3 Still Cut Prices at} $ Crumley Bros. EXTRA ', x . ER ek Ad -- i . THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, THURSDAY, AUGUST '20, 1008. MADE 'UP HIS- MIND TO HAVE A NAVY. See ¥ 1 ® Incapacity Becomes Apparent Wher. He Shows a Desire to Adopt European Methods . of Progress--Term Moor Loosely Applied. Moroeeé Correspondence N. Y, Evening It may 'have been observed that, al- thowgh various pbases of Morocco have been touched upon in various corres- i pondenge, little has been said about the | natives of the country--its occupants land owners--the Moors. i This has not been because the Moors {seemed least important. On the con- itrary, they are most so.' But of the {many dificult things to understand in { the country of the Farthest West the pative population is the extreme, The term Moor is loosely applied to {all the Mohammedan population of the | i | | | Read This: 1,000 yards Fine English Dress Tweeds, suitable for Children's School Dresses and well worth 60c and 75¢ per yard. Special Sale Price 32%c¢ Per Yd. The children will soon be returning to school, and you will be beginning to think of their fall school clothes. Nothing could be better for school dresses than these Tweeds. Excellent to wear and good to look at. : Secure some while they last, only 3215c per yard. All White Lawn Waists 257%. off. All Ladies' Wash Skirts 25% off. Bargains all over the store. Come and see. A Snap of a Life Time To Furnish a Home. As our Big Mid-Summer Sale is stil booming. Making room for our Fall' Stock everything reduced. A bargain for everybody. Lawn : Verandah aod suinmer goods less than cost. Pay freight. Packing free. Store open nights, at JAMES REID'S The Leading Undertaker. ous couptry, beside «- which other elements are insignificant. The Moor represents a mixture. When the Arab invasion from the Orient began, in the seventh and eighth eenturies, the newcomers found the country in_the possession of the Berbers, a Hamiti¢ race, whereas the Arab is of Semitic origin. The Jerbers were a momntain people, and are still to be found tolerably pure in some parts of the country. The Arabs were tent dwellers and men of the plains, and are also to be found with little mixture in certain sections of Mo- TOCCo. mingled and formed the Moors, who settled the cities and spread over into | Spain, where they built up the wonder- civilization of Andalusia, whose glories "are still to be traced at Gran- ada. Seville and other southern towns. In addition to the Moors, there is to be found in the ¢ities "an appreciable Jewish element, partly Oriental and partly Spanish and Portuguese, in 'its origin. Their speech follows largely that of the people they are among, and so does their dress, though the men wear black robes instead of the white or colored ones of the Moors," and a black skull cap in place of the red fez or red and white turban, A word may be said Here about the dress of the Moors, which is a study for a European or an American. The typical garment of the men is the jel- lab. This is a huge cloak with a hood and sleeves, both of which may be worn in a variety of ways and to serve many purposes. The hood may hang back over the shoulders, or bé pulled up ever the head, or be drawn down over the face, thus completely enveloping the body with the one garment. When de- sirable the hood may also be employed as a pouch in which to carry articles. The sleeves of the jellab have two openings, so that they may be worn either full or half length. They may also be allowed to hang loose, the arms being carried free under the cloak. The jellab may be white or in color--usual- ty dark--and of any material; from finest silk to coarsest homespun. A garment or great flexibility and useful- ness, it must be pronounced. Qf almost equal importance to the jel- lab is. the sutham, which is similar, but without sleeves. Tt is worn as an over- coat. For. indoors the kiswa is con- siderably used, d survival of the Roman toga, and consists of blouse, embroid- ered waistcoat, huge spreading belt, and baggy knee-trousers. When it is worn the lower leg is covered with stockings, but with other costumes the leg is bare from the knee down to the slippers. On their heads, which are shaven, the men wear, indoors and out, a red skullcap, smaller and closer fit- ting than the Turkish fez; or wrap arouiid this a roll of white which con- stitutes the turban. In general married men - wear the turban and the unmar ried the fez, close Mrs. Jones' Coachman. Cleveland I eader. A prominent society woman of this town has a prefty wif, and sometimes her tongue gets away with her. "Phone, 147. m---- MR SWELL DRESSERCS™. (| ~ SHIRTSTARE'MOV] | AG = | | around | | | | Na Shirts, Ties, Collars. | verything your body needs is flying out of our store because we are keeping on selling Furnishings for men at low prices. If you can buy three Shirts or. Neckties for the price of two, why not get that extra | Shirt or Necktie ? It is easy to put a string of prices on paper; but we won't bore you with these. Nor will we bore you when you come into our storé. We will save you money. Ask our customers if we tell the truth. ~F. P. JENKINS CLOTHING CO 114 PRINCESS ST. i | | didn't suppose you wanted a drunken { | i id NE) | |eat a tart. She has a coachman who has been with her for some years, and latterly had to be strongly recommended tggride the water wagon, which for a time » did. But the other day he fell off. he next morning he took it for anted that he wouldnt be wanted at ws old job any more and he therefore didnt show up. At the end of the week, however he recalled that he had some pay coming to him. He went with a hangdog air after the oh Fo money and was ushered in to see Mrs Jones, as she may be called "Why, James!" she exclaimed, re- proachfully, "what did ou mean by leaving us in the lurch the way you did without any notice?" "Well, ma'am," says shamefacedly, "er--that coachman, you the is- see--I { coachman arotind and 1 jes' "Oh, shame on you," interrupted Mrs mes. "That was no excuse. You lon't see Mr. Jones go away and leave me every time he becomes intoxicated do you?" The Power Of The 'Ad. Washington Star . Lilian B. Hill, the well-known writer {of humorous advertisemerits, said at one of the convention dinners in Denver: "Advertising lends itself to almost any imaginable purpose. For instance, at Sea Beach, .the dther week, a confec- tioner found himself with a great num- ber of stale tarts on hand. He rid him+ self of these tarts, and of all his fresh ones besides, by inserting the following advertisement in the local press: "'PERSONAL--A young man of " agreeable exterior and ample means de- sites to form the acquaintance of a lady. Object matrimony. Beauty and wealth are not so much in requisition as a good character and an amiable dis+. position. Young ladies who may feel inclined. to look with favor upon this young man are hereby asked to call at Dough's confectionery on Atlantic aven. ue at 3 o'clock this afternoon and, as a means of identification, to purchase and after that. day "A few minutes 3 | Dough's tart shelves were quite bare." Playing The Outdoor Game. London Graphic. ° We are gradually growing cosmopoli- tan; dining at fresco, going after dinner ta» outdoor amusements, even appearing in hats at clubs and restaurants. Oute door life is "what London has always needed in the summer, and the influx of foreigners is showing us the way to play the game --m--a-------- Tee cream dispensed from pure cream at Gibson's Red Cross 'drug store fomm- tain. 3 NOOR ND HIS WAYS] But, in the main, the two races, Cp ma Amusements. TO-NIGHT Matinee, Friday, at 8.30. Free Show High Class 'Vaudeville New Moving Pictures. Latest' Illustrated Songs. 5 Fray Children's 1 Cent Day on Street ars. : THE COLD WATER BAG. Makes a Good Pillow on : Nights. New York Sun 4 "You hear a lot of talk these hot days about the troubles folks have in getting to sleep." said tlie fat man who stays in town all summer. "The trouble with them is that they don't know how to keep cool." His remarks kicker. * 2 "Sounds fine to me," he remarked. "You ®alk as if you really knew some- thing. Perhaps you've got a cold air current piped down from Gregnland on- to your bed or have your pillows stuffed with cracked ice. [ don't suppose your pillow ever gets sticky pn these humid nights when there isn't. a breath of air stirring; mine does, and I'll tell you you can't beat it. If you can, loosen up. We're listening. What's the answer?" "Hot water bag," replied the fat man. A chorus of jeeers greeted this re- mark, so he went on to explain. "1 don't.suppose jt ever penetrated your thick skulls, did it," he asked, "that there are more than a few uses for a hot water bag? Never took one to hed with you in the winter, did you, when your room was so cold that the sheets seemed freezing together, and put it at your feet? "Never did enough thinking with that idea factory of yours, did yqQu, to realize that a hot water bag can be a cold water bag just as well? Faet, "When 1 want to spend a comfortable night and dodge the discomfort of a hot feather pillow that seems hotter than the sun-sogked asphalt, I get out my three-quart. hot-water bag. 1 fill it with ice water, not too full, but just so it's a little soft. Then wrap a smooth towel around it, and there's the finest hot weather pillow ever. "Fill another one for your feet, and if you aren't comfortable in a little while you feel the heat worse than I do." Hot aroustd the chronic Twenty-Two And No Offers. 'Mabel,' in Toronto Globe. "I am not married yet, for a very simple reason--nobody has asked me. Yet I do not understand exactly why, as I am--wel, not bad looking: Some people think me pretty, and 1 can do all the things most girls learn in housed keeping and sewing. I have a lot of friends, and some very good ones among the young men in our town. Thev seem to like coming to our house, too, but none of them is the least senti- mental, and it would really surprise me very much if 'one of them should have such a serious idea as marriage in his head. But I am 22 and in all the EXPERIENCED MACHINISTS, Blacksmiths and Boilermakers. Ap Diy, Hoon 826 Traders Bank, Tor onto, Ont. . AN HONEST CLERK FOR BRITISH American Hotel News-Stand, betwee sixteen and seventeen. Duties commence - A Sist. Apply in person to Thomas Nash, Proprietor. MEN, AT ONCE ON SALARY AND penses. One good an in each locality with or capable of band Hog id raat intro WANTED---FEMALE. GENERAL SERVANT. APPLY MR Macpherson, 162 Earl street, S, EXPERIENCED GENERAL SER- vant. Apply 253 King streets COOK, FOR SMALL FAMILY, where housemaid is kept. No wash- ing or ironing. Apply at Whig office. A LADIES TO DO PLAIN AND LIGHT sewmg at home, whole or spare'time;. od pay. Work sent any distance : charges paid. Send stamp for full articulars. National Manufacturing Jo., Montreal. ARCHITECTS. ARTHUR ELLIS, ARCHITECT, OF- fice, Cor. Queen and Bagot streets. i P. SMITH, = ARCHITECT, Anchor Building, Market Square. 45. HENRY ete., 'Phone, POWER & SONS, ARCHITECTS, MER- chant's Bank Building, corner Brock and Wellington streets. "Phone; 212. WM. NEWLANDS, ARCHITECT, OF. fice, second floor over Mahood's Dru store, corner Princess and streets. Entrance on Bagot street, "Phone. 608. SITUATION WANTED. DOMESTIC SERVANTS, EXPERI- enced, English, Scotch, Irish, arriv- ing weekly under supervision. If you need a servant write, The Guid, 71 Drummond St., Montreal, TEMPERANCE WAVE. - The Liquor Interests Are Greatly Alarmed. Tidal-wave movements are sweeping over the world. The expansion of mis- sions exceeds all previous growth. I'emperance reform is developing so flories 1 have read the girls seem to have a number of offers of marriage be- fore then. Perhaps there are otheg.girls who have the same experience as mine. Even the girls who do get married do not Seem to have had many more offers than those who do not, so things seem to be quite different in real life ro what writers of novels, would have us be- lieve. Then if one of these rare 'pro- posals' should come to me it seems very certain that I must take it without look- ing for a 'hero' (for not one of the boys I know is that kind}¥;.as I do not wish to die an old maid." Bicycle Coming Back. New York Sun. According to those who sell them, bi- cycles are coming in again. The sales of this season thus far have been far greater than those of last year at this tima, and those in turn were greater than in 1906. The figures do not come anywhere near the enormous totals of the late 'gos, when the bicycle was king and if you didn't ride you weren't any- one 3 No however, the reaction is being felt. For a few 1sons after the bi- cycle boom flattened out like a punc- tured tire there wasn't any more interest in the bicycle than there is im a cent in a busted savings bank: The stalwart few stuck to the game In the cities the new boom isn't felt so much as in the towns. The argu- ment made there which sells bicycles is the appeal to the saving instinets. The bicycle knocks out carfares and still furnishes a lot of fun for those who can't afford a motor-cycle, much less an automobile, Gratitude, In the course of a speech not long ago Representative John Sharp Wil- liams illustrated his point by @ story of an old colored 'woman in Alabama, whose extreme age and helplessness were such that her neighbors felt called upon to supply all her needs. The aged negress was very grateful for all such attention, and never failed to, express her gratitude therefor in original language. It appearing one day that she could not sufficiently thank the son of dn old friend who had brought her some choice frait the old woman said: "Yeu is powerful good to a pore ole woman pike me, wid one foot in de grave an' de odder a-cryin' out, 'How long. oh Lawd, how long?" Ww * Mrs. Gladstone's Divinity. At a reception held in a great hall in England some years ago My. and Mrs. Gladstone were honored guests. Dur- ing the evemng 'it happened that Mr. Gladstone was in a gallery directly above the place in the parquet where Mrs, Gladstone was chatting with some ladies In the gourse of their conversation a pf gm) which the ladies could. not settle satisfactorily. Finally one said: "Well, there is One above who knows all things, and some day He will make all things plain to us." "Yes, yes" replied Mrs. Gladstone, "William will be down. in a minute and he 'will tell us all about it." : Excursion To Ogdensburg. ' Qteamer Aletha will leave Swi dock at 8 a.m., Tuesday, August 25th, #2 for Ogdensburg. Fare 35e, | ! would be a_blessing to €anada. -------- fast as to thoroughly alarm the liquor interests in many lands. England is {discussing a liquor law, which will, if carried, close 32,000 public houses in { fourteen years. Switzerland, by vote in | April, moved to curtail the ravages of { absinthe, Germany is agitating for | stricter temperance laws; so are Finland {and Roumania, France, alarmed at the inroads of intemperance, is trying {to suppress. In the United States thirty-six of eighty millions people havé put the saloon under the ban of law. This "dry belt," as it is called, covers one-half of the country. And what of Canada, which already shows the smal- lest per capita consumption of absolute alcohol in the English-speaking world? In Nova Scotia, sixteen out of eighteen counties, and in New Brunswick All but five counties have local option. Prince Edward Island is all local op- tion. Quebec has it. This form of prohibition is:-rapidy spreading in On- tario and Manitoba, while stricter tem- perance laws are being enforced in Sas- katchewan and Alberta, A Great Movement. Ilome Journal. The business of the church to evangelize. The most glorious days of the Roman church were those when she was engaged in placing a cordon of missions around .the world. The re- proach .of. «Christianity in later years has been a shameless lethargy in which its command to "go and disciple" seems to have been, for the most part, re- garded as a dead letter. This new movement among the men of the church which aims to take up a duty that has hitherto been shouldered upon the clergy means a good deal for the future of the church as well as the world. If the church members of the four most actively evangelical nations of the world -- England, Germany, United States and Canada--wpuld but put up the small amount necessary to provide the proper. equipment, the world would be evatigelized in a generation. It is estimated that an average of two dol- lars and a half a member per year for twenty-five vears would do it.- The amount at present given is about forty cents, is Lack In Education. Preaching in an' English church late- ly, a clergyman took a practical stand: { "Farming is a trade, and like any other calling has to be studied. It is absurd for city clerks or shop assistants to imagine that, without any practical knowledge, they can succeed in farm- ing, whether in England or in the col- ones, They might as well dream of entering a surgery and dispensing drugs, or of commanding 3 battleship. as of taking a farmer's Ries without train- ing and experience." The experience is, however, all that a great many farmers achieve. « Study, reflection and training are rarely seen, or there would be fewer weedy and worked out lands, untidy yards and ragged fences. If the same methods were put into general farming as into the dairying branch of it Ontafio would become a garden. If farmers would only think 'ahead it. out. ER LARGE OFFICE a = ON SEPTEMBER of the. business ston, om ot, S a Ell di hei ONE FRONT BEDROOM, SMALL SIT- ting and draw, room, well fur % and electric lighting, tel ae, me convenient to bw rool ms Best board and v anteed. Situated in vicinity of City Park. Apply Whig effice WANTED. By the Canadian Pacific . Railway Co., first-class ma- ) chinist, boilermas y ck- smiths, car repairers and ( skilled wachanics. Apply. Local Labor Agent, K. & P. Freight Office, MONEY AND BUSINESS. OUR POLICIES COVER MORE OF building and contents than any Wd y offers. Examine them at Godwin's Insurance Emporium, Mark. et Square. LIVERPOOL, LONDON AND GLOBE Fire Insurance Company, Available assets $61,187,215. In addition to which the policyholders have for security the uulimited Hability of all the stockholders. Farm and city pro- insured at lowest ble rates. Before renewing old or giving new business gel rates from * & Strange, Agents. "Phone, 568, «PERSONAL. HAIR, MOLES, BIRTHMARKS, warts, ete., removed ; parmatefitly, without scan 'wenty years ence. Dr. Elmer J. Toke, Eye, Bard Nose, Throat and Skin Blemish Specialist. 258 Bagot street. 'MARRIAGE LICENSES. K, ISSUER _OF la. 8, KPATRIC IR 44 Clarence St. Cy Marriage Licenses, THE PARAGRAPH PULPIT Unitarian. REV. C. W. CASSON. -- Immortality Now. There will never be any kind of life more immortal than the. life we are living to-day. Eternity is but the perpetuation in another sphere of the life that now There is no garden of bliss that does not have:a ™ gate opening to us in this life. Nothing ean be won hereafter that cannot be won here. Now is the time to. live the immortal life. Now is the time to enter into those experiences which we have thus far been expecting to find awaiting, us - beyond the grave. There ig no need | for the postponement of our hopes and happiness, Some time we must begin. let hegin now. 18. ns Address, Rev. C. W. Casson, at Beacon street, Boston, Mass., for the literature. » SOME LUCKY SMITHS. Wealthy Members of a Famous Family. Although the will is not yet in the cal- endars of the probate registry, it is un- derstood that Major Francis Abel Smith of Cole Orton hall, Ashby-de-la-Zouch, and Wilford house, Nottingham, a diree- tor of the Union of London and Smiths bank, and a member of the famous fam ily of bankers, who died on March 20, aged 47, left a fortune of nearly £342, 000, and that he bequeathed £1,000 to the Nottingham general hospital. Other fortunes left since 1900 by mem- bers of the family are Samuel George Smith Rowland Smith . ... Oswald Augustus Smith Frederick Chatfield Smith Reginald Abel Smith Erie Carrington Smith 550,538 372872 202.158 226,705 The Old Style. The appreciation shown for excellent services by many church choirs is often small in quantity and sadly lacking in warmth. The singing of the congrega- tions is also occasionally deprecated as being vastly inferior to that of former years. To those who, in this matter, ire sighing for the good old times, this item is commended "Sixty years ago in a provincial town in England a hymn was frequently sung to the tune of "Old Nativity," in which was the verse :-- "Ye finny monsters of the deep, Your Maker's praises shout, Ye codlins from the sandbanks leap And wag your tails about." In the last line, trébles, basses, altos, and tenors ran after each other exclaim- ing, "And wag your tails--and wag your tails--and wag your tails about." The footprints of dyspepsia have been directly traced to the stomach nerves. Whem these "inside nerves" fail indigestion and stomach distress must surely result. For this, drug-' gists everywhere are supplying a pres- cription known as Dr. Shoop's Hes torative. rst, these tiny inside sto mach, heart dnd kidney nerves fail Then gas belching, heart palpitation, or failing kidneys follow. Don't drug the stomach or stimulate the heart or kidneys. That is wrong. 8 these failing nerves wi: Dr. Shoop's Restorative. It is the nerves, not The more you know about ted, the more you Win appreciate the delicate fragrance and delicious flavor of ! "Salada" Tea. < | the organs, that are calling for help. Within forty-eight hours after starting the Restorative treatment you ! BTORE AND DWELTIN Oo. 3 Rideau St. Apply Sn hunter 3 ---- SQUARI NO, IN . GOOD CON« difon, Wo inp. "Ry J, ols 0 Fel ' COMFORTABLE FRAME DWELLIN with good qutbuil pn York _ 'Boon, 159 Wellington St. £ A SMALL HORSE, 14 HANDS in ion we on Eves, 232 Montreal street, » | HAND-MADE 'BASKETS, LL, SIZES all kinds to order. Ropaieh ¢ done, Teasonable, wr 3% man, street. WANTED-GENERAL. TWO LADY uble home. A Whig Office. FIRB INSURANCE RISKS. GOOD es, lowest il fair settle og R. C, Dob & Co., 108 t. Helephone, 80 BOARDERS in a rospsets poly, Box "A. A. Au} co ments, Brock THE OPPORTUNITY T0 FURNISH estimates on electric work: All kindg of work promptly done. . J. Birch, Electrician, 200 Wellington street. A JOB CLEANING ASHES OUT OR rds ool or lars, or of baggs, carted. Prices right; A 8 Lytle, General aby . 85" on St ain St. 00D SIZED ROOM, three small rooms, either basement and over store. Give P.," Whig Office. OR TWO oR central position, first floor, or particulas. "Gg DRESSY GENTLEMEN TO GET their Spri Suits made at Gallo- way's. Style, price and finish guars anteed to please. 131 Brock St, next to Bibby's Livery. MEN AND WOMEN TO LEARN BAR« ter trade. Graduates earn twelve to Eighteen dollars weekly, Ielp secure positions Will equip shops. Con. stant practice, Carefu) instructions, Few weeks complete course. Cata< logue free Write Moler Barber College, Toronto. 1,000 Cords] of Hekvy,~ Midiim og Light Weight as required. Mill E \ Hard Wood, very best. Maple Blocks, ust the thing for quick hot fires. We déliver any sized order. > JAS. SWIFT & CO. COAL AND WOOD. Thousand Island & St. Lawrence River Steamboat Companies In Connection with New York Gen« tral & Hudson River R.R. Leave Kingston aaly, except Sunday, ,00 a.m. and 2 00 p.m. Leave Kingston Sunday, 7.30 a.m. and 4.30 pen, v > Leave Cape Vincent daily, 10.50 a. and 6.15 p.m. y my Making direct connections at Cape Vincent to and from all points in New York State. Through sleeper Cape Vine cent to New York, N sok end round trip rate Kingston ta Watertown, good golng Saturday 'ox Sunday, returning up to and including Monday, $1.65. . BONER HAVE YOUR Windows Decorated WITH GLACIER The only substitute for Stamed Glas Artistie, rable, Econofuical, by D. J. DAWSON Successor to Dawson and Staley, '217 Princess street. ¥ EY High Grade Pianos at Living Prices. Victor and Berliner Gramo) Wille ams' Sewing Macnab. hos Extinguisher ; and a full line of Musical Instruments, Music,' eto. Thanksgiving Day. Much: protest has' been made against the change of Thanksgiving from Thurs- day to Monday, on the gr that the real intention of the day is 'devotional, and will be smarred. It is not explained, however, why there cannot be just as much devotion on a Monday as on 2 Thursday, and why a reller cannot be as pious at home with his family dk oF sabi oat ics a lot o must a pe criticize a government, s fase they it unjustly. Not only is tke realize the gain. A test will tell. Dold Ly all dealers. ho SE