we Fy ¥ = change time with ws, and we must J a boys' clothing. Children's fine. wearing apparel. Latent, styles gent's fernienings. Neettesseses Substantial WINES Sn Favs Ce0EePTOVEIIIG Sm-------- fawtords & Walsh, ily afford: 10 lose 8 a programme do something to do away with. all. past Boasons' th Ro a Wo are som to please you in aisle, auality and fit. The price wild Rady be socoeddondoce a | conlerence, today, | em and sixteen operators in the con RA 1 ¥ou Only Find Out The Right Course to i; Many physicians whb advertise to My ithout the aid of the Hindle, le Simi as Pyramid Pile Cure do so "they ow i is te bk icine for ob- a proper bination of the most scientific a for the cure of Pile Cure is not in an a stage, but is an establish and js recognized and used sicians dn the HOUBLEY. in suppository form, it reat trouble at once and the healing process is auiek and (Se iy; J immedi patient lions the fact vy has re- [covered from the pain, suffering and irritation which thik trouble causes, Children who suffer from this pain ful trouble, obtain reliof at once. Tt a in bi 5 iil using. However, if children are afilict ed with piles, they should be treated without delay or the trouble mdy be. come chropic. Hundreds of little ones have been cured with Pyramid Pile Cure. The vention of piles is better than t cure and they can be pre vented if only people wonld look to the regularity of the bowels and not become conftipated. Constipation and its attendant ills can be avoided by the use of Pyramid Pills. The proprie tors of the Pyramid Pile Cure saw that it was necessary to use with the majority of their patients a mild non irritating laxative, and the Pyramid Pills for constipation were the result of much careful thought and patient investigation. Pyramid Pile Cure and Pyspmid Pills are sold by druggists for fifty and twenty-five cente per package. Tittle book an he nature and cure of orthoids or piles will be furn ished free upo: tion to the Py- ~ SECURITY, a Genuine _Carter's Little Liver Pills Must Bear Signature of ~ OURE 810K HEADACHE. © Many are suffering whe would not consider ox pense and for whom, at trifling cost, the MAGI CALEDONIA WATER would be a boon. Sold sSNA, A Cosy Bright Fire Is an attraction for every one. The - cheery glow and immense heat of our coal will make itself felt with pleasure during the cold weather, It's just the kind to cook with, too. Let us fll your bin with BOOTH'S COAL. "Phone 133, Foot of West St. EE ET rr ---- STOPS PRAYER TO WHIP WIFE Beats Woman Because She Was Tardy At Devotion. Kokoma, Ind. Jan 30. For thrash ing his wile, beeanse she did not in- stantly join in family prayer, John New dick was arrested and fined in the mayor's court here. Mrs Newsdiek, who displayed two Llack eyes and- a distorted countenance in court said ghe was husy in the kitchen at the time devotion was gnnounced, and pe fore she condd get her hands out oof the dough, she was terribly beaten hy the husband who stopped his praver to enfor.e discipline Wage Demands Of Miners. to fix the wave scale and conditions 'oi labor for the ensuing vear. There are sixteen min are willing to concede an advance, ou' h conceding that present condi Hien. do not justify it. nea SAN RS A i Queen Victoria, epoch in the history Indianapolis, lads, Jan. 30.-- The na wany other jewels on the crown tional wage committee of the United We visited Tower Hill, the place of Mine, Workers and the representatives | execution, -and the spot on Tower the apdl mise operators began theie | Gimen where Anne Boleyn, Margaret of cuted. AT 5 EHS "THE DAILY -- FRIDAY, JANUARY 80. {FROMOVER SEAS TOLD BY MEMBER OF coro. NATION CONTINGENT, The Rus From Liverpool to Lom- don--Alexandra Palace--Visit- od Only Small Part of Great Metropolis. Kepler, Jan. 27.--(To the Editor) : Having spent our last night, June 16th, in t S.8. Parisian we disem barked early the next morning and took trolleys to the railway station. Here we were lined up and numbered off, six men to a room, and ordered to enter our apartments. The cars in shape, not unlike those usedl in Amer ica, are divided into apartments each of which is entered bv a door from! the side; each apartment contains two seats and is supposed to Accommodate eight passengers. In a very few min utes we were all aboard and were be ing swiftly hurled through the coun try on our way to London. We were impressed with the finished appearance of the residences and lawns. The hedgerows and small fields form =» striking contrast with our awn farm ing country, and give to rural Britain a unique beadty specially enchanting after days of absence from land Nearing one city, clouds of smoke rosa in view, tall chimney tops were seen on every hand, and the road tak ing an elevation we found ourselves among chimneys belching forth smoke and living flames, The expression of a fellow soldier "The whole town is on fire," seemed literally true. Our graphy had become cgniused, but the evidence was too strong, and we knew this to be Sheffield, whose cutlery has found its way into nearly every Can adian home 'and has a world wide re putation and market. But we are soon at Woodgreen station at the Alexan dra Palace grounds. Here we were welcomed by a representative of H.M. the king, after which we marched to our tents, large marquees with wood floors, iron bedsteads and every venience known to soldiers in camp We soon disposed of our arms, great coats and other burdens, and proceed ed at once to the club rooms of Alex andra Palace, where an excellent re con past was served by the British mar mes, who acted ag waiters. These ma rines enlist for a period of not less than twelve vears and receive ten pence a day pay; this however, may be increased to one shilling per day on recommendation for good conduct They contented however, and evince no desire to change their vocation, Alexandra Palace is the second larg est exhibition building in London. In the great assembly hall are statues of the soverejgns of England with coats of arms. Central among these is a magnificent bronze statue of the late represented sitting in a chair on a base of Righly polished marble. Notable among the military collection on exhibition here are, the cup worn by General Gordon of Khar toum fame, a small black silk smok ing cap, the original proclamation of President Kruger after the Jameson said, a meershaum pipe reported to be the property of Kruger and the bugle that sounded the charge at the bat tle of Balaclava. But we must not pause here with the greatest city on earth to be explored It would be difficult, nay, ble to give any comprehensive London in the seem very impossi idea of compass of one or two short letters. In fact I found it im possible during my stay of thirteen days to gain anything like definite knowledge even of her people. 1 visit ed only a small part of the great city and a few of her great buildings. One afternoon in company with a friend, 1 visited London Tower, Low er Thames street, London Bridy The Monument and Cheapside, the greatest the world. old English mdon Bridge horse on it, f minutes try it without ut such is thoroughiare in Having heard from an lady in Canada that 8 was never without gs we stood for ov ing to eatch al he reputed ool the traffic andfsd nd : horses in this § ol ther city that we finally gave up pic] In' London Tower we Saf nearly all the different styled of armour used since the time" of ®Wenry VII, and shopping seem gray many rare piece "med before that time. The kettle d@rams captured at the Battle of Blenheim (17M), behead ihe axes, exeoutioners' swords and im plements of torture used in hygone ages all are there; but the average Canadian turns with much greater in terest to the soldier's cloak on which the brave Wolfg expired at Quebec, 1759. Even the great Wellington's uni form, in the next case, fails to attract ow attention as we gaze on this re lie which reminds us of the greatest of our country In the Wakefield wing of the we visited the crown room, used as a small chapel, tower formerly in which tra dition has it Henry VI was murder ed. In a large glass case in the centre are placed the crowns, coronets, ete, which torm the English regalia. Let a deseription of one, Queen Victoria's crown, suffice This occupies the highest place in the collection. Among its jewels is a larg seeplres; swords, ruby given to the Black Prince in Spain (1367), and worn by Henry V tn his helmet at Agincourt. With sey enty five large brilliants it forms a Maltese cross on the front of the dia dem. Fight splendid sapphires and as many emeralds adorn the band and arches, and the cross on the summit is formed of a rose cut sapphire and four brilliants. In all there are two thousand seven hundred diamonds and Salisbury (last of the Plantaganets) Lady Jane Gray and others were ox Surely the haunts of vovalty have not always been places of hap ------------------ Use Taylor's Snowflake Baking Pow. HE MAY FIND IT. A New Explorer For pif a The ent of schools She received « votes and was ¢l Luella Kraybill, the socialist candi date for school ndent of Kan sas, received 4, Wrighe County, 2,000 republican ma gave nearly Miss Jennie G. Keith, oi Goldfield Re corder, by a majority over her democra Keith is an advo rights of women on a bg«is of merit She is a newspaper sman by profes sion, having been cngaged in that li five vears, three of which were spent in Wright count ( w@ born in Western lilinois in Scotch parentag and is of Mrs. Helen ( is superintend ent of public n in Colorado and Anna FPF, 8 ived 11.439 votes for lent of public in struction in election, ot the recent running on tl winlist tick It has been found to ke frequently the case that the first nomination of a woman for elective office is made by one of the minor outside parties in a state. I the experiment sucteeds the woman may be nominated by one of the regular part t a succeeding election and ulti by the domi nant party, a nomination which car ries with it a practical assurance of election. . Fighting Tobacco Trust. New York, Jan. 30--1t is learned that the Retail ar and Tobacco Jemleis' Asso tation, which has heen ntorporated in this state, contom plates ihe « [ a distribu ting depot f made hy th # not included mn or controlled 1 ohn This proje t important gt I the vell organized tight of pendent lealers oy the co the os tablishme such lejot is eon dered a necessity on account ion of the association to the product of nh ries Py h member ial finan he distribu | and possibly egal similarity boveott agreement while the i ndent { and small, throuBhout t} Pre parin t nove all ar as" trast i from th Hunter--Yon lways com Second beat me erows Mourn For The Crown Prince. Vienna, Ja 30. Emperor Fran Joseph and the Archduche lari Valerie, his daughter, tod ¥, ik r ved the four th anr Th th tracie death of Ciown 4 ¢ Ru h In de ning they t th Capuch k h. where U pray beside th reath co i hh wn prince vi his p¥ i mol i ress Elizabeth, |! \ A tar A nh ap Of Clothi , representing twenty four min- | piness, and it is perhaps after all our f.the New York mg states. Extravagant stories are great fortune that we occupy onl rock street, is ofierin the heard woncerning the demands to be | Juded places unknown 1 ? he yo : a suiting v. annde by. the miners and tHe attitude | world of ailluente or ambition TER or «of Scot h | the operators, Int despite these 1 TRAGE REISENDE , is l new t ports there are uslications that a oT made to order : wage scale will be agresl upon with MX to XM 4g ont resort to extreme measures he More Help. ranted either cide. The miners are prepared First class journevnien tailors eo et ---- tt Insist upon an increase in wages: | find pleaty. of employment at Living Extra fine potatoes, wd ar is believed that the operators | stonsi. Frosl i gs, Fresh h slo wk, Fresh egos butter Cooked ham. Crawford's der, strictly pure, 25c. per Ib, Read Harrison Co's. letter, North rity and elected 7 "| negro, ILIFE IN PRISON. JiM BALLARD RELATES HIS STORY QF | KINGSTON PENITENTIARY. Experiences of One of the Orangeville In- cendiaries in the Cells--Story of Soli- tary Confinement--Says He Became Contented and Resigned With a 12-Year Sentence to Serve--500 Convicts There. Jim Ballard, one of the Melanc- thon incendiaries, has returned to Orangeville from the penitentiary. He was sent to Kingston in 1897 to serve a term of twelve years. The in- | tercession of friends secured his re | lease With Jim Ballard was his | James | Severai Alonzo Smith, William Reid. brother Dave, Corbett and of the gang esCaped by tur Queen's evidence. Ballard is a ANTHONY FIALA. wart negro, with a generous New York, Jan. 20 Anthcny Fiala | tity of white blood in his veins. The | will lead the next r polar ex. | ex-vonvict talked freely of his experi- (echition. Though ng it « Mr. | ences in prison and gives a graphic | Fiala has achieved v« 5 | description of the worst features wientist wd eng iit not | viet life He howeve impossible that Lr holding | t he feels more vig Ss and bet- | in reserve for hin i ¢ of dis | ter satisfied than at any time before over ng sought for { being confined l s Jim declares that he and his . % companions were filled with horror Women In Office. when informed of their sentences, New York ig of 1902 marked no ad They did not expect to live through + Fhosle the matter of woman suf their terms, vet they soon became frage hut there Was a considerable in- | 2° tually contented. Imprisonment he crease. inn the mmber of + en elected did not find s ich, a terrible thing to office and in the number of wo | He was placed in the stonecutting men: voted for for va = pluet | department at once. Now he is a In Idaho, which back to the | Master stonemason and expects to republican colun a lapse of follow the Yonk for a living. The several Yonrs. Mev | ott was * the other convicts in this gang have sopublican: candidat r Subsri i | learned useful trad Dave Ballard : is a carpenter, Smith a blacksmith and Reid is employed on the prison farm. "The man appears to feel no bitterness toward the prison officials or the officers of the law who were instrumental in sending him to the cells. The big negro manifests a good deal of resentment toward the members of the gang who escaped punishment by revealing the plans of the crooks to rob insuranc He is puzzled to under how they escaped serving terms in prison. When this was explained to Jim he observed e co ""Isee, 1 see!" as the fact dawned { upon him, 'but 1 could never under- | stand it before. And that's the re- | ward of those gents for all their \. swearing against me and the rest of rus. Well, well! I suppose it's not | worth bothering about now { Jim Ballard says the penitentiary { is about the loneliest spot on | There are about 500 men co | there, many of them erimingls of the | hardest type, thugs, thieves, forge | perjurers and murderers The num- { ber of female prisoners is only 50. If one makes up his mind to be con- | tented, as Jim and some of his fel- { lows did, he can get along Yery well | | and time passes speedily enough | Solitary confinement for insubordi- | nation appears to be terrible pun- | ishment, for Jim says he has seen { wen at the end of it coming forth scarcely able to walk. During their { co iement in the dark cells prison- | ers re in complete darkness, their {oy fare is a little bread and water { and they havé to sleep on the bare | | stone floor, Jim nor any of | his fellows, r, ever suffered this extr shment, which often includes the lash and sometimes sus- pension by the hands | The convict's wife has married since he was imprisoned, He declares that me puni he would not take her back for | the gold that twelve draught hor | could pull. He had '"'suspicions on | fre hefore he was convicted. This phase of the ne to} amuse him greatly she found hapriness with her hus- hand, "even if he is but 24, while his wife is 48," explained the huge with a grin that showed his | { white teeth ant wi » expanse of blue | as the past Future of Canada. | Chancellor Burwash of Victoria | | College: in a recent. sermon sai | Canada had passed through yea | trinl and difficulti in ove | the obstacles and solving prob- | incident to settlement and | | development of a new country, and | { had reached an cra of at prosper- t) It was now ne to inquire, as avid had done, how the country | as to be amade pros- | perous. Good « essen- | | tial to permanent , and to s re this the | er i grants and the rising ger beeducated and evar reacher cited the United States as { an illustratio A hundred year | ago the poy tion of the republi was five millions, about that of Cu | ata to-day: the membership of evangelical churche 360,000. In 1902 the population was 75 000,000, < was { the membership of the evangelical | churches 16,000,000 While the pop- lation had increased fifteen time the chureh membership had increase i times. Speaking to the con- as Met as to tions he to foster eo tion, the edu: | socicties. ---- noand ovangeliza ion and missionary Mother of Four Sons. to t Puzzles For Saturday. The puzzle pictures in Saturday' will repredent the: names of rent posts. When sending iw gn cis it will be petessary to endl a clipping of "the pictures. retest Aes estes mteses it] 2 ayien wy Latess Method Treatment to be a permanent and positive cure 71, nd Str stretching or Joss of time. Ma Varicocele 1 on, eq alizes circulation, stops pains inthe ed rRans their proper nutrition, vitaiizes the parts yng oo it absorbs the STRCIUre LSSuC, STOPS SMALE sen ation . While in all prostatic troubles it is the trea am k that my treatment will cure you, you cago" v PAY WHEN "CURED You need pay nothing until vou are eonvinded that a thorough and complete cure} sen established. This should convince you that I have confidence in my Latest Mert nt, otherwise make you this proposition. It makes no Qiflerence hod led to cure yo > me. Each Time You Call You See Me Personally, . ment par excellence. So positi ho | with such a purpose. Or each time vou wr it receives my personal attention, The number of years 1a F L rt lished after given op Ly other doctor gn e country. . CONSULTATION FREE, oll or ect system of howe treat t fo 2 Tor Canadian Ratna x v d express charges prepaid. Nothing sent C. O. Bpe ~ 2 WOODWARD AV DR. 'GOLD ERG, 208 > Aer TROY, YT MICH. wiLcox ST, -- -- T---- "THE ORNAMENTAL NUTMEG." A] | A wooden nutmeg,--a pictured peach,--or | a shoddy shoe,--may be so finished as to rank | with "Works of Art." But all three are strictly ornamental | They are made to sell--not made to use. Reliable leather would be wasted in shoes | The Slater shoe has wear for its first pur- | pose, and so uses such leather for its uppers and soles, as will ensure creditable service. 1° It is a " Conscience Shoe," and the Makers could not shirk responsibility,-- since cvery pair is sold with their own valuation, stamped on the soles in a slate frame, viz, $3.50 and $5,00, Goodyear Welt Process. F, G, LOCKETT, "Sole Local Agent, E. B. EDDY'S Seif-opening, square bottem GRO- CERY BAGS, also Hat, Millinery and Glove BAGS, and Flour and Cement SACKS are made from the TOUGHEST PAPERS, in all sizes and weights. : : Printing as Desired. B. EDDY CO. Limited, Hull, Canada. J. A HENDRY, Agent, | Ki dngston, hE SOLD JAMES REID, THE CANADA METAL CO., WILLIAM STREET, TORONTO, ONT. Rubbers; Lvery Pair Guarantged. ~\ ; Ea PQVHO * gnieal wo 1 ONLY AT A. ABERNETHY'S Princess Street, Kingston. SPECIALS IN BEDROOM SETTS THIS WEEK. One Solid Oak Bedroom Sett, British Mirror, only $35 ; regular price $45. One Curley Birch Bedroom Sett, d in ural, only $60; reg- price $75. ne Solid Golden Oak Bedroom Sett, Bevel Mirror, onl) $45 | regular price $60. Three Golden Oak Finished Setts $15 each; regular $20. The above number is limited at this price. The I eading Undertaker. eTtieyhone | 147. PIG L. EAD NOW is the time to BUY. It's going up. OP PEOOPDOCPIL RI De@Ex " McDonnell, -------------- BERR RRA Ganadian We New From the Canadian Ottawa, Jan. 30.--Ho Lady Ant son, and his" cousin, Ber have decided to remain while longer. Mr. Mc handsome led lad of about with ood-nat wa _ boy a laugh. inc ar " which. happen stays hee has so far esc At a concert in the Rus was present with Lady Antrim, his brother and Miss Lambton. His first programme showed a f to which his attentio smilingly, by the others cert wore to its conglu nervousness was evinced blush, and a shy laug while. At last "Here whispered so one, a glanced at in un ment. 'The singer 'st with a bow toward the began ber inasterpiece Donald." At the first ve the departure of the wi men, his namesake in th adorably, while joining in the half suppressed 1; friends, but when in verses the girl reminds their trysting place in tells him she will wait on his return, it was t for the semblance of gre ly as the words were ps guishing looks from the Antrim's face wore an amusement mixed wit son's embarrassment, In cr faces amusement pred song ended in a tumul but only when the 'open the prelude showed th was not a repetition © sor, did the Honorable nell breathe easily an wonted composure. The voung people of all times enthusiastic ov sports, and skating in p this year heecome more mored of the latter gra competition arranged by which will take place r probably the cause of interest. Every morning is frequented by a band ple. who give their tim tice of intricate curv The ladies' hockey tfan year practised vigorov have been neglected, an moment is given to Government House is 1 represented. On the day to's departure for W skated at the rink until with Lady Antrim a guests, leaving Ottawa » On Monday the remaini the pafty accompanied to, again visited the ri their last morning in Intending competitors a ested in possible rivals most afraid of a Mont Quebec, Toronto, Halifa illia have also some ex .s » Mrs. Stanley Maude, dent of the Woman's A of Ottawa is taking a in that organization, guidance, the difficulties ened its existence at th the season have near! The first of a series of teas will be given earl) end an interesting roun the art collections of th begun. John Manual flaest private' collection Back of the C There's more than the tickling: the throat. The behind that and : to be strengthene Cough mixture as the tickling s the throat; that is work stops" Th lieve the cough, b not cure the col tainly will not bt system, Their therefore merely 1 necessity very lim Scott's Emulsio stop at the throat that too, but its beyond that. I cures the cough, t the cold which is cough. It search real cause of the corrects the wa weakening condit passage through t distributes stren; worn out tissues, blood corpuscles up the body. Th ing better than Sc sion to build up a system after a co We will send a s anyone on jrequest. SCOTT & B 58 Front St. W.,