Daily British Whig (1850), 9 Sep 1911, p. 10

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PAGE TEN. HOTEL DIRECTORY. DESERONTO, S80 TO THE STEWART HOUSE, LEAD. iog Commercial Hotel. Hales. $1568 per day LORE OF LIGHTHOUSES i { OF THE SEA COAST. From the Light Erected at Alexandria Erected by Ptolemy to the Great Tower of the Eddystone Rock Is a Far Cry and Many Devices Have Been Added to the Mechanism-- Time Flashes. The first lighthouse on record is sald to have been erecf®d at Alexandria in Excursions Egypt by Ptolemy us nearly three centuries before the birth ot Sept. 14th, 15th and 1 Christ. It was said to haye been 500 81290 feet high, while the light, consisting 17.50 {4a sll probability of a coal or wood fire in an open hearth on the summit of 10.45 she tower, is supposed to have been 15.00 wisible 42 miles out af ses. 12.0) 14.75 end, oi the jourteenth cembury, FRAVELLING. CTY HL RE eT Annual Western Bay City, Mich Chicago, Ili, | Cleyeland, Ohio Via Buffalo s Via Detroit Detroit, Mich. Grand Rapids, Mich Port Huron, Mich Saginaw, Mich St, Paul All tickets goad to return 2nd. lurked round about their monasteries For Pullman reservations and sll in- jor dwellings. The lights at this time usually consisted of a wood or cosl fire burnt in an open brazier situated the 13 5 hands of various religious osders, who Minneapolis 3 itl Oet Or own expense, unt formation, apply to : J. P. HANLEY, Agent Corner Johnson and Ontario Ets. r v » : casionally read of lights being exhibit- ed in windows to guide ships in from seaward. Thesdissolution of the mon- asteries in the reign of Henry VIII, doing away as it did with the men who gratuitiously tended these coast lights as a i duty, abolished the fights also at one blow, and it was'not until several years later that the first of the regular coast ligits were-insti- tuted. At this time {4 was customary: for rivate people to erect lighthouses st eir own ex , in return for which they were allowed to levy a toll on al! assing vessels, The license to do this as granted by King, but the Trinity House, » guiM or fraternity of sailors who undertook 40 look after \@ interests of all those connected with shipping, had developed into a ch and powerful organization, hold- ing impo $ charters which regulat- ef IN CONNECTION WITH CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY. Ottawa Exhibition Sept. 12th, Mth and 16th ....... ¥2.75 Sept, 8.9, 11, 12 and 16, inclusive, 23.70 Return limit Rept, 18th Through Coach to Ottawa Sept. 12th Harrowsmith Fair Sept. 14th an 15th. SINGLE FARE RO TRIP, Good golug J4th 4 1h Sept. Good to return NS Special train w smith for Kingston a 16th Renfrew Fair Sept. 2ist, 22nd and 23rd, BING FARE, Good going Bept 21: 29vd Return limit, Sept. 25th. r'ull particulars at -K, & P. and R. Ticket Office, Ontario Street F., CONWAY, Gen, P sgent Kingston ve Harrow 6 pm, Bept eperal ent of naviga- hey regard the erection of hese private lighthouses as a usurpa- Sion of thair rights, for they were res sponsible for the buoyage of the chan- nels, and alleged that they had the le right of erecting lighthouses. Trin- x use, pe Bn opposed all for the building of light- houses by private persops.. But in ppite of this hostility, lighthouses were Brected at many points on the coast. The light consisted of an open hearth jt tle pu 31 the. Joma, while the Hovz devit a ey on the right- hand side were use for 3: the Zig. the necessary fod, Trinity House, in spitesof the obvi- ous utilit f the lights, were bitterly opposed 1, he measure, and charae- jerized 'the lighthouses ad""useless," | dangerous," and a "burthen'and hin- drance to navigation," and it was not asi] about a century lsterythat the icy of the oo i oh ed. Frey then no longer lion ees ares for the establishment of lights, but, on the ojher hand, helped the sailor to demand thet, for 'theydues he paid the private lighthouse owner should show a good snd steady' light. They also set about improving} the various schemes for, illumination, but it was not until 1898 that privately- owned lights were abolished and the entire system passed. indo shephands of 3 Trinity House {7 33 As I have said, above, the 'principal 6 {Suminasts u in dncient light- ouses were coal or wood fires in an open hearth, but towards the end of the 17th century it coousred fo some people to enclose the fire in a lantern with a funnel or chimney at the top This saved the fuel, but the efficiency MONTREAL TO HAVRE & LONDON of the lights suffered, for it was no Moderate rate service, carrying one longer fanned by the sea breeges, and Clans (second) cabin Dbussengers, and needed the frequent use of thesbellows py trvve Fh accommodation at minimum to keep At alight. There were: many rates will be allotted on steamers for Complaints about the poornesssof the the balance of ihe Ht, Lawrence sea lights, and the lanterns were :subse- quently rémoved, but coal ort wood res remained in use #ill 1899. iz | It was towards the middle of the i#ighteenth century that s for distingnishing one light from another were introduced, the first device of this kirid was invented, strange as it may seem, by a barber of , en called Robert Hamblin. The:method (by which lights are varied nowadays eonsists of hiding the light shown for A certain number of seconds. Thus one lighthouse may show a singleMlash 3 {every fifteen seconds, another, three Kingston daily ex- flashes in quick succession every thir. . . ty seconds, and vet another'may shew § light for thirty seconds,) and then be obscured for 10 seconds, and so on. These methods, combined : with the employment of white, red, 'and green $1.00, lights provided many different varie On relate system i ties of lights, and thus form a ready : means of distinguishing one from the Steamer "Belleville" easthound on other, as no two lights on the British _ Wednesday at § p.m. and westhound d0ast are exact! same. Saturday 10.30 pm. i The present Bell Rook Lighthouse Full particulars on application te J th gc ara, Pine e place, it wi remembered, that : H. Foer A I onto, has Pern immortalized in, the poem of il ' "Sir Ralph the Rover," where == "The gowd old Abbot of 'Aberbrothock LAKE ONTARIO AND BAY oF Had Qlaced that bell onjthe Inchcape { 'On a buoy, in the storm, sit floated and swung, 1000 ISLANDS AND ROCHESTER, N.Y, | And over the waves its warning rung." Sundays The first time a lighthouse was erect- ated on an isolated rock was jn the case » slands, calling at. of the. first Eddystone Li usé com- BE a apart han tor pleted by Winstanley in 1688, where tt LY, port of Rochester). tallow candles were used as an illum- ng y of Quinte ports. inant. The tower was polygonal in y th form, while the useless ornamentation Shote i Jost tesistahes to the, 1 wind. s light! , however, stood Leaves Kingston week days, at 3 pm, Mil 1703, when it was knocked down by for Picton and intermediate Bay of the sea. aiid Winstanley himself and Quinte ports. : all the sceupunts perished. The next For tull smegrmiation, Uppty Eddystons was: completed in 1708 by 7 kat Agent . hd ANE oh rani" . Rudyerd. and this was completely de. AROUND A 22nd; a nd C. P OF QUINTE RAILWAY. rain leaves Unlori Station, Ontart en 4 re dally (Bunday excepted ir Pweed, Sydenham, Napanee, Deser nto Bannockburn and all points yori secur® quick despatch Hanno kburn, Maynooth, and points om sntral- Ontatlo Route your shipments Bay of Quinte Hallway For fur er partheulars, apply. R Il Ware ri elch, Phone No § "ALLAN LINE ' Royal Mail Steamers AUTUMN SAILING MONTREAL TO LIVERPOOL. Victorian, Fri, Aug. 18, Fri Sept, Corsican, Fri, Aug, 25, Fri . Virginian, Fri, Sept. 1, Fri, Sept. Tunisian, Fri, Sept. 8 Fri, Oct, MONTREAL TO GLASGOW. Scotian, Bat. Aug. 12, Sat, Sept. 9 Hesperian, Sat., Aug 19, Sat, Sept tonian; Sat, Aug, #6, Bat, Se Bt. 23 Grampian, Sat, Sept, 2, Sat, Sept. 30 "nay To son, Full information on application te J. P. HANLEY, C, 8. KIRKPATRICK, 4.7. Ry, Clarence St, Allan Line Agents, Kingston. | i Steamers lea ept Monday. Eastbound, . , Westbound ., .. 7.00 a.m. 5.00 pm Tickets to Prescott and return, CO. Freight Agent. oj by fire in December. 175. It : . had been constructed of wood, and TWO CRUISES | Duration i : : the next tower, of granite, was ted Jo he Siosmiis | 110 DAYS : by John Smeaton and stood from 1758 to 1881 The working bee lives six months, 4 drone four months and the female four years. x * ¥mOS. STEWART, Prop EVOLUTION OF THE SENTINELS | In the United Kingdom, towards the | 10.50 lighting of the coast was left in the | uc), "established and kept up lights at their | | and thus did their best | te wart mariners of the dangers whick |, on a church tower, although we oc- | {| BVEr seen DOGS AND THEIR NAMES, The Aristocratic Bulldog Was Once 2 Herder of Cattle. 1t .is probable that few lovers of the most popular dog of to-day--the bull- dog--kuow when he obtained his name. He is called a "bull" for the reasorr that formerly his services were employed in the driving of cattle. The dog was trained to meet the rushes of the bull by the simple ex- Pe NJ | dient st sen Fhe spaniel mo popular spec ¢ namie from Spain hich country fhe first breeds were sent to England, where for a long time they were called "Spanish dogs : that the fox. » from the fox, i fox like muz- of fact, the dog unt of any ynard. On Slerrier is so nam- days when it was and of greater it was employed n to draw and kill down inte Rey- hat purpose, species of hounds so survivors of the ating degs were game. Then dogs : of their superior speed and powers of endurance were mpany the hunting par- led info two d te follow those capable rry a long distance were expected chosen Wo aece ties ! classes--t the gagne by s of sighting the qu Away All, however, to unite in the rem quarry. Ang so it happens that, in the Teutonic languages, the name of "hound," or "hund." asthe Germans have it, was originally used to desig- nate all snegjes of dogs, hut came in time to be appled .to hunting-dogs only. In later times there came a differentiatton respect grey- hounds, ratha-hounds, blood-hounds, deerhounds, ete An interesting case in point is that of the German dashund, which means The first dogs of this ved in the drawing w.th to "badger-hnund species wer: empl of badgers A Brave Deed The Duke of Connaught, Lord Roberts, Lord Derby, and the Bishop f Herel were among the large company which assembled on the occasion of "Speech Day" at Welling- recently. The Duke of presented the majority of the winners, but Lord Roberts handed his award wo M. B. Harve; and P. M. Broadmead received from Lord Derby the Earl «f Derby's prize for French In handing his prize<to the winner Lord Roberts said he had been ask- ed what was the bravest deed he had He remembered that while on his way to Lucknow his force waa stopped by a walled enclosure. A little soldier. a Punjabi Mohamme- ton Colleg Connauzlit the priz to lones, { dan, seeing the difficuity, ¢ndeavored to open the door which barred their way. When he tried first to draw the bolt one of hi: hands was cy' off by one of the enemy. Then he managed to unfasten the bolt with his other hand, which was subsequently nearly severed from the wrist The Lost Ancestor. Of Lord Houghton, father of the present Earl of Crewe, the following good story is told: He had seen the portrait of an ad- miral in a shop in Wardour street, and offered $25 for. it. The dealer wanted $60, but ultimately came down to $37.50. Lord Houghton would not go beyond the $256, however, and did not get the picture. Soon afterwards, visitflg a peighbor in Yorkshire, Lord Houghton caught fight of his friend the admiral hanging in the dining. room. He recognized him at once, and said: "Halloa! who's that? What have you got there? Something new?" "Yes," renlied the friend; "he was a celebrated admiral who fought with Nelson--a fine partrait, too--recently bequeathed to us--an ageestor of my 8." "Ah. was he" said Lord "A ghonth ago he was und ten of becoming one wife's tan with two of mine!" Distinguished Poultry Farmers. It was Queen Alexandra who started the vogue for chicken farming. At Sandringham Her Majesty has wme of the best birds in the world, and there is stiil a keen rivalry between Queen Alexandra and her brother, the King of Greece, in regard to white "Silkies."" Lady Derby is another great fancier whose name is well known ab the shows. So is Mrs. Pade. rewski. wile of the famous pianist. Lady Derby las the finest collection of Orpingtons in England. The young American Countess of Craven, daugh- ter of Mrs. Bradley Martin, has ex. pended a fortune ron hep ehicken farms. There is scarcely an aristocra- which she has not a specimen. The Art of Conversation. "Tell me," pleaded the artless maid, "wherein lies the secret of the art of conversations' The sage ailected the attitude he was wont to assume when in the act of impart wisdom and said: "My child, listen." : 3 Am listening," breathlessly she answered. "Well, my child." he rejoined, "that is the art of conversing agreeably' Inherent Dread of Cats For Dogs. The instinctive fear which pats have 2 dogs A, fuitiaind very amusingly ¥ a 0 caressing a blind and new i same hand that has touched the A At once the kitten will spit and fi itself up in the most absurd way, dis- ingui the smell of the beast for thousands own of the tic -chicken family in the world--pt- _| dentist. ------ | A POLYGOT PERSON. | ' Dramatist Louis N. Parker Can Claim Several Countries as His Own. Mr. Louis N. Parker, who arranged | the procession in connection with the | Shakespeare ball at the Royal Albert Hall, recently, is a man of varied tal- (ents. His father was an American, his mother an Englishwoman, he was | born in France, his first language was | Italien, and he was educa in Ger- i many. § | Mr. Parker first came as a student {at the Royal Academy of Music iu | ! Londen, and while studying music be- came su ardent first-nighter at thea- tre and opera. Of his many friends jin those days was Sir Herbert Tree. "I ' remember one famous first | night," says Mr, Parker, "at the Ly- !ceunm when we stood before the pit entrance from ten in the morning in order to dee Irving as Iago, Booth as Othello, and Ellen Terry as Desde. mona. The erush was terrific, and just before opening time an old gen. | tleman immediately in front of me fainted. As there was no other way of getting him out, we hauled him over the people's heads." i But Mr. Parker did not waste his time at the Royal Academy of Music. Shortly after leaving, he was made Director of Music at Sherborne Schogpl. Here he got through an enor mous amount of musical composition, and he was also responsible for the erection of a "model theatre' on the site of a barn. } It was in this little theatre that Mr. Parker's first play was performed. It was called "A Buried Talent," and had quite a romantic interest. Mr. Parker had given the manuscript to a local man to be printed. The late Norman Leslie one day en- tered the printer's little shop, saw the play, took it to his lodgings, and then found the author, with whom he made arrangements for its immediate pro- duction. Mr. Leslie, however, disap- peared, and for long nothing farther was heard of "A Buried Talent, until one day Mr. Parker received a letter r. Ben Greet offering to pro- duce it. Tapestries May Leave England. Unless some effort is made to retain the famous Mortlake tapestries, after Raphael's cartoons, it seems probable that they will find their way to Amer- ica, as it is understood that the Duke of Rutland, their present owner, has received an offer from that country to purchase them for $75,000, and neith- er South Kensington nor the National Art Collectors' Fund, although very anxious to secure them for the nation, are in a position to exceed this offer. These tapestries are an example of an art lost to England since the clos- ing of tHe famous Mortlake tapestry works over 200 years ago. The only two specimens of this work belonging to the public are at the Vietoria and Albert Museum, and are far inferior to these Belvoir Castle tapestries. The one about to be purchased for South Kensington was burned in the Brus- sels' fire last year. These seven pieces are in an excel. lent state of preservation. They were made at Mortlake for King Charles I. and subsequently sold by Oliver Cromwell to Lord Haddon. They hung for many years in Haddon Hall, and came into the possession of the Duke of Rutland's family with that famous building. They are now in the chapel at Belvoir Castle, 1 ------------ The Biggest of All Nests. The nests of the jungle-fowl, so-call- ed, in Australia are not only the larg- est of nests, but the heaviest as well These nests are built in the form ol'great mounds, the average measure- ment in height being fifteen feet. In circumferences they are about one hun- dred and fifty feet. They are con. structed in secluded, sheltered spots, and are skillfully interwoven with leaves, grass and twigs, together with such other suitable material as the fow! has been able to obtain. The bush turkey employs a similar system in the construction of its nest, though its home is more comprehen. sive in design. The shape iz pyramid. al. Australian unatnralists aver that the nests of the bush turkeys are sometimes so large that the services of several required to move them en: are Two Scotch Stories. A Beoteh schoolmaster in Banffshire | years ago had ng views on the subject of dress. In the day when erinoline was the rage a girl came to school with a v extensive one, which much exe i space be- tween the desk anc ¢ form on which she had t y teacher, seeing ; this, said to ng awa' hom: and tak' off thae girds/ (hoops) and come back to tne] schoo) as God made ye. \ Another rough & ready dominie was examining his boys in a coste- chism and asked if God had a begin. ning. No," said 'the boy. "Will he have an end?? Yes," he replied This was followed instantly by a but fet-on the side oi -the head. "Will he have an end noo?" "No." said the bov, and the tnastér whs satisfied. the t to her, Pulling Teeth In Scotland. An old Scotchwoman journeyed to London to visit her She taken with 'a jumping toothache and upon the advige of her son visited a dentist, whe Soon bad' tie: offending molar flying in the air. With a sigh | of relief the old lady elimbed cut of ! the chair and asked "How - moeoch¥ "Ten shillings, mam." "Tin shillings, is N : } screamed the woman, \W! I'll ha ye know, Sandy MaucPheh 'ud haa! me all aboot the smithy fof saxpruce" son. was replied the An Oversight. "I trast you slept comfortably and had everything you needed," sad y Macpherson's hgstess one cod torping last winter. i "Ay, weel enough," replied hog guest, a ag, "but | din® see the guid of yon bettie in the bed." i "Why, wasn't the water hot?" hostess asked in surprise. i "Verra hot," responded Macpherson, | "but ye forgot to put snvthing ia it." | the In India the mean duration of life is only twenty-three years. In England it' < is forty-ome years. i the wardrobe of the German emperor is said to be val-| ued at about $300,000, i j tively tot In. ny ¢ + ston ef t | By { were brought | embodied { All at once a perfervid supporter of A | { the other side yelled out at the to { tempting offer failed to make Mac. i Laren drop the catch. { she asks. "Why, I tied that strip of { cloth around your finger this very | morning to remind you of it." i atri THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1011. ; HAVE YOU A COPY? -- oo THE DEAHI DURBAR. Preparing For a Great Function In Honor of King. Delhi-Ke-Bashah is the title with | which the King-Emperor will be hail- | ed at the Durbar in December. No of-| helal program is wil be pablishe ever, poss te program The wo ---- sort's Rife Book. any public library or pnvate ion of books in Canada con- book written by Vic hushand, the Pr nee 2 subject i ie g with rk the ge mance of the printed Engl sh f preparatio t involves It was of the Manner reconstru } f principal regardle ! t 3 sar psively" ffiprov will be the fir f ths crowned Deili-Ke-Ba 1 | struck } i t f ore 1 | being Ling" George ws of st str uriously » envugh i this book rema us libraries of Windsor Castle moral, of Buckingham Palace Sandri yam, have been sear vain too. has the natons rary at the British museum ;. 'the warious libgaries at Cobourg iat Gotha, at Potsdam, Berlin \ have been ransacked for with no wha of la $ ol Ho . tic Indian type, jeslies at made at the ewelet be of a charset will be assumad by Ti great Durbar or enna I'he King and Quern wn. , Yi | hook " from Dec. 7 to Dec 16. Lin war tlt ssumed that even if four « # Sn copies had been destroyed, two even ome, must have survived it cannot be found in E <« hoped that some trace may be found in Canada or the Unit ed State Any bibliophile who cu | VET a glue io the whereabouts a econy of this book will plaee t} Irovgning house of England under obligation, as both King George and ¢ King Edward and te before them. have hearts on getting a copt of or, if they cannot get t secure permission from owner to have . ENOCess in a , Her pe since u here sharajah s 3¢ cere 1 6 is B® tate entry ind elit, pi 3 uo ool the inevitable . aod the re- | di ception of ral thousand Iadiaus in & pa 1 the historic Ridge, where © luring the Mu: sonal toucn two days in conve is a bn Lor bub engage | copy rulers. This , due en mprehen- | tudiun problem. It {royal and permanent the 'god effects [times by India. The King will prin ¥.# ~ lu that respect | very mu taken Ly Lord Har {| belicvad i dinge, v ho, hen the K steps [borg, for instance, th : asis to be Viee: | Queen of Spain, |} Governor h vol |e idom rea ace on Tuesday, Vino the han witnessed by at (ti tion b The scene will be i udid even to the |r expects a great | another day, a} The Imperial be under the respective chiefs « sing the Nation r Majesties" arrival languages--Eng lish, Gujarati, Marathi and nt Ron hooks hy muoerial personages fuli-fledged sovereigns private circuiauon larger than generally Princess Henry of Batten: mother of the quite s numb her ersdit. They l braries, or ut rs, their dis restr et t intimate whose tion dependence written SOM. and nber of mak # for h i of ed 1 4 | dis vist not retarn ti his plac will De stich ues mipHy nh oul of range wally to is " upon rr ---------------- Dodging Sunstroke. | sunstroke 3 ciusy Y i seasonable Urdu. | (uhject of that terrible Lord and Lady Mar and Kellie, Sir |, Lancet's Hedworth and Lady Lambton, Lord at-stroke is the A and the Dowager Lady Ai F. Maude, R.} i and Lady Derby, and red from several attacks ria Stanley are among those when he conceived the rays of the sun which not the lies! ultra-violet leader on 1 A rpMol disease ington, 1 He had afi Lady Viet jot sunst going out idea that the smsmmmrpls se caused the trouble "Delightful Impudence." but the sctinie or unced that Mme. Melba which photographically and pay mnother visit to her [ichemicail active It «x Australia, and the Com. {fed tw him that id he lined his helmet ady rejoicing in ans | W-th red to cut off these rays, just as one is more popular |® Photographer uses a red light wi ' famous prima | Ne 18 developing, he might preven stories of "the He tried it, and for many compa. | YEBIs he never had an ther attack. An sion she had been | flicer who di uot believe in th called for the sing | théory, however, one day surrepti . when some | Bously ab tracted the red lining fr i wh I. Maude's hat ag he was about tw rs, shout y to the sun, with the od. "I . Nellie: |! Maude again suffered sing us 'Home, Sweet Home." And | sunstroke, wid experiance) Kreel Mme. Melba bowed to the inevitable. |¢ HA al the BUST failure of Jud the way, how many people are { ry. until 'Lhe ojentant office: He aware that Mme: M&ba's father, Mr. | what he had « he Ang Ne ral David Mitchell ®who still lives in Mel a § sifter d thes fim s fron nd v u strict' Presby a ' inv borne, and who is a strict Presbyter ond red, and had n even a headacl were AVS, A Bre It is aun | 4 3 the mos ui shortly lan ealt will native monw ticipa "down 1s alr for no { sunstroke cal selec honest had no himself t that Col i ian, had suet a repugnance to his a becoming a professional vo never heard her revisited Mel | fame three fier troubl ¢ A Titled Woman's Service, The March ohess of Dufferin 1Ava is the British soc women interest herself in | onditi under w of his | the 1-and embroidery has | in the hunt f Beif Her falls, while wn out of | to con moan vestigation » Bolent nick of Aviater, Stoker, and Duke. Duke broke Hin «4 whch men wi ASIN a O recently playing sport On Westn factories nt eve the discovered mu urse of her has had many he was 1 yout nto scutd in én practi p woat ng », while such { . in many fla into and oid fine raimer famous She foun t inhuman + ne f th S11 | pr wi y worn luce most ¢ e ch Belfast mos while sanitar tone of as 8 sick Wiries & mototing, that erages $50 a week saw active TV IC in South : and on one cceasion, in order that he | m.ght gain pr experience ship engines he Atlantic a stoker on one of the liners. He i one of the richest men in England, be ing owner of the greater part of May fair and Beélgravia; his estates bring | him in something like $5,000 a day moral many he conditions ana shops care lat on souglit out "Joe to 1éve She "" Devlin, the member lor one of inquent Belfast Redmond 's wel fs ; lieuténants in Brit sh House Commons, point out 0 him the disgraceful conditions under whic these women | The that the Board Trade has forced "to in immediate nquiry hi «fe have a fu linen cndustr ¢ northern capita: | chief the ng work result Kitchener a Splendid Manager. Id Ww Kitchener's re upon tary organizer led the task of hand! more soldiers whe ito London for the coro: | His ecronation orders were iit & bulky volume of 212 pages and covered, apparcutly, every detail connecting the army with The week's festivities. Kitchener guarded against every emergeifey, and his ma- chine worked without a hiteh. It may : be remgmbered that George W. Stev : ature. | 1 ens. who wrote #® vividly about the Liank and tied to a tres Soudan cainpaign that broke the Mah. |, il ; t di"s power, sald that Kitchener would i : Marshal Lotd CER to Kill, Hacity of Hard An alligators te MAarkanis says al Was. with ing the 60.000 or ration Englist veler di ing. pazty. on natives proug! i r. They} to buy deternnned as i (rang ) ! did Whe k ? out of t Bullets from an Fs | have made a splendid manager for the |...) . be did not seen i | army and navy stores. | ¢ i u ily they Bribery on the Cricket Field. i chop off A. C. MacLaren, the famous English | cricketer, way once fielding at long-on | | when a tremendously high hit came in i his direction. He got well under it and patiently waited for its descent. | A Lost Battie For Sure. of " his voice, "Miss it, Archie, and I'll Jet | you kiss my sister!" But even this brave slow ft 4Xoown go {the me lin section : nthe thul. 1 t silk for me? |... fiure [laughter had said Pretty Fo "You forgot to get i The husband stares blankly at the of cloth and then says: "Well, I'll be ji d! And bere I've been trying all day fo rémember how 1 pened to hurt my finger!" | A happy eveal took plaes in Tweed | on Wednesday on the occasion of a double wedding. William Countryman was marvied to Mies Pegrl Palma- tear, and Mise Lawras Countreman was married to Frank Krider, of Wilkins burg, Fa. 3 i yo ny fe $3.4 tl ed. Aetd private, Vin the same battle that Fou lost your head." J. A. Moriarty, of Newhoro b been appointed cominercial St. Patrick's school, Ottawa, Joseph H. Lewis and Miss Haggar, Smith's Falls, Gh oelaesiing Caele Sam has 51.000 sawmills, rt minster « were marcel King and Queen Want Prince Con. Dora | th wise when Abbey's salt. perion lo use Don't you think i time to get a bottle? 25¢ and 60c. Sold everywhere. 8 BICYCLE SUNDRIES ook a BICYCLE MUNSON ¥ St. Send for Cut Price Catalogue ** "YoronTe . hbhdALASMABARRLAL MMM The Army of Constipation 80000 c0000000000 0000S Diy \ CLEANING O) COSTUMES FiNg PARKER & CO, Dyers and Cleaners, G0 Privcess St, Kingston, Ont, Ee " t} i men Need sym] iE 8 RE LLY the ; tof of drect © t F or Sure Relief For females, B suitabl Bold Pverywher a, © apecially cach box, vecham's § instruc tn bones 28¢. 2000000 9030000000000 lL COHEN} * * British-American High-(Mass : Ladies' Talloring. 00000000000000000 $3.50 Reciep Free For Weak Men Send R202 and Address Today~ You Can Have It Free and Be Strong and Vigorous, 5 surription "foe f wenkaned sme hel, tptiat ural desins, or has curd so many i right in their own ditional bely or medi- ry man who wishes fo vr and virnity, quickly A TETRA ro | have copy of the proseription y ordiner sealed en- | TEiops WO Any man who will write me for Tom preseniption comes Trom 8 phytician ho bas made » special sudy of men and | | am convinced $1 jx the survmt-ncting combi antion for le eure of aefickent manhood sad vigor failur > | cer put together. > I think I owe it to my fellow man fo wend them 8 copy 6 'cafldesce so that any man | anywhere who ia werk sod discouraged with | repeated failures ony sop drugw'og hiewself with harmful patent sediciues, we ire Ww it believe is the Guickrst-arting re Lorative, | apbuiiding, SPOT-TOUCHING remedy over devised, aud so care himself ai home qeietly | ana quickly. Just drop pow 8 line like thie: | Pr. A. KE Robinson, 385% L ek Bal | Detroit, Mich, snd | wiil send you & py * splendid meeipe in a plain ordingry en | velope free of cha wn. A grest many doctors would charge $5.06 bt. V0 for merely writ out a prescrip' Like this ~ but fant 3 omic y live - : oY mn tha "tme--that 1th egnin Bix mae) and aa otal ¥ 1a n

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