Daily British Whig (1850), 27 Aug 1909, p. 7

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THF DAILY BRITISH WHIG, FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 1909. Sn en -- TRAVELLING. TRL TEED, CANADIAN NATIONAL EXHIBITION TORONTO, Aug. 28th to Sept. 13th, 190 Round Tickets will be {issued at $4.90 jing AUGUST 28, 29, 30 ; Sept 7.8,.9,10,11, and at $3.58 AUGUST 21st and Monday, « pt 6th. All tickels rn on or before Sept. 14th good on trains 1, 2, 8 and 4 Central Canada Exhibition, Otta- wa, Ont., Sept. 10th to 18th Round trip tickets will be issued $3.70 wl going . 3, 1), 16 and 1%, and h Good going Fiesday t Thursday and Friday 1 19 and 17. All tickets good to return on or before Sept. 20th LABOR DAY, MONDAY, SEPT. 6th, 1909 Hound trip tickets will be {issued at SINGLE FIRST-CLASS FARE, good going Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday, Sept. 83rd, 4th, 5th and '6th, good returning on or before Wednesday, Sept. Bth. Tickets sold to certain points in connection with the above will not be kood on trains 1 and 4. For full particulars, apply to J. T HANLEY, Agent, Corner Johnson ani Uptario streets, Trip Tuesday, Tickets 'not al 12,13 INGTON J'EMBROKE » RAILWAY IN CONNZOTION WITH Canadian Pacitic Railway FARM LABORERS' EXCURSION 7.45 a.m., $10.00, go- returning. LABOR DAY fare hetween Sept. 3, 4, 6 Sept 7 at additional pt. 10th $15.00 tickets at single good going until Wednesday urn tations { return 1009 Central Canadian Exhibition Ont,, Sept. 10th 18th tickets will be Sept 15, 18, $3.70; 14, 75. All tickets good re before Sept. 20th Exhibition 13th, be issued 28, 30; to issued Sept Ottawa Round trip 31, 143, 17 2 Lo on Canadian National Foronte Aug. 28th to 1909. Round 'Prip Tickets wil at $4.90, good going AUGUST pt. 2.8, 4,7, 9 10,11 and at $3.55 on ig : ept 1st, 6th and Sth, re- 14th, 1909. Full particulars and C.P.R Ticket Office v F'. CONWAY, Pass no Sept At Gen BAY OF QUINTE RAILWAY. Train leaves union station, Ontaric street, 4 p.m. daily (Sunday excepted for Tweed, Sydenham, Napanee, Deser onto, Bannockburn and all points north To secure quick despatch to Bannock burn, Maynooth, and points on Centra Ontario, route your shipments via Ba) po! Quinte Railway. For further particu lars, apply R. Wj; DIOKSON, Agent 'Phone, No. 8 g Tosa od a0 5. 1 River Steamboat Companies In connection with the New Yor} Central and Hudson River R. BR. Co. Teave Kingston dally, except Bunday 6.00 am. and 2.00 p.m. leave Kingston, Sunday, 7.830 a.m. and 2.00 p.m. Making direct connections at Oape Viuceut to and from all points In New York State. Through sleeper Oape Vin cent to New York. Week end round trip rate, Kingston tc Watertown, good going Saturday or Bunday, returning Monday $1.65. For excursions to Brockville and Ogdensburg and the Thousand Islands, see local advertisements. Lake Ontario & Bay of Quinte Steamboat Co., Limited. STEAMERS North King & Caspian 1 1000 Islands -- Kingston -- Rochester. June 27th, steamer leaves Islands, Alexandria Bay and Gananoque at 10.30 a.m., daily,' except Monday. Returning, steawer leaves at § pm., for Bay of Quinte Ports and Port of Rochester, N.Y STRALFETHA--Leaves on Mondays at 5 p.m. for Picton and Intermediate 'Bay of Quinte ports. Commencing for 1,000 Full infGrmation from E. E. HORSEY, J. P. HANLEY, General Manager, 0, 8, KIRKPATRICK Ont, JAS, SWIFT & 00. Agents, Kingston. Kingston, STR. ECELWAT Will start regular trips to Kingston fi Jur 12th. leave Crawford's- of Princess street, 10 a.m. eturn 12 a.m. Leave J p.m., return at Return fare, 25c¢, Children hall CAPT. L. WHALEN, Captain. { Phone, 571. It's as Good as Money ten Real Estate turns out deal better. It jumps ip than cash can earn inc often doubles itself in a very we We have some most desirable and could to be R for investments you tter use emember wt your cash wd talk it over with us spare ast fortunes are now propositions Full pa paying rticulars, 57 Brock St. being made | NOMEN HATE THEW 30ME THINGS OF WISDOM FOR MEN. No Man Has Yet, or Ever Will, . Understand a = Woman--She Wants a Firm, Lordly Man. For better or fyr worse, n6 mam ever yet understood a woman or ever will. Men may know this, but they do not realize it or they never would imagine that they could improve a wo- man by telling her about shortecom- ings. A woman hates to be corrected by 'a man, A man! Thoughtless, thankless, in- consistent man! This world would be a happier place if you ceased to go | about trying to make women more | sensible. The sensible woman gives man his} due. She admits he is stronger-- stronger physically, stronger in mind The very sensible woman admits that he should use his heaven sent power, Man should be the man, He should be her steps. Men object to the mare who is the better horse. But women hate to be forced to be chiefly responsible for pulling the cart of Matrimony. Woman, I say--and I do not speak is a» fool--likés well enough to be lorded. What 'she hates is weakness n a man." 8he hates lack of decision. Finding it, she develops into a bully Chen, if only the poor, henpecked hus. band knewit, there is nothing in the | world more ardently desired by the | worm | ecking® hen than that the thould tarn apd bully her and over. master her and force her to give in. And now I have some eight or nine | ther wise words to speak to you, O wmorléss man! And I say to you that women like men who do things. Unless you should make a false de- fuctiom I will put it this way, A wo- | nan hates a man who does nothing It is 'given to all men to do. A wo- nen seldom has compunction in tak- ing the money that a man has" in- herited and will share with her, but he man who cannot make money and 'an do nothing but part with it she | holds im low esteem. It is another ex- ample of the lacking humor of men that they should laugh at women who | fight for the hair of a Kubelik or kiss the ground trod upon by a conqueror. O man---selfish, egotistical, swagger | ing being--listen again, and get under- standing! Woman loves you and knows that you cannot love her as she loves, and she likes you to enjoy yourself and be happy But She hates you to forget to say, as you were wont to say, how well her dress becomes her, how charming she is looking to-night. She hates you to forget her wedding day--she can nev- 'r forget it. She hates you to inter- fere with the baby, because you know nothing about it. She hates to be left behind to mope when you go off | on your holiday, And she hates the way you worship your pipe. It is not fair that men should have always the consolation of their pipes and women only the consolation of their tears. Tobacco is fragrant, but tears are bitter.--Lon- don Express The Anniversary of Waterloo. If nothing else perpetuates the memory of Waterloo it will be the little eeremony which on every anni- versary of the great hattle hus to take place at Windsor--that is to say, the Duke of Wellington for the time is bound, as the condition of Nis ténure of Strathfieldsaye, to present to the sovereign of these realms a French flag--a tri-color--which is then hung up over the Iron Duke's bust in the guard room over against that of the Duke of Marlborough, whose living representative must perform corresponding feudal service with a French royalist flag on the 13th day of August, the anniversary of Blen- heim.--London Chronicle The Changing Sky. One of the most surpriging results of the eross motion of the fixed stars, as projected on the background of the sky, is the gradual falling to pieces of the familiar constellations. The stars are moving in all sorts of directions, some faster and some slower, and the inevitable consequence must be that in a few centuries the whole face of the heavens will be so changed that if we comld come back again to our earthly life we Should not recognize them. Of course a very long period of time will be required to produce a very great transformation Thiers and MacMahon. .M. Thiers disliked Marshal Mac- Mahon and never lost a chance of saying something to the soldier's dis- credit. ""Aha," he said on one occa- sion, standing with his back to the fire in his drawing-room as he was wont, "have you heard MacMahon's last? He went to the hospital to see some invalid sqldiers. 'And what has been the matter with you?' he asked a patient. 'Scarlet fever, mon general.' 'Ah! Bad thing that! It either kills a man or makes an idot of him. 1 have had it; I ought to know!" Down to Hard Pan. In moving and settling down, the family had subsisted on short rations, and one morning Mrs. Drew found herself facing an unknown deficit. "Nora," she said to the maid of all work, "what is there in the store- room?" "Every blessed thing but the tea an' coffee, given cut ra informed her, "and sure they will, if they lust long enough." The Only Crash. Beekon Strete--Yes, in order to es cape the reise and the confusion of the city we went to our country place out Worcester way Dorr Chester--And quiet there? Beekon Strete--Quite so The de- lightful calm was broken but once. "And how was that?" "Our caretaker split an infinitive® you found it The Cultured Cuisine. "So your daughter has been cooking school?" "Yes," answered Mrs. McGudley. "I suppose she has helped along the household economies?" "Not exactly. She has made us ap- preciate our regular cook so mach that we have to raise her wages every time she threatens to leave." f to wise lord of wo- | little | YOU NEED NOT DROWN. You In the Water. Ninety-nine times in one hundred frowning is the result of fright and frenzy. There is a public horror of cramps. Not one case of eramps in one thousand is dangerous if the vie- um knows what to do and does it. Every long-distance swimmer enteriog a race expects to get cramps, yet he doesn't drown and he doesn't stop swimming either. He keeps going un- til his legs are in knots; still, he does- n't sink. He plugs along until there isn't another kick in him, and even now he doesn't go down. Instead of that he rolls over on his bggk and waits for the boat to pick Wim up. It may be a minute or it may be an hour, but until the boat comes the ehpert will be floating around) like a ship. When you catch a cramp in your arms or legs don't get excited. You may yell, but keep yourself under control. Don't exert yourself, for it ittle or no effort to keep afloat. down the feeling of panic. a¢h out your arm or leg, as the may be, until you are straining he utmost, Then strain a bit hard- watch the lumped musele go The dangerous cramp is in the stom- ach. When that takes you your breath goes, and you are not able to shout for help or even to articulate a sound. I have known of just two cases among hundreds of thousands of swimmers, | When you get that kind of cramp vou may as well say your prayers. but you won't get it if you don't eat for two hours before going into the water, Professional swimmers go hungry half a day before entering a race, and they never know such a thing as a stomach cramp. If a bathér in trouble would use common sense he never would drown. The belief is general that three times uhder water for the drowning person | means crape and flowers. It's true if you make the mistake of taking water for air. Hold your mouth shut when you are under 'water, and you'll | keep going down and coming up all day. Don't exhaust yourself strug- gling. Relax every muscle and den't move a hand. You'll find that you'll { never sink lower than your ears, and | that in a few seconds you'll rise up until your shoulders are dry. You can keep on doing this indefinitely, but, { of course, if you drink water you'll be | weighed, and down you'll go. | « Lobster Well Diggers. | "Lobsters! dispel drought in Aus. | tralia," said a traveler. '"'Australian | colonists, at the height of a drought, | often find their dried springs miracu. lously flowing again. Fresh water | lobsters work that miracle. -In every | ereek and spring, you see, there are i large lobster settlements. If these lob- | sters fail to find moisture they perish; hence when their streams dry up they follow the water down into the earth. They dig, dig, dig--just like our Pan- ama canal workers--and in the end | their strong claws pierce through the goft clay covering of some hidden | spring, and a rill of sweet, fresh wa- ter bubbles up. Some thousands of lobster artesian well borers, working away frantically like that, day and night," he said, "are bound to dis- cover enough springs to break any rea- sonable drought." No Pins In China. When you talk of the awakening of China, its adoption of occidental ways and ideas, one class of business men will not agree with you--the manu- factarers of pins. China frankly does not like thie slender, sharp pointed _in- struments considered so necessary by the Caucasian woman, or hooks and eyes. It prefers loops, frogs or the simple string. Even the most per- suasive of pin missionaries make very few converts. The great argument in favor of the pin--time saving--does 'not appeal to the Chinese. If they have anything, it is time. They were having it when our aboriginal ances- {tors were experimenting with com- { mon thorns, which were the pin's an- cestors. They do rot know what hur- ry means. They: are not so strongly inclined toward applying its defini- tion.--Van Norden's Magazine. Ready to Do His Part. An eccentric country squire agreed to employ an equally eccentric rustic to rid his mansion of its plague of flies, the terms being board, lodging and beer for three days. At the end of this period there were more flies than ever, and the squire interrogated his new employe thus: "Why ever haven't you made a start? Yeu con- tracted to kill all the flies." "I'm waiting for you, guv'nor," re. torted the wily rustic; "you've got to cateh em first. I only promised to kill 'em."'---London News. Choosing a Doctor by Photograph. Carlsbad is full of original ideas. Where else can you find the photo- graphs of all the doctors in the place arranged together in shop windows! so that a newcomer edn examine the faces and pick out the one whose looks he prefers? To have a medical wan with just the sympathetic ex- pression one likes best must surely be-a great help to recovery. Cautious George. "George, Wt man across the car is winking at fhe." "Which one?" "The little man. are you going to do about it? "Guess I'll have to say something rude to him." "Well, what will you say?" "I'll suggest to him that he ought to consult an oculist." There, see! What » Indian Rice Crop. The final rice crop report shows that: Bengal has 17,916,200 acres, against 19,836,300 last season. The normal area is 20,83K800 acres, but there was a lack of rain in Bihar at sowing season. The yield of winter rice in Bengal is estimated at 71,075 tons, against 57,930 tons last year. Chemistry and Pulpit. In the course of a sermon at Stoke- on-Trent the Rev. J. 8. Jones con- ducted chemical experiments in the pulpit,' with the object of illustrating his texi Shoot The Rapids Monday, 7 am., America, jnois; one hour there. 5c. Iro return to realy! Bibby ; $2 hats for style Abearnethy's new faN shoes are now | ! i { make : {| content with the layman's qalling { "fallen ---- TWO CAPTAINS. What to Do When Cramp Comes to' One Dies For His People, the Other's People Die For Him. Ruskin in his "Essay on War" says: "It is wholly inconcejvable to me how well educated princes who ought to 'be of all gentlemen the gentlest and of all nobles the most generous and whose title of royalty means only their funetion of doing every man 'right' --how these, I say, throughout history should so rarely pronounce themselves on the side of the poor and of justice, but continually maintain themselves and heir own terete by oppression of poor and by wres! re of justice, and how this should be accepted as so natural that the word 'loyalty,' which means faithfulness to law, is used as if it were only the duty of a people to be royal to their king and not the duty of a king to be in- finitely more loyal to his people. "How it comes to pass that a sea captain will die with his passengers and lean over the gunwale to give the rting boat its course, but that a Pe will not usually die with, much less for, his passengers--thinks it rather incumbent on his passengers in any number to die for him-- think, I beseech you, of the wonder of this! "The sea captain, not captain by divine right, but only by the com- pany's appointment; not a man of royal descent, but only a plebeian who can steer; not with the eyes of the world upon him, but with feeble «hance, depending on one poor boat, of his name being ever heard above the wash of the fatal waves; not with the cause of a nation resting on his act, but helpless to save so much as a child from among the lost crowd with whom he resolves to be lost, yet goes down quietly to his grave rather than break kv faith to those few emi- grants, "But your cantain by divine right, your captain with the hues of a hun- dred shields of kings upon his breast, your captain whose every deed, brave or base, will be illuminated or brand- ed forever before unescapable eyes of men, your, captain whose every thought and act are beneficent or fatal from sun rising to setting, bless- ing as the sunshine or shadowing as the night--this captain as you find him in history for the most part thinks only how he may tax his pas- sengers and sit at most ease in his cabin." The Vanity of Criminals. Criminologists speak of the brag- gart vanity of the criminal. It is true of erotic offenders, perhaps. But the thief will tell of the number of times he has fooled the police merely by way of self justification. He admits the premise that he was a fool ever to become a criminal, and he recounts his triumphs only to indicate to you that at least he is not an absolute idiot. Also criminologists point' out the childish vanity of the criminal who bedecks his person with jewels when he is prosperous. In this the criminal is no vginer than his honest brother. But jewels are about the only sort of property that he can safely possess, as was the case with the Jews in the old days when they were the driven race. The criminal may not with any safety become a bank de- positor, and he is*usually too much of a spendthrift to carry a roll of cash. But he finds that'if 'he is ar- rested and can show some handsome diamond ornaments and a valuable wvatch he will have no difficulty in securing a good lawyer and a bonds- man, and will have a fighting chance for acquittal at his trial. Saltmaking In Spain. ~"Phe Spanish method of producing salt, as employed near Cadiz, ,is by allowing the sun to evaporate the water from what are known as "pans" small ponds prepared for the purpose of a uniform depth of about eighteen inches. These are flooded directly from the sea three or four times a vear, and in time there is left a de- posit of about three inches of salt, avhich is piled in the open in the form of small pyramids until sold. This method has the advantage of being inexpensive and of not requiring ma- chinery. The only requisite are a hot sun and a soil which will not per- init the water to filter through, as the salt in solution would then be lust. Semething depends also upon the analysis of the water. For in- stance, the water of the Mediterran- ean has a greater specific gravity than that of the Atlantic, Loyal Women's Guild. The Loyal Women's Guild, at its annual meeting held recently in Pre- toria, reported that the care of the gruves of those who fell in the war and the general éxercise of benevo- lence showed that the guild was an active force in the Transvaal. Lord Methuen, the commander-in-chief of 'he military forces, who was present, paid a warm tribute to the noble work of the South African ladies who un- dertook to look after the graves, and ¢id that the resting places of their A comrades were thus for ever marked in the history of the Empire. The Souvenir. Miss Golding--Here's your ring. 1 have decided that I can never be your wife, so the engagement is off, and 1 shall expect you to return everything you may have in your possession that belongs to me. Mr. Hamlin--All 1 have is a lock of yo hair and a phato. I don't sup- pose you care anything for the photo, but the lock of hair you will no doubt want to preserve as souvenir. + Miss Golding--As a souvenir what? Mr. Hamlin--Of the time when you of "were a brunette, The Naples Cigar. "While you're in Naples," said the captain, "be sure. and smoke a Na. ples cigar. You see, they are the most curious cigars in the world. Each of those pretty Neapolitan girls who make them is given 500 tobacco leaves, and with those 500 leaves she is ex- pected to turn out 600 cigars. So that is why in Naples you sce men as theyy, smoke calmly removing - from their cigars bits of rag, smali sticks, cotton waste and lumps of clay. 'See Naples and die' the saying goes, but it ought to he changed to, 'Smoke a Naples "gar and die'." Kee Bibhy's swell {15 suis. < I'he whims of his congregation oiton the minister wish he had wep Every richt thinkige man will _tre and make goodoess contagious. Read Abernethy's advt. I : YHE MOUNTAIN SHEEP. Habits of the Bighorn In His Native Wilds. The study of the habits of the moun- tain sheep of {he Canadian Rockies is always brimful of interest, to the sportsman and nature-lover alike. The very country the animal inhabits can scarcely fail to awaken enthusiasm in even the most prosaic mind, so diver si are the scenes, whose grandeur and beauty have become justly world famous. The great, gaunt mountains, piercing the clouds, that halo-like en- Side + ir hoa honda; He gentle, w slopes, down which the river, born of the eternal snows, rushes in haste to join Mother Ocean; each in turn is granted its tribute of praise as the artistic eye, wandering from beetling crags to the sun-kissed ley far below, is~awed by the mani- estation of nature's power, or lingers with kindly glance on the gentler scenes of forest and river. Here and there, a mountain lake gleams like a treat emerald, where it lies cradled between two giant peaks, or flashes nto silver as the zephyr-driven wave. ets chase each other across its sur ace, ; Rugged and strong as the mountains mn whose breast he first saw the light, he mountain sheep fits naturally into he great picture of which he is a liv. ng part, and nowhere are his grace. ul outlines seen to such advantage s when, bounding lightly along the ace of some frowning cliff, he seeks \ higher and a safer refuge from the ifle of the hunter. The agility of he sheep in surmounting almost per- yendicular cliffs, together with his :een sense of smell, and great range f vision, make him, perhaps, the post difficult of game animals to wnt; for, ever on the alert, he scents anger while it is yet afar, and the unter who approaches a band of heep without making his presence 'mown to the wary game, can reason- bly pride himself on his woodcraft nd sincidentally congratulate himself mn his good fortune as well. Tiger Invades Camp. The Indian mail brings the story f an exciting adventure which be- ell a surveying party in Assam. They vere attacked by w tiger. The party vere working in the Cachar district f Assam, and the tiger appeared at he camp of Surveyor Gopal Singh. t sprang at the surveyor and one of is Khalagis, but fortunately touched either of them, and. disappeared as uddenly as it had come. Three days ater the tiger returned, and seized a {halasi, who was washing his cook- ng pots in a stream 20 yards from he camp. A- native, armed with a tick, rushed to the rescue, and tried o beat the tiger off. When other nen arrived the brute dropped its rey and disappeared again. In a 'ew minutes it was back and in spite f the shouts of the natives it seized he plucky native who had gone to the rescue of the first man. Once nore it was driven off, and again it -eturned, this time to seize a third Khalasi. east left the camp, but the party sat up all night surrounded by a chain f fires. At daybreak they proceeded to a Lushai village. An armed party | set off for the abandoned Camp to sollect the goods left behind. They found that the tents, bedding, blan: kets and bags of rice had been drag zed about by the tiger, and on a sight-rule aR) Pleas were marks of the brute"s fangs. The first man Jeized by the beast died four days fterwards. Watt and the Tea-kettle. A cousin of James Watt, the inven. or whose discoveries about the ac. ion of steam gave the impetus to nodern steam industries, made an in. eresting record of anecdotes of his south, Among other sketches, she vrites as follows: Sitting dne evening with his aunt, Mrs. Muirhead, at the tea-table, she said: "James Watt, I never saw such in idle boy; take a book or employ yourself usefully; for the last hour ou have not spoken one word, but taken off the lid of that kettle and out it on again, holding now a cup and now a silver spoon over the steam, watching how it rises from the spout, and catching the drops of hot water val {. Frightened away again, the | their flour twice a year, or oftener. We test the Christie reputation. before it can pass into the mixing room. ness and delicate flavor which has made Christie's Biscuits Sold by Grocers everywhere GOOD BISCUITS are made by more than one or two manu- facturers, and can be baked from any one of a few excellent brands of flour, but the Christie way is different. The best niillers inn Canada ship us samples of the samples and select the best brands for our purpose. 'We blend the brands which we have proved best-- keep on blending and testing by actual baking until we get a dough good enough to sustain, or better, Every ounce of 'raw material is carefully analysed The best sugar, pure, fresh creamery butter, new sweet milk and delicious cream -- these pure ingredi- ents mixed with our blend of flour, in the Christie scientific way, yields that delightful, appetising crisp- favoredaboveall othertabledainties from ocean toocean: Yes, Christie's are the best biscuits money can buy, yet they cost no more than just ordinary biscuits. Christie, Brown & Company, Limited, Toronto ~ Pretty Shrewd Buying. it falls into. Are you not ashamed of spending your time this way?" A French savant addressing members of the Institute in 1750 said, quoting this incident: 'The principal discovery of our fel. low-member Was a particular mode of converting steam into water, the con- lensation of steam in a separate ves- sel from the boiler and thus little James Watt before the 'tea-kettle be- comes the mighty engineer preluding the discoveries which were to make him famous. the Sunspots and Trade Cycles. Prof. Jevons, of Cardiff University College, addressed a meeting of the members of the Cardiff Exchange on the theory of a gonnection between sunspots and trade cycles. The lec- ture was illustrated by diagrams deal- ing with prices, falling trade, wages, ard wheat yields, all of which, Prof. Jevons contended, went to establish the claim, originally made by ®his father, the late Prof. Stanley Jevons, that the periodicity of sunspots had a direct relation to the periodicity of trade cycles. In so far as past re cords enabled him to anticipate the future of the coal trade, he fixed upon 1914, or possibly 1917, as the great boom year. Very Amusing. The late Dr. A. K. H. Boyd of Scot. land once visited a woman who had| lost her husbdnd. By way of com. forting her he proceeded to set forth with great earnestness and beauty of language the joys-of the state to which the departed one had attained. The: bereaved woman, with a vivid recol- lection of het husband's defects, found it hard to share in the minis. ter's hopes, althqugh she wished to show her sense of his kindness. She "unburdened herself thus: "Weel, Dr, Bayd, you're maybe no vera instrue- tive, but you're aye amusing." © Russia at Work, Too. About 1,000 people are employed by | the Russian Government on aeronsu- tical work. $1.65 Watertown & Return'$1.65. Saturday, 5 am. or 2 p.m., Sun- day, 7.30 am. or 2 p.m.; returning Sundev or Monday. fi Bibby 's $2 hats are winners. of France | Tans, Black and Patent Colt. NOW Ladies $1.50 White Oanvas Dxfords, The Best American makes of Men's Oxfords, Patents. All this season's $5.00 Shoes. NOW in Tans, Our Windows wearers. Come | big money making opportunity and mine the goods; BALLLLLL00804000000044 04006644000 Chocolates b §0c. : Fruit of all kinds arriving daily. L049 EEE 00¢ Shee CEPT EPT RRR PETE EE IVR ERY No wonder there was trouble in that family. However we are not discuss that quarrel, Put we want to say right here that you would a hot coal fire the way your wife dees. in is no work required. With a gas stovethe moment the meals are same moment your expense ceases. Call in at the office of the Works on Queen St., and see pipes put in the house. 0; ©. FOLGER, GENERAL MANAGER; for : R. H. Toye, 302 King St. Queen Quality and BE. P. Reed Ladies' Stamped Price $4.00 Oxfords, In Iso a line of Black Dongola Ox- fords, Blucher Cut, Patent Tip, worth $1.50 BOTH MARKED w.eues99¢) All Our $3.00 Patent Leather, Tan and Viel Kid Oxfords: NOW $2.35; % Chances For Men Blacks All Our Men's $4.00 Oxfords go in this big sale. Tans, Patent Colt and Call, in all the new snappy, smart effects. NOW Liccvmienisonss $3.98: Oxford J.H. SUTHERLAND & BRO, We have a most complete line of Chocolates in ulk or in boxes, See Our Special Box Line at 141 3 i in rm SL ---------------- ADAM AND EVE COOKED WITH A WOOD FIRE. going tr be crosses than a bear with a sore head if you bad to work all day this warm weather over Put a gus range in your kitchen and make home a pleasant place. Jenty of Jheat for cooking, washing, fronming, etc., but does not flame with waste beat such as coal and wood which must be kept burning when there ready that shout havieg the the atmosphere Kingston Light, Heat & Power Department. .

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