Daily British Whig (1850), 7 Apr 1905, p. 3

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$l FREE 'We Redeem Dr. C. L Shoop's Coupons, want y H you a doll SHOO™R RESTORATIV } end to Ign your name to he "Best" Drug Store 121 Prince Get Your Bottle--F REE] Was Not Able To Walk For Three Months, nam---- Was Given Up to Die, The Doctor Said So, sm Burdock Blood Bitters Saved Her Life. mt Read what Mrs. Wim. Castillonx, New. port, Quebec, has to say about I k Blood Bitters :--" Last December I fel] very sick after confinement. I was not able to walk for three months, and was given up to die by the doctor. My hs , | band read of the many wonderful cure ' | made by Burdock Blood Bitters, so pr cured me two bottles, After u about ten days, I was able to get ar and 'could mind my baby wit! ut help from anyone, and am now well, and able "| to-do my own work. 1 told a lady friend of mine who was troubled in the same way, aud she used it with equal success, [ cannot too highly recommend vour medicine, for I know just how go and hope and wish that anyone suf aa J did will give it a trial," own ' ' ) ' } ' rydturaay ' ' ' ' ) ' ' ' ) ' Extras ' ' ' ' } 30 inch White Cott ' ) 5c. yard i ' } Men's Black Cash ' ' cami pliced | ' ) 1 th we, 1 ( $ 150, a pair $ 4 81.25 1 ' § 1 ' ) 1 4 . ail ' ' anteed our price ¥ { ! Special sale of Corse ! ) or drab d ' ? tile, with frilled ela ' ' supporter ' ? regular £ ' ) > ' ) Special in ' Childres i other pu ' ) {pre ' bln S ! ) value at ' t vard ' ) ' # Big values in Print ! { Me. 12 a var ' : or shin ' $ Big ra 2 N : ? Curtan ' ¢ ' -- § ¢ : ¢ i! ¢ / ' ' @vesscscscssssassssssned Trial That we ask you to give our Scranton Coal You've nothing to lose; while we have hopes of securing your further orders. $ INES SWIT & C0. 3 0000000400008 2990000900 4 POOP vee ® $ IEE |, pduced Fares § 30 to Pacific Coast 19085, iares arch 1st to May 15th, Class . Colonist from Vancouver, $46.30 $48.80 Victoria, d Trail, Robson, 5 ~ Helena, Salt ---- sam wee o----_ $43.80 s, Denver, Pueblo $43.80 Los Angeles .. $48.0% ng Cars leave Kingston hursdays at Baroni Py com Sats "rads Ticken 0 4 West thereof as far as Gest? Coast, nominal charge is i berths, Which may be reserved advance For Fran jst Sleel Te and 1 Comfort Travel by the Grand Trunk Raliway System. J. P. HANLEY, Agent, orner Johnston and Ontario strects TON & PEMBROKE & CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAYS, (olonist Special Trains wn PO THE == anadian Northwest Settlers and their effects will leave Toon at £.10 a.m, every wsday During March & April it mufticient pusiness offers «t Sleeper will be.attac hed to Colon A ' Renfrew och trin from Cuide and full par- from Ticket v of Settlers Copy obtained cAlars WAY gels be Coast and March and to Paclic duriug rates ints Very w lenny ¥ gril at XK: &P and C. articulars Ontario Streev Full ket Office, 7 wh CONWAY, F. Gen. Pass Agt aiy-OF QUINTE RAILWAY New short. line for Tweed, sarovto, and all local points. ve City Hell Depot at 8:25 p.m. CONWAY, Agent B. Q. Ry., Kiagston ALLAN LINE A: FOLOER JR. Gen. Sunt. Napanee Trains F LIVERPOOL and LONDONDERRY Peace PREVENTED WAR. ee a wr NCIDENT RELATED BY MIS- SIONARY RALLY. Meth | ch--Very Brought odist About in a Mission Thrilling Story Cla A thrilling Incident, showing the ine fluence of the Gosepl among the In- dians of Northern British Columbia, s related in Centennial Methodist Churdh, Toronto, recently by Rev, G H. Raley, who has been a inissionary for many years at. Kitamaat, B. C, | which has recelved some prominence of late in connection with the selection of the Pacific terminus of the Grand Trunk Pacific. For a great many years previous to the occurence which Revpe-Mr. Raley referred to, about twenty ggliare miles of hunting ground had been in dispute between two crests or clans of Indians, known as the Eagles and Beavers, all of whom lived in Kitamaat. Councils of chiefs and other means resorted to | in the -Interests of peace failed, and | finally it was decided to settle the mat- | ter by a trial at arms in the eld-fash- | ioned savage ,method. Accordingly, i knives were sharpened, and other in- | struments of Indian warfare were pre- | pared for the butchery which appeared inevitable. The fight was to take place | on Saturday night | -. In the evening a young chief hurried to the mission and informed Mr. Raley | that the two clans would surely fight | that night, and to add emphasis to his { statement, drew his own big knife 1rém | its sheath, and aid it, newly sharpened and glittering, on the table beside the | nary Asten," he sald, "and you can hear them chanting their war songs. They | have also put on their war paint." "This must never be, id the mis~ | who finally esked the young chief to go up and down the streets | with blue paper in his hands. Blue paper was, to the Indians, the emblem | of the authority given to some mission | aries by the Provincial Government te deal summarily with offenders. He re- turned with the Information that no person took any notice of that, and that the chants were continuing, i I'ie missionary then sent the young chief with a piece of blue paper to the leaders of each clan. They interpreted this rightly as a summons to appear before the missionary. They did so. slona the two clans would be sent cpen conflict: between meant that a warship i be exterminated by tlie shells, and keuynl Mail Steardor. ox | leaders taken to the capitul of the Pro- Hah 3 pr 8: Mon. Apr, 10. | v , and, perhaps, hanged. This : 5 Mon. Apr. | failed to turn them He used moral | Mon Aps 23 | vuasion und thatlse failed. "We must - fight to-night," they sald, "but the Cabin, to mmodation sion will not be touched" : Sacond The conference continaed until mid- | advantage in the academic separation and Londonderry tet 11 Fre ni told | of polities and jurisprudence, the la yet been lost on the v ¥ Ding rg and then he missionary tol sf polities and jurisprudence, the late ~ehee os, A Ci then 'they could not fight on the Sub- | ter of which, in the university course, Most of thass <i Shiekud et La . I thai they must wait until | includes the formal science of positive well as the a. + Ee In "our local fruft " G an ho them {he Sabbath was sa- | law, the history of Roman law; the his- | & prominent [eae blr Blo ian odor. a is cred. and each chief in turn promised | tory of English law, and international shops just now, NEW YORK TO GLASGOW y | . >, { orchards, and have. been brought over Thurs. Apr. 13. 11 a.m, | that there should be peace throughout | law, which Prof. Holland has aptly hi of this line. The Cana- n. $50 and unwards--Second | the day, and that thelr respective crests | t dled the "vanishing point of juris- by the ships hs n September C . $85~Third Class, $27.50 | would come to church morning, ufter- | prudence." Glun apple repsor Rael? three moniha " sartienlurs splication to | ne and even { 3 p, - | an a . ther ge ur an ni ; \ mt 2 | noon ar 1 ¢ ing. Canadian students are, in Mr. Hous a Sts product he the South Afri. Pocsenser . IPOS. n Sunday forenoon thé two clans filed | ton's opinion, advantageously situated | ° ty ed to itself." For, in addition Re Oh ars. Sisests fo Seeing as hover before different | Tor the prosecution of the study of hos | SAM TATEA® FB FIER Saducer, the | parts of t) church or mission Py | ciology In all three of its great subdi- to the Y ¢ Aust Th Jerid eo. 8 5 pA. : . rn | tutermar it frequently happened | visions, and Canadian universities competition, o ¥ od A : x sent ARCHITECTS: that both clang were represented in one | should rise to the occasion and afford has to be encounteE el ts agp SMe EA 1 ly, €oi quently fn that church, | them the necessary opportunities, the Canadian pre w herr Ti wnoceu- NEWLANDS, © ARCHITECT, oF-| clans not ouly separated, put | cee-------------- into the field only Wi a second floor over Mahood's drug | fas were broken, for crest was | Canadian's Strange Adventure. pled. iti orn ors, - corner Princess and Bagot | pp, ed to then than family. The | One of the most terrible ordeals a hu- These apples ars SUMING Over treets. Enterance on Bagot street { large quantities, and are much appre Telephone 60 morning se left them absolutely | man being has éver been called upon to } hesburg wot least, The eA timc rei ipt ep e-------- ' ned In thelr determination: They | go through was that endured by War- elated, In Johannesburg . oT 3 EHEC : | ™ - A171 183t vessel of the Hine to arrive--the ARTHY ELLIS ARCHITECT, OI r d in the afternoon and occupied | der Thomas Kelly in the prison hosp' ai . t over 1,000 barrels fie 6 of New Drill Hall, neat cor- | tie sa place As members of either | in Mauritius, Wyandotte- brousts pie Five . He 4 a oq ioe and Montreal Stre ung weed to look across to the | Kelly, who arrived in London the and 4006 Sunn some oa They FOWeR SIO CSTE the fi ST hatred fairly | other day, was for six days in deaths} 118 of them ae ES ation nnd are a id ARE HITECT, MER rom their eyes. The afternoon | like trance, and only returned to active corhe gver un' hie conditi on. The andl el TP py B closed with no result beyond | life when actually in the mortuary, lands in hi ag he done bv Ho or a ama-------------- arently a more determined pur- | A Canadian, 48 years of age, who has jmporting a' fins established in » SMITH, than eter to draw the knife. The | spent fourteen years in the navy, Kelly Hhren ag A" ot Anchor Bullding, | evening service came. As the mission- | looks physically a wreck, and gives an » a e 'Phone 245. ary unfolded, the Gospel story, the peo- | impression of extreme bloodlessnuess, In the matter of the trade generally, : " 1 { in connection with this line, it seems E-------- | [le grew Tf and then interes 1 arrived at Mauritius seven months t the h or portion comes to Cape MONEY AND BUSINESS. | #yes began ¥ tén and before the | ago as boatswaln on a steamer, and was Thal tie jars Fae {he Garden Colony's - = er LE eice closed. th warring chiefs broke | sent ashore through _ii-health" he | Town Ato SUL IRS, Uy T cape | down and wept. The members of the | sald. "Stranded on the fsland, I ac- port being. som wd 0 y LONDON AND GLOBF LIVERPOOL, Fire ea irance Company. Available sssets 401,187,215. In addition to which the po holders have for Securit the unlimited liability of 8 ® stockholders, Farm and city ty insured at lowest possible renewing old or giving rates from Strange IES COVES MORE ON and contents than any oth- v offers. amine them at odwin's Insurance Emporium, Mark- et Square BEST IN CANADA! A Modern and Progressive School The old reliable Kingston Business College Limited, Head of Si. Dot re he rv, Rings ol Pacious t Aflartments Went Excelleg Results, indy Complete Equip- Thorough and al instruction by competent and ced teachers in every department ates sought affer as commercial in Canada the United any Mogue free. No vacatjon. Enter at i _Day and evening clarses. © MeRAY., H.F. 'CALFE, Tesi dent. Principal ET WE HAVE YOUR SALE And I will giarantee you satis fictory results. We don't brag, bt perform the work. Nothing fcrificed, but. your best interest Studied. v J. KURRAY, The Auctioneer THE FRONTENAC LOAN & INVESTMENT SOCIETY. (ESTABLISHED 1863. entists had called the larger body of of President Si ni ) water Lake Iroquois, In these days, » ~Sir Richard Cartwright | which were probably 17,000 years ago, { 'Wey loaved Ci the cariboo ahd other huge animals Propertie on City and Bu tar: Municipal and rn roamed the forest and provided food 1 ha or i P ite purchased | for the Indians. One of the interest- C. MGILL, Man interest allowed | ing features of the address was the & Mea y Managing Director. | scription Prof. Coleman gave of some ar Clarencs Strest. Kingston PIANO TUITICN 3S MAY NEWNAN. 271 King SL, Wes hildren given i #pecial care ® Advanced % primar ht tn Shere adupils thorcuchis ,- Tetate. and 1 wil eall and prac Peterhons Ga%: on are re Postar clans followed their leaders, and peace vas restored. That night in the homes | of the Indians war chants gave place | to hymns. Next moming the canoes | started off to their various hunting | grounds, and the two crests thereafter { dwelt in peace. | The Geology of Toronto. | man delivered a most interesting ad- dress én the "Geology of Toronto." He began hy stating that, so far as geolo- gists were able to search, Toronto was rich In evidences of the. prehistoric times. There could be little doubt that where Toronto now stands was, mill- fons of years ago, washed by the great which stretched down Brazil that there was a continent where nov Hudson's Bay. In those days | there existed none of the higher types | oil He traced the ge- clogy of the district, lly the Don sea to and ife then especis Humber Valley, revealed wl time during ch were in progress on the eartit's wusands of years ago there | heen a river from the Georgian Bay to ¢ 1 this, and it was after some val and change that the @l round by Lake Erie and River. water was the St the Klondike, was which, in the Toronto ot with lee, district, sand feel in height. This first ice pe- riod was succeeded by a period of ve- getation, which, In tum, sucecedéd by an fee period, and In this there was matter for thought--weuld a third or another fee period follow? After the first ice period Lake © On- tario was very much larger than it is now, and had two Islands, one at East Toronto, and one at the Junction. Sci- ! of the fishes and other animals which lived in those prehistoric days. anita -------- "A Disadvantage. ! tor one thing at least when those bullets whistled over his head." "What was that?" mo Thankful that he wasn't ang Lali wr,'s : - . el | | make &°separate In Toronto recently, Prof. A. P. Cole- | or point near Scarboro Helghts, for | very geological find and contiguration | I up- | 1 he probably rose to several thou- | "1. suppose the Czar was thankinl | What we sow Will surely grow, Though the hnrvels may be slow, It may be We shall see * Fruituge in eternity » From sonie deed : Drop i, like seed, For a soul that was in need! Let us strive . While we live Worthy gs to do and give; str 1g still With good will Empty g aries to fill, For what we sow Will surely grow, Though the harvest may be slow! Josephine Pollard CANADIAN SOCIOLOGY. William Houston, M. A, on Its Sco Method and Terminology. Method and Terry "The Scope, of Sociology" Was the subject of u pa- per read recently at the Cangdian las stitute, Tordntn, by W n, M.A, calllug attention to t eness\ of signification" of "socioloky." snd putting in ai objection to the hybrid origin of the term. The lecturer de- fined it as "the science of organized hu- man y and proceeded to point out that It is wide enough in its scope to include several other sclences, espe cially 'politics; jurisprudence and eco- nomics. The first of these has to do with the inftitutional framework of or- ganized soclely; the second with its legal character; the third with its in- dustrial énd commercial pursuits, In one ethics might be Included un- dér soclology, but: that science would have first to be itself subdivided, and, as a matter of scientific and academic treatment it ix convenient and suffi- ciently accurate to define sociology as the soche ense | above A oh Cg " Political institutions are the con- | the principal lines in which ( nada fa crete moans thru which civilized: so- | SiSts in supplying the wants ot South clety expresses its will and does its Africa. ae work. The constitution of the country To a large extent the timber coneists is one of them, but there are also mu-~ nicipal, educatiohal, ecclesiastical, do- : : mestlie and legal institutions, not to ing to learn that formerly this all came spedk of those that are quasi-economic, | Via New York, and Ba te Tn like property and public finance. It is promise that in time th 101 \ customary, though noel necessary, class tutions under the title "jurisprudence"; it is customary, also, to deal with both property and finance as phases of eco- nomics In Mr. Houston's opinion, the acade- Mr. Raley explained to them that an | mig treatment of worio)ogy has in Ca- nadian universities, "And -eipeclally 4n seri. from Bsquimaltand thelr village would | ously and needlessly handiégpped by the wunt of clehr conceptions off the and alms of There is some connection the University of Toronto, been subject matter, 'method the science between economics and politics, bu not such an intimate relation as justi- fles assigning them fessorship to the same pro cepted a wardership in the little prison, the condemned | where 1 looked after | cells when there were any murderer: { there. "In November I caught the fever, and One day, when | went into the hospital they thought I was better, I was y - seized with a fainting fit as I was sit- sibly this is owing ta Australian com 1 4 petition. It is expected, however, that | ting down to 'a meal. I fell from the Melville, which is due on the 26th; chair, and was carried back to bed. For he be Moy ke uantity, Ps { nearly six days 1 lay there without "i reign) 3 Jarye ie perha it seems | moving a muscle, yet perfectly consci- " a ens es tha pa, | ous of all that was going on. particularly gi ~ shoud | "My feet were warm as far as the have to look for wut ip coun ankles, but the rest of my body was tries many thousands of Miles away. quite cold. On the last day of my But so it is, and Canada is the latest trance 1 was stripped, wrapped in a recruit to the ranks of PREVEYOIR L . , \ - | sheet of calico, and taken nto the | Ir: HIS igedtion. The aport SE Cane. little deadhouse. Just ast he two coolies lan eggs to ths . aay who were carrying me raised me on to tive slab, I 'came to." They dropped mi | with a howl, and I cut my head open | in the fall. Both coolies ran away, and { one had not returned to the hospital | when 1 left the island. wife were very kind to me, the doctor on this ship, I should hav Ka | Gled on the voyage here if it had not | been for him." The Rheumatism Germ. | longing to the { aneutnonia germ was hequent investigation has tended or. J luids, and when animals are inocu ated with it a train | heumatism in man occur. casons, says Dr. Beattie, *ococcus rheumaticus" fidered a special organism and | ause of acute rheumatism. i Origin of "Yankee Doodle" | Hessian troops, employed as mereen | lence, {arity on folk songs. -anowne -- -~ Soup Powder is betier than por Arne | Res, at Chown's Drug Store, to of legal insti- Similarly, there is a great "The Governor of Mauritius and his and helped | me to get a passage to London. As for | Some time ago a circular germ be- same family as the announced as During the ice age all of | he cause of acute rheumatism, Sub- to onfirm this statement, sccording to M. Beattie of the University sf Edinburgh. When artificially grown . un milk or bouillon the germ pro- was again | juces a marked aciditication of these of symptoms {ind lesion similar to those of acute For these the "mie may be tone the Johann Lewalter of Berlin has traced { the tune of "Yankee Doodle" to 1776, at | Wasenburg, the central depot of the Lrles in the war of American indepen Lewalter {= an eminent auth Lever's Y-7 (Wise Hesd) Disinfectant other { powders, as it ix loth soap and disp wil bmgrs,- all siz- | Tens igh ye 2 a HE DAILY WHIG, FRIDAY. APRIL T0 SISTER COLONY. CANADA'S TRADE SOUTH AFRICA, -- WITH What the Dominion to Her Long Distance Neigh- ber. is Ship} ing "Phe Cape Argus says it was stated the other day by 8 representative of Messrs. J. Laing Miller & Co, agents for the Canadian and South African Joint Steamship Service, that pre ferential treatment how accorded. by *the South African Colonies to Canadian goods was bound 10 result a consid erable impetus being give the. trade between the two counirie Messra. Elder, Dempster & Co, of Withy Liverpool, and Messts. Furie & Co. of London, are carrying on this service jointly, and, while, owing to the depression that has reigned so long In South Africa, the expeclalions were formed at its inception have not yet been realized, there is very good ground, particularly In view of the pre- ferential treatment alluded to, for be- Neding that they will 'be before long Nét 4hat, in any case, the tale of un- diliited woe is to be told. On the con- trary, the indications are of éxcellent import--to perpetrate a vile pun Half a dozen fine boats ar employed on this service, which I= a monthly one In the summer they sail from Mgnireal, and in the winter from SL John, New Brunswick, Cape Town, Port Elizabeth and Durban are their regular ports of call, while East London, Mossel Bay and Delagoa Bay are calldd at if suffi- clent cdrgo offers. The representatives of local agents stated that timber, fi n pork, and poultry, apples, eggs, butter, ched- dar cheese, tinned goods, and cattle pre the of poplar planks for building purposes and for cabinet making. It is interest- Canadian ymber will be forw arded by this line, It can be put aboard cheap- er at Montreal than at New York, a d the rates are practieally the same us those of the Prince Line. One boat alone has brought out as many as 30, 000 deals, and Johannesburg is a big customer in this line. The stagnation of the building trade has had, naturally, its effect upon this branch of the Can- adian trade. At present the average number of cattlé brought over by euch boat in about fifty, and there is every prospect that this number will continue to in crease. The freight is low, the cattle afd sald to give every satisfaction, while such is the sxcéljEhcs of the ar- rungements on pourd, that none have ] r Town, owing to the fact that all goods destined for Johannesburg go through t 3 Poultry, in the shape of fowls, geese, ducks and turkeys, have beem a con- sidesble item, but, Stringely enough, of late the supply has fallen off--pos- in its infancy, but in the coming sea- gon much larger shipments are expect. ed than have been made in the past Frozen salmon, by the way, is a deli- cacy with which Canada, supplies: us. Possibly, if the fact were more willely known among our housewives, simon would be seen on Cape Town dinner tables more often than ip the cise at present. In regard to flour, there ix, 4s men- tioned on that occasion, good ground for supposing that the tralia will reach to large dimensions. AS it is, its con- '| attton is very satisfactory, although the large surplus available for export from Australia, and the somewhat e our shores. In addition toi timber for the bufld- ing trade, by the way, Canada is now exporting to us metal cellings and met- al laths. It is most satisfactory to learn that the prospects of this line between South Africa and Canada glve most excellent promise. For thilt lire ix an other link in the Empire, and one result of its establishment has been to draw together in closer relations these two portions of 'it. "The fact that the boats are obliged i| to leave thesg shores without cargo ix of the trade that would be earried un- higher rates. the yubsidy paid to the dine by i Canadian Government hibited to inerears cheaper lines that country has te offer us, must affect the Canadian export to naturally an unfavorable factor, ut the same time, making smaller the volume der other conditions, and necessitating The comparative Jowness of the freight rates in possible through the A particular feature of the 'rade done, through this line is the tendency ex- in the direction of RIL 7. THE DIFFERENCE, wa Ne'er a one have 1; ds Cleon dwelleth in a palace, i In a cottage I; 4 Cleon hath a dozen fortunes, & 1 Not a penny 1; i Yet, the poorer of the twain Is i Cleon, and not 1 i Cleon hath a million acres, 3 | { { Cleon, true, posseasea acres, i But the landscape I; i Half the charms 10 me it yleldeth | Money cannot bay Cleon harbors sloth and duliness, Freshening vigor I; He in velvet, 1 in fustlan, Richer man am L i Ge @i@eeoEveseee ~ v Cleon is a slave of grandsur, Free #s thought am I; Cleon fees a scores of doctors, red Of none have 1 { Wealth-surrounnded, cure - envir- | oned, Cleon fears to die, Death may come, he'll find me ready, Happler man am L | Clean sees no charm in nature, | In a daisy I; Cleon hears no anthems ringing In the sea and sky; Nature sings to me forever, Famest listeer 1; State for state, with ali attendants, he Who would change? Not IL rr Charles Mackay, TO RESTORE SIMPLICITY, Nature Study Promises to Offset Some Artificial Conditions. A classroom in the Toronto Univers sity College Chemical building wus filled with an attentive audience on & recent Saturday afternoon, when Dr J Fleteher, Dominion Entomologist, Ot- | tawa, lectured on "Nature Study" or i the educational value of nature study, | {ts relation to natural history, and the methods of enlisting the interest und | sympathy of young people in "the com | mon. sense of commen things Dr Fletéher, who was Introduced §y Prof Ramsay Wright, throughout an hour | and a half, held his audience closely, | meeting several times with warm ap- | plause. He Is, however, ¥0 fluent and | charming a speaker, and so able to | commmuRicate the ardor of his conyies { tions, that the event could hardiy have | been otherwise, | Nature study, he sid, was of particu | lar interext to everybody. It was not | the fad of th® few, Its value had been | recognized in the Public Se hools dur- ing the last decade, where it would take | the place of natural history, from which it differed as the foundation from the superstructure, natural his { tory developing out of the studious ha- | bits and eareful personal observation | resultant from nature study. Nelence was a hugbear to many peo le. Hut why? Was not pelence merdly aoou- rate knowledge? Nature study was itn | handmald, and might be defined as » coveful personal observation of sone common natural objects, together with | a conscigus mental effort to find out all about it, It was possible thus to open | up & new and intense pleasure in this glorious and exquisite world, through which the major portion of humanity was passing without seeing it. 'Wa webs to-day In an exceddingly artificial condition, and nature study promised | to restore to us the simplicity we had lost. Where was the place to study? Here. | When was the time to begid? Now. | The one handicap was the nomencli- | litre. which, unfortunately, was in an | Cuhfamiliar language. In teaching this | might be surmounted with children by attracting thelr Interest with beauti- ful objects, or pnlisting thelr help, as | had been done in Lhe schools of Mani- | tobe, whero they had been tuught to recognize noxious weeds on sight and | to destroy them. . everywhere, on the farm, and by the wayside, and 50 As sist In a work of vital sgonomlie im- portance to the country. The second part of Dr. Fletcher's ad- dress was illustrated with a number of beautiful stereopticon views of plants and insects and their habitat, The ec- i ology of such objects wan a profoundly | interesting part of nature study, Eee | { | i | | } | ology, br. Fletcher paused to ex- plain, dealt with environment, with the relation and adaptation of plants end snimals to their surroundings | everything having its own special Jo- | cally Possing rapidly over the sey- eral forms of the more common insect pests, he dwelt particularly on the rays #ges of the codling worm, which de- xtroys half the apples in the world, and | of the tussock moth, which is ruining | our shade trees. In very emphatio | terms he advised that steps be taken | during the winter months to dsutroy the eggs of the moth on our (ree, and that the trees be thoroughly sprayed in the carly spring. "The effects of nature tsudy," he concluded, "are far- | reaching; they extend into every ine | of work, And bear fruit In quickened | thought and accuracy of statement" ---------- One on the C. P. R, Office. At Montreal the advertising manage | or of the Canadian Pacific is George | Mam, and the eity ticket office is in | charge of a man named Egg. The two are fast friends, and If both happen to | be out of town at once enquiries for | Ham and Eggs are frequent. By a co- i incidence, both report to an official named Bacon, whose chief clerk is | named Brown. Recently Him and | Figg were both ih Bacon's office. The | telephone rang, and Brown anawered. | He caught an enquiry for the Canadian Pacific Office, and sald "This Is IL" "No, 1 don't want Bacon, brown or any other way. 1 want one of the Cans udian Pacific officials" "Well, will Ham or Egg do? They're both lere" "1 don't want any of them! Central, switch that cheap hash house off this wire!" 'Worm Turns. "Five years ago to-night, Henry" re. marked Mrs, Peck, who happened to be In a reminiscent mood, "you asked me to say the one Hitle word that would make you happy for life" "Yeu" rejoined Henry, with a sigh, long drawn 2ut, "and, womanlike, you bad to go and say the wrong word." the refrigerated: de ted ont th enambers has bad largely creased. ---- artuaent. Soe much t= this =o, that the space originally al- | e bomis 100 Petdgerating | Chown's Drug Store, 10 be Iu Instron in and have a look "Bury Come Display afovund PR Mehpod' Carden and flower seeds, gortoent just received at "drag store, Bg RL § lat be Ha seeses WE WILL ALSO is 'Order-made Suits. | more accurately, gave an exposition of | cutter could make you a Suit or an Overcoat 'as good as any | of the best tailors in Kingston. | would stop, and thin hair will thick just ax geod' Take no sibstitute Ask for "Herpicide." Sold hy lead ; ing druggists, Send 10c, in stamps ¥ ' oe for simple to The Herpivide Co.. De Thi Ww k : trot wh, W. Mahood pecinl s ee 2 | ngent ks ens | A vesitin] chat in the home is & ae "Who's this talking? sskod the voice. t "This is Brown. Do you want Ba- | con?" Patent and Tan Shoes Patent Colt and Russian Tan are going to be all the rage in FINE FOOTWEAR this season. We have made special pre- parations for the demand gnd will be able to offér you some of the/swellest goods ever shown for men, en and children. Don't forget this when looking for the "latest" in Footwear. PED FOP INI PPFD PIIEO® -- A FANCY SPRING VEST Will be Given Away--FREE--With Every $12.00 Ready-made Suit Purchased in This Store up to Easter Sunday, Give a Fancy Spring Vest With Qur $18 We guarantee that our European You cin see the Cloths, the Ready-made Suits and the Fancy Vests in our window, Dé not miss this chance to secure a good Sait and Fashionable Fancy Vest. JOS. ABRAMSON, The People's 180 Princess St Between Redden"s and Cra They Have Just Arrived Our Swell American Shoes for Ladies. Made by Utz & Dunr. Newest produgtions in Black or Choculate Col or, mitte- Ties, Gibson Ties and many styles of Plain or Blucher Ox=. afords in Patent, Colt, Viel Kid, Rus. sian Calf, Vici Kid Chocolate. See what we have before puschass: ing your next pair. Noga The Sawyer Shoe Store. -- ---------- Tin, Ans & Clothier, Groceries, METALS==Lead, timony., Aluminum. THE CANADA METAL CO. - - Toronté HAIR SOFT AS SILK. Kills Makes New Scientific Treatment Dandruff Germs, and Hair Soft. an aeonpied fact, a proven fact, that dandrafl is ua gerne disease, and it is also a demonstrated fact Newhra's Herpleide kills the dandroff Without dandenfi falling hair It is en. Herpicide not. only kills the dandrufl germ, bnt it also makes hair as soft ax dik, Tt is the most de lightial halr dressing made, It clean the seslp from dandrall' and keeps y nod it clean and healthy Hehing and irritation are instantly relic and cured, There's nothing permanently (Morris Chairs it a line Comfortable and pearance, Another Jirge shipment of Go-Carts! ond Baby Carriages expected th week, Cra Ae consity in these busy due al In 'Live . Lobsters | Fresh caught { Whitefish. | Fresh canght Lake Ontario Pike. | Fresh caught ¥addock, Steak : | Cod, Halibut, ate. THE BRITISH W Kingston, 'DOMINION FISH GO. Spring Importation For 1905. | Provost's, Lio "ns ob eed; T . Lake Ontario - HIG, ? i

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