» you LEA & PERRINS' anadian Agents. F Wait! more than we ask, » we've marked a Off Our eedily. . f what they are, Bluchers, sizes tt $2.98. harles- 646. to $18, Mirror 5.50, $10 and EID, felephone, 577. Plone s9s. NS, n- Furniture EA yecial--W. are offerin ek a large continuous Heavy Rocker, gable how drawice use at $4.00. k iid muh of those > a line of Boat and Lawa Camp Cot, Camp ir and urniture at 5 "out MES REID, ' Ci red uy gt 53 AS wd ~ : i 2 8 a i 5 A i if i 4 i A f I Applicants for inspection must state what Jette the homesteader is in default, and if 'su tly the statement is found be r particulars, the cant will Jose any por right of re-entry shouia the lm vacant, or 4 entry hae. deen granted it may be summ caf ry to perform the under f t-- one of lowing plans Duties--A settler is ired itlons e fol months' ( Senee u farming land owned by him in Wakes oy. of Me the requirement a sa suc] He or patent the SYNOPSIS OF CANADIAN NORTH-WEST MINING REGULATIONS. Coal.--Coal Lands may be purchased at $10 acre for soft coal and $20 for anthracite. ot ene individual or company. rate of ten cents per ton shall be collected on the gross output. arte.--A person eighteen years of age, or over, having discovered mmeral in place, may locate a claim, 1,500x1,500 feet. fee for recording a claim is $5. At least $100 must be expended om the claim each year or paid to the mining recorder in lien thereof. When $500 has been expend ed or paid, the locator may, upon havin survey made, and upon complying with or requirements, purchase the land at $1 per acre. The patent provides for the yment of a royalty of 3 19 cent. on the sales. Placer mining claims generally are 100 feet square, entry $5, renewabl dredge for gold of § ge for goi of twenty years, rencwable at the discretion A Re ha Joe py ton 11 have a in opera n . m from bol A the lease ! ive miles, tal 10 per annum | for each mile of river Teused. Royalty at the | rite of 9 33 per cent. collected on the output after it exc $10,000. Royalty at the 2, pounds ve miles each for a term | W. W. CORY. | Deputy of the Minister of the Interior. | N,B.~Unauthorized publication of this ad { wirtisement will not be paid for. | I! you wish to be successful at- tend The Kingston Business Coll Eimited, heed of Queen street. Canada's Highest Grade business a ing, graphy, < 3) Soimarclal subjects Oro ly y ab lecat eX ad ' Pay and nicht classes. Enter at any time. Rates very moderate. "Phone. H. F. METCALFE, Presidents J. B. CUNNINGHAM, Secretary. When You Buy COAL From fP. WALSH You get genuine Scranton, as he handles nothing else. If you need a reliable time- pieco or would like your watch Jut in thorough orler. one of the most reliable places in the city is at Kinnear & d'Esterre's, | 100 Princess St. Phone 336. New England Chinese | Restaurant Kags Open from 10 30 a.m. to 3.00 a.m. The best place al) roune Lud a de oh > Mala "or "an Finds | Be x notice. English and Chimes: | a speclallys 'Phone. 650. Wa. Murray, Auctioneer 27 BROCK ST. rriage , Cutters, Harnese, etc., for sale. Sale of Horsus every Saturday NewYork Chinese Restaurant 83 Princess Street Open from 10.50 » m. to 3.00 a.m place ta an al} round Lunch. the city. of all kinds potios. Engiieh and Chinese SUMMER WANTS F Charcoal io! more than 820 acres cam be acquired by » pardonisss "Sila A. ©O., Windsor, Ont. - u Agents for Canada. : . LOAN AND INVESTMENT tures. received and Half of getting anywhere is in making the start. - | If you want to be successful--if | you. want to better your position-- make the start. We have mie the start easy, and we have made the { "whole way to success easy. So easy, | in fact, that you will 'be surprised at 1 the insignificance of the barrier that | "has kept you back. The start to | success is to simply fill in and mail to us the coupon below. . { Read over thelist of occupations in the counon, mark X before the one you want to enter, fill in and mail the coupon tous. By return mail we will tell you how you can i easily, inexpensively, and in your spare time qualify yourself for the position you want, and we'll send proof of it in the form of facts as to what we have done for others, 80080 0000000000 + International Correspondence Schools + | cently. . Bex 799, Scraaten, Pa. . o Please explain, without further obligation on my part. how | cam quality for a larger salary in the position before which I have marked * . o> : | noble purpose when . Boskkreper T Engineer » Stenographers Electrie Lighting Supt, , Advertisement Writer » Engineer ' ShutGing weiter yor Window » Meohaniont Draftsman Civil ra a Ornamental Designer Contractor » Wiustruter Architectural Draftemen » Civil Bervies t . Chemist Structural Enginese Textile Mit Supt, Bridge Engineer . triclen Foreman Plumber Electrical Engineer Mining Engineer * Name ' } Street and No. » » City State. Neere ene eetssnectes s0svcsee Local Office 57 Brock St. J. K. Carroll. Representative Waggoners Special Blue Serge Suit $20 Best Workmanship First Class Trimmings Fit Guaranteed | COAL! The sudden changes in Weather ought to suggest the Wisdom ol putting in sowe good oal. We sell good Coal. It's the kind that sends out Lhe: most heat, and makes the home comfortable ; it's the best money can buy, and there is nome better mined. We deliver It to you clean and without slate, at the very bottom "prices. BOOTH & CO., Phone 133. Foot of West St 3 YEARS IN BED WITH RHEUMATISM! NOW WELL It is simply marvelous, the effect Bu-Ju has on Rhegmasis, It not ee ly relieves the ut completely the system of the disease. Bu-Ju, THE GENTLR KIDNEY PILL, does this, be- cause it cures the eet or pours ik farts 3 Rheumatism, and was bed fast until about when me some soc a large box, at your or by mail 4 money back if they fail to cure. a Limited. Windsor, Ont. 90 {rE | { i { THE FRONTENA c i ESTMENT SOCIETY | ESTABLISHED 1863. é Farm P allowed. , McGill, Managing Director. 83°C Office, 87 Clarence "Street, Kingston. When a woman is talking she dis- \ LE A . likes to be interrupted as muchas a ¢ [brave in the face of danger to himself | « | OF others when nerved to it by excite- | «ment, or can sacrifice his SO00000000000 00000000 - THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 1907. A GREAT CAMPAIGN. the Opium nARr GR i a Ee INA TENEMENT DISTRICT IN a : tant societics in Great > NEW YORK. | Britain ho he suppression L of ) -- | the opium long forced on China, to which a fourth society has been added A Dinner is Served Through the | ing" the Anglican church with Efforts of Bella Cook, Who | the. Archbishop of terbury actively Has Been Confined to House | leading, ate eparing for a great cam- | paign. For Forty-three Years. { ment last May, § the edict of the Anes | government, rising tide For twenty-five years, on the days | young China, present before iving and Christmas, a! jess. rare sight has been witnessed on Second avenue, New York, in one of the tene- ment districts. About two hundred wo- | 3nd China, seem men and children, each equipped with a | society has appealed to Christian people capacious basket, have filed through the | everywhere to unite with them in prayer varrow hallway of the front house, | for guidance and help to ensure ultimate through the unattractive back yard, to a | success. Rev. Dr. Eby, secretary of The | rear tenement house, where to each has | [nrernational Reform {been given materials for a holiday din-| arn Agia, and rarily for Cana ner. Each "dinner," a fowl and gro- | pakes the appeal Fora The day fix: ceries and vegetables enough to last an | for intercession is Thiirsday, May ordinary family a week, is the result of | Tp. bishops of Liverpool and Du he Jong thought and Horn of Mrs. | Prebendary Webb-Peploe, Lords: K a w as not n out of | po: Pole that house for forty-three years, nor Saird, Overtown aid Polwarth 'and off her bed for thirty-seven years. | 1 During all that time, although never | Ppe appea az $e : has resol suppress opium-smoking | rising to a sitting posture, and in con- | within Shved 4p Supptcss op ins porn stant ait shut away from the world | fej 1 judge are unanimous in their re- and all that makes life attractive, with | go rd for the bona fides of ~~: never a sight of tree or shrub qr blade | joa # : es of the Chinese od gh h 1 > i § | authorities in this matter, is surely in he gras hal 3 on a Tariow Spo {itself a fresh call to England to facili- le "I NE wig e Iy¥ oe tate, at however great cost to herself, j Lanes Ie JUrCings, Ars. LOOK 1S | ihe liberation of that vast empire from | spent an active and joyous life. She | its degradi thraldo: | |said in her bright, emphatic manner: | The wy Th ful in. {| "Weary! not I. When ministers and | OE are NOS i. Ve H. E. Chang | | other people pray with me, @nd tell the | t a a chang, has his | | Lord what a dreadful time I have had, | po "Learn!" circulated by the ren and how He has afflicted me, I tell them | thousand in China. H. EF Chou Fu, | {that I had rather they would not pray | viceroy at Nanking, recently asked Dr | {for me in that way. I have not been so | ! afflicted. My a have Ro happy." | Hampden C. DuBose, president of the "Talk about heroism," said one re- | \ti-opium League, to prepare a peti- "I can see how one can be tion from: the missionary body which | he would in a memorial and for- ward to the throne with his own cordial life for a | 'mprimatar. H. E. Yuan-Shih-K'ai, viceroy of the North, and H. E Ts'en Ch'un-hsuan, viceroy in the South, are! both younger men, from whom much may be hoped. They are purging the army of smokers and.coming down hard | for the sake of the rank and file of un- | on the army of civil mandarins under | fortunate humanity,--well, in my mind, | them who have anything to do with Mrs. Cook has out-heroed heroism!" |opium. For the older victims of the A first visit to this remarkable woman | vice they have some consideration, but | must always be a surprise, however young aspirants for promotion receive familiar with the facts one may be. Ex- [no mercy if they dally with the pipe cept the bed, the room lacks all the char- | Along these lines a campaign of educa- acteristics of a sick room. The face on | tion will do much to cleanse the ranks the pillow may quiver with a paroxysm |of the mandarins and raise up a race of -f pain, but a bright smile always greets | officials eager to honestly administer one, and there is a welcome in the very | anti-opium laws. air, The little room is exquisitely clean,| Another hopeful Yet the Gilficultics in the way, i tal a vest ihterests, in England, India almost insuperal stimulated by en- { thusiasm ; but to lie on a bed of pain | in that forlorn place for almost half a| century, and overlook one's own suf- fering, and control tortured nerves, all sign is that the vote in the Briush ha- | phases of hopeful- | 0g ¢ The | was Dr. Motoda, of U. S. Bureau for East | | Eugene Stock have been leaders in this| John Carter, of Pusey House, Oxford; That the Chinese government | rofessor MacAllister, the dis d scientist of Cambri University, and { the famous Eat esician Sir Alex- | sent a deputation with an expression of | The gathering also, as it were, unlocked | the doors of otiger cities throughout the | tional leaders. | ings have been thronged. This is in part | due to tactfulness of those who made the malt | tell them that T am in a hole, and that! pictures and friendly tokens are about the room, and therg are always flowers. ~ maid does the work, and cares for { her. Her bedstead was made specially for her, and was given.to her in 1871. She has never been off it since that time. By an arrangement of straps and pulleys, head or feet or knees may be raised or lowered or she can be raised on a canvas to allow her bed to be made and the mattress to be turned and changed. A large broad shelf her hands, encircling her body. This, John Stephenson, the street-car manu- facturer, had made for her. It holds] her work, writing materials, and all that she needs for her day's work. Among | sther things, a telephone was tried, con- | necting her bed with the pulpit of the church of which she has been a member | for more than fifty yéars. The effort to isten through it, however, wearied her, | and it was removed. During the years, | many physicians have been consulted | with reference to moving her from the! cussed; but all have agreed that the at-| empt would result in her death, and | that she could not live to reach the| street. i Her "office hours," as she laughingly | | calls her day, are from nine to six, and | | between those hours she is seldom | | alone. She has a keen sense of humor, | and understands human nature intui- { tively. Men and women with all sorts | | of needs come to her. Well-known so- | | ciety people find their way to her hum- | { bie home, seeking comfort in bereave- | ment and trouble. Erring ones, those in search of work, the needy, all come to | this apparently most helpless woman for | counsel and aid. There is a continual | coming for a dime for a night's lodging, for food, for the wherewithal i which to redeem things from the laun- | dry or from pawn, able-bodied men | who can "get work to-morrow, ma'am, | if I can only get a shave and a clean | shirt"--and so her busy days go by. And all get all that noble soul can give them. Many a one fas received there the first upward infpulse to a new life, and found | a before-unknown hope - and joy and] peace. Every one who comes gets al hearing, and all who appeal to her cre- | dulity go down in her little book and | are "looked up" by her helpers. Asked | if she never reached the end of her re- sources,--"Oh, yes," she said; "but then | 4 write to some of my rich people, and | it is not my work, but the Lord's; and | they respond." | Mrs. Cook was born in Hull, England, | in 1821. She and her husband started | {for America with their three little] { children in 1847. The baby was one of | memorable fact--that the Barons made | i | the twenty-five persons to die on the! | ship during the tedious seven weeks' { voyage. Mrs. Cook had not learned pa- tience in those days, and her grief for | her child was immoderate and uncon: | trollable. Her husband died of cholera two years after their arrival. To sup- port herself and her two little ones, she | took in fine sewing. In that way she | made some rich and influential friends, | the ladies for whom she worked becom- | ing interested in the intelligent and phil- anthropic little scamsiress. During that time she devoted two hours of each day to visiting the sick and suffering, mak- ing up for the time thus spent by work- ing early mornings and late nights. In Bellevue hospital, where she was to be seen almost daily, she became known as the "Little Sunbeam." She was never strong. When two vears old she fell the tiny cook-stove shines like a mirror, f scholars in the new swings back and forth on a level with | house, and every expedient has been dis- |i John to sign the | yoke of Rome. {mand from the better-endowed clergy a | portion of their first year's income when { appointed to a living; these portions When the church fot ever threw off the | papal yoke, King Henry VIIL claimed {and received these first-fruits; | successors, except Queen Mary, did the | same, but schools and col- leges are opposed to the vice and the traffic. The ruin of their fair land is believed to be at hand unless this vul- tute be driven away. The native press |is full of it. Platform speakers, now | everywhere in evidence, often refer to it | The, Chinese knew that the vice was con- | | trary to the teachings of Confucius and | the sages who, if thev had lived till | modern days, would have been horrified | at the spread of the evil and would have | headed a crusade against it. '-~ But the | Confucian conscience was asleep until | | the missionaries and the native Chris- | tians arose with a living conscience Contactawith this living force has arous- i { ed China and created native hospitals, native anti-foot-binding societies, native | anti-opium societies and what not. -- Another Pageant. Bury St. Edmunds, England, is to celebrate the conclusion of a thousand years of its existence by a great public pageant. Two thousand actors, includ- ing two hundred peers and peeresscs, are giving services and costumes free. If they were being paid, the cost would be £100,000. Grand ladies and girls in the humblest homes are making doublets and gay paraphernalia of the past, while smithies resound to the clang of ham- mers, shaping the armor to be worn by the hosts of warriors to be brought to life again. The Icather work involved | in the costumes is being prepared from the hides ofl the famous Chillingham cat- tle, introduced into Suffolk at the time of the Reformation. One chor of monks wilk be composed of clergymen, this plan of deputing people to present the parts of those who in bygone days occupied similar positions. having been followed throughout The stage on which this army of act- ors is to perform is the site of the old y where 'most of the scenes to be enacted Bok place. Four thousand Spectators are to be accommodated in a grand stand that will afford a splendid view of the spectacle and of one of Eng- | land's loveliest shires. wr Bury St. Edmunds possesses a story | worth celebrating. It was here St. Ed- | mund, the saintly Saxon King, lived and | died for his people, refusing to deny his religion. His shrine became one of the | most sacred spots in the island, and for | this reason the Anglican and Roman Catholic clergy, more especially the lat ter, are taking a deep interest in the pageant. Richard Coeur de Lion, El eanor the Good, and many othér rulers, took their vows before starting out on enterprises at the tomb of the martyred monarch. It was here--and this is a! their vow before riding to compel King | Magna Charta, the foundation of the liberty the whole em- pire now enjoys. 4 A Queep's Bounty. Few Bounty" is. In old days, before thie Reformation, the pope attempted to place the Church of England under the One method was to de- were called "first-fraits" or "annates." all his Queen Anne refused to accept | proposed in a letter to the press eight | years since an Empire day, she could | scarcely have dreamed of the great wave | of love of country and of imperialistic {ideas she set aflood. This year May | was now attached a purse containing | tenure and people know what "Queen Anne's, {them. The clergy, however, continued to pay them, but instead of going to the Crown, they were ed to the in- | crease .of poor benefices, and to other | purposes by which the church might be {made more useful. These "first-fruits" and received injuries from which she never fully recovered. Later in life she fell on the ice, and it is to those falls that she owes her long invalidism. me Leads. { averaged about £15,000 a year, and sums President evelte are continually being placed in the hands Nothing outside can take the place of | of the Board of Queen Anne's' Bounty home. The school is an invaluable ad- | by pious churchmen, so that the annual junct to the home, but it is a wretched | sum available is many times as great substitute for it. The family relation is | now, With the exception of parliamen- the most fundamental, the most import- ! tary grants made in 1800-1 ' ant of all relations. No leader in church | a ens 3 bern entirely or state, in science. or art or industry, provi urchmen use of however great his "achievement, does the church. What Queen Anne did was work which compares in importance | not to give anything to the church, with that of the father and the mother, | to give up something which her 'who are the frst of sovereigns and the | for " n sy | Great Success Of The Conference in Japan, Six hundred delegates, representatives | of twenty-five nations, a the con- | ference in Tokyo, the first gathering of {an international character in J | Every meeting was crowded, $0 | great was the interest that speakers re- | peatéd the addresses at other gather- | ings, hardly less thronged, twice, or even | three times, thus reaching 10,000 stu- | dents. Eastern thinkers bore their full ine speakers that represent- in Japan were native {1 se, save the venerable Bishop Ni- i oa the beloved head of the Orthodox | Eastern Church. Notable among them an mis- | sion, who made a profound impression. | The address of the Hon. Yun Chi Ho, | once prime minister of Korea, on "The { New Young Man of the Far East," was original, thoughtful and brilliant. Pro- fessor Chen, of the University of Pekin, | made a deep impression, as did also the { Tamil scholar, Azariah, head of the [newly-formed National Indian 'Mission- |ary Society. The Western speakers who | most impressed 'the, Orientals were Rev. ander Russell Simpson, who has fo years taken an active interest in mis- sion movements among students. Pro- fessor Bosworth was happy in his inter- pretation of Western ideas to the Orien- tal mind. The strength of the conference was evidently no surprise to the Japanese of other faiths, who planned conferences of their own on the same dates and sent to the Student Christian Federation gifts and messages of good will. The 3.000 delegates of the Buddhist Conference profound respect. Ten years ago such a thing would have been inconceivable. empire. At its close twenty deputations, of from two to five workers each, went to as many cities, bringing Christian message to the educated classes. They were received with cordiality by the municipal and provincial ials, the Chambers of Commerce, and the educa Everywhere their meet- conference pre-eminently Oriental ; five- sixths of the delegates were Asiatics. There were strong delegations from Ko- rea, China, Manchuria, Siam, India, Ceylon and the Philippines. The speeches were usually in English, but gll of them were translated into Japanese either by the speaker himself or by interpreters ------------ Fine National Spirit! When Mrs. Fessenden, of Hamilton, 23rd was observed more enthusiastically than ever before, and the 24th, Victoria day, was in many places not a public holiday merely but a time of stirring celebration. Leaders of the Empire day movement of Great Britain have announced that it was kept last year in 6,177 schools in Ontario; 5968 in Quebec, 1,800 in New Brunswick, 2,446 in Nova Scotia, 620 in Manitoba, and in 550 schools in British Columbia, Saskatchewan and Alberta Australia, New Zealand and South Af- rica have similar demonstrations, and altogether the pupils of 35,000 schools in "dominions beyond the seas" participate in the celebrations. At home, the Lon- don County Council this year author- ised celebrations among: the 900,000 scholars under 'its jurisdiction. The na- tional ensign was floated at twelve schools in the great city, flagstaffs hav- ing been provided by subscriptions of readers of the Daily Ta Open- air demonstrations have been held year- the four ly in a hundred centres in divisions of the kingdom, and the grow- ing generations are being impressed with their rich share of inherited glory, justice, benevolence, freedom and well- ordered government Whip In Church. In England many curious rentals of property survived from early times. The "gad-whip" at Caistor church, Lincs, was of unique interest. It was a white leather thong ten feet in length. Every Palm Sunday this whip was cracked thrice in the church porch, so_soon as the first lesson was commenced, as a tenure by which neighboring property was held, the tenant himself being com- pelled to create the disturbance. Then he would retire until the reading of the second lesson, and now proceeding u the aisle, the whip in hand, to Which thirty pieces of silver, according to the doubtless having Biblical significance, the embarrassed gentleman would kneel before the lectern, and calmly wave the purse-burdened thon, ominously round the clergyman's head. This remarkable ceremony ceased in 1846. won't bind--yet there's ugly bunch at theshoulder OF COMMERCE t ' HEAD OFFICE, TORONTO B. BE. WALKER, President REL oO \ : 3 1 IRA : " i -- Branches throughout Canada, snd In the United States and England. A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS TRANSACTED FARMERS' BANKING La a afforded Farmers for their Sales Notes cashed or taken for collection Every facili business. BANKING BY MAIL.-- mail. Out-of-town accounts receive every KINGSTON BRANCH, ESTABLISHED 1867 Paid-up Capital, $1 00( Rest 5, Assets, - 1S, banking s may be made or withdrawn by Shoes For Summer "Gowns. The lady without a pair of Canvas Shoes will be hard this season. a great favorite with all women Shoes. Fydbbdd Every New and Right Style is Here. begia to tell you about our Canvas t Ladle Come see, we can't Shoes here. All prices, but no will color shoes to match your costume or will sell you the dye, at * 25¢c. per bottle. . We will close our store at 5 o'clock every day during August, except Sa , J. H. Sutherland & Bro. THE HOUSE OF GOOD SHOE MAKING to find The pretty, dainty, and stylish Canvas Shoes will be who dress well and want mmart = 1 igh, $1 to $2, and for 15c. we Tuy ang } pd 9 : wv o o + 2 £ Special Display . : Lawn Waists | : & } vr BE ¢ 3k 2 0 We have never before in the history of our business had sucha magnificent display = of Lawn Waists as we are showing this = week. It will interest you to come and see for [yourselves. Wa | could not tell youhalf about them in the paper, but we promise = you a treat if you come this week and inspect our t dis- 5 y. Prices running from 39¢c. on. up to $4.50, with eyery price in © between. Come early and see this display. It will pay you. E HOSI : Crumley"s Hose are certainly " good ones. We call your atten- ¥ tion pspecially to the famous Buster Brown Ribbed, Fast Black 'Cotton Hose, the kind that your boy will appreciate and at the same time a money saver for you, in all sizes. Ladies' Fast Black Cotton Hose at 12jc., 15c., 20c. and 25¢c. per pair, at CRUMLEY BROS', BIRGH, 86 Brock St. $000000050000000000080. nm AND CASH COUPONS Lawn Mowers It pays to buy the best Mowers, and the is the only kind we sell. We have them with Three and Four Blades, $3.50 to $8 Every machine is guar. anteed. We also sharp- en and répair Mowers. MAKERS BERLIN | CANADA LIFE ASSURANCE CO HEAD OFFICE TORONTO, ONT. : Office, 15 Market' Kingston Assuntos 3 force (OVE) =o an 1s Street, :