Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 21 Jun 1912, p. 6

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PAGE STX. THE DATLY BRITISH WHIG, FRIDAY. JUNE 8 1912. ® c+ THAT TOBACCO L. With the "Rooster" on Is crowing louger 4s ne goes along 'ONly 45c per pound. For chewing and smoking. > { AT A. MACLEAN'S, Ontario Street. Cook's Colton Koot Compound. Tony Cts Caine Fogle, asd and n cAn 3 3 : No. por box, or sent Sn i Widder} | Gormeriy v za Dox Minions Oo. ToR0NTo, 3 § LIME FOR SALE DRURY'S Coal and Wood Yard Prose 443, 235 Welllugton St. iad Po. hd Sls GRL 1S NOT FITTED "{ehocolate cake and fudge {ready to marey. x - FOR WIFE SIMPLY BECAUSE SHE CAN MAKE FUDGE. Should Learn Scientific Marketing First, to Face Living Problem, Mrs. Julian Heath Tells Bronx Women. New York, June 21.--~Mrs. Heath, president of the Housewives' League, ac S: a meeting in the Bronx, and emphasized her "dont's for women" with the ivory gravel of President Miller, who sat at. her right, and ta applause with his fect, "Ihe High Cost of Living and | the Housewife's Problem' was the theme that evolved the following commandments for the woman of the house : Don't think that if you Julian make are. know can you You should NEW SHOE REPAIRING BUSINESS § ROBERT PAYNTER het take: > aver the business of the late i tas. Davis at the old stand, 249 { FRINCESS STRELT All kinds f 8hoe Repairing promptly done. All work guaranteed, 4 ap Bibby's Garage Now Open |! © What Have We to Offer ? 1st. Buildidg. practically fire- proof. r 2nd. Special care of your car. 3rd. Buprices of a licensed ' chauffeur. % 4th. Moderate charges. We expe¢t to have the Agency for tHe-bewt'/car in the business. Gasoline for Sale. F. A. BIBBY - 129 Brock St. During housecleaning, wishing to save time by having quick lunches, can be supplied with all kinds of Cooked Meats, Pickles and Relishes by just 'phoning or giving a call to 'H. J. MYERS Symington's Packet Soups and Gravies Get Them at D. COUPER'S Phone 76. 841-8 PRINCESS ST. Prompt Delivery. WHY PAY RENT? REAL ESTATE SNAPS BRICK VENEER HOUSE. Montreal Street, 4 bedroouts and all modern improvements, easy terms, $1,500.00 ° FRAME HOUSE, Chatham Street, good, largo lot, $800.00 DOUBLE FRAME (new), all modern improvements, Raglan Road, $2,250. DOUBLE FRAME Main Street, $2,250, SEMI-DETACHED FRAME, Main Street, can be purchased by instalments, $750.00. GOOD FRAME HOUSE on Markland Street; 3 bedrooms: modern improvements; nearly new; can be purchased at a very moderate figure and by easy Instalments. ; Let us qlbte you rates for Fire Insurance. It may pay you, Norman & Webb "HALL FURNITURE "4 HOUSE, .. Hall Mireors, ' : olden S ouk, \ $4.50 "Seats, $5.50 t 00. Trees. $6.00, i ns $30.00 finishes, Golden, Fumed or Ms IN aE ey rg scientific marketing first, : , Don't let the looks of butter fascin- ute It's like a man before you know him well. Put it to the test. «i Don't be too mudh of an optimist. The market man may be a poor mathematician. Watch his scales. Don't let your groper be promis cuous with his fingers. You. don't ; want fingers, . Don't be afraid to go into own kitchen. 'Truth should out, vastes be taken. in. Don't order 'hy telephone. The store- keeper doesn't keep a telephone for altruistic purposes, and you'll be stung both ways. ga Don't be devoid of imagination. So bewate of buying exposed or adulterated food, or bread, if van haven't investigated the bakeshops you. your and Afrom which it comes. And don't sit back and talk. Get on the job. MRE. LANCASTER'S VIEW. Judgmeit, if Sustained, Carries Out itl. Catharines] Jun 20.<E. A. Lancaster, K.C., M.I'., the framer of the miarrisge bull, which the -supreme court judges, yesterday, declared could not he passed by the (anadian parlia- ment, when seen by a reporter, had | prepared the following statement on the outcome of the judgment. Mr. Lancaster has been besieged with in- quires "as: to his opinion on the out come of the ease, and since reading the fuller reports, he decided to make a statement, so that his opinion would clearly he understood by the general public © "I'he whole matter has to goto the British privy 'council for final deéision, this decision of the Canadian supreme vourt being only a preliminary stép The principal purpose of my bill, and the eval in the country which 1 sought to remedy (as 1 explained in parlia ment at the Namal, was to remove the doubt and uncertainty héretoiore east by the courts of Quebec, on the validity: of marriages performed before Purpose of St, differed from that of the persons con: tracting the marriage, and to declare such marriages 16 have legal status, in other words, that no question of the parties' religion should have any thing to do with the validity of a marriage otherwise legally contracted. i the privy council confirms in its entirety the opiuton of the majority of the supreme eourt, as I understand to have heen pronounced, vesterday, then the doubts caused by these Que bee decisions will be removed, and the status of all persons so married and their children will be settled and fally established, and my legisiation may nol then be necessary, the ob ject of my bill being then accomplish ed and the evil removed. "1 mast decline to make any 'criti cism of the differgut' judgments of opinions of the judges of the supremé court until I have been able to peruse the full texts thereof." FINGER PRINT RECORDS. 7,155 Canadian Thus Tabulated. Ottawa, June 21.--No less than 7,- 155 Canadian criminals have their fin ger prints and photographs fyled away at the office of the criminal identifica: tion bureau for ready reference when needs may arise. The bureau was opened a vear and a half ago with Inspectog Foster in charge, At that time the finger prints and photographs of .all offenders in the penitentiaries were taken, and sent in to the bureau, and since then the identification marks of new offenders have come in regularly. The bureau has already proved of considerable value in & number of cases in which it has established the identities and records of different offenders. Re-Marry After Sixteen Years, Philadelphia, June 21, Russell 1 Blackwood announced that he is about to re-marry his wie, whom he divorced sixteen years ago. The vou ple were first married twenty years ago. After four vears of wedlock, dur ing which a son was born, the Hack. woods separated. [Blackwood re-mag:: ried four years ago, My this union there were two children. Mr. Black. otis sctund wife died two years age ahd is first wife with whom he con- ined Rome Criminal: on friendly terms, attended the cu SiR Oa on government work, and immediately afterward issued * &n executive order exempting any contracts in' connection with the a tanal until Jamuary 1st, 1915. The canal will be finished before that date, according to the expectation of the engineers. 2 et seme "Farewell to My Shipmates." London, Hon: Al sugar gathered with pine | ens | " CENTENARY OF KRUPPs. Kaiser to he Present at the Pageant . * in August Nexi. Beriia, June 2%.- rm of brupps at Essen will eclebbate ils centenary in August next. afd great prepara- fons arg now pi progress te make Lhe occasion Hnposing and memotrabi 2a According: to present arrangements the kaiser, with a large retinue, will arrive at Yssen by special train from Berlin and be the guest of the hrupp family" at their magnificent residence, Huegel Villa. After an official recep tion In the eity hall at Fssen the kay ser wiil conler decorations on WW of Krupp's employees who have been iu the firm's service for twenty-hve vears The great event will be a brilliant costume tournament, arranged to re present the passing 'of ithe ancient forms of armament to the most mo dern type of death-dealing engines of war, special attention, of course, be- ing given jo the development of gun a olergyman where his religious faith employed | + i | A } 1 STRIKING PICTURE 'oF | ROOSEVELT IN CHICAGO. It 18 sald that" the doughty colonel 1s Can Sume the Heuse at himself. MRS wife of the anxious to re- proprietorship of the White Washington as "Teddy" CHINESE CABINET CRISIS: The Education Minister Follows the Premier, Pekin, June 21.--~The minister of edu cation. Teai Yuan-Pie, has gone to Fien-Tsin. He did pot notify the cab. inet of his intention, and it is under stood that he will not return. Tang Shao Yi, the premier, who suddenly departed from Pekin, June 15th, and who later announced his in- tention from Tien-Tein of retiring from office, is preparing to leave for Hong Kong. A growing faction favors the appointment of br, Wu 1 ing Fang, the former minister at Washington, to the premiership. EE ---- DICK TURPIN HONORED. Pistol Presented to Highwayman is Discovered. London, June 21.~During the re- moval of the plaster ceiling and oak pamcling of the Jambean room in the famous Reindeer lon at Banbury, which has been purchased © hy Lord Curzan, of Kedleston, workmen dis. covered in the rafters a double flint lock horse pistol, inlaid with gold, in scribed, "Presented to Dick Turpin at tha White Bear lon, Drury Laue, Feb. 17th. 1735" Insane Woman's Horrible Act. Springfield, Mass., June 21. ~During the absence of her husband, Mrs, Clara B. Cross took three of her six chil- dren into a darkened room and turn od on the £45. When the hudhand re turned a'l wore dead ¥ ree other chil- dren were playing in another room and knew nothing of the tragedy. In 'a note the woman declared that she knew that 'she was insane and cotld never recover and eniov the com- forts of life and so she had decided to get what comfort she coald in death. She wanted her children with her, she said. - Mining Promoter Goes to Jail. New York, Tune 21 William T. Wintemute, of Seuwmit, N.J., pro- mater of the Gold Run Mining & Tunnel company, of Colorado, was found guilty in the United States dis- trict court of using the mails to de fraud. He was sentenced by Judge Hough to pay a fine of £500 and to serve ope year i prison. Favelte R. Tiffany, a Denver lawyer, who was in- dicted with Wintemute, was found not guilty. May Have Met With Foul. Play. Hackensak, N.J., June 21.--The body of A. D. Howard, a native of Toron- to, a veteran newspaper editor, buried at Englewood, Tuesday. will be ex hured in an effort to determine whe ther there was foul play. Howard was found Monday morning, in the ruins of his burned cottage. R. Fricdman and J. Kubn, burglars, murdered a man whose stor they wera robbi ware electrocuted at NEWS OF N WHAT WHIG CORRESPONDENTS TELL US, Che Tidings From Various Points i» Eastern Ountario--What People Are Doing and What They Are Beving, : At Brewer's Mills. Mills, June '19.--Recen Mrg, I. J. Roberts anc children, Vancouver, B.UC., at M Roche 5; Miss lize Smith at 8B. Boyle's, Taylor; ¥. Rochefort and sis ter at KE. Smith's; Sefley's Bay; Mrs H. Orr at J. Mundell's, Joyeeville Miss ML E. Milne at J. Milne's; Mrs W. McKenna and daughter, Stella, ai J. Fahey's, Marysville; John Hewlen, Michigan, is renewing old aoquaintan ces here, Brewers' visitors | . Elgin News. Elgin, June 19.--A meeting was held in the town hall, Elgin, for the pur pose of forming a baseball, club, and the following officers were elected Honorary president, Dr. D. A. Coon: honorary vice-president, J. 3. Dar- gavel; honorary secretary-treasurer, Dr. J. M. Dunn; president, N. W. Spar- row; vice-president, A. L. Campbell; secretary treasurer, W. (. Sharpe; captain. Il, Martin: manager, H. L. Sullivan. Caintown News. Caintown, June 17.--Mrs.. Charles Mcbermott, of Mallerytown, was the guest of her sister, Mrs. Joseph Hull. Elmer White js ill with mumps. R. I. Phillips' intends going west to = St, Catharines this week. Miss Beatrice Dickey is home after attending Athens high sehool. Miss Alice Shaver and | Misa Maude Kirkly, of Brockvilie, were | guests. of Mrs. James Eligh. Quite a number from here attended the big show . at hingstom on Friday last, Born to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hodge, Rockport, Sunday, June 10th, a = George L. Duell, and W. A. went on the excursion to Montreal on Thursday last. v ------------ News From Macdonald. June 20. Mrs. Fitchetd, is visiting her brother, and other friends in this and Mrs. W. R. George Hawley, Mr. and i Mrs. B. Huyck spent Sunday last at IMrs. M. A. Millers. Mrs. Augustus Keech, Deseronto, visited her niece, Mrs. Nelson Dingman, one day fast week. Mrs. William Fry and little son, Harry, of Belleville, are visiting her parents, Mr, and Mrs. W. H. Alller, Bardolph. My: and Mrs. Cummings, {of Watertown, N.Y., spent last weck {with relatives at Macdonald and Hay Bay. Frank Hawley is on the sick list. Mrs. Nelson Woodcock, of Hay | Bay, is still very ill, the result of her fall last week. Her daughters, {Mrs. Visser and Mrs. Dixie, are with ther. Mr. and Mrs. George Hawley and little son, Harold; visited at Camden East, a couple of days last week, guests of Mr. and Mrs. John | Jaynes. Macdonald, of Sudbury, Irwin Glass, vicindty. Mr. Mr, i Nrs Perth Tidings. June 19.--A great many in- tend taking in the picnic at the ferry to-morrow. Reeve Wilson has been | Sparing no pains to make the day a delightful one. The Woman's Institute of Carleton Place, Lanark and Maber- ley, met with the institute here to- day on business and tea was after wards served in the agricultural hall. A pleasant aiternoén was spent. A great crowd attended the circus here, and it was certainly a treat, the {horads were the best that have come {to Perth for a long time. The en- trance gxaminations are now going on and a great. many of the children from the country have come to write. The lawn social at Asbury church was a great success. Miss Lizzie Huddle- ston, of Merrickville, visited her pa- rents here last week. Miss A. Moor house returned after a month's visit. Mrs. McGregor, of Maberly, visited her sister, Mrs. D. Churchill, here: Reports From Westport. Westport, June 16.--Mrs. ' T. A. Howard, of Aylmer, Que., is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Fredenburyg. Mr, and Mrs. Charles Darou. of Syracuse, N.Y., are guests of friends in town. Perth; tha McDonald,. of Toronto, t {purge, has accepted a position! the staff of Mountain View hosp, T. G. Berry, of Gananoque, was the guest of Dr. G. Berry last week. J. C. Forrester is in Portland this week on a business trip this week. Rev. A. F. Cooke, of Kingston, is renewing Westport acquaintances. Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Derbyshire are spending a few days in Kingston. The Victoria took a large party of excursionsts to Smith's Falls to see the circus. The Lyn brass band will furnish for July lst celebration in West. port. W. J. Webster and Miss Helen, jof Edmonton, Alta, are calling on {friemds in town. Mr. and Mrs. RR. Grothier, of Newboro, were in town to-day. Tamworth Happemngs. Tamworth, June 21.--The school pice nic was a grand success. The proceeds for the I amounted to over $600. The day was fine and sports and and Enterprise resulted 2 to 1 favor of Tamworth. Mrs. Geo Woods died, on Monday last. The fun- eral was held on Wednesday, at the Methodist church, which was largely attended. Walter Harrison, of Ca gary, is visiting friends in and about town. Sidney », wife and child, of Linn, Mass, are visiting his brother. Mrs. G. A. Bateman is visiting her son, Clinton Rose. Miss Stinson, of Larkin, is wvisiti her grandiather, George Sinn Robert Coswell has sold his gone back to New twenty-nine pupils trying for the en- trance examinsiions. Dr. Wilson and John Hunter are having telephones placed in their h Stewart Woods is visiting his sister and father. Leo Lake Locals. Leo Lake, June 19.--Uuite a number from here attended Kingling Brow cir cas, at Kingston, Frida Doanelly, lost a valuable horse, on in Miller, | W. E. Garvin. who spent the holidag 'Scotip, the North-West provinces, the here, returned to Montreal. Miss Mgr- : Lutheran synod of Central music | 1 {righteped by .an autqmobile and died The autograph quilt," made and dons ted by the ladies of the Altar Society of St. Marnaby's church, Brewers Mills, was. disposed of at the picnic held in Deane's grove, on the 54 mst, and was won by John hennedy, treet car conductor, Portsmouth Miss Josephone Dean worked the ma jority of blocks. Mrs, '1. Murphy col lected the largest amount of money on her work, and was awarded a bottle of perfume by Rev. Father Traynor T. B. Patterson has tendered his re signation as teacher for the coming term, much to the regret 'of this sec tion. A littie baby gl has brighten ed the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. " Donnelly, Herbert McArdle, Sweet's Corners, spent Sunday in this viein iy. Directors of the leeds Rural Telephone company will hold a meet ing in Batterses, thursday night. he daily mail service between Seeley's Lav and Kingston is a great advantage, : ---------- Budget From Athens. Athens, June 19.-A. NM. Faton and family, after a few months' residence in Escott, have returned to this place. Rev. F. A. Read and famnly leave to- {day for their new appointment at Arnprior. Rev, J, Price has ban {transferred to Seeley's Bay. Rev. Mr. lake, Seeley's Bay, being stationed {here as pastor of the Holiness Move ment church, Rev, i. Edwards, new pastor of the Methodist church, is ex pected on Thursday. Rev. W. Westell 8 in Arnprior this week ai the Can ada Central Association of Baptist churches. Reeve Holmes is in Brock- ville this week attending counties council. S. A. Hitsman, principal - "of {the model school, is presiding exam- inbr during entrance examinations in Brockville. A large number of pupils from surrounding districts are in town writing on the entrance examin- {ations. Most of the high school stu {dents have returned to their homes. Miss. Carmichael, Penetanguishene, Miss Windsor, Berlin, Mr. Barlow, Lyn, teachers on the high school staff, left for their homes yesterday. John Earl, Robert Shaw, Mr. and Mes. W. G. Towriss, Mrs. John Mor- jriss and Miss Moris felt last Thurs. idayto spond a few days in Montreal. Mrs. Milton Manse!l and little daugh- {ter, Miss Anna Hickey, and-Miss I. Gifford, left recently to visit friends im {the west during the summer. An, Inquest at Lansdowne. | "Lansdowne, June 19.--Mys. D. F. {Warren attended the W.M.8. cdnven- ition in Chesterville last week Miss iLerow, Brockville, and Miss Viva Dix- on, Malorytown, were the guests of Mrs. 8S. C. E. Dixon, on Tuesday, {the llth. Mrs. Billings, Brockville, {attended the funeral of the Inte Mrs. | John Gray, which took place on | Sunday last. While here she' was the 'guest of her cousin, Miss (!, Cross. [Miss Irene Loney, Toronto, arrived, | Friday, to spend a couple of mouths iat her home here. Mrs. Bolton, Irish { Creck, and Mrs. Stevens, Smith's Falls, were recent viftors at Mrs. Eliza Horton's. An inquest is to be held on Wed- nesday evening regarding the<tdeath of the Iate John Kilsey, of Charleston, who was killed on the G.T.R. tracks on June 13th. Albert Mooney. is jury foreman and Dr. Shaw coroner. Miss Ida Moles has taken a position in Mooney & Phillips' stare. On Friday, June 14th, Gordon Surplis, son of Frank Surplis, was taken ill suddenly on his way to Kingston . and on the return of the boat was immediately conveyed to Jrockville in Mr. Hoffie's motor boat to the general hospital and operated on for appendicitis. Ile is doing as well as can be expected. The entrance pupils went to Ganano- que to-day to wrile fn their-examina- tions. Mrs. Albert Moore and Miss Moore are visiting at Mallorytown. Reports From Denbigh. Denbigh, June 17.--Paul Stein has arrived home considerably . improved {in health, after three weeks spent | visiting relatives and old friends in | Berlin, New Hamburg and Linwood, and attending as delegate the fifty- | seventh atinual session of the Luther {an synod, of Canada, which was held {at New Hamburg from May 30th to | June 3rd inst., and was attended hy "forty-five ministers and thirty-four lay delegates, representing congregations connected with the synod, and a pum- ber of visiting ministers representing 'other Lutheran synods in Nova Canada, and in the United States, and by a missionary just returned from Ipdia. One candidate for the ministry was ordained, but owing to the scarcity of ministers and the ur { gent demand for them in sil 'parts of the north-western provinces the va | cancy cgused by the recent removal of | Rev. J. Reble from Denbigh could not be filled and until a successor can be secured, services in the lutheran ' chureh 'will only be 'held about once !every month by other ministers. Rev. i. Daedisel, of Rankin, conduting the {first such service om y before last. | J. Adams, Sr., of Kingston, is here lagain. He will be the guest of his son, Dr. Joseph Adams and Mrs. ms, for some time. Messrs. J. N. Lane, E. UC. Bebee, Ed. Petzold and A. { Lockwood left for North Bay to en. again in building operations. Sirs. Ernestine Stein has sold the { W-acre farm near this village to Charles Wieneci ke, who took possession ames of all kinds were indulged ip, | "nd moved on it last week. fhe I game between Tamworth! i ; Polite Le Queunx, + William Le Queux, was somewhat surprised on going into a restaurant one evening recently to be overwhelm- ed by the attentions of a man whom he scarcely knew, but who insisted on introducing him as the greatest writer of the age to several others, and on his sitting down to the table with them: The riddie read itself a few moments later when {he effusive per- son handed scross the table, to the greatest writer of the age, o Jud, a4 which he had written! "Dear tion, Le Queux wrote on the other side of the eard : "Dear old man, 1 can'y" snd handed it back. Impersonated to Get Job. Winni i 15 sme a job as a O nt railway walchman asd Po P. Heflerman to et sre the medical. board. fined $25 abd costs in 1 seized her RABBI STORIES WITH MORALS By JACOB A. RIS. | vee 4 Three stories have come to me out of the past for which I would make friends in the present. The first | have from a rabbi of our own day whom I met last winter in far south- west. The other two were drawn from the wisdom of the 'old rabbis that is as replete with human con- tradiction as the strange people of whose life it was, and fs, a part. If they help us to upderstand how near we live to one another, after all, it is well. Without other comment, I shall leave each reader to make his own application of them. This was' the story my friend thé Arkansas rabbi told. It is from the lolk-lore of Russia: A woman who had lain in tor- ment a thousand years lifted her face toward heaven and eried to the Lord to set her free for she could en dure it no longer. And he looked down and said: "Can you remember one thing you did for a human be- ing without reward in your earth life?" The woman groaned in bitter ang- uish, for she had lived in selfish ease; the neighbor had been noth- ing to her. "Was there not one? Think well!" "Once--it was nothing--I gave to 2 starving man a carrot, and he thanked me." "Bring, then, the carrot. is it?" "It 1s long since, Lord," she sob- bed, "and it is lost." "Not so; witness the one unselfish deed of your life, it could not per- ish. Go," said the Lord to an angel, "find the carrot and bring it here." The angel brought the carrot and held it over the bottomless pit, let- ting it down until it was within reach of the woman. "Cling to it," he said. She did as she was bidden, and found herself rising out of her misery. Now, when the other souls in tor- ment saw her drawn upwards, they hands, her waist, her feet, her garments, and clung to them with despairing cries, so that there rose out of the pit an ever-lengthen- ing chain of writing, wailing human- ity clinging to the frail root. High- er and higher it rose until it was half-way to heaven, and still its burden grew: The woman looked down, and fear and anger seized her --fear that the carrot would break, and anger at her own peril, She struggled and beat with hands and feet upon those below her. "Let go," she cried; "it is my car- { rot." . The words were hardlly out of her mouth before the carrot broke, and ehe fell, with them all, back into tor- ment, and the pit swallowed them up. Where In a little German town the pious Rabbi Jigroel Isserlheim is deep in the study of the sacred writings, when of a sudden the Messiah stands before him. The time of trial of his pegple is past, so runs his message; that very evening he will come, and then sufferings will be over. He prays that his host will summon a carriage in which he may make 'his entry into town. Tremb- ling with pride and joy, the rabbi falls at his feet and worships. But in the very act of rising doubts as- sail him. "Thou temptest me, Master!" ke exclaims; "it is written that the Mds- siah shall come riding upon an ass." "Be it so. S8é¢nd thou for the ass." But in all the countryside far and near no ass is to be found; the rab- bi knows it. The Messiah waits. "Do you not see that you are bar- ring the way with your scruples to the salvation you long for? The sun is far in the west; do not let it set, for if this day passes the Jews must suffer for untold ages to come. Would you set an ass between me and the salvation of my people?' The man stood {rresolute. "Ten minutes, and I must go," urges the visitor. But at last the rabbi has seen his duty clear. "No Messiah without the ass,'t he cries; and the Messialt goes on his WAY. Once so runs the legend there lived in fag Judean hills two affectionate brothers, tilling a common farm together. One had a wife and a houseful of children; the other was a lonely man. Ome night in the harvest time the older brother said to his wife: "My brother is a lonely man. I will go out and move some of the sheaves from my side of the field over on his, so that when he will be cheered by the abundance." And he djd. ° That same night the other bro- ther said to his workmen: "My bro- ther has a houseful and many mouths to fill. 1 am alone, and do not need all this wealth. will go and move some of my sheaves over on his fleld, so that he will rejoice in the morning when he sees how great is bis store." And he did. And they did it that night and the next In the sheltering dark. But on the third night the moon came out his arms filled with sheaves, On that spot, says the legnd, was built the temple of Jerusalem, for it was esteemed that there earth came nearest heaven. The Look of Churchill. Londen Chronicle, When Winston Churchill escaped from Pretoria, the Boer authorities promptly issued a warrant for his arrest. This document should prove of interest to the first lords future biographers, for the detailed deserip- tion given of the lost prisoner : "Euag- hishman, twenty-five years old, about five feet eight inches in height, walks 'a fittle with a bend forward, pale moustache hardly percepiible, talks through the nose, and 'eamnot pro- nounce the letter 's' properly." Kingston and Ottawa. Rideau Lakes 'Navigation company steamers leave Swift's wharf, Monday, , Thursday 'at 6 am \ wanting snything done in sees them in the morning his heart | and they met face to face, each with | snd * Saturday | o Thomas Copley, Telephone: 987 Drop 'a card to 1§ P o Street when he © " ter line. Estimates given ¢ of repairs and new ' Hardwood Floors of all kinds orders will receive prompt atlent Shop, 40 Queen Street Woel's Phos Th: Great Fnglish. Remod ot ch Veins Cures Norte ¥ Dose ICE COMPANY Book of 30 tickets, 20 to 25 Ibs each $2.75. aences. Toues and invigorates the whole jin old ¥ vin 3 ny Lrval I a, Kwis3ion : LIMITED $1.75. Ticket books must be Office: 14 MARKET STREET ne. vous system. makes Dew and Efocts 3 4 buse oe A . Bi bd, . { will pl ix _ ery opr We foalled in plai " -------- Book of 30 tickets, 45 to 60 Ibs. each at the office before ice delfvery con > 'Telephone 68. | F. J. JOHNSON |THE LEAD FLORIST | 324 KING STREET. Special prices in Cut Flow- ers. See our window display Wedding Bouquets and Floral Designs. Floral Sprays a speciaity. Sweet Pea Seed in | Bulk Named Varieties 'Phones: | Store, 239. Conservatories, 23% Residence, 1212, IIR ee FRESH ARRIVAL Ganong's Chocolates The Finest in the ( ity. 60 cents per pound A. J. REES 166 Princess St. Phone 58 YOUR CREDIT IS G0OD AT JOSEPH ABRAMSKY'S plek f the Where full Btyles MEN'S AND BOYS SUITS, LADIES AND MISSES' SUITS AND DRESSES, DRY GOODS, HOUSE FURNISHINGS BOOTS. AND SHOES JEWELRY, visit will you. A postcard will br goods to your own home your selection Note the from a Intest you ean selection | © AND A pay more thah re the fo address JOSEPH ABRAMSKY, 263-205 PRINCESS STREET, KINGSTON. Next to "Princess Theatre." ST WHAT YOU WANT FOR THIS SEASON WHITE SHOES | Beautiful, graceful, dainty | right up to the minute in | style. { | Ladies' &i | White Nu-Buck - | Buttoon Boots | White Nu-Buck Pumps, | White Canvas Pumps, and Oxfords | 1.50, $200, $250 a, R00 White Canvas Button Boots $2.50, $3.60 and $3.50 ' Sawyer Shoe Store \

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