PAGE SIX. Take One Pill, then Take it 4) Easy. Take What Pill ? Why, a Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pill, of course. Good for all kinds of , « : pain. Used to relieve Neuralgia, Headache, Nervousness, Rheu- mat.ism, Sciatica, Kidney Pains, Lunt bago, Locomotor Ataxia, Back «che, Stomachache, Period- Teal i tins of syomen, and for pain in 20Y part'of the i ody. used Dr. Miles' me. cines for and find them exceiler t, 1 keep Dr. # AntiPaia Pils 11the house all the tif * and would tr at +hink of taking a jours %Y, Without tig i, no matter how short distance [ an going. 1 cannot praisc them Dough % Miss Lov SIURCY 3 LL. 63 High St, Py nacook, Ti At all druggists. 25 oad 2% MILES MEDICAL c0., Yoronto) San. a -------------- -------- THAT TOBACC With (he "Heoster" on 1s crowiwg louder as Be goes Only fc per pound. smoking. AT A. MACLEAN'S, tarie Street. ..That"s what our patrons sey «when served with Belfast Ginger Ale or Pngiigh Ginger Beer that do not bear our Be) pott1ed goods for family use have no superior. Sample It at any of the lead- Ing hotels o rtelephone 304 for a trial case. Thompson Bottling Co. 292 PRINCESS ST. KINGSTON. Heudache, and Distress after Eatiip Small Pill, Small Dosey Small Price. Genuine wos bow Signature i > lor 5 For chewin, * ane Pesassansssssrslansws wi { Highest Grades GASOLINE COAL OIL. LUBRICATING ON) FLOOR OfL. GREASE, ETO ¥ PROMPT DELIVERY. W. F. KELLY. Clarence and Ontario Rirests Fore's Building Vd Pa a IT PC na Labatt's Lager Now Perfected The best on the market! RE TRY IT 3 ! John Labatt Ceres 1 ' i ' ' ' ' ' | { 1 ! 1 ' ! ' { i aashasssaases od and fall - | Water. THY DAILY BRITISH WHIG, TIME BRIGHTEST, A wis ound geen -- Pip tenn From » OE tone nn dim Lord } Als LANG asa i Justice wf f n an address to a gathes t ome time ago s21d thes he und from his own long ex porience that the early morn- he time wnen he eould think sng had g was bos no doubt that our power to reatly during the day. | some people, hike Lord Alverstone, {'ehink bast in the early morning--be- 15d na ikiast, but after an early rs think better in 1 thing ad night. ink appears to de- y of blood eirculat. ind any device that flow of blood to usually enable us to re kis ve head will think better Evergonis kno from experience it the brain is not at its best after heavy meal. The explanation of 18 sipaply all the available od in the body-is drawn from the ard 'the extremiiies to help in 8 lige » For the same reason we can usually | think bast after a period of fasting, and it is kmown that clerks do better | work Oefore lunch than afterwards | The lase Prof. Mavor, of Cambridge, when engaged on his latest book would oceasionally. go without food for a day or nwresat a time, and for several yenrs belore his death his food cost him no tuwore than twopence a day. Prolong ed of sleeplessness produce 1s sensitiveness and irritation of the nerves, or, as the doctors call it, a stateyof hyperaesthesia; which is frequent ok to thought, Some people cany think only when walking, and otherss only in the noise of streets | and erowdy, or with the buzz of con- versataon all around. But most peo- ple requires silence aud solitude. Opin and morphia, in moderate doses, cause mental excitement of a peculiarly pleasurable character ich is always followed by a period { ntense depression. The opium on hia hiabit, once acquired, is 'al- ¢ impossible to break. Both tear and «<offee stimulate the | nervous agstem and the circulation, | The heart beats more quickly, and this causes the blood to circulate more rapidly through the bram. We drink | tea becauss: we know from our own experience yvthat, v iatever the doctors | may say, ww do le I more lively and | energetic afterwards But when tea+ {drinking dev into a habit, as i% joiten does, & brings indigestion, loss | of appetite, | and nervousness in its train. » The use ofl strong coffee at night is well known to students who are com- pelled to cram for examinations; for; although the ywoffee does not increase their intellectual capacity, it makes their brain calls imore sensitive for the time being. of stion { periods ravorabie ---------------- Early Venture With a Chum. \ Asir H. Edward Moss, who has in- | dused Signor Leancavallo, the world- { fame us composer, to conduct and sus | poyintend, at the Hippodrome, Lon { lon, yan abridged tversion of his own | opera) "Pagliacca." began in early 1 life to \evince an interest in theatrical | enterprises. When only seventeen he tioined wih a chum a small "show" on {four, but the' venture was not = success, Later, the} raneo-German war gave him an idesh which set him on the | high road to prosverity. People were { clamoring for news and pictures of |the campaign ,ausd Mr. Moss, as he was then, determined to give the pub- He a diorama of the war. He asked his father, who was a theatrical man- lager in Manchester, to lend him some money, and ythe diorama was put on the road |" Wherever the show went the ver- dict of the public was the same--"a really good thing." {In a month Sir Edward was able tod repay his father every penny he had borrowed and had, a substantial balance in hand. Bin Edward's country residence, Middled {ton Hall, Midlothian, is a splendid: Elizabethan dwelling. ' et -------------------- / | i | i The Oyster! Tree. | Though it may seem peculiar " toy thousands who are mnfamiliar with! Southern Nigeria, it iis a fact that {here oysters actually grow on trees! |. All through the Niger Delta, where; the creeks are tidal, there is a rise of from six to seven feet oli The suckers of the Mangrove! trees which line the bank# are cover led with oysters from, the points be-, tween high and low water, and al! {though they are partaken of sparing-| ly by the Europeans dwelling in thesa| parts, they form one of the staple {articles of native diet, y |" There is little to distinguish them from the ordinary bivalve known at thome. They have not the delicate! flavor of a "Whitstable," however, | than which they are a good deall j coarser ---------- | Black and White. : The negroes of South Alrica have finer preserved teeth than any other' race in the world. | It is remarkable that they should be able to hold their own, in the, dental sense. with their more civil; ized competitors, since they are so careless in regard to everything else. But the manner in which they look; after their teeth is even more remark. abla thap the results they achieve. | {. Twigs from trees, cut to a fine: peneil-point, are the only brushes! they know; ash from the fire the onlyi pasts they vse. Yet when a Kafiir, 'smiles one is afforded one of the best) studies in bisck and white that hu man pature can . gee St. Cuthbert's Comb. : It was formerly the cusiom to bury: 'combs with the dead, which clearly shows that these articles of the ilet sac significance 3 the people of the old world. The; enmb buried with Bi. Cuthbert snd: now presérved at Durham, England, is of ivory measures six and one- vr R-- -- : : WHEN THE BRAIN 18 THE From ¥x- This Was the Best Time Able Ad- OLD OUEBEC, A City Full of Interest and Informa tion For the Tourist, Quebec is one ot Amen t for its ancier of intere contin The schoo studi Cat versity, © inporiat Lan titution the Lod in ada, i ; storical ts, wich arr packed away with probably ar Canada. ' same 1 preserved of 1 ever have expensiv citadel said: "It to keep it up, but ! faction.' Beyond the walls Parliament Build stately building French lative ¢ ernor and his Cabinet and the state Liby ed by an @ily apcient Bie als also the Dest res with many schools and n 2,000 young w nada and the United States yeing educated in these instituly The aicygnt gat been preserved, peeesary new ( proportions have municipality Within the wails, hotel, is a plain, ¢ ing that was occu by the Duke of Kent Victoria, when he of the garrison new gates cut ti named after him nefir the principal , and one yugh' the wall His daughter, her liberally toward the e« cess Louise, wife of the Marquis of Lorne, not only laid the foundation stone, but revised the architectural plans while her husband was Gover nor-General of Canada. No city in America has so many nunneries and monasteries as Quebec, and most of them are either schools vr homes for the poor and aged. One of the benevolent institutions 1s unique. It is kept by the Bisters of Provider 10 receive the children of widows ¢ feed and teach them for two cents s a day nursery ¢ women can ve their babies + cared for by t-faced puns thqy are carning their living. / number of churches and the size of them is surprising. Nearly all aré of the Roman Catholic fait} A cathedral of the Church of England occupies a conspicuous place in the centre of the and is interdsting because a number of battle flags are hung in the chancel, r the pulpit and the altar in t vestry is a beautiful n 1 service preseut- ed by the 1g Edward. wThe seston tell you .that it cost $10,000. | One of the America is also, w swe Cily oldest churches in French cathedral or basilica of Quebec, which dates back to 1647. It is one of the most impos- mg structures in Canada. It contains several important pictures, including a picture of the crucifixion painted by Van Dyck in 1630, which, with sev- eral other examples of the old masters, was looted from the churches in Paris by the revolutionists of 1793 and pur- chased by Abbe Des Jardins, of Que bee, who happelled to be in «the French capital st that time. The vestments are superb and the collection of sacred relics is the larg est in North America. They ure kept in two large vaults in the sacristy and include, it is said, skulls or bones of more than 40 saints, beside pieces of tite true cross and crown of ti the eradle of the child Jesus, a piece of rope with wh e Saviour was flogged and a fragment of the veil ol the holy mother which shows a stain of the blood of her beloved éon which fell upon it 4s she kneeled before the Cross. the A Northern Utopia. Iroquois Falls was laid out for beau- ty as well as commerce, and is being built with the idea of future growth The T. & N.O. Railway station is in the centre of 160 acres of land, the resent limits of the town. From fare o forth roads in every direc tion; like a cobweb the streets run to one centre, and that the Government railway. These streets have been nam- ed after the royal family and Earl Grey's family, excepting one, and that bears the name of Ontario's Premier. Playgrounds and parks have been ar- ranged where the children can spend happy hours in play. The Composition of a Rocket. The ordinary skyrocket is made of various compositions packed in tubes rolled tightly round a cylindriesl core. The match by which 'the rocket is exploded is placed in a cavity at the bottoms. The movement of the rocket would be irregular if it were not for the guide stick, which is made very light. so that it does not retard the iBight of the rocket when the Jnoce: {come out and hit the ground with all' {their might 'and send the rocket up 'into the aig for all that _jt is worth. s oldest cites Ks } interesti part of in, are 4 | would I e i of Robert E. K med build- | | 5 - ? | well known, Gait 13 tas cotchest Majesty, the late Queen, contributed, | st of eonstruc- | tion, and his granddaugt ter, the Prin. | MONDAY, [| MONUMENT TO BE REARED Navigator Pacific, Captain Cook was i navigator of the Pac ers had discovered { Te Capt. Cook, Firsi | { ~ |'but he was thé firs | coveries to practical use, and b . | plorations served as a basis {tirst accurate maps of thal great ocean. He found that there was uo . {vast 4 continent stretch the shores Asia to ul | pole, as Europe had alw as the first to sail aroul and, and he gave its name He is have § fitting memorial his vices to England and the world. This | memorial wiil take the form of a statue to be designed by Sir Thomas Brock, the sculptor who did the Vie toria memorial, and will have a place in Loudon pear the Admiralty arch in the Mall. of olf -------------------- Ruskin's Impulsive Generosity. One day, walking near Radley, Rus- kin's attention was caught by a group of little girls playing in the road, and he went and talked to them. them spe ract i tion. He iug ] at home? Did she ove flowers? was her name? soilciior cottage wil "Ruskin Shaw en the Good Man. Discussing tha future of the human race and its art I impr George RB vement raara i man tof the would | Knowles' Rejoinder. ro William rin Galt. t the wel Bry Some time J { Bryan was lect | preacl Mr Fant or and author | rather ¥ «t town manse, Mr. Bryan d him w lence was {in Canada After regaining the present, " queried 3 the silver quest the novelist e-------- The Point of View. A Toronto yeu a rcputat teur sailo at Car ; district is the wind ac home Tess, 1 wish here. Ther wind goi ne man, who has made himself as an s taken up a homes Map Creck. the ama- ad to Trade With New Canadian exports«to New increased { for the fises osing March 31. {The expor $1,404 535 eee Politicians Are Rare. Sir James Barr declare kountry politicians are blackberr: some of the ae thieves, but'a statesman is a "rara avis" - = Zealand. | Zealand $404,626 Mrs. Wilham Goldsmith, resident © died on Saturday. twenty-hve grand childre grand ehikiren, the towi She grand childre , and seven g OCTORER A purge, rich, high grade, flavory coffee. The kind that makes you linger over your cup--such is Seal Brand Coffee Packed in 1 and 2 pound cans only. CHASE AND SANDORN, MONTRFAL. DALES CAKES. Dales' Sultana Cakes, 20c lb. Dales' Peel Cakes, 20c lb. Dales' Sultana and Nut Cakes, 25¢c1b Dales' Genoa Cakes, 30c 1b. A. J. REES, 166 PRINCESS ST. Phono 58. le 4A POO NS LIPTON'S TEA} OVER 2 MILLION PACKAGES SOLD WEEKLY |OUR CRYSTAL BRAND Of Standard Granulated S | Has been tried and found excellent for { preserving aud table use, Price Is I ddwaye night ANDREW MACLEAN, retarie Street. cvssssessssssssasseaanell I'HECLUBHOTEL § WELLINGTON STREET, (Near Princess) There approach homelike surroundings. Lovsted 1a centre of city and joss Lo principal stores and theatre $ Charges are moderate. Special rates by the week, #. WM. THONPSON, Proprietes, cette ttTeRTRNBNtTRANRS F other 'hotels, the Club but for are » > Prose nnssasteen or Pickling Pure Vinegar, all kinds of whole and Ground Spices. D. COUPER, 6 341-3 Princess Street. Prompt Delivery, 'hone sssssssssssessesssseel BETTER GET | ' ¢ ' ' ¢ » i Your bins filled with Our Coal before the Fall rush comes on I A -------- P. WALSH Birrack St csssssssaassnessesss i i i i | { i | @esssssssrsssssassses KINGSTON BUSINESS COLLEGE "Highest Education at Lowest Cost' Twenty i Fall Tern Tele Eng- heat tima th year $ Shorthand, tvil 'Service and Iates get the Within a short secured postions with 1 «t rallway oor in « da Enter any (il or write for Informa F. Metcalfe, Principal Kingston, Canada From KINGSTON Round Trip to NEW YORK 'FROM R. W. & O. DIVISION STATIONS Annual Coach Excursion October 10th and 11th Special train Service on October 10th Final Return Limit, October 20th Ten days for sightseeing in the Metropolis-- Theatres, ihe Hip podrome the Water-front, Ocean Liners, the Subway, Museums, Parks, Skyscrapers, Navy Yards, Broadway, Fifth Ave. Riverside Drive, Baseball. Secure your tickets carly. For complete information and time of trains, consult local agents or address New York Central Lines, General Agent, Watertown, N.Y. NEWYORK ENTRAL LINES OST everyone knows that underwear dif. ference is something more tangible than =~ > trade mark. There is, for instance, the difference of quality. The Tiger Brand trade mark is valued not for what it is, but for what it represents. Tiger Brand Underwear The Tiger Brand trade mark stands for something real and desirable. It positively assures the purchaser of pure wool, careful and accurate workmanship, excellent fin- ish, correct fit and tub-and- wear resisting durability. An examination of the garments and their construction will reveal these points, Nota de- tail is slighted; Even the but- toris are sewed on good and tight. And the purchase of ev- ery garment is made with the feeling of confidence that full money's worth 1s obtained in unde rwean satisfaction. At your dealers, 75c. to $2.00 The Galt Knitting Company, Limited, Galt, Canada -