© HOMAS COPLEY . Proxe 987, work algo: 1 rdw 00d Pioors of of ll kinds. ps i receive Srompt tin, 40 Queen Btrest c Restorer for Men restores every Jerse iu the bady | eusion ; restores and afl sexual hala Fremaurt isay man, "Price ghaton ot 0 ior at Mahood's Drug Store. "THAT TOBAG TOBACCO craming hi gg as he goes along Hd pound. Por ch hewing and CAT A MA A. MACLEAN'S, Ontario Street, 0000000000000 2000000 WE DYE ALMOST EVERY. § THING. We dye' or clean almost "wrticie of apparel-worn by men or women, and with our large works and large ex- perience we have the best ways of doing it. R. PARKER & C0, gs Dyers and Cleaners, 09 Priveess St, Kingston, Ont, S8ssesssstssessssse Quench You Tour Thirst * DUBLIN yma ALE, Rup. * » ® w . ° o . . ° ° * . * » v RARPHERIY VINEGAR, ' ORANGEADE. D. COUPER, 'Phone 76. = 841.8 Princess Street. Prompt Detivery, : Twn Tsing & -- All kinds of Tinsmith, Plumbing and Contract Work. down and stor- Stoves ed for the summer at meder- gpa 'work promptly attended | Lemmon Bros. | a 201 Princess st. ¢ FINKLE CO. LIVERY AND CAB STAND, Open Day and Night. Cubs: _cdored tor early 'morning boats | and trains promptly attended to. * Motor Car for Cataraqui a tse Ca 8 r on lica-~ tion. pp Notn| ig these hot, sultry days $ * "oaile and refreshing us R properly served, Our fountain enjovs because we large serve 0 | gun. {WHAT WHICG "CONRESPONDENTS i TELL The Tidings From Various Points is Eastern Ontavio--What People Arve Doing and What They Are Saying. t At Walunt Grove. Walnut Grove, July 31.---Harvest is well under way and thveshibghas be Al puck has retursed after a trip to Moscow. Miss Winnie tell has returnéd from a visit with ber aoutis Watgtown, Mrs. Me Pherson has her sister with ber from Rochester, N.Y. Quite a num- ber rom here pent Sunday among the islands. The wind on Monday nearly unloaded the fruit wows, Wik son puck has a fivemile Toptract of sei ting telephone poles Items From Chantry. July 31.=Mrs, Dickey ard dauguter, Arletta, of gn, .nre visiting at Edward Freeman's. Miss Uedfe 1rown, who has been teaching school near Simeod, arrived homes for wer holidays last week. Mrs. GG, F. Cleveland, and som, Grover, of Al bany, N.Y. and Mrs. H. G. Sheldon, of Portland, wewe guests of their ancle, A lrown, on Monday. Miss Jessie Percival, of A is, is visit ing Mis Doreen Davis. Knowlton Davis has returned from visitiog friends in 'Athens, ' ' Chantry, Sanbury Reports. Sunbury; = Ady. 1.--~The weather continues --fine--and --harvestiog hag become genernl. The quantity of the grain that has been. out is up to the average. Sacramental service was held in the Methodist church on Sunday. The Orange society is ar- ranging for a picnic. C. Spith has his barn finished. William ' Me- Neeley leaves in a few days for the west. Threshing will be the order of the day this week, un few wanting te do some stock-threshing. Milk received at all the local factories has greatly docreased during the past two weeks, A number of visitors are spending an outing here for a limited time. Local stores report a good continued trade. The ensilage crop taken in' general ja looking good. Meeting at Hartington, Hartington, Aug. 1,--A meeting of the Biftish and Foreign Bible So- ciety was held here last Bunday ev ening. D. McHroy gave an interest ing address. A collection was taken up in aid of the society. Thomas leonard, who was injured recently by [* hay falling on him, is (recovering. narterly service will be 'held in the Methodist chureh here mext Sunday. b spent an enjoyable time at the home of BE. Freeman lasl Thursday night. Mr. and Mrs. FE, Ryan' spent Sunday at Selby. Mrs, Hubbel has been visiting at T. Trousdale's; Miss VanOrder js visit: ing E. Campsall's; Mrs. Milligan is the guest of Mrs. Charles = Purdy; Mr. and Mrs, M. Beadiord spent Sune day at FE. Revell's. Acciderit at Maberly. Muberly, Aug. 1~Me and Mrs, Sasstssrssuniserenenng I. McNulty left to visit friends in Smith's Falls and Ottawa. Thos, Charlton returned home on Saturday. Albert. Morris met with a bad acci- dent on Saturday on his way from Althorpe with the mail. There was a freight train at the erossing and Mr. Morris thought. .he womld hold Hs horse and stay in the buggy but the horse became unmanageabld and upset the buggy, throwing' Mr. Mor- vis out on his shoulder. Mis head was badly hurt but no bones were broken. He was caved for by friends and Dr. Singleton was 'phoned ' for and was at Mr. Morris shortly after he was taken home, A 'wed boy has arrived at David Millikin's. Harry Hughes arrived from Vancouver on Tuesday. He will accompany his wife and son back about Sept. 1st. Master Norman Hughes, of Vancouver, and Froest Walroth spent a week ath friends at Burridge. SUPDEN DEATH AT 3 AT YARKZR. Late Mrs. Baster----Clay Bed Gives , Railwaymen Trouble. Yarlcer, Aug. 1.~James Warner bad the niisfortune to fall from a tree, on whicli he wus engaged in trimbisg off gos limtbe. He carvies his gra tn a sling, ov. Mr. Batstone has gone to his new charge at Franklin's. Mr. Me- Mullen, the new minister i rga of Yarker circuit, filled 'toment hee, last Sunday. 'All of the Arcus ning been biased by S. D. Babcock, and as soon fexpare, as the lenses of the present. boeupants |, he will carry ona business of his own. The buildings gre all newly painted. Dustalmliite. Aasion al dongs amd Mise E. Walsh, of Kingston, are George Deare's. Miss Louisa Walsh was one time principal of Yarker pub- lie sehool, "The family of Willidm Woodhouse, buve moved to Peterboro. Allen Peters insurance agent, has moved to the residence vacated by William Wood- house. A. W. Benjaminé, who has been ill at Svderham Lake, is getting bet- ter, and will soon be arowmd agsin. HA NGMA N ENTERS ETERNITY. Holds Record for Gruesome Work-- Fxecuted Six at a Thue. Fort Smith, Ask, Aung: 2.~~Within a stone's throw of the nual resting place of men whom he seni to eterar ty at the end of & hangwmaa"s rope the body of George Maledon, wilo for years served: as official execu tioner of the United States court at Fort Surith, was buried this week. Malelon, despite reports that he wos haunted hy the spirits of mew whom he had hanged, and that he was afraid to sleep in an unlighted room, "lived to' the ripe old age of eighty-seven years, dying in the sold W's home at Johuson City og Tenn. More than the usual agfount of trouble allotted to man ML to this man who legally executed mors than sixty men, but he was always jolly. In his declining vears he performed the duties of hanging as ably as in days when he established the reputa- tion which' made him: the most dread- ed man in the western jcountry, Maledot 'attained "hid record of six- ty hangings in the twenly-two years he was a turnkey at one of the most notorious jails in the world, and would have hanged' many more but for the election of a demoeratie president of the United States, which let out all federal employveds'in Fort Smith, In addition to the number he legal ly executed, Maledom shot two men to death. Twenty-two men were log- ally executed at Fort Smith after Maledon left the government service, Deputy Mardhal George Lawson per forming the gruesome fumction. With Maledon the hanging of men was 5 btisinesds and an art. Few man who fell through the trap of the Fort Smith gallows died of strang- ulation--it was nearly always a case of broken neck. His willingms to perform a dity shirked by most fed- eral employees kept Maledon in his position with each change of marshaly, until he fmally retired to make room for a demoerat. With the passing of Maledon there ramains in Fort Smith but one re minder of the death dealing ma- chine which from 1874 to 1990 snuffed ont' the lives of 'eighty- dight men. This is the trap of the old gallows. This trap is now the front porch of a cabin which stands nearde cite of the old gallows, and the feet of children patter upon it daily. 'Now the site of the old gallows is a part of a business centre, Maledon esme to America an infant from Bavaria in 1590 was a resident of Detroit until was grown, then going to the In: dian territory, where he soon be came a deputy marshal. During the terms of Marshal Logan H. Roots he was made turnkey and hangman, the position he held for twenty-two years. While he served as hangman Jalon twice hanged six men at one time, the trap: of the gallows being of sufficient size' to accommodate twelve without crowding. Three times he executed sets of five, and as many times executed four at once. Four times three men were legally hanged hy Maledon, and double executions were too numeroud for his attention in after vears, "I have never hanged a 'came back in after years the job done over again, ghosts of men executed at Fort Smith never hing around the old gibbet," Maledon once said when questioned as ko the reports of his mental disturbances. After he was relieved as federal hangman = Maledon toured the In- Jian territory and other parts of the southwest, exhibiting his Yopes and parts of the gallows, being greeted hy large crowds every where. He fihally gave up the ven- tare and went into the grocery business in 1ort Smith, later re tiring to a farm in Washington county, where heremaiged until tao aged to work. He wak sdmitted to. the soldiers' home in Tennessee, 5 reward for his service in the union army, -- STERILIZED DRINKING The Forbes Celebrated System Most Reliable. The Station Military Hospital, Quean street is mew being « equipped with the orbes. elas ated Water Steeitines, heat and, ing process. queen' pertify su a in ao installing it. Simciutely 'wale sal gas operated at Nyy ota, 1, "Lom Us. fons; steam ated ad six cont BK ).- when and he Ma- who have the man to for WATER. ANNEXATION CRY 18 NOT COUNTEXANCED. THE The United States Editors Demon- strated That the Anmexation Cry Was All Moonshine. , Canadian-American, Chicago A large party of American editors, recently in cofivention at Detroit, are now "taking a holiday trip through Quebec and Outario. When heir coming Was amiounced in the Canadian Hew rs, some of the latter hinted that the object of fhe Yankee journalists in crossing . the boundary at this time was to stimu- late sentimeni in favor of annpexa. tion. At the least it was rumored they were bent upon "spying out the land" in thé interests of the con spirators, Supposed to be active ow this side, who He awake nights plot: ring ways and means of alienating tive dominion Yrom the empire. 1 The editors have Just been cordial- ly welcomed and enferfained at Mon treal. Incidentally of course, speech #8 were made by and guest: and the Montrealers dost no time in convincing the visitors that loyally to the motherland was never strong in Canada as it i$-to-day. An: aexation 'was feared by Some nery. ous Canadians, they intimated. but favored by none. The usiversal aim was to rivet more securely the ties of friendship with thelr neighbors to the south, but te jfifsafve their staunch allegiance to t pew Ring and .the old flag. The visiting Americans may have been a little surprised at these earn: spokesmen fu responding - clear that Uncle Sam's present inten tions were of the best. One emphatic scribe stated fhat "there was not en- otigh annexaion spirit in the United States to wad a& shot guh." Another editor. who hafled from Virginia, sald this: "We are not interested in annexation. This twentieth century pelongs to the Canadians for de- velopment, and we say. to you 'God bless you, and speed you!' Nothing would please us better than to. sec Canada grow so that in this centuly she is in population and wealth, and in every other respect, the equal 0 the United States.' The journalists before promised that not a single favorable to annexation would written by any one of them. without exeeption they all announced their purpose to preach rec iprocity until the pact was establishéd on both sides of the border. If this illustrates one thing more than another, it is that anne xation seuoment exits in the U nited States and Canada nowhere oytside of the brains © of interested politicians. Whenever the iwo peoples get to gethier and compare notes they dis- cover that it'ls & dead. issue. Fro- quent exchanges of candid opiwioa on this vital subject by Americans afid Canadians will bury ani@xation peyond recall, and, at the same time, bobet one of the most imporfant of present- day reforms---re« iproeity. departing word be but A SAMPLE CASE. flow the Barley Trade Gan be Re- covered, Thomas Journal, Amongst other agricultural pro: ducts, Canadian barley is put on the American free list under the recipro- city agreement. The history of that commodity has a particular interest for the Ontario farmer. For years Ontario barley ox- ported' in great quantities the Lmited States. It was admitted fre during the existence of the old re ciproeity treaty, and after that was moderately taxed tif 1866, when the McKinley act imposed a duty of thir ty cents a bushel. This at once dimin- jahed our exports, in fact, had the eof fect * of throwing barley almost out of cultivation in the provinee, except for the supply of loeal requirements. In 1889, the year before the McKinley tariff, our exports to the United States amounted to 9,935,000 bushels, of which no less than 9,700,000, vale ed at $6,300,600, came from Ontario. Shortly after the imposition of the duty the conservative government at Ottawa endeavored to introduce into Canada the cultivation of the two- rowed harley favored By English brew- ers, but, chiefly owing to climatic rea sons, the eéxperiment was not alic- gether successful, although some two- rowed is grown in Ontario by farmers who think it more prolific than our native six-rowed; and certainly just as good for feeding animals. Hence whilst we have all along been sending barley to the British market, the trade has never been atiything like so great or so remunerative as that with the states When the Afierican duty was moderate, In 1910 our' totdl exports were 2,045,000 bushels, of 500,000 went to Britain for feed, while our ence prosperous business with the Americans had dwindled to a paltry 156,000 bushels. Under the present St was to ast expressions of fealty. but their ~made- yy ou yds ret 4 SE LIPTON'S TEA RNs Eh 413 AR which: 1,- {+ The *Bdelweiss™ flower Is the sym~ bol of perpetual purity. "EDELWEISS" BEER Local Agent, BK. BEAUPRE. is the rarest, best and purest beer in @ll'Canada. "Edelweiss" is not only a delightfully refreshing drink --'tis. a wholesome food as well Drank with meals it aids the diges- tion and tones up the entire system. A beer brewed especially for tem- perance folks. Bohemian Hops-- pure malt and filtered water. That's all, Brewed by REINHARDTS' OF TORONTO The Best Beer Sold Re Telephone 313. sssssssasssssssssssesfrssrsdasssssssssnaascecsl ¥ Men's Low Shoes Men's Low Shots, in and $4.50. CUT PRICE Men's Shoes, Tan and CUT PRICE... « ian Lo : : | : Tan and Patent Leather, ALL AT CUT PRICES Black, $1.00 Black. Regular $2.50 aml $3.00, $1.90 H. Jennings, sesscsesssesscscsstsesesfeocsssssssassssasssan - King bt. VPRO TERT REC TTR VTRLTRTTBROEETRTBOIOTRTY 'DAY OR NIGHT _ Phone " 201 OUR CRYSTAL. BRAND Of Standard Gransiated Sugar X Has been tried and found excellent for pre ng and. table use, Price Ia always r e ANDREW MACLEAN, Ontario Street, For Health Drink MecCarthey's Ale and Porter. It's the _ best. Agent, R. J. LAWLER Carriage Pi Painting This 1s the place to uns. your Auto repainted to stand all Kinds of weather, E. Jd. DUNPHY, Montreal and 1 Owe, Resse sssssssesssesessesl THECLUB HOTEL WELLINGTON STRENT. There, a © Bot ht none a he To hom ay nd Located in centre' of oity and tlowe to principal' stores ed an os are modergt : Special rates by the week, P. M. THOMPSON, Proprietor, ATRIA oF You REE A Small Launch, a Steam Yacht, or a Speed Boat, there (& is a Davis boat to fulfil your re- quirements. Our Gasoline Fo- gines have earned a high repu- $= tation for speedy reliability and first class workmanship, Ask for our 1911 catalogue, DAVIS DRY DOCK CO. «+ "Phone 420, Been eaneaeaieeer OP sesso 2 '0 2 sey See aay OO) NINGSTON * BUSINESS COLLEGE (Limited). "Highest Education at Lowest put i *Y enty:ateth OAT, beg'ns August it Bokkeeping 8h wraphy, Civil Beryien. and | Our Sroduates wet A a positions. Within a short time over sixty see tions with raliway cor- Enter one of the Ia t poravions a0 ne any time. Call'or write for Informas tion, H. F. Metcalfe, Principal Kingston, Canada. ee ------ ig -- POSEEUIE II 440040000004 TAKE IT AWAY what our «That's «When served Ginger Ale or Beer that do patrons say | with Belfast Faglish Ginger not hear our Our bottled goods for family § 5 no superior of the lead. 304 for a it at any oO rielephone Thompson Bottling Co. ! 202 PRINCESS ST, KINGSTON. S Crown Gypsum Hair Plaster fsaves labor and will make ~ your walls practically inde- structible, P. 'WALSH | 655---57 Barrack Street he Kind ¥ You ym Always Bought, and which Yan been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signaturs of ie and has been made under his pere sonal supervision since its infancy. -- RY Stbeseettsserssitseetd The American} Cafe 185 Wellington Sts "Tha Up-to-date A and Eating House. Separate appartments. Well furnished and lighted. Try our Full Course Dinner, ec. THOMAS GUY, Prop. PPP FEFE PFE IFRS EI HI0 7 Allow no pno to deceive you in this, All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-good" are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children Esperiencé against Experiment, What is CASTORIA Castoria Is a Rarmless substitufe for Castor Oil, Pare. gorie, Drops and Soothing Syrups, It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine ner other Narcotlo substance, Fes age is its guarantee. Jt destroys Worms and allays Feverishness, §t enres Dinrrheen and Wind Colie. It relieves Teething Troubles, euros Constipation and Flatuleney, Tt dssimilates (he Fdod, regulates the . Stomach and Bowels, giving henliliy and natural sleep, \ : The Children's Panacos~The Jiothe?'s rie OOOHTOFO00GG00CO00000 GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS CHOCOLATES pBears the Signature of Ganong's, G. B. THE FINEST IN THE LAND A. J. REES Toe ioe PRINCESS STREET. American tariff the duty is still thirty cents. With free barley Ontario will resume her control over that portion of the an market represented by the state of New York and New Fugland: whilst the Canadian west, where it grows to perfection, and, ripening earlier than wheat, escapes frost risk, willy: ne. doubt, 'ship ux considerable volume to Chicago, St. hours Mil wakes, St. Paul, and other western The new dam of the Seymour Power company is completed, and the head of [esol to make the apparatus operate. water will be measured each day and plataily gat store and factories, sont to the company, are equipped, also Toronto The country is again in need of rain, {Pp pe In Ottawa, Murphy-Gam- store, also all parliament build- and 2 number of Sovornment re equipped. al organs store, Montreal Roll- ing Nile, Caradian Fairbanks, MeGill] Unieeraity, % aeatne gift of Dr, Mil- tl day. Berkield 61 - ay. fers ns 8 Co { . x a acta AT Pon Oe omtlrpees. Soa] Bisse y Mbudy=Soctustes. Forbes Sterilized water. Even on the pen a day Rok King a Te at 10:15 all {tentiary at St. Vincent de Paul, is BE Terri {for NY J.P. Haney BEE Seni doen "AL Tos Angeles, Oul., Mary Jagrand Read, a prominent society lady, singer and European traveller; has heen gv od a divores from Legrand Reedy jonto insurance gh and chil on the ground of desertion. " While fishing on the Turbina pie at Hamiltgh, Wednesday aftornoon: of noon to-day, Edgar (a aged teedvy fell off, or was by aw . ht and 000 gallons. Every drop must boil and LL COHEN: British-Arserican Wigh-Class Ladies' Tailoring. Hae removed from 231 Princess Bireet, We are ready for business with all the jatest styles for the Fail Season. Now is the time to order your rail Suits hy saving a big dis count before the seuson comes, QOL Ox OORQ OOO OO The Kind You have Always Bought da Use For Over. 30 Yerrs chen pest all-da w A raeeien, Bri: S000 COD OLTCOTTO00 ROGTOOC all