Jlobe-trotters may talk of the fee served "by the Turks. they can get coffee at home just as rich, delicious and fragrant--by ordering Chase & Sanborn's d SEAL BRAND / COFFEE from their grocers. OMEN hy» 4.80, 5.00. nt pur- pon big Take putation dollars, Jan the ne upon }, Can p You That's omens pair. land & Bro. od Shoemaking, e possible, 8) in High Grade to Redpath E xtra Granu- ¢ Compound : AS,NO EQUAL for sTomaca and Bowels la. Hundreds in Kingston can d and TAKE NO OTHER. 5 for $1.00. eee $115,000,000.00 42,000,000.00 Over i. a oo uu.oy : The best compa for. policy. , The pany for - \GENTS "want for the Tolle i. ance Company ARLETON Brace ingston, Applications ALMONTE: treated con- Ontario and Ottawa Valley R. Dis- URQUHART, Special Agent Minum ) Immedidte Delivery! WILLIAM sT. Synopsis of Canadian Northwest BOMESTEAD REGULATIONS. 'Any even numbered section of PDomin-| ion Laods in Manitoba or the North-West Provinces, eXxcepling 8 and 26, not re- served, way bv homesteaded by any per- son the sve heaa of a munly, or wale vver 183 years of age, (0 the extent oi one-quarter section, of 160 acres, more | or Apprication for bowmestead entry must | Le luade person by the applicant at aj Dominive Lands Agency or Suib-agency. Entry by proxy way, however, be made at an Agency om certain couwitious by the father, mother, son, daughter, broth- er or sister of an intending howmesteader. An apprcation for ealry or cancelia- ons Maske personally al. any sub-ageut's PWN 0 We Agent Ly the Sub. wt we eapensu of Lhe appli- cant, and if The land apblied for is vacant on recuipt of the teiegram such applica- tion is to have priority and the land will be held until the necessary papers to complete the lramsaction are received Ly nail. Ti case of "personavion' or fraud the! applicant will jorteit alk priority of claim or if entry has been grauted it will be sumuuarily canceliud An application 1 cancellation must be made in person. he applicant must be ehigible for homestead entry, and only one application for cancellation will be re- cvived from an individual until that ap- plication hus been disposed of, Where: an entry is cancelled subSequeat to institution of cancellition procewdings, the applicant for Cancellation will be en- titled to prior right of entry Applicant for cancellation must state in what particulars the howesteader is in default. A howmesteader whose entry is not the subject of cancellation procesdings may subject to Whe approval of Depart- went, relinquish it in favor of father, mother, son, daughter, brother or sister 10 eligible, but to no one else, on filing declaration of abandonment DUTIES--A settler is required to per- form the duties under one of the fellow- ing plans :-- 11); At least six months' residence up- on and cultivation of the land in each year during the term of three years, 12) A homesteader may, if he so de- sires, perform the required residence duties by living on farming land owned solely by him, not: less than eighty (50) weres im extent, mn the wicipity of Ins homestead. Jot ownership in land will uot weet this requirement (3) If the father (or mother, if the father is deceased) of a homesteader has permanent residence on farming land owned solely hy him, not less than Ly (80) acres in exten in the vicini« ty of the homestead, or upon a home- stead entered for Uy him in the vicinity, such howesteader may perform his own residence duties Ly living with the fath er (ur mother.) (4) The term vicinity" =in the wo preceding paragraphs is defined as mdan- ng not more than nine miles in a direct line, exclusive of the width of road" al- lowance crossed in the asurement (5) A homesteader intending to perform his residence duties in accorgante with the above while living with parents. or on farming land owned by himself must notify the Agent for the district of such intention Before making application for = patent Lhe settler must give six months' notice in writing to the Commissioner of Do- ninion Lands at Ottawa, of his inten- tion to do so. SYNOPSIS OF CANADIAN NORTH- WE MINING R ULATIONS, COAL--Coal mining rights ay ..be leased for a period of twenty-one years ut an anual rental of $1 per acre. Not wore than 2,560 acres shail Le leased to one individual or company. A royalty at the rate of five cents per ton shall be collected on the merchantable coal mined. QUARTZ--A person eighteen years . of age or over, having discovered mineral in place," may locate a claim 1,500x1,500 feet. The fee for recording a claim is $35. At least $100 must be expended on the claim Such pal or paid to the mining recorder thereof. When $500 has been expegded or paid, the locator may upon havithg.« survey made, and upon complying with other requirements, pur- chose the land at $1 per acre. The patent provides for the pavment of a royalty of 2§ per cent on the sales. Placer mining claims generally are 100 feet square ; entry fee 35, renewable year- ly An applicant may obtain two leases to dredge for gold of five miles each for a term of twenty years, renewable at the discretion of the Minister of the In- terior. The lessoe shall have a dredge in oper- | ation within one season from the date of the lease for each five miles. Rental $10 per annum for each mile of river | leased. Royalty at the rate of 24 cent collected on the output after it ex- ceeds $10,000, W. W. CORY, Deputy of the Minister of the Interior. N.B.--Unpauthorized publication of this advertisement will: not be paid for. { | Plenty of It. Don't buy of dealers who limit you because they are limited. When a man wants § coal, he don't want a pro- viso with every ton. We have plenty, and we sell all 3 you want all the time. TheFrontenac Lumber and Coal Company. : A.CHADWICK, Manager Successors of The Rathbun Samphny. Phone No. 87. | ft When You Buy oy § COAL § From ; P. WALSH Yoiy get genuine Scranton, as he handles nothing Ee ars [Ts | seeurity--the known fortune of her Non | OASSIE CHADWICK |A CANADIAN WITH A SWINDLING RECORD": | She Got Money Without Bearing | Heavily on Her Femininity-- In Cléveland Her Sensational | Career Began. Mrs. Cassie Chadwick, whose death lin the Ohio state prison is reported, was one of the most remarkable wo- men that the last half century bas | produced. That her talents were exer- cised wholly in the fields of crime is an incident for which her surroundings may have been responsible. Had Fate cast her lines otherwise, she would surely have become celebrated, for she | possessed courage, audacity, nerve, perseverance, and hali a dozen other high qualities to a remarkable extent. It has been estimated that Mrs. Chad- wick's swindlings ran into the mil lions, and there can be little doubt that many of her victims have kept their losses to themselves, | rather than become a public laughing-stock. Oi the whole remarkable story, the ! most significant feature is? that Mrs. Chadwick got the. money without bearing heavily on her femininity. In the common sense of the word, she was not an adventuress She was per- sonally without physical charm. Her own testimony on the subject being worthless, we may assume that Mrs. Chadwick's maiden name was Elizabeth Bigley, and that she was born at Appin, Omt., forty-five vears ago, as her sister says. Her parents LATE MRS. CASSIE CHADWICK. werg poor, and life on the farm held no attractions for Elizabeth. Her | earliest attempt to make a name for | herself was executed on a cheque, and was attended by some irregularity | which landed her in a police court. On | the plea of insanity = she escaped im- prisonment, and soon leit the country to join her sister in Cleveland. There, in 1882, she married Dr. W. S. Spring- | steen, who divorced her shortly. Next she appeared in Toledo, under the | name of De Vere, and succeeded in fascinating several men, one of them being an express agent named Lamb, whom she Janded in financial diffi- culties, before she, herself, on a charge of forgery, was imprisoned for nine vears. On her release she went to Cleveland, calling herself Mrs. Hoover, in affectionate memory of her last husband. She obtained employment | as traveller for a millinery establish- | ment, and later on blossomed forth as a clairvoyant and masseuse In the latter role she met Dr. L. E. Chad- wick, a wealthy Cleveland physician, whom she so infatuated that he pro- {posed marriage and 'was accepted. the ceremony being performed at Pitts. bur It was in Cleveland that her sensa- tional career as a financier began. At the outset we are puzzled to find a satisfactory motive for her colossal borrowings. Dr." Chadwick was a wealthy man, and quite able to sup port his wife in luxury, but this w {not good enough for Mrs. Chadwick {The tremendous sums she fraudulently {obtained were put to no. logical pur- | pose; probably half of the huge total was given away. She bought a dozen vings from a Toronto jeweler, but cave them 'all away to former Cana- dian acyuaintances. She spent several {thousands of dollars in equipping her | domestic servants with silk and fine { linen, and sealskin sacques. Her home {in Cleveland was a huge brie | shop. Costly pictures, price and bronzes, famous statues, and {other most expensive articles of virtn { {were scatter {maniacal profusion. On her hands | | were thousands of dollars' worth , of 1 about with almost | s. She lived in the most luxurious style. But to a rational approxima- | tion of all this insane prodigaliy she might * have legitimately | through Dr. Chadwick's wealth. & attained Traced from its ¥mall and modest yginnings, Mrs. Chadwick's system of borrowings is easily understood. For | any. reasonable amount she had good hand: Her method was not ne Fight of the heauties She would borrow a thousand dolinm and when the note became due bor- |row two thousand from some one else |and retire the first note. When the |accond note expired, she could go to borrower No. 1 for $3,000, | probably get it on the strength THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, MONDAY, OCTOBER 14 1907. CAN'T STICK TO HIS LAST. -------- The Passing of the Custom Shoe- maker. Mournfully the old shoemaker glance ed about his little shop--shop now so 1d seen as to be almost a curios a lof her promptuess in the matter of {the first loan. This principle could be worked safely for any sum up to $10,000, but when the woman desired igreater advances some better security {than her note of hand was Necessary. {After a few years of this sort of |tinancing, Mrs. Chadwick met C, T. | Befkwith, president of the Citizens' {National Bank, of Oberlin, Ohio, a {man whom she completely deceived. To Beckwith she gave promissory {notes amounting to $250,000, signed | "Andrew Carnegie," the signatures being forgeries. She explained that {she had sold property to Carnegie, but that it was "tied up" for the {time being, and that it could not Le {realized on by either of them, but that Carnegie had given the notes so {that she" should not be pressed for | money. Beckwith, although a man reputed to be a pleasing combination of Hetty Green and David Harum, was trustful {enough to hand over $210,000 owned by the bank Tand $100,000 of his per- |sonal estate on these pieces of paper. | He made some casual enquiries of a {lawyer, who pronounced the notes genuine, but did not take the trouble of writing to Mr. Carnegie, a course of action which would have decided the matter at the cost of a couple of |stamps. He eatertained not the | slightest doubt, but gave up the bank's assets and his own fortune to this woman unquestionably. This _he did in defiance of a state law which forbids the loan of more than a tenth of a bank's paid-up capital to one person. To conceal this fact from the auditor, Beckwith and the cashier, a man named Spear, also a dupe, re- sorted to all sorts of subterfuges and tdoctorings of books. The grand ex- | posure came, dramatically from the deathbed of William Tedortha, an fOberlin lawyer, who had been consult- ed bv Beckwith. Bedortha felt that the directors of the bank should know how matters stood, and just before he died he told them the story ° which i shocked and amazed the world. ity, He was sad. "There was a day," he said, 'when it was all very well for the cobbler to stick to his last, but not any mote. "He hasn't any last any more--the modern shoe factory has either taken Gernot it away from him or by competition ¥ has left him too poor to make any" use of it." This sounded astounding enough. From the way the old shoemaker look: ed--the gloom on his brow, the tear steading on his cheek--he was deeply Hi hand rested hesitatingly in a wy J disheartened sort of way, on the shoe he was hali-soling, aud the aw] seuss blac h ch | 3 . "in whee y a a a ut a -- He -- . # getit? Very nearly. The President said, * Give it to him--just for his absent-mindedly on. the bench. verve." But the Cashier objected, * that this was unreasonable." "Cheap ocobblers can still get along and may be able to for awhile, but there is no won use for us high-class | shoemakers," he murmured. nothing left for us but to either get into some Of business, become clerks in shoe stores or hands in shoe Blanes Surge, 24. factories: hie i "Now, yom must recall'--bhis eye] bri rhtened © with the recollection | hen the custom shoemaker was one | ol the prosperous city residents, when | he could have a glass of beer and a| sandwich if he wanted it. That's all past and gone. "Why, not 50 many years ago, one | wasn't considered any pumpkins unless | he had his shoes made to order, at| they dor now. The man who could measure your foot and fit it with al view to such peo suliarities as coms, | bunions, swollen joints, abnormal in| ten and that sort of thing--why, he | . i in constant demand. Many were dealer or the manufacturer, either for the fortunes made' in that way. Alas ! | the swell customers are always asking I. didn't save mine, for I thought it |for the latest thing, aud would be dis would alwavs last. appointed if told that there had been "These things the earlier factory no late change. i t didn't pretend. to do. If the factory] "Why, there are tanneries now that shoe didn't agree with your foat, so | send samples of new leathers--the new- muc! h the worse for the foot. ness principally consists in color and "You had to tase What the fac-| gloss to the retail dealers. instead of tory gave you; it was a workman who | to the factories | Sleeping Under Water. ! To really enjoy sleep one should | sleep under water, It is there Mor- pheus really reigns, alongside the throne of Neptune, and pleasures de- nied mere land beings are graciously | dispensed to those bold enough to visit the depths. To be sure, a diver's outfit is essen tial, unless one desires to pursue the! nap to infinity: A sea captain who has devoted much observation to the fondness of divers for sleeping under water explained : "In the Mediterranean, for instance, the practice is not at all common. 1 once descended myself to visit a wreck on which divers were engaged. and there found several of them comforta- ablv Sar 3 rabins. The o ahly snoozing in the cabins, Pix thes | that have been made by the factories | feats in cutting, But the ladies are fer to get inside the wrec | want a nap, because there is then vo | { danger from ground sharks. But it is| | hard on the employers, because the | | divers are paid by the hour, and get very high wages « "Diving appliances are so perfect nowadays, that in spite of its risks it is fascinating work, and there is some- | thing about it, too, that makes a | submarine nap quite a luxury. There is | a soft, undulating motion under water soothing." i Egyptian Cigarettes. { In spite of the fact that the United States is the world's great producer of | | cigarett it imports 83,000,000 worth | of foreign-made cigarettes every year, Most of these are Turkish or Egyvp-| tian. In the case of Egyptian brands Jie] | ame is prac tically a misnomer. Wh Egypt is a considerable tobacco pro-| Ler, most of the cigarettes exported! from the land of the khedive a of | Greek tobacco and made by Greeks. The explanation of the 'matter, as) offered hy the Ameygican consul in Ath- ens, is simple. It sdems that the Greek tobacco crop last year was the largest | | ever harvested--abont 200,000, | 060 pounds. A brand of Greek tobac-! | co is used for Egyptian cigarettes. | i Why, it is asked, Egyptians ? (he | { answer is that Egyptian cigarettes are | made by Greeks, hecause cigarette pa- | | per is too expensive in Greece, where | it is a government monopoly. Thus the | business has gone over to Egypt. T he | most famous cigarette makers of | Ecypt are Greeks. | Turkey is a large tobacco produci ing | "| country, yielding 50,000 tons of tobac- | Ss | co every vear, and the Turks, it is) well-known, are a mation of smokers. As a Jawbreaker the lawyer has the | { rest of us beaten at the start, Some Ginger Tea. y Is considered a good thing to break | up< a chill, but something much more cortain is a teaspoonful Nerviline | { | taken in hot water. Nerviline sends! | glowing warmth tingling all through | Pe n 4 + | -------------- ies. The customer would not notice | Wo I ked them at all. Rut the salesman magni- 'Wonderful Miracles the body, makes you feel good at once. | Nothing so good for colds, coughs, chest pains and chills. Get a 25¢. bottle | , ! of Polson's Nerviline to-day. : purifying the in the Merry Musical Fantasy 'The Gingerbr aad Man," at The Grand, on | Pills work marvels { for the sick and! Tuesday, October 15th. "| moderate priced to $20 ind $26 a! sucoess, according to the report of the that, with the perfect quiet, is most | | #100, 000 worth of shoe lasts. would take no orders. "When a society woman asks for the "And this was what gave the cus- latest in shoes she is shown these tom shoemaker his advantage. Why, sample leathers, chooses the kind she 1 have seen the time when | had twen- | likes--perhaps to match a dress--and ty-four pairs of thoes on the shelf at | then the store orders the shoes from one time, and all made on a "single | a factory, giving the number of the | order for the same woman The | leather. 1 price which 1 got for thut job was; "li the factory has none of that | £00. } particular leather in stock, it must or- | "They were of all kinds--high, low, | der some. Modetn business: see ? | buttoned, laced and clasped; white, But the shoe factory hands have! black and russet; strong, delicate and | their troubles. What they dislike me medium; and they were made of leath- of all is the task of cutting shoes out | er, cloth or lace, {of cloth to agree with a lady's dress. | "But the day of the custom shoe! "All" kinds of cloth come' in. n | 'maker is about at an end. This is | many instances openwork cloth is re because the factories rose to their op-| ceived with orders to makes shoes | portunities. {frgm it, and then comes backing wp! "Have yon ever noticed the strides! with other cloth awd very delicate in the way of pleasing the pubic ? { willing to pay, and must get what "To-day, instead of going to the! they want." custom shoemaker one goes to a shoe! ------ store, or the shoe department of a! Motor Omnibuses In London. department stove. ..éte he is shown| The motor, omnibuses in operation samples of shoes ranging from the |in London have vot proved a nancial pair. They are all factory made. Yet auditor of the company, who says: there are few feet, éven to the Byron. |The company has never made anv esque club, that cannot be fitted there. |profits; nothing but a considerable "This is easy to understand when [loss from the first; * * the actual one considers that in even a small fac- loss on running has heen yee $60, tory to-day there are kept in stock (000. It has cost over 1s. . (thirty. |six cents) per car mile to us 1d "No custom shoemaker could afford |(twenty-two cents), and every car to keep that many; that is why the! {mile run in the recent period of work: What does it mean ? ? we give a new suit or refund your money. often abused 2?" asked a merchant. Does it pay ? "There's | socom SS wit =~" * reasonable." : workers. Yes. always. Semi-ready i anywhere from $5 to 215 : | ro "The factory shoes didn't fit as! ® . «78-80 PRINCESS STREET. LIPTON'S LIMERICKS In view of the endive interest which has been created through our last Limerick, we have decided to offer larger Prizes, and so that our friends at a distance may have an SEpGRAmitY of competing this com Label, fac tory has taken such a lead. ling has made a dead loss of 7d. (four- "And even if there be nothing in |teen cents) Efforts are being made the store which ..¢ customer wants to come to some general agreement the expert attendants can, by measur- | for increasing the fares, and inven. ling his foot, order from the factory |'OT* are endeavoring to Produce. sows and give him a pair of shoes that {appliance which will be prod uctive | will fit like gloves, | more steady rmning and will lessen { "There is positively no need for anv {the heavy repair bills which confront | one to have corns nowadays if he will | the owners of motor omnibuses. lace himself in the hands of a com- i SE + stent shoe clerk, for any kind of de- | China's Pernicious Tax System. formity or atmormality can be accom-| Pekin is now quite safe for foreign. odated. ers to go freely in all parts of the "There are lasts for wide feet, nar J ee She Fohisien ---- 4 . : A - here Tou Seat, Jigh instep, big. bunions ted. The Chinese are duvelopiog slow. Here the shoemaker digressed: ly dlong the rons yg or "By the way, do vou know what civilisation, but iy od ym n makes a bunion * Na ? Well, it is sim- Nr who have spent their lives in | Ply getting shoes too shart. In a the east and know the country thor: shart. shoe the foot cannot follow the | oughly declare that China will not de dictates of growth imposed by nature rok materially until she has a good [ve it simply cannot keep from grow- government. The present system of wo tiny axes, c] 'So the tissue and bone and flesh Bs for centuries, is the mother of { that should go into the toes is simply [41] graft, the incubus umfier which the | | sidetracked into a_bunch whergver it | uation is suffering, and will keep the on get the casiest, and forms a | | country back until the system has union." com fetely wiped out, This said the slasmaker went on: | een » ha "T was speaking of the various lasts ; i designed > fit Retr kind py foot.| But the average man isni half so Now, the styles of feet don't change | anxious to bet on a sure thing as those --bunions and corns and insteps pit] {behind the game are to have ankles are always pretty much the | A man is up against tough Tuck if he | same--but still the styles of lasts must | married a woman who knows that she change. The reason ? Simply to stimy- | knows more than he does. late trade. Some men seem to think that long | "You would | hair will make up for a brain short- be surprised at the slight differences made in these chang- | en thm, and thus wweures big big orders "It isn't wholly the fault the | aes By Dr. Hamilton's Pills| | Learned Physician Astounded By ! the Increasing Numbers of His » Cures. | Halifax, N.S, Oct. 14.--That wun {usual knowledge is possessed by Dr Hamilton is evidenced by the state tment of Mrs. Macleod, of 514 Camp! | bell Road, of this city. For years this {lady suffere. with torturing, reeling {headaches that could only be allayed by strong narcotics. "Different ye sicians," she states, "failed, so 1 de cided to see what Dr. Hamilton could ido. 1 purchased a few boxes of his | Mandrake and Butternut Pills and their use immediately gave the most | grateful relief. Headaches. and their | depressing influence left me. Spells of | fainting weakness, long hours of sleep- | lessness, fear of nervous collapse, all these disappeared after treating with Dr. Hamilton's Pills. My restoration to vigorous health is complete and * {no remedy could do more than Dr. { Hamilton's Pills of Mandrake and Baier, a - by Ssarthiing out weak spo enriching the blood, nourishing Hosilton's weak, 5c. per box, at all dealers, "Money Returned for Any Cause The ** Semi-ready " Guarantee money back after he had worn a $15 Suit for one year and a half. Did he For any reasonable cause -- and the customer is the judge of that worl good work always pays the Honest, of three weeks, closing October 17 $500.00 IN PRIZES First Prize, $150 Cash 2nd 50 rd " 25 25 Prizes of $5 Each. 75 Prizes ot $2 Each. The conditions of this competition are perfectl i Staple. Al you have to do is fill in the last line of the Limerick which shown below and then send it, (with label attached) of a package of Red, Pink, Orange, or Blue Label, or LIPTON'S COI which entitles the reader to send in one Limerick. You may send in as many Liuericha | as you like so tang as a TIN LID accompanies each Limerick LIPTON"S TO H.M. THE KING TEA The Finest the World Can Produce. Packed Only in Airtight Tins. FOR SALE BY ALL GROCERIES. "Money returned for any cause. ot Tailoring ibby Co.' netition will cover a period oor LIPTON'S 3 ix ood Fil 1 AND E IRE: 'aa understanding LIMERICK A lady of Sault Ste. : Marie, Asked a friend from Toronto to tea, She wired back, on the spot, "Is it Lipton's ? Eh! what" SNE Snesaasess Ssbeeeee SebseERRIAE to abide by the decision of Editor of The Toronto MALL final, and enter the competition on that distinet searnenne The competition will be decided by Editor of The Toronto "MAIL AND EMPIRE, whose decision must be as final. must be addressed "Lipton's Limerick," and a to BMAARE, Tatuto, Ont., not later than the last mail on Thursday, tober 17th. wes MAIL made in the United The highs class of Men's Footwes States. Union Made material. The best Colt Skin, Vici Kid, Gua Meni Coll . Widths from B to EE. Reid & Charles, Sole