THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1011. do Apt ¢ PAG NINA. "I am writing for which was very scant the pain was someth: of a cure or your money back, write mentioning this pa ~. TRAMPED 60 * TOSAVEHIS CHUM Prospector at Larder Lake Got Back with GIN PILLS Just in Time. = Pe some time my Ki bs awf WELCOME. RELIEF. Limited, Dept. 25, NAT. ONAL .LAZY LIVER PI Biliousness, Sick Fleadache and § a box, - The Famo fof ae. Rave N\ ei millions of families. - Its strong white light has made . it famous, : « Toronto, your In the dining-room or the us Lamp is he best gad most setviccable lamp you can find And it never flickers. . ie : i econ dk snes the too i is mn i to you. Just Pp: too, for oom : dy i The is made : Easily Ask your dealer ta show you his ling of sold smh gd soe, per, The National Drug. & Chemical Co. LLS are a positive cure for Sour Stomach, + of writefor descriptive circulas lo any agency of LARDER 'LAKE, ONT., MARCH 26th, 1911. tell you.the good GIN PILLS did me, eys and Urine. imes as many as thirty times a ul and no rest at night. I had been suffering I was constant] passing water a Edtytime, '1 began to feel worn out. I heard of your GIN PILLS and decided to give them a trial at once. I sent my chum outtoget then: (about 60 miles) » --and Lam pleased to inform you thatin lass than six hours, 2 felt relief. Intwo ys, the pain had left me altogether, I took about half a box and 'to-day 1 feel as well as ever and my kidneys are acting quite natural again. * Thanking you for She ills which I always intend to keep by me. Yours respectfully, SID CASTLEMAN. We have never received a letter that pleased us more than this one. When we realize what Gin Pills meant to this sick man, lying on a bed of pain miles away from a doctor in the frozen north, and how they helped liim, we feel that our efforts to prepare a standard ration for Kidney and Bladder Troubles have been crowned with success, GIN PILLS is a wonderful solvent for uric acid. It instantly neutralizes the hot, scalding urine, allays the burning pain, soothes the irritated bladder and heals the kidneys, Take GIN PILLS on our itive guarantee a box, 6 for $2.50. Free sample, if you of Canada, Constipation; Excellent for Indigestion. yO Lamp also in numerous other st les and chimney ; easy to clean i rewick. Ate Unwisely ? relieve the discomfort at once. and help digest the overload. The lover of ay feel quite safe with a box of NA-DRU-CO Dyspepsia.T a box. If your druggist has not stocked them yet igen The Queen City Oil Company, Limited Sometimes people do, and suffer, because the stomach balks. ts at han will mail them. ee i Camiaab Ga. wf Canada, Unset * eo « « Mentresl, spss. 3 a, cmt ti-- " THE the f bs An true Everywhere SA the oven. LEAST FUE ~ avert of 4 lion "Hgppy Thoughts" ave tn i aily use in Canada. org L, THE MOST SATISFACTION, It requires no argument to prove that the range ¥OU cab use every part of, at the samo stime, is 'the range that will give you the full return for uel you burn. Ou the: 2 Ea you, chn hse the oven an : ironing you can have a batch baking you is the only range economy. The that it can be used on an the Happy Thought. by its many abor.saving do- tening the work of the housekeepers. Its oy can prepare dinner Without rafido keep down fuel bills ¥ part of the range or on all the ee ee) d the top of the stove st the sine of biscuits in the t Dam & ¥ | dian national unity. TR FLAT WAS TELLER HAVEN FOR FRIENDS, HER Myrtle Reed Drew About Her a Fine . Company~-The New Master of the ... Vineyard. Myrtle Reed was not only a good story writer, but a good storyteler, says Jean Blewett in Canadian Cour. ier, speaking of the ill-fated Canadian authoress. A born mimic; dramatic to the core, she was wont friends % ¥ well sited ut time flying when the visited "Paradise Flat." ! fine sense of humor, aid 5 laugh *hish was contagious. It wi a long while before her own circle on her-- the warmth of her greeting, her pleas » her brightaess. It was to nally pa neo Lak 50 man Tr , that Myrtle first said by way of comfort, "Is average: man only a mushroom; his bast & delicacy; at his worst : who knew the romance of her Muttiage to Mr. McCullough, and how much love ith her husband she continued to be, used to smile at such expressions as, "Man, the married kind, are the test gold-brick ar- rid good nature. Her stories were always ng repeated, 2 Joken retailed. Was a woman big. of body sad of mind; good-hearted ke point of Rrodigality. Also she had her whims, e of these was to condense all the social life possible into a few passing months, teas, suppers, theatre-parties.. unique entertainments thought up by 'herself and ptung upon her friends, ther, of a sudden, to retire from her big busy world it was--and write a book. Not only did she kee religiously to the quiet of her home, but to her own room. Lying in bed she penned the romances which made her beloved by an army of readers. "I'm & shut-in," she explained by note to one half. shocked, wholly angry friend "ho had n refused admittance, "the great. est shut-in you ever saw. From friend and nei r, from' laughter and love d neighbor, { laugh love, from the cuddling of little folks, from music, especially the sobbing breath of song, fiom sri. from all things dear and familiar I am a shutin. Why? That my creative faculty '(if I have any) may have the chance to work. I am the woman ruminant--half fearful, wholly wrapped up with the brain child I am to bear." The production of a book would be heralded to. the circle by 'announce. ment cards of sown designing. Thus upon one the picture of a baby all dimples and rings of fat and the announcement, "Born to Myrtle Reed that they for- "on" (date given) "A Spinner in the Bun." = ' And another: "Myrtle Reed an. nounces the arrival at Paradise Flat of a lusty male infant who is alread "The Mastet of the Vineyard." you of a favorite book of hers: "I have dug up some Lavender and Old Lace i I Dope will please you. Help yourself to it." She was only thirty. seven when she died. Her "Love Affairs of Literary Men" is perhaps 'the strongest work of her prolific pen. i; Modernizing Province of Quebec. Events, which have lately transpir. Spey indicate that 'there is a 'plot on 'wadernise the Provinee 'af Quebec. For instanse, just this fall, Quebec enrolled her first law student, {At MoGill University Mrs. A. Lang- staff takes her seat amo the acute young men who until now have mono- polized the law course. Mrs. Lang- stafl,, in her legal ambitions, under. takes an unusual role. She is the first woman ever to entér upon the study way in the Pro. there never has been a woman lawyer. At the Bar of other Jlavinons women have pleaded cases. The Ontario Bar has a rather omi- ment 'member in the person of Miss Clara Brett Martin, a lady who as enjoyed political distinction on 1he Toronto rd of Education, Mrs. Langstat is not a Quebecker, She is a native of Prescott, Ont. Five ears she has been plugging at the aw in the Montreal office of Jacobs, Hall & Garneau. Faddist this courageous lady is not, She is not studying law for her health. But though nst a woman's pi ts champion, Mrs. Langstafi's legal am- bitions may gain -her a place upon the scroll of fame; for, after she graduates from McGill, Mrs. 'Lang. stafl"s first professional. problem will be to reverse the ancient legislation in Quebec, which excludes woman from the avenue of the law as a road to a livelihgod. .... Sydney Active. Syduey, Nova Seofis, is to have a town fair. The other night, a meeting was held in Sydney and an exhibition board elected, of which the mayor is chairman. It is proposed to hold two fairs a year. The co-operation of the Farmers' Association, who hold sway on the porth side of Sydney Harbor, will be sought. There is no way to boost a town like a good; clean exhibition. The fame of Toronto, Winnipeg and Bran. don is proof etiough of this statement, 'An exhibiddow of local industry pro- motes civic spirit. By bringing coun try folks and town people togetucr, it | ostering Cana | contributes directly to Sydney, which is ane of the livest towns in the Maritime Provinces, is on the right track all right when ths city fathers link up with the exhibi. tion idea. --Cagadian Courier. a ------ An Independent M. A : The magor of St. John, XE, is an independent gentleman, * ~ Recently there has been urged the need of extra playgrotinds Sor St Junior's after school hours. ~The other afternoon a Council meet. ing was held in St> John and the play. grounds question came up. ¥ A commitice was appel to keep her | Bhe glowed with 'goose and a fool. John THIWTTHIY APPEAL. Ready Retort Plays a Big Part in the Politicians Equipment. Among the best. known members. of the House of Commons is W. B. North. rup, M.P., of Belleville, who has: re. presgnted East Hastings at Ottawa for several terms. Always- faultlessly at. tired. one would mever think that the dapper M.P_ was elected thro h the voles of farmers, for his consti: is largely rural, to the far thermost point north in the County of Hastings with its twenty- four townships. en he rises to ad- dress the House, he is off like a race- horse. Verbally he travels at times at the rate of two hundred words a min. ute or more, and the Hansard men are kept at top speéd. It is no easy mat. fer {of even these expert stenographic writers to follow the whirlwind de- bater, who has heen dubbed the "Gen. eral Ben Butler of Canadian lawyers." Butler was the most famous American attorney in his day for celerity of utterance, but Mr, give him a close contest on the stump or before a jury. Northrup would | Mr. Northrup was i at a small village in his ride dung the recent election campaign, and de- nouncing reciprocity in unmeasvred terms, when a young interrupter at the back of the hall started to hiss. The candidate paid no attention. but. on, the succession of sibilant sounds being renewed with increased vigor, he Joused and looking straight at the of. ender, observed: "My friend! There are three things that hi a snake a Will you please stand a moment in order that the aud. ience may judge which of the threq you are?" Col. Bam Hughes is also adept in homely images that appeal to the rus- tic mind. When he enters into the serious discussion does not like .to woe betide the enough to break question. Some soldier was of any problem he be interrupted and man who is flippant in with an irrelevans years ago the gallant addressing a crowded meeting in Lindsay, when a voice from the gallery was heard. Col. Hughes was condemning the military policy of the Laurier Administration, and 'the interrupter shouted "Rats." The speaker paid no heed at first, but when the meaningless term was hurl. ed again, there was a pause--for the discussion was weighty and thought- ful. "My friend, I am here this evén: ing loaded for beat and have not time to stop and skin a skunk," shouted the orator, and~Lindsay went mad with delight --Saturday Night. ¥ Cabinet Peculiarities, Premier R. L. Borden is a golfer. "Commenting on this fact, The Ottawa Presi jokingly remarks that it. Price is to be hoped that M 13 not as bad as that of Premier As. quith, Mr. Lloyd George, or Mr. A. J. Balfour, whose putting has become the jibe of the English humorous weeklies. Mr. Borden's Ministers, pear, r. Borden's golf are despisers of cotiventionality At 'the solemn ceremony of in before the . Governor. only six of them wore silk i frock couts. They were: Hon, Borden, Crothers, Kemp, *. Monk aud Foster. nglicans predominate. in the new Cabinet. Eight Ministers -- Hon: Messrs. Borden, Hazen, Perley, Rog- ers, Roche, Burrell, White and Loug- heed attend the Chureh of England. Fourteen members of the Cabinet > born ir ifti . Mr. € om. Mr. } 83, 1852; \ Cochrane, 1859; Hen, Mr. | den, 1854; Hon. Mr, Loughe~d, Hon. Mr. Doherty, 1858; Hon. , Monk, 1858: Hon. Mr Perley, 1857; Hon. "Mr, Pelletier, 1857; Hon. Mr. Nantel, 1857: Hon, Mp. Burrell, 1958; Ton Mr. Kemp, 1868; Hon. Dr. Reid, 350, The law continues to be the profession for Ministers Ei Cabinet are lawyers. There are four reputed millionaires in the Cabinet--they arp not of the igwyers., -------- ee Canada's Trades Grows. Canada's trade figures for the first Six months of 1911 show a material increase over those for the same per- fod of last year. The totals as given recently by the Department of Trade and Commerce are for the six months ending September, 1911, amounting to §400.970,855, as agaiust $360,277 218 for the 1910 period. 3 The September trade totalled "$69. 868.429 2s. against $64,450,465 for Sep- tember, 1010. / Imports for the six months amounted to $258.406,004, do- westic exports $129,608,082, and for. eign exports $12,257,779, The 1910 fig. ures. were imports $223 465.647, domes. fic exports $127.525,432 hand foreign exports $9.80B107. © 0 + strong ght of Mr. Borden's -- a it would ap- developing Cabinet : © THE PROCLAMATION. How "Arthur" Was Created Governor. General of Canada. = text of the elaborate offi. ion of thie Duke of Con tment 'gs published in ¢ which is of adians gt this nangnt sg apy The Canada G t especial interest to time. It will be noted that the signa. ture is "Arthur," a ambors of the royal family sign only their Christian names: - CANADA By Field Marshal. His Royal High- wess Prince ARTHUR WILLIAM PATRICK 'ALBERT, Duke of Con- naught and of Strathearn, and Earl of Sussex, the Peerage of the fom, Prince of the om of Great Britain ie of Saxony, Prince wi Gotha; Knight Order of the Gar- 3 t 10 Meet Ancient and Most Noble r of the Thistle; Knight of th st Illustrious Or. der of Saint Patrick, one of His Ma- jesty's Most Honorable Privy Coun. cil; F and Principal Knight Grand Cross and Great Master of the Most Honorable Order of the Bath; Knight Grand Commander of the Most Exalted Order of the Star of India; Knight Grand Cross of the i ished' Order of Shint ifint George: Knight Grand Commander of the Most Em- inent Order of the Indian Enipire; Knight Grand of the Royal Vietor- ian Order; Personal Aide-de-camp tu His Majesty the King; Governor General and Commander-in-Chief of the Dominion of Canada. To all whom these presents conte. --Greeting A PROCLAMATION. WHEREAS His Majesty the King, by Commission: under' His Royal Manual Sign and Signet bearing date at the Court of St. James's the twen- f March, 1011, has been ed to appoint me to be, loyal pleasure, His Ma. rnor-General and Com: 8 -chief in and over Fis Dom. inion of Canada, and has further in and by the said Commission, author: ized, empowered, and commanded me to exercise and perform all and singu. lar the powers and directions con tained in certain Letters Patent under the Great Seal of the United Kingdom, of Great Britaip and Ireland; bearing date at Westminster the fifteenth day of June in the year of Our Lord one: thousand nine Hundred and five con- stituting the sad office of Governor- General, or in any other Letters Pat- ent adding to, amending, or substitut. ed for the same according to such Orders and Instructions as the Govers nor-General for the time being hath! already received, or as have been giv- en to me with the said Commission, or as 1 shall' hereafter receive from His Mbjesty. * Now, therefore 'Know Ye that 1 have thought fit to issue this Procla- mation in order to make known His Majesty's said appointment, and I do . tor + K shall ; also hereby require and command that all and singular His Majesty's Officers and Ministers in the said Dominion of Canada, da continue in the execution of their several and respective offices, laces and employments, and that His Majesty's loving subjects and all oth- ers whom it may concern do take no- tice hereof and govern themselves ae. cordingly. Given under my Hand and Seal at Arms at Quebec. this THIRTEENTH day of OCTOBER, in the year of Our. Lord one thousand nine hun- dred and eleven, and in the second gear of His Majesty's Reign: ARTHUR. A Journalistic Jibe: Hot criticism of Canadians afid Canadian civilization has just been handed out by one of the old country journalists now Jouriug the Dominion under the guidance of the Immigra- tion Department. : The critic is Mf. H. H. Baird, hail ing from Belfast, -Ireland, where he owns geven papers of large circula tion. In his remarks, Mr. Baird evident. ly wishes to depart from a custom of joy-riding newspapermen who some- times are inclined, perhaps, to flatter Canadians with eloquent tributes to the natural scenery of the Dominion. Mr. Baird hits at what he regards weak spots in ourselves. . One of his sharpest attacks'is di- rected against the Canadian husband, of whose virtues he entertains no very lofty opinion. A British Columbia paper thus sum. marizes his sentiments on Canadian married life: "Aceordihg to Mr. Baird, who had talked with many housewives on the prairies, they 'were treated fo much more harshness by their husbands in Canada than in England and Ireland. The average Canadian was surly and uncivil, and not inclined to give any information, and when a young Eng- lishman has lived here several years, he 'easily and rapidly fell ints the ways of the Canadian, and treated womenkind and men with the sarhe measure of surliness as his Canadian confrere." «i ; The Beaver. Thy beaver is really a sort of port. able 'pulp mill, grinding up almost | any kind of wow that comes his way, t says a writer. I once measured a white birch tree twenty.two inches through cut down by a beaver. A single beav. er generally, if not always, amputates the tree, and when it comes down the whole family fall to and have x vegu- lar frolic with the bark and branches, A big beaver will bring down a fair. sized sapling -- say three inches through--m about two minutes und a Li large tree in about am hour. Enterprising Climbers. A. L. Mumm, moactsin climber, and his 'companion, Dr. X.- Collie, have been at it again. Mount Robson; in the Rocky Mountains, was this time thé zcene of their upward plodding, . Their field glasses revealed some ex." traordinary- features. They encounter. wd two of the largest glaciers ever seen in the Rockies, one of which was fifty miles log and eight miles across. They touk observations of a peak even foftier than Robson. which itself is 13,500 feet abovy seq level, All things "the hustler doesn't want comes to him who waits. a _ You ean form a pretty good idea HOW A MOTHER USED | 9X0 IN CUBES *'How do I use up my stale bread > Why; with OXO Cubes. They. taught me a new dish that perhaps other Women; who keep house, would like to try. : : *'With twa children in the house, itis only natural that theré are many broken slices and ends of loaves that would accumulate. "1 call my new dish Oxo Bread Pudding "Por four persons, I soak 3{ pound of bread to a pulp in boiling water--then drain. I chop 2 ounces of suet ahd a small onion, and stir into the bread. Season this with a tea- spoonful of minced parsley, pepper and salt, and mix in a dessertspoonful of flour. : "Dissolve two OX O Cubes in a little boiling water and stit + into the pudding. Turn into a greased mold, press down and bake brown in a moderate oven. . *"I have found OXO Cubes wonderfully helpful in making Soups, Sauces and new dishes, and now I do not feel as if I could keep hose without OXO Cubes. They are so handy', : OXO Cubes are the greatest advance in food invention since men began to eat and women learnt to cook, 10 Cubes, 25¢c. 4 Cubes, 10¢c. LIST YOUR PROPERTIES NOW os For Sale or to Rent. ._ Bales Negotiated Rents Collected Fire Insurance Conveyancing and Real Estate E. Blake Thompson, OVERNORTHERN CROWN BANK. "Phone 288, DiC? MARKET SQUARS, KINGSTON, ONT. ---- -- I ------ CRANBERRIES The Finest CapeCodCranberries. 2 Quarts for 25c. SWEET POTATOES Ibs. for 25¢. S, A. J. REE Phone 68 - 166 PRINCESS ST. CL -------------------- CINE ow i! n, EVERY WOMAN SHOULD READ THIS LETTER ABOUT s Sugar + Laboratory of Provincial Government Agalyst. Moxrreat, 22nd February, 1909. I Hexesy Centivy that | have drawn by my own hand ten smnples of the St. Lawrence Sugar Refining Co's EXTRA STANDARD GRANULATED SUGAR, indiscriminately taken from four lots of about 150 hirrels each and six lots of about 450 bags each. I have analyzed same and find sem uniformly to ¢ ontain 99-99/100 to 100 per pent of pure cane sugar, with no impyrities whatever, (Signed) MILTON L. HERSEY, M. Sc. 1.1.D. Provincial Government Ar frst The SL. Lawrence Sugar Refining Co. Limited MONTREAL. in the flour means quality in the bread and the pastry you bake. ' Without quality behind your efforts, no knowledge or skill ean bring -good results, Better be without the skill than without the quality. "BEAVER" FLOUR is the highest development of blended wheats, the rich health-givi ies of Manitoba Spring wheat and enn dn Ontario Fall wheat, which make delicate, white, light bread and pastry. Remember, it is for bread and , both. ~ With. * BBA + FLOUR in the "Bouse, you only need one kind to rh the best 'resclts in every form of baking. BEAVER am economy a5 well a . Ask your grocer for it to-day. T.B. TAYLOR C0, Lid, Chatham Out. 109 Sa of what a man-asn't done, by thy be to going to 80,