x i <M EI, | Carefully if punt. sess nsssnsssts. person who finds ~~ fourth largest g mber we will give g sum of uty o llars- ($20.00) in g sh. id two ze, the first two g zes will be equally g rided between them go th receiving the g m of Seventy-five g ollars $75.00.) o oud three J TSONS in eq cor. ct answers the first $ ree prizes will be ct answers the hole sum of Two undred Dollats $ wooo) will be ually divided be. ® em them, each re. iving Fifty Dollars $ 50,00. And soon in ke progortions. 8 foney ! od us &n you ion Crhich 3 + rrite you explaining s write to-day, mark EPLY. eal, Can. at ds ugh all sorts of t? This is 4 better prepared closer shaved success because Knife for 15c., money in the Eston mm ------ TE g THE GREATER CANADA Branch Local Time Table -- lene and arrive at City ohnson street. GOING WEST Ltd 12.16 noon 12.49 p.m. 7 Mail .. « 3.19pm 14 Local .. ..8.16 a.m. Made of soft, silky, plain and fancy flannel, with lounge collar to match. Smart in looks, easy in feel, perfect in fit. See ata good shop Demand the brand HI Walers, Berlin Nos. 1, 3, 3. 4 5 and 8 run daily. All other trains dally except Sunday. Nos pone. 5. carr; Sleeper to an m tawa Toronto, Peterhoro, uffal, Chicago, Bay City, 1lalifax, Rosten and New J. P, HANLEY' Agent, Corner Jobnsom and Ontario strests. IN CONNECTION WITH CANe ADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY. TRAINS LEAVE KINGSTON : 12.30 p.m. Exnress--For Ottawa Mon- treal, Quebec, St. John, Boston, Toronto, Chicago, Denver, frew, Sault Ste. Mane, Duluth, St. Paul, | Business Training and San Francisco. P Local connecting with C.P.R. East and West. 7.45 a.m., Mixed--For Renfrew and in- termediate points leaving Kingtton at 12.30 p.m. arrive in Ottawa at 5 p.m. ; Peter- Toronto, 7.30 p.m. ; Montreal, 7.15 p.m. ; Boston, 7.30 a.m,; St. John, 11.55 aun. Full particulars at K. & P., and C.P.R. Ticket Office, Ontario street. Frontenac Business College KINGETON ONTARIO Day and Evening Classes Moderate Rates. Te N. STOCKPDALB, Principal. bore', 5.12 nm, ; Gen. Pass. Agent. Bay of Quinte Railway New short line for Tweed, Napanee, Deseranto, and all local points, Trains leave City Hall Depot até4pm, F. CONWAY, Agent B. Q. Ry., Kingston, i Between Montreal and the At- | INTERCOLONIAL RAILWAY CANADIAN CANADIAN winter ports, St. John and Hali- A WOMAN'S BACK WAS NOT MADE TO ACHE Thousands of Women suffer Un- That Really have 4 gs If intending to spend the early months of the new year ih Warm climate try the West Indies Full particulars about regular sailings and of & Yachting cruise to the Mexico, leaving Hali- Doan's Kidney Pills fax, J aBuary 20th, and x : t same way as they have others. . Almonte, Ont. , writes for six months for kid my back was #0 lame I 1 was advised to try On application to NTREAL CITY OFFICE 141 St, James Street woek I was able to walk pain, and ig five months my Pills are 50 cents per box .25 at all dealers, or will on receipt of price by The Doan Kidney Pill Co., Toronto, Ont. stttettttsasttesttte " CHAMBERLAIN" QUEBEC S. S. COMPANY BERMUDA Iloached in 48 hours from New York by the new Twin Screw Steamship *'Ber- mudien," 5,500 tons. Sailings every ten days. WEST INDIA CRUISES From New York » n_the tropics $100 to $180. For beauty of scenery and perfection of Juebec teamship Co. w York: A HE SCOTCH TO LIVERPOOL. From St. John From Halifax. Fri., Jan. 18. Sat; Jan t. RATES OF PASSAGE. First, Cabin, $55 and upwards, accord- Tunisian end Yonian, z oderate Rate )Steame reto ca sal > "oe. SLLLLLL000L8080020/00L00000000080800008 f FIPS ISIIIIPI ITIP IPIIIIIFIIIGIIIIIIY CERI ERR EER ORE Ea ae Bought A Farm. rd. retorian, $26.50; o have not much snow but splendid sleighing. The hay shipped from these parts beats all previous records. Much: dissastifaction exists in Sharp section. This is unfortunate as it will eause a retrograde move- mnt. It is to be hoped that an ami cable setilement will soon be reached. Wedn-sday night was the coldest so far, The grippe is prevalent. Mr. Bab- bought the Shammon farm. )m. Murray, Auctioneer 27 BUCK ST. Carriages. Cutters, Harness rch was solemnized last "residence of Col. Rathbun, Deseronto, when the Rey. "uttered the words nk Gaylord and Miss Horses Every Saturday snr POWER PRESIDENT'S PROPHECY OF CHEAPER POWER. Maj-Gen. F. V. Greens of Buffalo Speaks Eloquently of Canada's Rapid Rise In Wealth, Population and National Importance--Public Demand the Cheapest Possible Power and Preservation of Falls. "It is not alone in manufac tures that cheap power will prove advantageous, but also in light ing, possibly in heating, and cer- tainly in many domestic uses, not alone in the great cities, but in the villages and on the farms. I believe the is not far distant when practically every house in Ontario within 200 miles of the Niagara River will be lighted by electricity supplied by the power of the great cataract. It will be running the sewing machines, the churns, the ice-cream freezers, the ventilating fans, the house pump, the knife-cleaner and sharpener, the dish-washing machine, the clothes-wringer and other parts of the laundry, and a host of other domestic utensils not yet invented, but much thought about at the present time by a multitude of in- ventors.""--Gen. Greene of Buffalo to Toronto Empire Club. Maj.-Gen. Francis V. Greene of Buf- falo, a man of national reputation in the United States as an author, mili- tary expert, and public official, ad- dressed a large attendance of the mem- bers of the Empire Club of Toronto at luncheon the other day on the sub- ject of Niagara power. Gen. Greene is president of the Niagara Construction Co. and of the Ontario & Niagara Power Co., and as such his remarks in regard to the necessity and import ance of obtaining for the people of this province in the cheapest possible manner a supply of power from Nia- gara have authoritative weight. The first portion of Gen. Greene's address was devoted to a thoughtful discussion of the objects of the Em- pire Club and the probable future of Canada and its relations to Great Britain and the United States. International Relations. "It behooves my countrymen," said the speaker, "to study these problems with 'some care and decide what is to ba their attitude toward, their neigh- bor on the north, destined so soon to be the equal in wealth and populs- tion of a great nation. I think the attitude of the United States towards Canada has, in the past, not been wise. There was a time 20 years ago when by the exercise of proper tact we might have secured the Canadian market almost as completely as our own market. As matters stand now, Canada has no favors to ask of any- one, either on this side of the Atlan- tic or on the other. As to Great Bri- tain, it has 'béen said that British sovereignty in Canada exists only so long as it is not exercised, and, while perhaps, in view of the loyal feeling now existing throughout Canada to- ward your mother country, you might hesitate to acknowledge the truth of such a statement, yet I think that in any matter which brings the ques- tion to a practical test you will find this statement not far wrong. Determine Our Own Future. "Just what your future is to be, whether it is to be in a consolidation of the British Empire, or in absolute independence as a great nation, or in some alliance with your powerful and still growing neighbor to the south, I do not undertake to say; but of this I am absolutely certain, and that is, that your future will be determined by yourselves; that you have reached the. position where you are absolute masters of your own destiny. As you work it out and as you grow greater year by year I think we, in the United States, will have the same feeling of respect and admiration for you that one strong, self-reliant, self-respecting man has for another; that your growth, although politically and commercially independent of us; cannot but be ad- vantageous to us; and that in spite of the tariffs which now and probably for a long time will divide us your growth must lead to a large trade with us, and that with the constantly in- creasing facilities for communication and intercourse there will be a con- stantly increasing intimacy and friend- ship which cannot fail to be of the highest mutual advantage." Niagara Power Possibilities. Turning to the question of Niagara power, he noted that now the street cars of Syracuse on the east and of Toronto on the west were operated by Nidgara power, and between these two points, distant 260 miles from each other as the wires run? a variety of industries in the way of light, heat and power were dependent on this mighty force. On his own side of the river publi opinion in yegard to Niagara seemed to have crystali into the cry, "Save the Falls." On the Canadian side the ery seemed to be "Transmit and de- liver the white coal at the lowest pos- gible price." He believed that the so- being worked out, Sentiment In the States. "In the United States," the speaker = Bo ES 20 TERY » expression in the Burton bill adopted in Congress on June 29, 1906, assert- ng the paramount rights of the Unit- State of New York and the riparian owners in the waters of the Niagara River; expressing the determination to control the navigation of the river, protect the integrity of the 'frontier and preserve the uty of Niagara DAILY BRITISH WHIG. SATURDAY, JANUARY 19. west as Duluth, for power Purnoses, without the written in Permit the Seo: retary of War, forbidding the introduction of electricity from the Canadian side 'of the Niagara River into the United States without a simi- lar permit. Incidentally this law de- stroys the rights of riparian owners as they and their predecessors have believed them to exist for the last 200 years, and destroys them as complete iy es if a wall had been built at the river's edge of their property. On the Canadian side public opinion has found 'expression in the Beck law, giv- ing to the Ontario Government the right to expropriste by judicial pro- ceedings any or all powerhouses, transmission lines, and even, if de- sired, to expropriate the electric cur- rent itself, and appointing a commis- sion to regulate snd control the dis- tribution of Niagara power through- out the Province of Ontario, Two Countries Not Apart. "In the United States the main ob- has seemed to be to preserve the alls, and in Ontario to distribute the power tom the Falls; and yet, after E g £ BE i & i 3 # £ they do not believe that the Falls are in 'any danger of injury from any as possible. He believed that the United States Congress would adopt the views of the International Waterways Commission, | which has made specific recommenda- tions as to the diversion of water, and stated the. amount 'which could not be exceeded without the possibility | a ay to the appearance of the Falls. importance to Ontario. "Of the importance of Niagara pow- er to Ontario," he continued, "there | can hardly be question. It is | important to New York State, but New York is . comparatively close to the coalfields and has no duty to pay on coal. Of the importance of power it self there is even less question. It is the fundamental prime mover of modern civilization. The only source | of it is the sun's energy, which has | been manifested in the past in the | formation of coal and oil and ges, | is now manifested in the tides and the | | winds, and it the future will be chief- ly utilized in the energy of falling | water, thanks te the recently discov- ered uses of electricity. The use of the energy of falling water is as old as ginning of the present century its ap- plication was limited to a few hundred yards from the spot where the water fell. Now. by converting the hy lic energy. into electricity and by put ] transmitted at least two hundred miles to advantage; and if the electrical art progresses as much in.the nexi ten years as it has in the last ten years it will be feasible to transmit it 500 miles. What Cheap Power Will De. this power for Ontario, I need only say that Ontario owns the northern shore of Lake Erie and the western bank of the Niagara River, and that Niagara power can be generated. and and Windsor at a cost less than power course, power is not the only element in the cost of manufacture. Labor, raw material, and transportation are each more important, I believe, than power as elements of cost, but the power is, nevertheless, a very impor- tant element. In ordinary manufac- tures I believe a saving of, say, one- half in the cost of power means a saving of from 5 per cent, to 15 per duct; in: the electro-chemical indus- tries, such as aluminum, calcium ear- bide, carburundum, soda-ash, nitro- genous products, and the reduction of duction of possibly 40 per cent. in the cost of the finished product. Cer- tain industries of this last named class require thé very cheapest pow- er, aad cannot stand the cost of trans- mitting it. For such industries spe- cial facilities and advantages are present in that portion of Ontario be- tween the Welland Canal and the Niagara River, having the benefit of trunk railroads, and power at a price almost unrivalled for cheapness. What Electricity Will De. "In other industries, such as agri- cultural implements, boots and shoes, hardware, textile fabrics, steel and iron works, the price of power is 4 less important factor, and the business can stand the cost of transmission to the ready developed, as they are at so many points in Ontario, rather than to stand the cost of pulling up stakes and moving down to the vicinity of the Niagara River. "It is not alone in manufactures that cheap power will prove advan- lution to these two problems was now tageous, but also in lighting, possibly in heating, and certainly in many domestic uses, not alone in the great e ' cities, but in the villages and on the went on, "public sentiment has found | farms. I believe the day is not far distant when practically every house in Ontario without 200 miles of the ; Niagara River will be lighted by elec- | Hard on the Fish. States against the rights of the | tricity supplied by the power of the | great cataract. It will be running the sewing machines, the churns, the ice cream freezers, the ventilating fans, the house pump, the knife-cleaner and | sharpener, the dish-washing machine, | the clothes-wringer and other parts of | 808, Falls, and thereupon forbidding the | the laundry, and a host of other do- | ™ o 0 diversion of water on the American | mestic utensils not yet invented, but | lf the tobacco were also ped in- side from the Niagara River or any | much thought about at the present | to the sea, it would be a good thing of ita tributaries. extending as far | time by a multitude of inventors." Ni had ompire Sympathetic and Well-Posted Writer her first coat of glistening armor against the threatenings of encroach. ing winter the life that has remained concealed through the more open days awakens-to a new activtiy. The new ice is clear and honest, and will sound abundant warnings before giving way spongy ice of spring, that breaks when | it seems most firm. The first coat- inously, and echo a warning with al- most & musical cadence, writes 8. T. danger, | ing to hide. The long, jointed, and | by a slender, cruel-jawed pike, who i | } | among the hanging weeds, and the history itself, but until near the be- | ting in that electricity an enormous | pressure or voltage the power can be | "To come down somewhat to de- | tails in regard to the advantages of | distributed throughout that portion | of Ontario which lies between Toronto | can be produced by steam. To what | extent you will use it is for your man- | ufacturers themselves to say. Of | cent. in the cost of the finished pro- | certain metals, a reduction of one-half | in the price of power means a re- | | | ed on the site of the one which was the lake navigation and five lines of | | | | point where such industries are al- | Spislikofi, eoducillor- of the J. Pierpont Mor, from Semara. is aturting for | > or the 3+ UNDER THE ICE. Tells of Plants, Animals and Fishes That Thrive There. When the sensitive marsh puts on --quite unlike the thick, deceptive, ing will crack noisily end bend om- Wood in The Globe. Sometimes where a more venturesome step makes a deeper indentation the water oozes up to protest against the dangerous liberties that have been taken. The fascination of the smooth, undulat- ing, and cracking surface is soon lost in contemplating' the beauties of a dim and indistinet landscape in the translucent medium beneath. A close concentrated gaze brings out a varied panorama that the darkness is striv- tufted stems of the white buttercup hang in the water with a profusion suggesting tropical vegetation. These aquatic growths, that send up from the marshy surface in summer ridi- black as the shadows deepen into the rpetual night of the deep, weedy Pn The floating roots of the blad- derwort that send up their stems of yellow flowers in summer help to make the crowding vegetation more dense, and *"re are a few twining and circling stems of the waterlilies to give distinction and character to the submerged landscape. The still weeds are pushed aside pauses a moment with leisurely un- dulating gills and moves stiffly away on his destructive mission. re is life in the lower depths where the weeds slowly move and a form like a mudeat is barely distinguishable for a moment in the surrounding black water. A shoal of mud-minnows scatter with mervous haste, and down in the middle depth some gmall, non- descript fish seem almost fransparent in the dim light as they dart rest lessly here and there. A small sun- fish, proud of his bright colors, passes 80 close that his spiny fin seems al- most to touch the ice. As he glides out of sight there is a commotion long, dark form of a muskrat moves past with his back flattened against the under surface of the glassy cov. ering. He is trailing some bright green herbage from his mouth, and is in haste to reach one of the neigh- boring houses and enjoy a meal. He can do almost anything under the water. Even breathing is not im sible, for he will exhale a spreadin bubble of air, give it time to om a supply of oxygen from the water, breathe it in again and continue his journey. But he cannot eat under water, and so must rise in one of the ice-lined houses built during the com- fortable summer night. Away he goes through the branching and en- tangled weeds, more black than the water through which he moves, a great hurrying disturber of the silent life in the imprisoned landscape. Found In the Ruins, In the work of removing the debris from the site of the burned Transpuc- tation building on the Exhibitioa grounds, Toronto, the box containing the usual documents generally put in a cornerstone was discovered. These documents were all put in 'be box when the cornerstone of the enlargements to the buildings was laid in 1880, when the Transportation building was the main building of the Fair. There were found in the box a copy of The Globe, The Leader, and some other newspaper of that day, copies of the first prize list issued by the Exhibition authorities, a prize list for 1880 and several other docu- ments and a group photograph of Mr. J. J. Withrow, president, Capt. Mec- Master, Mr. Wm. Rennie, James Mec- Gee, manager and treasurer; Mr. J. Hallam, chairman of the Exhibition Committee, and Mr. H. J. Hill, sec- retary. Capt. McMaster and Mr. Wm. Rennie are now the only survivors of the .group. Mr. Chambers, Park Commissioner, is having all the docu- ments carefully dried and he expects they will be enclosed in the corner- stone of the new building to be erect burned. Canadian Surgeons In Chicage. The Chicago British American has this reference to a rising Canadian | surgeon: "Canada is coming to the | foremost ranks in the medical profes- sion in Chicago. Only last week Dr. Alexander Hugh Ferguson was knight ed by the King of Portugal, and now | Dr. Frank O. Carter has successfully performed an operation for blindness ! that has been the wonder of the medi- | eal world. The operation was for cat- | aract' with a thickening of the lens capsule, in which the eye was suc- cessfully opened and the cataract and ® PERFECTION n Cty, OER 50° eis i MOOREYS | F aa 401 ALL -. [YR | HONEY S | The best part of a Grocery Store --to most folk---is the part where Mooney's Perfection Cream Sodas are stocked. This is the part where clerks are busiest--and the most people come. It seems as if EVERYBODY is eating these delightfully crisp, appetizing biscuits. ier The only firm in Canada operating Private Freight Cars, ON Es $s § Don't let it be said you OVER LOOKED Our Red Label Shoe Sale. Some of the VALUES you should LOOK OVER. . Ladies' Vici Kid Bal. Flannel Lining. A good shoe at $2. Red Labelled at $1.49. Ladies' Gun Metal Calf Button- ed. The latest and newest college Buttoned and Bluchers. Are priced $3.76 and $4. Red Label price $2.98. good sizes left in $1.25 and $1.50. One and two strap Kid Slippers. Bois Sauey Felt Top Women's ouse Ts ' Slippers, in Opera and Red Labelled, 36c. Harvard cut, '$1.25 and $1.50, front Cosey Slippers. 1 : Sutherland Special Dressing. Red J. H. SUTHERLAND & BRO,, Tg ices of Good Why Some Good Things Are Overlooked is Because They Aren't Looked Over. Over 75 pairs of the Endicott Johnson $4 Men's Shoes in three lasts and styles, American made. Red Label Sale Price, $3. $ One Table of Men's $3.50 and $3.75 American Shoes, Metal and Pat. Colt Bluchers and Bals. Red Label Sale, $2.75. The Generous Reduction in , the Men's Packard Shoes, the $4 Shoes. Red Labelled, $3. The $5 Samp Price. Red Label Price, LH Fancy Tan and Black Amiean made; Red Label Price, Come in and look. Nerrly all Shoes are Red Labelled. SIFFFVIVIC VIII IV IIIIIIELRRRE NOTICE TO SMOKERS nse A ---- I, All the leading brands of 10c. Cigars, § for 28e: All Imported 15¢. Cigars, 2 for 20c. - All 10c. Package Tobacco 3 for 25c, All 10¢, Packages of Cigarettes, 3 for 25c. : All 15¢. Packages of Cigarettes, 2 for 25c. oid All 10c. Flugs of Tobacco, 3 for 25e. wi A lot of B.B.B. Pipes $1 for 50c. a little shop-worn. Over 1,000 50c. Briar Pipes, for 25¢. each. 6 Stonewalls, 8 Peg Tops, 6 Humbers, 7 Lafeyetts, 6 Cream #4 D la Cream, 6 Peels, She, Las Roses, Col. Steel. These are all of first-class goods, (new), and will be sold at these prices until the stock is all sold. ' JOHN ROUTLEY Wholesale and Retail FFFFVIFRINIIIIFVSINNIIINNNNIINININIIINIIIIN the lens capsule removed at the one operation. Dr. Carter is a native of Oshawa, Ont., and is a nephew of Wm. Wellington, of the nursery firm of Stone & Wellington, of Toronto. He is a graduate of the University of To- | ronto and immediately after graduat- | ing came to Chicago to practice." i | for the people, but hard on the fs : who is Von Buelow; it is stat i to take part in C0) 6 BRR ENT on DET NN XY A < BIG CLEARING SALE We are closing out our large Stock, to Rebuild. : o Couches and Parlor Setts and Fancy Odd Parlor Chairs. i Everything to close out at Sale Price, JAMES REID. ™® "hm Dr. Osler continues to be epigram- | matic and to utter sayings which | please the temperance people. Bpeak- | ing recently at the London Working- men's College, he said: "If all the beer and spirit were dumped into the for a year, the people of England ould be infinitely better off. And if LARGE SHIPMENT RECEIVED I : ANTIMONY AND PIC L T OUR 'Metal Co has retired from { Wall street, New York, and his som, thirty-eight years old, ix in | charge of the Morgan Banking firm. Chancellor COOKSON'S - 3 173-175 Princess Street. Packing and Freight Free, smemme---- PRICES William St. Toronto'