® eo / THE DAILY _WHIG, SATURDAY. AUGUST 28 CORBETT'S X --FOR-- A full assortment of MECHANICS' TOOLS. Best Quality at Lowest Price. Here's a House, Don't You Want It ? Not a free gift, of course, but it's so easy to pay for, we are sure you will almost look upon it as a gift. The gift part is that after paying rent to us for a given time we give you a deed for the house. Isn't it easy enough for you to try ? D. A. CAYS, 346 King Street. .. OUR ... Optical Work Is giving universal satisfaction. We give this branch of our busi- ness our painstaking attention, and * are handling successfully many difficult cases. Repairs of all kinds promptly attended to. ------ SMITH BROS. Jewelers and 350 King Opticiaas. St. OaRO OBO De ele OetereleOefeOnfeOnfe Rich, Ripe Fruit: We are headquarters for all kinds of Domestic and' Imported Fruit. . Canadian Pears, " California Fruit, etc. Of finest quality at prices that tempt you to buy. A J. REES, "ker. OOO OOOO QO Osk Onl tr Cpr FIRE WOOD JUST RECEIVED. A fine lot of nice sound, hard Maple, cut last winter. Good long lengths. "3S. ANGLIN & CO; Foot of Wellin; ton Street. ©00000000000000000000 RUBBISH Well not exactly: at any rate vou can -turn it into white money by ¢ol- lecting it all together and dropping a card to the Kingston Rag and Metal Co., 389 Princess street. This firm pays highest cash prices foreall the stuff you don't want and have no use for. ¥ ® sssancscessenconsd prove to that Dg EL 8 iri a certaig ¢ i e ana ebsolute cure for each rd ve i 24 Jonni ng an Prous rue piles, have guaranteed Ee Boncnite tr thin Te pL 'wha! think of You can use it nd k if not eured: 600 a bo: Beers or & Oe ut Co, ~aron! Dr. Chase's O'ntment | WELL, WELK! WHAT IS WANTED NOW? WHY MORE customers of course at Myers' Pork Market, 66 Brock street, where vou will obtain the best cooked aud smokad meats in the city "Phone 8 lbs. dripping for a. quarter 570 TO:LET. smicK RESID. INCE, 201 BROCK STREEZ. 11 rooms, ern improvements, alse brick at 244 Brock stivet, 10 rooms improvements. Auvnly to th. i X wv Co.. Nak Hall. Prine street. DENTAL CARD. f L,Y, HAS RESUMED HIS DENTAl BR, PALS at 129 Princess St. four doors foiow former of \ . texts THE WHIG -- 98TH YEAR aDAY ap at 206-510" Ki King, gle, a 5 year. Editions 30 end 4 "WEEKLY BRITISH . WHIG, 12 pages oeblished every Thursday morning at $1 £ "a, Attached is ome the best Job Printia Eicon in Canada; + i stylish and cheaj ok EW. 5, B. PENSE. PROPRIETOR I'HE DAILY WHIG. Opijer ver Orbemt § Dicor,' VULGARITY IN TIN SOCIETY. The eabled description of the Rag- lan reception, for the benefit of a lo' cal charity. is humiliating in the ex treme. It is a pandering to that vul gg spirit of curiosity Which true dig- nity = ----p It was g to participate the coronation ceremony, and the jewellery that went the peers must repuaiate. rare honor in robes, coronets and toward the adordment of and peeresses cost some millions of money. The occasion warranted the expendi vet .some of these distin- guished people' evidently "do not 'think they have got their money's worth by one public appearance. So Lady Rag- herself and het toggery ture, and lan exhibits and with the alleged desire her friends contribute for a fee, of making to the funds of 4 public institution. ' But the mighty are fallen! This one the setting behind "the queen at the coro- nation, puts herself on exhibition and has the dis- play advertised in true circus fashion gate. are announced designs--similar pre- putting themselves on exhi- for purpose, to how lady, of magnificent for three-pence a peep, by a red-heaaed girl at the outer And other to similar peeresses have for a similar sweet charity ! The king the scandal. little of the bition--ana benefit ought to put. an end to It is degrading; making coronation, its pomp and display. THE TRADE WE NEED. The attention of the imperial' gov- ernment has been called to the trade United States agents are culti- South African which vating in Indian and colonies. The persevering drummer is to be found everywhere, and he is usually rewarded for his persistency. In Northern India, for instance, he is selling a very good quality of iron for barrack 5,000 a bucket which is in' demand the he and proceeds to supply it. use. He gets order for month because discovers _ *'want,"' Therein the Canadians are receiving a Very pertinent and practical lesson. They are being taught the necessity of looking up trade, by the use of com- mercial agents, whose scent for busi- ness is of the keenest kind. The establishment of a direct line of this and South Africa will not be satisfac- communication between country tory unless it be followed or attended by such activity among the manufac- turers and exporters as will Tead to a proper development in trade. 'The agents have to by diligent enquiry, what the people of export salaries; of the government who gone Australia and learned, have ag- India could nee led goods, their South there earned and similar ents in Africa and perform a service whose effect would be to give to Canada the trade that United States, is now enjoved by the and that amounts to a considerable sum. NEW. ERA AT HAND. The new line of steamers which is in contemplation; "bulky boats capable of carrying large cargoes between the west and connecting the farth- the the public interest. east, est points in inland waters with sea-hoard, excites Something "of the kind ig within the" realm of probability, The grain trade of Canada is becoming the trade which muss be taken .care of somehow. The Canadian railways have been prépar- Jing all vear for the event so near at hand, the tremendous crop: of grain which, has to be moved quickly once the shipping of it sets in. at 60.000.000 Canadian Pacific Northern increased facilities, This crop is estimated bushels, the Canadian and railway and fhe railway have, by largely by 'a multi- plication of their rolling stock, ar- ranged to handle ite expeditiously. All of the Canadian crop has not Canadian boats KX 'vood deal edd through American reached the ocean hy and railways heretofore. of grain has pe to Eur But that is be. territory and found its way American ports. New ly ceased to be a grain trans-shipping not ope by ing changed, York has practical- point, and one cargd Has left this Montreal has became the about fif- to August and the season, 'while port of export, and from it ty steamships are bookel depart between the middle of middle of September. The of well managed and e juipped, new line steamers, then, if covering that are shaply beyond one's compre ension now, Pure drugs. H. B. Taylor; successor to E. C. Mitchell. "the 2 high CANADA'S GREAT FUTURE. A Kingstonian who has been in. the far west in business, who has covered a great part of Manitoba and met on the trains travellers who. had' seen much of it; predicts a great future for the country. ; The land is being rapidly taken. up and by a superior class of settlers. Many of these have remov ed from the Southern States and have the capital that enables them to stock their farms and make them remunerative. There have been spies in the land, men who have heard of it and been to go up and look result « of their report commissioned over. As a many people have entered the North: West and become pogsessed of.it to the limit of their purchasing power. These have been followed by the investors, the manufacturers, the cap- italists whose money is making things, and in temporary manner. "The Canadian North-West," said one 'who had seen something of? it and was speaking from a knowledge of the facts, "is the field of greatest promise.. There is the land, and it on- ly wants the people and the money to make it run with milk and honey; and it have what it wants. The Canadian. farms and cattle doubt the best that are go- hum no will soon are beyond going." The demand is for 20,000 harvesters. The' number already volunteered and on the way is 7,000. These are mostly young 'men, who will settle in the new country and 50" add to its productive power. SATURDAY THOUGHTS. The green gooas men have been very ful recently their New York swindles. The of freshies abroad seems to havé been unusually in suc number large. The grain crop of the .United States the chants, are banking upon it with a certainty is greatest in years, and mer: manufacturers and meehanics that means no weakness. - United States to have They can still play that the Lost Heir," and so they will be reconciled. The said treasury clerks wre been forbidaen to play poker. very exciting game of * According to a recent decision of the Scotlana, there is no It and committed «court in Dundee, is such thing as an act of suicide. an act of insanity, when a man is bereft of his reason. Ogden Armor, home from an ex- J. tended trip in Europe tells a_press- man that he has heard about a leef trust, but knows nothing more about it. He to of Mark Twain's innocents abroad. appears be one The federal ay exhibit grains at most of the fall fairs. There government will make of Canadian straws and is no finer object lesson for the farm- and the appreciate it cancelled "it this year. ---- Buffalo. were so ers, Wisconsin show people so much that they have Men pressed with the appearance of gre fed cattle that they went the land and pasturage, at much im- ie west to see and wound up the Unit- And there are by deciding to remove from ed States to Canada. others----many of° them. Pierpont Morgan's idea is that there should not be any waste of capital, of of in the of trade. he would covered material So labour, competi- combine all the wants and demands of the people. And give the benefit He does not that. tions business until one them of the saving ? say WHAT PAPERS SAY. Coalition Not Im It... Toronto News. x. .W. Ross and JJ. P, Whitney are unit {on ones thing= that A. Coalition won't get the job they're after. - A Terrible Warning. London News ew York boy: went fishing on Sunday 'and was killed by a blow from the sinker on his line. Other boys will please take notice. Dodging The Tips Montr. al Herald, P. Morgan, who' gives no "tips," says he cannot afford too. This ex- plains w I he rides in his private car, instead of in a Pullman. 1t's cheaper. Designs In The Council. Toronto Felegram: The loop-the-loop that the average citizen would he lighted . if theo city council could induce | to take a whirl at the exhibi- tion grounds. dangerous de- he 18° 80 An Exciting Event. Svracuse Post-Stamdyrd = The thought of ar sngriing automo- bile throwing out a stream of lire as as a house, darting carelessly about the city followed by the fire d partment, is not reassuring. Protecting The Shah ! Chicago Inter-Ocean. , : Great Britain was just planning to take a much-nee led: rest in the coun: try when the Shah of He is a nice enough man, bat actly the kind of man Great Britain cares to invite to its country home, not a given distance in a given time and perhaps. connecting the Canadian Pa- | cific and Canadian Northern railways with the proposed fast Atlantic line, will open up a new era in Qanada, and a trade of = vaster proportions than has been. Let us have all the in formation that is coing about: the en terprise, for jt means an expansion of pasiness energy and national power it will have to romain in London 4 little longer to ke him of the hants of the police. ------ *'Bibby's." Oak Hall. "Bibby's."' New. nohby our suits, 11 215 H. 1. out new 'I he are and neat and BN SiR Co Bibhv Our Taleum powder at 10c. a tin a seller. H: B. Taylor successor to EK. C. Mitchell. is Persia arrived. ! ox- | (TE: CLTRICAL BLACKLEL. WAS A BIGAMIST AND HORSE ' ~ THIEF. Career and Methods of "Rev."'A. T. Whitman--He Has Been in Frison and Likely t to be There ' Again. Toledo, Ohio, Aug. 19.--The Rev. Amos T. W hitman, who just completed a three- years' term in the Ohio peni- tentiary 'and was at once re-arrested by one of several sherifis who were waiting for him with warrants, has had a remarkable career as a criminal. When he was received in the Ohio penitentiary he had just completed a term. at, Michigan City, Ind., and~ the doars of Joilet prison, in | Hiinois, were then" open for hiui.. Now there are complaints against him in Mis- souri, Kentucky, lowa, Tennessee, Kansas, Nebraska, Minnesota and Ar- kansas. He is accused of stesling horses Mnight after having preached in the day time. In addition it is alleged thate he made a practice of marryjng women with property and then run- ning off with their money." One of his last matrimonial experiences was to marry a young widow at Taylors- ville, 1JI., whom he left, taking with' him $7, 000 of her money and five of her finest horses on the same night. ® Whitman was born® near Greenville, Ohio. He disappeared from his home about 1885, deserting his wife. He had forged a note and he took several horses with him. It was for stealing these horses that he was sent to the Ohio penitentiary. He next turned up in professed to be a preacher. He was an _cloquent preacher, too. At this time he got together a band of horse thieves, organized them thoroughly and directed their operations. He also arranged for "shipping the stolen horses to the east. He posed as an evangelist, usually under his right name, Whitman, He was so superior to the average trav- eling evangelist, that he was welcom- ed everywhere. He would conduct the at Kansas and services for a week or ten days at a village, and then, if urged, as he us- usually was, would remain another week, During his engagement. he would live around among: the members of his congregation. He playel the part of a man in modest circumstances and without luggage, and was invited to sleep and dine here for one "day and there for the next. Thus he got ar- ound among the well-to-do residents. He would ask grace at the table, and after dinner would stroll out -on the farm and size up the situation. If his host had a good horse he admir- ed him and found out all he could ab- out him. He would observe where and how the horse was kept and cared for. He planned' to. make a round of the chief owners in a week. His notes . were "then mailed to his gang, and about the sixth or seventh night after he began his service the work was done. The residents would wake up the next morning 'and find five or six of the best horses in the community missing. Whitman would attempt to console the losers and would have consider- able advice to give, which usually re- sulted in starting a posse in the on- posite direction from that which the thieves and stolen horses had taken. After 'continuing his service a few nights longer he would take his "de parture. He always went away with enough expense money to take him to the next place, and almost always re- ceived . an urgent invitation to come again. : In some instances he made the quaintance of marriageable women with money and married them. - He married many of the women under as- sumed names. Half a dozen of them gave him trouble, the most persistent of these being a widow of Taylorsville, 11k She caused ac- him more trouble than all the othe She advertised his ras- cality so persistently © that women from half a dozen states communicat- od" with" her fegarding= - Whitman's crimes, and Whitman was obliged to hide. ' Some time before this exposure he had the boldness to visit his old home in Darke county, Ohio. John Welker, who was then sheriff, had a warrant for him for forgery, and horse-steal- ing cases of IN Whitman heard of it and disappeared, 'and at the same time a dozen or more valuable horses run out of Darke county at were nicht. The losers the trail. He put Sherifi Welker on chased him to Sturgis, Mich., where he pissed him by twen. tv-eight " minutes. Then canie a chase down. through the MississippRev Ri) ley. to Texas and back to Minnesota, Wis- consin and Michigan, and laterea cross-cross game through Indiana and Illinois. One night Welker was so close to Whitman in Illinois, that the two occupied adjdiiing rooins at' thee same hotel, but neither knew it for some tine afterward. Whitman spent nearly all ready money in dodging Welker, and finally got away. His gang went to pieces, and he began to steal horses himself. He was at last arrested near Anderson, Ind., driving a horse he {hat stolen the night before. He plead: his ed guilty, apd got off with a two years' sentence ander the-name -- of Williams. * He fancied that at anv rate he was secure in pr ison from prosecution for | the crimes he had committed under his own naine. Sheriff Welker found hime bv ac-ident, however, and identified { him. Whitman confessed and told Wel | ker where he could find many of the | hors: s. and" enough of them were re lrcovered to reimburse the sherifi for | his trouble and expense. | On May 12th, three vears ago his { term at Michigan City ended. He | stepped out of his cell, only to he voted by sheriffs from Ohio, Indian na, lowa, Missouri and Illinois, lined pup to arrest him. Welker had the prior claim, and got him, taKing him to Greenville, from which place he was taken to Columbus to serve a three | years' - setitenee. It seems probaifle that he will serve several more term before 'he. gets clenr of the law { _-- | <'Bibby's."' Oak 'Hall "'Bibby's." | hist arrived, new colored shirts, $1 The H. D. Bibby Co. | rT ---- Pure Glycerine. soap, 5c. a cake. Taylor's. i [ i 1 one carrying LL. IN OUR OWN CIRCUIT. ~ News Of The Districts On Both Sides Of 'The Line. =~ A large amount of hay in New Yu rk state is still unharvested. Miss 'Cora Wiltsee, Athens, is tending the Toronto Normal school. Mrs. Lee, who resides with her son. £5. "W. Lee," At.ens, celebrated her ninety- ninth 'birthday on Monday. She is: still enjoying fairly good health. Mrs. Norman Scott, who, suffered a stroke of paralysis some weeks ago, is improving at the, home of her daugh- aty ter, Mrs. M. B. Davis, Sandhurst. On Monday, Aug. 25th, Arthur E. Fisher, son. of D. Fisher, Athens, will sail from Yanconyer for White Horse, Yukon, where ke will assume the prin cipalship of a public school at $2,200 a year. Arthur E. Fisher, son of D. Fisher, Athens, principal of the public school at Qu'Appelle, NNW.T., has accepted a position as principal of the public school at White Horse, Yukon, at a salary of $2,400 a vear. Miss Agnes I. Keyes, Gananoque, only daughter of Robert Keyes is dead from a "cold .contracted on' July Ist. She was buried on Friday last in the Roman Catholic cemetery, her six bro thers acting as bearers, the seventh a large wreath on his arm behind the * hears A singular conineidence is that Mr. Keyes' mother diel in' Detroit on March 11th last, and he was one of six brothers who carried her remains to their last est ing place. DESERONTO CAMP. Dates of Arrival of the Various . Corps. - aa The guns for use in the Deseronto artillery camp have arrived. from Kingston. Firing competition will take place from September 15th until the second week in October. 'lhe fol- lowing are the dates of the arrival of the various corps : September 15--11th and 16th field batteries, of Guelph. September 16--4th field battery, oi Hamilton, and 7th, of St. Catharinzs. September' 179th. field battery, orf Toronto, and 5th, of Deseronto. September 18=Sth field battery, of Gananoque, and 14th, of Port Hope. September, 13--"A" and *"B" bat- teries, Kingston. September 22--1st field battery, of Quebec, and 2na, of Ottawa, September 23--3rd field battery, of Montreal, and 10th, of Woodstock, September 24--12th field battery, of Newcastle, N.B., and 13th, of Winm- peg, Man. September 25--15th field battery, of Granby, Quebec, September 26--Nos. 1 and 2 com- panies, R.C.G.A. : September 29--Nos, 1 and 2 com- panies, 2nd. Regiment, C.A., of Mon- treal. September 30-No. 3 company, 2nd Regiment C A , and the Cobourg com- pany, garrison artillery. October I--Nos. 1 and 2 companies, 6th Regiment C.A., of 'Quebec. October 2--Nos. 3 ana 4 companies, 6th Regiment C.A. My Life Is Like Summer. Rose. Bv Richard Henry Wilde. Richard" Henry . Wilde was born in Dublin, Ireland, September 24th, 1789, and died in New Orleans, La., September * 10th, 1847. He came to the United States in 1797, set- thing first "in Baltimore, and afterward in Georgia. He became attorney general of that state, and represented it in congress most of the time from 1815 to 1833. He was a frequent contributor to the Southern Review and other periodicals. My life is like the summer rose, That opens to the morning sky. hE, ere the shades of evening close, «scattered on the ground--=to die! Ye on the rose's humble ed The sweetest' dews: of night are shed, As if sho, wept the waste to see-- But none shall weep a tear for me ! My life is like the summer leaf, That tremb in the moon's pale ray: Its hol is frail--its date is brief, Restless--and spon to pass away ! 7 Yet, ere, that leaf shall fall and fade, The parent tree will mourn its shade, The winds bewail the leafless tree, But none shall breathe a sigh for me ! My life is like the prints which feet Have lft. on Tampa's desert strand; Soon "as the rising tide shall be it, (All trace will vanish from the sand; Yet. as if grieving fo efface All vestige of the human race, On that lone shore loud moans the sea, But nome, alas ! shall mourn for me ! . Florida Fancies, Florida, Aug. 22.--School reopened last Mondav with a good attendance. A wedding is to take place next Wed: nesrlay. KE. Walker has returned frony the United States very ill. Mr. is snending a couple of weeks at her brother's, J. Walker. M. Martin and daughter, Watertown, paid their home a flying visit last week, Visitors: Miss Redden, Harrowsmith; Mrs. J. Gallagher, Portland; Mrs. 1.. Gallagh- er and daughter; Eva Wilton, Miss E. Skinner, Capnlen East; Myps. J.» Peters, Wilton; Mrs. J. Wallace and daughter, after. spending a week at Elgin and Portland, have returngd home. Save Your Eyes And protect your pocket hook, having wvour eyesight examined tested hy M. Mecklenburg, special pert,. who makes regular visits to Kingston, at McLeod's drug store, street, He will le here until Thursday. and for the balance of the week at Huliman's drug store, Napa- nee, Why ruin vour eves' by using cheap, ill-fitted glasses from pedlars and fa- bv and ex. kirs on exhibitions grounds or else where, Glasses in order to fit vour eves properly must be made to order. It is ridienlous to fit eves with ready-made glasses. 'Look out for the | pe lars: they ¢ the poorest, goods and cha the most for them. DEAFNESS CANNOT BE CURED By local applications, as they cannot reach | the diseasd portion of the ear. There is one and that Dole" is School Bell Rings hortly There is an army of 'school boys to be fitted. out next week. We expect to see our share of them, and we can promise them in ad- vance the most mannish cloth- ing they ever saw, and it is thoroughly made. We have the two-piece suits, three-piece Suits, Blouse, Norfolk and Vestee Suits. SUITS AT $2.50, $3. $4.50, "$6.50. $2. $3.50, $4. $5, $6. : The H. D. Bibby Co., * One Price Clothing House, ~~. OAK HALL. = Many customers are buying their Furniture and Carpets mow and having us hold them until later. They are saving ° money and we have the money to use. Parlor Suites, $25, reduced to $17.50. Parlor Suites, $65, reduced $48. " Bedroomr Suites, etc., all reduced. Carpets, in Brussels and Axmin- ster, all reduced in sympathy with our other lines. to Sideboards, Harrison Co's. GREAT AUGUST SALE. T. F. HARRISON CO. This Suit, until end of August, while they last, $10.50. A gen- uine snap. Regular $13. Phone qo and gr. ™ TEA TABLE TALK. The Flotsam And Jetsam of the Papers. Rev. William Muirhead, supplying the aulpit. at Cumnock, Seotland. shocked the people by his *behavi iour, He was locked ap. and fined. "But few people, " observes the as- tute reporter, 'have ever been acciden- tally injured by the discharge of their duty.' Glasgow ratepayers has voted to have the ratepayers of each. ward de- cide what should be done with the li- quor traflic within their wards. Toronto has an automobile and the purchaser has named it after his wife, because after erving to run it, 'he found he couldn't. * Down south in a graveyard, a "Here the second no- tombstone bears this iscription: lies an honest woman, blest work of God." A printer in Liverpool is 103 years old. He has made many typogra- phical errors during his career that he 1s afraid to die. There is a sudden gram decorations in chased gold, faceted steel, jet, jewel beading, embroidery and lace, en apl- plique. An Indiana man has made applica- tion fof divorce on the ground that his wife devotes more time to smok- ing cigarettes than she does to cook- ing his meals. To their great dismay the employees of a Kingston, Eng. brewery, who went to Folkestone for ther annual outing were compelled to "dine at a temperance hotel. The £10,000 votéd by the Lancas- hire county council for a permament celebration of the coronation is to he devoted towards a consumptive hos- pital. Maria Mulliner, aged eiochty-six, jumped ou the rails in front of an in- coming train at Deptiord, Eng:, and when, rescued, said" she had been dis appointed in love. The war in South Africa cost £228. 000,000, three times the of the Crimean war; the people have borne it without a murmur, and this ehorm us exjenditure has no whit impaired the credit of the United Kingdom. SO craze for mono- cost A curious spectacle has been wit J nessed- at Chester, Eng. A cloud of | hay passed over the city at an alti | tude of 300 feet, with great capidity. i It is suggested that the hav was car, riedd off the Nelsh hills by a. whirl wind. 1901 was conspicuous for building in the United States: forty-two of fifty five of the large cities of the country | reported an increase of 25.07 per eent [ building permits granted, while value of new buildings erected increas ocd 54.09 per cent. ly one .way to cure deafness, is 3 by constitutional remedies. Deainess is caused | Sothe. of the English tenures are cu Ly an inflamed condition of the mucous LL A~farm near Broadhouse, in ing of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube sd iieha, I" ™ the Innd gota inflamed you have a rumbling sound Yorkshire, pays annually to the lan or imps rie «wt bearing, and when it is entirely lord a snowballZuismidsummer and a closed d is the result, and unless thm 1 rose ut Chiistmas Whe manor o! \ ean he taken out aml this Jet TOS at (nh Ai ii restored on its snormal condition, hear- | FOston is held by a rental of two ar. ing will be destroved forever: nine cases out | rows and a loaf of bread, of ten are caused, by catarrh, which is no- | thing bu inflamed condition of the A ------------ mucous s. Hh trod Doll ' "It is better fo advertise your goods We will give, One undrec ollars for anv | . = 2 for b en: case of deafness (caused: bv catafrh) that can ' 107 sale' than 6 wait for the ssherifi not be cured by «Halls; Catarrh Cure. Send | to do jt: fer circulars, free F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills ere the best. ' Thevgivil cannot be less merciful tix men uh they are some times to each other. a silver filigree," the PROCLAMATION EYES THOROUGHLY TESTED --~BY-- M. Mecklenburg, M.A, D.OS., Of Montreal. Eye and Ear Specialist and president the Canadian Optometrical College, of New 'York City. McLeod's Drug Store, Kingston, till Wednesday evening, August 27th. Huffman's Drug Store, Napanee, August 28th, 29th, 30th. The dark roomy' of formerly doctor carries his essential with him which ix absokately Bt eyes properly aud correctly. In fact it is impossiblé to examine eyes intelligently with. out it. Do not delay this opportunity 'of consulting him. His charges .are very reasonable and it fe fails to do"you more: good, or benefis your eyes after others have failed, will charge you nothing. His fees are very moderpte con- sidering what you get, bweides that he fur- nishes glasses at wholesale prices, a saving of 50 to 76 per cent. Solid, gold frames or nickel mountings from $2. Solid silver rold filled, warranted, $1. Nickel, ~ German silver or Alumina 500. You pay more than double for the goods elsewhere. No belter goods can be had anywhere at anv price. Meking and fitting artificial eyes, both in shell and full block, a specialtv. own or Ear trumpets, invisible ear telephones, and best aids for the deal. Satisfaction guaranteed. GLASSES when Btted properly will nay five vears. Makes regylar visita. 1 A TET ------ FOR SALE OR TO RENT. ON | Tk EAST formerly owned "Apply to Smowthe ete, Kingston, DESIRABLE BRICK HOUSE wide of Montreal strect by Mrs. W. G. Elliot. & Smythe, Solicitors, SUBURBAN RESIDENCE. sold to wind up Estate. The the residence of the late George The house built of brick iz high, 35x40 feet. There are four full sized City Lots. The property is on the cortcr of Albert, Mack aml Nelson 'streets und overlooks Victoria Park. For VALUABLE Must "be Cottage, W. Fen two sic price amd terms apply. 16. Smythe & Snivike, Solicitors, Kingston, June 26th, 902 ° . As You Like It The '""YOTTO" burner gives you the best'light you could have--a clean light that makes ni#ht work or reading a pleasure. You can have a plain or ornamental burn- er, and the cost needn't be great, for there are some very attractive ones at a low price. : BRECK & HALLIDAY, Electricians, Princess Street. to &