THE DAILY i BRITISH WHIG, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1908. & TO RAILWAY © IN CONNECTION WITH Cenadian Pacitic Railway Thanksgiving Day Monday, Nov. 9th, 19¢ tickets 'will a, FIRST-CLASS . ARE, Good going Friday, Saturday, and Mopday, ber 6th, 7th, and 9th. on or before Tue sday, Round be November 10th. y = Hunters' Excursions October 6th to 8rd. limit Dee. 5th. Return tickets at SINGLE November FARE Low Rates To PACIFIC COAST $50.10 ONE WAY Second Class Good Going Until October 31st. Full particulars at K. & P. and C. RR. Ticket Office, Ontario St, F. CONWAY, Gen. Pass. ---- rear BAY OF QUINTE RAILWAY. Train leaves union station, Ontario street, { p.m. daily (Sundays excepted) for Tweed, Sydenham, Napanee, Deseronto, Bannock: burn and all points north. To secure quick despatch to Bannockburn, Maynooth, and points on Central Ontario, route your ship- ments via Bay of Quinte Railway. further Janes ary, app y to R. W, DICKSON, Agent, 'Phone, No. MOOSE Open Season. P. New Brunswick September 15th--November 30th Nova Scotia October 1st--November 30th Quebec September 31st lst--December Write Genera Posseoser Dege. MONCTON. N.B. For copies of 'Moose in the Micmac Country "Fishing and Hunting." Toronto Ticket Office, FL King | St. East. General Passenger Department, | Moncton, N.B., or apply Montreal Ticket Office, 141 St. James St. uli Day MONDAY, November 9th, 1908. Round trip tickets will be issued af SINGLE FIRST-CLASS FARE, good going Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday November 6th, 7th, 8th and 9th, good returning on or before Tuesday, Novem ber 10th. HUNTERS EXCURSIONS AT SINGLE FIRST-CLASS FARE, Until Nov. 3rd points Matta Georgian Bay Port Arthur via ints ir Te points in Temagimi, wa to Port Arthur, to and Mackinaw Division, N. Nav. Co. and to certain pc Quebec, New Brunswick, Nova and Newfoundland To Muskoka, lake of Bays Magneta wan River, Penetand, Midland, Lake field, Madawaska to Depot Harbor, Argyle to Coboconk, Lindsay, and points from severn to all ticket ure day or until cle to points gation, if earlier, steamers Low Rates to Pacific Coast. $50.10 way second-class .. . Good going until Oct. For tull particulars, apply J P HANLEY, AGENT, Corner Johnson and | Outario streets One STEAMER WOLFE ISLANDER | WOLFE I8i 9.15 1.00 9.1 1.00-- 1.00 3.00 p.m 3.00 p.m 8.00 p.m a.m. ) a.m, 15 a.m 1.30 p.m 1.30 pw ' p.m. Simcoe 3.00 pom. to change without 9.45 a.m. ~Special trip oor's dock, I'nble subj Island and Spe at Ti me ne Neat calls at Gar and from Kingston ALLAN CHAN MONT REAL ect den Island going Royal 1 Mays i LINE LIV E RPOOL. ING TO Ha BOSTON & PORTLAND TO GLAS GOW. Hesperia 1 Bostp loniar *ortland Aided and rates on a HANLEY, or ( Agents, RIRKPATRICK, ocal King- | n Chirese Laundry Gentlemen :(--Ploase alg and 1.adies' and Send me your washing Goods called for reasonable DUN Barrie and delivered ; KEE, Brock streets. price Vor. THE FIRST ( oF THE SEASON. We will have our Home Made Péik sages, SATURDAY. Try a pound or they are just as good as ever MYERS 00 Brack St "Phane, 570, 80, trip SINGLE or Novem- Ggod returning Return 'Phone, 50. Agent, on: Scotia | to Halibur | | We make | 'W.F. Sau | EC SC A EE TTT IA AT " For many vi ellent." Shakespeare ( tues, ex Romeo and Juliet). PERFECT WHISKY, PERFECTLYMATURED | Messrs. Alexanders Macdonald LEITH, Scotland GUARANTEE That SANDY MACDONALD Special Liqueuf Scotch Whisky is aged for ten years in woud, before being botiled--which ex- plains the purity this superior brand of Scotch. and flavor of INVESTIGATE--Quality will do the rest. 20 AM A MOTHER How many American women in lone ly homes to-day long for this bless to be able to utter these words, but bec ause of some organic derange- rent this happiness is denied them. "Every woman interested in this subject should know that prepara- tion for healthy - maternity is accomplished by the use of LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND Mrs. Maggie Gilmer, Union, S. C.,writes to Mrs. m: "1 was greatly run-down in health | from a weakness peculiar to my sex, | when Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound was recommended to me. It not only restored me to perfect health, but to my delight I am a mother." Mrs. Josephine Hall, of Bardstown, %y., writes : "1 was a very great sufferer from Jmale troubles, and my physician failed to help me. Lydia E. Pinkham"s Vege table Compound not only restored me to perfect health, but I am now a prouc mother." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN For thirty years Lydia E. Pink | ham's Vegetable Compound, mad: { from roots and herbs, has been the | standard remedy for female ills | and has positively cured thousands o women who have been troubled witt | displacements, inflammation, ulcera tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities | periodic pains, backache, that bear | iIng-down feeling, flatulency, indiges tion, dizziness or nervous prostration | Why don't you try it ? Mrs. Pinkham invites all sicl : | women to write her for advice | She he ie guided thousands tc Lyam, Mass. Regina Watches bois T | of consular reports on the Dominion | ng to come into their lives, and | of West | | labor essential of a good expensive cturers do much of it. The ski to the prod timepiece that some mg ille rd uc tion ¥ so is ata use EGINA Watcl the re made killed me- chanics i orld. That's the man with a REGINA of his time. Sole R by why iS SO sure Agents, Kinnear & d'Esterre House. The Watch 100 Princess St., Kingston. Avierican Oils a specialty of handlin of all g Lubri | cating Oils kinds. I'rices on! KELLY & CO O applica South Cor ntario and Clarence Sts "Uhone, 486. o tell your friends. | Wn. Murray Auctioneer 27 BROCK ST. New Carriages, for sale. Cutters, Harness jete., Sale of Horses every Saturday, | ton \manville | ciation | won | ley's te | time | the Branch | the { light i wa | the Coal Oil, Lubricating Oil, Casoiine | .. | ening | lowed by = {EAR OF PROGRESS FISCAL REPORT SHOWS GROWTH OF CANADA. The Total Trade Was Beyond Any Previous Year--United States | 4 Capital Has Been Largely In- wested. | Canadian progress is outlined: in | the introduction to the annual series | just published by the bureau of | manufacturers, Department of Com- | merce and Labor. The total trade 16r the calend year 1907, according to Canadian sta-' tistics, was $646,150,000, of which | | $372,825,000 were imports and $273, | 325,000 exports. The increase in im- | ports over the previous year was $52,- 758,000, and in exports $3,849,000. The | | | figures for the Canadian fiscal year, which ended March 31, 1908, make | approximately the same showing. The | United States exported to Canada in | | the calendar year goods to the value of $222,582,000 which was an increase of $26,455,000 over the previous year. | This increase was maintained in the face of the preferential tariff which cives the United Kingdom an advna- tage of about 30 per cent. in the cus- toms duties. The exports from the United States to Canada are more than to all the rest of North Ameri- including Cuba and the West In- s: more than twice the amount to South America or Asia, and four times that to Oceanica. The imports from the United King- dom into Canada were $96,849,000, an increase of $19,204,000 over the pre- | vious year. Exports to the United Kingdom decreased $8,458, 000. Capital from the United States has been invested, in Canada in one hun- {red and fifty important industries since 1897. "The immigration from the United States during 1907 was 53.000. and the estimated property brought hy these immigrants 549.000,000. The mineral production in 1907 was 586,183,000, an incre of $6,183,000 ver 1906. There was a loss of $4,- 00,000 in gold production, a slight increase in copper, and an increas in coal from $19,945,000 to $24,560, 00. The wheat «¢ now av ges wpproximately 100,000,000 bushels an- nually In 1907 ailways total milc Wis ase fifteen hundrad miles of were constructed, and the age in operation at the be- zinning of the present year was little short of 28,000. It is estimated that $75.000,000 will be spent in rail- way construction in 1908 In electrical development the pres- ent plans contemplate 400,000 horse- | power from Niagara on the Canadian ide, as compared with. 3,000,000 horse-power on the U nited States | side. an important electric light and power mite rprise to transmit the power 119 miles to London, Ont. Substantially Wl the importations of electrical ap- paratus are from the United that witry having sent $3,341,000 worth, as against $74,000 from the United Kingdom. In dutiable mach- inery other than agricultural the United St: simplied $6,225,000 out of a total of $6,900,000. The United Kingdom has better success in holding the market against the United States for textiles. The | United States only supplies 12 per cent. of the textile imports. The im- portation of woollen goods from the United Kingdom increased from $10,- 100,000 in 1900 to $21,000,000 in 1905 Coincidently the number of Canadian woollen mills declined from 157 to 103 Col As an illustration of the ing of living it is said that the commission has recomme nded. an crease in ¢ ries for the civil service mploye 12 per cent. in Eastern Canada and 2 to 25 per cent. in West- ern ( anada cost 8 CAN ADA'S 5 BEST SHOT. Sergeant Morsls, Thoug h Young, Has Long List of Honors. Frank H. Morris, Bowmanville, who has made such a phenomenal record at Bis ley this year, making the highest in the whole empire, win- | coveted Gold Cross of the nal Rifle Association, and sev-| eral 'other valuable prizes, is one of a trio of marksmen from the Domin-! Organ & Piano factory Bow- Major W. C. King (ad-| the Canadian team), Pte.{ Rowe and S F H ) s He was born ¢ nklin, Isle of Wig 20 years ago J. BR Morris, a Wimble- lon man and winner of man¥V prizes in local i Provincial Ritie Asso- atches Sergeant Morris 1 place in last year's Bis-| Last year was his first | at Bisley, when he won £6 for team and £6 for himself. At Long | in 1906 he won the] i the Corporation of To- ronto, the Culverwell Cup for highest ager gate at Cobourg last year, and | Hopper Cup of the Cobourg Rifle Association, winning two years the ast Durham Rifle Association cup in the Canadian Military Rifle yg trophy. Ottawa, in 1206 for rate at long range, and r prizes. Sergeant 46th Regiment, of atant of Sh father also y 18 seco ranees gold 3 medal « ague at age st of 1 Lascelles Made a Chief, The last night of his Plains of Abraham by the of camp fires and strange -ceremonial occasions, Mr Frank master of the page ants, initiated as a Ch Iroquois. The presentation 0 o Wampum necklace, the feather] and the head dress, with the christ. | of the new chief Tehonikon- | the man of resources, was fi I-| the initiation dance, after several of Mr. Lascelles' sistants were made minor chiefs. By me extraordinary mergine of east and west the ceremonial and the merrv-making concluded with the singing by Indians and white men of "Auld Lang Syne" around the fire. stay attendi: the 1 Las- | uch relles of vf raka. which as- | Naturalizing Canadians. According to returns received by the state department 87.404 aliens have taken out naturalization papers | as British subjects in Canada since | the act went into foree in 1902; be-| tween July 1, 1906, and December a1, 1907, 7.279 United States subjeets | ' were naturalized and 306 Japanese. ar | yo | Miss Hilda Hanbur | late Lily Hanbury), Nora Kerin, the last named, who stud- | | Scott, | Irene Vanbrugh and Violet Vanbrugh | admit a Jewish strain, though far off; | Mrs. | here of About $80,000,000 is involved in | States, | {of his sisters are nuns, | these ladies have not been raised to | jas a |a bicyele bell, | tal | chest. JEWESSES w | ENGLAND, [An Foremost In Every Intellectual | and Artistio Pursuit. It is intere: ish women in ha the foremost in every intel foetus] and artistic pursuit, domestic life they have always been ecognized as pre-eminent. i London hostesses, many talent ed wives of English statesmen, are Jewesses, al n work is very valua "The Jewess of stage an literature and life," says a writer in T Realm, "has | always admiration. gery and as for chie, says ur Yiddish girl possesses it in a degree which among Christians is the | Dirchaigin of a few actresses and m sic hal o! Semitic origin. And more than probabl in the case of Madame Ra- chel, o began by selling oranies and singing at cafes, and ended being feted right royally even at the Iaperial Palace of St. Potetsbury; and also in the ease of Sarah Bern hardt, for her , stage brilliancy robably due to the half that = He- rew. Turning to Jewesses in our midst, the public does not often num- ber among its favorites such a group of relatives as Miss Julia Neilson, (sister of the ileen Kerin and jed at Paris and Queen's College, Harley street, declaring to the writer that they were all stage-struck whilst still in the nursery, where they acted their own tiny plays. Not to mention Miss Marie Dainton and Ada Reeve, Mrs. Lewis Waller and Mrs. Clement sisters, are Jewesses. Miss Brown-Potter is the grand- dnughter of a Spanish Jewess. And one (may say anent the Jewess the stage that her influence on it is wholly good, for, like Caesar's wife, a Jewess must be above re- { proach. "But if one were asked to ame the virtue pre-eminently which Jew and Jewess exercise in their relation toward the world, it would be philan- thropy or benevolence. Monteflore and Mocatta have been and are names almost synonymous with those words, and we know what the late Mrs. Sam Lewis did with her millions, remem- bering éven the telegraph boys, news- paper lads, and policemen at the dan- gerous crossing. Happily, Mrs. Bis- choffsheim, la grande dame of philan- thropy, is still with us, though her husb: and, who has given én excelleat street ambulance system, did not long 'survive their golden wedding, which they celebrated by the distribution of £10, 000 to Gentile and Jewish char- ities." ARISTOCRATIC NUNS. British Peerage Has Several and Noble Recluses. The Duke of Norfolk has two sis- ters who are nuns; Lady Minna How- ard belongs to the Carmelite Order and Lady Etheldreda is a Sister of Charity. Lady Edith Fielding, sister to Lord Denbigh, is another Sister of Fan | Charity, and spends her days at a | convent in Kiou-Kiang, which is in | China, as its name indicates. Lady Cristina Bandini, daughter of our Scotch-Ttalian peer, Lord Newburgh, is a nun in a French convent; and Lady Leopoldina Keppel in a nun of the Sacred Heart, in spite of the fact | that she is sister #f a Protestant peer, Lord Albemarle. Then, Miss Mary and Miss Edith Clifford, sister of Lord Clifford of Chudleigh, are both nuns, as are Miss Cicely Arundell, sister to Lord Arundell, and Miss Leonie Dormer, sister to Lord Dormer. Lord Firench, who lives in Johannesburg, has two sisters who are nuns; three Misses Petre, sisters of Lord Petre, are nuns; Lord Herries has no fewer than four sister who live in convents; and, as for Lord Trimlestown, an Irish peer and eighteenth baron, history seems uncertain as to whether four or five rank of baron's daughters. days there were four sisters of a one-time Lord Camoys who had taken the veil, but most of these la- | dies are now no more. the by-gone A Laughing Philosopher. The Earl of Sandwich, whose great- nephew has been sponsored by the German Emperor, was once described "laughing philosopher." a man of parts, a musician, an archi- tect, a connoisseur in art, and a great traveler. He has never married, but shows a marked liking for children, | and keeps about a hundred, mostly the sons of soldiers, in a house on his estate, called St. Edward's Home. At the time of the Boer War he turned ais country place, Hinchingbrooke, xmto a convalescent hospital for wounded officers. The humorous side of his nature is sometimes shown in carious fashion. For instance, during the bicycle craze, he used to walk about the streets of Huntingdon with which he rang inces- tly in order to warn unwary pedes- rians of their possible danger. For his charitable deeds he has received from King Edward the Order of St. | John of Jerusalem. The State and the Crystal Palace. while in'| Many, lor) : { | compulsory | best citizens, man isad experiences. thropy thelr | j was the only victim of pox, small or {by coming in | Dr. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. A Citizen's Protest Against Com- pulsory Vaccination. ton, Oct. 30.--(To the Edit. n' yesterday's issue I noticed Bell's belligerent move in taking | advantage of a most unjust act, viz, vaccination. Vaccination abominable to hundreds of ow oi whom have had fundreds of cases an be cited where the onc vaccinated Kin, is chicken, or a loathsome disease caused contact with foul air | emitted from a dirty sewer or cellar. | Such places are not properly inspected. | Prevention is better than cure, and- if ny of the diseases exist, it is the | careless neligence of the chairman of | the board of health and his associates. cause of much comment. {A gentleman from Toronto who resid- artistes--themselves probably {ed on" Queen street north left our city | disgusted, saying that if circumstances such as he found The out- the existed in Toronto here there would be a rebellion. stench on warm evenings from houses is terrific and has been The nuisance ground out Division streét is horrible. Horses, cows, pigs, dogs and cats lie unburied through the heat of summer and the stench is dreadful, and, no doubt, germs come back on drivers, delivery rigs, horses, and on those who perform surgical operations on the dead animals am told cows' heads, with eyes, brains, gums, ears, etc., are boiled up and put in bologna and other sausage. hope it is not so. What Kingston needs is a thorough system of cleansing in cellars, sewers, out-houses, yards, ete. The idea of expecting Officer Timmerman to do all this work and put down the re- port in a three-cent scribbler. When, oh when, will Kingston get out of the rut in doing things so far behind the age? If you want a good laugh read by-laws. It should be read in some of our five-cent' theatres. It would certainly take. I hope Dr. Bell will act slowly not close up our Collegiate or and Col- jsure. If he does, | to get a velvet coat, for the boys are well up in hazeology. There is such a disease pox. The sease is\ cleanliness, leg or There is about as much sense in {as in carrying a chestnut in (Me ket to cure rheumatism. In our city to-day most intense suffering caused hy cination, and there no need of especially the compulsory part. is a free country and the abuse freedom will not be tolerated. those who wish to be operated be accommodated but please do urge those who are opposed to such moeasures.--Yours truly, ANTI, college as it po there the 10¢ is is of Some Were Vaccinated. Kirgston, Oct. 31.--(To the tor) : It is stated that every case of small-pox far, in this city, has been among unvaccinated persons, Edi- RO as several of | In | He is | A movement has been organized to | Jhtain state aid for the Crystal Pal- ace. The matter in hand, and a public meeting ia to be held to consider the project. Tt is stated that an initial grant of £100,000 and an annual subsidy of £12.000 would be required. The Crys- Palace, which has labored under financial difficulties for some years, is considered to be a national institu- tion, and Lord Brassey, among oth- ers, favors a Government gran. London on Canvas. By permission of Archbishop Bourne, Mr. Louis Weirter, R.B.A., has converted the top of the Jalty 'campanile of Westminster Cathed: into a sort of studio, from which he is painting an immense picture of London, measuring 20 feet by 12 feet, | as seen from that lofty view-point. James Fitness layer, of a contracting brick- Brantiord, Ont., fell of a waggon load of brick, on Saturday, the waggon running over his leg and He was seriously injured Woodstock will vote on. loe al option | in January. Lord Mayor has taken the | aches disappeared | Dr. i the in favor of vaccination. 1 take objection to this to assure | persons have not only heen the patients who have had But have really been the | the city has had to care for in the present scare, 1 don't think it fair | to attribute such a statement to | Bell, who knows too well that it is true, and is above { such a misleading statement in order | to make out a case on false | tenses for vaccination. For {months I acted as constable at {he | isolation hospital and was daily i | contact with its patients during that {time and | assure you that | vaccinated patients there ipox. I was not vaccinated, nor was my successsor, and yet neither of caught the disease.--C, WHITE, Alfred street. desire to worst cas pre two Sew " 177 SS. WAS PANDEMONIUM. | German and Czech Members Fierce Free Fight. Vienna, Oct. 31.--Another riot took | place in the Rohemian Diet at Prague [hursday, owing to the obstructive methods of the German deputies. | The Czechs threw large quantities oi sugar at Herr Wolf, a deputy, whom | they accuse of having been bribed by sugar trust. When Herr struck a Czech in the fight followed. The German minority desks and defended themselves with kicks and blows, while the Czechs bombarded them with inkpots, book {and other missles. The riot lasted twenty minutes, and when order had been restored the floos was covered with collars, cuffs, neck ties, studs, broken inkpots and frag ments of elothing. Woli face a general mounted their the Knox Colley The purchase of site, Toronto, is completed Butter, farmers' Gilbert's stores. Calvert, liberal, Middlesex by 15; count. EYE STRAIN | HEADACHES Manitoba lady tells. how head th the use of A. W. Chase's Nerve Food. Women who use their eyes much for | reading or fine needlework are sure find eye-strain and nervous, sick head aches among the first symptoms, when the nervous system gets run down. As a not mere relief but cure, prints, 26e., Wes re elected in there will be a Dr."A. W Chase's Nerve Food stands without 4 | rival because it gets a®™ the cause of the trouble and builds up the nervous system to health and strength. Mrs. George Fuller, Lakeland, writes : "Dr. Chase's Nerve cured me of nervous headache, oe which I was a great sufferer, and I am no longer troubled with twitchings of the nerves in the arms and legs." The portrait and signature of A. W. Chase, M.D., the famous Receipt Book author, are on every box. 50 cents at all dealers or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto. Dr. A.W.Chase' Nerve Food Foo the book containing Kingston's | positive cure for headaches, | | leges by forcing that abominable mea- | I would advise him | small- | prevention of such a di-| not scratching the | arm and rubbing cow scab on. | it, | This | Let | on | not | and this is being used as an argument | statement and | the public that vaccinated | among | small-pox | Dr. | lending himself to | with small- | a" James Reid, The Leading | in | EAA + 2444404440444 for a departmental sto:e | | to | | | | w THE | dedder™ Waar He Samp: "Mother ~ never made such delicious coffee as this!' WHAT Sus Sap: "Mother never used Chase & Sanborn's: Coffee. \R That's why." 'Women's Tan Boots The New Tan Boot will be ¥ the most popular boot of the sea~ 3 son for the modern woman's street wear or stormy day ser- $ vice. The correct model is the ¥ wave top, or Napoleon. We have § it in different heights--all very § smart. Perforated or plain toes and vamps. § Choice Russia Calf leathers. Button, Lace or § 2 Blucher style, all sizes. $3, $4 and $5 Provide yourself with a pair of Wintér Tans, Madam, how much comfort you'll get out of them. and you'll be surprised when you learn : J. H. SUTHERLAND & BRO. THE HOME OY GOOD SHOES SIGS IIKAGKHIISIISIICKAGIGICICI ING Anyone who ever sle 'ps on a "Gold Medal Felt Mat- tress" is sure to speak about it to others. They have a reputation all over Canada as the cleanest and most comfortable of mattresses, and these tozether : Hercules Bed Springs, Gold Medal Felt Mattresses make a combination fit for a king. Youmay pay more for something inferior, but for all-round comfort and satis- faction, we guarantee these kes to bz "Second to ne." taker. "Phone 147 wn Paan FAEAAET HERI TATEN 4 4 : For Outdoor Foot: Comfort. Men's Tan or Black Siberian Calf Water- proof Boots, $5.00 and 6.00. 3 i : + 3 + Doctors' Special Black or Tan, $5.50 and 6.00. Geo. A. Slater's Invictus Duk-Bak, $5 00. { THE SAWYER SHOE STORE Er FHA EE EEE REAL 014004 5 F ¥ -- a Hallowe' en Specials! ! Hickory Nuts, Chestnuts, Filberts, etc. Grapes--Tokay and Malaga. Tallies--Our notcd*makes just in. Try Toye's "Chocolate Sharbot." Get it to-morrow. wd Pe Something new in pastry, just out. R. H. TOYE, 302 King St. «KING" FLY KILLER RITE 0 FR Kills without crushing and does not soil the most delicate fabrics or injure the highest polish. 10c. pach, , Druggists, Hard- | ware amd Gracers. ITER RRA a