ea v 12 ( Majestic Heaters ¥ Will make your home com fortable this BARGAIN PRICES ON ELECT RIC IRONS, a a a RRs rn. 3 THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. ---" " CONFINED TO BED FOR TWO MONTHS {Was 80 Run Down After the | "Flu" She Couldn't Do Her Housework--Grateful to Tanlac. v i me of year. OASTERS, ETC. MASTER OF ART OF WOOING | Missourian Gives Out Some Pointers That May er May Not Be of Value te Others. REFUSES TO BE COMFORTED Given Remedy for Potate Bug Pest, Pessimist Digs Up Another Tale of Woe. A Kansas Oity farmer has proposed -- 8 scheme for doing away with potate | Te experts im all lines, but bugs so simple that it seems ridicu- |*Rall net a man whe can persuade HALLIDAY ELECTRIC CQ. | =~ %=="" tions offered by a Kansas City farmer. y Cor. King and Princess Phone 94 {ada have testified to having used Tanlac with such. splendid results | following influenza, grippe, opera- Kansas farmers should command fu- stant respect, but we would not be In- | to the Missouriam who 1s locked up in the Tombs as a confessed bigamist, the Way to a woman's heart is through her se SEIS lows. Perhaps not much dependence is | ®!&ht women to marry him rank as an | to be placed In agricultural sugges. | Authority on matrimony? Accerding | Evening Footwear Fashion's 'Intest die- tates in Ladies' Evening Foetwear. Slippers full of style Many mew and exclu- sive things to 'interest young wemen. clined to have faith in a Kansas Olty | higher emotions. "I appealed to the Young women can find Evening tions, typhoid and pneumonia, and = (other troubles that result in a run- down condition, that it has become | universally recognized as the most powerful reconstructive tonic of the | present day. | Another very striking statement |in connection with this fact was given recently by Lyman Williams, well-known farmer, living on R.F. { D, No. 1, Vinemont, Ontario. "Last February," said Mr. Wil- { liams, "my wife was taken down | with the 'flu' and was confined to her bed for two months. It left her in such a badly run-down condition that she wasn't able to do any of her housework whatever and noth- ing seemed to restore her strength. | Her appetite was very poor, and her SALE. 174 Barrie Street Brick; Hot Water. 377 Alfred Street . . 413 Johnson Street . 31 Alfred Street .. *S Princess Street ... 20 Wellington Street .. 4658 Albert Street S44 Collingwood Street .. King Street .............. Also three houses under a bungalow on Mack Street. your tnate. Insurance of all kinds. changed. Apply toi J.O.HUTTON . i: Hot Water. . New Brick; Hot Water, - Stone; Hot Alr. "rame;: large barns. ame; no furnace, .arge store and dwelling. struction on Edgehill street, and Buy mow and have finished to suit Vietory Bonds bought, sold and ex- . 87 CLARENCE STREET Phone 708. ~~~ | stomach was in such a bad fix that she could only eat the lightest kind jof food. She had awful headaches | lasting for a day or two at a time | |and was simply in perfect misery. | | "She saw Tanlac so highly recom- | | mended by others that my wife de- | cided it would be a good idea to try | |it, so we got her a bottle and she! to improve from the very Her appetite picked right up, | See Our Assortment of of any kind. She has regained all her lost weight and can do her housework with perfect ease. My wife is so grateful for what Tanlac has done for her that she is always telling the neighbors about it, and I'm no less thankful than she is for her recovery." Tanlac is sold in Kingston by A. P. Chown, in Mountain Grove by James McDonald, and by the lead- ing druggists in every town.-- Advt. en Before Purchasing Dominion, Dunlop, Hercules, K. & S., Firestones, Lee Puncture Proof i. WOOD Sawed in Stove Le BOOTH & CO., Foot West Street Phone 133 REPAIRS! REPAIRS ! Welding is not a side-line with us. We guarantee our workmanship. All broken parts made as Strong as new Water Jackets and Crank Cases weld- ed without heating. KINGSTON WELDING SHOP 43 FRINCESS STREET. | KINGSTONAUTO SALES CO. A talk on INDIVIDUALITY: All Your Own SAY that something is "All Your Own" implies much more than mere possession, it means that it is an ex- pression of yourself, your personality, your individuality. Individuality--Exclusiveness--in Fur Models is one of our chief accomplishments. Our huge stocks of raw furs, our experienced designers, our modern fur factories, enable us not only to create hundreds of beautiful . fur models, every one an exclusive design of its own, but also to make it possible for us to design and manufacture for you some- thing which expresses your own personality. Our designers are at your service. Write to-day to your nearest store for your copy of our new Style Book of Purs We will next talk on Service tan farmer, However, this hint may be taken for what it is worth. The | Kansas City idea Is that all that Is Decessary te keep the potato bugs away is to plant one bean in the hill with the seed potato. It seems that the bugs hate beans. . Perhaps they do. Anyway, in our OWR experience we can testify that we have never seen potato bugs feed- ing on bean vimes. It would be a logi- cal assumption that they will not ven ture inte the presence of beans. Se far as we have observed there has mot beem a potate bug in eur garden this season. Perhaps, that is because we 8d net plant any potatoes. But gar- bugs besides potate bugs. That is ene of 'the harassing experiences of about every amateur gardener. And If it is net buge it is something else. Just as you get your gardea growing well, aleng come a couple of calves or a herd of cows and eat off the tops of everything. The bovine tribe seems to | began ' start. and after taking four bottles she i says she never has an ache or pain {have a peculiar fondness for young corn. Only a person with bitter expe- | rience cam fully appreciate the sig | nificance of that old nursery appeal te Little Bey Blue to blow his horn em account of the cow's being in the corn, Between the pests that bite the roots | or mastieate the leaves and these that | oat.or trample the plants it is mighty | bard to raise growing things. --F. HL. Young ia Providence Journal. SEE BEGINNING OF NEW ERA -------- | People of Helgoland Will Welcome | Return of Visitors te the Unfor. | tunate Little Island. The change which dug a huge fort | ress a hundred feet deep in the cliffs, | covered them with gua emplacements | and girdled them with a labyrinth of | walls fifty feet thick was a mere than doubtful blessing, and Helgoland must have found her transformation Imte the most netorieus and sinister speck | of land in the world a severe strain en her seal for the fatherland. When the war aetually came her fGshermen were exiles; for they were one and all shipped off te the main- land and the island was givea over te the gulls and the guamer. It is now threwn open again, and a beginning has been made with the dismantling of its mighty forts. The inhabitants will cheerfully see the last eof the | guns, and apparently they would like, tee, to be quit of German taxatien; | but they hope quite reasemably, that the Island's final disappearance may se at least delayed by leaving the treat seawalls the Germans built. This might well be done, for Helge- and so leng as it lasts will be a lede- star fer the curious, and there would de a certain rough justice im the fact | f its people prefiting in the future | 3y the world's interest In its simister | past that has cost them so dear. Religions of Presidents. The religions of the presidents of 'he United States: Washington, Npis- topalian; J. Adams, Unitarian; Jeffor- ton, Liberal; Madison, Epis lian; Monroe, Episcopalian; J. Q. dams, Unitarian; Jackson, Presbyterian; Yan Buren, Reformed Dutch; William | Henry Harrison, Episcopalian; Tyler, | Gpiseopalian ; Polk, Presbyterian ; Tay- lor; Episcopalian ; Filmore, Unitarian; Pierce, Episcopalian; Buchanan, Pres byterian ; Lincoln, Presbyterian; John son, Methodist; Grant, Methodist ; Hayes, Methodist; Garfield, Disciples; Arthur, Hpiscopalian; Cleveland, Pres-' byterian; Beajamia Harrisen, Preshy- terian; McKinley, Methodist; Reese volt, Reformed Dutch ; Taft, Unitarian ; Wilson, Presbyterian, Coolios Pase Through Canada. Whea the big blue funnel liner Tyne dateus clears from Seattle she will! proceed te Vancouver, B. 0, where, in' addition to further carge awaiting her The Chinese are among several thew sands of ceelies utilised as laberers back of the lines during mearly the farmer much niere than ix a Manhat- | dens develo urage all kinds of | iP OF encourage 3 n | quality, or does It vary and require | [ to | Worl | and they set dowm several says the Londen Daily Express. The | Dever te their lower natures." best in wemen always" he says, "and Women alse, this artist In love dis- | j covered, "like to be swept off their | |teet by those whe woe them; they | | have me patience" "with the dawdler. | | Nor did he find that it was essential | for the weoer to be handseme or more | | than meatly dressed. But these, of | course, are oid precepts in the manual | of courtship. {been great rakes, and ardor is tradi- Ugly mea have often | | tionally effective in sweeping the re- | | lnetant fair "off their feet." His main | | contribution te the art of love, and It | | 18 eme worthy of Ovid, is that of the | potemcy of an appes! te the higher ma- | ture of women. But is "the best" in women a fixed individual? | to be dlagnesed in the | That is ne deubt a difficulty that will | | confront ordinary wooers. Is the high- er feminine nature compatible with matinee tickets and tea dances, or does it incilne seriously eamly to more ele- for less successful wuitors to whem the mystery remains of other mea's easy | mastery of am art of which they fall learn the rudiments. --New York | CAUSES OF BROKEN ROMANCE London Newspaper Points Out Twe | Reasen's Why Leve's Young Dream \ Is Rudely Shattered. Engagement breaking is in seasenm. "The marriage arranged between Captain X and Miss Y will net mow take piace." That cold print end te romance can be read any day mew im. | the society columns ef the papers. It is becoming a habit. Experts whe study these matters declare that the percentage of broken engagements has never been se high, reaseas, main ome is: The great khad iMusion. (a) The | woman: "You would net believe how | different he looked in his civilian swit, | I simply couldn't de it." (b) | my dear. The man: "She was awfully charm- ng as a driver in the Women's legion, | | out when I saw her ia one of the new evening gewns--well, it just ceulda't happen." The house famine is givea as an- other cause. Two young people who believe themselves te be twin seuls go out and try to find a future heme. It is physically Impossible for amy persen"s temper to stand the strain of present-day heuse-hunting. They | quarrel, and there is anether brokea | romance. Cleaning Rusted Tools. Elbow grease is usually the best thiag to use when cleaning rust from steel, but the fellowing manner has alse been suggested: Fastea the steel tightly te a piece of zinc by means of wire and place it in a jar containing water to which sulphuric aeid has been added. Leave it there uatil the rust has disappeared. If the article is very rusty add a Httle mere acid from time te time. The process by whieh the rust is rembdved is electrical. The steel being In contact with the zinc short-circuited "~ttery cells are coffee ' a pack i" Borrowing may be a disease, but | lending is insanity. v rr Ee vated Interests? The recipe apparent- | ly leaves the problem about as it was | from day to day, never tried PostuM CEREAL The fact that tens of thousands of former coffee drinkers now use Postum in its stead is a tion of what youll do some day if coffee discontent is sufficient] aroused in you. When the mood strikes you-- perhaps today--why not order ° age of PosTUM CEREAL? Ten days with Postum instead of coffee shows many a man "Theresa Reason for PosTuM \ here Dressy Feotwear of genuine distinction that will fll their heart's desire. $6.00 up to $12.00, erland & Bro. THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES Uptown Shoppers You save time and money buying here. I have just re- ceived a large shipment of Fall Goods, Ladies' Suits, Coats and Dresses, most exquisite apparel, very latest styles. Prices to suit the most economical. I am forced to Ladies' Boots from $1.50 up, dren's Boots at factory prices; sacrifice a large quantity of new boots, latest styles, shil- aslo a large stock of Chil- dren's, Men's and Women's R ubbers just in. I must make room for my complete fall stock. JOS. B. ABRAMSON : 257 PRINCESS STREET Phone formed, and the rust is reduced to iron again' by electro-chemieni action. The steel will become' darkened by the process, but will regain Ms brightaess if rubbed with sweet oil or a mixture of petrolatum aad kerosene. . Safer. At an Indiana high sehoel the other day the athletic seciety was putting season, tickets for ball games on sale. One of the most popular boys in the senior class came up te the desk at which the tickets were being seld bought two, had his name inserted in the blank on ome of the tickets and then reached for the tickets. "But you haven't told us whese name to write on the other ticket' protested the ticket seller, "and the rules of the asseciation require that all ticket purchasers have their names on their tickets." New, the senior had planned te pass the favor of his company aleng te several girls. "Well," he drawled, "if you have te write something in that blank, just write anonymous." New:and Stronger Bricks. Mere substantial walls may be econ structed with a new type of brick, patented not 30 lomg age by a retired ceatractor of the seuthwest, and known as seif-bending and interlocking, the inventor states. On ome side of each brick are twe circular, bevel-edged besses, while on the reverse side, in the same relative positipns, are twe depressions, inte which ie bosses ft emactly. The briek is recommended for domes or arches, chimneys or hol- low walls. --From Pepular Mechanics Megasine, It is easier to earn money than it is not to spend it. mmm, Habit is a Great Thing and lots of folks worry al varying in fl and quality It ea they've Made hs good indica- ury of attire it became bad form for & man to shew his class by his clothes, and 50 he advertises his prosperity by dressing wp his wife. ; with A EE -- ne NJ)