ad Cad EE ahd | Save now for Xmas! Not money -- but coupons. : ; For you ¢an buy § Christmas gifts for every member of the family with Black Cat' Profit - Sharing Coupons, and there's one in every packet of Black Cat Cigarettes. More than 200 useful and valuable gifts are listedinthe Black Cat Gift Catalogue. This book will be sent to you free -- fill in the coupon below and mail at once. In the meantime start your collection of Profit-Sharing Coupons. Get a packet of Cigarettes 10 for10Cents You will find ten of the mellowest and' most pleasing "cigarettes that ever appealed to a smoke lover's taste. Mild and Medium 'strengths. Canada, Limited, 853 St. Lawrence Montreal, Please send me, without charge the Black Cat Gift Catalogue, Name Has Special Qualities MILDLY STIMULATING, NOURISHING, SUSTAINING A Perfect Tonic THIS IS THE TIME OF THE YEAR IT IS NEEDED If not sold in' your neighborhood, write JOHN LABATT, LIMITED LONDON James , . McParland, Agent, 339-341 King St. East. C . -- " | Buttermilk Buttermilk Having bought School, I am now prepared to deliver Buttermilk in the whole outfit of Eastern Dairy any Quantity. Phone 845 Pn niin, Price's AN NIN lL AN PPS es .. cep | Ladies' Cloth Top I= LADIES' CLOTH | "TOP BOOTS ° Plain Toe, in Black: Brown and Tan. © 17% § Alsé Gun Metal, with Black Olith Ton, $300a Pair... # AA tt st in i JJ | vide for, enlisted THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1915. | THE SPORT REVIEW The McNamara boys will hold the Montreal Shamrock hockey franchise | this winter. [ "Jim" Corkery, the Toronto run- | ner, is training for the Yonkers Mar- | athon, which will be run on Nov. { 27th. Some of the proceeds of the sol- diers' game in Toronto will be given to the Convalescent Home for re- turned soldiers at Kingston. | Hamilton = Tigers should go | through their Big Four season with an unbeaten recora. In 1905 they i won the O. R. F. U. championship f without losing a game. | Barney Dreyfuss threatens to | force out President Tener of. the Na- | tional League, but he may find him {as hard to force as the British west | front. * } Se | Canadian horses ure holding their | own at the New York show, and { maintainifg the great reputation of Canada for its hunters and jump- | ers. The stewards of | Rowing Association have Saturday, May 13th, 1918, | date for the annual regatta. the American selected as the Toronto will not see the play-off game for thec hampionship of the Interprovincial Union intermediate | series. At a meeting of the Argo- {naut and Hamilton Tiger represen- tatives the Hamilton man called the toss. -- Hamilton Times: There are no less than sixty men working out for regu- | lar berths on the Hamilton Rowing Club O. H. A. teams. Downs, who, according to reports played with the Kingston Frontenacs, is werking out with the senior team, and his speed in practices has about secured a steady job for him. Downs was a defence man. She The Ottawa Club will have the | services of Coach Shaughnessy next season if the Intercollegiate is not in | action. McGill has first call on the | big fellow, and his presence in Ot- | tawa will depend entirely on 'the | state the war is in Ottawa Free Press: If Ottawa is in the Canadian League next year, it will only be on an equal basis with the other cities, The Capital has been giving a thirty per cent. higher guarantee than it receives up west, A letter recently received from "Billy" Richards, the former McGill football player, who is now a prison- er in Geissen, Germany, states that he is imprisoned with another Otta- | wa boy, C, Ainsborough. "He does ! not expect to figure in any exchange | of prisoners, as he has not been wounded, and will probably have to | remain until the war ends. The guests of honor at the sol- diers' game at Varsity Stadium Sat- | urday- will be: Col. Logie, 0. C. of Neo. II. division, who played at one i timewi th Queen's; Col. Hemming, O. C. No. IIL. division, Kingston; Lieut.-Governor Sir John Hendrie, Premier Hearst, and President Fal- coner. The annual meeting of the Winni- peg Amateur Hockey Association will be held on Saturday. It is under- stood that the only club ready to play senior hockey this winter is the Monarch, which is only in that posi- | tion because the Allan Cup, the sen- {for amateur hockey championship | emblem for Canada, is in its possges- sion. : It has been aunounced by Arthur Sixsmith, the . former Canadian hockey star, and the person in charge of all hockey arrangements at the Winter Garden, Pittsburg, that he has made arrangements with the Star Hockey Club and the Wanderers of Montreal for a series of games to be played at the Winter Garden in December. He also stated that the Winnipeg Monarchs would play a se- ries there in January, while arrange- ments were being completed to bring the Ottawa Aberdeens to .that city. Games have already been arranged. with teams representing New. York Boston; Cleveland and St." Paull Already Cornwall is making an ef fort to get into a real hockey league this season, and E. N. Runions is in communication with the hockey pro: | moters of Kingston, Brockville, Ot | tawa and Smith's Falls' with a view | to forming a four-club league. Corn- | wall's hockey players are sure that they will be able to make a good | showing if this league is formed. i . General commendation all over the | province has greeted the suggestion {from O. H. A, headquarters to pro- soldiers playing hockey in the big association dyring the coming winter. The idea is: to have soldier teams where possible; il but in any event to give every indi- ii vidual hockeyist a chance to play the ii game, either in his home town or in I! the town fii which he is located by i! the military authorities. | The rule proposed for the O. H. A. ll will give the soldier hockeyist the ll following options: fii (1) He may play with the team in ii his home town or ¢ iy i (2) He may play with a soldier's team in the town in which he is lo- li cated, or i . apf oS miay play with any team in ll the town in which he is located. 3 pe " I ¥s of this paper will be learn that there is at disease that science its stages. hejpg A! MEAT SUBSTITUTES. How to Substitute Nourishing Food "For Meat at Luncheons. Cheese Rarebit. -- One - foiirth pound grated Canadian cheese, two tablespoonfuls of butter; place but- ter in pan over slow fire; when melt- ed turn in cheese, stir, until all is melted, slowly. Salt and pepper to taste .(use cayenne pepper). Have four eggs beaten very light; then whip them into the cheese. Cook until mixture will hold its shape when dropped from a spoon. Drop on greased pan, garnish with bread- crumbs, dot with butter, set in oven to brown. Serve with tomato sauce. Chieese €anapes.--To two table- spoonfuls of melted' butter add one teaspoonful each of salt, paprika, and mustard; stir in two cupfuls of grat- ed cheese, half a gupful of soft breadcrumbs, and one cupful of milk: Let all cook together for five minutes and then add two well-beaten eggs. Do not cook 18mg after the eggs are added. This is a very rich and highly concentrated food, and one must serve with it plenty of good toast of whole wheat bread in order to give sufficient bulk. Cheese Balls.--One cupful of grat- ed cheese, one-half cupful of fine breaderumbs, five drops of Worcester- shire sauce, egg well beaten. Mix together, roll into small balls and just before time to serve plunge into hot fat. Fry delicate brown. To be served hot with salad. Qualities of Guncotton. If someone should place a wad of guncofton on the palm of your hand and threaten to touch it off with a lighted match, you would be frighten- ed. Yet you need not be, although guncotton is one of the most power- ful of ordinary explosives, it would not hurt you. When dry guncotton is exposed to the air it does 'not explode when ignited, but burns with great rapid- ity. So rapidly does the burning take place that if a loose wad of the ma- terial be held in the hand and touch- ed with fire, there is a sudden flash, and an instant later not a trace of smoke or a mark on the hand remains to indicate what has taken place. Guncotton does not detonate unless it is confined, as in the barrel of a gun. When dry, however, guncotton can be made to explode with great vio- lence by being struck sharply be- tween two hard surfaces. Detona- tion, as such an explosion is called, is quite a different phenomenon from burning. It seems to consist in the instantaneops disintegration of the molecules of the exploding substance. It is as though all the bricks in a great building were in a fraction of a second to be scattered about. Chickens, Foxes, and the Gospel. "Some years ago," says a Louis- ville man, "at a session of the Legis- lature of Kentucky an effort to repeal the law offering a bounty on foxes' scalps was made, buf was defeated by the appeal of a member from a mountainous and sparsely-settled re- gion. 'Do the gentlemen want to de- prive my constituents and me of the benefits - of hearing the Gospel preached?' he demanded (with indig- nation in his tone and overspreading his rugged countenance). 'We are all Methodsits up my way, and our preachers won't come without we can give 'em chickens. We can't raise chickens unless the foxes are killed by somebody, that's sure; and there ain't anybody that can afford to spend their time hunting foxes and get no- thing to pay for it. So, gentlemen, if you repeal this law you'll be de- priving my constituents of the benefit of hearing the Gospel preached; that's the way it looks to me.' This reasoning was too much for the Legislature, and for thc time being the law was not repealed." Strange Potato Industries. Towns in the Netherlands have several ways of dealing with the sur- plus production of potatoes. Accord- ing" to a recent consular report, there are now factories for drying potatoes, with an annual output of many thousand bushels. Of these plants 350 are for the production of potato flakes, while in 86 the pota- toes are dried by the hot-air process. Potato flakes can be used for feeding stock, for distilling alcohol, for mak- ing starch, 'and for the other pur- poses for which natural potatoes are used; or t can be ground and bolted to make flour. This flour is a yellowish-white product, rich In carbo-hydrates, and is used principally by bakers for adding to rye and wheat flour in making bread. It is claimed that the addition of po- rtato flour gives the bread a good flav- or, makes it more digestible, and keeps it fresh for a comparatively long time. It is also used to some extent in thickening soups and 'sauces. Combined Knife and Fork. A handy tool for soldiers, campers, and pichickers, as well as for one- armed persons, is a combination knife and fork recently patented and Bow being placed on the market. [It consists simply of a curved blade with the end formed into a four-pronged fork. It' is designed to be stowed away in a case that can easily be carried in the coat pocket. Carrying Them Out. Youth--I S€nt you some suggestion telling how { make your paper more interesting. you carried out any of my ideas? Editor--Dii you meet the office boy with fhe waste-paper basket as you came upstairs? ° = Jouth-- Yes, yes, 1 did. Editor--Wall, he was carrying out your ideas. th, Xen " "Well," the old' man replied, slow on to say right with two or three of them Pp 1y| medicine concerns for a couple weeks, but 1 ain't quite decided yel." sn tegen ol Acie ace rapidly be oars and 300 PAYS 50 P. C. DIVIDEND. International Milling Makes Distribution. Montreal, Nov. 12.--The Interna- tional Milling Company of Minnesota, with mills at Moose Jaw and Cal- gary, has declared, for the year end- ing August 31st, 1915 a 50 per cent, dividend on the common stock. This calls for the distribution of $400,- 000, of which $160,000 has been re- invested in common capital at par thereby increasing the common stock capital from $800,000 to $960,000. This is tne fompany which was consolidated with the Canadian Cer- eal and Milling Company three years Or 50 ago, and re-sold to the original owners by the directors of the Invest- ment Trust Company in lieu of rais- ing additional working capital to keep both concerns intact. A few months after this took place the same interests which sold the Internation- al Company raised $250,000 new capital and put it into the Canadian Cereal Company and, unfortunately for the shareholders, the Cereal Company is in liquidation. Big Studebaker on 10 Per cent. Basis. Chicago, Nov 12.--Directors of the Studebaker Corporation, in declar- ing a regular quarterly dividend of 135 per cent. and an extra dividend of 1 per cent., practically placed the issue on a 10 per cent. basis. A Million For Dividends, Montreal, Nov. 12.--It is stated on good authority that the net earn- ings of the Canada Steamship Com pany for their year, which closes Dec, 31, will aggregate between $1,- 750,000 and $2,000,000, and that af- ter paying all interest charges in the neighborhood of $1,000,000 will be left for dividends. Car and Foundry Stock. Toronto, Nov. 12. It is gener- ally understood that practically the whole of the 25,000 shares of Can- adian Car and Foundry underwritten in New York early in Octo! or has| been absorbed by the market. This would help to explain the heavy as- pect of the market for the shares for a time back, while the rest of the war stocks have been booming Met With Quick Sale. Toronto, Nov. 12.--The entire is- sue of $1,200,000 Province of Sas katchewan bonds recently brought on the market by a syndicaie com- posed of the Dominion Securities Cor- poration, Wood, Gundy & Co., and A. E. Ames & Co., was all sold out within a couple of days of the first offering to the public Control Of Plenaurum. Toronto, Nov, 12.--The La Rose Company, says Robert E. Kemerer, has purchased all of the treasury stock of the Plenaurum Company, amounting tp 59,000 shares, at price of §1 per share, and has also purchased sufficient private holdings at between $1 and $2 per sharé to give the La Rose control. Commercial Notes, 3 The number of stockholders of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company has pased the 93,000 mark. The Canadian Northern Railway has raised $400,000,000 at an aver- age interest rate of less than four and a half per cent. The stockholders of the United States Steel Corporation have reach- ed the unprecedented number of 141,685, made up of 85,768 prefer- red stockholders and 55,917 com- mon. DuPont Powder Company is mak- ing 750,000 pounds of powder a day, on which there is a profit of at least $350,000 a day. On this basis™ the profits each week run up to about $2,000,000, or in excess of $100,- 000,000 annually, and this from pow- der alone Gross earnings of the Toronto Railway Company Aeity system) for the month of Octohyr were $461.- 682, or less than daring September, the Exhibition month, but more than either August, July, June or Febru- ary of this year. The annduncement is made that W. J. Shaughnessy has been elected a director of Canada Foundries & Forgings, - Ltd. - Mr. Shaughnessy' was not long ago elected to the West Kootenay Power Board. He is a son of Sir Thomas Shaughnessy. The directors of Dome Mines met in New York yesterday and declared a stock dividend of 50 cents a share. This is ut the rate of 20 per cent. per annum, and the same rate as has been ruliug hitherto. 3 The California orange crop this vear will be from twenty to fifty per cent. below normal. The Nova Scotia Steel & Coal Co. has disposed of $1,500,000 of com- mon stock and $1,000,000 of six per cent. debenture stock. Gross profits of the Hollinger gold mine for the four weeks ending Oc- tober Tth were $158,342, a new re- cord for 1915, and the best showing since November, 1914, when the total was $163,000. Trading in the Cobalt issues still STAN HEAD orrice A GE EST'D 1873 q Drafts issued, THE DARD BANK OF CANADA TORONTO NERAL BANKING BUSINESS TRANSACTED Special facilities for cone ducting business accounts; and Money Orders payable at any Bank- ing town or city in Canada and Foreign Countries, SAVINGS DEPARTMENT AT ALL BRANCHES KINGSTON BRANCH H. E. Richardson, BUILDERS !! Have You Tried GYPSUM WALL PLASTER? It Saves Time P. WALSH. Barrack St. Motor Oil, Cup Grease and Fiber Grease for sale at H. MILNE : Phone 542. 272 Bagot St. All oils delivered on short- est notice. Coal" The kind you are looking for is the kind we sell. Scranton Coal Is good Coal and we guarantee prompt delivery. BOOTH & CO., Foot of West St. ed KINGSTON CEMENT PRODUCT Can supply Cement Blocks, Sills, Lintles, ck Flower Vases, Tile, Cappler Blocks, etc. We also manu- facture Cement Grave Vaults. Esti- mates given for all kinds of Cement Work. Office and Factory Uor. of CHARLES AND PATRICK. Phone, 780. MGR. H. ¥. NORMAN. FOR SALE Splendid farm, 150 acres, 2 setts of buildings, 12 miles from Kingston. Farm, 100 acres, good bulld- ings, '12 'miles from Kingston. Prices $4 750. Easy tan os Sra farms. W. H. GODWIN & SON Phone 424. 39 Brock St HIRT Local Branch Time Table. IN EFFEOT MAY 30TH, 1915, Trains will leave and arrive at City Depot, foot of Johnston street. » No. 19--Mall No. 13--Fast Ex. .. No. 27--Lcl. to Tor. No. 1--Intl Ltd. . No. 7--Mall No. 31--Local to Belleville > a meow v POPP B BEPEP pes care WNT cap? we So 8 " = 18--Mall . 16--Fast Exp. .. . 32--Local to Brockville . 6 -Malil 12 . 14--Intl. . 28--Local to Brockviile 658pm. 7.37pm. Nox. 1, 6, 7, 13, 14, 16, 18, 19 run dally, other trains daily except Sunday. rect route to Toronte, Peterboro, Hamilton, Buffalo, London, Detroit, Chicago, Bay City, Saginaw, Montreal, Ottawa, Quebec, Portland, St. John, Halifax, Beston and New York. For full particulars apply J. P. HAN. Y, Railroad and Steamship Agent, cor. Johnson and Ontario streets wi vee pp BEB BF a . Train Coach and Buffet- Library « Observation-Par- lor Car, with Broller Ser- vice, leaves Torente Union LAS pam, Kingston 540 p. m,, via LAKE ONTARIO SHORE stopping all important poluts, Perth, Smith's Falls, Mervickville, and Kempt- ville. CENTRAL STATION Sparks St, Chateau Laurier OTTAWA Descriptive Folders from F. Conway, City Ticket office, cor. Princess and Wellington Sta. Phone 1197, THE "YORK" . pm. Lv. Ottawa .1.15 Smoker, From ST. JOHN CHRISTMAS SAILS. Corsican Dee. + Liverpool! 3 v » 31. Live 1 Corinthian . Sicilian Pretorian | . For ful] information ta loea¥ agents or th THE ALLAN (INE 5 King St. West. Apply continues light with Temi ing the undisputed leader, which security is being quietly absorbed for invest- ment purposes. National Tube Co., and indepen- dent makers of Pittsburg district have added $2 a ton to price of all tubing. .- A New York Stock Excha seat has been transferred for $73,500, comparing with $74,000 last week. ThepPrudential Insurance Co. in 1914 wrote $518,963.82] insurayee. From 5,000 policies it=.Yorce in 1876, ihe number increased in 1914 to over 12,500,000. Its assets grew from nothing to $361,000,000. < . Edison says that the day of uni- versal peace is a long way off. M 2 Central orders 2,500 box gondola cars. munition firm planned in th $50,000,000 capital. Place Faith In Advertising. Chicago, Nov. 10. Railroads of Ihe Faited States demonstrated their n per advertising by spending $10,000,000 for newspaper Space during the last fiscal ICTY NORTHER THROUGH SERVICE TORONTO TO WINNIPEG - NOV. 1st PARRY dou, SUDBURY, PORT ARTHUR AND | Connections , Prinos Albert, Saskatoon, Regina. s 5 rs " : gary. all important points in West- ern Canada the Pacific Coast LEAVE TORONTO 1045 P. M. Monday, EQUIPMENT Wednesday and Friday RELIABLE EXPRESS SERVICER all fetus and berth reservations rw Rn er