PAGE EIGHT. \ To have a lame back or painful stitches means Disordered Kidneys, and the sooner you have the Kidneys and Bladder id a perfectly healthy condition the sooner you will enjoy life, As far. as we know, there is only one "remedy that is guaranteed to cure won, and that is FIG PILLS. If they don't make you a strong, healthy person in two weeks, your maney will he refunded. At all dealers, 25 cents per box, or The Fig Pill Co., St. Thomas, Ont, 4 Sdld and recommended in Kingston . by J. B. McLEOD, Druggtst. THAT TOBACCO With the "Rooster" on it i crowing loudeg as he goes along. Only 45¢ per pound Nor chewing and smoking. , AT A. MACLEAN'S, Yi "atario Street, GANDUNOR i HOTEL 'E= soma BEES, 5 74 BT SHB TIE KINGSTON BUSINESS - COLLEGE (Limited) . "Highest Education at Lowest Cost' Twenty -sixth year, Fall Term begins August 30th. Courses in Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Tele. raphy, Civil Service and Eng- sh. Our graduates get the best positions. Within a short time over gixty secured positions with one of the largest raliway cor- ofaticng in Canada. Enter any tme. Call or write for informa- tion, 11. F. Metcalfe, Principal Kingston, Canada, 3 | market All kinds of Dry Goods Men's Boys' and Ladies' Suits, Boots and Shoes, Jewellery, House Furnishings. ete, sold on easy payment plan. Come in, see gur goods and terms. New Btock of Fall and Winter Clothing just received. If will pay you to call and see it™ Joseph Abrams cites. | re 3) 3 Aion Of ABIL i id 1 ' y | 18 a term we think we arc i honestly entitled to, Our years gives us a keen insight into the requirements of our profession. experience of many » While our work is that of experts, we charge anything but exorbitant prices. Do You Require Our Services? CALL AND SEE US. David Hall 066 BROCK STREET. "Phone 335. Residence 'phone, 8586. ; dust, provided It Make all of your cakes and pies with Ko-Ko-But, You will find your bak- ng LIGHTER--it will « keep FRESH :longer-- and will be more TASTY, more nutritious and more wholesome. Test and | prove Ko-Ko-But in your | own kitchen, It's eco- nomial. because 1 Ib. | goes as far as 1 1-2 Ibs of butter or lard. "Your grocer sells it Write for Book 3 'Recipes. \ ~ Dominion Cocoa-Nut © Butters, Limited of Tepeech, § calm. seems (0 THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, # CO Lo Sv RR ES nerete HERE are few Improvements possible which do more to make farm lf easant than an Ice house, lis sto blotks not only make it possible fer the farmer to in- crense his profits by jmproving the value of his dairy products, but also, to enjoy the comforts of a home supply of ice. 1: is 30 easy and inexpensive to have an abundant supply of jee all summer that {i is really surprising that every farm is not provided with an jce- house. The spread of concrete con- struction on the farm has been fol- lowed by the erection of such build- ings in all parts of the United States and Canada, and it is the purpose of this article to give some suggestions 'which may help those who have not yel built, to plan their jce-houses. Concrete, being indestructible and not easily penetrated by heat or cold, Is a splendid material for the walls. It has the added advantage of being comparatively cheap, since sand, stone, gravel and water are usually available on the farm, and the work can be done by the farm- i -4F or --his--assist- ants, at seasons of the year when spare time is plen- tiful, Moreover, concrete walls are not affected by the continual damp- ness and do not rot like wood. The. saving in pdinting and repairing, to gay nothing of su- perior ice-keeping qualities, in a few years amounts to more than the first cost of the concrete building. Location. In determining the location of the iv. fce-house, a plagé should he chosen where the build. ing "eur be well drained by an un- derground line of drain tile. ~If pos- sible, «It should be placed Where the shade of large (recs, . or larger structures, i... silks protect it from the heat of the mid- day sun. The concrete for the walls should be made of Port- land cement, clean sand and a hard crushed rock or sereened gravel. Instead of the sand and rock, clean bank-run gravel may be used. : Naturally, the sige of the ice-house will depend upon the nwenber of Pounds needed daily and the number of days lice will be used. A cuble foot of jco weighs about 67 pounds, and a ton, with 10 per cent. allow- ance for seams between the cakes, oc- cupies 38 cubic feet. If is not neces sary to pack the loé between the cakes, but on the floor, around the sides of the building and on the top of the ice there should be placed 12 inches of sawdust, well rammed. An 18-inch thickness of prairie or mursh hay may be used instead of the saw- is well weighted down on top of the ice. Making al- lowanee for sawdust packing and 8- inch concrete walls, a house 10 feet square <inside measurement) and 8 foot to the eaves, will hold 10 tons. A VERY SORE FEELING STILL EXISTS IN GERMANY RE- GARDING MOROCCO, The Paris Figaro Fears Europe Will be the Theatre of a General War Shortly. London, lee, 5.--Afier which followed Sir the storm Edward Grey's have come. The inspired official' and semi-official ans of Germany, which last week adopted a fone of mildness, slight recrudescence of Anglophobia for a few days, but they are now silent. Similarly, the newspapers of France have | in practical initial terms that the Morocco: question has. been solved, so for the time it is Germany that has accepted defeat. It is un- questionable, however,. that a sore feeling remains in that country. "Sir Edward Grey done Ger- many & service by not . concealing his inability to hold out aby prospect of an improvement in the Anglo-German relations," says the Tagliche Rundu- chan, voicing the popular view of the present situation, while an independent popular organ of French opinion, like the Paris Figaro, declares : "From Sir Edward Grey's words it is seen that Europe is fated to be the theatre of a general war within two or ive years'. gi! : is is unnecessarily pessimistic, bu the words of hoth 4 a oa French newspapers are valu. » popular [afla able as indicating the continned de- ' ing of t this tube licacy of the situation, which, jndeed, Sir Edward made no to disguise, Nevertheless, the situation for the present bas been saved. had a] stored to ite J will be destroyed forever; nine uw "I which is nothing but an in The materials may be hauled to the site at odd times, and piled so as ta be convenient for working. The wooden fotlms for the concrete may be either fixed or movable, Fixed forms are«merely two boxes without top of bottom. which fit one within the other with 'an $-ineh space he- tween for the concrete. Buch forms are made of 2 by 4 inch studding spaced two feet and sheathed next t)» the coneréte wall with 1-inch siding. The forms should be held In place ut the bottom by timbers called liners," and should be well braced. To save lifting the concrete, the outside boards may be nalled on as the concrete !. placed in the forms. Movable form' require less lumber than the fixed variety. Such forms are built jn sec- tions 2 40 4 feet high and in lengths convenient to handle, usually 8 to 19 feet. The 2 by 4 inch uprights are spaced three to four feet." Cross-cleats at the top are provided to keep the forms eight inches apart, Near the bottom twisted wire ties are used 1) draw the farms up tightly against the previous day's concrete work. - Each SHOWING CONSTRUCTION OF CONCRETE WALL FOR ICENOUSE, succeeding day the wires are cut and the forms raised. : The sheathing and rafters for the wgoden roof may be used in the forms. It 18 not necessary to cut them; their ends may simply be al- lowed to project beyond and above the walls. Foundation grenches should be dug 10 inches wide along the lines laid ou! for the building and should be carried down to solid ground and below frost, usually three to four feet. Bring a drain tile up within the building lines to the point where the door will be. Mixing. In mixing the concrete a tight wooden platform should be used. e proportions dre one part Portland cement to 2% parts sand to § parts crushed rock. Or one part cement may be used to 5 parts bank run gravel, In measuring, count one bag of cement equal to ome cubic foot the country on that issue. The time for Hom. R. L. Borden to put the Quebec natiomaiists in their places was when he had seventy-three members from Ontario behind him and was in command of a sufficient major- ity tb put through a redistribution bill and go to the country on the is- fue a to whether R. L. Borden or F. ). Mook, was ta be the premier of Canada. --- pe The next best time to find out "who's. who, and what's what," will be when the naval issue brings Hon. R. LI. Borden to the parting of the ways. Canadians who believe that Mr. Borden sh, have faced this issue earlier, believe that the Bor den government will finally go wrong on the naval vguestion, and thus butcher' the ideals of English-speaking Canada to make a holiday for the rac- ial bigotry of Quebec extremists. Caripg for the Children. Hamilton Times. 4 ladelphia has 460,000 school pu- ile. It employs to look after their th twety-five physicians and nine school nurses. It maintains six lacge playgrounds and seventy-nine small ones, twenty public bath houses, twen- ty public libraries and two municipal recreation piers. Last vear 1,200 poor children were fitted with spectacles provided by the city. DEAFNESS CANNOT HE CURED. by loeal lications, as they cannot reach the aged portion of the ear, There is only one way to cure deaf. ness, and by constftutional edies, cal by a med condition of the Hueous (th- en Is Infiamed you have a rumb- ling sound or Imperfect hearing, and When it is entirely closed, ness is he result, and unless the Inflamma- tion can be take out and this tube re- its normal condition, hearing Ke Eustachian Tube cases ' Catarrh, amed con- dition of MUCOUS Su . 1 give One ndred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused out of ten- are oa b: Concrete for the foundation should be made musky wet and filled In the trenches to the ground level Set up the forms, apd during the erectios, in the gemtre of one of the end walls, place a door frame (2% by 6 feet clear) within the forms. Brace it well sb.that the concrete Will not bulge it out of shape. Place the con- crefe in| Jayers 6 to § inches thick carried around the entire building in the' concrete walls of each gable end set a frame for ventilating doors (2% by 2% feet) Im the same way us the large door frame was placed. As the forms are filied, at intervals of' 18 Imehes, Imbhed bent Irom rods or twisted wire in the concrete arcund the corners of the building: Likewise put two HH-inch rods « n old wagon tire in the concrete 1 inches the door upening. When the side snd walls have reiihed their i heights and while the euncrets is yet soft. set ¥-inch buits, § in 8s long. heads down, 6 inches in concrete and 82 inches apart. To these bolts will be fastened the 2 by 4.inch plates for the roof. After the building I» a week ald. the forms may be removed and the 4-inch concrete floor built d ly on the ground, Begin at of the building and slope the floor %s-inch to the foot in the direction of the drain tile at the Lay the las' sewer pipes of the S-inoh drain with weil -cemented joints and include a tile known as a "fiap," having a bend which. always contains water The .water acts as a seal to keep ou! the warm air ir the drain. Cover the floor end of the drain with a trash strainer. The Rool. The roof may be covered) with shingles or any other good ma- terial. Close the door opening, next to the ice, with re movable sections of boards fitting ip slots or grooves and provide a door swinging out. Hang the littie doors in the gables with hinges on the out- side, so they be cracked to pro- vide the necessary ventilation and at the same time kee} out the rain. Store the ice as previous: ly instructed. " Success in ice- keeping depends largely, heat-proof bulld- On an air-tight, On Sood drainage, with the drain "trapped" to keep out warm air; On careful and thorough packing of the ice; : Qn well regulated ventilation In the roof space over the ice. A well-built concrete lce-house ful fills these conditions. Every year it Is ready for use without repairs. And by means of ice, farm life can not only be made' more comfortable and at- tractive, but fruit, poultry and dairy products can be marketed to better advantage. For an ice-house 10 by 10 feet, 8 feet to the eaves and 13 feet to the roof peak, with 8-inch walls, 4-inch floor, and a foundation 10 inches by 3 feet, the following materials will be réquired for the concrete: Crushed rock, 15 cubic yards. Sand, 7% cubie yards. Portland cement, 21 barrels, ané 18 3% by 8.inch round head bolts. Budget From Stella, { Stella, Dec. 2.-Quite a nuiber al tended W. II.- Preston's auction sale on Wednesday. Good prices were realized, Farmers! Institute meet ings were held at Stella on Wed: nesday afternoon and evening and at Emerald on Thursday. There was a good attendance. 'The stéamer Ale tha will sonke her last trip on Sa turday. A representative of the Pie ton Seed Co. is on the. Island this week giving out peas to the farm: ore. Cod. THIL has purchased the old' vill hall: from W. Cochrane. He int making a dwelling house of it.. The sloop Maggle. L. loaded barley here this week. Dr. and Mrs Hudson, Roshin, arrived here last weok to _the winter With M: and Mrs, J. C. Dixon. D. F. Mills; Napanee, shipped. $!, 71 worth of fowls from the island last week, Charles Fleming is still confined . to the Hotel Dieu hospital. Kingston. Jlrs. N. Wemps has , re turned to Chicago. . Mrs. Alexander Glen accidentally fell in the cellar of her Home a few days ago and was badly bruised, Visitors: Mr. and Mrs. Wright, Sandhurst; A. E. Sanders, "Boskey Dell." Galt's Mayor Retires. y Dee, 4 ~<Mayor Thomas Lellan bas iuaounced his retirement rom icipal polities. He has Jor the past two years cocupied the posi- tion a= Galt's chief ruler. His worship has been comnected with municipal al fairs for the past niné years, and has occupied various itions in the town coundil." Mayor Melellan's announce ment starts the campaign for the coming municipal eléctions. Sarspeity thal cponet he enred by Hall" . t may | oF WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1911 To secure with Neilson's the centers only firm eno in Marase N. R. GRIMM 102 Pripcess Street, Sole Agent CHOCOLATES Can Only Be Had at This Store. ~The Chocolates That Are Dif; Terent. The first enticing piece show you how different are these d the ri "Hard 5', we uss rich, ferent, cpating forms a thick, sach wholesome centre, All these chocclates have the "Extreme Split | Neilson specialty--exclusive with Neilson's Chocolates de Luxe --another touch of distinction that makes them to be easily £aten. T n soft not too Ward --is the nd Neilson's "Hard Centers" £ Perieclicr firm, crisp shell It'sa different. Perhaps you prefer Creams to "Hard Centers"--or as s Choo Chocolate Dipped™-to etther 7 Chocolates. If you cannot get Nelson's neighborhood, send the most delic You ever tasted n You can under the Neilson namé~also JO other packages of these different i, for a pour 7et all thres Chocolates in your d box of hocolates 3 WM. NEILSON LIMITED, for Kingston, and /NEILSON'S va ToRONTO ASS Sales Negotiated Fire Insurance "Phone 286. GPeE Ye S A FRESH SUP Glace Cherries, Angelica JUST ARRIVED. 1 1b. 1 1b. Boxes Orystalizel Cherries, 1 Ib. Boxes Glace Assorted Fruits. Be healthy and happy! Take the advice of world-famous medical practitioners and drink plenty of "EDELWEISS" BEER (Nou - intoxicating) Purest ever brewed. "Edelweiss" contains all the elements of a typical diet-- besides being deliciously refreshing and invigorating "=" Reinhardts' of Toronto Local Agent, E. Beaupre, Telephone 313 ---------------- LLL , ------"-- LIST YOUR PROPERTIES NOW For 8ale or to Rent. Rents Collected Conveyancing and Real Estate E. Blake Thompson,' OVER NORTHERN CROWN BANK MARKET SQUARE, ITS & OOO) sees a Al Glace Assorted Fruits, Boxes Glace Cherries, Phone 141 R. H. TOYE, %2 KING sr. Emm---- CRO ORCRSEICM YO OOO) ie OOOO) Palmer Cabinet Resigns. Halifax, N.S, Dec. 4.--Premier Pal mer and members of the Prines Fd ward Island government, on Sa turday, sent their resignations to the lieutenant-governor at Charlotte town. The premier. recommenda] that the latter call upon My. Mathieson the leader of the the commervative op position, to form meeting af the conservative will be held to-morrow to the situation. The parties in bouse of 'assomifly, after the by-elections, stood fourteen dixteen conservalives. Montreal Stationmaster Dead. Montreal, Dec. 4.0. C. Caron, Grand Trunk station master here, died Sunday moming of riot "e discase, He had been adhiig fo Mr. Caron had, been in the employ of the railway for forty vears, amd Kad been station master for the last de cad. A five-year-old daughter, of Mr. and Mrs. James Sutherland, of Monteagle, pear Uelleville, burned io death on Friday, by her clothes eateling fire at the stove, while her mother was out milking. a government. A pariy discuss the recent Hihprals to game Lime was Ld Cleet, y annings WM 48 HOURS. Cures Kid. dey ond Bladder Troubles en ---------- ' | : 1 ' i : ! | ALL KINDS OF LUMBER AT LOW PRICES. ASRESTIO PLASTER POR BALE. ALBO OOAL AND ALL KIND OF WOOD. : S. Bennett & Co. Cor. Bagot and Barrack sas "Phone #41, YATRA SeasasSassesTaned Smoked Kipper Fillets - Bloaters Ciscoes Finnan Haddies DOMINION FISH COMPANY §3 BROCK ST. PRONE 320 @**rrsssssssasscsssessanl THE CLUB HOTEL « WwW BLLINGTON STREET, 4 ¢ ' ' ' 4 hone approach ' ' ' homelike a en PF. M. THOMPSON, Proprietor. Geccssasrrersrrrnenicoll Your orders will be filled satls- factorily if you deal there , WALSY'S, 55-67 Barracks Street. COAL! The kind you are looking for is the kind. we sell. S SCRANTON COAL is good Cosl and we guarantee ¥ : ¢ ' ' ¢ ¢ ¢ ' ¢ ' ' ¢ ' ' » prompt delivery. BOOTH & CO. FOOT WEST STREET. FTVVOEWTBTETRRRTRSTERTRROR TVR VBVLBBTBRBBGBRLS s Bessscssssrssissssssal S00000spsccsccscsscens Highest Grades / GASOLINE. COAL OIL, LUBRICATING OIL. FLOOR OIL. | GREASE, ETC. PROMPT DELIVERY. W, F. KELLY. Clarence. and Ontario Streets. Toye's Building. 0080000000000 0000008 P0000000000000000000000 Poscccsccssccescoonscee saa calla i