LIC Electric Restorer for Men 0m ol restores every nerve in the body Phosph te its od teasion | restores vim and vitality. Premature decay and all Jueak ness averted at a - 4 " take you a new man. Price $8 a box, or twa for i alled to any address, Soobell Drug . os, For pale at Mahood's Drug Store. Phe Pantry Pest makes his exit when Keatings arrives. A clean, safe and effective way of getting rid of cockroaches. Sold by all Druggists we In tins only 10, 15, 20, 25¢, You never tasted a finer lager than this new brew Exquisite} mild and mellow. Sharpens the appetite--a fine tonic. Just try this different bi a enthuse rare quality. k for the I. label. Order by name. Order from any dealer or from OHN LABATT oi CANADA LTD. eat dames --Mebariand, 330-341 # L, Kingston 1 } ADVICE T0 WOMEN Women suffering from any form of illness are invited to promptly coms in municate with Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass. All letters are received, opened, read and answered by women, A wo- : man can freely talk of her private ill- ness to a woman; thus has been es. tablished this con. fidence between Mrs. Pinkham and women of America which has never been broken. Nola § Never has she pub. lished a testimonial or used a letter without the written consent of the writer, 'and never has the Company allowed these 8 Cnidential letters a t out © Tr possessi as hundreds of thousands of them in their files will attest. Out of the vast volume of has. bi So vice ch lad to SETS GALLERY AGOG CRY OF "ALOUETTE" IN HOUSE OF COMMONS. --t------ It is Given When the Whips Are Scouring the Corridors for Mem. bers--Col. Talbot, of Bellechasse is Quite a Singer. eet ve o---- Alouette! Talbot! Ajocueitd! Alou ete! Mais chante done Talbot!" That is the ery that sets the galler- ies agog sometimes in the House at Ottawa while the whips are scouring corridors for members and the | business of the nation stands still. It [i® the one time, while the mace is on tatile, that horseplay is permit that five minutes before a divi- ithe ted s.00., Fdrthwith from the Speaker's right uprises a lusty shout in a true and wiusical voice "Alouette, gentille Alouette; Alouette je te plumerai." While the House joins thundercusly in tne chorus, It is Lieut.-Col. Onesiphore Ernest Lalbot . of Beilechasse." Onesiphore Ernest Talbot is something of a name, out if he had lived in the middle igs, he probably would have been allied Walter Van der Vogelvide, or Fannhauser, or Wolfrain; he is the prizé troubadour, the meistersinger Jf ie Commons. Since he was born #h Quebee in the nineteenth century, in- stead of Europe in the fourteenth, he does not go from eity to city singing folk songs, he holds down a padded chair near the front rank on the Grit side and raises his voice in a habitant chanson that has been echoing back from the Quebec woods for a century, but is as unknown in.Ontaric as though it were a war chant of Afri- can hunters, You can travel far and hear nothing beter than that same "Alouette" song, with the shouted chorus which re- quires practice to bring in on time No should attempt to lead, bat in Col. Talbot's hands the song is safe. He plucks the lark from the tip of its beak to its Ipst tail feather and back again, never making a mis- take. "En roulant ma boul," is anoth ed of his, and "Brigadier vous avez raison." At first your English member in the smoking-room at night is 'all at sen' when these songs are struck up, but quickly he learns them. We have sothiag better in English, very little as good Almost better than singing does the ruddy colonel love to interpellate the Opposition. He sits down low in his chair and shouts things ag them. And they fume and sputter at him, call him "Nuisance," and various unecom- plimentary and un-Parliamentary things, but the colonel doesn't care. The angrier they get the hap ier he gets, Bome people do not believe in interruptions, they say that a proper question properly put is the only kind Jf interruption that is really effective, and the colonel's method has got him & reputation he does not deserve, for he is a debater as well as an inter. rupter. Anyway, it's all in the game, as hie plays it. " There's another game he likes, and that is checkers. {: isn't your rough and. tumble, Marquis of Queensberry, bite, kick, and gouge checkers, eith- ¢r; it's pure science-book checkers, with every move according to a mas- ter. He will clean a tyro out in about three moves, and then look as though he wondered how it happened. 'Very few people can appreciate checkers as he plays them, anybody can appreciate the way he sings 'Alouette." nov.ce A Hudson Bay Pasture. There has been appearing in one of the daily newspapers of Edmonton a small-type, five-line advertisement, which may be added to the hundred and one other-indication of the change that has come "over the Canadian West in the past few years. The ad- rertisement announces that the "Hud- won Bay pasture is now open to re- teive stock; 800 acres in pasture, also sity water and good fences." . There are men still in active life in Canada who can recall the time when he "Hudson Bay pasture" extended 'rom the Arctic Ocean to the Interna. donal Boundary, and from the Lake if the Woods to the Rocky Mountains Fhe occupants of the pasture were buffalo, upon a certain number of which fell the duty of paying the rent Jy giving up their lives and surrender- img their hides and beef. Now the Hudson Bay pasture is a mere patch, snelosed by a good fence, like an On. tario farm, and supplied with city wat. #r, like a swburbanites lawn. The West is changing so rapidly and so radically that it scarcely knows itself from day to day. Provincial Weeds. An exhaustive bulletin has been issued by the Provincial Department of Agriculture on the "Weeds of Ontario." It is'by Mr. J. E. Howitt, MB. Agr.. lecturer in botany ai the Ontario Agricultural College, and is an expansion. to 144 pages of former smaller bulletins issued in 1900, 1903, 1906, 1908. The illustrations, of which there are 66, are well drawn, ani while not in color, like the elabor- ate "Farm Weeds of Canada" is sued by the Dominion department, make identification simple by their clearness. : The farmer loses so much by weed pests that he cannot afford to ignore any information or assistance that he can get which may enable him to grapple with them, and this book will no doubt go out of print as rapidly as its predecessors. Noth ing that the farmer needs 0 know about is omitted from weeds its raw | es. Trade With New Zealand. According to a report received from tha Canadian Trade Commissioner in be | New Zealand, Canadian exports to that colony for the fiscal year which closed on March 31, totalled $1,404. 535, an incresee of $404,635, as come pared with the previous year. The incipal increases | were: Chassis ow motor vehjcles $75,000, and news. paper $55,000. Practically all in. creases were in the manufactured products of Eastern Canada. The report indicates. that Canadian mak- ers of automobiles gre Sommencing to get a pretty good grip om New Zealand market. By the end of THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, nies tin, Ee -- ee NORTH BAY'S MAYOR. IS Gee. A. McGaughey Rose to Position | Y in o i NE - oer Seven Years 14 Town [NEARLY 2000 ACRES GAINED Sandwiched in between an account | 'ACH YEAR FROM SEA of a measles epidemic and the report | EACH YE. M SEA, of a barn-raising, a Deseronto paper | some years had a news item that read about like this: 'Our estimable | Joung townsman, Geo. A. McGaugh- mission. ey, M.A, who was gold-medallist in | z av political sciengé at Queen's Univer- | London, July 12.--The fact that the sity, has graduated from the Upper United Kingdom "is growing in size Canada Law Below}, and Hereafter yearly inacenst ut shrinking is raved il known as wyer Gi " lm the final nr roval com- Mhats i it id mie 2 the hon " Er the reclama- matter Josulazly as if Whe had 8 !tion of tidal lands and aflorestation; healthy annual crop of A's, and [which has now been printed. gold-medallists and lawyers. That | J¢ js estimated that during the last aragraph didn't do justice to what | piri. five years about 6,640 acres Sere had dene. nor to what he would 3. "vee fost by comst erosion, wiile p o n w 48,000 acres have Deen reclaimed The estimable young townsman from the sea. The losses have been went to the office of W. D. McPher- | chiefly the o sonst, --omd-- the son, M.P.P., Toronto, where he sat up r ay o pen in the Yidal nights learning how to get a witness E8195 almost. entirely in t es- w tell more than he wants to, and tuaries. . fitting himsel! for the time he, too, | Erosion has been most serious on wou be called upon to be a repre. the east coasts of Ifeland and Eng- land, and would have been far more sentative of the sovereign people. C Leoking- around for some sovereign serious but for extensive works carried out by local authorities. From a na- Rechte to represent he picked on No {tional point of view, the report states, rth Bay--and in less than seven years the untrammelled electors of, [the extent of erosion need not be con- sidered alarming, but in order to deal that town asked him, without one dis- stEtng voice, to be their mayor for 'gfectively with the. situation remedial 1911. Now, all this time George was- lipeasures are necessary. 'n't growing any younger, but he had- | ben : : o KT L be | Administrative changes are recom- ht grown much older; he was thirty- mended and a closer and more sympa- in M . that' | : z aor Fovomact at ah aaa dr [thetic coopation: bebwees 3. col 9 , {body and local authorities and private mayoralty of New Ontario's most im- 3 x portant town, it's only a stepping Owners. It has not been found Tidal Estunaries-- Interesting Data in Report of a Royal Com- stone to things higher. He is secre- tary of the well organized Liberal! As- sociation of Nipissing, and his name will go before the electorate at the next general election.--The Canadian defensive operations applicable to all {paris of the coast line, but it is point- ed out that some central comtrolling {authority ~ is essential in view of the wrong type of delensive work being | undertaken, The commissioners recommend a simplification sof the law affecting the |adminiétration of the foreshore, par- {ticularly in Seotland, and that the duties now devolving on the sioners of woods and forests shall he transferred to the board of 'rade. [Another important recommendation is |that a clear right of passage by foot {on all foreshores in the United King- dom, whether crown Fh not, A Wireless Freak. Wireless telegraph, like most other things, is subject to freakishness at times. This was well illustrated by an experience of Mr. John C. Eaton of Toronto. Mr. Eaton went to New York a few days ago to see his wife off on the Mauretania: for a voyage to Europe. When the big liner was well out at sea, Mr. Eaton sent a wire- less message to his wife, addressed to the Mauretania via the Cape Cod sta- tion. He immediately left New York and came to Toronto, embarking on his private yacht, the Florence, soon after his arrival. The Florence is quipped with wireless apparatus, woh is used by Mr. Eaton te keep in touch with Toronto while he is cruising. When Mr. Eaton went on board, the Marconi operator was ex- perimenting with his instrument, try- ing to catch a message 'which was floating abodt in the currents of ether. Finally he got it, and handed it to Mr. Eaton, who was astonished te find that it was the same message that ne had sent to his wife on the Maure- tania before leaving New York. In- stead of going where ii was sent, or because the New York. land operator had directed it inaccurately, the mes- sage had gone on a little Jiensuse trip of its own accord, circled among the clouds, and followed Mr. Eaton to Toronto, where possibly a repeat of it was picked up by the apparatus of the Florence. --BStar Weekly. shall be conferred upon the public, in addition to the rights of nawgation land fishing they already possess. A further important proposal is that the hoard of trade shall be consti- tuted the central sea defence ity for the United Kingdom, and that the public works loans commissioners shall be empowered to issue loans on {the seciirity of the rates. There are, the comunigsioners are convinced; considerable areas of tidal lands, "especially in Ireland, which could be reclaimed with profit fo the community, and the reclamation of which might give opportunity for the utilization of unemployed Jabor, They recommended that the board of trade should be charged with the duty of 'scheduling such lands, and should be given compulsory powers for their ac- quisition. : soncue GO Sy As a practical measure they 'recom- mended the growing of marrum and 'other grasses on the sand dunes. |. In conclusion * the say they cannot recommend grants from public funds, as any general policy of that sort would subject the State to serious difficulties and should not be encouraged. They do mot think that responsibility for sea defence Sparsely Settled. The first census return has been re. ceived "wd the Department in Ottawa. It is the population of the territory of the coast of Hudson Bay, west of Fort Churchill, and the enumeration was begun last fall by the Northwest Mounted Police on a special order-in- council. The population totals 1,800 ersons, of whom 200 are white, most. y Hudson Bay employes or police of- ficers. The rest are Esquimaux. This is the first real census taken in that district. Ten years ago the popula. tion was largely estimated upon re. ports of missionaries and others. A substantial increase is apparent." The enumeration of the eastern territory to Labrador was made simultaneously with the other, but has not béen re. ceived yet. The population there will be-much- smaller; } In the present census an attempt is being' made to cover accurately every bit of Canadian territory whers human life is known to exist. In the far north, Capt. Bernier of the Gov. ernment steamer Arctic counting the Eskimo whalers and missionar- ies, while in the western hinterland and Mackenzie River basin the mount. ed police are doing it. \"nor ik there an obligation on crown to defend the coasts: of {United Kingdom from fhe inroads the sea." | The extended administrative ance they suggest is, in their opinion; the extent of the intervention called br from the state. A WEDDING MISFIT, the the Bride's Father Showed Fight "Guest" Did Not See Coffin. A Chicago men, who started out one {day last week to attend a {went astray and got into a house jwhere a funeral was being held, serts the Chivago Record-Herald. (was a little late and through a rather dark hall into a | back parlor, where he found a va {cant chair. Unfortunately it was im { possible for him to see from where he isat just what was going on in the front room, where the preacher and ithe corpse were located. He was | able, however, to hear distinctly. The {preacher was in the middle ol his discourse, | "It is . true," he was saying, "that this is a most solemn occasion, - but let us try to look upon {hopeful side. It may all be for A Greag Athlete. Chicage Record-Herald "bob" Davis, who is editor of Mun- sey's Magazine and the author of sev-! eral plays, is the possesso; of a sense of humor and a power of pXpression that is frequently picturesque. Speak- best: Who among us can tell ? ing of a. man who had achived some qo remember that behind the darkest distinction as a kill-joy, Davis said : {cloud the sun still shines. It is our "That fellow is a great athlete. He duty to try to believe that our friend can throw a wet blanket two hundred | has entered into a happier state, It yards in any gathering." {is true that he will mingle with us no ---- {more; we shall not again be cheered It's better to stay out than to get [BY his bright smile; all that once married and fall out. seemed dear to him he has had to re sign; he has met the common fate, but # is not for us to decide that this For Infants and Children. is to be the end of all for him." The Kind You Have Always Bought Unable to restrain himself any long- er the man who had wandered into the Bears the Bignature of the wrong house, leaned over toward one of the former friends of the dead man and said : Ts . "Say, if 1 was the bride's father I'd lick that fellow." - . Owning a Home. » NICE HAIR FOR ALL. people on salaries and wages because it is only by going into debt for Oucs Deatray the Dandraft Germ andl copie of This seit thal the are Hair Grows Luxuriantly. age wageearner of moderate Pay Any one can have mice hair if he or ican ever hope to get anything ahead. she has not dandruff, which causes| The trouble with a salary, in a- brittle, dry hair, falling hgir and! bout ninety-nine cases out of a hun baldness. To cure dandruff X is ne [dred, is that it is merely a living, cessary to kill the germ that cavses |The man on $12 a week lives on &, it, and that is what Newbro's and he lives on his salary when it is i 'ornelius Grew, Col |doubled, trebled or quarupled. Rare "Wash., says: ly does he save, because his deminds "One bottle of Newbro's Herpicide expand at least as rapidly " as his me of -dandrad, which : pay. 4 om But if he gets enough ahead make a start toward building and takes the bull by the horns by in- vesting what he has snd becomes re sponsible for the balande, he will meet his obligation somehow, and when he is paid up be owns some thing. 1 he kesps on renting ail he bas after a term of years is a bundle of rent receipts that Ne can't eash to Send druggists. J to the Her ich, One bottles guaran sed. Jas. B. Me | Kingston in for as much as a cup of onflie aed a doughnut.--Dulath Herald. WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1011. GROWING IN SIZE {sible to lay down any géneral rule for | Hoss--susiained---in--the-- past bythe. commis-- author. | commissioners | rests primarily on the nation at large, | of | assist. | wedding, | as- | He | wak conducted | the more | Let | We have advocated bome-owning for : THE DOUKHOBORS, j a-------- | Queer, Russian Sect Which Has Ee i : come Canadianized. | The Doukhobor women have been. | reclaimed from the plow. | . No longer do they sweat in the fields i of Canada instead of horses. Even as their men are ceasing to be the wild { wanderers. and fanatical spirit-wrest lers they were when they appeared {in the northwest several years ago, so {the new world's environments hava draWn the women back from the brute | level, to which they had been degrad- led, to the home, with its cooking, its | spinning and its weaving -- old-time | tasks, it is true, but tasks adjusted to { their strength. " | The melting pot of this western ; world. has recast even the Dgukhobars. | The colony boasts of a substantial { schoolhouse. Doukhobor teachers were { educated in the schools and returned {to impart the knowledge to their fel- | low-colonists, | Ridiculed by Canada the Doukho- | bors' pilgrimages in the dead of win: | ter, through snow-covered roads to | meet their "Christ," made them the | laughing stock of the country. But | those crudities are things of the past; | they have become Canadianiz in the true sense of the word. There are two colonies of Doukho- bors in Canada -- Yorkton, containing 7,000 members, and "Rosthorn, with 1,600. The Doukhobors now use horses. Formerly they believed, it was unscrip- tural to work these ardimals and the women instead acted as beasts of bur. den. Eighteen of them were general- ly needed to take the place of a team. The women now are engaged in the domestic arts and are magnificent em- broidérers. The farmers are becoming prosperous and many of them have the latest farming machinery and the {best-ui-live stock---Fheir-objections-to the use of animals as servants of mag bave been overcome. \ \ Mr. Foy's Smoke. It will 'be remembered that when R. J. Fleming came out last sutumn with 8 new bunch of rules for the Street Railway Co. in Toronto, one of them prohibited smoking on the cars. Perhaps some of us might have ob- jected more strenuously to this rule if {it had not been for the busy month | spent fighting the pay-an Jou-enter | system. When victory finally rested | with the citizens, we looked about and {found that mo smoking was allowed | any more, even on the rear platform | in the trailers, or on the three rear | seats of open cars. It is said that the Attorney-General { was wailing on the corner recently for {a car, and as it did not show up for | some time, he made the time pass pleasantly by lighting a cigar. It had hardly stated to emit its pleasing aroma when his car ap, ool the horizon. The member wo Bouth Te- jronto looked longingly at the fragrant { weed, and felt that he could not throw it away. He climbed upon the back platform with the cigar held carefully | 0 4s not to attract attention. Occa- | | sionally the conductor had to depart { to collect fares, and with all the care i of a school boy eating candies during | | school hours, the Attorney-General tok long pulls at the cigar when the | man with the little coffee pot was ab- | | sent. Those who did not dare to break | , the rule stood by and inhaled the | | weet breath of the Havana second. hand, or rather second-meuth. « { They evidently thought he had the | right -to- break the rule; for when he { { had alighted, one of the men asked | the conductor, whe had apparently i failed in his duty, . "Was that R. J. Fleming?" i "Oh, no," was the reply, "that was the Attorney-General, Mr. Foy."~To- ronto Star. | ------------------------ : A Canadian Success. | The organization of a company to | take .over the Canadian end of the { Sherwin-Williams Paint Co. calls at- | tention to the fact that the president jt this big concern is a Canadian, who has had a remarkable career. His name ig Mr. Walter Cunningham, and many young men id Montreal | remember when he started business for himself in 'a small way in Mont- real in a little Notre Dame street store. In a short time he went to the head office of the Sherwin-Wil- liam Co., and soon became president {of the largest paint manufacturing company in the world. He is regard- | ed as one of the big businessmen of | the continent, bis organization abili- | ties being looked upon as marvelous. | i { He is also president of the new Can- | adian Sherwin-Williams Co.. with | him as manager being associated Mr. iC. C. Ballantyne, of Montreal. | { - i Diamonds In Canada. | Mr. R. A'A. Johnston, of the Do- { minion Geological Survey, will leave | Ottawa for Germany soon to inquire nto methods by which diamonds ean [ be extracted from chromite. Di%- | | monds in chromite have been found | in northern Quebec, and it is elaim- {ad that they can be extracted by a | { particular method known in Ger. | imany. If so, it is believed that the | Quebec diamonds fields will take on |a large importance. There have been | | many rumors for years past, about | {diamonds in the northern part of | {Ontario and Quebec, and some of these days sensational discoveries may be made. A mining engineer in the north has a fine diamond which | he. claims to have secured from an Indian, and which he sent to "Am- sterdam, where, he had it cut and polished. --Star Weekly. : Hard to Find. One of Mr. Fisher's census enumer. ators had an interesting time inter. viewing a lady on O'Connor street. Ottawa. With his voluminous book and nicely sharpened: pencil! the in- quisitor appeared at t door . and the woman came. "Is the man of the house in? he sweetly enquired, opening his judg- ment book. "No," was the reply. "Will he be in at noon?" "No." here I ean find "Can you tell me w persisted Mr s un- him? derling. on ¥ a was drowned last Was unexpected answer. The Mace. A -------- Some men wre honest because it is fron muh trouble to be otherwise. { But the wage earner has a boss ig | blame it -r ! | Alek a man has been touched begins to realize that he was har hit. : - PAGE NINE | Fresh Fruit Arriving Daily | Raspberries, Cherries, Peaches and Plums. { R. H. TOYE, 302 King St, mesic Trereresseessecceal / le a aa a -- -- oe ATTENTION 'WHEN YOU REQUIRE ANY Tinsmithing, Gas~Fitting, Plumbing or Hot Water Heating Done CALL UP Elliott Bros, Telephone 35. 77 Princess Street. : le All orders promptly attended to. Saves Labor as well as F uel Saves time in the morning when you are in & hurry, and at night when you are tired OTRO IS, Here isla furneve that le easy to attend One you can tlean out without using the poker. > § The ashes at the side of the pot can be 'shaken down without losing good coals in the centre. The four separate grate bars do that, Yq The water pan, so essential to good heating, , is placed where it can be easily filled and not se likely to be overlooked. "Heola' Furnace Six _tons of coal instead of seven. And this furnace which is 80 easy to run will save you one ton of coal ia every seven. q It will give you pure air without ges or dust, § Whe you shake it down no ash dust can escape either in the basement ria the living rooms. Sound interesting p Why not investigate Get this_Bookiet. NOTE THE FEATURES THAT MAKE FOR CONVENIENCE Water Pan Openings conveni- ently placed on either side of ash doer. Large Firing Door for wood or large shovels of coal. \ Four Separate Grates to clean out ashes withou using poker . It will be sent free, and it will tell you things to know about heating. Write for it to-day. Common Sense Ash Pan fitting perfectly and cate hing all the ashes you ought Door Handle which nto place and locks the door securely, CLARE BROS. 4 CO., LIMITED, - PRESTON, Ont. ELLIOTT BROS. Kingston. Large drags THE INTENSE HEAT OF THE PAST FEW DAYS Makes the 5 o'clock early closingmovement of great benefit to our employees. Will Custom- ers kindly stop early during July and August so that our help ean get. full benefit of the early closing movement, A visto our Store,' will show some good values in seasonable shoes. |J- H. Sutherland & Bro. THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES