PAGE TEN. - How To Save Work In The Home Wost of the dust in the modern home comes from the floor. It needn't, if you woutifBse Floorglaze right. And dust isn't aerely a bother for the house- wife and the maids. It's a danger. Dust spells d-i-s-e-a-s-e. The germs of all infections dwell, mainly, in floor- dust. Floorglaze reduces floor-dust to a minimum, When you coat 'a floor with any of the, ten shades of Floorglaze you have a floor that is creviceless (can't harbor germs), washable (use an anti- septic in the mop-water), and nearly dust-proof. You will get weary watching for it to wear off that floor, Floorglaze stands outdoor wear, even--verandas, porch steps, etc. And a gallon covers 500 square feet, Cheap! Your dealér has it. You would find our Free Book interesting reading, May we send you acopy? Ask on a post- card. Imperial Varnish & Color Co., Limited, of Toronto, i «Jteécommended and MITCHELL and A. ston, sold by W. A, STRACHAN, ,King- WHY AMI ILL? HOW TO TELL. Does cold affect r back, and cause] One of TT followed by disturbance of the kidney action. Does the use of spirits, tea or beer excite the kidneys? Are you easily worried and sanoyed over trifles? Are thu feet and hands cold? Circulation bad? Do the feet and lags swell? Is there puffiness under the eyes? Do you have rheumatism, poor eyesight, headaches and backaches?! Is there gravel or any unnatural action of the kidneys? If you have any of the above ptoms JOU late i weak or : and these symptoms are warnings of more serious troubles to follow ; Bright's Disease, Diabetes or Dropey. Whatever you do, whatever you think r discase 4 look well to your kidneys at the first sign of anythirg wrong, Give them just the aid they require in Doan's Kidney Pills, the Great Quaker Kidney Medicine, av 1 see how well and fit you feel siter even a few doses. Mrs. 0. Warren, Radisson, Sask., writes: "1 wea troubled with very severe pains in my back for years, I tried everything ( could think of but they did me no good. A friend told me about Doan's Kidney Pilla and after taking two boxes, I Haye not been troubled since." Price 50 cents per box, or 3 boxes for $1,25, at all dealers or The T. Milburk Co Limited, Toronto. - In ordering specify * Doan's." - aster Shoes Ladies' Shoes, in Vici Chocolate, Tan or Black. Black, Tan or Oxblood. All Blucher Cuts, Plain, or with Toe Cap, low or High Cuban Heel. $2.00, 2.50, 3.00. H. Jennings, King St VAVAVAVAVAVAVAVAY Sturdy Children Kia, Calf, in Burns, { been authorized in a cablegram THE SPORT :REMEW F-- Before He Can Claim thé Mara- thon Championship--Dorando Has Cleared Up $20,000 and Will Visit Italy. St. Yves is being lionized by the people of New York, "I have run my last Marathon," declares Alfred Shrubb. There will be ro senior series {o the C.L.A. this season. The All-California football team de- feated Vancouver by 3 to 1. The annual convention of the Cana- dian Lacrosse Association takes place at Toronto, Friday. Deseronto ~ holidays and eleventh hour training don't seem to work to- gether in winning Marathons. Jem Drigeoll, the English scrapper, who created such a furore in Ame- rica, has been invited to Australia. Governor Hughes has been urged to prevent the boxing that takes. place in New York under the present: law governing clubs. . "Longboat was beaten simply be- cawse he was not in shape," says "Tom" Flanagan, referring the Marathon Derby. Dorando, up to the present time, has cleaned up $20,000, and intends spending the summer at home, but will come back next winter to try to duplicate his performances. A cable from Johannesburg says : A 220 yards race for the professional championship of the world, held by B. R. Day, of Ireland, and for £200 a side and a purse of 2100, was run on the Stadium ground here between A. B. Postle, of Anstralia, and ™ay Postle won easily by three yards, his time being 23 seconds. Montreal Jerald : Montreal is to have another big Polo tournament. A couple of summers * ago, when the Polo QlubShad its headquarters'at St Lambert, teams from Calgary, King ston, Toronto 'and St. John delighted the eyes of the lovers of fast horses and skilful riders, when they played in* a big Canadian championship tournament. Just such another tour ney is to be held here this vear. The Brockville Harrier Club has changed the date of its big indoor meet to the 21st inst. Promises have been received from some of the best runners in Canada to take nart. The programme will consist eof 50-vard dash in heats, 220-yard dash, mils run for boys under seventeen, -300-vard hurdle race, one mile relay race for harrier clubs, four men from each club to comprise the team, and three mile open, to "I have challenged St. Yves to a Marathon race with Longboat for $5, G00 a side, to run in weeks time," said Tom Flanagan, he returned fron New York to Toronto "I am convineed that=Longhoat beat the Frenchman in three week 'me, All I want is for the Indian to train faithfully* under my directior for three weeks, 1 don't care wheth er the race.is here or in New York. If Longboat wins have the $5, 000, If he loses his training won't cost him a cent." New York World : ring went to Athens Canada, in 1906, and won the Mara thon he was greeted like a Ro man conqueror on his return to Lis native city. The grateful people gave him 'a house worth $10,000 and a life job in the government service. When Martin Sheridan came back after carrying the American colors to vic in Fngland, Ireland, Scotland, Sweden and France he had to borrow car fare and his pay as a cop docked. That's the difference. "Tommy" son wrested be three when can he can When little Sher- from Hamilton, race, tory Burns, from whom John- the heavyweight cham- pionship of the world, is anxious for another fight with the negro pugilist. Hugh D. Meintosh, who promoted the fight Australia, and assumed management of has that he Johnson-Burns in the announced has since had from for a return match He said he would post 85,000 to bind such a match. Burns, he was willing: to fight erica, England of France, and on any erica, England or France, and on terms, Burbs to arrange with Johnson, declared, an Detroit ball will start offi with its base- machine in fighting trim. Tt is smoothed, well oiled, polished, work- Suchard's Cocoa is an easily digested, wholesome and most nourishing drink for growing children--far better than tea or coffee.. They like it, and it makes them strong and healthy, Give them SUCHARD's CoCoA AVAVAVAVAVAVAVAVA. | FEATHER PILLOWS | | | | | For People who are Particular. ing steaaily,~gpasily, gracefully, that machine of Pa: All cogs are there, Proferly placed, working well, Schaefer is doing sensational wark second. The Teuton eaptain entirely recovered from his ill Then much has been written of Bush, Moriarty, Benckendorf, Stanage around Seems ness, THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. THURSDAY 8, 1909. and everyone in Detroit is aware of outfield, strength, and to say that the trio is as great as ever is sufi _ient. Jennings. has enough Pitching mater: ial to draw from to fortify himself on the battery proposition. New York paper says: Contrary to general belief no championship was involved in the Marathon Derby and St. Yves must beat several good men before he can claim the title, The race was a closed one, the entries oi Edward Cibot and Louis Orphee, of France, John Svanberg, of Sweden, cand Pat White, of Ireland, being re- fused. Of = this quartette Cibot has the best claim to the championship. He has not only beaten St. Yves, his countryman, several tumes, but holds the record for the Marathon distance, 2.34.50. Cibot, with Orphee as a partner, won the recent six-day go- as-you-please race at Madison Square Garden, and is now training hard for Marathon contests. Although he has-net- run against Svanberg he has beaten the Swede He holds many European long-distance records and is anxious to run: St, Yves in this country. The Nome-Candle Creek dog race, promoted by the Nome kennel club, and upon whch hundreds of thous- ands of dollars were wagered, was won by DBergers teams, numbers one and two, driven by Scotty Allen and Percy - Blatchford, respectively. They finished first and second as named. Berger wins the purse of $11,000 in gold and will hold for a vear 'the handsome Suter trophy, hung up for the all-Alaska sweepstakes, The dis- tance was _ 412 miles; and the win- rer's time was 82 hours and 2 min- ates. The second team was 17 min- utes behind the first. Fink's Siberian dogs, upon whose success $100,000 was wagered, became snowblind and finished third, There were fourteen teams in the race, which began last | [hursday. The course wag lined with | mthusiastic citizens, most bf whom | closed their places of business during | the contest. The start was made in| » blizzard and the temperature rang- | d from 10 to 20 degrees below zero. | Che winners broke last year's record yy about 24 hours. } Freedom From Disease. Ii you are run down start running up towards "sound health. Debility | means a loss of a portion of life itself, | ality means new life, new energy, | freedom from disease and the power to | accomplish things. Wade's Iron Tonic | Pills (Laxative) build health by sup- | lying the system with rich vital] blood. { | { | | | "wm i I'hey are a great nerve strengthener at Money back if not wind' blood maker, Wade's Drug Store. satisfactory. In boxes, 25¢., Great Bog Slide In Ireland. As to the recent heavy | snowstorms, followed by equally heavy | rains, 4n Ireland, several serious mis- | haps have occurred. The most i on | | | a sequel us of these accidents was a bog slide it Kilmore village, near Ballygar; in') alway. At the foot of Mount Mary, | the slopes of which are covered with heath and bog over several thousand acres, there are little hamlets, oc- upied by small farmers, whose prin- cipal business is the cutting and sale of turf, The «larm was given by some | coftagers, who awoke'to find the house surrounded by bog, and a great hali- i"uid mass moving down the moun tain side. The occupants of the neighboring houses found themselves n a similar predicament, as they nar- nowly escaped with their lives, not having time even to dress themselves. I'he cabin of ap old woman named McDonnell was almost entirely sub- merged, only the chimney appearing above the mass, and the occupant was buried in the ruins. Several small [atmers lost all their stock, The woman who talks to a man about what interests her, rather than about what interests him, is either a born old maid or else supremely hap- pilyv married $100 REWARD, $100. The readers of this paper pleased to learn that there is at least pne dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and | that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure jis| the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a| constitutional disease, requires a consti-| tutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure | is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the] system, thereby destroy ng the founda-| tion of the disease, and giving the | patient strength by building up the con- | stitution and assisting nature in doing | its work. The proprietors have so much | faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. 0 Sold by all Druggists, 75¢. | Take Hall's Family Pills for constipa-| tion. | will be CHENEY & CO., Toledo LOOK FOR THE TRADEMARK ow» THE T. F. HARRISON CO. IEE, ECT EAL. TORONTO. WINNIPEG, WASHINGTON. 'T. Y VES THE RACE A SrTNNTNG. BEFORE CE.. 3 In the greatest Marathon race Yves, of France, gave a splendid e Jumping to the front at the pisto there for the entire distance but f overhauled by Shrubb, the Englig man was not to be denied ,howevh which he maintained to the end, fi horse. Fully thirty thousand pers | | giant, as Bismarck i not of a glant, since giants are THON ? ever held in America, Henri St. xhibition of pluck and endurance. 1, the game little Gaul stayed or a short period when he was runner. The game little French- Tr, and soon regained the lead, nishing the last lap like a quarter ons saw the performance. lin a letter to the Times by an Ame- {think of senoing any other. Sold only POSED BY MISS. RAY GILMORY, CF ANNA HELD CO DER ~ PHOTO BX JOEY YE The combination of cotton net with fine embroidery is ar abso- lutely new notion that dressmaker son. This frock of coin spotted w s are using to advantage this sea- edge embroidery in straight bands and in a rounded, drapery effec The net is mounted over lavender mented with violet velvet ribbon gnd a cabuchon surrounded by violets. bite net is trimmed with "etect} silk and the leghorn hat is orna of white roses { REACHING THE POLE Peary Talks About His Luck. Philadelphia Record. Z Commander Peary was talking in New York about the luck he would have in reaching tne pole with the Roosevelt. "They say you are a fatalist,"" said a feporter. "They say that you be- lieve you are fated to fipd the pole before vou die." The explorer laughed. "If I am a fatalist,"" he said, "T as- sure you my fatalism is of the work- ing and strenuous kind--like that of old Abe Cruger. "Old Abe lived in New England in the days of Indian warfare. He was a fatalist of a pronounced type; never- theless, he would not venture forth without his blunderbuss. "One day he had an important er- rand, but the blunderbuss, when he came to get it, was missing from the rack made of antlers where it always hung. Some one of his family had taken it. Abe sat down to wait till it" was brought back. +" 'But, Abe, I thought you were list "' said a friend. So I am,' the old man answered. " 'Then why bother about your; blunderbuss ?' taunted the friend. : 'You are in no danger from the In- dians, since you can't possibly die till your time comes.' " "Yes," said the old man. 'But I was to meat an Indian and his time had come. It wauldn't do for me not to have any blunderbuss, would it? ' Commander a sup Ose President's Taft's Physique. London Times. : ts s The story of President Taft is told rican cdrrespondent : "The public has heard much of Mr. Taft's bigness. It true he hs the stature of a giant and the bulk of a had. But it is he has the strength, said not to be as strong as they look, { but of an athlete. He had it - when he went to Yale University, and has it still, being now fifty-one. It was then the custom at this famous col- lege to treat tne arriving freshmen a little roughly--to rag him, in short. | As the innocent recruit and the less | innocent sophomores walked up and down the pavement in front of the college green the sophomores would playfully elbow the freshmen into the gutter. "Mr. Tait also true that suffered this indignity like others. He said to the friend who was with him. 'I you'd walk {a little behind me when we meet that fellow next.' 'Yes, but why 2' 'Be- { cause ¢f he tries that again I am go- {ing to throw him over my shoulder, and I should like vou to eatch him. And he did: and from that time on nobody molested the Ohio fresh- { man." wish | "Every ladv in Kingston" knows the quality of Huyler's, McConkey's jand Neilson's high-class sweets. Don't at Gibson's Cros€ drug store. { Phone 230, t is the people who are never dull that leave the most yawning gaps be {hind them when (hey pass on from { this stage of existence to another. | Fresh garden and flower seeds at bson's Red Cyoss drug store. Phone 230, |= Red MAKE GOOD READING. The) Stories Concerning Freak Bets at Lloyds. The freak bets at Lloyds would make volumes of curious and interest- ing literature, Any agent of Lloyds wil tell you that he does not know what les company would insure, but he hag never Yd of anything which it would not. Suppose you fancy there is a pink-eyed seal swimming on the Arctic coast near the me ith of the Mackenzie river and the Smith- sonian institution offered to pay %10,- 000 if you could get that particular kind of seal. You cable to Lloyds to insure the risk and you can get that wager on at very little more than the cost of the premium, if you care to pay it. They will insure the enter- prise to succeed or to fail as you like. nce upon a time there was an old noble in England, gouty and a little bit scared, who had been told that his heart was going three beats faster thant ought to run. This nobleman went to Lloyds and bet that he was going to die soon. Lloyds took the bet and the premium, employed a doctor, who reduced his heart action to normal. The nobleman got well and his loss to Lloyds was, of course, a real gain. - Bronchitis More Than a Cold it Becomes Chronic and Returms Again ahd Again, Wearing Out Its Victim. At Other Times it Develops Rapid- ly Into Pneumonia--Cure is Found in Pw. Chase's Syrup cf Linseed and Turpentine. Sometimes Any cold is serious enough when its dreadful possibilities are considered, but when there is soreness or tight- ness in the chest and a dry hard cough you can look for bromchitis, which is often confused with an ordinary cold. It is usually known by aching limbs and body pains, chilly feelings, weari- ness and weakness, pain in the chest and a tight, tearing cough. Fever, dry skin, thirst, coated tongue and constipation are other symptoms. Dr. Chase's Syrup of Linseed aad Turpentine seems almost like a specific for bronchitis because it is so success- ful in loosening up the cough, aiding expectoration and preventing the in- flammation from reaching the lungs. Bronchitis is particularly dreaded be- cause of its tendency to develop into pneumonia and even when this does not result bronchitis is likely jo re turn again and again whenever a slight cold is taken until it wears out even the most vigorous system. Dr. Chase's Syrup of Linseed Turpentine is so prompt in affording relief and so thorough and far-reach- ing in action that it succeeds when ordinary cough medicines have mo in- fluence. James F. Thompson, Yonge Mills, Leeds county, Ont., writes: 'Last win- ter my two boys were so bad with leolds on the chest or bronchitis that they coughed all night and could get no rest or sleep. Séveral cotigh reme- dies were tried to no avail until 1 was told about Dr. Chase's Syrup of Linseed and Turpentine and this treat- ment soon cured them." 25c. a bot- and j It is a wise cow that would know its own milk in the measuring tin. tle, at all dealers, or Edmanson, NET AND EMBROIDERY GOWN] THE SUIT You may choose from the many different styles "abd The swellest you ever saw. Prices, $7.50, $9.50, $11.50, $13 and $18, AEE THE HAT A We will show you Hats of the very latest shapes and blogks. Prices $1.50, $2 and $2.50. ™ 3 NECKWEAR ) we will show you the latent a, § wi 8 For your selection of a Tie, direct from New York. SHIRTS 5 All new and Up-to-Date. a GLOVES The new colorings in Spring Weight Gloves, Perrin and Freres', male. The best in the world. \ - ) Mothers of Boys, should see our exclusive designs = Boys' Cloth- ing. The very top notch of elegance. Come in and see. , ¢ ¥ * Roney & Co 127 Princess St. : - DEWARS "Special Liqueur" is soft, mellow and fragrant! _ 3 Ja Will interest you. All the new fads and fancies of Shoédoin are here, for Ladies', Suede Tops, in Brown and Grey, with Pat. ent Vamp are the Smart Dress Shoes this sesson, Grey amd Brown Suede Pumps, with large ribbon bows, another Sonu effect. Tan Oxfords and low two hole ties, are in big \ . Patent Colt Oxfords are always dressy. 3 ; ' For Men who care, we are showing many Smart Shoes, Pas- ent Colt Blucher and Button are correct dress shoes, for those who are interested in something unasuming, Packard's Kas. garos, Bal. is a.popular shoe. Oxfords, in Tan ahd" Pat ent Colt, in all the new lasts and styles. a For Children, our window display shows the finest line evér carried in Kingston. We would deem it a great favor if our fri would early this week, as the service is much bette? than during . Saturday rush. -h J. H. SUTHERLAND & BRD, ™'suoe Maines . . ' 9 S Mu 7 ' Bates & Co., Toronto. Canada Life Assurance Company, Imperial Guarantee and Accident Insurance Co., Western Fire Assurance Company = Last Mountain District--North-West Lands, Special Excursions for Prospective Pur . Cobalt Stocks. : For Full Information Call or Correspond With J. O. HUTTON, AGENT. OFFICE--18 Mczr ket St.. Kingston, Ont. SPECIAL EASTER COODS SECURE YOUR EASTER CHOCOLATE NOVELTIES While there is a large assortment to choose from. R.H. TOYE, ** EST ¥