THE DAILY Aris 1 wh wEDSESDAY. NOVEMBER 8. 1911. oR CRYSTAL. BRAND rd Seandn nuisted Sugar Ha as trigd a found sxcellont by ; De gn table use oe always righ ANDREW MACLEAN, , Ontario Street. " Bososassersrasnsasanaed § THECLUB HOTELS WELLINGTON STRERT, k (Rear Princess), i Thers arc other hotels, i§ Bone Approw £ Bomellles zur Located In to priacipal the Club for andin $ entre i elty ana close stores and tre. thas Charges ra moderafs Special riics bY the weak - P. M, THOMPSON, Prosrieter cecsesessecseal KINGSTON BUSINESS COLLEGE (Limited "Highest Education at Lowgst Cast' Toenty- "#ixth Jor. Fall Tern beging Aug 30th, Courses in Book sepl; &. Shorthand, Tele. Kerby, Civil Service and Eng- Our gradustés get ie best positions Wilkin a short time over Bixty wred positions with one of the lurgest raliway ear. porations in Canada Enter nny time. Call or write for infurma tion, HH. ¥. doicalls, i Kingsi. s, Canada Bry ssssves - BETTER GET Your bins filled with Our Coal before the Fall rush comes on i | 353A AA AAAS - a P. WALSH Jarrack St. essa t Le ,fEVBTVTBBRS ° BELLIS AEE te Sweet Cidet ~~ New Figs Choice Apples Coast Sealed Oysters D. COUPER, "Phone 76. R413 Princess Steve, Prompt Delivers i GASOLINE, COAL OL. TRERICATING OIL. FLOOR OL: GREASE, FTC, PROMPT DELIVERY, W.F. RELLY. Clarence and' Ontario Streets. Building. ls Sosbonee 0000000 OOGOS 000080 c0ROOROICOIOOIOPOODY . * » " . ° 8 ® » * ® * » ® . . » * * . » » - | : I | i i i i | Handsome Catalogue Free TT + Our new Christmas catalogue is now ready --and is yours for the asking. It contains 124 pages of illustrations repro duced in colors of Diamonds, Jewelry, SBliverware, Cut Glass, Leather Goods and Novelties. A postal card will bring. you a copy. ford Ryrie Bros., Limited Canada's Largest Jewelry House Jas. Ryrle, Pres, Harry Ryrie, See. -Treas. 134-136-138 Yonge St. ; TORONTO o- Cured Cu "Eight Years of Bad Eczema on Hands / ries 315 Se A. Beaty ---- Montreal A. sticura Scan and Ointment Miss Mary A. Montreal, writ finding desérved of born casa, and Soap for elad to siy ib anyona, i 1 iter tn y dot ther nine years ing out on the } became very worse, so tV at 1 could nok sie consulted & physic time, but it got my hands in wate hospital, an d it tid that }* could for ne ily « advised to try Cuticira Oint and I found after a fe burning sensation i A well, dur use Citicura Hoa t wl go fs » o we, yr ny n Tall iv became bat night. 1 veha treated me a jon 6, and I eould not pry | I wis treated at ihe a4 Just the same.™Y way vo" a very bad case of kezema, ell, {us 1 ADE 0% usingre verging thet ¥ che years unt ¥ was ent. I did so, plications "the oo i or daring, 1 conid " id not have any hy ng the nig it, 1 beenn after a , - ap. I stiek to. the © tiers thought if { cotid use other LOVEE seven years wit", no result niy having a few apr' cations a $0 fram Cutlenrs Ointment. it fair trial with a ev re and sty I used the Cuticura Ointment r slearly six" months, and Jam it | have hands as clear wish that you publish this Alt thew tid, and ifanyone doubts it, Fite m0. Outliers Soap sod Ointment are gold by irritai druzeiis and dealers every whos, , liberal free sample of each, Sh 2p. pond to Potter Dirge < Columous Ave, Boston, U "LABATT'S LONDON LAGER: SNDIA 'PALE AND EXTRA STOCK ALES, XXX STOUT STANDARD BEVERAGES i JOHN LABATT, LIMITED, LONDON agent, James McParland, 589. tis King St. E., Kingston "f strongly recommend-- : SOUVENIR RANGES] for purely business reasons--that's the situation in a nut-skell." "You see, the range » and stove {rade is a big partof my business. I cannot afford to push a line that's liable to injure the reputation of this Store. For my own sake I must stock the best ranges on the market. That's exact- ly why I recommend Souvenir | es. "The 'Champion Sr is durable as well as attractive. EE making this range the 'next . "best Ying to an 3 smpstishatle soaking { BIG coNCRERE fe -- ANRLVERY BIG GUNS. | The Magnzine | : I } The modern s<-aoast fort is a bat tery whose guas are protected in front | and flank with enormous monoliths of | concrete, covered, In the sides exposed to the fire, with sand enough to. de flect projectilés before they reach the ; concrete, says the Maga. zine. Deep down in the interior of these huge masses of stone are placed the magazines and operating rooms re- quired for 'the service of the batteries. They are simply caves in stone, artl- ficial, to be sure, but as permanent as thie everlasting hills. It is weird snd uncanny to reflect that in one of those caves, scintillating with the highest resources of science, men stand over a drawing board on aitable and prac tically see and plot on a 'chart every movement and position of the ships of a hostile fleet and flash forth to the gunners in the open such instructions for polnting their guns as enable them fo make consecutive buliseyes on a target 6,000 yards away or from groups of great twelve inch rifled mortars to make 47 'er cent of hits with flocks of projectiles on the deck of a moving target anywhere within range. It is vastly important that such rooms be made as comfortable as pos- sible for the strained human intel. Jects working out their country's de- fense within them. But to make them comfortable is a difficult problem. In the Unifed States the first modern bat- teries were completed during an exigency caused by the war with Spain. But since their completion during the warm and humid months of summer and early fall their gal- leries, magazines and service rooms reek with moisture. Water stands in great beads upon the walls and ceil- ings, from which it drips down to form great pools upon the floors, and they are not safe places for either human beings, ammunition. or material of war. WS rmedy the evil many expedients have been tried and much valuable experience pained. . But the problem is beset with aificulty. FALLS ONLY TO RISE. An 'Experiment Which Shows a Sort of 1 Perpetual Motion Effect. AX novel experiment in the 'demon- stration of perpetual motion is to be Engineering ern Sep Coast Fort. ¢ performed simply. A glass beaker about six inches high and four inches in diameter is filled with water to the Telght of about four and a half inches, and two and one-half to three ounces of commercial aniline aré add- ed, which will sink to the bottom of the vessel. The temperature of the beaker and its contents is now raised to 170 or 175 degrees Falwenlieit by means of a burner, when it will be observed that the aniline will rise to the surface of the water, from which it will hang in a mass of curved outline. Almost im- medintely the suspended aniline com- Inencves to miter in shape, and grad- ually a large drop an inch or more in diameter detaches itself from the mass and falls through the water. And now, the detached drop having fallen to the bottom of the beaker, comes the surprising part of the ex. periment. The fallen drop is seen gradually to rise to the surface, where it joins the mass from which it pre- Viously broke away. At once another drop commences to form and, having become detached, falls and risestin the sale wanner as the previous dsop. «So long as the temperature of the water is maintained at 170 degrees Fahrenheit or over this procedure con- tines indefinitely. -- Spokane Spokes. min-Review. test \ + Worked Both Ends. Queens at their best are bu women. Said Mary 6f Modena once In days of exile, "It took all the jewels that all the goldsmiths could procure to decorate my crown." She was "pow: dered" with gems, which Fountain- hall says "made her shine like an angel" And Queen Caroline, too, the wife of George 11. used té allude to Lord Horners rather personal remark that A Juit to Romance. or , Fou bave a lock of my hair, haven't you™ "Of course." yeu can at oh Sa ll own EC DEFENCE OF ig Gives Some Information About the Mod "See if WHEEL PROBLEMS. | Does the Edge of the Whee! Revolve Around the Ax? . | "The "wheel that turns' under fhe | locomotive or, the car has a long and I queer history," says & writer in the b Railroad Man's Magazine, "but the mystery is still "ith us and whirls its hundred questic: marks before our eyes every minute of the day. "Of course every one bellaves that {the edge of the wheel goes around the | axle. But does it? Take the etd of | any spoke near the tire or any part of | the tire and on a still, windless night fasten a ciindle to it; them back off till nothing can be seen bit that candle flame, "Let the wheel revolve slowly, free from the ground. The candle flame | makes a circle of fire all right and | goes around the axle. Now lower the wheel unti} it rests on the ground and start ahead. The flame suddenly stops going in a circle and begins to. make a wavy line, first high and then low. It goes around gothing at all "Men with clear minds can perform the experiment satisfactorily by tying a handkerchief around the tire in day- light, but to do this takes a keen math- ematical imagination, because the eye is confused by other moving objects and is not able to see the handkerchief | free from these other influences. "At night the candle flame alone can be seen, so that is perhaps the best timé to try the matter ont. Tie a torch to a locomotive driver and then send the engine slowly back and forth while the observer is off some hundred feet distant in the dark. The torch does not move in a circle. It simply goes ahead somewhat like a flying ma- chihe rising and falling in the d, coming to a dead stop at its lowest point and going twice as fast as the engine when at its highest point. "The fact that tbe bottom of an engine wheel always stands still is more easy to learn than the fact that the top of the wheel moves just twice as fast as the train, but this can be proyed easily with a plece of board. "Take a piece of board, say, ten feet long and lay one end on top of the wheel. Now move the engine fotward two feet and you will ind that the board has gone ahead four feet, just twice as far as the engine. Lay doww- the board and tie two pieces of string to the wheel, one at the top and the other at the bottom, where it rests on the ground. Noi run your engine for ward two feet and see what happens. The bottom string has moved forward, too, but not nearly so far as has the top piece of string, although the ends were even at the start." Plants Breaking Up an island. ' The layman would scarcely associate great strength with so 'delicaté and fragile a thing as wmaidenhair fern, yet if its roots have mot sufficient room they wil break the pot in which the plant grows. HBiades of grass will force the curbstones between which they spring up out of their place, and in a single might a crop of small mush- rooms has leen known to lift a large stone. 1ndeed, plants are on record as baving broken the hardest rocks. The island of Aldabra. to the northwest of Madagascar, is = becoming smaller through the action of the mangroves that grow along the foot of the cliffs. They eat their way into. the rock in all directions, and into the gaps thus formed the waves force their way. In time they will probably reduce the island to pleces.--Scientific American. Bathrgoms In Paris. An observant English journalist in Paris has--as a hot weather amuse- ment--made a private census of bath- rooms. "He calculates that in all the flats and private houses of Paris there are about 2,800 bathrooms. And this writer, lying in his own bath and mak- ing another ealculation, will bet a bathfid of water that he could get up and pitch a ericket ball from the gar den about bis modest flat this way and that over as many bathrooms, It -| Is a curious little difference of national architecture. And the quaintness of the difference comes with the fact that you see more people in London who look--yes--dirty than in Paris. Bven the beggar in Paris is clean In face, fin- ger nails and clothes.~London Chron- cle. recall amy ruling of the treasury de- partment on that point. . If you are bringing 18 any of either you'd better declare them and leave the classifica tion to us,"~Harper's. Weekly. Ones in a great while we meet a spinster who wives us the impression that she could make some man per fectly miserable if she had a chance, | Too niany mirtake merited Punishaient for prsecation. d invigorates the Scalp Senin inv a lu Xuriant, hair ¢ 8 ity ~ ZEBRAS IN AFRICA, ny They Are a Fearful Pest and "a Menace to Civilization, Zebigs In Afriea areca nuisance and & menace to civilization according to iobn T. MeCutcheon fo "Hunting Ad- veoatures In the Big Game Country" He says: . Then there's the ubigditous zebra, almost as numerous as the kongool You. see vast herds of zebras at many places alpug the railway, asd there after. #8 you roam about the level spofs of east Africa. you are always running inte herds of them, At first the sight of a herd of zebras is a surprise, for you', have Deen accus- tomed to seeing them in 'the small numbers found in captivity. . It is a source of passing wouder that these rare animals should be reaming about the suburbs of towns In hundred lots, You decide tbat it wquld be a shame. io shoot a zebra and determine not 16° jolu in this heartless slaughter. Later on your sentiments will nn dergo a change. Everybody will tell you that the zebra 18 a fearful "pest and must be exterminated if "eiviliza- tion and progress are to continue. The zebra is absolutely useless, and efforts to domesticate him have been without good results. Ile tramps over «the plains, breaks down fences, tears up the cultivated fields and really faifiys no mission Xin life save that of supply ing the Hons with food. As long as the zebras stay the lions wil be there, bit the settlers says that the lions are even preferable to the zebras. Under the old game ordinance expir- PALE NINA on nn en ---- HE greatest advance in food invention since men began to eat and women learnt to cook. , xo IN CUBES A preparation of beef essence (stimulating and fibrine{noutishing) made under scientific control rt to - o 10 for 25¢. 4 for oe 2 i from sta a Mm "CRANBERRIES | The Finest CapeCodCranberries. 2 Quarts for 25c. "SWEET POTATOES - 6 Ibs. for 25c. A. J. REES, 166 PRINCESS ST. Phone 58 ing December 15. 1909. a spor was sllowed two zebras under bis license. Under the new one he is al- lowed twenty! That reveals the atti tude of east Africa toward the jaunty little striped pony. THE TONIC OF VICTORY. Army Surgeons Say It Acts Almost as an Anaesthetic. Bonnette, a [French, army surgeon, writes in the Presse Medicale of the extraordinary indifference to the pain of operation manifested by the soldiers of Napoleon while the great conqueror SWeeping vicioriausly over, Europe. fle the defeated soldier is full of Imaginary terrors, subject to panie, madoess and treason, 1he conqueror, on the other hand, is intoxicated with fMe- cess, says the New York Medical Journal. Nothing, not even the morbifie microbe, can resist troops who believe themselves to be invigeible. Victory Is the most powerful of re- storatives and deepest of anaesthetics, | degless members of the old guard crowded into av ambulance would at sight of the emperor rise on 'their stumps to salute him After Eylan Larrey operated -aninterruptedly for thirty-six hours, and he reports how the soldiers seemed unconseions of their own troubles, lost in thought of the glory of their leader, and. maimed as they were, lending their best aid to fei low patients. At _Borodino larrey disarticniated the shoulder of a_colonel, who immedi. ately set out for I"rance on foot, where he arrived after three months walking. After fording the -Heresina, a river in Russia, General Zayonchek., seventy. five years old, had his kneecap shat. tered by a bullet. Amputation was pér- formed in thrée minutes in a violent fnowstorm and in bitterly cold weather, yet the white haired officer was. placed in a sledge and taken to Vilpa, where he died at the age of eighty-six years, Many similar anecdotes are told by our elvil war vegerans, Stupid Fish. Professor Haro! Russell, the Lon- don zoologist. will huve nove of the popular yarns about the w ndgerful things fish will do when put to it He says they are deat, dumb and vir: tually color blind. When the calcare ous stones are taken out of the ears of fish they losé all sens of equilibrium and roll about as if cruzy. Most fish bunt their food by only defective sight, but the eels by even wiore de fective smell A conger eel with which Professor Russell esperimensed devoured with the sume avidity lish dosed witli cheese, anchovy, camphor spirits, turpentine aud ivdoform, © Where We Aim. Wiliam Déin Howells in one of his talks about erature said: "Good 1it- erature is dlways condemned on ifs tirst appearance. 'That Ix bevnuse. being original. it Is new und strange. Shel o ley's work was bitterly condemned at first. So was Coleridge's, So was \Yords- worth's. So wax Stephen Crane's" Me, Howells paused, then added Ime pressively. "Stdnes are only rupawn at those 1rees which are beavy wilh fruit" ; 3 The Fertile Rock. Gibraltar Is often cuted a barren rock. yet it has 456 species of indige nous flowering plants, Castor oil plants, daturas and daphnes attain" the dig: nity of trees and geraniums and helio tropes the propertions of - hedges. These floral delights often concen can- non and otber armaments.' The few stakes that aré found are small and harmless. Lizards peveral inches Jong Lon tn Hy On "The Httle son of the hostess Is ly doesn't take after bls mother. ot Jook Hike his father" +His mother says he does. I'm his father. "--Houston Post. Dangers are Hight if they once seer Hehe and more dangers have deceived men fay forced thaw, Aacus. What " small boy can't nedecsiagd i how a small girl manages tv hep tir bands' do clead. . way, #he average wan is willivg THE TORONTO GENERAL TRUSTS CORPORATION acts as ADMINISTRATOR -- * is' no' will aor where the prefer not to act. WINNIPEG SASKATOON of Estates wheve there' appointed executors TORONTO OTTAWA 4 LIPTON'S TEA OVER 2 MILLION PACKAGES SOLD WEEKLY fant other | J. Es Makes all cook- ing more whole- some, more digestible, and more nourishing, because it is a yuss vegetable product. Ko-Ko-But gives you Detter sooking frying and better pastry than either butter, or lard. You will find Ko-KoBut more economical -- because | 1. go as far.as 1% Ibs. of butter or any other she ening, Test and prove Ko-Ko-Bnt iu your own kitchen, "Your grocer sells it." Manufacturers ¢ Dominion Coconut Butters Limited,