Daily British Whig (1850), 8 Nov 1902, p. 8

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8 THE DAILY "WHIG, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8. TO-LET. ST psi ima HOOD ROOMS. ®iTh ul OE ay, FOUR GOOD FURNISHED ROOMS, WITH board, with all modern conveniences, at | 191 University Avenue. 43 KING STREET, WEST, BRAIFUILY situated, lacing the Harbor. Jon and taxes. Apply to Kirkpetrick, aa & Nickle. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION, HOUSE oo tral part ol city, heatew by hot all conveniences. Apply "nl G oo this office. HOUSE, 7 ROOMS, NO. 56 BAY STREBT | between Bagot and Ridean streets; also and sheds in rear. Apply 45 Wil- liam street. HOT | 115.8 STUART STREET, A 2s, 9 ROOMS: . 1so other bovin = ol J. 8. R. STORE OCCUPIED BY R. ALEXANDER, NO. | 111 Brock street, ik, refrigerator, meat trade. Ap hy f sae wo Jota Mekey Brock McKay, Jr., ' MONEY AND BUSINESS. LIVERPOOL, LONDON AND GLOBE FIRE Co! Available assets, on L157 215. addition to which the bave for security the & a of all the stockholders. | 'arm tv Property insured at lowest | Possitia tu bois renewing old or | 'ggg lens rates from | STRANGE & STRANGE. Agents. \MGNEY TO LOAN IN LARGE OR SMALL interest i sums, at low rates of on city and farm property. Loans granted on city and county debentures Apply to! 8. C ILL. Frontenae and Investment Society Offics op posite the Post Office. I'WO HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS IN sums from ome thousand to ten thous and dollars. For particulars apply &\ GODWIN"S INSURANCE EMPORIUM. over Express Office. Market Souare ARCHITECTS. WM. NEWLANDS, ARCHITECT. OFFICE, second floor over Mahood's Drug Store, corner Princess and Bagot streets. En trance on Bagot street. POWER & SON. ARCHITECTS, MERCH ants' Bank Bi corner Brook and Wellington streets. 'Phome 212 ARTHUR ELLIS, ARCHITECT, OFFICE site of New Drill Hall, near eorner of Queen and Montreal Streets. HENRY P. SMITH, ARCHITECT, ETC, Aschot Building, Market Square. 'Phene UNDERTAKERS. Y. F. HARBISON ©0., UNDERTAK! 233-238 Princess Street. Qualit; ERS, and the lowest Night Calls- 8. 8. CORBETT, FUNERAL DIRECTOR, 281 Kingston, Successor to W WW Dveeman EDUCATIONAL. | KINGSTON LADIES' COLLEGE KINGSTON, CANADA. Residential and Day School for Girls. Address MISS M. GOBER, M.A., SCHOOL OF ART Classes Re-opened on MONDAY Oct. 6th, 1902. Afternoons of Monday, Wedneeday and Fri day, from 2:30 to 4:30. 12 o'clock. Saturday mornings, 10 to WRENSHALL, Principal COLLEGE TON. COLLEGE 1s Principal | | | KINGSTON BUSINESS TORONTO BUSINESS TORONTO Largest. and best equipments Unequalled facilities for securing positions 8321 Queen Street. Kington. SEND FOR CATALOGUE Confederation 'Life Buildings, Toronto. aN MAYORALTY 1903 To~the Electors of Kingston : LADIES AND GENTLEMEN :-~As a oan- didate for Mayor for 1908, I respectfully so- lisit your votes aad influante to elect me. C. J. GRAHAM. 1 these | possibility | will be satisfied with no less. | never MAYORALTY 1903 To the Electors of Kingston : LADIES AND GENTLEMEN :--I am aoan- | didate for the mayoralty for the year 1908, Sad Bepectially Jeb lon your sot and in-* fluenes on .y J. T. WHITE. MAYO RALTY 1903' To the Electors of Kingston : LADIES AND GENTLEMEN :--I respect- fully solicit your votes and influence to elect me as Mayor for 1903, » J. H. BELL. Carriages Carriages EVERYBODY Who has rubber tires on their carriages are well pleased with the ease and comfort they enjoye in driving, if you have not got them on your carriage you should send to LATURNEY and Rave them on and enjoy your JAMES LATURNEY. +» CARRIAGE MAKER, 390 Princess St. Kingston. INVESTMENTS --IN= REAL ESTATE Mining and Oil Stocks See GEO.CLIFF, 115 BROCK STREET. © | dwellin, McCann, 51 - | who is described as a charming dia- the | | prove it. | them; | that 1 | measure | is measureless, my | would not moek {in your ILOVE LETTERS. is A GIRL DID FOR A CHAFING DISH That's All it Cost J. F. H. Cas- sell of Radford, Va., to Find Out What Thirty Women Would Say to Him ii He Were Courting Them -- It's Pretty Nice, Too. Richmond, Va., Oct. 31.--J. F. B. Cassell of Radford knows what it is | like to have thirty women writing love letters to him, all at the same time. He has just tried it. And Miss Anne Virginia Culbertson, lect poet, knows that she wrote best love letter of all thirty that Mr. Cassell' received, some silver-mounted chafing dish to Mr. Cassell made up his mind early done to put snap and ginger into the Radford District Fair, so he wrote a | sort of open love letter and published it in the Radford Advance, proposing at the same time to give the chaling dish as a prize to the woman who | should send him the best reply. . The contest was one of the features and easily the leading feature of the fair! Miss Culbertson's prize letter and one other letter are published bv the Rich- mond Dispatch. The prize letter fol- lows : My Dearest: In these two little words is my answer, for the first claims you mine, and the second pro claims that to me vou are dearest of men. Have I, 1 wonder, been too ready in my response ? 1 think not, for it seems to me a very poor sort of love that keels to enhance its value by assum- ing reluctance. There are women--per haps the most dearly loved of all of for 'love 1 regard' as too high and sacred a thing to admit of the shadow of sham-or pretence. Your let ter was so simple, so direct, so tender knew it came direct from the heart, and my heart shall speak open ly in answer. If 1 had not felt sure of myself before, your letter would have made me love vou. I expect never to be able quite' the nature of my I shall walk by vour side all my days ana you shall believe that vou know my every heart throb, but it wil not be so. To measure my love would be as impossible as to the space that stretchea last night between the shining stars and the throbbing sea, so you must never ask me for the measure of that which I cannot tell vou how long I have loved you jkrhaps from the dav we met. For even then 1 said to myself, "He would under stand." By which I meant that if 1 bared my inmost thoughts, iy high- est aspirations, my cherished ideals, most sacred beliefs, they would a responsive chord in you. You them; for 1 had read face the nobleness and 'tender- your . nature. | am not to confess my carly interest in you; for in this solemn moment | wish my ¢oul to sfand face to face with yours, naked and unashamed. ht vou are the order of men to be repell ed by frankness, go your way. | have misread you; vou are of smaller cali- bre than I had dreamed and I shall show love for to youl rou. touch ol ashamed ness not grieve for you, but for the man 1 thought vou. Your letter does not tell me that vou think me beautiful, and I am glad your love has never persuaded you that I am. Ii you loved me for beauty's sake, TI should have no ground for complaint if you ceased .to love me when beauty was gone. If vou discover in me some inner spiritual beauty, and love me for that, 1' shall be sure of your love so long as I caw preserve that beauty of the spirit. 1 shall trv to find just what it is, ana hold fast by it, sé that vou may have no excuse for unloving me, sir! I | love to think, that you only of all men can see this inner beauty--what ever it that has drawn vou to me; for jut as "the Oriental woman is veiled to all 'men but her lord. 50 shall I walk with way beauty veiled fo all men save you, and rejoicing that it is so. I must tell vou, that vou have come suing to' a woman, , who, in days, thoroughly believes in the of a grande passion, and I should myself to even be able reconcile for she has a hand- | | lin the fall that something ought to be. | to lapse into an indifierent affection un- and commonplaces of | me der the cares daily life. So be warned in time. Will be Opposing Presidential Can- And yet, notwithstanding this ten- | didates dency of mine to make love "au His LOVE AFFAIRS VENTI- Chi Nov The Tri grand serieuse,"' there is another side | - cago, ov. --The Tribune (re- to my nature, and it demands that | LATED IN COURT. publican) says : vou let me 'laugh at you occasionally. | | was 'born with a sense ana I find that most of mv friends . . give me food for laughter gt time. Were to Take a Percentage of | "First--It gives the presidential For the rest 1 would be "just as Heiress Money but the | nomination of 1%3 to 'Theodore | hivh- as your heart,"but 1 would Scheme Did Not Work. J 1oosevelt, . : glance levelly into your eves, walking Berlin, Nov. 7.--lhe relations of | . Second--It makes David B. Hill, hand in hand, your equal and your Baron Burchard Von Muenchhausen | of New York. his almost certain op- helpmeet in all things, as it was with the so-called "marriage syndi- | bouSEt, : . : meant 1 should do. cate," which financed his journey to | e work of the republican na- I have been utterly unreserved for the United States in 15v%, to obtain a Sons convention, two years hence once, and. have bared my heart for rich wife, have been made public vin been done for it by the voters, rou to read, though I am reserved by | through a prosecution for blackmail the only yuestion Joke for the politi- nature, ana shall not always be able brought by the baron against Her- say to ig a on 5 e identity of the to reveal myself even to you. Yet mann Pincus, Moritz Mendelsohn, and Socra Fo 0 oe ake the battle whether | seem near or remote, whe- | Adolf Mendelsohn, three tradesmen, pam SON i is, Mdeniity was ther 1 am cold, whether I am sad or | who were members of the syndicate. piso Prachca Y Settled y the ballots laa, believe that through all ana in | The trial has just come to its close. as the h day before Yesterday, they spite of all my --,.] am in mind. | Buron Yor Muenchhausen is a ment. pa or : ) age of i oilecvs Roost and heart, and soul, surely and Un: her of a famous German family, which The A oF a cand ate. : changingly all that 18 implied in the | dates from "153537. The testimony show- Bevan Yestige of = verism and one brief word. "yours. | ed that an ex-convict, named kissler, when TT i. Su inten Some of the young men who have living in Stuttgart, telegraphed 10 | Nevada wont oy a 0 possibly examined the correspondence have | pray von Quizow, a noble woman. re Bary to on Ww or d Re es Said that, while Hay would be glad siding in Berlin, who undertakes to i brought Mr. Will into ine ---h I Miss Oilborssons lees, | obtain wealthy, wives for army on | the democracy of the west and his op- causes even more 1ihrills to radiate Saying that in she had a tthed | position to the support of the silver from their ~ nerve centres than hers. officer. on Alive gotvice for an Ameri- | plank hy Tammany caused the es The author's nani. is not disclosed. | can fortune of $7,000,000, to let him trangement between himself and fl She save: know. Frau Von Quitzow put Eissler Tammany leaders. To-day thfs is on Out Scom behind the dark and Ia communication with Baron Von a memory, of shadowy exture at changeable clouas of fear and doubt, = uenchhausen, who is a lieutenant In | that, and Mr. Hill need not\ swallow dear heart, your love has come like the Prussian artillery. | he baron, any thing distasteful to himsell\ or his the vlorious 'sun, to make bricht i | according to statements made in court | constituents when he proclaims his beautiful my existence. Sometimes | | agreed to give Eissler ve per. cent. original watchword, 'lI am a demo- have thoucht that I knew vour secret, | of the money of the heiress he was to | crat. sometimes | have hoped that the beau tiful vision of mv dreams was lode, ling place, and he signed conaiaonal HAD MARRIED AGAIN. and there were the davs when the sil | bills for $375,000. On these inlls Kiss. Ser lining of the: clowd cas viable [ior raised money in Berlin from a Husband Finds Wife No. 1 Sur- and partially reflected the glory of | ULCIOUS group ol persons, which in- vived Galveston Flood. the sun behind it. Then again my | siden Pincus and the two Mendel Alpena, Mich., Nov. §.--A fomance soul despaired. believing: that the love | 2010S, and Baron Von Muenchhausen of the Ualveston flood had come to longings of my . heart had found no | ¥a% provided with the money with light if the details of a story alton. answering harmony in yours. But | Which he paid the expenses of his ing relatives 'of ma family } ] ) | hot S : g s (of an Alpena family now. that 1 see love, unobstructed [Journey to the United States. prove well founaed. ? hinine into my life from the depths | ™ oy s Larter 5 His wivepsue | Just before that awiul catastrophe of vour noble he rt, 1 feel that no | W888 layes maw: wio had heen lor | gy, Tw 3 Bryan, a sister of Mrs. A. clouds can ever rise ngain to mar our merly in the service of the rich Am E. Cou with a vounzer daughter perfect understanding. {erican woman referred to by rassler; went from their howe in Indian terri. A beautiful story tells of a great | she preceded the baron to the United tory to visit Galveston friends, and painter. who was born into the dirt | States to negotiate the juarriage, Lut both were supposea to have been lost and squalor of 4 city alley. There he | her efforts were not Successful, The | 5 "the flood. spent his childhood in blank ignor- | Mame of the heiress in question Vas | An older daughter of Mrs. Brvan ance of the fresh fields apd the bright f not. disclosed in court. Baron Vou |, wrien Mie, Couse from Pitts- sky until one day he was taken to | Muenchhausen did make the acquaint- | ton, Pa., that she has learned that live out in God's open air and sun- | ance while in' the United States , "1 her mother was rescued ana taken to shine. Left alone in a dear old-fash- | Martha Washington Beckel, a vwdow.| "oy nivaium at Fort Worth, but that ioned garden the child's spirit awoke. | 1 moderate wealth. who, according to | ypgj] recently her reason was gone, He touched softly a flower here and | the German peerage, he married De- | nd it was not known who she was. there; he felt timidly of the green | Comber 23rd, ISN. Since his marriage When the poor woman finally re- grass. and patted the rough old trees, | the baron has been living with his gained her mind she told who she was he saw wonderingly the great blue sky. | wife on his estate near Schwobler, | (ith such accuracy of detail that the until at last steeped in natures real- | Hanover. physicians were = convinced and set ity and loveliness, he looked up with { On his return to Germany, Baron | ahout finding her relatives. The the great crv. "1 am alive, 1 am | Von Muenchhausen had to reckon with daughter saw a newspaper article, de- alive." The childs heart had indeed | the holders of his bills. A compro- scribing the case and wrote her aunt, Leen born anew. mise was negotiated with Pincus, and | who is now investigating. So fas no- Long after. when y famous painter, | the Mendelsohns, who surrendered his | {hing has heen learned definitely of the versar his birthday, vears of his life And of my when my hi so, beloved, 1, too, have ga |brought into court. Pincus and the | his wife dead, has married again, s0 soul's birth anniversary, and the days | Mendelsohns were acquitted of the | that the joy of finding his wife alive real life date back to that dav | charge against them. will not; be unmixed with regret at ~ you and your love came into ------ the situation in which he finds him- i HOW TO BE TREATED. self. You are, dearest, the only man I ---- ® -- have ever met. who unde 'rstands right- Proposal of Reform in English TOBACCO A PAYING CROP. lv the part ambition plays in the Pri Svat life of 3 woman's sphere. The beauti- ISON myst. . Farmers Getting 10jc. a Pound ful harmony of the two was first London, Nov. S.--In England's four For R Le made clear to me by vou. You have | great convict prisons of Dartmoor, os or haw af. : shown me that ambition in its high- Portland. Parkhurst and Borstal, Windsor, Ont., Nov. 8--The farmers est sense does not mean a separation | YOUDRZ convicts are in future to be of Essex county who grew tobacco of one self from sympathetic fellow- y : Syery ship and tender passion, but rather | Possible means will be employed to | themselves. Owing to competition the does it reach his full perfection its | keep them from associating with old- prices paid this fall for the raw leaf grandest aim. when it is charged | criminals. 1 hey will be officially | are far in excess of former vears, and with the sublime duty of holding in | known as "juvenile adults,' the term | the prospects are that the buyers will harmony and perfect understanding | aPPlying to those who at the time of | further advance the price. The price is two immortal souls. To_make this | 'conviction are twenty-one vears of | now ten and one-half cents and pres- world better for the joy that glad- | 2ge or under. The scheme is already | ent indications are that buyers will dens it, to do that work which is | it force at Dartmoor, where school- | run close to twelve cents a pound 'for here alone, such is true ambition, | masters are employed in teaching the | the crop before they secure the weed and, this, dear love, have vou taught | Youths. An ex-army - officer {rains from the growers. me in words and by example. Your them in physical culture, and they are own life so full of energy, so*full ® of | instructéd"in carpentry to aid thet in i the stir and strife of living is vet earning a living when liberated. An- 0 You Look On moulded and made strong by the sub: | other advance step in prison reform lime passion of love. You have | has been made by the abolition of Si grasped the deep truth that love must | Oakuin picking by female prisoners. In he ark Side? sweetly touch the chords: before © the | It Place needle work has been adopt- grand melody of life can be produced. no bounds feel that destiny "has brought me "into the loving service of a knight equip- strong armor My ped ir Vv ol Joy 1 the child-man, that day f know S alwa vs kept in the of humor, the anni- garden as and always counted the front that year. when conquers in the struggle of life. With 4 deep appreciation of the hon or that has been conferred upon me, and pledging my love unto the end, vet © complain loving is not thee in For ever vour that long own. ROOSEVELT AND HILL GERMAN BARON "The election of Tuesday, in the opinion of politicians of both parties, settled two things : A Heiress Syndicate--Members wed in the event of the marriage tak- paper on the payment of comparative- ly small sums. Baron Von Muench hausen afterwards accused these men of blackmail, and the matter was thus the truth of the newspaper article, but Mrs. Couse is quite confident that no mistake can have been made. Mr. Bryan, the hsuband, believing treated as a class apart, and this vear have cause to congratulate ed, and it will.'in future be the task of the women convicts to 'make their own garments and also those-of + the Are You Blue, Discouraged, Irri- table and Depressed ?--It May "I undérstand he's vérv much in love with Miss 'Antique sizht.' be very first must f Tove at "He near-<ichted @ wi tale prisoners : be Your Nerves Are Exhausted gre Big Walking, Match. and You Need Philadelphia, Pa., Nov. 8.--Begin- DR H 9 ning at midnight to-morrow night, ° AS I| forty of the world's most famous pe- "all eternity of | destrians will start on their journey enough to love | in the annual international six-day NERVE 00 | ro-as-vou-please race for the cham . ! pionship of the world. The contest Irritability and mental depression, takes place in Industrial Hall. sometimes amounting to melancholy While it is hardly probable that | and despondency, are marked symp- George Littlewood's wonderful record | toms of nervous exhaustion. of 631 miles is going to be broken, the In the beginning vou feel languid indications are 'that the record that | and tired, find it impossible to con- Pat Cavanagh made in last year's race | centrate vour thoughts. The tasks of is going to get an awful jolt. This | the day are put off till the morrow, vear the field is made up of men who | little things worry you, you forget hold records and who are in condition | your blessings and look on the dark to stand a fast pace from the start. | siae of things. Among the men who are entered- aml At times there may, be nerveus head- trained® for the event are Pat Cavan- | aches, spells of dizziness, indigestion, ach 6f Trenton, John Glick of Phila- | sleeplessness and general weakness of delphia, Pete Hegleman of Germany, | the body. You dread what the future Tom 'Howarth of FEngland, "Kid" | may bring to you and feel the work West of Harrisburg, Gilbert Barnes of | and responsibilities of life more than Pittsbure. Peter Golden of New | you can bear. 2 York,! George Noremac of Scotland. Mrs. Corkey, 272 Wellington stréet, | Guerrérro of Mexico, Davis. the full- | Kingston, Ont., states : 15 *'1-sufferea a blooded Indian, and Harry Shelton, | great deal with neryous headache. In the colored fiver. : fact, 1 was so bad that at times I Tt was n ¢ took weak, dizzy spells, and my nerv- ous system seemed quite undermined Anarchists To Be Remembered. and exhausted. Some. time ago. A CUT IN CUTLERY OU can't get the results the "Famous Active" gives by doing. your cooking on any other kind of range, because no other range has A all its special features, | 3 such as A Ventilated Oven that does admit fresh, hot air, and passes off all the. roasting fumes. A Deep Fire - pot, with "McClary's Special" Duplex Grates, and Ssctional Cast-iron Linings, which wear longer and give better satisfaction than the brick and cement used in common ranges. A "Famous Thermometer" that registers the exact heat of the oven; and a practical basting door, just large enough to baste a fowl of roast, and yet too small to admit enough cold air to chill the oven. We fully guarantee the "Famous Active." The "Sunshine" Furnace and "Cornwall" Steel Range are also two of our guaranteed specialties. Mc<Clarys \( Lonoon, Toronto, MoNTREAL, WinNiPEG, VANGOUVER, St. Jomn, N.B. LEMMON, CLAXTON & LAWRENSON, AGENTS. All Sensible People Wear COMBINATION UNDERWEAR At least all those who know how com- fortable it is. No shoving up at the waist, but a smooth glove-like fit from neck to ankle. Elegant in material and finish. MANUFACTURED BY THE KNIT-TO-FIT hrc. co, 613 Lagauchetiere St., Awitreal, ESTABLISHED 1890. "PHONE MAIN 4303. W. F. DEVER & CO. STOCK AND BOND BROKERS, 19 Wellington Street East, Toronto. Main Offices --47 Broadway, New York ; 60 State St., Boston. STOCKS, BONDS AND GRAIN Bought and Sold for Cash or on Margin. Particular attention given to Canadian Securities. letters mailed daily (4 p.m.) on application. vited, READY-TO-WEAR STREET SKIRTS. A Nice Trimmed Dress, Walking or Rainy Day Skirt, is something that many women are looking for these days We desire to in- form intending purchasers that we have at presént one of the largest and choicest collec- tion of Ready-to-Wear Skirts to be seen in this part of the country. A good heavy Cloth Serge Skirt for Market Correspondence in- & Some of the Prettiest Women's Coats in Canada are to be seen "here. * All Wool Frieze Skirts, nicely stitch- New Kid Gloves for Women, Foundes ed at bottom. Grey and Black, only Make, 75c., $1, $1.25, $1.35 pair. $2.50 each. yo a -- a iis Women's Flannelette Wrappers, pret Firm and Heavier Makes, . Plain tv. patterns. all size Y rides Corded, "I'ucked and Flounced, Oxford | YY Patterns, all sizes and } ies. and Black, $2.75, $3.50, $1, $5, each. Job line Serge and Leather Tams, Oxford and .Black, Homespun and | Worth 50c. and 75c., for 35c. each. Cheviot Trimmed Skirts, £5, $6, $6.50, Job line White Plush Tams, worth 87.50, $8.50, $10, each. $1.25, for 75c. each. Special line, All Wool Homespun | Women's Hats, Children's Hats -and Plaid Skirts, regular $5, for $2.50. Old Ladies' Bonnets. We can suit Pretty Wrapperette Waists, 75c. and you in style or in price. Our $1 each. , > millinery department 1s indeed a very Plain Wool, Flannel and Bedford | busy one. Hundreds of women served Cord Waists, ®1.95. and £3 each. and all delighted: ' CRUMLEY BROS New Idea Women's Magazine for December only Sc. a Copy. » Chicago, Ill. Nov. S.--The sixteenth | heard of the good results accomplish- anniversary. of the execution of Au- | oq by Dr. Chase's Nerve Food and be- eust Spies, A. R. Parsons. A. Fischer | gun to use it. Since I have been tak- and G. Engel. known as the Havmark-1 ho this medicine a great change has | et anarchists. on November 9th, 1886. | some over me, the headaches have dis- | will the commemorated tomorrow hv appeared, my nerves have been | the local labor and socialist organiza strengthened and I do not have any | Memorial services will he held in the afternoon deleca- tions, more of the dizzy spells. I have no- as usual. and We are offering some rare bargains m CUT LERY at present. thing to thank but Dr. Chase's Nerve tions will visit Waldheim cemetery | Food for this change. and decorate the graves of the anar- Mrs. G. M. Brown, Cobourg, Ont., | chists, and also the grave of Louis | grates: "I was completely run down | Linge. who killed himself the .» night | {i health last spring ana could not do | before the execution. one day's work Eo being laid up | for about two days afterward. 1 felt! 'Big Orders For Flour. weak, languid. ana miserable most of | Frerett, Wash.. Nov. 8--The flour | the time, and was oiten blue and dis- | mills of this city are now working on | couraged because of my continued ill- three consignments," two for Ching health. When in 'this state 1 was aa- vised - to try Dr. Chase's Nerve Food, The three . and one for Vladivostock. 1 { Ne ] orders cregate 25.000 barrels of ana did so with most satisfactory re- flour 'and will be shipped this month | sults. It built up my system wonder- | fully, strengthened 'ana fostered my : : i+ :. | nerves and took away all feeling of Hous Ns a fhe sibjo, Bb languor-, and fatigue. I cannot sav pnancial phi losophy that the chief use Jenyipieg hoo goo ehput De' Chise's of money is to enable him that has it YY eh te mv hn * to keep away from" the people from Dr: Chase's Nerve Food 50 cents a whom he could not keep away if he | | © at all dealers or Edfmanson, *did not have it. < Bates & Co., Toronto. * h Lemmon, Claxton & Lawrenson, Carving Sets. The finest in the city, at prices within the reach of all. 'Razors, Strops, Knives and Forks, etc. A big selection, a right price. These go fast. See that you don't get left." There are bar- gains here to-day. King a Kingston.

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