Daily British Whig (1850), 24 Jul 1906, p. 3

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he and Neuralgia CoOTT'S LINIMENT of the head just wid . It gives instant re lief, THE HEAD, use iy, the bottle, 25 cents. nt Hair Restorer calp Cleange- sale at. your druggi procured at James w White Liniment ¢, N.B., and Chelny: 2 Models Our ecialty > a special study of urs for Women why Our Styles of the ordinary n harmony with idea of women GOURDIER 80 Brock Street y Exclusive Fur Store ohn, e Silver that our stock le Cutlery' is o-none. We are that the de- new: and will ind the wearing [ each piece we H BROS. 's i: Opticians one €66 of Marriage icenses GASOLINE xallon Lots over, a Gallon always handy on % YOULDEN ITED. "ENT pr t Our Stock of EWEAR ticle, including vers, Skirts, Drawers must out this week. your stock of id if you need 'ments thiswill est time to can save con- n your pur- ers, 15c. up. , 85c., worth ollar, c. and up. ? something extra | at 45¢. a pair. uy a goc. Print this store on or only 63c., 0 40. \& SHAW The Mooney Way There's nothing too ggod © go ino MOONEY'S CRACKERS. The best flour that Canada mills, the Canada's famous dairies can produce, and the best equipped bakery in Canada, For the Stomach Heart and Kidneys Dr. Shoop's Restorative is a Cause Care --not a Symptom Care. It is& common mistake to take artificial diges. ters for stomach troubles--or heart stimulants for weak heart--or so-called kidney remedies for diseased kidneys. These organs do fot act separ sly Or of their own accord----they have no con- 1 over themseives--and not once in 800 times Itis the rEan-- is the sickness the fault of the organ. fault of the nerves which control the ol and only through these A nerves can stomach, kidney {or heart dis orders be cured. Dr. Shoop. Racine, iseonsin, I early in his medical Ric perience that heart weak- nesses, and Bright's dis- an other affections \y of the kid- meys. Forallof Fe are not separate are not to be treated \§ merely symptoms of ness, and when the \§ the €¥mptoms and the The remedy which Dr, ¥ temporary relief recommended by "ALL PRUGGISTS VM IN PATENTED SAFETY BOX Makes polish- ing your own shoes a pleasure. No chance to smear your fingers with the paste. Gives a high, lasting polish, with very little rubbing. It is black, not blue. DOMESTIC SPECIALTY CO. HAMILTON, ONTARIO 2 PUREST, STROK TROHGEST, | BEST. E.W.GILLETT 2087 ohRITED TORONTO.ONT. Wood's @ Lh and foisornee he Jomady. Biotin ST Ge he NET ous Debility, Menta fa or Brain W { 2 | self were left. i - asco Riions: Sper for Ottawa, every Monday, Wednes-| <p. (he clergyman," apparently un haa and Kftels of One 1 plonse, six day, Thursday and Saturday, at 6] .onscious of all this, kept right on Binet by al drugs upr aatiod fn a.m. For Clayton every T uesday, Wed- | it the janitor, seeing no prospect on reoelyt of Pcdiol rice. New pom nesday, Friday and, Saturday "at 6.15 of raliel, fmally gave in also, and, podt Wisiso " Medicing Co ont. p.m. 'James Swift, J. P. Hanley, ag |handing up the kevs to the minister, ents. said : = -- . -- "Pm off. You can lotk up the ] Doukhobors at Yorkton have [church when you're through.' " uggies|, Waggons, As there has not beautiful snow this season, Waggons will be more ured. If you Wagwon ft will be to your interest to call on Jas. Laturney The Carriage Maker 390 Princess Street, Kingston ------------------------------------------------------------------ At South Framingham, Mass. hodies have been collapsed building. reach "twenty. d all | favorite gown of mine which T p/ nerves are restored Shoop prescribed for " these ailing nerves 'is kmown as Dr. Shoop's Restorative. Itrelicves the pain and distress of kidney, stomach and heart troubles quicker even than those medicines designed simply to give [* Dr. Shoop"s Restorative can now bé had of druggists everywhere. For sale been much of the are in need of a Buggy of any special design, | recovered from a The death lig may | Ayers SHE" 'SEEKS MODEL] REJANE'S DESIRE FOR HER NEW 'THEATRE. French - Actress , Considers Play- houses of London Superior to Those of Paris--Her Color Scheme. London, July 24. --Mmeé. Rejane spent Thursday and Friday in making a tour of the London theatres in. order to gather hints for the introduction of the latest improvements in theatrical architecture into the magnificent new theatre which she is building' for her- self in Paris, and which she hopes wilk be ready in October. In explaining' her pilgrimage yester- day Mme. Rejane frankly admitted that the theatres in London are far superior in structure and design to those of Paris. "Perhaps," she added naively, "this is because in Paris we have always concentrated all our energies on our dramatic art rather than on technical details. "Indeed, T am not sure," she added, "that theatrical managers in Paris have not rather neglected their public, I could name theatres where there is not even a cupboard, let alone a room, where a lady can leave her hat or her wraps, and if she finds the atmos phere of the auditorium too stuffy, and wishes to seek fresher air, she is compelled to stand in a dismal pase- age. "Again, the box-office system is a miserable farce. The numbered ticket system with counterfoils, which is, of course, general in this country, is practically unknown in Paris. In my theatre I mean to alter all that and to introduce the most up-to-date erican system, "Also, 1 inténd to provide the au- dience with pleasant saloons in which they can either wait fos their friends, or spend the intervals between the acts. "In London, too, you understand much. better how to make your thea- tres look beautifil. The little alcoves and the gilded pillare which the Lon- don theatres have on either side of their stages are, to my mind, very pretty, and 1 mean to introduce them into the 'Theatre Rejane.' "F muy say that the color scheme which T have chosen is similar to a wore in one of my most successful roles, The seats on the ground floor in the stalls will be upholstered in white, those on the first tier in lemon, and those on the second floor in deep or- ange." NEWBORO TIDINGS. Cheese Factory Report For the Past Month. Newboro, "July 23. --William Code, inspector of the Ontario branches of the Union Bank, was in town last weik on business. Mr. Dunford Mill- brook, who came here last week asa junior clerk in the local branch of the {Union Bank, left for home on Fri- day. Miss May Dargavel, who has been seriously ill for some time, is able to be Around again. Miss - Agnes Halladay, milliner, is spending her holidays at her home in Fl-n. The Excursion to JIroqucis, Cardinul and Ogde nsburg, on Friday, under the au- spices of the Delta and Westport Sun- day schools, via B. & W. railway, was largely attended. The thirty-one patrons of the On- tario cheese factory were paid $3,965.- 13 for June milk; 818.55 per ton was paid, while the Model factory paid $19 per ton. F. C. Landon has purch- ased a gasoline engine for his new launch which will be launched this week. A meeting of the directors of Newhoro fair was held on Saturday evening, and the dates of the fair wore set for September 1st to 3rd. Visitors: James Dunham, Spencer- ville, at Miss Dunham's {. Breeze and daughter, 'Miss Georgi of Syra- cuse, N.Y.; at Mrs. M. Breeze's; Mr. Witherell, of Foster's: A. H. J, P: TFett's; M Chafiey's ' Loc Williamstown, at TT. Tett, Merricksville, at ss Lillian Fleming, of at J. Fleming's. DID PRODUCE SHOWERS Despatches Affirm Hatfield Earned The $10,000. Winnipeg, Man., July 24.--Despatches from Dawson City tell of the success which has attended the efforts of C. 1, Hatfield to produce rain. The first day he set up his apparatus rain be gan to fall in a fine drizle, the next day several showers fel, and con tinued until the fourth day, when the rain fell in torrents. Since then it appears as. though he has been able to produce rain "whenever he desires. Prominent Dawson City people agree that more rain fell during the first week of Hatfield's experiments than recorded before during tlatfield comes from has ever been month. rain-producing business in Southern ('alifornia. the Yukon council for producing there. Clayton, Kingston And Ottawa. Steamers Rideau King and Queen gong on another crusade, but thirty ight Jeaders to jul Am-J any one Los Angeles, and for several years has been making a success of the Hé receives $10,000 from rain were arrested and sent rT ---- CARS Are onthe Grand Trunk Railwdy System. "The tourist traffic over the Grand Trunk railway system to the "High- lands 'of Ontario" is larger than in any other part of Canada, and each year for several years past the odm- pany Rave been improving their road: bed, relaying the tracks with eighty pound rails, and augmenting their equipinent with modern and luxurious coaches, dining cars and parlor cars, until their present trains are among the finest on the continent, The latest additions placed on this division of the line are a series of buffet pador cars, built specially in the Montreal shops for this traffic. They are models of elegance, both in their exterior and interior finish. Eighty-one feet long, they contain a parlor with seating ea- pacity for twenty-nine passengers, n smoking room with seats for seven people, and in addition an exception: ally large buffet is provided for serv ing meals in the parlor section of the Car. LS, The inside finish of the car is ear- ried out in a handsome design of ma- hogany with antique bronze trim- mings, while the upholstery is done with green star plush and the ceiling of the car painted green with gold ornamentation, the result achieved be- ing a happy blending of color and a pleasing harmony throughout. The lighting features are combination fix- tur's for gas and electricity. Hand- some Wilton carpets of choice design cover the parlor and ladies' dressing room, and rubber-tiling the smoking room, buffet and passages. The ears are equipped with six-wheeled trucks, Westinghouse high speed brakes, nit signals, and other modern appliance They are the standard Grand Trunk color (bottle green) and weigh 116,300 pounds each, « MISS KATE DOUGLASS, The former holder of the work's Lennie championship for women Kas re- cently again won the championship hy Jofeating Miss May Sutton, the Cailors nia wonder who had wrested the championship from her last year. UNCONSCIOUS FROM SHOCK. Lady Operator in Telephone Office Severely Injured. Almonte, Ont., July 24. --Miss Eva McArthur, day operator of the Bell telephone office here, had a narrow escape from scrious i Jt seems that in some way an electric wire he came entangled with a telephone wire, with the result that an electric cur- rent was sent along the latter wire, the shock of which rendered Miss Me- Arthur unconscious. A doctor was called in and the sufferer was taken to her home on Mill street, where she soon rallied. On inves imation by an employee of the Electric Li~ht com- pany, it was discovered that a tele- phone wire on Main street, near Un- ion, had, by the force of the wind, been blown against an electric wire, thereby causing the accident. How Burros Eat Thistles. Comey Life in America. I'he Rocky Mountain burro, one of the most sagacious of animalz, seel the thistle as a favorite food, and the pungent spines with which it protects its leaves at every angle ard doubt less a. recognition on its part of this fondness of grazing animals for it. experiences of frontier life are 8 Few more amusing than to watch the don key's attack upon a large bull thistle, He walks about it, seeking for a fa vorable opening, projecting his lip gingerly against its spines and jerks back as he feels its pricks. He sar veys it pemsively for a moment or tovo and then slowly raises his foot. and strikes it, pausing to watch the eficet of the blow. He then perhaps strikes it from the other side and watches again. The blows become rapid, and at length it is broken down and thoroughly trampled, after which it is consumed 'to the last vestige. A Tedious Sermon. Bishop MecVigkar, of Providence, of a tedious sermon : "There was a little old church on the outskirts of Philadelphia that had an old clergyman who was noted for the dryness of his sermons : "It _is snid that one Sunday morn- ing the old gentleman preached a ser mon =o amazingly long and dull that the congregation diminished one by one unti! only the janitor and him Father Could Not Swim. We Tell We have nothing to conceal! No secrets to hide! We publish the formulas of all our medicines. You will ind these in Ayer's Almanac for 1906. If you do not have a copy we will gladly send you one. Then show the formulas to your doctor. If he does not approve, then do not buy; if he 5, then buy, and keep these standard family medicines on hand. itis. Ayers Pills. ; six Buffalo, N. Y.,, July 24.---James Craid sat fishing on a dock on the Niagara river, vesterday, with his lit- : Kk . bein &5§ MATERIAL FORMERLY CAL- Divisible Into Sheets the Two LED ISINGLASS. Thousandth Part of An Inch in Thickness -- India Chief Source of Supply, Canada Next. There was a time when mica, or isinclass, as it was far more com- monly dl, 'was familiar in one lifted use in every household, in which there was a parlor or a sitting room stove, 'thin, transparent sheets of this mineral being set to the stove door. Through "isinglass," not destractible Ty en to heat, as lass would have been, the glow of the fire withih could be seen. With Jong use the mica might be- come smoked up and opaque, or it might become ma and broken. Then the head of the houschold would get and set into the stove door fresh isinglass, from the stove dealer's, while the fragments of the old were very probably turned over to the children, who were likely to be sur prised to find inte how much thinner shests still the thin old pieces from the stove door vould be divided. As a matter of fact ica is divisible into sheets one two-thousandth of an inch in thickness. Now there are Many who don't know mica at all, not even as it is used in the stoves, people born and raised in houses that are heated hy steam, in which not stoves are used for heating purposes; but while the oumber of these is larce and all the time growing, the number of veople wha use the stoves is larger still; and so while many may have passed en- tirely out of the sight and mind of many who once knew it in this use, and in this use only, the preparation of it for stove use still constitutes a regular branch of the mica trade; and thus on¢ of the old uses of mica still continues. The chief use to' which mica is now put is one not dreamed of until with- in a comparativély few vears, namely us an insulating material' in. the con struction of electrical apparatus, for which purpose ite use is now general and constantly increasing. and far larger than in any use to which it had ever before been put. Mica is now used also for making chimneys for incandescent gas lamps f placed where they would be exposed to drafts, or out of doors, subject to shades, and it is usetl for muking fan- cy boxes, and, in place of glass for covering the labels on drawers, asin a desk. Ground up mica is now used in the manufacture of lubricants and of fertilizers, and of dynamite, and in other forms it is used for boiler coverings. Mica was long used for for lanterns, and it is lanterns, where such -use vanfageous. It is used in place of glass in spectacles worn by stone and metal workers, and in miners' lamps, and .it has been in the past or still is put: to various other, including orna- m nal, uses; but among its various modern "uses the chief i in its appli- cation to cleetrieal machinery. For this the mica is cut into hundreds of different shapes and sizes. India is the chief source of the world's supply of mica, with Canada next, the United States next, and Brazil and other countries following. Mica from one source and another, ranges in color from white or trans- par nt, through various shades to black. In. the formations in iets it is found in more or less scat ring deposits, or in pockets. Its value depends, with regard to the uses to which it may be put on its color, its freedom from imvurities and the size of the sheets that can be ob- tained from it. Now this anciently known mineral, for many years put to varied though comparatively limited uses, finds more extensive use than ever im applica- tions peculiarly modern. windows and still used in would be ad- which it ex- MUST PAY OR KEEP SILENT. Alexandria Bay Gets. After the ' Montreal Hotel Barkers. As a means of protecting Alexandria Bay against the competition of outside hotels and business interests, the trus tees have promulgated ou law to the effect that from now on ne person shall be allowed to solicit or run for any hotel not lovited. in Alexandria Bay nor for any business similar to that of the hotelkeeper upon the strects, docks or public grounds or vessels unless they hl} have first secured a license, Each season's license is to cost $100, with a $200 penalty for violation, and the license shall wxpire on October Ist. The new village nw is aimed at the solicitors ior thé Memteeal and Quebec hotels, who work in eonjunction with the Richeliea and Omtario Navigation company. Mr. CanvaWl, representing St. Lawrence Hall, Montreal, and W. H. Ransley, representi the Place Viger, of Montreal, wérainformed, yes terday, that the licenges | were ready, bit neither have made up 'their minds whether to pay or td p#lF up stakes. they hound him to go to Montreal, thereby taking much business from us and i view of this the trustees consid- ered a lictnsé no more than right." To Make Tough Steak Tender. To make a tough pieces of steak ten- der, put three tablespoonfuls of salad oil and one tablespoonful of vinegar tle son, Marvin, ten years old. Sud- denly the hoy and was drowned. The father, with grief . watched in vain for his little boy to risé to the surface and when he did not appear, he drew a large knife and attempted to commit, suicide. A sailor sitting on the rail of a vessel moored to the dock leaped to where (raid sat and bad seriously injured himself. the to Emile Zola in Tuileries, is, toppled into the water | crazed | in a frenzy, | will vield wrested the knife from him before he Tt is proposed to erect a monument in garden of the on a large flat dish. Lay the steak on the mixture, and let it rest in this way for hali an hour, Then turn it over and Jet it rest another half hour -in the tame quantity of vinegar and oil. Tt is said that the toughest steak to this treatment and be tender when served, Your Pasnfel Corn. Bromemetontie RATES First insertion, 10. a word. Each coms "THE. 'PEOPLE'S FORUM . i FOR SALE. he now rukiing x in Whig Press AN APPRENTICE, OR JUNIOR clerk, at Wade's Drug Store. HELP, THE YEAR ROUND. SITU- ations vacant, dowdatics. hotel and factories. Department #8," 208 Wellington street. GENTLEMEN TO HAVE THEIR suits p hand ; also Sa your ot 'an_up-to-date suit made. Gallo- 181 Brock street AN ELDERLY WOMAN AS LADIES' maid, on Str. America. Apply Folge or's office. TWO MAIDS, FOR Spauen KING ston, to 40 years of age. Call Pay or 4 ao Wellington St. TTI WANTED, POSITION AS HOUSEMAID. "APPLY Box "M.G." Whig office. TEACHER, FOR 8. 8S, NO. 8, TOWN- ship of Hinchinhrooke. Apply, stat- ing salary and qualifications, to . OC, Finn, Seerotary, Paterprise P.O. Box 08. BOARD AND ROOMS. secutive insertion thereafter de. & | BOAT, 14 FT. DINGY, WITH SILK word. Minimum charge for pne ine aus, Son $95, will sell for $70. etrtion, 25e. . . rrison 0. -- Advt. 4 lines or under a Week, $1 lines or under & mon ONFECTIONERY AND = BAKERY AoW, 4 or under a month. $3. | CON well established. Apply: t0 Everybody in Kingston Reads the WRIG McCOanfi. 51 Brock streel. : HELP WANTED--MALE, CITy A F, PROPERTIES. WAN] Gur, ban. Ro Teale. ° pay. Dy * 208 Wellington CLOPEDIA, NEW, AMERICAN R anoy at .a discount, for Apply through Whig office. HOTEL, DOING GOOD JyUsinLss, Jenson melling Price | Roly" Mrs, . Me Donough, Stelle, THE OLY AVAILABLE FIRST class vacant lot, on Lower Union St. view of city park, Apply Beau! 208 lington st .. Dept. I'D. - THE BRICK RESIDENCE, SUMMER A A DW CR er | Md 458 Eo aE ------------------------------------------------ Ss E HOUSE, NO. 804 QUEEN ST: ; $00 Guan Bt. i ; moderate. Apply jam water" bouting aad I TT loons. Vi mediate Fo A ply 840 A COMICAL POSTAL Cards, A hit. 36 different kinds, for 2%c. The Louis Larives, Agency, 8328 South Irving Ave. Chicago, Il. ILL USTRATED THH STEARNE WAREHOUSE, Kini St., With lot 45x1332, will be sold cheap. McCann's Real Estate Agency, B1 Brock St. 'Phone, 8320 or 621: TWO-STOREY, NINE-ROOMED SOLID brick dwelling, i. proves 5 first of a Ue. alington 4 TWO FARMS $4200 EACH: ALSO Doctor's residence and: farm So,o00 FURNISHED ROOMS TO BE practice Worth T™WO ar. Apply to John Gardiner, 151 let in pleasant house. in good ellington street. Jocatlof "union, board ; r ole " fequired' . ._Uhicss r. Apolien Are | nwo GAS STOVES, DOUBLE OVEN] | known.' Address T.," cars Whig 4 burner on top. (American Make), : in perfect Wo ine o ae three lLurner table Stove, i PR rina ARD AND ROOMS, AT A burenin. Apply 298 Princess St. s street, Vaurhy ; A BLACK AND 3 FOX HOUND, with scar on one bind lew. Reward for his return to 69 Princess street. GOLDEN OPPORTUNITIES ny people who neglect to use these columns. Advis, here bring the quickest, Goy, Dn froot H, WITH INITIALS 'J. in 'centre, cither on Str, marin, last wight, or on way to 301 Johnson St. Finder please leave at above addross. surest results. A RED-COVERED PASS BOOK CON. taining receipts for Oddfellows' Relief Association. Any one finding of knowing where book is please com- municate With this ~ Ome, of T. X. Rogers, Ontario Bank. FARMS FOR SALE, TWO FIRST-CLASS FARMS, TOWN- SPLENDID retiring, ments. $200, oh INVESTHENT, O¥NER Box 164, Whig office. FOUND. A FLOCK OF DUCKS, AT GARDEN Island, on July 22nd. Owner can Pries, $8,400, PHI, Wellington. St., 'Dept. *'D, » Fass AL Tt POWER & SOB, NR oo PERSONAL. Sa A COOK, wna DESIRES TO GO Hb the wr, r. the summer, cnn find -- a Who would be glad to a accompany her. Address "'D.F." TA P. a a DR. J. LAPPEN HAS OPENED Shroot: aber rhe at. a a have the same" hy applying to 8. Adsit, Garden Island. . MEDICAL. PR MSCART TOFPIOR LATELY ship of Kingston : two miles from city, ~125 acres. Township of Fitts burg, near Washburn, ~3786 acres Apply to Cunnh yon, T9 Clarence street, Kingston, Ont: Now Juneau. Waskington, July 24.-Alaska's cap- ital is hereafter to be Juneau, instead of Sitka. Congress passed a law, sov- eral years ago, giving permission for the removal to Juneau, but no appro- priation. was made for the purpose. One of the appropriation bills passed at the last session of congress carried an item of $5,000 to enable the gov- ernor of Alaska to moye the govern ment effects from Sitka to Juneau. The acting attorney-general has decid- ed that this law really changes the capital to Juneau, Sitka has been the capital since an American territorial government was organized for Alaska. The population of Juneauw is 2,000, only a few hun dreds more than Sitka, but Juneau has far more white people, proportion- ately, than Sitka. Smart Coat Shirt. One signs for sporting of the most popular waist de and outing wear President A. CO. COwnmall, in com this summer will be the coat shirts, menting upon the * pew' law, said made of heavy outing linen or madras "Thee solicitors are" hBimance. No | °F thin lawns as the occasion de- sooner does a person sAeike here than |™ ands, Miladi's wardrobe will be in- complete if at least two dr three of those shirts gaganot included, particu larly if simmer sports are to be en waged in to any extent. They are easi Iv laundered, and as the sleeves are elbow length, finished with turnback! cufis, there is no ery of "dirty cuffs' long before the waist- is really ready for laundering. The waists are fashi- oned after the man's coat, with stitched turnover collar and lapels, the double-breasted front being finish. ed with six large buttons. A point not to be forgotten, and which gives the desired mannish effect, is the stitched pocket slit on the left side of the front. For cool days an embroid- ery or lace chemisotte is worn with these skirts, but there . strenuous sports are engaged in they are cener- olly seen without the neck covering, What it wants is pt gg at- | the waist closing sufficiently high. The | which ih of Puta pln Extractor, back is plain, with but a very little which lifls' ont Hot and bran fulness apvearing - at the waistline. short order, 0 pain, no after | The fact that these are becoming to efiects; just clean wholesome cure | the slender and stout girl alike makes that's "Putnam's." for their popularity. ALASKA'S CAPITAL MOVED. Ah a = COURTING 1S.1 RISKY, Seat of Territorial Government is | Jap Doctor Says it 1 is Perilous in America. St. Paul, Minn, July 24.---Ameriean men,, in their subjugation by Ameri- can women, have the deep sympathy of Dr. Toyokish Iyenaga, of Chicago. "1 don't wonder there are so many bachelors in this country," he said, in a lecture in Minnesota University. "Courtship in America s such a risky undertaking. One little word, 'No,' and the labor of months and, maybe, years is lost, "People hold the view that the Jap anese woman if a poor; spiritiess crenture because she fans her husband while he eats, bowing at his going ond coming. The American man one: ries his lady's shawl, ties her shoes, slaves from dawn to midnight that she may have a new bonnet; but do you eall him a poor, spiritless crea. ture? The Japanese women of this generation are trying as hard to re deem their lost rights and privileges as the American man to recover those vights and privileges so graciously sur: % rendered to his womankind.' A Hen Laid Big Egg. Ventnor, July 23. The farmers are busy with their haying and' report a good crop. J. Davison made a wip to Prescott on Saturday. Miss M. Mec y has returned from Rochester, .Y., where she spent a pleasant week with friends, W. Davison, Kemptville, spent Sunday in the vi¥age, Mrs, - P. Sloan is visiting at Groveton this week. Mr. and Mrs. A. Cook spent Sunday with friends at Iroquois, KE. Vanderburg, one of the egg buyers of this village, fot a hen's egg recently 'rom Mrs, M. Mason that measured eight and a half inches in diameter, "ix and three-quarter inches in cir- cumierence and weighed five ounces, Wallace Davison has returned from New York after a stay of a few weeks, Mrs. W. G. Vanderburg and little daughter, Vera, Warburton, spent last week with relatives hero, 'The revival services held in the Me- thodist church for the past three weeks, closed on Friday evening; fifty converts enrolled their names on Mr, Whiteside's book and it is very evi: dent that much good had been done, Mr. Whitesidh opened revival services in the Methodist church, South Moun- tain, on Sunday, where he will labor with Rev. Mr, Burke. Cardinal Gibbons' Birthday. Southampton, x J., July 24-Car- dingl Gibbons, who, as usual, is spending the summer hereg is quistly erlebrating his soventy-second birth- day to-day. In accordance with his wish, there was no formal celebration. However, congratulations poured in be mail and telegraph from all parts of the globe. The summer colonists, with whom the cardinal is very popu. lar, and many friends of the cardinal from other cities, called, during the dav. and for every one the venerable jubilar had a friendly word. The genuine Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry is sold at Gibson's Red Cross drug store, RELIABLE FOOTWEAR For Boys Boys. Something that will stand the wear and tear. EE 10K or a OR € x Don't fail to see our ona 3 Boots before you purchase. $1.50 and $1.75. Fi H. JENNINGS, 356 King St, 5 -------------------------- YOUNG GIRL ABDUCTED. Pedestrians Had No Time to Pre- vent Outrage. wf Paris, July 24.-A daring abddetion was carried out, yesterday, by two motorists, disguised with large gog- gles, who, at ten o'clock in evans ing, sized a pretty young giel, the dnughter of a merchant, close to ber father's house, in the Rue St. Ferdin- 3 and, at Les Ternos, The thing was & done so quickly that the passershy had no time to interfere, The girl uttered "one ery of '"'Moth- er I" and then her mouth was covered by one of the men, and she was lifted into the car, which disappeared imme- diately at full speed, By the time the police reached spot, summoned by witnesses of scene, no trace of the ear was to be seen. The car had made its way to- ward the Bois de Boulogne, the the Great July Clearing Sale. Prevost has madé a gréat reduction in all light-weight summer clothing; black lustre coats, all sizes, for Fi dark striped coats, $1.50, Splendid assortment of clerical long coats, at low prices. All other classes of goods in light-weight will be sold extreme- ly dow. een cess tis Likes Being Mayor. Columbus, Obio, - July 24.~ Mayor Tom Johnson, of Clove and, declared to-day that he is vot 'offer the posi- tion of chairman of the national de mocratic committee. am nol a candidate for the pl of Cleveland, and I'm going to run again up there until they defeat me or elect me unanimously." That summer doogh or wold me cured bv Gibson's Red Cros cough syrup: 20% Livy

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