ed- ward than there were a year ago,.and that" they are in good condition. If the season is at all favorable there is no doubt that cheése production will show a considerable increase. Nor will increased production be confined to dairy products, that is if the weather is propitious. The vol- ume of grain'wroduction will show a could hardly be othetwise because output in "this time was away down in. 1916. The Island county, at least a good deal of it, lies close {b water level and the high lake level and con- tinuous rains of last spring kept very large areas under water, or in a soaked condition, until the last seed- ing season was over. Two farmers living near Green Point were unable, for this reasom, to sow a pound of grain in 1918, Joseph J. Brown, who has a 400-aere farm near Bléom- field ,was compelled, from the-same cause, to leave 60 acres uncropped. All over the county, A. P. MacVan- nel, District Representative of the ! Department of Agriculture, tells me, acres and acres remained idle. Better Conditions Now | This year conditifns are wholly different. The season is late, it is) true, and much of the land is yet waiting for the epdtivator, but sever- al of the farmers at Saturday's cheese board reported half the seed- ing done and all joined in saying that, all the ground counted on for seed-| ing this year will, if conditions prove | favorable from now on, be got into crop of some kind. David Minaker, Union Factory, reported, however, that if he had more help he would | break up 25 or 30 acres of soil for| grains por hoe erop. He has 200-acres and has no other help es that afforded by a boy. Something has already been done! towards getting more help. The | Principal of Picton *Collegiatc and! Mr. MacVannel have been instrumen- | tal in sending out twenty-four boys | and twelve girls from the Collegiate | to assist directly or indirectly in| farm work. Thirteen of the boys| have gone to their own homes and eleven to other places. Of the twelve! girls eight have gone home and four | are assisting in preparation for the! planting of truck crops for canning. | An effort is being made to get more boys from Toronto and liberal pay is being offered for the right kind. Cne farmer offers $30 for a lad of seventeen who can handle horses and farm 'machinery. City manufacturers. who are mak- ing greater profits than ever before, and city wage-earners who are earm> ing more than at any previous time, must, as Mr. MacVannel said, expect to pay more for their fbod than they have done in yéars past. It is cost- ing more t» produce that food than at any time in the past. Farmers have, also, a lively recollection of the | days in which they produced food wi a loss . In this very county, in one year, when potatoes could hardly be | given away, tubers were left piled in heaps in the fields and in a few cases cows were actually killed by eating too many of thgm. One Indication of Price Levels. As one indication of coming prices | the fact may be mentioned that at Saturday's cheese board twenty-six and three-eighth cenjs was paid against last year's high level of eighteen and eleven-sixteenth cents. But those who will have to pay these prices should remember that in one year cheese sold as low as five and a half eents, not fifore than enough to pay for hauling the milk and mak- ing the cheese, leaving nothing for the milk itself. Besides, this year farmers have to buy practically all their grain feed and this is costing four or five times what it did then. A considerable acreage will be given to beams, to be ripened, in Prince Edward. One man intends putting in 25 acres, Notritbatend ing what has been said, too, about the canning end of it, the belief is that all canning factories in the county, and there are about a score of them, will be found running be- fore the season ends. Canners were professing a while ago to be indil- ferent about the making of contracts, but E. T. Plews of Cressy factory says that aresdy he has heard of canners who had been falking 35 cents per bushel for tomatoes offer- ing 40 cents. Over in Northumber- land they are going higher than: that ~42% cents. se By 0 te emt | very considerable augmentation. This || tario towns. THE FINEST SILKS THE WORLD PRODUCES--FAMOUS FOR THIRTY. SIX YEARS THE VOGUE OF SILK Has not yet reached its apex. Silk of all kinds is to predominate for the coming summer season, and we are ready to quote old fashioned prices on all staples such as Silk Faille, Taffeta, Messaline, Satin Du- chesse, Tub Silk, Pailette, Butterfly, Pongee, Rajah, Etc., Etc. We would particularly draw your attention to our 1915 price on that ideal suiting silk Full 36 inches wide, in colors: FRENCH FAILLE Black, Navy, Nigger Brown, Royal Navy, French Grey, Trench Grey, Russian Green. 3 Priced at $1.25 a yard. necessity for hand labor is being re-. duced to the minimum, There are, Mr. MacVannel thinks, from 60 to 100 milking machines in the county. | What these mean in the way, of re- ducing hand labor was well stated by Joseph J. Brown, already guoted. | He has 30 cows on one farm and 1v {on another ,and is producing 1,200 pounds of milk per day . The thirty | cows on one place are milked in an { hour by a milking machine; the other ten are milked by hand. 1 There are probably more gasolene | engines in Prince Edward than in any other area of like size in-the! Province. More than half of the | farmers in the county have gas! power, Mr. MacVannel says, and] some have two engines. One of these | is Joseph J. Brown He has a four- teen horsepower engine that runs his own threshing machine, silo filler and grain crusher, and a 2% power engine to run his milking machine, | Horsepower is also being used to the limit, three and four horse teams | being a common sight in the fields. But more help will be required to harvest the crops, and farmers are' looking, more favorably on the offer | made from the cities than they ohce did. GIFT OF $6,000 FOR NEW SUNDAY SCHOOL Frederick Welch 'Makes Hand- James' Church, RUGS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION; FURNITURE FOR EVERY ROOM We were never so well prepared before to meet your de- mands. We have exorcised great care in selecting our patterns, with the result that we are able to offer you values unobtain- able anywhere in Canada. Our immense selection of new rugs in all the rich tones of genuine Oriental designs at a fraction of the cost. Our list of customers is constantly growing. (THERE'S A REASON.) I. F. HARRISON CONPANY Phone 90. At St. James' chuveh 'on Sunday Rev. T. W. Savary announced that Frederick Welch had made a gift of | $6,000 to the church to be used for | the fund being raised for the new | Sunday school building. There is in prospect $15,000 a | the erection of the new Sunda school, and arrangements will some Donation to St. | { { | MONUMENTS We have opened a branch of our-monnment business with a he oh stock i of warble and granite. Special attention given to cemetery lettering. | FALLON BROS., * 139 Clergy St. Phone 637. made to go on with the work just a | soon as the labor conditions are bet- ter. The War Department is preparing plans with a view to card indexing every resident of the United States, and materials used in thé constrie- tion of vessels. AGED WOMAN Run Down and Feeble -- Made Strong By Vinol. So many people in Kingston and vicinity are in Mrs. Wickersham's condition we ask you to call at our store and get a bottle of Vinol, and if it fails to benefit we will return your money. In her eighty-second year Mrs, John Wickersham, of Russellville, Pa. | 'says: "I was in a run-down feeble condition and had lost flesh. A neigh-; bor asked me to try Vinol and after' taking two bottles my strength re-. turned. I am gaining in flesh, it has' built up my health and | am feeling fine for a, woman of my age, so | get round and do my housework." | The reason Vinol was so success- || ful in Mrs. Wickersham's case was because it contains beef and cod liver | peptones;*iron and manganese pep-; tonates and glycerophosphates, the very elements needed to build up weakened . run-down system create strength. Right here in Kingston we have seen such excellent results from it is a pleasure to know 80 much good for old Kingst, Also at the a all On- Possible, however, the Tires Tires - Tires ALL MAKES AND SIZES DUNLOP, . DOMINION NOBBY TREAD, GOODRICH SILVER TOWN CORD, GOODYEAR, PRICES RANGING FROM $13.00 UP SFE a Re ¢ i HD