Daily British Whig (1850), 23 Aug 1902, p. 7

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¥ ad Baby's Own Soap is a guard against all skin troubles in children. It cleanses, softens, soothes. and prevents chafing and sores. IT 18 AS GOOD FOR THE OLD AS THE YOUNG. ALBERT TOILET SOAP CO., Mrs. MONTREAL. 4-2 Nourish the Weak Nerves. Build Up Wasted Tissue and Purify - The Stagnant Blood in August, Paine's Celery - Compound Nature's' Summer Medicine Used by the Wealthy and Humble is The One Great Health Builder. a Paine's Celery Compound = supplies. the needs of the weak, sickly and ais a way that no other medi cine can do never brace andstrengthen the nerves: it tissue and quickly puri fies the foul stagnant al lowing it with and life to every part ef the body. Paine's Celery Compound is the great furnish of nutriment for the weak and run system. The use few bottles of Celery Compound produces that are astonishing and happy The thin, emaciated hoay on solid flesh, th is clear. es height and sparkln pain in k banished: the diver ana work héalthilv, the digestive 1s do duty with unfailing regulye feelimes well take despondeney Nourishing tion of Nn the blood round, happy when used; well." eased in It fails to weakenea forins new and blood, to course irecaoimn or down nervous Paine's resuhts to the SO of a sick. takes skin the ¢ the | Kidne orig iy. being of new and the place of nervousness, and melancholia. thé Hékves, the forma tissue and cleansing of hg Paine's Celery Com vigorous and no failures Cemnpound is sick people ene nu life. Paine's it "truly ans Ww new; 'There can Celery "lakes he Garling's Porter is the kind' the doctor ordered. He knows that he can rely upon'the purity and thorough age of every bottle. Sole agent of Kingston, J. Henderson. Maypole S {san English Home oap Dye that saves time, patience, mess and trouble, A brilliant, fast dye thay washes even while it is dyeing. The - dye of highest quality. An easy dye. Made in Rngland but sold everywhere. roe. for Coloys. 156. for Black. Ww ashes and Flower Stands. Office Railings, Wire _(luards Ornaniental' Fencing, Arches, Garden an Cemetery ats, and all kinds of work man IN wlactured by F. PARTRIDGE, Crescent Wire Works, 275 KING MONEY AND BUSINESS. EET re -- = sm-- TWO HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS I? sums from one thousawd to ten thous and dollars. For particulars apply a GODWIN'S INSURANCE ~~ EMPORIUM over Express Otlice, Market Souare. eee aa MONE ro LOAN IN LARGE OR sums, at low rales of interest ,on and farm property. = Loans grante city and county debentures. 8S. C McGILL, manager Loan and Investment Society posite the Post ( 2 SMALI cits of Frontena Office o1 OL, LONDON | AND 13 Arne \ $61.187, policy holders hav r security. the un ¢ limited 'liabilitv of all the stockholders Farmt and Cit Property insured at lowest possible rates. Before renewing. old or giving new business get rates fron STRANGE & STRANGE, Agents. RONBBRS LEER The Commanding Powers of The Press IS A PERFECT NEWSPAPER IMMOLATED ON THE. AUTOMO- BILE ALTAR. - Death on the Highway--The Great Danger of the Present Hour-- Advancement of Women in the Battle of Life -- She Fights : Bravely. "i8pecial Correspandence; jo or , Aug. ago 1 had occasion superlative power "of the p It universal 'and free God's air and jcht. * It is the vital éssence which life to everything that moves and breathes or has a 'being. Destroy it and. take it away to-day 'and _ the world, sinks back into that impenetrable gloom which existed in the universe before the "Almightve said "Let there be light." From that time to the present men have been seeking for some.common medium of inter- course. They thought they had found it in Volapuk, but so far Volapuk has been a railur nage of music came nearest the realizition of their hopes. Seven' little characters com- passed alle they desired to ¢ommuni- cate or know. finding thei®interpre- ters in the birds of the gir and with a wider was an assistant Letter No. 1.218.) 22. --A few weeks to speak of the is as to-day gives to mankind, touching the tenderest chords that move the human heart, yet lack- ing that unspeakable element which could make it a-language universal. As the ages 20 by it seems as if we were approaching neaver the goal and the realization of our hopes. Among the commanding powers of which 1 spoke the press seems to he nearer a universal power than any other crea- ted by man. Before me lies the Tas manian Mail. forty-two pages. long, printed at Hobart, Tasmaniak an isl and south of Australia, containing more of the elements of a. perfect newspaper in every branch of human knowledge that man desires know than anv other newspaper which 1 can now remember in country on the clobe, and for personal, beauty of its male inhabifants it second to no country. on the globe. 1 say this with ont any disparagement to its females, mothers, and daughters challenge the admiration of ayy have a thi remarkable island, and strange it may seem it rnishes its great grand sive with the) of old English roast beef and, its lamb chops can he found tables of the fashionable Pall Mall. . Its magni among the dis Garden market and many months before may "serve as a proc of peace between the malo vous precinct of Whitechapel and the hionuble drive in Hyde Park, where beauty displays itself in the sweet summer" 'afternoons, many of them tracing their pedigrees back' to that family tree which onée grew in. Para and the fruit which in the hands of our Mothér Eve got her un- fortunate aescendants into: such a heap trouble. > Wonderful, newspaper, the pole =iml in rprise unvail the the present time have been scaled within the circle of the Antarctic. A bhattle=in which thousamls mingled un ler the © walt read at the breakiast tahlés of all the great, cities on the ¢ and mingled with the price of wheat, corn and the multipli- trusts opening a broad hioh wealth, to power for the mil who toil and spin, and before our eves read the bottom of the pace. randly illustrated: by the superlative oenis ol scope to any whose wives know lec of as tenaenest hreakrast houses on fruits are Covent ih ficent pest splayed at dise hore of . wonderful, is the column we read to the northern thé" daring who steries oh, In of the one Pear of progress en to seeks which ol uj To Oli vation of way lions to the world, we 'have an ac the coronation of Envland's and we shut our to the mental picture, 'we fancy we can almost hear ¥he shouts that shake the British Empire like a reed shaken by the wind, and the hogan count nionarr fil out as CVes Lnahs of thegnultitude make the welkin ri with the old time battle ery of "God Save the King!" : Halt ! What, Halt! fast. Nota dav We are shocked with the intellivence that some one well known to the world has'been immolated on the sac rificial "altar of that terrible machine that is known ag the automobile. One of the hardest lessons known to man kind moderation. We all remember the old "Put a"-beggar: on horseback d* he will ride to -the Within the last few the speak of human life has been multipli fast that stand unappalled at, the speed of over si¥tv miles an hour. Evil has heen defined as multi- plied good. How moderation heat means comfort inereagethe pow er and the end is dust and ashes Water "is one of the most. necessary clenients in human life. Plunge a mor- We passes are going too now, hut is vears we m wE are not public benefactors. : WE are not snatching people from the grave. .. WE cannot say. that we are restoring to health those who have been given up by anywhere from three to thirty eminent Doctors. WE make only the very modest claim that IRON-OX TABLETS arean invaluable nerve tonic, a cure for indigestion and con- stipation, a blood maker and purifier, a corrective of slug- gish liver and derangements of the kidneys. 2 ONLY THAT! but perhaps that is enough for 25¢ who © tal being beneath its surface and he perishes. The soul, then, is nothing but an empty temple, so far as earth is concerned, and of the dréad hereai- ter we A nothing till we have solv- ed the dreaded 'problem (of life and death. Within the memory of men still living a first class speed upon the land was' twelve or fifteen miles an hour. Millions and hundreds of millions have gathered to see a. man exceed 'the speed in running of ten miles an hour, jor that noble animal, the horse, ac- complish a mile over a first clas course in two minutes and a half. cond by .second the time has been cut down till two minutes is the goal the ardent sportsman seeks. Its only a few wears since that simple machine, the bicycle, became the traveller's aid and "wonder. Men dreamed thdt the golden limit had been reached and in- seribed "Ne Plus Ulta" on their ban- ne Excelsior was accomplished at last. It had.reached 'the zenith of its | glory when a new mvention placed it quietly, on the shelf, developing a speed of Mercury, the fabled messeng- er of the gods. For everv good thing that mankind enjoys a certain penal- tv must be paid. The lex talionis nev- er fails. Dives mounts the wondrous new-found steed and challenges the lightning in its course. Lazarus looks on- in wonder and his heart is wrune- with envy as he sees the rich man sweep by him like a dream of the night, but death; is on the Highwav. Suddenly and without warning, in the twinkling of an eve. Dives 'the mighty is dashed to earth. No man so poor as to do him reverence. The dust has yeturned to the dust from which it sprang. It a pitdul storv. Two voung men inthe cir®le of our gold- en youth meet death under circum- stances precisely the same. One is dash ed from his horse; his brains are scat tered on the earth. The other, with his bride by his side, mects death on the flyer which was the pride of his heart and the envy of his companions. Is it not time, then, to crv halt ? Is the king's or the president's highway call it which vou pleasé--to be made a death trap for the humble traveler who is compelled to go on foot ? For while this machine in its superlative madness, seems to hold a mortage on every human life, the time not when the rights of the majority receive attention and the highway travel be made as secure as the thres hold of his own home. There are certain lines which mankind cannot too highly priz The multiplied speed of the press is one whose accomplished thou- sands can omy be counted by the aid of lightning. the swift power of which is yet supreme. We are now. sufiering from a business paralysis which blocks the highway of progress. The striker inks he is fichting for his rights. He [Wants to divide the wealth of Croesus ttle dreaming how minute would be { his share. "The is not to th: swift. nor the battle to the strong, but he who does 'his best in the race has a better chance "of winning "than the slugeard who remains behind and he who fichts while one gasp of lite re mains stands; a better chance for hon or than the coward who runs away. The true course to the best know how by the lights we had at the time and leave the rest to Hivy who watcheth the sparrow's fall. Thi great danger of the present hour is the uncertainty that ; with the direct ing workers of 'the execution of the contractse which they undertake. A word from the walking delegate may hurl the tor down to hopeless ruin, while' he himself not. .. neither doth "he spin, vet he surpasses- Solomon in all his glory. He the disturbing el ment between honest labor and honest wealth and when they shake hands the union will announce the requiem of the walking delegate for ever. One of the most encouraging Signs of the times is the advancement of women in the battle of life. She is no lenoer the tender wall flower that must supported in order to stand the director of her own course in-every avenue of human endeavor and. fights as bravely for prizes of life as ancient knight ever battled for victory under the banner of excelsior. Several times w vear the Sorosis meets in one of th most fashionable and richest hotels 1, this city and there vou can see welded together every energy and every hope. every charm and every accomplishment that glorifies the sex. Musie, inting, sculpture, literature are the 1ibbole ths of the passing hour. Iu is here we meet the gentle maiden who has the trials and triumphs of the coming life before her; the proud mater w hose has way to fame and hbnor, who promises only qualified obédience: but in the her heart docs more than obedience ever claimed. God bless her. This is/ not the hour of certain prophécy. The ac tive are__mostly away I mountain "or at the seaside. We must await with. patience for developménts of the hour and so farewell. --BROADBRIM. 1s Tag must of wof speel race 1S ao Wie most energetic contri SOWS is hewn her a noble generosity of workers Hard To Secure Work. Dufferin, Aug, Enclisiv of this vicinity, who went out west on the harvest excursion, that he found it very hard to secure work" at 81.25 a day and the work is heavier than in. this locality. He thinks young men hat better v at home, wher their 'opportunitie are nmch better than in the harvest fields of the fa west. 'Miss Jean English has returned to Arthur td resume her duties teacher in the country school adjoin ing. A number from here agtended the social at Mrs. Hamilton's, Sthool h: re-opened," and Miss Nesbit here again, Miss Annie Redmond is visitin Miss McArthur at Washburn. Visttors E. Hutton at A. Grant's; W. Nelson at J. Euelish's. : 22. --Cameron writes as Worry And Late Hours. Worry fect the nervousness, and late hours seriously svstem causing exhaustion, veneral debility and fron ni¢ Pills makers. They stre imigorate the a vitality irregula loan] 4 sleeplessness. great blood the nerves, sl wast onstitutionat contadus seventeen Price 25¢ for SVSte davs at Strengthening plaster Smart Weed and Bell Plasters. A tombstone word 'for a man mna always has a. good when he's down. hing Could Scarcely A PAIR OF BALLET SHOES 3 "Really I'm the dullest of said Edgar Brooke, with the smile of long suficring, to a youthful interview- er who was trying to pick up a few more crumbs of interest at the end of his long talk with the most inimitable comedian of the day. Edgar Brooke glanced abstractedly round his study and . racked his brains for a suitable anecdote, but he couldn't for the life of him remember at the minute any of the antiquated theatrical storiés that every actor makes his own The youthful interviewer's eves wan- dered curiously around and fell on a quaint little pair of-shoes which were hanging over the oak fireplace-- not dainty slippers, spangled and gav, but just a limp memento of the ballet, with rounded toes, no heels and an old covering of silk, worn and fraved. They hung against the wall, with the little toes turned in, as if their danc- ing days were over and they were far too weary for a pirouette or even the first position. "*A curious souvenir, "My. Edgar Brooke smiled, silence for a minute. The comedian had forgotten the vouthful interviewer. He seemed to see the little shoes dancing on the wall. His comfortable room faded out of sight. There was the sound of scrap- ping fiddles and the flare of gas. Twenty vears had slipped awav in hardly as many seconds, € ; * * - » Brooke." aud there was v » It was behind the scenes of a coun- Ary theatre. The close air of a little room almost stifled Edgar Brooke. He dressed with the. Pantaloon, two ac robats and the Demon King of the pantomine: 7 Their clothes were heaped on a bas- ket in one corner. The Pantaloon was "mdking up," amd the Demon King was drinking whisky and soda and reading scraps from the Sporting Times to amuse the two acrobats. Edgar . Brooke, hungry-eyved, lean and haggard, sat with his aching head between his hands.' His tinseled harlequin suit was loose for his wast- ed body. Months of illness, hard luc and poverty had taken the heart and soul out of him. He cave a sigh of thankfulness when his' noisy comrades were summoned to the stage and he was alone. "*Heard that Brooke has sack 7 said the Pantaloon. "Yes; poor devil !7 answered Demon King. Then there was the quick patter of fect on the stairs, the door was push- ed a little open, and a Columbine, in gauze and a smile, peeped into Brook's dressing room. Although she was only sixteen, they had been sol- emnly engaged for two months. "Eddy. darling!" 'she exclaimed. running into the room and perching herself on the Pantaloon's basket. The voung man looked up, wretched to hide the marks of tears on his face or to trv to control his unsteady lips. "It's "all "up, Kitty." he replied. "I've got hv notice, dear. Run down stairs--you shouldn't come up. One day they'll catch you." "My own love." the Colum bine, jumping. off 'the basket and 'kneel ine down béside him, "you aon' know Vourseli--none of these fools know You're worth than the whole dot! "Oh, Kitty, Kitty ! T can't bearit!" Broken by weakness and despair, he drew Kitty's slender arms his resting his her the got the too salq you. more aroun and, ad on sobbed cheer neck shoulder, You must whispered. She persuaded to stand up. hunted tor: his mask and stli wand, shook herseli together and gave a-touch to her own complexion before aloud. up, Eddy!" she him small tne glass, wear Brooke went stage with his hana The manager the standing with his*back to the curtain. "Urry up there!" sad hye. Have vou cot that side 1.2. "My boy, vour shop's wabbling. Lights! "Ang it all! Lichts ! Knvek'im off ! Ring up !, Now, my dear' Up went the curtain the ' Columbine with and a beaming smile, leaned acainst the wall with hiz clinched "hand Then he, down to the her shoulder. company was on ot 1 nraceg and on went a Hving bound Edear Brooke for a second his throb ran into to brow. too; the olare of the stage. He could othing but an endless row of horizontal. blurrea lights that, were dancing between him and the au the seemed to full of Columbine tripped toward him. took his hand, they twisted and turned tocether, The busthng, and at the see dience: house be and and Hark: short the harlequinace w ish Straighten Up Ou Account of Severe Pains in Smail of Back--Weranged Kidneys the Cause of Trouble. . KIDNEY-LIVER PILLS A orelit many people who suffer from backache, lame back ana pains in the limbs think they have rheumatisin and that there is no cure for them. At least nine cases in every ten can be cured by the usé of Dr. Chase's Kidneyv-Liver Pills. Mrs. Lessard was badly crippled before . she began the of this great kidney medicine. Here is her letter - Mes. J. l.essard, 150 Aqueduct street, Montreal, Que., states - "My main' trouble was with mv back, which Was very weak, and svhenever | stooped 1 conld hardly straighten adain-on accotint of the which would egteh in } Beheving Pe : use Severs thé s kidneys with Dy arse of Kidnev-Liver and This medi treatme 4 began ec Chase's aay I am all right a a Ii # ha well." Dr. ChaSa's er Pills, on pill a dose, 25 cents-a box, at all dealers, "or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto. sf men, arrow 29th, and se to- 1} i vests: THE DAILY WHIt, SATURDAY, AUGUST 23. : Ea o + Ha Furnace. est Corner co cold to be quickly heated with a "Sunshine" ; No other heater will extract so much heat from the same. amount of fuel, and few others have dampers to which the. fire is so obedient. : ~~ The "Sunshine" Furnace is simple to operate, easy to clean, needs very little attention, has self acting gas dampers, and is in every way a modern heater. Sold by all enterprising dealers. Write for catalogue i > 8. & T quin had" to take the usual flying leap | through a window. Brooke and" his sweetheart seainy made their entrance hand in hand. "Stand still, Eddy !"' she whispered, and then danced around him with a hundred little tricky steps and beckon ing gestures. : The cue cdme. Harlequin struck the ground with his wand and leaped. It was a last effort. Luck and training guided him to the right spot. He shot through the window as cleanly as an and was caught by the men who were waiting. to receive him. He rose to his feet, still clinging to their arms, staggered a minute ana then fell fainting to the ground. "Plucky little chap!" said the men. > "Not 1s one of ounce of flesh on his hones ! said the other. When Edgar Brooke came to him self, he was lying on a bench Hastily drageed on to the stage. He saw that the gas jets in the flies" were turned The curtain was raised, for the noisy audience" had poured into the streets. His bench was near to the footlichts, but they, too. were lower ed, and it was an anxious, whispering group of people on every side that gradually crept into his consciousness. There © was the manager stooping over him, with a hand on his breast and a: big finger presse to his pulse. Reside him was the clown. 'Most of the oirls were still in their costumes, with their hair falling untidily on their shoulde The whole scene was shad- owy and strange to the pale, exhaust ed Harlequin as he sank back again on the arm of the Demon King. He cl 1 his eves, but suddenly the ringing of his Columbine seem- to out of the babel of an off. voice ed leap tongues, At first she said. the little eloquent he coula not follow avhat He only saw how erect was ficure, .at once pathetic and of and the fierce earn of vouth. her words connected and broken ter es were, "In a couple of panto will be over shall al! ¢o east and west knows where 7 Buts look been good friends, haven't cood friends 7 You fellows have been kind all of vou. But there's one of vou that I love--there! 1 love him! = Why? Because he's: fought against trouble and poverty and ill ness, because his heart 'has never fail ed him till to-night. I'll tell vou something else." 3 There such" intensity her voice and face that held them cilent and absorbed for a few minutes love took shape, dis as the sens old "Wa Lord we've jolly months this ** she said. the here we to me, Wi in she more. i's soul this: Fdgar Brooke has no on earth to to! 1 tell vou he's danced in a booth; he's sung in the streets; he's worked: he's stam ed; he's looked lite. under the can vas: he's thought, of- deégth under the <kies. That's the stuff for an actor just turn at to he made of.' : Edear Brooke put out his hand stop but she went on, with flash¢ ing eves. "Weil, ta 2 Shall it ake of our We all vou sad be a round robin for the own hard times? Come! know where the shoe pinches.' She bent down and pulled oli her own shoes and held it out to th manager first of all. He michy have vosisted the disconnected ttle speech, hut not the pretty face,iarnel up appealingly to his Ons : into the shoe i hig cheeks his little of his him. we ToHowea Colwmb me another, with a what co aie ol tH 0 a couple of tor the and the touch burn, worl 1, COMPAGS, Jt theatre was quick response ed and 10 irom one + amile, as now tear. When she brought the litte shoe tq the side of the bench at last, be couid only streteh ont: his hands to the \ that pressed round. -He tmel to them. looked up tothe Cola with a few broken his face ring of encour of uncertain girl's fihgers faded - into and sicht, and swiftly they came. LH Aenrions memento; anid the vouthful intery vecalling the faded ballet shoes "Yes, said lightly would est vou. that married--a About People. now crowd thank hine turned The Hicker the hand sound words and away. : voues, the tne: tow h d vorind his <h li twine misty Wi of low of One as Brooke? an, popular combdian to the Lirooke "But it seaveslv inter: hv the did 1 tell vou wife was _a dancer--hotore we time *"--Mainly \ Edonr wav, long ago Gentlemen Who Are Bald hair should call on Dorenwend at British American Kinesten. on Friday, August 1 hiz wonderful deyices in and wigs worn on over " Is Explanation and demon stration free Prive apartments at hotel Don't fe to his new in vention, patented all over the world. Or -have thin Prof. hutel, 000 head ite York clothings a Eplendid a codts and nroper garments tor sum- mer wear. His summer coats at #1 and $1.50 are special value, sizes 34 to 46. See his window, great variety to choose from. . the Cholera Infantum. the time. It cures DIARRHEA, DYSENTERY, CHOLERA, CHOLERA MORBUS, CHOLERA INFANTUM, COLIC, CRAMPS, SEASICKNESS, SUM- MER COMPLAINT, AND ALL FLUXES OF THE BOWELS. Its action is Harmless, Reliable and Effectual. Relief is almost Instantaneous. ~ Given Up by Doctor and Mother. Mrs. MaxXwELL BARTER, Grand Casca« pedia, Que., writes : "I take great pleasure in telling u what W Dr. Fowler's Extract of ild Strawberry has done for me and mine. A year ago my little girl, now nearly three years old, was attacked by It was in the hot season and she was teething at e The doctor gave her up; in fact, I did so myself. ¢"I finally decided to try Dr. Fowler's Wild Strawberry. I procured a bottle and it did her so much good that I got another bottle and by the time it was finished she was completely cured. 'As for myself, it has saved me from inflammation of the bowels several times. I always keep a bottle in the house and cannot recommend it too highly." Ol Do You Want h Pair of CANVAS BOOTS ~ AT 00ST? YOU CAN GET THEM AT COST. A. ABERNETHY, ns C. M. HAYS, G:T.R. Disqusses Economics of Oil as a Fuel. 1 C. M. Hays, general Grand Trunk lows to the on the subject of the « railway, London manager of the writes as fol Financial News, il fields in¥l'ex- as, and the application of oil to trac- "We m liteot tion purposes in this mandoement progres the cific neighborhood of 1 having 150 Fou company, the oil ners. ol "the locomotives ade considerable ion while I had Southern Pa- equipped in the with oil r barrels of are confidered the equivalent of a ton of coal tor steam-proc Incing purposes, and as our coal cost us gw average of in Califo ton in Texas, ¢ tracts for oil on--the } vou NI 82 per ton cents per be mate the eco the =ubstitution comotive pense in building of hese station points, 10,000 barrels, oit--can | a total engine. remote, to make stitution of petroleum Grand Trunk railway, Ont fields were devi of anv might | As we hus nics to of oil Th connection { fo CONst with SUPVice. tanks poses, some for, burning cos We Dre prac at engine S100 per for from S50 fre the White: Linim Swit] {inimens penetrating positive cure inflammation, néuralg and lumbago. In bottles, 25c., Wade's arug store. rnia, and about ind 1 made con- basisel taeuty way easily esti- be obtained hy tor in lo- ¢ principal ex therewith is the r storage pur ructed, at fuel capacity of The appliance we placed on an t not exceeding are perhaps too ticable the sub for coal on the although if our ever to reach a magnitude we you are aware, Detroit River and the , added to would ex There at coal ton « oal the for in use x varia fire + Xpens« not the in places d any th the this is offset ent is the most | known, and a for sprains, swellings, ia, rheumatism, at TRUNKS and VALISES. TO LET. JOD FURNISHED ROOMS, WITH OB without beard, 101 Queen streat. HOUSE 191 BROCK STREET, 9 ROOMS, All modern improvements. Apply to C. Livingston & Bro, FOUR GOOD FURNISHED ROOMS, W "Hl , with all modern oconvenisnces, a# 191 University Avenue. box BRICK DWELLING, 93. EARL STREET, ten rooms; Hot Water Heating: Al other dwellings, stores and offices. J. 8. R. McCann, 51 Brock St., ground floor. POSSESSION AT ONCE, - sirable house on the corner~ol Bagot and Gore streets, near the park, Modern im every way. Daisy hot heating and in perfect order. Apply Felix Shaw, 115 Bagot street. THAT __ AIRY DE- : ARCHITECTS. POWER - & SON, ARCHITECTS, an' Bank Building, corner Wellingten streets. 'Phone 212. ARTHUR ELLIS, ARCHITECT, OFFICH site of New Drill Hall, near oornee of Queen and Montreal Streets. HENHY P. SMITH, ARCHITECT, Anchor Building, Market Sguare, 345. ETC., "Phone W. NEWLANDS, ARCHITECT. OFFICE, sccond floor over Mahood's Drug' Store, corner Princess and Bagot streets. En< trance on Bagot street. UNDERTAKERS. S. 8. CORBETT; FUNERAL DIRECTOR, 281 Princess Street, Kingston, Sucoessor to W. M. Drennan. T. F. HARRISON 236 Princess efficiency the best: 'Phones--Warerooms, T. F. Harrison, 51. CO., UNDERTAKERS, Street. Quafity and Prices the lowest, 90. Night Calls-- ANY INDIVIDUAL 1S BENE- FITED BY VISITING A MAGI CALEDONIA SPRINCS; THE MOST ROBUST ARE RE-INVIGORATED BY THE FAMOUS WATERS AND BATHS.

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