-- . 3 3 "BRICK'S TASTELESS " . REGISTERED 't It is an extract of fresh cod livers, containing all the virtues of pure Cod Liver Oil without the 2 nauseous grease, combined with Phosphorus in | the form of the Compound Syrup of Hypophos- | phites, nutritious Extract of Malt and the Fluid l" Extract of Wild Cherry Bark. [It will promptly relieve, and if its use is con- . tinued, permanently cure chronic bronchitis, all pulmonary affections, croup, hoarseness, nervous 4 disorders due to an exhausted condition of the system, prostration following fevers, debility at change of life, or constitutional weakness at any \ age, and all blood disorders. f We positively guarantee "Brick's Tasteless" to do exactly what we claim it will do'as printed on the label of the bottle, or any advertising matter, and every druggist who sells "Brick's Tasteless" is authorized to refund to his custom- er the full purchase price if one bottle does not J show a decided i vement, which 1mprove- ment will result in a complete cure if additional bottles are taken. We. therefore request you to try a bottle of *"Brick's Tasteless " on our recommendation, and if no improvement is shown after taking it, return the empty bottle to the druggist from whom you \ purchased it and he will refund your money. Can we be fairer? punce bottle 50c; 20 ounce bottl¢ $1.00 ---- -- FOAL ROR N A is one of the features of the GREAT IDEA steel ing or toasting, it is an ideal attachment. hroughout are lined with asbestos, around which cknesses of steel. Even the flues under the oven nctically insuring the GREAT IDEA steel range , the enemy of all steel ranges. GUELPH STOVE CO., Limited Branches at Montreal, Winnipeg and Calgary EEL. RANGE HE EEE NE ERR Staham, Sole Agents For Kingston. day Specials -------- Underwear Ladies Ribbed Vests and .Drawers-- special at 25¢., 35¢., and 50c. each y Hosiery, ' size e at 25¢. pair. rere Stocking, ir, or 3 pairs Cushion Tops Cushion Tops--A big array of signs at 25¢. and 50c. each. S . Cushion. Cords--A big variety of col- s Wool and |orings, 2} yards long, with large tas- 5c., 35¢., and |5el, only 25c. each. : Laundry Bags 1 White and Linen Colored. Extra spe- neat frills in| Cia! at 25c. each. or hox. Wool Toques, at 25c., 35c., and up. ur ( Cash Coupons. LLEY BROS. The Gthe Goes demanded in 'the fahiomble fgure by Ge luest frock ideas are insepemble from the recent D & A" MODELS, wish, wns sty other, malize of the ses of a woman, ¥ you want to dress clegandly, with an sherhought for lek$ ad comfort, "TD & A" w the corset fog you. From the pomt of vanety of models, color, strength of despr. quality and beasty of materials excellence of finish, "D & A" CORSETS are oll that is to be desirgg--in fact. stand wnsporoached from any other Trand of corsets : FASHION HEALTH COMFORT ~ "BL& A" 4 the Model approved by the leading couturiers of Canada, aod adopted by the foremost modistes as the corset |} model Best suied to the cament mode in gowas. FOR SALE AT ALL CORSET DEPARTMENTS Prices, $1.00 to $5.00. LESS GRIME IN LONDON When the children need a laxative, don't' dose them with castor | gecorp oF vears work BY oil, salts, senna or POLICE IN EMPIRE'S CAPITAL. calomel, . Striking Figures of Life In the Metro- polis -- Marked Improvement In Public Morals -- Convictions Are Fewer--Some Unsolved Mysteries-- Murders Numbered Seventeen-- Finger Print System Satisfactory. A very satisf, feature of report for 1906 of commissioner of police for the metropolis, which has just been issued, is that there was a decrease in the number of of- fences committed during the year, though, curiously , 430 persons were sentenced to penal servitude, as compared with 374 in 1905. The number of persons apprehend- OR--FRUIT LIVER TABLETS are the finest medi- cine in the world for children. Pleasant to take--never 'grip.' Made of fruit juices and tonics. 50c a box. od Aan th Ir er WTS oY. Es. 138 a decrease of 7,420 as com with At druggists'. the preceding years. Of 3,418 were convi at Bessions, 96,335 were convicted by magistrates, 630 were acquitted, bills ignored, ete., at Sessions, and 19,459 were discharged by magistrates. There was a decrease of 1,Ml in the number of criminal offences re- ported during the year, and a decrease of 1,318 in the number of felonies re- lating to property. The apprehensions for these offences decreased by 426 and 595 respectively. The proportion of felonies to each 1,000 of the estimat. ed population was 2,391, and was the lowest recorded during the period for which statistics are available. Burglaries decreased from 512 to 445 in 1906. House-breakings decreas- ed from 1,622 to 1,459, but the num- ber of apprehensions increased by 60, and the convictions by 49. Violence to the person was used in only three cases of burglary and one case of house-breaking. Of these offences, 713 were committed in houses left t . with no person in charge. 3 There were seventeen cases of mur der of persons over one year of age during 1906. In only two cases were no arrests made. In the case of the | "Studio Mystery," where Archibald SECO SHERRY | Wakley, a young artist, was brutally | murdered, the report says that after BOTTLED IN SPAIN ONLY. | prolonged inquiry evidence to justify A WORD TQ THE WISE: |" arrest was not forthcoming. The To those who enjoy and appreciate | Other unsolved mystery was the death the goodness of a good wine for the ©f & woman in the Edmonton Infirm- family table, THE LANCET---the ary after an illegal operation. world's recognized leading medical | The "finger prints" system oontinu- Journal--recommends SHERRY. 'ed to give unqualified satisfaction, It is a well known fact that the not only in the United Kingdom, but premier sherry house of the worl | algo, it is said, im all other countries is Spat 2 oa GONZALEZ & | where introduced. Identifications still This firm bottles, and seals exclu- show an upward trend, although sively at their own bodegas a brand | "ENS are not wanting that high-water of sherry, the excellence of which | mark has almost been reached. : At they absolutely guarantee--and that | Scotland Yard, 6.776 identifications is IDOLO SECO. | were effected in the year (as. against For sale at all leading Hotels, Cafes, | 6,186 in 1905). Of these, 2,982 were Restaurants and Wine Merchants the | for the metropolitan police and 3,794 World over. for provincial forces. Lawrence A. Wilson Co. Ltd. BE , Canadian Agents, - Montreal. 17| KIER HARDIE IN INDIA. Feared In London Mutiny May Take ---- Form of Gigantic Strike. Considerable apprehension is felt in London as to the résult of Kier Har- | die's ebullitions on the inflammable temperaments. of India. | The wordy Labor leader has told the natives of Bengal that conditions in India are worse than in Russia, and the atrocities committed there, if known in England would provoke more horror than did the Turkish out- rages in Armenia. {| All India, with its teeming millions, | certainly had been disturbed during | the last few months; there had been | a long series of murderous assaults NAGIC | upon Europeans, and attempts had | been made to corrupt the native | troops. Ome authority, whose views NSURES 'has attracted considerable attention, makes the prediction that, while there will be "no second Indian rising in our time, there is likely to be some- thing more dangerous and baffling." "The modern weapon of revolution," says this authority, "is the strike. '®f | In one way caste is, strictly speaking, a form of trade union. There are | among the Hindoos the bakers' caste, | the cooks' caste, the washerman caste, | and so on. No baker may wash his own clothes; no washerman may pre- pare his own food. If the Hindoos strike, what would become of the native army and the whole business of India? Again, the telegraph depart- | ment is mostly Hindoo, and the pos- | tal service is entirely Hindoo. In- dead, almost all the subordinate offi- cials in India are Hindoo. No strike conceivable in England could have half the effect as a caste strike in India. : "The engine drivers are Parsees, Furasians, and Mohammedans, but everywhere else the Hindoo has in- creased. At presept the Mohamme- dans are numeri only a thir teenth part of the subordinate offi- cials. This is the danger of the ser viee--the vast predominance of the Hindoo--and if omens are true, he paturally will use his advantages while he can. When Chandra Pal was arrested, he said the time to strike had 'not yet come. He meant, strike in both its meanings." em-------------- Made Money in Colonies. A gentleman who admits to having succumbed to what he is pleased to call "that Carnegie feeling" is wvisit- ing Manchester. Stylishly dressed and wearing a fur-trimmed overcoat, the unknown e : visitor approached a policeman at Our specialty is coal that is ®| midnight and asked to be directed to right. a neighborhood in which common 7 lodging-houses abound. The oon- TheFrontenacLumbep §| stable was startied by the request and Coal Company. > hervar PURE FOOD INSURES E.W.GILLETT ares FORONTO.ONT. oe - THERE'S PLENTY We are able to furnish you as much coal as you want just now--later difficult to get it. Our supply is abundant, and we'd like to send you enough to last through the winter. it may be sometimes works rapid Shortly afterwards the policeman noticed | the jentionun 3 walking » Deansgate wi a hl cro A. CHADWICK, Manager wretchedly-clad and half-starved Successors of The Rathbun creatures around him. Invited to ex- Company. Phone No. 87. j Plain, the man with the fur coat sad: POOP OIOPO@®e | "The fact of the matter is I have { only arrived back in Manchester to- | day after an absence of eighteen years A Ol IN | in the Colonies. My last night in ',| Manchester Was spent, oh ous of the | infirmary seats. ve just been up Put in Your Tank there now to invite as many outcasts at Our Dock. | as I could find to have a bed and as | square A large stock of Dry Bat-| y teries k Plug and Coils! Time » Spar g changes.' That word "affinity" which always on hand. {went into 1907 looking like a lily ' {will emerge with the complexion of SELBY & YOULDEN, oi == * "=r NO man ev another a 8 LIMITED. i gi bin --- gr cal survey, and to study its geo and natural history. Although Prince Charles Foreland was the first the British Admiralty charts. As a result of our expedition we have been able to give a detailed survey of the whole of the west coast, of the interior with its mountains, and of a considerable portion of the east coast. Whereas previously we ry meagre knowledge of the geology of the island, the expedition has brought to light many interesting new facts, and has sueceeded in ac- quiring detailed information of ani- mal and plant life of which previous. ly nothing was known. Prince Charles Foreland is about 60 miles long and five to seven miles broad. It con- sists of three portions, the northern two-thirds being entirely mountain- ous, with hills rising to nearly four thousand feet, the section to the south of this consisting of an extensive flat and low tract, at no point higher than 60 feet, separating the northern mountainous region from a smaller mountain part which to ships pass- ing not very far off appears exactly like a separate island. A consider- able portion is bare rock, with patches in places of very fine vegetation, bril- liantly verdant, with many species of Arctic plants, especially in those parts where there are great rookeries of birds. The mountain ranges in the middle part of the island are very much glaciated, especially on their eastern slope. The stormy nature of the coast made boat work often dif- ficult and sometimes impossible, while the land traveling was excessively rough and extremely hard, especially with our heavy loads. The report of insufficiency of food was untrue, the expedition being well supplied with all necessaries, in case of some acci- dent necessitating wintering on the island. We had plenty of food, cloth- ing, and house accommodation. We were in no danger, but the expedition involved a great deal of hard work, first on account of the rough nature of the ground, and also owing to the | impossibility of using our boat dur- ing heavy weather. Often we were knee deep in bogs which alternated with rock and rough g . Our zoological collections are good, and include a specially fine set of bird skins. We also have a few seal skins and the skeleton of a whale. The geo- logical collections represent rocks and fossils, which make the geology of the Foreland very much more inter- esting than we expected. We also have an extremely interesting botani- cal collection" Our work is scarcely finished, and I hope to have a fur- ther opportunity another season to complete the exploration of the Fore- land." AN EMPIRE FOR SALE. Thirty Wives Thrown In--Throne of Human Bones. The announcement was recently made from Paris of a kingdom for sale for a paltry $200,000, and it is conjectured that Jacques ly is going out of business. According to the advertisements the kingdom which can be picked up for this trifle of $200,000 is the beautiful region of Aysbonia, which is located in Afrioa, presumably on that part of the map of the dark continent which still shows vast tracts upon which the geographers have not yet got in their fine work. With the kingdom goes the power of life and death over the population. The throne is made of human skulls, and the crown, which also is a me- mento, consists of human bones. The retiring monarch will throw his 30 wives into the bargain. It is some time since the Emperor of Sahara disappeared from public view, and as Mlle. Delierre, Empress ol Sahara, not long ago returned to her native village in France, declar- ing that she had had enough of Im- perial existence, it is thought that she may have left Lebaudy because she did not care to be thrown in with the thirty wives whom he is now thought to be offering for sale with his king- dom. Bishops and Palaces. The Lord Bishop of Norwich has given an interview in which he advo- cates the selling of the great episcopal houses and the reduction of the bish- ops' incomes. His lordship mentions that he had to spend more than $15,000 when tak- ing possession of the palace at Nor- wich, and that it cannot be kept up for less than $12500 a year; if a smaller residence were provided his stipend might be reduced by $5,000, or $7,500 a year. In connection with the bishop's pro- posal for a reduction of incomes, i$ is recalled that the Bishop of London stated not long ago that although his income is $50,000 a year, and he is un- married, the cost of keeping up his palace at Fulham is so great that he finds it difficult to make both ends meet, According to a Japanese newspaper, 700 frogs were killed and 2,000 wound- ed in battling among themselves. How a thief must laugh to read in the papers that the five dollar' watch he stole the night before is valued at $200 by its owner ! A poor man lelieves there ix no happiness that cannot be purchased with money. Lalande TECHNICAL TRAINING. What Is Being Done In England to Educate the Young. Some few years back British manu- the workman whe P gh. Bul foreign Sempetiiion has taught a les. son which bringing about results beneficial to the trades of the country. It has been discovered that the man who can design and draw, as well as make, an object is the Wave per- son and he finds emploftient where the purely hammer and chisel prac titioner has to fe idle. In the techni- schools the control of the London County Council it is made | imperative that the student shall know his trade from beginning to end. He must thoroughly work out his ideas on' paper before he is allowed 1) express them in the necessary material. The system may be seen at its best in the exhibition of work executed by the boys and girls at the Technical Institute, Pitfield street, Shoreditch. In that admirable insti- tute, they i by. giving the pupils an intimate knowledge of the alpha- bet of their craft, then they pass, as it were, to the forming of words, and, these essentials acquired they pro- ceed to composition. The success of this training is evident in all the ex- hibits. For example, a boy is set to design a cabinet. He is told the dimensions. A h design is made and criticized by the teachers; seo tional elevation, and other drawin are limned. A cutting list is prepared, then the model is an and com- pleted to scale, and a cost estimate of the full-sized object is ¥urnished. Is it small wonder that the knowl edge of this exhaustive character is appreciated by the progressive em- ployer? A talent thus developed can adapt itself to many things. The school is meant for those who intend to follow ' some particular trade, and there are day and evening classes--those held in the day time being preparatory, those in the even. ing for youths who are in employ ment--the ages in both sections rang ing from 14 years, The work done is excellent in desi and workman- ship. The idea is always in conform ity with its practical evolution. Orna ment is chaste and applied with taste and economy of material. Mother of pearl and the natural color of var ious woods are utilized with artistic judgment, evident in a series of cabinets, a handsome hall stand of oak inlaid with rosewood, ;holly, and ebony, and in two beautifully propor- tioned fireplaces and overmantles, one done by a deaf and dumb boy Two or three other lads similarly al- flicted show capital specimens of pan- elling, and there are a flight of steps with balustrade, the effort' of six beys, a substantial well-fitted oak cabinet, upholstering, carving, archi- tectural draughtsmanship, pattern making, ete. The dressmaking and embroidery section contain skilful work, and in the domestic economy class girls learn how to cook a substantial dinner for four people at a cost of one shilling, dainty dishes for supper, pastry; and not only do they know how to treat the matter at but they know the parte of a juicy chop or a pint milk. In this branch elementary dressmaking and laundry work are im t features, carefully studied and well executed. RATS ATE HORSE ALIVE. Horse Attacked by Rodents at Night Was Found Skeleton in Morning. Kildysart, in County Clare, is be- coming famous for happenings of a wonderful kipd. Astonishing stories have come from that part of Ireland of late, but they have been entirely capped by the amazing tale now to hand concerning the exploit of a party of rats that attacked a horse alive, and in the course of one night picked clean its bones. A horse which had been badly in- jured (so the story goes) was on Bat- urday handed over to a knacker, who took the animal down tb the seashore, it being his custom to remove the hides from dead horses and to launch the remains into the sea. The knacker, however, did not de- stroy the horse on Saturday, but left it on the shore, and early on Sunday morning returned with the intention of killing it. To his surprise all he found of it was the clean-picked skeleton. The place is infested with rats, and it is thought that the horse lay down, and it being unable to rise owing to weakness, the rodents attacked the animal and ate it alive. E Items of Interest. Lord Rosebery on his Dulmeny farm of 35,000 acres produced exclusively seeds which are sold in nearly every country on the continent. George Bernard Shaw says an ideal state of society would be where every man spends $250,000 a year on him- self alone and earns it. About 30,000 private motor cars are registered in London. There are 900 motor buses and many motor cabs. Archaeologists have discovered the marble quarries which supplied the material for the famous temple of Diana of the Ephesians. Switzerland's greatest industry, the entertaining of tourists, has been offi- cially computed to bring $23,000,000 a year, $7,000,000 more than the public revenue of the whole confederacy. So far it has been found impossible to get good records by phonograph of the songs of birds in the wird state. As soon as the needle in the instru- ment Degine to vibrase the bird de- tects ' sound and stops singing. M. Lehman, the Swiss DE ao recently received $200,000 in the lan exhibition lottery, 4 from 500 to 1,000 begging and matri- mounial letters daily, and the postal authorities at Romouth, near Frey- burg, have had to triple their staff. In Belgium the minimum pay of rinters, roofers, glazers, painters and ilermakers is 7 cents an hour or 70 cents a day. Blacksmiths, lock- smiths, carpenters, masons, plumbers and electricians are paid 80 cents a day. The average depth of British coal mines is 800 feet. Four thousand feet is the limit of practical mining. EE -------- The Most Certain Corn Cure. ~Js Putnam's Painless Corn and Wart 'Extractor, which has been used successfully for thirty sears. It takes out the pain, cures the Corn, awd pre- vents it returning. ONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1907. Y CHEAP, EFFECTIVE, PALATABLE. APENTA HUNGARIAN NATURAL PURGATIVE WATER. THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE READ OFFICE, TORONTO ESTABLISHED 1867 B. EB. WALKER, President err, [ihe Soonang Branchos Total Assets, - 113,000,000 Branches throughout Canada, and In the United States and Engtand A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS TRANSACTED FARMERS' BANKING - Every facility afforded Farmers for their banking pangipey. Sales Notes cashed or taken for collection BANKING BY MAIL.--Deposits may be made or withdrawn by mail. Out-of-town accounts receive every attention KINGSTON BRANCH, CORNER OF KING AND PRINCESS STS, P. C. STEVEN SON, Manager. Cowan's | Maple Buds, Cream Bars and Milk Chocolate are superb confections. Nothing to equal "them. ~ THE COWAN CO., Limited, TORONTO 4 -- _IPTON--: | | the settler | Our Last Limerick was a success, but many who sent in splendid lines, ua- fortunately failed to comply with conditions. Some omit- ted name and address, others did not send the tea lid with label attached. So here's another opportunity i-- $750.00 IN PRIZES TO 128 WINNERS FIRST PRIZE, $200 CASH 2nd " §0 " 3rd " 25 " 50 Prizes of $5 Each fr: Ti 5 Ey sires, pert ; residence piers 4 -- ot loan hen ty (80) im, RE A homesteader residence duties in accordance with above while liv with the ving ts ore farming land owned 'must ontity the Agent Jor the district of suck tion to do #0. SYNOPSIS OF CANADIAN NORTH. WEST MINING REGULATIONS. 75 Prizes of, $3 Each CONDITIONS READ CAREFULLY. The conditions of this competition are perfectly sim- ple. All you have to do is to fill in the last line of the Limerick which is shown below and then send it, accom- panied by a TIN LID (with label attached), of a package of LIPTON'S TEA, Gold, Red, Pink, Orange, or Blue La- bel, or LIPTOR'S COFFEE, (embossed lid only,) which entitles the reader to send in one Limerick. You may send in as many Limericks as you like so long as a TIN LID accompanies each Limerick. LIPTON'S av speciar SERED AproinTmEnT TO H.M. THE KING TEA The Finest the World Can Produce. Packed Only in Airtight Tins. FOR SALE BY ALL GROCERS. LIMERICK SAID A CHARMING YOUNG MAID OF DELHI » "OF ALL OTHER TEAS I FIGHT SHY FOR SINCE EVERY TEST i PROVES THAT IAPTON'S IS BEST G I agree to abide by the decision of the Editor of The Toronto MAIL AND EMPIRE as final, and enter the competition on that dis tinct understanding. Signature Address ...... ... The competition will be decided by the Editor of The Toronto MAIL AND EMPIRE, whose decision must be accepted as final. Envelopes must be addressed "Lipton's Limerick," and sent to MAIL AND EM- PIRE. Toronto, Ont. " Postage must be prepaid at letter rate." All answers must be mailed ty last "post Tuesday, November 19 th, ' Greetings from King ston, "Life Models" and rr ------------ -- ||T. McAuley |S '§ P. WALSH Sinner Puddings Mrs. W. C. Caldwell, Lanark i gs Hw il W. W. CORY, Roputs of the Minister of the N.B.--~Unpauthorized Rublieation § sdvertiservent will not be for, - 6 Watches! In Solid Gel, Gold-Filled and Sterling Silver Cases, all sizes and fitted with any make of movt, Our special move ment has a universal guaran which is good from Hali- fax to Vancouver. Helore sclucting a watch see our dis play. : Kinnear & d'Esterre, Watochmakers & Jewelers 100 Princess St., Kingston HERE'S SOMETHING NEW IN POST CARDS Kingston Views. Come in and have a look. When You Buy COAL From You get genuine Scranton, as he handles nothing else. FOR THE HOUSEKEEPER. Roll Bacon, 13 por For 3" Hy Bho measuring