THe 3 i } I 18 Bf performed eerwmony which united W. E. Corey, it will be the ocean port of the do- the steel trust king, and Miss Gill | minion," when ships wil find an outlet Feri £ F F # experience 2 § : 5 £ i on great moral qued- tions, Divorces 'do not startle the | people, for there are sores of them But then have not affected the as the Corey divorce has done. deed of release was sought by the '®; whose abandonment was enough to break her heart. She was his help- meet in poverty and pinch, She in- spired his ambitions and helped him to climb to prominence and power, She shared his toil and anxiety and should have shared his prosperity. After he became the president of the steel trust he saw Miss Gillman, an actress, and he chased her about the country and neverfeeased his at- tention until he got her conwent to mary him. He had no fault to find with his wife. He simply let her go and under circumstances that aroused the public ire. Corey and his spouse may enjoy their trip abroad and their ing in the million-dollar chateau in France « which he gave her as a wedding presoni, but later on they will feel the sting of outraged consci- ence, s you we WINDSOR, the v fine TABLE SALT. In S-- avout is ax delightil ae tis lasing, MUNICIPAL, TRADING IN ENGLAND NL ee. 'Major Leonard Darwin, a son of the great scientist, has been discussing ieipal trading in Montreal. He has been impressing on the audiences he has! addressed though there have been failures in the public businesses the evidence is cloar that some things can be run by the municipality to the great ade vantage of 'the people. Attention has been concenteatod upon the great schemes of the social: ists, come af the wild ventures in which they indulged while in power in boat service, 'an expensive undertak- ing, expensively mimaged, and a loss to the public from its beginning. There is the electrical system at Tun: bridge Wells, which has been aban- dondd. with depressing effects financi- ally. There is the palatial plan of housing and caring for the poor, which must sooner or later invite at- tack and provoke a focling of hostil- My oc Public ownership is all right in its place, and when limited in its scope. The people can manage the water and Tight business as well as the private corporation, under certain conditions. ltrs haa 66 Be wapert: direction, ane it should proceed from: one who is re- op i | for sxpensive experiments in eda. cation has pot yet arrived in Can ada. It is trae that there are con solidated schools in the muritime pro- vines, and they are in operation, thanks to the generosity of Sir Wil. tiem Macdonald. They may be per manenily endowed. H they are not one ean foreser what is to as soon as the great millionaire discon: tinves. his contributions. clergyman, " pers which have been saying so much But bis pact in the on this point will need to revise their given great" offence. He become personally conscious that a tut tung, up .: Spslogiond Brantford regarding the power which as something he dare not hold | derstood to control, What shout the | Publ is remarkable. It that the heart of America is the circumstances of the fact that] cont, Hot terrify, if the new continental ides of the Globe and World men ns tive. ---- Winnipeg contemplates the day when to the sea by the water ways which : will be constructed northward via the verified some sweet day, It has been ascertained that Mr. Crothers, of St. Thomas, is not the only one who served the people in Ontario, in publie capacities, without reward or fee. So that the Tory pa: comments. All is doubt and uncertainty in the Hydro-Electric Commission is un- vote of the peopls last January ? Wag it not mandatory ? Did it not involve the entering into of a contract for a certain amount of power ? Rev. Mr. Clark, 'who graced the Corey-Gillman nuptials by his pres- ence, and who was at the time satis. fied that the contract was sealed in heaven, must have undergone a re- markable change of mind. He has apologized to his congregation for the part he took in the case, Mr. Borden has a unique place on the fast Atlantic scheme. He is "not in a position to form an opinion with regard to the twenty-fivekinot ser vice," referred to in cables, but "his own position was on record in parlia- ment." That is about as definite and as satisfactory ax he can be under the circumstances, SPIRIT OF THE PRESS - The Chinook's Hasty Voice. Calgary Chinook. The lumber combine must be smash- od. This country is too much en- lightened to stand being robbed by a band of sharks. Discovered, Brockville Times. What Toronto would really like is a privy council which would act as a donkey-ongine for the Toronto city Not Very Likely. Montreal Gazette. » It is reported that Henry Orchard, the murderer of former Governor Stounenberg, of Idaha, has turned re- ligious. But it is doubtful if the fruits of the spirit from that Orchard would be worth harvesting. So It Would Seem. London Advertiser. Abe Ruef, political boss of San Francisco, detected in | villainies, procesds to snitch on his pals, The age of chivalry is dead, and thire is no honor any longer, even wmong thieves, a Advertising Him, Toronto Star. Chief Clerk Webster, 'who gained some notoriety in the removal of Fish- ery Commissioner Bastedo, is to do field This is the way the gov- ernment Mr, Webster, instead of hanging him on a clothes line, Sir Wilirid's Wisdom. Ottawa Free Press, A majority of 273 in the British House of Commons in opposition to Awsten Chambpriain's tariff reform te solution but proves how wise Sir Wil- frid Laurier has been to keep the Canndinn side of the issue free from British party politics. Do You Think So ? Toronto Mail. Postmaster-General Lemioux would : f f i i ontusion bogeys is entirely new and attrac | ton oeron. amd a serviceable article like} store. rick, 'a story of the Canadinn Rockies, appears in oS ah = point of exorilence and under thé all right; but-you | Some ; Co siti : 3 | Will have to get out and work for | plaining a ive Wtkineen op pobe two mills on the dollar, but the peo | i you want 10 se then carried, | Btilities are not pa pe will have nome of it. Perhaps | Ney Ontario people ar worki mi gt. sin. wet anywho in Cosas the sucoession scheme. The pith of | = attention fo the taxpayers who are better able to grievance is thal the is | theft, violence or slander: but no ope be enforced; The College Question. The Georgian Bay canal scheme is | Hamilton Times an enormous ly over an hundred ion. : d millions of dollars. But that would tion of efficiency and respect in the ormal College wus doing well bere. It bad been raised to a posi- " that id not said for it before it ot to Hamilton. It has no proper place in the university, and the govern- The Montreal Gasette counsels the |™Ment's recent actions are admissions arvative premice of Ontario to {4% act. But Toronto ranted i, beware of the Globe and World and | There 44 jo were none to speak in behalf of their woolly railway schemes. The Hamilton, or the best interests of the jon. And muddle, cy result, and inefficien the people pay dearly for it. A Disorderly Session. Montreal Witness. The last session of parliament will go down to history as one of the most disorderly if not the most dis. orderly on record. Charges and coun- Hudson's Bay. A dream that may be | ¥T charges of eriminality are bandied about, members shake their fists, stamp their fect and gnash their teeth at one another, and dall ome and another everything but gentlemen. No more important subject can come before the house than its own purity, and if this warfare should result in any manner of cleansing, the country would have no reason to begrudge the enormous in time and money. Against t hope goes the fact that neither side is exactly seck- ing the truth; each is as intent. on blackening the other as on clearing ita own skirts; the result being that the public does not know who to he. lieve and only bevomes callous to ic 'basencss under a general im- pression that all men are liars and all are thieves. ONTARIO FELDSPAR As Reported to the Ontario Government. Canadian Mining Journal for May. According to the Ontario bureau of mines' report, recently issued, the pro- duction of feldspar is increasing. The output of the Richardson mine, owned by the Kingston Feldspar company, is now about 130 tons per day. No. | pit at this mine, on the southwest side of the quarry, has a depth of 75 fect and an area of 260 feet by 50 feet. No.2 pit, on the northeast side. has an arca of 300 feet by 50 feet and an average depth of 50 feet. A shaft 30 feet deep has been sunk between No. 1 and No. 2 pits, and the water drains from the pits to the shaft, where a No. 10 Cameron pump raises it to the surface. The feldspar in No. 2 pit is dipping to the northwest un- der the body of quartz which appears on the surface. > The Jenkins mine, near the Richard- son, has been closed for the last "w oar. At Border mine, in the township of Portland, feldspar is being taken out of an open cut some 200 feet long, 20 feet wide and 25 to 30 feet deep. The dike of feldspar runs in a northwest by southwest direction, and cuts across the * gneiss formation. Bodies of quartz are found in the dike. The Kingston Mining and Develop- ment company also works a mine in Portland township. This open cut is 200 feet long by 25 feet wide and 8 fest 'deep. The feldspar occurs in a large pegmatite dike, and is the. pre- dominant mineral in that part of the dike being worked. The dike ocours cutting a dark gneiss. Watch The Kidneys. When the kidneys falter in their work the blood is immediately loaded with isons that should have been expelled Do the system hetmnatin, Boe bago, or a el raking down the system lo, Peck's Kidney Li aid, cleansing and strengthening and insuring healthy activity. In box- es, 25¢ For sale only at Wade's Drug Store. Money back if not satisfactory. Baseball Record. Eastern League--At Buffalo, 3; Jer sey City, 0. At Toronto, 5; Balti- more, 0. At Rochester, 4; Newark, 3. American League--At Chicago, 4: Boston, 0. At St. Louis, 3: New York, 2. At Detroit, 0; Philadelphia, 1. At Cleveland, 0; Washington, 8. National League--At New York, 6: St. Louis, 4. At Brooklyn, 0; Pitts- burg, 3. At Boston, 6; Chicago, 1. At Philadelphia, 4; Cincinnati, 2, any attention | 02 at Montreal for the tug St. Paul, ere are quite [8nd would proceed to Kinoston very number of persons who do not pay | shortly. to dredge out the slips, "which laws against | the council had asked done. that these laws should be | the city's request for stone from the All that is asked is that | Peoitentiary His worshin also ammounced that Hon. Mr. Aylesworth. who was acting . | minister of marive, had informed him that the dredge Sir Richard was wait- Again, the mavor intimmted that for repairs to certain streets would, in all probability, he granted. Hon. Mr. Aylesworth, he could say, would agree to any rea- sonable proposition in that regard. Fourthly, Mayor Mowat announced that a sovernment surveyor ». uld he here this week to look over the land asked for by the city for the exten- sion of King, Odturio pnd Bay streets to the water's edge, and to see what could be done. Thus, it will be seen what Mr Harty and Mayor Mowat have heen able to get for Kingston. When they get busy, thines come their way. The mavor also addressed the coun- cil relative to the nropossd road con- struction by-law. He hoped that the board of works would not defer this matter too long, but get the bylaw in shape so that it could be submit. ted to the people at not too late a date. His worship mentioned that the citv's revised by-laws were now com- plete, and the volumes ready for dis- tribution. The book, he said. was a leredit to the printing establishment that turned it out. viz, the Whig job department, and it was the equal in binding of any law book. City Soli- citor Melntvre, he said, was to be {eonrratulated upon the able work he {had done in compiling the by-laws I Mr. MeTntere had vt his whole heart {into the work, and done it all alone. {In Toronta. a big commission of law- {vers and judges had heen appointed {for the purpose. but Kingston had a eitv 'solicitor who was equal to the task. Marine News. The steamer Bermuda cleared for Montreal Monday afterngon. Swift's » Steamer Pictdn, down, last night; steamer Hamilton, up, to-day. The steamer North King is in the dry dock, being overhauled before commencing the season's trips. The steamer Rosedale is on her way from Fort Wiliam to Kingston, load- el with grain, for Richardsons'. The schooner Tradewind, on her way from Gananoque to Oswego, for coal, called at Kingston, this morning, for supplics, The steamex Alexandria was at Fole ger's, at nine o'clock, Monday night, on her way to Montreal, and took on considerable freight here for interme- diate points, - There wert no arrivals or departures reported at the M. T. company, this morning. 4 steamer Westmount is expected fem Fort William to-mor- row. This forenoon the steamer Brittanie, with 58,000 bushels of corn, from Mil- waukee, and the steamer Jessie Spald- ing, with 81,000 bushels of oats and barley, from: Duluth, reached the M.T. company's wharf. The arrivals were unexpected. The steambarge Navajo arrived at Richardsons', at ht o'clock, last night, from Montreal, with a load of freight. The vessel went down with a cargo of wheat, but owing to the strike of ib 'longshoremen, was de- layed at Montreal for several days. Capt. Corkey says that waiters, stew- ards and all on board the vessels that will work, are being paid to unload the vessels, and that a number of them have been able to get dnloaded and away. It is belicved that a set- tlement will soon be reached. HAGRIISISIGISISIISIISIIISIIIIK wR [od 3 THE SMELTER BY-LAWS. : #% Bear in mind that every %, vote not cast is one against ¥|- MW! the Smelter By-Law. lon't » make the mistake of stay- i # ing at home. Voting, May ¥ 28th. At Pasadena, Cal, E. H. Conger, former United States minister to China, died, on Monday. Every woman of refinement appre ciates a radiant, beautiful complexion, which is so much admired by men. Such complexions come to all who use Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. Tea or Tablets, 35 cents. Mahood's drug "The Avalanche," by Robert Her mountain climbing in have done etter had he agreed with {30e. and 730. W>BIBBY'S «--w A SERGE | FOR MINE | This is the conclusion of many a man sort of a Summer Suit he will purchase. § + : : ¢ i : 3 when considering "what * A man never tires of a Serge Suit, no matter if he has worn on 3: every summer since he can remember. § Get a good Serge Suit, Sir, and you are sure to be A SATISFIED MAN | | We take no chances with our. Serges. tested to make sure that the color is fast, and the fabric is right. You'll take no chances in buying your suit here. See Our Special $15 Blue and Black Suit, Semi-Ready! Other lines, $12.50, $13.50, $14, $18. "The H. D. Bibby Co. 600000000000000000000 * ° ° ° * ® > CHILDREN WILL HAVE PERFECT TEETH IF FED ON It is a muscle-pro- ducing, brain-build- ing, bonemaking 3 food. Supplies nutri- tive qualities neces- sary to the health and comfort of girls. growing boys - and : BISCUIT for Breakfast ; TRISCUIT for Luncheon. All Grocers--13c. a Carton ; 2 for 25e. PLLLLLLRL0000000000000 Fireworks! The largest assortment of Roman Candles, Sky Batteries, Triangles, Wheels, Ros: Whe lg, Mines, ete. Fire Crackers and Cannon Crackers, Torpedoes and Bombs, Tor- pedog Canes and Caps, Balloons and Flags. Rockets, Union A. J. REES, 166 Princess Street : FIFFIISIINIISIVINIISIIR FIPIIVIIIIIIIIIIR IIe m---------- Oxford Shoe § ALWAYS COQL AND COMFORTABLE. ¥ We have a [large assort I ment of OXFORDS de : FOR : 3 £ BE Men, Women, Boys and Girls Men's Oxfords in Tan Calf, Velour Calf and Patent Colt, $3.50 to 5.00. Blucherand But- - toned Patterns, Women's Oxfords in fine Vici Kid, Patent Colt, Tan, Brown and Canvas, $1.25, 1.50, 1.75, 2.00, 2.50, 3.00 and 3.50. Boys' and Girls' Oxfords in Patent and Vici Kid, neat and dressy, also cheaper lines for Sen day sétvice. $1.25, 1.50, 1.75 2.00 to 3.50. Try Us for Your Oxford Shoes --~ ® See Bibby's display of leather belts, "5c Bibby's. 3 | - Abernethy'sShoe Store i i Food For Th bo Growi Whole -Grain Prepara of Greatest Value I ment of Body an "The growing child e those elements that are grain preparations," say: a recent magazine articl Foods for Growing Chi Malta-Vita is the ) wheat food, rich in e clement demanded by ti child "and Just as strengthening for the « and older sisters and br a pure n product whole of the best white little salt, mixed with malt extract--Malta-Vit: body with all those food ¢ make bone, blood, mus and bring perfect health The malt extract is ac wheat has been thorough steamed and converts the wheat into maltose, or which is highly nutritio assimilated even by ver: achs, Physicians recom for its strength-giving Malta-Vita is rich in it. treated with the malt wheat, rolled into little goes to the ovens; wher crisp and brown, deliciot scription. BTrocers, n¢ MAKES YOUR CAKES 1 MAKES YOUR BISCUIT MAKES YOUR BUNS Li MAKES YOUR LABOR LL MAKES YOUR EXPENS Order from your G EW.GILLETT TORONTO. ON Ee £08 SYNOPSIS OF CANADIAY HOMESTEAD REGU Anv even numbered sectlo lor vands in Magitoba © Wal Provieces, eXecpting 8 reserved, n \y be homestea person the sule head of a fa over 18 years of age, to tl one-quarter section, of 160 or less. Application for homestead pection must be made in p applicant at the oflice of th or Sub-agent. Aun application for entry made personally at any Sub may be wired to the local Sub-ageat; at the expense »phicant; sad if the Jang »p Baca on "receipt of o to application is to have prior land will be held until tl papers to complete the tra eceived by mail. In case of "personation" t be suminarily cancelied and cant will forfeit all priority An applicant for inspectic eligible for homestead entry pne application for inspect eceived from an individual pplication has been disposed A bhomesteader whose entr) tanding and not liable *o wy, subject to approval of relinquish it in favour of fat son, daughter, brother or eligible, but to no one else, tlaration of abandonment. Where an entry is summar or voluntarily abandoned, su Institution of cancellation the applicant for inspection titled to prior right of emntr) Applicants for inspection m hat particulars the homest default, amd if subsequently ment is found to be incorrec ial particulars, the applica: any. prior right of re-entry land become vacant, or if en granted it may be summarily Duties--A settler is requ form the conditions under following plans :-- (1) At least six months' re on and cultivation of the ls year during the term of thre (2) It the father (or moth father is deceased) of a resides upon a farm in the wi land entered for by such the requirement as to resider atisfied by such person re the father or mother. (3) If the settler has his esidence upon farming land him in the vicinity of his the requirement may be residence upon such land. Bafore making application the settler must give six mo writing to the Commissi tinion Lands at Ottawa, © fon te do me. YNOPSIS OF CANADIA] WEST MINING REGULJ Coal.--Coal Lands may be | 10 per acre for soft coal a anthracite. Not more than can be acquired by one ind company. loyalty at the J cents per ton of 2,000 pound collected om the gross output Quartz.--A person eighteen ) or over, having discovered place, may locate a claim, feet. 'The fee for recording a clair At least $100 must be exper claim each year or paid to recorder in lieu thereof. Whe been expended or paid, the lo upon having a survey made, omplying with other require chase the land at $1 per acre The patent provides for Hie malty of 2} per cent on Placer ot alms genera kot square entry fee 5 early. An applicant may obtain t dredge for gold of five miles term of twenty years, renewa discretion of the Minister of tl 'he lessee shall have a dru ation within one season frow pf the lease for each five mf 10 per annum for each wil leased. Royalty at the rate cer' collected om the output 4 eds $10,000. hy uty of the Minister of t Dc ora publicati advertigsiment will not be paid ren BRITISH - AME HOTEL KINGSTON - - Has undergone altera I» now open to the sublic. W. TELFER - -