MONE C | ESTABLISHED 1873 = STANDARD BAN i : OF CANADA Head OfficeY- - - - Toronto _ JOINT DEPOSIT ACCOUNTS ' Deposits may be m or withdrawn by either' & two members of a Te mot LE Lot Le as Hoan by the survivor without delay or cost. Write or call for further partis. j Interest added four times a year Savings Bank Department in Connection with all Branches. 13a KINGSTON BRANCH J. 9. Turner, Madager COR. PRINCESS AND BAGOT STS. o - Is worth as much as money earned, and if we can beat all other Prices--at the same time giving you as good quality, fit and as 'well > made Clothing as others--it must mean money saved. That we do o... this hundreds of satisfied customers will testify. "Here are Some of the Values We are Throwing at You: ~ a Men's 2-Piece Pure Wool Home spun Suits, $6.95 and $7.45. . Men's 2-Piece Fine Grey Worsted Suits, $10:65--the same as . shown by others at $15. Men's sumer Trousers, Home spuns, Flannels, at $1.85 to $2.95. : ' Men's '3-Piece Hand-Tailored Suits, Worsteds and Tweeds, in Browns, Greys and other shades. Regular $15. Sale Price $10.85. Men's 3-Piece regular $20. Sale Price, $14-75. N Summer Vests, Summer Underwear, Summer Hosiery, Neckwear, &c., at Sale Prices. Compare these goods with others. We are satisfied to leave it 4 to your judgment. essen, I---- » RONEY & CO., 127 Princess St. . The Store That Sets the Pace. Where Shaking is Respectable A Draft off furnace deme, with ne other assistance, ls poweriess to overcome the dust nuisance in shaking time, Only surplus dust rises of itself above the fire. @reat Suih descends Into ash-pit, and unless legiti- mate oiitiet Is therein provided, dust will escape threugh ash -door slits and inte operator's face. - In "Sunshine" Furnace the legitimate dust outlet is pro- vided. It's a great big dust- pipe running straight from ash-pit to dome, thence to chimney. When big pipe damper Is opened, all dust in ash-pit ascends to dome; then, when direct drafts are opened, all dust passes up chimney. Always the vlean and quick dust route in "Sunshine" Furnace -- via grate, to pan, to dust - pipe, to dome, to chimney, to open air. =. MCClary's LONDON LEMMON f& SONS. Write to us for "Sunshine" testimonials received from your own townspeople. : VANCOUVER TORONTO MONTREAL WINNIPEG 1 « The only x remedy known to science which will positively cure lost manhood 1s * the marve!lous German Remedy discovered by Dr. Ju Kohr, It is controlled in this dountry by the Dr. Koh Medicine Company, a concern which has the highed Sta ndin in them ical world, This Treatment A Cr thousands of men, young and old, when remedies have failed, If you are suffering from diseases of the tive organs such as lost man! exhaust ing Ea nervous de! Hu the results of this remedy can and will cute you headache, . les, varicocele, pain in the back and failing memory, isappear completely in the worst cases in Jrom oud to two week's treatment, We make the honest offer a cure or return your money. Thousands of testimonicls, ~~ Correspondence treated aafdenthal, FIVE day's treatment sent free witha rules for health, and advice, Our greatest successes have been those whe have failed with other tregments, This remedy fs .. Yegularly used in fhe Frena German armies, and " the soldiers in these countrie. are models of strength securely sealed in plain wrapper. . ; Address DR. KOHR MEDICINE CO., P.0. Drawer L 234:, ~*antrosh - | grandchildren of THE DAILY BRITISE WHIG, SATURDAY, JULY 4, 1006. WAS A GREAT SIGHT 20,000 . PERFORMERS IN MAGNIFICENT PA . Diamond Jubilee of the Emperor Francis Joseph of Austria Celebrated in Succession of Superb Historical Scenes, Vienna, June 15.--The Emperor Francis Joseph, who is on the verge of seventy-eight years of age, 'stood for three hours, to-day, on the royal stand in the . . famous Ring- Sass to wit- ness the pass- age of the most imposing = na- tional pageant. For most of the time the sun was broil ing hot, but the aged mon- arch seemed quite uncon- scious of the trying 'nature of his ordeal, and from be- ginning to end of the magnificent five-mile historic protession which passed before him was as intensely interested as any of the half-million persons whose priviy lege it was to be present. The pageant, which was in celebra- tion of the emperor's sixty years' reign, had taken four months to pre- pare, and had cost $750,000. It was on such an immense scale that the whole inner city of Vienna appeared to have been transformed into a vast theatre, in which hundreds of thou: sands of spectators could watch the immense company of 20,000 periorm- ers, including 4,000 horsemen. Many spectators paid from $200 to $800 for seats facing the pavilion, which 'ac- oon the royal party. Austrian afistocrats of the most fa- mous families marched or rode in the procession in the roles of their an- cestors, who had distinguished them- selves and won their historic titles as statesmen and generals hundreds of years ago. In many cases, too, they wore the very armour and trappings of the time represented which *had lain for centuries, undisturbed in their family castles. First came a group representing thg founder of the Hapsburg dynasty,. King Rudolph 1, surrounded by the chivalry of his age. Mpst of the members of . this group belonged « to families which can trace their titles back to the time ol Rudolph's reign at the end of the thirteenth century, and included Prince Auersberg, Prince Fuerstenberg, Prince Liechtenstein, Count Harrach, ' four Counts Khuen- burg, and about forty other counts and barons whose families have the proud distinction of being as old as the dynasty, the Austrian equivalent of the English "coming over 'with the conqueror." King Rudolph, represented by Count Eltz, carried his helmet in his hand and bowed to Francis Joseph as he passed, 'the monarch replying with a military salute to the greeting of his ancestor, This. group, like several of the others, afiorded a remarkable study ip' medieval armor. The knights were all on horseback, and armed with lance and sword, and their helms and shields were gay with the crests and escutcheons which are nowadays only emblazoned on the carriage panels of their descendpnts. After King Rudolph followed a liv- ing picture of an expedition of Vien, nese citizens setting out to destroy one of the robber barons' castles which were a terror to the countryside in the fourteenth century. 'Ime artillsry of the period--great catapults to throw stone balls--the ballista, and the battering ram, and a kind of movable redoubt on wheels, excited much interest as" they rumbled slowly by. Rudolph TV, called the Founder, formed the central group of the next figure. He was followed by builders, masons and carpenters in the dress of medieval burghers dragging a mddel of St. Stephen's cathedral, which he founded, 48 well as the Vjgnna univer- sity--and by a number of church dig- nitaries in gorgeous vestments. : A procession of twenty knights, with dttendant squires and pages, on their way to a tournament, was portrayed in the fourth group. > The next group represented a par- ticularly interesting scene in Austrian history--the double marriage of, two the Emperor Maxi- milian, which brought the crowns of Hungary and Bohemia to the house of Hapshurg. The aged Emperor Maximilian and the king of Bohemia were carried by in = litters, and the of Poland and Hungary rode on horseback in gorgeous costumes. After them fol- lowed the youthful brides, twelve and ten years old, in a golden carriage, accompanied by other carriages full of court ladies, represented by a number of ladies of the aristocracy, dressed in ancient brocgdes and velvets. Several military groups representing the storms which the Austrian empire passed through in the sixteenth' and seventeenth centuries, came next. There was the first siege of Vienna by the Turks, with a long column of land- sknechts--the" mercenaries of the time --headed by Count Robert Salm, the descendant of Count Niklas Salm, who organized the"defence of the city. The picture of the second Turkish invest- ment of Vienna showed the triumph- ant entry of the Polish army under King Sobieski, into the city aftér his victory over the Turkish besiegers out- side. He was surrounded by scions of the Polish noble families Lubomirski, Sapieha, Zamoiska and others, whose ancestors distinguished themselves in helping to roll back the tide of Tur- kish invasion which might otherwise have swamped all Central Europe. kings The king's visit £0 Copenhagen to see Queen Alexandra's villa, will be now slightly abbreviated in order that he may go on to see the King and Queen of Norway and the Crown Prince and Crown Princess of Sweden. Queen Alexandra, and possibly the Empress Marie of Russia, will be at Copenhagen: during the king's visit, which will probably not extend over more than four days. . VERY IMPORTANT CASE. Voter Cannot Be Registered By Proxy. { Winnipeg Free Yress. , At tue recent revision at Dauphin, though in the polling division, declin- ed to attend the regiatialigh booth. 'Phe liberals protested all cases and the judge heid that the registra- tons 'were ldegal. He ruled that no Jorn can be registered by pro. temporarily absent from the re- gletration district or prevented by illness or similar disability from mak- ing application. was that the batch of applications filed by the conservatives on' the ground that the voters "were detain- ed by business' were refused. Fortun- ately this did not disfranchise the voters, as both sides had notified the parties to attend the court aml with' one exception they appeared and were placed on the list by personal i cation. In two similar at Mec not ap- names were refused. | It is to be hoped that this ruling | will settle for the whole province this very important point. An r may be fully qualified bat if he is not leg- ally registered, his name cannot stay on the list if protested. This is doubt- less sound law; and it is good public policy, The free and easy "course, fol: owed by ome of the judges, of not considering charges of illegal registra- tion provided there is no question of the qualifications of the electors inter- ested is an encouragement to regis tration clerks to break the law in the interests of their party. The procedure governing personal registration should be clearly defined; and the regulation should be strictly enforced against all parties, 'His honor made | 'another import- ant ruling," says the Dauphin Press, "to the effect that the revising judee is bound 'to place on the list all ap- plications received by registration clerk, no matter how illegally or, im- properly, unless objection is filed with the judge in 'accordance with the pro- visions of the statute. This ruling con firms the liberal contention that the Roblin act gives to their registration clerks powers to accept or refuse ap- plications, and enables an offical so willing to place the political oppon- ents of the government at"a tremen- dous handicap. In many constituen- cies in the province these officials used this power unscrupulously to the ad- vantage of the government, and wher- ever the liberals got a square deal it as due to the fairness' of the clerk, not to the protection of the law. It demonstrates conclusively that where the officials are invested with such wide powers they should be appointed by the judges and not by the denomi- nating political organizations as un- der the present act." . Mr. Borden and other leading con- servatives in the House of Commons, have been declaring during the last two months, that the fair way to make lists is to give complete powers to the' judges. Mr. Roblin, who has declared that he shapes his policy to suit Mr. Borden' programme will doubtless hasten next session to pass a bill restoring to the judges this power of which they were deprived in 1904, BEWARE "SWELLED HEAD." Japan Losing Sympathy--Too Anxious to Have Army. Tokio, July 3.--~A notable article ap- pears in the Kokumin, an influential semi-official organ in Tokio, dealing with foreign criticisms of Japan. The Kokumin calls upon the Japanese peo- ple to guard against losing the world's good opinion, and says that in contradiction to the universal re- spect and good-will entertained toward Japan during the war the nation has now lost the sympathy of the world through over-anxiety to enlarge the army and navy beyond the financial capacity of the nation. Commenting on the article, the Jap- an Times, published by Japanese in Euglish, says: Calm reflection shows the way in which the Jate war resulted has been misapplied in many respects, both Ly those in pow- er and by the public in general. The journal calls upon the Japanese peo- ple not to display "Swoll n heads." , Don't Forfeit Good Looks. There is no beauty so attractive as the beauty of heal h. It is a kind of beauty almost any one can have. Don't endure pimples, boils, blotches, ete. 'hey not only mar personal ap- pearance but ere si:n8 of dangerous blood disorder. Wade's Iron Tonic Pills (Laxative), care the blemishes and remove the cause. They are a great nerve strengthener and blood maker. In boxes, 25¢c., at Wade's Drug Store. Money back if not satisfac- tory. A telegram from Belgrade the other day stating that King Peter of Servia has no intention of abdicating in favor of the crown prince, brings again into prominence the most "harum-scarum" young man of the courts of Europe. Heirs-apparent are generally credited with considerable wildness and an ap- titude for "seeing life" "at somewhat sensational speed, but Prince George of Servia has beaten all records in that direction. So extraordinary have some of his exploits been that he has often been declared to be mad, and a London daily paper referred to him in an article as "His Highness the Hooli- gan." One man was killed and one hun- dred injured at the 133rd celebration 'of the battle of Bunker Hill .at Charlestqwn; Mass, The ghosts of the old Britishers can' smile grimly as they think that more people have been hurt in celebrating that battle than fell in the actual conflict. : HOW'S THIS ? Wa offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by HaM's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Taledo, O. We the undersigned have known F. J, Cheney for the last 15 years, and ~~ be- leve him perfectly honorable in all busi- ness transactions and financially able to ary out any obligations made by his rm, WALDING, KINNAN & MARVIN, Wholesales Druggists, Toledo, O. ' Cure is taken internally the blood and Testi- acting directly upon mucous surfaces the system. sent bottle. Sald b; Dru, monials free. Price 75 cents a aly Take Hall's Ane or const pation, : Pointed Reasoning With Our Neighbors Southward. , so irankly .in sympathy with Cuadian feeling and judgment, und so suggestive to his countrymen, that "his have returned from a year's trip around = the 'world, the last six months ~~ spent in various countries. 1 can i th friend among the nations , with the exception of Great' Britain. | found this to be the case la. ' » Siaplay a little away in my poc beak and talons; confessed, in a conuiuon. In Constantinople, a whom 1 met on the bridge excl d : "Ah, il you bad a military power like as to contend with, instead of Spain -- 1" On the Ringstrasse, Vienna, an Austrian officer remarked : "You are like the boy of twenty; you think you are so much, that you know so much, but --!"' : : In Berlin 1 made friendship with a German whose name is hoporably known throughout the world. I ask- ed him to tell me frankly why Ameri- cans. were not popular in Europe and, elsewhere. After some polite hesitation he said : "You go about waving the flag of your country in other lands, forgetting that the natives are just as ptoud of their own flag. Your doing so does not inspire respect for your country or its --it has a contrary effect. You boast so much; you speak of the naval battle of Santiago, where you did not lose a man, as if it were a. second Trafalgar. You teach your children that you won the war of 1812, in which you were badly beaten. In the hotels your Feonle talk loudly and dress quaintly. You are so anxious for other people to know that you are Americans as if it would exalt you in their eyes, whereas it does not." : In England, the most finished and the most delightful country visited, 1 found a warm friendship for us. They thought we "bluffed a bit," but that was all in the game. When I think that the flag of this little island was the flag'in my journey around the world, that it was the home of my forefathers, -that it is guaranteeing the safety of our eastern coast against all Kuropean invasion, that it is carrying the coal for our great fleet on its record-breaking voyage, when those who understand must know that it is England which = has hushed the hostile Japanese war cry, when every port at which our fleet will. touch between Manilla and New York will fly the Union Jack or be under British rule--then, I say, let us cease this constant twisting of the lion's tail of which we are so f Let us look to ourselves andl to © olin best friend, and aet accordingly. GETTING A DENTIST. A Poker Game With An [Unexpect- ed Ending. San. Francisco Call.' George Wingfield, the Nevada min- ing man, told a bunch of brokers the other day a story of how he not only found relief from an aching tooth, but met his match in the arts and wiles of the game at which he was then a past master. Said George : "Arriving at a Jittle 'prospect' for a mining camp a stran- ger and suffesing from a refractory molar, I found there was not even a blacksmith who might have tools that could minister to my need. I was told that at a town thirty miles away 1 might find relief, provided 1 could break up a big poker game in which a travelling dentist was the only winner and too busy for the de- tail work of his profession. That's easy and inviting," thought 1, purch- asing two packs of cards from my in- formant for my purpose, I saddled my horse and hied in search of a soothet for my saffering. "It was easy to find the game. Luck was still with the dentist, and a new _player was indifferently welcome, but a patient was an obstruction not to be tolerated. However, 1 was soon seated, with a determination to break' the winner, at all hazards, if neces- sary, to get that tooth extracted. Hand after hand®was played and = the star winner lost one big pot after an- other until, in desperation he called for a new deck of cards. 1 innocently produc.d one of my purchases, and the game proceeded. "Luck changed again, and the den- tist resumed his winning. Finally 1 lost the last of my pile in a big jack pot and the game broke up. Walking over to where 1 sat disconsdlately nursing my swollen jaw, the dentist said : "Now, stranger, I'll fix vour tooth free of charge, and say, I'll zive you half your money back ii you tell me where you found my deck of marked cards," . But Wait For Vacation. The Argonaut. A country clergyman on his rounds of visits interviewed a youngster as to his acquaintance with Bible stories. "My lad," he said, "you have, .of course, heard of the parables ?"' - "Yes, sir," slyly answered the boy, whose mother had instructed him in sacred history. "Yes, sir." "Good !"' said the clergyman. "Now, which of them do you like the best of a i The boy squirmed, but at last, heed- ing his mother's frowns, he replied : "l guess 1 like that one where, some- bady loafs and fishes." -------- young man has run his head into the "matrimonial noose. You can't get enough clothes on to sham to fool the Lord. The devil takes special care that his mortgages do not outlaw. If it is the contemplated mean act, ARE NOT LOVED ABROAD. { J.S.C. writes to the Paris-American, } a journal for United Staters Eur} pags By hanging around a girl many a ; delays are not dangerous. A good name ean not be stolen for any great length of time, the letter is ol uncommon interest to} | "No Washboilers to Sell," Says Anty Drudge. Rag Man--"/Ole rags! | Gum Boots! Tinware!" you get all taem Anty Drudge--"* Goodness! § Where'd mashbclers" gg dung Rag Man--*'1 buya dem from "voomans," Dey FN use any more. You gotta von to sell?" Anty Drudge--* 'No, sir. . I have not used one for manya year. It didn't take the women of this town long to get rid of their washboilers after I came and told them how to wash with Fels-Naptha in cool or luke- warm water. No more boiling clothes for them I see." Are you governed by habits? 'Nota bad thing if they are good habits. Nota good thing if they are bad habits. Are you-in the habit of getting up. before daybreak -to start washing 'so that you'll be through before night? ~~ = If you arte it's a habit to get rid of right away. There's no necessity for it. Get rid of the old-fashioned boiling, and scalding clothes, back-breaking washboard-rubbing: habit and adopt the casy Fels-Naptha way. : Strike off the chains that bind you to the washboiler and washboard. Be a pro- gressive woman. Follow directions on the inside of the red and green Fels-Naptha wrapper. 8 FPERING FROM WOMEN'S AILMENTS. woman's sufferings. know { have found the cure. Peele, & a Gas Stoves are durable, easily. cleaned and practi~ cally indistructible.. Every woman who uses a Chicago Jewel would not part with it, if she could not get another, See them in working order at our store. HOO WEL GA I will mail, meat with full tide of any chia women's ailments. | want to tell gil this cure -- you, my reader, for 'daughter, home . EY ll ree from women about your , | want to wri it ELLIOTT BROS. 0000 500000000000 I0 0