ll Suits. Surely there ortant as the present cessity of New Under- r garments it is almost new under ones. The nderskirts is our cus- prices are as usual the Sateen skirts 35, 1.49 and on up to 0. x Moreen skirts laffeta derskirts 11 Coats Children »e a great store for 1's Coats. "Head- rents call us. This s for their outfitting been greater than in easy stages up sforLadies | 2 Them Back in Style | Ve have several nice lines adies' Dorothy Dodd Ou Patent. Leather, adies' Dorothy Co Patent Button, $450 adies' Vici Kid Dorothy ton, nice and dressy, ies' Fine Vici Kid Turn- Sole Dorothy Button, $4. adies' Empress Kid But- 'comfortable kind, $3.00. yles. We will be pleased YEAR 74. NO. 243, mececcoee0esecee sees ° | Things to Remember Furs of Little Value Good fur has a always | value of its own--like a fine diamond. We give our fur garments quality and style to make them perfect and void worry by selling only such garments as we can absolutely guarantee. We urge shoppers 'to do their buying early--not only be- cause of the better service we can give, but because the variety is greatest now, and some of the styles are limit- ed to one or two of a kind. We invite inspection and do everything in our power to help you mabe intelli- gent comparisons. ° There's no room in this ¢ » label on Fur of any sort is 8 ket, which carried security values 10 a |friends."" Dufour a guarantee of excellence. uch lower average figure Suan has children in Canada, and the watch | been seen in many years. Loanable |. " : " 3 i 7 We make everything we sell, $ ups were Gghtly held. almost all of recived gis Png BL and Fustentes everything we o | the banks and trust companies hoard- | preat jov over the fact that their Montreal, Oct. - 23.~The « board of mast. ! ing their funds to an extraordinary father was still alive. They have | governors of the Wesleyan Theological | : John McKay Fur House, 149-155 Brock ST. KINGSTON. 00000000000000000000 TAKE NOTICE. I bave the best line of Heaters I ever nd, 1 have also am enormous stock of RK Second-Hand Store, | A VESSEL ASHORE. Has 500 Passengers, But in' No » T. Malmo, Sweden, Oct. 23 --The Rus sian steamer Lithunia, irom Libau for Copenhagen and New York, and having 500 passengers on board, went ashore off Skilling, yesterday, during a thick fog. The Lithunia is leaking | and already has fourteen fect of wa- | AUSTRALIAN WORKE RS ter in her fore-hold. Her situation, however; is not dangerous. ain declined assistance from the] | Mills Burned Down. ie shore. . . 2% _ "The e reason. Of course the demands A eiiRiy ; Ogdensburg, N.Y.~ Oct. 23.--The |same reason man ORANDA Tariffs Afe Raised in Melbourne {flouring mills of the George A. Tay- of justice should always be satisfied DAILY MEM . | Boarding Houses and Living jor company. loc ated on the river provided they do not damage the Ri I Rr Fine Furs is Dearer. front, were destroyed by fire, on Mon- | viera as a resort for ieuuie seekers At Campbell Bros'. The Manufacturers. | yp, Oct. 23.--Some very _lday night, eutailing a loss of over Our undeviating aim here is to asso Cheest Board, 1.30 p.m, Thursday. ah Bourne, the v of unmasking 95 000. which, is covered. by .insur- ciate Monte Carlo with everything | jective work, in the way © \ ance. The origin is attributed to |E8Y. brilliant and fascinating in life, and it would be most inconsiderate to Roller: Rink every ,aftemeoon oven-| ihe nature of the new Australian tar- by the opposition ing. Wonderland Thentre, afternoon and evening. . Princess Theatre--Moving Pictures and Illustrated Songs. Limestone Lodge, No. 91, A.O.UW. meets Thursday evening, at 8 o'clock. This day im _ history :--Maritforougn captured Lis , 1702 ; Battle of Fdge- hill, 1642; Surrender of Mets, 1870. At 'The Bijou Theatre--A thrilling drama-- "The Factory Girl," also "Pill Squires," the Australian heavy-weight champion training for a fight. WHIG TELEPHONES. 243--Basiness Office. 229<Kditorial Rooms. 202-<Jobbing Department. Legal Forms, .all kinds, at Whig. The Daily Whig is always on sales Gibson's Drug Shore: Market Square-- Open ll late each evening. ! STUDENTS A -- WE HAVE THE STUDY LAMP YOU WANT. Neat Solid Nickle, with a green shade. Very easy en the eyes, and will make your work a pleasure. : "No smoke. No-smell: * Don't ruin your eyes. «+ Ses them at Robertson Bros. T | | that it could not muster enough cash; | ol 1 want to dispose of at | relief of this situation were 1 want the room for | .,,ct constantly | Secretary, of the Treasury { alarmed by The, cap-| and lodging last week, and it ted that most of the hoardin AVE ISIS Precipitated by New York Failure. SECURITY VALUES | : ah : | TOOK A VERY BIG SLUMP ON OW price seems t the aol of some tl TUESDAY. in buying Furs. It lacks ®| : jadgemen! . Ie Loans Could Be Secured on Pa Stock Exchange Collateral--A y } Prominent House Went Down More | in the Crash--Cortelyou Hur- { ried From Washington. i New York, Oet. 23---Overborne in { its efforts to stall off a series of runs |ecided that a meeting of on its central office and all three 'of its branches, the Knickerbocker Trust company suspended payment yester- SECRETARY CORTELYOU. day afternoon. At each office it was announced to - depositors that the company was entirely solvent, but { yesterday, to meet the tremendous de- mands that were made upon it. The lure of an institution sources, named in its last statement as close to $70,000,000, following roublesome events of | events of seven days | House banks, precipitated a for amything in crisis in finance. Se dor The MK ay a Phere was a crash in the stock bar money consequently ad- per cent. degree. Call vanced sharply to seventy | and during a large part of the day no loans at all could be made on stock exchange collateral The situation was aggravated by rumors affecting other stock compan jes which bruited about dreet throughout the day, and the failure of Marcus Mayer & Co., a pro- were | minent stock exchange house, with lia- bilities of $6,000,000. Conferences to devise means for the held al from the opening of o'clock at night Cortelyon, the developments in this from Washington, business until six city, came hastily and on his arrival went a conference with Mr. Morgan and oth- at once Into ers. PRIGE -------------- HIT BY PROTECTION. ifi,has been done | n ros, 1 g © . 10is were : a x * » : : , | organ, the Argos, in thie an ado which at midnight were in ruins. The | ation, if we opened 'the season by e haus boon espe success h ham i | paper has been especialy fiscal mills were burned three vears ago, |© sting a guillotine the Lyne-Deakin Hhsca and were oquip- "The Goold affair has been gro showing how | scheme hits the | and the bachelor living in lodgings. | The tarifi had hardly a fortnight before the to make the telling announcement Argus was able | Already there is a move upon the i part of boarding-house keepers to raise | their "tarifis,"" 'and so meet the | creases of their weekly bills caused by estab- | the new duties. Several large | lishments raised toelr prices for boar x follaw their ex in Melbourne will not take they do | ample. If those who conduc great In wil Jstepe toward their own seli-protection ie pq it is explained by | such establishments that the | crease in their grocers' bills alone {run away with their profits. The increases in the boarding "tar- Ed Dt | Murphy's grain elevator at this point | now showing ii" will, of course, vary, i hy , -- a destroyed by fire yester- scarfs, ties and stoles suitable for | lector will try and have the full |liament, states that the success of the {aid that the average = Sa i day, together with about 20,000 bush-| present wear, at Campbell Bros., the amount paid in by the end of the innovation will depend on the educa- [single boarders, will be at {he Sale lols of grain. A hot box on the shaft-| manufacturing furriers. vear. Delinquents can help by paying tion and knowledge of the represen- jolt ver cent, The Young I oh oy ing in the pit of the elevator was! bei their taxes at once. [tatives. {merly paid $5 a week : will probably {AE tause Of the fire. Much of the | = | The edict making education compul- {have to pay each week to his land- ot remaining in the ruins will be Death Of Mrs. Moore. 1 | sory. throughout China follows closely liady an extra sum of two shillings. | ET0% FURIE Gy lobed with wa. | Hamilton, DC 23.--Mrs. Moore, wi- Two Johns Fishing. lon a number of similar edicts for the y 5. s 1 ei savy oug dly soakec - > : : . {The thirty shilling boarder will be a ' ¢ ' dow of the late Lyman Moore, passed! Yesterday John Morris, of this city, | reform and moderation of the empire. {taxed to the extent of half a crown, * | away very unexpectedly yesterday. She | und John Offord, of Sydenham, for-| Less than a month ago the sale of | and married couples will find that it Broke Opin A Saf lhad a fit of poughing and a blood | merly of the Whig, went out to opium and the binding of women's costs them for mere boarding ex- . role pen ale. { vessel broke, causing death. She was Buck Lake and relieved that famous [feet were made illegal, while a re | penses four shillings or five shillings| St. John's, Que. Oct 23. --~The sale pother-in-law of Mre. R. B. Ferrie, of | fishing ground of all the salmon that /markable plan was prepared for the la week more under the new tarifi | in the G.T.R. freight office, hore; Was| he Times. remained. Mr. Morris came home re- | fusion of the Chinese and the Man. fthan it did under the old duties. buriziar ised ° 'ting Suriog a -------------- 0 | joicing over wis good luck, {chus hy intermarriage and by the 2 he safe. co ¥ ¢ . re-organizatiom of army. | Saw ity to forty 'per cont. - ih Pa da - Save from thirty vy | Moreover, nu ministerial cabinet is The increased duties on articles workmen's attire have, savs the Argus, Tfermented. grape juice at Chown' ¥ drug stores he grave | JF CLOTHING oh hes se the worker 3 purse of the wo ped with new machinery of t been published in health, has such of | night. calised a substantial addition in prices. (f KINGSTON, REVISES ITS POLICY. French Work--Will Rank WNith | Aided Circuits. | Montreal, Oct. 23.--The Methodist shurch has made a partial revision of its policy in regard to the French work. This department which hag un- | til now been under the control 3 the {mission board, it has now heen de- icided to transfer at 'the end of the | present conference year, in July next, {to the Montreal conference. This will give it rank among the domestic mis- {sions of the church in place of among {the foreign as at present. "Thus the twork among the French-<peaking peo- {ple in Montreal and' other parts of | Quebec will be on the same plane as the work aniong the less thickly set- {tled English-speaking portions of On- | tario and 'the west, | This revision has been decided upon {as the result of a careful enquiry {made by a commission under the {general hoard. of missions. This com- | mission reported at the last meeting {of the board, and as a result of its {recommendations the new policy was adopted. It was at the same time de the commis {sion and of tlie board of the French {institute here, as well as of others {concerned in the change of policy {should be held as carly as possible. | In addition to the change ol con- {trol of the work, a change in the | control -of the educational branch of f the work has also heen decided upon. 1 0f "this the details likewise remain _to | be determined. : | PRAYERS FOUND FAMILY. | Identity 3 Making Supplications. Kankakee, - 11l., Oet. 23.--=Because Francis X. Dufour, a patient iti the | Bastern Illinois Hospital for the In- | sane, said his prayers in French -and was overheard by a night watchman {of that nationalitv.. the identity of {the man has been estahlished, and re- latives in Chicoutimi, (ue., who have mourned Dufour as dead for sixteen vears, have learned of his where- abouts When Watchman A. M. Pelletior was making his rounds one night recently he overheard one talking in French. His curiosity and he traced the sound, finding the man in praver, Gradually he learned some his story. enteen vears ago Du- four, then fifty-two years old, left ho to work as a sailor on a boat plving on the lakes out of Chicago. with total |1{ is believed that one night he was and beaten by robbers in the Chicago, although the patient had no the Previous | py gwledge of how he came to be in in Clearing | Kankakee. Records show Dufour was committed | here from Chicaro in 1892, and on the a ' told Pelletier of his 1 attacked "Trecords appears the notation "Ni asked that he be restored to theni. HONOR SEA HEROES. Providing Every School Here With Nelson Shields. Oct. 23.~Lord Strathcona the Browning Bethany Surrey for aged people London, in opening {Homes in {said that no object of benevolence was promised tp erect more worthy. He another cottage. | Conspicuous among the ornate de- | -- corations of the Nelson monument is the immense tinted maple leaf, bear ing an anchor in lichen, among the emblems of the rose, shamrock thistle, a gift from the Esquimalt branch of the Navy League The British ad Foreign Sailors annual report refers appre Society's ciatively to Lord Strathcona's gift of towards offering tt Canada a Nelsor the copper of Nel 10,000 pounds school in son's flagships Earl Grey and write expressing the object. the Duke of Argyle hearty approval of | spontaneous combustion. The firemer unable to save the buildings, tbut had been rebuilt pattern. ---------- Petawawa"s Water Supply. Toronto, Oct. 23.--Dr. Hodgetts, so cretary of the provincial board returned from where, at the Pequest ¢ wawa camp, 1 investigation into the water suppl . and the sanitary conditions generally. | 5-518- go speaks highly of the USES sneral advantages of the camp, bu report on the investiga- location an "says that h tions mentiéned will be made to tl 1 hot discuss it in the meantime, 1 Grain Elevator Destroyed. Carberry, Man., Oct. 23.--C. ab yrofessional offi ard explosive | the boli thus, , made. split {roti top io hotlom, ONTARIO, WEBNESDAY, RE A = LAT WS Established Through was ardused,' and Victoria h¥ latest of | we hve 'no the Peta- the dominion government, he made an | authorities; and that he can-| { The burglars were undoubtedly | : The handle was broken | by 'gol introduced through! The door was | on Roadside. SATURDAY, | | Worse Disaster lons of Gasoline--Machine Was a Racer. } Pembroke, Ont., Oct. 23. Driven | from his automobile" by flames burst- | ing out all around it, saved from | worse disaster only by the presence of | mind of his chaufieas, who quickly | turned off the feed from twenty-eight | gallons of gasoline in the tank, Lorne Hale, of this town, was left standing on the highway threequarters of a mile from Quyon on Saturday after noon. His machine & heavy touring car, valued at $6900, was severely damaged, but can be repaired. It was insured for $5,000. Mr. Hale was on hi§ way from Ot tawa to Pembroke, atcompanied by his chauffeur, C. R, Batcheller, Bux lington, Vermont, They left the city at 12.15 'and were humming along at the rate of thirty miles an hour when the fire started from some wiexplain- od cause. The flames shot in all direc tions.and the two found it impossible to extinguish them. X fearful explosion was averted only by shutting off the and hauled the wreck into the village. || They crossed the river themselves and | took train for Pembroke { The car was a V and had a history, as derbilt cup, at at New York, Y Lord Strathcona will shertly Canada. 3 ASKED | College has 'requested Rev. Dr. Work- man' to resign the chair of Old Testa ment Exegesis on the ground of doc- trinal unsoundess, the decision of the board being summed up as follows : "The doctrines relate to the Holy , | Seriptures, miracles, sim, the Deity of ; | Christ and the Atonement. On these it: , | is held, in that his position | ie Unitarian." The board sat until two o'clock this | general OCTOBER 23, 1907. man, of Brooklyn, and Miss "Edna ; | Follette, of Detroit, were principals in Left Lorne Hale Stranded © hospital romance which culminated {in marriage at Windsor. The met a {year ago, {pital at Chattanooga. Tean. Dr. and | Mrs. Kingsman left this afternoon for South {Sou bo: appointed |ospita in Peru. AN EPISODE AT QUYON ON | He Will Go to'the Senate From famed by Was Narrowly | the two men who will be made United Escaped--Chauffeur Turned Off | States senators Tank Containing Eight Gal- state of Oklahoma, is one-eighth Cher- gasoline tank. { okee Indian. Mr. Owens Will go to Policeman E. S. Shechan was shot Going to Quyon, Mr. Hale und the! the senate as soon' as President Roose dead at New York, presumably by one chauffeur scoured a team of horses,| velt ratifies the constitution of the|of a gang of crooks whom he had fre. A { was teacher, editor, valuable one, | agent to the Five Tribes, banker, and | delayed through scarcity won the Van- | has represented the Indians as « the recent motor races | counsel | $9,000,000. He visit | and has been prominent as a democra- tic organizer, t morning, wil the decisi ive , es : wen the. decision way arris und the British possessions in Borneo, Windsor, Ont., Oct. 23.--Dr. Kings Despatches From Near And Distant Places. THE WORLD'S TIDINGS GIVEN IN THE BRIEFEST POS- -- Matters That Interest Everybody Notes From All Over--Little of 'Everything Easily Read and Remembered. The «¢ wealth § | oral will endeavor to bring penny pos- I age into effect this session. The act providing for the regulation of the export of electricity will come into force on Mowday next. The establishment of a mineral de partment to the Ontario provincial museum has been decided upon. It- is estimated that it will cost £15,000 to send an all-Canadian team of athletes to England next year. General Booth is improving se fast that Miss Eva Booth expects he will { be able very soon to Gill his engage- | ments. | R. MS. Empress of Ireland, C.P.R. | line, from Liverpool for "Quebec, in- ward 120° miles east of Belle lsle, at 12.30 am. Thomas Beatty, agent of the Mas sey Harris cpmpany, Cannington, was arrested, charged with theft from the company. The new Prussian douma will be con- while engaged "in the hos- America, the groom "having superintendent of a PART INDIAN INHIM. Oklahoma. Robert L. Owens, who has been the democrats as one of from the prospedtive t tor derates, who it is estimated will have | about 288 seats. He was educated [quently arrested. University,| Work on the Grand Trunk Pacific Indian | through Saskatchewan is being greatly of ties and woposed new state. at Washington and Lee lawyer, searcity of men, The Allan steamer Siberian Philadelphia for Glasgow, via St John's. Nfid.. sailed from Philadel phi, on the 22nd. Plans for the new entrance to To- ronto harbor, the' work to cost almost $400,000; has heen ratified by the gov ernment at Ottawa. he in suf- and his d their in suits against the govern- nent which netted the Indians nearly is a man of wealth from tering from acute neurasthenia, friends are most anxious about him. He shortly will be taken to &sanic tarium in England. A dispute has arisen between Great Britain and the United States cons cerning the demarcation of a hound: ary botween the Philippine archipelago ed at there being nineteen pembers| 14 oo id that Upton Sinclair was wesent « y . r ta : present, including Rev. Dr. Carman, | io tod from the Vanderbilt mansion general superintendent of the Metho- | 4 Newport, where he was serving in dist church in Canada, who presided. a 'menial capacity with a view to : The vote on the resolution asking gaining knowledge fora new hook. Prof. Workman to resign stood ten to Donations amounting to £3,000, were pven, 3 in, ' - . made by the Schwabenrein, a large he: enquiry into the matter has| German society of Chicago. to the heen going on for some months, and |. qous charitable institutions of the some time ago the professor presented | iv. These donations are made avery hisviews on the above subjects to the | Lear board and aniter due consideration the{ Active stops are to he taken at above is the result, once with a view to the organization of the new regiment of the 18th WILL ESCAPE EXECUTION. «It Would Seriously Affect the Riviera Season." Monte Carlo, Oct. 230~The trigl of the Goolds, husband and wife, former Montrealers, fork the murder of Mrs Lewin, a Swedish acquaintance, will , | begin next week. It is well under , | stood here, however, that neither of them will suffer' the death penalty. "An execution could not take place here," offisial. "Such a i {thing is not to be thought of. It would seriously effect the Riviera sea gon, afd they would not tolerate such an unpleasaht thing at Niee for the said a high our patrons who come here for relax- tesquely mbgnified. It is an ordinary, sordid murder, such as oteurs every where. We intend to get the 'trial over quickly, and the culprits will get | a fow_ years' imprisonment at Nice, for prison at Monneo. We { shall arrange tospay a lump sum for Jf | their keep; so, probably, they will | at large in five years if they survive." The police here say that Madame Goold's eyes have the extraordinary vi 4 | property of gleaming in the dark, like ¢| those of a cat. She is declared to be ia my storiously repellant creature, an el aleohol-soddened weakling. ---------- A Lot Of Talk. { | There is a lot of talk about our | big values in fine furs and the ° talk B.!is making business for us. We are a large assortment of wr to D. K. Fraser's wall paper salé all this month. ' Fountain pens, ¥1, at Chown's drug bh | mois vests keep out the wird andiMany of the mediaeval features of the {Gibson's Red Cross drug stores |; c id Mounted Rifles. which is to be formed MAKING GOOD TIME. in. Eastern Manitoba, Headquarters are to be at Winnipeg. . The French colonel in Morocco, whose Reynolds is Hoping to Make al Record. | reconnoitring partly was so fiercely Whithy, Ont., Oct. 23 "Jimmy" | attacked hy five thousand Moors the Reynolds, the walking barber, from other day. has been placed under ar for taking his men heyond the orders, a clairvoyant, stole | rest {limite fixed in his [At Beloit, Wis, Port Hope, arrived here on his _home- ward trip from Toxpnto, at 8.03 a.m., and left again at 8.10 feeling ro shape. Hr pes to rine Hort fo diamonds valued at 81.000 from Mrs | within thirty-three hours | George Willinms He asked to be per Oshawa. Ont... Oct. 23.--"Jimmy" | mitted to perform some charms on the Reynolds arrived here at 9 19 o'clock | gome. and in a few minutes both dia- this mor wm his return trip from |monds and man disappeared. toate Ho has walked cighty-cight |. Coptain Henderson. of the steamce he loft here yesterday, but | Bermuda, at Green Bay, Mich., which shows very little efiects from his Jong | arrived here from Quebec with a cargo trip.He appears to have astonishing | of pulpwood last Friday, committed endurance for a man' of fifty-six years. suicide this morning by hanging him After resting twenty-two minutes here, | self. His accounts are all right. Reynolds set off for Port Hope at 9.41 ---- which leaves him eight hours and rs nineteen minutes to complete his jour- | ney, the journey still before him being | i -- thirty-two miles. {CHINA PREPARES FOR NA- miles since ..verage Life Lengthening The Municipal Engineering Maga- wiprorivg oe ARLIAM zine npited from © various | TIVE P ENT. source +» nverage age of those who | die ant ws for the United States! at large that' the average age at| Education Made Compulsory is Step Toward Con- 1 the First death was 33.7 vears in 1900 and in S00" was onl 99 47 vears. s . . 1590° way ly 20.40 years, howing | stitutional Government. an increase in length of life in ten] . in years of 1.28 years. Much pf this in-| Pekin, Oct. 23, ~The first step to- ercase in length of life is due to the | Ward constifijonal government mn saving in children's lives by better China has beer taken in the form of the death rate of an imperial effict, issued yesterday, vears of age being | Which makes education compulsory 1900 | throughout the empire, Local government institutes are to sanitary conditions, children under fit 307.8% per 1,000 of population in s compared with 5 n 1800 ine of 473 lives pe - oy : * be established for the purpose of ------------ {tanching the principles of constitu- {tional government, with a view to The Taxes Unpaid. {ultimately establishing an elective Tek Collector Bartels, reports that | parliament. there is now less than $8,000 taxes| The edict, which expresses the | unpaid. This is an evin better show. anxiety of the emperor and the ing than that of last year. The col. dowager em ® to establish a par trolled by the conservatives and mo-} 1 hd i i ? Po you feel the cold wind ? the near future Char 4 he appointed in keep you snug and warm, Sold at ernment at have already RNAs Ey bmi ak Font ito hakailunband. ations of Brown, Blue, Wine and Ggeen. Of "course the plain smooth faced cloths are the favorites and we are offering a great t of these very able Fatuiey tor Suita gut Gu FRENCH BROADCLOTHS, QUEEN'S CLOTHS, FRENUH ARMOURS, SUITING PANAMAS, . FRENCH CHEVIOTS, FRENCH VOILES, CORD-DE-CHENES, ETC., and Bcores of other beautiful materials, in all the very latest shades of IRIS EBEUS, COPENHAGEN, ROSE DUBARRIE, SEA HOLLY BLUE, BEESWING, _ GREEN, All lovely to look upon. Come and see them. STEACY'S BORN. MITCHELL~In Kipgston, at 154 Furl St, to Mrs. B,C Mitcholl, a devgh: ter. MARSHALL. --~At Conneaut, Ondo, on Oct. 20th, 1907, Mr, and Mrs. W. A. Marshall, a son. ---------------------------------------- Grant Hadi FENWICK--~EADE.--~At v Brookiye. on Tuasing evening, Uect. 15th, 1907, the oo br. RB. n Hull, Emily ¥ 1, third of George Eade, enera ager lor Thos. Uook & Sow, to George Fenwick Fenwick, son of the late G. S. Fenwick. (Toronto papers please copy.) th DIED. SMITH. --In Kingston, on Oct. 28nd. 1007, residence, 90 at her late a St. daughter of the late Adum Jennie, Soeith, formerly of 8 Funeral will take place Fhursiny morn ing, at 10 o"clotks to Sead Hil Cemetery. nnd ances are respectiully invited to attend, Cheese! ---------- Fresh shipment just arrived of Oka Cheese Tilsiter Cheese Canada Cream Cheese Primrose Cream Cheese § 1b. Primrose Cream Cheese, lbs. Imperial Cream Cheese (Small, medium and large). Jas. Redden & Co Importers Of Fine Grocerles.