TUESDAY, MARCH 16, 1920, NEURALGIA It Jou know the Templeton's 7 Rheumatic Capsules ER pane mend Ad a av For 31704 & pos "ell them OAK WANTED From 1 to 4 inches thick. Also other and Sleigh MNAMEE & SLACK. | I ing for industrial'concesns to ring its {city Registrar .. 4 54 QUEEN STRERT PHONE 1217W. OVER-ACIDITY momach has upset many a night's your stomach is acid- disturbed, dissolve two or three Ki-MoIDS on the tongue before retiring and goodness of Kimoide guaranteed by SCOTT & BOWNE MAKERS OF SCOTT'S EMULSION If you are troubled with pains or aches; feel tired; have headache, age of urine, you will find relief in GOLD MEDAL for kidney, remedy National' Remedy of Holland since 1696. All druggists, 50c. a box. Guaranteed. the on Mother' hs and olds Go Quickly tie ctnnot affond to be sich duties. At the first sympe \ for quick recovery the fis 700 wiilD aa 1 | tatives of industrial concerns went ' = i THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG = x . ! {formity with the plan prepared by FREE SE AND EXEMPTION 5 assessment commissioner, and ithat a by-law be passed confirming : -------- |the same and adjusting the different FOR LARGE , INDUSTRIES TO polling sub-divisions. LOCATE IN KINGSTON. { That the following accounts be | paid: ' City Council Adopts This Policy-- | G47 Products. Limited. . Awards Contracts for Road Mater 'GNW. Tel. Co... fal--Decides on Ward Changes. {Lemmon & Sons .... The City Counefl last night adopt- | John Lemmon ed a recommendation of the indus I> MeAuley 1mae ves tries 'committee that the policy of | Queen's University .. offering a free site and exemption | Sawyer-Massey Co. .. from taxation for a period of years | Standard Printing Co. to worthy concerns looking for in- American LaFrance Fire En- 3 1 Eine Ca... wv uy ns dustrial locations be sanctioned. |g 'Anglin & Co, .. .. .... 5.89 Ald, Steacy, chairman of the com- | Bell Telephoné Co. .. .... 4.05 mittee, explained that in order to yu Qockbamm = . geese 152.38 get industries that would employ Te an Laundry ... 5.82 over a hundred men, Kingston had | Kingston Transfer Co. .... 1.66 to do something out of the usual in |Laturney Carriage Works.. - 30.80 order to make up for the present un- D.& Jalan Haan 34y favorable power conditions that Jilly DE er & Sons .. 156.00 exist in eastern Ontario. Represen- J. H. Waller .. .» 35.38 HW. Watts ,... .. .. .. 47.40 through the country and considered | property pay lists ... .... 101.24 carefully what each eity or town had 8. Anglin & Co. .. ... ... ; to offer, and accepted the most fay- Utilittes Commission ... .. orable offer. Kingston had to com- British Whig Pub. Co. .... pete with other places, and if James McFadden ,., .. .. factories were to be secured it could |gtandard Printing & Pub. Co, not continue in the old way of wait- 'Steel Equipment Co. ...'.. .« $388.62 7.00 doorbell, iN. W. Tél. Co. .. Ald. T. Angrove said he belied SiN McAuley .. ... .. that it Kingston was to Brow to any | Montreal Financial Times .. extent it must be through factories, | John Vancoughnet on .e for after all the working classes | canadian Northern Ry. ... 2.95 were the backbone of any com-|j p. Re 4.85 munity, Hanson, Crozier & Edgar... 5.50 A County of Frontenac......4,825.24 Discussion oti Tenders. There was a good deal of discyus- sion upon the Board of Works re- Communications Read. port recommending the award of These communications were re- contracts for sand, asphalt, cement; ferred to committees : road oil and stone. All the board's | Board of Education submitting es- recommendations were passed except | yymates for 1920. that' relating to the Kingston Sand City of London suggesting amend- Company, whose request that - the ment to the Municipal Act to hold penalty clause in the specification be municipal elections on the first Mon- waived wag refused. This company day in December. was the only tenderer and its figure Cities of Hamilton and Lindsay re- was $2 a cubic yard, with no penalty arding fines, fees, etc., going to the clause. The council by a vote of vernment/ rerun 11 to 9 decided that the clause must 8. G. Turpin asking to have remain. Cherry street opened to Thomas Als. Graham and Couper wanted street and Cowdy and Patrick streets the Board of Works recommenda~ opened from Stephen to Thomas tion to award the tender for road street oil to the Dominion Tar and Chemi- W. Clifford and 8. G. Moyle ask- cal Company Limited referred back, ing for a drain on Macdonell street. but the council voted 16 to 4 in favor Public Utilities Commission notify- of the award at 11% cents a gallon. ing council that in future any hy- City Engineer McClelland reported drants installed will be at the éx- that the company's product fulfilled pense of the ¢ity. the specifications. On motion of Als. Couper and With regard to the stone tenders, Smith the council endorsed the peti- Ald. 'Angrove said that Roddy and tions of the Hamilton and Lindsay Monk's tender was found to be the councils to the Ontario Legislature, lowest all round as only six per cent. asking that all fines imposed in po- of the stone used last year was of Mee court go to the municipality. the amall variety. Ald. Smith fav- On motion of Ald. T. \(Angrove, ored giving the contract to Roddy council decided to ask the Provin-4 and 'Monk because they had lost 'cial Board of Health to send an en- money in supplying the city' with gineer to Kingston to consult with stone in their last contract, owing the city engineer as to securingdrain- to war conditions, sand also because age for ty houses which Ald. Co- they had a plant in operation where- hen' pro s erecting on Montreal 4s the other tenderers. had no plant street. The sewage would have to as yet. The contract was awarded to empty into'the river and the permis- Roddy and Monk as recommended. sion of the provincial board. is re- There was some discussion about quired. > warding a contract for 800 bushels By-laws "were passed for the pur-. [ oats at $1.10 a bushel to Charles chase of asphalt cement and road oil, 'onoghue, some of the aldermen be- and for the widening of Toronto ag in Javoy of buying only half that street, > 'mount and depending upon a drop In attendance were Mayor Nickle In price with the coming of the new and Alds. T. B, Angrove, J. B, An- erop next fall, but Ald. Chown stated grove, Chown, Clédw, Oohen, Couper, that there was little hope of oats Craig, Grabam, Kent, O'Connor, being cheaper. The. committee had Patterson, Pense, Phillips, Robert- G. N.W. Tel. Co... «ava 1.28] ABUT THE SEED DRILL What Is Considered fo be the Most Efiicient Type, The Feeding Device Is the Heart of the Drill--Seed Should Be Drop. ped Directly Under the Axle of the Disc--Give the Bearings Care. ful Inspection. (Contributed by Ontario Department of Agriculture, Toronto.) § the drill sows, so shall the farmer reap, is-no fallacy. It is as true in its content as the 'maxim "As a man sows 80 shall he reap." Given the right kind of a grajn drill, the seed is all planted at a uniform depth, evenly covered; the earth compacted. just enough to retain the moisture around it. These conditigns mean that the young plants will all come up at the same time, that the roots will be well protected, and that the grain will ripen upiformly, As the grain is planted, so will it grow and ripen. { If some of the seed is planted too | shallow, and some too deep, the seed | that comes up first, ripens first. Thus | it is that some of the grain is ready | to harvest while other patches are | still 'in the milk stage. { The feeding device is the heart ot the grain drill. Upon its reliability depends the accuracy of sowing the | seed. The drill scale is computed for | the average sized seeds, and there- fore cannot always be depended upon when the size of them varies from | the normal. If the grain is oversized | or undersized the" required amount | | ber acre may be sown by setting the feed lever at a point slightly greater or slightly less than shown on the indicator. There are, in common use, two different forms of feeding de- vices, The fluted-cylinder-force feed, and the double-run-force feed. The amount of seed sown by the flut- ed-cylindersforce feed may be regu- lated by a lever which changes the size of the outlet, but it does not al« ways handle all classes of seed withe out breaking them, as' can be dons | with the double-run-force feed, which | necessarily requires for driving it a disc wheel, or a cog wheel with from "nine to fifteen sets of cogs that make as many speeds or feeds, In the most efficient type of grain drills 'the seed should be deposited | -a8 nearly directly under the axle of | the disc ag possible, as this is the only place' where the seed can be dropped directly on to the bottom of the trench withdut hindrance. By this method the dise is not run deeper than the seed is deposited, thus the draft is reduced to a minimum. If the seed is deposited in the rear of the centre. of the axle, the rotation of the disc tends to carry earth and seed up with it, causing the seed to be unevenly deposited. In operation, a properly angled disc opens a trench about two inches wide. The falling seed strikes the concave side of the shigld and the convex side of the dise, and is thus scattered evenly over the entire width of the trench. Grain see)l drills single disc, the dbuble disc, the shoe, and the hoe drills. The open delivery single disc furrow opener LIGHTING THE OCEAN. } How = Certain Marine an , Huminate the Water. On still nights in tropical waters the Sea ofttimes is illuminated =¢ i* by! § i fires of its own. Every breaking! wave-crest looks like a flame. An oar| "disturbing the surface 'seems to dip; into molten metal. Swimming fishes | leave wakes of brilliant brightness. | The phenomenon is due to the pres! ence in the water of innumerable multitudes of minute animals, each of which holds up its tiny torch, se to speak, to contribute to the illumina- tion. - Marine creatures of many tribes-- crustaceans, jelly fishes, cephalopods, fishes of various species, etc.--catry lights, Some fishes have luminous disks on their' heads; other have luminous spots along their sides, and yet others are covered with a lum- lnous slime. The "angler" fish has a regular torch for a back fin, enabling it to see while looking out for victims which its light is expected to attract, Another finny species, found only at great depths, carries on the end of its nose: what looks like an electria light bulb, and which serves an equi- valent purpose. It {sin the dépths of the ocean that the really remarkable light-bearing fishes dwell. Theirs is a realm of inky darkness, into which no ray of daylight penetrates. If they are to have light, they must furnish it them- { selves; and, to catch every possible glimmer, most of them are provided with huge eyes. Most remarkable in this respect of all known deep sea fishes -is the "'argyropelicus," which carries a cou ple of dozen lanterns of large size-- one on each side, in front of the eye, and the others along the belly in a double Tow. These are veritable bull's-eye lamps, each of them with a double-convex lens of crystal-clear substances and a reflefTor behind. The light is emitted by a mass of cells in the rear part, while the pur- pose of a reflector is served by a lus trous sheet of white fibrous tissue. Each lantern has a muscular arrange- ment for turning it this way or that, ous system, by which its mechanism is manifestly cofftrolled, Thus in all likelihood the fish is able to turn its lights on or out at will, Another species has on each side of its head a double lamp, with reflec- tors, the two pointing different ways. That is to say, one of each pair of Janterns points, upward and ahead, while the other is directed downward, While throwing a beam forward and in the direction in which it is going, the fish is able to illuminkte the bot tom over which it passes in search of food: It is interesting to observe that Lhe bull's-eye lanterns here described are constructed on the same principle as the best and most modern ones of human manufacture. Nature thought out the problem and produced the in- vention long ages ago. The light of the marine torch bearers and lantern-carriers (silvery, golden, or sometimes ' greenish) is cold light -- illumination without heat. It represents the solution of a WHY IS IT that chronic ekin diseases which and fx.connected by a nerve (entering | at the back) ol central nerve | WT RE ol Truviem wailed science nas tried 1 vain to puzzle out, In other wor. t is light without 'w, ste, the enery mployed in making it being whoii xpended in illumination. It used t# be thought that thi ight was due to the presence o! 'hosphorus--whence the term "'phos 1otion was exploded. The best theory t present Is that it is attributable to ome sort of chemic substance se- 'eted by the animal, which, when cygen comes into contact with it, ves out light. rgyropelicus" e firefly's flashlight apparatus, The death occurred on March Sth Michael Grant, a highly respected North irant was forty-six years of age. ~ Never dispute with a man more 1an seventy years of age, or with a oman of any age. It's difficult to keep your circle of riends on the square. DON'T LET YOUR COLD Home Rule bill Long ago that absurd ing reached the In the case of the we have recognis- measure, Crosby. Mr. trouble, DEVELOP INTO LA GRIPPE OR INFLUENZA DISRUPTIVE MEASURE. . The Guardian Despondent Regard. ing Home Rule Bill, London, March 16.--The Manches- ter Guardian is very @espondent re-. | garding the probable' effect of the It sccepts dhe fact of Asquith having made a motion for its rejection as proof of his hav- conclusion that the bill is only calculated to make bad worse, na it not only agrees with him, but declares it opens up & pros- pect of conflict by the side of which the present sporadic disorders will le "photogenic cells" like those of | soem trivial. The fundamental aff- ficulty in Ireland is due to religious and political divisions.and the bill is not a uniting; but a disruptive The paper declares that the Sinn Feiners wish nothing bet- ter than that the bill should pass. Fortunes await the inventor of a lifeboat that will float on a sea of Don't give it a chatice to lay yon in a. bed for several weeks with a bad attack of Grippe or make you fight for your life to escape the clutches of Pneumonia. "A simple little cold" is a very dan- gerous malady to belittle. Stop the cold as soon as it appears. Drive it out of your system with DOMINION C. B.Q. These Tablets of Cascara, Bromide and Quinine break up a cold in a few hours --clear the head --relieve the Headache and Neuralgia. gi are specific for colds and may be relied upon to give quick relief, Have you a C. B. Q. Red Box in your house? 'If not, get one today at your druggist's so that if yon do feel a cold coming on, you can get rid of it with a few doses of DOMINION C.B.Q. in the red box. National Drug and Chemical Co. of Canada, Limited. 18r The Tablets in The Red Box I-99 RELIEVE : Colds, Coughs Grippo. Headache Neuralgia 2 BOUGHT--SOLD--OR EXCRANGED Owing to the favorable exchange it is a good time to rell your Anglo-French, United Kingdom or any bond, payable' n New York funds. PE deposits the seed between the shield and the convex side of the disc. The space is open from the emd of the hoot between the disc and shield to the bottom or lower end of the shield. The shield immediate use of '| been advised to bay.~ The fire coms| gon, Sargent, Smith, Steacy and : mittee was also given permission to Twigg. prevents the falling seed from becom- purchase a new team of horses at a . cost not to exceed $500, and to sell | cams ~ i Me an old team. . 3 Me Made Her Feel Like ing mized with the looss earth and y Yen ar fd / " surface trash and insures its pas- GRAY ho) SY RUP | A Different Person sage to the bottom of the trench made of -- by the disc. It will also do" excellent RED SPRUCE G UM work in highly cultivated soil that is have defiled all other treatments yield to Zam*Buk ? , It is because Zam-Buk is germi- cldal, and also has such power of penetration that it reaches disease in the underlying tissues and cures from the "root" up. That is the only way a permanent cure can be effected, Telephone 703 J. 0. HUTTON 2 2, IL C. Buckley 6f 81 E. Broad- 67 Clarence Street, Kingston ~ nothing like Zam-Buk. For fifteen : TI IEE ------------------ years I had eczema, and I tried an endless number of * eczema Sura but nothing hiv capable of Bg me permanently until I used Zam'Buk. Ten months' usg.of Zam- Buk has effected a complete eure." For ulcers, abscesses, boils, ring. worm, blood-polsoning, piles, burns scalds and cuts, Zam-Buk is equally good. All dealers or Zam-Buk Co, Toronto. 50c. box, 8 for $1.25. he" TELEPHONE 703 $2,000 to Fair Grounds, The cound¢il adopted the recom- uendation of the property commited . ee to expend $2,000 on the fair WHY MRS. MILES WOOD rounds this year, provided the fair : w Reo \ssociation expends a similar | MENDS DODD'S KIDNEY P amount. This arrangement was | Tem------- ; made at the request of the associa-| She had kidnty traullles and Her feet to a hoe turrow opener, which comes tion which wishes to 'secure proper SW oS look for im Dodd's | GOWN at the rear edge of the disc and accomodation for live stock exihibits, | the relief she Pills deposits the seed about two inches Another property or nmittde Kidney " back of the dise. It Son not plant clause that carried was upst- : 15th. --(8pe- € seed at as even a depth as e ing the finance committee to refuse a yen; Out. Maren Pills {8pe- the open delivery single disc of the all applications for rebate for rental me feel like a new person." That is| double disc, but deposits it at least eptiny py and Ontario halls, ex: | hg statement of Mrs. Miles Wood, | Si6bt inches in rear of th cepting where the halls are used for a well known and highly respected charitable purposes %r for civic wel- resident of this place. ' The reco dation ; of the fin. "I was troubled with my kidneys Mrs. Wood continues, "and my feet antes parities that the ward bob] ;yqijed, 1 tried Dodd's Kidney Pils free from trash. The closed delivery single dise fur- row opener has a closed boot, similar JUTE BAGS WANTED We will pay highest prices for all kinds of Jute Bags. Get in touch with us. ay 'A. SPEIZMAN .. There are many styles of double each with the result that the swelling is tein By ura are squal was nearly all gone and I feel better in assessm avery. way. He population 31 Seon : ont of the "To any person who is bothered Population Assess: % with kidney trouble or with their 2,732 $2,268 feet and legs swelling I would say 2.890 1,923.0 § | 'use Dodd's Kidney Pills.' : 2.459.760 | The women of Canada have come 1.396.635 to look on Dodd's Kidney Pills as a "819.055: standard remedy for their kidney : 4,034 1,386,620 | lis, They ast id of the id neys. ey are purely a mply Victoria ....... 2,934 1,557,415 Koney remedy. By apy 2 is neys in good dondition to strain all Ald. I. Aligrove. remarked thet | the impurities, all the seeds. of ais- Cetaraqui ward did not mind having | 889, out of the blood they carry good some of its present electorate trans. (health to every part of the body. Ask St. Lawrence .. 3,437 Cai 3,070 . 4,164 Dodd's discs, but the one that plants the Seed under or slightly back of the disc axle, or hub, is the ome to use, for that point is the of the furrow. The. fu opener that shots the grain fi of centre is to be avoided, for the rea- son that the seed reaches the ground before the furrow is fully formed, and it = therujota, ized with the soil a8 the seed trench being made, causing what is termed "wavy" sow- ing. The double disc type of opener tends to spread out the seed more than other kinds, so that each seed has a somewhat greater area from which' to draw moisture, The hoe furrow opener or WHENEVER v PUBLISHER has a complete and ef- ficient system of records and knows positively ~the facts regarding the circulation of his paper-- 3 d. "We'll | Your neighbors it Kidney letreg to &1 ard. oe Pills do not help all kidney ills. said, "for the people down there are | w= e very prolific." ' Public Library Bylaw. NOS 0GGED The finance committee gave some} RE COLD on on intermation with pegard oh the public Ubrary by-law which is ---- upon by the people next week. - Cream in Nostrils To was explained that every elector who Up Air Passages. , votes for mayor had the right to a ---- vote on this by.aw, wiheh is not ! What relief! Your a money by-law, t open right up, the air pas- "Perhaps. it may not be called a | sages of your head are clear and you money by-law now," remarked Ald. | can breathe . No more hawk- Armstrong, "but we may find ath ing, snuffiing, mucous discharge, | h * y Porcupine s Is a money bylaw before we no struggling tor e, dryness--: ; Shrough with it." : E hreath at night your cold or Riches shovel opener does not penetrate the ground ieadily and clogs easier than any of the other types. p And when every publisher is willing to give these facts to | advertisers without dissimulation--- It will be because every publisher is a member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. . But all publishers have not an efficient system of records - and all are not guileless. 1 Tg protect themselves against unfair competition and to * inform advertisers in regard to their business methods "above board" publishers join the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Atieors know that no unfair publi- g _ cation can qualify for membership. Every straightforward paper may belong to the A.B.C. Most of them do belong. ; 'The British Whig is one of them, znd the only one in "pn f i g i i | Write for your. copy to-day Hower L. Gib & On, 5 553 il BH i Mp, TEE i Vo : 7 : st al Ef