THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14, i911, i PAGE ELEVE a It is simply impossible for this space-saving DEAL Folding d to close accidentally. It is self-balancing in any position. Works with springs, not weights, and is so light and per- fectly balanced that a child can operate it. All metal ~--therefore vermin-proof. No parts to work loose, wear out or break. Bedding kept in perfect order, always open to air. Canopy permits artistic draping--open or a it is a handsome piece of fumiture. Be sure and ask for the IDEAL Folding Bed, and see that it bears our trade mark. Ask for name of dealer nearest you. Write for Free Folder No. F120 « IDEAL BEDDING Clie MONTREAL -- TORONTO -- WINNIPEQ 2 SOWING HIS WILD OATS REAPING A HARVEST OF SORROW How many young men can look back on their early life and regret their msde "Sowing their wild eats' in various ways, Excesses, violation of na- ture"s laws, 'wine, women and song"~all have their victims You have re. formed but what about the seed you have sown-- what * about the harvest? Don't trust to luck. If yon are at present within the clutches of any secret habit which is sapping your life by degrees; if you are suf- fering from the results of vast indiscreti Flood has been ~~ ge - any private disease and vou dare not marry; if you are married and live in dread of symptoms breaking out and exposing your past, if you are suffering as the result of a misspent life--~DRS. K. & K. ARE YOUR REFUGE. lay your case before them confidentially and they will tell you honestly if vat are curable, YOU CAN PAY WHEN CURED We Treat and Cure VARICOSE VEINS, NERVOUS DEBILITY, BLOOD and URINARY COMPLAINTS, KIDNEY and BLADDER Dis eases and all s Peculiar to Men. x. IN FREE. Books Free on Diseases of Men. If unable to call, write for a Question Blank for HOME TREATMENT. Drs. KENNEDY & KENNEDY Cor. Michigan Ave. and Grisweld St., Detroit, Mich. NOTICE All letters from Canada must be addressed to our CARA AAC Canadian Correspondence Department in Windsor, Ont. If you desire to see us personally call at our Medical Institute in Detroit as we sce and treat no patients in our Windsor offices which are used for correspondence and Laboratory' for Canadian business only, Address all letters as follows; DRS. KENNEDY & KENNEDY, Windsor, Ont. Write for our private address. A Coal Stove That Keeps The Floor Warm The Regal does this in two ways: In the first place it creates contin uous currents of warm air in the room. There is a special flue in- side the stove, apart from the fire chamber and free from gas or smoke. This flue draws in the cold air from the floor, heats it, and passes it out at the top. See diagram. In addition to this the Regal radiates extra All the hot smoke and fumes from the fire pass down and through a flue under the ash-pit before they reach the pipes. This keeps the stove hot the bottom and belps materially to warm the floor. REGAL PENINSULAR With its wassive nickel parts, heavily plated" and elegantly formed its large bven--withr its perfect dupiex grates and durable fire-box, the Regal Peninsular has a combination of beauty and heating comforts not usually fouldidn a heater. It is thoroughly Peninsular and that means that it is honestly made. It has proven economical both in fuel L consumed, and in its years of service, If you are interested in heaters or ranges, get "THE COST." it is a booklet you should read before you buy, Ask for it. ~ heat near the floor. at with if} 4 i ONTARIO & = -- ROS., Kingston: = VANDALS IN LABRADOR RUTHLESS HUNTERS ARE COST. ING CANADA MILLIONS. Lleut.-Col. Wood Urges That the Wild Ungava Country Be Preserved For the Nation -- It Is an Animal "Sanctuary" Where the Fur Re- 4 sources Can Be Maintained Inde finitely--Outrages Committed. The paper on Animal Sanctuaries | in Labrador by Lieut.-Col. William Wood, F.REC., and read before the | second annual meeting of the Com mhdsion of Conservation, held in Que- bec, has just been issued in pamphlet forma. It is to be hoped that it has! been given a wide circulation, and! that wherever e¢irculated it is being studied. It is further to be hoped that its students will heed the appeal with which the pamphlet opens, ar do all in their power to give it effect. It is in these words that Lieut..Col. Wood makes his appeal 5 "All to whom Wild Nature is one of the greatest glories of the earth, all who knows its higher significance for citilized man to-day, and all wha consequently prize it as an heirloom for poster are asked to help in keeping the animal life of Labrador trom being wantonly done to death That is the keynote of the pamphlet --the conclusion to which the writer would lead every reader. But the little book contains lessons for all our people, who at any time or Jace come into touch with the life of for- | est, the lake or the river; and it would | fuculeate principles which can be put into practice much nearer home than, Labrador, and which should find ready acceptance by every lover of nature, y every true sportsman, as well as | y the utiitarian pure and simple, an: #ees in the game and fish of the cound try great natural resources which cau be profitably developed, but whose ex. termination means destruction of nat- | jonal capital. | A few of the lessons of general ap- lication with explanation all gleaned the pamphlet for the benefit of those who may not have an opportun- | ity of reading the little book itself. What. does Lieut.-Col. Wood mean | by "sshetuaries?' "A sanctuary," says | he, "may be defined as a place whera | man is passive and the rest of nature active. Till quite recently nature had | her own sanctuaries, where man eith- er did not go at all or only as a tool- | tonary of fis western ent rprise. using animal in comparatively small | numbers. But now in this machinery- | using age, there is no place lefi where | man cannot go with overwhelming forces at his command. He can stran- | le to death all the nobler wild life | £ the world today. Tomorrow he | certainly will have done so, unless he | exercises due foresight and self-con- | trol in the meantime. There is noi | the slightest doubt that birds and ani- | mals are now being killed off much | {aster is always the largest and noblest forms of life that suffer most. The 'whales and elephants lions and eag- les go. The rats and flies and & mean parasites, remain." ; Lieut.-Col. Wood considers Labrador *the best country in the world for the best kinds of sanctuary" and he 'goes on to describe the country, and e animals and birds that now make ! Labrador their home. That home he urges, should be kept intact and se- cure for these denizens of the forest. |Gireat destruction has already been 'wrought, largely by fires burning the forests and ever the soil itself; but "still, there is plenty of fur and 'feathers worth preserving. Nothing Can save It unless conservation re. places the present reckless destruc. or." } The portion of the pamphlet dealing with destruction makes this clear. {Lieut.-Col. Wood first speaks of the destruction of the éggs of wild fowl. |The fishermen, he says, who /come up ithe morth shore of the St. Lawrence joke eggs wherever they go. "If they are only to stay 'in "the 'same spot for a day or two, they gath- er all the eggs they can, put them into water, and throw away every one {that floats, Worst still, if the men are going to stay long enough they will loften go round the nests and make sure of smashing every single egg. | {Then they come back in a few days and gather every single egg, because {they knew it has been laid in the | jmeantime and must be fresh. | Already results have given warning | |i 'of what the end will be unless meas- jures of conservation are at once en- forced, | Within living memory the great sauk | and the Labrador duck have become | jextinet. The Eskimo curlew is de | {creasing to the danger point. The lob. | ster fishing is being wastefully co o] ducted ; whales are diminish iy iwalrus is exterminated everywhere i Labrador except in the north, Th seals are diminishing, and the wood. land caribou has been killed off to] such an extent as to cause both In. | dians and wolves to d'e off with him. | :The barren-ground caribou stilt} lentiful, though deerrasing. The dy i out of so meny Indians Before tha! time of the Low and Eaton expedition! of 18034 led to an increase of fur] bearing animals, But renewdd, im} roved, increased and unconirolled | Yrapping has now reduced them below 'their former level. Hunting for the market seems to be going round io & vicious circle, always narrowing in on the quarry, which must uitimately be strangled to death." Lieut.-Col. Wood also tells of a ty of hunters securing a large num. r of walrus and tusks by having a! whole herd of walrus wiped out, in spite of the fact "that these animals were, at that very time, known Ww be the only food available for a neigh- boring tribe of Eskimos. The Eskimos ware starved "to death, every soul immong them, as the Government ex- plorers found out. But Eskimos have no votes and never write to the papers; while walrus hides were booming inj 'the markets of civilization. "A form of sanctoary suggestad for the fur-bearing Yukon is well worth 'considering ss 3 remedial measure,' writes Lieut-Col. Wood. "Tt cousists in opening and closing the country by 'alternate sections, like crops and lal low land ia farming." a Fhe epotisk al vaya feels a boundless pity for the people who don't like him. + the food in a family ought to be way. enough, bat it seldom happens that than they can breed. And it'| WAY HONOR SELKIFR. -- Winnipeg Men Psopose to Erect a Monument te Pioneer. A movement in Winnipeg advocati the erection of a monument to Loi Selkirk, has attracted wide atiention in the press, and the proposal is obviousty a good one that the marvel is .that no one thought of it before. Lord Selkirk might almost be said to be the first Britisher who realized the possibilities of Western Canada as a field for settlement, and proceeded t> carry his ideas into effect. It 's just one hundred years ince he took steps to found his colony at the june. ture of the Red and Assiniboine Riv. ers, a colony which was destined to become the city of Winnipeg, and which was the initial step toward the agricultural development of the great Northwest. Lord Selkirk's col onists met death and the loss of their effects owing to the savage warfare between the great organizations the Hudson's Bay Co. and the Northwest Co. Their failure does not alter the fact that Selkirk was a seer 50 far as the future of the West was concerned Not only was he a pioneer in prairie settlement but previously he had in terested himself deeply in the develop. ment of Western Ontario though even there his proverbial ill-luck pursued him. As dhe London Free Press re- cently pomted cut he established a settiement with twenty families in what are now known as the town ¢hips of Dover and Chatham in Kent County. The site chosen turned out to be swampy after it was cleared, and the hardships proved too much for his settlers. He was one of the first men to realize the value of god roads to Upper Canada, and offered himself to expend forty thousand pounds on a adway clear through Amherstburg, on Detroit to York (now Toronto) if the ive Couneil of ny would um I pavmen certain al nen wiid | i= along routs The failare of ounerl to the proposal retarded for year devel nt of Upper Canada. only whi Are n of Ontario and nitoba we tivities 1n the direction AR tion carried or He made a similar attemp I e kdward Island which was hardly anore fortunate Hiz name, vir, will forever in [ this country be associat. ries from the River Exec grant lot s of Js Lhe t in w ih «d honor hi It was pro- him by a of the cen. This idea was abandoned, but it would be a pity if the enthusiasm of Westerners for hig memory should die out on that oupt. Canadizn cities have many monuments to men important than this opiim:st, who was destined to die before his dreams came true. --Toronto 8 N: 1S posed WO comir world's fair in cele tion le less gnu Hindus In Canada. The present Hindu population of Canada numbers about 5000, all men, for no women are allowed to accom- pany them Canada or to follow them after they have arrived and settled. These are resident entirely in British Columbia, and chiefly in the cities of Vancouver and Victoria and on the fatins in the neighborhool where they are industriously employed in many forms of manual labor eo to the | for' whieh they appear to have both special adaptation and desire. Dr. Sunder Singh, the accredited agent for these people in Canada, tells how the eyes of the Hindus were first turned toward Canada and how the first beginnings of modern emigration from India were inspired. He says that the visit of Hindu religious re. formers to great Parliament of Religions, which was held in Chicago in connection with the world's fair first aroused these people to an appre ciation of the advantages of occidental civilizations and democratic tita- tions. The educational work sd on by nisgionaries in the hign schools of India alwo prepared the way for a sowing of good seeds in a ready soil, the fruitage of which turned tl of educated Hindus toward v Economie conditions ir ci India furthered a movement of emigrants to Canada in 1905, when, and nuing unttil 1907, not a few came Ww this couniry ~~ Vietoria Times ont Great Tonnage Increase. Bo far this orcase of 113 f incoming vessels over #i last year, and an in 144 tons in the outwa tonnage. Up to date, the the Montreal east inward tonnag be 1,686.2 for the 15 an nnage © same per- 87 .- in ase of stered at the un be a8 show Seas outward. tonnag ERM 1.640, 132, wiih several ships still arrivals he number 57¢ while last year the number was 561 | increase of classes of an all schooners from the lower ports A remarkable feature 11 ar is the tremendous increase in the flour ha: doubled (self &y r year. The tables farther here is wwpere money spen manufactaring trade in Can hag developed tremendously ly has the trade b Montreal and Neu and South Africa g bounds There is also a great increass in manuiactures shipped fromé "I which come in bond from toe Enid States, nine which ineiad vessels, coastwise and trade, whieh twee own One on Sir Wilirid. A story is going the rou: prominent railway man and n son. The sad magnate ig a friend « Bir Wilfrid Lauries, and on visit to Ottawa was asccompasied by his lsd. Aler introducing him to the Premier, he explained that he ad. mired the French so much that this young son was being instructed io their language. Pleased, indeed, was Had and the boy was put & F.te examination. He knew th h for nose, eyes, hand, head, ete, bet wher Sir Wilfrid pointed to the dogs tad) He hesitated a moment, tha ond "1 don't kmow that, Sr Wild You sce, mademoiselle quly teaches u- what she has hersell." bout a 2 Lvuiy recep? True happiness is merely a case of not wanting the things you can's et. When a man gets too respactable to enjoy ble he is due to give the under- taker a job. {lower and admit the ocean air aun % | actual darkness. A GROWING IDEA, Women's Canadian Clubs Spreading All) Over the Land. The first Women's Canadi was formed in 1907. One we X Eke to venture the statement that men's Canadian Clubs had no it is improbable that a Wom i > : dian Club would ever have been Restores co ed to the history of Canada. The i Removes is, however, that m : Clubs were formed first ¢ity in Canada to possess Canadian Club was Montreal. Women's Canadian Club of Win was inaugurated Toronto {fol men's Canadian then many Canad have been organ rowth of the i ful On jhe A Club for 'women has kept pac with 'the Canadian Club Lt nsideratiion "EY nt re -------------- or (6 Gray en's ns 1h for Shay clean and (ewiths herd & . REFUNL JAS. B. M oC vem m ud began % For Pickli STLDENTS? EE & CO, "NN WEES NE ng all d Pu rine i = oof whble an SiINdAS O01 winole an Ground DC ror Spices. OUPER, 33 niet } Priccess Street. Delivery feast wore home, this the ne seeng hin in the differ Canadian" Clubs telligent interest as well as a keen ing people he Women's iar other predominant motive on the growth oi the Can is nationality It is impossible 1 every Women's C has been formed are being formed the, are indepx whieh find it easy Association of Cana Undoul in affairs ed " NL and alone. Clubs ibs hoa ws LIPTON'S TEA OVER 2 MILLION PACKAGES SOLD WEEKLY iy ORR TTR Lh me . There 3 Canadian list includes London, North Quebec, St Victoria, federation wi clubs and w at least tw Clubs in Canad: Beriin, Fort Wi Bay, Montreal, John, Toronto, and Winnipeg Women's Canadian widely in some respects y all have a large membership. Mout real, which is the oldest Women's Canadian Club, i keeps to the idea of and has a speaker address them at a luncheon. The statistics of Women's Canadian Clubs show the popularity of the movement with Canadian women, The Women's Canadian Club of Berlin and Waterloo was formed last year. Ib began with a wembership of 117. are iam, Ottawa, Vancouver, differ | y one which Le mens ciud "Old Boys" of the House. Of the senior nine members of the House only one Liberal is left, and Agent, James McParland, NDON St We Told You So! LABATT'S LAGER Now Perfected--The Best on the Market! TRY IT John Labatt, Ltd. ] NT ad 1-34) King St, i, King sou that is Sir Wilirid; all the others are from Ontario, and are Conservatives. Out of the semors there disappeared at the recent elections, Bir Frederick Borden, Hon. Mr. Paterson and Hon. Mr. Fisher (although Mr, Fisher was out for, three or four years), There are only eight or nine members now left in tne House who have an unbroken or nearly unbroken connection with the House before or since 1891, and the order of seniority runs about as fol- lows: Ph Hon. John Haggart, first "elected 1872 (unbroken.) £ Sir Wilfrid Laurier, * first Felectod # $ first | elected 1874 (unbroken). Dr. Sproule (Grey), 1878 (unbroken). i ts Pa George Taylor (Leeds), first elected : 1881 (unbroken). Hon George E. Foster, first elected 1382 (broken). David Henderson elected 1882 (broken), Dr. Reid (Grenville),, first elected 1891 (unbroken) Col. Hughes, HEALTH Sugar 1s one of t PARI al Sugar (Halton), , firs first elected 1892 (un- Maclean, ys first elected j 1802 (unbroken), ' # Established in IN PURE SUGAR XTRA GRANULATED SU The Canada Sugar Refining Co., MONTRE . AL, 1854 by J ) i § aely exi 1 f GAR ( UMPS Redpati i rt Limited CANADA. a Redon 'And then there comes & very con- siderable gap. W. H. Bennett is prob- ably the next in the order of senior. ity, but he was out of the late Par.' ® liament. R. L. Borden came in in 1296. Mr. Osler of Toronto was also first elected in 1396, Methodist Antiquities, Among the antiquities of Methodism which have been brought by Rev. Di K. Carroll, the secretary of the western section of the Ecumenical | Conference, for exhibition in Canada are the watch carried by Bishop As { bury, his specmucles, jackknife and comb. The bishop's saddiebags also coming, and reposts of probably | the oldest church on the continent, the oid John Btreet Church, New York. I'he Eastern Section Secretary, Rev {James Chapman, has al arrangi | for a number of interesting relics to follow him, including letters of Johu Wesley, manuscripts of a number Charles Wesley's hymns, records of {ithe "Holy Club" and its lst of of- | ficers in John Wesley's handwriting, | and other articles of historic interest. Ais0 free from dise any [oor Alberta's Evenings. Marvelous is the influence of the | Pacific winds and currents. Two hun {dred miles north and west io the Peace River country and in a broad strip lying across Alberta north of | the Lesser Slave the climate is milder ; than at Edmonton. The mountains are ? interior the glance send you prctures, It and | chilled. i Summer nights in Edmonton give "only about two hours and a hali of One can easily read fine print by daylight at 10.30. Ball games begin at 7.30.. The longest day ives 18 hours of sunshine. One rare. ¥ 'sees such brilliant, livening sun shine anywhere else, want, and let 1 you will want Address PRESTON oSiteel Cecling. 484 them as you would a J certain they will be when their surface is non: if the beauty of your home or store stra tell im ¢ 2 save you more than merely money Suggest to ue about what you might : The Metal Shingle & Siding Co., Limited Branch Office & Factory © they ao wn PRE ( Hin clean ££ rns ni 1 cleaner than § ' washed because Or hsorbent nger argon through the book we want to in will s the letail story that show you what ONT Montreal, Que A Jubiles Year, In the October Canadian Magazine { Dr. J. D. observes that Bliss { Carman, Archibald Lampman, Wil {Ham Wilfred Campbell, Frederick George Scott and Margaret Marshall Baunders were all born just 50 years ago, in 1861. In any consideration of Canadian literature lis, is au im portant fact, : - You ean borrow the last cent a fat | woman has if you will only praise ber | figure, I a msn doesn't Jook out for Wim | self he will never be able fo get aj v