Dropsy-- Given up by Doctor "I had dropsy, and was told by my family physician that there was no chance for me. My family also gave me up. My limbs and body were swollen one-third larger than natural, water collected around my heart and I had to be propped up in bed to keep from smotheging. I took Dr. Miles' Heart Remedy until I was entirely cured. This was in 1902, and I am now able to do any kind of work on my farm. My cure was certainly marvelous." L. TURLEY CURD, Wilmore, Ky. Dr. Miles' Heart Rentedy has been wonderfully 'successful in relieving heart trouble. Its tonic effect upon the heart nerves and muscles is a great factor in assisting nature to overcome heart weakness. ? z Price $1.00 at your drucgist. He should supply you. If he dor it, send price to us, we forward prepaid. DR. MILES MEDICAL CO., Toronto, EARL IS -SHABBIEST DRESSER. | King Gedrge's Master of Ceremonies Cares Nothing for the Pomp He Dictates, i Washington, June 21.~A prominent figure at the goming world's, eucharis {tic congress 'will be the Duke of Nor- { folk, the representative of the oldest Roman Catholic fan ily in the nobility of Great Britain, Ho is England's pre { mier duke, its premier earl, and, for i that matte r, is half a dozen baronet cies rolled into one. As hereditary earl marshal 'of England he had sole icharge of all the ceremonial arrange iments connected with the funeral - of the late King Fdward, "the peace imaker," and of the proclamation of {his popular successor, George V. And when the coronation of King George Y, 'akes place, the will be the supreme stage manager, Women's Oxfords aad Oxfords i in Tau, Brown and Black. Light or heavy sole. Lots of style and good went. Big-range- and little; pri $2.00 a Pair H Jennings, KING STREET. - DUKE OF NORFOLK All his official duties are associated with pomp and pageantry, yet no man in the kingdom, probably, has a greater distaste for show and glitter and fuss and feathers. He cares noth- ing for the cut and fashion of his clothes. On one .pecasion when he had thrown the grounds of Arundel castle open to the publie, two old Ir ish. women were among those who availed themselves of the privilege Presently, to their horror, shabbily dressed man leave the path and walk across a strip of ground, de- spite the notice, "Please Keep off the Grass." One of them called after the offender indignautly, here ! Come back here!" The duke for it was he--~turhed 'and came back to the two women. Then one of them burst forth : "Why don't you stick to the pash, you ould reprobate ? Can't you read what the sign says ? "It is the loikes of you as keeps the loikes of us out of many a dacent place." On. his watch chain he wears a six- ' Don't Persecute penny piece. He says he has preserved it in that fashion because it is the first money he ever earned. able other stories are told illustrating what other men might regard as em- barrassing situations in which he has been placed through his indifference to this personal appearance. The premier duke is one of the rich- est peers in England. He owns 50,000 neres of land, besides big slices of pro- perty in Sheffield and London. He is a very devout Roman Catholic and contributes largely to all Catholic charities. During the South Alrican war he enlisted with a regiment of yeomanry. His bravery and obedience to orders marked him as a model sol- dier and endeared him to the rank and file of the British army. Business Is Business, London. Answers. "The Village Blacksmith" had been recited by the "actorfeller from town" amid intense admiration. When he concluded, the rustic nudieneo in the just WE HAVE PLACED Electric Light IN MANY HOMES THIS SPRING. | In every case our patrons have been pleased with the fixtures, work and prices, y Let us wire your home and do your repalrs. schoolroom cheered and applauded till it was blue in the face. "Ancower!' it oried. "Ancower!"' The "actorfeller from town" was just able to go on again, when a burly. rustic, very much out of breath, tap- ped him on the arm. "'T've just. come round from in fromt," whispered the man excitedly, I want "ee ter do me a favor." "Well--well, what +s it?" queried the "'acter-foller" impatiently, as the re- newer cries of "Ancower!" fell upon his ears. : "It's this," whispered the intruder. I 'appen ter be the josser vou've been talkin' aout, an' | a verse this time sayin' as "ow I et out ¢ I. W. Newman Bectric Co., 70 PRINCESS STREET. 'Phone 441. Try our Electric Irons, - @ | bicyeles.' ' Many a preacher fails because whilgp he guards the seed of truth sedulously he knows nothing of the soil in which he plants it. The man who likes EY can be led ' to like any really good thing. 'FINKLE'S LIVERY AND SALES STABLES "hava 10 clr: Clas Ry Ee FL Rw . vehicles and : EY 2 any rh x RS 5 head & 8. , we are pl gd ith iB 3 Swan ind pen ghert calls may be at- SPECIAL NN me 3 Waggons. Any ing ho onl a Condition. i Thar or Sr baffeers Ph i akgon. : hana Buggies § Bocend-h a Rand New Waggons of every duseription. "¥ put by Carriage otis Ru 3 on 3i hatled 0 Duke of Norfolk | they saw a- HHL Lome asl Innumer:. I want yer to-put in| DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY. JUN PANGS AND TORTURES Through Pink Pills. Todigestion 1s a condition in which the stomach is more or less unable to digest the food. Even a light ease oi indigestion means much = nasery, bat when the trouble $5 at its worst" the life of the sufferer is one of conciant and acute misery. Indigestion is re coguized by a burming sensation mn the stomach, bloating, an oppressive feel- ing of weight, beiching wind, pains in the region of the heart, often vomiting and nausea, and a dread of food for the mivery it causes. Dieting and the use of pre-digested foods may give some relief, Lut will never cure indi gestion. The work of indigestion de- pends upon the blood and the nerves and the only way to cure indigestion is to so tone up the stomach that it will do the work that nature intended it should do. The very best way io cure a weak stomac h is through a course of Dr. William¢# Pink Pills. These renew the blood, strengthen the | perves and thus give tone to the stone ach, and enable it to do its work with ease and comfort. No one. suffering from indigestion in even the slightest forme should neglect the trouble for un iistany to do so means that i ob tains a firmer hold, and daily the mis- ery and suffering is increas od, ard the ctire made more diffiult, 't the first ispproach of the trouble tnke Dr. Wal liams' Pink Pills and it will speedily disappear. These Pills will eure even the most obstinate case of indigestion, hut naturally it 'takes longer to Jo » es wo wore: HAVE HUGE. AIRSHIP] WORLD'S LARGEST AND MOST POWERFUL AIRSHIP. A Mile-per-minute Speed--Construct- ed to Remain in Cloudland for Days and Beat Any Rival on Earth. London, June 22.--In a few weeks' | time/ the largest, instest, and most | powerful airship in the world will ie | launched dt Barrow. This leviathan is the first airship ever constructed for the British navy, and it is the forerunner of a fleet of airships which are to be the Dread- noughts of the air. The same inviolable secrecy that was maintained during the rapid construc- tion of the sea Dreadnoughts at Ports- mouth is being preserved in the case of tlie vessel, which Messrs. Vickers Soits ard Maxim are huild' »z at Bar: row for the admiralty Only half a dozen people in the coun- try possess knowledge of the entire de- sign, and knowledize of sections is con- fined to the smallest possible number of officials and workmen, any of whom would be liable to penal servitude if he divulged any ol the precious secrets connected with the vou, This airship is intended to be a battle ship of the air. It will be manned by a specially trained crew, and its duties will consist of thoroughly and quickly exploring the upper regions in search of . the -enemy's airships, overtaking so. ~ Mr. Philip Lafleur, St. Jerome, Que., says: "After I left college, when I had studied hard forfour years, suffered so much from indigestion that I found it difficult to earn my living. I was troubled with terrible pains, al bloating feeling, and a sourness in the stomach. This led to a loss of appe- tite and [ began to show signa of a nervous breakdown. I tuted several different treatments without finding any apparent relief, and my nervous system had grown so shattered that I could not work. A priest who was interested in me advised me to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and I lollowed his advice. It was not long before they began to bring me back to health, and in the course of a couple f months my stomyrh was as souny AS 6Ver: my Lesvous system strong and vigorous, and I have since enjoy- ed the best of health. 1 owe all this to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, for whith | shall always feel grateful." ' Sold by all medicine dealers or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $250 from The Dr. Williams' Med- icine Co., Brockville, Ont. How P.O. Opens Letters. In Russia one letter in every ten passing through the post is apohed by the authorities as a matter of jeourse. Indeed, She postal fruthotitics of every frauntey "have -saperte--who havo raid letter opening tu a fine art, Some kmds of paper-can be steamer open without leaving any trace," and this simple operation is finished by. re-| Duruishing the Hap with a bone instru. | ment. Tn the case of a seal a matrix| s 'taken by means of new hread . be- ore breaking the wax. When other methods fail tho envelope is placed. be- tween pieces of 'wood with edge pro- seeting one-twentieth of an inch. The e of the envelope is first flattened, en Fougdined and finally slit open, Later a hair line of strong white gum is applied and the edges united under pressupe.--London Chronicle, PRR A Six Follies of Science. The six follies of science are the squaring of 'the circle, perpetual mo- tion, the philosopher's stone, the elixir of life, magic and astrology. In all ares men of undoubted ability have toiled early and late to unravel the mysteries supposed to he connect- ed with these fascinating problems. It is not always remembered that such intellectual giants as Bacon. Sir lob- ert Boyle and Sir Isaac Newton sought the philosopher's stone. In the study of astrology Lilly was for a time even pensicned bh parliament. Most of these "follies" conferred in- direct benefits upon science, for in seeking one thing their devotees dis! covered 'many sanother) The craze for the sceret, or unknown, has still its hold upon men is seen in palmistry and kindred cults. Number of | of Fatal Accidents. Ottawa Journal, During the month of May, three hundred and seventy-six people were killed or injured in Canada during the course of the day's work, Of these accidents thirty-eight per cent. were immediately fatal. Some day we will adopt as a first principle the idea that the workman must Ue given science's extreme protection no matter how expensive that protection may Game Went Wrong. Denver Post The stranger laid down and scooped in the pot. "This game ain't on the: level," pro- tested Sagebrush Sam, at the same four aces time producing a gun to lend force to his accusation. "That ain't the hand I dealt ye!" , LO. Shoe Polish, sold in the big bux, gives «more shines--coming in ter buik, keeps fresh onger-- made for Suick action, cléans easier ~being practically weather-poof, holds its Lrillianey on the shoe for a greater ~ and. costs you only the same as smaller pac just ten cents. Palo Ten Polish cleans, bos and leaves wer Bs nalural color. roceTs and shoe men sell SB Poio. Ladies Lke it. | trade. or | The is held them and destroying them and drop. ping explosives on the decks of war. shins Lelow. To carry out these duties eficctually, Britain's airships will have to rethain in the air several days on end; and have speed superior to that of any forei zn ship, whether on the sea or in the air. ~-- So far as can be gathered, both these vital conditions will be fulfilled. When completed, the ship will be near- ly 200 yards long, and will almost fill a gigantic shed 200 yards long, 30 yards wide, and 40 yards high, which is now bein finished at Cavendish Dock, Barrow. The gas envelope alonerwill be of enormous proportions, far larger than that of the famous Zeppalin airship, while the vessel itself will be fitted with not only powerful engines, but with sleeping accommodations for the crew, and a number of special guns and mountings. In regard to the speed, it is said on good authority that it is hoped to ma'niain a rate of sixty mies an hour under favorable conditions, Experiments are now being twith the object of finding out lis the best type of propeller to A ful ious- looking structure has erected in Messrs, Vickers' engineering yard at Barrow for carrying out these SXREriments, At rather resemidles fi sec- tion "of a steel suspension bridge, through the middle of which has been run a mast. At oneend of the "Oridge" a propeller is fixed on a shaft, a moor is set goirw, and the whole i the theavy structure is carried round and round at a terrific speod hy the force of the revolving propeller, This testing structure can seen from the roadway, and when it "ig working many people try to figure out the speed at which it is - whizzod around Hy the rapidly revolvini pro peller. The airship is bein built in sections in the engineering shops. When completed the sections will be taken to the shed and assembled. Trinls on an extensive scale will he conducted and the ship will afterwars leave for her permanent station, which no doubt will be on the east const. As soon as the trials are completnd a fleet of airships will be built om- budyviny whatever improvements on the original design are thought tom! e necessary. made which | ed herp be Instruction in Honesty, Chicago News. A few years ago there was a shift less colored boy named Ransom Blake, who, after being caught in a, number of petty delinquencies, was at last sentenced to a short torm in the peni- tentiary, where he was sent to learn a On the day of his return home he met a friendly white acquaintance who asked : "Well, what did they put you at the prison, Ranse ?"' "Dey started in to make an honest boy out'n me, sah." "That's good, Ranse, and 1 they succeeded.' "They did, sah.' "And how did , they teach you to be honest ¥" "Dey done put me in the shoe shop, sah, nailin' pasteboard onter shoes fo' leather soles, sah." in hope What Hens Know. Peterboro Review: A duk in Ashbursham knocked over a hive in itg anxiety: to find what was inside, and when the bees got through with him he was dead. That is one of the perialties for butting in. Some people are like that dog, and once in a while they get badly stung. However, this animal - was not one of the wise old dogs of Ashburnham, Un. tario, but a dog of Ashburnham, Es- sex, England. But chickens are wiser than dogs. They stand by the hive, apd when the drones come out later in the season, ejected by the - working bees, they stand pear by and ent them. They can distinguish the work- ing bee from the drone, for the latter haz a peculiar ham. The bee with the business end is left severely alone. Calling Mr. Borden Down, Tgronte o Weekly Sun. Be JONitienl game, self-govern- 2] ugh to have developed a cham- pion. Mr. Borden, on the contrary, as we understand him, will at the next election ask for a popular declaration that in all matters of war Canada shall abandon all pretensions to au- tonomy, and he would have us, of course, 'adopt the principle of taxation without represgntation. For greater self-government Canadians have been pressing, sometimes angrily and al ways sternly from the begioning ot their political ° life. Does Mr. think that he can flout dur political idols as William Lyon Mackenzie, Bald win, Howe, Sir John A; Mavdonald and Blake, or that in the long State the fate of of George North ? ------------ ound 'of the United States run he ce the Third JU {arid &s compared with the rich mea- 1 np 25, NE 1910, -- DANISH FARMS EXCEL T ¥ i Systematic Education Secret of Hus- bandman's Success. Copenharcn, Denmark, June: Some very intecesting Bgures have! recently been printed which show | why Denmark has come to be known | as the "Model farm" of Europe i The sei! of Denmark is natural a. i dow lands, of 'more favored countrivs. | Moreover, the climate is inconstan. | and the winters are by no means {short. But the Danes--they, number | some 2,500,000-are of an 'excellent | breed, and their education as farmers | is the best yet evolved in any coun- | try. The total number of farms: is! 250,000, with a culliv ated area of over | 10,000,000 acres. | The land is thus divided : Less than { 1} acres, 68,000 farms, 25,000 acres; from 1§ to 13% acres, 65,000 farms, | AS0,000 acres; from 134 to 40 acres, | 46,000 farms, LI130,02¢ aeics, from 10 to 150 acres, 61,000 farms, 5,900, | 000 acres; from 130 to 50° acres, 3,000 | farms, 2,100,000 acres; more than 630 | acrés, 822 farms, 1,150,000 acres. - : Quite eighty per cerit. of the cultiva- | tors own their holdings, and these in| consequence control the state machine, | with an outlook on life almost exclu | sively agricultural. The minister of } agriculture was a roof-thatcher, and | four of the other mini isters were small farmers. Until about 1880 each farmer toil somely made his own butter, but | then a butter-making machine of great | utility was inveniéd, and a number of | Danish farmers clubbed together and | bought -a specimen. To-day there ave | JU87 co-operative dairies, with 158, | 000 members, who ship to England yearly butter worth £200,000. | Then the farmers took to the use of | skim milk for hog feeding, und a! big bacon business was the by-product taking the form of thirty-four distric co-operative abattoirs, with a mem bership of 90,000. { In 1895 was formed the famous | Danish c-operative Egg Export So ciety. It has 57,000 members, and in | 1908 its business amounted to £320, 000. The peasant is, moreover, his own banker. There are apera tive savings banks in the country, 'and il is now proposed to institute a great central bank to co-operate the whole of them. The Danish farmers' unique. He ix taught school. Experiment "stations are tered all over the toy kingdom. He knows all about bacteria and fer ments and nitrates . and legumes, School attendance is compulsory up to fourteen. Lut ticre ave forty-two high schools and twenty-nine agricul tural eolleges--""patriotic seminaries" --for. maturer students, and to these the Dane owes his 536 eo is in scat. education his business it is Woman Suffrage in Britain, Brantford Expositor The woman suffragists of Gre ain are, considering their a tremendous restraint selves--are keeping quiet. This is counted for by the fact that are, woman like, having their way--at least to An extent. A bill to extend a larger franchise to women is before the British parliament. The bill, which ix a private the product of a conciliation committee on which some forty member liament served, and it is said sympathetically regarded by members of the government. not expected that the be come in any sense a party one, a members of all four political parties ini | Great Britain were represented on the | committee, and all are rid of a somewhat If the bill becomes voles to about which is about the proportion strong-minded females in forty five--to be . expected in the forty-five million population of the motherland, | If this legislation proves satisfactory, other women may want the franchise, | and there will be a probable extension of it to others, than the single wo men and widows, chiefly included in the new legislation. sat Brit sex, 1 upon . them nc they one, is of par to leading issue will anxious to get troublesome issue. law it will give | a million women, of one Great Men Will Montreal Herald we took the list of publi who have made history greal reputations for themselves; two could be found who agreement about all the they dealt with together. Brown and Holton, between and Blake, between Blake wright, between Macdonald and Car | tier, bétween Langevin and Chapleau, between Tupper and Wallate, Thompson and McCarthy, well and Foster, there were differences on essentials, that imperilled, whe n | they did not actually destroy, that mutual confidence which alone can give strength to governments which are charged with the duty of carry ing on the business of the This, it is well to bear in mind, is the normal, not the exceptional, order of our existence. We cannot exercise it. We must just, each in its sphere, do his best in the circumstances in which | he is placed, according to his science and his abilities, Differ. men, for us and | no in tion were que Between Mackenzie and Cart hetween between Bo nation, con Are Synonymous. Everybody's "Poor Myra Kelley," said a maga zine edstor, "was almost as distressed as_Mr. Carnegie at the spirit of graft | and crookedness rampant amorg us. "The young writer, at a dinar magazine contributors, «aid that worsted wealth--that was our tro | ble she orystalized ber mean- ing in an anecdote. "She said that one man asked other: "" "What position does Bland hold in the community?' ""A very hotiorable position," the reply. "Ja he weglthy? " "Wealth and honor,' er," am today." of } we | an-; was said the oth JSynony mous terms in Ame rica AAO ADAASS Ss an as oo Jd THE LAND OF STORY BOOKS, Robert I. Stevenson. At evening when the lamp Is 1 round the fire m yparents si They sit at home and talk and sing And do oot play at anything, Now, with" fy Hie gus. 1 crawl . All fn the dark slong the wal nd follow nd the forest track A behind the sofa bac "There in the night where none can py. | All in my huntenNs Samp I lie A ny at. oe that | have read | Fil it tire to oo 'to bed. remarkable | {superiority as a husbandman. putting | | constitutional disturbance, WHITE LABEL ALE Bottled by The Dominion Brewery Co, Limited Toronto \ "The Ale of Quality," the very life of the malt, 'PU RI TY. caught and held in absolute INDIA PALE ALE First in Progress;-- first in Perfection --first in Popularity, the finest example of what a PALE ALE should be. ~ INVALID STOUT You want strength---<you can get it'and keep it by taking' DOMINION BREWERY CO., Invalid Stout. XXX PORTER Will make you work better, play better, rest better it. celled. and sleep sounder Its blood making properties are unex- when you take « TORONTO RIGNEY & HICKEY, Agents 136 PRINCESS STREET, KINGSTON. The Crimp In the Zinc Is the effective partof a Washboard EDDY'S 3 IN1AND 2 IN 1 WASHBOARDS Are so named because the Good Features of the Crimpingofall others are Combined, coder uently aie the MOST IMPROVED AND UP- TO-DATE: Ask for them. Give them a trial } t "eh THE E. B. EDDY CO., Also EDDY'S FIBREWARE Tubs, Paihs, Handy Dishes, Etc. Ltd., Hull, Coy own | be | It is | | DOCTOR SAID HEART NERVES WERE RESPON- | SIBLE. There dg soany a man and woman | tossing night after night upon « sleepless d, Their eyes do not close in the sweet and A ad repose that comes te those whose heart and nerves are right. Some wo or | disease has so debilitated and irritated the nervous system, that it canuot be vieted and causes nightmare, bed reams, starting in' the sleep, twitching of | the muscles, restlessness, ete. Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills a qocific forall padple troubled in this'w have a soothing and calming effect | I= 0 @ nervous system. Mrs. Calvin Stark, Rossmore, Ont, writes: --' About two years ago { began to be troubled with a smothering sensa- | tion. at ht when I would lie down. ot 80 wal could not sleep in the dark, 3. igo @ to sit up and rub my | limbs, oe, id become so numb, My doetor said my heart and nerves were { responsible. 1 saw Milburn's Heart and {| Nerve Pills advertised and got a box te { try them. I took three boxes and can | now lie down and sleep without the light | burning and can rest well. 1 can recom- mend them highly to ali nervous snd rus | down women.' Price, 50 cents per box or 3 boxes for | na st all dealers or mailed direct oe pt of priee by The T. Miltum Ce. Timited, Tortonto, Ont. iY SEPPOPPEP ET PEPE ePLPd v Sowards Keeps Coal AND Coal Keeps ~~ Sowards. HAVE YOU TRIED Him? 'Phone 155. VEY VTVYIeVYVYITeVYPYYVY a The lights 'of the world never tell you to watch their smokes. Life soon denies all ensure in those who deny themselves none. Gms dw 20000009' Rockers, $150 2.00, 6.50, ete. Chairs, $1, and up. Hettees, $1.50, 4.50 and 6.50, Camp Cots and Chairs, Motor Chairs, 'R. J. REID Leading Unde r- taker. Phone, 577 1.50 Boat t's Here for You Hardwood matched, quarter Red Oak and Top Floor niatched Hard In ut White Birch for y fnch end Maple Flogring in: No. 1, Clear and SNect qualities For Walnscotinglwe have Clear Georgia and, native White Pine; Ash and Our prices are qualities the best Flooring end and Al Spruce lowest and ™E Frontenaclumber & ! Coal Company, (A. Chadwick, Manager), Successors to the Rathbun Co. 4 J grvseesserensisie i Ice Cream Take some delicious Ice Cream home with you : 40c qt., 20¢c pt., 10c¢ } pt. GRIMM'S Agent for Kingston, i UNIQUE LAUNDRY | We recommend our work to be first class. S 8 ecard and we will call for nd deliver your laundry. We sew all rips #i and replaco buttons frée af iii charge. 73 Clarence St." ¥ ois nets #0 Tod nin al Ei