HEMLOCK We have a large and well assorted stock of Hemlock on hand. You will find that we can meet your needs at right prices. ALLAN LUMBER CO. VICTORIA STREET. "Phone 1042. ee ---- ~---- JUST ARRIVED 200 CORDS HARD AND SOFT WOOD SLABS--CUT TO SUIT YOUR STOVE. SOWARDS COAL CO PHONE 155. OFFICE: McGALL'S CIGAR STORE PHONE 811. UP-TOWN FOR SALE $3800 -- Rough cast, on Pembroke Street, 3 piece bath, electric lights, Lot 66 x 132. $8800---On Charles street, frame, 7 rooms, toilet, electric light, gas, hardwood floors. Possession July 1st. $3800--Clergy Street West, double rough cast, 3 rooms each and summer kitchen, electric light and gas, toilet, newly The J. K. Carroll Agency 56 BROCK STREET Phone 68. Res. . *'. n--1128w., REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE OF ALL KINDS HAVE DINNER DOWNTOWN Take it easy this Summer. Have your Dinner with us. Good things well served. Prices reasonable " THE VICTORIA CAFE JEWLY LEE, Mgr. King St. « Telephone 762 Best Quality Ice Cream Order our Ice Cream if you want the best. Ice Cream, all flavors, sold in bulk and delivered when desired. Try our Strawberry Ica Cream--it's delicious. LACKIE'S BAKERY a sg NEWEST AND MOST EFFECTIVE STYLES IN English Worsteds, Scotch Cheviots, Tweeds and Saxonies, Scotch and Irish Homespuns You may select with confidence from our new lines for the Spring and Summer of 1928, for they include all the fabrics in de- mand by the well-dressed men. CRAWFORD & CO. Fine | the heads. ~ 173 PRINCESS STREET Phone 2450w. -- over You Meot RCULLL in the Dark THE uses for an Eveready Flash- light are innumerable. One of the . times you will most appreciate its _ handineds is when backing a car on a Darrow road after dark, or in fixing a tire, or locating engine troubles. - For the motorist the Eveready Spotlight is the most suitable style. It focuses; gives a 300-ft. beam or a wide circle of illuminating objects near at twist of the end cap makes CAMPAIGNS IN ENGLAND Prof. W. G. Jofdah Gives an Address to the Kiwanis Club. Prof. W. G. Jordan entertained the Kiwanis club with a most interesting account of political campaigns in England during the 'sixties, at the weekly luncheon in the Frontenac hotel on Monday. Among the celebrat- ed statesmen he heard speak were, INPEDINENTS IN MARRIAGE To Be Happy There Must Be Respect and Love for Each Other. Natural impediments to success in marriage and the cementing influ- ences of love were subjects duscussed by Dr. J. Aspinall McCuaig, before an interested audience last night. At 8 o'clock tonight in the First Baptist church, he will deliver the cecond of his populsy lectures on marriage. , The subject will be "Courtship and Woman's Love." Gladstone, Morley andHon.W. . For- ister, all of whom were orators, as well as politicians, and swayed vast audiences, { "A great change has come over the conduct of eiections during the per- | iod of my own lifetime," said Dr. | Jordan in his opening remarks. "We {Fave seen the extension of the fran- jchise from the restrictions that exist- {ed in 1865, when the workingman had no_vote, to universal sufterage, | but I can remember the intense ex- citement that prevailed among all |classes during the elections or 1863 |in England and Scotland when open (voting was in vogue. Workingmen and fishermen, although without the [vote, were attached to one party or another and cracked each other over On one occasion a can- cidate named George Hudson disap- peared the day before polling. In 1868 workingmen got the vote for the first time and during the election of Henry Gladstone, a son of Hon. W. E. Gladstone, bad eggs and over-ripe {fruit were freely used by the adher- ents of the candidates. Candidates {some times used colors, one selecting pink. and his opponent blue and the voters would declare themselves for pink or blue." Dr. Jordan as a lad took part in elections as a messenger, and Fe stil has a vivid memory of the procedure carried out'at that time. He heard Gladstone deliver a budget speech and make of a very dry subject an exceedingly entertaining one. W. E. Forster, secretary for Ireland, who escaped the Phoenix Park murderers, was one of the ablest politicians of {kis time, and Dr. Jordan heard Glad- stone's oration in the House of Com- rions at the time of his death, in | which he paid a great tribute to For- {ster although they bad sometimes dif- fered. The issue in the elections of 1868 was the disestablishment of tae Irish et ch but then. as now, there those who would attempt to make local issues paramount. "We should always endeavor," said {the speaker, "'to gverlook the local were issues and deal with, the larger na- | tional issues in elections." Speaking particularly of the coie- Lrated Gladstone, Dr. Jordan said n appeal to the ce, liberty and {- A hearty vote of t\nks was ten: {dered to Dr. Jordan on a motion of {J. D. Royd, seconded by T. A. Kidd. { President Hugh Nickle occupied ithe chair and 2 new member in tha person of Oscar r.. was introduc- ed by Billy Moore. Mr. Cooke is the jproprietor of Cooke's Auto Serviea, Queen street President Nickle in- troduced ore of the club's wards, an lunder-privileged boy who was heip- ed continue his schoo! attendance, with the result that he passed his entrance without the necessary ex- aminations. A. subscrintion of $30 was taken up for his benefit. One of the contributors wae Cyrus Birgo, Hamilton, a visitor who expressed his pleasure over the work of the Ki- wanis Club. Rev. Dr. Wilfred Kingsley - was sérgeant-at-arms, and the absentees from the previous meeting kept him busy collecting fines. The 'cinging was a feature of the meeting and a tribute to. Erme "Smithies, song leader, and hanger of The Allen theatre. COST TOURIST $5,000 WHEN FRIEND SAW HIM Recognized Man Who Owed Him Money and Got the Bailiff. Quebec, June 26.-- The beauties of Quebec proved to 'have 'very little charm last evening"for an Am- erican tourist who arrived here by auto, and a few hours later left, after he had been relieved of $5,000 which he owed to a local resident. The party was calmly crossing the ferry boat to this side, when he was recognized by a man who remem- bered that the visitor owed him $5,000, A Instead of making his claim im- mediately the creditor called on a docal lawyer and related to him the pleasure it had been for him to meet his debtor. The lawyer Immediate- ly called on a bailiff, and a few hours later the debtor was located in a local hotel and taken into cus- tody. At the court house he en- quired from Sheriff Blouin what, was the shortest way of getting out 'of the trouble. "Pay," came the an- aid a few hours after an = answer came with the necessary guarantee and the man was released. = a -------- Dawson Will Entcrtain Harding. Dawson, Y. T,. June 26.--~Presi- dent Harding is invited to visit the Yukon. The re adopted unanimously which cord fally extended the hospitality of the territory to Mr. and Mrs. Harding and their party, Se Right Hon. 5 Chancellor, is slowly recovering 'his fliness and it is stated that there is no question of his resigning the EE ---------------- i 1a Viscount. Cave Lord Tomorrow afterncon at 38 o'clock lin the same church, he will delive: | the last of his special lectures to wo- men. The subject of this address {will be "The Care of the Girl," In his lecture last night om "Nag- {ging Wives and' Overbearing Hus- bands," after explaining that it was not capriciously that he had chosen his topic, Dr. McCualg pointed out that if a woman is unhappy with the man she has married she resorts na- turally to nagging. On the other 'cand, the man who is unhappy witn the woman in marriage can be dom- inating and overbearing. To bring niarried men.and women together as cne, he maintained, there must be an adjustment, just such an adjustment, relatively as is made in a machine shop between the different parts of a machine before a machine works por- tectly. -- Marriage Impediments. Declaring that marriage can never he "tried out." Dr. McCuaig said that a man and woman must come to- gether with complete abandon cf pur- pose in order to make marriage a sue cess. There must be no latent reser ¥ations. He then stated that regardless of the strength of love existing between them, there are always common im- vediments to successful marriage such as: First, the man and woman come from different stock by inherit- ance, and, therefore, they are oppo- cites physically and temperamenta'- |1¥; second. the man and woman come | by rcason of the difference in homie | environment prior to marriage; jthird, the man and woman are each self centered, or, In other words, both {are what ho called *'egoes." Sex differences, Dr. MeCuaig main | tained, never constitutes a basis of {adjustment, but rather often sex dif- | ference becomes the rock upon which {the ship of matrimony is wrecked {and therefore is an impediment {1ather than a help to adjustment. | | Must Have Respect. As enumerated" by Dr. MeCuaig [the essentials for the overcoming of {must be in each the instinctive sub- {jugation of the self in favortef tie |other, or, in other words the putting of the other first; second, there must be, from the beginning of the honey- moon, the practuce of transposition, or the seeing of things from each {other's standpoint; third, there must | be a recognition on the part of eacs |of the varying superiority of the other, so, that both bringing essen- tials to each other, will respect each other for them, and fourth must be the acceptance of marriage as a love relationship and not ag a business partnership, . No Mother-in-Law. In his arraignment of the forces tostile to adaption, Dr. McCuaig stat- ed that there is danger in the inotacr of either the man or the woman en- tering the home as a permanent resi- dent, 1n the first year of tho!lr mas- ried life. He further expressed dog- niatic opposit'on to the pursuance on the part of either the bride or tne husband of ary ambition outside tha home in the first year of their mar- riage. In closing, Dr. McCuaig set forth the cementing 'influences which he cited as follows: First, seasons ul companionship; second, a common ambition, "such as the planning for a Lome of their own, and third, tha hn- cemdng of the little child, than which he maintained, there is no greater ce- menting influence. % Dr. McCualg concluded by stating that if the young people of Kingston would be guided by the principles set forth there wonld be ten years from how thcusands of homes of laughter in Kingston, free from nagging voice and overbearing brutality, but if not, there would be instead, homes of strain and friction and tear and break. -------------- 8,000 Japanese Babies a Year. London, June 26.--Right Rev. Arthur Foley Winnington-Ingram, Bishop of London, addressing the annual meeting of the British Col- umbia-Yukon Church iAid Society, stated that he had preached emigra- tioh in East London for the past thirty years, and had found it cut of different molding conditions | | We have a few good Used Cars which we are offering at Reduced Prices, as we need the floor space for our new cars, Chevrolet Studebaker The Central Garage Limited Phone 600. Brock and Montreal Streets. WE NEVER CLOSE. It's just as necessary for a storage bat. \ tery as for @ human being. Good health means efficiency in either case. Our free inspection is an inexpensive safeguard. STANDARD BATTERY SERVICE 19 Broek Street. Phone 1340. Free inspection of any battery at any time ' AGENCY FOR ALL OCEAN STEAMSHIP LINES Special attention given your family or friends going to or returning from the Old Country, Passports arranged for. ny . For information and rates apply to J. P. HANLEY, C.P. and T.A. 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Try to make yourself a new Hat out of materials that are as common as postage stamps. You spend from $3 to §5, spend hours in the making of it and what have you got when It is finished? Something your friends | laugh at a block away. No doubt you have a Hat you used to like but are tired of the shape Let us reblock it up-to-date. You have & Hat when it is fin It won't cost more than $1.50 \ probably less. ~