PAGE SIX. me Best Tea At Its Best "SALADA" TEA is always the same, no matter | | when or where you buy it: "SALADA" is the choicest fea --green, black or mixed --from the finest tea- growing country in the world--Ceylon, with its exquisite flavor "and freshness protected by the sealed lead packages. Symington's Packet Soups and Gravies Get Them at COUPER"S Phone 786. Prompt Delivery. P J JOHNSON THE LEADING FLORIST 324 KING STREET. Special prices in Cut Flow- erg, See our window display. Wedding Bouquets and Floral Designs. Floral Sprays a specialty. Sweet Peg Seed In Bulk Named Varieties. Phones: Store, 239. Conservatories 23% Residence, 1212. 841-83 PRINCESS ST, . The great Uterine Tonic, sod + wonly - safe effectual Monthy gi egulator on which wom .1i can depend. , Bold {a three of strength) Pe ° wid op ro Ungx Mepieine Co. Toroktg, Ont Ga LIME FOR SALE DRURY'S Coal and Wood Yard "Phone 448] 3350 Wellington Fe NEW SHOE REPAIRING BUSINESS ROBERT FAYNTER har take: wor the business of the late Jae Davis at the old stand, 26) RINCESS STREET. All kinds tf 8Bhoe Repairing promptly done, All work guaranteed, Bibby's- Garage Now Open What Have We to Offer 7 1st, Building practically fire- proof. 2nd. Special care of your -car. 3rd. Services of a licensed chauffeur, 4th. Moderate charges. We expect to have the Agency for the best car in the business. Gasoline for Sale. F. A. BIBBY - 129 Brock 8t. During housecleaning, wishin to save time by having quick lunches, can be supplied with all kinds of Cooked Meats, Pickles and Relishes by Just 'phoning or giving a call to H. J. MYERS 115 Brock St. Phone 570. For Potatoes Land Plaster will start the plants in- to vigorous growth P. Walsh 85-57 BARRACK STREET. WHY PAY RENT? REAL ESTATE SNAPS | = 'BRICK VENEER HOUSE. Montreal Street, 4 bedrooms and all modern improvements, easy terms, .. 1,500.00 + FRAMY HOUSE, Chatham Street, good, large lot, $800.00 DOUBLE FRAME (new), all modern improvements, Raglan Road, $2,200. UBLE FRAME HOUSE, n Street, $2,250. : SRMy DETACHED FRAME, Main Street, can be purchased by instalments, $750.00. GOOD FRAME HOUSE on Markland Street; 3 bedrooms; 'modern {mprovements; nearly new; can be purchased at a yery moderate figure and by easy instalments. Let us quote you rates for Tr Insurance. It may pay Norman& Webb | There is a good better. and best in everything. But after you bave had the best nothing else can be better nor will you consider anything else even good. Why bother with the * just as goods', Get the genuine O'Keefe's Special Extra Mild Ale, 269 k. BRAUPRE, Local Distributor. "Phone 313. TTocl's Phosphodine, Th: Great English Hemedy. To..08 and inv igucates the whole ne. VOUA Syston, makes new Blood in old Veina, Cures Nerv | Jus Saati, Mental and Brain Worry, Des Sexual Weakness, Kmisvions, Sper pio ia. and Kff:cts of Abuse or kK cure. Sold by ¢ vi esses, ik Bian on EC out AF Betis fl per be pz forSn One will please, six ts o= mailed it New pamphlet male formerly Wi gino Ca ormnto, Persecuted Chanffeurs. One police regulation after an- other has made the life of the chauffeur miserable, but apparent- {ly the depths of his wretchedness { have only recently been plumbed. { '1 was driving uptown the other | day at a pretty fair speed,' a chauf- | feur said, "when a cop bawled at 'me { to stop. I stopped. | " 'Under arrest?" 1 said. { 'Not yet,' he answered. | over here a minute.' ! "He directed me to a hydrant | with hose attachmenty and the first thing T knew he was giving my lic- {ense tag a good washing. | " 'Your number was buried an | inch deep in dust and oil,' he said. 'You might have run over a dozen people and got away safe, for no- body could read your number. Here- after you fellows have got to look out for that. "Look out that our license num- | bers are ciean enough te read! Will the persecution of chauffeurs never | cease!' 'Come : Men may be born modest, but men have to asyuice all they get. 2 the world loves a cheerful flat Keep the Skin - Clear and Soft of wo 1 } | | Humors prevalent in nothing more annoying t irritation of the 2 eruptions | beauty of the complexion. the skin are especially the. spri There breaking out | Internal treatments are slow unsatisfa¢tory in results, but you {depend on Dr. Chase's Ointment { heal up | elit. P Onlike pore-cl Dr. Chase's Oiutment © pores of the skin and makes it soft, smooth and healthy. the skin, and a beautifier of the great est value, Kemma, salt rbewm, psoriasis, chai. | ine and all pore of itching skin dis- to the soothing, hea! het sof sid, of this wellknown oint- ment. ' It is indispensable in the I= is an to have skin and disfiguring to mar the and can to the sores and briny lasting ng powders, cleans out the It is a food for ome | i here thers wea babife and young. chil dren, " THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, 1 |sssssessesssssssssnsen!: When Marcia Came Home By JEROME SPRAGUE. ei00080008080000 esos eccceveee tefl mother," Marcia said but I'ma going back." nee looked at her in amaze- "You're not--going back," + gasped, "I'm tired of it gli, and Pye told Pp hil' "How "Don't could manded "He "Oh, I krow you?" her sister de- loves you, Marcia." it but love isn't ev- perytning, Connie. 1 theught 80 when 1 married Phil, and went up there in the Junfher regions and tried to lve hisyiite. oy MOXDAY. 1912. JUNE at she who had, one night, interrupted litany to 'say, "Another gud troable---another day ¢ kissed her he had with- a Tittle that he had worked harder and _ metre doggedly Suddenly the reason of his incessant laboring dawned upon her. Did he think she wanted an easy life more than she wanted romance, had endeavored to give it to her? Their horzes - were waiting for them at the station. They drove through the long aisle of the forest. Pine trees towered jbote them, and there wad a edly fragrance drawn out by the warmth of the afternoon sun. - The pussies were met Margaret. The man drove away with the horses, the maid who had greeted them turned and went into the house to scrve the evening meal. Pailip looked at his wife. "You are houmie again, Marcia," he sald, simply. "WIH you try to believe it is for the best, and not blame me Be had ne A Aft fer at the deor to And you know I've tried to be happy, but I'm ed t¢ that sort of thing, and | every time I came back ome to live tn the midst of the beauty that sur- rounded me when I was a girl--and saw you with your lovely things-- why 1 wag wild with envy, and it w asi't-g Hille feeling or a mean feel- ing, it was just that .1 can't live where everything is rude and rough. } Aud as for baby--you know how I want her to have everything that life €an give her, and she canpot up there." "But how could What did he say?" "He---he didu"t * say much. He just looked at me in a puzzled way, and asked, Aren't you happy?' and I said 'No, but it isn't your fault. It's only . because I'm different--and there's nothing here to do.' Then he asked 'What do you do in the city?' and I said, 'Oh, there are the shops, and the theaters, and the bridge parties--and pretty clothes,' and he said, 'I can't give you such rings. Of course, I can't keep you if you want to go," and' so 1 caine. Ard mother thinks it's just for a vis- not us you tell Phil? "how can Marcia?" panted, "be- life up there "on," Constance cried, you do such a thing, "Because," Marcia cunge I know what means. You don't. Of course Phil is a lawyer, but his clients are alli the men who work in the forests, and the women--why, they are the | wives of those men--and there isn't |' anything to do, and I won't go back |, S0 don't ask me, Connie--dont) ask me." i "1 won't," said Connie, gentty, | * "but if you knew, Marcia, how I: have envied you. You have all of ! the things that I want. 1 haven't | & husband who loves me heart and #6 instead 1 have a memory of a man who jilted me--1 haven't a child to make my life full of inter- est. I have only the hollowness of excitement; that have lost their pow- er to please." 2 Marcia bent to kiss her sister's cheek, "Poor Conule,"" she said. "1 know | seem heartless--but life here seems go good to me." . For two months Marcia lived in a whirl. Her mother, joyous at hav- ing possession for a little while of her youngest girl, loaded her 'with gifts, and Marcia appeared at gard- en parties and tennis events, and »0lf tournaments, robed exquisitely fn rose color or in white. Zhe dressed baby Margaret like a doll and took her with her. To- gether they were petted and praised. "And if 1 were up there with Phil," Marcia said to Connie, "I chould have spent this summer lis- tening to the frogs eroak and the crickets sing." "You weuld have hopes and sorrows," said Connie, "Oh, Marcia, isn't he lonely?" He doesn't say so," said cia, evasively. Two weeks later Phil came down to fetch his wife. "You are coming home with me, Marcia," he said. "Why?" she looked at him in sur- prise, "lI thought you knew 1 wasn't coming any more?" "That is what you said, and 1 thought 1 might let You have your way. But--I'm not going to let you take your life in your own hands. 1 promised to love and pro- tect you. My duty to my child places upon me the same obligation to love and protect her--I haven't any right as a husband and father to let you stay here." "But I'm not a slave," tested indignantly. "Il know," he said, sadly, "and if you think it is easy or that it doesn't hurt my pride to take you back this WARY, you are mistaken. But love | } shared Phil's C Mar- Hn " 1 f C she pro- | trem ulously, i give me. y friends of the owner. bout 25 wish lat £50. Shakespeare, Goethe, Victor Hugo, too much?" Suddenly she raised her face . to "The sun is setting," she said, "Kiss me, Phil, and for- I didn't know; 1 didn't his, kpow.' He took her in his arms and bent his face to hers, and she heard his whisper of fierce rapture. '"'Another day is ours--another day of love; dear heait." : Summer House in Oak Tree. Providence Journal On2 of the finest able trees in the moth oak on the Barer, in the town of Exeter. The tree is about eighteen feet in circumference ut the ba and five great branches, which leave the trunk about twelve feet above The ground, form the support for a spacious plat- form which in times past was used by the owner of the lari 8s a summer houre. The lowest and most remark- state is the mam- wlate of Wilham Se, of these Branches, forn s the principal support for i latform, leaves the trunk of the almost at right angles and the others form a symme trical dome which pro vides a canopy oper a daneing plat form which has been built beneath the tree on the ground. The great oak formed tregt which the an ideal for gatherings of relatives re and 1t 18 located not far from Beach pond, which a years ago was a favorite retreat considerable number of visitors who made the summer house among the branches their favorite rendez Vous ew tor An Allegory. Four Hies, which had made way into a certain pantry, ed to have a feast, Orne flew to the sugar and ily, but soon died, tor the tull of white ledd, The second chose the flour as diet, but he fared no better, for flour was loaded with plaster paris The third sampled the syrup, but his six' legs were presently raised in the air, for the syrup was colored with aniline dye. 'The fourth fly, being all his friends dead, determined to end his life also, and drank deeply. of the fly-poison which he found 1m a convenient sau- cer, 2 He That, their determin ale heart sugar was his the of is still ahve and in good health too, was adulterated. ¢ Modern Works for the Bla. blind Zur A circulating library for the in Switzerland was started at ich in 1904 by Dr. Charles Beyel on a small scale. who now number 0, have so far been supplied oily with clzesic authors, but they femand modern writers, and their is likely to be accorded. as any Swiss are willing to subscribe ywards the extra expense, estimated The books so far supplied soviety are the works of Schiller, Raaine, ete., but the blind ask or more modern works in order to The readers, a- the WY keep themselves in touch with present lay literature.--Geneva Cor. London Standard. -------------- Caught in the Act. "Darling, do you really love me?" breathed the lover. "1 do--havee 1 not sworn it many time 7" sighed the loveress "You have--but do you? "Why do you ask? What have 1 done fo make you doubt it "Ha, girl | 1 saw you--l caught you---- : "What did you see, love ? Speak !" must not take account of pride. And I love you--Marecia." "If you loved me," she said, "yo would want me to be happy." He came over and took her hand "Dear heart," he said, "I know you better than you know yourself. | Back of all the childish frivolity ; ! the 2's a woman---the woman I love, | {aad & woman who is going to take | up life as it ought to be lived---a wo- ian who would hate herself some vhs if 1 should let her do as she | wanis to do." That night Marcia talked it with Connie. "Do you ougat to go back?' 'If a man loved/me;" sajd Connie, "as Phil loves yon, 1 would go with him to the end of the world." 'That's what I thought," Marcia, bitterly, "when I married Phil, but romance doesn't survive ong when you are up against the hard things of life." Philip Ames took with him an un- willing wife. The trip on the train was a silent one. Only little Margaret prattied of the return. "Are the pussies and the chickens expect ing me?" she asked her father. "Yes, and the pine tres have lots of things to whisper in your ears. bon't you know when the sun is set- ting bow they whisper, whisper, and sing lullaby songs?" "Yes," said little Margaret, "and that's the time when you always tell mother how much you love her." Mattia, listening felt her heart leap. That .had been one of Phil's little ceremonies in their temple of love. At sun-set he would take her in his arms and say, "Another day {is ours, dear heart." . When had he stopped? She re- | membered with a shack that it was | she who had rung the knell to ro- mance. It was she who had been i | u over think I said { "When 1 came in 1 saw you setting the clock an hour forward !" She could not deny it. Her affection was not boreproof. This was the be ginning of the end.- (Cleveland Plain Dealer. ------------------ The man who loves a Woman as much as shie wants to he loved has no time for attending to business. Some women delight in showing how agreeable they can be to strangers roots --statted the hair falling out. Result baldness. Doa't wait uatil these facts apply to you. 'Start in tonight using HAY'S HAIR HEALTH. Clegnse your scaly of every trace of Dandruff. Keep i clean. Stop the lailing bair and give the new growth a chaoce. Use HAY'S HAIR HEALTH rego larly and you'll be entirély free from Dan drull--from gray or faded heir--and froe baldness. HAY'S HAIR HEALTH will keep vou looking young. En $10 aod Se Stores conve rg | impatient of his caresses. It was JAS B. McLEOD, AGENT afd so he. tree '§ structor, 5 Making. a Flat World Round When Columbus set out to reach India by sailing westward, he met with opposition and ridicule. He believed the earth to be round. 'Wise men held that it was flat--that Columbus was mad --and that he'd fall off somewhere if he departed from established beliefs. But Columbus' belief found him a' continent and made him blessed of memory. Business World is flat to some men Their profit-bearing shores of unity streteh-only so far as their grandfathers trod. Custom, superstition and apathy have set them confines which they may not pass. For instance, they believe the business year is a flat one-- not.an all-year round of trade, with East joining West, with Spring merging into Autumn--but just two distinct seasons, with sawed-off edges gaping into space. They confine their activities to a Spring trade and to a Fall trade. To them there is.no intervening continent with stores of waiting wealth. Their world is flat. They have not explored the mid-year months of Summer trade. June, July and August are never-never land. Surely this conception of Summer as a "dull" season is as fallacious as the delusion that the earth was flat. People have just as much money in the hot weather and spend quite _ as freely as in Spring and Fall. Granted that they are not buying skates and snow shovels in August, yet they dre buying staple articles. Furthermore, they have an eye on luxuries and comforts they are counting upon purchasing in the Fall. J modern Columbus has discovered this Summer trade--this golden West lying between the known continents of old beliefs. De parting from established habit, many have made their energies and their Advertis- ing an all-year-round proposition. Keeping up Advertising during the Summer months not only links your Spring and Fall, but produces rich har- vests from the Summer months themselves, Advice regarding your advertising problems is available through any scopuined Canadian advertising agency, or the Secretary of the Canadian Press Association, Room 508 Lumsden Building, Toronto. Eaquiry involves no obligation on your part--s0 write, if inl on 00000086000 000450000 00000048 FARM FOR SALE (110 AORES), Situated near the Village of INVERARY, convenient to Scnool and Church. Frame Dwelling and numerous outbuildings, taciui ing Cement Silo, all in gocd repair; also good Orchard. For particulars, apply to E. BLAKE THOMPSON, OVER NORTHERN CROWN BANK. MARKET SQU ARE, "Phone 286. . KINGSTON, ONT. Libis sont ok EE ---- FRESH ARRIVAL Ganong's TIE, Chocolates The Finest in the City.] 50 cents per pound A. J. REES 166 Princess 8t. Phone by We Are Headquarters for INGOT METALS Large 3 hock, Prompt De- liveries. I Pig Iron, Ens METAL Limited Pig Lead, eh Soret, Aluminum, Zinc Spelter. TORON TO EE ------ QUEEN'S CAFE Lunches served on the shortest notice. The Le ttehanded Pupil. The principal of the Brockton schools having struck with the fact that en out of mine children who failed to be promoted in i schools were left-handed, he or that pupils be allow the hand or right hand the f most convenient teachers make ing upon the which of the crat, ------ by, and the scemery . did not arrive REGULAR DINNER, 25c. M, PAPPAS & The townsveople had forgotten about 184 Princess St, the unfuliilled promise, and the thea . tre itself no longer exists. However they are gratiied to Land the artist 18 a man of his word, and are now wondering whether they had not bet ter build a new theatre in which to use the scenery. The mayer has sent a grateful letter to Heer Hensel. lin Cor. London Standard. Mass, been Expected Something Better. Senator Bristow, of Kansas, is so tall that when he plays golf he uses clubs a foot longer than those or- dinarily. used, and "when he hits the ball it goes a mile--when he hits eft rund In some the a great pomt of insist- of the right hapd, ig a detriment to 'the progréss child Louis Globe Demo od Lo uw As school Ber- Tie ~t Oldest Triplets in United States. The Windecker triplets of Wisconsin said to be the oldest tfaiplets wm the United States, celebrated their sixty eighth birthday anniversary at Fond du Lic, June 9th. They are Mrs. Se dosen't show up well in a ring date Pier, of Wasau, Wis.: Sydney; When a woman sets a clock Windecker, of Fond du Lae. and Syl | ways sets it by guess vester Windecker, of Byton.--~Bostont People who live Globe. ' {shouldn't throw mud "Which recalls a story told on Bristow when he first fell before the temptation to play golf. He waht ed to know how the game was pla; ed. "Well, you see," said his "you pug the ball Haht ust this way. Now see that moun. there ) is a little hole, and the pay is 10 put tne oan. into nat hole in one ni Bristow let drive with the same force that he had acquired in split- ting rails in Kentucky, and the par- ty followed the ball. When they came ub to it they found to the sur- brise of every one that the Kansas Senator that the ball was within three inches of the hole. "Now, what do you that!" exclaimed Bristow sorrowful Iv... "1 missed - it." --Saturday Evening Post. A piece of colored glass looks beau in tiful a church window but it here, she a in clean houses PACKED IN ONE think of he grade of coffee, a cents extra per pound will give you an immeasurably finer beverage worth many timesthe extra expenditure. A trial of The Painter Kept His Promise. The mayor of the Little town. of Kulstein was greatly surprised the other day when a waggon drove up to the town hall eontaioing a splendid set of stage scenery, represemting a landscape. A letter followed, and ex- ofained that thirty-five years ago a certain Herr Hensel had been given an order to paint scenery for a new theatre the citizens had built. The work was done in Innsbruck, and one of the sets: was spoiled in transit. The painter ised to compensate the town authorities for the loss, and to snd them another set. Time went |