a rR Sr mate ES FOR ALL COMPLAINTS Woodstock Sentinel Review Thrilling scenes are featured on Page One of the IMustrated Whig; which will be issued on Saturday. The pletures are copyrighted and belong to His Majesty King George V. They are British war scenes, and full of exciting interest, and have to do with the capturing and consoli- dating of German trenches. Page Two is equally pleasing, 'where new and enrapturing war scenes are dis- played, many of them having to do with the happier side of trench life, as well 'as soe hot work of the British artillery in France. Page Three is distinctly Kings tonian in appearance. It is made up of photos of soldiers and battery views. The features are: C. M. R. Staff Ride, under "Major Allan Stroiid. Army Service Corps Motor Truck. Major E. C. Barrett, 13th Bri- gade. « : Capt. W. E. Steacy, R. C. H. A. Lieut. B. W. Franklin, 146th Bat- talion. - Three young sons of Pte. Bert Wiles, attired as coming soldiers, Four of the 146th who find it too warm to wear hair. Men of Arts '15 Queen's with En- gineers. Photos of Capt. P. J. Moran, Capt. J. Elliott, Major J. R. McGowan, Lieut. F: Ingledew, Bomb, W. Car- roll, Pte. M. H. Timmus, Corp. F. Wilson, Pte. Stewart V. Wilson, brothers in arms, and Lance-Corp. W. E. Buse. On Page four are two groups of the second line of research Maxwell Lefroy begins senhotise full of ihe with flies. Round Dim N apdotile g with flies for 4 few vi -- ut viel are so packed that the bottles have become black and - opaque. nty bottle traps are baited ny d erent un he traps fu bail wit e Era fly bait thal the professor has ds a several women as-| covered. For he has found the ideal ants have been collecting house mixture for tempting files to go into breading othe, feed Shor: a fly trap. The Perfect Bait. " It is in brown sugar an - ter mixed in equal parts. This mix- ture must be left to stand for twen- ty-four h@urs or so before a fly will take mucli notice of it. Then some slight change sets in, due, no doubt, wes ould B or More. rE a ar Cop Stay to ft tatio dt hat 0 fermeénta B, an rom that mo- Pe ares AVES Sxcamively esult | ment he will not be kept away. alt s past lures. | Some subtle smell about the mix- Are victims Hop which of mal-| ture appeals to the house-fly taste, f rood ony and he surges anxiously and Ho. lood as they are when | cently round the bottle. 1 has finest kind of exercise for the p sional or business man, and that "it beats golfing all to pieces, if one could only see it that way. The editor of the Whig is a lucky man, assuming that his discovery is the outcome of his own experience and not merely the result of hearsay. athletic amusements, but that it is the greatest specific for the most popular disease of the age, nervous unrest. It comibines, they say, the essential benefits of athletic exer- ¢ise and the study of philosophy. It is the great relief from the mechan- ical tendencies of the period. ables a man to work and play at the e. It affords the man of practical affairs an opportunity of mixing the poetry of nature with his business, and the dreamer an oppor- tunity to realize on his dreams. It may be confidentially commended to the woman with nerves. After a sea- son honestly devoted to the garden she will likely forget the meaning of nerves. Your true gardener is the only true exponent of the modern doctrine of efficiency. He is the great cham- pion of conservation. He derives benefit even from his failures, and he loses nothing. The mere toiler depends for his reward on the har- vest and the market prices. Should the harvest fail or the bottom fall out of the market he regards his labor as lost. The real gardener gathers his reward as he goes along. His labor is, in a large measure, its own reward; it cannot be lost, what- ever may happen the crop or the price market. And he knows the real meaning of He treats the bloom "best means The last day of our sensational summer sale -- the greatest bargain event in town! vi After hours. the girl assistant comes ne with a drop of either on a rag, drops it in the cone of the trap, and puts a glass slab to keep in the fumes till the flies are stupefied: Then TIE Of fal | they are counted. From 10 a. m. or which | On the 29th to 10 a. m. the following rob- morning the trap so baited caught 5 - more than 600 flies. This bait, which no doubt will Pala Beach Suits, Summer Dresses and Women's Raincoats. #7 18 only new Palm Beach linen suits in white and linen color, a few summer dresses and some odd raincoats, and capes, for women and misses, in sizes 12 to 36. Regular 3%. 50 to $14 50. _- Saturday . . $1.00 AWNING STRIPED SILK COATS. 6 only, in-rose and white and copen and white. Regular 58. .50 00 iy Sl trition norma £ Ar "into 0 the Siood inch elements the Ruban ht Eo Pans 8 ceaditon And, to pro- medical authority costs very little to make, and quite harmless. Casein, which is chief solid that goes to the making of milk, can be had for 45s. a hundreweight, or 4d. a pound. It has proved the best and cheapest fly bait of many hundreds Cases reported of from oo by all| that Professor Maxwell Lefroy has t in. | tried, and he has gone into the busi-|. nd a| Ness on scientific lines, using during at who is unable supply you! his four months' experiments every 3 oi Tatotistered|yind of thing, from chemicals down ord hy o National lojne jaboratoriss. heer and bananas. . treal, ii Pe Loa How to Kill Fly Eggs. 1 Te Experiments to prevent house of Lox dine flies breeding have been carried out in a series of horse manue heaps ly- ing at the bottom of the orchard be- hind Fly Farm. It hag been noticed house, but go out generally to the nearest manure heap, each to lay her '900 eggs. They burrow into the manure and lay generally about six or nine inches from the surface. After passing through the maggot com- sent school School, 1886. Capt. John Kingston, children, Miss Junior Fourth Glass, Central School, Principal Inmand, teacher: time picture of Jumbo, the king of elephants, killed at St. Thomas in Broun Mackie, son of Rev. Mackie, column picture. 9 The Illustrated Whig for Satur- day is a jem, and will over in an appreciative way by the many readers of the Whig. Part 1. Victoria | conservation. Dyde, teacher, and of his fruit trees as a crop in itself. y A Should the fruit fail to mature he will 'still be able to credit himself with a large measure of joy from the crop of blossoms. He knows the pleasure of anticipation as well as of realization, and should he be disap- pointed in the latter he can still credit himself with the former. And the joy of anticipation is often. the most genuine of all joys. The mere toiler is the slave of the laws of nature. The real gardener rises superior to all laws but those 'of his be looked lown highest nature. His garden is his world, and it is largely a world of his own creating. An old- D. D., formerly of is presented in a two- each, in sizes 16, 18, and 36. Saturday $5.95. Less . LINGERIE WAISTS 7 96 New York Awning Striped = and novelty voile waists, priced up to $2.00 each. HOUSE DRESSES Saturday . Ce ah es . $1.00 120 print and percale dresses, made in new style effects, i in pocketed, buttoned and bound trims. to44. Saturday .. .. ..... .. .. CREPE KIMONOS Reg: $2.00. In sizes 36 . $1.00 ee and the chrysalis stage the young AWFUL CRIMES files emerge. A third of a bucketful of this sub-surface manure yielded 218 flies. On this basis quite a small manure heap would yield a quarter of a million of flies. But if it were "dressed" with the cheap and simple dressing Professor Maxwell Lefroy has discovered, mot a fly would come to life. This dress- ing is just plain earth or sand mix- 2 ith "green oil," or cheap oil stifled from gas tar. One gallon of this ofl coating is mixed with forty gallons (thirteen bucketsfull) of earth, will make dressing suffici- ent to cover a manure heap of eighty square feet in area. For these experiments, the result] ™' o of which should be of first import-| 9erly resorts," said Smith. ance in the promotion of public instance, I know of, the husband health, ways and and means were| WhO was actually grateful to the feund by the Zological Society of white slaver who placed. his wife in _| a resort." Landon and iis secretary, Dr. Chal To avoid possible chances of dis- covery, the vice trust organizéd a string of disorderly houses in New York and nearby states, shifting girls from one town to another, when the police became active. The present investigation, Smith said, is producing more and more evidence each day of collusion between white slavers and members of the police force, who have blackmailed and ex- torted protection money from both the white slave agents and their vie- tims. At the close of the present investigation Smith said he will press charges against other police officials besides those already under THE KAISER'S MEMORIAL CARD FREE AE EI I A a th New York Sun. ! In the midst of his labors on two military fronts and in the harvest fields, Emperor Wilhelm has had time to design a memorial card, copies of which are to be sent to the kinsmen of German sailors lost in the war. This production of the Kaiser's is thus described: "On the card 1s a picture of Christ, holding out both hands in blessing over a sinking ship. Surrounding the figure of Christ are the words: '" 'Who. stilléth the noise of the seas, the noise of their waves and the tumult of the people.' "Under the picture is this inscrip- | tion: . He persian binding. Reg. $1.50. Saturday . $1.00 GIRLS' BATHING SUITS ; 10 only, the balance of our $2.25 to $3.00 lustre c bathing a suits, . $1.00 Husbands Sold Wives to the White Slavers. . New York, Aug. 18.--Wives have been sold to New York white slave agents by their own husbands, and led into dives of immorality, Assist- ant District Attorney Smith said he had learned from witnesses in the grand jury investigation of the vice trust now in progress. A "We have testimony from white slave agents themselves that men hard pressed for money, and seem- ingly lacking all ideas of morality, have come to them and begged that k be given their wives in disor- "In one in colors, navy, maroon and black. Saturday .. .. GIRLS' DRESSES White embroidered voile, gingham, print and crepe dresses, in sizes 6 to 14 years. Regular $1.50 to $3.00. Saturday, $1.00 MILLINERY 25 untrimmed tagel straw shapes. Reg. 75¢ to $2.00 each. Saturday, 2 for. . .. $1.00 18 trimmed hats, reg. $3. 50 to $8. 50, to clear Saturday, $1.00 SUMMER PARASOLS 18, regular 75¢ to $1.50. Saturday, 2 for . 12 only, regular $2.25 to $4.50. Saturday . NO RESERVE FELT RUGS In fancy color mixtures. Reg. $2. 75 to . 50 each. Satur- day .. vaties .. $1.00 60 wash crepe kimonos, in colors sky, copen, rose and pink with '" 'To the memory of for the Fatherland.' " 'WILHELM, I. R*" The eminent designer of this work of art has not, it seems to us, availed himself of the full possibili- ties of the occasion. How much more appealing, for example, the ecard would be if instead of "a sinking ship" it bore a picture of the sinking Lusitania, and, in place of the legend selected 'by the Emperor, this famil- iar injunction: "Suffer little children to come un- to me, and forbid them not; for o such is the k'ngdom of God." LOVE VALUED AT $32,000 That Is Sum. Professor's Wife Gets For Losing It Baltimore, Md., Aug. 18.--The $100,000 suit brought by Mrs. Mary W. Soho against Mrs. Helen E. Hem- meter, the wife of a leading medical specialist and dean of the Maryland University, for the alleged alienation of the affections of Mrs. Soho's hus- band, Prof. Aristo M. Soho, teacher of modern languages at the City College, has been 'settled, the amount agreed upon being $32,000 With the. passing of the order will also pass the alleged letters, written by the defendant to Mr. Soho. Mrs. Hemmeéter will have these letters re-|. turned to her. For the last month they have been locked in a suit case and placed in a vault of a safe de- posit company. Mrs. Hemmeter is in Maine and { will not return until October. Her | husband is also in Maine, stopping lat a 'place called Christmas. The | whereabouts of Prof. Soho are un- | known. arrest, to. A woman never thinks of writing a letter if she has someone to talk On the reverse side, to complete the memorial, this warning might appropriately appear: "And whosoever shall offend one of fhese little ones that believe in CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use ForOver 30 Years Always beans the Signature of | me, it is better for him that a mill- stone were hanged about his neck and he were cast into the sea." Thus adorned, the Imperial me- morial card would have met more nearly the needs of truth than it does with its present decorations. REV. COMPTON FINDS > IT HOT IN nN SALONIKA Censors all Letters Written in of the man who seeks comfort during these hot days. Cheaper Beef Cut from the Finest Western Stock. One of the Hospitals There. J. Arthur W. Craig has received through the kindness of Capt., the Rev. 8. J. M. Compton, late minister of St. Andrew's Church, recent copies of the Balkan News, publish- ed at Salonika, Greece. Mr. Compton, his many Kingston friends will be glad to know, is en- joying excellent health, but he re- ports it as exceedingly hot at Sa- lonika. There the lowest the thef- mometer reaches in the daytime is 110 degrées, and it is so hot in the afternoon that a sigsta of three or four hours' duration .is indispens- able Mr. Compton js chaplain--to--the Canadian forces stationed there, and has forty wards in one of the hospitals to look after. He also censors all the letters coming from patients in the hospital. . Page & Shaw, the chocolates of excellence. Malood's Drug Store. Queen's authorities 'are still = at work upon the report asked for by Sir George Foster concerning the facilities of the university for con- ducting scientific and industrial res search, and the report wll be ready in a few days. |B. McCurdy, Acting Minister of Mili- Rouler $1. 00 and $1. 25, Saturday, 2 for "a LACE CURTAINS . $1.00 50 pair Nottingham lock stitch lace curtains. Heavy designe in in 3 yard lengths. Reg. $1.50. Saturday . UNBLEACHED COTTON 1500 yards heavy unbleached cotton, full 34 inches wide. 10c a yard. Saturday 14 yards for . . . . All Sales for Cash -- Sale Starts 2 a.m. BREAD WAS HORRID, SAYS MAYOR CHURCH Another Count Against Camp Borden--Transporting --Troops-Attacked:-- Toronto, Aug. 18.--"We do ' not know anything of the bread at Camp Borden except what we are told by those who complain," = remarked Mayor Church when his attention was called to the statement of Gen- eral Logie discussing the possible causes of bad bread at camp as given. "But those who do complain are cer- tainly not those who would usually be regarded as kickers. And they. have been coming in now for a long time, possibly as far back as July 14th. The piece we had yesterday was horrid, and I think it was gen? uinely sent. In any case, if Generr al Logie takes the matter up with his usual thoroughness the exposure will have resulted in some good." In the course of a letter to Hon. F. Jack Johnston' en Aug. Sale Men's $5.00 Oxfords To Clear at Walf Price $250 SEE WINDOW FOR SIZES s Shoe Store _ 70 Brock Street very seriously injured by the method of transporting troops out of the city from Camp Borden. As you kanow, the Union Station has not the facili- ties for handling troop trains. Many of thes¢ arriving at the rush hours at the Union Station, between six and nine, when the tracks are taken up With the ordinary passenger busi- ness. The result is that women and children have fo £0 out among tia; his Worship says: "Recruiting in Toronto has been freight cars and other trains to see their friends off, many wrong station. they have gone to the "I may edy further that recruit- ing has killed here by Camp Borden, © No men will enlist here it they know will be sent to this camp, and I 'that nothiag will ~ be done to have as a winter camp." At Washington it is believed peace shunting | will shortly be arranged between the In {railways and their employees, .