FOR SALE, The Albion Hotel property, corner : Jantesat and Queen streets, Kingston, ll sell at a sacrifice. For particulars woe T. J. LOCKHART, Beal Estate Agent, 159 Wellington Sti, Kingsion, 'We recommend our work to Pe first class. Send a card and | we will call for and deliver our laundry. We replace | ttens free of charge. SAM LEE, 294 Princess Street. , | @ Finishing Furnitu Special Notice . HEBERT & GCAMIC 126-132 ONTARIO STREET, Will eall at your home and clean up your-Furniture at Reasonable Rates; also your Hardwood Floors or Plano. Drop a card before the fall rush, THAT TIRED WHEEL in all ages the only natural and me- chanical and scientific way of working Sron 1a by heating it and sticking it While it is hot, at also stands good in the matter of potting tires, as every- one must admit that the most natural and mechanical and scientific way of setting tires is by heating and getting them on while hot. Then you have a Phtfect Job. More on this subject next change. pairs of all kinds get a rompt attention, Rubber Tires on your Bugsy. also your Baby Carriage gel: prompt attention, . 'Am selling balance of our Steck off JAMES LATURNEY Carriage Maker, 890 PRINCESS STREET. BUILD ALL KINDS OF LUMBER AT LOW PRICES. ASBESTIO . PLASTER FOR BALE, ALSO COAL AND ALL KINDS OF wWooD. our best Carriage or ires LL | LF, ) ELECTRIC LIGHY FOR CHURCH, STORES AND HOME OUR SPECIALTY Sie ad Eel in Fal Futva in Wonen We have a large range of Women's Fall Boots in Pa-- tout fea or Gun Metal. Style heel at $5.00. "It was in the latter end of the year 1908 that a nasty itch came th h my skin, and tore the flesh. 1 - pital, but 1 re- I could not sl ee a rn on or about the mont Jan 7 One day I chanced to see in the papers a cade like mine, but I gave | , At las the Quticura. Remedies, rat was Jutioura Ointment 1 used, I found their effects. 1 got ona box of the Ointment more, and in Jess than one woek the skin was all right, and left no traces after it, I have not had a return of the same since, and 1 shall always praise the Cuticura. Remedies a8 being the means of my cure," (Signed) Jomx Tyremii, 04, Scotland Road, Liverpool, In a further letter Mr. Tyrrell adds: "The first appearance of m eczema was a burning itch tore and left my body, legs and arms one mass of sores. It caused sleep less nights, but' now I can 'sleep as well as over," (uticura. Soap and Ointment everywhere, Potter Drug Botton: a Gray Hair to its Natural Color na Beauty. Nomatter how long it has been gra: or faded. Promotes a luxuriant of healthy hair. Stops its fal out, a RY Jem nd gosay : r 3 'Will not soil skin or linen. Will not #1 and Soe. boi I= not a dye, mal ] S0e- hat 2x. nr aagiata, the Hair and Sx. "hilo Hay Spec, ewark, N.J. U.S, A. and Toreatodnt Canads finy's Hortina ar : Som fiexkn, akin oth a REFUSE ALL Jas. B. McLeod, Agent. Don't Persecute your Bowels Be great in act, as you have been in thought, ~King John, Act V, S¢ 1. The world is full of men who have "nothing done but great things un- done." Imagination creates great poems, makes eloquent speeches, prints magnificent pictures, invents splendid instruments. Potential poets, orators, artists amd inventors a'oumd. Here and there a ShaXespears, or a Milton, a Raphael or a@ Titian, a Borke or a Wibster, a Watt &r an Edison raises bis head out of acrowd of dreanors amd takes his place among the illustrious men of action, Not infrequently some youth is de- scribed as a promising lad, a young gening, He bs remarkably precocious in thought, far in advance of his years, When he reaches maturity his friends are amazed to find that sone comrade of whom nothing was expect: ed has passed him in the race for Jis- tinction, He may have had Dreadth of mind, predominating imagination; the other may have had narrowness of soul, ut lie was developed on the side of will, which so far as this practical world is concerned is infinitely Deter than imagination. The greatest men are those in whom penetrating ima- gination and strength of will are wqually combined. : Shakespeare is supreme in litera tare. There is the clearest evidence that bis dramas are not the product of mere imaginative genius. They are more largely the product of his genius 'or work. His series of sight histor- ical dramas, is, in many ways, his reatest achievement. Wherein lies this greatness ? In the profound grasp of social and political questions, in an utinate knowledge of the facts and sharacters of each historical period. He conceived a great series of dramas, 'tis imagination bodied them forth, and 0 at once went to work to prepare iimself to give them tangible form. The very firstlings of his heart were he firstlings of his hand. He studied he history of his country; he recon: tructed the charac@rs of by-gone wes; he made use of any historical ttudies he found at hand. Shakes eare'y plays arc 4ll evidences that e was great in act as he was in hought. Milton for many vears had "yeen dreaming of producing a Kreat wie. Opportunity was lacking, but, vhen the fitting moment arrived, he wied, and produced an immortal wem. "Epics and dramas have been nid are being dreamt out daily; * the 'orm. Thousands have gazed upon noble tagues, sublime 'paintings and listened o inspiring music and have been im: relled to create, in thir imaginations, kl IAS FORGOTTEN AVERSION OWING TO CHANCELLOR. Vided Veto Conference----Minister Also Defended Queen Mother and Prince Agninst Keir Hardie. peclal Qorrespondence Toronto Star. London, Sept. 17.~There is a cer tain piguancy shout the fact that doyd-George ix at present staying at Salmoral Castle, the king's Highland RT. HON. DAVID LLOYD GEORUE. man of action is required to give thems 4 | when A ar SERMON statues, paiotings and music. But ey fail to put their thoughts into ton. Doubtless some of these dreamers are the imaginative equals of the great poets, painters and wusi- cians under 'whose influence they bave come, but they. lack the patient indus- try, the power of infinite pains, the determination not to overcome. In every great artist's career there have been times when he has felt that he could sever approximate his ideal. If he were lens than the greatest he al- lowed the difficulties to conquer him, if he were of the stuff that heroes and masters are made of, he braced him- self and with renewed energy faced his difficulties and usually won. Every great invention is an evidence that some man was as great in act as be was in thought... From the begin- ning of the nineteenth century ocoa- sional dreamers conceived that sound might be carried to a diftance over a wire and reproduced. Alexander Gra- ham Bell, & Seoteh lad, had his im: agination stirred by this thought. To think with him was to act. Labor iously be toiled to give material shape to his dream." It took years of experi- menting, study and privation, but con- tinuous action combined with buoyant imagination and faith in himself brought success. A thousand exam- ples might be given from the modern world to prove that it is only by being as great in act as in thought that any- thing worth while is achieved. The fail- ures are for the most part those whe dreamt, but did not act. King Rich- ard IT was 'a dreamer with a lofty con- ception of kingship, but he never got farther than the conception. Henry V had an equally lofty ideal, but with him thought and action went hand in hand. The greatness of the Elizabethan age lies in the fact that it was a time of action. England conceived it possible to take first place among the nations, her seamien promptly sailed forth to explore thé ends of the earth. Often some individual is pointed out Na nounced failure; he had great promise, but he lacked the energy to act. Many a tramp on the wayside has had . the dreams of a Shakespeare or Wordsworth. Tt is often the case that men who can rise to the most sublime heights may, under other cir- oumstances, sink to the lowest depths. It is action that saves. When the wheels of dndustery.are whirring and the rattle of the reaper is heard in the 'fields, there is happiness in the nation; the factories are silent and the fields uncultivated, there is sorrow. The grantness of nations and individu- als can be Measured by. the action they display in working out their thoughts. jon | witly ard to ham, while Thies has pokon in the high- est terms of the king's uprightness and ability. = In the first place, Both the king aud the premier were anxious that a con- ference on 'the veto question should take place, but serious doubts were entertained as to whether lloyd (George would concur in the proposal and without his concurrence any con- ference would have been an absolute impossibility, as the advanced radicals who always regard Mr. Asquith with suspicion - would have broken out in open revolt. However, Lloyd Geowre not merely fell in with the proposal, but consented to take part in the con- ference himself, and he gave both Mr. Asquith gnd Mr. Ballour to under sand that in so doing, he was ac- tuated largely by feelings of loyalty to the king and by a Jdewire to make his somewhat difficult posftion at the ommencement of ite rei%n as eapy as possible for him. The latter +88 wived this iptimation, which was duly sonveyed to him, with much grati- fication, \ In the sétond place Lloyd George, a8 chancellor of the exchequer, was ex officio chairman of the conmmities which settled the civil list, and, ° im that capacity, he was frequently brought in contact with the king, and displayed a delicacy and an anxiety to meet bis wishes which won his warns gratitude, For Lloyd George i regarded, and now recognizes this more clearly than the king himself, yy all the advanced radicals as their natural Jeader, and it was very large. v due to his nfunce and authority *ith' them that. but u single liberal or radical member voted in favor of he laborities" amendment to. cut lown the annual allowance for the thyat family: Hy some $350 5 irdly, the king was very much Sokchet by the vigor and loyalty of the language in: which Lloyd-Geo lled Keir Hardie's' somewhat - home, as minister in attendance on his aajesty, inasthuchias it disproves the umors that the chancellor of the ex- shequer was out of favor with the frst wrsonage in the land. For, in ar 'anging the rota of those ministers vho ave to be in personal attendance wm the sovereign, when the court has ved from Leadon, the wtmost care & always taken to ensure that the nitisters selected should not include my minister whose presence for a mgth of time beneath the same roof in the shghtest to. the monarch. stance. Queen Victoria at one time had + great dislike for Disraeli, whom, in 'ater life, she came to favor more "han any of her. advisers, and, until ~hange, that great man never was de ut fo Sot as minister in attend: £ ¥ ser feelings towards him underwent ali seemly attacks on the quesn-mother, And be awsured the chancellor that he was grateful to him not only as king, Bit Ala a son, whose mouth was , by exigencies "his posi tion, while his mother was attacked in public. J And lastly, as soon as his majesty oreated his eldest son Prince of Wales, a movement was set on foot to peti tion the king that the prince might be formally invested with the it at some town in Wales iteelf. The unani- A Story Concerning a Great British Consul. M. A FP. Lendon, Sir William Robson, Great Britain's leading coufisel at The Hague Arbitra- tion Tribunal, has been described as "the Dandy Lawyer," aud certainly he is one of the best-dressed members of his profession. But his white spats and i whiter waistoodts are but the outs { ward and wisible sign of the courage {of his convictions, which are such that be once refused a brief marked at £10,000 | Sir William has all the intricacies of the law at his fiboers' ends, al though be is by no means the dry and serious individual one might marine him to be. Heo #5 a brilliant speaker and has o ready wit, and as a entle- man he onete defended said of him ; "He seems to get on good terms with his andiencé, and, though he pretends to be jestitig with them, he is all the time wor home his point." On one occasion in the House of Commons, when he was nember for South Shields, after a lenrthy deéiate, a member from the opposition bene complained with a touch of bitterness that evidently Bir William could not swallow his argument. "No." said Sir Willlam without hesi- tation, "I don't want to die of indi- gestion !" § + The Doctor Worsted. Topeka Journal A farmer hired a doctor to attend his sick wife. The dootor bad an eye out for the main chance, and asked the agriculturist if he had the money to pay for an operation, "Sure," says the farmer, "and I'll pay vou $100 if vou cure her." "I am not handling insurance as side line," Says the doctor, "and I do not take cases that way." "Yery well," says the farmer, "I'li pay $100 if vou cure her, or $100 if you kill her." The doctor let it go at that. The lady died ed for his fee. his roll and asked, her 7" "Certainly not," said the doctor. "And there is a heap of circumstan tial evidence that you didn't cure her," said the farmer, carefully replac- ing the wad next to his femur, "there fore, according to our agreement, J don't owe you anything." aud the M.D. call The farmer pulled out "Did you kill In Cold Storage 40 Years. Winnipeg Fre Press. The obituary of Florence Nightin gale which was printed in the Lou don Daily News the morning after her death was written byt angther of the great women of the Victorian era. Harries Martineau, who died forty vears ago. It is not an unheard of thing in newspaper cwcles with well systemized stores of ready-to-hand in formation that upon the death of a notable person an obituary is pub- lished which was in great part writ to see it in print. But this obitus ary of Floreace Nightiogale, whose writer was dead two score vears be- fore the time came for it to be used, must surely go on record ag an il stance without parallel. \ We-------- Spitting in public places sows ease and creates a harvest for "grim reaper." The casiest way to manage a is her way. dis- the wile Yes, Madam there is one REALLY PURE Saltfor Table acd Daky... ADVISED Taking Lydia E. Pinkbam's Vegetable Compound ~ "1 haye taken wii m's Vegetable Com. Be is doctor told me it L E. egetable Com dpound a fine remedy for all woman's in by a pgrson who was not living | WHITE. LABEL ALE The Dominion Brewery Co., Lm t Toronto "The Ale of Quality," the very life the malt, caught and held in ab PURITY. INDIA PALE ALE i First in Progress -- first sin Per oc --first in Popularity, the finest example of what PALE ALE should be. INVALID STOUT You want strength--You get it and keep it by taking DOMINION BREWERY 20, Invalid Stout XXX PORTER, Will make you work better, play better rest better and sleep soundér when you take it. Its blood making properties are unex- celled. DOMINION BREWERY CO0., Limited is TORONTO RIGNEY & HICKEY, Agent 136 PRINCESS STREET, KINUNTON, ' aT Insure Your Airship? if you haven't one, then INSURE YOUR LIFE. If you don't think that's worth Insuring, then INSURE YOUR PROPERTY If you have no property, INSURE YOURSELF AGAINST ACCIDENT, In any case call on J. K. CARROLL, 14 Market St. If You Are Looking for the Best in$ Chocolates and Pure Ice Gream GO TO "Next Door to SAKE L L' Opera House. Phone 84C. 20 Princess Streets 0000000RAGANNC00000000000000000000N00000D S. J. Kilpatrick & Co Noted for keeping the best stoe --doing the best work--piie the lowegt. i Every sfick a match,' every mafch a light, and every light a sfe eyen flame. ¢ we wk % De-Light" for the J moker--Try a Box. J. | Always everyw in Canada, : EDOYS ARE CORRECT FOR FALL WEAR