3 a DAILY BRITISH 8 'HE Established 1869 RRIERS Manufacturers BRING YOUR VISITORS TO THE GRAND CAFE Kingston's High Class Restaurant. Full course Dinner 65¢. and up. HO Qh EE ------ NN RAL MATTRESS When housecleaning hive your Mattresses cleaned and ree a A. ~PETER LEE, Prop. ES et -- modelled. Go to Hughes' when you want a new one at low price. W. H. HUGHES, - i Cr STREET Outing Trousers 5 Cream or Stripsd Prannel $7 0) English model, wide bottom Witte or Khakd Duck $9 95 Ore ams $4.50 Phone 31804, EPA NE KINGSTON'S MODEL STORE Suit Sale 10 ONLY---SPECIAL $15.00 Blue and Brown Herringbone YOUR CHOICE OF 100 SUITS AT $29.50 Newest sles and colors. w value. OUR BLUE SERGE at Pp oot Jags gs MEN'S WORKING SHIRTS v . $1.25 to $1.08 NICE SELECTION OF CAPS, $1 . YOUTHS' KHAKI] LONG TROUSERS, $1.08 N 85¢. to $2.00 We carry a nice range of ODD TROUSERS Sizes 82 to 44. -- || BE DISCUSSED AGAIN I TRAFFIC BY-LAW MAY | | Ald. Price Has. Given Notice | | of Motion For its Recon- sideration. i { | At the meeting of the city couneil | | Wednesday night, Ald. Price gave | notice of motion that he would move | | for the reconsideration of the traffic | by-law, defeated at a recent meet-| ing at the next session of the "city | fathers." { It will be rec-*led that the coun- cil turned down the traffic by-law, as recommended by Chief of Police Robinson. The by-law called for the stopping of autos on all the arteries leading into, Princess street, from University avenue to Wellington street. Ald, Nash moved that the police y| Mrs. J. D. Taylor Received In- PREPARATIONS FOR commissioners be given full author- ity to deal with the motor and vehicle trafic, He said that the po- lice commissioners in Toronto. had been given this authority, but there was no member of the council who would second his motion, and it was dropped. Ald. O'Connor said thatfit was a pity that the council had turned down the traffic by-law. The city needed such a by-law. TWEED WOMAN HURT WHEN TRAIN HITS CAR Juries to Leg on Wed- nesday Afternoon. Mrs. J. D. Taylor, Tweed, was severely injured Wednesday after- noon_when a car, in which she was 8 passenger, and which was driven by Ber husband, was struck by the C.N.R. train on the. Midland branch at Corbyville crossing. The woman was brought to Belle- ville on the train and removed to Dr. J. J. Robertson's office. Mr. Taylor was unhurt. Mr. Taylor complained that the view at the crossing was not clear, afid that he did not see the train un< til it was almost upon him. To avoid a head-on collision he turned the car sideways, the steps of one of the coaches tearing off two wheels and overturning it in the ditch. Mr. Taylor was driving towards Belle ville at the time. THE SUMMER SCHOOL Five Hundred Students Are Expected at Queen's In Two Weeks. « Anticipating five hundred students at Queen's in less than two weeks' time, news comes of special prepa- rations being made by the student committees appointed last year to organize activities for the present summer session. W. J. Neale, of Ottawa, chgirman of the -athletic committee, is going to get baseball under way the day after the classes open. A softball game between the married and the single men is set down for Thurs- day, July 8th. Tennis, which is so poptilar with the summer students, ik to be given a strong impetus with & tournament right at the start of the term. Sexton, the star of last summer, is not to be here, as he has * * | IN MARINE CIRCLES The pleasure yacht Gannet arrived in port yesterday afternoon. The steamer Jeska and Pat Doris arrived last night with coal from Oswega:" | The steamer Concretia arrived last night and is at the causeway. The steamer City of Ottawa clear- ed west this morning. The steamer Kingston arrived from Toronto and Charlotte this morning and cleared for Prescott. It will return this afternoon and clear for Charlotte and Toronto. BAN RIGH HALL. Will Be Ready in Fall for Queen's i Girl Students. Evefything around Ban Righ Hall is rounding nicely into shape for the opening when the students retGrn in the fall. The building is now in the hands of the electricians, employees of the H. W. Newman Electric Company having been working there for three weeks. The building is to be excep- tionally well-lighted. The corridors are strung with fixtures, there are ten drops in the dining room and fif- teen of fiva lights each in the recep- tion room. , Plumbing, woodwork, plastering, painting are all practically complet- ed. Keys are in their locks, stoves and boilers are in place in the kitch- en and an electric potato peeler in the corner awaits its first peck of po- tatoes. One lot of bed-springs are on the spqt. The lidcieum in the upper flats has been laid but has to be matched and finished off yet. On each floor there is a large elec- tric gong for fire and a smaller bell worked from the cooking headquar- ters. < - Canadian Pacific. City ticket office, 180 Weddington street, report the following arrivals of their steamships: Empress of France, from Soutk- ampton and Cherbourg, due Quebec, June 26th. Montroyal, front Quebec, due Liv- erpool, "June 26th. Montelare, from Liverpool, Quebec, June 26th, Melita, from Montreal, due Cher bourg and Southampton, June 235th, and due Antwerp, June 26th. Minnedosa, from Antwerp; South- ampton and Cherbourg, due Quebec, Jurie 26th. Metagama, from Montreal, Belfast and- Glasgow, June 2%th. Marloch, from Glasgow and Bel- fast, due Quebee¢, June 27th. Empress of Australia, from Hong Kong and Yokohama, due Vancou- ver, June 30th. Empress of Canada, from Vancou- ver, arrived Yokohama, June 22nd and due Hong Kong, June 29th. due due ' REAL FISH STORY. Which Js True as' a Whig Man WHIG | BASEBALL EVERY GLOVE IN OUR STORE TO BE CLEARED OUT AT A good assortment and lots of them. A nice gift for the passed their examination. - MOORE'S 207% REDUCTION Boys who Fi for every PA . PRINTED INU. 8. As NEW PICTORIAL REVIEW PRINTED PATTERNS i you éan lop the div. and other pattern. Printed, Perforated, and Cut Out, they almost talk to you PICTORIAL REVIEW PATTERNS For July on sale. 20c to 45¢ a any \ Pattern 2752 T= Pattern 2752 | i day. With » PICTORIAL REVIEW smaller cost than with The New Pictorial Review Printed Patterns are here The new Pictorial Review Printed Pat- terns are easily the finest Printed Pat- tern made in the world to-day. They are sosimple that it is a pleasure to do your own sewing. Buy one to-day and be con- vinced. FOR THAT NEW DRESS Beautiful, new Voiles, Muslins, plain and fancy Crepes, Broad. cloths, Ratine-Ginghams, Gab- erdine, Ratines, Pique, Silk Chambray and Ginghams, in a maize of dainty designs and wonderful colorings; all prices. PICTORIAL MAGAZINE for July .......... w.ueeenn 15e Newman & Shaw THE ALWAYS BUSY STORE fe Wit d Episod At last, Here is a "fish story' that Shen can be dépended upon to be the truth, as the writer witnessed thé af- talr. A young man was trolling from a boat at Kingston Mills Wednesday evening, and going along easily he felt a heavy tug on his line. Letting the fish get a good hold, he started SUMMERTIME HATS At Moderate Prices Parisian Shop to pull him in. When he had the fish almost in sight, off snapped his steel pole and the boat tipped over, throw- ing him into the water. The young make shore, as he but much to p-- ne ham ANNUAL SWIMMING CAMPAIGN Free Instruction for Boys at the Y.M.C.A. Next Week.| mal was able t was a good yéimmer, his chagrin, o lost the fish, whisk he --~¥¢3 several years the local Y.M.C. HAD A FINE OUTING. St. Andrew's Sunday School Picnic Held at Brophy's Point. About 3560 people made the trip on ternoon, to Brophy's Point, where St. Andrew's Sunday school held its annual picnie. A fine programme of races was run off, capably handled by Messrs. Bews, McDonnell, Burns, Spence, McCullough and any others who assisted- A well contest- ed* ball game between the married men and the Sunday school boys was the steamer Waubic Wednesday at-[i AA Real Estate | $4,600--Brick dwelling, mod. ern, central. $5,000---William street, detach. ed brick, modern, deep lot. | $6,000 -- University Avene, brick, modern. $5,100-- (Neat the University) ll ing DearS ae) | Real value A. has thrown open the use of its become an intra-mural and attended patatorium to boys of the city claims must have been'a big one to upset a boat and snap a steel rod in staged, ending in a win for the boys BUY HERE AND SAVE MONEY the regular session in medicine last winter. Two new grass courts have béen laid out west of tha arena, on thé former site of the old curling rink. Alan which is carried out by the girls of the winter session is to ex- tend to all new students at the sum- mer school. Representatives of the Summer School Association, wear- ing Queen's colors, are to meet all the tralhs, day and night, while thé new students are coming to the ¢ity. More than that, Mr. Carr, di- rector of extension, has been asked to write all the registered students to acquaint them of this fact. This gervice will be Invaluable to the pewcomers in assisting them to lo- cate their boarding-houses, etc. es- pecially it arriving after dark. It wa$ not so necessary when the | s¢hiool was small, which was not so two. Mrs. Leonard R. Cossitt, Toronto, died on Wednesday, from heart dis- ease. Béfore her marriage, twenty- eight years ago, she was Miss Minnie Colecock, second daughter of the late Mr. ahd Mrs. Neville B. Colcock. Her father was at the time the proprietor of the then Brockville Times. A--------r Aa ct Ama Tn "THE HAT STORE" Let us help:you select your. & the purpose of teaching all to swim. That this service has been appreciat- ed is evidenced By the fact that last year over 150; lads registered and 54 were taught to swim at least a few strokes. Onee the boys have obtained confidence and can swim even a few teet it is only a matter of practice until they are quite at home in the water. Situated as Kingston is on 8 large body of 'water, it is very des- irable that every resident should be able to swim and to. rescue others trom' drowning should an accident in the water occur. Parents and boys al will there~ fore welcome the Lnouncement made at the Y.M.C. A. this morning that the campaign this year will be held next week and that boys may register at the Y.M.C.A. office on Thursday, Friday or Saturday of by a score of 12-8. Mercer and Thompson , did some heavy hitting for the men, while Waugh clouted hard for the boys. ub A very delicious supper wad sérv- ed by the ladies. Much of the success of the picnic is due to Mr. W. Gill |and Mr. .J. Bews, who worked very | faithfully throughout "the whole 'day. . The races resulted as follows: Miss McCullough's class, Edna Pyke; Margaret Patterson. Miss Clow's class, Malcolm Bews; James Cummings. Mrs. Millar's class, Jack Mercer; Ed. Cunningham. Miss Davis' class, Minnie Thomp~ son; Margaret Johnston. { * Miss Donnelly's class, Clara Drys- (dale; Betty Thompson. Miss Donnelly's class, Bernice Me- many years ago. 2 this week for the free swimming instruction. C. 0. Chamberlain, the physical insructor, has lined up some of the best local swimmers to assist STRAW HAT It will pay you to, come to 'The Hat Store." -~ Fliroy; Hilda Laird. Mr. Anderson's class, Gordon Mercer; James Strong. class, Reg. Miss Thompson's Bruce; Tom Thurlby. LoRin | Miss Newland's class, Tom Cum~ mings; R. Grey. Mrs. Ald. Nash's Objection. At the meeting of the éity council ' " . «Miss Cullin's class, Phyliss Black; Francis Dunlop's class, Miss Spencer; Miss McLean's class, Violet Roach; Mary Hortqpn. : Miss Leach's class, Florence Cun- ningham; Jead Wright; Irene Me- Miss Burns' class, Vers Wathem: athem, \ ; i Z ' kB o 8 sg 1 ER. FIEsE fH a