Large Audiences At the Grand Opera : House on Saturday. | von GRORGES CATHEDRAL ON That ever popular comic opera, | SUNDAY MORNING ---- ' "Robin Hood," was heard by appre- | Two Priests Ordained by the Bishop | clative houses at the Grand Saturday | alierngon and evening. | The company is a capable one.| of Kingston--Sermon Preached by | The, principals all have good voices | r. Mr. Swayne, Athens 4 and the chorus is well traiped. Her-| An ordination service was held in bert Watrous, in the part of Will| g; George's Cathedra] Sunday morn-/| Scarlet, was heard to splendid ad- ing. It was most impressive, and! vantage, his magnificent bass voice was conducted by the Bishop of | delighting all. Kingston, assisted by Dean } | Rev. Cecil F. Whalley. Two were | ordained priests, Victor O. Boyle and The part of little John was in the efficient hands of James Stevens, who Cecll Winter. The parish of the first | is Coe Hill, while the second { the Find Was Made. ! HERE are some parts of the | Féndered "Brown October Ale" and | . other numbers in a charming man- | world--South Dakota, for | hor, Phil Branson made a rollick- | St nville for hi Instance---where a large in- | ing sheriff of Nottingham. Fred. a aro ny Re di 8 Parish. come is derived from the | Walker was well cast as Friar Tuck, | "ANGICates for ordination were pre- | > . sented by Ven, Archdeacon mining for the fossil hones | While Sol Solomon as Guy of Gis-| Th finati ? | bourne made the most of his part. | e ord natlen sermon, au The title role was taken by Ralph |OP€, Was preached by Rey. nr e said | Brainard, who, besides being a capa. | SWayne, rector of Athens, Barnum Brown | ble actor, possesses an excellent tenor | that ordination Was a divine act, and : 1 | Yolee, and sang with ease and artis. | "equired a divine agent. He referred | of the American Museum of Natural {rie finish | to the sacredness"or the Christian | History, there are localities in Al-| "Alan-a-Dale" was played by Cora | Ministry, and said that the gifts of | berta where the soil actually yields | Tracey, who, besides having a pleas. | God were 'dispensed by men duly | Successive crops of these interesting | Ing stage presence, has a contralto | qualified to perform that sacred | and valuable bones. | Yoice that is exceedingly smooth and | Work. The sacraments of God were Mr. Brown, who is fairly well | her singing of "0 Promise Me" was a | not appreciated, as was evidenced by | known to many westerners, says that | decided hit. | the neglect of the holy communion | he first heard of the old anima! | Carolyn Andrews appeared as and of the holy rites of baptism. It} graveyards while at his work in New | Anabel, and sang her numbers in a | Was not unusual to find whole fam- | York most pleasing manner. Ivy Scott | ilies that were not baptized. The "A visitor to the museum. while | Was a charming Maid Marion, and | people" did not seem properly to ap-| examining tc large fossil specimens | has an exquisite soprano voice. preeiate the need of ministers, As In the reptile hall, remarked that he | | Ollcers were necessary to an army, | had seen many similar bones near his | | so ministers Were necessary to the | ranch in the Red Deer Canon of Al-| The solid and stgble chaarcter of church's performing its sacred work. | berta," he says After talking with | the silver black fo¥ breeding indus- | Parents endeavored, it possible, to} kim for some time he extended an in- | try in Canada is attested by the man- | Dave their sons who Join the army| 0 08 vitation to me to visit his home and | > ner in which Canada's fox companies | qualify for commissions, in order! . prospect the canon. Accordingly, | have during the past two years stood { that they might better fight for their| 159 Wellington St. preliminary trip was shortly after Opp. Golden Lion Gro- IN FISSL MINES r GRAVEYARDS OF PREHISTORIC ANIMALS YIELD TREASURES THAT HELPED HeR "Fruita-tives Again Proves fs Extraordinary Powers : Rocnox, Que., March 2nd, 1915, 1 have received the most wonderful benefit from taking " Fruit-a-tives", 1 suffered for years from Rheumatism aud change of life, and I took every remedy obtainable without results, I tried * Fruit-g-tives and it was the only medicine that really did me good. Now I am entirely well --the Rheu. matism hag disappeared, and the ter. rible pains in my body are all gone. 1 hope that others, who suffer from such ~distressing diseases, will try "Fruitsh. tives", Mivame ISM IE ROCHON, De. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 250, At all dealers or sent Postpaid by Fruit. f-tives Limited, Ottawa, Red Deer Valley in Alberta is Fabul. ; ously Well Off in Remains of | Palaeozoic Monsters Whose Skel- | etons 'Are in 56 Great Demand in| Museums the World Over--How | of animals that lived before Noah's flood. According to Mr. In a great assortment of charming new styles made of awning striped silkenfiel and voile, meadowbrook em- broidered crepe, silverbloom muslin, floral voile, Geor- gette crepe, crepe-de-chene, taffeta and printed Marquis- ette. Three Hundred Fox Companies. { are absolutely fashion's latest decrees, These styles e foremost dress manufacturers in New and come from th York. We cordially invite your inspection of not only these but also of our swagger New York Jersey Silk Sweaters in plain and striped effects. Palm Beach Suits, Crepe-de- Chene and Georgette Crepe Waists, Fashion Brand Lin- gerie waists, new Bathing Suits and caps, etc. parison of corresponding the stress and strain of war condl | country, God and the right. Was! made to that locality, tions, closed markets and diminished | !'e same anxiety displayed about the | 'From Didbury, a little town north | values, Not one of the three hun- | Christian ministry? ® | of Calgary, we ware driven eastward | companies engaged in fox | The people should try to realize | ninety miles through a portion of the dred Jdief i 4. | the great necessity of having faith in} uewly opened grain belt of Alberta. SiNeding bus sought roller Ie Liquids | God, and should earnestly endeavor | Near the railroad the land is mostly | carrying on their business at the old | !0 accomplish the work that God under cultivation . and comfortable | stand and increasing their produe- | would have them do They should | homes testify to 'he rich nature of | Ga from yedr to year. While tem- | Dold up the hands of the clergy, | the soil. ¢ porarily suspending the payment of | realizing the sacredness of their of-| "A few miles eas!ward the brush | dividends, they have increased the | fice, and should help them in every land gives way to » level expanse of { numbers of their breeding stock and | Way that they might not be hindered | Erass-covered prair'c dotted here and | added largely to their productive | by worries of an unnecessary kind. | there by large and small lakes pro- | capacity bably of glacial origin. Mile after | The ioReer silver mile of the road fol'ows section line, | 3 B ecial Inducement for Summer Months 8p The price, too, by actual com qualities -- are lowest in the city. Steacy's 'The Women's Store of Kingston We will make you free of charge an eextra skirt with every suit you order, Skirts and Sport coats made to or- der very reasonably. in and examine our work. New York Skirt & Suit Co. 2083 Wellington Street. anked Our modern 40 gallon Slufeed Tanks are capable of handling Say number of films a day. We are mow putting through from 80 te 85 rolls, and with increased Stal of operators can pPromige the 'snme prompt service at 10 eents a roll, The preacher called upon those to] be ordained to show, by their life and | | character, that they had a lively ap | preciation of the glorious. fact that | | they had been called to be ministers | |of Christ and stewards of the my- steries of God. | DARLINGSIDE NEWS | OF VARIOUS KINDS. | Will Not Build a Barn This . Season--Some Poetic Effusions. Darlingside, June 17 Robert Me Cullough was in Brockville Friday Fred. Aikens, of Larue Island, was Lansdowne Thursday Frank Houston, Arnprior, visiting | fox breeders arely out y | "builded better than they knew." ud one is Talely oy Se of the | They created a new industry neces- "It 18 through this level farm land | S2TY to commerce and capable ore that the Red Deer River winds its |Ya3t expansion. It is especia y way flowing through a esnon far be- | adapted for extension in every one o low the surface. The canon was pros | the nine provinces of Canada and the pected and so many hones found that ten or twelve border States ot the It appeared most desirable to extend | Ereat American Republic, Any are the search along the river | throughout these vast ; agricultural "Usually fossils are found in 'ba- | eSigns ml ght profitably aid A lands,' where extensive areas are de- | FanC og 4 equipment, ; re | nuded of grass, and the surface erod- jing as an adjunct lo agriculture | ed into hills and ravines A camp | adds a profitable factor to the ordin- site is located near some spring or | TY farm, without displacing or is- | Stream, and the collectors ride or turbing any of the ordinary activities. | walk over miles of expanse in each | The grove or Wooded lot furnishes direction till the region is thorough- the site and Supplies the lumber for | ly explored. {ranch sonsiruetion, No farmer who lin "Quite different conditions {adds a fur ranch to his establish- | found on the Red Deer River. | ment need keep fewer horses, cattle, | his sister, Mrs. James Chisamore, has ting through the prairie land, | sheep, swine, or poultry on that ae- | returned home. * river has formed a canon two to five j count, A small ranch will hardly | J. D. Latimer has disposed of his | Films liundred feet deep, and rarely more | FéQuire any addition to the number entire herd of dairy cattle, owing to We rantee to sell you the than a mile wide at the top. In | Of farm help. | ill-health. best i a and will replace places the walls are nearly perpen- | : # : Owing to scarcity of labor and the any which are defective. dicular, and the river winds in its | Canada and New Zealand, | extremely wet season, Frank Tilton . narrow valley, touching one side, The exports from New Zealand to { has decided not to build a barn this| Supplies then crossing to the other, so that [Canada are in excess of the Smports. | Sumer, but open to do 80 at wupp it 1s tmpossible to follow its course |The following table shows the value | season conditions are favorable " ny bo) uti for any a distance, even on horse- [of the exports from New Zealand to Fred. Warren, Lansdowne, has | back | Canada during the last six years: | been busy this week crushing and dis- | "The conditions appeared so favor- | 3 800.910 tributing stone on the roads in this | able to the fossil-hunter that a camp [1si1.: Vicinity. The extremely wet wea- | was established and a flat boat, built |1912.. 'iu ther makes it very difficult work, on lines similar to a Western ferry- 3313. sith pecially getting in and out of the pil | boat, twelve by thirty feet in dimen- 1915... : ing grounds gun sion, and having a carrying 'eapa- {Increase 1916 over 1913 | That remounts for the British) city of eight tons, was constructed. [army are to be bought in Canada this "Supplied with a seasan's provi- {summer will be good news for the | sions, lumber for boxes, and plaster | Canadian farmers. If our Govern | for encasing benes, we Began our | ment wants to give the general public fossil cruise down a canon which an additional thrill of satisfaction in| was at one time in the fur territory | connection therewith they will take of the great Hudson Bay Company, | timely steps to see that T de W fet "No more interesting or instruc. | Foster et al are not allowed to inter tive journcy could be taken. High | | pose themselves between the farmers up on a plateau buildings and hay- | jand the Britis Hea, Italy ra Stacks proclaimed a well-settled | 8 adaptor toe daylight ving a Maye country, but habitations Were rarely a dis {a bill with similar purpose is before seen from the river, and for miles tuat the exports during the United States Congres Get traveled through- picturesque soli- 1915 exceeded the imports by £10,- fi a 'o in he He on o dy i {Ung up early in the morning seem tude, unbroken save by the roar.of.[020,078 énsures a plentiful supply of [to be getting popular vrovided one the rapids." {money for all legitimate purposes. | does ft under a misapprehension that Especially eharacteristic of this The only trouble anticipated is a | it%ia not early. 3 canon are the slides, where the cur- [shortage of shipping so that the ex- | yi rent, setting against the bank, has {ports may be continied upon the | undermined it until a mountain of [same scale. + earth slips into the river, in some casés almost choking its course. In one of these slides we found several small mammal Jaws and teeth not known before, from Canada, asso- clated with fossil clam shells of the Eocene age, a geological period esti- mated to have begun about 3,000,000 years ago. "Along the upper Stream fossil shells Jaws were obtained, but near the ---- Have You a Taste for Rich, Old Cheddar Cheese? We Have It. 25c Lb. The Wm.Davies Co.Ltd. Phone597 --------" are Cut- the We en The Shoe You Prefer It will be an 2asy mattter for you to find what you want in our stock. Our lines of best quality, moderate price Shoes for Women includes all the best -- new styles, built in a variety of leathers on many lasts, nkes sold, ex. nd repaired, Cameras of all "huuged, rented The Popal OPEN AT est's | 4 1,651,060 In consequence of the higher prices obtained = for exports, larfei ship- ments and decreased imports, the balance of trade for 1915 amounts to [the large sum of £10,020,078. The [following table shows the figures for | four years: | rT E. P. Jenkins Imports Surplus 20,976,567 ; 27 656,09 28.834 5 A shape to | foot. fit every Darlingside Drippings, a world-wide world to greet The Sawyer Shoe Store 212 PRINCESS ST. --e---- | There's Located -at Brantford You, And a thousand chances meet you, Deseronto, June 17.--R. H. S. Bed-| When you take the road of dreaming | ford, son of Henry R. Bedford, Des- And go forth to win your way. | eronto, who has lately been with the You're welcome with Your effort, |W. C. Edwards Co. of Ottawa, has As the sun is to the blossoms, {Secured a position with The! And the whole world loves a toiler Schuttz Brothers Company of Brant-| With the true dream in his bosom! | ford, where he will have charge of You're welcome, always welcome, | the department of packing cases and! To the chances time is hiving; Novelties. Mr. Bedford was for some You're welcome, always welcome, time with the Rathbun Company | To the toiling and the thriving town of Content, where the river | quiring which time that firm pany ; -- bends southward, a new series 1 making boxes for the Quaker Oat | There's a world-wide world te cheer rocks appeared, and._in these our | neo le of Peterboro | You search was rewarded by. findir peop . : : JOM. FOR THE EMPIRE'S SAKE Save the Babies USE ONLY PASTEURIZED MILK Milk is thoroughly pasteurized and sold im sealed bottles. | Phone 845 :: Price's ~------ part of the and mammal Our AT YOUR SERVICE Good store, well filled with up-to-date merchandize for men, and good clerks to sat- isfy your needs. . RAINCOATS "Just 'now the says Raincoats. Reta choice variety of Tweed Raincoats made in the most: modern style from $12 to $18 each. Plaid lined and tweed lined just what the young man wants. ENGLISH PARAMATTES _ Paramettes are getting ex- tremely expensive, we can still furnish "you nearly all lines at old prices. \s™he bee is to the clover, | And the whole werld waits the fellow Who can put the big things over: You're welcome, always welcome, Tu the bright hopes always burn- rg; You're welcome With your d yawning. 5 | | | ! + | { » always we'c me, reaming and your The" most stylish foundation for the up-to-date costume is aD&A ora LaDiva corset, Save money and improve your appearance by selecting a D & A or a La Diva, which are made in Canada by highly-skilled opera- tives, in one of the finest corset factories in the world. Every [Corset is guaranteed. At best dealers, everywhere. weather res God keep us restless Rather than dead: Rather than questless, Give us instead . The hunger for growing, With energy glowing, By love ever led! -- Uncle Sam Disappointed Syracuse Post-Standard - About six hundred. men joined the army during the last week, bringing new enlistments up to 9,428, not quite half the desired number. More than half a million patriotically in- clined citizens have paraded in differ- ent American cities under the banner of preparedness, Yet out of Ameri- ca's millions a mere handful bave ding din- | -------- | And a thousand comrad 2 | au § €8 NEAT you, | aur hones. Specimens were found | John Mackay, Renfrew, has sold] When vou face the call th duty tinued our journey, and progress : . Fou' Fe welcome , ant down the river was necessarily much | Thomas- F. Barnet, k You TG elcome. every moment, slower. Frequently the boat would | AA A aA A A A ee | Pe camp while we searched the banks, | : . examining the cliffs layer by layer, | I he Racking ains o that no fossil might-escape observa. | > tion, | been prospected or a new specimen | obtained, the boat was dropped down | . to a new convenient anchorage. Bea Were Well-nigh Unbearable --After Five Years of Suffer- till scarcely a cubit's space remained | unoccupied on board our fossil ark. | On account of the heavy ainfali |. p,, downright excruciating pain | cure for Sciatic Rheumatism The X | pain I have suffered has n well ossils are exposed every season, ag | few allments can be: compared to nigh unbearable, It En in! that in a few years these same banks | sciatic rheumatism. Since this condi. can again be explored profitably, | tion of the sciatic nerve denotes ex- f,,. toes, gradually getting worse. | od ! | The nerves contract until one fis frequently '(heu!) 40 to 60 degrees | logical cure {s found in the use of practically useless. My doctor tried below zero in winter, it is difficult to! hr. Chase's Nerve Food to nourish think of a time when a warm celm- | ho starved nerves back to health only.afford relief for a time. ' "For about five years I was sub- fect to this tfouble with severe at- tn Increasing numbers . as we con- his summer home at Calabogie to! In this life that lcads to luck. be tied up a week or more at one . . . | OF en-sou-us a mile or wire hat Sciatic Rheumatism after box was added to the collect tad ing Cure Was Effected by Dr. Chase's Medicines. and frequent sliding of banks, new | the hips and run down the legs to; Where the temperature is not in- | haustion of thé nervous system, the many different treatments, but could ate could bave prevailed, yet such | ang vigor. ' condition is indicated by the fossil | Reports are continually coming in | A' Getinat once. \ plants." ' "AS a result of the Canadian work, the Museum is enriched by a magni- ficent collection of 'Cretaceous fos- sills more than 2,000,000 years old some of which are new to science," Gordon Main, son of T. L. Main, and Clarence Sibary, son of Mrs, T. S. Sibary, Renfrew, are among the Canadians missing after ihe Tevet Severe fighting in France. It may Possibly be that they sre prisoners. | to us regarding the splendid results | obtained In the treatment of sciatic | rheumatism by using Dr. Chase's | Nerve Food after each meal and Dr. | Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills occasion- | ally as a means of arousing the | action of the; liver, kidneys and | bowels and thereby keeping the sys- { tem freed of pain causing poisonous | Impurities. ' W. J. Talbot, Edenwold, Sask. writes: --"It is a great pleasure for | me to recommend Dr. Chase's Kid-. 4 Nerve Food as a tacks: which would last about two months. The last attack T had was shortened to two weeks by the use of Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills and Nerve Food. This treatment was con- tinued until I was satisfied that the cure was lasting." . ! This statement is endorsed by H. BE. Wooley, J.P. ¥ Dr, Chase's Nerve Food, 50 cents Kiiney-Liver PIS 36 centr gon on idney- cents a box, a Edwmanson, Bates & Com- | any, a presented themselves to the recruft- ing agencies, Lieut. Charles A. Wilson, Edmon- ton, aged 28 years, has been killed in action in France.' Hé was a grand- Son of the late Charles S. Wison; Picton. Mrs, William Mackay, Renfrew, js offering her down town residence for sale. A bank may-be erected on the site, he wife is untidy the hus- to get And If ¢t band may try