i + THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, ' THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1010. yy) / y rr i La HE great variety of work which the nod- ern office imposes upon the typewriter "is ade quately handled only by the Underwood----the mod- ern writing machine. There is an Underwood suited to every conceivable typewriter requirement, PREY UNITED TYPEWRITER C0., LTD. 4. KR, OC, DOBBS, KINGSTON, Salvia Grows Hair, or Don't experiment. Go to the Dest drug store and purchase a 50c¢ bottle! of SALVIA, the Guaranteed Hair Preparation, and if it doesn't cure Dandruff in ten days go back and get your money. A beautiful hair) dressing; not greasy. Building? | 1 can Supply Ready 'Roof, Wal Past, Ue. ~~ and Portland Cement P. WALSH, 55-37 Barrack St. HAIR NATURALLY ABUNDANT. When it is ¥'rée of Dandruff, It Grows Luxuriantly, Hair preparations and dandraff curves, as a'rule, are sticky or irritat- ing affairs that do no earthly good. Hair, when not diseased, grows natur- ally, Juxuriantly. Dandruff is the cause of nine-tenths of all hair trouble and dandrufl isénused by a germ. The only way to cure dandruff is to kill the germ; and;seoifir, the only hair preparation that will positively de: stroy the germ is Newbro's Herpicide-- absolutely harmless, free from grease, sediment, dye matter or dangefous pugs. 16 allays itching instantly; hair glossy and = soft aa, silk. %. the_gguse, you remove the ar loess street being macadamized in hv { will not ONLY THING AT iS THE STREET RAILWAY COM- PANY'S REFUSAL TO PAY y 1 | {A Share for New Bails, Ties, Ete, Council Hag Already Adopted the General Paving Recommendation . by the Board of Works, Olyection is taken in many quarters 'to the description of Kingston's maca- "dam roads as "mud roads." Ald. Car son does not like the phrase, . which i would seem to imply that there was no foundation to the roadways. Ald. {Toye is also one who does not see why the city's ronds require to be {given "'the hook" all the time, All the 'matter with them, he says, is that ithey are rough, and for the reason {that they have not received a fair a mount of attention for from tem to fifteen: years, "i + "Wiere in there a road in Kingston lon which the heaviest waggon cou!" | get stuck in mud in the worst of wea- [ ther?" is a question put to the Whig by a citizen. "There is not one," Le ideclared. "In some cities there are roads, in which in muddy weather, a Theavy waggon would get easily stuck, {but none can he found in Kingstn The foundations of this ei'y'e raad ways are solid, and all thats: the matter with the roads is that they i { i | : { i ! need to Le surfaced." + Your Money Back, | be meet to once more The board of trade this afternoon is take up the question of good roads. It has before it a large petition signed by property owners and tenants in the business section calling for the permanent pave- ment. Thie petition Ald. Chown says, was what led the Board of Works to ask the city council to prevent Fey the meantime. There are some. aldermen, who eannot ses why it is necessary to wo inte the whole question agin for- council' some months ago decided jn f vor of penmanent pavements i; the -- Toth; --withheld-detion-] ponding the making of a satisfactory agreement with the street railway com- pany as to what it would pay and the street railway and of it is the only thing unsettled, If the street railway say any money for tracks dte, Ald. Savson will press for a vefer- ence 16 the prople gn the question of the city paying for everything. UNDER-STRENGTH REGIMENTS. No Longer be Tolerated at Barriefield Camp. 1 commanding officers of some of the rural regiments come to tarriefield camp. next year with companies only ball up to strength, they are liable to jose their commands, 'Those in aw thority will. no longer stand under strength regiments, unless there is some pretty good reason given. Some of the regiments at Barriefield were away under strength last month, and next vear their commanders must get busy. Ome of the chief requisities of a commanding officer is ability to keep his regiment up to strength, H he cannot do that, he is looked upon as unfit for the position he occupies. A commanding officer is supposed to have the power to enthuse, and, there fore, draw voung men to his com- mand. Captains of companies are al: pposed to be. hls fo recriit, and SO: 51] to lend. assistance to command- will el by leading lragsists. Bend 10, stamps for sample to- the Herpicide .+ Detroit, ple One Dollar Bot- teed, G. W. Mahood, Spe - We Give You! Cash Coupons WATCH OUR WINDOW FOR DIS- PLAY OF PRIZES. REMEMBER THE PLACE. Gage's Grocery Cor, Montreal and John Sts. 'Phone 549. Prompt Delivery. It's Here for You Hardwood Flooring in end quartér cut White and Jak and Select Birch for Floor. end matched Hard Maple Flooring in No. 1, Clear and. Select qualities. For Walnscoting we ll << have Clear Georgia and native . White Pine. Ash and Spruce. + Our prices are lowest and . qualities the best. Frontenac Lambie & Coal Company, 'Successors to the Rathbun Co. Hof oil. A few days ago some of t | | liverynien complained about the oiling i of 'the streets. have mn automobile," er. It is, therefore, expected that the military camp st Barriefield next year will be about 1,000 stronger than it was last month. Regimental com- manding officers have been told plain- ly what is expected of them. ee eemtmr-------- RAIN CAME AT LAST. The Heavens Favor Kingston After Nineteen I a After nineteen days of drought, Kingston enjoyed a shower of rain this morning. aud a cooling of the at- mosphere. There had been no rainfall since Saturday, June 18th, and a good one was badly needed. What fell this morning was only like a drop in a bucket, Lut it was appreciated all the same. At ten o'clock, enough had fall- en 10 keep the roads damp for the day and there were fervent wishes that the amount of rain would be increased a hundred fold, so that the crops would receive a muchsneeded watering and the country roads would be cleared of their inches of dust. Wednesday was a very watro day, Towards evening the atmosphere heeame somewhat oppres- sive, hut at ten o'clock a nice hreeze sprang up and mide the night pleas. ant. 2 AGAINST OILED STREETS. Cabmen Make Complaint Abont the . New Method. : The cabmin iw Kingston do not favor the oiled streets. Several spoken to, yesterday, stated that the oil made the driving very dangerous, be- cause 'the horses were in great danger of shi all the time. It is pointed out that the horses have to be extra well shod, all the time in order to igtand 'on the streets which have been oilged.?x. hed The eabmen advocate water, fiend t "Its all right for people who g said one eab- man. "The oil will not bother 'them, but for 'horse: it is not the thing: Let us keep to the water." = A $500 Challenge. An interesting = controversy in hein 88, nol te CP it has been could speed fast Liv hee' at boame MAJOR J. B. MITCHELL. M-- He is Now With the Winnipég Grena- : * diers. The 100th Winnipeg Grenadiers is being organized. Tts major will be J. B. Mitchell, who first saw 'service with the Gananoque artillery ag a bugler, and with 11 went to Prescott, being stationed in the Tort there dur- ing the Fenian raid alarm in 1866. As a corporal he wen! with the battery to Cornwall in 1870 at the time of the second Fenian rid. He received a medal and two clasps for service. He attended the school of gunnery in To- ronio in 1871, and the military school in Montreal, in 1872, receiving frst claxs certificates in each case. In consequence of the battery, of which he was then sergeant-major, be- ing changed into a field battery, a short. course was taken with A" Battery School of Gunnery, in King- ston, under colonel, now Lieut Gen. Sir George A. Femwdewii join the mounted police in 1974 and was with the force in making the record trip from West Lynne to the Rocky moun tains the longest ever made by an armed force away from its base and carrying all supplies with it. WHEELING ON SIDEWALK. "Tis Said Women are Sometimes the Offenders. There is no excuse now, for bicycles on the sidewalk. The magis- trate announced, on Tuesday, that evifyone must keep off the walks. It is stated that women have Veen the ofienlers, in several of the cases. Be careful 'ladies; or vou will receive a summons, to attend the police court, at 1 a.m some of these days, Riding on the sidewalk is a very dangerous practice, and has resulted i the injury of man people. True; the roads ir Kingston are in very rordiden for wheeling, but this Keep to the road, riding poor is an PACLNC, leave or Mayor Hugo's Remarks. In' welcoming the Kingston Salva« tion Army band, at Watertown, N.Y., Mayor Hugo, who is a native of Kingston, told the gathering that he remembered when the army was first organized in Kingston He also re- members when the first barracks was built. In addressing the army workers the mayor said that he was full of praise for them and the grand work that ic being done by them not only in some" of the larger cities, but in Watertown as well. He said that a certain element that would be hard to reach otherwise were catelully looked after by them. The speaker! then cited several examples of good werk he knew had been done locally. He told of how several men of the city had been secured work through the efforts of Ensign Stubbs. He told them .that Watertown and the people of it = were very glad to have Canadians come there, although he contended that the various reports that are heard are to the contrary. To Hold a Convention. The members of the Woman's Mis- sionary auxiliaries, of the three Meth- odist churches, Princess, Queen and Sytem "had an ideal afternoon, on Tuesday, for the 'open-air meeting, at Lake Ontario Park. The meeting in charge of Mrs. Muirhead, was attended by nearly one hundred. Mrs. S. Sel- Jery gave a Bible reading, and Mrs. T. H. Sproule also gave a reading. An interesting paper, "How To Interest Women In Missions," was read by Mrs. Charles Wright. After discussion, it was decided to hold a district conven- tion in the city in October. The meet- ing was followed by a picnic tea. Band in the Park. By kind permission of = Lieut.-Col. Cunningham and officers of the 14th P.W.0.R., the band will play the fol lowing programme in Macdonald park, to-night, weather permitting : Torea- dor march, Riviere; overture, Tan- eredi, Rossim; intermezzo, Forget Me Not, Macbeth; valse, The Dancing Girl, Coote; grand march, The Fire Brigade, D'Ace; selection, The Time the Place and the Girl, Howard; Pol- ish dance, Scharwenta; Highland pa- trol, Amers; Regimental march, God Save the King. J. 8S. Robinson, band seargent. If the weather i$ unsuitable the con- cert will be postponed until Friday night. cordial," in 20e.~ and at Gibson's Red Cross "Lime juice f0c. bottles, Drug Store. A "Corner" in Comfort For those who know the pleasure and satisfaction there ; is in a glass of ICED POSTUM Make it as usual, dark and rich---bofl it. thoroughly to bring out the distinctive flavour ahd food value Cool with eracked ice, and the great continent of Europe, AS BUSY AS A BEE. STEAMBARGE RANDALL HANDLING FREIGHT: - Has Carried 2,500 Tons Into Smith's Falls and Has Yet Over 1,500 Tons to Handle----Marine Paragraphs. The steambarge John Randall pass ed on her way from Ridean Perry with lumber for Oswego. She will load coal in Oswego for Smith's Falls. The Ran dall has carried 2,500 100s of coal into Smith's Falls, so far this sea- son, sand yet has to carry 1,500 tons, The little steambarge is as busy as a THE b At Swift's wharl : Steamers Belle ville, down; Rideau Queen cleared for Ottawa, this morning; Keewatin ex- pected with coal; Caspian down; King- ston down this morning; City of Mon- treal, up to-night. " While the steamer Kingston, of the R. & 0. line, was backing into the of the steamer Belleville and bent the latter's bow stem. The schooner Kitchen is at Richard: sons' wharf, taking on a cargo ol feldspar for Charlotte. The steambarge Navajo arrived here loaded with brick, from Brockville, on the way to Bath. The schooner Dertha Kalkins arrived at the Grove Inn with coal from Os. wergo., The penitentiary bourg. The steamer Sowards arrived Anglin's with coal from Charlotte. The schooner Major Ferry arrived at Sownrds' with coal, from Oswego. The stesmer lladdington passed down on her way to Monuresl. the Co Marshall is at stone for schooner loading at LABOR'S GOLDEN LAND. fort and Hope. Frasik Bullen, one-time sailor, and writer of sea tales, has beep | sending his impressions of Canada to an Eog- lish paper. The extremely favorable conditions which Canada offers the Ja- Hover is the theme of his observations forwarded from Winnipeg. There is naver, a lack of crowds in the open places of our great English cities every working 'day, he says; crowds who wait wistfully for hive, feelinz daily more acutely the loss of | that which is even worse than scanty food and insufficient clothing--the loss of efficiency, of ability, and desire for labor. | In the faces of thosé waiting crowds at the street corners of our huge cities at home there are to De found all the expressions from eager, keen-eved hope. as each well-dressed man approaches, down to the vacant, apathetic: stars of the man who no longer cares what hap- pens to him or. to those once dear to him. Fveryvone with a heart who has trav. elled much about our land will bear me out in saying that dhis is the sad- dest sight we have to show, this root and origin of all the miséry of the slums, It is impossible to study the faces of suth crowds out here, for the sim- ple reason that they do not exist. It is unthinkable that here should be wistful, humsry crowds with mute en- treaty for hire of their labor ¥anding in the market places here. Crowds there are, and of varied nationality, but they are moving, they ave hired, and life for them is full of interest. According to the country from which they hail, so do the expressions on their faces vary in intensity. There is the bright, eager outlook «of the Brit- isher who has found steady, well-paid employment and is already looking ahead, the placid, ox-like satisfaction of the Scandinavian and Ruthenian as well as the Teutonic races, the vivacity of the Southern European, notably the Italian. But all have the one great seal splendidly set--contenfment. Amon; jhe laboring crowds you may seek in vain for native: born Canadians, except from the Province of Quebes, for Yankees, or for 'Britishers--a hate- ful term. but'l have no other under- standable. 2 What it may be out west I do not vei know, but as far as I have gone it seems to be tacitly understood that the heavy drudgery of this vast coun- try is to be done by the escapes from who have been accustomed to toil hopeless- ly for the merest pittance, to live upon offal, and then to be taxed both in flesh and money until -they bec ime like the blinded oxen in the anciént threshing-floor--muzzled, too, in de fiance of the levitieal law. These men get big wages in Canada, and can easily save five dollars a week, Mr. Bullen says. Corrupt fore men and paymasters exist but do not thrive, for they are too, severely dealt with when found out. In Canada al- 40, says the writer, far different from Australia, the hoard of the laborer is seldom confiscated by the saloon-keep- er, Ever move drastic restriciions upon the sale of liquor are being formula- ad, and it is not difficult to foresee the day when the consumption of intoxi- cants will cease altogether, for it will not pay either to manufacture or to import them, At present throughout the great pro. vince of Ontario, which is, 1 think, the most prosperous in Canada, con- taining the capital of the dominion, Ottawa, and the greatest city thereof, Tosento, no liquor may be sold pub- licly after 7 p.m. on Saturday until 8 i while the add sugar and lemon; also a little cream if desired. aif © Postum is really a food-arink with the nutritive elements of titer sans POSTUM * | jment i a result of this and many other factors, such as the incentive to lsbor offered by the possibility of pnemploy- a severe winter, the ever- i i 2 H Ti B dock at Toronto, she struck the as es fore doing any further damage. affair caused quite a stir, in the neigh: | ~ OUR BIG SALE. _ = ee Without preliminary talk, here are bargains that will make SATURDAY ~ne of the busiest days in 'our history. Don't Miss This unity. " . Children's Wash Suits Buster, Russian and Sailor Styles. Clear 48¢. : Regular 75¢, 90c and $1 values. To Regular $1.25 Wash Suits. To Clear at 78c. Regular $2 and 2 25 Wash Suits. 61 Meus Extra Five Worsted Suis »~ go «das the best $20 goods in Colors are Browns, G Ciear at $13.95. : Men's 2-Piece Homespun Suits. To (lear at $1.29. : Canada. reens, Gr ys aud Olives. All sizes in the lot. To R.gnlar $10. To go now at $6 96. Boys' 2-Piece Suits Fine Worsteds and Tweids. = kd all ov r at $6.50. Double:-bréasted or Sicyle-breasted Style, with plain or boomer pants. To Clear at $4.26. Many other lines at prices to clear. Come now, as it will be along time before you have such a chance to get Clothing at such low prices. "RONEY & CO, 127 Princess St. m-- __ THE STORE THAT SETS THE PACE. HAD ARM BROKEN. $= MICHAEL GRATTON MET WITH ACCIDENT PLAYING BALL. He Fell While Running From Third Tver thing tir Canada Tends to Com Base to the Home Plate=His n= juries Were Speedily Attended to. An unfortunate accident occurred at the cricket field, on Wednesday night, during the baseball "match between Richardson's elevator and Live Coals, when Michael Gratton, son of Joseph Gratton, forenmifin at Richardson's ele- vator, fell, while running from third base, to home plate, and as a result, had his left arm fractured, near the wrist. The mishap will confine him to the house for some time. Dr, Boyce, of the general hospital, set the fracture, The game was nearly over, wign the accident occurred, and it put a gloom over all the proceedings. The injured player was removed to his home, as soon as his injuries were attended to. "Mike," ag be is known by all his friendy, is very popular in sports, and everyone wag very sorry to learn of hig mishap. He is not only a good ball player, but also is good at hockey. In the izame, the team from the elevator succeeded in winning a victory over the Live Coals, by a score of 9 to 7. Interest in Lawn Bowling. Ever do any lawn bowling ? King- ston has quite a large number of fol- lowers of the game, and the spacious lawn on (ueen's campus, is well pa- tronired every afternoon and eviting, but particularly so, in the evening. It is fine sport, and the Kingstonians, who are members of the club have been enjoying the sport. : Lawn bowling tournaments are all the go, in Western Ontario. No doabt the local club will be able to hold one in Kingston, in the near future. be to de- Live Coals Defeated. The Live Coals, went down, feat, in their gam: dv the cricket field, cn Wednesday might, with Rich chardson's elevator, by a score of 9 to 7. The game was thet ordered to be played over again, by the league, as in the last match the Live Coals won out, but played a man who was not eligible for the team. The grain hust- ers put up a brilliant game, and turning cold water on the Live Coals towards the last managed to win out in grand etyle. The Live Coals could not come back. "Senator" Pow- ell did the twirling for the bunch from the elevator, and Hunt was behind the bat. Both did good work: Rea and Stansbury, formed the battery for the Live Coals' George Vanhorn was the umpire, and he is, deserving of the thanks of al interested, for the way in which he handled the game, MADE THINGS LIVELY. One Bakery Rig Ran Into Another on Wednesday. About 5.40 o'clock, on Wednesday evening, a horse attached to a bak- ery vig, was standing in front of a store, when it took a motion to break loose, and for a few minutes, made things lively. The animal started to- wal Princess street, at a slow pace, but soon caught up speed, and when Queen street was reached, was going at a lively clip. Other rigs and peo- ple on the street, had to clear the way. Going up Queen street, the horse ran into the bakery waggon of Mr. Clilcheth, of Portsmouth, and damped it over. Mr. Clucheth was thrown out, but beyond receiving a severe shaking up, vas not injured. The horse was brought to a standstill be The borhood. 8 itp Leak in a Pipe. Men have been at work, on a drain, it EER RRS 4 } ni Sacrifice nsgrer Fu i ale - 'Wash Suits | SATURDAY MORNING, 8.30 O'CLOCK. Arn yA, 34 Only White and Tan Wash Coats Full length. . - o - J . Sale price $2.98. A A AAA NL AA At NN 48 WASH SUITS Coat Lace Trimmed, wide full skirt with pleats. Colors White, Tan, Pink and Blues. SALE PRICE $3.98 56 WASH PRINCESS DRESSES Trimmed with Braid, Lace and Tucks. All colors. $3.98 SEE WINDOW ¢ 2. WALDRON] bh It would naturally be Gulet this month if it was not for the special inducements - Every Line Reduced The latest and best at