Daily British Whig (1850), 20 Oct 1902, p. 5

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ZL THE DAILY WHIG, MONDAY. OCTOBER 20 " Curse DRINK CURED BY COLONIAL REMEDY. /o taste. No Odor. Can be given im giass of waler, tea, or coffee, without patient s knowl ed re. Colonial Remedy will cure or destroy the dis- eased appetite for alcholic _stimulents, whether the . patient is a confirmed inebriate, "" tippler," social drinker or drunkard. Impossible for anyone to have an appetite for alcoholic lignors after using Colonial emedy, . Indorsed by Members of W. C. T. U. Mrs. Moore, Superintendent of the Woman's Christian Tem, nce Union, Ventura, Cal., writes : "*I have tested Colonial Remedy on very obstinaf¥ drunkards, and the cures have been many. In many cases the Remedy was given secretly, 1 cheerfully recommend ard indorse Colonial Remedy. Mem- bers of our Union-are delighted to find a practical and economical treatment to aid us in our temper pe ance . Sold by druggists everywhere and by mail. Price $1. Trial package free by writing or calling on Mrs. M. A. Cowan (for years member of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union), 2204 Sa Catherine St.. Montreal. Sold in Kingston by J. B. McLeod, Prin cess street. Right Now In the time to purchase a OUR GRANARY as grate. We have a large stock and will sell them cheap. The Yotto Lamp Lamy the Incandescent three times the cost. Is the best sold. It gives licht at one-half and sce it. Princess BRECK & HALLIDAY, Pri=goen.,. SAVE YOUR COAL. Cover your pipes and heaters with HOOPER"S ASBESTOS CEMENT. Thus save fuel and gui better distribution of heat. REQUIRES NO EXPERIENCE TO APPLY. Send card to our address stating suclace to cover and we will advise you amount of material required and: price. HOOPER BRGS., * Seer. FON Orr Or OOO One Oe OOO R ed, Blue : Or Green " , --Every kind of here. Big 10-l1b. baskets or small fancy baskets for table use. Fresh grapes are arriving daily. Call and see them. . <b J. REES, Princess St. S Oe feei+ Oo Ose Oat OsteOnteOete Ole Ose On We Have No Coal furnaces, But we have samples touched with gold. These are given away with every sale of gas heating stoves, eonstiming from 1 to 2 cents worth of gas per hour: We have stoves from the natural cas region to displace your Il stove No trouble: no dust; no stor cheaper than coal And we can "give von some light on the squestion Lv using the Kern Burner, consuming onvthalf th as of other burners, and giving three times the licht. Open evenings. Call and inspect J. W. OLDFIN. 2: xIva - It has become the vogue to drink MAGI CALEDO- NIA WATERS for 'they keep in health the liver and urinary organs. Sold everywhere. ANYTHING TO SELL, MAM ? This 'is what the second-hand dealer says when he calis at your door, and you promptly say no, without a thought. "The Kingston Rag and Me tal Co. only ask you to drop them a card to 389 Princess street after you have sorted over all your old stuf and they will pay you highest casl prices. ARCHITECTS. WM. NEWLANDS, ARCHITECT. OFFICE second floor over Mahood's Drug Store, corner Princess and Dagot streets. Ea trance on Bagot street. POWER & SON. ARCHITECTS, MERCH ante' Bank Building, corner Brook and Wellington streets. "Phone 212 ARTHUR FLLIS, "ARCHITECT, OFFICE site of New Drill llall, near corner of Queen and Montreal Streets. HENRY P. SMITH, ARCHITECT, ETC. Anchor Building, Market Square. Phone R4K. EDUCATIONAL. VIOLIN MISS GRACE EVANS, Teacher of the Violin, 123 UPPER UNION ST. - SCHOOL OF ART Classes Re-opened oun MONDAY, Oct. 6th, 1902. Afternoons of 'Monday, Wednesday and .Fri- Call grapes oJ' IT WILL BE THE FUTURE ONE OF WORLD. A New York Appreciation of the Possibilities of Our Western Country--Lines Into the Fine Land. Yew York Sunday News. "Canada is to be Great Britain's granray,"' said the late William Ewart Gladstone, the premier of England. Brought up to' date, and with equal Justniss, the praphecy might be made that Canada will yet be the world's granary. This year's crop in the Can- adian North-west is the magnet - at- tracting attention and emigrants to citizenship under King Fdward. Fifty years ago the centre of the population of this country was at Parkersburg, W. Va., Alaska, Arizona, Colorado, Dakota, Idaho, Kansas Montana, Nebraska, Nevada and Wy- oming were without popul:®ion, and very little was known of the resoure- es of any of these now marvelously productive States. Fifteen years ago the Canadian sov- ernment was deemed 'wanting in wis- dom." because it granted a subsidy for a transcontinental line. Now there are two, and soon there will he a third all being built north of the Canadian Pacific, and each tapping "the future granary oi the world." This" activity is based on the won- derful crop results of the last three or four vears, for crop failures are in- frequent where the summer winds and and the sunshine temper and ripen the vast acreage sown to wheat, oats, barley and corn. And so with railroads piergine every INCIDENTS OF THE DAY. Newsy Paragraphs Picked Up By Reporters On Their Rounds. J. L., Neilson, bf Napanee, was am- ong to-day's city visitors. H. G. Macpherson, Watertown, N. Y., spent to-day in the city. Capt. W. H. Macnee left this morn- ing for Belleville on a business trin. Wiliam Neish after two weeks visit in New York, returned ta the city to- day. he! Mrs. John Potter, a former resident of Brockville, died at Seattle, on Fri- day. on Miss Lizzie Daly, Kingston, is in Ottawa, the guest of Miss Dunce, 242 Cambridge street. In the: absence of Snodden, Constable acting sergeant. Joseph Lossee, Collins Bay, fishin in Loughboro lake, caught eight sal mon in one dav. William Liddle, Glenburnie, his farm to George Murray, Waggoner farm, for $2,200. H. Cunningham, piano tuner from Chickering's, New York. Orders re ceived at MeAulev's hookstore. Fredericks Elmer, son of Chici Elmer is very ill, a relapse from an attack which confined him in hospital for over a week, Capt. and Mrs. DuPlessis returned to-day from Sorel, Que., where they attended the funeral of the late Miss DuPlessis. A fire in the dwelling of Arnold Hor- ning, head of Loughboro Lake, des- troyed two bedrooms. Loss covered by insurance. Sergt. is Police Timmerman has sold of the A. V. Redmond, after a successful season on the steamer Toronto, has returned to the city to resume his studies at Queen's, . > large number of friends of "I'om- my" Palmer visited the ferry wharf this afternoon to bid him farewell. He corner of a land inhabited vears ago only by Louis. Riel and his misguided hali-breeds. there has sprung into existence scores of towns, thous- ! ands upon thousands of families, and with them all the advantages of mol- | ern civilization. | Last year the ability to get the | crops to market taxed the capacity of | railroads and steamboat companies. This vear a still greater problem con | fronts the producer and the exporter and importer. seventeen Many fields are even now being fer tilized by rotting gram, because che farmers cannot secure help to harvest | their crops. The big cities of Canada ' have been emptied of idle men, ant theusands have gone from the *'stanl still'® sections in the Dakotas, Minge- sota and other places in our own coun. try to work for the prosperoug tand- | owners, of the North-West. 4 | American capital, eager for a pro fitable abiding place, is invading the North-West. Marshall Field, James H. Kckels and other Chicago financiers are investing rfillions of dollars in land, in elevators, in railroads, all of | which are sure to produce an abund- ant return on the investment. The settlement of these vast vacant lands is barely begun. There are n north-western Ontario, in the province of Manitoba, and in the territories of Alberta, Assiniboia and Saskatche- wan, at least 200,000,000 acres of farm lands; over. 250,000 square miles of | habitable territory, of which probably seven-eighthy are as yet unoccupied. Take Manitoba as an object It has within bounds 47,3! acres, of which 6,329 are lakes, 1,300,000 it has within its bounds 332,840 of cultivable land. | Though last year only 2952002 acres of this territory were under enltiv . tion, so great was the vield that the ('fanadian Pacific increased ts capital | its acres, stock - 820,000 000. iy order to pur chase new rolling stock suflicient to handle the cvops. It is certain that no portion of North America has attracted so much attention in- recent vears, and it attention of recent years, and it equally true that no portion has been the scene of such extraordinary devel- opment as the region bowided hy the Ed Lake of the Woods on the east, and stretching. awav to the foot-hills of | the Rockies in the west, Within the period of twenty vears this vast, fertile region, known gener i wllv as the Canadian North-West, haa | become the food market centre of the | world. i From the United States old settlers are leaving their farms in Ohio, in the settled districts of North and South Dakota and Indiana, to take up these rich and fertile lands. Statistics show that during the past vear upward of 20,000 settlers have taken up home steads in Manitoba alone, abd in the Saskatchewan region and the provinee | of Alberta the number is estimated av 60.000, The soil is a rich loam. and in man instances the same land has been work. ed year after vear with wheat with- out the slichtest aid in the way oi fertilizer or anv other artificial means, During th€ present harvest, which has proved to be a record one for the (Canadian North-West, the estimated crop -is-upward of 75,000 bushels, with an average crop of thirty-five hushels to the acre, In other grains, such oats and rye, the average crop heen from sixty to seventy bushels pers HE has acre, Almost anything will grow in the rich soil; but wheat, the crown anil ¢lory of the West, has also proved the "oross."' . The climate is equable, and such is the: astonishing richness of the and the rapid growth induced therehv soil that wheat sown in April is readv Aor the Linler's knife in the month of August. : Towns and cities are sprincine un like mushrooms. Winnipeg to-dav is the bull's eve of the dominion, and the town of thirty years' existence (for twenty vears ago it was the desolate prair'e) now ranks third in thé: bank clearinas of the dominion. Away out on the prairie fat await the voung man--lands that are <h from Nature's womb--and the ad- vice of Horace Greeley, is as full of wisdom to-day as it was thirty vears lands 1 ago. th 2a w '" Ads " Are Read. dav. from 2:30 to 4:30. Saturday mornings, 10 to 12 o'clock. CHAS. E. WRE) Sal, NGSTO! "Me atiiness COLLEGE voronyo ISTUN. | BUSINESS COLLEGE TORONTO. Largest" and best equipmen & Canada Unequalled facilities for securing positions 821 Queen Street. Kingwton. SEND FOR CATALOGUE + Confederation Life Buildings, Turoato. | Wille lnhia "Record It used = require? ingenuity to duce people to read advertisements. Now, however, people understand that it is just much their in- terest to kpow .what advertiser haz to sel it for advert to sell them. Therefore, the advertise ments in a popular newspaper are read by the great' majority of the buy- ing people. © , mn to the the as i= | A. Sunday services and it various en- ; tertainments. A-deader will be engaged ! dauchter, Mrs. {*C. She had been. visiting her parents Fife of the people. IScotlish American. has gone to Watertown, N.Y., to take "are » number of cases of diph theria in the city, and the disease seems to he spreading. Several chil- dren are in the hospital dangerously ill of the disease. Mrs. Nellie Jee and Nrs. Ida Brown. of Watertown, N.Y.. are visit- ing their mother, Mrs. Charles Kim ball, 101 Montreal street, and will re main for 5 few weeks. Seret. Snodden and Thomas Me Guire left at noon to-day for Cala bogie on a ten days' hunting trip. Thev threaten to clean out all the game fowl in the district. A quartette will likely be organized to furnish vocal music at the Y.M.C. and some good singers secured. To-day being the last day on which to pay water rates, if the discount is to be saved. the citizens flocked Mo the water works office in large num hers, and the clerks were kept on the jump all day. a W. H. Godwin returned on Saturdav from Toronto, having accompanied his Brandon, that far on her journey to her home in Trail, B. here for the past four or five months The management committee of the Board of Education has been called to' meet this evening, when Inspector Kidd and Secretary Macdonald will present reports touching their recent visit to Toronto and Hamilton schools. Rev. T. W. Goodwill," M.A, a gradu ate of Queen's University, preached the annual TRanksgiving sermon 'in St. Andrew's church, Peterboro, on Sunday. under the auspices of the Woman's Forcien Mission Auxiliary. Mr. Goodwill is a. native of the South Sea ISlands, being the son of a most faithinl missionary, and is well qualified to know much of the Preparing To Go West. A number of veterans residing in: the county of Frontenac met at the Wind- sor Hotel Saturday, to discuss the question of Tocating their Jand grants in New Ontario. Tt was decided that just" as soon as the patents arrived from Toronto, vight' of them would locate 320 acre each for themselves. If any others in this district de sire these pioneers to" locate land for them, it can be arranged upon pay ment of $6 per member of the party, 83 payable in advance and $3 when the land is secured. If the location ix not satisfactory, the pioneers will buy the land. It the intention of those who go out first to build houses, clear the forest and till the Tand forthwith. 15 They Weren't Ladies. lady went out in search of' two others who had gone out for a walk some time before. She met an old man and asked him if he saw two la dies pass this we "No, nor 1 wisna lookin' for them." She met another and asked the same question. "Na, bit there micht 'a' been ten pass't for onything 'at 1 ken or core." At last she met a boy and asked the same question. He replied : "No, I didna see ony ladies, but | saw two aul wives." Animals Killed By Train. On Saturday night a Grand Trunk railway train struck and killed two valuable horses beloning to Mr. Moo- ney, a well-known farmer who resides a little east of Napanee, It is likely that a suit for damages will be enter- ed against the company, as it is said there were no eattle guards at the crossing from which the animals gain ed access to the railway track. Death In A Fire. Charlotte, N.C., Qct. 20.--A special from Hamlet, N.C., says: Fire which broke out at the - Cotton Compress here, about noon yesterday, destrov- ed property valued at 8 00 and caused the death of J. M. Wilton, df Clarksville, Ga, book-keeper for the Compress company. Wood Not Arrived. Toronto, Oct. 20.5-None of the city's wood has reached here as vet.' and, there 1s no word of anv, althouch the officials received notice, a weok ago to-day, that some had bein shipped from Waubaushene. er -------------- Miss Kate Livingstone, .a ou Livingstone, has hundre son of the famous Dr. now completed her one seventh evar, i Isle of Mull, She ivin with Mrs. pro- prietress of Glen Aros, Mull, where she a& Fir Fletcher, THRUST ON_ HER CONDEMNED MAN LEAVES A FORTUNE TO NURSE -- Prior to His Hanging, in Alaska, HePWills Her Land in Michi- gan and Tennessee. St. Joseph, Mo., Oct. 20.--Mrs. Mary E. Hart, a former well-known paper woman, of California, and now of Nome. City, Alaska, has had a for- was executed for murder. The fortune consists of many thousands of dollars' rom Mrs. Hart asking for information concerning : acres of land which lies in Cold Spring township, just north of the village of Kalkaska. The land was owned by Frederick Hardy, who was aanged in Nome City, September 19th, convicted of the murder of two pros- pectors, Richard and Con Sullivan, orothers,: both of whom formerly lived in. Butte City, Mont. While . Hardy was in jail awaiting his fate Mrs. Hart met him as a bear- rv of the Red Cross, treated him: kind- 'v, and strove to help him in all pos- | sible ways. Hardy appreciated her ef forts, and told her he was a nephew | of a prominent eastern merchant. On the night before the hanging Hardy | sent for Mrs. Hart and told her he | had made her his legatee. He gave her an order on a company in San Fran- for his trunk, * which ,contained clothing, a sword, and sundry articles to the value of $500. He asked her to send the photographs in his trunk to his mother. The will, made over the namé of Fred. Watson, leaves the entire estate to Mrs. Hart, and makes her the exe- wutrix. The property is itemized as fol Three hundred AsCo lows : and seventy-five | acres in Kalkaska 'county, Michigan, | ind 1,565 acres of land in Lawrence i county, Tennessee." Personal property | is also mentioned, and a sum of money | in bank in Logan, Ohio, but the am- ount is not stated. | By investigation Mrs. Hart has found | that Hardy's true name was |Watkyns. | His stepfather's name is Hardy, so he | took his name. Hardy was born in Lexington, Ohio, in IS76. In 1898 he | enlisted in the United States cavalry | and started for Cuba. He was in the | Philippine war, was mustered out at | the Presidio in San Francisco, March 28th, 1902. He had $1,800 when he was discharged. He went to the Aleu- tian lslands on the fishing schooner Arago and deserted while ashore for | water. Mrs. Hart will leave Alaska the latter part of October to take possession of her property. Among The Advertisers. Atlas bread is being freely -advertis | ed in the west, . - | The News, Mansfield, Ohio, eives the | voung peoplé of the city a gala day! annually in the parks. . Proprietors of Grove's pills are | launching out. and have included the | Whig in their lists gs usual. The Evenin® Star. Peoria, Illinois, has a circulation of 214,000, gnd its advertising per year has been 391,216 lines more than hoth of its contem- noraries together. Battle Creck, Michigan, known until a few years ago only 48 a sanitariam resort and the home of the Duplex press; is heine written up in New York 'and other places as a great and place. It is the centre now of about thirty pure food concerns: rising rg Played A Tie Match. The Association Football teany vitited thie ¢ity on Saturday wd Odessa played a < mhatech with "AY Battery team on the Barriefield commons, which the artillerymen marked out last week. The score resulted in a tie, one goal each... Odessa scored the-fiest goal after ten minutes play and two minutes afterwards Hart, "B" Bat tery's full back, made a splendid run from the batteryss goal' line" up through the defence and scored, After the visitors' ume the members of hoth teams were entertained at" the Delica tessen to an oyster supper. The sue cess of the: affair was chiefly due to Br." Hart. |Next" Saturday "the "artillery team will play at Odessa. doesn't pretend to understand: them. New York Bachelor's Living. Ainslee' "If the average bachelor, with a mil lionaire's income, not the fellow who | ooes in for extravagant fads, but the man who. maintains "social positign and who entertains liberally, were to balance up his personal account for the year, it might contain these charg without comparative extravagance : iouse or 10,060) Sun 1.080) apartment, "and service. § and entertaining sbiles ed yacht Autome Che Ans Horses, coach, grooms, ew Total ..... Sang A Solo. «In Brock Street , Methodist: church | 1 > x wm 2 last' evening Trooper Mulloy. sang as | a solo, "Saved By Grace," his fihe voice credting a good impression. He was long a privileged domestie. Miss Livingstone is now very was accompanied by Miss Godwin and William Davies, What May Occur. The strength i "A" battery, RC F.A., is =to he reduced: to 114. ana that of "B' battery to 113. If is un- | derstood that Lieut.-Col. Fages will be in command of "A" and Lieut. | Cql. Hudon ai "Bg news- J tune ihrust upon her hy a wasn who worth of land in Michigan and 'Len- | nessee. Letters were received 'by the county officials at Kalkaska, Mich, ohsur Mung he obtained 7,500 francs, | different | a race for a silver dollar which Mr. | first to have | distance. The smaller boy reached the | spot first, but it was hidden in | so, and the boy gave his smaller com- | petitor one of them. "This act of gen- Weiched, found w An Ohio genius has invented an in- Jewel Stoves and Ranges has just strument for piercing the ears with. commenced. We are sole agents for out pain. Every third-rate vocalist Kingston, Taylor & Hamijlton. should own one. TP. O'Connor, M.P., thinks the me E------------ Irish questions have once more been F- MOST ADROIT OF FORGERS. | Derived Profit From Practice of His Art. A man has recently been on trial be- | fore the Paris assizes who is propounc- ed by the police of that city the most | skilful forger ever apprehended. His | name is Pierre Giraud, and.at a form- er trial, after two examinations by experts in handwriting, a document forged by him was attributed to a per- { fectly innocent man, who 'was sent to prison for five years. Girard is only thirty-five vears of. age, but he has had a_ strange career. At the age of fifteen he was sent to a veformatory because of theft, leaving | at the age of eighteen to join the ar- my, where his good conduct enabled {him to become a sergeant. He then | obtained employment at Paris octroi and subsequently at the Bank of: France, During the whole of this time he obtained important sums of money from a number of provincial banks by means of forged cheques and bills of exchange. He began at Epernay in 1891, and obtained two sums of 9,870 francs and 3.900 francs with a forged | cheque. In 1892 he was at Paris and [obtained 24,000 francs, and a few months later he attempted to cash a cheque for 19,780 francs at Orleans, | but was unsuccessful. In 1893 at Chal- and later in the year he was at Ne- vers, where he made 17,300 francs. The next dav he was at Troyes; re- sult of the visit, 42,500 francs at three banks. In 1895 he tried to work his little game in Chambery, but the bankers refused to cash his bills. In 1899 at Laval heosucceeded in RANGE Is the Corner Stone of a Happy Home, Makes cooking a pleasure because it has every known device to ease the work and produce good results. Special features-- broiling and basting doors, asbestos lined and ventilated oven, deep fire-box, *"McClary's Special cast-iron linings, etc.--its best duplex grates, sectional features are not found on any other make of range. Sold by all enterprising dealers. Write for catalogue. London, Toronto, Montreal, Winnipeg, Vancouver, St. John, N.B. Makers of the "Sunshine" Furnace and "Cornwall" Steel Range 14 LEMMON, CLAXTON & LAWRENSON, AGENTS. obtaining 9,000 francs. He continued in ,this way, sometimes with success, sometimes with failure, until arrested. His method was to dress as an army surgeon, call at the bank with his forged documents, change into civilian clothing in a cab while on his way to the railway station, and appear next day in Paris at-his usual occupation. GENEROUS CHARLES HYMAN. How He Rewarded Youthful Fair- ness in Manitob4. A western newspaper has founded a little story on the recent trip of Chas. S. Hyman, M.P., through Manitoba. Mr. Hyman was one day in Manitou, where he saw two small boys by. the side of the road. He'asked them to run Hyman would throw down the road as far as he could, the one who got it the dollar. The larger boy said it was not fair that they should start even, and went back some the dust, and the larger boy found it. He then went back to Mr. Hyman and asked him to give him two fifty-cent pieces for the dollar. Mr. Hvihan did evosity so stirred Mr. Hyman that he wrote after he went home to get the name of the boy who shared ~what he had fairly won, and forwarded to Willie Harold a cheque for $50, The Birth Of Justice. E. Johnston, Picton. . UO! the deep unrest of the world's new birth, Not a nation's now, but the whole world's LADIES' NEW We Have Just Received a Case of the Rpd White Fur Felt and Silk Beaver Hats are the cor- rect thing in New York City to-day with Frosted Fruit as the leading novelty trimming One of these hats after leavin be styled AN AMERICAN BEAUTY Ready-to-Wear Hats for women and children ed at close prices. November Woman's Magazine. CRUM YORK HATS. Newest Hats and Hat Trimmings Worn in New York City. g the hands of our trimmers would indeed We have a large and choice collection of Canadiun , all mark- November Fashion Sheets. New ldea Newest Patterns Just Received. LEY BROS. Pain, And hand clasps hand o'er the rounding earth, Lean throbs to heart o'er the widest wadin! O civilization's fateful hour, What awaits us in thy latest birth, Will justice reigu and rule wath power, Or' death Dut close thine eyes on earth ? O truthy must come as- a beam of light, Ur truth will come as a scorching flame, When suns are hurled from their place night-- s God's own right but a sounding name ! in wok down the sweep of the 'eveling yeiirs, Devp strewn with the wreck of human power: Then scofl in the face of the darkening storm, And wait for the stroke « the fateful hour! Have ye builded well with an " Old World " pride, O'er the. wrecks of years, Have ye learned no more from the pulping . of time, on the saws past, Than to build o'er a sea of blood and tears ? 0 the flitting years! 0 tomb of pride! That wid'ning tomb for the graves of men, For sire and son, that side by side, Are swept with the wreck of their lives again | y But who shall sav that the hour has struck But who shail y that the doom is read ? nting, then sween them off stage of life to the tomb of the From the dead 7 For truth has come as a beam of light, Pointed Paragraphs. Fiver broadening down to the perfect duy: | pienge Stock now open for inspec-4 SOVEREIGN BRAND, London. Chicago News. And earnest souls from their dreams of & A JAS. McCREADY, Montreal What the train despatcher says night, ; Sn os ion : . y . Hots 4 Shilling 19 lis by ber sowdom wy: ORNE & . GROVER, Boston, | J. & T. BELL, Montreal. To err may be human, but to for- | 0 truth has come as « begm of Nizht. y Mess. JOHN , McPHERSON & CoO, oive is : And some have come at her earnest call, . 3 a ads aa © With a mind to grasp, and a heart to dare, | KROHN & FECHHEIMER, | Hamilton. Mode! husbands are 'the men who And a soul to live, and feel, for all! Cincinnatti a We have just received a earload never awarry, >. . : : It I= folly tn offer n wise man gq 9 brides of lito_ o'r the river of death ! : WALKER & WHITHAM, Cam- | of Trunks and Valises, which we : a ; a flos reak though the heart be ' j . penny for his thoughts, Aud fe! 1.19, Weak Wp pello, Mass. will sell at a very low priee 'for Many a man thinks he needs a wife 0 bridge of love oer the elf of Tate, The famous Crossett Shoe for | the next two weeks. until after he gets married. . That the world may pass from the old to When a sensible man gets the worst the view / | \ of it he makes the best of it. { Any man who Yeally knows women The coal strike is over, but the | strike for Burrows, Stewart & Milne's pushed into the foremost place in the creat drama of British politics. J . i re i. ° 2g a LY A Itis Ea specific for, Vo 7 couets & coups & A ngatected cold 18 ¢ the germ of BRONCHITIS, ASTHMA CONSUMPTION Sadat Nrhridges| 0 fung ad A prepanition which has been" mn rucceasfu} use for 28 YEARS and has Leen proved to be inval- Leading Shoe Styles of Canada this week samples of the best and latest styles and Misses Fall Shoes of the best makers in America, a few of the names of the up-to-date manufac- tures here given will be positive proof of the excellence of our im- A ABERNETHY, JAS. T1cPA ~ FALL OPENING of Ghe and the United States. Men made in North Abington, Mass. FLORISHEIM & CO., Chicago. GEO. A. SLATER, Montreal, Que. ' J. D. King & CO., Toronto, Ont, VICTORIA SHOE CO., Toron- to, Ont. We are showing in eur windows of Men's, Women's ' 123 and 125 ~ Princess Street. Ee T---- The Ideal Beverage JOHN LABATT'S ondon orter L Porte Full of the Virtue of Malt: and Hops. Perfectly Agreeable to the Most | Delicate Palate. A iin RLAND, AGENT, KING STREET, KINGSTON. > unable in wl) affections of the Chest, Throat-& Lungs Prepared by § W. T. OWRRIDGE h Hull, Eog. i bre sc. §1.Bo { : PIG LEAD ! CANADA METAL CO., WILLIAM STREET, TORONTO, ONT; = i quarters If You Use Advice. Also Bar, Block, Strip, Pipe. | { |

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