formed on exce i Obstinate Coughs YIELD TO DR. WOOD'S Norway Pine Syrup All obstinate coughs and colds yield quickly to "Dr. Wood's" con~ taining as it does all the lung healing virtues 'o bined wip the soothing, healing and expectordfut propergies of other ex- cellent herbs and b¥rks. Mrs. H. F. McCormick, Rodney, N.S., writes: "I had a severe cold one winter, and had been coughing for a month. I could not sleep at night, Sor could 'I speak above a | whisper, After I had taken a bottle of Dr. Wood's Norway Pihe Syrup I felt better so I took"two or three more and was entirely cured, 1 have three children anid 1 always give it to them when they have a cough or cold." "Dr. Wood's" Norway Pine Syrup has been on the 'market for twenty- five years and we claim that it is the hest cure for a cough or cold you can possibly procure > "Dr. Wood's" is put up in a yellow | wrapper, three pine trees the trade | mark, price 25¢ . and 50c, Manu- factured only by the T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. THE NEW CES ov. HERAPIO ? a INy BEE THAT TRADE MARKED WORD ' THERAPION ' 15 ON BRIT. GOVT. STAMP AFFIXED TO ALL GENUINE PACKETS Prescription Service The confidence the doctors have in our ability to properly dispen.e - their prescriptions quite justifies the careful ser- vice we are giving today. From early morning to mid- night we are "on the job," and take thy utmost care to give our customers the service which has so helped to build up our business. 'We are now com- mencing our thirteenth year, which we hope will surpass last year, and that means we'll be "going somo." At Best's The Popular Drug Store. Open Sundays. Phone 59, Branch 2018 1 i i 1 | | | | | | { I | ] | | : ! it i NEELEY Jr, M. 0. D.0 | Street. 8 doers above the Opern House eel ever spent. ROOST WOUID MASE «and Colds the Norway pine (ree com- | | | | i | | | { Since entering the imperial service | | requires the utmost secreey and be- | | ing his chapging addresses, his rela-| | tives on this side | hear little regarding him. IN.Y., a graduate of the City Hospital, |and who formerly lived at Kingston, | soldiers who are on their way from || Save Your Hair! All Dandraff Goes (every particle of dandruff; | vegetation. It goes right to the roots, | Store or toilet AND OPTICIANS, |i. directed. charming and beautiful. You will ganize hi sion to Petrograd. In brief, Jdeut, this Lawrence's is _ the story a victim to the fumes | recovered. rence, who had been promoted trench and secured a gas and Incidentally added to t ber of widows in Germany, The sergeant was of an inventive turn of mind and after examining the German machine carefully he decided that he could ited States en- nown to have; : a sufficient] rined men at the time! 3 progress He g0 _Fritz one | THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1917. Death Ended 4 ot | fom, "her kind heagt reproached het | when she thought that her husband was present: at the first chlorine at. | would perhaps be lonely in, her ab tack made by the Germans, and fell ¥e0Ce- but was drag- | ged to the rear, and as he had only inhaled a small. quantity he quickly Elizabeth ladies-in-waiting knew quiries of her find out if any of them 8er- would only be too delighted to con sole the imperial grass-widower, ba | and the suddenly told discovered the right 'person | actress Katrina Schratt, who was al ways considered to be more interest 'matter a a SE FP CO PR | chamber of the man who loved ber, | then made in- to ol someone who could be relied on te 7 i S hile she was Within a fe ..| comfort the Emperor w 3 ioln & lew days Law | abroad. "I mentioned several ladies,' geant, and a chum, entered a German | "'ites the countess, 'who, I felt sure projector | he hum-; Aunt Cissi did not approve of them dropped until she me one day that she in the | t The stillness seems : would have the darkness fly, outuate nt, A REMARKABLE BIGHT. emma I { t A Fri But | UE oo, Died Sut Dis i ing off the Burg Theatre stage than | commandin Boas n wont to his: Cit People rather disapproved of t o ne : er 0d 50 Sa Elizabeth's attitude, but she was | Pressed him that that dignitary te right in thinking well of ths | sald: 4"This is no place for you: re-| Auite right i xing Lhe i . actress, who has, since the death of | port if London and see what they . ' | can do for you." The sergeant went to London. He got the ear of the War Office after much heart-break- ing untangling of red tape, and the War Office 'was 'impressed and gave Sergeant Lawrence orders to remain in London. He remained in London | week after week without hearing any -In the. meantime some of- cials at the War Office decided they could go ahead with Sergeant Law- | rence's new deviee better than he | could. They made a test machine and took it out for a trial. The ma. chine was effective and one of the men was killed. After some fui- | ther delay Sergeant Lawrence was | sent for and told to go ahead in his own way. He did so and, the test of his machine proved that he had a device which one man could easily carry, which could send out the most deadly gas for a half hour if neces- flame of such heat that barbed wire entanglements 'could quickly be burned up. The War Office then _tssued to Ser- geant Lawrence order to prepare | a number of these machines: Early in the present year Sergt. Lawrence 'was given a commission and attached as a "technical assist- ant at the office of the ministry of munitions. In May last he was sent on a special mission to Petrograd. he has been engaged in work which yond an oeeasional brief nete regard- | of the -.Atlantie fpr : To Join Red Cross. Miss Annie Halliday, Watertown, has accepted a position as a nurse with the Canadian Red Cross Asso- ciation for hospital work at Kings- ton. Miss Halliday will leave 'Watertown, N.Y.x says' the Times, February 20th, for her new 'position. The new hospitals are being put in readness for the wounded Canadian over the sea. i CLOTH AND DRAW IT THROUGH HAIR t Becomes Beautifully Soft, Wavy, Abundant and Glossy at Once. Serato And Hair Stops Coming Out. Surely try a "Danderine Hair Cleanse" if you wish to immediately double the beauty of your hair. Just moisten a cloth with Danderine and draw it carefully through your hair, | taking one small strand at a time; | this will cleanse the hair of dust, dirt or any excessive oil---in a few min- utes you will be amazed. Your hair will be wavy, fluffy and abundant and possess an incomparable soft- ness, lustre and luxuriance. Besides beautifying the hair, one application of Danderine dissolves nvigor- ates the scalp, stopping itching and falling hair. Danderine is to the hair what fresh showers of rain and sunshine are to invigorates and them. Its exhilarating, stimulating and life- producing properties cause the hair to grow long, strong and beautiful. You can surely have ty, soft, lustrous hair,°and lots of it. if you will just get a 25-cemt bottle of Knowiton's Dahderife from any drug countér and try it Save your hair! Keep, it looking say this was the best 25 cents you sary and which also could project a! years, was made up of the same Schratt, and twe well-known Vien- ions of his Majesty. helped to make a degenerate court of Austria a by-word throughout world, was ordered So ended a royal in it a suggestion of ages. has the longest pational hyma. at Renfrew on W Sunedden voted friend to Francis Joseph." An extraordinary story, to be sure and one that coul as his of recent 'Life | atfve testimony. The author of tha | book supplies the corroboration oy | means of an interview which, many | | years afterward, a representative of | Te Abzeigey focdiate | Appear in Two of the New Bri- intervie was a marriage | between | the Canadian troops in Eh | the Berlin Lokal with Frau Schratt. occasion of the rumor that a morganatic | was about to take place my aunt, proved herself to be a de- gant be accepted, Francis Gribble rightly asserts in LE the Emperor | Francis Joseph," without corrobor: I stan Some t In EASTERN O Sometimes. | By Marie Sills, Uhrichsville, Ohio. Sometimes and my heart grows lonely here, And I long for love of friends who my friends forsake 1ave finished life's career, But why should 1 grow lonely,-when he Master is tp me end that sticketh a mere fraternity, Sometimes the nights seem longer han they did in days gone by, oppressive, 1 ark! my soul! Why fear? for he night will soon be o'er, And our bark will reach the hapbor of day forever more. day the voyage over, upon the bright eternal strand, | I will clasp again the vanished hand No mpre to fear, no more to mourn, no more to wait at last, meet my Saviour Lerd and d secure, the storm the cloud, he tempest now are past, NTAKIO UNITS gades, the reorganization eme of and on BC | Francis Joseph and Frau Schratt, the | ternitorial lines which has just been | eause of the rumor being found in a| completed, there are six brigades. report of a quarrel in which the Em- | They are officially described as Cana- peror's daughters, Valerie and Gisela, after a long period of seeming quies- cence, took their father severely to task for his mode of life. | Schratt discreetly left Ischl and, after a short stay in Brussels, turned up in Rome in the company of the late | Empress' sister, to receive the bene- diction of the Pope, and a declara- Kisch, by whom she peror." Then, Empress Elizabeth, Frau Schratt added: "That high-minded . and noble lady was.my most gracious patroness and friend. In the unrest caused by the mental pains which drove her "from one place to another, it was a comfort to her to know that a good-tempered, light-hearted woman cheered up her husband, and gave him many a pleas. ant and harmless hour by chatting with him and relating all sorts of anecdotes and stories; attending him in his morning walks in the Schenbrunn Gardens while he was taking his Carlsbad water, and never abusing her extraordinary position for intrigues or to push protegees. It was the Empress herself who, hat- ing the stiff court life and court dig- nitaries and ladies-in-waiting, had created my position, which I thea maintained owing to the gracious confidence and gratitude of the Em- peror. Every spring I was the first to bring the late Empress, wherever she was staying, the first violets, and I always. spent a few days with her. and bodily | | reinfo a unit dian Reserve brigades, and the bat- taliong composing them are to act as rcements for those battalions Fray | in the field with which they are af- | filiated. Eastern Ontario battalions appear in two of those brigades. reserve Eastern Ontario Battalion is The 6th | A Strange Event on the St. Lawrence! --that of ice in the waters that had Colonel Theo nt that his plans) Kate Schratt makes her exit from|been clear the night before, and so! Ring 10. rales al A 4 With those Of the| ,, .trian affaifs. That she takes|Solidly blocked from Prospect Point | in the event of ral staff to such an extent as tol : | to Frontenac that several men walk-| and to sail to Er 8 the organization of his.com-| Witlr ber into retirement a handsome ed on it from the village wharves to soon as possible. 1lt It is said| legacy from her royal lover, the late Calumet Island." A large lake sailing plac € this fore th 1 1e 1 tis except With) Francis Joseph of Austria, makes a| vessel and a tug with several barges «ntente gener wlio have charge of the tacit consent the President | p s sordid affs in town were caught in the jam and the fighting ind to lead it injand the army Chials, but that he feels | Biting ending 10.8 yety sordiq affair | held for a day or so, as ie am ang accordance t that Canada's expfrience during the| Lhe laison between the emperor and| , it hauled out on dry land. In every Those w the last two years. in 18 and | the actress was particularly notor-|girection great icebergs were strand- coelonel's plan he making [training expeditiona ; within | ious because it lasted thirty years. led on bottom, and one stopped to re- | them with the i ining directly a it time would be of invaluable | Astounding as the fact may seem, | main several days in water twenty with those wii ny | assistance to him | it is now known that the \late Em: | feet deep a little way out from where - Now, any idea ¢ army and | _™a press Elizabeth was herself respons: the uptown Standard Oil station now navy officials of the United States ible for the bringing together of the is, and several adventurous boys went may have for conducting a distine- ROSE £ROM THE RANKS. * | Emperor and the actress. We haveloyt in hoats to climb upon it, tively American campaign to the eon- it on the authority of the Countess The great waves of Lake Ontario trary notwithstanding. It is declar-| goo did Rec rd. of das . | Marie Larisch, who, in her remark. during the winter before formed the ed that Colonel Roosevelt feels that | >Piendid ecord of Clever Noya| able book entitled "My Past, 12% | jceberg that several weeks of almost the sending of an expeditionary force | Scotia Soldier, | bare not only many of the faots cod: | continual north winds during spring to Europe would give additional zest A young man from Truro, N.S,| ®erning th® estrangement between kept back at the upper end of the to the struggle of Allies and con-| has .made rapid progress since the | the Emperor and his queen, but alse lake, to break loose and drift down vince them as nothing ¢ could that| outbreak of war. P. H. Lawrence, | B® Soul of the unfortunate royally' make the month of May seem like America whole-heartedly devoted | who was a Canadian express mes. wanderer who was assassinated i0|wintry March. There were icebergs, | to the cause {or which they are fight-| senger in 1914, and enlisted with the | Reva. It appears, from what the lang mauy of them, in sight on May | dng : first Highland regiment to cross over. | OUDtess writes, that, the frequenl| 24th, the anniversary of Queen Vie- How large a*force he would raise | $eas, is now Lieut. P. H Lawrence, | {rips abroad of the Empress Eliza-{ioria's birth. Many photographs of would depend entirely upon the con-| R. E., technical assistant, T. W, . | Peth were made in search of reliel the interesting scene were = taken, ditions obtaining at the particular ministry of munitions, London, and | [fom the disappointment of a wreck-|some of which are still in existence. A see pm, at last account. was on a special mis-| © life and a vanished love. Yet, i | says the queen's erstwhile compan: * me, closer thin | PAGE THREE | -- | Probs: Decidedly cold tonight and on Wednesday. _ [Ramb | ; River. i A FORCE OF YANKEES TO FIGHT /the Mexican situation was critical to] 2 Ro al Scandal % | Clayt r e<8t. Lawrerite . | i IN EUROPE, nake formation of a vision} - y <! From May 15th, 1885, to the same Rl possib iin a very short time, His! ; Aa Stents sin aN ¢ s coming spring will be thirty- : He P 1 i pre e known to cover the FEPEBIbdbiduid ddadmin ung | aL this co BILE Spring gd > ¢ Plans to Raisc a Division for | ¥ y L 8 fk Ah RY one years, and all around us are men Allies in Event of War--Probably | P73 Di a Corps, OF even NUBBED by court of als, | and women well along towards the ' ; / lof 00,000 men. | aunted by h : cere half-way ark f life's s ; Work From Canada the matte which Colonel! taunted 'hy those, who were } halt Way Juans i } 3 Dan who | i ye . " a Oe "1 jealous of her powe i then had not been born. A strange New .York, Fe )() I \ considerati Jeal er power, forbid iat y - Wiha 215, dig wo a igeration, | den entrance to the death | 8ight greeted the vision of residents| this morning sas 3 s informant, | len > to the death-|,1,,2 the shore on that May morning! 4 or J Dollar ow® Corset ! Contains many, o of genuine French rustable steels, has to 30. FEET AREN'T ACHING OR TIRED NOW-"TIZ" Use "iz" Yor T8ider, Puffed-up, Burning, Cdlloused Feet and Corns, People who are forced to stand on their feet all day know. what sore, tender, isweaty, burning feet mean. They use *'Tiz,"" and "Tiz" cures their feet right up. It keeps feet of the 1st brigade, and is com-| From.this it will be understood how |the 20th and 21st. ; | , : " | The next Eastern Ontario reserve| Never limp or draw up your face in reference "to the | field are the 2nd and 38th. Ll bon pie, | Making Good in Profession, Miss Evelyp Eerguson, St Law- | rence hospi¥al, Ogdensburg, N.Y. spent the week in Brockville as the guest nurse seas. school cousin on, M. guson She is ing ra A. Ferguson, Miss well-known by all, is training as a | kind, genial and lovable disposition won for herself a host of true friends who made her visit a pleasant one. Miss Evie is a graduate of Victoria but eighteen years of age. She is a number of her friends in will be glad to hear that she is mak- ing good in her chosen profession. Miss Evie is well known in Kings- ton, frequently spending her vaca- tion hére, of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. Evie, as she is with the view of going over- She is popular and hag by her in the class of 1916 and fis of the Hon. Howard Fergus- P., and also of Lieut.-Cpl. Fer- in active service in France. a talented little lady possess- re traits as an elocutionist. A Kingston An empress, however magnanf and high-minded she may be, ve. mains in certain 'questions above everything a woman. And is it, therefore, really possible te believe that the Empress would have honor- ed me with her grace and confidence n such an extraordinary way if even the possibility had existed in her thoughts that, after her death, I might marry the Emperor?" Anyway, no marriage took place, and after the little storm had blown over, Emperor and actress renewed the companionship which, beth in Vienna and Ischl, had brought them 80 many pleasant hours. In the Aus- trian capital Frau Schratt had her own private residence to which the Emperor almost daily repaired for a quiet dinner and a friendly game of cards. The card party, many the Emperor, four people: Fran nese bankers, both sworn compan Withinva few hours after the death this woman who had the intrigue that had Except that of China, Sap Marine The Miracle of Love. Watch for it. A quiet wedding was solemninged ednesday why Mrs. D. B. was united to R. Yn of Beckwith. the middle remedy, ou would hardly have in a : * NESE } Good Old 'Howe: Ry only a few minutes to eid ter than the Ready- Kind--Easily and . Cheaply Prepared. ned curative nown ative. per- Poagh them curative power that lies in this "home-made" cough syrup which e. ist 2'5 ounces uf 5 Tele with mais n . "The total cost any di tion (according to the Paris Siecle), | posed of the 39th and 168th Eastern inftanily Stops, the pain annulling "her marriage with Baron | Ontario overseas battalions and its © buses and bupions, has a son." | affiliated battalions in the ficld are 8lorious. 0 the morganatic mar ; hs y he Fanos of To the Sanat inter- | battalion is the 5th, and it forms ajin pain, Your shoes won't tighten viewer, however, Frau Schratt de- | unit of the 5th Canadian reserve and hurt your feet. hi clared that all such talk was non-| brigade. It is composed of the 95th| 'Get a 26~cent box of "Tiz"' now sense and 'that those who engaged | Eastern Ontario overseas battalion, | from any druggist Just think! a in it knew neither her mor the Em-|and its affiliated battalions in the| whole year's foot cbmfort for only | "| as surgeon on a whaling ship, he fin. became | engineer and owning a foundry he in perfect condition, '"'Tiz" is the only remedy in the world that draws out all the poisonous exudations which puff up the feet and cause tender, sore, tired, aching feet. It in corns, It's simply Ah! how comfortable your feet feel after using "Tiz." You'll 25 cents. A A A Ag Ai, + Invented the Fog Horn. The man who invented and install- ed the first steam fog horn died blind and in poverty despite his varied at- tainments and achievements in wide- ly different fields. He was John Foulis, a Scotchman, who came to St. John, N.B,, in the early years of the last century. An interesting de- soription of this versatile Scot is given in a paper vecently read before the St. John Historical Socjety by William Murdoch, C.E. Murdoch says of Foulis: 'He was a nephew of the brothers Robert and Andrew Foulis of Glas- gow, printers and publishers, whose productions were the admiration of all their contemporaries, and whose edition of Horaee, pub} d in 1744, was hung up sheet by sheet, in Glas- gow, and a reward offered for the discovery of a single error. "This scion of an intelligent breed wis a graduate of Glasgow Univer- sity. After various experiences when a young man, even to serving ally settled in he characteristics of the finest imported models -- it is an ideal low-priced corset for slim andrdverage figures--it is made coutil; boned throughout with guaranteed un- four strong garters and comes trimmed with lace and sati This corset comes in high and medium bust in all sizes from 19 There are many makes of dollar corset --"Steacy's Special." STE "The Woman's Store of Kingston." and patent untearable front, n. - : but only one best make The utmost in corsetry for $1.00. ACY'S oS 4 18TH ANNUAL SALE 18TH Carpets and Furniture ---- ------------ ARN RT SC -- : Beds, Rugs, Springs and Carpets and Mattresses Linoleums ® a TH. - SE J-------- ~ IER During the past 18 years we have tried out different lines of beds, springs and mattresses. For the past eight years we have sold our present line and we believe it to be the BEST VALUE IN CANADA, NOT 'EXCELLED BY ANY, During the past two weeks we have sold a great number of brass and iron beds for future delivery. This speaks for its. The Wise Buyers Know-Where To Go. Be One of Them. RUGS, CARPETS AND LINOLEUMS ALL REDUCED. I. F. HARRISON COMPANY Phone 90. Have Always Boaght, and which has been in use for over 30 ycais, has borns the signature of The Kind You St. Joba and a land surveyory st, analytieal chemist, and a civil and mechanical | engineer. His survey of the River | St. John is still in vogue in the Crown Land Offics of this Province, | His ical knowledge ranged | rom analyzed ores to making his | own whiskey when overtaken by ad- | versity. "While operating as a mechanical engined the first steam ferryboat to cross St. John Harbor, besides the first steam craft to ply the 'St. John River. Later on, when Mr. Foulis was the engineer of the Light and Si Service of the Government of New Brunswick, his principal charge being Partrige Island (at the harbor's entrance), whereon was an automo- bile fog bell, he proposed a steam whistle, steam whistles being then new to the world. + "Later.on his suggestion was acted upon. - There was no patent law then and, though in. his old age, blind and poor, 'he was given no compensation, and the inventor of the fog horn died in poverty." A A A-------------------- New X.M.C.A. Trenton, Feb, 20.--Tho ment has asked the Y. LA. to un- dertake work among the 2,000 em- ployes in the munition plant at Tren- ton. The Government has agreed to provide the building and equipment, and to pay the secretary's Master Earl Scott is severing his connection with the D. P. Boles staff, Picton, and is going to Chicago. » and has been made under his per= sonal supervision since its infancy, A Allow no one to deceive you in th All Counterfeits, Imitations and % J ood "' are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children--Experience against Experiment, What is CASTORIA® Castoria is n harmless substitute for Castor oil, Pare. goric, Drops na Soothing Syrups, It is pleasant. Ig: Baan Te Hs Alorphine "It dentrays 8 so, Is age guaran roy orms + For more than thirty years it bas been in constant use for the relief of So i * Flatalency, Wind Colle, ail Teething Troubies : SEALE ot Foss ne pT ass 0 and natu sloe The Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Frioad. > agnuve CASTORIA Aways Bears the Signature of