------ -- - 'Bet Rid of The Dust Nuisance In Your House Floor-dust carries most of the germs that fake doctor's bills mount up. Floorglaze makes floor dust not worth ! reckoning with. Because Floorglaze, the can't wear-oft enamel in ten shades, practically DOES glaze a floor. And dust won't lodge on afFloorglazed floor. Saves 4 lot of housework, --and banishes a plenty of disease. Floorglaze and rugs, with the smallest care, insure the health of the house- hold and make a better - looking house. Anybody can apply Floor- glaze,--a gallon does 500 square feet. Just as good outdoors as indoors, --and nothing else does so well for either. Why don't you get your floors disease proof? Your dealer should have Floorglaze. Let us know if he hasn't, You would find our Free Book interesting read- ing. May we send you a copy? Ask on a postcard. Imperial Varnish & Color Co., Limited, of Toronto. s Sold W. A. MITCHELL and H W. MARSHALL, Retail Jobbers, King- ston, Ont, Plumbing In Your Kitchen js just as essentink-as in "any % other part of your home PORCELAIN LINED SINKS AND STATIONARY WASH TUBS are now considered Practically indispensable by lovers of cleanliness and order. We__ can equip your kitchen at compara- tively little expense. David Hall 66 Brock St. "Phone, 335, Hed bbir bbb breed The People : Know. That's Why They 3 Ask For : ELEPHANT READY MIXED PAINTS are made from pure lead and oil; It suits them and that is the reason why progres- sive people buy them The Home of Good Paints 3 H.W. MARSHALL. Successor to A. Strachan. BEER Ap---- * - INDIGESTION AND NERVOUS TROUBLES Can be positively cured by the use| of Hygiene Koln Uelory and Pepsin en- | dorsed by Physicians as the World's best tonic, Write for free sample. HYGIENE KOLA LIMITED, 84 Church 8t., Toronlo, Bold by all Druggists 'and Stores. i $ "- : The shades are clean, clear ! and perfect. They know they : wy | PALMER BROS. Marine & Statiomary Gasoline Epgines . Make and break and jump spark, two and four cyéle, one to four cylinders. Owiy engines' are simple and reliable Rranch Office: Cornwall Dock, Alexandria Bay, N.Y WILFRED IL. SNIDER, General Sales Agent. : i IR A Apt Si MEN AND WOMER, Use Big @ for unnatural harges, inflammations, tions or nicerations of we Owe membranes, esa, and pot astrine gent or poisonous, Sold by seat $a plain w TORDAT, repaid, for "1 Xpress: P 91.00, or 3 battles $2.75. Circular sent ob request. FLOWER BORDER 7c. 'Ft. Ornamented Fenee, from, : i Field Feria, [rom $e. vod, Ry Ares gent Wire and lron w os Sad : PARTRIDGE & SONS | Manngactured King St. West, 'Phone, 880, PRAISE FOR EARL GREY SOMETHING ABOUT CAREER OF CANADA'S VICEROY. Thorpe Lee In London Daily Mail Lauds the Governor-General For His Enthusiasm and the Good Canadian Spirit of His Stay Here --Ruled In Rhodesia In Negligee-- Has Worked Hard, His Excellency Earl Grey has been successful to a noteworthy 'degree as Governor-General of Canada, Canadians of all classes have heard with complete satisfaction the news | that for another yoar he will remain with us as the cial link connecting us with the 'Motherland. He under- stands his position well. - He jnows the points at which it demands no initiative, but he displays initiative of a high order whenever the march of events suggests am opportunity. The manner in which he carried through the Quebec Tercentenary celebrations is 'an instance of this. Mr! Hamar Greenwood recently said: "The greatest compliment I can pay Earl Grey is to say that he came to Canada an Englishman and he re- turns to it a-keen Canadian." In the course of an article in The London Daily Mail, Thorpe Lee praises Earl Grey's enthusiasm and then says: "in England, before he 'went to Canada five years "ago, there were some who estimated Lord Grey at his trie worth. They saw what he had done for such causes as co-operition, garden cities, and 'public house re form. They had heard of his ungen- ventional rule in Rhotésia, where, as Administrator, he was ready either to listen or to, talk to all comers, and received them 'meually in an airy eos- tume consisting of 'flannel shirt and trousers with a slouch hat. They knew he 'was a strong Imperialist and at the same time 'a convinced Social Reformer, a combination equal- ly desirable and rare. Bat it 'was left to Canada to bring out the great- ness of the man 'who went 'in 1904 'to be the Dominion's GovernorsGeneral; and it is Canada which has taught us over here in England te appreciate one of the finest Englishmen of our time. "Never has the Sovereign's repre- sentative in the Dominion been more universally popular. He is liked be- cause he 'puts. on no side.' He is respected because he is a man of business with actual experience of affairs, and can meet Canadian busi- ness men upon their own-ground. He is trusted and admired by reason of his sympathy «not mere lip sympathy) | with every ood work. "1 regard the British Empire," he said at Winnipeg recently, 'de the most potent instrument 'that has ever been ashioried 'or conceived by an for spreading the blessings of equal rights and impartial justice, of Christian service and tre chivalry 'all over the earth." "Wa, in our sneering, cynical way, may smile at such enthusiasm. They recognize in Lord Grey the faith that ean move mountains, as well as the simple honor and straightness which made the Archbishop of Que- bee say of him that 'no one could have sot a finer example in the per- formance of Christian duty both in public and in private life'." "It in curious to look back mow ahd recall Albert Grey's firsp appear- ance in politics as a Liberal. Tt was in 1878 that he entered the Housgd of Commons, but only to remain iff it for a few minttes! He and his Consetvative opponent polled the giime "niitdber of votes. As the re- titrning offi¢er rafuged to give a cast- ing 'vote, 'they 'both presented them- elves at 'the table in the House and demanded to be sworn as M.P. How- over, '4 scrutiny was ordered, and the seat went 'to the Conservative. Two years later Mr. Grey was elected with- ont any dotbt. Then he was twenty nine, a 'young man who had done well at Oxford ; who had married the creat heiress, Miss Holford, who was heir 'to 'his uncle's peerage; who had the world most cemfartably warmed for him without any effort of his own. "Bat warmth and comfort were not what he wanted. 'His energy demand- od work, adventure, experience, At first he plunged into social questions at home. Now he would be presiding at a co-operative CORgress; now push- ing a plan to beautify railway em- bankments; now lénding his support to one of General Booth's schemes. One day he was granted a licenses for a public house on his estate. Next day he found he could sell the pro- perty, it _he chose, for $50,000. The monstrous absurdity of it strack him. He became the untiring advocate of public house 'trusts. For a time this, accupied him; then he began to pin for a wider field. He found it through the ageney of Cecil Rhodes. Rhodes wanted someone to help him in ob- taining a ehartér for Rhodesia. Lord! Grey (he had succeeded to the title in 1394) was just the man. Afterwards he became Administrator, and a trus- tee under Rhodes' will. "When the Governot-Generalship of ; Canada was offered to him he was not particularly 'anxious to go. But! it was 'a. great opportunity; and as soon as he had nocepted it Ne beg to see what work for the Bagire he. could do. The speech he I oe at a dinner given to celebrate his a int- ment simply = sparkled . with | Jest. There was in it none of the solethn{ I portentousness which is usual in pro-i o Can consular uttérances. anadians very soon fook to this modern Don, Quixote, "this unusual Englishman with the Trish eyes 'and none of the! Fnglith stiffness. In five 'years he hus made himself a great: name," With Lady Aberdeen. Lady Aberdeen is accompanied on Her tour to Canada by Dr. Ogilvie Gordon, who won her diploma at Aberdeen University, and who is honorary secretary of the Internation- al Council of Women, and by "her family physician, Sir William Thomp- son. . Holland's Industries. The principal industries in Halland are cattle-breeding and dgriculture. Wm. Murray Auctioneer , 27 BROCK ST. Wew Carriages, Cutters, Harness, Sale of Horses evary Saturday, FLORIST; . MADILL A CANADIAN, Abraham Lincoln's Friend Was Born ) In Fredericton, N.B. hh Those who have read the Lincoln 1 } | { iterdture with which for the) past | twelve months the newspapers and | magazines have justly been deluged, | have heard a good deal about Joseph Medill, who in later days became the | most éminent journalist of the mid- dle west, but few are aware that Jos- | eph Medill was a' Canadian. No poli- | tician or statesman ever attains any | position in the world in a democracy without a "few newspaper "pals," | . | with he can sit down and talk out as without fear of their | publication until the proper time | comes, 'and who are in a position to | make things clear to the genaral pub- lic and clear up, as a public man is seldom able to do #lact ively, any misapprehensions with whic! the public mind may have become pos- sessed. 'That is precisely what Jos- eph Medill did for Lincoln, and it is intimated by Miss Tarbell, one of the great statesman's numerous wor- shippers, that after Lincoln became president Medill wanted to become adviger in chief and made trips to Washington to tell the. object of his loyalty, and indeed adoration, that he was going wrong. "But the point of interest for Cana- dians is that 'the newspapérman who Lincoln the nominee of the Bepubli- can party and the president of the United States was a Canadian of Scottish-Trigh 'ancestry, born in Fredericton, N'B., in 1823. Tt is true that' he was to all intents and pur- poses an American; for when he was nine years old his father, a farmer, took his family to what he deemed the more congenial tegions of Canton, Ohio. When only twenty-six years old he was editor of a paper which did not advocate the abolition of glavery in the states where it was 8l- ready established, but was bitterly opposed to its extension to any of the new territories then being opened up for settlement. As students of the political history of the English-speak- ing part of this continent are aware, this was Lincoln's initial policy. though he was afterwards foreed to carry it to its logical development. As editor of The Chicago Tribune in later years and as first citizen of Chi- cago, a eity whose English-speaking population is in a very large degree Canadian, his fame became wide- spread, and in a reckoning of what the United States owes to' Canada the name of Joseph Medill would be on our side of the ledger. Got His Ox-Blood. Bir William Van Horne, the far- seeing C.P.R. magnate, has many in- terests in Cuba, where he is presi dent of the Cuba Railway Co., a well built line, operating through the rich provinces of Santa Clara, Camaguey, and Bantiago, and which is busy ex- tending branches to the outlying fruit and sugar plantations in all direc- tions. Bir William is interested in 'sugar cane, and in conjunction with his son, R. B. Van Horne, 'Operates a large grape fruit plantation of 100 acres in the province of Camaquey. An amusing story is told of Bir William at Camaqueys where. the Cuba Railway Co.'s large hotel is lo- cated. | Thig building covers about five acres, was formerly a Bpan- ish cavalry barracks. Shortly after acquiring the property he was look- ing it ower and suggesting what al- terations were necessary. The boss painter asked what color he thought best for the floors. Bir William pro- being cool and appropriate. You can imagine. his surprise on his. return to the hotel several days after to behold the painters with their 'boots off and pants rolled up, energetically following orders "and with "brooms painting "the floors with + ox-blood, which they had obtained fresh from the shadfhter-house. ------------------i At Famous Club. The Mayor of Toronto and the City Treasurer "were guests of "Some im- portance at the May dinner of the Sphinx Olub held 'at the Hotel Ceeil. Mr. Oliver's little speech was cordial ly received, as was Mr. Coady's. The Sphinx Club has something of 'a Canadian' connection "and has enter- tained Capadian puts, 'at various times. = The. president, Mr. Ralaton Balch, 'is fhe 'Son of a former canon of Christ Church Oathedyal, Montreal, and there 'are "Canadians eonnedted with the management, The club gives dinners each month 'and 'enter- tains distinguished guests 'such as Lord Alverstone, 'the Lord Chiel Jus- tice: Archdeacon ' Sinclair, of 8t. Paul's Cathedral; the lending drama- fists, sach "a8 Mr. Alfred Sotro and others: 'writers like Anthony: "Hepe, and Rider Haggard; distinguished a] | military men. "About the Mink. "A. careful stady of the mink shows that they travel fegular ipaths along streams, wind are 'very curions. - This the experienced trapper knows; and it is through this knowledge that #0 many Aare tured every 'year for the tur trade mink is an expert at climbing tree, and many of the young of our finest wild birds fall prey to his thirst to'kill. He is @lso an ex- pert at -eatéhing fish, and wherever the brook trout is plentiful there also the mink will be found. Mink are always more numerous in gottled parts of the country, evidently because thére is more food, such as mice, mugkrats, owl, etc. 'They are very destructive to the young of the wild ducks and the ruffed grouse. During the winter months many grouse have been found killed and partly eaten by mink. Eskimo Woman Magnate. { Probably one of the most remark- | able woman magnates in the world is | Mary Coonie, & full-blooded Eskimo | whose possessions of earthly wealth | are all within the Arctic circle, says tne June Popular Mechanics. She is an absolute opposite to Hetty Green, |'the most noted woman magnate of | the civilized world, in that she knows | no civilization other than that of the | 'Arctic eircle, and cannot even read or | write her name. Her private secre | tary is an Englishman of note. | Spend Sunday In Watertown. | "Only $1.65 return, going Saturday | or Sunday, returning Sunday or Mon- | day. Buy Abby Salt and Bromo Seltzer at Gibson's Red Cross drug store did 'more than anyone else to make posed a nice shade of ox-blood ae' JUNE 26, 1909. In the Silver Country. It is wonderful to see he ltnats 9p here, surging out and out in of silver, writes A. C. Pulver of The Toronto World, from the Gowganda country. Some are ill-equipped, others load- ed down, but all have hopes a that's the reason. The incomprehensibl® studies are the derelicts that roam through the bush, live on anything and sleep any- where, sometimes fellows with splen- tether. oo pieces cl ii , "De whiskered and grimy, and hopeful and never whimpering. Oftentimes they make a strike and the report urges on the rest of a for- Jorn-looking "contingent, and at any rate there is no room for pop-eyed and cotton-mouthed hangers-on, It's get there or get out! I've seen men who could hardly write their names, get $500 in ten minutes on a showing of silver in samples brought. And that same day the poker table gets the "stake" and the blind pig shares it. There is no lamenting. It's the way of it. While in a lawyer's office the other day, I overheard an Indian giving powers of sttorney to a man just about to leave' for the city. The man wanted the nin badly, go there are chances that it's worth something. The Indian didn't object and' when the lawyer asked him how long he intended giving 'a power of attorney, he simply grunted and sgid "All time." "For life?" asked the lawyer. "Yes," said the Indian. it?" asked the lawyer, "Say to 10 years." "Alright," said the Indian, and the | rity man didn't appreciate the situa- tion, and by which it's inferred that wll lawyers are not half bad. Didn't Care Far Scotch. On her trip to the Arctic Circle last summer Agnes Dean Cameron found that food was the main, in fact al- most the only object in life in the uncultivated "barren lands" of the north. On her long boat journeys through the Great and Lesser Slave Lakes and on the Slave and Macken: zie rivers, records of the Hudson Bay Co. that stretch back More than two hundred years were open to her at every post. Poring over one of these closely written diaries she found nar- rated from day to day the story of an especially hard season Driven des- perate by hunger two Indian women attacked ,a couple of mail carriers on the Mafkenzie, killed them, partially devoured the bddies and 'made the | rest into pemiéan." Charged with the crime, they confessed. "We asked," wrote the Hudson Bay fact in his: prosdic way, "what the flesh was like, and they replied that one of the men was very good, but the little red Scotchman tasted of tobacco." Politician arid Amateur Actor. Those who were at the Tercentenary celebration in Quebec last summer will long remember the superb ap- pearance of the man who played Champlain. Standing in the Don de Dieu, the ship modelled on that in which Champlain weathered the At- lantic and the perils of the gulf of St. Lawrence, or seen 'on Plains of sAbraham 'in the various historical scenes of the pageant, he was a fine figurg. Made up with a Van Dyke beard, with the sweeping hat and black velvet eostume of the seven- teenth century, he 'was dramatie, etriking alike in bearing and deelama- tion. ost of the visitors who saw the pageant assumed that he 'wis some peid actor brought over by Mr Frank Lascelles. As a matter of fact it was Hon. Charles Langelier, the sheriff of Quebec, a noted Liberal politician in his day, an ex-member both of the Quebec Legislature and the House of Commons, and a former Minister in 'the Cabinet, of the late Honore Mercier. Lord Aylmer Turns Farmer. Jord Aylmer, formerly Inspector- General of Militia Forces, has moved to Queen's Bay, Lake Kootenay, B.C.. with his fapuly. He has purchased land on the lake shore, which he in- Jende wo devote to the cultivation.of ruit, Got Out by Hole An attempted burglary dnde rather peculiar circumatances was reported from Motherwell, England, recently. A shop at North Motherwell was dur- ing the night entered by thieves, who gained. an entrance by making a hole in_the brick wall at the rear of the building. The shop is in the Miners' Rows, and the lights used by the bur- glars attracted the ettention of the tesidents, "who crowded round the door to prevent the escape of the thieves. They called the police and awsited developments; but when the sonttable entered it was found that the thieves had made their escape by the hole, quite unobserved by" the watehers." They went without their booty, however. Designer of "'Dreadnoughts." 'fhe man who has credted a new anval standard by designing. Dread- noughts is Mr. ohn Harper Narbeth, a naval architeel employed in the ®onhstruction department of the Ad- miralty. Mr. Narbeth began life as a shipbuilding apprentice at Pem- broke Dock, and iltimately joined the designing staff at the Admiralty. When the plans of the Dreadnought were first submitted, they did not eapture the fancy of the Lords of the Admiralty. Afterwards, however, the merits of the design were recognized. When not busy over his plans at Whitehall, Mr. Narbeéth is to be found | at Wandsworth Corhmon, where for | many years he has made his home. 1 Strange Little Dramas. Are Enacted Britioh Columbia Hunter S\Exciting | nd spondent in Victoria. i aa 1 "But wouldn't it be better to limit | Scaly, Blotchy Skin. Is a type of irritating skin disease | that's becoming very common. It 'Adventure -In the Rockies. Apropos of the presence of much tines 'game in the settled portions of Columbia this year, the fol- lowizle aocoutts of a hunter's encoun- | fer a wounded bear near Fernie | { is 'worth reproduction, writes a corre- | Bears have been so plentiful in the vicinity of P , and have ventured so néar setlléements, that many loecl sportsmen have made successful trips | into the adjacent mountains in search | of big game. { One of these excursions on Oct. 12 narrowly escaped ending in tragedy | and, as it is, the hunter is still 1n | the 'hospital suffering from severe | younde inflicted by the infuriated animal he had wounded, The wound: | led man, pamed Price, proceeded a | | few miles north of here, in the Wootls- | McNab Co.'s timber limits, where sev. | eral bears had been seen, dnd soon | discovered the tracks of ome of the | anfmals. About two miles above the | company's mill Price came on throe | bears, and he shot, wounding one. | which, however, made off into the | woods. He tracked the animal for a | couple of hours, and was about to { give up the chase, when, on entering | some heavy underbrush, he came sud- | 1 at the animal, and before he could | | denly on his quarry, not a guns | length from him. He fired point blank | Et out of its way it.gtruck him a eavy blow on the head, and before | | he could recover himself the madden: | ed animal had sprung on him and in- | flicted some terrible wounds with its | claws and teeth. The injured man fought desperately in the unequal con | test, snd, though of powerful phy gique, was rapidly becoming exhaunst- | ed, when the animal for some un- deconntable reason left its prey and wandered into the bush. Price hound up his wounds as best he could and | dragged himself down the mountain, | where he was discovered by another | hunter. who assisted him to the lum | bor mill, where a conveyance was se- i eared and the injured man was driven | | into Fernie and his wounds dressed | | by Dr. Corsan. 'The man's leg end | arm had been badly chewed by the | bear, and, though weak from loss of | { trance requirements, , can be obtained on application | plood and the terrible experience through 'which he had come, it Is thought he will recover. How Fires Start. What starts the forest fires? This | question has been asked over and | -- over again this year. Campers and locomotives, is the usual answer Many of the other things whieh start blazes in the forests are forgotten It is true that perhaps one-half tO three-fourths of the forest fires do | begin as a consequence of the eare lessness of some camper or from sparks flying from locomotives, but set the woods afire fires the cause is not known. This the air is too thick to permit the smoke to be seen at a distance by the forest officer. 1 campers would be sure to ex- tinguish their fires before moving, and if the railroad companies would use efficient spark arresters, it is reasonable to think that the annual forest fire loss could be reduced more than one-half. In the case of light- hing, man has no greater responsibil- ity than to put the fire out as soon as possible after diseovery. Careless brush burning by homesteaders and persons clearing land is said to be the cause of many of the fires whi¢h have started this year, particularly those which have swept over the Lake country. Seekin Bare Caribou. Dawsonei, the eéariboo of an unde- will be accompanied by Samuel Whit- taker, his assistant, and it is hoped that in this wild and inaccessible dis trict some specimen of the animal, if it existe, will be found The belief in the existence of ithe speeies 1s, based upon the discovery of a fragmentary skull and one horn, but the descrip tion of the skin by a gentleman whe saw it warranted Ernest Thompson Saton in his conclusion. Any doubt in the mind of the naturalist was set at rest by Commender Hunt snd Lieut Bills, formerly of H M.8) Bhearwater, visit there some years ago. Mr. Ker- mode has longed for a specimen for ent tour will be successful ¢ Looking Ovér Wheat Areas. A prominent visitor to Canada a ghort- time ago was ex-Provost Mar shall of Maybole, Ayrshire, Scotland, who has been in the Dominion on a trip found the world. Mr. Marshall Alexander Jack & Sons (Limited), and is one of Beofland's best known men He has always taken 'a wery great in terest in farming, and is ready to do {'all in his power to make the work easier for the farmer by producing néw machinery and impleménts. Ms Marshall will visit Australia, New Zealand, India, and Europe before re turning to Seotland. Students Who Collect Souvenirs. "That the souvenir habit has taken a strong hold in university circles is facts," says the students' paper of To | torks and four teaspoons." Last G.T.P. Survey. The locating of the main line of the | Grand Trunk Pacific between Edmon- | ton and Prince Rupert has been com- pleted. Tt has occupied nearly two | years. Survey parties are employed in the vicinity of Fort George in een- tral British Columbia forming the spreads rapidly 'and effects different | last of the big force in the field: parts of the body. If your skin is! ' itchy and irritable use a quick-acting | Tn ns remedy like Dr Hamilton's Ointment: | it penetrates the skin, allays the itching, gives reli at once. For any skin irritation, roughness or chapping, | { | Here's A Tip For You. { Montreal Star % 5 A New York waiter, peid R30 a there is nothing so certain as Dr, | month, has saved S200 000 in thirty Hamilton's Ointmeént. Sold by all; four years This! is nat =o much a dealers, in 50c, boxes, . C-- problem of the Ligh Mechanical, and Mining Examinations wi June 14th and Septembre Strd | and Examinations for - {fore Friday, « TO CERTAIN POINTS IN! CONNEC { hibitions and Third 3 TION WITH THE ABOVE WILL NOT | | will commence on Seplember ¢ regarding examination J. A. NICHOLSON, M.A. Margaret's Col -- TORONTO there are a number of things which | | For more than one-third of the | A High-Class Residential and Day School is not strange when it is remembered | for Giris under the management of that a fire may smoulder for days if | Miss J. E. MacpoxaLD, B.A, Principal, Large Staff of Teachers, Graduales of Canadian ond English Universities. ¢ Full Academic Curse for Universily Matriculation with Physical Education. Write for Booklet to the "ecretary, St. Margaret's College, Toronto, Royal Victoria College =~ Montreal. A residential hall for ents of McGill University. rs Students of the College Arts of McGill Univer- on identical terms with seribed species whic a oh separate classes. i eri pect which is supposed 10 1, "ihe lectures given by the Professors have as its habitat the Queen Char- tand Lecturers of the Universit, studerits lotte group of islands, Frank Ker- |are assist mode, curator of the British Cdlumbia IN provincial museum, left recently for (annually. the north on the steamer Amur. He |~¢ . Instruction in all branches In search of the fabled Rangifer to th the McGill , Conservatorium of Music For further particulars, address The Warden, Royal Victoria College, MONTREAL, | COBALTS MARGIN Cobalt Stock on| BE. BE. HORSEY, J. P. HANLFY also New York Stocks, | who found tracks of the animal and a : margin deposits ; ghed antler upon the occasion of a hefore investing. have the latest news All stock deliveries made prompt-| "5 Thousand Jind and $1. Lawrence Patriarche &Co., River Steamboat Companics STOCK DEALERS, Office, Standard Stock Exchange many years and believes that his pree- orders at our expenses N.Y. We have direct wires con- pecting all our offices. ° . R. H. TEMPLE ®& SON Members Toronto Stock Exchange. is head of the large implement firm of { Orders executed and New York Exchange. | COBALT STO {10 Melinda St, witnessed by the following set of ronto University, editorially. "Since the beginning of the fall term the dining-hall has so far lost twenty-four | dinner knives, twenty-three small | Baggage to and from Station free. Send 3 stamp for N.Y. Olty Guide Book end Mas IN CONNECTION WITH Canadian Pacitic Railway {| Dominion Day Round Trip Tickets will « be 'sold 'at sle "iy Fare Good going June 30th, and Sho )UNLOP | LG Good for re*urn until July And, | Next Homeseekers' Excursions Ll Will leave on Juibe "15th, 20th 3 43th, U7; Aug. 10th, 24th ; Sept. {th aus. Wibkets good for 60 days: | Fan particulars at K. &: P. and ©. T2 Rw office, Ontaric street. Fy BE , Gen. Pass. Agent. ILL UNIVERSITY MONTREAL | Session 1909-1910 PAY OF QUINTE BATLWAY. 'wa , Ontario y excepted) anes, Deser- uA ham, outa, Bannockburn and all points north: To secure quick despatch to Bannock. 'hen, Maynooth, avd 'points on Central FOn(arib. ate your shipments via Bay of Quinte Rallway. For fu, ther particu tars, apply R. Wi DICK; WON, 'Phones, No. 3. \ Dominion Day, Thursday, July 1st, 1909 Round trip tickets will be fssued at SINGLE FIRST-CLASS FARE, good oing Wednesday and Thursday, June AGth and July Ist, returning on or be- Yur 2nd. TICKETS SOLD BE VALID ON "TRAINS 1 and 4. /INDEPENDENCE DAY, July 4th, 1909 Tickets will be issued, Kingston to Prescott and return, at $2.10, good go ing Saturday, Sunday and Monday, July 8rd, 4th and 5th, returning on or before Tuesday, July 6th. Homeseekers' Excursions To the Canadian North-West, Mani- toba. Saskatchewan and Alberta. Low round-trip second-class tickets will be {ssued via Chicago, North Bay or Bud- bury, on following dates : June 1", 15th, 29th; July 13th, 27th; Aug. 10th, 24th ; Sept. 7th, 21st, Good to return within 60 days from e~'ag date. | ALASKA YUKON PACIFIC EXPOSITION Seattle, Wash., June 1st to Oct. 16th, 1909. Special round trip tickets on sale daily, May 20th 'to Sept. 30th, {jvod returning on or before Oct. Hist For full . particulars, J. P. HANLEY, Agent, Corner Johnson and Ontario Stay ee ee Quebec Steamship Company LIMITED. | River & Gulf of St. Lawrence Summer Cruises in Cool Latitudes S88. "Campana," with elactric lights, | | | electric bells and all modern comfort 'SAILS FROM MONTREAL ON MON- DAYS, at 4 pm 5th and 19th July, [2nd, 16th and 30th, August and 13th | September; fori Fictou, N.S. calling at | Quebec, Gaspe, Mal Bay, Perce, Grand | River and Charlottetown, PEL BERMUDA Summer Excursions. $20 to £30. hy | the. Twin Screw "Bermudiav," 5,500 } tons, 26th June, 7th, 17th and LRLh { July, at 11 a.m. and every 10 days | thereafter from New York. "Temperature cooled by breezes scldom rises | above 80 degrees. The finest trips of the season for | health and comfort, ARTHUR AHERN, Secrgtary, Quebec) For tickets and staterooms apply 10 J. P. HANLEY, or C. 8. KIRKPAT¥- RICK, Ticket Agents, Kingston, Ont. Lake "Ontario & Bay of Quinte Steamboat On, Limited. STEAMERS North King & Caspian 1000 Islands --Kingston --Rochester. Commencing June 27th, stéamer leaves for 1,000 Islands, Alexandria Bay and Gananogue at 10:15 a.m.; daily, except Monday Returning, steamer leaves at oO Pp ans for Bay 'of Quinte Ports and Port Mf Rochester, N.Y SPRALFETHA Leaves on Monday at 5 m for Picton and intermediate Bay of Quinte port ---------------- Full information from General Manager, C. 8, KIRKPATRICK Kingston, Ont JAR, SWIFT & CO. Agents, Kingston In connection with the New York Central and Hudson River R. R..Co. YTeave Kingston daily, except Sunday, 5.00 am. and 2.00 pm. Leave Kingston, Sunday, 7.50 a.m. and 2.00 p.m. Making direct connections at Caps Montreal | Vincent to and from all points in New | York State. Through sleeper Cape Vin- CKS A SPECIALTY. {cent to New York. * Week end round trip rate, Kingston to . pape Toronto. 'Phone M. 1639. | watertown, good going Haturday or 3 -- | Sunday, returning Monday. $1.65, For. excursions to, Brockville and Ogdensburg and the Thousand Islands, Members Standard Stock Exchange see local advertisements. Listed and Unlisted Securities Bought | information regard ing . BATEESE MINES, LIMITED |The Peoples Str Stranger (CAPT. HAMMOND.) Wharf," Foot Clarence St. The Scenic Houte to Gananoque, leav4 ing: Kingston daily, (Sunday excepted.) Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, at 4 p.m. Tuesdays, Thursdays and Satuf- days, at 3.30 p.m.' Calling north sida of Howe Island. Steamer open for Pie- nies and Private Parties. For informa- tion, apply to the Captain, on board steamer TO KINGSTON MILLS, Mondays, Wednesdays end Fridays. Leave King ston, 10.30 a.m. Fare, 15c; return, 26¢cy STR. ECELWAT Will start regular trips to Kingston Mills, June 12th. Leave Swift's Wharf, foot of Clarence street, 10 a.m., return 12 a.m. Leave 2 p.m., return at five. Leave 7 p.m., return at 9 p.m; Return fare, 25¢, CAPT. I. WHALEN, Unp