PAGE TWELVE v TORTURED BY RHEUMATISH Sunday School Supt. Tells How "Fruit-a-tives" Relieved Tagosta, Cxt,, Oet. 154, 1913. oy § ait a well known, suffered fic Ph umalism, in my- hands. is city for more / 1 spent a lot of money without any good results, 1 have taken "Fruit-a-tives" for 18 months now and am pleased to tell you that 7am well. All the enlargement has not left hands, aud perhaps never will, but soreness is all gone and 1 can do any kind of work. 1 have gained 35 pounds in eighteen months." R. A. WAUGH. 0c. a box, 6 for $2 50, trial size 25e. Atall dealers or direct from Fruit-a-tiveg Limited, Ottawa. my the A ---------------- For One Week Only Cut prices on Auto Tires --all sizes, BIBBY GARAGE, Dodge Bros.' Agents. Tel. 201 and 917. ee etm---- THOMAS COPLEY Telephone 987. Drop & ecard to 18 Pine street when wanting anything done in the carpen- tery line. Estimates given on all kinde of repairs and new work; also hard- w. floors of all kinds. All orders ® prompt attention. Shop Street. will recely Queen We have the very best in Cooked Baw, J Aciliod Tongue, Jellied Hocks, am and Veal, Bologna and Head Cheese, P.8.--All our meats are kept ice cold in our modern refrigerator coun- ter away from flies and dust, No massing -- no handling. Orders sent to any part of city, J. R. B. GAGE, Phone B4\ Have You Tried GYPSUM WALL PLASTER? It Saves Time een ano espe ially > THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. TUESDAY, JULY 27, 1915 . SOME UNUSUAL VIEWS | OF SHORNCLIFFE. fddy Wand" Institute and Ross Barracks , Shomcliffe ~ Camp. ~ WARSAW MAY ESCAPE CAPTURE BY THE GERMAN HOR- | DES BEFORE IT | I . | If Warsaw Does Fall, However, the! Armies Of the Czar Will Remain | Intaet, | London, July 26.--The Russians! are now holding in check all the Austro-German drives against War-| saw. The initial impetus with whieh | thé Teutons began their four con-| verging movements has been broken, | and the situation is distinctly en-| couraging for the Slavs. The Austro-Germans haye approach- ed within range of the defences on! eastern barriers are still free. This | means that the garrisoning force can retire at any time from the city and join the main Russian field armies. | Marshal von Mackensen is still un- able to advance and further Rus- | sian reinforcements have been dis- patched to hold the Germans south | of the Cholm-Lublin-Ivangorod rail- | way. Northwest of Warsaw, the Slav defenses along the Narew River are still as impregnable as they have been since the very beginning of the War, To the west of Warsaw the Ger- mans are being forced to swing southward for an indirect approach on the capital. The great flanking| fortress of Novo Georgiewsk is ac- complishing the purpose for which it was intended, and is preventing a4 movement upon Warsaw by direct] rqute out of the West. The Russians everywhere are mak- ink a splendid defensive fight, and | while it cannot be predicted that! Warsaw is out of danger, the pos-| sibility that the Germans will fail to take the city is in reasing. Thera is now scarcely any chance that if Warsaw falls the Russian field arm- les will be surrounded and over- whelmed. Their freedom of move- ment is still unhampered. THE FAINT-HEARTED FLEE When Danger Threatens-- Weakling's Leave Canada. Buffalo, N. Y., July 27.--Many Canadian families, according to in- formation received at the local cus- toms office, are moving to Buffalo and other American cities along the border. Ifis dafd this is done.so sons and fathers, who have not yet enlisted, will be removed from the warlike atmosphere, reducing the temptation or inclination to join the! King's army. In some cases, it is asserted, some member of the family moving is at the front and the step is taken so no others will be called upon, ' A worried woman, accompanied by a little girl, appeared at the office of the customs collector in the Federal building this morning. She wanted somé papers countersigned, so she will be able to move her household effects from Toronto to Buffalo with- out any trouble. Deputy Collector Bradish accommodated her. She asked that her name be left | out of the paper, but declared that many mothers in Canada fear the time when conseription is resorted to. She also sald there is strong resentment in parts of Canada, be- cause the Canadian and other Colon- fal troops have been given what she termed the "mean work to do. | "It was unfair," the woman told al reporter, 'that the Canadian sol-| diers should have been placed in the first line of trenches at several points on the front where death was almost certain to follow. The Canadians are among the best soldiers fighting for the Allies of Great Britain, ana they have not been treated as if they were valuable. But 'I suppose it must be so." * This woman told of a small village | where nearly all the men left for the war. Mr. Bradish, who has just returned from a trip to Canada, said a village near the place he stopped sent 250 men to the front, most of them under twenty-five years of age. According to the latest reports only two were alive. THe wonteh to tell whether any her 'were en- listed: She intended to move from Canada, she said, to protect her sons. j that she been un- 4] eyes were thein. { Welsh coal, and it urges a test hy the Queers Canadian Militar ~ Near Dic] IC The high lying Shorncliffe camp near the southern coast of Kent where the Canadians are at present in training. a ) te in's & , .| and the Ross Barracks where many of the men are quartered lie at, t} Jeune, AUS ddugemmen: thir Jeath norta of the camp, and the road seen in the picture rans south to Sea- {not borne out by ow Ye state-| rook amd the famous old Cinque port of Hythe. ments. The report was premature, | lines, shows the married men's quarters of the camp, now filled with Cen. The Ivangorod fortifications are con adian bachelors, while the Queen's Canadian Military Hospital at Beach. structed on both sides of the Vistula | borough, two and a half miles away, is the Elizabethan mansion which f iy * residents of London presented to. the the Canadians and Anglo-Canadi Yar Office at the outbreak of war§ ( swollen from much crying, and her face looked haggard and wan. ¥ 5 Says Hugh Jennings:--"I fear Boston more than Clicago, The | Red Sox, when under way, are hard- | er ta beat and they have a month at | home in September. This will help | Chicago, on the other hand, | has seldom been a good road club. | Detroit usually plage harder when in | front of strange faces and my men | can be depended upon to stick in the | fight until the final count." | | Both the major baseball league | races continue to develop new points | of interest, but the struggle in the! National League is claiming the max- | imum of attention on the part of | baseball fans. Seldom has the fight | for the pennant been so close at this stage of the game in any organiza- tion as in the Tener circuit this year, | The Boston Braves, only two rounds above the bottom of the lad-| der, for example, are but 83 points | behind the Philadelphias in first | place, In the intermediate posi- | tions Brooklyn, Chicago, Pittsburgh | and New York are on fairly even terms. { If there is football played next fall----and it looks as though there] will be--the Hamilton Tigers will be | without the services of their outside | wings, "Punk" Thompson having | gone with the 36th Overseas Bat- talion and Orval Walsh having de- cided to enlist. Other players have applied for commissions, and there will be very few of the old faces | left when the Tigers step on the field, The Hamilton Rowing Club mem- bers promise a surprise after the Canadian Henley, for many of the oarsmen will join the colors, among them being Sam Manson, the Tiger captain, who will take out a com- mission with oiie of the Hamilton re- giments, and will await his turn for overseas duty, Other members of the Rowing and Tiger Clubs will en- list, and it looks that by the time the football season rolls around, there will be very few of the regul- ars on either of the senior teams. NOVA SCOTIA COAL May Yet Be Shipped To Great Bri tain, London, July 27.--On cable in- structions from the Nova Scotia Gov- ernment, Agent-General John How- ard is taking up with the Admiralty the question of using Nova Scotia coal. The Provincial Government claims that the collieries produce one thousand tons of washed nut coal daily. equal in every respect to It will be Imperial Government. THE SPORT REVIEW | Eddie Wood Institute THe view Rishovro 'ol. Donald Armour describes it as the Vistula's western bank, but the| Peing "Gloriously situated and an ideal place for convalescents." PITH OF THE NEWS, Despatches From Near and Distant Places. Three German prisoners were re- captured in the vicinity of London. Violent Turkish attacks on Galli- poli peninsula were repulsed by the Allles, . George W. Armitage, St. Thomas, was. instantly killed in a' motoring accident, near Ridgetown. Albert O. Higgins,.. Windsor, fell out of a window of a hotel in Detroit and was instantly killed. W, K. Lodt, a Burlington farmer, was drowned while swimming in Whiteman's Creek, near Brantford. The 9th Mississauga Horse, Toron- to, recruited over 1,100 men in three weeks, the high record for Canada. Rev. Robert Jaffray, in Toronto, expressed the opinion that a spread- ing of the Gospel . will follow the war. E. G. Williams, 101 Spadina road a Toronto wholesale grocer, dropped dead while attending the Hamilton races. William Bail, Guelph, was knoek- ed dewn and almost instantly killed by a horse driven by George Strome, who is under arrest. General Bertram, after visiting On- tario munitions facteries, announced that Canada was making shells cost- ing $152,000,000 tor the Allies, Mrs. Herbert Benoit, Watertown, N.Y., received a telegram from her brother, William Hillis, announcing his rescue from the steamer East- land. Grand Trunk gross earnings for the third week of July were $980, 898, the lowest for any week since mid-June. The decline from last year is $29,997. The transfer to the United States and Canada of a large amount of the trade ordinary carried on between Newfoundland and Great Brifain is one of the results of the war. Samuel H. Edwards, general sup- erintendent, and: thirty-two guards of the Tidewater Oil Company's plant in Bayonne, N.J., were arrest- ed, charged with ineiting to riot. D. A. Thomas, representing Lloyd George, British Minister of Munition with General R. W. Mahon, and R. H. Carr, has arrived in Ottawa, to obtain information as to Canada's capacity for furnishing munitions. Lieut.-Col. Herbert A. Bruce, the well-known Toronto surgeon, sailed on Saturday from New York for Eng- land. Lieut.-Col. Bruce, who .re- cently received his commission in the Army Medical' Corps, will visit the Canadian military hospitals in Great Britain and France, KAISER'S 'TRAIN LUXURIOUS, Travels From Berlin To Fighting Line In Palace, Whenever possible when travelling between Berlin and the fighting-line uses his luxuripus State train, which is a veritable pal- ace on wheels. Six coaches, each weighing, over sixty tons, compose the special train, and of these four remembered that Nova Scotia offered | are 100,000 tons of coal to the Admiral- ty as a gift in the early stages of the Nar, but the offer was not accepted, the reason assigned being the traas- portation difficulties. Tommy's Apple. When Thomas placed a TOSy apple by the garden gate and ed himself behind thought he had done so unobserved. then secret | M a hedge, hel! boro Lines, FINANCIAL MATTERS It Is Said The Steel Chairman May Resign. New York, July 26.--Judge Gary's policy against taking war orders may cause his resignation as chairman of the United States Steel Corporation. It is stated the company, could have taken several hundred million dol- lars worth of orders had Gary con- sented, and that now orders can be taken for a year ahead. Dominion Steel Dividend. Dominion Steel Corporation has | declared the regular quarterly divi- | dend "of one and one-half per cent. | on the preferred stock, payable Aug- | ust 2nd. | Canada Cement Dividend. Montreal, July 26.--The Board of | Directors of Canada Cement Com- | pany have declared the regular one and three quarters per cent. divi- dend on the preferred, payable Aug- ust 16th, to stock of record July 31st. Commercial Notes, The Monetary Times estimates war orders placed in Canada at $394,- 000,000. The control of the United States Industrial Alcohol Co., has passed into.the hands of the William Rocke- feller interests. Directors of the Coniagas Mine have declared the regular three per cent, dividend, payable August 1st. The amount of money distributed is $120,000, Indications are that the Union Pa- cific this year will earn better than twelve per cent. on its stock, or over four per cent. more than is required to meet its eight per cent. dividend. Houston's Bank Directory reports twenty-six new branches of Canad- ian banks opened in June, and eigh- teen closed. Total number of bran- ches are now 3,264, or 3,159 in Ca- nadm, twenty in Newfoundland, and | seventy-five elsewhere. New. York Sun says Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Com- pany has another order from the British Government for ~ 1,000,000 rifles at the same price as first or- der, $26.75, making total of two or- ders nearly $54,000,000, The output of bituminous coal in the United States for the first six months of 1915 is estimated by C. E. Lésher of the United States Geologi- cal Survey to be between 180,000, 000 and 190,000,000 short tons, tha rate of production having been from | 85 to 90 per cent. of the average for the previous year. American Telephone and Tele- graph for the six months endéd June 30th, reports gross earnings $33,- 149,807; decrease, $178,960; net, $20,442,628; decrease, $126,680; surplus, $2,701,317; increase, $121, 7 The Bell Telephone System in tol United States reports for the three months ended May 31st a surplus of $5,631,406, an increase of $1,079, 990. rs An eminent London banker states that Great Britain can raise five bil- lion: dollars a year for war purposes and continue this for several years. The British: banks have now on de- posit more than six billion dollars, | the high record in the two hundred | years of British banking history, De- posits have tripled since 1880, How's This? We offer Ong Hundred Dollars Re- ward for any case of Catarrh that can- not Re cured by Hall's Catarrh Care, . J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, O. 'We the undersigned have known PF J. ¥ Jaz the last 15 years, and hi perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made his firm. NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken intern- ally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces 'of the system, Is sent free. Price 75 cents per bottle. Sold by ail Dr sts, Pane Hall's Family Pills for constls - Take Care of the{Cents and timate ly Become Indepene dent m We solicit your account in our SAVINGS DEPARTMENT KINGSTON BRANCH, H. E. Richard on Br Mans rer -------------------- Fresh Columbia Ig- nition Dry elk J0cEach KINGSTON FOUNDRY EES m-------- ass MADE - IN . CANADA 1 Ontario Mutual Life Assurance was given a Dominion e ominion more Canada, the statutes of O oH aompany. 1arter by an Act passe i 1878 was sul known as The Ontario Mutual Life Antuhance. Comms But ecelved a néw name by an Act of the Feder " amet the year 1900, and has since been known as The Mutual aament in ance Company of Canada. rs Its investments of nearly $25,000,000 are £XC lives insured are Canadian only. It strictly ssuring Made-in-Canada contracts, : 8. ROUGHTON, Agent, 60 THE ONLY MADE-IN. ANADA MUTT Canadian than The ' niario in 186% as The lusively Canadtan; a Canadian the Company PHONES 610 and San, BROCK STREET, AL LIFE COMPANY. -~ No Epidemic of Disease Has ever been traced to Pasteurized Milk. only Pasteurized Milk in Kingston is Price's :: Phone 845 The ONE CAN SAVE ENERGY AND TEMPER "BY, USING ONLY EDDY'S MATCHES THEY DO NOT MISS FIRE IF PRO. PERLY STRUCK -- EVERY STICK IS A MATCH -- AND EVERY MATCH A SURE, SAFE LIGHT. Men's Dark Tan Shoes, Rubber Sole and Heel : NW cunen aor Tan Shoes, Ru oles an $3.50