® PAGE FOUR AProm "Létters of Travel," By Rude : yard. Kipling.) When England stumbles the Em- pire shakes. All things considered, there are ORly two kinds of men in thé world murderer who got sentence' W when he had time to think, was the flank foredom of all wh) took par in the ritual. NIBBLES FROM RUDYARD KIPLING. | { 3. Once upon a time 'hers was a off with a fife- impressed Rim most, "It was just like going t0 a doe- £ THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG it is said, make much more un- tandable t8 'Amer yinent and desi in that cdrner' of B | war was brought into'so much Jnence, The Holts announce that Lord Charnwood's "Abraham Lincoln" has gone into its eleventh edition. Ft was this biography of our great Civil War President that Join Drinkwater says he found the most useful If your wife became a widow . to-morrow, where would. she turn for the yesular, income you have always provided ? What money would she have left after she has paid doctor's bills and funeral expenses ? Could she meet the mortgages and taxes ? Or give your children the comfort and education . SATURDAY, JULY, 24, 10%, | 10% Off on Screen Doors at W. H. COCKBURN & CO. Corner Wellington and Princess Street. Phone 216. | Mm An AA At nar en --., A at on More Bargains FOR ONE WEEK ONY we will sell « high grade Electric Iron --{ully guaranteéd--for $6.00. Worth §7.50. Get your order . in early. : 2 HALLIDAY ELECTRIC Co. 345 King Street . ~~ = Phone 94 _ you have planned for them ? ! Would the money left bring in enough income, if invested? Would she know how to invest it safely? Or must she 'be haunted by the knowledge that her small capital is windling ? ~~those who stay at home, and those | tor or a dentist," he explajnedl. "You I Ww hi f all the 'who do not. The second are Ba to 'em very full of your affairs | 0 the writing of this play of al J many works on Lincoln that he stud- died. It has been adopted by the State of 1llinois fer use in the public most interesting. and then you discover that it's only Tevi---- part of their daily work ty them. 1 In Madiera onée they had a Fehe [otpetL" he added, "I sHould have | lution which lasted just long enough | found it the same if--or--I'd gone | Schools. + 'for the national poet to compose aon to the. fintsh." men national anthem, and then was put He would have. Break int) any . down. All that is left of the revolt l new hell lor heaven, and you will be | Cf 3 1 A ) hae 'been mow Is the song that you hear on the | met: at is well-worn threshhola by tical dramatic rofjuction as. Ne t twangling ma es, the baby-banjos | the bored experts in attendance, an important influence in fecen of a moonlight night under the ban- | dramatic development in this coun- ana fronds at the back of Funchal | try, has brought ogether five sig- And the high-pitched nasal refrain |to think for himself. 'If a woman | rificant plays which Harcourt, Brace of it is *'Constituc-oun!" can't make a boy think as sho thinks |& Howe announce for early pub- : she sits down and cries A man | lication under the title Modern "Some men when they grow .rich hasn't any standards. He makas 'em. | Amcrican Plays." It will contain Did you ever consider a Manufacturers Life Monthly In- come Policy? It will give her a definite income every month as long as she lives. / Let us tell you alt the valuable features of this sensi thoughtful, economical, well-secured policy. ' The /* Manufacturers Life : Insurance Company TORONTO, CANADA Professor George P. Baker, whose course of study at Harvard on prae- "A man's instinct is to teach a boy iv Gas Ranges You will find on our floor a very complete stock of GAS RANGES at prices from. ... «oo. $17.00 to $70.00 We invite your inspection of these. ' M. G. JOHNSTON, Branch Manager, Kingston, Ont. Completion of thsi coupom places you under mo obligation I would like particulars as to a Monthly Ineeme of not KINGSTON - i. trates. his being insensibly til] he a, oY the i RR the I'gets drunk, falls foul of the local riddle of the Sphinx?" "No," I mur- |, iceman, smites himself into the mered, what is it?" "All s2nsible men | Daeen canal, and disposes of the are of the same rel gion. but "° | question of treaty revision with a sensible man ever tells. hiccup. may be called '"imperfects" both mental and physical and other facts given here which 'will be practically interesting to students of insanity and feeble-mindedness in our various A STUDY IN CANADIAN GRATION. "om "Plot AD OFFICE - a death the genuineness of the collec- | Now d'vou see?" Thinks," Edward Mass 8 Plots x HE » * ] : ywrights" anc Louis | A better way is to spread your ple- | ¢hat we're being school-marmed - deface, nor any reve of fortune Tt is easy to escape from a |been appear Xafy Miles nothing, and--in spite of all that has | (hat it seemed wrong to leave it. And | lar "edition, with {ll ions from ---- {in it paving, bad in its streets, fad | Syndicate, which is placing it in the answers were explicit: "Because the | tnan bad in its sanitary arrange- | Zealand, the Orient, the Philippines LEMMOI y & S Ol IS Be- |. country again in 'the Autumn for a =life. { > "The Menace of a New .Order in how things are done in England. the story of the Englishman who 10st | 314 curious are either "them things" | of Present Problems." etl ~qldn't drink, he 8ald: | jectives other than those which cus tions of E. P. Dutton & Co. will be who is professor"of English in the daily, weekly and monthly, in all ten by negroes for negroes, and IMMI- and soul of the colored population, store pictures in a gallery." Living {A woman's the most standardized | David Belasco's "Peter Grimm," their friends envy them, and after heing in the world. She has to he, | Augustus Thomas's As a Man tion is disputed under the dispersing "Not yet." . and Pl \ 1 An- hammer. "Well, our trouble in America 'is | pacher's he U nchaste ned Woman. tures over all earth; visiting them as | to death." . Wilbur Finley Fauley's 'Jenny Be Fate allows. . Then none can steal or | --- } Good," the fiim story w h has force a sale; sunshine and tempest I big city . We lingered in New | Minter as t tar, has been brought warm and ventikate the gallery for | York till the city felt so homelike | out by Grosset & D nlap in' a popu- been said) of her crudeness--Nature | tyriher, the more one studied i, the | the photoplay. The novel has been : eensrassasnciacs _ is mot altogether a bad frame-maker. I more grotesquely bad it grew--hbad | serialized by the McClure Newspaper = SE : | | What is the matter with the Eng- |i, its street-police, and but for/the | United States, Gre Britain, Can- lish as immigrants in Canada? The | kindness of the tides would be worse (ada, South Africa, Alstrilia, New English do not work. Because we |ments. No one as yet has approached | and Hawaii. 5 LAR i US EE Lae sR EN I are sick ®t Remittance-men and loaf- the management of New York in a -- Hil 2 £3 Pad 187 PRINCESS STREET : 3 ers sen out here. Because the Eng- | proper spirit; that is to say. regard- Norman Angell will come to this . : lish are rotten with Socialism. [ing it as the shiftless outcome of cause the English don't fit with our |gqua1id barbarism and reckless €X- | speaking tour that will'last almost | They kick at our way of doing |yravagance. two months, His subjects will be things. They are always telling us | i re . The sailor in port is the only su- | Europe and America" and "The They carry frills! Don't you know {perfor man. To him all matters rare | Great Illusion and the War: A Study his way, and was found half-dead of | ,. "them other things." He does not -- thirst beside a river? When he wasyyy;ry himself, he does not seek ad- Among the mid-Summer publica- flow the duce™\can 1 without a i,m puts into his mouth for all occa- Colonel Robert T. Kerlin's "The Siang" - | sions; but the beauty of life pene-|vgice of the Ne ro." .The author, Virginia Military Institute, has made a wide study of the negro press, parts of the country, believing that in these papers and magazines, writ- without any likelihood of white read- ers, could be found the real heart and he has put into this volume the results of his duty. By W. G. Smith, The Ryerson Press, Toronto, $3.00. More or less comprehensive studies have been made of practically every phase of Canadian development, but only recently have we seen any ser- ious and extensive treatment of the immigration question. Doctor W. G. Smith, who is head of the Psycholo- gy Department of Toronto University, and also a prominent ménber of the Mental Hygiene Association, some two years ago was impressed to be- gin a careful study of newcomers to Canada. The result is given in "A Study : In Canadian -Imthigration," just published by the Ryerson Press, Toronto. Mr. Smith introduces his subject by presenting the possibilities of the several Canadian provinces for the settlement, of immigrants and tells the history of our immigration from the days of French occupation to the present. "The history of Canada", he ing on her shores Canada was reject- provinces. Some rather serious criti- cisms of our immigration laws, as they have been put tcgether, and as | several they have worked out is made. For | f instance, it is shown that during the | t period from 1910 to 1918, while the United States was rejecting one out of twelve of the immigrants appear- |i Ex-President Taft has worked for years with zeal and vision or the cause of the League of Na- ions and. his addresses and papers upon this question have been gath- ered together and will be published n book form next month by the Mac- millian Company under the title of ing only one per 135. Is our Canad- | 'Lectures on the League of Nations." ian "melting pot" really working? Are we making citizens out of these newcomers? How best can be carry on work among those we already have with us? There are a few of the | 1 questions which are answered com- prehengively in closes with chapters on "Future Im- migration" and "Present Needs." i The hook is well worth the serious study of anyone interested in Cana- | I dian civics and will present an abun- .The Dorans have in train for early | publication "A History of the Jap- anese People," by Captain F. Brink- ey and Baron Kikuchi. It is to be printed on Japanese paper and there- the volume which |fore will be all in one slender volume. Of the two- authors Baron Kikuchi s one of the country and Captain Brinkley, -whe -is chiefly responsible or the work, has been intimately associated with Japanese affairs for + bles says, "is in large measure the his- tory of immigration," And, follow- ing this in a comprehensive manner, dance of information on almost any phase of this very discussable topic 'of immigration. 2 he goes on tg show how the immi- grants coming into Canada have af- fected our national developments. Some rather startling figures from duly authorized sources are collected, showing that less than forty per cent of our male immigrants havé taken our naturalization. This suggests the query as to whether the others really intend to take up the responsibilities of citizenship. Again, a series of interesting ta- Show outstandingly a rather Hir® rarticination of the immigrants in Canadian crime. Dr. Smith has woracd this out very carefully show- ine the inflience of racial tenden- cles. The same thing has been done # in a similar way in regard to what Notes of Interest : to Booklovers. Thomas E. Rush's "The Port of New York," published a few weeks ago by Doubleday, Page & Co., bas gone already into a second edition and will be used for study and. sec- ondary reading public schools. in the New. York A timely book to be published shortly by the Scribners will be "Dalmatia and the Jugoslav Move- ment," by the Jugoslav diplomat, Count Louis Volnovitch. The book Dont take ry anybody's 'word for it. But if youre a coffee drinker, and feel as though Youll know more aftera - can learn from re a couple of years inin "There's a Reason" for PosTuM . more than half a century. He went to Japan in 1887, became a profe® sor in the Imperial College and after- wards was made foreign adviser to the Japanese Government, in which position 'he has played an important part in the direction of Japan's for- eign 'policy. He married a Japanese woman and has been thoroughly id- entified with Japanese life. He is the author of a good many books on Jap- anese 3 e and literature. This new vdlume 'is said te offer all the essential information about Japan- ese History needed by the average American reader for an understand- ing of the Japanese problem in our own modern affairs. J A mew novel by Sincldlr Lewis, to be called "Main Street", is promised for Fall*-publication by Harcourt, Brace & Howe. It is the story of a girl who goes from an interesting life in the city to the narrow exist- ence of.a country doctor's wife in a small town and of how she learns there the real significance of living. For immediate publication Double- day, Page & Co., have "J. Wilbuf Chapman--a Biography," whic tells ister who, starting his work in an Indiana village, became the pastor of Bethany Presbyterian Church, founded and fostered by Jchn Wana- maker, and later of the Fourth Pres- byterian Churchnof New York. He made evangelistic tours through the Philippine Islands, New Zealand, Australia, China and Japan and dur- ing the war gave energetic service on the National Service Commission organized by the Presbyterian Church. His death occurred a month after the signing of the armistice. The biography is written by his inti- mate friend and associate, Dr. Ford C: Ottman. O3car Wilde's "A Critic in Pall Mall," which tnams have Just brought out, will\ make complete their uniform edition in fifteen vol- vmes of Wilde's writings. It in- cludes a miscellaneous i though it last year. > Frederick O'Brien, whose "White Shadows in the South Seas," has won remar e success, has returned to nis home in California. He has been collabora during the last few weeks TN Suring. Langner of the Theatre Guild on a dramatic version produced is book whi at the ¢ be under Mr. O'Brien's guid- the life story of a Presbyterian min- | If Your House Could Spask i It Would Shout for Surface Protection Do you know. that the annual loss from fire. in Canada is ~only about one-fourth of the loss from deterioration of property ? No matter how substantial a build- You may have a place on your "building where the surface coating is giving 'way and the danger of damage exists. It is worth looking into, The old saying about an *'ounce of prevention' must have been particularly written' about paint and varnish, for if prevention pays anywhere it .does pay on your buildings. Never did it pay so well as riow, when material ing is, the elements will damage it if given a chance. Unless the surface is protected by a surface coating, wear and the elements will work away at it constan tly. With proper surface protection, weather can have no effect upon your property--the coating, not the surface will meet the weather. All .damage of every kind must start at the surface. Save the Surface and you save all. YOU SAVE HARD WARE AND PAINT DEALERS ARE AT YOUR SERVICE: Taylor & Hamilton, #3 Bros. ! : Simmons yg res eon 3 Lemmon & Sons, 'crneer, & Hunter , TST PRINCESS JraEET. T-W. Milo, 2 5 'AINCESS STREET. 9-01 PRINCESS STREET. L. JZ Ci oARGY STREET. E. Moncrieff, ! 78 WILLIAM STREET. 169-171 PRINCESS