$BRITISH AMERICAN 3 IT HAS CENTURIES YET i REFUSE THE JUSTAS GOOD KINDS | DONT BE IMPOSED ON MADE in CANADA E.W.GILLETT CO.LTD > JORONTO. ONT. OTEL EZ Electric Restorer for Men Phos phonol restores ory ve ion : restores vim and vitality. Premature decay and all sexual weakness averted at ence. d wi make you a pew'man. Price $8 a box, or two for Scobenl Drug Jailed to any address. For sale at Mahood's Drug Store @esrsrsssssssssssesand Geo. Muller & Son Cleaning, Sewing Bleyelens, Geo Carriages Carpet and Laylag, Carts and repaired, 2 Telephone 1032, 279 Kiag » KINGSTON. grrr asranessenen, Wood's The Great Puglis fiomedy. Tones and invigorates the whol pervons syste, Inakes new Blood in old Veins, Owres Nerv ous of ity, Menad and Brain Worry, Jes ney, Sexual Weakness, Enisvions, Sper or > and Effects of Abuse or Kxoesses, Prive 21 pet box, sixfor §5 One welll pleato, sh will eure. Bold by all drugirists or mailed in plain Beg. on receipt of price, New pam; re edd The modicine Co. Jormerty Toronto, Ont by Windsor) ST reetseTITeaseeV eed THECLUBHOTEL | WELLINGTON STREET, {Near Princess), There are other hotels, none approach the Club homelike surroundings. : Locate? In centre of city and close to principal stores and theatre. ? Charges are moderate. Rpecial rates by the week, P. M. THOMPSON, Proprietor, Sovrtneny ee but for KINGSTON BUSINESS COLLEGE (Limited). > » "Mighest Education at Lowest Cost Twenty-mixth year. Fall Tern begins August 30th. Courses in Haokioepiny Shorthand, Tele graphy, Civil Service and English Our graduates get the positions. Within a short time over sixty secured positions with one of the largest railway cor- orations in Canada. Enter any ime. Call or write for Informa- tion Metcalfe, Principal Kingston Canada OY $ The American Cafe 183 Wellington St. The Up-to-date Restaurant and Eating House. Separate appartments. Well furnished and lighted. _Try our Full Course Dinner, 0. THOMAS GUY, Prop. LLLL00L00000004 PIVIGIIVIIVINIIIIIINNY | be ------ a -- - Crown Gypsum Hair Plaster saves will make your walls practically inde- structible, labor and P. WALSH 55--67 Barrack Stiest LADIES' MISH CLASS TAILORING The finest work gusranteed, All prices reduced during June, July 'and. August, Fit and style guaranteed, If not sultable to customer, money returned. : I. COHEN 231 Princess Street, Try PICKERING'S Lio FOR MEAT AND GROCERIES: We stock the. best, Prices Right, Prompt Delivery. + The auic smashup i the great In CANADA'S FUR TRADE WILL AL. WAYS LEAD THE WORLD. The Great 3ub-Arctic Country Which Lies Beyond the Reach of the Plow ! Will Continue to Supply the De- | "mands of the Fair Sex Who Carry ! From $5 to $5,000 of Peltries on Them Ip Winter. One of the first things to strike the | winter visitor in Montreal, Toronto, | Quebec or Winnipeg is the amount of | fur used in weanpg apparel, says W.! Everard Edmonds in The Canadian | Centu®y. In the latter city alone, | forty-five thousand women wear furs | costing from $56 to $5,000 a set. A | low average cost of these furs .is fixed | at $100, and the estimated investment amounts to $4,500,000. Men's furs form an important attribute of the | trade, but an attribute only. It is| the women who make possible the immense fur business now conducted in the leading Canadian centres. ' "The value of furs, which even a small woman can carry ou her per:| son, is simply stupendous," said a| leading furrier, the other day, "No more do the tiny round muffs ap-| pease. Instead, to-day, the women' de- | mand a 'rug,' a 'pillow,' or a 'lobster' | muff, and these are almost as large | as one would expect from their names. | Nor are the majority of women who | wear furs satisfied with one set. Some | have fur coats and a muff and 'throw' | in reserve. Others have two or three sets of neck furs for the various kinds | of weather." | What fur shall be worn, is now | largely a matter of fashion. Bor men, | | Taccoon is still popular and stylish, but for women it has become too plain. Buffalo coats are like angel's visits; and ermine skins, for'w ich | the kings of France once paidi4$1560 a | pelt, are now valued at a dollar. | But does My Lady of Canada ever | think of the wonderful romance that | lies behind her thousand-dollar oeat, D ATLY BRITISH LIGHTNING MEMORIES. Some Phenomena! Feats by Well Known English Acjors. _ To be what is called a "quick study is a very useful accomplishment {the theatrical profession; but whilst the average actor and actress are 1 ly quick in committing their parts to memory, there are certain Thespians { who have achieved wonders in that direction. For instance, Miss Dorothy Grim- ston, the talented daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kendal, "went on" for Lady Isa | bel in "East Lynne" some three years ago at forty-eight hours' notice. Mos: peogle who have seen the evergreely lay will rémember that the part of the tearful heroine is enormous, for she 's rarely off the stage for any length of time. In spite of the huge ness of the task, Miss Grimston ac complished it with ease, and was prac- tically "perfect" at night. A well-known provincial acter, Mr Arthur Dennis, who for many years | has played Mr. James Welch's parts | on tour, is the possessor of a lightning memory. He owns the distinction of | having studied the part of Dick Whor- | oles in "The Lady of Ostend" in the | | mosphere about "The Evening Pray-| space of something like seven hours. Of course, this was not *'straight off | the reel," the study extending over | two or three days; but the length otf | time devoted to the task was virtually little more than 420 minutes. The part in question 'covers ninety closely- | typewritten pages, and is the longest part in modern farcical comedy. duced to printed columns, it would take up a very large section'of a news- paper. Mr. Ashley Page, well known to dra- ms audiences throughout London and the suburbs, is a remarkable "study." Mr. Page doubtless owes much of his talent in this direction to the fact that for many years he has played in "stock" companiés where a fresh piece is produced weekly. His best record for rapid Hamlet, a part known to be the long- est in the whole area of Shakespear ean repertoire. himself master of the role it less than a week. and when it is rémembered that peetic diction is a very different | Re. | study is a classic one, viz, | Mr. Ashley Page malls | WHIG, MONDAY, JUNE 5, 1911. | © AN ARTIST OF PROMISE. : } | Hamilton Girl's Work Is Attracting | »' Considerable Attention: i It is sych a comimon thing to think | of young lady artists as paint wast i ers, that people are inclined to over lock the fact that a large number of {of them are coming to the front in: { Ontario. They are pushing their way Finto 'most of the important exhibits | { pnd several of them atfraet consider i able attention. One young lady who! { will probably be heard from in the | | future is Miss Marion E. Mattice of | Hamilton. She has worked chiefly {as a temcher, but is simply biding { her' time and will surely come int | her own. A year ago Miss Mattice | attracted attention with her picture | "Motherhood," exhibited by the On: | tario Society of Artists. She has a {gift for coloring, especially i such | The best Coffee costs bu > t little more than the poor grades. You get the best that money can buy at moderate price when you use : al Brand sharp contrast effects as are caused | ! bv the reflection of fire light. Her pictures 'are chiefly remarkable, how- ever, mosphere, and one was interested in | the picture because it expressed so eloquently the love of the mother placing her child in the cradle There is the same homelinese of at- er," which is the principle work of Miss Mattice during the past It shows a little girl at her mother's | knee, and the attitude of the child at its simple devotions is perfect Miss Mattice-has made use of the dame fire-light effect as was fou: her former picture. This young art intends to go to Europe- shortly study, and after she returns, people | may look for original work from her | She has tried many lines | which the detail and the freshness « 1 the coloring shows how exeellent | her technical equipment. A. visit | 'who was admiring her work paid particular attention to one decorativ panel of a young girl ina quaint | summer costume. It was extremely | effective, but Mizz Mattice said laugh ing. "You ses we ara all thoroughly commercial, That was painted for | firm which { vertising shoes.' T! 'n fotieed that the (fet wer of r the part and lurks in her silk-lined muff. Per- | sort of material from ordinary melo | ly dainty and carefully painted haps not, but there is a romance none | the less. From the days of the "Com- | any of One Hundred Associstes," | Janada's history has been wrapped in fur, and fur is playing an import ant part in that history to-day. Fur, | indeed, is one of our greatest assets; | and in competition with other coun. tries, Canada will always take first place. During recent yeats, all furs have | advanced two hundred per cent., while | some are worth ten and fifteen times | what they were only a decade ago. The output of raw furs is increasing in value by leaps and;bounds, and | export statistics show only what] amount leaves the country. The larg- | er companies, such as the Hudson Bay Co. and Revillon Brothers, send practically all of each season's catch | to Europe; but the many 'smaller companies devote their attention to supplying the hame market. v | 'he fur trade will continu® to be a | permanent industry in Canada, for the simple reason thas climatic and other conditions will prevent the great north hinterland from being anything but a gigantic fur preserve. For five months, the Arctic chill gives place to the | almost tropical summer, and during | this Sompasatively long period'the tur | is worthless. Hunting 1s abandoned, and is not resumed until Beptember, when the breeding season is over. In this way, Nature has favored Canada, | for the Bar while continuing his Gal { 1885, | fur-bearing animals are left unmolest- ed by the hand of man. But the coming of autumn changes all that. From the scattered trading | posts, where they have sp:ut the sum- mer, come the Indian and half:breed trappers with their families and dogs, | for, during the summer months te | | and the vast wilderness échoes to the sound of human voices once more. On gaining the shack each family pre- ares for the hunt; and perhaps not | or months will théy see eit nearest | neighbors twenty or thirty miles away. 'Inere is plenty of room, there in the North, and the trapper is sure of his grounds. The country is all map- | ped out, and woe betide the trapper | who trespasses on his neighbor's pre- | serve. Ng signs are put up, but the invader would meet the fate of the mining claum-jumper or the cowboy who stole a horse in the early days. As a rule, however, a trapper's | is absolutely free from human "line" moljstation. His line may vary in| Ndemgth from ten miles to four times | that distance -- depending upon the i walking powers of the trapper--and | is marked out so as. to bring him | home at the end of the day. Nix or | eight traps are set in each mile, and clumps of brush, piles of roots, or | other shelter arranged so as to imi. |W other wonderful pyrotechitic novel | tate nature. The bait--almost any | flesh will do; the animals of the north | do not frequent Paris restaurants un? | til after they are dead--is placed in ! the back part of the shelter; and the | trap is set just bepeath the entrance, buried, of course, in a layer of earth or moss, In reek of early 'morning the | trapper sets out on his snowshoes | like a policeman going on his beat His ye is keen and alert, and he goes | armed, in case of trouble. The catch varies with each trip, and when he dogs not arrive at home at the usual hour, his family conclude that his day has been a good one. All sorts of animals snarl at him from the traps-- fishers and martens, lynxes and minks, ermines and rabbits, to say nothing of an gecasional owl or whisky jack. As each animal isi killed and removed, the trap is re-set, and it may be long | after K before the hungry es- trian reaches his claim to «AL og his evening meal and to tell the story of | | encouraged | politics was when he stood for Ply | bons, drama dialogue, the feat appears al the more extraordinary. Mr. Ollie Seymour, now well-known as a comedian throughout the vinces ance feat. He was enacting a small role in '"The Silver King" some years ago, ! and four hours before the rising of | the curtain the gentleman who enact ed The Spider (the gentlemanly vil ldin role) was taken ill. Mr. Seymour was called upon to take his place The "serip" At 7.30 the curtain rose, and when the time arrived for his entrance Mr Seymour walked in the stage and went { through the long and heavy part with scarcely a single appeal to the prompt | er. elped Him. Mr. citing recount'in the law courts, be comes M.P. for Exeter once owes a great deal of his success at - the Bar to the advice and encourag" | ment of Bir Edward Clarke. It' wa- the latter who, when Mr. Duke was representing a Plymouth: paper in th: | Gallery of the House of Commons the future K.C. to read for the Bar. And Mr. cf the very few journalist who read lery. work. He was called in and soon built up a large common law practice. His first' venture int» mouta in 1900, being returned by th largest number of votes ever given up te that time fot a member Plymouth. Mr. Duke is an protectionist, and was, in the days of the movement, one of the fir of Mr. Chamberlain's "whole hog gers." " ear'y Coronation Goodies. During the coronation festivities there promises to be a veritable rain | ot toys and sweets for lucky children according to Messrs. Joseph Wells the oldest-established fir makers in the country, It appear that there is already an EEG demand for daylight fireworks--shells filled with all softs of novelties in the way of toys and delicious sweet Toy guns, Teddy bears, surprise packets, mouth-organs, fishing-lines, dolls, picture postcards, vtc., ete., wil shower down when these shells are fired--an innovation which is bound ts end | bring the keenest delight to the chil. | These | most of these are buried in little | shells are sold at prices to suit all | ia Juiel contempt for such things. He | fel dren who witness the display. pockets, and the same remark applies ties which Messrs. Wells are selling. West Indian Hobble Skirts. The we n of th: Wes: Indies have been wearing the hobble skirt for years and are apt to wear it for years to come. 'The hobble may have orig- inated with these women of the tro- pics, but they probably care-little for the credit, as their hobble is more o1 !a necessity than a fashion decrees They wear a belt anywhere between the shoulders and tae hips, and the tight hobble cords is placed just below the knées. They are often forced tn walk through long, wet grass and ford streams, and when occasion demands is the skirts are-pulled ap and the hobble cord holds them in place. Every. native woman .wears a hobble, but she calls it a "grazitto." A Cruel Reminder. . His Wile--John, do you remember what took place just three years ago Her Husband--What, is this our wedding anniversary? : His Wile--N-.no. Three years ago '| today you boughs me. a new hat. M ic. pro | achieved a wonderfu! | of forty-five typewritten | pages was placed in his hands, and | he sat down to study it at 5 p.m. | who, after an ex. | more. | Duke is one | *¥ | known A Doctor's Discovery.' | Dr. A { lozist at Hospital, a great the Muskoka Gravenhurst, at deal of ¢ s-by the account of original re search in prevention and eure of tubereulosis A Consumptive h aroused interest in work the | sount of his work has appeared under | Pul- | "Investigntions on manary ' * Leafiing med ieal men oth in } Burope. appear to be of the-.op that this specia may be | eve of a great discovery. America ist have thrown the Tight of adv thought on this great subject Recently Pr. Caulfield was awarded the Ex<House Surgeons' Association | prize for the best paper publis | during the wear. Dr. Caul only thirty-one years old old Jarvis Street Collegiate per Canada' boy. | in the hospitals of London, Berlin is an and Up- | Toronto General Hospital for { time, and is a member of the Na He States frequently ures tres. | on the staff of The Toronto Star a: Muskoka correspondent, and proved | to be one of the best correspondents { The Star ever had. If he discovers a cure for tuberculosis, The Star will not begrudge its loss when he for | sook journalism for medicine. ardent | An Old-Fashioned Actor. The recent death of Denman Thomp- son has caused a number of old citi- zens to recall the days when he lived in Toronto, half & century ago. The house which he occupied on Wilton | avenue, which was then looked upon { as being. '"'up town,' is still to be seen, and some people can recall the home- ly character of the actor who was later on to make "The Old Homestead" throughout the length and breadth of the continent. Thompson possessed a great many eof the racy | qualities which formed the appeal of Joshua Whitcomb, and he was an hon- est, simple soul with none of the af- fectations which are supposed to char- acterize modern star. Thompson might not have succeeded if he had {lived in this generation, when the for the tenderness of their at | yeat. | of art. | | having done one farm-yard scene in| £8. to | *NA-DRU wanted a design for ad-| H. Caulfield] resident patho. | medical | In the meantime his investizations | He spent two years | and Vienna; was bacteriologist at the some | tional Board of Health of the United | in Washington and other medical cen- When a student in Tosonto, "All" | Caulfield spent a couple of summers | Packed in 1 and 2 pound cans only. 12¢ | PINEAPPLES. | : : ' : 2 | $ : : : i ~ FRESH STRAWBERRIES Arriving Daily | For- Preserving | Special Price Per Dozen. TUVVLVVTVLLVVRR TTC 1 | ncn | : ovea ng year: 1 pagon, The A tablet (or less) at bed-tin doses never: needed. Compe e regul ted parations, by expert chemists. Motley s 2 f your druggist Kas not yet weil mail them. UG & CHEMICAL COMPANY OF CANADA, LIMITED, MONTREAL. 2 25¢. a box 25¢. a NATIONAL DR a wa i correct! co" - Entirely different from common laxatives. Pleasant to take, mild and painless. 1 i ke all the back if not satisfactory. R. H. TOYE, 302 King St, =e BOeWRteWWTTR BCT TLVeTIPHRrteotstetsetsetatssesestsstad id Folks on easing tendency they need is Laxatives the bowels perfectly. Increasing 125 NA-DRU-CO pre- 1&9 ocked them, jetailed ac- | Children's Slippers and Strap Sandals wear for Children. FROM 50c TO $.200. Now's the time and here's the place to get the most comfortable and cool Foot Barefoot Sandals Patent Ankle Strap, Roman Sandals, White Canvas Oxfords, White Canvas Ankle Strap REID & CHARLES LIPTON'S TEA OVER 2 MILLION PACKAGES SOLD WEEKLY public and the profession find that | the intdlectual drama is steadily dtronger. He wal not a man of deep education or culture, and had uite satisfied with his friends growing | and the fame which the one charac. | | ter brought to him, and indeed after | the success of "The Old Homestead" {he wanted no other part' One man who knew him in his later years re. lated that his old 'age was peaceful and, unvexed, and filled with kindly actions done in an unassuming way. Making Trouble. | get into trouble is the opinion of an { employe in the health department of plaints are made by citizens. He tells, for instance, of a man who telephoned to the department to tell plaining one knew t+ tion of a city bylaw. "x an infrae- said the kicker, in a sincere tone. catch him at it." : A New Disease. medical inspection work started. in Toronto's public schools are meeting with some funny inci iscroscop : "You'll not find a steak like that in dents a hurry," boasted the tall waiter. (And the guest looked ap with an icy smile. "1 should say not. It is so securely | ster hidden under these few chips of tatoes it is doubttul if 1 find it at all." Rev. J. W. Hodgins, Anglican, at Strationd, told Athos coi Purses that some ailment the child Martha Lait, of Weimar, is in New. York mn route io the Island of hy - one of the Ha group; a / trip. to That many j-ople like to see others" an Ontario city, to which many com- | that a neighbor way doing a little | building or other worl that the com. | don't want to make trouble," | Then he added with great eagerness, | "but if you come up right now you'll -- { The nurses in connection with the | recently | A fittle girl was told by ene of the | i THE ASTORIA --FOR- MEN i i i i in the "Hall of Merit." - line. The operatives are attained, shoes for Men, They will leather are used in the manufacture the best Because of the wonderful success which we are enabled to offer a $35.00 value leathers, high and low cuts, at $1.50. ! Is conceded by experts to be worthy of the! highest place Nothing but the best grades of of of this --eelehrated skilled artisans, this shoo. has in all See this line of please you beeause of the fact that Aslorias embrace more nd patterns 'and lasts than any other line of Shoes made for men. ASTORIAS ARE UNION MADE od { : i i i H i i J.-H Sutherland & Bro. THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES amit p---- ----a PAGE SEVEN. ROTEL DIRECTORY. i DESERONTO. - | GO TO THE STEWART HOUSE, LEA ing Commercial Ho'el. Rates, $1.50 per day, THOS. STEWART, Prop. TRAVELLING. RAILWAY LE DRERL Ss i HEAD CAMP, | MODERN WOODMEN OF AMERICA, Buffale, NV, June 20th to 24th, ¥ nd trip tioKet® 'w be issued $975 at th, and 15th, d te jth June } return u TO WESTERN CANADA, 2 TUESDAY, JUNE 13TH And every second Tuesday thereafter intil Sept. 1¥th, at very low rates Good to return within sixty days, THE FINEST FARMING COUNTRY * so IN THE WORLD {is to be found along the line of the GRAND TRUNK PACIFIC in the Pre- vinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta Descriptive literature with beautl- fully engraved maps, giving full in- mation about FREE HOMB- STEADS and how te obtain them {free can be had on Application, J, P. HANLEY Corner Johnsen and Ontario Sts, | LETS EY ERE §. RAILWAY IN CONNECTION WITH CANSINAN FaviFiC RAILWAY, NOTICE No. 1 train 11.456 a.m. Kingston Commencing Jupe 5th will leave Kingston at No. 2 train will arrive at 4 pm No change in arrival or departure of other trains at Kingston Homeseekers' Excursions WB at A i, Saskatehewnn and Alberta, 13th, 27th ith, 25 good for 60 dave particulars at K. & P. and Jicket Office, Ontario Street. F. CONWAY, Gen. Pass. Agent BAY OF QUINTE RAILWAY, rain leas Ur ation, Ontario y excepted), re, Desers all polots despatth to h, and points on your shipments Hwa. For furs RH Ward, Pass Agent, lickets | Full {C.P.R | | sn Nt LAKE ONTARIO AND 'HAY or QUINTE STEAMBOAT CO, LTD, Str. Caspian 1000 ISLANDS AND ROCHESTER, N.Y es Kingston on Sundays 1,000 Islands, callin Rockport an leaves at § (Port - of of Quinte June 24th. amier leg 10 am' ft Alexandria na . Bay, Returning Charlotte, NY er), calling at Bay Daily service after Kingston pm, for handled Aletha leaves Sunday at 3 4 ports Freight th despatch and care full informatio apply, HANLEY, SWIFT & CU Ticket Agent rast Freight Agent, ALLAN LINE Stecmship Co'y, Lid. WERATING . FINEST Ee: PASSENGER STEAMERS ON TH ROUTE LAWRENCE SUMMER SAILINGS, Montreal to Liverpool ROYAL MAIL SERVICER. May Sth, June 2nd May 12th, June #th May 18th, June 16th May 20th, June 23rd. Montreal to Glasgow Tontan™ May €th Grampian" May Scotia" May 20th - Hesperian," May 2 Montreal to London Bteamers 'uretcan "Virginian "Tunisian Victorian june 3rd. 153th, June June 17th ith, June 24th, 10m. One class (moderats rate) alling at Havre, France, For full particulars of Rates and i Sedlings, apply, f.P. HANLEY, GT Ry C. 8. KIRKPATRICK, Clarence St. or THE ALLAN LINE, 77 Yonge Street, Toronto. Quebec Steamship Company LIMITED, 'River and Gulf of St. Lawrence Sommer (ruises in Cod Latitudes, fons re; 0, Apecis I modern MANTREAL ON po Sth and 22nd 2rd iSith Beplember Howing day at ing at Tiaspe Grand River, Summer PEL and Chariotistewn, PEI New York From Quebec Via the far-famed River Saguenay al Gaspe - Chariottptown an AE rinidad 4.600 tons, wn Guebes at 8 pm, 14th and Rin July, JHh and 20th August, and {5th Beptlember * BERMUDA Foxe reign, $26 and wp, Horew Nt Bermudian" ng from New York at 11 Zith June and Sth July, days thereafter. Tem ied by #ba brewyies seldom £9, degrees frips of the need com fore. Yor thokein and statersoms, sppiy eo i 3 HANLEY. or ©. 8 KIRKPAT TRICK, Ticket Agents Kiogston, Ont at Esp ay CONPFANY, wide by $ season for BEC, 17th and