Daily British Whig (1850), 27 Nov 1902, p. 3

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Miss Lillian Ramse A Prominent Club Woman, of Den- ver, and Her Mother Tell What Warner's Safe Cure Has "Done For Them. New York's Most Successful Spe- cialist in Woman's Diseases ' Says: 'Nearly Every Case of So-Called Female Weakness and Painful Periods is Due to Kid- ney or Bladder Disease of Some Form." & If You Have Pains in the Back and Feel Miserahle, Make a Test of Your Urine and Satisfy Your- self. MISS LILLIAN RAMSEY. Miss Lillian Ramsey, President of the Denver Quincy Club, oi benver, Colo, says "1 was all run down, and had no appetite, was troubled with andiges- Lu, pains in my back and suffered un- told ansery during my monthly periods until 1 used Warner's Safe Cure. Thanks vo it 1 am now as strong and healthy @as any waman could be. My mother sullered for over two years with what our doctor called ' weakness peculiar to women." She had severe pains in 'her back and her head ached almost con- stantly; in fact, she was an invalid un- til the doctor prescribed Warner's Said Cure. 'three bottles made a& permanent cure. She has no more of her ola troubles and enjoys perfect heglth Al her complications were caused by dis cases of the kidneys. Had my mothe: taken Warner's Sale Cure in the first place, instead ol a lot of so-called cure tor fewsale weakness, she would have been saved a great deal of sufiering. We will never be without a bottle of War ner's Safe Cure in the house, and if eve ry poor, suffering woman knew the merits oi Warnér's Sale Cure she might be restored to perfect health. Thousands who have died from kidney disease of one form or another because it had poisoned ther systems befor. they knew it, might have been saved had they examined their urine and found out the true condition of their kidneys 1'ut some morning urine in a glass or bot tle, let it stand 24 hours: if then it i: cloudy, or has a brick-dust sedunent, oi particles ' flout in it, your kidueys ar chiseased, and if not atienced to at onc vour life will be cut offi with Bright's disease, diabetes, uric acid poison, 0i other complications, x A free trial bottle sulicient Lo cure cases when the simple home test described above has been anade Yin - the. earlies stages of the discase. Warner's Safe Cure the has oiten beer ol kidney diseas. will cure any disease of kidneys livery bladder, of bloof? it will cur: Bright's disease, . diabetes, Istones rheumatism, rheumatic rout, swelling eczema, mundice painful passage o! urine, torpid liver, uric digestion and stomach are 80 oiten caused by dition of the Kidneys. Warner's Sate Cure is purely vegetable acid poison, in- trouble, which the diseased con- and contains no narcotic or harmiul drugs: It is free from sediment and is pleasant to take (Beware of so-callex kidney cures ull of sediment and of bac odor--they are harmiul.) Sale cure does not constipate 1 Kills the disease EOTINS Warner s Sate Cure has heer and used by leading doctor: 5 years and is used in many prominent hospitals exclusively WARNER S SAFE PILLS move the bayels gently and aid a speedy cure, Warner's Saie Cure is what you need You can buy it at any drug store, $i a hottle Refuse Substitutes and Imitations here 1s none 'just as good as Insist on the genuine, which Vs cures Substitutes contain harmful drugs which injure the system Tria! Bottle Free. To convince every sufferer from dis eases of the kidoevs. liver. bladder and blood that Warner's Safe Cure will cure them, a trial hottle will be sent abso- lutely iree, postpard Also a valuable medical booklet which tells all about the diseases of the kidneys, liver and blad- der, with a prescription for each dis ens and many © the thousands of tes- received _daily hom grateful patients. who have been cured py War- ner"s Safe Cure All you have to do i# to write Warnef's Sate Cure Company, 44 Fombard St, Toronto, Ont. and men- tion having read this "liberal off- er in this paper The genuineness of this offer is fully guaranteed by the nublisher RAILWAY HEL BRET Ses BRANCH LINE TIME TABLE Tr ains Leave the City Depot, Foot of Johnston Street: GOING EAST. time als No 2. Factern Flier . = 228 AM No. 16, Local .. cols on R18 AM No. 6. Mail - . . 12.58 P.M. No. 4, Foet Expross - ian VT PH No. 12, Loval ......u 7:13 P.M GOING No. 8, Mail ...cee weveeess seven AM. No. 3, Fast Express . AM. No. 11, Loeal " i AM. No. 1, International Limited . P.M. No. 7, Mail ay PM. No. 15, Local ws ingly . 8:03 P.M Nos. 1. 2, 3 and 4 run daily. No. 8 daily, except Mondav. Nos. ©, 7y 11, 12, 15 and 16 daily, except Sundav. For Pullman accommodation, tickets and all other information, apply tc 3 J.P. PANLEY, Agent. City Pass. Depot. Durdered In Yukon. Victoria, B.C., Nov. 27 on the steamer Amur, from the Yukon, Passengers say Purser Ayres, of the -téamer Prospector, was robbed and murdered on tober at s----f-- A board of trade has | in Port Colborne n organized SERA re RSPR AES ET t TOLD IN THE A writer in a late issue of a New York daily has been transmitting a great de: | of sympathetic gush to pa- yer, rcsaraing the so-called. passee woman. The article contains such at- tractive phrases as "bitter, bitter mo- ment," "quivering flesh," which she savs is "'pierced by the rusty stiletto of the wit," of the joke-writer "who hugs himself merrily," as he pens kis witticism on the passee woman "rejoicing that he has filled another stick of space." Its very pathetic, of course, this picture of the woman ag- onizing over vanished charm, and its companion one of the the space-writ- er's jubilations, but as a matter of fact its somewhat inaccurate. When a man is reduced to filling space "by the stick"'--the lady's technicalities are very imposing--he doesn't waste much energy hugging himself anyf way at all. But her sympathy is misplaced. I'here's no raison d'etre for the passee woman. There does exist of course in every neighborhood an assortment of women of various ages, married, and in a state of single blessodness, who are generally classified as passee, but such a state is their own fault. Ac- cording to the writer of the article spoken of, the passee woman is one who has lost her charm. And pray when does a woman lose her charm ? Never, unless she's several degrees more than three parts fool. Of course the charm of a woman of fifty won't be identical with that of twentv. and a woman who "is just at the age when she doesn't look it," won't be at- tractive if she masquerades under the oit-time flippant impertinences of nine- teen. There's the charm of (the fresh ingenuous "just out," there's the harm of more perfect poise and rip- ening womanhood which a girl gets with her quarter century; there's the charm of the buayant, conquering ful- ness of the summer time between this and thirty-five. Forty has the charm oi gentle wisdom and garnered experi- nce, whith no age can wrest from it, and on fiity a tender, softening ripe- ness | falls that makes one marvel at the crudity of the earlier years. The woman, however, who deserves all the gibes she gets apd more, is she who, perhaps, was a reigning belle n the days when such an occupation night naturally be expected to he all mprossing, and who will not volun tarily relinquish her claims even when orty overtakes her, but goes, we'll say, into competition with girls who are looked upon even by women late in the twenties as children. Such a yne furnishes a pitiable spectacle to wngels and to men, and--the latter say vhat they think of the show. Fancy yabbling "with artificial joy at a ball in your thirty sixth year, and imagin- ing your: performances to be a counter- art of the eager excitement of the lebutante in her first trained party 'rock ! Fancy being jealous at thirty Jf the retinue which pretty twenty has as her escort ! Fancy scheming at for ty to have your card filled with the names of boys who were infants-in arms when you made your first bow m the social 'stage ! Fancy balancing mm your old grey head at fifty a hat which might grace a Venus of twenty ive, and imagining you look like \starte up-to-date ! Think of the en- cebled usefulness, the wasteful heart surningg the soured and blackened ives that come from the silly, silly lesire to cling to that which must 1n- witably slip into the past of things that may not be. There is no time In her life from her kittenish baby girl Yood to feeble old age when a.woman nay not have men, or, better, one nan at her feet, not indeed for hard" striving, not by attempting to be sther than she is, not by qualifying in other, words for the epithet, ""'passce, but just because she is a wgman--a sweet, true, strong natural woman- with, by the way, in addition, just 'hose little artifices peculiarly adapted for each stage of her development with old Mother Nature will which wise equip her. * - . - A good deal of "anxiety is felt about the health of the Dowager .aarchioness Si Pufferite who has heen -serrously ill «Clandeboye for some time. It was her intention to' join her sister. Lady vicholson, at Tangiers, for the winter, ind it is stilt hoped she will be able to do so, as the latest news from Bel ast gives a better account. Meanwhile he memoir of her late husband, by ir A. Lyall, progresses, and the mo pument which is to be placed in Done gal Square will be alike worthy of the great diplomat and the city of Belfast. ; Lady Minto is being kept busy in Montreal. -On Sunday she was kept "in her room by the severe cold which has sothered her for two weeks, and which is vety very, very troublesome. She ad- dressed a meeting of the Victorian Order yesterday, on the subject of cot tage hospitals, she having studied this Lranch of the work while on her tour in the North-West, and last night the vice regal party*was present at the hanquet given in aid of "the Nazareth asylum for the blind. The tea and sale of work which Miss Macaulay very kindly allowed the .Ju- vim Woman's Auxiliary of St. Geor- ee"s Cathedral to give. at her house on Thnesduyv was a very great success. both pleasurably and financially, the large rooms being filled between the honrs of five and six with peopl who | were good enough 'not to leave empty handed. Nearly all the pretty, useiul things on the work table were sold, | and quite all the sweets disappeared. | with the resnly that a nice round to- tal of ity dollars fell into the | treasury, The door 'was in charge of ix Peau an! Miss Lettice Tandy. Lossli= and Miss Martin took "the eandv table, Mrs Coyle, : Jane Stanord, Miss Laturney and Miss Crace Kirkpatrick were the energetic helpers at the work table and the tearoom was in charge of Mrs. vorman Fraser and Miss Wa | Sutherland, their assistants being Mrs; Kirby® Macaulay, Miss Jessie Kirkpatrick, Miis Clark and. Miss White. The anxihary's energetic sup tendent,, Miss Frances Macaulay is y Ory [tof he heartily. congratulated on the { very successful nature of the fir.t ; entertainment ven since she took | charge," and also in the numbers of | tock on the cost price, 5s new members who have enrolled their names this year. . - - The Levana Society of Queen's will $ / TWILIGHT, Ye si Ju the now Sri building oF v Mr. and Mrs. Hayter Reed have re- turned to Quebec. | Dr. J. M. Forster, of Mimico asy- lum; has been given three monihs' leave' of absence, after long continuous service, and will sail from'New York on Saturday ior special study in BEur- oe. Through a fall on Sunday the col- lar-bone of Miss Marjorie Maclean was broken. The kind wishes of very many até being gratified by hér prospect of an "easy case." Major'and Mrs. Panet returned to the city on Wednesday. - - - At the Church of the Redeemer, Chestnut Rill, Boston, Mass., on Mon- day, Rev. TP. James Bowlker, of Eng- land, and Mrs. Katharine Rooseveit, daughter of the late Augustus Lowell, of Brookline, were married by Bishop Lawrence, of Massachusetts. Mr. Bowl- ker is professor of mathematics at Haileybury College, England. The bride is related by marriage to Presi- dent Roosevelt. The engagement is announced of Miss Alma Gayfer, daughter of Mr. H. Gay- fer, of H. M. customs, Hamilton, to Dr. E. J. Saunderson, of Ottawa. The wedding will take place in the near future. © The departure of Miss Gayfer will be quite a loss to Hamilton musical circles. Cards are out for the marriage of Miss Muriel Tasker, daughter of R. T. Steele, of Hamilton, Unt., to ur. David Ernest Wright, of Toronto. The ceremony will take place on December 11th, in the Church of St. Thomas. At Christ Church, Russell, Manito- ba, Miss Ellen Boulton, daughter of the well.known late Senator Colonel Charles Boulton, was recently marri- ed to Mr. A. L. Bonnycastle. eve. Miss J. E. Wood, whosé last novel, "Where Waters Beckon,"" was publish- ed in New York in September, sailed for England on the 22nd, for a series of visits. While in England Miss Wood will be the guest of the Misses Swin burne (the sisters of Mr. Algernon Swinburne), Lord Gwydyr of Stoke Park, the Hon. Mrs. Willoughby Bur- rell and others. Lord and Lady Mount-Stephen were amongst others present at the weading of the Hon. Dorothy Brand, voungest daughter of Viscount Hampden, and Mr. Percy Guy Feilden, son of the late Lient.-Gen. Feilden, M.P., at St. Paul's church, Knightsbridge, London. Mr. D. H. Baird, of the Quebee Bank, Toronto, has written a two-step, in vhich the time and tune are so catchy that they =et the feet tripping in voluntarily. He has called 1t the "South African." Mrs. Enoch Thompson, of Toronto, entertained -at tea on Monday, when her guests had the pleasure of meeting Mr. Ernest Seton-Thompson, the writer of the many animal stories which have charmed voung and old alike, within the past few years. Mr. and Mrs. George Reid have re- turned to Toronto, anl have brought with them many charming sketches of places visited by them during their tour abroad. Major Carrington Smith will sail for England almost immediately, as he has been recalled to join his regi went. Mrs. Hugh Fleming and Miss = Gor mullv of Ottawa, will leave shortly for Toronto, where they will he. the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Oshorne, "Clov- er Hill." ewe The "usual autumn dance which was eoiven at. Trinity College,, Toronto, on Tuesday, was as Trinity's affairs, large and small invariably are, most enjoyable. The stately old" building. with its low ceilings, its time-stained oak, "and its eminently academic at- 'mosphere, makes a wonderfully effec tive getting for the pretty fades and pretty frocks of the girls who are for- tunate enough to come infor invita- tions from the dons and men of Trin ity. : ".. s+ An interesting proposition that Mr. Seton-Thompson put forward in a lec ture in Toronto the 'other evening, was that leadership in animal? was "not given always to the big male, but to some. cautions, elderly female. As the audience seemed incredulous, the lec: turer showed some snapshots, in which a ~hornless déer ledy and her antleved lords brought up the rear. : 2. ww = A French letter-davs that long ago in France, when tiny dogs; weve inse parable companions to the Grande Dames, the huge muffs then in vogue were used as resting places for the pets, and known as "dog muffs." Now adays the muffs might well have the name revived, so big are they, the latest being heart shaped, with. huge fur flounces at the wrists. One = of the famous actresses wears a wonder ful creation in chinchilla with grey chiffon flounces, and" toque to match, with but a touch of turquoise bine. Amongst other wise things about hats and their wearers, Max O'Rell has this to say: Man's station in life is <hown from the way he takes off his hat. Kings and emperors just lift it off their heads. A gentleman takes off his hat to whoever salutes him. Once a beggar in Dublin saluted the great Irish patriot, Daniel O'Connel--The latter returned the salute by taking off hix hat to the beggar. 4 "How can vou take off your hat to a beggar ? remarke a friend who was with him. "Because." he replied, 'Il don't want "that beggd&r to say that he is more of a gentleman than I am." Parvenus keep their hats on al wavs, unless before some aristocrat to whom they cringe. "To sleep is to strain and purify our emotions, to the mud to calm tae fever of the «oul, to re deposit Of aie, turn into the bosom of maternal nn ture, then the * reissue healed and strong,' wrote. Amel, Building Cunard Steamers London, Nov. 27.--Tt is stated that one of the now Canard twenty:five knot hoats, which are to be built un der the, government subsidy system, will be( constructed by the Vickers, Maxam company, ana the other by the John Prown. Limited. company. on the Clyde. Three other boats will be onstiructed on the Clyde bank under | ilders' percentage, a )rerecentage in hat i- known a the company = or : DAILY BRITISH WHIG, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27 AGRICULTURAL. NOTES GATHERED UP FOR THE FARMERS A Course in Live Stock Judging-- Hog Cholera in Kent County-- Sheep Make the Best Kind of Scavengers. Premier Ross reccived the first bar- rell of sugar made in Ontario. "Made in Canada' is what you should ask for when purchasing any- thing. * Winter is the best time for pruning grape vines, and pruning is always ab- solutely necessary. There is an increased demand in the west for pure-bred stock, owing to the great influx of settlers. Plant raspberries on dry soil 3x7 feet. This is a good time of the year to set goosebesry plants. Prepare the poultry house for the long winter months. Clean thoroughly and see that all draughts are checked. Old apple trees, if healthy, may be grafted with success. Early spring to graft. Do not neglect to protect the trunks of all young fruit trees against rab- bits and mice. It will pay to take care of them. Hog houses as found on many farms are vile affairs and wholly unfit for a respectable hog to pass any part of his time in. Thomas Checkley, of the third. line of Fitzroy, has purchased Matthew Sherlock's fiftv-acre farm, on the same line, for 82,750. For all kinds of live stock, both as a" life-giver and a disease destroyer, there is nothing so valuable &s an abundance of sunshine. There will be an excellent crop of winter avheat in Ontario. A large arca is under cultivation, and the yicld pro- mises to be magnificent. Over two million pounds of cheese were sold on the Vankleck Hill che hoard during the season just closed: Estimated value, £230,000. Many farmers make a mistake by stacking straw in the barnyara. The strawstack out doors is not so valu- able for feeding as that stored under cover, Give the hog his choice of filth or cleanliness. :ana he will choose. the lat- ter. Dirty he will sicken, clean he will remain healthy, providing his rations are all right. The size of Manitoba potatoes is enormous, it being no rare thing for one to weigh four and one-half pounds and those weighing three pounds each are quite common. Economical swine feeding consists in making the greatest gain possible from the money invested in feed. It is not alwavs. the feed costing least that gives best results in profitable gain. On Cornwall cheese board this sea ron 4,067,760 pounds of cheese were sold. at ten and one-eighth cents aver- age. Thus over 8100,000 was paid farmers. an average of over $13,000 jer week. The department of agriculture holds that a better inspection of clover, grass and other small seeds is urgent- ly needed if Canada is to hold her own in the matter of exports to other countries. The government ascent at Liverpool savs that the grading of Canadian ap ples this year was much better than in America. Liverpool will handle about 80,000 barrels - a week until Christmas. The course in live stock judging at the Ontario Agricultural -College = will begin January Sth, for two weeks. No tuition: feé will 'be charged nor any en- trance examination required. Any farmer or farmer's son may enter. For flooring concrete is the Fest and cheapest substance that can be em ployed. It is durable and water tight. A barrel of rock cement will lay fifty- five square feet of four inch floor, and good qualities of Portland cement will do more than that. Hog cholera is making woeful in Kent county. Dominion Inspector Orchard reports between 5,000 and 6,000 swine Killed. Out of 1.200 cases examined by hin, only sixty-two were apparently free = from The heavy rains aggravatea the disease. A pavilion is in course of erection at the Guelph Agricultural College to ac commodate the in: live stock judging. These classes were attended by over 200. farmers and farmers' sons list winter, gnd the prospects this vear are that" the attendance will be much greate For a horse with worms give before hreakiast each morning for three davs » bran mash one hour giter each dose. Give the regular feed for dinner and supper. Tincture of iron, hali ounce: turpentine, one ounce; fluid extract of male shield fern, two drams; raw lin- seed oil to make one pint: mix. Every farm should 'haye at least a small flock of sheep as rcavengers. There are go many things that sheep will consume that they are considered necessary adjuncts to farming, if the waste materials are to be utilized. A well-managed flock will pay a large dividend on the capital invested the first vear. An educational campaign against the pea weevil, the bug which has partly ruined the field crop in Ontario for ceveral seasons past, will be waged with vigor at Farmers" Institute meetings this winter. A circular is be ing sent to correspondents of the bureau of industries asking: for infor mation from every locality as to the work disease, classes before growth begins, is the best time ams extent and nature of the injury done. To improve an old orchard, scrape off the rough, loose bark from trunks. and branches and prune 'the trees. Plqugh the orchard and remoze all the grass and weeds. Clover is a good crop to' raise in an orchard. To insects and fungi spray with Bordeaux mixture and paris green at least twice after the blossoms have fallen. The British cattle embargo, which so much has been written and which Great Britain refuses to repeal, is of more benefit to the Canadians than to the British. Our farmers should feed and fit 'their animals for market at home. "Put the feed and the animal together here," says the Farming World, "and get the profit that the British middleman is looking for." A MORE ANCIENT MARINER. By Bliss Carman. The swarthy bee is a buccancer, A buriy velveted rover, Who loves the booming wind In his ear As he salls the seas of clover. A waif of the goblin pirate crew, With not a soul to deplore him, He steers for tne. épen verge of blue With_the filmy world before him. Hig-#fiisy salls abroad on the wind Are shivered with fairy thunder; On a line that sings to the 1ght of his wings He makes for the land of wonder. He harries the ports of the Hollyhocks, And levies on poor Sweetbrier: He drinks the whitest wine of Phlox, And the Rose is hig desire, He hangs in the Willows a night and a ay; He ritles the Buckwheat patches; 'Then battens his store of pelf galore Under the tautest hatches. He woos the Poppy and weds the Peach, Inveigles Daflodilly, And' then like a tramp abandons each For a gorgeous Caneda Lily. There's not a soul in the garden world But wishes the day were shorter | When Mariner B puts out to sea With the wind In the proper quarter. Or, so they! say! But I have my doubts, For the flowers are only human, And the valor and gold of a vagrant beld Were always dear to woman. He dares to boast, along the coast, The beapty of Highland Heather; How he and she, with night on the sea, Lay out on the hills together. He plifers from every port of the wind, From Aprit to-goiden autumn; But the thieving ways of his mortal days Are those hig mother taught him. His morals are mixed, but his will Is fixed; He prospers after his kind, And follows an Instinct compass-sure, The philosophers call blind. And that is why, when he comes to dle, He'll have an easier sentence Than some one I know who thinks just so, And then leaves room for repentance. He never could hox the compass round; He doesn't know port from starboard: But he knows the gates of the Sundown Straits, Where the cholcest goods are harbored. He never could see the Rule of Three, But he knows a rule of thumb Better than Euclid's, better than yours, Or the teachers' yet to come. He knows the smell of hydromel As If two and two were five; And hides it away for a year and a day In his own bexagonal hive. Out In the day. haphazard. alone, Booms the old vagrant hummer, With only his whim to pilot him Through the splendid vast of He steers and steers on the slant of the gale; Like the fiend of Vabnderdecken: And there's never an unknown course to sail But bis crazy log can reckon. He drones along, with his rough sea-song, And the throat of a salty tar, . This devil-may-care, till he makes his lale By the Hght of a yellow star. He looks lke a gentleman, lives like a lord, And works like a Trojan hero; 5 Then loafs all winter upon his hoard; With the mercury at zero. --In "Songs from Vagabondla." A Sketeh of Bliss Carman. Ar. Garman belongs to that small group of Canadian poets whose work has heen récognized by the most in- telligent. critics to possess very high qualities both of form and imaygina- tive range. He was born at Freder- jeton, N.B., in 1861, and was educat- ed under Dr. Parkin at theyCollegiate Institute, from which he eritarad the University of New Drunswick. He graduated as an alumni gold medal- ist in 1884, and afterwards pursued his studies at Edinburgh and Dar- vard Universities. He studied law for two years, but found more con- genial work in journalism. In 1890 he becanie a member of the staf of The New York Independent, and formed connections with the leading American magazines. He was: also associated in a unique venture in per- iodical literature in establishing the Chap Book. which had a brief but brilliant existence. = His first vol- ume of collected poem was entitled "Low Tide on Grand Pre,' and ap- peared in 1893. Since then he has published, "Behind the Arras," a further collection: "Songs_ {rom Vag- abondia,'"' in collaboration With Richard Hovey, and "More Songs ¥rom Vagabondia,' Mr. Carman's remarkable for its lyrical Guality, and it breathes the broad optimism of a spirit disciplined te stoicism, but in close fellowship with nature: of one who loves to face heeq cea winds and sea rain, and watch racing tides, notes the sunkizht «8» hills and all that vagrant beauties op- ¢n to the wayfarer, but ahove all loves the good-fellowship of "his own kind. verse is v \ U.S. Teacher.-- ine Day »° & Feo! twens Now, Temmyv, why do we offer up thanks on Thanks S, Pupil" "Cos dere ain't no school dat day, I guess." kill | \ about " Force," course, "Give thamks for - " Sunny Jim." Sweet, crisp flakes * The writer is one of: three with ' Force,' Yim Dumps is more than thank! when Thanksgiving Day cores round acain, Fer all the Dumps, © Eat vnrestrained each ample Till, filled with good t} ng- to the brim, e Force pit "he Ready-to-Serve Cereal makes a thankful digestion. Threo Generations Eat " Force." It is an open question whether the children, grand- ma or myself could get along without it. 211 traiaed on "on 'i orce, says 1 of wheat and malt. generations who start breakfast " Josspn M. GIBBONS," MOORES HAPPY HOME 31 | Bos Sr THOUSANDS IN USE Reliable - Perfect- Economical SOLD ONLY AT ELLIOTT BROS., In Our They are HAPPY HOME RANGE rr-- WHY THE "HAPPY HOME" IS POPULAR: It is economical on fuel. Satisfactory to operate. Artistic in appearance. Large ventilated oven. A powerful water heater. Every range guaranteed by the makers. 77 Princess St Window : And You Will See the Best Men's Shoes Made in America, Geo. A. Slater's {nvictus Shoes A. ABERNETHY'S SHOE _ "7 STORE. LEAD PIPE All Grades. There never was as good as manufactured by the CANADA METAL CO., WILLIAM STREET, TORONTO, ONT. ..BERMUDA ..| THE NOW FAR-FAMED BERMUDAS, WITH cable ¢ommunication and equable winter temperature of 65 degrees, beautiful scenery and 100 miles of good roads, headquarters of the Bri army and pavy, is unrivalled in its_attractivencss, reached by the first class iron steamers TRINIDAD or PRETORIA in forty-eight hours from New York. Sailing every SATURDAY this winter. The tropical islands, including SANTA CRUZ, ST. KITTS, MARTINIQUE, ST. LUCIA BARBARDOES AND DEMERARA, also afford beautiful anc interesting tours, all reached Liv steamships of the uebce Steamshi Company Trom New York. SPECIAL CRUISE TO THE TROPICS PER SS. MADIANA, 7TH FEBRU- ARY, 1903. For descriptive pamphlets and dates of mailing apply to A. EMILIUS OUT- ERBRIDGE & CO.. Agents, 39 Broadway, New York: J. PP. HANLEY or J. P. GILDER- SLEEVE, Kingston, Unt. ARTIIUR AHE Secretary, Quebec. ALLAN LINE. CHRISTMAS IN ENGLAND, Tunisian, from Halifax, Dec. 8th From St. John. From Halifax Bavarian, N¥v. 29. Dec 1. 10 p.m Tunisian, Dec 6. Dec 8, 10 pm Corinthian, ec 13 Dec. 15, 10 pom P'retorian, Dec ou Dee. 22, 10 pon FIRST CABIN--Tunisian and Bavarien, $60, upwands. Parician, $55 and upwards re torian and Corinthian, $50 and uji- wards. SECOND CABIN--Tunisian and Bavarian, fae (ther steamers, $37.50; Liverpool, Loiclowrderry or London. f Third =~ (148:--825 and $26: Liverpool, | ery. Belfast, Glasgow, London New York 10 Glasgow ane Londonderry Sardinian, Nov. 27th; Laurentian, Dec, | 11th. Sardinian carries 2nd and 3rd class passengers oniv, J 3 HANLEY, Agent, City Possenger Depot, Cor. Johnstom andl Ontario Sts. J I". GILDERSLEEVE, Ciarence St. | ~~ NOT THE SAME OLD PLACE | BUT THE SECOND DOOR ABOVE, YOU will find the best variety of cooked meats in | the city alin fresh pork esusages, tender- 1 bologns, pure lard, mild cured bacon. Cive us a call, at vers' store, 60 Brock street, 'Phooe 570, MAYORALTY 1903 To the Electors of Kingston : LADIES AND GENTLEMEN :--As a oan- didase lor Mayor for 1908, I respectfslly so- lieit your votes and influence to elect 'me. C. J. GRAHAM. MAYORALTY (903 To 'the Electors of Kingston : LADIES AND GENTLEMEN :~1 am a oanm- didate for the mayoralfy for the year 1008, and respaotiully ol your votes snd fn- J. T. WHITE. -@uenen om my behalf. MAYORALTY 1903 To the Electors of Kingston : LADIES AND GENTLEMEN :--I reeprot- fully solicit your votes snd influence 10 eleot me as Mayor for 1908. J. H. BELL. Auction Sales. SAVE MONEY BY EMPLOYING ALLEN & BROWN, Auctioneers,

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