' WEDNESDAY, APRIL ©, vai. | Gives Tanlac Credit For Splendid Health EE ---- T. J. PARKER, 42406 Juneau Street, Seattle, Wash. "I used to think all the Tanlae testimonials were exaggerated, but I have feit thankful a thousand times I evér believed in it strong enough to give the mediciné a trial," sald T. J, Parker, well-known sales- man for Gately's Clothing Store, re- siding at 4246 Junéau sweet, Seattle, Wash, ' "Several years ago I commenced having periodic spells of sickness and a few months ago I had an at- tack that I thought would finish me. When I did finally get up, Iwas scarcely able to go. 1 hdd mo ap- petite and what little I forced my- self to eat caused so much gas on my stomach I could hardly get my breath, 'At night I was often so bloated J couldn't breathe while lying down and just had to sit up and struggle for air. At times I had cramps so ot 9 bad I could hardly endure it. "My liver was sluggish and some- times 1 got so dizzy I would nearly fall. I felt tired and miserable all the time, couldn't even sleep and for days at a time I wasn't able to go to work. \ "Well, g friend of mine finally got me to try Tanlac, and it certain- ly has done a good job for me. My appetite is fine now and although I am eating just anything I want and as much as I please, my stomach never gives me the least trouble. 1 have picked up in weight, my strength has come back to me, and I am now enjoying the best of health. "All the men at the store know Tanlac put me back on my feet and I am glad to give this statement for what it may be worth to others.' -- Advt, A ready Let us show low price. °S 210-214 W 'Higher. Value Lower Cost its new low price no one need be denied the greater comfort and rid- ing qualities of the Overland Sedan. Since you rest as you ride and save as you go, *¥s no wonder owners speak of their Overlands in the highest terms. . * "The little old car has always been to go up town, out any worries as to what might happen because nothing ever happened" --that is what one Canadian owner* writes. Another says, "As for springs I never give them a thought." ; Expressions like these indicate utmost satisfaction and confidence -- the things you mast desire in a motor car. ou the greater economy and valye of this handsome Sedan at its $2234--Name on request. $3239--~Name on request, Sepax $1795 fab Torense and including sees tox han Bros. PHONE 1410, * Willys 2Overland Limited, Toronto, Canada or up country with- GTON STREET. v If electricity were geitius, all mad- houses would be universities, | ; The cure of scurvy is credited to Captain Cook, the explorer. ~ | How Churchill's Enemies Interpret Recent Move To the Colonial Office HE following article appear- ed in the Londo when it was reported that Mr. Winston Churchill was onial Office, Malbrouek s'en va-t-en guerre' At least he used to, did our little Winston. He va-t-en-ed with Gen, Weyler, that flower of Spanish chiv- alry, when the poor Cubans from the clutches of the Spanish cigar-barons, and handed them over to the embraces of the Yankee cigar-barons. served with the Force d the Tirah Expeditionary titis of deluded tribesmen. Also he and "'bunked" from Boers In the Transvaal. devil cf a warrior and all. But Winston is, they say, no longer | the pot a-boifing with those decided- {ly "dud" whites, Kolchak and Yuden- {itch, Denikin and Wrangel, {they've let him down badly. They've | packed up their rubles in their new | kit-bag and "beat it," and Winston | A Sec- | | 1s 16ft without & decent war. {retary for War is no Better than an office boy when there is no war to- | ward. Hence it is that Winston has | vacated his rococo workshop in Whitehall, and, turning his back up- on the delightful equestriah statue of Field Marshal the Duke of Cams bridge (sans umbrella), is crossing | | the road to the Colonial Office. | | The Colonial Secretary's jxb was a | | back number until Joseph Chamber- | {1ain, the Pride of Camberwell and the | Belisarus of the Bull Ring, bumped | it into publicity. | But there came a generation which | |knéw not Joseph, and the proud | glories of .colonial preference faded away like an old soldier. Nowadays | the Secretary of States for the Col- onies is one of those imperial states- | men who have to be looked up in the {reference books. Nowadays, if an ac- | |quisitive man came to you and said, "I'l bet you an Oxford" |Oxford scholar-dollar-five of the Colonial Secretary," you would would probably stand him a bottle that he drank it. suspected of designs on the job? is a distinct slump in wars. The rattling of sabres i8 drowned by the rattling of teeth----the teeth of the good, kind financiers who are Tearful lest the British working man should follow the example of his debased brother, the Russian working man, who has repudiated all financial ob- ligations for wars entered into with- out his consent. But if Winston "takes over" the tolonies, he'll be able to ginger things up somewhat. He doesn't got the illicit moneys that his ignoble an- cestor the first Duke of Marlborough got out of his wars, but he contrives to get almost as much glory®as that titled scoundrel, and he's hoping for the best. True, the colonies have had a béllyful of fighting, and are not showing any antiety to engage in fresh wars manufactured in White- hall. But thé new scheme is to '"'en- fice 80 as to include the middle east. The middle east js not exactly a colony. Indeed, ,the few odd millions of "natives" (low fellows, like you and me) seem to have got their stunt--whieh was purely a war-time it pretty clear that they are no more afitious to be grabbed by Imperial Britain than by Imperial Germany. But they don't couht. There is 'trouble' in ihe near east, and, with a bit of luck, there should be more trouble. And trouble is dls- tinetly up our little Winston's sireet when Winston gets busy as Secretary of State for the Colonies, we may look forward to a nice little gehle- mossle in '"Mespot" and other branches of the Garden of Eden. So the young man ought to be real happy. As to the taxpayer, tis a different story. Mesopotamia is, even now, costing us But why trouble about the cost? We can save quite a lot by abolishing education, which Is, after all, a luxury. Moreover, it tetids to make the prospective tax- payer discontented. Ignorance means bliss--and blood, and boodle. ------------ The Unsporting Bishop. One seems to have heard of an archdeacon being mistaken for a "Sport," but that was a vague tale, while for the following anecdote we ot chapter and verse from the Rev. B. Money in his book entitled "Humors of a Parish Priest and Cther Quaintnesses: A certain most excellent colonial bishop once came to stay with me for our confirmation, says the author. He left me in the morning to take a confirr tion at Esher and returned to... 3» the afternoon. When [ m: if door he sald: "Now, I look like a spov. With 4 smile and a little he was very spruce--I said, "Well, no, my lord: but why do you ask?" 3 ube when I asked at the station for a ticket to Esher, the book-clerk are no races at Sandown to-day.' --f Snow Dries Garmenti. A ocdrious by Arctic travélers--snow, whén at & very low temperaturs, absorbs mois- ture and dries garments. Bad Business. Father Dufty is credited with this after-dinner story: "An old sexton asked me. 'Father, weren't the Apostles Jews? 1 said they were. Puazled, he demanded; 'Then how the deuce did the Jews let go a good thing like the Catholic Church and let the Eyetulians it? "--The Outlook. DOPODIUPOLGPIPO LILI r IoD | Herald | to leave the War Office for the Col- | the Americans rescued | Also he | Malakand Field | Force, doing valiant deeds in the very | teeth of the matchloéks and the Mar- | decapitated Dervishes in the Soudin, | Altogether Winston is the happy. He has done his best to keep | but | (Oxford- | | shillings | sterling) "you ean't tell me the name | give him the money straightway. If | you were by nature vindictive, you | of Australian wine instead--and see Why, then, is our little' Winston | Well, as we have pointed out, there | large" the scope of the Colonial Of- ! heads full of the "self-determination' | gospel anyhow---and they have made ! said to me, 'I suppose you know there | t Nas been noticed | THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. 13 268 PRINCESS STREET 1900 WASHING MACHINE DEMONSTRATION WATCH THIS MACHINE DO THE WORK Further information | THE HYDRO SHOP | SPECIAL DEMONSTRATOR igure 8 did it EE EY Lr ae 'MISS BARHAM PASSES; LIVED PAST CENTURY Was Noted Governess, Took Special Pleasure in Play- ing Piano. Port Hope, April 5.--Miss Lydia Barham, Port Hope's oldest citizen, passed away Sunday morning at '"Bunain," the residence of Mrs. Bar- low Cumberland. Miss Barham cele- Lrated her ome hundredth birthday on Oct. 13th last. She was born in London, Eng., and cane to Canada in 1843, and shortly after to this town. Except for several trips across the BEWARE OF BRONCHITIS Bronchitis is generally caused by neglecting a cold, or exposure to wet jand inclement weather. It begins with a tightness across the chest, dif- | iculty in breathing, and a wheesing | sound comes from the lungs. There | is a rafging of phlegm, especially the | first thing-in the morning. This is at | first white, but later becomes of a | greenish or yellowish color and is occasionally streaked with blood. Qn the first sign of bronchitis you i should check it immediately by us- ing Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup, thereby prevent it becoming chronie, and perhaps developing into some more serious lung trouble. writes:--"In December, 1919, I was very sick with bronchitis, and had to stay in the house all winter" One day 1 saw Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. advertised, so I got a small bottle which helped me very much; I then got a 60c¢. size, and it complete- ly relieved me. I cannot praise -"Dr. Wood's" enough for what it did. Two of my neighbors are now using it for colds." Don't accept a substitute for Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup; the gen- wine is put up in a yellow wrapper; three pine trees the trade mark; price 36c. and 60c.; manufactured. only-by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. DONT FUSS WITH { Mrs. Brice Culham, Sheffeld, Ont.; Atlantic, she had lived here almost ever since, : For many 'years Miss Barham was a noted private teacher, and was governess to such well-known famil- les as the Macaulays of Kingston, Hon. Frank Cayley's family, Toronto, the Merediths, Col. Williams', the Haywards and the Boultons, of Port Hope, and Mrs, Seymour, of Niagara Falls. Up to a short time before her death Miss Barham was able to go out for long rides in a wheel ehair, and, except for being somewhat deaf. was in possession of all her facul- ties. She knitted a great deal, was very fond of reading, and, what wus most remarkable, took a particular delight in playing the plano an hour at a time. Strongly religious and staunchly British, the name of Lydia Barham was honored by all who knew her. On the occasion of her hubidredth annlversary a telegram of congratulation was received from Adam Brown, of Hamilton, himself ninety-five years old. GREATER WHEAT AREA Acreage This Year in Australia Ex. ceeded Only Once. Washington, April 6.--A special report has Been received at the de- partment of commerce from the U.S consul general at Melbourne, In which a review is given of Australian trade. "Dealing with the common- wealth wheat trade the report says: "The crea under wheat in Aus- tralia this year was 11,552,00C acres, Only once, 1915-16, has there been a greater area sown in wheat, when the total area amounted to 12,484, 5123 acres. The yield is estimated at about 130,000,000 bushels for which the federal government has guaranteed 5s. per bushel. Payments are to be made in two instalments, the first payable when the wheat is delivered at railway sidings, and the balance on or beiore April 30th, 1981. Any amount over 6s obtalned by the wheat board will, after ex- penses are paid, be distributed among the growers, The New South Wales government gives to the growers of that state an additione! guaran- tee of 2s. 6d. making in all 7s. 64d. to New South Wales. The price of Wheat to local millers is fixe. at 0s. per bushel. It is estimated that the quantity of wheat available for shipment will be about 100,600,000 bushels." ' Not Reached "Pen" Yet, So near and yet 80 far. This is the cdse of thé man who was brought here on Saturday list by a constable from Sandwich, but wao was refused Admittance to the penitentiary, athe constable did not have the necessary papers. In ™e meantime the man is being held in the police station await- ing developments, but just what is ts be done in the matter has not ye: been announced. The constable who brought the man here has returned home. ' Not Committed. Washington, D.C., April 5.--Pre- sident Harding is ndt committed to eny definite programme with regard to a congressional declaration to de- clare the stale of war with Germany gan) A foie St at an end, it was announced today. SUFFERING OF YOUNG WOMEN This Letter Tells How It May be Overcome--All Mothers Interested. Toronto, Ont. -- "I have suffered since I was a school girl with pain in my left TTTTTI Tm deandwithcramps, Li if growing worse each Halll ll|[ear until I was all 3 ndown. Iwasso i bad at times thas I atent ut was Some jwanted to perform v a 2 an operation, but my father objected. Finally I learned through my mother of Lydia E. Pink- ham®s Vegetable Compound, and how thankful I am that I tried it. I am relieved from pain and cramps, and feel as if it has saved my life, You may use my letter to help other women as | am glad to recommend the medicide."" Mes. H. A. Goobmax, 14 Rockvale Ave., Toronto. Those who are troubled as Mrs. Goodman was should immediately seek restoration to health by taking Lydia E, Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Those who need cial advice may write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co, (confidential), Lynn, Mass. These letters will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. f the doctors' THURSDAY, APR. 7th, FRIDAY, 8th, and SATURDAY, 9th. Where you pay your Electric, Gas and Water Account. ......PHONE 844, HYDRO SHOP. AAAS AIA at ria I Talking Machines All kinds of Phonographs res paired, cleaned, recharged and adjusted. Main and governor springs for all makes in stock. Quick service, expert workman. J. M. PATRICK 149 SYDENHAM BT. - P'hone 2058J. WS Carbon Burning and Oxy-Acetylene Welding WRIGHT'S Machine Works 40 Princess St. - =~ Phone 1264. -- a, ' COLUMBIA SIX It's (he shutters that make he Columbia Six & {rue all weather Car, ' EDMOND WALSH, Agent Central Garage § Auto Repairs a Specialty, $35 King St = '= Phone 21886. Finest cotton textiles are made from mature cotton. One small Six McLaughlin. These can be seer at:-- Phone 1750. Some Automobile Bargain Two Second-hand Ford Touring. MCcALLISTER & DRAK THE AUTOMOBILE MECHANICS Benzer Lens always in stock. 803 PRINCESS STREET One Second-hand Chevrolet. E Phone Res. 1246). -> WIRNIPES, BRANDON, REGINA, SASKATOON, 'CALGARY, EDMONTON, PRINCE RUPERT, VANCOUVER, VICTORIA THE "NATIONAL" LEAVES TORONTO 11.00 P.M. DAILY via 0.7, T.4 N.0. and B.N.Rys. via Parry Sound snd Sudbery Leave Teronte 85.45 p.m. Dally except Suadey a STANDARD TRANS-CONTINENTAL TRAIN EQUIPMERTY . Tiekets and foil Iatarmay