MAY HAVE TOPENLIST, SAYS HON. ARTHUR MEIGHEN, Address At Oyillia~~New Call For | Troops, He Says, Is Challenge to | Native Born. | Orillia, June 23.--In the course of | an impressive address before the | Orillia Canadian Club, Hon. Arthur | Meighen, Solicitor-General, said: { "Up to the present the problem | has been for the Government to create machinery to keep pace with | the offers for service; but the ma- | chinery has been provided, and now | it Is a question of the response being | The Late Mrs. Ellen Burns, Word was received on Wednes- | day morning that Mrs. Ellen Burns, formerly a resident of Russell street, had died in Rochester, N. Y., on Tuesday after a brief illness. It! was only two weeks age that the deceased -lady was in the city and was apparently in good health.. She was about sixty years of age. Re- | cently the late Mrs. Burng has been | | ing, t bride: June 22.--Opn Wednesday, even- June 16th, a pretty home wed- ding was held at the home of the #- father, William Irvine, when his eldest daughter, Miss Ethel Jean, was. united in marriage to William H. James, Bank of Montreal, King, by Rev. R. J. Craig, of the Presby- terian Church, Demordstville, The bride, who was given away by her father, wore white silk gown with silk lace over dress caught with French knots and carried white roses. commenced Titanic disaster. i -- PRESENTED IN THE BRIEFEST POSSIBLE FORM. The Whig's Dally Condensation Of The News Of the World From Tele graph Service and Newspaper Ex changes. Edward Kelly, Toronto, was arrest- led charged with keeping a betting house. Lawsuits for $18,000,000 were in connection with the In Franee the total amount of cre- dits voted since the beginning of the LIVE STOCK MARKETS, The Prices Pald at the Variors Centres. Toronto, June 21.--The eattle market to-day opened strong and trade active for choice stall-fed and best butcher steers and heifers prices averaging from 10e to 15c¢c higher, the best loads' going strong at $8.25 to $8.50. Several small odd lots of four or five steers sold at $8.65 to $8.75. The general of fair to good | butcher steers steady to firm with last week. a Cows were weaker. <The bulk of the cows were grass-fed and general- Iy off fa quality, compared with for mer deliveries, averaging about a quarter. lower, Calvés steady to a shade easier. SLT eg ALADA TEA S advertising. It is is a notable example of a product that has been distributed, mar- keted, and standardized, in the United States and Canada, by the use of newspaper "account" because it has won its way through also an interesting She entered the parlor to the strains' of Mendelssohn's Wed- ding March rendered by her sister, Miss Mabel. The young couple were unattended,and only intimate friends were present, Following the ¢ere. Late M. W. Bartels Inverary | mony 'a wedding dinner was served, The death of Murray W. Bartels after which Mr. and Mrs. James mo. on which people with British blood | occurred at his late residence. In| tored to Napanee and' took the fast in their. veins have been frightened |verary, on. Wednesday morning af- | train for Buffalo and cities west. The by words, but I believe it may come [ter a lingering illness. For many | bride wore a travelling suit of sand to this--that every physically fit |years the deceased had been a resi. | olor, with Panama bat. Mr. and Canadian will have to join in the dent of Napanee, where he was born | Mrs. James will reside in King.' fight for the existence of the British | sixty-two years ago.| In religion the| Mr. and Mrs. James Knox were in Empire and the codtinuance of civil- [late Mr. Bartels was a Methodist. | Kingston attending the funeral of ization." {A son of the deceased has been re-| their sister-in-law, Mrs. Knox. The Minister did not despair of |siding at Providence, R.L, was with| A patriotic concert was given in universal peace. He believed it |his father during the last few days.| Naylor's Opera House on Friday would be brought about by the de- | On Friday afternoon the funeral will | evening by the Ladies' Patriotic velopment of a deeper interest in |be held. | League, when loca) talent rendered foreign politics, and of more respect | sme | several vocal selections, assisted by for the rights of the little nations. SQUEAK WHEN CHASED, {Miss Anna Ponton, Belleville, who sang sweetly, Col. Ponton gave a STEAMER SACRIFIOHD CARGO. splendid address, and also put on canvas several pictures of the war zone, Col. Ponton and Miss Anna Pon. ton spent the week-end with Miss Rathbun 'and H. M. Rathbun. Miss. Ponton favored the Church of the Redeemer on Sunday with solos, The induction service of Rev. A. H. Acton, Harrowsmith, will. take place on Wednesday, 29th inst, in the Church of the Redeemer, Miss Nellie McLaughlin and Miss Sener, Toronto, are staying a few weeks in town. Miss Nesbit return- ed to her home in Kingston to spend the summer vacation. Her sister, Miss Clara, has been her guest. | George Gardner returned homs from | college at Ann Arbor , Michigan. Mrs. E. W. Rathbun has offered her home on Main street for the invalid soldiers. Mrs. Rathbun has moved her residence to Green Bank, Dun- das street. The flag has been flying at half- mast on the C. M. B. A. Hall, as word was received Saturday that John Toppings had passed away in tile House of Providence, Kingston. Eat greens! The late Mr. Toppings resided on God sent us here to make mistakes, | 5 | Mill street, but I 5 Kingston a To strive, to fail, to rebegin; [All the winter we've been living on | year ago for treatment. He is sur. To taste the bitter fruit of Sin | the meats and fat of land, vived by one daughter, Miss Aggie, And find what bitter fruit it mak- | warye been overheating systems, do- | and two sons, Jeron and William, ing what all science banned, Deseronto, also three brothers, Mi. We have got our corporations all chael and George, Deseronto, 'and conflummozed, out of fix; James, Montreal, The remains were So revengeful but wise nature now | taken from Kingston to Westport is playing us some tricks; for interment. What she means, The steamer Brockville is under- Eat Greens! going slight repairs at the ways at the shipyard, The evening Toronto train has again been replaced by the Cana- dian Northern, making it very con- venient for passengers going west equal to the demand. The call has [staying with her son in Rochester. | gone out for 35,000 more men.. It | The remains will be brought here in| is a challenge to the native-born, In |a day or 80 and buried in St. Mary's | a month we shall know what the re- | Cemetery. | sponse has been and how Canada has | met the test. Iam not an alarmist, | and I do not know of any occasion | war exceeds $3,123,000,000, The dynamite outrages of Mon- day have greatly stimulated recruit- ing at Windsor Armouries. Herman Kropf, Stittsville, Mich., choked to death while eating his din- ner in a Sarnia. boarding house. The United States has detained seven British reserv'sts who "were leaving for the front. A coneiliation board is to deal with the dispute between the C. N. R. and its engineers and firemen. The Minister of Finance has re- ceived Sir John Eaton's $100,000 cheque for equipment of a machine gun section. A charge of Sunday selling at the King George Hotel, Trenton, was investigated by the Provincial Lis cense Board. Peter Krug, a prominent Chesley manufacturer for a generation, and father of two of its ex-mayors, is dead, in his seventy-ninth year. The 57th Soo Rifles obtained the enlistment of 225 recruits by means of a march-out and patriotic speech- es. J. J. Bohan, proprietor of the Hastings House, Belleville, died on Monday night. He was a sufferer from heart failure, Anna Hoffman, thirty-seven, daughter of Mrs. Kate Brunotte, Urbans, Ohio, is under arrest in Eng- land as a German spy. Capt. Pick of the 30th Regiment, who commanded the volunteers who left Guelph for the front last August, has been killed in action in France. The voluntary. relinguishment of their salaries by members of the British House of Commons for the period of the war is suggested. At Calgary, Alta, Judge Carpen- ter will conduct an investigation into the oil companies in July. Over one hundred are under suspicion. Thomas Betts, well known Cana- dian lacrosse player, died from gyer- strain of the heart after running in the Canadian sports at Neurngren, near Hythe, England. The wounded Capadians would like to be grouped together. At present they are seatfered in num- erous hospitals, so that it is difficult for friends to reach them. Sergeant Michael O'Leary, of the Irish Guards, went to Buckingham Palace and received the personal congratulations of King George, who pinned the . Vietoria Cross on the soldier's breast. At London, George Joseph Smith was placed on trial for his life. He is charged with the murder of three women, with all of whom he went an deast, through the ma ceremony, and Miss Margaret Sexsmith, Toronto, [all of whom: found . dead 1m is the guest of Mrs. Edward Cau. [bath tubs. o lin, ------t------ For One Man's "Glory". Rochester Post-Express. Nobody knows and probably no- body will ever know how many of the Kaiser's subjects marched away in the prime of life "are batteréd re- mnants of humanity, snow, mangled, crippled, blinded, eous = wrecks. The weeks shall grow into months and merge into the endless proces« sion of years, but' we shall never know how many splendid, stalwart fellows, kindly fathers, and loving sons, were slaughtéred that the Kai- ser might figure in history as a con- queror, or how they died or in what populous trench they sleep, waiting the judgment day. Students Earn $8,000 On Side. Students at the Pennsylvania State College have earned more than $8,000 through outside activities during the last year, according to the report of Thomas C. nell, secretary of the student employment bureau. 'The report shows that the employ- ment bureau assisted students to earn $3,500 in the village during the college year. worked on farms, cleaned houses, did typewriting and clerical and attended . Catering and waiting on table netted about $1,000 more. . A GOOD THING When It Comes Atong Don't Let It way From You. Spring lambs $1 to $1.50 lower than last week. Sheep, light, about steady. Hogs are evidently weaker, though there was not a heavy offering. Pack- ers are quoting about 50¢ lower than last week at $9.10 off cars. -- Montreal Cattle, Montreal, June 21.---Trade at the West End market to-day was good, with rather lower prices for com- mon to medium cattle and hogs, but prime stall-fed beeves were higher. ipts were: Cattle, 650; calves, 600; sheep and lambs, 800; hogs, 1,- newspaper advertising employed section by section; and its experience gives point to the claim as to the economies entailed in the use of newspaper space, P. C. Larkin, President of the Salada Tea Company, of Toronth, says this: "I have tried demonstrating, street-car advertising, street posters, sampling from door to' door, electrie outside signs, ete., but I do not believe that anything has given me the results, for the money expended, as has newspaper advertising. "I do not think that I ean give you any better proof of my belief in newspaper ad- vertising than to tell you that at present we are spending over seventy-five thousand dol- lars per year in advertising, and yet this is less than three-quarters of a cent per pound on our output, for last year we sold over 8,000,000 pounds of Salada., In 1892 we sold only 12,658. "Results are obtained by quality first, and then the use of the daily newspaper columns." . Prime beeves, 8 1.4c to 8 3-4¢, a few dt 9¢; medium, 6 1-4¢ to Ne; common, Gc to 6 1.4¢; calves, be to 8 1-2¢; sheep, 6c to 7 1.2¢; lambs, $4.60 to $6.50 each; hogs, 9 1-2¢ to 9 - "We Have Captured Everything We 5-8c. Have Gone After." Toronto, June 23.--~Trumpeter S. { C. Bradley, of the Strathcona Horse, 23. --The | C. Squadron, who was wounded on Norwegian mal] steamer Venus ar- | June 5th, writes from a Boulogne rived here to-day minus the larger | hospital that there has been a gen- part of her cargo, which was thrown | eral advance all along the battle overboard, the captain asserted, un- | front He says: "So far we have der a threat of a German submarine | captured everything we have gone commander that otherwise the Venus | after. You should see the Germans would be sunk. { Whooping when we get them on the The captain says that the Venus | move, As soon as we get among was hailed by the submarine and |them they commence to squeak." given the alternative of jettisoning| Bradley was wounded by a piece all foodstuffs on board or being sent [Of shrapnel as he was returning to to the bottom, and that in order to |the trenches with water. save his boat several hundred casks - of butter and many cases of salmon | Nature's Diet. and other tinned fish were consigned (Charisse D Clarke in the Bath Inde- to the sea, The remainder of the | ve it . . freight on the Venus, consisting of | There, is siness i the sunshine; wood, was permitted to remain on fa i Jaere i madness in the rain. bord, nd oug fie winds are soothing This 1s the Swit Yimle that 4 Ser | Ani the ey CHE Rl man submarine boat is reported to a : " goes wrong in spring of year have pormisted a vessel to escape un Causing awful indigestion and the er such terms, heart goes acting queer; Mistakes. ¢ It all means, Norwegian Skipper First to Make | Such Bargain. Newcastle, Eng., June Buffalo Cattle, East Buffale, N.Y., June 21,--Cat- tie--Receipts, 3,600 head; fairly ae. tive;' prime steers, $9 to $9.50; shipping, $8.50 to $8.90; butchers, $7.26 to $8.75; heifers, $6.50 to $8.26; cows, $3.50 to $7; bulls, $5 to $7. Veals: -- Receipts, 1,900; active, $4.50 to $10, Hogs---Receipts, 18,000; active; heavy, $7.80 to $8.10; mixed, $8.15; yorkers, $8.10 to $8.15; pigs, $7.90 to $8; roughs, $6.50 to $6.65; pigs, $5 to $5.75. Sheep and lambs--Receipts, 3,000 head; active; lambs, $7 to $10; year- lings, $5 to $8; wethers, $6.25 to $6.50; ewes, $3 to $6.60; sheep, mixed, $5.75 to $6. Chicago Oattle. Chicago, June 21. -- Cattle--Re- ceipts, 16,000; market firm. Na- tive steers, $6.86 to $9.60; western steers, $7 to. $8.25; cows and heif- ers, $3.25 to $9; calves, $7 to $9.75. Hogs--Receipts, 37,000; market slow. Light, $7.60 to $9.90; mix- ed, $7.45 to $7.90; heavy, $7.15 to $7.80; rough, $7.15 to $7.80; pigs, $6.25 to $7.60; bulk of sales, $7.60 to $7.80, Sheep--Receipts, 10,000; market firm. Native, $5.50 to $6.40; lambs, native,$6.75 to $9.25; springs, $6.25 to $9.85. tetas DATES OF FALL FAIRS, 1913 Issued by the Agricultural Societ- ies Branch of the Ontario Depart- ment of Agriculture, Toronto, J. Loc- kie Wilson, Superintendent. w Almonte Arden .., Arnprior Bancroft .. Belleville . Bowmanville .. Brockville .... Centerville .... Cobden .... +Cobourg .. .. Corawall .. Delta «+. .. .. Demorestville .. Frankville . . Harrowsmith . . Inverary «. .. Kingston .. . Lansdowne .. .. .. Lombardy .. .. .. ....Sept. 11 London (Western Fair) Sept. 10-18 Lyndhurst .. .. .. ..Sept. 14-15 Maberly ...... .. <..Sept. 14-15 Madoe .. sen ve 22000 6-7 Marmora .. .. .. .. .Sept. 23-24 Merriekville.. .. .. ..Sept.16-17 Morrisburg .. oo AUG 3-5 Napnee .... . .Sept. 14-16 Salada Tea is a steady adver- tiser in the Daily Whig. There is a lesson here for every business man to take to heart. THOMAS COPLEY Telephone 987, Drop a card to 13 Pine street when wanting siything done in the car - tery line. imates given on all k nds f repairs and new wo also hard. wood floors of all kinds. All orders will receive prompt attention. = Shop Queen Street. BISURAT MAGH Eis For sour acid stomachs, gas and fer- mentation of food, A teaspoonful in a fourth of a glass of hot water usually ives INSTA RELIEF, Sold by all Sruseists in either powder or tablet form at 75 cents per bottle. KINGSTON CEMENT PRODUCTS Jan supply Cement Blocks, Silla, ¢ p|lintles, Bricks, lower Vases, Te: + g.10| Caps, P'er. Blocks, etc. o also Sept Oe 1 manufacture Cement Grave Vaults. "Sept, 6.7| Hetimates given for all kinds of Co : ment Work, Kingston Cement Products. H. F. NORMAN, MANAGER, Office, 177 Wellington Street. Phones: Office, 730; Factory, 1204. A Pretty Island in LOUGHBORO LAKE Can be bought at a bargain. It it. well wooded and nicely situ- ated. Above 3% acres, An ideal site for a summer home, and right in the centre of the best black bass fishing grounds, Apply W. H. GODWIN & SON Real Estate and Insurance, Plone 424 - . 89 Broc' St, hv es. To miss the path, to go astray, To wander blindly in the night, But searching, praying for the light, Until at last we find the way. And looking back along the past We know we needed all the strain Of fear and doubt and strife and ] pain To make us value peace at last. t Who fails finds sweet ; Who stumbles once walks with care And knows the place to cry ware' To other unaccustomed feet. 'Tisn't needful to call doctors or to fill your belt with drugs, Just quit piling in wrong fuel that your locomotive plugs, Just accept the earth's good off'- ringfs; eat vegetables, fruit, And devour more of esculents, thus getting down to roots; Which means Eat greens! later triumphs then a we "be- WHAT THE LAYMEN DID, At the Recent Bay of Quinte Meth. odist Conference. The laymen of the Bay of Quinte Methodist Conference held sessions during the sitting of Conference at Oshawa, and discussed some practi- cal church problems, It. would have pleased the ministers to hear the splendid discussions and see the fine spirit which characterized the delib- erations. The financial interests of =the « | church were considered, and. many { men gave their experiences. = The i| outcome of the debate was the adop- tion of this resolution: "Wa recom. mend that. al} congregations throughout this Conference be ear- nestly requested to adopt the duplex or other enveiope system where not already in use, and to take Action to organize for the successful carrying out of a systematic plan of work for financing each church, The en- velope system is the best- yet tried, and should be adopted by the churches." Attendance at the mid-week pray- er service in the churches was con sidered at length, and there seemed to be an earnest desire to accom. plish improvement. The : recom- mendations of the laymen were that Conference give earnest attention to the subject, that a record of attend- ance of church officials be given at | every quarterly meeting, that three laymen in each church be a commit- tee to help the pastor in férming plans and carrying out wrrangements wav BEpt. ¥1 . «Sept. 28-29 + «.8Bept. 29-30 ewe Sept. 9-11 +. Sept. 20-22 v vinn e000 9 ..Sept. 30 Oct. 1 «+ +. Sept. 16-17 «vies dBept. 8 . +.Sept. 28.30 . «Sept. 16-17 pv ------ Captain J, A, Dansereau, wounded at the front and now in Canada, has been' made a lieutenant-colonel and given command of a mew Frenoch- Canadian regiment. Captain Loury, Major Naisunk, Major Kirkcaldy, Major Ross and, Major McKinery will be given commands. in the west, All are returned wounded soldiers. The Grey County Couneil appoint ed Fred Rutherford as County Clerk to succeed the late John Rutherford, his father, who was clerk for. over A quarter of a century. Through strife the slumbering soul escapes-- We learn on error's troubled route The truths we could not prize with- out The sorrow of our sad mistakes, A MESSAGE TO - THIN, SORAWNY FOLKS An Easy Way to Gain 10 to 30 1bs. of Solid, Healthy, Permanent Flesh Thin, nervous, undeveloped men and wolhen everywhere are heard to say, "J can't understand why I do not get fat | eat Dlenty ot Food Jourisning feed. The reason this: You ¢ fat, no matter how much you un« less 8s assimilate Newboro . . - + Sept. ja the AE a rans your food Ona "opt. 13:15 labia ymats, hors Out "Ahroneh AWR .. .. .: «. ..Bept, - Ottawa (Central Canada) Sept. 10-18 nat a needed In a Means of gently Pari vi aaies ae + Bop, 31533 | UEEINE tines. to absorb the stomach and Intestin Perth .. .. .. .. Aug. 31 Sept 2 oils and fats'and hang them gar to the Patan pers ola ioB Hn rr Tada tissues and Ris + «Bet. ;31- ule thestt up. The thin. person's body Prescott .. + .B6pt. 14-16 (5 jike a dry sponge-- sager and hun- Renfrew .. ..Bept. 223-24 for fatty materials of which SH Shannonville. .. .. .. ..Sept. 18 ng deprived by the fallure of the oe : entary canal to take them from Spencerville .. .. .. .Bept. 28:29 the food. The beat way to overcome Stelle «. Jiovy ive. Sept. 28 sia einful waste S24 Segh buildin los PHAE ote as ox Bunt. 31-33 is ts An bo Oe recently discover- worth .. .. .. .. aSepth ed regene f that is recoms Toronte (Can. National Aug 28. ed 80 y by physicians here Sept. 13 and adroad. 4 a Wide Sargol tab. Vankleok Hill." "Bent. 31-23 QPEIy our 'shacks 1 out and rol vs on «oBept. 214 Wolte Island i. .. «Sept. 21.22 The death oteurréed on Monday at the residence of her daughter, Mrs. Abraham Moore, 22 Tunnel avenue, Brockville, of Mrs. James Herron, aged eighty-nine years. {Have you the right attire for the sports of summer ~--the proper shoes for tennis or golf? {Do you know just what to wear ta give you the most ease and comfort? {Are you familiar with the modes .e een eo Fresh Fruit & Vegetables Fresh, Cured, and Cooked Meats. Campers' Supplies. Order Early, at C. H. Pickering's 490 PRINCESS ST. PHONE $530 or Hot Days There's refreshing coolness and an unusual degree. of summer style in our varied showing of FINE SHOES. Coolness counts just as much in footwear as in frocks. Bee the new omnes in our windows to-day -- fine fitting shoes that you will enjoy every minute and that will help you to be delicious- ly cool and wend stylish these hot qQ ur cheeks rm, ithy flesh are depositéd ov- er your body, covering each bony angle a projecting point. Your druggist a, nd will refd 8 Your -- Pulverizing The Soil. = I ar Rot sub oa the growing ops, orough "welgh! 39 quarterly meeting (at every Sunday puivorization of the soll orion of Jn ° , 4 service would be still better---£d.), fe rentest importance, and without that an appeal be made to all offi- clals and members je Sille Sargol has produced % ts In overe op a and gener: should not be taken unless 0 in ten pounds or troubles, | io re, for it SS won Ftul flesh -builder. Love 18 a malady of the mind swells the head but makes $10 00k like 30 cents. Parker's Specials Just Arrived, Spring Lamb, Finest Beet, Pork I Cottage Hams .....:................20c Ib, (sieed 25c) BEPC rs SAR PRR SEE rah PRR ga 5 ow York Fruit § Canadian Berries arriving daily. Large Pineapples tessseiiaian : Oranges von Thre ataaeek 158 each: L200 300, yn 4) 1 RarrdtrrinssacrnvanvasaaPal All kinds of Vegetables Goods delivered to at "the city. Pho. 1408, # delisered vay ale St Sess rr iB ans ns vant anun