"INSTANT RELIEF GF MISONG_WENDRIAL srg ws somes fi ITCHING HUMOR Limbs Below the Knees Were Raw --Feet Too Swollen to Get Shoes On--Sleep Completely Broken by Intense Itching and Bumi Well in Two Days and Says That CUTICURA IS AMONG HIS HOUSEHOLD GODS nn *"@od blees the man who first com- pounded Cuticura. Some two months ago I had a humor break out on my limbs below my knees, They came to look like raw beefsteak, all red, and no one knows how they itched and burned. They were so swollen that 1 had to split my drawers open to get them on and could not get my shoes on for a week or more, used five or six dif- ferent remedies and got no help, only when applying them the burning was worse and the itching less, One morning 1 remembered that [ had a bit of Cuti- cura and tried it, From the moment it touched me the itching was gone and 1 have not felt a bit of it since. The swelling went down and in two days I had my shoes on and was about as usual, I only wish I had used the Cuticura Remedies in the first of my troubles. They would have saved me two or three weeks of intense suffering, Dur- ing that time 1 did not sleep an hour at a time, but was up applying such remedies as I had. Henceforth the Cuticura Remedies will be among my household gods, rest assured. OT, B. Farley, 50 South State St., Concord, N.H., 14, 1907." nl ea -- Eczemas and Irritations, Cuticurs Is Worth Its Weight in Gold. The suffering which Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment have alleviated among the young, and the comfort they have afforded worn-out and worried parents, have led to their adoption in countless homes as priceless for the skin and scalp. Infantile and birth harmors, ecalled-head, eczemas, rashes, itchings, chafings, and every form of itching, gcaly, pimply skin and scalp humors, with loss of hair, are ier] permas nently and economically cured, Completa Exten and a ou Breer Humor of Jnfuso: Oban So AGS consists of Cuticurs Soap to Cleanse the Skin Cutieurs Omtment 0 Hest the Skin, and Cutt cura Resolvent (of in the fo of Chocolate Cogted Pls, In vials of 6) to Purify the Blood. Sod throughout the world. Potide Drug & Chem. Corp, Sole Props, Hoston, Mas wr Matled Free, Cuticura Book on Skin Diseases 10 NISTHAJESTY.THE KING Sir John Power & Soni Led. ESTABLISHED AD. 1791.1 THREE. SWALLOWS IRISH WHISKEY Famous for over a century for its delicacy of flavor. Of highest standard of Purity. It is especially recommended by the Medical Profession or account of its peculiar "DRYNESS" Tablet to the memory: of R.W. FREEMASON. v Address of M. W. Bro. J. Ross Rolrertson, Past Grand Master and Historian of the Grand Lodge of Canacta. At' St. Peter's eblurch, Brockville, Ont., on Junet MW. Bro. J. Ross Robertson unveiled the memorial Bro. Ziba M. Phillips, deputy provincial grad master from 1812 to 1845, and president of the Kingston masonic con- vention, 1817-22. There wes a large attendance of the brethren from Sussex and Salem lodges, of Brockville, mind from = other lodges in the district. The tablet was erected by Sussex and Salem lodges, of Brockville; St. James, at South Awgusta; Mount Zion, at Kemptville; Ur rstal Fountain, at North Augusta, in the 15th dis. trict, and Ancient Sty John's, at Kingston, in the l4th masonic dis trict. The regular morning service conducted by the Rev. Harold ford-Jones, the rector, sind just pre- vious to the close of the service M. W. Bro. Robertson stepped to the front of the chancel and said : It is surely a good and pious pur- pose that is served by #he presence here to-day of the members of ° the craft of Freemasons who reside in this town and in this district. You, my brethren, are here to-day, in this sacred edifice, dedicated to the worship of the Great Architect of the Universe, and at this hour of prayer and praise, to assist in the unveiling »f a memorial plate to a brother Free- mason who for nearly forty years of his life was a faithful worlker in our ranks, and a pillar of the eraft in the old province of Upper Canada. You worshippers in the 'congrega- tion, outside of the ranks of 'the craft, also have an interest in the life that is commemorated hy the simple cere- monial of this hour. Ziba Marcus Philips lived ane of those lives that miay not have filled many peges in universal history, but it was one of those lives that did fill a big place in the making of Canada. Bro. Phillips was the son of Ser- géant Ziba Phillips, of the King's Rangers, a non-commissioned officer who was noted for his work in connec tion with the military secret service from "1775-83, and he was a grandson of Ziba Phillips, a private in the same regiment which did such gallant work under the command of Major Rogers. The father was also a member of the craft, for his pame is frequently men- tioned in connection with masonry of old Upper Canada. Bro. Ziba Phillips, whose memory we hovor this morning, was born in the city of Uswego on the 16th July, 1787, juft one-hundred and twenty-one years ago. About 1791 his fafher removed from the United States to the them pioneer town of Kingston and afterwards to the township of Augusta, where he drew land as a United Empire Loyal: ist, and resided on lot 29 in the town- ship near the old French fort, and later he bought lot 28, which was the site of that pioneer fortress, Ziba, junior, was a bright and ac- tive lady eager for knowledge and fond of reading and as an old record has it, 'a most obedient andwloving son." His hovhood days were uneventful. I'he rudiments of his education were veceivid at his mother's knee, for she surely thought that her boy had bet- ter be unborn than untaught. An old army pedagogue who dwelt near the Phillips' home, was a valued neighbor, and many an hour he spent in the humble dwelling on lot 25, in- structing the lad who in after years was to lead so useful a life. Ziba was an apt pupil and his strug- gles for the rudiments of an education were crowned with success, for before he was twenty-five years of age he had mastered the scence of medicine and surgery and was entitled to prae- tice the healing art in the woods of ¢he old Midland district. 1st was Bed- Initiation Into The Craft. sida 107, hus father; who was an en- thusiastic Mason, initiated his son in pn odge that wet in Shipman's tavern n Maitland and in 1809 his father openctd a lodge in a Stone house, with a cottage roof, which stood on the Phillips lot in the Prescott Road. Ziba Marcus was an active brother from the day, as we Masons say, thar he was brought from the darkness of the world into the light ol the eraft. He proved himself a true man in the growing usefulness of his humane and noble life as a backwoods - doe tor, He had to: ride on paths blazed through the bush to earry the healing of medicine and the blessings af sur- gery to sufferers in the humble cab of the pioneers, The - eraft requires 'of its sons that 'aith in God which shows itself ip mercifal service towards humanity. Bro, Phillips was go faithful craits mon in time of peace. He was exenr plary in the discharge of is civil duties, and he never lost sight of to the colors, Bro: Phillips proved his fidelity to that great foundation prin: ciple of the craft, which requires loyalty to. the mation from all breth. ren. As u Volunteer for the defence _of Canada, be went out to the help of the old flag agafist the might of the He joined the Canadian Pericibled He foug on «8 arbor in Map, 1513, and he was in the thick of the fight at Lundy's Lane lin July, 1514, and was captured by six / of 'ths ehemy, but escaped, and with 'aid of some of his company turn: round and captured his captors. THE DAILY victorious flag of our empire floated over an Wnconquered . province, Bro. Ziba M. Phillipe returned to Brock- ville afd in due course became a lieu- tenant-colonel in the Grenville mili tia. ; Having 'risked his life to restore peace with honor to the land he loved, he again faced the daily round, the common. tasks of lile as they had it in" those far off years, when this now beautiful town was a village by the riverside. --- S---- His Work For The Craft. His travels through the prov incé btought him in contact with his brethren 'of the eraft. He saw that the management of the craft was not what it should be, and that if some active hand was not out stretched, the work of a great frater- nity would be materially impaired. Ihe provincial grand jodge, that is the governing body that muoaged the seore of lodges in the province, was dormant, for the provincial grand muster: had gmswercd his final sum- mons. in this state of affairs, Bro. Phillips saw his opportunity and quickly he seized it. It was well that he did so, for by his: act he secured after three years of stremuous labor, the ne-organizetion of the provincial ram lodge. He culled representatives of all the lodges BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, JUNE not delight to turn over the leaves of our memory, there to find treasured recollections of the long ago ? How often are we asked those who, younger in years, sit around our hearths and homes, to wll them stor jes of the pioneer days when our fathers, who! now foregather in better land, fought the battle of when this vast province was the b of the kings of the primeval wood- land ? Yes, when ; in the silence of the woods the sweetest sound was the clip of the well-sharpened axe that turned the sturdy oaks and the stately pines into habitations for the early mnmi- grant settlers. Surely, we do what is right when wa cherish and comimemcrate the me- mories of the men and 'wowen who struggled in the olden time to turn the forest inte'the cleared land, that in the gutumn time, became the home of harvest sheaves of golden grain. And so, with the men and women of the later and better days, the descen- dants of the pioncers, who as they sit at their firesides with their little ones" around them, talk of the grand- fathers and grandmothers who, with not much of this world's goods to bless them, braved the perils of the great Atlantic to found a home for themselves and those who would come after them in this good land of Cem ada. in Upper Canada to meet at Kingston. He placed the position of the craft before the imethren, ronsed them to the danger, and inspired them with his own enthusiasm. . . The great Masonic covwentions In Kingston from 1517 to 1822 were the outcome of his work. His leadership tunught the brothrén to keep a system of crafts government alive by a series of convebtions, for there was no awthority in Canada: to re-arganize the dormant provincial lodge. he mother grand lodge of Eng- land, that really controlled . Masonie affairs in this province, was appealed to by the convention which met un- der the direction of Bro. Phillips. It was four years hefore this appeal was answered, and then Bro. Phillips felt assured that the craft was saved from disruption. The grand lodge of England to his aid. H.R. H. the Duke of Sussex, grand master of England, saw that the Canadian craft were in a state of dis organization, and that a strong hand would have to deal . with the condi- tions. Simon Macgillivray, one of the founders of 'the North-West company, was a prominent English Mason, a personal friend of the Duke of Sussex, and by request of the duke visited Canada and re-organized the provin- vial grand lodge. Bro. Macgillivray on arrival in Canada, learned of the good work done by Bro. Phillips, and on his way, from York to Montreal he stopped over at Brockville, to confer by or der of the grand master of England, the honorary rank 'of deputy provin: cial grand master on Bro. Phillips. Bro. Macgilliviray spent a pleasant day at Brockville with Bro. Phillips, and expressed great gratification in meeting the brother who had done such active work in the year 1822. Ten years later the provincial grand lodge again became dormant, and the craft was again rescued from its perils by the wisdem and activity of Bro. Phillips. > Frue, he did not reorganize provincial body, but he visited the principal lodges and kept the eraft well in hand till 1837, when he organ- ized the second Kingston convention, and in 1842 instituted. a provincial grand lodge at Smith's Falls, which was composed of the lodge in Brock- ville and those in the Midland dis- trict. came the The Craft Re-organized. It was his energetic work in this district' that compelled the brethren of the home and western districts to re-organize the dermant provincial grand lodge and form, under Sir Allan McNab, in 1845, the third pro- vincial grand lodge, which afterwards united with 'the grand lodge of Can- ada, formed in 1855 and that body is now the present rand lodge of 'Can- ada. In 1842, there were about thirty lodges at work in the province of Up- per Canada, with a total membership of less than a thousand, and the an- nual expenditure in benevolence of not mor: than a few hundred dollars. l'osday im this province there are 400 lodges with 5 membership of about 40,000, and an annual expend; ture of $25,000 to the aged members of the craft and to widows and or phans of members who have passed away. The grand life work of Bro. Phillips for the ctaft virtually ended in 1345, two vears before he was laid to rest in the little graveyard by the road. side, four 'miles from this town, known as Read's burving ground. This simple memorial to departed worth ds the first tribute of pratitade that the craft of this province has ever dedicated to 'the services of the heroes and pioneers of Masonry. I have given you the outlines «f o life that was great with a greatness that i» weighed on scales that are truer than owr poor earthly stan- dards, Ziba M. Phillips s:rved his day en] generation and was one of those who laid the foundations of that great temple of Masonic strength. the Grand Lodge of Canada, in this province, the shelter of 40.000 craftsmen, who can say of Ziba Marcus Phillips what woe said of Sir Christopher Wren, "MH you wish to see his momunent, look around you." It is appropriate to this feremony that the. few. words I have given vou should © be said. about cur Irother Freemason who did so: much for the institation 'of Freemasonry in the old province of Upper Canada. | 2 The Days Of Long Ago. of usin this eongrega-] Good Medicine For Children. Gentle laxatives should be adminis- tered . oovusionally end for this par Our brother, Ziba Marcas Phillips was one of those . men who belived whatever was worth doing at all was worth doing well. As a lad, he was earnest in the As a husband and father he was one of the most affectionate of men. As a physician; he was attentive, humane and gentle. As a soldier, he was al wave in the front rank. As a citizen, he had the respect of all who knew him. As brother Freemason, he was trues to his obligation, and his work in our ranks will never he forgotten and in token of regard for "his werk and worth I now unveil 'this me morial tablet. Be Ready To Heal It. No one escapes burns of wounds avd there are a variety of skin affections awd similar ailments that must fre quently ' be treated. The best remedy in any case is Wade's Uinument It is guaranteed to cure eorema (salt rhoum), boils, vimples, sores, scald hesd, dandruff and sll sealy or itchin ruptions of the skin. In hig hoxes, , at Wade's drug stor old 20 Death Caused By A Hoax. Edinburgh, June 27 Peter McCul- loch, a blacksmith, «of Muthill, Perth- shire, received a letter stating that his son had been killed at Paisley, and the shock was such that he him SM died the following day. Inquiries have proved that the letter hoax. was a Pilgrimage To England. London, June 27.--A telegram from Gmunden states that 4,000 Yersons will participate the Guelph pil grimage to. England on the occasion of the thirtieth anniversary of the death of George V of Hanover on June 12th, 1878. King was buried at Windsor castle. mn George Play's 500-Night Record. London, June "27.--The 500th per formance of "When Knights Wore Bold" takes place at Wyndham's thea- tre to-morrow. This play has now broken all records for length of ruy in London in the present century. Bill Against Dueling. Mndrid, June 27.--The Spanish min ister of justice, yestenday, introduced a hill framed to abolish dueling which he proposes to substitute judi cinl proceedings or the submission pl differences to a court of honor for Pageant Episode In French. London, June 27.--The words of one of the episodes of the Dover pageant will be in French. Louis N. left London, yesterday, to the players rehearse Municipal Family. Paris, June 27.--In the little of Venauson a man named Guigo has heen elected and his six sons municipal lors, | \ { mavor, his hrother clerk { couneil- That tired, dull headache is very Take two of Carter's Little Pille before retiring, and vou wi relief. They never fail to do good. languid feeling disagreeal search of knowledge} 27, 1908. Afloat or Ashore the "Montserrat" bottle is always in constant demand. "MONTSERRAT" Lime Fruit Juice makes dozens of delicious, cooling summer drinks--makes the best limeade you ever tasted--and is cheaper than lemous. " Montserrat' is the pure juice of ripe West Indian Limes with all the natuwal flavor of the fruit. Jt mixes with every. thing (except coffee). Be sare you get "MONTSERRAT." Canadian Agents: is the only one with Fused Joints The only way to insure against the escape of gas, dust or smoke from a furnace is to buy a furnace that 7s and wi? remain airtight, All furnace joints except fused joints This requires airtight joints. are made with bolts and cement. They may be airtight at first, but S550 eX in time the cemént dries out and Xe . the bolts work loose, making the joints leaky. + Fused Joints (Patented) are made by fusing iron and steel together at a white heat. They are absolutely airtight and remain so. They can never work loose or leak. . In twenty years not a fused joint has ever leaked. This feature makes the "Hecla" the safest ahd most sanitary furnace on the market. Fused Joints keep the house free of Gas, Dust and Smoke Our catalogue tells about other exclusive features such as the Steel Ribbed (Patented) Fire Pot, the Individual Grate Bars, and the Cast Iron Combustion Chamber. £7 Clare Bros. & Co. Limited - Preston, Ont. KINGSTON AGENTS: ELLIOTT BROS. - . . p-- A - - mn a Tr Authors & COX reli Toronto. Est. 1860. If you are silicted in any way, write us about your case. We have brought comfort and health to many who were apparently " crippled for life," or able to move only by the aid of crutches, To-day they walk, run and evem skate. We can probably help you Write us. ' Surgical Aids to the Afflicted Why Buy Impo § Mattresses ? | better your - P To reliev= the pain «= support the spine -- Splints make wing easier --- and assist in curing the trouble -- we recommend thie Thomas Hip lint for Bp disease. Fasy to just -- quickly put on and off -- and lends welcome aid to the afflicted. Made to order specially and a perfect fit assured. 4 When you can get | cheaper goods from | dealer, made by the Kingston Mattress 110 Clergy St. 2 are never fickle. The dealer who a'tempts to turn the course of true love by offering a substitute for what the purchaser knows to be the Best Polish in the World, richly deserves the fate that is dealt out with a liberal hand to all ' No dealer who values his reputa- tion will offer a substitute. » - = 10c. and 25c. tins # % ¥