Daily British Whig (1850), 19 Sep 1911, p. 11

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- HOTEL DIRECTORY. DVESERONTO. ; To THE STEWART HOUSE, LEAD. | » ng Comingrcial Hotel. Kates, §1.60 r day. we THOS, STEWART, Prop. TRAVELLING. ---------------- HER Dominion of Canada General Elections, Sept. 21st Round trip Single First-Class Fare RAILWAY SAA ckets will he sened af Goud going ¢ 26th and good to return u 1 ickels iween Mont: op tigins 1 a i ~Low One- Way Second-Class| Rates to Pacific Coast | Daily until Got, 15th, | Por full particulars apply to } J.P. HANLEY. Agent, Corner Johnson and Ontario Sts 22a : be | gud rinesliaty tations Varont fo 4 | ned » hod {8IR HARRY JOHNSTON | man { bit UNDUE CEE WALI | RAILWAY IN CONNECTION WITH Canadian Pacific Railway --n---- Dominion Senerg Elections SINGLE FANE. Good going pi. 30th, and is Re. turn Iie i nad, TetY Renfrew Fair Sept, 2imi, 23 20v4d, Good 2%¢d, Parham Fair Sept. 26ih and 27th, SINGLE FALE ROUND TR flood BE 24 £ g a turn Full Pr. R ir got 0 res 28th at K. & P. and C. imiario Bireet Pass Agent he] parti ars Tie Rot Office F. CONWAY. (ier BAY OF QUINTE RAILWAY, Train leaves Union Station, Ontaric Btreet, 4 pm. dally (Sunday excepted) for Tweed, Sydenham, Napanee, Deser: Bannoe kburn and all points To sec quick despatch tg Bannockburn, Maynooth, and points on Central Ontarfo Route your shipments via Bay of Quinte Rallway., For f ther particulars, spply, HK. H. Ward Fre gent; J. J, Welch, Pass Agent "Phone No, 3, LAKE ONTARIO AND BAY OF QUINTE STEAMBOAT CO, LTD, Steamer North King 1000 ISLANDS AND ROCHESTER, N.Y., Steamer leaves Kingston Sundays at 1016 am, for 1,000 islands, calling at Alexandria fay, ltockport and Ganan- vogue Returning leaves aL 5 p.m. for Charlotte, NY. (Part of Rochester) calling at Bay of Quinte ports, Steamer Aletha Leaves Kingston week days, at 3 p.m. for Picton. and intermediate Ray of Quinte ports. fon, apply Ticket Agent Freight Agent Duration 110 DAYS COST $650 AND UP For full informa JAS. BWIFT & CO, AROUND. Hy the Swamship CLEVELAND {The int to Jeave WORLD [New York October EE ih ON AN Johan Fob 6 ee Heing ny fia Out, BIZ & Feb. ns. Wr large Crus , 18. A tons. AMERICAN LINE J. P, HANLEY, | TWO (CRUISES -- Hl Be | 11.000 Tons) (50, 1). The second Ban ¥ OCEAN Harpe Event Trips Victoria wr loval agents Rochester Industrial Exposition Tickets will be issued Kingston io Charlotte and return at $3.76 going Sept, 21st until Sept. 23rd; 28th, goad good to re- also good go. to return until Good turn ing Sept Sept. 301th For further particulars, JP HANLEY, Ticket Kingston. FOSTER CHAFFEE. A.GP.AL Toronto, Ont apply to Agent I. rt i pss "THAT TOBACCO - With the "Roaster" on s crowing louder 8s he goes alon nly 460 per pound. For chewing a smoking, AT A. MACLEAN'S, Oninvia Street. ------------------ WE SELL Scranton Coal Co's Coal Selected fram the Celebrated Richmond No. 4 and Ontario No, 1 . Mines, the beat Anthracite Coal mined in Pennsylvania. Te Place your next order with THE, JAS. SOWARDS COAL CO. ; "Phone 155. _ North End Ontario Street. {of their | tug 8chool of Art, A HERO OF THE WILDS IS ONE OF BRITAIN'S VANGUARD. { Indefatigable Africin Explorer Obey- ed His Restless Spirit and Went Over Vast Stretches of Wild Ter ritory--Did Much te Stamp Out Cannibalism in Uganda and to Place Settlers In the Country. The wildesi, canoe was its owner, Englishman, wus savages tu their a feast toward, appetites was think whoever else dinner speeches shan't." For he q be himself would be But now, the him to intent guest und not one they set him down and bade him of the feast paste, of decd "What 1s "Man." he And it was failing over a hire ol up his fle palm and peg up in the Th guest Twenty 8s u rican a river bank in West Africa. A moored to the side, and a square-shouldered little being hauled by villages. There was and; suspecting saptors, the to himself, make the after- is certain that 1 te expected that the dinner natives had captured he might be a the dishes, and inn a place of honor r eat. He ate. The tit consisted of a red ily sgrecable flavor asked the prisoner wi, nnswered They had caught one 1. had smoked him and, after cut. and mixing it with per, had gerved him manner sforesaid wa: Sir Harry Johnston sfterwards he attended honor at another Af. but this time the menu wus in French, and the feast cooked alter Fren methods, by sable gen. tlemen 'na raiment of fig-leaf. With the former feast in mind, w muy say that Sic Harry has some- thing of the African in him, and he will not deny the soft mpeachsuent But the two contrasts afford a very food epitome of the history that he ws helped make in Africa. The progress which has helped to ef. fect is incredible sell how he ever got to Alrica at all must be as great a mystery to most people as the JLosente of the fly in the amber. 'or no man seemed by nature less ualified for the rough-and-tumble, the peril and privation of African travel than this handsome little artist and student. His father was secretary to an in- surance company in Loaodon, where Bir Harry was born in 1856. His grandmother was an artist; the facul- ty skipped a generation, then crop- ped out in him, so his father, after ving put him to King's College seni hum on tp the South Kensington where he won a gold Wedel, end then turned him loose as & regular student at the Royal Acad. ey, with supplementary studies in the art schools of France. Every: thing was cut and dried for his career as an artist, and there seemed every probability of his painting his way to glory. Buddenly his health failed. He seemed to have a wretched consti- tution, and he had overstudied with his painting, his greedy reading, his frenzied devotion to the mastery of languages He was sent for his health"s sake on a tour through France, Spain and Portugal; and a lstent, unsuspected instinct for travel now asserted »n- sell Instead of returning to his studies, he threw in his lot with a French expedition to North Africa, and when Ir did come back it was to launch out with a notable series of articles on Tunis. This was in 1880, prior to which he had never earned a penny. And then he was anybody's man for a time; his career became a matter of great uncertainty. With lus health improved, his soul cried out for action; he could not face the prospect of years of study at Cambridge, so he threw himself into natural history and biology, toil- ing away at the Zoological Gardens under expert guidance until he be. came a first rate naturalist and ana- tomist. Al unconsciousiy he wus sowing seed of which the Empire wis afterwards to reap the harvest. Not a particle of bh = artistic training has been nothing of his talent languages has wasted, nothing of his literary skill but has been ad- vautageously utilized & At about this time | planning a West African and he needed aan who could speak Portugues Johnston was the man He had mastered Portuguese, French, Spanish, Halian-and, if you please, Arabic. He was pining for a chance such as this, for, though he had not yet absorbed black man, his trip to the Dark Continent had set his blood dancing with the zest for travel in that wysterious land. Umnece you have been you always desire to return, while youth Keeps your mus. cles supple and your heart undaunt. ed. So off he went with Lord Mayo's expedition. The party compassed its purpose and returned, but stayed on. He determined to wrest the secrets of the Congo from that mighty river, and off he went alone, a breadless boy of fourend.-twenty, "Mr. Stanley, [| believe,' he one day ssid, varying the historic formulas, when to his great joy he ran across the camp of Liviugstone's discoverer. Stanley took to him at once. Two wonderful little men they must have seemed 10 their black cohorts, for Stanley, like Gordon and Johnston, was a tiny man. Together they ex. plored the untracked purlieus of the splendid river, and when Sir Ha returned to England he wrote a which made him famouse at the age of Jreiyate. His work caught the of the Royal Society, who placed oh . command of their sclentifie skpedition to Mount Kilamanjarc. his retorn Lord Salisbury sent Nim off as Vice-Consul to the Cam- Here he speedily succeeded Beene was woolliest little "Well, the years guest of feast h to he JOSE, béen ord Mayo was expedition, a to the chief post, and was launched at last on his grest official career. Lite In India In India the mean duration of life is only twenty-three vears In Eag- land its is forty-one years : 1 3 THE DAISY BRITISH _WHie. JUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 19, 1911. MR. DENISON'S 4 MUSKRAT. Machiavellian Cunning. Mr. A R of T can plan hunting and expeditions same | fac planning hiild Toronto Star Weekly of many a wid and never ving next to nature however, t is unpleasant to get Near 16 nature-~even man nature. Here's a demonstrates it The scene laid in the part of the province, and the ning of thing: is the shooting of a muskrat. Mr. Denizon left it lying of a portage An Indian found The Indians esteem these creatures 8 great delicacy, and the brave in guesiion planned a feast It 0 happened that he had long been anxious to do Mr. Denison a good turn. With this in mind, he called upon the architect, and invit- ed him to he his guest at the forth- | conning banquet The white man was 100 good-natured to refuse, and the delight which he would exper ence in eating muskrat hecame the derisive talk of the camp. Mr ' i. son, however, determined to ake precautions, and when he started' orth for the Indian's tent, he car- ried a generous basket of white man's provisions Arniving found the Denison rips wontao fishinz with the shows The archiliect he SAVE is the which ings He thing's _ misfortune, happy as when Sometimes n a si 100 story whiel 1» northern beg n- at hia destination, he muskrat revolving on a spit over a fire which had browned it deliciously. His red host was jubilant. Not so the guest, who had secretly hoped that someone would steal the animal before the hour ap- pointed for its dismemberment. The conversation which ensued when they finally sat down to dinner was something like this :Denison--""Well, John, you con- Johnston © Work is a sider the muskrat a great delicacy, don't vou?" John--""Yes " Denison--" "Have it very often?' John----'"No, very scarce now." Denison (after an awkward pause) --""John, I brought a lot of provisions in that basket." John (rather dubiously)-- Denison (sparring flor time)- say . you don't get muskrat olten?®"' John--'"Very scarce.' Denison (suddenly inspired) "Well, look here. In Toronto we get musk- rat every day. | have him for break fast, dinner, and supper; nothing we get »0 much of as muskrat." John (enviously)-- "Heap good." Denison--"80 you see, Johp, it would be a shame for me to eat part of this muskrat when I get them every day at home, and you hardly ever have, them, I'll just eat some of these provisions I've brought, and you can have the muskrat all to yourself." It is said that John never suspect. ed the real situation, and that he uot only gobbled the whole muskrat without assistance, but mansged to help empty the visitor's basket as well, Yes." "You very ¥ #'" Monored Abroad. Dr.sRichard Andrew Reeve of To route, upon whom the University Birminghaw, Englaiikd, has conlerred the honorary degree of LID. is pro fessor of ephthalmology in the Uni- versity of Toronto, and has been for ears one of the leading speciallsis in iy diseases of the eye and suill ua student, Dr. Reeve had chosen Ophthalmology as a spe ciality, and the year after being ad mitted to the ivge ol Physicians and Surgeons was appointed assistant surgeoh of she Torpute kye and bar Infirmary, a held until he resigned 10 devote his attention his rapidly extending private practice He received the degree of M.D. from Toronto University, and, alter holding a dectureship, was appointed profes sor and dean ot the facuily in 1806 € is also a memb f the University Counédl and has been president of the Ontario Medical A=ociation. Alt 0 intimately assoetated for so many years with the medical ror nto U niverrity he obtain cal education at Que Kingston Dr. Reeve Se DOKL Year and he las as sie good an eve he had when began year the firse Dominioh Day rated. Dr. Reeve is member of the clety of the os in ear. While position he to wlagn facully 1's Wversity, of wok ity a and as g rooms as Lie was cele will Vears but bs he ply in the opera he practice & promitent Ophthalmological Bo- ol United Kingdom, and Some of fis notes on he treatment of diseases of the eyes contributed to that learned body have aliracted at. tention throlighout world. --~ Family Herald. the Lumberman's Slang. No other industry, perhaps, ishes so niany original, peculiar, interesting words and phrases ol a technical-cum-siangy nature as the lumber industry oi Canada. Timber tracts, says Canada, are i "limits" or "berths timber on a tract is a the condents of a "star ed in "feet --a "frat" being a board one foot square by one inch thick and not a cubic foot. To make a survey of a staud of timber 8 w "eruise" it, the mau who does the "cruiser," and his report thereon is a "cruise." Trees are "tall. aad the wan who "falls" them a a "sawyer." A man who works in a lumber-camp i ie known as a "lumber jack" or "shanty man.' Wien going ap to eamp he speaks of going "up to the shanties " Timber tracis that bay, suffered the iliefMects of forest fires are said to be "hrooly," which ls, of gourse, 8 corruption "ef "brale" (burnt). furn- sod growing "stand," and Ar Ineasur- Bill and Dan. The first meeting and partnership between Mackenaie and Mano in the early days of railway construction in British Columbia is thus reported 'na Munsey s Magazine for September: Where's the Bank of Commerce, I'm looking for it myself, pard, Let's look togesher, pard. Sure, Mike, 'PROFESSOR ON ON THE ORIDIRON He Evaded the Meal With True Marry Griffiths « Ts N No Longer Fer ie Varsity Compas. ---- Tt Opiatio there is a schoolmeated ol high dbswnction in romance laos guages who never gets credis for bes ing aa emicien ad ail. Teo Bs | students he is known as "Harry"; | Bui the electric, i a large pari of the student body at tbe University of Toronto even more intimatsly as "Red." The great Cana dian », hing public speak of him ad- eotively Reddy" --""Reddy" Grif- $n. They think that they kvow him. litte suburo-haired ' oan, who wurns out championship, col- iage Rugby teams in Toroni is a many-sided genius Mr H. C Griffith wae a professor in the Freuch dsparument of the Uti- versity of Toronto. For several yeard be has acted a: honorary coach to the college football club, Bo great has become his reputation in the football | world, shat his real academic position the blic | lutely. an he is not | | Griffith pigakin artists the public have completely overlooked. Now, that is not because Griffith does not count in the lecture room, but because fume 'catches man quicker pulliog off athleiic stupts than exam- ining Fregeh papers. That Griffith - lreally after all draws a professor's sal- + have been reminded olug to tewcl) any more Frenoh at Toronto. And that means that in & few weeks, when the leaves begin to yellow, and ary, | the gridiron squads to trot out on the cmnpus at the Ontario Uni iversiy, there will be uo dynamic "Reddy' eahing signals to Toeroute And all over the Dom- (iglon there is a sigh from hundreds ' | | | { | Riet, fair copds and fresh. of seniors snd Hien They don't want to lose him. Grif. fith, the student's faculty hero, has carried their interests to a grand stand finish: No man at the University of Toronto ever did more for athletics and eaprit de corps than H. C. Grit fith ¢ has done a great: deal for the uplifs of sport outside of his.own constituency. Griffith is au, idealind in sport. In thai sense he is the pro- fessor on the gridiron. As the Ameri. can colleges ther: are professorial foot Lall enthusiasts. As Soldiers' Field you may see them Mung in boxes al the ensmpionship games, They dif- fer fromi Jriffith. Beason after season be has given every night of his time to exhorting, cheering and teaching & bunch of raw boys punting, tackling and srick plays. He has never got a single cent tor it. Highly paid pro- fessional coaches atiend to the train. ing Harvard and Yale gladistors The faculty look on. Why does Professor from the cloist and coach football teams' Because he loves the. game, and he's just &s much a college boy as a professor. He's a diverse per- sonality, There is "Reddy" Griffith, a short, tense figure tweed suit and tan loves, Latless, chasing a ball sround a field, a pack of pamting youths at his heels. "Follow up, seconds! Fol low up--up! Fheu there is the scholar with as keen a love for hunt ing down siips in Freneh grammar se has the wizded of the gridiren for un- covering bad team work. The fuot ball Griffith is & sphinx when you ask him about the team's chances. When the Doniinion was on tip-toe last year just before the 'Varsity-Hamilton con- to the pressimen he was taciturn- y polite fe loses his nerve omly wien the camera snaps. Oriffith, the projvasor, is somewhat of a lackadaivi- eal person' tripping over to Kurope every summer to stroll on the boule- vards and in the cafes and art gal leries, and wheu, he come back and gets a lew fellows in lis room, he can keep them up all ght with whimsica! renuniscences of the Latin Quarter Griffith is leaving "Varsity, and the worries of the Intercollegiate Union. To become a bromide' Nos Griffith He hes became a master of that live prep. school for boys at 8t. Catha rines-- Bishop Ridleg. He is a grad- uate of this school, and he has always | had a hunger to get back Canadian Courter, ul Griffith step Eh His First Flight. For sonye years there has been a dis- pute in Toronto between Store mag nate J. C. Egion and others as to she fArst Toronto man to own an automo- bile, which distinction Mr. Eaton claims. There need be no controversy, in futare ages about the owner of the first aeroplane in the Queen City. He is J. J. Jackson. Mr. Jackson's bird is a Bleriot, like that of De Lesseps, seen 30» Csnadison last year, acksonr has!tried cut his ma- ey and his short flight was prob bly she most exciting experience ever decd by a mere Torontonian. It was at the Dounlands aviation meet thet Jackeon got smbitious to scer. One evening in the twilight, after Mc- Curdy and Willard had electrified spectglors for su homr or so, Jackson who had pever been off terra firma Le- fore, suddenly, with great energy, trot- ted out his machine, climbed into the seat, grabbed she Steering Nhe, turn ed ou the power gud Thirty feel Lo and wy P The Bler jot bucked like an unbroken colt. The propelior insanely thrashed the air engine foesed, Jackson hung on like a cowboy. At last he grew tired of be- ing an air-man. He red for earth Then ha fell. The bird crushed ite owner nst ite framework. Jack son was lucky 0 efeape with his life But Le's plucky. He smashed a good deal of his first machive, but he says he's going to follow up the game until he becomes. a real live bi Ainaricans sti Coming. During the month of July thers were 29.261 immigrant arrivals in Canada, 13600 at ocean ports and 11,002 from the United States, as com- pared with July of last year, the in- ream 5 17 per cent. For July last he figures are 16019 at ocean ports od 9.199 Americans. For the four months of the current fiscal wear arrivaly at ocean rts numbered 127.92 and from the ed States 54.514, making a total oi migration from April to July inclu. sive of 182739. The corresponding months last vear gave 100872 at ocean ports and 54.69 American, making a tots! ef 155,571. x PIONEER FORESTERSSS | Grand Master Aubrey White Fough® | the Lumber Vandaly I MEL bre White, recently A at | | 40 thy honorable office of Grand Mas | | ter of whe Grand Lodge of Canada of Apcient Free and Accepted Masons, is | Deputy Minister of Lands and Forests ) { | | of Ouatario, a posi be has held since IST. He is one of the fathers of for- sir; apd forest conservation im Can- ada, which fact good people who sre given fo aocus ing lumbermen of being nofhing else | but ruthless destroyers of the forests for Mr. White is an old lumbermasn In the late sixties and early seveuiies he was one of the largest operators in the Muaskoka district; but, although » lumberman, he was far fin being a destroyer of dovests. In very earl. wet days of his lumbering o he protesied to she suthorities agaist the ruthless destructiveness the methods of most lumbermen "and pointed out thet the inevitable result | would be the wasting of a large portion of one of the country's richest assets He paryoulerly protested against the destruction of small trees, the wasting of the upper portions. of the larger trees, the destruction of the hardwood in making jamber roads, sad We lack «f attention wo the pre- vention aud extinction of forest fires. His outspoken denunciation of gxisi ing methods excited the hostility of sole of his brother lambermen, who proclaimed that il ali his fine prin. ciples were put into effect the pdus- try would be handicapped w the poins of ruination He was in grin earnest, however, aud to prove the soundness of his ar guments he pui his principles int practice throughout his own limits When hus choppers lelled forest monareh they dare not cat a log off . and leave the rest to rot in the ss ar to provide fuel lor any forest conflagration They had every inch of ate inte aid the smallest | had Ww go vith drive tree tops had ¢ gatliered together and burned. lu making their roads sod trails througn the bush his fore raén were instructed that ft was 1 10 avoid unnecessary timber as to locale s a ot LW vi tie ogs uu the de Young lumoermen operating in ct as Mr. Whit 8 AdvVAntag 3 i iW" results © MOSErvALit i resto by many is season of the servation of she i ©. picwresque sfuskoka distr na condition much iearer approaching their primeval tate than was possible ander less fav. rable condits So mach of present beauty tire territory ng t Muskoka lakes is due {ores auc patriotism of the rts wlong ago. Family loreats younger the sur- ns und {1¢ iu the ght id 1! mber bauks fo years and Weekly Star ian wi hear Herald Recreation Reading. It is we that clergymen and prot are obliged a good deal of serious literature, are. seldom f I of "heavy" novels r t whigh are merely of 'a Montreal lured that he would rables'" nor *'Rob- anything in the Zenda story to ug. There is a Huiversity, ead ster f the nt i Canada, but whose re on eonsists of the i vorks i the Duchess and ghtly feminine novelists Sulite years when late Sir ver M { Outario vas Yol Is spending a iol laxatic n fict mortal other n spi I ay the vas Premier « n his way Ai m M and, where } i few days, and mos on the Muskoka re icalutres it gnized the leading tue prov A= the reached Sandfield, the passengers crowd » thie side to see crowd usually assembles the re- Oitver i © guzers bout the jolly atl ned 1 ¢ book he had | was known treat VETAl passengers eri Oiive as r in 5 ses » vrammond mii Treasure Found. "HEUTE Was thief 4 Leary b tie \ 1 at is very much It's pu SHUVEr in tt wh it and it iach sih the STWare it, Doesn't Want to Vote. An English wimar in Canada, an ardes talking aver the ine vote with a © 2 don't want deeidedy unearthed femin. suid the latter 2 we'd he shat Laurier ven ne Telegram Why, of those anything i be sure ta eatiestare our best The man who is absolute boss o* his bome and family #5 never an ob- Jeet, of 4.0f atfoction §7 Bowe people who preténd (hey ars and narrow PRL] sometimes the most will surprise mauy | thous- | who | of the passengers } Me wall" | Cifizen | his | s | rr PAGE FLEVEN. pm aE TH NEW BR KEMEDY, SUCCEEDS | IN LONDON. pn IER Ng Ne. 2 {F Mackay Edgar Is a Former ¥ Ru dent | Fr --uf- Montreal: + Mr: E. Mackay Edgar { dan England, owuer of the ah 1 boat "Maple L 3 aboul to make the al the championship for speed [rom Unites St 4s a Canadian, and | W fess than jen years sgo was a Iv lent of Montreal, says Chestertielc The Family Herald and Weekly Star addrersed envelope Co Haverstock Ra ampatead Lande o = Tre new DING Tastes) Form of TROTAPIOR. cay 10 take, safe, tasting cure. Carriage Painting SOME CLASS TO iy nm 3 This is the place to have your Mr. Edgar is a son of the late Frank Auto repainted to stand all kinds of Edgar. a Ligh und much beloved offi- | weather. ol Grapd Trunk during t { EJ. DUNPHY, { Hickson Tegine, and & very prom:oeni | member of the Masorse Order. Mr Meutresl und Ordmanes Streetn Mackay Fdg r's mother was Miss M . Weod's Ph { kay, uanber of a wealthy Mont. real ! ici the 3 snator The Grvat RKaglish Ressed, sent head Y Tones and invigorates the whole nt i Wa ROUS Histol, Bakes new . Mr: Edgar serv flood tn old Veins, Cures Neves the ou Iebidily, Meatal iL ya dency, inl, HW rakwns sa, Rmisnons, "Sper wmatorrhaa, end Effects af Abuse or Exceases, 5 fue 31 pet box, six for 85 One will las L8ix will cure. Sokl by all druggists or fa plaln pkg. ou recel vood medic Ne w wamphiel Frey Wile, iy "THOMAS TORE Pronk 987. Drop a card to 18 Plone Btrest Rien wanting auything done In the Car ter ine. Kstimales given ou all k nds repairs and new work also. Barts Floors of all kinds, All ders will receive prompt attentiouw, op, 40 Queen Blreet. a , divisive ~ {BETTER GET } Your bins filled with ¢ Our Coal before the Fall + rush comes on which | wrest bu temp! t up si les iin cial Owe. Phe Mackay is After leay $ ed inouse i e pr count Montreal B for of wholesdle others and wh 1893 Scuato Was int ated i Cr perat of winding mpany up. This vears ¢ Maiely ssal vel ae the affairs OrkK eXtended Mr. Edgar ene ' « any gute { usefal bush } period expe ai! 3 I uli ACLILE sana I hard-working vasipess mad : . | { gar attained pronuinent positial ! one of tig ¢ al Capital's at { leur emeerieg i! Al Mo he distiuguishie elécut ons ikl, and a lew had been recogs in busiiices nized as on talented sma | teur comedians He a-suw- the lesding various "0 | fas } great was Was professional | offered a poss | stage, but Li I no! entertain it for iB mune as | had § wing | merely as a pa me It is aracivristic of My SCTeRIIONS a Hr as HE ine arx fae ad « fre ie Mosel n Canada 1y pacts In Pp! the SUOUEES at hionable wd Ut &, and a a a a P. 'WALSH Barrack St. ue into i that ¢ takes his seriously I manner sport 3 while 1 Montreal tennis player good of the smartest yachtsmen 3 Lawcence Yacht Club | ter the estate of Mackay Brothers ad been wound bouglit a on | 1 Mi k Exchangs snug had begaii to ¢xpar Lg iN conte: 1 SOM g i irial wergers ed Im hundreds « isikl wl dence of an il uf gr ish financ be advaunt his as a authority on has firmly esiu hed {made a great deul of 'money gar in his prosperity genial 'nature h made hi popular a a Young man, what he hax ventured nedrly in lus pre empt to wir { tor-boat champ nship she | adheres is la you we and pr Vel whole-soulet THLE LOO wialever hie became an expert and REITER LASS SL takes esiden: Hus de a -- ---- FOOD © QOCOOCQOVOHAOVOO FINKLE CO. LIVERY AND CAB STAND. Open Day and Night. Cabs Ordered for early morning boats and trains promptly attended to Motor Car for Cataraqui daily Sight-secing Car on applica. 9 tion. FINKLE CO. 'Phone 201. 120 Clarence St. cricketer, sese Sesssuveeenss 1 Osanna St scat Aud t ted up, he nireal d Wlie soon fina up of Brit id iv would him tw take up London, where, and a relial { an investments he iimael!l' and Mr. Ed folie ol Liat 80 fact $50,000 the ent ers 1 age headquart clever 1 acer OO00D000000V 0000000000 Br sseciciscccassanacas® I. COHEN British- American HWigh-Class Ladies' Talloring. 081 m and tie EOL nm vs at Work | u he ard motto lay while y« sti wh play sesssssssssssassese aders will perhaps be Some of wy re Werested in Knowing Mr. Edgar descendant of James Fs agus LLY years private Prince: Charlic's Chevalier, known Lhe King James 111 Nothing the constancy sul devoti Edgar Is uitfurtunate ro is recorded ry al is a who was fof pe 0 Bonn. Fath Jacobites us finer than n oof James yal tastier uy BVT LLLRVCCRAS ) Pecscsscssssssssassssas AREA ARRAN 3 Cl Drinks for Hot Days iitry days ing ss a + Qut of the North. A story ths | ences wii | Age lias frlana ns A % vy we and res large rerve CREAM PARLOR 8 NTREED, "Ko ed for 8 Tespaet | Colstgeral ? GEORGE § ICE 84 TIINEOER cal pr EEE ER re Boeclale, FHV ESP EE FARRAR EA AAA Foe rr asassasssassanag) {Highest Grades GASOLINE, COAL OIL, LUBRICATING OIL. FLOOR OIL. GREASE, RTO, PROMPT DELIVERY. W. F. KELLY. Clarence and Ontario Streets. Toye'n Ballding, peda eit throes of ne nh desperate. Th: | 300 Now Dut decide Llmnsel! And uperate he ing some Wie palietil s Tien, with ten ATT TET Te ere Te *8 AWAY what did he Wo operate na odiass hit ashint Ug col Imen Live J in ne wit valid one. he forth to Nepigon { § 2 01 La woud mom slnuleu ses curried he SeatsnecsteleSecstsess eset ea SOT Crews North a Her tion Eight Wes lhe | toba | Delt Ours Junior wil ning of eral regatta wins ou two days in nes, J M Doubles, Bighis, Pair Junior Four Sensor Eights, it menses corsds kind ters Win. work of thie men Beuior F Whig DeLnior Ningl Doubles Wi : ped im * wi BVYerY Tom catiges to big freg cheereg the Capadisn victors Bepeg ng say ti Winnipeg "igh tite mwiftest L3H is Wirse is ¢ eifitors sport » at i 'wm -------- " First Kirk In 8. C. » As n purely business proposition, the First Presbyterian Church, Vie toris, B.C. 6! which Rev. Dr. Camp- | Bverytling {bell is pastor. was sold recently, the ing line goes cotisideration being $90.00 This was ground as soon 8a the first Presbyterian Church built in Lamp introdnced British Columbin and oviebratd ite | into inzgignificapre. Tungsten Lamps Ljubiler on the fast Sabbath of June, make darkness like daylight and {at wicoh tine the Pastor was sisiated will give the greatest satisfaction {by Prel. Stalker. DD., of Aberdeen, at the smallest cost in every home | Bootiand, and Principal McKay, D.D., | We also install these Lamps in stores, of Westminster Hall. i factories, the iliuminar- the dark back the Tungsten They ali pale eles into in in loffiees and H.-W. Newnan Fieeric Co 79 Princess Street - Poverty becomes a crime when it is brought abou: by idleness, was o of eXITRYUgAtre. The "Bower of the family" worthless

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