ay from your druggist. If ou QUICKER than anything | give you your money back nd: quickest medicine for your children's hs ughs and colds for 34 years. AL Svan ha oi ion to soups, fish, game and meats. 'RO CER FOR THE BEST SAUCE. [VE YOU EW & Pragins AN ADIAN AGENTS, MONTREAL. Big 3, Big 3. Furniture Carpets and Undertaking. AT - James Reid"s "Phone 147, ur Feet Dry 9 bers, in Wide, Narrow or nted Toes. er Shoe Store: EAR ------ hore ROUTE TO Ry. SBURGH ROUGH TRAINS 'DAILY m., 1:25 pm., 1:55 pm. m., 7:55 p.m, 7:15 am. eS station, Buffalo, ready for oc- Service returning. Canadian Pass. Agt., 80 Yonge St., e, G.E.P.A., Buffalo, 'N.Y. " . | Taffies! sh Chocolate Caramel Tafty 20 CENTS PER »ITEB S40 LL000000000000 86 Princess Street EERE SVT ERIE ugar Refining Co;, Ltd a SUGARS s. Made entirely from cane r "St. Lawrence." the old "J ) | the Misses Ferguson, may possibly be {home from Toronto next week. 3 - - Mis. Buxton Smith will be at 132 old in Gloucester street, Ottawa, till after {| Christmas. | Mr. David Gillies, of Carleton Place, *3e {is in town for the week-end. wl 1g § | Miss Hannah Bredin came up from | Montreal yesterday and to-day left for Chicago for a visit. While here ; WWW she was thé guest of Mrs. Henry Cun- Miss Agnes Brown, University ave- [ningham, Earl street. : nue, gave the pleasantest of little| Miss Nellie Macoun will leave for teas, on Thursday, with Miss Kath- | Toronto on Tuesday, and will be there leen Harty as the guest of honor. Mrs. [till the following week, when she will D. Phelan and Mrs. Kenneth Ireland, [return to Ottawa for the opening of were the dispensers of coffee and tea, parliament on the 28th. with Miss Agnes Richardson cutting | Mrs. Frances Hill Macnee, King the ices. The tea table was lovely in- Street, and Miss Cecil, are staying with deed, its polished surface showing Mrs. Francis BHotterell, Rosemount | Major E. N. Mozley, of ths Royal |Poin€ ail 00 AU a 3 Snipe it Gut thoy decided to fight to perfection, i Deuity of a fhe of a, oprreal, { Chaie® Military college, was host at a plea- | arveting an addition to their club] It was arranged that Signor Conti Very ifge wand purest white <hrysan- Miss se Simmons, ol evs t on Tuesday evenin~ | % pm Aine . Si themums, which stood in a tall irl {Locks, is staying with her aunt, Mrs. fo. Pr | house in _ the ee T. Lent, dram his $0 sous should Sght. Signor smaller vases, holding smaller flow- iD. Noonan, William street. ers, surrounding it. The waitresses | .- * 'e were Miss Marion Redden, Miss Fran- Mrs. James Third, Wellington street, ces Sullivan and Miss Kathleen Rich- [pag returned to town. | Mrs. ardson. Among the guests were Mrs. Mrs. Hol Swift, Captain E. de B. Patiet and |" a \ i f the duel Si Conti and + a a s. ton, treal, } . . The many friends of Miss Grace La-| ning of t uel Signor Conti and the J. J. Harty, Miss Etta aud Miss | through the site. todas on hires | Mr. P. G. C. Campbell. | | londe, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, | two brothers of the Aloasi family fell Kathleen Kirkpatrick, Miss Mona » Ys, y | | Abraham 'Lalondé, former residents | dead, and 'the three survivors sustain- Knight, Miss Nellie Macoun, Miss Mu- riel King, Miss Elsie Saunders, Miss Kate and Miss Minnie Gordon, Miss Beatrice Tandy, Miss Mabel Brown- field, Miss Florence Cunningham, Miss Jean and Miss Katie Craig, Miss May Smythe, Miss Madelon Carter, Miss Loretta Swift, Miss McNierney, Miss Marion Calvin, and Miss Bessie Richardson. " vo ele west. | Mrs. H. C. Finkle of Newburgh, has | been the guest of Mrs. Ramsay Duff, Princess street, this week. Mr. Ernest Cunningham has been in | and Mrs. Cunningham with little Paul, turn home on Monday. - = « Miss Stark, Gananoque, who has | ag been the guest of Miss Franklin, Ken- : nedy street, Winnipeg, has returned home. Mrs. Sidney Warner, Napanee, and | Mrs. I. E. Eakins, Belleville, are visit- | ing the Misses Clark, University ave- A charming little tea was given in Ottawa on Thursday afternoon, in honor of Mrs. Tyrrell, of Toronto, staying with Mrs. Thomas Gibson and Mrs. Robert Cartwright. Lady Cart- wright received in a rich' costume of black silk with touches of white lace, and was assisted by her two daugh-| io ters. Miss Cartwright and Miss Molly| Mrs ©. WI. Boyes, Kingston is jpareme. Cartwright. The tea table which was spending the week in Napanee, the decorated with beautiful yellow guest of Mrs. E. J. Pollard, and oth- { "mums." was presided over by Miss F. | oso qo Cartwright, Miss Jane Fielding pour-| === a we ing coffee, while Miss Marion Cart- : tem . The engagement is : wright and Miss Connie Lowe assisted) enuan t is apnounced of Miss Ella M oque, to Dr. burgh, NX.» * * . - Mrs. John B. Magee, who has been visiting Mrs. T. G. Smith, Queen street, has left jor St. John, N.B. Many of her old friends here have en- joyed her visit very much, and have feted her a great deal in an informal little way. Mise Annie Walsh, Clergy street, will be home the first oi next week, from England, and with her will be Miss Louise Walsh, who has been for six years in the old country. They are on the Virginian, which was sight- ed some days ago. . ihe Mrs. Ernest Gallagher, of Toronto, Mrs. . Michael Sullivan's dinner par- is the guest of her sister, Mrs. John ty, for Miss Kathleen Harty, at McKay, Jr., Sydenham street. her residence, on King street, is the Mr. and Mrs, W. C. Bermingham | event for to-night. have taken "Maitland House" for some months. Edward Earl Irish, of Yarker, "ue. 8. Mrs. E. T. Taylor's tea. at the Roy- al Military College, on Wednesday. af-| ter the cross-country run, was a much- appreciated ending to the afternoon. | The day was one which showed up the the attractions of indoors and hot tea very effectively. vived hats. Aggie a There was a pleasant little bridge, | James 8 | a eT No _.2 Mrs. D. E. Mundell' will leave Sel- | last night, with only two tables in | wrecked in Washington, and his chauf- Tiy Bibby's special' 25c. hosiery. { a form of life, his opponents hold that | J kirk, Man., on Tuesday for home. She | nlay, and a visitorin town for the |feur, who, in company with a machin-| A $1 bottle of Cod Liver Oil Fmul- | they are no more vital than a paper lar furs. MH desired we will place will stay in Toronto for a day or so | reason thereof. ist, was giving it a trial run, was bad- | sion only 75c. at Gibson's Red Cross | flower or a wax. doll. Nevertheless the | your purchase af\le until wanted, on her way down, and will probably . .- ly hurt. | drug store. experiments have raised alittle scien | Campbell Bros., the Bon voyage to Mise Kathleen Me- reach home next Saturday. oe... ow . eh. 1 Parland, who is off on the Lusitania, {liams, Coleman, Nine, Chaumont, and William "A. Watertown, N.Y. THE DAILY Hammond, of Toronto, for her trip in | GANANOQUE TIDINGS. THREE ARE Miss Jean Duff, Princess street, is Game Wardens Are After the Law ---- going down to Ottawa, next week, for the opening of parliament, and other Ottawa gaieties, and while there will | be the guest of Judge and Mrs. Mac | hands full daring . the past week or Mrs. Buxton Smith did not leave! : for Ottawa till yes | received Miss Maud Betts, Beverley came back to town on W . Miss Elsie Pense, King street, leit, | to-day, for Toronto, where keep house for her brother, Mr. Ed- ward Pense, while Mrs. Pense is pay- ing a visit to her mother, Mrs. George King, Alice Street. Play at Badminton will go on for the winter, as usual, with tea on Wed- | her |nesday and Saturday afternoons. { { . . John Fi tone S { : town from Toronto, this week, and he 1 8 will ay aystiane Shatts, the | nated to the Gan anogque Rifle Associa- : : 3 4 ception, on Thursday and Friday. ¢ who is a high favorite here, will re- next week, at the home of Mrs. R. E Sparks, University avenue. John Renton, of i and wil) be for the week-end with Mrs, | Grace Methodist church last evening, {William J. Rentom, University avenue. Mrs. James Masgie, Bagot street, is home from Torento. ' Miss Laura Mullin, night superinten- nde. ] : {dent of Erie County hospital, Buffalo, | i Miss Adelia Daly, Napanee, is in the N.Y. is home for a week visiting her | lease i (Continued on page 5.) Died At Cape Vincent, N.Y. | Wednesday night, ! IN.Y., occurred the death of John H.|partnership and the business will Beerman. of Ganan- | Nims, father of Attorney William A. {future be conducted by P. E. Banks. of New- | Nims, aged eighty-six years. The fun- | Mr. Lipman will remain here eral was held from his late home on Miss Tda Alberta, daughter of Mr. |Saturday at 11 a \ and Mrs. David Burgess, Napanee, to |born in Washington county, N.Y. but - the | had spent practically \ | marriage to take place in December. | the town of Cape Vincent, going there |W York, have returned to town. whén only three years of age. year ago, when village, he was a farmer. te being: Major and | tect, has submitted plans for the Alessi and his two brothers. The chief {AL ; D. Laflerty, Captaiy and Mrs. | addition, which have been accep |Alan Palmer, s i {Nora Gordon, Miss Mabel and Miss | Dorothy Brownfield, .m. Mr. Nims was BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1907. savior) i Gananoque, Nov. 16.--The local ish VENDETTA IS ENDED BY A and game wardens have had their | TRIPLE DUEL. | two; several complaints having been | -- them that Sotust-holdere Sis Men Fight With Pistols on lin this vicinity were violatin the | treet Sicilian street, | DL; legos granted by their an Sa 5 oa ¥ | Two seizures of nets have so far been Wh. Rome, Nov. 16.--Two families of re] and investigations are bei she will |) je Also one seizure of game cl Comitini, in Sicily, have fought" a | Jackie duel with men on each § sie, - to have been shot ou Sunday will) ac- cordi Ww settled shortly 3 Ig 13 Rpoe, There had been a vendetta between the families for gemerations, and final- in the police court. The local au- | thei ities claim that they purpose com- - - by | square of Comitini was chosen for the work will shortly be | encounter, and it was agreed that pis- 4 | begun. The ated cost will be tols should be the weapons. Miss Loretta | about $1,300. Within a few moments of the begin- Bessie and Miss { the club and ed serious wounds. s A crowd of inhabitants witnessed the duel. The police force, consisting of two carabiniers, stayed away until the affair was over. lof this town, learn with pleasure of late marriage in Vahcouver, B.C., | to Edwin McCrossan, of that city. 'A very handsome cup has been do- ~ | tion by Mr. Thomason. It is to be | competed for by the members of the !association next year. A very beautiful and entertaining lantern lecture om mission work in FRENCH SCIENTIST A WIZARD. Grows Plants That Are Like Real Thing. i Winnipeg, a hat ible to deter mine at what point begins, just as among the creatures it is {often impossible to classify organi as plants or animals. If the functions what we have been pleased to regard a end matter 3 would seem as we to frame definition hh iy i Reviews. S The increasing extent to which na- tional problems and development all over the world ave matters of internationalism is one of the most noteworthy and remarkable signs of the times. Certainly, if the mneteenth century was one of nationalism the twentieth is rapidly becoming a of internationalism. Great Britain's pressing problems are those of her foreign relations or the relations of her home government with the riepen- dent alien peoples. The questions that press for settlement at the Ja- panese capital are largely of interna national import, concerning the emi- gration of Japan's citizens to other lands. Germany is concerned with the balance of power in Europe. The fate of the Austro-Hungarian empire is dependent on the centrifugal forces acting ufon diverse nationalities with. in its borders. The French republic, which js becoming more and more a of vegetation can be reproduced by purely socialistic state, is concerned | China was given in the auditorium of The particular variety of scientific under the auspices of the Young Peo- Recromancy of Prof. Leduc, of Nantes, ples' Association. The lecturer was France, consists in toying with life Rev. W. H. Boshart, bursar of Stan. 8nd in producing artificial plants and stead College, who has been in China. | cells which conduct themselves exactly | | Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Sine have | like natural growths, but which are from Byron Boyce, of Hal- | composed only of inert matter. : i | stead's Bay, one half of his new dou- | Leduc's experiments ag so simple ible tenement house on Pine street, | that anyone can repeat them without | just completed, and have taken pos. | *laborate implements. In the first | } pessom, | place a tiny seod must be made, which The firm of Lipman & Dier, gents' | CONSints of two parts Subs sugar ad | RS 3 a 4 _; {one part of copper sulphate. op this | fdrnishings, King :strect, has dissolved | L0G PT a tr - one to _ per | |cent. of potassium ferrocyanid, one to! Dier. | Dnt | ten per cent. of common table sale and spring, Ww rposes op {one to Tour per cent. of gelatin, and » when he pu m : : . . ; , » w away. Mr. d Mrs. Charlek 'or. | 1b & few hours or days something will mack, King street, who have happen. n been [vi spending the two past two weeks in | in Cape Vincent, Robert seed germinates, roots and stems are produced, leaves unfold and branches shoot out in all directions would baffle a botanist all his life -in Up to | { The growth he ig Je Annual Meeting Poor Relief | Re swuld not distinguish it from a real 3 { i | plant, { four children, | Society. | The plant has all the functions of by his wife and Mrs. F. E. Mott and Mrd. C. D, Mich., Campbell Bros'. For everything that's new in men's | Try Bibby"s new $1 caps. Bryce's Small investors are making enorm- | ous purchases of stock in odd lots in | ston's. automobile was Wil- | The Augnl ceting oF She Kingeton | vegetation except ome. Its develop Charles | Poor Rel Society will be Med in, the | oil" pei by point hea Ol ys 4 » » Ee : 2 its wounds; it feeds; in a word, it doos at three p.m. His worship the mayor IN} everything that can be expected of al -- | the chair, . All are invited. | plant except the reproduction of its) own kind, and even that Ledue refuses Big Glove Values. f to consider an unsurmountable obsta- | See our lines at 90c., $1, $1.50, $2. i cle. 1 Campbell 'Bros., the store that saves { Although Ledue's artificial plants re- you money. {semble natural plants so closely and Dress suits yeady to wear. Living: | tific tempest in Germany and France. | Scientists are wondering if (he gra-| | breaking down barriers between na | best store to select them is hore where he is himself inclined to consider them are unsy with class problems, which, however, =socialistic as they are--involve the, recognition of class rather than na- | tionality, but are international in that | they are causing a drift away from | the oll conception of patriotism and | tions, China i= schooling herself - in western ways, that she may the mors effectively protect hersell against the forces western civilization. led by Japan. The motives which move most of the South American statesmen have their origin and guidance in the inter relations of the southern continent, Europe and the United States. Our own national tasks are becoming more and more closely interwovew with our necessary relations to the peoples and governments of the rest of the world. And, as a final expression of the in- ternational drift of men's thoughts to. day, the month of October saw the closing sessions of the second world congress of peace at the Dutch capi- tal, where for four months representa- tives of forty-five nations have began talking over in the friendliest of spirits the vexed questions between them. The Best Time. To select your furs is now and the quality is beyond question and values See our big showing ad There is no one, we imagine, sets about do EE come from a disordered liver? Did you know that ; is | i to, and the heart and nerves being © bound wp with one another, of the ome means disease ond of the other. When find heart the least bit - you your a Ten ons Pill. They'll put you in such cone JH i i fl i TH gif FL i i £ Mra, Jon CO. Yensen, Little x3 writes: "I was troubled with ey un tag my heart pial mare harm than 1 was advised Sind to tay Heart and Pills, and wing tw bane 1 wal completely cured. I cannot for the world of good did me for they saved my life." ot Price 50 cents per box or 3 boxes for $1.25, at all dealers or mailed direct on i I ; vik of neck pieces and mufls in the popu- [drug store. he tm See Bibby's new $1 shirts. The. Rev. Professor Ferguson, and to-day, with. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert C. [Wall street. Bibby's for men's working mitts. dations of living to dead matter are So ---- ee e---------- Sh fmm o®GH ': mn we we-- ------------------ PE ---------------- pase ARR ELLE LLL0E004 0060080000008 Our Sacrifice Sale mre CO) J nie it Fall &WinterCoats -- AT 333PerCent Off. Every Coat in our large stock (over 600) is guaranteed to be this season's latest fashion, and man tailored throughout. All the t, and a rtion of the actual cost has sacrificed; but we need the money. Plain Coats Tweed Coats Broadcloth Coats | $9 Coats 1-3 off. Now $6. $10 Toats 1-3 off, Now $6.67. y I $12.50 Coats 1-3 off. Now $8.34. $15 Coats 1-3 off. Now $10. li $18.50 Coats 1-3 of. Now $12.34 $20 Coats 1-3 off. Now $13.34. b) + $25 Coats 1-3 off. - Now $16.67. | | 36 Fur-Lined Coats off regular prices. THE BEST IS ALWAYS THE CHEAPEST DENT'S GLOVES Are the best. We are agents for 'these goods, in Cashmere, Wool and Kid, large variety, for Men, Women and Chil [ Si Lined throughout in body and sleeves. All at 1-3 - | * Imported Scotch Flannels In White, Navy, Red, Grey, 25¢c., 30c., 35¢., 40c., 50c. | 60c. yard Flannel Sheeting, 72 inches wide We Remnants of Shaker Flannels dark and light colors, at special vrices. For Broadcloths Are the most fashionable material for Dressy Wear. We have them in all colors, Venetian and Satin finish thorough- ly sponged and shrunk, 90c., $1, $1.10, $1.25, $1.35, $1.50, $1.75. Black and Colored Voiles enka High class materials, at 75c., 90c., $1, $1.25, $1.50. Special Offerings in All-Wool es White Blankets Scotch and Domestic makes for single and double beds. ENGLISH FLANNELETTE SHEETS, for large double beds, plain White, $2, $2.50. Waldron's Celebrated Stockings FOR LADIES--English Cashm ere double feet and ankle. 35c., 3 pairs for $1. FOR BOYS--Heavy Kicker Stockings, extra able, 35c., 40c., 45c., 50c. FOR GIRLS--Ribbed and Plain English Cashmere double and ankles-and knees, 30c., 35¢., 40c., 50¢., 60c. pair. Special strong and service- feet Reduco The new form reducing Corset, in all sizes, makes, 50c. to $3 pair. also other leading R. Waldron, Brock and Wellington Sts., lar Celebrated Goods in all styles. They Fit, They Wear, Pen-Angle Underwear are agents for these Men, Women, Children. 'They Wash, The comforts of Home are increased by hav- ing a warm Eider Dressing Gown OR Dressing Sacque. We have them in all styles and colors. Prices $1.50 to §7 each. we TO-NIGHT | WE OFFER ~~ | 3000 Yards All iil Silk Ribbon 5, 6. 7, 8 inches, Wide, Plain and 'Fancy, regu- prices 35, 10, 50c. yd. Yard