{ i he 81 lan iH AE - - tN Synopsis of Canadian Northwest HOMESTEAD REGULATIONS. NY even-numbered section of Do mMnion Lands in Manitoba or the Northwest Provinces, excepting 8 and 46, pot reserved, may be bone sleaded by any person the sole head of & family, or male over 18 years of age, to the extent of one-quarter secuion, of 460 acres, more or less. Application for homestead entry musi be 'wade in person by the applicant at a Dominion Lands Agency or Sub-ageucy. ry by proxy may, however, bé made an Agency on certain conditions by the sather, mother, son, daughter, brother or fster of an intending howmesteader, An application for cancellation must be made jn person. The applicant musts be. tigible for homestead entry, 5 DUTEES. (1) At least six 'moive reside upon and cultivation # tand 8 each year during te: bree years. 8 30 (2) A homesteader may, 80 - de fires, perform the equirsn oe | gu; tles by living on farmin Owned olely by him, not less th ABO) acres in extent, in the vicinity of his homestead. Joint ownership ip "land wil not meet this requirement. (3) It the father (or mother, If. the ther is deceased) of a homesteader had purioanent residence on farming land owned solely by him, not less than eighty (80) acres in extent, in the vicinity of the ho d, or upom a homestead entered for by bim in the vicinity, such home steader may perform his own residence duties by living with the father (or mother). (4) The term "vicinity" In the two greceding paragraphs is defined as means ing not more than nine miles in a direct ine. SYNOPSIS OF CANADIAN NORTH. WEST MINING REGULATIONS, v . COAL.~Coal mining rights may be leased for twenty-one years at an annual rental of $1.00 an acre. Not more than 2,660 pcres can be leased to one appli cant. Royally, five cents per ton; QUARTZ.--~A person eighteen years of age and over having mad a iscovery may locate a claim 1,600 feet by 1,500 feet. Feo $5.00, At Joast $100.00 must be expended on the claim each year, or paid to he wdning Recorder, When $500.00 has been expended or pald and other requirements complied with the clajm may' be purchased at $1.00 an " $5.00, of five miles to one ap- 100 feet square. Entry fee, REDGING,--Two leases of a river may be issued nt for a term of 20 years. Rental, H) vapematle pana Royalty, 24 cent after the outpht exceeds $10,- gi WS Bw.¥w. comry, puty ot nel inisf@r of the Interfor, N.B.--Unauthorized publication of this vertisement will not be paid for. Aa Diamond | Rings | No Adhd department in ow to increase "Diamond prices, make 1eSa JeeIns sowapidly as the Tepartment," honest represent this only possible. In Solitaires, no better values can he had than our special $25, $50, $75, $100 and $150 Rings. Fach stone examined and our gua funding money benefit to you. on critically mounted, rantee of re- of some is Kinnear & d'Esterre DIAMOND SHOP. 100 Princess St., King- ston. AAA AAA ARE AR A 0484844 Jsesssssssness ' » » Fall Term Opens Sept. 1. The Frontenac Business College, Kingston. High-grade wcourses_ in all .com- 2 mercial branches The highest standard of any cominercéal school in Fastarn Ontario. Wo are offering special scholar- (® ships to the first fifty registering for the n®% term. Send or call for particulars. T. N. §' Phone, 680, STOCKDA LE, Principal. $080844£04800040000 » » > 3 > v »O-O TY. YO 4 OOOO OPP OOO ORTUNI 3 Kingston Business College Limited, Head of Queen Street. 25th ) year Canada's Leading Busi. ness School. Practical, Progres- rive, Permanent Bookkeeping, ¢ Shorthand, Typewriting, Tele- & graphy, Civil Service. A Special - rates to the first 1 twenty-live registering before Sept. 1st. Write or call for particulars. I, CUNNINGHAM, Secretar METCALF, President. »OOO000 C ( ( ( ( x J va 5 é 4 Q OO0000 THE FRONTENAC LOAN AND INVESTMENT SOCIETY ESTABLISHED, 1863. President--Sir Richard Cartwright. Money loaned on City and Farm Pros erties. Municipal and County Deben- ures Mortgages purchased, Deposits received and Interéat allowed. S. C. McGill, Managing Director. A HINT TO SHAVERS We are now sélling a Safety Razoo which is fully guaranteed, FOR 25 CENTS. Get one and try It, a A. STRACHA DR. LITTLE'S FEMALE REGULATING PILLS Hest for Women's use, in irregularities or supression, at all Druggists, or by mall, DR, LITTLE MEDICINE CO., Toronto, Ost. FOR YOUR SUMMER COTTAGE. | A nice Ham and a piece of good Sugar Cured Pea Meal Bacon are necessary for | the summer home Also some very choice Cooked Meats. We have a variety | to choose from HH. J. MYERS, 60 Brock Kt. Phone. 870 'It is best for early that when they steal time they the voung to learn roh themselves, EL Te $O-00 }00000000000000000 3 CZAR AND CZARINA © 3 AT HOME. V000000000000000000000 © W. :Norregaard, in the London Mail. When on New Year's Day, 190s, the saluting gun on the Peter-Pay) fortress by aqmistake' fired ball cartridge against the winter palace, the Czar and his fam- ily Toft their capital for good and took tp their residences at Tsarskoe--Sdlo, Since then only on two occasions have they visited St. Petersburg, and then only for a few hours-s-at the opening of the first Douma and at the consecration of the cathedral built in memory Alexander 11. on the spot where he was Jhwrdered. 1 sarskoe-Sclo is situated on the Baltic Railway half an hour.by train from St Petersburg. Immense, beautifully kept parks surround the palace. with magnih gent old trees and gorgeous shrubs, with dainty snow white pavilion: ad five works and sculpture and * ful ter races and colonades., Clove t.. the pal- ace is a great lake with richly wooded shores. and a most picturesque fittle is land, en which a pavilion, modelled as a Greek temple, gleams out radiantly white among 'the luxurious vivid green foliage. The palace is a stately con struction in late Ttalian renaissance style, built by Catharine 11, It is, how ever, only used on state occasions, at official banquets or bouquets, The im perial family as a rule lives at a much smalier palace called the Alexandrovski. In May the court moves to Peterhof, on the Finnish Pay, and stays there till autumn: Here also there are vast, mag- nificent parks, extending the w hole way to Oramenbaum, right opposite Crons- tadt. The great palace in Peterhoff, built by Peter the Great and consider- ably eularged by 'Catherine 11. is situ ated on a lew ridge running parallel to the coast line at a few hundred yards distance, . Peterhof is chiefly renowned for its waterworks and fountains, which are built on a larger scale than those of Versailles and for beauty and effec tiveness more than rival them In a corner of the park, right on the hores of the sheltered behind tall brick walls, guarded by many semtinels and mounted gendarmes, three sm residences are situated, not much bigger than the average dwelling house of an ordinary, landed: proprietor: The largest of 'these is inhabited by the imperial family. The second is at the disposal of the Empress Dowager during her lately not very frequent--visits from Gatchina. 'The third, the farm, indeed deserves its name, being an old peasant house. fitted up so that it may serve as an abode for the imperial family. It was first used when after of the imperial children had been suffering from m , the larger residences hae to be disinfected and replastered. The whole family then for a time moved to the farm, where the l convalescents - speedily recovered their strgngth I'he; stay had charmed the children that year by vear now ene or the other of the girls pleads feeling ill, and entreats her parents to go foryagdew days to the. farm, which B ea, some isle across the li I have been told sionally granted arina are really health restoring place that the request; is oces But the Czar add the delighted to have an for some days in thé small, cosy rooms of the quaint 'old farmhouse and for- getting for a while the cares and re- spongibilities of their exalted positions On the whole, in whatever light the accident at the New Year's salute may be regarded, sure it iS that for the im- perial famility it was in a way a most fortunate event The climate of St Petersburg far from 'healthful, the socral jabligations are very cumbersome. Pet€rhaf and Tsarskoe-Seio, on e other hand anitorinms, and away from the capital court etiquitte to relaxed--even large ly Neither the Czar ne much interest in court ceremonial formal ial function I'hey are both extremely fond of theix handsome, bright children and devote of spare time thar company i can manage a common sight f courtiers « rf Nicholas to. see the Autocrat of All tl Rn rrily with a bevy o delighted, boisterous children Of course ev in the quiet pre f Peterhof and Tsarskoe-Selo th the Caar is prety fully ocgup rised carly and after breakfast nearly every day a morning's fide, He is a man, his lithe, erect hgure lending self extremely well in the sade 10 o'clock he 1s back at Wis writing luncheon time receiving the re foreign the sam 1s ¢ th are "real s tation 1ct pensed with, Crzarine takes or SON as much their they sS1as romping me of a bath ar 11 ind tll 1 o'clock cupied ports of mindster seeing ambassa and otl In afternoon em often including a ¢ ar Empe wn dinne down his cr and devotes Yo his family lays LIne well Inncheon is gener to the imperial family in a even the adjutants occasionally mnvited famous Nihilist attempt Alexander II. by explodin mine tinder the dining room at winter palace it has been a castom at t Russian court to have meals served al ternately in different rooms. The cus tom is stifl adhered Gen. M t » that once, being invited by indormal luncheon he dat finding the fable Mid in the Czarima's boudoir, 'Next time," the Grand Duchess Tatians pertly remarked, I suppose we ll lunch in the bath room.' . After dinner the children say good night"and the Czar generally plays bil which he is very fond, or Dinner is AS Bg lly served private room, than not being more Since the 1111 killing t in { rather surpr sh hrards, of there 1s musica of which he is still fond ef. being himself a skilled and talented utant of the piano, often playing intimate circle either solo. or mipanying the violin of Czarma also is very ection for modern of his sister musical, hav® Italian bhe 1g 3 predi ms I'he m 1 n ns of the imperial household Czar honors with per Iship and who aré his con- anions in his. excursions and sports are Gen. Didjulin, commander I al ; Gen. Komoroff, comman- pers the ins det of the guard, and among his ad- jutants Prince Orloff, Count Heyden and Gen. Drentelin. The Czar is a good tennis player and a good oarsman. He takes great interest in motoring, and nearly every day goes out for a drive with Prince Orloff. who is an expert hauffer, the wheel. He is also a good shot. During his annual autumn cruise in the Finnish waters among the thousands of beautiful islands he often C at | | has proved to be such a wonderfully excuse for staying * 1 intending { goes ashore to enjoy a day with the guns. . On these cruises he is accom- panied by the Czarina and the children, the latter in particular looking forward to an expedition full of novel exper- ienices. 2 The children are made to lead as much as possible an outdoor life, and have plenty of exercise. Their education is conducted wholly on English lines. Be- s tween themselves they speak mostly Russian, but with their parents generally English. The Empress bas fearned to speak Russian quite fluently, but with the Czar and with the children she al- ways speaks English, The children have their ponies which they use for riding and driving, and even the Itttle Crown Prince Alexei has is own donkey, on which he proudly Kes his rides. He is a very handsome ttle 'hoy of four, strong and sturdy, d the jolliest little fellow imaginable, ety. far advanced for his years. His récious sayings and doings ar¢ a con- tant source of merriment to his elder sisters, as indeed, they are to the whole court. The sisters, the Grand Duch- | b sia, are from 1214 to 64 years of age. hey are all very pretty. rather thin nd tall, taking after their handsome mother, but lively and robust, thanks to their healthy life in the open air, GOT NO ROYALTIES. For The Gospel Hymns They Spread Broadcast. That neither Ira D. Sankey nor Dwight L. Moody ever received any di rect financial benefit from the publi- cation of the gospel hymns which were such potent factors in: their work sas evangelists and which are now useful 'the world over was brought to Jdight in an interview with Elton Low, of Chicago, president of the civil service commission, who is a nephew of the late Mr. Sankey. In speaking of the character and work of his uncle, whose death last Thursday night at Brooklyn, N.Y., has brought forth expressions of appreciation and grief from thousands why knew the celebrated singing evan- gelist and his work. Mr. Lower desig- nated the channels into which the ®arn- { ings from the composition agd publica. | tion of the gospel hymns went "Since the ammouncement of Mr. San- { key's death T have noticed 'various re- ferences to the royalties the publication of his singing books," said Mr. Lower. "Neither Mr. Moody nor Mr. Sankey ever received any di- rect financial benefit from the publica tion of the gospel hymns. The royal- ties were given into the hands of a com mittee of business man trustees--in 1875. Thé money received from royal- ties: was appropriated for religious, philanthropic and educational work in different parts of the United States-- much of it went the Northfield schools for young meni and women founded by Mr. Moody Royalties at the present time are paid to trustees of the schools at Northfield." In discussing his uncle as he Rim. Mr. Lower said: "There is no need for me to refer to the great field for good covered by Mr Sankey during his long career before the public. He was a great. big, broad- minded, generous man He was' a musician and a composer of gréat talent } if it had been turned in any m in the world of music would vy have won him as 'great fame as did his authorship of the "Gospel f Hymns." His magnificent baritone voice was- heard throughout the world. "During recent years 1 had seen him only when I visited him at his home in Brooklyn, where for the last. four years he was confined by physical weak- ness incident to the loss of his eyesight During that period 1 think I was the only person who ever heard the sound his voice in Recently, when sat at his bedside urging him not to relinquish-the-power his voree had with knew song could still sing nd softly and said to me that he "He threw his head back sang one verse of a favorite hymn. | thing that is only time that Mr. Sankey used | voice to sing since he lost his sight." During those years he waited patiently for his time 'While confined to his bed his mind was a He did wk dictated story "Gospel Hyr published recently [he manu script of this _book he had prepared during his busy Jife and had always ! to publish Several wk it Battle Creek, Mich. he was the guest of his friend, J. H. Kellogg, at the Battle Creek, nitarium. He had intended to finally revise it for the printer, but it was burned in the great fire which de stroyed that insttufion--it will be re led that Mr. Sankey narrowly es After the of his sight he dictated the present book from' memory of those notes ® "During his career his greatest help was Mrs. Sankey, who Fanny V Edwards, my mother's 1 member of Mr. Sankev's ir ) Pa., before he had abandoned $ Care for his life's work as ing evangelist In his story of "Gospel Hynu Mr. Sankey pays this tribute to that good woman She has been a blessing and a helpmate to me throughout my life and in all ny wor Sankey that. of work a Elin carly stil in the is much w ot Ne the nns 1 to was choir ir 1 bt ne er whose name was linked with D. L. Moody in evangelistic generation ago, was born at Pa. August 28; 1840. He wwed a talent for music. i teens he became a leader the Methodist Episc church of his native towm Later beeame Sunday school supermtenc and president of the Y.M.CA. It was at the interndtional convention of the YYM.CA. in 1870 that he first njet D..L. Moody and they began their tour of evangelism, Moody the preacher, Sankey as the singer. They moved-great audiences in all parts of the world. In 1873 the evangelists visited the British isles and other Efiropean countries. It was on this tour thawSankey wrote the music of his most famous hymn, "The Ninety and left as Nine." Mr. Sankey aftérward told the story Fle had picked up the song in the course of his travels and put it away, sometime to use it in gos At the close of a great meeting in Scotland, when Mr. | Moody had given an address on "1 Good Shepherd" I while the people were in pel meetings to Mr. Sankey and said: "Give soto "I produced us a the said Mr ! the story, "sat down > and started to play, and the the song was born. The effect was efectrical hard-headed Scotch farmers, ended nearly lines," San- at When the song. wt wm tears." a susceptible mood, the preacher turned | ses. Olga, Tatiana, Maria and Anas- received from' the people, he brightened for a moment. | | | «4E DAILY BRITISH WHIG, FRIDAY, AUGUST 21, 1908. / pec : oO The Russian Revolution By Mrs, BE; Johnton, Picton. 0 0000000000000 000000000 "Pale, silent, stern, what could I say to that long-accrued retribution ? Could I wish humanity different 7 Could I wish the people made of wood and stone ? ~ Or that Lhere be no justice in destiny or time ?"'--Walt itman. So said Walt Whitman, the great American poet, of the French revolu- tion and the "terrible year" of ven- geance that' followed. And yet every student of the French revolution knows that the ple were patient, long- suffering.f/and kind. even as they are in Russia to-day. It is not the people (that is the- radicals, the revolutionary part) who are responsible in the largest measure for the terrible and wholesale massacres; and terror, "and bloodshed that is flooding the land there to-day. Who then is responsible? The Czar? No. The titled aristocra.y? Not wholly. 'But. everyone in power who are anxious to keep unjust privileges and possessions, at whatever cost to others. The government i8 responsible ; the officials, pafticularly the military officials, when they incite the army to deeds of atrocity and wholesale massa- cra, such as has happened there again and ag#in dufing the past three years, as any one who reads carefully the ac- counts that appear from time to time in the press can see. Who, then, would we naturally expect to be responsible for deeds of cruelty except such as have been bred to deeds of cruelty through long genérations! The un- voiced masses have been bred to pa- tience and long-suffering forbearance and it "will take much to make them anything clse but patient long-suffering. The radical students and * workmen, what is popularly termed the revolu- tionary party, keen, thoughtful, intelli gent men and women who have been bred to a courage and endurance of persecutions such as we western people cannot realize. They have been bred to a moral courage,'and a love of justice and right and truth and an endurance of persecution for conscience' sake such as seems towbelong to another age than our own, in which they have heard the steady tramp of their best and their bravest both women and men, in their continuous march to Siberia under the lash of brutal Cos cause they had dedicated their lives to right and justice and truth, and the freedom of the people to be good and true; they have listened to and seen such deeds as these, I say, and yet have dared to go on in their work of education, and the propaganda for freedom; though well they knew that their next effort might cost them their liberty and send them, exiles, into frozen Siberia. From such a class, bred through long genera- tions to such endurance you would ex- 8, of truth and right and justice under circumstances neverrso dangerous, but you would not expectynor do you largely find brutal ferogityy murder, massacre, pillage and rapine;. but. everywheré, where they have been able ta get the rule tempofarily into their own hands,, justice, order, moderation and good sence. It were well, perhaps to place emphasis on this, lest we of the west should in our careless reading of the associated 'press despatches, credit the reformers ,of Russiw with. the cruelty, massacre and othéridisorders that the Cossacks, and governmental officials Jave largely mmcied: Blame net the revolutionary party for the violence and the mob that evil and vicious sub- merged tenth found in all large cities who is of 'no. party but always at the back of cruelty and murder and rapine | and theft especially "{f upheld in their vil work by the strong arm of the law, and backed by the power of the army too often been the case in Russia. It is to such we can attribute many of the outrages, massacres and 1s has | | | years ! | ¢ | sister, who was | | causing | | | | we prefer to die to the conquest of the future other atrocities that have been charged up to the people at large No, Russia 1s not a nation of cowards as some have supposed, nor is she rption of brutal rioters, Russia is a nation of idealists, not to_a less degree IH to a iter degree than ny other nation in the world to-day, world that is full of idealism, not- withstanding the worship of wealth that S Prince_.-Krapotkine, great Russian exile in his inevita- letters to the young: "All of you who have knowledge and talents, if you have heart as well, come and put them the service of those who have the most need of them and know that if you come it must not be as masters bit as comrades; it must not he to gov rn, but to be yourselves inspired in the midst of a new world which 1s marching The equali hat can 1 gre perhap abroad truggle for tradi, for justice hosom of the people! W life more gloriows that ty in the you find mn evolution began, as every reader wws, Jan. 18th, 1905, in what to be a peaceable industria! strike, non political in its character, as the author ities supposed, of 12000 employees of the Neva shipbuilding works. In the afternoon of the same day one of the cotton mills joined in the. movement, anxiety lest the rest .should follow thus placing in the ranks of the strikers 100,000 men. Two days later a petition the Czar was circulated at workmen's meetings for signature, bitterly complaining of sthe workmen's deprivation®of human rights." and say- ng "If thou leavest us. in this position " The next day half Petersburg was in darkness, and protection owing to the seemed t to i of St without walk-outs To cope with the difficulty the goe- ernment filled the streets, especially in the disaffected quarters, 'with heavy pa- trols of soldiers, and refused to permit | a delegation of workmei to present their | petition to the Crar. {only one way to cope wi Now there is J 1 dissatisfacs injusice and that is to re- tion with | move 'as far as possible the injustice. | To, repress by force of arms 'those a- | | i 1 | flames { hercely than ever. flame with a sence of injustice, is like stamping out a fire in a ship BY board- ng, up the hold and confining the below. It will "assuredly burst again, and the next time more But the Russian long - adopted this forth authorities had | method of stamping out the flames of | industrial revolt in their country, and ey naturally resorted to it on¢e more. { This third day after the beginning of { met paraded the streets . . whole mdustrial centre is idle. Many of the audience were | strike the associated press despat- after "mill, factory Throngs of work- . The All the textile mills and every printing office , Stated "mill after factory closed. eS fin St Petershnrg are closed." \ rrybody was | Reports alsa come from the interior that the . workmen, gi Other. cities are Wa A a pect courage to adhere to the principles going to join in fhe Silke which assun an open' litical And vet the authorities fan t TOUS SY ms hand. "Life Hie. he will give for his life." vy: have so often quelled industrial uprisings be- fore in Russia by shooting down the workmen that they think it will sue- ceed equally well this time. And it does succeed. But only as damming back the fire in the ship's hold succeeds i ing ut the fire As the day advances the ranks of the strikers are rapidly augmented. Strong delegations, visited all the factories and printing offices and shops, etc. ' Practi- cally ali the small establishments in St. Petersburg are already closed--and Father Gopen is going from assemblage to assemblage of the people addressing the workmen. It haé been decided fo» hold a great mass meeting in the palice square, from all parts of the city fort e the opposition on the part of governmental officials they have resolved to present their petition to the Czar. But the srikers have resolved to gO un- armed. They said, "We are unwilling to meet violence with violence" They are ready to die in front of the palace but insist on being heard 'by.the Em- peror himself. Father Gopen leads the: procession in clerical garb carrying a cross, And thus the people come, men, wo- men and children and indigent old men and women to present their pathetic ap- peal to the Czar. "The father of his people," as they still believed. -"whb wishes to rule justly if those high in power_will but permil 2 it him." ey plead with him in their petition to break loose from the corrupt gov- ernment officials ruled by capitalists, and a cruel aristocracy, indifferent for generations past to the miseries of the masses, and all the merciless beanro- cracy by which Russia is governed. Sir," said the petition, "we have ar- rived at the extreme limits of endure ance, we have reached the terrible moment when death 1s to be preferred to a continuation of our intolerable' sufferings We have not asked much, we have asked but for means of livelihood, without which life is a bur- den and labor continual torture." After referring to certain demands made by | them, and certain other points of their case, the petitioners continue Any one of us who dared raise his voice in the interests of the people, of the wark- ing classes, has been thrown into prison or transported. Kindness and good- feeling have 'been treated as a crime Assembled before the palace we plead our salvation. Refuse not thine aid and ! raise thy people from their tomb. Give them the means of working out their own destiny." We all know the Czar's answer to this petition, and to the 100, 000 unarmed workingmen," women, and children, who tried to.make their way to the palace square. They are met | a solid array of troops, with rifle, bay. | onet, and sabre who charged the help- less, unarmed crowd, killing men, wo- men and children indiscriminately. But nothing daunted the workmen, with faith in their emperor still unim- paired, being barred from the bridges and gates, crossed the frozen givers by twos and threes and arrived at the | palace square, but instead of being met | by: the emperor, they expected, they | were met by Cossacks wha charged once again, velley after volley, the helpless unarmed crowd. We all know the sequel sin the three |. terrible years that have followed. . The petitigns for a redress of grievences the efforts, the uprisings of the people, again and 'again met by. grape-shot, brutal massacre. by Cossacks, those paid sol- diers of the government, of whole towns and cities, full' of people put to the sword, sparing neither men, women nor children, or helpless old age,. no | infancy, as witness the Siedlce butchery | where two. hurtdred people were indis- | crimipately butchered "according to a | delibCrately planned programme," says | an associated press despatch where the | massacre began in two different and re mote quarters of the town as soon as a | red light was shown en the city tower, The whole quarters were destroyed. "The | panic," it was stated, "was spreading to | Warsaw and other towns where they feared the same programme would be carried out. demanding the surrender of | all revolutionaries under the threat of | fire and massacre, against the le | population. But why continue 'the un | speakable horror of it; or of others of where it was said 'the soldjers have | received orders to fire on everybody | arouding suspicion." . "It is im- | possible to ascertain the number of dead | or wounded. Dr. Lorentowiez . . . . | bandaged the wounds of 472 persons" | or the still more horrible. massacre by cossacks in Odessa following the re 1 of some Russian soldiers to longer | part in wholesale shooting | down of their countrymen. and the | many other massacres and outrages of | a similar nature numerous some times to mention, some of which it is | only fair tc and we naturally xpect, have been of the people's mak ing. in all the horrible three years that have passed there. But surely mercy is | a crown to a great sovereign. And now in this the latest chapter in the | awful tragey, but not, as we believe, the last chapter, comes the reverberating cry of Tolstoi, that great and Christ- too say, For saleby McKelvey & Birch artillery was employed and |Z similar nature including that in Warsaw, |= : wnarslee | : The shrewd buyers: hav and three pairs of Oxfords, blame them at the values! ad Women's §4 & 4.50 Tan, Chocolate, Pat. Colt and Vici Kid Oxfords and : Quality makes, now. ny $2 8. . dh All the balanee of our Men's $5.00 Packard ( ing been taking two and you can hardly Walter & Whitman) and Thompson Bros'. $5.00 Oxfords, in Tan, Velour, Calf and Patent Colt, now $3.75. "3 If there were better shoes made for $5.00 than the above three makers, we'd have them. ° ; J. H. SUTHERLAND & BRO. The Home of Good Shoe Making. RAZOR OF PERFECTION 'THE > EVERLASTING SHAVING COMFORT NO RAZOR TROUBLES POSSIBLE » These razors are tempered as hard as flint by our exclusive secret process of electricity, - You can obtain one on 80 days trial § from your dealtr without obligation to purchase, Firm of A. L. SILBERSTEIN, 476 "Broadway, New York, N.Y; . 89-71 BROCK STRE Y KINGSTON, ONT. - ad tenn bo! f "MEN Regular $5.00 SHOES - WOMEN Regular $4 and $3.75 Shoes: Now Now $3.99. | $2.99. Sec our windows for bargains. REID -& CHARLES 111 PRINCESS S87. KINGSTON. ££ Ny Visitors to Toronto Exhibition .are invited to call at the Cowan Company booth in the Manufacturers' Juilding. We will give you a hearty welcome {| and a cup of Cowan's Perfection Cocoa to cheer you on' your way. The Cowan Company Limited, Toronto. kke Russian reformer, whose life of self sacrifice and noble devotion to duty and to right, has gained the reverence of all the civilized world, protesting against the wholesale hianging that is gomg on jn Russia by order of the Czar, at tlfe present time. He says his nation 1s. becoming _démoralized--even the little children are playing at hang ing one another in their games--and goes on to say if this wholesale exes Lcution is necessary in order to protect the citizens, then he who is part of the protected, demands to be put in prison that he may free his skirts from the blood that 1s being poured out whole- sale to protect him, "O hope and faith ! O aching close of exiled patriots' lives } O many a sickened heart ! Turn back unto this day, and maks your selves atresh. "Those corpses of young iden, Those martyrs that hang from the gib- bets. nh Those hearts pierced by the gray lead, Cold and motionless as they seem, live | elsewhere with unslaughtered vitality. | ) "Not a grave of the murdered for free- dom, but grows seed for freedoin in| its turn to bear seed, i Which -the winds carry afar, and re-sow,| and the rains and the snows nourish. | Not a disembodied spirit can the wea- pons of tyrants let loose, x stalks javisibly over 7he earth whispering, counselling, cauti --W. Whitweng ® Fur Nechl Pieces. | | | When you buy here you get first guality and buying now at our sum- mer prices means a big saving. Camp- But bell Bros.', the manufacturing {urriers. A Snap of a Life Time To Furnish a Home. : Rit As our Big Mid-Summer Sale is' still booming. Making room for out' Fall Stock everything reduced. Lp FA bargain for everybody. Lawn Verandah and - sunmer s less. than cost. Pay freight. Packiog /} free. Store open nights, at iw JAMES REID'S ~The Leading Undertaker. i = = tee 17 lums for Preserving Before buying elsewhere, tty us for Cheap Plums, - J | 2) i