DISTRICT p, 8 t Items gy Brann" Magy nity Cou, oX and Addingtan g, i i V1 "ime Lake Ne, corner stone of | st church wip k i be Kid on -W. H. Lake Pie nd; news Tuesday 4 to, veeive) rother-in law, A Dc Seat) of Amaica, ha "heen 8 Edith Batty h ace 1 { Ol as orship of the Picton oe Xr one yedr from Sopteniber +: al. 3315 per year, In Waupoos, on Tuesday MN a painful illness of sever v Henry Harrison Prana ey, eventy-sixth year, wh ert 1. English, who fof . s rit me time: since {o go he Sask., has taken up oy from Cupar, a near town op he wt branch of the (.p R. he iam A. ar his farm to ay ith, Wamer, near 1 Tage Venton, ton township, for $12,000 > ins [fifty-three acres, about ir which is in orchard ang § th al our iy vard Grange, Toronto, arrive j nee, on Saturday, and left - toba on Wednesday, where he wil dhe next six months, Bol 1 his connectio i Empire. B wih Wy s Symington, nee on Monday f or Glasgow on tl esday, Yhere che ie end of August, visiting friend; the leading hospitals, : Perry Scott, evangelist, spmge he past KIX months in Napa vicinity, left for his home, Farg akota, on Wednesday, accompa, v his niece, ' Miss Myrtle Scots, reverend gentleman did 4 food during his stay in Napanee, sad accident happened on all grounds at Centreville lay evening last ; r, one of the tr MD, will leary wr Montreal, and ie Corinthian op will remain yy the on Little Georgy acers, was tracing Il and was accidentally struck by t while running. His NOSE Wag n and his face otherwise disligury 1 and his face otherwise "dis " 5. Agnes Williams, Rose Hall, died 13th. The deceased had heen a ng resident of Prince Fdward ty and made her home with her Egerton Williams, Rose Hall. She seventy-three ve : ars of age apd 8 two children, also three sige and one brother. Mise H. Yo wey, Picton, Mrs Consecon," Mrs ary, and Robert Daniel Petfine James Davidson, McCartney, fo. Cal. -- -- For Children. ng the children here for straw handsome st R, 1de., 6c, : he H. D. Bibhy Co, ------ ve you pains in the back, inflam. on of any kind, rheumatilh, ing spells, indigestion or const n, Hollister's Rocky Mowfttyin makes you well, keeps vou wel nts. Mahood's Drug Store. at reasonable Ae., He, to y itl, wie, THE DAILY WHIG, SATURDAY, MAY 19. wring ven . for purchasifig a new organ for Bris- | NS ' HURCHES tol cathedrai. One thousantl seven : i = - hundred poumls have been raised, and : tn : Mr. Was wrote from a sick bed offer- nT FIRST AID 10 : i de the balance: i ¢ "0 THE VARIOUS DOINGS IN THE | "%,(2 Full 00 RUE i pie, | WILL VEACH HiRst \ the lead of the Rev. H. | Ry RELIGIOUS WORLD. G wi, vader fhe ead of dhe Bev | R : m-- - ade a free-mall offering of the people he . MALE ade 2 huilding fund. The amount | In the British Army Probably-- ® There Are | Two on Hugro contributed by sixty-one members of . Surgeons Find Work Getting Scientists agree that Bapuists--British Wesleyans {, "onorogntion was $1,340, which | Harder--Field + Hospitals Near Possessing all the grace, style, for the amount of power prs 'Lrowing in Numbers. | hey aspect 16 an 2 th 00 negro | "Fighting Line Po Qoed elegance and comfort qualities for expended the Bicycle Various Calls Extendeg, Ronin he United States, with | Service. : which D @ A corsets are famous, It saves Whe fife Sven It Pays fo Ride a Bicycle Because-~~ It saves time above all other machines, or means of conveyance, makes the greatest re- turns, Even the Almighty cannot use peo- ple who are born petrified. Making wealth common will not make the ideal commonwealth. Sin's crown is so constructed that it soon becomes Satan's collar. It will take men and women of iron will to bring in the golden age. 'Lhe liar does not become a moral athlete by his mental gymnastics. As soon as a man is satisfied with himself the angels. begin to be sorry for him Rev. @. ¥. Johnson has resigned St. car fares It is always ready for use It will get you there in the quickest way Where Quality Counts OurBicyclesRankFirst Silver Ribbon Massey - - Brantford - °° - Made in Cushion or Cleveland - Perfect Rigid Frame Models Up-to-date Equipment-- Sills Hygienic Hand'ebars C.C.M. Morrow Coaster Brake Backed up by the broad guarantee of Canada Cycle and Motor Co., Limited " Makers of the Wo-ld's Best Bicycles." TORONTO JUNCTION. WRITE FOR CATALOGUE ---- A Nice Piece of Hose Will" cost you here 8. per foot, Good Lawn Mowers $3 50 each. Sickles, Rakes, Trowel, and "all other Gardening Tools a The Big Blue Hardware Store McKelvey & Birch, 69 and 71 Brock St. Baby Carriages and Go-Garts Sunshine and fresh air is essential to the baby's health. Wheel the baby out In one of our up-to-date Go-Carts, or Carriages. Have your old one made like new; Send In your repairing and upholster- ag this is the season for it. Use our Furniture Restorer,. to. give 'your housecleaning a finish. JAMES REID, The Leading Undertaker. 'Phone 147 FERIA HII FINANCE AND INSURANCE ". CUSTOMS BROKER - The business of the late Cs G. Oliver, will be carried om im his office, /9 Clarence street. G.A. BATEMAN Who for the last five years has Associated with Mr, Oliver. Money to Loan Mcintyre & McIntyre BARRISTERS ': TE ---- GANANOQUE NEWS. Salvationists Raise $125 Week's Self-Denial. onque, May 19. ~The Bachelors "Hoste ns met in a friendly base- game. he Pore at the end of ningas stood : Bachelors, 7; in a Ganan, Cresoents At the § : ie Salvation Army barracks, a Whi hg oF Sabbath school children a ni on Wednesday evening. Quite 2¢ number attended. Thursday g Lint, Ri ~ 3 % rps, rave ichardson, of the Jota) 4 his exporie lag Ss experience as a . Lion oa the British navy, on board thd Pears d and Impregnable. He ap- Bertgin. cAman's uniform, and bh oh d the large audience in Tito n rond, PEt between : week', nds of thir sel atl Bary "onary doolleetions; $112.95 TL and they ow Bunday to If You Want a Home Or Insurance, have a talk with George Zeigler, "i" {il iikce 57 Brock Street. Mill Property For Sale Near the Grand Trunk consist. ing of grist, saw and shingle mills with all necessary machinery for the manufacture of chairs and cheese-boxes ; B acres good land with young orchard, 33 acres asturs ; two good dwellings ; Pa barn, good Water-power ; could get 500 electric lights in village. Buildings and machinery up-to-date ; ha¥e cost $6,000 will [sell for about halfprice. T. J. LOCKHART, Real Estate Agent, Kingston. got sufficient more to make up $125. Mrs. Allen Earl and young son, mor, of Sweet's Corners, who have been making a short visit with Mr, and Mrs. Freeman Moore, Garden street, returned home yesterday. Mrs Marshall and daughter, who have been spending a few weeks with friends in Ottawa, returned home during the past few days, accompanied by her sister, Miss Lizzie Rock, who will spend some time here. Mrs. Massey, of Montreal, who has been visiting for come weeks past with her sien, Mrs, H. C. Taylor, Stone street, was called home on ateount of her daughter's ill. ness. H. C. Taylor is still ill and unable to attend to business. Mise Luella Salter, after spending several weeks at Kingston and Pittsburg, has returned spending deverst months past in Syra- cuse, N.Y., has returned home. J pone Miss May Parker, who has bien | Andrew's church, Montreal, on account of ill-health. Rev. A. H. Whalley, Iroquois, has "been appointed rector of Emmanuel church, Arnprior. 'The First church, Eramosa, has given a #all 10 Rev. J. A. Moir, B.A, LL.B., formerly of Manotick, Ont. Rev, W. A. Amos, B.A., Woodstock, 'has accepted a call to the Presbyteri- an church at Allandale, A Cobalt Roman Catholics will build a new church costing $4,000. The bu, ing in use now will be used as a sep- arate school. Rev. Rural Dean Wright, rector St. John's, Brantford, has declined the call to the rectorship of the In- gersoll church. The induction of Rev, Charles H. Daly, @ pastor, bf Sty, John's) conghe- place on of next, Vv. Frederick H. Howard, S.T.L.; Cordova, has received and accepted an invitation from the Rednersville Methodist ecircnit for 1906. Rev. W. W, MacMaster, pastor the Pourth Avenue Baptist church, Ottawa, has accepted a call to the Baptist church, St. John, N.B Rev. F. A. Connors, lately of Carle- ton Place, has been ordained and in ducted into the pastorate of the Bap- tist church at, Del Norte, Colorado. At a congregational meeting of the Queen Street Baptist church, St. Catharines, a unanimous call was ex- tended to Rev. Dr. 8. S. Bates, To- ronto. The Methodist conference of British Columbia passed a of unanimous reso- lution urging that the general con ferenco for Canada be held here in 1410. Rev. Alexander McMillen, of St Enoch's Presbyterian church, Toronto, has resigned, with a view to accept- ing a professorship at Edinburgh Uni versity, 'the united congregations of Ripley and . Bervie have extended a unani mous call to' Rev." W. Cooper Mercer, of Owen Sound; stipend to be $1,000 'and a mansi] It is reported that the new modera- or of the general assembly of the Presbyterian church, which meets in London, on June 6th, will bLe* Rev. Dr. Falconer, Pictou, N.S, The Presbyterian Foreign Committee has decided that Dr, R. P. Mackay shall be deputed to visit for- eign fields, and the Canadian assem- bly will be requested to choose him as its delegate to the assembly of the Presbyterian church in India, which meants at Indore in December. At Shanghai in April, 1907. Dr. Mackay will attend a centennial conference in memory of Robert Morrison, first mis sionaiy to China. In Ausyralia there are 210 churches to every 00,000 people, a larger nun- ber in /proportion than any other country, Britain has 111, and Russia about fifty-five, The New York federation of church- es, which has been in existence for ten years, is out of debt for the first time in its history. It is spending more than $16,000 a year in its work. Indianapolis will have the interna- tional meeting of Young Men's Chris tian Association societies, whiclf brings together between 800 and 1,000 workers from the United States, Can- ada and Mexico, next May. The Methodists of British Colum- bia proposes to erect a memorial church to celebrate the jubilee year of Ur. Robson, a pioneer of the Metho- dist ministry, to whom ritish Col- umbia is indebted beyond calculation. The Calvanistic Methodists of Wales, are still considering the offer of David Davies, the millionaire M.P. for Mont gomeryshire, to provide thefn with a building in Aberystwyth, worth £50,- 000, for the purposes of a theological training college. _ Rev. T. Anson Halpenny, B.A., jun- or pastor of St. Jam Methodist church,, Montreal, has been invited by the quarterly official board of Sher brooke street church, Montreal, to be- come their pastor to Rev. C. BE. Bland. The Congregationalists now about $200,000 a vear for church extension, but not satisfied with that are starting a, movement to es in succession are raising insure £500,000 being raised. There are 500 congregations of their denomination in_this country. Native Protestant Christ dia have formed a national home mis. Klonary society to evangelize their own country. The society will be ad- ministered wholly by Indian natives in harmony with existing Christian churches in that land. H. 0. Wills, belonging to the well known Bristol family of that name has given £2,000 to complete the fund Happy at Last Mer NMushband ne longer gets Intoxicated - Samaria Tasteless Remedy Cured Mim. This laly says: "For the first time iang in In- 3 be content--my hus. pd of his 'abi of ing. Several months you sent me a free sample ou at my hd T a's my / and it regularly, It i wonderful, and 1 suc iently thank you for the biesred l change it has to wy free b snd Pampislet giving full particulars, testimoniale and price sent in plain sealed envelope. Core THI SAMARIA REMEDY tor 1 orcas: 1 vB jordan Chambers, jordan St., Toron aga) Mission® : since I have been married 1 can and' > fifty institutions of learning and forty- | From Sumatra, the Rhenish Mis- sionary Society reports a year of har- vest such as it has never before seen. The number of pagans baptized dur- i the vear was 4,712, besides . 136 Mohamucdans. Thé total of Chris- tians is now 61,764. In 301 schools, 14,519 boys and girls are under in- 8 ction. . he Salvation Army is making such progress in Germany under the lead- ership of Commander Oliphant, who the Frankfurter Zeitung declares is almost as interesting a character as ory high forehead, "bushy eye- bin igh a long black beard. Though an Englishman, he speaks German fluently and his citations evince thorough familiarity with Ger- man erat Methods Book Room, beside what is needed for running expenses, goes each year to the Methodist superannuation fund. The past year has been unpsually suc- cessful, and the result is that $15,006 was handed over during the past week, to Dr. Griffin, who has charge of the fund. This is $1,000 more than what was received last year, and is the largest amount ever paid over by the Book Room to that fund. In view of the coming Methodist general conference the following statis- tics are of interest : There are, in the isters, 1,360 are ) and mission work, 54 are engaged in educational and ather connexional work, 3 are in special evangelistic work, 36 are left without a station, and 347 are on the superannuation and supernumerary lists. Of the 320 what should be done with regard to the observance of Sunday, for what was right in the case of one was al together wrong in the case of anoth- cr. It 'was quite wrong. for a rich amuse himself to take Sunday pleasure, but it was not at all wrong for © a hard-worked man, who never got out except on Sunday, to havea of the rich. largest. augmentation reported some years. The junjor members the first. time exceed 100,000, the exact figure being 102,753. There are on the church rolls of * Wesleyan Me- thodism in all grades of in England 639,230. Of the thirty-five and only four a decrease. London' tha community marks a con siderable advance, doubtless the result in large degree of the energy with which its various missions are carried on. A:European Deer Story. Siringfield Republicun Stories of deer with rain barrels or water pails "on their heads are com mon enough among Maine and Adiron- dack guides, but it is left for Earope to come to the fore with a variant. Some huntsmen near Innsbruck came upon a stag with a ladder on its ant lers. In spite of this handicap it made off at great speed on seeing the men, leaping hedges and dashing through the undergrowth as if quite unimped ed. Its mad career was stopped, how ever, when the ends of the caught between two trees, struggles were so frantic at the ap- proach of the huntsman's dog that it broke off part of its antlers, and, thus freed, made good its escape. The lad der proved to belong to a farmer, who had left it standing against one of his haystacks. While stealing the hay, the stag had ov idently upset the ladder, which had thus become fixed ladder Its honesty: is the best policy--~even for stags, e -------- Routine Bicycle News. "Tandem." --Lippincott's travelling salesman in the em- ploy of a large bicycle manufacturer in Philadelphia was obliged to go on a business trip into the west about the time an interesting domestic event was expected. The salesman desired his sister to wire him results, according to a formula something like this : If a boy, "Man's safety arrived"; if a girl, "Lady's safety arrived." To the astonishment and chagrin of the father-elect he had been gone but a few days when he received a tele gram containing but one word : "Pandem."" tts Actors And Coughing. > The principal cause of coughing in theatres has heen explained on scien- tific lines by a London Harley strest specialist. "People in theatres," he said, "do not cough because they want to. They cough because the actors do not speak loudly" enough and because they cannot hear. Two nerves commeet the tympanum of the ear and the back of the throat, with he result that if the ears are strahmed, through, say, an actor's faulty enunciation, it pro- duces irritation in the throat, which sets up coughing." Alum water will restore anv faded color if put into the rinsing water af wer the goods are washed. Emigrants cannot work out their passage to Newfoundland, ; ¢ Gen. Booth. He is tall and lean, has | Methodist connection in Canada, thirteen annual conferences and 124 districts. Of the 1,802 ordained min- | employed in circuit | man who had all the week in which to | for | kind of recreation on that dhy which would be absolutely wrong in the case Wesleyan Methodists report a large twelve month previously. This is the for for thus membership districts thirty-one report an increase, | As regards on its horns. Which goes to prove that | London, 'May 18.--The British mili- five denominational papers. They | tary authorities. are seriously consid: have a national organization, with | ering the suggestion of instructing the boards for missions, home and for- | soldisrs of ~ the British army in the eign, education, publication and the | clements of "first nid to the injured. young people's soeieties. A strong appeal, based upon the ob- | servations during the Russo-Japanese | war, has been madé, to bring about {| some much needed reform in. the hos- | pital service of the army and the plan { has been warmly supported by many | high medical authorities. | %t the recent thirty-filth congress of { the German Association of Surgeons, | held in Berlin, several interesting de- | tails were discussed relating to war | surgery. It is generally recognized | that modern conditions of war are | rendering it more and more difficult | for military surgeons to pursue their | duties conneceted with first aid. Itis | said that the most efficient medical | services sendered during the Manchur- | ian campaign were those performed by means of field hospitals erected along | the line of communication in the rear | of the fighting lines. Reports 'laid he- fore the congress by various authori: ti*8 were unanimous in declaring that ! wounds resulting from shells were usu- ally fatal. On the conclusion of the | various. Manchurian actions. it was | not uncommon for one doctor to at- tend to one hundred and twenty more cases, It is stated that seventy per cent. of or the soldisrs wounded at Mukden had | recovered and again resumed duty ! within three: months of the action. 1 comparatively hygie 'his, of course, 'was owing to the | isnic effects of the | unusually small projectile used by the 1 hostile armies. Dr. Schaefer, who ob- | tained considerable experience in Man churia, states that no less than 2,000 wounded were treated in one field hos pital, and only ten of these required | to undergo operations. It appears to be unanimously agreed by medical au- | thorities® throughout the world that | the system of first aid instruction now | imparted to soldiers has been ree probationers, 149 are employed in cir- | sponsible, for saving an enormous cuit and mission work, 163 are at col- | number of lives. Formerly many of lege, and eight are left without | the wounded. were quietly permitted to a station. | bleed to death when even an element The Bishop of Bath and Wells, { ary knowledge of anatomy and ex- speaking at taunton, said he was not | temporized surgical appliances would going to lay down any rule as to | have enabled their comrades to save | them | The Dear Dead. Daisy Gertrade M. Corbett What do they cure--the dear dead, If the birds are singing overhead, If the tender leaves Clothe the naked trees, And over! the earth the green is spread. ; What do they care--the dear dead What do they carc--the Ii the roses white blow If the sky be fair, And the sumaner air Is perfume-laden with violets fled What do the care--the dear dead ! dear dead-- increase i pir q ing the incregse_jn. their numbers during the | yo, \- , joy care=the dear dod past, vear. The membership is given | jf the trees abe golden-brown and rod, as 498.285, or 13,406 more than a | If the putumn rich in harvesting Reaps the glad If the fallen | What do they the spring ; the tread, dear dead ! the What do they care--the dear dead- If the snow falls gently on their le If all around is White and ehill And the songs of the singing-birds are still ; | Those Asleep have nothing to dread, | So what do they care--the dear dead ! Nothing to them is the rain and snow Nothing the fiercest winds that blow, | Nothing at all the cold or heat Cf a bitter wintérd or summer sweet ; Only for them the Victory won, Death has been. Cconguered |and Life begun. | Lighting Millhaven. | R. G. Miller's barn at Millhaven | was struck, on Saturday last, on the south end, where the bolt divided, part of 'it going down through the | building to the ground, part running along the | north end of the barn, where it also divided and ran down the rafters, { through the hav, and split the cement wall. These bolts passed within two vet of his cows, and three feet from two horses; which unhurt, | Strange to say, the buildings or hay | did not take fire. | Chester Nicholson, Millhaven, was on | the milk stand, straining milk, and | lightning struck a poplar tree near | him. He was so shocked that he was laid up for a day. and the other ridge to the were To Inérease Salary. | At the May meeting of the yuarterly | official board of Seeley's Bay Metho | dist circuit, after looking™over the business of the year and the verv gat- isfactory results, both spiritually and | financially, an, advance being made | along all lines, the following resolu | tion was passed : Whereas, we aopre | ciate the very efficient services render | ed by our pastor, Rev. Thomas Mere | dith, during the past vear, we extend | to him 4 cordial ana tnanimoug in vitation to remain for another year, { and that the salary shall be increased | by fifty dollars. ® At Chaffey"s Locks. Chafiey's Lock, May 18. --Farmers of this Jocality have fished seceding. Thomas Simmons has improved his premises by paintine his verandah and barn. The lockmen have finished paint ing and cleaning and have put up some new iron gates. C. J. Speagle, Westport, has completed two very fine launch houses for the Opinicon Club, The members of the club have purch ased two new gasoline launches; one of them arrived here yesterday. E. Fdgers it having his' house painted. Miss 1, Boulper, Gananoque, is visiting Mrs, F. Littlejohn. Campbell Bros. The store of big vals in men's hats. = Have you weakness of any kind- stomach, back, or any organs of the body ? Don't dope yourself with dr- dinary medicine. Hollister"s Rockey Mountain Tea .is the supreme curative power, 35 cents, Tea or Tablets. Ma- hoods Drug Store. J. M. Barrie is one of the most painstaking dramatists of the day. So hard is he to please that he re-writes an act eight or mine times, over their head, the "Crest" is the only corset made that will not break at the waist-- that positively will not break and cause discomfort and ill fitting gowns. Suitable for any womah any day and all the day -- good to work in, walk in or rest in, Fashion approves Jt COMMON sense and c t d it, : \ Ask for the corset that s cannot break at the waist ~the D @ A Crest Corset Long Distance Bonds and Stocks .. Telephone Mata SIAEN-02 Bought and Sold on Commission Investment Securities Both Listed and Unlisted. Information upon Request Members e Toronto Stock Exchange rs « TORONTO Commission, Orders Executed on All Exchanges in the wardrobe of the outdoor in| jp ore tun yoy era on the woman, One can Adjustable Band Dress Skirt for grace of curve and perfect neatness. It is the greatest comfort to ; every cular woman, Newest styles--best materials--tailor-made, At all high-grade dry-goods stores, . Look for the W/HINERJA" uve. THE MINERVA MFG. CO., LIMITED, « TORONTO, ONT. People in the Country and small towns have got to consider fire ~--and take every precaution in building homes, Fireproof is an attractive feature of Metal Walls and Ceilings J If the stove explodes, or lamp overturns, or curtains blaze up--the fire is confined to the room where it starts Because the Metal Walls and Ceilings are absolutely fireproof, and prevent fire from spreading: METAL SHINGLES will protect your bulldings from lightning~they are rain and snow proof--are guaranteed lightning proof % aud will last for go years, Find out more abbut Metal Building Materials, state what you have in mind and mention this paper, METAL SHINGLE & SIDING CO., Limited, Preston, Ont. LABATT'S Ale and Porter are Nature's Best Tonics, Pure Malt N products, made from the choicest barley and best selected hops. They are very healthful and aid digestion, Labatt's are very palatable beverages and agree with the most delicate stomach. JAS. McPARLAND, , © 339 and 341 King St. 'Phone 274. A EM BICYCLES TYPEWRITERS SEWING - MACHINES : Sold and Repaired gin DOBBS & €0., 171 Wellington St. 344% $330 540404 $2259 $4434 : Fireworks! . Fireworks! & Big lc. assortment at Rees'. Big Se. assortment at Rees'. Crackers from lc. t6175¢. package. Roman Candles from lc. to 25¢. each. Rockets from lec. to 50c. each. Torpedoes, Canes, Cafis, Mines, eto. A. J. Rees. 166 Princess St. J @