or a ApS A go Thanksgiving Day, ( RAILWAY SEA HINDER Xxcursions Single First Class Fare For the round trip, going Oct. 25th, 26th, 27th Oct. 30th. Tickets to intermediate points be | tween Montreal and Toronto will] not be good -on trains leaving west. bound 12.23 noon and eastbound | 1.08 noon. ' Excursio Hunters' Excursions To Hunters' Territory in Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, good going until Nov. 9th, Return limit, Dec, 12th. For full particulars, apply to J. P. HANLEY, C.P. & TA. Corner Johnson and Oat. Streets. and 28th. Return limit IN GONNECTION WiTi CANADIAN PACTFIO RAILWAY. HUNTERS' EXCURSIONS Round Trip Tickets at SINGLE FARE, October 7th to November Sth. Mattawa to Hipawa, Temlskam- ing Northern Railway Stations and points in Quebec, Oct. 17th to Nov. 9th to stations Sudbury to 8.8. Marte, Havelock tc Sharbot Lake, Parham to Cala bogle. All tickets good to return until Dec. 12th, 1912, Fall particular at K. and P. and C.P.R. Ticket Office, Ontario Street F. CONWAY, Gen. Pass. Agent LAKE ONTARIO & BAY OF QUINTE STEAM- | POAT CO. LIMITED: BAY OF QuINTE ROUTE. Str. ALETHA Leaves Kingston dally. except Sun day, at 3 p.m.. for Pictob and tuler- mediate Pay of Quinte ports, call- ing at Deseronte, Morthoort and Belleville on Tuesdays, Thursdays. and Saturdays. Freight bhendled with despatch and care at reasonable rates. JAS. SWIFT & CO, Freight Agents. J. P. HANLEY, Ticket Agent. CANADIAN PACIFIC) EMPRESSED adth, B70 fet GY tant k or Nagh, btw Wirslesr sad Submariue Signals JOLD ALL RECORDS BETWEEN CANALA AND LIVL RIOD Empress of Ireland T.ake Champlain Empress of Britain , .. .. Lake Manitoba .. Empress of Ireland . Empress of Britain Tickets rnd all information trom any steamship agent, or F. SON- WAY, GPA, K & PR, Kinsston, Ont EE... Sell la eh ------------ THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1912. The Best Cough Syrup is Easily Made at Home Costs Tittle and Acts Quickly. Money Refunded If It Fails. This recipe makes 16 ounces of cough syrup, and saves you about §2.00 as com- pared with ordinary cough remedies. It stops obstinate coughs--even whooping cough--in a hurry, and is splendid for sore Jungs, asthma, croup, Laarseness and other throat troubles, Mix two cups of granulated sugar with one cup of warm water, and stir for two minutes. Put 2% ounces of Pinex (Afy cents' worth) In a 18-ounce bottie, and add the Sugar Syrup. Take a teaspoon. ful every one, two or thrée hours Tastes good. This takes right hold of a cough and gives almost ipstant refief. It stimu- lates the appetite, and is slightly iaxa- tive--both excellent features. Pinex, as perhaps you know, Is ihe most valuable concentrated compound of Norway white pine extract, rich In guaiacol aud the other natural healing pine elements. No other preparation will do the work of Pinex in this recipe, although strained honey can be used instead of the sugar syrup, if desired. Thousands of housewives in the United States and Canada now use this Pinex and Sugar Syrup recipe. This plan has often been imitaped, but the old success- fu) formula has never been equaled. Its jow cost and quick results have made it immensely popular, oh A guaranty of absolute satis faction, or money promptly refunded, goes with this recipe. Your druggist has Pinex Yor will get it for you. If not, 10 The Pinex Co. Toronto, Ont. send FOR FLA CAKES Pies, Puddings, Sauces and Ice Creams try Shirrifi's True Vazla. Tie real extract of Mexican Vandia Beans. Sur- paszs ell others in flavor, 6 bouquetand strength, SLT TrueVanilla NADRU-CO LAXATIVES are entirely different from others both in their composi- tion and their effect--complete evacuation without purging or discomfort. 25¢c. a box at your druggist's. NATIONAL DRUG AND CHEMICAL CO. OF CANADA, LIMITED. 165 Hunters and--, [rappers WILL GET THE Best Market Price, Honest Treatment, Correct Assortment, Quick Returns. by shipping their Raw Furs and Skins REVILLON FRERES TRADING COMPANY, LIMITED ESTABLISHED 1728 the old relisble Fim of the Fur Trade 134 and 138 MeGIll St., Montreal Ask for ow Free Price Lint WE PAY EXPRESS CHARGES DOMINION SERVICE WHITESTAR CANADIAN Ti * TREAL Ww, ple: Glasgow. 1 AN." - Oot. 13th, Nov. Sth SCANDINAVIAN" Nov. nd ---- MONTREALHAVRE--LONDOX "Beotian" = Oct: } wv. 17¢h nthian,™ No! -- ang Free tavien to and all Steamers te Havre and « - : full Ppticutaen af rates, ete. "THE WORLD'S WORK DEPENDS ON THE WORLD'S DIGESTION From he captain of industry to the hod carriy ~from mjlady iu the auto to the woman vith the scrubbing brush-- the accomplishments of every one of us depend absolutely on the accomplish. ments of our stomachs. Backed by a seri digestion, a mar: can give the best t is iu him. . When his stomach fails, | Right bits of eating , sleeping and exercise, aided Tablets, will efficiency cat HALIFAX BRISTOL (Winter), From Montreal - : and Quebec. A Steamer. From Bristol Oot 36. Reval Edward .. Nev. 13 Nov. 13 .. Royal George .. Nov. 21 i WINTER SERV From Han TE RY Rr Bristol Ber 11 on en Royal al gad Edvard . Gna esd ROyal an. § 1513 Reval Jan. FS 8 | A CANADIAN PAINTER. | J. Colin Forbes, R.C.AA., Is at Work ! on "Christ and Barabbas." | Mr. J. Colin Forbes, R.CA., the Canadian, who has painted more pub- lic men than perhaps soy other ar- tist, and whose portrait of Gladstone is frequently called the best ever i done of that statesman, is engaged in the execution of an ambitious canvas called "Christ and Barsbbas." In his gtudio the other day he was good | enough to talk sbout the difficulties of conceiving such a work. | "I do not remember 'Barabbas' be- ing used in paimting as a foil to Christ,"" he said. "Even in literature | the only book with this subject as its | motif that comes to my mind is Marie Corelli's, considered by many to be one of the finest word peintings we have. "There "re, of course, difficulties which every painter meets in portray- ing an Oriental picture --atmosphere, for instance, and for my picture I have secured all the costumes and para- phernalia from Palestine; but the out- standing difficulty, I find, is to mould the face of Christ. Many of the painters who have attempted this sub- ject have confessed their dissatisfac- tion with the results achieved, and yon will not have failed to note that most of them have beén influenced by the type of 'ace of their country." J. Colin Fortes numbers among the famous men who have sat to him, the Far! of Dufferin, Bir Jobn Macdonald, Sir Alexander Mackenzie, the Hon. Fdwsrd Blake, Bir Charles Tupper, Bir Oliver Mowat, Sir Wilirid Laurier, the late President' Harrison of the 11.8.A., and Prof. Schurman of Corvell University. His painting of Gladstone in the National Liberal Club is "not to be surpassed as a truthful and ef- fective portrait," according to one eri: fie. at many censidered to be a better effort is that painted by Mr. Forbes at Mr. Gladstone's home. Of this he says: "I stayed for a considerable time st Hawarden studying him both in private and public life. He would sit in one corner of his study writing snd Mrs. Gladstone in another, and 1 ran still clearly call to mind the strong, deeply-lined face of the great man as he sat at his table, writing, writing, writing, as if he never would itop. He wu a very old quill pen, which he would stick into a potéto on the table when he stopped writing. "I made a careful study of him when speaking in public. I remember on poe' occasion, at a public meeting, his rravat became dissrranged, and was hanging down the back of his coat, 'but when Mr. Gladstone became elo- guent he lost all thought of his attire. Mrs. Gladstone was on the platform on this occasion, and crossing over to her husband she put her hand on his shoulder and just said, 'William.' Mr. Gladdtone stopped speaking at once and suuply said, 'Yes, dear," and then continued his discourse in a more modulated voice, hut the tie still re- mained hanging down." Mr. Forbes' pictures of King Ed- ward and Queen Alexandra are, of course, familiar to Canadians who have been in the Parliament Buildings at Ottawa. © . "King Edward," said Mr. Forbes, was a King without effort. He was kindness itself with regard to sittings, and scarcely a day passed while I was at work on the portiaits that some act of courtesy did not testify as to his Majesty's thoughtfulness. The Queen, too, was exceedingly gracious. She did not readily consent to be painted, but directly she acceded to Pig peti- tion she seemed interested, and did sll in her power to assist me. "--Star Weekly. Buying Band Instruments, ~ With the ever increasing tide of immigration from all parts of the world the small goods trade, "which includes band instrument:, stringed instruments, accordions, ete, as profited to a great extent in Canada The new towns and cities of the West have been filled up wih adventurous spirits, Great Britain being the home of many of them. As every village and hamlet of the old land has some musical organization or other the newcomers emuliite conditions that they knew at home; immediately start to organize a band, an erchestra, and, of course, a choir, or choirs, which later often evolve themselves into a choral society. While we import band instrumenis from England. France, Germany and Austria, very little comes in from the United States. The leading makers are English and French. We manu- {geture to come extent bere in Canada. tringed instruments for the most part come from Gérmany, as do most of the smaller instruments. Several business of band and orchestral in- struments and music, and the trade is growing rapidly, A -------------- 3 Football Box Score. The Rev. Father Stanton of Ottawa College favors keeping & record of what the players accomplish in the James in which they .-similar to the baseball box score , fe slager made a tackle possibly Le would Be shown with a perfect 1 peraentage. Also the 'scoring would received the 1 and what he disposal of the sphere would also be carefully jotted down and averages made up} on . At the end of each story of the game he would have a Femmes showing the record of ayer. Canada's Water Power. It is estimated that the available water power in Canada is 17,000,000 T.at developed in 1910 i horse of her industries. pe Joa a which IL iy Sr ga THE TIDES OF FUNDY. The Celebrated Ebb and Flow Is Fam ous the World Over. Something there is in the tide! rise and-fall of the Bay of Fundy so sug- gestive that verse-writers have made rhymes about it; so unusual that sightseers have marveled at it; so tremendous that practical men have talked of making power out of it; so so perennial that history has come from it. All the world, or thereabouts, knows of the Fundy tides, and even yet people come to see them. They are inseparably connected with the yesterday and to-day of the two Mari- time Provinces whose coasts they wash twice daily. It is by no means s matter of mere form, this filling and emptying of the funnel-shaped bay. It does move, too, than make a world's record for itself. Artistic effects and economic benefits have been left by it, and are being fostered or added to every day: for instance, the long stretches of- marsh-land that it has built up either shore. Poetry has been writien about these, and from them came every year substantial crops of hay. First cause of both is the tide. Other than Nova Scotians have felt the peculiar charm thst lies, close and real, over the marshes of Grand Pre and Tantremar. All that has been sung of them, of grace and beau- ty. and loyal fervor, is rightly theirs; and such as they sre, the tide has made them. Less known to literary fame, but their equal in age, and made after the same fashion, are many other smaller marshes along ' the tidal coast. Of such is the Belle Isle marsh on the Anpapolis River, a tract of about a thousand acres, known to the earliest settlers as "The Great Meadow," and to this dey farm- ed as hay land. Belle Isle marsh may fairly be called historic. It formed a part of the old seigniory of Port Royal, belonging to D'Aulnay de Charnisay, and when that autocratic gentleman fell upon troublous times financially it, along with other lands, was seized by his creditor, Le Borgne. The son of the new owner assumed the title of Sigur de Bellisle, and from Canadian houses make an exclusive show how many times each payer, $100 Reward, $100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least cue dreaded disease that Science has n sui to cure 1n allies stages, and that Is Catarrh, Hall's Caterrh Cure is the only positive cure now known o the medica] fraternity, Catarrh be. ing a constitutional disease, requires + constitutional treatment. Hall's 'atarrh Cure is taken internally, act. ing directly upon the blood and nucous surfaces of the system, there. v destroying the foundation of the Airease, and giving the patient «trength by building up the constitu- tien and assisting nature io doing i» work. The proprietors have so much feith In its curative powers that the) offer Ong Hundred Dollars for ant case that 'it falls to cure. Send for list of testimonials. o Address, F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo Sold by all Druggists, 76e Take Hall's Family Pills for constl- wmrion. ' himself the name passed ont to his land. There was sotue seitlement on it as early. at least, as 1679, for there are records of a conveyance in that year from Sieur de Bellisle to one Martin, who was already an cecupant and farmer upon the "great meadow." There are not many tracts of land in ! Canada that have been farmed ior two and a third centuries. At the time of the Acadian expui- sion there were grain fields on a part of the great meadow, and these, ac- cording to lodal history, made fierce burning. when the English torches were set to them. The Belle Isle marsh of to-day is dyke, inside of which is fertile mes- dow that was originally built up by those same tides. . Outside of the dyke is a winding belt of salt marsh, and then the long. low flats of red mud, up which, then down sgein, the river flows and ebbe. Handiwork of a very different kind is that which the tides have done on one particular river of the Fundy sys- tem. The bay narrows greatly at its head, and its tidal waters pass through Chignecto and Shepody Bays into the Petitcodiac River, with a force that might be from such extreme com 'ony Hell-way up the river, before the much-famed Bore at Monc- ton is reached the furious tides bave cnt a two-mile stretch of cliffs into a natural gallery of str and ponder- ous sculpture. The cliffs, which are mostly perpendicular, and from fifty to eighty fest high, have, by the long- continued weari and pounding of the tides, been hewn and hollowed into columns, arches and caves of many shapes and sizes. This cutting is sometimes wondrously smooth and even; elsewhere it is rough and jag- ged. The cliffs at Hopewell form one of the best examples of water erosion in all Canada, and incidentally they are eloquent of the Fundy's tidal a Fullerton in Toronto lobe. Can Write Anywhere. Sir Gilbert Parker, the Canadian novelist, has something like twenty- five b to his credit, and several of his novels have achieved at popu- larity. One of them, "The Seats of the Mighty," was presented in dramatic Parker is one of those fortunate au- thors' who can write anywhere, and under any conditions. "There are," he asserts, "times when absolute sil ence is painful, end then a hand 'or- gan under the window is a positive relief. Usually 1 write with ocom- parative ease and facility, and if a thing does got seize me 1 drop it for a time. Ofice absorbed in a novel, and 1 ean write under almost any circumstances. Ong of the concluding chapters of 'The Trail of the Sword' ( wrote in a railway train; two chapters of 'The Translatior of a Savage 1 wrote between London and New York. Some of my short stories have been written among crowds of people; one was written at a railway station when 1 wes waiting for a train." protected from the tides by a circling ' form by Bir Herbert Tree. Bir Gilbert | T'S a fire, old, mellow stout--that is as rich and nourishing, as fresh crcam--yet won't make you bilious because it's cxtra mild. ORDER A CASE FROM YOUR DEALER. an re E. BEAUPRE, LOCAL DISTRIBUTOR, 'PHONE 313 Make it a point to bu original bags or barrels is / Ril IS FX ANCE OF Make it a point to "look for : this Trade Mark on every bag and barrel you buy Range tion. "This is the I Use--the GURNEY OXFORD?" When a range is recommended by one woman to another, it has met the final test. The staunchest friends of the Gurney-Oxiord are those women who have experience with it day in and day out. They know how dependable it is; they know that no other range gives such constant and unvarying satisfaction, not simply in management and cconomy, but in cooking results. The Gurney-Oxford works constantly for its _ owner's peace of mind, and it supplements her effosts to make each meal one of absolute satisfac- SIM ct MONS BROS, Kingston. i Every woman who has had experience with the Guinicy Economizer cannot help telling her friends the satisfaction of being able to regulate the fire by turning up or down one small lever. She tells about the flues that make and kecp the oven alway evenly heated, but above all she is enthusiastic about the golden brown biscuits, the light delicious breed and pastry, the roasts and fowl done to the queen's taste, that her Gurney-Oxford turns out. The Gurhey-Oxford owes its popularity to the recommendtion of those for whom it works. '