BE -- I La... Interested Caps' | Brand. i "If so, see our window | display of Eastern "THE CLUB" Plumbing and Heating Repair Work a Specialty, Address 226 SYDENHAM STREET who 088. - Second to none for comfort and Choice Steak, Pork, Lamb. All kinds of Smoked Hams and Bacon. QUICK'S VESTERN MEAT MARKET 112 CLERGY STREET Phone From 1 to 4 inches thick. Also other Carriage and Sleigh lumber. MeNAMEE & SLACK | 64 QUEEN STREET PHONE M1TW, i I SA Br GOOD NIGHT | . GET OUR KAPOK MATTRESS 1009 pure durability. \ Z 7 RS. R. T. BUTTS, of Karsas | City, who says her life' was miserable for two long years be- fore she began taking Tanlac.| She now declares shd is enjoying | the best of health and that she] has gained twenty pounds. "It it had not been for Tanlac I would still be a sick woman, so I feel | like I ought to tell everyone what this { me," wonderful medicine has done for was the sincere statement made recently by Mrs. R. T. Butts, 1924) Troost Avenue, Kansas City, Mo. | "By the help of Tanlac I have got- | ten rid of a severe case of nervous indigestion that had made my life {| miserable for the past two years. 1 { could not eat anything without suf-| | tering afterward. The gas on my sto-| mach would rise up into my chest | and press on my heart and at ti { would almost cut off my breat | nerves were so up-set that the 1 { unexpected noisé would almost dis- | and I kept on improving until now 1 | never suffer any more from indiges- 'SIX MILLION JEWS i | | 1H tract me. I seldom slept well and was so nervous | would often roll and toss until after midnight and { what little sleep I did get seemed to {do me no good. I was also a great sufferer from headaches and would often get so diszy 1 would have to hold on to something to keep from! falling. | One day I happened to see a testi- monial for Tanlac, describing a case like mine, so 1 bought a bottle and | before 1 had finished it I began to feel just like a different person. Those terrible headaches disappeared and my appetite returned. When my first bottle was gone I got another | can eat just anything I want and I tion. I am not the least bit nervous and rest well at night and never know what it is to have a headache or a dizay spell. "Tanlac has not only relieved me of my suffering, but I have actually gained 20 pounds in weight and have not enjoyed such good health for years. anlac is certainly a wonderful medicine and I will always feel grateful for what it has done for me. I want to recommend this medi- cine to all my friends because I be- lieve it will benefit anyone who is suffering as I did." Tanlac is sold in Kingston by A. P. Chown and by the leading drug- sists in every town. -- Adve. HAVE LITTLE FOOD Heart-Rending Stories of Suf- fering and Death Come From Eastern Europe. The cans in which oll was sent to | the destitute Jews of Poland are be- ing turned to still another use, ac- | | cording to reports brought back to | | the Canadian Jewish War Relief | Committee by relief workers abroad. For several months these cans have been serving in a number of light- ning-change capacities, ranging from chocolate containers to sheet-iron { stoves. Now that the epidemic of { 'typhus is such a menace in Poland, where there are 100,000 cases, and ! throughout Eastern Europe, the old cans serve as portable bath tubs, and Canadian Jewish relief workers and | 'Red Cross nurses are striving to com- | bat the dread disease with cleanli- | ness. All through the stricken lands of Eastern Europe little Jewish chil- dren are receiving their daily baths in these old oil cans. i Conservation is whittled to a fine | point of necessity in these countries, | where 6,000,000 Jews are at the point of starvation, and even the dam- aged cans are not allowed to go to waste. They are used to patch holes in the roofs and walls of the devas- tated houses, Cold is as much of a problem as disease in Eastern Europe ! this winter, since the Jewish popu- lation, almost without exception, is clad In rags, and the wretched places in which so many of them live are | slight protection against the weather, and Wander Until Over- come or Starvation. a ---- | | nis sman portion of food. | in the course of a day or two, i in marr to h M. upitd; In age Balp THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG And thew, the children take up the tramp again like so many small gypsies. Once in a | while 2 woman will mother the little | travellers and aid them until starv- | ! ation overtakes them. Jacob Bashein, who had been In charge of a relief unit for the Joint Distribution Committee, which han- dles funds collected by the American Jewish Relief Committee and other ! ' Jewish fund-raising relief organiza- | tions, told of these tragic pilgrimages. The Canadian Jewish War Relief | Committee is appealing for funds Lo ! plleviate this terrible suffering. | Aree, a Canadian, in an account in | such tipp | happy lan | dow of the real thing. For Instance, it is pointed out that in Canada the | done something for the tipper, but tin England, we are told, DIDN'T UNDERSTAND SLANG "A fellow threatened today to 'put me to sleep.'" "] am glad that he didn't do it, as you do snore so." ! in Britain, Thus, nobody would think of tipping the conductor on a trans- | continental limited, but in England, ; self in London dnd appeal to a cop | it is perfectly proper to tip that offi- | cer when he has helped you discover | have aroused our Canadian friend SPRING STYLES Mr. Panetella: What are the lates] spring styles, my dear? Miss Perfector: Wrappers will be worn tighter. THAT'S RIGHT HE'S WRONG Old Hearsay: 1 hear that Mr. Foreflush couldn't stand the expense of his first floor apartment and NJ he had to move [4 up on the six- teenth floor, Old Gossip: Yuh don't-say! That whs quite a come-dowh fer LITERALLY "That new barber is a highbrow | could hardly follow his remarks." "All barbers are apt to talk ovel their customers heads." WANTED TO KNOW My ancestors came over inthe Mayflower. Did they have wouLD HAVE BEEN EQUALLY SUCCESSFUL "You have spent thousands of dob lars, trying to make a man of thal boy." "1 know it; | might as well hav{ tried to make a woman of him." SIX OF ONE AND-- She: yol think more o king mone; than you do ol It And you think more spending it thay you do of me. The home of Mr. and Mrs. J. P.9 Mellow, Napanee, was the scene of a pretty wedding on April 7th, when their daughter, Laura Edna, was son of Mr. and Mrs. Archie Parks. i $00VOOINIVHVOLODLICIDOON | classes of persons mever tipped here, | English call him, or the Head Porter, | for you is to take your money. You | arrive at a hotel, and an under-por- | | in 'the Standard bank: Co Tipping Habit 1 in England | 1 DBL LE MPD | HEN in doubt, tip all' around,' Irvin 8. Cobb advised people traveling in Europe, after the humorist had toured that continent and learned something of the peculiarities of its inhabitants. | Practically the same thing is sald, less cheerfully perhaps, by J. V. Me- 4" the Toronto Mail and Bmpire, of his experiences with the tipping system in England, to which he refers, somewhat peevishly, as "an unmiti- gated nuisance." Few Canadians are inclined to regard tipping with any degree of enthusiasm, but after read- ing Mr. McAree's story, it seems that g as pesters us in this 4g_pnly the merest sha tippees are not tipt unless they have *'the- less they do for you the greater are their expectations, and the more bitter their indignation if they are ignor- ed." Moreover, there are many who, it appears, regularly receive tips says Mr. McAree, 'you can tip any body connected with a railway ser- vice up to the board of directors." We learn also that if you lose your- your whereabouts. What seems to more than anything else, however, is the graft connected with the Eng- lish tipping system. He says: The most unmitigated grafter of them all is the Chief Boots, as the as we would call him. All he does ter carries in your luggage. The! { head porter stands inside the door | dressed like one of the Beefeaters at | | the Tower, and gives orders to his| subordinates. When you are 1 you notify the head porter, an sends some one to carry down the luggage. Some one else whistles a taxi. Before you pass out you ha d| the head porter two or three dolla it you have been his guest for as| many days and he opens the door tor | you. Then as the under-porter puts in your luggage you slip him half a crown. Perhaps you think that the head porter shares the proceeds of his extortion with the rest of bo staff. On the contrary, the man you have given the half-crown to has probably to hand over one shilling and sixpence to his chief. Mr. McAree devotes himself to the rest of the tip-taking fraternity in the following paragraphs, in connec: tion therewith incidentally exploding the old theory that Bu tippees are profoundly thankful for even the smallest coin: You tip the chambermaid who makes your bed nad bursts inoppor- tunely into the room, and, by the Way, you never can surmise from the nature of service you require the probable sex of the hotel-servant sent to perform it. You tip the bedroom waiter or waitress, the dining-room waiter, the head waiter, the pages, the elevator boys. You also tip the boots, who in return industriously blackens your shoe-laces, When re- quired, the boofs or valet will pack your trunk or suitcase with incredible neatness and wastefulness of effort. Your spare underwear, for instance, he will carefully button up, so that you will have to unbutton it before you can get it on again. It is he, we suspect, who irons our socks when they go to the laundry and asks us if we want the laundry-bag launder- ed, too. Ten thousand times No! All these servants stand between you and illegal departure from the hotel. They know by a sort of instinct the time you intend to legve, and bee your path. Yet, in spite of all, short time ago a guest got pe from the Adelphia in Liverpool, ac- companied by his trunk, and without settling his bill. As Mr. Christy ob- served, he must have been some baby. Apart from this little garrison you do not subsidize anybody else in the hotel----not, in fact, until you leave your taxi, when you give the driver a little extra. If you are going on & train you again take up the white man's burden at this point, and tip a porter to find a seat for you and your luggage. This chap is very likely to earn his fée, for if he is treated like a man and a brother he will save you from shifting wearily from one foot to another to the journey's ead, should the train be crowded. Some times he fails, or his patrons fail in their duty, as we gathered from the remark of a lady standing in the cor- | ridor surrounded by luggage. "Had the man been truthful all would have been well." Traveling through the country you can tip the charcoal burners and oth- er peasantry who will tip their caps in exchange for your silver. Aboard ship you have only to talk turkey to the bedroom steward, the bath- room steward, the dining-room stew- ard, any other roving steward whe catches your eye, and the boots. The captain is understood to be immune from tips, and will steer you to your destination as nly if you do not got up a testim for him. The ish traveler - would probably ving | h that all this talk about tipping with farthings and halfpennies is the old bunk. If ever it was anything else it must have been about the time of the Botr War, T. Shaw, who has been | Pills' are just the remedy you re- "CANADIAN TRADE. | Tem Commandments That Should Be Remembered. The Canadian Reconstruction As- | sociation urges observance. of the | following "Ten Commandments for | Canadian Trade" as a means towards a safer trade fituation and the de-| velopment of Canadian resources: 1. Buy Canadian products. In do-| Ing so, you develop the home market, encourage factory expansion, provide | employment for new populations, and | create bigger and better markets for | all kinds of farm produce. 2. Import only necéssities, and then only if similar Canadian arti- cles or substitutes are not available. 8. Produce to the limit in field and | factory. Increased production means new wealth, and is essential to the success 6f any effort to reduce im- | ports and promote export trade. | 4. Co-operate, ve, specialize, | standardize. These are the means to | maximum production of high quality | goods at minimum cost. 6. Develop export markets. For- eign business gives stability to trade. It reduces unit costs, benefits domes- tic consumers, affords employment to factories and workers in times of de- pression, and corrects adverse ex- by improving the trade | 8. Utilize Canadian services. Ship by Canadian carriers through Cana- dian ports. Patronize Canadian rail- ways, Canadian steamships, and Canadian banks. Place insurance In Canadian companies. Employ Cana- dian architects, engineers, scientists, and other experts. Spend vacations in Canada. 7. Manufatcure raw materials to final stages in Canada. Hundreds of millions of dollars are lost annually to the Dominion, and especially to Canadian wage-earners, by the expor- tation of raw materials and semi manufactured products. { 8. Use science for the determina- | tion and development of natural re- sources. Industrial research will re- veal new wealth, improve industrial processes, and help to relieve our economic dependence upon outside sources for fuel, iron and other es- sentials. | 9. Make quality the hall-mark of Canadian products. In return for public support of the home market, Canadian manufacturers should pro- | vide products that compare favorably with imported goods, and Canadian workers should recognize good work- manship and maximum production as their standards. 40. Be fair to capital. Canadian money should be encouraged to ine |. vest at home, and foreign capital at- tracted to promote Canadian indus- | | trial empansion. Ontario's Minerals. A drop of $25,000,000 in Ontario's mietallic mineral production during 1919 is the feature of a preliminary report for the year issued by the Bu- | reau of Mines. The value of metals | produced during the twelve months | amounted to $41,510,000, compared | with $66,178,069 for the preceding twelve months. A scrutiny of the de- | talls of the statement, however, | shows that the reduction is accounted | for almost entirely by the small pro- | duction of silver, nickle and copper matte, and the reduction in the mar- ket value of the latter metals. The falling off in the output of silver was compensated for to some extent by the high prices, but even at that, the value of the mines' output was, Sougnly, $4,600,000 below that of 1918. Metallic nickel was produced to a much greater extent and provided an increase of nearly two million dollars in vilue. While silver production in on- | tario continues to decrease, even with the treating of low-grade ores made possible by high prices, the gold mining industry continues to grow. The 1919 output of 505,963 ounces, worth $10,451,688, was the largest to date. Ontario is rapidly becoming a grea tpgole producing province, the output "last year being greater than that of any other province or any state of the American Union, with the exception of California. { Japanese Picture Star, Tsuri Aoki, the Japanese picture star, who has been commissioned to adapt and modernize the works of a number of great British and Amer- more ---- more invitingly, mips it's SEAL BRAND COFFEE that is used. The famous Seal Brand flavour, fragrance and delicacy are sealed right into the Tin. In ¥, 1 and 2-1b tine. Neste said is bulk. bulk, Whale greed, for Tricolators and oy all ey dealers. A a A Lh loi It's fren WRITE for it. CHASE & SANBORN, MONTREAL. 6 TIRES TIRES TIRES AT VERY LOW PRICES. Drop in and look them over. W. H. COCKBURN & CO. Corner Wellington and Princess Street. Phone 216. SPRING TIME IS CLEAN UP TIME --USE-- "KLEAN ALL" JAVEL WATER A great Disinfectant for Toilets and Sinks. Germs cannot live where it is used. Manufactured Specially for WHITENING AND TAKING OUT STAINS FROM WHITE LINEN AND COTTON WITHOUT BOILING. 12¢. PER BOTTLE Province of Ontario 6% Bonds 15 Year Maturity Price 102 and interest yield 5. 80% a I om------------" BONGARD, RYERSON & CO. "The Home of Good Investments" Phone 1728. = « « «= 237 Bagot St. H. J. Bongard, Manager. FIVE ROSES FLOUR Jor better bread W. P. Peters Wholesale and Retail. SEED CORN Specially selected for high germination. All varie- ties in stock. LAWN GRASS Special mixture . .50c. Ib. ROYAL PURPLE CALF MEAL the only real sub- stitute for milk for oalves. Banner Oats, registered stock, grown in Prince Edward Island Frontenac Seed Oats .$1.00 per bus. . $1.60 per bus. International Dairy Meal 189% 'protein, 259 Oil Cake; Wholessle office and ware- jean dramatists to the requir of the native Japanese theatres, is a niece of. Mme. Sadda Yacco, who was the first woman in Japan to be permitted to appear on the stage, wo- men's roles during all the thousands of years previous having been assum- ed by men players. Miss Aoki's uncle was Kawakima, reformer. of the fapanese theatre. She emigrated to América in early girlhood with these relatives. Because of her thorough knowledge of both Japanese and Eng- ish, and of the dramatic traditions of both 'countries, she was selected to make the translations of the English classics, SHORT OF BREATH Could Hardly Walk Without Resting When you go to a physician to be sxamined for many héart trouble one of the first questions he asks : "Are you short of breath?" Now, when the heart becomes af- fected there ensues a feeling of a choking sensation, a shortness of breath, pitation, throbbing, Ir- regular ting, smothering sensa- tion; dizziness and a weak, sinking, all-gone feeling of oppression and . sign of 'the heart be- coming weakened or the nerves un- strung Milburn"s Heart and Nerve quire. They regulate and stimulate the Rear, and strengthen and restor. the whole nerve system. Mr. Stephen Crouse, East Clifford, N.S, writes: --"1 'Suffered for FURINA Sold in produce EES for Feed -- PURINA Chowder «= PUR-| INA Chick Feed ehecker- board bags only Guaranteed te than other feeds. PURIN. 4s 00KS , foot of Princess Street. Phone 51. Retail store, old stand, 117 Brock Street. Phone 217. Holidays, night or Sunday phone 809. Holidays, night or Sunday, Mr. Green, phone 1352. Special attention to mail or- I ders. Shipments made same day received and at mors any As. market prices. wx +» vr oun Fava 45 $T5.00 por ton Grow your own VEGETABLES All kinds of gar den seeds in pack- ages and bulk-- now on hand Dutch Sett Onions) 28e. Ib. The Safe Place to Trade In a Few Days Our New Address Will Be 233 Princess St., Next To Harrison's Furniture Store. (CrawrorD & WALSH Tailors