Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 30 May 1912, p. 11

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KING'S PARK-South Winnipeg) "A few choice 100 ft. lots for sal easy terms. It. will pay you to secure these at once. Apply to J, OHuTION, 18 Market Street, | Thomas Copley Telephone 987 Drop a card so 19 Eine Street when wanting anything done In the Carpe - ter ine Estimates given on ah kinds of repairs and new work: #0 Hardwood Floors of all kinds Af orders will receive prompt attention Hhop, 40 Queen Bireel. BIGYCLES BIOYCLE SUNDRIES 3 Cut Prices 413 Spadioe Avenue, Send ier Cut Price Catalogue, TORONTY Electric Res for Men Phosphon p ol every nerve in the body thio dnd alley, its tension ; res! remature decay and all sex make you anew man. Price to any sddress. Seobeil Drug on, Ont. w & bax, or two for For sale at Mahood's drug store TEA! TEA! TEA! From the Finest Tea Gardens of VOTH VUE TVUCD Ceylon, uncolored, and of the finest Maver, Green and Black at 30c per ANDREW MACLEAN, Ontarie Street v 8, blood ¥ tee Sat, ithe dae > Borin oronto, Tt bn doubt o, for FRER book to Dr, Le HAMPSTRAD, LONDON, ENG P ON CURES TO" : Re heh ' ) Fresh Caught HALIBUT WHITE FISH TROUT LIVE LOBSTERS : 63 BROCK ST. PHONE 250 Scrantop Coal Co's Coal Selected Yrom the Celebrated Mines, the best Anthracite. Coal mined in Pennsylvania. THE JAS. SOWARDS COAL CO. North End Ontario Street. pound, at Emupy % \ 2 Cures weakness Dr. ERAPION.s0 THE ag SALMON : A-- DOMINION FISH CO., ¢ Riehtiiond 'Nb. 4 and Ontario No.*1 !! Place your mext order with "Phone 155. During housecleaning, wishing to save time by having quick Innches, «an be supplied with all kinds of Cooked Meats, Picklps and Relishes by just 'phoning or giving a call to H. J. MYERS wi. Th "the making of THEIR SYSTEM 18 BETTER THAN EUROPEAN ONES, Prisoners Get a Good Diet and by' Assiduous' Attention to Work and _ Discipline the Oriental GCenyicts Can' Earn Prison Promotion---Re- sponsible Positions Are the Res wards of Good Behavior. The prison system in India is, in many essentials, quite distinet~from that which pfevalls in this country, and eutiously enough, far in advance of it, The "prisons of the East, or rather gaols, as they are there termed, wear none of that heavy and depress. ing aspect which is characteristic of most of the prisons in this country. They are, ob. thie 'contrary, very bright and cheerful in. appearance, with plenty of color in their surround. ings. This is as: it should be, for surely it is the purpose of prison treatment to elevate and not to rush the wrong-dogr, fo 'brighten and not Wo duskon hid life. tor th canng etter, for the pudpase and scope d is article, than scribe in detail the life of 'a typical Indian gaol. For this purpose, there fore, 1 will select the Central Gaol. Coimbatore, in the Presidency of Madras, one of the largest g in India. The gaol holds about 1,508 prispatrs, and is built on the same plan as nefrly all the other gaols in India-- that is to say, the octagonal: plan. The gaol tower, containing the offices, is in the centre; and the wards, cons taining blocks and workshaps, radiate from it. Attached to the main gaol is a cellular gaol, containing 388 eclls, in whieh "habituals" are confined at night, In another enclosure is the factory, where about' 260 prisoners are ems. ployed in weaving, 'In the faetory are 100 power looms, with all the necessary preparatory machinery; a dye shop, where cloth for tent work and yarn for weaving colored material are dyed; and a mechanics' shop for executing repairs to machinery. The factory turts out a large quan. tity of cotton material, practically the whole of which is for Government departments. Sheets and towels for the army are sent all ever, India, while there is hardly a department of the Government which does not ob- tain cotton material from this gacl. 24 The other industries on which the: prisoners are employed are carpentry, ir matting from eo- coanut fibré, extracting aloe fibr:, and making colored rugs from aloe fibre and cotton. A large number of prisoners are also employed in oil pressing, and on cleaning grain and grinding it 'into flour for their own consumption. Otherg==short tearm prisoners--are employed on the farm and gardens. All vegetables required for the gaol are grown in the gaol gardens. : The ordinary routine of the gaol is: Unlocking at six, when, of coutse, the count of prisoners is taken, after which all prisoners are given a bowl of warm congee, made of raji flour, with which they are given a small 'quantity of chutney. Immediately after this meal is finished the prison. ers are drafted bff to their varions works. At eleven o'clock they are given the midday meal, consisting of a raji flour pudding or cake, together with vegetables and dhall curry. At twelve the work bell goes again, and work is resumed tilt 5 p.m., when every prisoner who is not sick has to bathe, and the evening meal, which is similar to the midday meal, is served, At, six o'clock, or shortly after, the prisoners are locked up for the night. The prisoners, other n those known as "'habituals" or incor. rigibles, sleep, mot in cells, but in dormitories, lying upon earthen couches furnished with light cover. ings. Of course, they are under ef- ficient guards. Every Morkiay morning all prisoners are paraded for the inspection of dhe superintendent. dnd medical offifer. At this inspection the prisoners are paradéd on alternate Mondays without their clothing in order that the miedi- cal officer E ® a better oppor. tunity of j mg the health of the prisoners, and detecting cases of skin diseases, a A All prisoners are weighed on ad- mission to 4 subsequently once a, fi 7 orgies E sentence, andl shot any prisoner seriously lose weight he is st. once paraded at the id for in. spection. < ha > Jar 42 Jossible all work A ask: ed, and the tasks chegked « sonsts Whe do short, work before the tendent for punishment. Ii shou men: tioned that there are no "governoms" in Indi , the. chief officer be ing called Rhols, the. chief, of and he is usually a medical man. Punishment 'ordinarily consists of fines of remission e , the inflie tion of fetters of handeuffs, or penal died. Whipping is resorted to in Fare a as graye a saults on other. or. on gi officials. Conviets eaten to avelve months or more are termed Centr under the a convict can earn one for work and of eh four tks. 40a: Gne day's 'wenty-four marks go-to on remission A tonvict, commen in the THE PRISONS OF won| AVERTED A WAR. How Earl Cowley Prevented an International Catastrophe Sir Francis Bertie, British ambas- Government "at t| vetlipg the staties of hg, ngs Bt kine Edward a8 Nice and Canpes respec tively on Apfil 8 and 10. For forty years Sir Francis was a member of the permanent staff of the Foreign in London, and though he hb never represented the Court of Si James abroad he was suddenly made ambassador to Italy. usua ly justified. Bir Francis was, how- ever, in no need of tuition as a diplo- mat, for diplomacy was in his blood. And when the {ime came for his trans. ference to the Quai d'Orsay he was simply following in the footsteps of his forefathers. Lady Bertie's father was the Hon. Sir Henry Wellesley, one of the sons of that Earl of Mornington who fath- ered the great Duke of ellinglon and the first Marquis Wellesley. His fifth son, ihe belore-mentioned Sir Henry, became Earl Cowley, and the father of Lady Feadorovpa Bertie. Earl Cow. ley was British ambassador in Paris, and during a great crisis, between England and France, Lord Malmes- bury sent a "'highly patriotic de- "spatch" for delivery to the French Government, The despatch amazed Lord Cowley, who saw that its delivery would mean war. Bo Lord Cowley said nothing. but just went round to Count Walew- 1 8ki, for a "quiet little chat," in the course of which he drew from his - ket the warlike despatch, and "allow- ed" the French statesman to peruse it. Said a Walewski, "You may hand me that despatch; but if you do 1 shallfsend you your passports to-morrow Jmorning!"" Lord Cowley carefully tucked the despatch away in his coat-tail ket, went back to the British Embassy, and sent the despatch back to London, so that its "i's" might be dotted, and its "t's" crossed. Twice Lord Cowley hed to return that dangerous. document to London before he would present it to thie French Government, and when all the verbal squibs and crackers were expunged he sent it to Walewski--and peace reigned ! Second son of the sixth Earl of Abingdon, Bir Francis was born in August, 1844, and entered the Foreign Office at the age of nineteen. Big African Railroads. Five vast railway projects for the opening up.ef Africa are at present either in progress or seriously consid- ered, First, there is the great Cape to Cairo Railway, whose northern and southern sections are pushing slowly to an ultimate junction in mid-Africs. Then there the French Trans- Saharan which m be extended eventually through Equatorial Africa to Cape Town and the further sclieme of that nation to join the valley of the Niger and Lake Tchad with the Atlantic coast by means of the Trans- Sudanese Railway. Germany also has lanned the Trans-Equatorial road, first important reilroad develop- ment in Africa. 'The fifth enterprise contemplates building & line from the straits of Gibraltar southerly along the Atlantic coast by way of Casablanca and Agadir to Dakar, which is an import. ant point of shipment for west Africa, where France has lately built an im- portant naval station. ---------- Pistols In Parliament. For a parallel scene to that which was recently witnessed in the lobby of the: House of Commons when a ver--h } clergyman discharged a revol- appily without causing injury to any one--oneé must go back 100 years, when on May 11, 1812, John Belling- ham assassinated Spencer Perceval, who was then Prime Minister of Eng- land. Bélli im, who was a bank- rupt of disordered brain and whe had 8 grievance against the Government, which had refused to interfere with the regular process of the Russian law, under which he had been arrest ed, went up Jo stoTal 4a the Pre- mier passed thro by, placed a pistol at his breast and fired. Per- deval walked on one or two paces, faintly murmured, . "Oh, I am mur dered!" and fell on the floor. Bel- lingham was afterward tried, con- v and hanged. 2 'are the only two occasions that shots have been fired in the House of Commons.~London Answers, Royal Journalists. There have been royal journalists as well as royal authors. rge ILI. contributed seven articles to the An- nals of Agriculture, a monthly maga- sine edited by Arthur Young. These Jubiisied under the were of Ra one his biographe most profou now ledge ."" Loui Naito another after his of agricul- II. was a journalist type. For some years as 10 Th habe of sana, jluore he a a anony- mous J isical articles: to various Pari lies. Bome of the o the "King had the pleasure of seeing them vetoed by his own cen- sor. Many Kinds of Paving. London uses ots diffrent kinds of wiker iy in the world, he | tar ma : It was an up- | appointment, but it was entire- | i to teach ! te WHEN TEACHERS SMILE. Unconscious Humor of the Motes Sent Them by Parents. The by the amusement derived by. feach- ers Grow the letters wiuch illiterate parents of pupils send, apologizing for the non-attendance of their son | or daughter, or criticizing the method Secretary of teaching, says an English paper. Sir,~My boy has been learning shorthand at your school for more {than a year, and he can't speak it section of yet. 1 intend to send him to some other school where they know how Here is "another specimen taken from Mr. W. J. Sargent's entertain- ing booklet, "Humors of School Life': Dear teacher kindly excuse Willie we kept him at home yesterday. We wanted to give him a little pleasure so we tock him to see his grand- mother's grave, After examining the eyesight of a number of scholars, a master wrote, to the father of one lad, telling him ! that hid son was suffering from my. opia, and needed attention, The father wrote back, saying: ' Thanks for your note about Harry. Just you knock it out of him, for I haven't time. Another note," sbout hair cutting, was regeived through a teacher ask- of ing a scholar where he got his hair cut Bir--You seem to be anxious to know where my boy got his hair cut, I wish ta tell you that I put him in the cellar all last night. so as the rats could nibble iv off and I could save fuppence. Another parent, who apparently wished to impress the teacher with his medical knowledge, wrote: Dear Master,--Excuse James from 'attending school &s he had had an illustrated throat with glaciers on both sides and cennof yet eat any solemn food." An assistant master who had spent a good half-hour in teaching the ex- ercises in drill termed jumping got this note for his pains: Dear Bir,--Please leye off teeching Fred any more jimnasticks. If I want him.to jump I can make him jump. It often happens that object lessons in school bring the teacher into trouble: Bir,~You told my boy that drink- ing beer ilijured the coat of the stom: . Please do not interfere with niy family affairs. On another oceasion a parent wrote: Bir,--~Tom came home to-day with his clothes all covered with mud. He says he had to mix some clay for the teacher. His father is a navvy, and God knows I've enough washing with- out having to wash thé lad's clothes. The next time Tom comes home dirty I'll send you the elothes to wash. Printing Without Ink. Printing without ink is a discovery of sn English inventor. In the course of some electrical experiments he sc. cidentally pressed a coin, whith had fallen on to the table and was rolling off, against a metallic plate covered with a piece of paper, and at the same time against an insulated electric line, To his. amazement he saw a sepia print of the coin im upon the paper. This happened about twelve s ago. Since then the inventor followed up this observation and has now developed a process for print- ing without printing ink. He uses dry paper impregnated with certain chemicals, whose nature is not dis- closed." In the process of printing the paper travels aver a metallic plate and the type is applied on the oppos- ite side, a.current 'of electricity pass- ing through the paper. According to the particular metal used for the sub- stratum and according to the mode of impregnation of the paper, a great variety of different colors can be pro- duced, so that multicolor printing be- comes an easy matter. A Debt Owed the Grasshopper. On top of the Royal Exchange, in London, Eng., is a great golden grass- hopper. And thereby hangs a tale. Sir Thomas Gresham, a noted mer- chant, put it there when he built the first Royal Exchange in the time of Queen Elizabeth. All the Greshams were very fond of grasshoppers, and they took it as their crest. The found- er of the family was born in the Nor folk village of Gresham, and his wickéd mother left him in a wood there to die, but a grasshopper hopped down beside the poor little urchin and began to chirp. It chirped so loudly that an old woman was at- tracted, and, finding the baby, she took it home and cared for it. Mormons In England. © English people always have opposed steadily the growth of Mormon pro- paga in that country, even to the extent of wrecking the Mormon tem- ples.and maltreating the elders. Re- newed, metivity of the Latter Day Saints in the midisod and northern countties at the present time is caus. ing bitter resentment, especially in South Lencashire, where the clergy- the young men of the ps conducting' an organized ¥ t the influence of ¢ eir denials of gamous practices are scouted and numerous petitions for their suppres- sion have been sent to the home office. Wonderland of Australasia. The hot district of New Zealand EE of Ata to Maorilarid what i RE i fic iy : s io il ; 23 8 Ly i | an i iy if FE £ £F i ; hi EF. = il gi i i L | : i J £ ¥ ¥ 1 A FAMILY OF POLITICIANS. dncénseious amor. of school- i sador in Baris, represented. the British | boy "'homlers" is sometimes eclipsed [to political power in {ope and & quarter miles (the THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1912 L Jos. Chambertain, of Boer War Fame, | Founded a Ruling House. The rige of the Chamberlain, family land | been remarkable for the ¢outiferpo which it has previded during the 1 { quarter of a céntury to the infinence 'of the house of Cecil. As Colonial in 'Lord Salisbury's last Ministry Joseph Chamberlain was per | mitted a free hand and, although Be {ed Heside was titular chief of only,that small Liberal Unionists who de. | serted Gladstone in 1886 on the qudsé {tion of home rule, he dragged his { chief and the Tory party into the dis: {astrous Boer war. It was notorious that Salisbury had a great admira- ition for Boers, but the descen- dant of a lang line of noble Cecils 'was no match for the shrewd scréw manufacturer of Birmingham, As | English politics go, Balfour was the | natural heir to the Premiership when his uncle, Lord Balisbury, retired in 1902, but the vigorous personality of | Chamberlain was felt to be so Yander: {ous to his chances that his feared | opposition was neutralized by making | the younger Chamberlain Postmaster General, with a seat in the Cabinet. Austen Chamberlain has so improv his chances since and consolidated his leadership of the Protectionist wing the Conservative party that, on Balfour's retirement fiom the leader. ship a short while back, it was neces- sary to elevate a compromise chief in the person of Bonar Law, Chamber- lain's . influence being sufficiently strong to prevent the election of a dyed-in-the-wool Tory. His yéuthful son, though only five years old, is already heralded as a worthy succes- sor in public life to his father and grandfather, to whom the torch' of tariff geform can be passed when the time comes. Joseph Chamberlain 'was bora in 1836 and retired from active business, in possession of a comfortable for- | un at the early age of 38. He had n several times mayor of Birming- ham, his native town, when he en- tered Parliament, in 1876, as 'an ad- vanced radical, with strong republi- can tendencies, and an ardent home ruler. He entéred Gladstone's Cabinet in 1880, but forsook both the Liberal party and his own earlier platfonn, six years later, on the question of home Tule He allied his band of seceding Liberals with the Conserva- tive party and became Colonial Sec- retary in the Tory Cabinet of 1805. a tight rein on his Cabinet, Chamber- lain now had an opportunity for the unfettered pursuit of his personal am- bition and, in 1809, he goaded. Presi- dent Kruger, of the Transvaal, into a declaration of war although at the time the English army was, totally un. prepared for active service. His Cabi- net .colleague, 'Sir Michael Hicks. Beach, Chancellor of the Exchequer, declared that he eguld not help feel- ing a profound sympathy for Kruger because he had so many dealings with Chamberlain. Three years later, when the war was over and the people had leisure to reflect upon its mismanage- ment and blundering inefficiency, Chamberlain diverted attention by launching his famous scheme of Im- perial unity. He proposed not only the creation of an Imperial army and uayy system, but the development of a greal economic entity by means of a protective tariff against the rest of the world. He favored a duty upon the importation of breadstuffs and meat into the United Kimgdom--the duty to Be remitted on products of British colonies should they in turn discriminate in favor of English goods. The opposition of Canada and Aus. tralia to both an zollverein and a for- mal naval and military union proved fatal to his propaganda, while the strong objection in England to the taxation of food forced his retirement from the Tory Cabinet in 1008, after j eight years of strenuous service as Minister for the Colonies. He contin. ued his forceful campaign for tariff reformi, but shortly afterward was forced by ill health to. withdraw per. manently from active public life. In 1887 he went to Washington as British commissioner in the fisheriés dispute. Austen Chamberlain is his son by his first wife. He is the recognized leader of the tariff reformers should Balfour retire definitely, he would stand a strong chance of the Premiership in the next Tory Govern. ment. Put a Stop to Paying Toll. Sir William Henry Wemyss Cooke, the owner of Hornet's Beauty, which was beaten in the Lincolnshire Handi- cap recently, belongs to a wellknown Doncaster family. Wheatley Park, the family seat, which lies close to the somewhat malo- dorous Don, is not more than a mile or two from the town. In the days of the late baronet, who, like his soa, was a very keen sportsman, the auth. orities erected a toll.gate near the entrance to the park, so thal every time the baronet drove into the town he would have to pay toll. But this did not suit his book, and $0 he went to considerable trouble and expense in eutting a new road from the house, and a new entrance to the park, which enable him to avoid the toll-gate when going inte Don. caster, Wildcats of Great Britain. The wildcat, the oldest member of the British fauna and a resident ever singe the days of the mammoth, is rapidly becoming extinet, It still lin- gers in parts of north Wales and the more secluded districts of Scotland. Wildcats, like snakes, were never known in Ireland, the specimens re- ported from there having been domes. ticated "tabbies'" which had taken to the woods. Short Railways. There is a railway, separately leas. ed gnd worked, whose total length is Victoria and Pimlico). Another (Exmouth Dock) is half a mile in length, and another (Felixstowe Dock) is a . ter of & mile, and another ( bury and Market House) only 2 fur. longs 20 yards. A ; yells because something wor- ries or a college youth yells be- cause he hasn't any more sense. Charity appears to' over a multi- tude of sins, but most of them show through. J Through Salisbury's inability to keep | and, | -- "BROWNING'S CENTENARY. Services In Westminster Abbey In Memory of Great English Poet. The. centenafy. of Robgrt Browning, ove of the greatest of English poets. wag Observed on May 7-by éommem. Orafion' exercises held by the many Browning ' societies 'throughout the world, and by memorial services in Westminster Abbey, where, in the "Poets' Corner," his body is entomb. 5 that of Tennyson. : The life of Browning was one of poetry andl romance from beginning to end, 'Surrounded in he Sad days by learning and cullure, in an Aiaphere of the best in litératuve, arf and music; it'was but natoral that the poer's career should have been destined to the realms of higher thought. Many of his works were dil- deed, it' is" 'clsimied that Tennyson once declared of Browning's "Bordel: lo'* that he could only understand the first and the last'line "and these were both Hes 1" Born in Camberwell, near London, Robert Browning was the son of a clerk in the Bank of England, who was a man of learning and an ardent lover of the classics, a writer of clever verse, and a connoisseur of rare prints and engravings, of which Be was also a callector. The poet's mother was a gentlewoman of great delicacy and loveliness, of fervent religious feeling and with great love for music. She had known bat little instruction in the art, but she was a natural musician, and every day in the late afternoon she was at her piano for her hour of | "darkness and solitude and music." To the young Browning the playing of his mother was a source of great joy and it contributed to the other artis- tic influences of which poetic impres. sions are wovey. His marriage to Elizabeth Barrett, the tess, was the result of a long land romantic courtship, against her father's opposition, and their married life was singularly beautiful and happy, ending only with the ssing of the great Englith poet and dramat- ist, Decerhber 12, 1889, | Browning himself bore great respect for the learned bodies of his followers, and whenever, during thie latter years of his life, he was asked 46 mean- ing of a certain passage in ong of his writings, he invariably replied that he' did not know, "but just ask the Browfiing Bociety," he would add, with a twinkle in 'his eye, "they can tell you.all about it." Since Shakespeare, few poets have given to the world a message of such supreme importance to indpire and quicken spiritually. Browning's phil. osophy of life is that man is a spirit. ual being, his spiritual body clothed with a temporary physical body, form. ed to correspond with the physical world during his. temporary. sujourn | for .dlsciplinary and experimental ex. perience ; that he withdrawg from this {body to enter on the next plane of experience in this evolutionary pro. gression, but that this change of con. dition constitutes no break in con- SClousness, A Long Sentence. The Twelfth Royal Lancers, now stationed at Potchefstroom, are, says The Johannesburg Evening Chronicle, looking forward to the end this year of a hundred years' punishment in. flicted on them in 1812. In that year, when the war was in progress in Spain, the Lancers broke into a mon- aftery and misbehaved themselves. | When the Duke of Wellington heard of this he paraded the regiment and {sentenced it to a hundred years' pen. falty. This penalty is still carried out lin Potchefstroom to-day. It takes the form of hymn-playing. Every night at 10 o'clock for a hundred years, so ran the duke's order, the band must par. ade and play five hymna ag a punish- ment: These are the Spanish National |Anthem, the Russian National An- (them, the Vesper Hymu, the Prince of + Wales' Hymn, and the English Na- tional Anthem. Formerly each man in the regiment was required to stand to attention beside his bed when the penal hymns began, but this has now been stopped. Wellington was himself once a captain in the regiment. -------- Siamese English. The proprietors of a Siamese news- paper have distributed handbills con- taining the following notice: "The news of English we tefl the [ latest. Writ in perfectly style and most earliest. Do a murder get com- i mit, we hear of and tell it. Do a chief die, we publish it, and in borders som- bre. Bgaff has each one been colleged, and write like the Kipling and the We circle every town and'[" Tickens. extortionate not for advertisements. 'Bay it. Buy it. Tell each of you its greatness for good. Ready on Friday. Number first.' King Liked the Horse, | The horse which the-King rode at Hvarious reviews and other. functions jin Indias gave His Majesty such satis- {faction that it was purchased and | brought to. England. The animal, which is a splendid specimen, is now in the Roysl Mews at Buckiugham Palace, To mark the royal visit, the horse has been named Delhi, Tommy Atkins Best Scholar. The number of illiterates in the Brit ish army at the last period for which figures are dvailable was 1 per cent. ; France, 3.5 per cent.; Austria, 28 per cent.; Italy, 31 per cent., and Russia, 82 per cent. Recent statistics show the number of illiterate recruits in the French army to be 14,000. Rhodes' Scheme Dropped. One of Cecil Rhodes' pet projects, ic communication by a con- tinuous direct route between Cape of Good Hope and Cairo, has been aban- doned by its organizers, the Trans continental Telegraph Co. is was the first of the all-red route projects. Time to Roost. "Doctor," said a despairing patient, "I'm in a dreadful way--1 can neither lay nor et. What shall 1 do?" "Well " said the medical man grave. iy, "1 think you had better roost!" - lf No man ever has to hunt tempia- tion. He is lucky if he can dodge it. A clever man is one who doesn't try to say smart things all the time ficult readily to understand, and, in- | Sometities a prison is more of a) haze than & palace. oo you Baste At . Reas Do hl RL A = RYS 2148 QUEEN'S CAFE. Lunches served shortest notice, : REGULAR DINNER, 25¢, on the = BAPPAS 4 00, bop Prices ret bos, Sx Jeg Une i SL and Jiffeets io THAT TOBAOCO wi is crowls Only 45« smoking th the "Rooster" on It 8 goes along per pound. For chewing and louder. as ne AT A. MACLEAN'S, Outarie Street, Pine; Pine; Pine: PINEAPPLES A. J. REES 166 Princess St. wpples at $1.00 per dozen ipples at i $1.30 per dozen ipples (large) at $1.60 per dozen Phone 68 RADWAY'S READY RELIEF CURES ASTHMA (he specifies Resolvent and rubbed on the chort and throat unt « baring « vw Besglvent whenever a paroxyen fonthis disoase are the Ready Retief, the Hadwuy's Vitis. Tio Relief must be hd and the Fills must be tak Frog oe rvals, in email doses, titty to rest. Give d bearnnos onre, Extra linary etires Of Asiana Baye been scopmpiished by Lose means. sk for RADWAY'S and Take no Substitutes COST OF GAS Five to ten cents hour at: the small cents Ten cost a not expensive, Now per. day cost of two gallons of hot water will bout one cent--that is , then, what reason have you for not using it? CHEAP, CLEAN & CONVENIENT, A card addressed to the Of- fice of Street, you th will co ing. F are doing wood One give you soft, w the Works, Queen or 'phone 197 will bring e necessary information. ver the cost of your took- igure up and see If you this with coal or cent's worth of gas will 2 1-2 hours eof nice Lite light in your sitting room to read by Two burner ary st regulation standard s will prepare an ordin- immer meal in half an Light, Heat, Power, Water, Dr ots. C. C. FOLGER GENERAL MANAGER. boats, three ings. 000. tion, sheds, lessen in v®tt you. REAL ESTATE SNAPS "SUMMER COTTAGE, €ON- faining all furniture, cooking utensils. ete, 4 persons, firat-clags SOLID Twelve rooms, good cellar, between two Shd ments, city, on the water front, $2. STORE, very central loea- & good opportunity for delicat-* FRAME HOUSE, Russell Str, condi wu Let us quote yoti rates for Fire Insurance. two outbuildings, condition, $650.00 BRICK HOUSE . drive house, complete; acres of land, outbufld- and modern improve 1 1-2 miles from the electric lighta 3 large two sixbles, barn, ete; or bdke shop. 23 by 260 ft. lot, good ° on SVU wes for Sale and to Rent parts of the City. It may pay

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