I - gross -------------- Se pat I 8 Er 2 ¢ ? 3 THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATU PAGE SIXTEEN _ oe Their Fathers Are Fighting For | Right: Shall They Starve 4 S= Rn 'id : = ini iii. % Fem oF PHOTOGRAPH "pl > | = ©) UNDERWOOD MuUNT pr Here are two fugees, two of thou father sands who the call of their Allies for ful nations. Those wait to count the co how much help t! receive from outs They perhaps believes tion, like Brit 1 not stand and see them ¢ that the people of these w friendly countries would their childpef and their } starve while they were an B all that they really kneyr was th they heard the call of dury and re i ed to their King. | Of course, their faith im the r } tions who guaranteed their neutral} ity' was not misplaced, unis they | had faith in Germany. Grea: Bri-| tain and France did ily to their] side, and with them are pang ang end to the Teuton drean world conquest. - And their children and allowed to their wives thave not been Almo t Tot N _ WCCO» rn Sra, al Collapse of the Nervous System ~ ok ety >. starve The two ure, healthy and in zl at Stre 1. ma rs, and it is con a 1pie matter to care fc But there are left in Bel an have been or tan be E and What of them? : relief commniittee: has uéstion most efficie them ever since r- homes t It has been rough the respon or shown in the enougn, to Kingston Board of Trade. pict- are are iparatively yr them, giuam more » taken to The Bel- answered ently. It they were o shift for enabled to se of Can- So adians, with the people of the Moth- lerland and of the United States to the call of He 's need. . ¢ convinitt needs grow greater rather than less as long as {Germany rules the occupied parts of Jelgium and so long as the need lasts the friends of freedom-loving Belgium are asked to open their hearts and loosen their purse-strings. Cor itions should be sent direct to e. Central Belgian Relief Com- mittee, 59 St. Peter street, Montreal, Ne Could Not Lift Cup of Tea to Lips--Rest or Sleep Was Impossible -- Attributes Cure to Dr. Chase's Nerve Food. Kingston, Ont. Feb. 17.1917 We have to report to-day an extreme case of nervous exhaustion, This is not™" the diy of miracles, | and no miracles are claimed for Dr. Chase's Nerve Food, but to Mr. Moore is seems almost like a miracle the way his worn-out nerves have been fed back to health and strength W. E. Moore, No. 4 Lower Que- bee §St., Kingston, Ont, writes: "About five years ago 1 was suffering from nervous trouble, paing in my back and general "run-down condi- tion, and was next door to dying a couple of times. I was So nervous at times that I could not get a chp of tea to my lips, Some times I would never close my eves during the whole night, and if I did get to sleep would waken with a jump. Through seeing the effect of Dr. Chase's Nerve Food on a friend of mine 1 was {n- duced to try.it. After taking a treat- ment I found a great improvement; am enjoying could sleep well, and Sh good health at present. At-times if I am not feeling up to tl use some Nerve Food. commend the use lof Dr, Nerve Food to persons from nervousness, run-down condition." This is Nature's cure, and this is why Nerve Food hag made s 18 mark I I wish to re- Chase's suffering sleeplessness and way of effecting Dr. Chase's ch a reputa- tion for jtzelf ag a cure\far diseases of the nerves. It is gentle but wonderfully potent to the run-down system and energy which makes Iging Nervous hehadaches, sleeplessness, irritability n in action, restoring the vigor life worth indigestion, soon leave once the nervous energy is restored by the use of Dr. Chase's N erve Food, and the benefits obtained are. lasting. 50 cents a box 6 boxes for $2. 50 a full treatment of , at all dealers, or Edwanson, Bates & Co., Ltd., Toron- to, Do not be talked into a substitute. If Belgium Were "Next-Door" To Canada : Jil the heavily-charged electric Wires, that _pen the people into a workless and almost foodless land, ran along our frontier --if instead of reading of Belgian sufferings we heard the pitiful tales from the lips of escapéd victims comfortable as ourselves ~if we could see the long and hungry bread-lifies of people as intelligent and once as Simp he --if we could watch the thousands of emaciated children ' Commission who are fed at the schools by the Belgian Relief iif what they are enduring, and thei desperate need, . were clear and vivid to us, instead of unreal and overseas * "then the great hearts of Canadians would be moved, Ll in aa Vad and there would be 50 tr our pi contri Can the we bnng urgent YOUR active depend on yourself? Send one lump sum to % erai tr to the B Igian Relief Fund. . need of the hungry Belgia to YOU? Fin sympathy for those whose lives weekly, monthly or in or Lott Pe Cg SEND CHEQUES PAYABLE TO TREASURER of 59 St. Peter Street, Montreal, The Greatest Relief Work in History. Fund accepting Imitations disappoint. How W ¢r Fes Harr the Wold The as a mmod but esp > war 1 yin volume of distr | vears Loudqn hand S00,000.000 td one-tenth normal vield one-eighth proximates the sla and likewise is equal to ¢ ag gregate crop of South Ame \u tral crop is about tw t the 1 England on 1916, commandeered the of the British Isles. n 2 likewise cémma ' ) ant Australia been paid for it. over the market re as to the of wool would not co time. Certain it is that an era of continued h wool and wool-stuffs for some to come The flocks can only creased gradually appreciable increase again bring the yearly crop up to the point where it large enough meet all demands. The yearly short comings cannot be off by recourse tb reserves, because the lgtter already been seriously depleted. there will price year be in and an immediate sary to} igh of international trade be able to hold their newly gained markets in the trade war, which is sure to the peace declaration? To a con erable extent they will succeeded in taking over large wool formerly sold there by a cheaper variety of goods contatning a portion of cotton which has been very satis factorily received An outgrowth of the situation which is bound to come and which has even now been made the subject of organized and concerted action on the part of the wool manufacturer of the UU. 8. is a campaign for nore sheep throughout the world. "This movement is certain to gain moment um at the close of 'hostilities. The above words, says the Toronto World, are part of a special article in-the New York - Journal of Com merce, written by a competent writer well versed in the wool trade, and are worthy of careful consideration. In January the National Wool Growers convened in Salt Lake, Utah, an attendance 'of 1,000. Some of the meeting was the summing.up of jhe president "At the present time the world is operating. from and wool is consumed fast as available. This eliminates any danger of over-production of wool for several years to come. The abnormal condition has been brought about by war condition$, and is not lasting, although it is highly prob- able that it will. never again go to the low levels of the past. Fine wools and half-bloods, and abovegare get ting scarcer and scarcer flier world over, and the scoured price of fine wools wi maintain proportionately higher levels than will cross-breds." Surely the above should stimulate many more farmers throughout the Dominion -to enter . into "the safe budiness of raising siieep and lambs; the time is opportune to encourage the girls of the farmers' homes to are bare, as pride themselves in feeding 'the lambs and sheep. It is well that the farmers' sons are competing in the raising of hogs, why not enable the daughters to rival for honors show- > ing careful management of lambs? AUTOMOBILE PRICES : MAY ADVANCE AGAIN Manufacturer Points Out the Reasons, Including Demand for Raw Material. "There is no doubt about it, if priceg ot materials continue to soar, automobile manufacturers generally will be compelled to announce an- other increase of price within the next few weeks." says the general manager. of a well-known motor car company, . "Even those concerns who, be- cause of their financial standing and credit, have been in the habit of "covering" for two years in advance for their requirements, now find their two-year-old contracts expired and no possibility of renewing them at the former prices: Advances all the way from 25 to 100 per cent. are announced, and worst of all, few supply houses can guarantee deli- veries or prices evem at present quo- tations, > "B ybody is in the same boat. The f: of the matter is, there is a shortage of raw inaterials, of if you préfer to put it the other way, an overdemand for them. I have never known a time when market condi- tions were so uncertain or when the manufacturer had so much difficul- ty in estimating costs. Just take one m that the average buyer would ink ofthe shortage of rail- cars, One would not think this would be a serious item in the in- creased cost of making automobiles. "It costs money too, to keep men scouting around at the different plants to see that our stuff is shipped way it can be done. Our own men must chase freight cars and then see that the on time, "Machinery has doubled In vaule: tool steel is out of sight; die mak- ers and die sinkers are earning twice and three times as much as they did int to have | Will the new entrants into the field | foilow | Japan has! en trade dropped by Germany in the! east, and has supplanted the 'extiles big questions were taken up, the pith | hand te mouth, the retailers' shelves | Hhowels some -reguiar help elue they as per schedule--and that ig the only} material is loaded into them cap W Coachaire. home speedi near its cost you could wish for. MADE IN CANADA w > In the Wee Sma' Hours HEN the time comes for bidding your hospitable friends "good night," there is a delightful sense of freedom and independence in the possession of a BRISCOE, B "4-24™ No need to depend upon street cars and cab drivers --no long and tiresome waits at the kerb or on the street corner. Your BRISCOE. Coachaire, with its graceful, harmonious top and body lines, its roomy interior, its wide doors and windows, and its powerful "Half Million Dollar Motor," ly and in comfort. The BRISCOE; B *'4-24" is equipped with every convenience As a matter of fact, its exfra equipment would add $200 to the price of the average light car at anywhere { AR EQUIPMENT es on Dasi Tv Elk | Light; Lic i includ ense Brabket Aut 3 BRISCOE BROCKVILLE, ONT. Distributors for Kingston, ANGLIN BROS,, 35 and 37 Montreal St., Kingston, opposite Windsor Hotel The REGUT Light S ot - | i WRITE to-day fo on Dollar Motor," or 'show' you. | THE CANADIAN | | | | \ | | | i | I : } mim me Sa am A = | 100k fit the price of coal t ) | mention the uncertainty « i ply 1 *Kevrytl , tomobhile ha and as better an Ve } hence cannot cept cubstituls the material specified by engineers costs are riously affected 'Bo far we weathered the storm and vdia refused in crease priees, but 1 re |i no cet tainty how long we may be able to do so. As stated be : condt ons do change for the bet! soon not will we have 3 nounce an inerease of priee, but other manufacturers will have to do likewise' i A lA AM ANE, SN OLD FOLKS NEED "CASCARETS" FOR Salts, Calomel, Pills Act on Dowels 8 T , : Like Pepper Acts in Nostrils. . Enjoy Life! Don't Stay Bilious! Sick, Headachy and Cgn- stipated. Get a 10 cont box now, Most old paople must give to the ' suffer from conatipation dition is perfectly natural #8 natural as iteis for old peopl walk slowly. ¥or active as youth. sre less elastic. And are muscles. So all old people One might us well + eyes .with glasses: as to neglect this gentle aid to weak howels. The bowels must he kept active. This is important at all ages, but never so much as at fifty. Age is not a time sies. Youth may o« the bowels into act ed Casbarets 4 Lasharets, se 10 aid weak for barsh phy- ionally whip : Bat a lash v day. What the of the old need Is a gentle and natural tonic. One that can be constantly used without harm. The only such tonic is Cascarets, and they cot only 10 cemts per box at any a ago; working hours are hore and wages are higher, Then { sleep. LIVER, BOWELS 718. Waite, sales manager/of the Grant EE ET TEER REA PPP A REQUIREMENTS OF AUTO OWNER. I automobile should be to do the following things ling to the head of the en- 3 nt of one of &ar manufae- i 1 and pleasing- | on t speeds from ¥ 1 pe¥ hour over y them over the rough- at 8 fast as they ean i ride with degree of com- ! | oe To pull through deep sand, I mud or snow easily and with- {% out overheating. } any ordinary. hill are travelled roads away from quickly a stand- as their ' cars. all these things as possible and without re and constant atten- SREP RSE EPP RFLP RPP PPPS TLL LITT | HOW TO ELIMINATE THE GLARE OF HEADLIGHTS Grant Official Says it Can Be Done by Proper Setting ' of Lamps. Elimingfion of glare ffom antemo- bite headlights 1s ridica¥ously ! easy when the headlizhts are hung on forked brackets, according to George Motor Car Corporation, He says: 'The problem of headlight glare' which is not only inconvenient to ap- preaching motorists, bat positively dangerous, and which has caused so Jnany accidents, has been the subject of 'deep study lor more than a year by,a committee of members of the Sotiety of = Antomobile Engineers. At the conclusion of its investiga. tions, Lhe committee made recom. mendations for a standard headlight wifich would throw . a concentrated beam of light for a distanceyof 200 feet and yet with its hig "point not more than 42 inches from the groevnd." a a A AN A a a a NS a PE Nt SE tN ll (li aa Wi ile fe Bh of ERY hou accuracy. all t will take you Tilted Windshield t Head Lights with Extra Demountabie Rim: Oil omatie and other important iarage and let tlie car A CO., LIMITED, every day in the year, the Waltham everywhere records the passing time with unfailing The accuracy of the Waltham has become the standard by which all other watches are judged. Your Jewel ow you any of the Waltham models in styles and at prices to suit any taste or pocket- book. Write for: the booklet ne nti Trouble Dimmers; ; Electric Horn; Switch i Starting and Full and jars, the "Half Mil- D ill stv " HL THI AR TH] RD r of the day, er will gladly rig f: 13 that the upper edge of this beam, § which if the lamp is a good one is clearly defined, will be parahel to the ground. When the lamp is set square, the centre line of the beam is parallel to the ground, but tle &is- tance between the edges of the beam grows greater as the distance from drug store. They work while you 3 "Rie solution is to set the lamp $b the lamp gros greater, - A tN, "It, 8, however, easy to under- stand that if the upper edge of the shaft of light js parallel to the ground, the lght will extend for as great a distance as the lamp fa cap- able of throwing it. but will be suf- ficlently low so that it will hot strike the eyes of a person approaching whether afoot or in a vehicle"