Are You Proud of Your Boy ? i Then Buy Him One of our HARD WEAR SUITS It will give him an elegance in his appearance and bearing that will surely work for good in him; they will outwear any other suits for the money, our *'Hardwear" Suits are $5.00 To $10.00 Hadn't you better come in and see them? LIVINGSTON' S BROCK ST. The Popular Curtains For This Spring Are Scrim, Voile and Marquisette We are showing a large assortment of novelty curtains of Scerims and Marquis- ette in white, ivory and drab; plain, hem- stitched and with Cluny and Italian Filet insertion and edging to match, 2 1-2 and 3 yards long. This is the most up-to-date curtain, and suitable for any room in the house. $2 to $5 a Pair Curtain Materials Plain and fancy hemstitehed Serims. Daintily colored bordered Serims. Madras Muslins, in white and cream. -- Casement cloths in great variety. Art Muslins in ppetty patterns. SYNDICALIST PERANCIOENTS OF THE DAY IN EYeLa%D 1s REFORIER LOCAL NOTES AND ITEMS OF : UERERAL IV INTEREST Agitators May, be Able to Force the Happenings in the Of City 'and Vicinity Labor Unions Into a General] ~--What the Merchants Offer to Sitike -- Believe Many Soldiers) the Ileaders of the Whig. Will. Refuse to Fire Rioters. "Witch Hazel Cream." Gibson's. London, April 13.--The syndicalists | Pr M. Kinsella. of North Day, bave forced the leaders of the rail- | Pett Easter in Kingston. way, miners and transport workers |. Str records now on sale at C. into a schewe to form an ailiance |: Lindsay's, 294 Princess street. of their organizations with member- E. Pense, 436 Princess street, ships of 1,500,000 men. spent the week-end in Belleville. The labor léaders are showing re John Markey has been appointed luctance to be used as pawns in the | Ate of the steamer Wolfe Islander. syndicalists' game; but the syndical- i J. Carswell and Harold Hunter, of ists aro' confident 'that they will be ' Brockville, spent the week end in the able to induce the men to break away city. from their leaders. i Sweet potatoes and Spanfish on- It is inevitable that with unrest ions. East lot of the season. Car- on the wale aimed at there should be sovshy's Pills, Gite troops employed to keep order, and aud's » n's. the BE Lg Sry that they | . Miss Carrie Lanceley, , Toronto, will be able to induce a large propor- is visiting Mrs. W. M. Campbell tion of these men to refuse to fire | BaBOt street. on ribters, . ee cream bricks." Gibson's. As a preliminary test of the readi- , J. Broadbauk, of Niagara Falls, ness of the workers for a demonstra- - J. D. Bailey, of Galt, spent the tion of solidarity the extremists are Wosk-aud hare, a " Oil aiming at a general stoppage on May | azel Cream.' Gibson's. Day. It fis ed that the ell The Tenderfoot™ will be the Whig's be in readiness for striking the first DOW story. We will begin its publica- tion on Wednesday. Blow for a general strike in June or Lady Cartwright, "Otterburn", "Both the plectricians' and the build receive Jamorrow and on the ies hare Sow spread io oie Mrs. Charles Wright, Toronto, is wlectrical trades union withdrew ! all street a. R= Soars, Johnson its' megfbers who are on the staff of "K asagen wn 44 Crs . the office. of works, and the London Asagra. 2 2 Building Industries Federation de ae wil & SHE Saray do sans dided that no member affiliated with h 8 : the union should be permitted to chilly, of new millinery and dresses, work until a settlement of the dis Fitch Bazi) Cream, Gilson a. ; bod Mf. and Mrs, J. Newman, 0od- pute was eaciod. : :, ville, are with Mrs. Newman's The action of the electricians is oT due to the fact that staff meu were mother, Mrs. . W. Allen, Clergy street. called upon to do the work of fel- Mrs. N. Johnson, Shannonville, has low-members "bo had struck becauge returned home, after spending a few the Sontiaetons ny om T ahe or days with Mss. Charles Phillips, Cow- employe had not conceded dy street. ion's terms, "Ice cream bricks." Gibson's. Varions government departments Miss May Smith Outer Depot, left are seriously inconverfenced. Saturday to spend Easter with RA friends at Cushendall and Wash POPULATION OF INDIA burn, ett i "Bluud's Pills." Gibson's. Xn : TT the I Many Changes Taking Place in ¢ D: KE. Bogart-and. wile. of 'Toronto. # Se XEanpire came to Kingston on Sumday even Spd fiel tepublican : vi : APR p- fiw priugie KR seuny 3 grow 6a. tre- wid sad will remain here for few menous rate, as is shown in the cen- Nothin | . ab es g has been heard of Albert sus for 1911. The Zrofs A ee Johnson, the young man who made given, » an xtpaon any oa atier his escape from Rockwood hospital for statistical' celerity, in ten day the insane, one day last week. {| the census was taken, but the detail- cream bricks." Gibson's. ed report i8 now coming out and iS guita a number of local members of special interest because so much op Krishis of Columbus went fo attention has lately been -directed pigokvilie Monday to confer some deo- to India and its problems. gree work on the order there. As already announced, the total " Saturday afternoon, the King's population in March, 1911, was 315.- pp, hors of Sydenham Street Meth 156,396 persons, of whom 22% DE dict church entertained the inmates cent. were under native rule. The ,t the Home for the Aged on Mont- Indian empire comprises 1,802,657 pan} street, * square miles, so that the average Saturday was a big day for the par- density is 176 persons to the square cal post system. Two hundred and mile, which is about the average of forty "ong parcels arpived here for dis- Eurape, exclusive of Russia. But an tribution, The rush of mail at _ the average in such a case means [ittle. post office for Easter was very large. Europe is 'exceptionally uniform, "Witch Hazel Cream." Gibson's. while in India, as in most of Asia, Archbishop Gauthier, formerly of the gifts of nature are very unevenly Kingston, may consider the Father distributed. In India two-fifths of Fallon frouble when he &oes to Nome the area contains fewer than 109 poi month, It is alleged he is dis- persons to the square mile. pleased, On the other hand, a third of the "Blaud's Pills." Gibson's. population is contained in an elev- At the session of Sydenham enth of the whole area, with an av- Street Methodist Bible school on erage of more than 500 to the squarc Sunday afternoon, Miss Florence mile. In Europe 250 to the squarc Trotter and Miss Florence Valleau mile is regarded as the limit for agr- sang a duet., cultural regions, while in the more 'Wiish Hazel Cream." Gibson's. fertile parts of India, the number Rev. Sister Mary Beatrice has may run up as high as 750, though heen appointed superior of St. Fran- this implies a very low standard of cjg hospital Smith's Falls to succeed living as well as v er close cfittiva- Sister Mary Austin, who has return- tion of the soil. Citles have relative- od to the house of Providence, Kings- ly lost in India, but hie is ascribed ton. '| mainly to the terrible ravages of the "Kasagra, 25¢." Gibson's. plague, which had fullest scope in Don't forget St. Luke's W. A. tes the crowded quarters of the towns. _ 4 cp. OF "home-made dainties at The proportion of people living in the rectory; 311 Alfred street, OX cities of 100,000 or more persons is Tuesday, April 14th, from 3.30 to 6 but 2.2 per cent., as against 16.4 p.m. Admission." 10c: per cent. in England; in India, as in, "Toe oraddh bricks." Chbson's. China, the inuneniorial village life is A fornier Kingston girl, about fif- still dominant, and this is favorable teen years of age, who appeared in to the stability of the empire the juvenile court here on one occas- Making for change and unrest, 5, "hae heen given a term in the In- however, is the decline of the quiel- dustrial school for vagrancy by a To- est Hindu religion as compared with ront6 magistrate. others of a more aggressive char "Rosaora. Me." Gibson's acter. In ten years the Hindus gain- Miss A "Garrett, Toronto, is the ed five per cent.., as against seven, guest of Miss. H. I. Chown, 479 thirty-seven and thirteen per cent. Princess street. Miss Garrett is on for Mohammedans, Sikhs and Budd- oo. way home from England w bere h'sts. The number of Christians in- (0 00 some time. creased by .nearly one-third, and "Witch Haze). Cream." Gibson's. since 1872 the number of native F. R. Anglin went to Toronto at Christians has increased. threéfoll. noon to attend the formation of the As to the reason for the relative de- Ontario Technical Education Assoecfa- cling of the Hindus, several expla- ("pa representative of the nations are offered. They probabl Kingston Board of Education. suffered most from the plague and Col." Roosevelt's second article in the the famine, but it is also suggested Mav Scribner's will describe bis jaguar that early marriage and compulsory hunt 'up a small branch of the Para: widowhood makes them less prolific, guay to a wilderness ranch, The col Which .in so crowded a country WAY nol misses no feature of stRis new and not be an unmixed evil. strange country, and the iaguar huni . At present per 10,000 of popnla- ae full of hard work and adpenture. tion the distribution is as follows: vp. cream bricks." Ghbgon's. Hindu, 6,939; Mohammedan, 2,126; "The Girl of the Underworld." Buddhist, 342; Sikh, 96: Christian, ae presented at the Grand Opera 124: Animistic, 528. Of greatest house on Saturday afternoon and significance is the rapid gain of the gvening, Yair audiences being pre- Mohammedans, because they most gant on both occasions. The piece strongly feel the prevailing unrest. presented was unusually interesting but the progress of Christianity 1% with human thrills that stirred also doing its part by undermining amotions. A the system of caste to which 2 immobility of the unchanging Bast : ws is largely due. And the growth of; = "The Bridge That Failed. Christianity is also closely connect-| This big three-resl feature shows ed with industrial changes (for the two men stiving for the woman they missionaries are 'doing much to bet- love. One in his treachery cuts the ter the conditions of the humblest rope cables which hold a bridge send. classes. ing his rival down into the seething In view of the oulery over Hindu waters below. He is carried through labor in other countries, it is curious rapids and & mill race. The heroine to find that the net excess of emigra- dives from a Sry hight into river tion over immigration for ten years and rescues Chim, is but little more than five hundred thousand. In general there is little } migration, and only eight and sev- Don't fail to wee enteenths per cent. of the population comedy, at Ideal were born elsewhere than where they Tuesday. were enumerated. Another curious thing is the dee¢line in the proportion; You may of females per 2.000 males, which, after rising steadily from 1881 to There is 1] 1501, has dropped back to where it. where pride sad. poverty So has in s thi years ago, namely, 954. { hand. ; The ratte or this advance and de- "Street education never leads in the are somewhat obscure, but no!'direction of pasition of trust and p, i a general tendency, as influence. d countries, to neg-| The man Wash Goods -* All the Season's{New Wash Materials in Exclusive Noveltiés are to be found here. Many of these cannot be repeated ater. RATINES, i in White and Colors, alo i in * "Fancy Effects. CREPES, in novelty printed designs, 25¢ up CREPES, in White, from 15¢, 18c¢, 20c, 25¢ CREPES, in the Summer Shades PIQUES, in different cords. LINEN SUITINGS, 25¢ and up. FANCY VOILES, And many Novelty Cottons. To-Morrow To-Morrow We will Have Ready M ay pry 200 Copies Delineator Butterick's Will be ready Summer This is one of the best F ashion Book | numbers, with hun This is the latest and the dreds of New Spring large book at 25¢ copy, with any Butterick Pattern shown for - the first FREE.. © | iw. JOHN LAIDLAW & SON. and Summer things egal Patent Dress Button Boot, plain toe, 'black cloth top, all sizes, 5 oo' 9 jar rice $6.00. Similar style in the Walk-Over Sho onl ywith tip and calf top same siz- es, same price. Hott shoes are new ¥ and d ressy.