i (vercoa jon ? Solved It? you. 5 iB % * $ * ° ° 3 : * °* * é * 3 * ° * * * < ® ° ° ® i. 3 % < * < < <* o LS would care to wear. We Spring Overcoats than ours ply perfection. )ppers. lium lengths. nor English Raincoats ced Black Cheviot, ike about extieme styles ics and tailoring--we will Bibby Co. TAILORING. 0600000000000000000¢ ards Soap Write for our handsome illustrated catalogue of premiums given free for Richards Pure Soap wrappers. ful adulterants, eat and destroy oidery creations. of nothing but purest of vege- thout injuring a single thread. RICHARDS PURE Soap. k, Ont. (Cul this ad. out-- is valuable) Tv mswering this advertisement. LATER'S INVICTUS ; SHOES FOR MEN, WOMEN AND BOYS. SISTENT Y : x AISI Spring is Here and § You Want SPRING SHOES | atest varigly of Up- -to-Date 5. These Shoes are the In- r. They are up-to-date in ev- Velour Talf,' Patent Colt and AAACN HAS 0 and 85. , $3.75 and ($1. rd $4, hoe Store III \ Fk bet" ~--Monuments Your Stomach" is the way people in China say "Good, Morning." The greeting of almost every nation is an inquiry after health.. The Chinese have the root of the matter. A strong stom- ach is the foundation. Look after this organ and the general health: cares for itself. Man is so consti- tuted it cannot be otherwise, It the mission of BEECHAM'S PILLS to keep the stomach well, the liver active and the bowels regular. They dispel sickness and create health. Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Bilious~ ness or Constipation cannot exist when Beecham's Pills are used ac- cording to directions. For over 30 years. they have cured disordered : stomachs, and are now a world-fa- mous remedy. They merit your confidence. Sold Everywhere in Canada god U.S, Ainerica. In boxes 25 cents. HON; H. R. EMMERSON Director of Record Foundry Co, There are few men in the Maritime Pro- vinces, or, for that matter, anywhere in Canada, belied kuown to the public than the Hon. R. Eminerson, Minister of Railways ah Canals, Hon. Mr. Emmerson is a son-in-law of the late Charles B. Record; who, some 75 years ago established the Record Foundry and: Machine Co., at Moncten, N.B., and ti" a heavy stockholder and a director therein." He is responsible for much of the untiring energy which has advinced this concern to a front rank in Canadian industries. he 'Record Foundry and Machine Co. now have works at Montreal! Aud Moncton, and-have also sales Branche: in Moncton, Montreal, Tor onto, Winnipeg, Calgary and Vancouver.' . rr rrer----r 'Ladies' Tailoring UT have -much * pleasure in andamcing' to the Ladies of Kingston that 1 hawe secured the premises, 261 Princess St. and have opened up _ma: Firsti€lass Ladies' Tailoring Establishment. Style, Fit and workmanship euars anteed. | "Kindly call abd see me. Will makes ap" fron your own cloth. Prices moderath. . A. METZ Graduate of Yarando Cutting School, Regent St. London, Eng. REE IS dee S COAILL! I'he sudden changés in weather ought Lo suagest the wisaom of putting in some good Coal. We sell rood Uoal. we 8 the kind that sends . out the most 'heat, and makes the home comfortable ; the best money can buy, there is one Lecter mined We aeliver 11 to you clean and without slate, gt the very bottom prices, BOOTH & CO., Phone 133. Foot of West St BRITISH - AMERICAN HOTEL CNTARIE Has undergone alterations and Is now open to the travelling sublic. W. TELFER KINGSTON Proprietor MME FRONTERAG LOAN & INVESTMENT SOCIETY. ESTASUSMED 1863, § President---Sir Richard Cartwright Money loaned on City and Farm Pro perties.. Municipal and County Deben Lures. Mortgages purchased. Deposits received and interest allowed. S C. McGill, Managing Director. Office, 87 Clarence Street, Kingston, New England Chinese Rest vupant 33 oie strat Open from 10.30 a.m. to 3.00 a.m. The best' place to get an all round Lunch in the city cals of all Kinds on shortest notice." English ag Chinese Dishes a specially. "Phone, 655. Wm. Murray, Auctioneer 27 BI0CX ST. New Carriates, Cutters, Harnes:, ete., for sale. Sale of Harses every Saturday. Foreign and Domestic Gritaige and Marble, Large stock to choose fri, at] lowest possible prices, BN : 3 {Ontario, s How's s CAPPING CEREMONY bone NOT "BE DONE | AWAY i WITH BY QUEEN'S. Dy ae on the 24th, but it is un- fikely that there will be any notable visitors on that occasion. This year the medical graduates will attend with those of the other faculties for laur- eation, and with 200 students to be "gapped" by the chancellor the time for other proceedings will be limited. There was some talk last of doing away with the laureation cere- mony, but Principal Gordon, when asked yesterday about the matter, stated that he didn't think it would be abblishbd. It was an"interesting ceremony for Queen's students and their friends, and the time-honored cus- tom. would likely remain as long as it was al all possible to retain it. The university authorities intend hereafter to hold convocation proceed- ings": on University day, Oct. 16th, when" most of the honorary degrees will he conferred. At that time noted visitots have a better chance to see the fmiversity in operation, and most of the students in attendance. At the spring convocation there are mot more than 'one-third of the students pre sent. VERONA TIDINGS. New York Capitalist Looking Over Mining Property. Verona, April 11.--W. A, Grant, sta- tion agent here, left yeaterday for New Ontario on a prospecting tour. Evangelist Scott, Fargo, N.Dy left Monday to hold a series of special ser- vices at Mountain Grove. Miss Grace Burleigh is recovering from a severe attack of quincy. The annual cheese meeting was held at the factory rooms Saturdiy, The factory has commen- ced operations, Rev. A. F. Reid, New York, addressed meetings at the F. M. church Sunday morning ahd even- ing. M. G. Vandewaters has moved in part of Miss Hetty Steele's House. Mr. and Mrs. M. Montgomery, Od- essa, spent Sunday at the Temperance House, William Dixon, High Falls, has engaged for the summer with his brother, Hepfy Dixon, Mapleville. Miss Frankie Keates iE visiting friends at Hadrowsmith. iesley Burleigh is shingling J. L. Smith's barn, Front Road. A little girl has arrived at J. McKeever's. . Arnold Snyder has mov- of from Lyons: Lfmpson's house here to the Oak Flats. H. McMullen has his . incubator operation. Mrs. Le ighton Bi, Bec Lake, visited C..W. on Monday. an by 4s wearing a very sunny smile over the advent of a_young son. Mrs. Levi Tryon is nursing Mrs. (Rev.) ton An I ib oipion. Ed- Fweerd. Tallom; som James, andJ oseph McMullen, have gone to Latchiord, New Milton Jefirey has moved irom Mye. Williams' house, Sand street, Alfred Albert- after to the one vacated hy son. - Miss Florence Kingston, spending holidays with Miss Fleta Walroth, has returned to the city. Miss Beatrice Leeman, Florida, was a visitor at Edward Carl's recently. Frederick Trousdale is dooking after the K, & P. station during W. Grant's absence. The Temperance House has its quota of guests nowadays. -Several fami- lies ately out from England are quar tercd there.: The men find employment in the mings. R. C. Wayman, wife and child, were at- S. Revell's last week. Donald B. Craig and A. F. Reid, a mining capitalist from New York, are in the vicinity looking up some mining property near here. Mr. Uraig may be seen evenings at the Unicn hotel. . Master Harry Dixon bas fully recovered from an attack of peritonitis, INCIDENTS OF THE DAY. Newsy Paragraphs Picked Up By Reporters on Their Rounds. Tarihe moth 'bags and sheets Chown's drug store. William Swaine, piano tuner. Orders received at McAuley' s. "Phone 778 "Moth camphor,' * the strong kind, is sold at Gibson's Red Cross drug stove The~ rehearsals for "Leo, the Royal Cadet," are drawing large crowds of young people, H. Cunmngham, piano tumer, from Chickering's. Orders at, McAuley's book store. Phone 778. According to the new liquor license law, a holder who is three times con- victed of violations within two years loses his license, Governor Foik, of * Missouri, wants all life companies doing business in his' state to invest seventy per cent. of the reserves of such premiums in the state. The arena to be built in. London for the Olympic games next year will pro- vide seats for 367,000 persons. It will have four times 'the capacity of the famous old Colosseum in Rome. at a wverfect test at Chown's drug & The parks committee was cf ¥ meet this afternoon' to make prelin ary pngements for getting. herdit- ferent s 'in shape. Why don't you try Carter's "Little Livep Pills They are' a pwsitive cure for sick , and-gfl the ills pro: duced "by! disordered liver. Only one pill a dose.' See the Jateést in shect. music. - We carry in stock all new vocal and in- strumental suecekses, and are selling at 18e. re copy all Soe, and 6c. music. MeDermiott Bros: "Phone 773. Fresh Colgate's talcum powders at Gibson's Red Cross drug store. Frank Oakty, who claimed King- ston gs his former 'place of residence, was fined ten dollars and costs. in the: Montreal police court for breaking down the floor of a Chinese laundry on St. James street. He claimed he had a lavndry cheek, and wanted his laundry, but the celestial declared Hat ' 'me no Sow him.' Bottien. 30 wor t wa ttles; at Vor store. i Perfect fitting glasses, the resul i. . avocation like which 1 There Will Be 200 Graduates on Pther Ju. Hho. woekly hs Sor the "24th--Convocation Also | SPond Boston Post. Bet to Be Held on October 16th Harel 10th and April oa wid Hereatter. fully a million dollars, are captured Fipal arrangements have not yet | by 'the twenty-four steamers and four besn wade for Queen's convocation | thousand men in this pursuit. Three of the older Rie the last links with the bygone days before Steam was introduced, have heen struck ofi the list. Captain "Arthur Jackman, the most renowned of the th-ec as a sealer, whaler, Arctic voy- ager of dauntless Viking, who lost four vessels under him but never lost a man, though he cruised from Green- land to the Levant, died early in February; Captain Samuel' Blandiord, the commodore of the fleet, who had been for fifty years master of g sealer. was stricken with paralysis 2 Janu- ay, and Captain William Wino W ho t the age of sixty-seven ve hundred mile journey on eh "rr by dog sled to join. his , col lapsed by the way and had to, aban don the attempt. At the inset of the current toward Labrador, where the floes are by the currents along the northern coast of Newfoundland, the sealers Come upon their prey, and day and night _are made hideous with the scenes t ensue. ~The mother seals fight gamely in de- fence of their young, but are driven off by sealers' clubs, and little ones are Saughtored in thoysands. They are the izes, yielding the finest oil, and eat skin and its 'adhering mass of fat are separated from the carcase (which has * no value) and dragged to the ips, "The seals are found in immenge herds or "patches," often covering a body of ice reaching beyond the range a vision, and it is not uncommon find as many as 250,000 seals Killed in one of these herds and brought to St. John's The seals are to "be found also in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, and four of the ships go there to hunt them, but twenty of the fleet operate on #he At- lanti¢ sea face of the island, their range" extending from the Belle Isle Straits to the Grand Banks, which area of ocean is more or less covered with floe and berg ice every 'winter, to the "great annoyance of trans. Atlantic shipping, The great slaughter of young seals takes place between March 12th and 24th. The young ones are thén too feeble to move, and there is no escap- ing the hunter's murderous club: Sometimes phe mothers, alarmed at the noise which accompanies the on- rush of the men, scramble to the blow holes in the ice by which they reach the water, and thus escape with their young, The most horrible tragedy in the history oi the floes was that of the steamer Greenland in 1808. This ship was struck by a blizzard while 180 men 'were hunting for seals over the icy plain. They were left helpless while she was driven to sea. Two nights and a day elapsed 'be- fore she reached them again, and when she did she found that forty- eight of them had' perished from hung- er and cold. Some had gone mad from their sufferings, others had col- lapsed © from exhaustion and beep frozen stiff, a few had heen killed by fragments of ice tossed about, while others fell drowned. Of the total only twenty-five bodies were recovered, the others hav- ing found a grave in the depths of the sea. About fifty of the survivors were frost-bitten, and it was a sad looking ship that returned to port that year. The' industry is one of the most ar- duous, and yet the most unremunera- tive, known to British colonists. The toil of the hunt, the exposures on the ice, the accidental submergings. the Poor food, the insufficient clothing, the loss of.rest, the discomforts on shipboard, the ice blindness, the sick- ness brought on by lack of attention and cleanliness--all these things com- bine to make the seal fishery a dread to all save thosé whom stern neces- sity forces inta it. And this is not surprising when it is discovered that the most a _ man could earn as his share if the ship was filled would be $80, though he 'might k Bo month or more engaged in the, iawhile the average return to all the fleet will not exceed $50, pi war with an- other. The ships themselves sometimes fare as badly as their men. Harlowe Happenings. Harlowe, 'April 10.--Edward Morgan has gone to Michigan to visit his § mother. A number of the young men left, to-day, some for the Cobalt and some for "Huntsville. C. Wheeler, Syracuse, and Miss Rooks, Belle Rock, are visiting the former's sister, Mrs. A. Palmateer. Rev. Mr. Allen, To- ronto, addressed a large congregation here in, the Methodist Episcopal church on "Sxinday last. Miss Pearl Taylor hadiraturncd, after spe nding her holi- go § at her home, at Latimer. W. 'adman, Holloway, visited his sister, <. J. White, last week. W. Thomp- san, is home from a visit. at Napanee. hr) organ and C. Hillier made a trip Arden on Saturday last. J. rite ifley and son, Hugh, visited Tweed recently. A fine fox was pick- ed up on W. Seott's farm last week, "Moth" camphor in flakes" is sold at Gibson' s Red Cross drug store. H. Foster died on April 11th, at Walkerville. He was born in Prince Edward county, near Picton, sixty- one vears ago. Owing to illness he dis- posed of his farm and removed to De- seronto, where he gonducted a livery business for a number of years, after which hei removed to Belleville. Kettles made of thin paper are used by Japanese soldiers. When needed for boiling a kettle is filled with water, nd then water is poured overt. It is hig over the fire, and in ten min- utes\ the water is boiling. The kettle used eight or ten times, and 35¢. Red tape girdle corsets, form. fo idea | n. i 7 ny it at Gib- store, */ into the ocean and were |. Sliver amended next yoar if there fort. br Richard , Cartwright's old pension bill is Under discussion in prison. Building company, 'on Saturda Miss Millet, Etienne de Fitz James. At Albany, N.Y., Attorney-General Jackson has begun an action to pre- vent the alleged telephone merger. Presque Isle harbor is and open to navigation. The fog sig- nal will be in operation with 'a week. Canada Foundry Toronto. It is in contemplation Ottawa, in Canada. Mining divisions in the Larder Lake and $he Lady Ewlyn and Montreal River district SL) be established and Con; ns Nicholas declares himself in favor of the nomi- nation of United States Secretary Tait for president. The veneer factory. of Mulholland & Co., Sunderland, Ont., was destroyed by fire on Wodnesday. Cause un- known. The value of plant was $16, 000; insurance, $4,000, Hon. waited upon Dr. ly to be acceptable to the city of to: ronto, u Sylvester Dawley, aged sixty-five years, a farmer of Hamilton town- ship, was, found dead on the side of the road, "Thursday morning. Heart failure supposed to be the cause. Fire broke ont, this morning, in the drying kiln of the Gerhard Heintman company, Toronto, and' extended to the gluecing and piano stool depart- ments. Damage estimated at $4,500, An Italian lost his som in Toronto. The police had "one. ."'ls that he?" was asked. "I don't know; wait till I get home and ask the missus," was the reply. The lad is still at the sta- tion house, Manion's failure to locate the correct point where the passénger train. Fifteen-year-old Freddie Sullivan, the boy detective, upon whose evi- dence several Ottawa hotelkeepers were convicted of having sold liquor to him, declares he perjured himself, and aceuses Chief de la Ronde of giv- ing him money to swear falsely. At Hardwick, Vermont, one passeng- er was killed gnd about fifteen others injured, -one seriously, in the wreck of a westbound passenger train on the &t. Johnsbury and Lake Champlain railroad. The entire train exception of the locomotive, left the rails and plunged dowf a forty-foot embankment. ' Donaldson Doings. Donaldson, April 10.---Mr. and Mrs. A. Cheatters entertained a number of their young friends to a tafly party on Monday last. The teacher has re turned from her holidays. I. McMirty is very ill. A young boy visitor has come to stay at the home of D. Geddes. Charles = McKenzie, from Winnipeg, 'visited his aged parents hero and started for his home on Monday. J. Allen spent Sunday at J. Jones'. Miss' Hazel Jopes speat Sunday with Miss Rose Sproule. W. J. Donaldson has purchased a pure bred Durham calf. A. Cheatters pur- chased a three-year-old colt from A. Stuart. P. Cameron took a flying ' trip to Kingston last week. STOCK FIGURES. Furnished By J. 0. Hutton, Market Street. 18 Toronto, April 11th. 1 p.m. ADIL oot rs wc | 37 EY Coniages as 4.75 . Foster ,... 1.60 . Green Meehan 79 92 McKinley 1.70 1.60 Nipissing ree 18.76 18.87 Peterson Lake . 52 Silver Leaf d6§ A564 Silver Leaf 1.64 1.55 Sritiswey § 1.87 APR. Lace 177.00 176.50 Twin City 97.25 95.50 | Foster hits, Coniages Leaf The odoent election law will be is 'need itney denies that Tend} has been a for a new Central Hamdlton, wi will erect 100 more houses in ihe br) Pr. » Graham will open the new Liberal Club rooms in Brantford be of James Mil- let, New York, is to marry Comie clear of ice Four men ' were injured, one having | + his back brokkn, in an accident at the company's works, to enlarge and * transform Rideau Club House, making it one of the finest Longworth Members of the Orange Association 5 Pyne to urge that the teaching staff of all schools be kept to the highest state of Jotfici- enoy. Conditions have been made > the Toronto Electric' Light company for the sale of the plant that are not like- At Los Angeles, Charles Henry Rog- ers, alias Charles Garrick, was ar- pested, charged with the. murder of filis Olney, Fredesick "Olney and Alice Ingerick, at" fiddleton, N.Y. on October Gth, 1905, "55 Mrs. « Harriet © Dewing, Stratford, Ont., was burned to death early on Thursday morning. She: had been keoping house for leopold I. ' H. Keoller. Koeller, who slept down stairs, was aroused by hearing Mrs. Dewing moaning. He found her stand- ing in the middle of the floor all { pt Hao He extinguished the flames, but the woman died. The Mountain disaster on the C.P, R., wherein two express messengers were killed, was due to Engineer his freight was te meet | with the! quality. -- ' KS¥EAT BUILDING. Dedication of the Institute. Pittsburg, Pa., April 11.--The mag- nificent new building standing at the entrance of Schenley Park, this city, was dedicated to-day, with most ela- borate ceremonies, It is a gift, as the dpigram on the building declares, to "The People of Pittsburg." It is, in- | deed a gift to the American nation, and the extraordinary attention that the ceremonies of dedication have at- tracted throughout the world is the best evidence that in the world's op- inion, it is the creation of institu- | tions like this which gives real eleva- | tion "and dignity. to an le. It was the most Stagaden platform celebration that has ever ried in { America. The attendance of men of ! distinction ig beyond all precedent, | including men who have won distine- | tion in: almost every avenue of the Carnegie world of work, in art, in letters, in mueic, in scientific achievement, in education, in geographical exploration and in the service of the state, and among these men are at least thirty who have won high renowa in Eur- | ope, including representatives from the most venerable institutions of learn- ing in the world. At the moment of the dedication of the institute sm- bracing the five great departments of fine arts, museum, library, school of music and technical schools under ome administration, the financial outlay | for cost, equipment and endowment of all the main and branch buildings j will amount to $25,000,000, a sum staggering to the mind even in this age of great fortunes and stupendous | gifts. In-Europe, under slow growth of royal patronage and state aid, such an institution could not reach so great a cost in less than five hundred vears. In Pittshurg the loving kind- ness of a singlé man has created, in the short space of ten years, an insti- tution unique in . its comprehensive- ness. When the building is completed it will not be. the finish, but only the beginning of its real usefulness. A commupjity. that has until now been held wn to hard facts will then launch into the pursuit of ideas. Sec- retary Church, of the institute, says: "Before \ Mr. Carnegie gave us this splendid gift there was nothing here but the material life, and it required a vivid imagination in any man to pierce the smoke clouds that rolled overhead, and realize that there was any such thing as an intellectual Jife beyond. I have heen amazed at the nopularity which the institute has won for itseli. I have seen men from the mille and employees from the street- car lines, whose toilsome lives would make one' think they had no time for the nvpursuits . of leisure, pouring through the various halls of the in-4 stitute, demanding high class litera- ture in the library, studying master- 'pinces of painting in the art halls, in- vestigating the wonders of. science in the museum, and listening with close retention. to the organ recitals in Music Hall. Besides this. ten thousand boys and girls have applied for admis- sion to the technical school. With its five grent departments under one con- trol. there is no other institution just like it in the world." This is weather. Kentucky lawn Kentucky lawn, grass s seed "Absolutely Pure ~ For the third of a. ard for strength and purity. It makes the hot bread, hot biscuit, cake and other pastry light, sweet and excellent i in every No other baking powder i is "just as good as Royal," eithet in strength, purity or wholesomeness. \ $1.00 OPENS AN ACCOUNT = . In our Savings Deposits of $1 and pads ar ecived, century the stand- "y go A votes LR . Many low-priced imitation baking powders are upon the These made with alum or phosphate acid, and care should be taken 20 avoid d hem. eter slum sor bone phosphate in abaorma ues: hu be the food. NEW BRICK COMPANY. . ma . clay: produced is of such a A. 4. Chisholm Promoter, of aly Hol it ras uy be be Tanulaotiséd Kingston, is in Ottawa. nto use and can Pee be go Fo up pos 4 used for indoor decorations and face buildings. As far as is known thereis only one other deposit of the same . character . in, America, located near Indianapolis. The first annual meeting of the coms pany will be held in this city horus Ottawa Free Press, A company composed almost entire- ly of Ottawa men has been formed for the purpose. of makin, pressed brick out of the clay found along the Ri- deau canal. It was incorporated last month under the name of the Perfect Brick and Tile ompany, with a capi- A. talization of $100,000 Chis- | when the 'election of officers wi holm, of Kingston, who is now in the place and other business 'of Sake city, promoted and, organized the | scription be 3 company. The company has already commenc- ed the erection of bujldings at Wash- burn on the Rideau, where the bricks will be made, They expect to have the plant completed in a few months and turning out 50,0000 bricks per Hay af- ter June lst. They have secured from the government the "exclusive rights of drawing the clay from the Rideau banks from : Kingston Mills to Jones' Falls, a distance of eighteen 'miles. Department. on which the highest current rate. of imetest is allowed. STYLISH ALAR SKIRTS, in' Clai- fon, delo , Venetian, RBoxeloth and Panama, $3.75, 83.25, $1, 81.50, $5 to $7. FANCY TWEED SKIRTS, $1.50, $5 and $0.75, BRILLIANTINE SUNBURST SKIRTS in cream, pavy and black, $5.50. MISSES' FANCY TWEED SKIRTS, ; sizes 32 'to 36, at $2.50, $2.76, 83. Buy Sprig Coats now. A full assortment to choose from. at $3.50, large. TO-DAY +A. nig OPE flowers; ribbons'. erican -bats. aa : pl wold onl at Gibson's Red drug tore. ig