P. AGE EIGHT Don't deliberately throw away money by buying your fall suit or overcoat elsewhere, Live wire suits and overcoats for young men. Suits of English model, with narrow shoulder; form fit- ting costs, high cut vests and smaller trousers, ced mod- erately, $15.00, $18.00 to $22.00. m We have an overcoat to meet every man's taste and every man's special requirements... Prices $15.00 up to $22.00. Livingston's, Brock Street. A little out of the way, but it will pay you to walk. ee ------------------ ~ A'Specia omens Suits & Coats for Saturday J Offering of 36 only stylish fall and winter suits, in this season's most approved. manner in black, navy and regimental blue, beautifully tailored from the most lar fabries. Regular sold up to 50. Saturday for $14.75. Women's Winter Coats . Only forty of them in the new fall col- ors, made from heavy English tweeds, in belted and plain effects, at less than the price of material. Saturday for $6.98. HE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2), 1916. _ Capt. Bawlt and the 154th reeruit- i ing trek pa rty are in Ottawa to-day. lll one platoon of the 155th Battal- ll! ion is spending a few days leave at Hl! Coe Hill . Lieut. J. H. Potts, Special Service | Company, has been promoted to the {rank of captain in the 45th Regi- | ment. Norman McKibbon, area super- | visor for Ontario and Quebec Mili- {tary Y. M. C. A. work, was in camp jon Thursday. A calle from Captain the Rev. W. | E. Kidd, states he passed through the | recent big engagement onthe Som- je region unscathed. | F. Johnston, pay office staff, was {in Cobourg on Thursday in connec- { tion with matters pretaining to the | Cobourg Heavy Battery. 3 -- | Sergt. R. W. Woood, 156th Bat- deputy "reeve of doing recruiting He has been secured talion, formerly Elizabethtown, is duty at Gananoque. there since July and has some 27 recruits. It shows the efficiency standard of Major-General Hodgins, A. G., when he cut the inspection of the troops short so that they might return without too much waste time to their private parade grounds. We must now write it Lieut.-Col, W. H. Emsley, as our old friend has received additional recognition and honor. Col. Emsley--the Rev. W. H. Emsley, of the Montreal Methodist Conference--Iis now with the On- tario Military. Hospital, Orpington, Kent, England. It is ite probable that Brock- ville will be the recruiting head- quarters for a new battalion to be enrolled from Leeds, Grenville, Dun- das, Stormont, and Glengarry Coun- ties, it being expected that Brock- ville and vieinity will contribute largely toward the new battalion. The programme provided for the soldiers of Barriefield camp in 'the Y.M.C.A. tent was delightful on Thursday night. Mrs. J. R. C. Dobbs arranged the programme. Those who went over to the camp were: Miss Woodman, Miss Tweddell, Messrs, Robertson, Saunders, Macdonnell and Munro. After the entertain- ment Reg. Hudson, who acted as chairman, thanked those who took part in the programme. On Friday evening Rev. Mr. Imrie, Toronto, will address the men. MADE A GREAT RECORD. Steve Ayres Thirteen Heats at the I Fair. Steve Ayres, owned by W.- J. Muller, of Collingwood, thirteen heats at the Kingston Indus- trial Fair, and came under the wire ten times first, which is a record for a 2.60 pacer in Canada. The free-for- all race, in which he was contesting, was the hottest race ever contested in Canada. It could not be finished in five heats, and in order to decide the winner of the race six heats had to be run off. 1 LOST HER ROLL OF $30. Hotel Employee Reported Her Loss to the Police, Miss Thresa Graham, employed at the Prince George Hotel, reported to the police on Friday afterncon that she had %een robbed of $30, She says she left the money in her coat, which was nanging in one of the rooms of tle hotel. This is the third theft of money reported the past few days, and it is quite evident that a sneak tnief has been working during the fair days. Canadian Casualties. Died of wounds--R. J. Bell, Belle- vile; V. Cesarino, Iroquois; J. E. Chappell, Thomasburg; J. E. Ander son, Pembroke. Wounded--Lieut. A.~ R. ~ Acker only man, F. A. Anderson, Peterbro; W. H. Addeson, Smith's Falls; J. C. Brown, Pembroke; G.\H: Gibson, Wellington; W. A. Letford, Elgin; F. R. Eggleston, Peterboro; A. Mann, Campbeliford; W. C. Offord, Syden- ham; J. H O'Keefe, Sand Point; W. } H. Peachey, Cobourg; A. Latour, Cornwall; G. C. Lightheart, Peter- boro; A. D. MacKinnon, Williams- town; F. C. Hill, Pembroke; C. B, Wilkins, Brighton; J. Gierman, Eganville; R. L. Butcher, Napanee; A. E. Wartman, Newburgh. William Offord Wounded. In the latest list of casualties is- years' experience in the THth Regi- ment, of which he was a member, he enlisted in The 21st Battalion in Oe- , 1914, sailing with that unit in 1915. His next of kin is Sydenham. 23 is 2 i tarldl: 4 stepped the CENSOR NOT A FOOL. "The censor is not the fool you take him to be." The above line was penned. by a British censor upon a letter from an officer at the front! to his wife,.in which an ingenious code was discovered. It meant to dis- close to the anxious wife just where her husband was fighting, but it was spoiled by the censor, and an order was issued by the Wir Office probib- iting such practices. . Before the officer, who wrote 'le; code letter, left for the front, he se- cured two maps showing the entire British fighting line. The maps iden tical. One he left with his wile and the other he took with him. - Thereafter, each time he wrote al letter, he placed the stationary on| his map, stuc®: a pin through fit di-/ rectly over Paris, another directly over Brussels, and a third at the; point where he was stationed. Upon | receiving th. letter, his wife would superimpose it on her map; agjusting the extreme pinholes over Pars and Brussels, and her husband's where- abouts would be indicated by the; middle hole. This is but one of a score of codes and secret signals dis- covered by the censors recently. England does not censure the rcla-! tives of men at the front for wanting to know the locality in which they are fighting and perhaps dying, but| such disclosures become a menace. | No one knows how extensive Ger-| many's espionage system may be, and England is taking no chances. _Another code system used by striim Jee was more elaborate than t e pointed out by the cen- | sor, with his "fool' notation. It was | arranged UL. just before | :afled for France, and | consisted of (1. > charts of the battle | line, one of which he retained while | the wife kept the other. -Each map | was laid out in: blocks an inch square; each square could be identi- | filed by combinations of letters indi- | cating each line of squares from left to right. Down the left hand side was another row of letters. In writ- ing home, the officer would say: | "Give my regards to L. A. Smith." Being a fictitious name, the wife would know it as a key to her secret code. Putting her finger gn the "A" line pf the squares on her 'chart, she would follow along under the "L'" squares, in which was her husband's position at the front. It is improb- able that any information contained in these code letters has ever reach- ed the Germans, but there is a possi- bility of such a mischance, and Eng- land is losing no opportunity to de- feat a spy system that has made Englishmen gasp. gp -- Praise for Brother-in-law. "I cannot close this despatch with- out recording the brilliant work of my Chief of the Staff, Vice-Admiral Sir Charles Madden. Throughout a period of twenty-one mgnths of war his services have been of inestim- able value. His good judgment, his long experience in fleets, special gift for organization, and his capacity for unlimited work have all been of assistance to me, and have relieved me of much of the an- xiety inseparable from the conduct of the fleet during the war. In stages leading up to the fleet Action and during and after the action he was always at hand to assist, .nd his judgment was never at fauit, I owe him more than I can say." . Sir Charles Madden, to whom Ad- miral Jellicoe pays this magnificent tribute in his story of the Jutland battle, is his brother-in-law. Both admirals married daughters of Sir Charlés Cayzer, the shipping magnate. Admiral Madden married in 1905, and has one son and three daughters, while Admiral Jellicoe was married three years earlier and has four daughters. Sir Charles has been Chief of Staff to Jellicoe since the outbreak of war. He has been continuously employ- ed since he entered the navy forty- one years ago, a fact which shows how highly his abilities have been appreciated by the successive Boards of Admiralty. When Asquith Laughed. It is said that Mr. Asquith has once been known to laugh out- \right while on a public platform. The record-breaking occasion was at a political meeting in _Seotland. The Premier was constantly being interrupted, one of the chief hecklers a farmer wearing a large straw y . th "Who said that?" quickly. There was sudden silence. Then a man in the audience stood up and, hat, shouted: "It was him wi' the coo's breakfast .. the officer with his wife, | cEeiiiss To-night "The Bohemian Girl" The Aborn Opera Company with | its spectacular version of "The Bo-| ara 1] THEATRICAL NEWS hemian Girl" is the attraction at the | [iii Grand Opera House to-night and Sat- | urday matinee and night. This fam- | ous opera has a permanent hold upon the public affection with its pictur-| esque romantic and interestingly told story as well as its beautiful music which has endeared itself to all lovers of melody. In the opera there follows a series of advéntures and complications through which a pretty love romance is woven. At the Strand. i Capacity business greeted the screening of the photo plays and vaudeville presented at the Strand Theatre last evening. The vaudeville is a musical novelty act, featuring Budd Holloway, who rendered some | pleasing numbers on as many differ-| ent instruments. The photoplay de/ luxe was a five-act . Triangle play, "Stranded," starring sweet Bessie Love, who is capably supported by/ De Wolf Hopper. The comedy is one of those famous i two acts, entitled "A Social Cut."| Same bill to-night and to-morrow. Secret of the Submarine. Astounds with its terrific surprises, stampedes the enthusiasm of those] who sit enthralled by its fast suc- ceeding climaxes. Great adventure, a | Ji double mystery, a globe girdling chase, a closely knit web of inter- national intrigue, and clear cut characters. This serial Is composed of fifteen episodes, chapter one will be shown in the King Edward The- atre Monday and Tuesday. The man- agement would like as many as pos- | sible to attend in the afternoon and avoid the crowding at night. Usual admission, ro . JUDICIAL COMMIS- SIONS IN MANITOBA Winnipeg Free Press. The Roblin Government, when it included Mr. Rogers, appointed Jus- tice Phippen as chairman of a com- mission to investigate taxation comn- ditions in Winnipeg; Chief Justice Mathers, chairman of the commis- sion, to report on the advisability of establishing civic hospitals in Winni- peg; Justice Cameron on a commis- sion 'Appointed to inquire into umi-i} | versity matters; Judge Locke, chair- man of a commission to inquire into the telephone system; Judge Ryan, commissioner to investigate the work- ing of the provincial franchise law; Judges Locke, Prudhomme and Myers to investigate the legality of the transfer of St. Peter's Indian Re- |} serve; Justice Robson to hold an in-| Hil quiry into the vice conditions in the City of Winnipeg; and Judge Daw- son to inquire into the administra- tion of the charities department of the city coubcil. After Mr. Rogers' retirement from the province the Roblin Government appointed Chief Justice Mathers to inquire into the circumstances attendant upon the es- cape from custody of John Krafch- enko, and, as its last official act in April, 1915, the appointment of Chief Justice Mathers and / Justice Macdonald as commissioners to ex- amine into the charges relative to the construction of the parliament build- ings. As a member of the Dominion Government, Mr. Rogers was a party to the appointment of the Meredith- Duff commission, which investigated |} the charges made in Parliament by George W. Kyte, greet eee VV CONSERVATIVE PAPER SPEAKS PLAIN THINGS Montreal Mall The upshot of it all is, according to the logic of newspapers like the Toronto Telegram and the Ottawa} Journal, that Ministers of the Crown should be encouraged to invite con- tractors to increase their tenders for public works. When matter comes before a Royal Commission the occa- sion lends inspiration to the mini- ster, and sleeping 'Wrongs are expos- ed on the spot. The minister need have no fear of the disclosures. All he has to do is to "soak the judge" who happens to be doing duty at the time, and if he has enough hewspap- ers in his retinue, the chances are he'll get away with it. One of the recent British seizures of teeth consisted of one hundred dozen sets, some having rubber plates and others composed of materials supposedly needed badly in Ger many. | . , Vancouver ' has 12,000 men be- tween eighteen and forty-five years of age and medieally fit, Keystones in| |] Special for | Saturday 7 Morning 7 9.30 to 11.30 We have just secured three particu- larly good things, and these we will offer tomorow morning from 9.30 to We cannot accept telephone orders + for these three specials. | 347 Pairs Ladies Black Undressed Kid Gloves - A genuine French glove in sizes 6, 61, 61,63,7. These are perfect fitting and worth regularly now $1.50 pair. Yours tomorrow morning, $1.00 pair. 1000 Yards Crash Towelling A union linen that gives excellent wear, and is now almost impossible to get. The wholesale price of this make today is 13ic yard. Your tomorrow moming .. .......:... ecyard 100 Full Sized Cotton Sheets With deep hem. A good English sheeting and worth $2.00 a pair. Yours tomorrow morning. . .. .. 80c each. P New Veilings for fall. New Neckwear for fall. New Fall Hosiery. New Kid Gloves for fall. New Underwear for fall. \. ok Lidaw & 3 '