i ------ Mother and hilden ~. Had Awful Coughs 5 Were. Cured thy DR. WOOD'S NORWAY PINE SYRUP ' Mrs. Arthur Appleyard, Novar, | Ont., writes: "This past winter my | children and I had awful colds and! coughs which we got 'by being -in drafts. 1 tried a number of differ- ent remedies for us, but got no re- lief. 1. thought 1 would 'try Dr., Wood's. Norway Pine Syrup, -and I found it a most excellent and sure cure. It gave relief to the tickling | in the throat and stopped the cough! and with a few bottles we were all] cured." | Dr. Wood's 'Norway Pine Syrpp Is | a remedy that has been on the mar- | ket Zor over twenty-five years, and | we can recommend it as being, with-| oyt doubt, the best cure for coughs | and colds that you can possibly pro-| cure, There are a lot of 'mitations on| the market, so when you ask for "Dr. Wood's" see that you get it. Put up | up in -a yellow wrapper, three pine | trees the trade mark; price 25¢ and 50c; manufactured only by| The T. Milburn Co., Limited, 'Toron- to, Ont. Best's Spring Tonics Are prepared to give the quicks ost. results -- lasting, too. Sulphur and molasses .... 23¢ Sarsaparilla Compound . $1.00 Blood Purifier, 50c and $1.00 [ii| Beef, Iron and Wine, i 75¢ and $1.00 Emulsion Cod Liver Oil, 50¢ and $1.00 Best's Popular Drug Store. Everything Photographic Developing and Printing. i Phone 50. Branch 2018 Jii| Lemons Do Whiten! Try This on Face, Neck, Arms, Hands The lemon juice massage induiged in once or twice each day means a' little time and trowble, girls, but what of the splendid results? A skin bleached beautifully white, a com- plexion with the bloom of.a peach, a softening of those lines of care; in fact, a skin eloquent of nature's pur- ity and hands white, soft and full of charm, ; What girl or woman hasn't heard of lemon juice to remove complexion " blemishes;- to bleach the skid and to bring out the roses, the freshness and the hidden beauty? But lemon juice alone is acid, therefore ipritating, and should be mixed with orchard white this way. Strain through a fine cloth the juice of twe fresh lethons into a bottle containing about three ounces of orchard white, then shake well and you have a whole quarter pint of skin and complexion lotion at about the cost one usually pays for a small jar of ordinary cold cream. Be Bure to in the lemon julce so no pulp gets wo he bottle, then this logion will remain pure and fresh for months. When massaged daily into the face neck, arms and hands it should na- turally help to whiten, clear, sinooth- en and beautify the skin. Any druggist 'will supply three ounces of orchard white at very lit- tle cost and the grocer has the lem- ons. Sinn sa Ry WR v Keeley Jr., .0.D.0. b b ; p Those ople (and the | are many) rhe dread iy Hie fo Na goal as made us, PE causes no pain, a scomfort,' or inconven- feyce. £ Francs by ! IE thon : Aoudon Jn thei apposiian to Auch a Admitting i It was generally How GERMANY WON TURKEY Goeben " isha 0 Darda- els Was Practically Capitulation. GAMPAICN OF PROPAGANDA KAI- INSTITUTED BY THE SER'S TRICKY AHIES, WAS It Was Declared That the In India and Egypt Were Throw Off British Rule, HEN the Turks admitted the Goeben and the Bres- lau to the Dardanelles, they virtually capitulated | then and there to Kitser Wilhelm, For years they had lent a willing ear to German propaganda, but jit is doubtful whether any of their states. | men, except Enver Pasha and a few of his personal supporters, realized that this would eventually lead them into the war with the Entente Powers, Events now moved "very rapidly. The Germans persuaded the Sublime Porte to buy the Goeben and the Breslau, capitalizing the argument that they would replace two battle« ships which were being built on order in England but which the British had commandeered upon the outbreak of the war. A new and more energetic cam- paign of propaganda was instituted, | The Kaiser was portrayed as the da- fender of Islamism, and in some quarters of the interior the natives were informed that he had turned to the Mohammedan faith. He was pointed out as the only man who could save Turkey from Russia. It was asserted that the Moslems in In- Moslems About to i WOULD L'E T0 SEND IT OVER TO" FRANCE Toronto Woman Wants Soldier Husband to Have Tanlac After What Tanlac Did For Her. "1 derived so mudh benefit Tanlac to my husband who is in France," sald Mrs. Agnes Liston, of 185 Bellwoods Avenue, Toronto, the other day. shé continued, down and in mighty bad shape gener- ally. 1 Jost my appetite, nothing tasted right and the little 1 forced down seemed to tear me all to pieces My head ached most all the time, 1 neck and in the small of my back. Spells of weakness would nearly over- and I would get to trembling lently that I could hardly stand on my feet. My nerves were in such wretched state that" many a night flay awake till almost day before 1 could go to sleep. 1 fell off to almost a shadow and had so little life and strength, {and felt so miserable all the time, it was all I could do to drag mysell] around and do my housework., * "I heard so.much about Tanlac that I got me a bottle and began to improve right from the start. By the time I had finished by second bottle my appetite had picked up so that'l am actually ashamed of it. 1 enjoy everything I eat, nothing hurts me at all, my nerves are- stronger, those pains in my back are gane and I nev- er have a headache row. Tanlac has built me up something wondeiful and it." Tanlac P. (fiown, in Plevna by Gilbert Ost- ler in Battersea by C. 8. Clark, in| Fernleigh. by Erwin Martin, in Ar- doch. by M. J. Scullion, --ADVT, dia and Egypt were about to throw:of that country." off British rule. The army was expanded info a sys- tem under German militar; control, The Prussian general, . Liman un Sanders became its dictator, while Admiral Suchon of the Goeben assum- ed practical command of the Turkish favy. The Dardanelles were closed and heavily mined. Gold was poured into the 'bankrupt treasury of the empire, * But in spite of all intrigues Turkey was unwilling to put her head in the noose, It was necessary to devise a master stroke. Turkish torpedo boats under control of German officers on August 29 deliberately opened fire on the Russian port of Odessa. A gun boat was sunk, much damage done, and Russia insulted beyond apology. believed that the in the Cabinet anything of Minister know only who plan beforehand was Enver Pasha.|cine and dentistry. Proof. low, Mr. Downing, is awfully fond of | kissing. Pater---How did you find' that out, | you good-for-nothing girl? Madge--I had it from his own lips, --Pearson' s Weekly. The Women of Russia; The educated women prior were often found as owners and man- agers of large factories and estates; they got their degrees at the universl- ties along 'with men; women were given posts as teachers of all kinds, including professorships at men's this| universities, and they practiced medi- | There was a But perhaps the most important role] marked tendency to encourage them | was played by the German crulsers| entering the legal profession, and the in raid, "After. the Turks were snagged i} duties of jury service. the | war,' writes Lieut, S. "there were rumors of pose sible revolution. Again the Goebea "had its part to play. At one time she anchored in the Bosphorus just off Dolma Bagtche, the Sultan's palace, with her guns trained abeam. It pre- sented the most formidable sight in Turkey. With the Breslau she wonld have been a match for the entire Turkish navy because of superior speed, trained men and modern fight- ing efficiency. She carried ten. 11- inch, twelve 6-inch and twelve 24- pounder guns. "One of the 11-inch turrets has a lohdingg record below 8 seconds. An advantage -in action is that-in each to Bryant, "furret some 16 shells with their pow- der charges in brass cases can be carried. There.are four submerged torpedo tubes. The horsepower ist about 85,000 at 28 knots. Each ture ret is fitted with its own range-finder, range-transmitters and substation be- low the turret.- The complement is about 1,100 men. "When thinking of the sea power of Turkey one's mind unconsciously turns to the Goeben. Throughout all her escapades the Turks came to re gard her as the backbone of the Otto- man sea strength. Time and again she survived long voyages "in fu Black Sea in the face of a Russi fleet several times her strength, Ea return was but another sign to the Turks of the presence of a force that was worsting the Russian. Undoubt- edly, then, her political influence all during the war had conpiderable ef fect upon the morale of the popula- tion, a factor that it was important to foster with care.' The article holds, in conclusion, that tha activities of the (ioében em- phasizse the following principles of naval warfare: "1. The imperative value of guick and reliable communication with and reliable communication with alt naval forces upon or before the de- claration of war. The Goeben's early notifications of war played a big part in her éscape. "2. The valtie to a navy of cruisers that are capable of high speed and are fitted for independen{ work. 43. The value of the offénsive. In- stead of looking for a safe retreat | trom superior forces, the Goeben fifst deceived her enemies by attacking the Barbary coast, and, second, bq seeks ing in Turkish waters further activi- ties that were wholly unexpected by the allies. "4, The waltie of high speed. This factor was important in the escape from the Mediterrantan. In the I Sea it was the one advantage that made it possible for the to Qermans 'Tearry on their raids 'and co vay work. , _"5..The importance - naval officer's knowledge of eraAtional 'affairs. The allies lost from thie lack of- knowledge of Satitieal conditions in Turkey that would have caused them to suspect and prépere for the Sasben's dash to the, D The : Germans, on the world power it for each important maritim: a few tiaval officers that are thor 113 furnishing officers to direct the Constitutional Democrats in Duma wanted to admit them to the When women teachers and professors had served 20 years théy were entitled to retire .on a Governnient pension, and 1>*they died' and were survived by husbands the pensions continued during their husbands' lives.--Family Herald. Sugarless Sundae. The first prize in a recent contest held by the Soda Fountain went to the following sugarless sundae re- cipe, called "Honey Brazil": pint cream, 1 teaspoonful cornstarch dissolved in milk, % pound butter, 1 | cup of Brazil nuts cut in pieces 3 inch or inch in diameter. Heat the-cream and honey together; add the cornstarch and cook it unptli it thickens, ed. Serve a ladle over a portion of ica cream and top with whipped | cream and a red cherry, In Desert Lands. Annual rainfalls range from a frae- tion of an inch, in portions of. the Andes mountains in South America and the great desert regions of Africa and Asia, to 600 inches, or ff{y fest, in parts of eastern India. From the northern parf of California to Alaska there is a stretch having an annual precipitation of 100 or more inches and even this amount detracts much from the comfort of living as well as from the agricultural possibilities dof 'the Soil. Polishing Diamonds. Before the polishing of a diamond is begun the rough stoné must be held firmly. This Is accomplished by building a solder mold for®it. The mold Is first. roughly shaped by hand and heated. It is then reshaped as often as necessary to fit the stone perfectly. When it is exactly right, it is heated again and the stone drop- ped in. Held firmly iy the snug sol- der mold, the stone can then be handled easily. en nt mnt Many ties our sympathy may do more damage than han good | r, is the Best. "Spr! ng cies tomes in some de | 3ree to every man, wibian and ehile n pur climate. it is that ran-down condition of fapavetished, devitalized" blood. t 'is marked by 'loss of appetite and that tired feeling and in man by _sorfie form of eruption. Hoos puraagariiis pods rsapariila fami i at once- mow, Delay may be an 8. Ask your druggist for Sarsaparilla, and insist or "ions an, for uothing else ean take its place. from] that I want td send a bottle] with the army} "For the last two or three yeass,"| "I was terribly rup-p had an awful pain in the baek of my come me, everything would turn blac ki 80 vio-} I'am better in every way since taking is 801d in Kingston by A. rn ene ' = | oughly versed and trained in the poli- | ties, language and military conditions | Madge--Pa, that nice young fel- | | | | in Russia, | to tHe revolution, enjoyed a | position of freedom equal to that of | any other counfry in the world. They | the | One pint good strained honey, 1 | After removing from- the | the cornstarch and.-cook it until it | Hood's Sarai. the Groat Blood | Ing m the system thet results from impure - EPID OID IIID DIED fhe V.cior of Bagdad ~~ Was a MTitary Genius But a Very Modest Man FPDP DDD DIODE EN. MAUDE, dad, who died ree the 'conqueror ently hos: Yorn al in fies buried entre of the British cemetery of Bagdad, adjoining the old Turkish cavalry barracks. A 'wooden cross marks hig grave, and a heap of wredths, chrysantbemums and marigolds were strewn over the grassiess mould of the desert. Among these floral tributes were ribbons and artificial flowers, the tribute of the people of Bagdad, of the Naquib, and of the Jewish people, whose annual dramatic entertainment he attended a few days before his death, The nearest graves to his own are those of privates of the division which he used to command. The British Eye- witness with the armies in Mesopo- tamia in am account of a memorial service held in the citadel at Bagdad, writes of Gen. Maude: "One's first impression of "hinr was | of modesty, repose, confidence and | strength. Only gradually did one realize his thoroughness, his far vis- fon, and his infinite application to detail. .He was a master of detail. Supply, transport, intelligence, psy- chological factors--in every branch of staff work he was the inspirer and director. "Ex-officio he will have a niche among the military immortals as the ad a in an army' pit Mesopotamia, in the ¢ north { GEN. SIR STANLEY MAUDE. | conqueror of Bagdad, but none real- ize better than the army he led how individual his suc@sses were. He was more than the heart and brain of the machine. It is doubtful if in the whole of British military history there is a pardllel instance in which a series of military victories can more exclusively attributed to personality of one man. "The retrieving of the situation | after the British had failed to relieve | Kut, the reconstruct' n of the fight- ing machine, and ° breaking up of the Turkish force in the Tigris, call- ed for qualities which, when found | in combination, amount to genius. | In those dark days Britain prayed | for a great man--and he was on the | spot. "The operations which led to the capture of Bagdad were a series of masterly strokes, so brilliant in con- ception that the Turks never serious- be Pp the | ly contemplated their success, But Maude was always confident of break- | ing through. In the long, costly and | laborious business of evicting the | Turk yard by yard from his elaborate trench system about Kut, he was sat- isfied all the timé that things were | going well, and his confidenee was | infectious. "Gen. Maude's Hiodesty was pronounced as to be remarkable. F detested flattery and would have lik-! ed to have carried.on the whole cam- paign anonymously. - No personal ref- | erence to himself was permitted in| any public communique, H#& never gave himself the credit for any sue- | cessful operation or stroke of genius, or sound piece of organization, He never listened to congratulations without minimizing his own part in | the affair. " 'Don't congratulate. me," he would say in good-natured impati- ence, 'It was the men who did it.' He bad probably conceived every de- tail 'of the operation, even to the handling of - single battalions, yet, when the coup was accomplished, he would reflect the whole credit on the spbordinate command. - He was as disciplined in his routine as a clock. |4 0 4 o morning, breakfast began and was fin- ished at 7.16. The office and a full day's work followed, until his ride in the evéming. He travelled light' eveérydhing he possessed. "Time. in war is everything' was his faverite axiom. 'Every officer,' he said, 'ought to havé {t inscribed on his shaving-glass:' His work and ae- tions were governed by this maxim. my never late for an appoint- posarssed great personal "magnetian, especially for his troops. On the eve of every operation he was aceiistomad to send aut encourag- to the soldiers, and he made a , point of presenting medals Pedi after any action to those who had distinguished them- selves. Delay in this, he maintained, defeated the object aighed af. Only a fey dhye héfore his death he tra- veilpd sixty miles by sirplatie for this pupuse, * : : hie Papers. : pro ait China there are aboat 440 ines rs, and .of these only about fifty hdve good eircalation. The aver- 1ge is not more than %,000 copies an ssue. One newspsper in Shan hat claims a dajiz- circulation of 30. Alessandro Valléro, owner of a Brooklyn coffee house and leader ofa of blackmailers and gun; who committed twenty- three murders, was sentenced to die i * I He started work at five o'clock in the |. valise and small kit-bag containing dea! of her heailh az alleged [ed a the sluetsie ohair. your | _THE E DAILY BRITISH WHIG, TUESDAY, APRIL 2, 1918. PAGE THREE Probs: Wednesday, northerly winds, fair, colder. - RSSATHTRANAAES VAAN ARRTAY SILK SAI El Tomorro 1500 yaids genuine Chinese Natural Shantung silk, full 32 inches wide--every piece has been carefully selected and will be found to bie of excellent weight and perfect finish. We ¢an' highly recommend this silk to give good wear and is particu- larly desirable for waists, dresses, children's wear shirts and pajamas. A special value at 75c, and sold by many stores ly 53c yard J ee -------- A Single Application Banishes Every Hair -------------------------------- ? (The Modern Beauty) Here is how any woman can eas- fly and quickly remove objectionable, hairy growths without possible injury to the skin: Make a paste with some | powdered delatone and water, apply to hairy surface and after 2 or 3 minutes rub off, wash the skin and the hairs are gone. This is a pain- less, inexpensive method . and, ex- cepting where the growth is unus- ually thick, a single application is enough. You should, however, be careful to get genuine delatone. sgeeserfedrdrdodeolrdelroirdedoldededdeddob dob ob ob * THE DEMOORACY OF + KING GEORGE V, | With the British Armies in France, April 2.--No king ever travelled more simply than did George V., who just visited the battlefront. He crossed the channel on a destroyer, just like an ordinary officer. He was whirled up and down the lines like a hard-work- ing. army _ inspector, shaking hands with the enlisted men and eating ordinary mess food wherever meal time caught him. Seeing a slightly' wounded Australian at the railway sta- tion, the King walked up to him and_sald:. "Yve often heard about you." ? The Australian, his hand, responded: there!" The King shook his, hand warmly, and appeared immense- ly. pleased to be taken as an "equal." This incident is symbolical of the democracy . for .which the world is at war. ! Ld 4 $ - + . -* @ * 4 % * * + * | | holding out "Pat it &* * * +> + : + + + * Ld * * +» + * * * + + + + + + + * &* * * +» * +» + &* * + Prrsrstesesettest sissies A r m-- The man who casts his bread up- on the water dni then has one eye open. watching for it to return not the true giver. 'The man with too. much ought to Piinsese fwo good eyes. Know m by the Efiends They Make DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS 10LH THEIR ig . . Dame Clement Collin Tells Why She Recommienids Them to Her Friends | How They Have Made Their Re- putation. Breche A {8pecial.) is faith anon, Que, Apr. 1. ong the many friends Dodd's Kidnex Pills have made in this nart of QWeboc is Dame Clem- ent Colin, a well-known resident of this place. "i received great relief from Didd's Kidney Pills," is the rea- son she gives for always Fecommend- ing . Dodd's Kidney (Pills to her friends, and she. adds that a great] vigor is due to the help she got from the great Canadian kidney remedy. 5 Dodd's Kidney Pills hold their papal rity not because of the prom- they make, but because of the good they do. They are no cure. all; Tiey are Purely and simply a kidney remedy. The reason they are credited. with cures of Thema. , |tiem, heart disease, dropsy, ete, Is becanse ail these diseases are caw by: sick kidneys. Cire the kidne and the cause of the disease is vémov- Dodd's Kidney Pills have made their reputation as ney remedy by the cures they hive made. Ask friends about them, : and at 85¢ and 90c a men' Ss To Own a Nice Tea Waggon ? ternoon tea. - ; We have a number of up-to-date designs. Nothing is more convenient for serving af- Bedroom furniture in a great variety of designs. We save money for you by mak- ing our purchases months ago. VICTROLAS AND VICTOR RECORDS A Complete Stock on Hands T. F. HARRISON CO.,; LTD. Phone 90. Auihiahhidiabhakkakhruhakrarhraaiiai Ahhh dd AA The Liquid Wash for Skin Disease. We have witnessed such .remark- able cures with this soothing wash of oils that we offer you a bottle on the guarantee that unless it does the same for you it cosls you sot a cent Mahood's Drug Store, Kingston. wry, NAA LONG in yout SEDITION, p meio, Former Minister and Others Sent to 5 Jall for 15 Years. Biiritngton, Vt, April Llar- ence H. Waldron, formerly pastor of a Baptist church at Windsor, con- victed last -week of sedition, was taken to Atlanta yesterday to hegin a fifteen-year prison there. tian ds pn ci rst -- Rededm Curions Prophise, : A remarkable sromjsé made twen- ty-five years ago has Just been re deemed? : ® When Sir James and Lady Pender, of Donhead 8t. Addrew, Wiltshire, Eng., celebrated their silver wedding in 1892, the latter presented a num- ber of the local children with three- penny bits, and promised each of them that if they returned them at the celebration of her golden wed- ding each would receive a haif- SOV ereign, 2 - Nearly thirty of ihe poripients. yo} 4 turned their three-peony bits when the golden wedding was recently celebrated, and seach received a half- sovereign in accordance with Lady Fender's promise, i 8he had the three-penny bits glids ed and wears them as a necklace, The Feminist Movement. As, anothers fndization of the spread of the feminist movement, Japanese girls are now di ig to sée a photograph of the prospective husband selecied. by the parents of od . . the girl. 5 ~ ------------ Resps tainty doesn't hein and end with one's sell. term in the federal | x Save Your : Coal > THE SOWARDS COAL CO. Phone 155. CLOTHING ON EASY. TERMS Ladies' Suits, Dresses and Furs, Seatemen's Suits ul Gvstontes, N. Morris, 374 King St. "LOT FOR SALE 40 ft. x 120 ft. Enough stone on it to baild a house. Snap for $150. W. H. Godwin & Son | dnsuranes and Real Estate. "1 39 BrockyMt. Phone 424 3 a as - Seeding Begins In West, inpipeg, Aptil 3 --<The weather thronghount the Prairie Proviness has turned cooler with some rain in Als berta and Saskatchewan. At pearly every point ihe weather is cloudy a po and unseftled with high, wesferly winds and the temperature falling mapidly. March has been so mild thid year that seeding has begun at certain points. ret 'A whole Jot of Jeotis expect the Lord wilt their manifold 'sing because they possess the vistas 'of being generous,