PAGE -------- WORTH ITS WEIGHT IN COLD, HE SAYS e Braham Wouldn't Take Anything for the Good Tanlac Did Him. "1 wouldn't take all the gold you could pile up around me for the good Tanlac has 'done me," sald George Soe Bratams of "31 Grove --avenus, Toronto, recently. "When I returned from overseas I was pretty much of a wreck. I used to have fainting spells, and my nerves were in such a bad state that I used to jump at the least sound. My stomach was always out of order so that whatever I ate upset me. I never knew what it was to have a good night's sleep, and I always got up in the morning feeling tired and weary. I was steadily losing weight and finally got as weak as a rat. "One evening I said to my wife, '1 think I'll try a bottle of Tanlac.' 1} did, and the result was wonderful. It just semed to meet my needs from the start, and has relieved me of all my troubles. It gave me a good ap- petite so that I can now eat well and my food agrees with me. My nerves are so steady and I no longer have the fainting spells. I sleep fine and T'm stronger In every way. If there's one medicine that's worth it's weight in gold, its Tanlac, and I want to express my gratitude for what it has done for me." Tanlac is sold in Kingston by A. P. Chown and by the leading drug- gists in every town. --Advt. RUN DOWN, PA AND WEAK, NERVOUS AND TIRED ? "Vital" Tablets THE GREAT FRENCH TONIC WILL BUILD YOU. UP. How many people to-day are put- ting in an existence, far different from nature Intended. Disease of one sort or another is lurking in the system, sapping the very life itself One cannot enjoy life. The French have come to the rescue of all such persons. In VITAL Tablets are all the essentials to make you healthy and strong. You have no appetite, your food does not agree with you, your nerves are all on an edge, why? Because the very part of your body that needs to bé kept in a strong, healthy condition. is gradually get- ting weaker, rather than stronger You must build yourself up. You must fortify your body. Once your y is strong, it will throw off the d se. The question is, what should one take to do this? = The makers of VITAL Tablets will sell them under a guarantee. If they do not build you up, you can have your money back. Build yourself up, and away goes every disease. VITAL Tab- lots are a wonderful reconstructive remedy, known to science. Go to your druggist and procure a box of VITAL Tablets. See for yourself. Price fifty cents per box, at all drug stores. - Special For Saturda 50 Ibs. Salt Pork Choice Corned Beef Choice Dripping Choice Beef Roast 2Se te 30c. Ib. Choice Steak, Pork, Veal, Lamb. § All kinds of Smoked Meats, etc. QUICK'S YESTERN MEAT MARKET 112 CLERGY STREET Pho TWELVE _ fo Puddy's Yard We all call him Buddy, for he Buddy alway? spoke t¢ wr when we went to school. And he would teil us stories about the war. How we all wished we could do some- thing for him! . Bill did, with Bob's help. Then we all joined. One day, after school, Bill and Bob took ail the rubbish out of Buddy's yard: snd burned it in the alley. Then they raked it clean and washed the After that, we all got busy. Tom eae The Clan, of N iA 3 & IX. Building the Bridge TRANCE ROLT- WHEELER " Six o'clock in the i | pretty early, but in a ae Sy are long. When the C Director called the roll only two of the beys and two of the girls were missing, and every one agreed t 68 out of 70 was a good response, oa a work call. Before nine o'clock the four trucks with their loads of workers reached the points predetermined by Lars. They had expected some of the farmers to come out and help, but to their surprise and joy, the farmers-- always ready to respond when taken the right way--had turned out in mass. Instead of seventy or eighty, more than two hundred were already at work. The road was like the en- trance of an ant hill . y Not only the farmers, either! eleven o'clock, buggies began to THE KIDS AND THE COPPER CANNOT BUY SWEETIES FOR ONE CENT ANY MORE. | It Takes a Five Cent Bit to Give a Youngster a Taste of Candy Nowa- days. That old bug-bear, "High Cost of || Living," is taking away candy from i | the kiddies. The housewives com- plain about the high cost of sugar, Citizens in general kiok about the | | Canadian dolar in value | before the onslaught of the high cost of living, but now the children have good cause to complain. In the old days a copper went a long way in providing sweets for the SN children, but to-day all the coppers Look Out and prepare for your coal needs. A. Chadwick & Son New location: 3 Corner Ontario and West Sts. fs the time to get your lawn mower ready. Don't wait un- til the grass is ahead of YOU. All makes repaired sharpened promptly. I and Hi! || mothers will have to loosen their are good for is to help pay the war tax at the movies, and help boost the Sunday school collection. But, beg pardon, they can be used for the purchase of the very amall ice cream cones. Older folk may have taken notice {of the change of things, but if you | are not convinced just take note of | the size of the '"'all day suckers' the children are getting these days. They are very much smaller. Years ago the candy shops had certain candies three, four and five for a cent, but my, bow things have changed! Now the children are doing well if they get one for a cent. Ome cent's worth of candy will never satisfy a child nowadays. It takes a five cent piece | to even give a youngster a good taste of sweets. And the worst of it all is that the children do not understand why their before || money does not go as far as | the war. And gome of the shop keep- | ors have had a hard time trying to | explain the cause of it all. So, in the future, fathers and ll | purse strings and give the children J. M. PATRICK 140 SYDENHAM BT. Fhone 2056J. {a ifttle more money when they want il | to provide sweets, for the day of get- | jung a cent's worth of candy is passed. MOTHER! "California Syrup of Figs" Child's Best Laxative Accept "'California™ Syrup of Figs only--loqk for the mame California ysic for the little stomach, liver and bowels. Children love its fruity taste. Full directions on bottle. You must say "Cali- "ad po EAROEYN SHERWIN BAILEY © 4 nailed the broken boards in the fence. We clubbed together 'and bought a pot of paint to pant itg One afternoon Wwe spaded up the earth on both sides of the walk, and planted it, ome side for flowers, the ther-fur vegetables We=boys-are" looking after the vegetables, and the girls are tending the flowers. Of course, we worked om our own yards, but Buddy's was the prize one. Then the mill folks, who live in the same district where Buddy does, seeing how nice his yard looked, be- gan tending their own. They worked like anything and Mill Town section got so that it Jooked quite pretty. One day the Board of Health man zafled us to his office. We were afraid it was for vaccination. It wasn't, He just wanted to thank us for making My Town healthy as well as beautiful. Weren't we proud! 4 Your yard has ever so much to do with the health of your town. (Tomorrow: Sleuth A gg Bi a with huge bas just things to eat. So, when the ns blew for dinmer, it was more than a dinmer, it was a spread, a spree! Everyone deserved it; too, for on all the bridges, the heavy fogs had been Laid, and, on the road, a good deal of the grading had been done. Two good hours were allowed for dinner and then one turned to again with a will ever had such hard work seemed so much fun. It seemed impossible that such a lot could be done so quickly. But a couple of hundred men, well di- rected, can accomplish wonders. By six o'clock the planking was down on the bridges, the road had been roughly graded. It was even ready for travel h So much food had been brought for dinner, that there was enough for a jolly supper, and by dark the Campers were on the road home, tired, but happy. The County had a new road. (Tomorrow: More Profit Ehsed) \ THE NIPIGON POWER DEVELOP- MENT. By J. E. Middleton. iF i & § i ¥ i ' i FERRE, i 7 golf ied : Ii 7s i i 8 i Ei Ii ef8 ahi di I i 5 z £ 5g i 2 { i i & ® g li i H H £7] 2 ¥ 5 THE DAILY BRITI ] Fe! SH WHIG WEDNESDAY, JUNE 80. 1920. THE SCHOOL CHILDREN'S PAGE 3 The Sage and the Boor And the Memory-Man sod : Once a boor, seeing a Wise Man 'paSsing 'along the road, noted his queer appearance and threw stones Site i The Wise Man quickly turned round, and seeing that the Boor was stupid as well as rude, walked up to him and gave him a small piece of money. ef "That was very clever of you," he Baid, "to throw stones at me, but I am not rich. See that broad-shoul- dered Meienants who is passing by, over there? e is rich. Throw some stones at him and you will get more than I can give you" ' Boor at once did so and pelt- ed the merchant with stones. But the broad-shouldeyed merchant rushed across the road, caught the Boor and gave him a sound beating. When you cannot inflict justice yourself, it is wise to use the help of others.--R-W. -- Drown Your Migraine "Oh, Irene, you look so tired! Don't you think you had better stay home and not go to the thtatie to- night? "Ah, it is a fit of that old mi- graine again. But what can I do? And I don't feel like staying home, either! "I'll tell you: go to the bathroom fill the hollow of your hand with cool water, and sniff it up into the nose, several times. Gargle with cool water, too. Then, placing the inner side of your forearms under the faucet of the bath, let the cold water run strongly over them down- ward, for a couple of minutes. Do the same with your legs from the knees downward. Lie still, then, for ten minutes with a wet handker- chief-on your neck. You surely will feel very soon relieved and the whole operation won't take more than a quarter of an hour and will be wholesomer than aspirin or any other drug. As you see, the whole process is to divert the blood from ithe congested brain, which is the cause of the migraine." "Indeed! Well, I'm going righ away to drown this migraine" ro A ra Sen mca The Fool Paper. The angry citizen puffed into the fice of the city editor. 'See here, sir", lo you mean by publishing my resig- ation from my political office in his way?" "You gave the story out yourself idn't you?" asked the editor. "Of course I did." replied the an- ry citizen. "But your fool paper rinted it under the head of 'Public mprovements.' * he velled, "what | The Aged Snake And the Memory-Man sod: An aged Snake, finding that he had no longer the activity to catch frogs, went quietly to a pond where the Frog-Ki "What is your trouble?" asked an emissary from the Frog-King. sy | have always lived by eating Frogs," said the Snake, "but, last month, while chasing a frog, he leaped over the foot of a holy man sleeping on the ground. I struck at the frog but my teeth entered the toe of the Holy Man and he became ill. Before dying he cursed me and forbade me to eat any frogs save those that might be given me by the Frog King for alms. Tell the King, therefore that I will be his steed for the pay of two Frogs a week." The King, remembering how fast the Snake could travel, agreed. The cleverness of age makes for the lost activity of youth.--R.-W, Think of a number, multiply by 8, multiply the product by 3, divide the result by 6, add 20, subtract the number thought of, and divide by 4. You can always tell what the result is. (Ans) Five. Making the Most of It King: lived: RAL JI adit on hus head as a petitioner for favor, "Do you think; Ursula; that T | could wear this white frock one more summer? The material is still quite good, but I'm tired of it. What could I change?" "If 1 were you, Margaret, I wouldn't change it at all. Instead, wear with it a hat, a girdle and a sunshade all of the same color. It will look distinctive and summer- like. Get is easier to match the hat and girdle to the sunshade than the reverse. A plain mercerized cotton one is best. It will be cheap and can stand a summer shower, a contingency you must always reckon with. Cerise is a pretty color, easy to get and ef- fective with white. Then get two yards of pongee silk, for your hat and girdle, which you can make yourself. Thus, out of your old dress, you will have a complete sum- mer costume." ~--GEO™GETTE BEURET, | Dally Twelve-Syllable Rhyme The best friend In the end Is the one You befriend. --t Divide twelve in half so as to make seven. (Answer): Draw a line cross- 'wise through the middle of XIL Only an expert shopper can visit seventeen stores in one afternoon and escape without spending a cent. Protection and Profit When money is in a Savings Account in The Merchants Bank, it is absolutely safe from loss, THE Head Office: Montreal. OF CANADA, KINGSTON PARHAM, VERONA as far as All the time it is =80 that the bank it take care of your mene unneeded sums on them at home. theft and fire by opening MERCHANTS BANK ed you are concerned. here, it is earning interest pays you to let . Don't carry your person or hi Protoct thm again 1ade a savings account. TEER et Hl aati atsahaERR A ace TTT ! Investment Suggestions for July Funds . . Diversify Y our Purchases for the purpose of combining a liberal income return with desirable secur- An equal. amount invested in each of the following securities will yield an average of ........ -6.54% ity. PIRES ET PE TEI PL TH TY IL ea ii ALL Dominion of Canada, 515% Coupon Bonds, Due 1st November, 1934, To Yield ....compsoeinas Province N 5.92% of Ontario, 6% Coupon Bonds, Due 15th To Yield June, 1930, sess scscsncsnna 6% County of Carleton, Ont., 6% Coupon Bonds, Due 1st June, 1921-1940, To Yield Willards Chocolates Ltd., 8% Sinking Fund Cumu- lative Preferred Stock (Carrying 25% Bonus of Common Stock) ro Yield............... 8% Descriptive civculdr will be your sunshade first, as it~" | | = £ LUMBER We have well-assorted stocks in Pine, - HM wi i { 3 i i i i i i ! 4 ----ei-- er are Spruce and Hemlock. "Allan Lumber Co. Phone 1042. Victoria Street URIS ? i : i . » 0 IAEA {i} S soonest! LUX-washed stockings last the- Its so simple and easy to wash them in the quickly made, creamy LUX lather. Do it without twists ing or rubbing. Do it in a very with a warm iron and the daintiest, sheerest stockings look like new--for LUX issopure that it will harm nothing that pure water may touch. There is no substitute for LUX. Grocers and departmental stores sell it. Recipe booklet "The Care of Dainty Clothes' mailed on request. LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED, TORONTO LUX=A, | JUTE BAGS WANTED We will pay highest prices for all kinds of Jute Bags. Get ia t touch with us. A. SPEIZMAN 60 QUEEN ST. KINGSTON i ------ mar NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY THAT NEW HOME WHILE WEB i HAVE THESE DESIRABLE ONES FOR SALE 174 Barrie street--brick; hot Ww ater. 377 Alfred street--brick: hot water. 418 Johnson street--brick; hot water. 23 Mack street--brick; hot air. 26 Wellington street--stone; hot air. 131 Beverley street--Concrete block; hot air. 468 Albert street; frame; large barn. Also finest gummer home on Wolfe Island, semi-furnished and other fine homes which we do not advertise. Come in and see us. Best lots in the city; very reasonable. Apply to:-- WE OFFER SUBJECT PROVINCE OF ONTARIO 6% 10-YEAR-GOLD BONDS Dated June 15th, 1920. Due June 15th, 1930. Payable Toronto and Montreal PRINCIPAL and Half Yearly Interest (15th June & December) PRICE .100 and interest-- YIELD 69%. BONGARD, RYERSON & CO. "The Home of Good Investments Phone 1728. 237 Bagot St. You will find us at: CORNER BAGOT AND BROCK. Come and see us. CrawFoRD & WALSH