int 4 al Success he - oven never smells lose and stuffy, as do the reat majority of range yvens. . Food cooked in the Pandora is more health- ul, as well as more appe- izing and satisfying. If your local dealer annot give you complete nformation about the 'andora, write direct for 'REE BOOKLET. R, ST. JOHN, HAMILTON ngston. SHO0LDH000080000000084 STOVES HOME? range arity as one of the ges made. It will less fuel than any irket. 1e line of Steel pay you to examine hasing. BROS. + 17 Princess St. every housewife who capacity of rer ont bl et & gos erated oven, which 2 w of pure, heated oxygen y when the range is in % s the fire il : ate to a: sigh, ved without loosening a in shaolutely the makers. & * DEN COMPANY : Moatreal a3 i Vaacouver ET ---------- No Other Food Product has a Like Record Baker's Cocoa 127 Incrosing Sai It is a perfect food, as wholesome as it is delicious; highly nourishing, easily- digested, fitted to repair wasted strength, preserve health, prolong life. CHOICE RECIPE BOOK SENT FREE ON REQUEST Walter Baker & Co., Ltd. Established 1780 DORCHESTER, MASS, U. S. A. BRANCH HOUSE : 86 St. Peter Street, Montreal "Bont Neglect a Gough or Cold." CHRONIC BRONCHITIS Mr. Wm. O'Hara, Souris, Man., writes: « Having suffered for & long time with a severe attack of Chronic Bronchitis, which 1 could not get cured, } eventually tried = Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup and am glad to state it bas given me a com- plete cure." | Theatre, New York. MAKES YOUR CAKES LIoNT. MAKES YOUR BISCUITS LIGHT. MAKES YOUR BUNS LIGHT. Order from your Grocer. E.W.GILLETT aves TORONTO.ONT. THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY NOVEMBER 30, 1907. = 7 wer - w-- " - w-- ing preferable in order to insure al healthy maurity. Common law in| . most states of the union forbids girls ------ to mslvy under the of 16, popular) a-- \ prejudice raises Ht! te to 18, a ABOUT PLAYS, PLAYERS men of 30 and over are the recog. | MARRIES HIM AS COUNT AND PLAYHOUSES. nized belles in society in all centres ox BUT FINDS HIM CONVICT. -- wealth and culture. During the last . half century the t which a - "The Nawgiork Tdea" to Be Pro-| td women oo France May pos Wealthy American Heiress Delud- duced in London--"The Right claim herself "une vielle demoiselle™| ed By Notorious Adventurer, of Way'? Company Finishes in and go about unattended has advanced and Then Deserted. "Instead of marrying, as she thought, : from that of 23 to 30. Which all goes} New York This Evening. ol hat i age pro- 10. dow. ¥ the marrirage prot Count Gennaro di Castelmenardo, of a istingut Ni family, Miss Chauncey Olcott in O'Neill of Derry, gressively rises with the progress of} has began an engagement at the Lo civilization--a fact which undoubtedly distinguished RL: maly, means something. 5 Edith Van Buvren in reality tied her- During Blanche Walsh's engagement| As to the age of discretion, tHat is aj self to a clever scoundrel, 'whose in Washington this week she revived | movable quantity which no man may| name is Gennaro® Vessicchio, and who, the "Kreutzer Sonata." ¢ specify. Some few people attain it inj sides being a notorious' Camorrist, is Marie Dressler has received an offer | child other fall short thereof when! ant incorrigible ex-convict, still subject to appear in the Christmas pantomime their heads are hoary with the frosts| to police surveillance. This crushy at the London Drury Lane theatre. of age. The proverb, "There is no fool revelation was made by the chief of Frank Worthing will use a dramajlike an old fool" is one which applies | police before the Naples Court of Ap- founded on the Chambers novel, "A peculiarly to affairs in love and matri-| peal, when a heiress, belonging Fighting Chance," as his stellar vehicle. | mony. There is said to be one hour in} 10 well-known dnd wealthy American Henrietta Crosman will end her sea-|the life of a peach when it is at is family, sued for separation. son at the Liberty Theatre, New York, {highest degree of perfection, and simi-| The young woman had made her hus- in "The Christian Pilgrim," to-night. {larly in the life of almost every woman} band's acquaintance casually at Nice a William Gillette, now in retirement, | there is a longer or shorter period when] Year ago. His elegant, fascinating man- is putting the finishing. touches to his|she is at her fullest development off Mers and passionate jrafessions ot Jae new play, which Charles Frohman will| charm and malleability; at her greatest fesulted m an en Sle. 3 a. n present in a month or two. capacity for making a perfect helpmeet| Buren made Jnquiracs y Jetter about the On her return to New York next] for the man of her choice; an ideal wife] Castelmenardo family and received ex . -, : lent reports, but, as she discovered March, Mrs. Patrick Campbell will play and mother. 1c Y o 3 an engagement of three weeks, offering when too late, her bogus count had no Eminent physicians agree that to most} 3 \ Electra, The Moon of Zamato, and a|women this blossoming comes at from | relations whatever Sith the geANING Ars play in prose by W. B. Yeats. 23 to 25, to some few a little sooner, to} ISoTite house o am + hushand The Shuberts have purchased a new many others somewhat later. It mayh er various P 0 his MAH &} hw : irly tak At MAVYN ft her to pay all the hotel and other musical play by Frank Pixley and be fairly taken for granted that if, with | » s of their honeymoon, and im- Gustav Luders, which will be produced|all her getting, a woman is ever going| Re fe aan squ OR her in the early spring. The name of the|to get wisdom and understanding she a : the Mme ati, Ri new piece has not been announced. will do so by the time she arrives at} a . Wishing to legalize her mn Mr. Tree and Oscar Asche gave the this period of her life; at least she will! ----, 5 ns id $5000 to TOCTTe use of His Majesty's Theatre, London, | probably have gained some knowledge} | iS of 1 . J BD ithe of y whility England, on November 24, for the|of men and of the world, and not soj be 4 wg nt hor tly Sher: SA Playgoers' Club concert in aid of the |casily led away by a winning manner | 1h el demimond ine ™. Poor Children's Pantomime Fund, |and a flattering tongue. There are not b+ 50 ject ag ia ae sed the London. | many girls who are able to grasp the! big an Y i] Sut the Bertha Kalich began her third an- [true responsibilities of marriage until grea Ak Secret in the nual tour under the direction of Harri-|they are past 21, but at that age they| wife's favor, tho the absence of di- son Grey Fiske at Pittsburg on No-| usually have crossed the threshold off oo ro0 aus in Italy' awkwardly hampers vember 18 in' "Marta of the Lowlands," | womanhood, and are fitted for the du-| the woman's future. : . and appears in this play to have found | ties and blessings of married life DETTINGEN, 1743. meee a role that suits her talents as an act-| There are, sadly be it spoken, some ress. women who are not fit to marry at all, Kendal Robertson, an English Shakes-| women who have never learned to be| ; a aT pearean actor, has Ee Jor. a south- | unselfish, helpful, charitable, thought be Ror soul-StiFving Robust English, the ern tour in "King Richard III," under ful of others; women who live for theit| xe . y an by ,, Jub the management of Charles Green, com- [Own narrow aims and pleasures, for| ae recent § in the Lo Spectator, mencing at Mobile early in December. | bridge playing, gossip, dress and fri-| @ Po the - ie. k must be the, heart He will be supported by an entirely] volity; women who will "do" a drive,| Sar an weak I e Ne ear! English company. {a play and a supper with any sneering | % HCH a hot qu ned ) RE 3 Tou George M. Cohan will retire from the {man who chooses to ask them; women hytim, anc WE pass. from : . Sublime cast of "Fifty Miles from *Boston" to| who regard a husband me rely as some | © the rigiculogs: as Fig A 1 ae Sn. take a few months' rest and complete|one to gratify their extravagance and | Verse g tet oronto News anent the two new plays. His place will be taken |pay their bills. One thing 1s cenaif, same hatt/e: to appear in the Christmas pantomine [that the women who never ought to > RAR +a by Eo rence Wheat, who has Jam play- | marry are those who despise homelife, "Ww DAPPER SORE na, ae ing the title' role in "Artie." | dislike children, and who yearn for the| : Whenever we wih ag cogs Clyde Fitch will supply another play | excitement of "the firing line in hfe's{® war, yg senan that he a for Clara Bloodgood, to be used after | battle." | himself ike a little 'man of valef. -- she finishes her tour in "Truth." This| Most persons who think about it will Thackeray. a. will be the first drama written by the!agree that the best time for both men| Dapper King George, he was round and distinguished author for the Shuberts. and women to marry is when, having| 4 Miss Bloodgood is playing a number of | reached manhood and Soumankood, thes ne-night stands with marked success. |meet the one whom they: love with ail} bo airy Ba Robson has been engaged by | their heart and soul and strength, and | But Dapper King George was a fighter the Messrs. Shubert to succeed John| who reciprocates that affection But| ith en English blood at the heart red, With a German tongue in his pig-tailed Mason as Alexis Karenin, with Vir {let both man and woman, especially the| 0 ginia Harned in "Anna Karenina." Mr.| woman, be sure that they are really and of him, 'his Robson was for years leading man with {truly .in Jove before they" take the mo-| And ory of wrath, and a man of his % § ists, "harles Coghlan, and, because of his|{mentous Step which can never be re-| Si es blame to Mr. Coghlan, traced As George Meredith has said: And a wrecker of orthodox strategists. Ye also acted as his understudy. "What we chiefly want in the making) . - a New York Dramatic Mirror of |of marriages is more brain, more brain | Os ee the Second, he played the hig week hasa threescolumn of arraign-|O, Lord!" be s co bin of 'William Winter as 2 | . {4s soon as the bullets began to fg critic. The author is Harrison Grey| NEW YORK LETTER ou ought to have seen hi at i ter controversy with the critic of The | =. . tingen, Fiske. who has been engaged in a bit- a a Tribune ever since his ES review | The Financial Flurry An Interest- of Percy MacKaye's poetic biography. ing Study. ! "Sappho and Pharon." | A panic, or rather a flurry in money Eugene W. Presbrey's dramatization | circles, in a great city is an interesung of Sir Gilbert Parker's "The Right of | study, The recent nervousness did not Way" will terminate its present New| reach a "panic;" every one was uneasy, |. York engagement at Wallack's Theatre! but no one lost. There was abundance; | orty-four this evening. when the company Georg visit Philadelphia, Baltimore and Wash, | enough &risp currency to make the ex-| ington. Jt will return to New York | changes cut quite a hgure. for an extended engagement at the Liv When thé Knickerbocker Trust Com- erty Theatre early in the year : fhe English production of Mrs | it had enough and to spare, but not in | Fiske's success," The New York Idea," | crisp currency. Barney, the energetic | will be made shortly, it is reported, in! president, took hold of this institution | spite of Mr. Fiske's prohibition. Mr la few years ago when its deposits were | Sleath, the London manager, says he $11,000,000. Barney pulled it up to} paid . $1,000 in advarge, and that ten] $06,000000, then committed suicide days after the signing of this=contract| Strange that success and suicide should | with the agent he received a cable from | follow close in each other's tracks. Mr. Fiske forbidding him to produce} The Knickerbocker ranking so high | it. . | on sth Avenue too, frightened the popu- | Blanche Ring, one of the three stars | lace. All the banks began clinging 10 | presently appearing in "The Great | Cash on hand, knowing that the masses apd White Way," is anxious for a try at | With deposits would clamor for cash When we heeled into line § . the legitimate. However, for the "pre | New York's millions are a tharfty en, we Wheeled into line in our scar- sent, Miss Ring will continue to romp people, having bank accounts represent- | And fell . His the fiend at the French- through the gaiety of musical review | INE savings ol all kinds, $5 to $500,000. | hee ts on cast as Mrs. Dane, the wife of the de- It is these millions from the masses ag- | mens twoal tective, who is looking for his legs and | gregated mat make the I Ive operat | He called ns brothers, he called us sors joesn't find them until everything else] mg capital, daily bank bakances 20 a , : fiscovered . | great extent, that the banks do_the busi- | He levelled the 1S discov " . | ness of the country with. The rich guns, "The Hoyden," the new musical play | have theirs in other things, in which Elsie Janis has started her heirs in cash in the banks, and when | first season as a Charles Dillingham/| they start to run it means something. | star, was originally intended to run six| The banks escaping runs might as well | roar; weeks in New York, that being all the| pave them, for they have to hoard to be | Then he cursed time that could be booked at the Knick-| ready. It is said $1,500,000,000 was | ardly brutes, erbocker Theatre. v a e the play become, however, that another | Solvent banks were strained to get in| New York theatre, Wallack's, has been| cash for possible emergencies. It was| secured for the time following the not because of any lack of values, of | We shattered their Knickerbocker date. The change will | money, the country was all right, the| teers, be made December 2nd. {values all right, the money plentiful,| We scattered their Arnold Daly, whose attempt to run|peace and prosperity prevailing, but in| neers; ! his men; are reckoned, the Second. thousand with gorge, tains made wade,-- An army behind and an army before, further shore. Forty-four thousand of hungry men, We cursed and we swore in that Dan jel's den; with the worst, and swore, boots $5.00 THE plain Bangle Bracelet will be worn more this season than ever before. QUR $5.00 Bracelet is made of solid gold, and can be supplied either in the oval or round shape. | T is quite heavy and the finish and workmanship is the finest possible. V/V/E encloseitin a fine velvet lined case for $5.00. Send for our Catalogue. -- Ryrie Bros. Limited 134.138 Yonge St. [TORONTO out newspaper advertising, without erit-| signal and all put on the alert, and their Line, has met with failure, will in future bei, firm grip herd of swine managed by Liebler & «Co, who have] taken over the Berkeley as well. Onelpractical finances, are easily frightened, | heels, the Licbler & Co. will be the refurnish-{press them. Yet these people, owning and eels. ing of the theatre. It is also the inten-|the banking cash, have it in their power duce the use of Fuse between the acts| country and none can gainsay them for| and both beford and after the play.|it is their money. , v They have arranged for the Telhar-|janking capital "is in the rich; not so, monic music to supply the place of the! is with the poorer people orchestra, something that has never been | i over, it was only a fright after all. | attempted before in a playhouse in New| . York or any other city. | our ba and there Dubbed Trooper Tom Browne and th Earl of Stair : a winner, | Sat down on the ground to a cold-mut | ton. dinner. A CONTENTIOUS POINT. What is the Proper Age For, Marrying ? | By Helen Oldfield. . | As long as there is marrying and giv-| ing in marriage, which in the natural | order of things must be so long as| there are men and womerf upon earth, so long will the proper age at which | they should marry be a fruitful source of discussion. For ages the figures have| steadily, though slowly, advanced, and] since 'Shakespeare spoke of 14, lack-| ing "a fortnight and odd days," as a} "pretty age to marry," blushing 15,1 sweet sixteen, 18 and 19 have all had] their turn as the ideal age for heroines) in song and story. i awadays physiologists tell us that! for 'her own sake and for the good of ssterity no woman should become al wife until she is 20, that po man ought to take adele fntil he is 25; the ages of | It is so easy to cure Constipation. | ing, | As soon as the bullets began to sing: You ought to have seen him at Dettin { gen, | You ought to have heard how he cheer { ed his men; {When the judge is set, and the book i are reckoned, jo | The Second George enjoyéd a fight At Detiingen his fame was bright, He drew his sword, and waved it hi men fly. The foe was frightened half fo death And ran till he was out of breath, | No single moment did he lose, He thought | Hughes. 25 for the woman, 30° for the man, be- | You ought to have seen how he cheered {When the judge is set, and the books There's Dettingen down to King George Dapper [all receiv : , The lack of. orge, . will| uf seveived their own be lack We were pinned like rats in a filthy | Jammed up in a jin, which the moun- any sth Av e, closed its doors, |... i pany, on sth Avenue, closed its doors | With a broad-backed river too deep to And the great, grinning guns on the And Dapper King George blasphemed And Dapper King George in the field muskets and laid the the masses | And he jeered and cheered and sweated Till his charger ran from the cannon's such cattle for cow- So well liked has| grawn out and put away by the people {And he led us afoot in his big jack- prancing Muske- capering.. Carabi- the Berkeley Theatre, New York, with-15 twinkling there was, as it were, a| We played the deuce with the pick of " ical notices, and without an orchestra,|every dollar was tightly squeezed with| And their Foot Guards rushed like the The masses, as a rule, know little of | Plump into the river-mud, head over of the first matters to be taken up byland no arguments of "confidence" im-|{ To sup on the weeds with the gudgeon tion of the new management to reintro-|t, disturb, distrust the business of the The Greys and the Royals took each a ar ag, : Too many think the{ And four brass cannon we clapped in | g; The worst | And Dapper King George, having then | Knights-Barranet both, like a King and Oh, George the Second, he played the | There's Dettingen down to George the Second. {And yelled: "Now watch the Fr - adit adh A Wal t the quickest SHILOH'S couibs cia CURE | Get a bottle to-day from your druggist. If it doesn't cure you QUICKER than anything youever tried he'll give you your money back A Shilohs is the best, safest, surest and quickest medicine for your children's coughs and colds. EE A gl, and coms Tor 94 Tours. All droggists-- 28c., §oc., and $1.00 a bottle. ot --1 [PTON A Christmas Limerick The interest in our last Limerick was so keen and the character of the replies so on the whole that we have decided to ofier One More Limerick, which will close soon enough to allow us to pay the mopey to winners in good time for Christmas gift buying. We are pleased to have the opportunity of contribute ing our share to the Christmas good cheer. This time we offer : % $800.00 v IN CASH PRIZES TO 128 WINNERS FIRST PRIZE, $250 CASH ' 2nd ue 50 *" 3rd "" 25 50 Prizes of $5 Each 75 Prizes of $3 Each fh : I | i ! : g sk ar ! fi 578 in in the i H i 2g : : f Bg k | | i i h 13 1 i i f | ed rl . tg «ff ls v bs i i i get sl fx i 3 (8) It the father (or mother, Mb ib CONDITIONS allt me J, i READ CAREFULLY. er on The conditions of this competition are perfectly sim- homestead, of upon a home- ple. All you have to do is to fill in the last line of the seat antored oF B3 blu in the Sicinitys Limerick which is shown below and then send it, accom- residence duties by living with the fath- panied by a TIN LID (with label attached), of a package er (or mother.) 4 of LIPTON'S TEA, Gold, Red, Pink, or Orange La (4) The ieinity. in ne ten A bel, or LIPTON'S COFFER, (embossed 'lid only,) , which I ie 8 ln Saihed as Shean entitles the reader to send in one Limerick. You may send tna exclusive of the Wath of road a- in as many Limericks as vou like so Jong as a TIN LID wanoe crossed measurement. accompanies each Limerick. ij TSS Sometonder Inieing to with +" Postage on Limericks must be prepaid at letter rates. Un ON ae living With in & notify the Agent for the district of such intention. for Belore patent Bg | ve six months' notice in writing to the, Uowmmissioner Do minion Lands at Ottaws, of his inten SYNOPSIS "OF CANADIAN NORTH- LIPTON'S | === BY SPECIAL S85 APPOINTMENT WoMitoul mining sights Lay bt TO H.M. THE KING be. rate Eh W oF ay Toews sn p : "The foe for recording = claim' ts $5. : A ah Your a' a0 ining recorder in lien Sha do os expended or paid, | the may Al other Poquiremenns, 'pur been on iar ith other requirements, The Finest the World Can Produce. Chase the nnd at $3 per acre. - phe_pekem for the payment Packed Only in Airtight Tins. of 8 Toyalty of 3) per cant tm the seiens FOR SALE BY ALL GROCERS. . square ; entry fee $5, renewable years = -- n a may obtain two leases to a td of five miles cach for o term of t , renewable at the LIMERICK GQ J mT Telly ran elt ae SE Saehas Sout Semana OULD BE NOTHING JT TON'S TEA," hog ' % AND ALL THE DOMINION Flo bor gana for meh min of ro ENDORSED HIS OPINION y cent collected. the output after * | avers $10,000. - ie ay w. W. CORY. | Dupuy of tha be gee Be BB I agree to abide by the decition of the Editor of The Toronto ertisement hieation MAIL AND EMPIRE as final, and enter the competition on that dis- |= _E a be Te tinct understanding. a---- Signature ... ks ' Address ...... ASOL NE CO Put in Your Tank # at Our Dock. A large stock of Dry Bat- teries, Spark Plug and Coils always on hand. : SELBY & YOULDEN ° LIMITED. J The competition will be decided by the Editor of The Toronto MAIL AND EMPIRE, whose decision must be accepted as final. Envelopes must be addressed "Lipton's Limerick," and sent to MAIL AND EM. PIRE. Toronto, Ont. nism tase All answers must be mailed by last post, Tuesday, December 10th. Winners of our last Limerick will be published in The Kings- ton Whig on Tuesday, December 3rd. 7 TCR = 1 spin you a yarn w._. But let it bein ~~ ec Natural Wool Underwear Made of fine, soft, Natural Wool, of medium weight, unshrinkable, and perfec form-fitting, Penman's No. 95 . is just the kind of Underwear that will satisfy the majority of peele. $ / Sold at a reasonable price under a guarantee that authorizes you to get your money back from your dealer for any Pen-Angle Y A UNSHRINKABL i "ll You'll find the Pen-Angls in red on various fabrics and weights for a men, women and children, among which we might mention Scotch Knit, Elastic Ribbed, Wool Fleece and Balthoral Stripes. Also makers of Pen-Angle Hosiery. garment found defective in material or making. the King was Colonel A CRT 5