THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG LED, 45 HUR RT INTHE L. 1.1 , THURSDAY, MAY 2, 19i8. TRE IA R. R. WRECK i Had 'Bronchitis FOR THREE YEARS, COULD GET NO RELIEF, OF 305TH KIL \ | ©, THREE MEN i Probes: Friday, fair, higher temperature. EE a 3 " ra 9 Bronchitis is gensrally the result of a cald cansed b fxXposure to wet and inclement ather, It begins with a tightness across the che st, dif- ticulty in breathing, and a wheezing sound comes from the Jungs. There is also a raising of phlegm from the lungs, selally in the morning. 8 18 at first white, but Iatér becomes of a grean- ish or yellowish colar, and is oecas- lonally streaked with blood. On the first sign 'of bronchitis you should check if immediately by using Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup and thereby prevent it becoming chronic and perhaps turning nto some more serious lung trouble, Mr, Theodore P. Beers, Main River, N.B., writes: troubled with bronchitis for three years and could get no rellef. 1 was always worse whan got wet. I tried lots of different medicines, but none did me good until a friend told me to try Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. 1 got three bottles and be- fore | had them balf used I was bet- ter. "My mother is now using it for asthma. It is a great medicine and We never want to be without it." Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup is Put up in a yellow wrapper: three pine trees the trade 'mark; price 25¢ and §0¢; manufactured only by The T, Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. A Sweeping (leara So { Upper "1 was The cold, backward weather of the last two months has left us with a larger assor- ment ol spring hats-than is usual fqr this time oi year, and with the new summer models CARS (ON LEFT) ARE SHOWN 18 ict DNTHENR SIDES. - avira sop rinior: a ~ This picture shows the train of twelve steel ears, bearing a the oh Indantey,® which wrecked by a broken rall on the Long Island Rallroad three miles east of Central Istig: ive cars rolled doin an embankment, killing three soldiers and injuring about No commissioned officers were among the dead or Injured. Ruomors were in cirenlation yesterday ta the effect that the wreck may have been due to the work of German enemies and that spikes had been drawn from raliroad ties A representative of the Long i of was battalion sei a on a] forty-five others. RPP soon arriving, makes it imperative that we b 1 Keeley Jr, M.0.D.0. ] 4 Those people (and they are many) who dread the b ordeal of an eye examin- ation are agreeably aston- | ished to find that, as made | Dy us, it causes no pain, discomfort, or inconven- | ience. And We Use No Drugs. Keeley Jr, M0.D.0. . LaF ata dh Ww - a Ah ¥ 2 : fio give the quick. ~~ lasting, too. | SPDR PI DED IDID OIC T IIPS DH Island Railroad said an fifth car plunged down the embank 3 : - «> 3 Chinese Problem $ Again Acute POOR Ilr lr eel RET HARTE once gave a di- verting picture of the "'heath- én Chinee"" whose WAYS, at least in the old Californian days, were "childlike and bland." Although, on the authority of Bob ble 'Burms; the inconvenient power te "see ourselves as others gee us" is denied 'o mortals, it might be most instructive asd flluminating to know the Chinese impression of. the ocol- denials peculiar ways 'when East Juxtaposition, Take. as an example, the Chinese's gdvent on the Paeifie coast of America. At one moment he declared to be a most desirable Imutigrant, and at another a very un- desivable one. Through the imposi- tion of a poll tax of $500, Canada for years practically excluded fur- ther Chinese immigration, but now Some men have put forth-a sudden l | novaement deniand for at legst 100,000 coolies from "far Cathay." The excuse Is the acute shortage of labor and the peed for increased economic produc- tion, The proposal has been greeted with a chorus of dissent by Canadian labor leaders, who, taking the stand- point that the Dominion has already more allens than is desirable, con- tend rthat the coolie influx wonld lower the standard of living and I] clieapen. the wage rate of the people, They declare that the true remedy for ile labor shortage lies in .the closing. of all unnecessary publie works ultil aftér the war, the Cav- ernment in the meantime taking over all the plans for production and dis- tribution. For these uncompromising Opponasts of coolie labor, there may be some grain of comfort to be exe ence of the Federal Government, which has. not sh wn' the slightest disposition to take seriously the agi- tation ef the Oufario men to throw down the bars against the Chinese, It is well to remember (hat the Chinese situation jn Canada anc the United States is but a symptom of a eater, world-wide movement. The affects appreciably the i Mhole status of tie «Chonese race ia the fmpending reconstruction' of in- AIR imc Son Pn RnR CI 10° VICTORY - Courage is a matter of the blood. Without. good red blood 'a man has a weak heart and poor nerves. In the spring is the best hoe to Lake stopk on he's condition. 1i bluod #8 thin and watery, face or ingly; generally weak, tive and fi should takes spring tonic. will do th u old: made up of Blood roi, Oregon Grape root, ua root; Black Cherry with glycerine and quid © or tablets. first put out by Dr. was dy oe fon jas. sen said DF il A 's Golden Me i ot keep this in tals al to Dr. oe dor a i getang, were looking into the wreck on any other theory Lie was not an hour. Apparently the defective rail had supported the | The forward truck of the fifth car broke the rall® The con and' West are brought into economis i tracted from the apparent indiffér- | This Ss al Discov- 3 Investigation indicated a broken rail w as to blame The train was making about thirty miles aware of it avy locomotive pling holding the ment, twenty feet hich at that EAA ii the point ternations Chine with the w of the (et may be n 1 an ate Zonas gary for varlon sion "0 broaden their v themeelva :ilizenahib with other natio It may be gusstioned whethe [ yet gualified for this right, ane 48 no apparent li judice against miscegenation being broken'down. But Chita is in a state of flux, quite apart fram that low peril" feartuily 1 shadowed by | 8til more perilous kalsers. She has ere vival yei- will more and more be deemed acute as modern methofs continue to be adopted. Unrestricted emigration might afford only temparary relief, And one might appropriately ask, | in this connection, Where is the jus- tice of a system which keeps the Chi- nese aut of North America .and ule lows Europe to have 'spheres of in- finenée™ upon her territory? Care. fully * examined, these commercial y rights, backed by treaties, appear to | » he nothing less than {incipient in fringaments of Chinese sovereignty, | and otight, In justice to the Chinese, Ito be gholished, either at the coming | { peace conference or at the sittings of i the projected League of Nations There is an urgeat need of Jaws dealing comprehensively with all oriental races on n basis of equality. | On the other hand, there should be | some well-defined limitations, teeting white laborers from economin disaster, They have rights ro than the Asiatics, whe bowever. of- ten aggravate the situation by posing 4s colonists; unwilling to settle down or to identify themselves with the country's institutions and modes of of Canada, in controlling immigra- tion, is how to apply her restrictions equally to every land, excepting the Mother Country and the various branches of the Anglo-Saxon com- munities, Medals for Cavalrymen. |. Sineé April 1, 1917, the Canadian {cavalry ln Franee has received no less than one hundred awards. for deeds of gallantry, according to in. formation received by the Mifitia De- partment from overseas, The list of Sands includes two Victoria Crosses, one C.M.G, (Commander of the Order of 'St. Michael and St. George), four Distinguished Service Orders, twenty Military. Crosses, twelve Distinguish- ed Conduct Medals, (fty-two Mill- fary Medals, four French decora- {tions, and four mentioned in de- ispatehés. The officer awdrded the CMG. is Bfig.-Gen. J. B. Seeley, (CB, D.8.O., and the two officers who | {won the Vietoria Cross are Lieut. F.M. W. Harvey and Lient. H. Stra- fenin, M.C. Previous to Apel 1, 1917, {Canadian cavalry had received 45 | honors. Sir Charles M, Cavanagh, officer commanding "the | Corps In France, declares the Cana- {dians proved themselves *a fine {fighting brigade." aod that there was no reguldy brigade in the corps 'which he regards more highly | Well Done, McGill! { Over 2.000 students, graduates ithe 'mtiitary forces. Three hubdred [31 these have gained 3 land 236 are among those who have {nade the scpreme sacritice, Mu Gill. Corps was originally organized i9y Sir Aurkliud Geddes, now Direc | or-General of Recruiting, who was i+ humble professor there when the | 1ar broke out. All honor to McGill, 4 a ipa me rip i Duke's Goth Birthday. { London, May 3.---Lboyal greet: | were extended to the Duke of Con- | naught, wip yesterday welebrated {nia oi irihdag. His Royal . . To about London look: mn 5 & 4 _ 3] L Tr 'Delaware coast his morsing a mlirates, Sisty- pre- to find a relief for congestion, which || pro- | leds | life. Perhaps the immediate problem | British Cavalry | < Enis a; ni Ki ro] is 4 otie pil] a dose, 256 a bax, > & and that if the federat authorities the first four ears of the train fourth. car broke and the and fifth to the tOVER-WORKED HIS THEORIES. BEavon Rhondda, Fram Now Extremely Thin. May 2. reports morning Baron resigmed the otic: o sh Food Controller, beeause o Ith, were confirmed tonight ited, however, that bis rosigna not ibeen accopled London, ed this in hod ~ Baron Rhondda, {% perhaps an ex umple. of. over-davationh in practice jol his own theories Ife has been confined to bed for several weeks laron Rhondda, was a vory port-! ly person, became in a shoot time | extremely thin, He had boasted that » was Imposing upon 'the publie. temporary . physical collapse to show that he over-did the i short ration regimen. The Food Controller remarked to | reporters to-day that he thought the est compliment that the British food control system had received | was the fact that the German cen- | sorship had forbidden German pap- ers to say anything ahout its cess, Lord Rhondda has been one His {deems eX- | Being Portly, sue- | ample of the business man who has} sureeeded insCGovernment position, where some others have failed, - ete ete THE NEW QUEBEC. | | ------ | Rev, Father Comtols in Stehight Talk | to Parishioners. | Montreal, Say 2.--Rev; Father! | Comtois, parish priest of Terrebonne, | in the course of a sermon said: ' "My brethern; we are at wa v, Eng- land and France fighting side by | side, and duty commands us tc come to their support. At the bast election, conscription was established as a re-| Sult of the verdiot at the polls, i "The law is hard, but being the law of the land, it must be obeyed. | The authority dictated to us by the! Government comes from God, and al-i thought it does not please us, nedes- | sity obliges us to comply. | "To-day, we have in our agents of the federal police. will go to your homes ang you (deceive them well, Use moderation. They are doing their duty, and there must be no wrath in your dealinzs with them, all of whieh wil be to 'he honor of our parish." midst They must Will Close Big Hotels. Winnipeg, May 2.-~Rumors current that the big Grand Trunk Hotels, the Fort Garry in Winnipeg jand the MacDonald in Edmonton, {will be closed shortly, It is under {stood that each was run at & net | Toss of about $40,000 last year. : |More Letters From +... Gananoque Scores of People Telling of Their | ixperience With This Well known Medicine. 2.--More #8 come to hand today to [prove the great good being accom- {plished in this town by Dr. Chase's iKidney-Liver Pills. Mrs. BR. W. Henderson, Main St., 18., Gananoaue, Ont., writes: "I have used Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills as a household remedy" for about fif- iananoque, Ont., May evidence h e [and teachers from McGill bave joined 106M Years, and for kidney and liver jtroubles have found them excellent. have also proved that in a case of | tonsolitis or severe cold, if given in time, Dr. Chase's Midney-Liver Pills {will Quickly relieve the patient. shave Baa, Sxperisuess of this in my {own family, and thin thege ills janet be equalled." " | 'Mrs. T. H. Harper, River 8t., Gan- janeque, Ont. writes: "For quite a umber of years we have made use lof Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills in jour home. They are an excellent remedy for kidney and liver trou- ibles, and my husband finds they also :rolleve him of, lumbago, from which he sometimes suffers. {i " husband ©sed Dr. Chase's {Ointment for itching piles and in a very short time he was completely % ¥3 1 > 6 also used Dr. Chase's end Ga Ah pls dealers, or .Edmansen, Bates & Co. Husted, Toronto. ¥ ht results from subs are | "| volved dn be checked only. in one 1 & WASTE IN MANY Ways. . ian How Much Household Waste Can Yon Save? ¥ou' cannot always produce, but You can always save, The thing that i8-saved takes the place of the thing that cannot be produced. We waste food in many ways: In peeling potatoes, the loss is 20 per cent, In stale bread. In bread crusts. In table crumbs, In kitchen garbage. In the fats of meats. In meat and chicken bones, In the sour milk and buttermilk that is thrown away. In fats which we neglect to render, In eating more than we really need. In eating the wrong kinds of food: In frying meats and not saving phe fats, > In not substituting other meats for the beef, wheat and bacon, which are neelléd overseas. In improper cooking. In feeding too much protein (al- | bumen in eggs and gluten in flour) | to old persons and persons of sedent- | ary habits. 5 1 In keeping too many domestic pets, | which consume good food. { "In leaving food uncovered to be wasted or spoiled by vermin, Canadiens must realize the tire- | mendous aggregate which is repre- | sented uch wasie. The loss in. | Wa¥--hy every individual man, wo- i man, girl and boy doing his or her Sale Price All mew hats this season, Every approbation and SEE WINDOW DISPLAY make room. So what is our loss is your gain, as every colored trimmed hat must be sold Friday and Saturday. 100 New York Trimmed Hats, ularly from $6.00 to $10.00 priced reg- hat marked "in" plain all sales for cash. ha a. VICTROLAS AND VICTOR RECORDS part, says the Food Controller. | HONOR THE DESTROYERS Does Big | Branch That ; Work. i Major HI Corbett Smith, speaking! {on the work of the Navy, told several | { good stories recently, including tuat {of the sailor who, when he "came | to" after the amputation of his leg, | felt for the missing member, and (cried: "*Ere, where's my leg? It's | got all my moaey in the stocking." | He spoke of a destroyer which, | while engaged with two Zeppeling tdropping bombs 'pretty lively," Share of War } | asked permission to launch her boat | 10 pick up the ship's dog that had] fallen overboard. = Permission was | given, and the dog wis rescued. { Anothe: anecdote was that of a "painter" who bad joined the Navy 2s a "hostility man." and was put to! work with paint-pots. Having' made a fearful mess of the job, he was tasked what sort of painter he called himself, and he replied, "Well--apr--. | I--er--generally exhibit in the Royal Academy." "iL Major Corhett Smith concluds od, "you ask the men of the Navy who takes the biggest share, they will answer. 'It's hats off to the de stroyers every time.' Tit-Bita, Cadet M'Gaw y Hurt, Deseronto, May 1. ~~Cadet J. R. Mo nd on, RAF. was ! 1 § 27 pa r Ba T. F. HARRISON CO, LTP. we pt rst. ALWAYS SWEET AND. i * ~ " RADE QE | Spl dy SR ag OE I 0 05 05 pv est os MA 8 disap: Hs sae an ¥ Ba