A Thomas Copley Telephone 987 t line. Estimates repairs and a gl and new work) a - foors of all «nds. a tell] recelve prompt - sslention, 40 Queen Brest. . Pn, For Sale Motor bont, 24 fi long, 18 horse: Power, full auto control, 12 miles An hour; In hest condition. Bont house can be supplied. H. 8. CRUMLEY 116 BROCK ST - PHONE 1442 BUILDERS! Have You Tried: GYPSUM WALL PLASTER? It Baves Time. P. WALSH AUTOS FOR HIRE At- Bibby's Garage Moderate Charges Phone 201. Garage, 917 Residence ~~ i Nm i DO NOT RENT. WHY NOT BUY? We have some great bar- gains, Two bungalows with 6 rooms, good locality, at $1500, good locality. Apply to THE KINGSTON BUILD ERS' SUPPLY CO. 2nd Floor, Room 4, King Edward Building. NM Nenu Why Pay High Prices ™ T Wilt Glve You FIRST CLAbS GOODS" | The Style and Fitting will be Faultioss Money in Good Real Estate is Safe and Sure i el Tocatity ta ¥ seeranienanns brick house on John street, wrobms, improvements taker aws wav srvirees ve SS00000. Drop a card to 13 Fu ajssel whe wanting anything dv , a t Garpen- biol bh rd HUMORS OF LIBRARIES 'OF LENDING BOOKS: Muddled Names Are the Most Fre- " quent Causes of Merriment to the Attendpnts--One, However, Re- membered the Cover But Not the Name -- Fringes and Hasirpins Aroused Suspicions. Prosaic and serious though the business of lending libraries may seom to be to the average person, it provides at times an unsuspected fund of humor. There is, for: fg- stance, the.juvenile borrower, who writes to the librarian: "Dear Sir,--Please renew. the book that I took out about two weeks ago, or it may be three. 1 forget the author and title, but: § wag bound in blue, with a picture a delphin on the back." ToL And thén there is the troubled reader who, holding out to the as. sistapt the latest novelty in. book- marks, says, "1 wish you would tell your lady readers not to leave fringe- nets In-their books. I found a hair pin in the last book and a fringe- net in this, and my wife is getting a bit:suspicious."" Perhaps, however, it is the people who uneonsciously twist the titles of £ books they ask for who provide the librarian and his assistants with their biggest laughs, and in 'Library Jokes and Jottings," Mr. H, T. Coutts gives some amusing examples of borrowers' quaint requests. Here are a few selections: "1 come for Mr. A . Will: you please s him 'Indécent Orders'? 4 ("In Deacon's Orders"). "Please renew 'Prisoner of Zena Dare'. " ("Prisoner of Zenda'). "Have you a novel entitled 'She Combeth Not Her Head'?" ("He Cometh Not, She Said"). 5 "1 want Braddon's 'Trial of the Servant'. " ("Trail of the Serpent"). "Have you the 'Essays of a Liar?" ("Essays of Elia'). "I want 'From Jessie to Ernest'." ("From Jest to Earnest"). ""Buneh of ¥Screws.' Cruise')." » "18 the 'Stuck-up Minister' ('Stic ket Minister') in?" " 'Kiss Auntie' it you please." "A lady reader," says Mr. Coutts, "who bad a passion for country walks used to arrange visits to charm- ing rural spots, and sought help in her choice of them at the library. She asked the attendant to supply her with 'Notable Hamlets.' Until he pointed out to her the portraits of Henry Irving and other famous actors, included in the volume, she ('Bunter's ('Quisante'), Two houses, $1600, | a » to do with rambles | "Sweet Family Robinson could not believe that it had nothing to famous vil. lages. ~ That. the printer is not devoid of humor is evident from the following entries selected from the proof sheets of a library catalogue: '"'Boldrewood, Rol, 'My Rum Home' (Run): fole, S. R. Dean, 'A Book About Noses' (Roses) ; Stables, Gordon, 'Our 4 Friend the Fog' (Dog)." THe facetiousness of the printer is again shown in the alterations of "A Harvest of Wild Oats" to "A Harvest of Wild Cats"; "The Golden Face" to "The Golden Fare"; the "Princess Aline" to the "Princess Alive"; and "Mrs. Caudle's' Curtain Lectures" to Mrs. Candle's Curtain ' Lectures." Childrern often confuse the titles of popular books and will ask for such things as "Allsop' Fables," "Good Liver's Ravels,"§ "Helen's Dalry," "Holly berry Fin#," "From Powder Admiral to Monkey," and ugoe." Most of these cian be translated easily, but a more difficult case oe- curred when a girl requisitioned "Watercress." The librarian' told her that a hogk of that pame was not in 'the libary, but thé girl pers sisted in her request... A schoelfel- low, shé said, had borrowed it only a week or two before, and had teld her it was a nice book. Hventually & solution of the problem was found in: Mrs. Molesworth's "Lettice." The Glove on the Pole. A quaint custom in an English town, Honiton, is "proclaiming the fair." The town obtained the grant of a fair from the lord of the manor so long ago as 1257, and the fair still retains some of the picturesque characteristics of bygon> days. The town crier, dressed in picturésque uniform and carrying a pole decorat; ed with gay flowers and sdrmonnted y a large gilt model of'a gloved hand, publicly announces the opening of the fair, as follows: "Oyez! Oyez! Oyez! The fair's begun, the glove is up. No man can be arrested till the glove is taken down." Hot coins are then thrown among the children, The pole and glove remain displayed until the end of the fair. A Cloek 'Cage Made of Pentiies. A novelty ini clocknfhking consists of a time plece whose case is made of English pennies. The coins, of which there are ninety-six, all bear the date 1797 and were beaten out to almost double their original size and then riveted together, while the figures were made of small dwips-of copper cemented on to the face. The clock stands fourteen inches high and' is eight inches broad at the base. That "time is. money" is an adage with which we all more or less agree, but this is a case in which the saying | might be reversed and still remain 4 true. The 'clock: is owned by a resi- dent of Laurel Bank, Ilkley, York- J shire; England; Cast Ofi-Police Baots. A' queer way of disposing of their old boots is followed by the Colombo police. When these "cast offs" have accumulated to a figure hordering round a thousand they are taken down to thé police hulk in the har- bor and thrown inte the sea. Former- ly, policemen were allowed to dispose of these, when they' became unser- viceable, but according to new tegu- Iations, they have to return to head- quarters all boots when they get worn out. { y Hardship comes when the fire. of genius isn't hot enough to keep the pot hoiing. It: makes - woman heartsick 'over time she has to cut a piece of valu. able old lace. an " UNSUSPECTED FUN IN ROUTINE. ary ipne's neighbors. THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, MONDAY, JULY LOMPANIES HARD HIT. Incréase In Arson Is Costly For Ins surance Concerns. "A period of depresion, such as the present* causes a serious drain vn the fire insurance tompanies of Canada through the deplorable in- crease of arson." The man speaking was ap Ontario manager of one of the largest Cana- dian fire insurance companies. The frequency of arson in. the Province of Ontario is recognized by every insurance manager and ad. <juster. But arson is about the mosi difficult of all crimes to prove con- clusively, and. while we are thor- oughly satisfied. of its presence in many cases, we are obliged, for lack of evidence, to swallow our medi- cife."' 'What propertion of Ontario fires 'since 1912 would you ssy were de- liberate crimes?" el "All & matter. of guessing, Some insurance men put it as high as thirty-five and forty per ceni.; others "think fiye per cent. is enough. It is impossible to kmow with any exact ness, because while we may have ave suspleions in case after case, 6 have no conclusive proof. Take, for instance, the circumstances of a great many country town. fires. All the retail stores are lined up .n the same block, all of frame construc- tion; all about an. equal risk from the insurance' viewpoint. One is a millinery skop, another a dry goods 'store, smother a bank, and so forth, Did it ever strike you as queer that a fire during hard times seldom or never starts in a bank? It is net. a matter of luck 'se mueh as the fact that a bank has nothing on. its shelves to sell to the insurance com- panies. | If fire were left to itself it would strike home with all the un- certainty. of lightning. But because it is pot left to itself ,it manages to visit far too many. stores and fac- tories." with large. stocks of goods just a little past their season and therefore a dead weight on the pro- prietor's hands. "A Toronto man lgst a certain kind of building the other day by fire apd put in a request to me for several thousand dollars insuranee money. I was mentally satisfied his case was crooked. Inquiries. brought 'the information' that the banks were pressing him hard, that kis business had run down badly, that he wis up against it for ready cash. And on top of all that away went the build- ing and stoek in smoke. Do you blame us for laying a big percentage of our losses to arson? "When a proprietor of a stock of unseasonable goods determines to turn his hopeless wares into a hun- dred cents on the dollar, he never hands the job to anyone but himself, The dishonest policyholder is his own firebug. He tells no one his plans, and does the deed at an hour when observation is unlikely. Un- less circumstantial and corroborative evidence can be secured the court cannot convict on a company's mere suspicion. "In all instances of suspected arson the onus of proof is placed up- on the companies. That were fair enough if the crown bore the ex- pense 'whtere the evidence warrants an arrest. But not only must in- «Burance companies: work up the case by their own solicitors, but in the event of a culprit being sent to prison the companies bear all the cost of prosecution. As a matter of fact, the state is far more concerned in eliminating arson than an indi- vidual company, for the people ac- tually pay the piper." Sir Richard's Honor. In British Columbia they are said i410 take their politics more seriously than do the Eastern Canadians, but frequently there is'a gleam of good- nataréd humor and badinage in the debates of the British Columbia House. ' Not long ago Sir Richard MeBride, the Premier of the province, went south and was the guest of a Cali- fornia university, which honored him with the degree of Doctor of Laws. He returned, took his seat in the House, and the news of his new de- gree soon became noised abroad in the corridors. It was not long until a Labor mem- ber of the Legislature arose _and gravely drew "the attehition of the M.P.P.'s to a report of the honor done the Premier in a foreign land. "I congratulate Sir Richard," he said, "for it cannot be gainsald that he well deserves the dégree. He has doctored. more laws than any other man in. this province!" And even Sir Richard smiled.-- Canadian Courier. Sir John's Adyice, The late Rankin McKee, the wide- ly-knowa actor, who died recently, was a Canadian, born at Sandwich, Ont., in 1844, the son pf Lieut.-Col. Rankin, a member of Parliamenf. While at Upper Canada College, To- ronto, he had a disagreement with his father over his association with + the dramatic society there, and ran away 'with an actor. He made his stage debyt in Rochester under an as- sumed name. Hig father found him and made him return to aecept a Gov- ernment clerkship, "About two' years later," Rankin has sald in reminiscences, 'the great Sir John A. Macdonald, who was then Premier of Canada, told me what he thought of the Government service. "You keep on and on, and in the end you are only an old haek,' he sald. 'I've heard that once you were an actor. Why don't you go back on the stage." Rankin was quick to follow" his advice, A He Remembered. Thirty-nine years. ® ago. James O'Brien, now license inspector for South Wéllington, Ont., rescued Geo. P. Armstrong from a watery grave in Birge's dam, on the River Speed. Mr, Armstrong, who is now a professor at Harvard University, dropped into the inspector's office at Guelph the other day and presenfed him with a gold watch as a token of his appre- ciation. One might just as well attempt to rearrange the colors of the rainbow [ms to undertake the reformation of mani- \. Continual. cheerfulness is a "fest sign of wisdom. OFFICERS ARE MODEST," But: Passengers Tell of Storm On North Pacific. Seafaring men never like to make much of any great deed which they perform, and, as. a result, have. often been branded as bashful, says The Victoria, B.C., Times. After nursing their ships through great storms. which the passengers believed would send them to their doom, captains and offieers are always made much of by the travelers, who tell stories of how they were kept out of death's iron grip by the great seamarshin of the men who commanded their ve: gel But when a newspaperman appioach- 8 a captain to obtain his account of the great trials he is liable to get something like this: "Well, there isn't much to it. Of course, it was the worst weather | ever "experienced Mm my 20 odd years' experience ai sea, But still yon know we are paid to. bring. our ships: safély into port, and we're gimply fulfilling our oblig- ations to our company and.the pubs le." Upon the. arrival of the Empress of Japan, Capt.-Hoperoft, from the Orient, it was not expected that the officers would make muck of thelr terrible outward voyage. In reply to a query the master of the white liner would only say; "Of course it was a bad one." a A passenger on the Japan on her outward voyage writes of trip and says that the waves. on the Pacl fic were running mountains high i have never geen anything like them," he writes. "Rough weather was en- countered at the start and it grew worse-and worse the further the ship got out into the ocean. After the first four days not more than a third of the passengers: came up to the saloon; some of the passengers, in fact, did not show themselves again until the vessel was almost in Japan- ese waters "The officers seemed to have no sleep, and those who were notgon deck went from cabin to cabin com- forting the many who were ill and making themselves friendly. And all this was done to keep us from very grave fears. We could not believe the that anything was seriously wrong while the officers were in such hu- mor. The captain and the chief offi~ cer seemed to take it in turns to be up and below all the time. No set of officers could have inspired gréat- er confidence, "The pitching of the steamship was simply terrific, At times the whole of the front part of the ship was under water, and as the hows"rose up the water poured off the sides in two broad cataracts. Then the stern would g0 under in the same way, but not quite so badly, for the poop was never submerged. Altogether, it was a very exciting voyage, and none of the pas- sengets wish for another such experi- ence Record Wolf "Clean-Up." So far as '"clean-ups" among the wolves of the northern woods go, Arthur Sitch, of Hymers, a "little place in Thunder Bay Distriet, holds the record fdr the past winter. He has killed twelve since the cold wea- ther set in, and received a bounty of $15 for each. PEI L Seven small carcasses arrived in Toronto not long ago through the parcel post delivery, addressed to the Department of Provincial Police, They were pups of the grey timber wolf variety, cold in death. On Good Friday Siteh was track- ing an old she wolf through the woods near his potato farm in the northern forests. She discovered the fact that he was on her trail and led him a merry chase, doubling and re- doubling in her tracks, and leaping from log to log in order to confuse bim, but finally led him within the neighborhood of a tree, beneaths which he found a hole that looked much like a lair, Tracks leading into. the burrow convinced him that some wolf had its dwelling. there, whether. it was the one he had been trailing or not. He reached im and' touched with his fingers something furry and warm. Upon bringing it out jt proved to be 2 puppy wolf. He puts his hand in again, and kept on until he had seven of the tiny cubs ly#ig on the ground besidq him, As they yelped at the capacity of their lungs when dragged out he made sure to respatch each one as he 'drew it forth to prevent their cries reaching. the ear of their nother, who happened to be away at the time and might make things diff- cult for an unarmed man'if she turn- ed up while he was depriving her of her young: There were five females in the litter. > Postal Traffice Grows, Thq annual report of the Postmas- ter-Ganeral shows that 633,470,000 letters were carried through the mails In 1912-13, as shown by the sale of stamps. The net revenue of the fis- cal year ending March, 1913, showed year previous, as compared with an increase of $550,973.79 for 1910, and $478,001.65 for 1903. Ontario leads the provinces in the postoffice statistics, with 262,333,000 letters for 1918, 36,485,000 post- cards, 5,728,000 registered letters, 12,715,000 free' letters, 6,215,000 newspapers, 59,180,000 eirculars, 65,473,000 packets of merchandise, and 9,229 closed parcels for abroad. Nobleman Roughing It. A romantic story has been told at Magrath, Alberta. In the village of Welling, four miles east of Magrath, live a couple styling themselves Lord and Lady. Mouston, who are said. to belong to the English nobility. Lord Mouston wdfks ds a farm laborer, and his wife teaches school in a way which 'has ®ndeared her to all who come in contact with her. Lord Mousfon says he lost his fortune through investments in Transvaal mining stocks; then came to Canada, where he hopes, some day, to make sufficient money on a farm to enable him to reclaim the family estate, now owned by a wealthy merchant of London. Lots of men walk miles to hear a political speech who wouldn't walk a 'block to hear a sermon. will the oldest I it is true the die' 'young, inhabitant please of- fer an 'explanation? 'rewarded 6, 1914. TRAFFIC IN DIAMONDS. bmn | How Llicit Business 1s Carried Op In South Africa. | Some good: instances of the seamy | side of the diamond traffic are told | by Douglas Blackburn and Caps. Cad- dell in their engrossing work "Secret Service in South Africa." A young | Englishman of good family arrived on the fields, and having about a couple of hundred pounds but no ex- perience, joined a Scot®an who was working a claim that seemed promis- § Ing. They did little for a month or { $0 beyond just paying expenses; but presently the average finds rose very | considerably, then dropped to below the previous worst. At, the end of | about four months the Englishman announced that he was sick of the | business and would retire, leaving it | to the generosity of his partner to re- | turn his partnership momey if luck | turned. The Englishman' celebrated' his departure by standing drinks with { suspicious liberality to a crowd at a canteen, Knowing---or, rather believing-- that the young man was so short of money that the raising of the home- ward fare had been a matter of diffi- culty, the partner began to think and ask a few questions. He noticed that a German Jew, who was suspected of being an illeit buyer, was on very friendly terms with the Englishman, and drew certain conclusions, on which he resolved to act. He joined the drinking party, encouraged his departing partner to linger oyer final glasses, and carried him home very drunk, He took the opportunity of making a domiciliary search, and was by finding over £4,000 worth of stones concealed in various parts of the baggage; besides conelu- sive evidence that the faithless part- ! ner had sent through the post te Cape Town parcels. whose contents could be well guessed. The young-.man left for Cape Town next day, bearing. the signs of a broken heart and head. That he carried little away with him was inferred from the fact that for a couple of years after leaving the diamond fields' he was working as a clerk in a store. A simple method of tranéférring stones to an accomplice was practiced by a famous I, -D. B. (illicit diamond buyer), who amassed a fortune with- out having to undergo the indignity of arrest and search. His sleeping- partner, but very active and alert treasurer and custodian of his illicitly | large uprooted | 8s they could, and replenishin | | thorn with over 200 small sprays of an increase of $1,678,221.04 over the | acquired stones, was a barmaid, who afterwards became his wife. The 'I. D. B. catled in at regular periods, and ordered such drinks as his natur- ally parsimonious disposition and the day's luck or ill-luck suggested: They ranged from champagne beer When a bottle of stout was called for, the barmaid understood the signal The I. D. B. would drink about half of it, engage in conversation with someone in the bar, and either go off hurriedly, after glancing at his watch or accept the offer of someone to take a drink. In either case, he did not finish the stout. This the-barmaid would put apparently among the dirty glagses awaiting washing, but actu ally in a place of safety, for she knew that diamonds had been dropped into it from the mouth of the I. D. B The largest parcel! of diamonds ever captured at one time would have been got through but for an accident. Just on the Free State border, the police patrol came up and began a systematic and microscopic search of a suspected wagon. They even cut the dissel-boom--or wagon-pole--in- to small pleces, and sounded or prod- ded every part of the. wagon Marge enough to conceal a stone, but in vain, On the way, one of the detee- tives remembered that he had left a knife or gimlet on the wagon, and returned for it. He found the men ruefully repairing the damage as well the water in the water-kid, which had been emptied out in the search. The detective asked for a drink, and, in helping himself, was struck with something odd about the large bung which closed the kid. He examined eloser and found a packet nailed to the bung--in fact, it was the bung-- one solid mass of pitch containing four pounds' weight .of extra fine stones. to Wonderful Lace Veil. Devonshire (Eng.) lace workers have been engaged for three years, and will not finish for another nine | njoni hs, on a beautiful court voi! with | flouncings and trimmings made on a fabric of the finest Brussels net. The edging is about thirty yards of love- ly Honiton lace, and the centre part contains 240 largé sprays of haw- the same flower. Scattered over the whole are hundreds of butterflies, The wearer of this elaborate adorn- ment will be a lady (now in India), and, the occasion will be one of the functions of the British Court of 1015. Wisdom From Wives. A man who had been married three times used to say, even in the pres- ence of his third wife, "I married the world, the flesh and my present wife." And he gave his experience, says Rey, E. J. Hardy in "Still Happy Though Married," as follows: "My first wife cured me of romance, my second taught me humility, and my third made me a philosopher." Salt- For Malaria, Seeking a ebeap and non-poisonous substitute for kerosene ofl in tropical sanitation, Dr. J. W. Scott Maifie, of the West African Médical Staff, has | experimented with common salt as a means of suppressing malaria and yellow fever. In solutions of sufficient strength, it has proven rdmarkably effective in destroying larvae of the yellow fever mosquito. a Played Part 1,800 Times. Mr. Edward Compton, the well- known Fnglish actor, recently gave his 1,500th impersonation of David Garrjek. He has made a fortune ou of thé part, and holds the record o having played the title-role more times than any actor, past or present. A. man's faith in his judgment gets a rebuke every time he steps up a step that isn't there. A woman may have faith-in her | thirty-five were private banks, one WORLD'S GREAREST BANK. [ Lloyd's Now Neading Institution of -Its Kind, N With the recent acquisition of the Wilts & Dorset Banking, Company, Lloyd's Bank' of London becomes probably the greatest financial cor- poration of its-kind, as its deposit and current account now aggregates more than 500 million dollars, says the Wall Street Journal. i Lloyd's Bank has a history extend- ing over a lomg period of years, as the private bank out of which it was formed was established in 1765, and the present banking corporation. was formed in 1865. Including its latest acquisition, the bamk has absorbed no less than forty-eight other bank- ng houses since 1865, and of these of these dating back to 1677. The bank is represented in forty-five out of the fifty-two counties in England and Wales, and a subsidiary com- pany was formed in 1911 to open a branch: in Paris, an old French pri- vate banking house being taken over. It is unusual for an English joint stock bank toiorganize a subsidiary for doing business in a foreign coun- try, but this plan had to 1+ adopted. Under the French law, to conduct a banking busimess in. France would have rendered the entire capital of the bank; ne matter were located, subject to taxation. In all Lloyd's Bank now has 880 separate offices. While an incorporated bank, the traditions of the private banking days yet remain, and practically all officials of the bank and its branch managers were educated in private banking houses, and preference is always given to men so educated in taking on new employes. An Odd Little Island. The Isle ofe Man presents many curious features, none of which is more curious than its laws. For in- stance, the 'Legislature is called the House of Keys, and. was, in other times, a judicial body charg with the duty of interpreting the laws. Any person so bold as to slander this House of Keys was liable not only to a fine in the amount of $50, but to the loss of both his ears, Two deemsters were once appoint- 'ed to execute the laws which before the year 1417 were uncodified, and these were kbown as breast laws, for the reason that they were imparted to the deemsters in secret, to be kept by them within the secrecy of their own breasts as long as they chose, or during their whole service, though they were authorized to impart and explain to the populace. as much of these special laws as should at any thie seem wise and expedient, Certain of the Manx laws, as set down after the codification, are ex- tremely quaint. Here are 'a couple of extracts from the Manx legal rulings: "If a man steal'a horse or an ox it hide them; but if he steal a capon or & pig he shall be hanged." "In case of theft, if it amount to the value of six pence halfpenny it shall be felony, and death to the of- fender; and under that value to be whipped or set upon a wooden horse which shall be provided for such of- fenders." Floating Churches. A novel feature of the vessels building at Cammell Laird's ship- yards at Birkenhead for the Nation- al Steam Navigation Co. of Greece is the little church which has been fitted on board each vessel. These floating churches have stained-glass domes, tiny altars, and walls adorned with ikons. Standing on the shelter deck and fitted up tered by doors on either side. In addition to the dome, brass-framed rectangular side windows are fitted. On the occasion of general service the majority of those attending will, on account of the smallness of the church, have to Le accommodated amidships in front of it, and in order that altar and priest may be in full view of those present sliding doors have been arranged in the wall of the church directly opposite the altar. Landiady Gets Better of Joker, Sir Robert Ball, who was a keen humorist, was never loath to recount a joke at his own expense. The great astronomer was dining with come friends at Straford, and when the bill was presented he said to the landlady: "Madam, I am going to give you a lesson in astronomy. Iu 25,000,000 years all things must re- turn to their original condition. We shall all be here again eating a din- ner precisely identical. Will you give us credit until we come back?" "Well," replied the landlady, "you were here 25,000,000 years ago, and you left without paying the bill then. Settle that account and I will trust you for what you have had to-day." Ran Into a Hyena. An unusual accident befell two young officers in Secunderabad re- cently. They weré cycling one night from the club to Trimulgherry. One of them was riding a motor bleycle and towing the other who was on an ordinary bicycle. Suddenly a large hyena rushed across the road in front of them; the motor cycle just missed it but the other one caught it fairly. The hyena fled howling horribly, but the' rider of the ordin- ary bicycle was also thrown right over the handle bars and sustained some rather nasty injuries in con- sequence of which he was in hospital 'for some days. When the wind propels a straw hat it is chaser but the remarks of the owner are sothing that even sounds like that. : To Oswego, - New York Beginning June 20th, Dixxipd leaves Swift's wharf 3 pon, on Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays, reaching Oswego m., connecting with hound New York Central and D. I. & WW. trains. For. irformation inquire from Husband, but she seldom believes more than half he says. Agent, C. Kirkpatrick, 42 Clarence St Telephone 8 is no felony, for the offender cannet | internally in oak, the church is en- { STEAMER | RAILWAY A haga' | ND TRUNK The Lake and: Rail - Canada Sérvice has been inaugurated be- tween Eastern and Western Canada, trains leaving Toronto. via Grand Trunk, Mondays. Wednesdays and Saturdays, 11.15 a.m., to connect at Sarnia with the high-class steamers of the Northern:-Navigation Co., for Fort Willlam, theuce Grand Trunk Pacific to poluts in Western Canada: We, can wake all arrangements to oring your family and friends from he "Old. Country." For lull particulars apply to J. P. HANLEY, Railroad and Steamship Agent, Cor. Johnson and Outario Sts, man, So, CANADIAN LCE "THE CANADIAN," --Between--- Montreal-Torvonto-Detroit « Chicago Via Canadian Pacific and Michi- gan Central Ralironds via Michigan Central Glgantie Steel Tales between Windsor and Detroit Leaving Montreal $45 a.m.; Toronto 6.10 Ww, arriving {m. 'and Chicago 7.4 y. Equally good services returning. | Through Electric Lighted Equlp- ment >» TORONTO - WINNIPEG - VANCOUVER | Torontos.Vancouver EXpress No, 3 5.65 'an a.m, Teaves Toronto 5.65 p.m. daily, Toronto pto 1 og p esday, fing Rall or Oe. CONWAY, OP, Ticket Oflice, cor. Pringess und Wellington Ste. Phone 1197, > A A PN AA ANNES CANADA STEAMSHIP LINES, LIMITED MONTREAL-QULE SAGUENAY S81 o and K 1 leave daily ecti Prescott with riving Mentreal TORONTO EXPRESS SERVICE Si $s leave Jingston..at 8 pr lay fur Torent King leaves 1 oF Sunday, ar hariotte, D ISLANDS--BAY OF QUINTE wspian and North King leave at 10.15 wn. dail except Monday or 1000 Isle ne 5 pom. for Char- 1000 loty HAMILTON =--=TORONTO-QUEREC Weekly ry Alexandrin awa and City: of water outings Folders and information frond P. HANLEY, y Ticket Agent, Phone 99, Rideau Lakes Navigation Co. For Ottawa. »» Every Monday, Wednes- day, Thursday and Satarday at 6 a.m, Passengers going through to Ot. tawa may occupy stateroom the eves ning previous. No extra charge. For Clayton every Tuesday; Wed- nesday, Friday and Saturday at 6 p, nm. Jones Falls and return, 500, every Wednesday at 6 am. OFFICE, FOOT OF JOHN- SON ST. PHONE 391. Ocean Steamsliip Agency. C. 8. Kirk 82 Clarence * reet. 'Thone 508 - msn CANADIAN SERVICE. from Bouthampton From Montreal July 9 ANDARIA July 25 Fuly 16 ASCANIA Aug. 1 July ALAUNEA Aug. 8 Steamers call Plymouth eastbound. Rates--Cabin (11) $46.25. 3rd-class, British eastbound, $30.26 up, West sound $30 up Apply Local Tieket A yor | THR ROBERT -REFORD CO, LIM ED, Gen. ersi Agents, 50 King St. East, Toronte Via LIVERPOOL To GREAT BRITAIN and CONTINENT Palatia] Steamers, Excellent "CANADA" "LAURENTIC" - July ' : sun TRITON, July 2 AND EVERY SATURDAY Fi ING en ant = Only four short days ai sea, iis Local Agents J.P. Hanley, <4. T. R. J 8 Kirkpateick, € I Re i iid. oh Sy vid