= cott's Liniment i use, it jg sul ns ( ur, Rbeuma tis a3 Seventy rains, Sy, a Co d Frost Bi ili Large bottle, 25 centy, | Excellent Hajr nd Scalp Cleangep for sale at ye be yo! Proeureg ur dry at To 3 ott"s White x St. J ¢ inimen : ohn A.B. and it Co, ---- rd ow is he Time 0 Have urs emodelled nd epaired t . GOURDIER'S ' and 80 Broek Street 5 Only Exclusive Fup Store No. 2 incy Silve ilver Piec today ming me art and de- ey in construction than r before FERN DISHES re more graccful and Sing than have Leen FRUIT DISHES ainty designs in reed. Burnished Raw it Dishes, Poke Bonnet \pes ther style Fruit Dishes, Vv Finish, With rich » borderings in relief, also in demand MITH BROS. ewelers :: Opticians Phone 666 juers of Marriage in McKay he Reliable Buyer ants J), 000 ring Rats ouse, 149-153 Bok Street "NIGHT | an buy neat pattern dered Turnover Col- rth roc. and 15¢., for y Embroidered Col- sn work pattern, with egular 25 center. To- sale 15¢, each. .0-Silk Cotton Hose, ly ot them all, cele- {ermsdorf dye, seam- , perfectly tast colors, izes. Extra value at air. jal Sale of Plain Its, worth 4oc. To- sale 25c. each.' JNDAY | ill sell a. large size 1} Juilt for g5¢. that you ay $1.25 for. It'sa > at the price and you , well to see it. Mon- gsc. each, | sale of Dress Goods lay. Lustres 25¢ and hmeres 39c. and ops itings 50c. and up: MAN & SHAW FAST DISAPPEARING BEFORE EF. Established 1859 | 4 PORTS OF CIVILIZATION. Original Members of the Order of Crims inals Were Religious Devotees Who Reduced Murder to An Art -- Not Mere Vulgar Slayers of Men--Crim- thug. "It is our custom." he sald. "The potter's son takes to the potter's wheel;.| the coppersmith's to the tinkling ham- mer." becam himself a sacrifice to the goddess of vows. For Kall Devi is also the patron- | ess of that sdourge of India, cl morbus, and next hot weather the old thug passed away during &n epidemic. Kall had stretched out one of her hun- dred hands and called her devotees away. ! . t Strangely enough, the veteran x he ) From 'this confession it seems that the adoption of the word "thug" as a synonym for: a ferocious criminal. very sound is suggestive of silent and | sudden murder. the slungshot. inal Life Where Son Follows Father. It was a happy inspiration that led to Its It echoes the thug of This, of course, is a mere coincidence; the word. is not English, in spite of its sound. It is Hindostanee. In England | it has no néwspaper currency, but re- tains its historical meaning, a caste of Indian strangiers. In becoming popular the term" has, ' Corby's I} X L Rye i : .| suftered some degradation, for the thugs { Whiskey. Very T1P €or India were no vulgar sluggers and | 1 ip | murderers. They were religious devo- | Absolutely pure. High mn tees and artists in crime. De Quincey | would have .given them high rank among the practitioners of "Murder Considered as a Fine Art." The thugs, indeed, were under vows to Kali Devi, the black-browed consort of Siva the Destroyer. She is that ter- rible personage who appears in the Hindoo pantheon as a fierce but beau- tiful woman, riding on a tiger, or as a hideous, blood-stained idol, garlanded with skulls.' Banded together as caste i brethren, the thugs hunted men to of- | fer them the deity of destruction, and because she fequired a bloodleks sacri- | fice they killed. their victim by suffo- cation. The thugs, not being cannibals, could not live by mere murder, so they robbed their vietims and divided the spoils be- tween themselves and the temples of quality and price. . a AT VAN LUVEN'S Greig's --White Jumbo pkes. Invincible Jelly Powder, 3 vkes. 1 4 Swan' Breakfast Food, ; 15¢¢ . A o5¢. | Kali. As a religious body they were Quaker Rolled Oats, dumitg phys %¢:| protected by the Brahmins ana v re | Quaker Puffed Rice. pkgs. We. but impecunious rajahs, who licensed Wheat Vigor, 2 pkgs. 25¢. | and taxed them. It was an easy way , Furcka Minute Tapioca, pkgs. . lve. | fora ruler to Increase his revenue, ! Condensed Mince Meat, Tgs: : Toe. And the. Yietms were raving mer Choice Biscuits and Cookies, 31bs. 25c. During the many centuries of war "Gallon Apples, cans 20c. | and anarchy In India Thuggee flourish- ed mightily. Under Aurungzebe, to whom as a Moslem Kali 'was an abhor- rent idol, it Suffered a check. Hindoo fanaticism stipported it. The Nawab of Surat had captured a band of thugs and was about to release them for a ran- som offered by certain Banians, who hoped to acquire 'religious merit" by | the act. The Emperor ondered the thugs to be sfrung up by the left hands . 10c. and 15¢ 10c. and 15¢c. Olives, bottles, Olives, bottles, Cooked Meats, Sausages, ete. Green Vegetables, Oranges, Bananas, Pine Apples, Lemons, etc. v F. W. VAN LUVEN 246 Princess Street. winning the confidence of their victims was the mainstay of the thug business. Theirs was not the bold overt, "Your money or your life" attack of the ban- dit, but the crafty approach of the criminal tactician. They reckoned on taking their man off his guard, as the "coney catcher" did in sixteenth, cen- tury London and as the bunco man does to-day in Western America. Confidence operators are as Old as graft itself. | The work of suppressing thugges was done by Col. Slaaman, one of those mar- tyrs to exile and official duty that the Indian civil service needs and trains. In the district where he replaced black- | mall and brigandage by law and order the town of Sleemanabad--Sleeman's city--atandls for his monument. long task of rounding up the thug bands was made easier by disaffection within their ranks. band was broken when unbelieving Moslems were admitted as members of the robber caste and rose to be leaders. The Kali worship became a mere pre- text for robbery and murder, and thug- gee fell before the repressive measures of a strong executive. The The powerful religious One is not surprised to hear of Euro- pein criminals adopting methods more or les like those of the thugs. Ir. a robber can trust his pal, two heads and two pairs of hands are better than one. A skillful grasp on the throat by one | man stifies the cry 'for help and safe- guards the 'Opératiohs of his partner. But as no idea of religious tity would avail in court they must stop short of strangulation or risk a charge of mur- der. | The garrotters who infested London in the '60's choked but @id not kill the late returning citizéns. When chloro- form came Into use ln surgery the un- ' der world of crime, or at any rate its master minds, at once appreciated its value. It was paifiless, it was safe-- for them; the victim would awake in a state of mental confusion; he could give the police no clew. The drug be- came popular with the scientific erim- inals. who operated on English railroad lines, where the closed compartments secure privacy. Sometimes a subject died under chloroform by misadven- ture, but that might have happened at thé hands of a young medical practi- tipner. In Paris, however, the tricks of In- might have been established. measure, which I¥ a very far-reaching one, will be to give a person convicted on indictment of a criminal offcnce an unrestricted wight of '¢ppeal on all Phone 417. SCORN REWARD. Refuse Pay for Returning $30,- » 000 Notes. Nad, May 19.--An example ol rare honesty is related by the Von Mcsitancsa, a Santander newspaper. Two argy. sergeants named Bellona and Elena, passing through the Calle Metidez Nunez, saw a parcel tied up in a silk handkerchief, It was found to contain bank notes valued at 1005 00 pesetas (320,000). The syldiers passed on, and presently met a woman who, with visible signk of distress, seemed to be looking for some lost vhjéet. 'Asking if they ¢obld be of any service, the senora gave a correct description of the package and its tontents, which, without more ado, was. thereupon, handed back to her. The delighted % owners offered = the finders a handsomié réward, but they declined, having, as they said, dong m0 more than their duty. The bunk Roles in question, it transpired, he- longed to a well known Cuban family st arrived from Havana, who were staying at thie principal hotel in San- tander. As the men steadfastly refuse © accept money, the case has heen litought 10 the notice of their superior officers, who, it. is hoped, will ot fet their' act pass unrewarded. ------ Have We Had Time ? Have vou and 1 to-day, stood silent as with Chiiks r retin oy and fray of uie, Lo see 22 dare, to do for Him al any Have we had. time our hamd to lay in is, Aud thus compare His will with ours, Al wear the iwspress of His wish ? Re sure the contacts will indure through- out the day, And help us walk erect, through W and storm show cheer, Yithin the soul sin's hidden stain Nevive a thought «f love for Him again. Deady the steps that falter, help us sce, cloud see The footsteps meant for you and vie. ------------ Campbell Bros., To-Night. For children's nobby headwear. On the average, about 250,000,000 pounds of tea, annually pass through the bands of the merchants trading in the vicinity of Mincing-lane and Fenchyrch street. Men Restored To Vigor YOU PAY AFTER YOU ARE CURED urbe physician who has not in his Aer to gure his first and receive his who are in Rt the Inan {dus pire tunfijentetn Abe, in the jungle and left there to dle. The Bani prototypes of the sentimental- ' ists who present notorious -modern criminals with bouquets, banqueted the i strangiers before the execution. These terrors of the Indian highway are now extinct, like the sabre-toothed tiger. About sixty year$ ago many hun- dreds were executed and the remainder transported or put to work at: tent- making and other peaceful trades in strict confinement. It was the writer's privilege a few years back to visit one of the last of these world famous stranglers. He had been captured young and sentenced to imprisonment for life in a central In- dian jal, In a ¢ool corridor that overlooked the sunlit garden a véncrable ¢.! man was weaving the pattern of a Persian carpet. Tall and erect, with 'snowy mustache and high caste features, he might have passed ¥n uniform for a British colonel bronzed by years of service, He show- ed mot a single one of the criteria of the type criminal as described by Lom- broso. ' Nadhoo, so he was called, had been so long a prisoner that he was rather cared for as a curiosity, a museum specimen, than treated as a criminal. , He had become an expert in weaving, and when the loom were idle. was by ne means uawilling to talk of his ex- periences as a thug. He had been born 1a the caste, and devoted early tb the service of the Kall. His father Jed him in the jungle and of the corpse and the dagger, into the freemasonry of the brotherhood. He learned their signs, how to inter- pret the omen of the owl, the patter of the "ramawsi"--the secret language of the craft. Being a precocious youth, as he said, he was selected to play the part of "talker," or confidence man. He was oftensibly' a traveler on the Delhi road, where the Indian Midland Railway now runs, for His brother, who dealt in silks and cotton goods in a Deccan city. Of his exploits as talker of the band of Tulsi' Ram, & notorious thug, executed long ago for his crimes, he told this tale: "Tulsi Ram was the right arm of Kael, and I was the right arm of Tulsi Ram: It was I who decoyéd Nasur Khan, the rich jeweler, with coaxing words, as men take carp from a pond by tickling their sides. : "Nasur was journeying to Delhi with gems from Mysore and a caravan laden with silks in bales and rich brocades. I came before him as a poor trader, beg- ging for permission to join his train for, - the sake of protection against at A twinkle in the old man's eyes be- trayed his relish of .the irony of the situation. "Nasur was as hard as the stones he dwelt in," he cofitinued, "and the price he demanded for 'his: protection was high. 'Then TI told him that the Rajah of Mulwa had news of the approach of his caravan, and Nasur's heart became as water, for he feared the horsemen of Mulwa and the toll they take. when his pay greeting? seemed--my broth chatted with them, as travelers, of price And as they cofiversed to- gether they made a jest about the thugs 80 my brethren gathered around Nasur Khan and his men, two to a traveler, and when all were listening opén- 'mouthed to a story of Hatim Tal's an ow! hooted twice from the jungle. That 'was the signal" dumal a handkerchief, around the neck of the victim. .He told how the travel. ers weré buried while warm in the : es that had been prepared for them. For himselr, it was his destiny to be a | meres to the secret Place there 'initiated him, by the weird rite | "Nasur's heart was giad within him when he rode-aside from Mulwa, and met Tulsi Ram merry was his Quiet merchants all, they Nasur's men The old man llustrated with twist . #nad knuckle the act of tightening the | dian thuggees have been closely follow ed. Look over the files of the Parisian papers of recent years and you will find accounts of men found dead in lonely places with leather cords around their necks and empty pockets. They had re- sisted the attacks of strangler thieves. In other cases wealthy men, returning late from the opera on foot, fell vies ! tims to the handkerchief trick. In this case the "foulard" of heavy Lyons silk took thé place of the cotton "rumal™ of the thug. | A robber dressed like a workman or petit bourgeois would approach a be- lated clubman and offer him for sale a ring, ostensibly picked up from the pavement. If monsieur did not take , alarm the robber's partner, who had | crept behind his victim, snared his mouth and throat in a noose. Then | with a quick jiu-jitsu 'turn the thug heaved him off the ground on to his back, like a sack of coal, and his part- | ner stepped up and rified monsieur's pockets. The victim was then dropped on the pavement with force enough to stun him and the thugs made their escape. The French gendarmerie trace this clever and bloodless operation to the teaching of a professor who lectured in the criminal quarter of Paris some sixty years since. About that time the thugs + of India were being brought to trial and the revelations that followed excited great interest in Europe. It is very likely that the professor borrowed his line of treatment from these Published cases. But old Nadhoo of the jail would have sald that the spirit of an execut- ed thug had incarnated itself in |the Frenchman in order to pro e the mystery of thuggee in the virgin soil of France. The thugs of India, it was sald, be- gan as devotees, but ended as brigands. epidemic in Asiatic countries that are not ruled by the strong band. Burmah is a case in point and so are the Philip pines. The thugs of Burmah were called da- coits. During the first few years of the British occupation the troops were ac- tively employed in small detachments in running down the "dakus" and laying theit chiefs by the heels. It was a rough school for subalteras. The na- ture 'of*the warfare is well illustrated in Kipling's "The Taking of Lungs. tungpen," a tale of the harrying of a dacoit stronghold by Mulvaney's de- tachment. But dacoity is now extinct in Burmah and the country is policed by native constabulary. New to Him. At a musical comedy in London from his seat in the stalls Clyde Fitch no- ticed a young man in one of the boxes laughing uproariously. His companion wal a critic, and Mr. Fitch sald to him, "That chap in the box seems te be en- joying himselt™ "He is the author" said the critic. "Well, then" said Fitoh, *T think he ought to have better taste than to laugh so loud" "Oh said the critic, "he is the author, but he never heard these jokes before. They were put in by the comedian™ Stevenson's Samoan Residence. It is' reported that the Samoan resi- dence of Robert Louis Stevenson, Vail: may be that it will be made the oficial residence of the German representative, A syndicate of Philadelphians is nego- tiating with the present owner of the villa with the tourist hotel plan in view, while the German Government is desir- ous. of acquiring the property and con- templates making an offer. ' Agreeable.' The kind of girl With whem to go Through lite, your life to bless, Will never say yes when you say Nor no when you say yes -- In France, out of every 1.000 inhah- tants 123 are more than sixty venrs old, a¥ aenidat 73 in Fogland wknd 79 in Germany shalt ¢ "aks sure you are right, and then i i Some form of brigandage, indeed, séems , Sma, will become a tourist hotel, or it" Errors of Justios Wil Be Less Frequent When Court Is. Established. A new pri ip Boglish law is laid down by the Lord Chancellors bill to establish a Coust of. Criminal Appeal. The pressing ned of such a Hill has been shown by the Beck case of wrong- ful conviction. During ihe past few years many mem-have suffered severe penaitiss fof crithes they did not come mit, and had a Court of Criminal Ap- peal bien .in existence their innocence The effect of thé Lord Chancellor's CONDENS ED ADV RATES GING AND DINING ROOM | STORAGE. Fiust insertion, lo. a word. Each cons ply Hotel Congress, King tl sccutive inscriion thereafter dc. a street. y : Nord. Mig charge for ome Ins} GENTRA SERVANT, NO, wASI- » 200. ng. G WaAROS. in ven Advt. 4 lnés or under a week. $1, ink to 86 Barrie a. . Adit: 4 lies or under W wonth, $2 . -- a a PRESSMARER, FiPER fon AL A PLEASANT D . , so - apgrentices. ard: * PJ Everybody ia Kinzston Reads: the WHIG son, He ohwston Atrect. room _ | HELP WANTED-MALE. A GENERAL SERVANT. Xa Jak ing or ironing, A Mitchent, Tod he a criminal lunatic. | Notice of the desire to appeal must be given within ten days of conviction. Should the convict exercise his privi- lege; the judge who has tried him shall make a report to the Appeal Court. That body, however, cannot pass a sev- erer sentence than has been imposed at the first trial. The Criminal Appeal Court may sit either th public of with closed doors. It has the right to hear the case in the absence of the appellant, but it may assign Him legal aid should his means be insufficient to obtain it for himself. The act dobs not extend to Scotland or Ireland. : MR. BURNS' COURT SUIT. Made by the Firmi Which Supplied His Uniform When a Page Boy. At last the secret as to who made Jolin @8urhs' court suit has been divuig- ed. Messrs. Hill Brothers of Old Bond street had the privilege. » { W. Rines, the mayor of Battersea, wiio is a tailor himself,' tells tn Taflor and Cutter, the story of how every tail- or in London wanted the order and how every pressman tried to penetrate the secret. "Why Mr. 'Burns went to Hill's Is a question which naturally arises in many minds," he siys. "We cannot do better than give Mr. Burns" own explanation, to ourselves. Kl "'In thinking over the matter," said Mr. Burns, 'I thought I could not do better than patronize, 'as a Cabinet Minister, the firm whose workmen had made and presented me with a suit, and so made me an honorary customer of the firm, when I first entered Parlia- ment as a private' member.' | "This makes the third vecasion upon which Mr. Burns'.cdreér has been link- ed at important points. with the firm. Some thirty-five years ago, when he be- came pagé-boy, the gentleman with whom he took service happened to be a customer of the Bond street firm, and his first uniform was made there. "This sequence of events is remark- able, to Bay the least of It. First as page-boy, then as plain M. P., now as & Right Honorable, with Cabinet rank. | "Who shall say what the future has in store? Some day, perhaps, we shall have to chronicle the fact that Hill's form." Résembiance to Shaw. A. G. Hales, the war correspondent, writing in London Opinign and To-day on the unequal talent to Be found in the House of Commons, tells & story he taken for Bernard Shaw. He and Mr. Shaw were once in the same Turkish bath, lying on slabs, With towels over their facet. The attendant chuie alobg and touched the coxcomb en the shoul- der. "Réady, Mr. Shaw?" Re Bald. The coxcomb bounded to his feet, all aglow with pledsure at béing rhistaken for a man of intellect. After he had been rubbed down he gave the attendant half a sovereign, for 85 full was he of the pride that goeth hs a fall. As he turned to go he said,' y man--er ! --what made you miftake me for Ber- | hard Shaw? The attendant grinned. | "Er--ell, sir. you S56. sir, you 'ave the sarfie sized feewf nN Played Gage and Music Together. There is aps no sounder musician living than Sir Walter Parratt, the mas- ter, of .the King's yusle, &nd Rt would require something of a.m 1 genius to accomplish the feat Sif Walter per- formsd when saying with; Bone musi cal friends at as ago. To while away the évening chess was suggested, and Sin Wal)ér proposed that he should sit at the plane and play from memory, while he opposed two frivhds on the chessboard at the same time. The challenge was accepted, and with his back t> the board Sir Walter eat at the plano andl played Chopin and Méndelssohn, caliing out his moves i whenever necessary. He won the game fn three-quarters of an hpur.--London ueen. England's Problem of Unimployed. If the manning of British ships with national seamen became unlversal in practice there would be a living found -for 40,000 of the unemployed.--Syren and Shioplog A marriage has been arranged be tween Cw Ein Ivor Currie, R.A, son of Major-General 'offlall Currie, and Miss May * Constarion "White, second daughter of Field Marshall Sir George White, of "White Hall, Bally- wenn, County. Antrim, 5 heard of a coxcomb who was once mis- | GENTLEMAN have made his Prime Minister's uni-' | Snider from Gananoque. way's, 131 Brock street. OF 40, WEIGHT 198, astonish you, points = -- TEE , AS the crlininal law stands at pres: | AN ACTIVE MAN, A BUTCHER PRE: "ent, the cohvicted person' only » ferred. Andrew Maclean, Ontario SULA GOOD GENFRAL SERVANT. NO ¥ technic . - " washing or ironing. Apply to Mes, . of appeal rests on a technicality. Should iN PAINTERS IMMEDIATELY, ON | SV, J. Crothets, 179 Earl street. 3 the judge agree to this appeal it is con- © Steamer Turbinig, at the Gov- ; PWELLINGS, Wor ad sidered by She Aur for the Cupsldera- ernment [ory Dock. A GOOD GENER AL SERV Ant. No §iL, ; sores ia, 3 ion 343 tion of Crow S68 R served. il ng "i ure All Migs swept away by the new | SMART BOY, WITH SOME a) Mrs. T. McKean Rovertson, 82 s hy bill, and the appeal Is allowed as the Re hating, Good gvpegtunity. Lower Union street. privilege of the citizen both In law and EXPERIENCED AND INEXPERI- in fact, COMPOSITOR, EXPERIENCED, USED enotd gir? to work iw paper box The Court of Criminal Appeal will to display setting and making wp of factory. Good wages. Apply King: consist 'of "at feast three judges of the forms. Hritish Whig. ston Hosiery Co... King street. High Court." Th» bill affects all con- : RR victiogs in ordinary criminal cases tried na NO MORK BOUND SRE at. assizes of gudrter sessions, useful. Apply O. G. Johnson. : #} inode id - [TH& prerogative of mercy is not inter- : Be A Hustler. Hodis v" Possentiol fered with, and & prisoner is to be al- { HELP, THE YEAR ROUND. SITU-| "7 was in Duluth, Minn," said a moutl, may le 'J. White lowed the privilege that at pres nt ex- PO a nt dowestics, hotel aod I Kingston than this morning, "when I bread, 1 ion street ~West. lets of appealing to the Home Secre- | ~~ Wollington street Sy remy tho frst telogram, announcing' - poy tary. That Minister can, however, re- he the 'destruction of San Francisco by | FROM MAY 187, 1008. ' FINR mit the case to the Court of Criminal BOYS OVER 14 YEARS OF AGE, |ugrthqueike. It was early in the suburban residence known as Rose APpsalif he conald:zs it outside his dis~ Aon I": Bo Be. Week: morning and in the afternoon 1 re iy Loni yd Union street frie on Vii ohn "Wher sentencs OF King and Queen streets. Sa ejved . printed letter from i Sater heating, "Rood" out "Buligimer cases Where -- | lishing house, asking * me to act as rden a ous A death has been passed is not allowed, ACTIVE. RELIABLE ROY. GOOD | agent for a book descriptive of the to Cunningham & Lyon, 79 Clarene. but is permissible in every other case, Ghoning ahd steady emplovimnent, 10 | great * catastrophe. That's hustliog.™ . a ob the righ oy. ply . Uglow | 5 1 . s eres Ivers aoe | Lomiaes: i read ae, "Tuto eth_ hte, man 8. h ' e man who wine out to-day, and he u Hiningl Agdea); Wat Body can eith- a1 RSMEN, FOR AUTO-SPRAY [is the only one who does. If you have $4 guath the Soiviction and' direct ue. , "fiw "corbumetse-aie whut' "Spraves [if article de will. 8 howe $0 Tout, uF at the trial and pass _-- a machine free to approved agents. | 8 want mfulfilled, vou must mike the Bee a aver M 's Drag tence they may think fit Cavers Bros, Galt, Ont. facts known hy the widest possible atore corer Fringes and re ee Thel Aomar Court may als | Freer | publicity. You. must do it fodav. Do | streeis. Entrance on. Makot a GENTLEMEN TO HAVE THEIR | not wail unt not man gets the 'Phone, h considér that an appelfant was insane Suits pressed nnd cleaned earefully by | start of vou. Put your advt. in the at the time the offence was committed hand; also bring your cloth - and | Whig, and the number of replies will and order him to be kept in custody as bave an up-to-date suit made. Gallo- ig. F POWER & SON, ARCHIT s BCT, M R chant's Bank Buildine, corner and Wellington: streets. "Phone, 213 cor height, over 8 foot, dotifes ante = Er -------------------------- merase | ARTHUR ELLIS, ARCHITECT, a a 4 énrn some business u now ledge fon mite 1d , near of horses. Has family and would he FOR SALE, » ner of A rw PR streets. gin at $7 to 5 Bur Wank; Avply Box, No. 535, Whiz offen. LADY'S CRESENT BICYCLE, _IN|MENRY Po, & : ¥ " ------------------------r a Sp" excellent condition. Apply this Ofice. ote. A ih. fn MEN AND BOYS TO LEARN PLUMB- | sess Whone, alr g Ing. Plasiering: ; ir cklaying. Sphclal A PHAETON, ALMOST . offer ifé scholarship y lolinrs, latest tyle. Apply to Saas payments : position knd Union]: Nie ole 4 MONEY AND RUSINESS. mearuntecd { free : Satalogue, -- 2 Bros. Trade Schools, New | pygpy SWARMS OF BEES: ALSO York, Chicago, St. Louis, - some ewply hives, all patent, hives. EE Address op, TT." Whig office. WANTED. me CITY AND FARM PROPERTIES. GIRLS 5 AND BOYS. APPLY "Our plan. No sale. No pay. . Oberndorfier's Cigar Factory Ontario partsent "D.,"" 208 Wellington St. stfeet S-- AMERICAN ENCYCLOPEDIA, NEW, "DOMINION MAGAZINE" REPRE- bitten Yolen, ut u Giscount, for - sentative in Kingston. References, reason. v roug| I'd ( 7 fh P. 0. Box 153; Toronto. office. our otacthe Cov hn . " a = UPHOLSTERING, REPAIRING, CAR-|THE ONLY AVAILABLE _ FIRST n To pots to clean ond lay, screens m class vacant lot, on Lewer Union St. ot Sauare. . 3h to-order, at - Miller's, 210 Division Beautiful © view of city park. y street. 208 Wellington Sti, Dept. *D.* GOOD PAY FOR. EARNEST WORK. | TWO-STOREY,. NINE-ROOMED SOLID era Bvbrywhere diktributing efvealara. | | brick (wellipe, provert in frat clan] samples and advertising matter. No dition. & peality, pot St. canvassing. Cooperative Advertising price $1,150. Apply 208 Wellington A : Co., New York St., Dept. "DD. peation, withou "required unless PEOPLE TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF the splendid opportunity aflorded Ly this column. If you want a clerk, a bookkeeper, a servant, in fact, help SOLID BUILT HOUSE, locality, western part rooms, large lot, fruit vrete basement of VERY NIGH City 9 , water, ete" $1,600. known. Address Mee : PRIJAT of any kind, a small advt. will Apply Box 20, Whig office. Prin ry supply it. The Soi is small | the fe | «ue TTY reet. sponse prompt and sure. RESIDENCE or LATE DR. y R LE OR L p . 100 King St. All modern improve. FOR SA TO-LET LOST. Mente, hot water | heating, was and | HEDGEWOOD HOME, 108 UNION - electric light. Central location. For AINING BILLS ANT ull information, apply to EB. BE "Monday, on either orsey, 8, Market ative! sale. For Weltington, Princess or King NT UPRIGHT GRAND PIANO. particu Apply to R. W, Anglin. Sta. Reward for its return to this Very uh tly used. Cant he told oe from new. Very low price for cash. So Party leaving towh ina few days. For A Ion os OL AND RSO' # wice and particulars, write at once, | BEAGLE DOG, - » PE NALS ~ ™ Box. RY Whig office. tan, auxwers nH he Nume Th TH : AT CRY T Information renuestcd hy Cart. We YOUNG. HANDSOME INTELLI "| SPLENDID INVESTMENT, OWNER S. Manghes, 182 King stroot, American wanan, wonithy tn her own | SPLENDID INVEST MELT Oc right, @lso large Stock Farm un ror a5 thei wood or ys " r oice | land wi Wants. t ' nr nin taly, wd will aunt | "8300. The _ fourth includes Cofner ; MISCELLANEOUS. ; husband Onancinltv. Address . Miss or a Good grocery | FARM HELP. AND ALL OTHER! 3 Hart » Dept, 692 oh Walmsh, trade oatablishod---- No repairs kinds, of hilo supplied, Department Chicago needed. Sanitary conditions, A 1. B.," 208 Wellington street. rT A N MAN WORTH Price, 3800. Particulars, 203 m---- WEALTHY BUSINESS N WOR' Wellington 8t.. Dept. * cash £40,000 with beautiful home in shbind oe ARTICLES FOR SALE. cit i Lage in country, desires > Inwediately true lovin wie, No MEDIGALS, . _joumion gov yhiections to working girl or widow. R. McCARTHY. OFFI B Address Mr. HM Room 578, Ceylon BR ad by Be. R¥ah, cornet on: logues ie T evel Bidg., Chicavo. treal and Brock streets. Youge St. 'oronto. acpi we FIRE IN THE CABIN. ---- Oakum Was Burning Briskly--Men Arrested. About midnight, Friday, while on his beat, on Ontario street, Police Constable Arniel saw two men board the schooner Granthain at the water- works dock. Followed bv his brother William of Booth's vard, who carried a light the officer boarded the hoat and dicovered the men in the cabin, a pil: of onkum smoking beside them. They were both under the influence of liquor, and on¢ was endeavoring to stamp out what pfomised to be a blaze. Arniel had arrived in time to prevent 'What might have heen the loss of the schooner. However, there was ne; proof that the two men had éom- mitted arson and they flatly denied they had set the oakum on fire, They were, however, taken into custody, and this morning appeared in court, as Gordon Macdonald and Samuel They were each fined $5 and costs or iwenty days onthe charge of being drunk. DROWNING ACCIDENT. -- A Boy Nine Years Old Meets Watery Grave. Morrisburg, Ont., May 19--A sad drowning accident happened here Thursday. Willie Bdckstead, nine years of age, while playing with another lad in a punt /at the wear at the head of the flume, fell into the canal and was drowned. The suction of the Water took him through the gates into the flume. The body was recovered in thirty minutes and every effort was made by Dr. McLaughlin to resuscitate him but without avail. Baseball Summary. National league--Cincinnati, 7: Bos- tom, 6. Brooklyn; 7; St.<Lowis, 2. Chicago, 14; Philadelphia, 5. Fitts- burg, 7; New York, 6. | Amefican le hicago, 10; Wash- ington, 0. Philadclphia, 4: Detroit; 3, New 'York, 11; St. Louis, 1. C Jove-\] land, 14; Boston, 1. : Sees aan by the makers to To dc so means INGS at 20c. per 3 Ae eh - >» GRAHAM IN NEW YORK. Club Dimner. New York, Mav 19. club, of New York, gave its annual banquet with George P. Ont., as the principal speaker. subject was "The he said: "It is like the British has a distance look on Mr. one of the greatest men of the Eastern ochepter, 3; Jersey league--R City, 0. Buffalo, 12; Newark, 3. ? "Excelda" Manufacturer's Sacrifice The Sommerville Co. have been ordered ings, and 4oc. per pair for the Soc. Stock- The Somenill Was Chief Speaker at Canadian 'I'he Canadian at the Hotel 'Astor, Graham, Brockville, Canadian" Pardia- ment," and, in speaking of that'hody, liament, vet unlike it. Our parliament less ' power than the governor, while your congress has greater power than your president, However, we at Roosevelt as Personally 1 like him because he is hits elf." : +4 y introduce theif *godds. to sell not more thah 1 four pairs of the "EXCELDA" STOCK- pair for the 25¢ Stock- » sof TR Also Superior Stocking Supports at Bargain. § Prices. : Toe <4 3 Mgt a nn hd Ate es aker referred to the of the' French in the early develo went of Canada, and expressed ¥ opinion that the British. verhment was the only one that ried out the work of colon cesefully. 1t was a false notion, was not loval to the governmen the contrary, he went on to say, are the most loyal 'citizens we They have given to Canada some the Brightest intellects in the dos minion. : His par- Magnetic compasses are to be glint in future to a tive davalvy ine ts age. { the rate of four : Don't court £¥a said, to believe the French-Canadian