i THE WEAKNESS OF OLD AGE GREATLY RELIEVED BY "FRUIT-A-TIVES" "Fruit-a-tives' is a god-send to those suffering from the Weakness and Ner- vqusness of old age. "'Fruit-a-tives" re juvenates the whole system strengthens the stomach --lielps digestion--relieves the irritated Wear and kidneys--st that pain in the back regulates t bowels--and purifies the blood. The concentrated and intensified fruit juices in *'Fruit-a-tives" act gently yet effectively, and ily oh The troubles which are the natural results of a long, nseful life, soc. a box, 6 for $2 50, or trial size, 25¢c. Atall dealers or from Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa. ane WM. MUKKAY, Furniture Sales given tention. Count Stock.ete., have been for lo y Auctioneer ht Ci special It farmers wap eh dollar. get my services MARKET BQUARE. Sena SEO sou 28. G07 ania Book and Map Electric Restorer for Men Phosphonol restores every nerve in the bady to iis proper tension ; restores wim and vitality, Premature decay and all sexual weakness averted at once. phono! will make you a new man. Price 53a box, 0 two for Edad to any address Scobell Drug 8t. Catharines, Ons, For sale at Mahood's drug. store, "sy KINGTON BJ5INi3S COLLEGES 'dighest Fducasion at LowesiCost" o Twonty-sixth year. Fall Term® begins . August «80th Coursed in® Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Tele-0 graphy, Civil Service and English @ Our. graduates get the bestg' positions Within a short time over sixty secured positions with one of the largest railway cor-® porations in Canada. Enter any® time, vig or Nite for informa-® on. pr, etcalfe, DPrinci (Limited). ' pale Kingston, Canada. . S000000000000000000000 COWAN'S PERFECTION COCOoA Is rich in food value and easy to digest. It is just Cocoa, pure Cocoa, ground from the choicest Cocoa beans. Nurses and Doctors recommend its use ia sickness or in health. A DOUBLE CURE FOR DOUBLE TROUBLE Patler Worriscy's No. 26 Cures Catarrh tr a Combined Treatment. The sudden weather variations in our climate result in a great many cases of itarrh---a troublesome disease usually considered hard to cure, and one which often leads to serious pulmonary and infEstinal troubles J A neglected cold in the head weakens Te nasal membranes, so that at every future exposure the trouble returns. At iength these conditions are fastened onto the system, and the sufferer undprgoes the annoyance and dan of #hrome catarrh Some doctors confine themselves to prescribing external applications, and thus do not reach the seat of the trouble. Others give internal treatment exclu- sively, and thus do not promptly relieve the aficcted parts Father Morrisey, the skilled priest. physician, rightly regarded catarrh as a double 1scatble, consisting of mnpleasant Incal effects and their fundamental cates, the latter having to do with im- paired geneeil vitality His famous remedy, No. 26, is a com- bined cure for catarth. Ti consists of tablets to be taken three times a day) and an cepecally compounded salve The salve is antiseptic, and quickly healt the inflamed membranes of the nasal passages. The tablets to the seat of the trouble and restore the system to its usual tone. Together, they cure. Instead of neglecting a disease that is unpleasant to yourself and to others, and one which often leads 10 pneumonia and consumption, it is surely the part of wis- dor to take timely steps to do away with the effects and at the same time remove the cause No. 26 does just that. 0c. for the Sambi SreatmEn, At sour druggists, ot from Fat! orriscy N ~licir allo, Ltd, Montreal, Quebec. . Sold and guaranteed in Kingston hv Jas. BR, McLeod. x -- Fnmm------ -- HOW ALENS CREEP IN tenham ably the THOUSANDS OF FOREIGNERS EVADE BRITAIN'S LAWS. Return Excursion Tickets Are One of the Popular Methods of Getfing Past the Officiais -- Second-Class Passengers Are Exempt From In. spection and Many Cross Channel In That Way. Whatever may be the legislative | outcome of the amazing siege at Step- ney, there is no gainsaying thai at present our immigration laws are more ineffective than those of any other country in the world, says a London r. Any alien with the brains of a rabbit, however black his history or blighted his heaith, can easily enter England against the will of the authorities, and can, in fact, snap his fingers at them. The latest method of evading the Aliens Act is to come to this couniry with the return hall of an exeutrsion ticket, which can always be parchas- od ou the continent or obtained by post {rom London or from a confeder- ste who has used the other half. Not long ago a Frenchman well-known in Leicester Square, thinking it poli. tic to léave his usual haunts for a short time, went to Paris by a day excursion. While thers he gave the return half of his ticket to an old comrade in crime, who with it came to London, giving a false name and address to the purser a he crossed the channel. But there are many other dodges for evading th: Aliens Act. One which results in hundreds of "unde- sirables" entering this country is systematically practised on some steamers. It is keeping the number on a ship jnst below the limit allow- ed for exemption from inspection Originally a steamer which carried fewer than twenty steerage passen- gers was not, for the purposes of the Act an immigrant ship, and was not, therefore, liable to inspection. Then the number of third-class passengses allowed for exemption was reduced to twelve, and now it is again twenty. Mark how matters have been adjust ed accordingly. Some captains used regularly to bring over sevgfiteen or efghteen third-class passengers, then nine or ten, and at present they are cept when they cut things very fine and arrive in the Thames with nine. teen. It is nat uncommon for the aiiens thus "scraped through" to include at least one who has been refused leave to England in an and was turned back owing to lack of means: or for some other reason. No fewer than four rejected aliens were about a year ago dum ina batch at Hull from a (technically) non-immigrant steamer. The same steamers bring over many "undesirables' as second.class pas- sengers, and thus defeat the object of the Aliens Act in another way. No seoner were second-class passengers exempted from inspection tham such companies lowered their second-class fares till they were only a little higher than the steerage fares, and ever since nmny immigrants unable to pass in- spection, as well as not a few of those refused permission to land, have tri- umphed over the authorities by com- ing to England in the intermediate class. Shipping agents in continental ports also have many tricks whereby they dump 'undesirables' on us. About eighteen months since, for instance, some of those at Bremen kept in stock letters of invitation written by people in this country. These they supplied -- for a consideration -- to aliens for showing to the inspectors when they reached England as con. elusive proofs that there was not the remotest chanee of their becoming burdens on John Bull A moderately wideawake immigrant, however, réquirés no assistance to en. able him to enter England without even a "By your leave." What ip to prevent him from shippin: as a catble- man or sailor and landing at one of our ports as such? Nothing. As a fact, this game is played on us thou- sands of times every year. Out of the total number of cattiemen who arriv- ed in this country in 1909 no fewer than 2.209 did not return on the cat tle ships. Some may have left as or- dinary passengers, but the majority doubtless remained in England. Whe ther they are likely to become good pitizens may be gatged from the fies that thousands of ecattlemen who have landed in this country have straighp way sought the hospitality of the cas- ual ward. ? The ranks of Chinese residents in this cauntry are steadily recruited in the same way. Of late years many "sailors" from the Celestia. empire Lave manied English girls and set tled in our large rts, particularly Liverpool, where laundries "run" bv their compatriots absorb some ot them. Six or seven years ago an attempt was made to establish Chi- nese Daas in London, with the result that the promoters got such a fright from hostile crowds that the enterprise faded away. But in Liver. pool, Birkenhead, and the Wallasey district there are many such [aun dries, and a few have recently been opened in towns so. far inland as Stockport. ] They compete strenuously, not only against our native laundries, but against ome another. One deseribed himself as a "Christian Chinaman," and his rival in the same street, bo'd- ly annow A, "Me no religion; me wash clothes!" d : Still more undesirable immigrants work a passage to this country. One of the men responsible for the twean- ty-five or twenty-8ix casualties at Tot ly came to England as a fireman on a steamer, and prob. } desperado evaded the Aliens Act in a precisely similar man. ner. Both, at all events, were nom- inally sailors when they landed. Health is the second blessing that we mortals are capable of, a that money cannot buy.--Waltog. Your moral scales, upon .close ex- amination, may Bot be ss correct as oul mat rial for a mind-your-own-business Have yon more faith in a good luck charm than ia your own pong enh. re "Buy Vichey water' at Gibson's. back again to the ald number, ex- | to land. He or she previously came | immigrant ship, | » every village there is plenty of BURIED TREASURE. War-Time Secret Lurks in an-Ontarie Marsh. 2 Many and varied are the stories of lost treasures. It would seem al- most that in all the earlier settled districts of Ontario there are treas- ures buried to find which would mean sierna! opulence to the fortunate finder. Many of these stories are | undoubtedly myths, but it is equally | true that a goodly number are based that a story of a Jost treasure that in itself evidences a eonsidera of reasonableness, and is wubftantia:- | od by material evidence and fe word | of people yet living, may nét be un- | Interesting. | About midway between the towns | of Oshawa and Whitby, on the north | shore of Lake Ontario, is situated | what appears at the present time to | be nothing more than a bleak, barren marsh, with its uninviting bogs and dense overgrowth of rushes and vege tation peculiar to such places. It was: not always thus, however, for | many years ago this same area was a body of water of considerable depth, being in reality a bay of the lake. The story s that during the war with the United States in 1813 the bay afforded shelter to a Canadian schooner while engaged in carry god specie from Kingston for the pay of the militia stationed a3 York. The vesse! wad sailing up the lake before a brisk sou'easter late in the after. {| noon of a September day in the year | 1813, and when a few miles west of { Oshawa harbor it sighted an Ameri. can boat, ome of the pirate type that were prevalent on the great lakes during the war and wrought havoc with Canadian vessels. The captain knew the coast fairly well, and he immediately thought of the bay as a means of escape, reckoning that the American boat, being of greater draught, would be unable to navigate the comparatively shallow entrance. With ail haste he put into the bay, and his surmise proved to be correct, for, while he was able to work up the bay tll he was a considerable dis tance from the lake, the gunboat, by reason of its draught, was unable to { enter. 'Not to be daunted, the Ameri. | cans stood off as close to the shore | as they dared and commenced to bom- { bard the Canadian boat. The cap- | tai, fearing lest they might land and attack him on shore, thought it beat | to unload his cargo and endeavor to conceal it in the woods back from | the shore. The task was extremely | arduous because of the absence of | any semblance of a dock, involving | the necessity of carrying the gold in | small boats a= far inshore as possible, | and shouldering it the remainder of the distance over the bog and un- | certain footing which old stumps and | sunken logs provided. By dint of perseverance inspired by the momentary feat of assault at the hands of the enemy, the task was finally accomplished and the treas: temporarily secured in concealr Darkness began t~ fall over th~ which added security to their p. since it afforded more complete « cealment and because of the fact that the Americans, when there was in- sufficient light to enable them to di- rect their fire, simply sailed away, to the great delight of the defenceless Canadians. Anxious to reach York and the protection of its fort, as soon as they felt assured that the enemy had abandoned the attack, they be- gan the work of reloading prepara- tory to continuing their voyage. It i# not hard to believe that the task was most difficult, considering that all was absolute darkness by now and the nature of the ground over which they had to carry the kegs of gold, | nor is it at all :mprohable® that, as the story goes, one ol e kegs was dropped during the handling from the small boat up to the side of the | schooner. Means were not at hand to recover it, and indeed had they pone. sessrd facilities it might have been mpossible to locate it and extricate it from the mucky bottom of the little bay So,- having finished loading, they weighed anchor and were soon glad to be ance more on the open lake and on a fair way © a place of safety Chiefly through one of the crew, who was on the spot and saw the | keg drop into the water, a William McGann, has the story. been handed down. The bay has been long since | emptied of water by reason of the low- ering of Lake Ontario and the deposit of sediment, but it is not known that the treasure has ever been recovered Many have sought in vain and some have made the spot the mecea of their financial peregrinations Divining taxis and various devices have been used in the endeavor, and the ap pearance presented by many of thess treasure-hunters' working in the lighs of a lantern at the dead of night is extremely ghost.like. A number | cannon balls have been picked up | in the vicinity, both by those engag- od in the quest and by farmérs work. of the sandsnipe or the piping curlew is more apt to. be encounterad than umes Tossing Bouquets, Promineni among the leadérs of the recent farmers' lower tariff tion were three former Ottawans who have risen to eminence and fortune in t west, higher tarilf depwiation, also, was Mr: W. H Rowley, who, remaining in Ottawa, has built up a great man- ufacturing concern that supplies mil. lion: of people with certain necessi- ties of civilization. Ottawa men, whether they go on to have the knack of rising to the tap and taking a leading part in the life of the community or class of i they form a part.--Ottawa Journal. A London "Bull." The following is part of a despatch sept from dear London recent! to Canadian pers: The Standa says: "Let us perfectly frank. The commercial arrangements between Canadas and the United States must { and can only be the thin end of the wedge of pelitical union." Money always bas and always wil , pat up a bit and velentless fight against justice. " "Buy moth camphor." Gibson's. The Monit. que man in the com . munity is from being any particu lar help to it. THE DAILY . BRITISH WHIG, MONDAY, upon more or less authentic facts, so | degree | ------ a ---- : i Sandwich Golf Club Has Bought the i Prince Homestead. The of Sandwich has long been distinguished as a place of besu- ty == well as for its historical.inter- and one of the most lovely, as well as most interesting spots in the vic r has been secured for ithe new golf and country club, in which' many men from Windsor and Detroit are interested. The Oak Ridge ! Gof Club was formed some ten years !ago and had a nine-hole course on | rented property below Sandwich, but {as a long lease could not be obtained | A ROMANTIC FARM. town {it was decided to give up this pro | perty and purchase grounds where | permanent improvements might be | made with some confidence that such | éxpenditure would not be wasted { With this in view an option was se- cured on fifty-six acres of the Park Farm. and a stock company was in- corporated and sufficient stock sub- soribed to purchase this property and provide funds to make a good stam towards laying out s golf course and fitting up a clubhouse. The credit f originating this scheme and suc: cussful.y, carrying it through is due to Mr. R. M. Morton, and sharehoid- ers are congratulating themselves on having made such a good purchase, for in a few years this property will be worth double the money expended. This 'venture will alter one of the most romantic places in western On- tario, for Park Farm was long age the home of Col. John Prince, cun- snicuous for his forceful conduct dur- ing the Patriot rebellion in 1838, and that part of it which in the battle of Wind=« r, Prince's official report states, ¢ brigands and pirates twenty-one were killed, besides four that were brought in at the close of the engagement, all of whom 1 or- dered shot, and it was done accord- ingly." This was certainly a drastic measure, and a military council look: ed into the matter and it was discus- sd in the Imperial Parliament. where the great Wellington himself spoke in behalf of Col. Prince, de- claring that the circumstances requir- ed vigorous treatment; that no mob should be allowed to enter a country and march against unprotected citi- zens without being severely dealt wit Certainly the shooting of these prisoners cleared Essex County of those styling themselves Patriots The coming of John Prince Sandwich was an event in its history. for he introduced foreign tastes and a flavor of the English gentleman of eisure. He bad been a barrister in Gloucester, England, and came to Canada 1n search of change and sport It mattered little to him where he settied, 0 long as game was abund- ant and the company congenial. These conditions being faifilied in Sandwich, to Sandwich he came in 1834, accompanied by hus wife, three sons, five English servants, and a box of golden guineas so heavy two men were required to it. Two servants, man and wife, decided to try farming, so 'Prince looked about him, and finally purchased a beauti- fu! piece of rolling land directly behind Sandwich He stocked the farm with thoroughbred eattie import- h to ed from Engladn, buiit a house, and | placed his retainers on the land. The woman, however, wa: an expert cook, and, tiring of cruntry life, she and her husband established themselves in a hotel in Sandwich, where for vears their house English comfort of its dinners Prince then .decided to occupy Park Farm himsell. He added two large wings Wo the house, and turned it into what he called a shooting-box He made the grounds beautiful wit! hedges, gardens and miniature lakes, he imported pheasants, peacocks and 'sani and placed deer and other game in the natural woods adjoining When he and his family were sottled Park Farm his hospitality knew bounds; the house was soon filled pen, and the stables with and the excellence n with snorts their horses Prince spent maner lavishly, and waz never known t« refuse 'a can nor take a note for se curity An Unprofitable District. Two very interesting reports on portions of the Northwest Territories, southwest of Hudson Bay. have just heen 13z:aed hy the Dominian Geoleg cal Survey. They are of sspecial value | to Ontario, on acount of the fact that seems of | ing in the fields nearby, but the nest | the now submerged treasure of war | deputa. | | domain, At the head of the manufacturers' | their travels or remain at home, seem | . He is also a the region concerning which they give information that part of the unorganized Nerthwest Territories, forrverly part of the district of Kee. watir, which Ontario is sd strenuous ly endeavoring to have added to its APA Judging from both to he little there the reports ct that pros provinces will gain a region in which | may be found any valuable economic minerals in paving quantities Fyen if the difficulties of transportation are overcome, it 13 very doubtful whether the mineral found would re. pay working Big Chiefs. It i=n't necessary to go to Gran- stark to find a snug, independent principality and its raler. "Big Chief" Eliott of the Six Na tion Indians, who dropped in upon a Toronte newspaper, rules over a name'y, the reserve near Brantford. It is a 18 by 9 miles king- dom. The chief iz a natural orator, with a; gift of eloquence, which observers say. held Sir James Whitney speil bound when the chief spoke with the deputation of patriots recently. "Big Chief" has a fluency which must be heard to be appreciated, and a voea- bulary a Boston lessor wou'd envy. or-sergeant in the 3th Not to Be Forgotten. "] say, do you think much of Fon "I do unfortunately; he owes me s ten spot." Abdominal Surgery. Abdominal surgery first 'was ay | tempted in France in the fourteenth eentary. The trouble with jeans lies in the fact that they often become perma nowt gifts It's a good plang so far as possible, to leave business afiaire amt of home! citele talk, ~ "Moth proof bags." Gibson's. MARCH 13. 1911. was famous for old | i DESTITUTION. Apply Here. In a speech in London recently on the subject of destitutign among the English masses, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Lloyd George, stated that of the 420.000 adults who died last year in the British Isles five-sixths were in poverty. They l¢* no property worth any one's while to pick up, said the Chancélior--a few articles of cheap clothing and furniture which the broker's man wouki not sell for rent. The other sixth of the British adults who died in the twelve month period lait $1.,500,000,000, or £300,000,000 stetling in property of one kind and another, Of that large, gigantic sur- plus, approximate'y one-half -- $750. 000000 -- had been accumulated by 2000 persons. Commenting on these figures, the Chancellor said "Did the 350,000 who died in penury lead lives of indulgence, dissipation, thriftlessness and extravagance' Ind the 2.000 people who left half that enormous sum pursue careers of ar- duous toil, of frugality, of industry? No! It is facts such as thes he gigantic wealth at one end at a man cannot spend in a lifetie of luxury, and at the other end m ns burning with semi-hunger and tne ains of anxiety and pover'y which are producing the murmurs a: the heart of England which there some disease in the syswem Lloyd George. continuing, said Eng- land's annua! bill for armaments now: $350,000 000 or $40 for 'every heusehold in the United Kingdom and wate this burden removed Great Bri tain oonld afford to pay every wage earner in tne Kingd an additional four shillings a week The Chancellor 1s is the head of at that faction in Eng'ish polities which is seeking to break up the great land lings of th sh a sort of peasant proprietorship, something like that in France. His { remedy for unemployment is smal! farming, but on the general subject of unproductive labor his views appv n America as well az in Britain and have no political significance "It is a shallow but common fal »v." he said, "that inasmuch as the find employment for and pay good wages tw those who personally minister to their comfort, to that ex tent they are rendering a service to | the community. Quite the reverse They ara withdrawing a large num | bar of capable and women from useful and productive work." riel eo The Hill of Tara. The famous Hil! of Tara, once de- scribed by James, Bryce, British am bassador in Washington, as "the most interesting and authentie monu ment of early civilization in north western Europe," is about to be sold, says a report from Dublm To-day Tara Hill looks much like any other hill, but on it once stood the royal palace of the Ard Righs, or High Kings, of Ireland for many cen tures. It was there while a greal national assembly was beimg held that St. Patrick' converted the. Ard Righ Leary to Christianity, an event ch is celebrated in many old Gae- . poem: The glories of the place came to an end in a curious way. The Ard Righ, grandson or great-grandson of Leary, | sent his representative out through nrovinces to collect the usual an- tribute. This particular repre tive of the High King was a lit njudicious, for when he ar- zt the palace of King Guare naught he insisted on entering { it with his spear across his body un | der his arms The spear was too long, or the door | was ¢ narrow, to admit of entrance in th wav. So in the name of the Ard Righ he ordered the door to ba 20 that he conld enter | pulled down lin the wav ha desired ed. Hence the feud vy laid Tara low lerics championed the causa of King Guare, and in due time a de- putation of them went to Tara, and an» of them solemnly cursed the hill, with the result that it became gradu- King Guare that ulti- nate The ally deserted, that tha immense pal- ace fell into ruins and that it ceased Ito he the seat of the High Kmgs of Ire'and Same vears apo the owner of the vill, whe died a short while ago, got the ides that the Ark of the Covenant was buried there and had excava- tions made, but all that was found were a few old coins and weapons, $30,000,000 Railway Scheme. Minister of Queensland ought forward a railway which will in amount of $30,000. - it is proposed netra es of new railway. Th.« line will link up the coastal line Rrishane and Cairns. The wil! make it possible to take t Cairn 1 the far north of Queensland, and travel to Adelaide, tne capita f South Australia is wil also bring Neérthern Queensland ndon. Engineers scheme least the ! & money t iI m we scheme Weer England's Rich-Scored in Words That { GEG. THOM. GY, Jk. i Distributor, 2392 PRINCESS STREET. 14 for case. Phoae J EERILY BrovryCa, Der, Mich PAGE _SEYEN. C1 In America 500 BOYS WANTED To put their feet into our Solid Leather Shoes Boys are coming right this 'way for their Boats, hey know where the best Boys' Boots are aristocracy and estab. | ! Interesting Relics lin found. REID & CHARLES ~ Ge rss srsT etree dre tcc vases Extra Good C A A et A " Madras (Miuce Li hh he P.S akes at Popular Prices Fruit Pounds, 10c each ; Sponge Cakes. 12¢ each Magnolics, 12¢ each Duchess, BIRTHDAY CAKES made to order Perr strt vet TTRATTTAPTVATRERRLTATLT RIALS RG. flavor), 20e¢ « R.H. TOYE, 302 rn 10¢ each ; ach, King St Phone 141 Lh ithe ie ei tidied = WHERE COOK'S MEN DIED. of Massacre Dis. covered Recently. The exact spot where 10 members of Capt. Cook's expedition were mas. sacred by the Maoris 137 years ago has been definitely determined, and some interesting relics of the ancient tragedy discovered by Robert McNsh Grass - Cove, Queen Charlotte Sound It may, perhaps, be remembered that on Dec. 17, 1773, the captain of the Adventure sent two officers and | eight men across the sound to gather | wild geese for the ship's company | They failad to return, and searchers | baskets containing human fleeh and i who were sent ont finally discovered evidence of a tragedy in a number «f fern root, also a hand of a white man Grass Cove was previously ceonjec- tured to be the scene of the ancient tragedy, but Mr. McNab, however, has settled the question once and for all by discovering the exact spot Shere the Englishmen were mmnrder. ~ After Mr. McNab and the party of friends with him had decided that the massacrs took place in a certain bend in Grass Cove--a conclusion to which they came by comparing the locality { with the description given in Cook's popera--they went ashore and spoke to a settler, Mr. Greensill, who was living on the spot, regarding any evi. dence of the massacre that he may have seen dug up in his garden an old flint lock, a barrel, a bayonet, and some other kind of a weapon he was un. able to identify This latter weapon Mr. McNab at once identified as an officer's hanger, which was doubtless the one used by Midshipman Rowe, who was in | charge of the boat's ccew. There was a week nearer to Ia e-timate that the carrying out of this scheme will occupy seven years Garden City's Report. ! The annua! report at Letchwerth, | Eng. says that 128 house, shops, and | factories sr¢ built within the year { ending September 30, bringing the to- | places | the exact locality i whieh | cupie | Grass Cove {tal ¢! new buildings erected since letchworth became a garden city to | 1.334. The estimated value of these buildings (= $2.022500, with a gross | revenue of $8550 The death rate | a description of the ~word given in the accounts and they corresponded | exactly with the weapon dug up It was with that\hanger that Mid shipman Ro illed two Maoris and wounded t f before being over powered and killed. This dizen beyond a shadow of a of the massacre, Mr. Greensill's garden in Mr. McNab disce ances the idea that the weapon may have been carried there from the f As unten Mr. Greensill said he had; i Ee FOR. Health Drink MeCarthey's Ale and Porter. It's the best. . Agent, R. J. LAWLER Carriage one E. Jd. Cor, Montréal e8oscevee - - Painting Carriages to lvnk leave them with us x and Eo-cAarts ene DUNPHY, and Ordnance Streets S000 OVS S Wood, Lumber, Shingles 3 e Honest Measurement. On 9 * 'rices. . ? N. JACKSON, . PLACE DPARMES, . . Reshlence, 280 Bagot Street. © ® "puone No 1019 » Seccseee e000 StstObOEn THE AMERICAN CAFE 183 Wellington St. pte I'he and and lightad Try our 280. I HOS right took pléce on the spot now ae- | ! C H. { Cor. Princess Eating appartmante, SPECIAL THS W Hestaurant House, Separate Wall lurnished rilnte full GUY, Prop. EEK. FARMERS TER course dinner, a Pickering, | t. and Vuiversity Ave, {for 1008 wos only 52 per thousand, | 'hat the locality exactly correspon is | "Phone 530 { and the infantile mortality per thou- | *!!D the description given by Capt a. - { sand birth , the lowest rates for | Cook. --London Standard. " | aby town in the country | S---------- $ i ' Just Due p | Country Without a Millionaire. The towns of Waterloo and Berln, | COAL. ! 3 . : {Ont., are in mu t . relat ve | That's the boast of New Zealand. |. uel 3ame 7 : "Sounds good." you say, "but they | + S - 3 Aza E io, fi The kind you are looking for 3 | can't have any railroads, of telegraph, |», .. 'ne tu MN is the kind we sell. 2 r telephone. or modern utilities of fona a P " Arti 5 LF el 3 any kind. can they?" will ote talk of Water. | Ser ( oal 1 Well. no, they couldn't, except for | BE RE 4 2 Water. | Yanion pe' thing--the fact that the nation |\oy Bie A nt | € 1s good coal and we guarsutes 1seif has some peoples and property, : i prompt delivery. 3 heace some credit on wh h to raise | 3 ! : 3 {a Litic money now and then and : { . 1 Py : wi | iu BOOTH & CO. § FOOT WEST STREET. whom sh Kr n 1 Giood citizenship is ane of the best | time asked ! Notch 3 77 { factors towards progress in every com- | Mm, dnd i: "1H mares you, manity. but I'll take 5 bit o wooing Bret After a widow has made up "her Wher vou Baar a man sev that he a----a---- Pind to marry another man she bo fools better when be works it's vour i bow Sepa het Sart i pms fo wear colies matehk hor cae to make a getawsy, » people dee when it is uselens. | eotaplendn