FRIDAY, SEPTEMEER 12, 1010, THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG COULDN'T LEAVE HOUSE FOR YEAR Hamilton Tells of His Wife's Remarkable Improvement 8ince Taking Tanlac. was able t« T the first time d she wouldn't anlac had not 3 the remark- am Han 'reston St. vd ish Infin- continued able 10 over- Her appetite 1 she fell off ntil she wa little noise and ror night ight in ner 2d of dull Tia she much attend could just house ar out-of months most of th pain, to all doo She while he en in bel y to me has He : ¥, She that if ghe us out of home, Every. day she peams mger and more like her old se ind she never complains of being tired any more, out for started takin just other she would 'since sh e appetite told mo kept on house fine ni day eat Last Sunday she went a long walk with me, for the first time she's been out of the house} in nearly a year. She seems like a different person and 'is beginning to | over. | fael that her troubles are all Tanlac is the only thing that aver did her any good, and we both are happy a8 we can be over the way she has recovered her health since she been taking it and we are glad tc recommend it all the time." Tanlac is sold in Kingston by A P. Chown, in Plevna by Gilbert] Ostler, in Battersea by C. 8. Clark, in Fernleigh by Ervin Martin, in Ar- dock by M. J. Scullion, in Sharbot Lake by W. Y. Cannon.--Aadyt. I po ro a Bg A Quality counts when you are buying food supplies more than any other article. Our stores are stocked with 'the best that can be bought. Call and see or Phone 530 The Unique Grocery and Meat Market - 490 to 492 Princess Street C. H. PICKERING, Prop. ---- ~~ QUICK"S WESTERN MEAT MARKET Specials for Saturday Choice Creamery Butter BSe, 1b, All kinds of choice cooked meats. Choice, Stew Beef ...... 15e. Ib, Chofce Pot Roasts ...20e-20¢ 1b, Cholce Steak, Lamb, Pork, ete 112 CLERGY STREET. PHONE 2011. | th oa | #1 and weak and run.down| has! IOs " Go North for Blondes a a ME theories have been ad- ed lately which connect'a 1ccess or failure in life complexion. Blondes certain kinds of if they get in other kinds fail Men of thinking for the get' out and do Interesting is the Sealed atoetodts lied for one come- plexion do the phers More this continent, worl the } theor Winnipeg, is no- place for a real An effort to prove rays of the sun ie' races in all latitudes ; made by Dr. Austin widely-known Phila- mag and scientist, admitted that he pre-) 1-violet delphia and it is t sents sc 16Ye arriv & 'ronctusion" all the no izopean races will be extinet s f Winnipeg within a couple of unless there | is a constan ream of immigration from their native lands. Starting fro: at the ecarlie lived somewher medics turies :pted belief s white and | about the latitude the Euphrates n, Dr. O'Malley that the and the .real were de i as mankind The farther peénctrated > the skins of ae tnat did not ed because they says, blonde ventured south or x south the early | the darker hued b¢ their descendants become dark per could not surviv the murderous | ultra-violet rays Those who went | north became more blo d. nature's , for the blacker an ob- | ject » more quickly it radiates | the heat iv receives, and the whiter it is the more slowly it lets the heat escape. lt is because northern animals are { ception is provided white. by the An ex- Esqui-~ order that their skins may the ter withstand the six months ! blinding sunshine upon the | fields and the ice, One. might ask why polar bears are not dark for the south of | | fat} b fos Is | | | i { { of this that the | | maux, who are dark, but this is in! bet- | of SNOW=- | same reason, but at any rate every-| y | | body knows that in the north part | of The temperate zone and even in the { frigid zones many animals become { white in the winter that were brown in the summer, ' It is not so much the matter of eold and warmth that affect the growth and development of man- kind and mark inexorably his proper i place upon the planet as the sun- shine. Not heat rays but light rays | make the blonde and the brunette, For instance physicists working with extra-special rays, Rontgen rays, Bec- querel rays, and rays from radium | must protect thémselves with coat- ings of rubber, lead, glass and other materials that prevent the rays reach= ing the skin. Otherwise 'the ultra violet rays would change the proto- plasm of cells so that they would let in salts which would disintegrate and i kill them. In the United States more than twenty investigators were killed | by the dction of X-rays before shey discovered the necessity of protect ing themselves from these baneful emanations. It is exactly the same with the sun's rays. The more direct and the stronger the rays are the more is the necessity for the human beings to be darkly pigmented, it is that the negroes in Africa cam | | withstand rays that cut short the lives of -white men, and. the Scandi- navian on the other hand is comforts | able under conditions that darke | skinned people could not endure. There is a general law that certain vegetation and animals can thrive in certain latitudes. | kind is not immune from {| although men live at the equator | and in the Arctic circle; Nature pre- i { i i merves the race that is best adapted to live in certain zones and kills off the others. Dr. O'Malley calculates that from the eauator north only | *Mans | k= eR 2 this law, | Thus { i ori i hirtieTh latitude is the | the black man; from | o the thirty-ffth is the he brown en like the from the thirty-8fth to the is thes zone of the brun- nean type, like the | Spaupiard. From th el to the fiftieth is a sort of | Landa which ordinary | t of us can get along bly, but the zone of the | blonde is of latitud observed, forty-fourth a map he hat as far migt be of the looks at is slightly south | paraliel, If one | may be astonisl hed | parallels of Toronto is wore like Spain than the Br record of the American revo | gives concrete facts to support In that struggle said if the soldiers of | {ington were natives of Ireland; | quarter were native Am ANS; | the rest were English, Scotch, German and Dutch. But among the Daughters of, the American Revolu- tion, the Cinelnnati and similar so-| cleties -cobnposed. of descendants of | Washington's army, there are now | any Irish nar . 'The Irish, race, have almost | ter 4 century and a Recently Dr. O'Malley exam- amilies founded who had emi- » of 1847. All d and -were iren a good an gener- | ze of about , or 276 in nued to be as grated atter the emigrants to give t start. . In the ation there was a1 five children to at all. If these had productive there would have been at least 1,000 descéndants to-day. As. & matter of fact there are fewer than This is | 200 and nearly all are neurotic, deli- {| cate children ganera come ext In another couple of 18 this stock will have be- , simply because the an- cestofs v sn they went to Penasyl- vania went south a thousand miles into a zone Intended by nature for the Italian, Story of Robin Adair, Is the famous old song, "Robin Adair," which we have sung from childhood, Scotch dr Irish? Scottish undoubtedly will ply. point otherwise, Hanging in he: present the great hallway of mansion of Sir Robert e the general re- | Yet authentic history seems to | Hodsog, at Hollybrook, Kiltiride, Co, | Wicklow, where Robin lived, played, ind sang verses, is his harp, while, attached to a small building nearby, is a brass plate bearing the tion: © 'Here Robin sat, fed the bowl, Degenerate d ! ancient lin and sang, and quaf- how fallen the low roll, fountains gush, where flowed genial wine. + And Robin, arches, according to the latest res was a successful wine mer. hant in Dublin, with, however, :ottish an ral connections fence the confusion, He it was who 1ilt Hollybrook, where he eénter- ined lavi shly, the original song of Robin Adair," whicn gods back to ie year 1730, being written to com 1omorate .a visit he paid to som yorting friends at Puckstown; ne: rtane, Co, Dublin, commencing: "You're welcome to Puckstow! obin Adair." Robin, in spite: of his. conviv 1bits, Tved to a-greenold age Itimately died in Dublin in 171 1 addition to his harp, two of ine glasses, which held a quart "ine each, are still preserved ,--' ts. Rozier Wickard, St. Louis, recently discharged as a captain in the army ir service and now employed as an utomobile salesman, was arrestedon \ warrant, charging him with threat- aning the life of President Wilson. inserip- science bids ascending waters | once | Vhat Cash You Need When Travelling --and more particularly, when large sums are required--is best carried in the form of a Letter of Credit, issued by The Merchants Bank. This old estdblished form of international banking, is preferred y Experian red travellers because of its absolute securit Letters of Credit are cashed onl by banks or d after the identity of the banking eorpo holders is faction of the bank and guards against THE MERCHANTS BANK Head Office: Montreal. OF CANADA Established 1864, Kingston Branch, - - - H. A. TOFIELD, Manager, Verona Branch, - - - J. W. McCLYMONT, Manager, Safety Deposit Boxes to Rent at Kingston Branch, EO RELIABILITY. On schedule to the minute, on the job #ll the time and at a low cost of operation, res salety VER HEAR OF A REQ stopping save on the initiative of the driv- er? The Reo is as reliable as the sun in its orbit. VER SIZE BEARINGS. Which means being capable on occasion, of carrying twice, yes, three times "its rated load. without danger of -- a breakdown. ~All classes of high yield Investments -- --Corporation, Goveinment and Municipal. Private wires-- New York. Chicago, . Montreal, Toronto. STOCKS----GRAIN-----COTTON Boyd's Garage, 129 Brock Street Phone 201 BONGARD, RYERSON & CO. Bagot St Phone 172% H. J Rongard, Manag Have You A | wenty Pay Life Policy?" A Policy on your life may do much that you intend to do--if you live. It may pay off the mortgage, supply food and clothing for your family, keep the children at school and prevent a forced sale of your other property. A true story of a Canada Life Policy | issued over forty years ago. | It may be all that is left of your life work --to keep you in comfort in your old age. But--your Policy must be large enough. The Twenty Payment Life At age 30 he secured his $5. 000 Twetily Our new up-to-date policy provides-- Pay Life Policy. Fi the. 1. -That premiums will cease in 20 years, 2. That dividends will be paid during the 20 years, and afterwards. 3. That if you should be totally and permanently dis- abled before age 60, all prémiums- will be samcelled, and a monthly income paid to you. : 4, That such monthly payments will not be deducted from the policy at your death. 5. That after 3 years you may take a Cash Value, or receive a paid-for policy or pledge the policy as security for a loan. 6. That the policy cannot lapse while a cash value exists; that the policy is indisputable after one year; that you may reside or travel inany part of the world or engage in any occupation without affecting your surance. At age 35 he received his first Dividend, which was added to the Plier. (There are many other valuable privileges.) An Immediate Estate The great advantage over any other farm. of invest- ment is that a small percentage paid yearly creates immediately an estate of $5 000, $10,000 or more. Thesg active, progressive years of life in which you are earning the most money are the years in whch premiums can be more easily met. At ae 30 he received notice that his Policy, with 20 years Dividends, was fully paid for. Twenty years is a convenient period and premiums spread over that length of time are moderate and easy to handle. Do not delay this important matter. particulars today. Canada Life J. O. HUTTON , Ask for At age 70 he withdrew the Cash Value for his own He received a Life for $61 in retary for his anv. many years his ad Jen protecied by insurance of $5,000