FIRST PRINTING ONE HALF MILLION COPIES. The best work by far--yet done _py the "author of "That Printer of Udell's." "The Shepherd of the Hills™s « The Calling of | Dan Matthews," "The Winning of Barbara W orth, ete, Harold Bell Wright's New Stopy Exalting Life and Love. THEIR YESTERDAYS Tender with sentiment, pathos, realism Ionors the home, | pupremely glorifies the wife and mother delighgfally wholesome. INustrations #8 Colors by 'F. Grabam Cloth, $1.25 ¥ ' Cooles 1Z2mo * ound uniform with' "Barbara Worth" . NOW RE ADY. ORDER A COPY FROM R UGLOW & COMPANY 141 Princess Street 4 jeAm------ r-- "NEW FALL. BOOTS FOR MEN AND BOYS High Grade Goodyear Welts - from $4.35 to $5.50 "The Dr. Worth Cushion Bole for Men, solid comfort, one' price . JOHNSTON'S SHOE STORE :ocx x a AA > : THE QUEEN MILLINERY | ~~ Desire to announce their -- FALL OPENING Of LADIES' DRESS and TAILORED HATS, on Thursday, Friday and Saturday September the 12th, 13th and 14th 174 WELL'N GTON STRE ET , St rm . with SUTHERLAND SHOES They are in a class by them-: selves--nothing too good for the Children, and good shoes the long run. This Pon has doubled in the last ten years Selling only good shoes. @-- J. H. SUTHERLAND & BRO. The, Home of Good Shoes. 132 a 134 THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, QUARTER OF A CENTURY ME. AND MBS. WILLIAM Me- 44d : Marriage Took Place in House in Which They are Now Living-- Rev, Dr. Macgillivvay Performed the Ceremony. On Saturday, Mr. and Mrs. William McCammon, of 320 Queen street, wil; celebrate the twenty-fifth anniversary of their marriage, and a unique part of the proceedings will be that Mr. and M®&. McCammon will be celebrat- ng this event in the house where the ceremony fook place a guarter-of a century Ago. The ceremony was performed by Rev. Dr. Macgiliivray, of Chalmers church, who a, on Friday, celebrate the 'twenty-fifth anniversary " of his indue {ion As pastor of thai church, which goes to show that this marriage was one of the first, if not the very first, Dr. Macgillivray was called upon to perform in his pew charge. Mr. and Mrs. McCammon are cele brating the event on Saturday after poon end evening, when they will re {ceive the congratulations of their host of friends. My. MeCammon was boro in Kingh ton and has lived here all his life. Mrs, McUammon:® is a mative ol Tyrone, jreland, and came out' to thi: keountry when very young. Mr. McCammon has served twenty {hree years as market clerk, and pre vious to receiving this appointment, followed the butcher trade for many years. He is well known, both in the city and throughout the country, and. it i the wish of all his friends that he and Mrs, McCammon will be spared to en joy many moresyears of happiness and prosperity, Rejected at the Cape. A local young lady has been ve- jected twice in a few days, when she tried to cross Cape Vincent. The officer told her that she must apply to the United States immigra- tion commissioner at Montreal for permission. She sald' her father lived in New York. The young lady, was accompanied by her mother when she made the second endeavor to cross the line. noubled in Price, Omuadian Locomotive gamed anoth- er point, closing at 58} bid. The annual statement of the company, to be presented at the annual meeting on September 18th, will be watchel with interest. The high price was a new record, which compared with 42 a month ago and 21 last March. The company has declared the regular Juarterly dividend of 13 per cent. on the preferved stock, payable Oct. lst, vor shareholders of record Sept. 30th. CROSS.OR FEVERISH HALF-SICK CHILDREN Mean Their Bowels are Waste. Clogged; Liver Sluggish and Stomach Sour. % Your child isn't natyrally cross, irritable andi peevish, Mother ! Fx. amine the tongue; if coated, it méans the little one's stamach is disordered, uyer inactive, and Es thirty feet ol bowels ciogged with foul, decaying waste, Every mother realizes after giving delicious "Syrup of Figs' that this is the ideal laxative and physic jor children. Nothing else regulates the Jdttle one's tender st ch. liver and bowels so efifctually, besides they dearly love its delightful fig taste. For constipated bowds, sluggish liver, hiliousness. or sour dwordered stomach, feverishness, diarrhoea, sove throat, bad breath, or to break "a cold, give one-hali to a teaspoonful "Sprup of Figs," and ia a few hours ail the clogged up waste, sour ile, undigested food and constipated mat- ver will gently move ow and out of the system without griping or nau- sea, and you will surely have a well happy and smiling child again short. tv, . With Syrup of Figs you are not arugging your i com- entirely of luscious figs, senna and aromatics it cannotbe harmiul. Full directions for children of all and for grown-ups plainly print. on the package. Ask your druggist for the full name "Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Sen- na," prepared by the California Fig Syrup Co. This is the delicions tas ing, genuine old reliable. Refuse any- thing else offered. Telephone | "We have Just Received Another Large Shipment of J Yn lon vr Se Overctats. and Sweater CAMMON MARRIED IN KINGSTON | Lc a GAS FOR SCHOONERS THE DAY OF THE "WIND 1am] MER""-IS PASSING. | -- i Successful Experiment on Sailing | Ships May Lead to Big Change in Fleet--New System Sid to be Cheaper--Local Marine Notes. The following frog: the Montreal Witness, of Tuesday, will be read! with interest, by local marine mah: | "The day of the pure 'wind jam- mer' in the port is passing. Al- ready this summer two of the old- «st schooners in the river fleet have added small gasoline engines to their equipment so that, when the winds are' unfavorable, they are able to creep along to their port. Oné of the two, the two masted schooner, 'J.E.W.H." passed through the canal yesterday aftermbon, and' attracted a good deal of attention by the way she moved down the river. A shipping man, with whom the 'Witness' reporter talked, said that the experimont had been so sue- cessful that he had heard that many of the barge owners were contem- plating adding an engine to their | boats at an early date.' "The advantages of the engines, | according to the mariner, were many. Barges so equipped could! move around the port at any time without the assistance of a tug as their power was sufficient to move the craft slowly against tha current. Then, too, he. said there would be a great saving in money. for the cost of towing through the canal, and in the harbor amounted to a big sum in a season. To pass through a-lo¢k the schooners must secure either a tug or one of the teams that are always available. This cost must and often meant, too, that the ship must wait until either a tug or horses could be pro- cured. The new motive power would cost less, and be much more speedy. 'You can say that the day of the pure old 'Wind Jammer' is over; gasoline has ended them." Movements of Vessels. The » schooner Kitchen, loaded with feldspar, cleared from Richard- son's wharf, for Charlotte. The schooner Major Ferry rived] from Oswego, with Sowards. | The schooner Maize, from Fairhaven, Crawford's wharf, The schomner Abbie IL. cleared for Charlotte! The- steamer Sowards, arrived at Rockwood Hospital, with coal, from Charlotte. : M. T. Co.'s elevator:--The steam- er Tagona, from Fort William, dis- charged 48,000 bushels of wheat, and 23,000 bushels of barley, clear- ed for Belleville, to load cament for Fort William; tug Emerson, from Oswego, with barge Cornwall, coal- laden, cleared for Montreal, with one grain barge and two coal barges. The steamer ~Maecassa, of the Niagara and Ontario Navigation company, arrived at the wharf of the Kingston Shipbuilding company, on. Tuesday night. She will he docked at the end of the week. A new wheel will be placed, and her bottom scraped. . The Macassa will return to the western end of the lake for the fall trade. 4 The barge Melrose, of the M. T. company, is expected to be docked at the shipyard, for repairs, Wed- nesday night, or Thursday. The schooners Keéewatin and Oliver have arrived from Sodus and Oswego respectively, with coal for Swift's. 1 Swift's wharf: . Steamer Kingston down and up; Aletha down and up; Rideau Queen cleared for Ottawa; Rideau King down from Ottawa. The steamers Dundurn and Belle- ville are due west and east respect- ively Wednesday night. Navigation is reported to be par- itally held up at the Soulonges canal on the St. Lawrence, owing to an accident which the steamer Dupn- durn had on Sunday night or Mon- day morning. ' Vessels drawing not more than 11 feet were allow- ed through, but it is reported that the deep draught vessels have been tied up until the repairs were made. The steamers Rosemgount and Kin- mount, graindaden, from Montreal, are on fheir way to Kingston to discharge at the M. T, Co.'s cleva- tor, The tug Bartlett cleaved light, for Cornwall, and Will wtwmn to King- | ston, with light barges; the (ug Thomson is due to arrive do-night from Montreal, with three light bar- ges, ar- coal for with = coal is discharging at Andrews, A Pittsburg farmer is charged with stealing a yearling heifer from an- other farmer in that district. and his case will be heard before Magistrate George Hunter on Monday. ¥. K. Homosuokis, Cobalt, for high grading, was given two years in the penitentiary. LUSTROUS HAIR "FOR WOMEN Starts Hair Grow- and Its Abun- | he > x Pcisonous Sugar of Lead or Delightful, Sulphur in Refresh. ing Parisian Sage. It you haven't enjoyed the mar- benefit derived from Bie 8 Sage, the modern hair grower, beautifier and dandruff remedy! you have nilsged a | new resolutions vol 1913. - JOCK Jockey Boots for Women Jockey Boots for Girls Jockey Boots for Children in Tans; Pat E Y B 00 3,00 and $2.50, $2.00, en's and Gun Metals 00TS $4.00 $3.50 $1.85 Jockey Boots Are Now All the Rage. SURELY SETTLES UPSET STOMACHS "Pape's Diapepsin" Ends Indigestion fas, Sourness in Five Minutes. RNeoally does" oraer--"really does" tion, dyspepsia, gag heartburn and aoUIness. «a ive minutes--thal--jusy nat--wmaked Pane's Diapepsin the Tar esi selling stomach regulator in the world. Hf what you eat ferments in to stubborn lumps, and belch gas and eructate sour, undigested food and add; head is dizzy and aches; breatl oul; tongue costed; your insides fill ed with bile and indigestible waste remember the moment Diapepsin comes in contact wilh the stomach al such distress vanishes. Its truly as womshing--alniost marvelous, and th juv 1s its hdrmlessness. A lakge fhftv-cent. case of Pape' Diapcpmn will give vou a hundred allars' aruggist nak. 'it's worth ie weight in gold te mon and women who can't get their stomachs regulated. Tt belongs in vonr nome--should always be kop! handy in fase of a sick, =mour. vpsel put bad stomachs in overcome indiges-- will hand you your mone) it's the quickest, sarest and most harmless stomach doctor in the world THE TOWNSHIP FAIR EXHIBIT BY THE GOVERNMENT INSTRUCTOR, J. G. Taggart, B.S.A., Giving the Farmers Valuable Ipformation-- - He Delivered Lectures During the Fajr. The exhibit which of all at the Kingston fair deserves notice -and from the public is that which is being shown by J. G. Taggart, B.8.A., who is in the employment of the Ontario Department of Agricul- ture and alms at the spread of in- telligent methods among the farm- ers. The fair Is essentially a farmers' institution and this is where the department reaches the farmer with facts, which, if le re- gards them, will greatly improve and simplify his work. Mr. Tag- gart has on display a number of glass tubes of grain which illustrate the advantage of early seeding by showing the ratio of tha yield from a number of fods of seéding. He also demonstrated the difference be- tween the quality and quantity of grain produced by'drained and that bv undrained lands. He showed the chemical preparations for spray- ing the apple trees and the differ- ence spraying makes in the yield. He has also a number of chemical preparations which are the newest thing in fertilizer. He also has a display which gives the farmer a definite idea of the appearances of the seeds of the various weeds that are usually so annoying to the far- mer. By becoming familiar with these seeds, the farmer can avoid them when buying his seed grain. Besides being on band with the personal talk to inquiring farmers, Mr. Taggart gave lectures during the fair to young men on how to judge stock horses, cattle and sheep. He Will hold a contest for those under twenty years of age in judg- ing stock fo rwhich prizes from 50¢ to $1.50 will be given. Due to the bad condition of the track there were no horse races held on Tuesday. Tha wet weather seemed to keep the exhibitors of stock away also, although a number of the horses were judged and prizes awarded. perhaps most support 5 -- es Phe Dr, McCarthy's Baby Goat, Pr. McCarthy his just received fram hiv brother, Daniel, in New York, a unique present in the shape of a lit tle woolly one-week old gost. It! shinds not more ge -and is being brought up on a regu Jur sucking bottle. The litle fellow is quite a novelty to the doctor's two small have and is fond of their pany. He bleats beautifully when The deetor 38° mwnkinfy to "lone Hs goat." 4 mb sei------------ Rescued Lad Vrom Yrowning. * * Friest Roberts, waterwoeks plilob-: er. anved a lad from R Snning on had fallen into the worth 'of satisfaction of Your - omach during the day or at night 3 Township "DELICIOUS. PURE ICE CREAM By the Pint or Quart SAKELL'S Next to Opera House : Phone 640 |THE Is the Ideal Motor for Businees DAVIS. 'Phone 420. DAVIS passed in workmanship and materials motor thoroughly tested and guaranteed Any .size launch supplied complete We carry the best in Motor Boat DAVIS DRY MOTO R he sur- Each Buy a and Pleasure, Could not if price GET were doubled. IN LINE! = [3 DOCK CO. i | i | { Acceppories ! ] | | DE A remarkable instrument----the pocket. Takes up very little s; noticeable than an eyeglass Are you interested? Drop In Dale. of New York City, prove conversation and other sounds; natural hearing of hundreds. A AND A AP New A ace. is how It has increased the joy of living for Continuatia Demonstrations Privately September 11 arg 12 ENJOYMENT FOR THE AF Our Guarantee With Every Toitimdnt wroplione; carry it<la yeur inconspleious and not wore chain A Free Demonstration of the New Aurophone & Aurasage Will be given by us Wednesday and Thursday let an ¢xpert demonstrator, H, 7 it conveys music, low pitched how. you.£an hear them distinctly. thousands and bettered the Wednesday and Thursday, A a a A SE RTL MAHO0D'S Di Bi STORE The Rexall sre S-- -- PETER D. DAVIS DEAD. Nas Oldest Hesident of Towaship of Adolphusiown, Davis, one of the oldest township of Adolphus town, died, Monday, at the dmmily homestead: Mr. Davis was: eighty-five years of age, the son of the Inte Hen ry Davie, and the d= weendant of Unit od Empire Loyaline, who settled on ihe shores of the Buy' of Quinte, Throughout his life Mr. Davis took an active part in 'municipal affairs aod served the township as reeve for a nome ber of terme. He also played a pro {minent part in politics in the distriet He was. an ardent conservative. | Mr. Davis never married. He is sur vived. by two brothers, Gilbert M. Davis, Napance, and John C. Davis, Alexandria, Ind., and two nephews, 4 Nelson Bavia, who occupies the soath fwing of the Womestéad at Adolphus town; and A. R. Davis, Toronto. ---- Peter Ih residents of the The internationai Association here, having come from Torooto viectric lighted Puliman otorn party, suns 125, went down Lhe river. poh 2 , Hasler was among the number Bedding For Fall We sell nothing but best KELLARIC ARD OSTERMOOTE; WOOL AND FELT NATTRESSES, COLD BLAST ODORLESS PILLOWS in Art Ticking. REIS QUALITY REIS TOW Cy