Daily British Whig (1850), 6 Oct 1903, p. 5

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res much less labor ite. If you wantto' er results with Sun. wash according to the Sunlight way g. Sunlight Soap 0st delicate fabric, \R injure the hands. r hear a man-- u could believe ever bought a that dida't'give on, and if he ever hear him fused to make sy. whether the r ours ? r hear a man bought some- nd found out could have less money ? . Did you as high pric- vays welcome ok. The va- ed no word- | Clothing is ~~ --f Rl oafls ed, $10 and Gloves, 80. ir Hats. - Ex. Ladies' Ger- en's Gérman Dress Skirts, ers, Ladies' Flannelette te Drawers, d Children's @ west, inery antle Store. CRIME SHOT. [hey See Men Robbed. hile the director m in Fiume was Pp was attacked hot Lim and the body of £1,000, was taking home 8 wages. was committed two little boys, ding cattle in a wen witnesses of refore shot they, enough to give he, a. ing te, road to investi- DWELLINGS FURNISHED AND UN- » plete with fittings; w - > . > rs awa a dR" J Foods oo - 8 BL hB H.C, 2 + + 2 ' 8 RN " . 1 i u x > As >a X B +] a) os ¥ > « £4 LY . 3) , | mam -------- ss Life is worth living when one can wwake after n good fight's ¢ ready foranything the day may bring. Eye clear; tongue clean liver active; stomach right; hand steady and every nerve vibrating with that sp i sense of the power of perfect lic: Too few enjoy this caviable morning awakening, but Abbeys Effervescent Salt can always ba depended upon to restore the system wo its natural con- dition and keep yon in good sound health. A gentle laxative it helps | nature to rid the system of poisonous | impurities, stimulates the liver and | tones up the digestive organs. At all Druggists ase. and 6oc. Alcoholic Kidney Remedies Add fuel to the Fire of Disease, DR. PETTINGILL'S Kidoey-Wort Tablets Are Saving Thousands ot Lives. * A vast number of men and women suffer from a slow consumption of the kidneye, and yet do not realize the fact that they are slowly dying from Bright's disease. Many such victims who feel that their kidneys are in a disordered condition are seeking relief by using some of the liquid kidney re- medies ro composed of alcohdl. Such: treatment adds fuel to the fire of the disease. Dr. Pettingi I's Kidney-Wort Tablets is now the recognized specific for all forms of kidney diseases, urinary and bladder troubles. They are strictly pure in composition, and are now Jrescrived by our ablest physicians. {idney Wort Tablets are curing thou eands who failed to find relief in the ordinary remedies of the day. Ask your druggist for them; he will guar. antee them.' Price. 50 cents per bottle or six bottles for $2.50: = WE place new lights and ir old ones. Guarantee - ough work and reasonable pricos. Carry everything needful in stock : 3 3 3 3 6 Auer Lamps, Mantels, Glassware, etc. Attend to your gas service, while ™ you can get the work done cheap. % DAPI PITTI Tre A $ Tens of thousands in health to-day solely through drink- ing the MAGI! Caledonia The Waters without a peer. Sold by all best dealers. BRECK & HALLIDAY HAASAN IAAP CANNEL COA «FOR -- YOUR GRATE. It lasts all night, Try it. _P. WALSH - 55-57 Barrack Street. TO-LET. LARGE FRONT ROOM, WITH ALL modern = conveniences. Mrs. Yates 64 William street. furnished, stores, etc. McCaan"s Real Estate Office, 51 Lrock street. Phene 826 or 631. 3 ' TWO LARGE OFFICE ROOMS IN Exchange Chambers, Brock street Apply to Geo. Cliff, Real Estate Agent, 95 Clarence street, or John Mudie. EE ------------------ETT TE FOR SALE. mp------ ET TSET---- NE FIVE-YEAR-OLD MILCH COW, giving fifteen quarts per day early in season gave twenty- two. One Carriage Horse, kind and perfect, or will exchange for a heavy drait horse, One Daisy Churn, in verfect order Apply to J A Gould, Smith street, opposite Princess street. 730 ee ee ten eee STEAM 'ENGINES AND BOILERS, IN perject rondition, nearly new, com- 12-Horse-Power stationarv cost $200, for $110; 10-Horse-Power stationary Boiler, cost $185; Yor $100. 8-Horse- Tower Horizontal Engine, cost $170, © for $90: 1j-Horse-Power, Reversible, * . Upright. Portable Engine and Boiler. suitable for light work or steam Boiler, AS EDUCATOR THE ADVANTAGES OF MAN. UAL TRAINING. An Article in The Brantford Ex- ate Institute. It is claimed on behalf of manual training 'work, that it belongs to a group of exercises that are essenfial to any complete course of study. As a new subject, seeking admission to the high school curriculum, it must make good its claim to recognition by establishing both its educational va- lue and its direct relationship to the community life of the period. The schools have so long been the hunt- ing grounds for self-seeking faddists and unpractical ~ theorists that any proposed change is looked upon with suspicion and questioned as to its right of existence. It therefore is necessary in a discussion of this kind to answer the demands of that legi timate conservatism which calls for particulars before deciding the ques- tion at issue. Manual training is educative in its tendencies for three reasons, among others, --Jt is interest- ing in itself and helps to make other school studies attractive; it leads to the acquisition of knowledge of a useful and 'entertaining kind, it causes clear thinkinf and accurate execution, it develops self-reliance and original ity, it brings about that attitude of mind which seeks cause and corse- quence by investigation rather than by authority, and this is the most valuable attainment of the educated man. Whether or not these are to be con- sidered as factors desirable in school work, of course turns upon what the schools are supposed to be for. If, as has bee so generally assumed in vears gone by, they are simply to fit children {o pads eXdminations on bookwork and things told them, they become but = packing houses where scraps of information is the material dealt in and children's minds #he re ceptacles for its retention. In such a scheme neither manual training, nor the interest mor originality, nor the scientific mind has. any place or func- tion; indeed all such agencies are hin- drances, because they direct attention from the one object of learning items by heart as a laying up of ammuni tion against the great day of attack by the examining board. Men who know the. principles underlying real education refuse to accept this stand- ard. They know well that hoards of knowledge that is not translatable in- to effective action is of no more worth either to the possessor or to the world, than is the miser"s hidden coin, or the starving castawayv"s rescued gold. The accumulator of knowledge, unless he turns it into productive ca- pacity, is not a whit more useful to society than is the man who gathers old newspapers or cracked teacups. If, on the other hand, the view is taken that the schools are institutions necessary to our civilization, because children are born in ah environment that is exceedingly artificial; and every sense of justice to the individual and of protection to the community demands that each one shall receive a proper and fairly complete preparation for living a useful life as a member of this highly organized society, then in- terest, invention and power of enquiry are clements to be cultivated. This is what schools are for, and any agency that tends towards these results, is a legitimate source of educational pow- er. That manual training is productive of interest, both directly and indirect Iv, is perhaps - a subject needless to disduss here. All knew well the fascin ation that constructive operations, even of a crude kind, have for bovs from ten or eleven to fourteen or fif- teen years of age. It is one of their positor, By W. S. Ellis, M.A, i Principal of Kingston Collegi- | per cent. of the pupils in the schools wil be concerned in later years. The new subjects of 'which manual train- ing is one, that are about to have places on the curriulum, will tend to remedy these defects by placing stress upon power of efficient accomplish ment rather than upon mere membr ization in the school exercises Turning now to the other side of e subject, 'the relationship of these ons to the civiization of the times | the comununity « life of the coun try, a simple statement of work and aims will be sufficient to establish the connection. The object of the primary end secondary schools is not to im- part scholarship but to train up good citizens; not to reach out to the bounds of all human learning, 'but to make boys and girls hE of in teliigently performing the duties that. wil fall to them in the modern com- plex life. When public opinion gets weaned from the morbid fantasy that examinatlién results are the measure of any desirable attainment, it will come to he recognized that ability to honestly earn a decent living, to give an intelligent vote, to rear a family in a respectable way, and to leave a fair share of the work for the preser vation of the sovial fabric in which we are enmeshed are real functions of life for which the school is bound to make preparation. In this preparation three factors are prominent and constant--information, that leads the individual to under stand the causes and bearings of pre sent conditions; the attitude of mind, which leads him to investigate and to think clearly, and the independent and courageous wi'l which brings prompt and effective response to judg ment. A proper course of constructive work, with the suitable academic sub jects accompanying it, is necessary for training towards these results. The aim. of this course must not, however, be that so loudly heralded by some enthusiasts, the giving of facility in the use of tools. Hf every pupil in the province were able to build soap box: es correct to centimetres, it 1s very doubtful if industrial occupations would be one bit better off than at present, or intelligent citizens any more plentiful: than they now are. Still, a course in manual trairing will necessarily consist of graded exer cises," but mot of the making of pre scribed models to definite dimensions and by definite direction. The system of models takes all vitality out of the work and reduces it to the purely me chanical. The ideal course is a re gular progression of type exercises to serve simply as guides for pupils' ef forts, but permitting of any variation that the student may fancy, provided he has capacity for its execution. The life of the work is the expression of individuality, it keeps alive interest, it develops character, it is the educa tive demand in constructive exercises. It has already been said that through this agency the school and the world outside the school may be brought into a close relationship with each other, both theoretically "and practically. In these operations the boy is not dealing with abstractions but with materials of construction, and his problems are similar in kind to those oi the shop and mill. He is doing what skiled workmen are busy at; he feels that' he is gaiging ' the power to express thought not only by the spoken. or written word, bul; along some lines at least, by the ex' eccution of the concrete article, or by its representative drawing. He is Jearping- to think in the same terms that men do who are carrying on the world processes around him; he un derstands their language; he follows their methods; he appreciates their motives: in short, when he steps be vond the threshold of the school he is not altogether a stranger wander ing to and fro on the face, of the earth. ¢ These, then, seem to be some good reasons why manual training, as one of a group of subjects (all discussion of the allied studies has been omit early experiénces of power over the | world of matter. If the educational doctrine, widely held, be at all true, that the individual epitomizes in his early years the great period of devel opment through which the race | has passed, then the constructive tendency of boyhood and youth sums the long ages of human growth that connect the cave-dweller with the machine shop operative. This the rave has gone | through in reaching its present civili zation, this the boy should 'pass | through in coming to his place in that | civilization. Hence ii there be any real foundation for the theory of the simi larity of development of the man and his kind the neglect to use this apti tude of pupils for constructive work, is the ignoring of one of thé great | natural tendencies of the race that | makes for progress, | Manual training and its allied | group of subjects leads to the acqui sition of knowledge that is apolicable | in the actual affairs of life. To make this clear it will be well to recall | that there has been borrowed and | inherited from older countries with | ideals and traditions diflerent from | ours, a syspem of education that | glorifies knowledge to the detriment | of intelligent action, that places literar$ and theoretical far above thé practical and material. "It places the writer, who is merely an artificer-ih words and. sentences above the /man who builds a house, a raiftoad for a machine." Certainly the man who embodies a thought in a group of words is not likelv to be doing more for mankind than is the man who puts that other thought into groups of gearing, shafts and pulleys, designed to produce useful material. it has been charged, and with more than 'a show of reason that. the drill and instruction of the schools, bear far more closely upon the affairs of city life and of certain classes of the community, than they do upon the 'matters relating to the great indus trial and productive operations of the land, --matters with which ninety five Is Your Catarrh Any Better ? You ought to treat it now, the wea- ther is so favorable. you catch cold, nose and throat kept inflamed despite all you can do. pleasant to use and so effective--Cat- arrhozone. In the summer it cures catarrh in a very short time. You did. I am sure vacht. cost $175, for $90. Steel Shaftings. Hens and 2 Pulleys, cheap. J. A.-Gould & Co, Kiog street, east of Queea street. Catarrhozone and recommends it also. ' 25¢. and 81, he t | to the civilization about | corporation, | agents, [ : | terday, for the first time, to sell to the | en stated that ¥ the exhibition Further, | In the winter | are | Now there's that delightful remedy. so | ted) has just claim to a place on the curriculum. It gives valuable mental training, which is an element in: edu cation, it develops character, which j« the object of education, it tends to place the boy in sympathetic relation him, which is the end for which schools exist. -------- U. S. STEEL CORPORATION. -- Offers Sheet Iron Plates To Ger- many. Hamburg, Oct. 6.--The United States through its Hamburg Stefiens and Co., dffered, yes German iron masters sheet iron and iron plates for home consumption, or export. Commercial papers profess to doubt that the offer is sincere, or that itis likely to lead business, espe inlly as plates are now among the lowest giced articles in the German market They also believe that the company will lose Keavily if it invades Ger | many. 4 -------------------------- Kingston Barracks. Upon 'the item of $25,000 for bar racks for the Royal Canadian Artil jery at Kingston, Sir Frederick Bord the city of Kingston give the government grounds, for new bar | racks. The present buildings are un | sanitary, there seeming to be a diffi- | culty of disposing of the sewage of the | city in such a way that it will not be a nuisance to these barracks. It is in tended to sell the property there and | construct new barracks, probably en the land which the city offers fo pro | vide for the purpose. At present the | question of Festoring the Fort Henry is under had offered to | property ( deputy minister reporting that the government might occupy it with ad { vantage, Lord Dundonald being also very much inclined to that view. r---- Died In California. | Information was received in the city Ito day of the death in California - of Stanly, son of H. W. Wilsm, Clergy | atrect west, manager of the Rideau | Lakes Navigation company. The re { mains will be brought home for inter { ment, ------ {| The Fiddler, who won the last race at Morris Park, Saturday, and who | to have been a "ringer," | wax paraded in the paddock after the | ith race, when many wellknown horsemen were satisfied that he' was The Fiddler and not MacNamara, as had been reported. Green tomatoes, Maullin's, | was said 25¢. per bushel, at consideration, the THE DAILY WHIG, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6. ----------e-- VISION RESTS PHENOMENON SEEN BY THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE. Doves (And Veiled Head--Sub- stances Held Between The Strange Apparition And Lights Fail to Obliterate it. Oswego, N. Oct. 6.~All Oswego is stirred by an evidence of the super natural attending the funeral prepara tions of Mrs. Thomas Kelly, who lies dead at her home in West Fifth street, just south of Albany "street. Thou sands of people have been attracted to the house in sedrch of an explana: tion' of the phenomenon, but they have gone away with their curiosity unsatisfied. On the cei'ing of the room in which the dead woman rests in her coffin ap poirs tha well defined head of a wo- man veiled, and accompanying this are a pair of doves. All are at the foot of a cross which appears on the ing about a foot from the ride wall and directly over a ¢andelabrum which stands at the foot of the coffin. The cross is about six inches high and rests on a mound two inches high. The vision was first seen on Sunday night and has remained ever since in gpite of efforts made, by the 'move- ment of the lights, to show that it was produced by shadows. Substan ces have been held between the vision and the lights but have failed to oh literate it In daylight and at night the strange apparition remains | unchan ged, and it has been viewed by fully 5,000 people. A steady stream of the enrious ix going and coming from the house. No explanation at all satis factory has been discovered, Clergy- men have been caled in and viewed the with wonder but without comment. INCIDENTS OF THE DAY, Newsy Paragraphs Picked up by Reporters On Their Rounds. George Richardson left at noon to- day for Montreal. Misses Edith and Mabel Irving are visiting friends in Deseronto, Dr. E. Fahey leit today for Roch ester, N.Y., on a business trip. scene Mrs. 3. A. Roblin, Rednersville, ig dead of consumption, aged thirty-three) years, Dr. Spankie was defeated in Rich- mond in the British Columbia elec- tions. Capt. and Mrs. W. Bruce Carruthers left to-day for Ottawa on a pleasure outing. Archbishop Gauthier left at noon for Ottawa to attend a conference of the Canadian archbishops. Mrs. James German, Petworth, has gone on a trip to Michigan, to see her brother for a few wecks Lieut, Gordon B. Johnson, R.E., has received orders to proceed to Ceylon at the end of this month. M. R. Milne, University avenue, left this afternoon for Philadelphia to re sume his studies at the dental college. H. W. Richardson went out to his Bedford mines this afternoon to in- vestigate the blowing up of his steam: vaocht. ' Samuel Merkovitz,' who committed perjury in a betting house case in Toronto, has been sent to. Kingston penitentiary for three years. Farmers who attended the market this morfing stated that there was a heavy frost during the early hours, preceding the rising of the sun. W. B. Taylor and James Dennison, stone cutters, left to-day for london to take up work on the new drill hall in course of construction there. Miss Ida Newlands, professional nurse, left to-day for New York, after spending the past few months at the family home on Barrie street, James H. Madden, Napanee, recently appointed judge of the county of Lennox and Addington, has been ap pointed judge of the surrogate court for the said county. A big moose weighing over 1,000 pounds, was shot aear Frankford, 'hy John Herrigan. The animal, which was six feet high, had attacked sev eral people viciously. The en is announced of a voung machinist employed in the Kingston Foundry and a popular woung lady of Centreville.- The wed ding will take place this month Cheese makers say that the flow of milk is remarkably good for this sea son of the year, .ns pasturage is ex cellent. The factories will remain open until about the tenth of November. » gement GENERAL HOSPITAL. The Businkss Transacted By The Governors. The October meeting of the govern: ors of Kingston General Hospital was held on Monday afternoon. Present Prof. Marshall, chairman: I. M. Mcin- tvre, B. W. Robertson, W, F. Nickle, Gi. Y. Chown, Dr, Third, Dr. Wood, Dr. Garrett, Dr, Walkem, James A. Minnes, Rev. S: Tighe, W. B. Carru- thers, Rev. D. Laing, Dr, Duff, Dr. Chown, Dr. Massie, Dr. Kilbors, R, E. Kent, Archdeacon Carey, W. B, Skin- ner, Rev. J. Mackie, The committee to inquire into the advisability of increasing the term of the nurses-in training from two to three vears was re-appointed at its request, t the mquest of Dr. Walkem, K.C., the medical men present were asked if they had anv objection, on the ground of danger to the community, to the erection of a shack for contumptive patients, on the hospital premises, and they were unanimous in stating that the danger from eontagion would be reduced. } The report of the visiting governors suggested that certain trees on the hospital grounds near the nurses' home should be cut down as they darkened the new building. The = re port was referred to the committees of management. Capt. W. B. Carruthers and R. E. Kent were appointed visiting govern ors for the present month. Drawing The Distinction. Chicago Tribune Women have taken our collurs and ties, our belts and our socks, some- where we have heard that sone of them "weal the breeks," and Ahere is a Conspiracy on foot to take our DIED AT ANDRESSBURGH, - Mrs. James Andress Passes Away ~Big Crops Everywhere, Andresshurgh, Oct. 6.--~The death took place on Saturday evening last of Mrs, Nancy Watson, relict of the late James Andrews, She had = been ill for several woeks, and her passing away was not unexpected. The de ceased lady was 'born in the town- ship of Elizabethtown, and was eighty- four years of age. 'Throughout the township she was widely known and esteemed as a kind hearted, genial old lady, the good influence of whrwe life will last for many a day. She leaves five daughters and one son, viz: Mrs. Péter Larue, Quabbin; Mrs. Albert Moore, Lansdowne; Mrs. Thomas Sher. man, Michigan; Mrs. Thomas An- dress, Wisconsin; Miss Laura, at home, and Silas, in Climax, Michigan. The funeral took place on Monday after noon, the sermon being prea in the Methodist church at MalloFyvtown by Rev. Charles Baldwin. Interment ment took place in the adjacent come tery. John A. Root, Yonge Mills, \has just completed the erection of a large new barn for Henry Ruttle, of this place, and has several other barns to build in the neighborhood. He is a splendid mechanic, and his services are ia great demand. Dr. David Judd, wife and two children, of Boston, Mass., are spend ing a few weeks with the doctor's mo- ther, Mrs. Henry 8S. Judd. The lat- ter's daughter, Mrs. (Dr.) Sparling, and husband, are also visiting Mrs, Judd. Many of the farmers are engaged in filling. their silos for the winter. The corn crop was a good one this dea son, Ducks are quite plentiful in the creeks and ponds © roundabout, and not a few of the ' coveted wild fowl find a way to the farmers' table, Wal nuts are unusually plentiful this fall; along the river front the branches are breaking beneath the weight of Ke nuts, Some of the residents will gather at least fifty bushels from their trees, In' consequence the price has gone down to 81.25 a bushel. There never was a larger trop of apples in this section than that now being gathered. Ther growers are scarcely able to find a market for their fruit at any price. Good snow apples can be bought at the orchards for 25¢. a bushel, Blake Hawes left on Wednesday for Mickigan, where he will spend a few months.Aeman A. Guild, of the Bri vish Whig stafi, Kingston, is spending his holidays with his parents, Wr and Mrs. A, P. Guild, Budget From' Cataraqui. Cataraqui, Oct. 6.--Thanksgiving services were held in the churches here last Sabbath. The Anglican church was very prettily decorated and Canon Grout conducted the servides. Mr. McKee preached in the Methodist church in the morning, and Rev. W. I. G. Brown in' the evening. Owners of orchards report a good apple crop. WN. J. O'Shea and J, L. Haycock have sold their apples to the packers. David Purdy and family have moved to the city for the winter, Their ab- sence will be keenly felt. Mrs. David Nicol is vishuing friends in Tweed. Miss McFarlane is with her sister, Mes. Drebner, for a few days. Mrs. Craig and Mrs. Robinson are attend. ing the W. M. 8S. convention at Mor- tisburg. J. L. Haycock-- is at home for a few days. He has just returned Trom the North-West, and leaves to- morrow for the capital. Dr. Ed wards is improving his premises hy wilding a new drive house, ete., and Mr. Binnington has his catile sheds well ander way. John Simpson has returned from a trip.to Chicago, Mrs, Clark and daughter, of Adolphus town, are at Emest Cooke's. Mr. and Mrs. T. Foote, Cleveland, are at C. Purdy's, and Mr. and Mrs, C. Ide, Rochester, at Mr. Kisér's. Mise Ethel Riley is 'spending some 'time with her ister in Toronto. Miss Jean Baw who hax been ill, is able to be \ stairs.. Refthen Dawson, one of the oldest residents, is not enjoying the best of health at presint. A Barn Burnt. Pleasant Valley, Oct. 5.~ Rain is much needed to soften the ground for the plough. Farmers are cutting corn and digging potatoes, many of which are rotting. Apples are a plentiful or Mr. Watson has improved his residents by the addition of a portico and granolithic, or cement steps. FE. Whitty had a barn destroyed by fire on the 27th September (Sunday.) J. Hartman is about to move from this plice to Bedford, and today took a lond. We wixh him succeds in his new abode. A wee lady has come to the home of E. Whitty. Other visitors : Master J. Watson spent a week viciting in Uncle Sam's domain, and returned last Thursday. Mrs. J. Gordon at Thomas Watson's. Miss | Annie Watson spent wn week at Elbow Lake visiting friends. George Barr is having a cellar built preparatory to moving his house thereon, and will shortly remove to his farm. =] a-------- Chicago railway meh may strike Sa turday if their demands are refused by their employers. They want high- er pay, shorter hours and none but union men employed. 5 James 1. Kernochan, well known as a New York clubman and society lender, is dead of meningitis, aged thirty-five years. THE OLD RELIABLE 1 1 Canada Pacific Ry. ... Toledo Ry. .... ioc. Twin City Transit . Commercial Montreal Telegraph Bell, Telephone Co Montreal Cotton Co Dominion Cotton Co. R. & O. Nav. Dominion Steel, in this town. FREE PACKAGES OF | SHREDDED WHEAT TRISCUIT The New Electric Baked Wafer , : AND BISCUIT _The Standard Cereal Food are being delivered to the homes in Watch Shredded Wheat Man | for the generous Some people should do less talking and more. g It is to the people who do the cooking we wish to THE "HAPPY THOUGHT RANGE Saves fuel and food, health and nerve and make you love to cqok, Over 1,200 Sold in Kingston. For its working qualities ask some of your frie: using ih CLOER, BABBIT, THE CANADA METAL -CO., TORONTO, MES. L. CUMBERLAND Phrenologist and Palmist Positively, without a susmtion, gives names, dates, acts, and Jocations, in the vast problems of life in all their various details. The past, present and fus turg revealed with marvelous accuracy. ihe locates mines, minerals, and buried treasures, old estates, lost or absent friends. In matters of law, speculation, investment and all domestic troubles the nredietions of this gifted medium are In fallible. She unites the separated, causes speedy and happy marriages with the one of your choite and removes ovil in fluences. She tolls you what buwiness you are best adapted to, and what days and locations are lucky for you. She nr po nizes none as her superior. Her remark. able Vaychic Power has won for her a reputation that has been accorded to but few. Oné visit to this genuine medium will repay you for the many disappoint ments you have had in life, Ncientific mist reader. : Office hours 'from 9 am, to 8 p.m. Readings, $1. Room 8, Hotel Congress, hing Street. "FALL IS HERE ! MR. SINGLETON, Organist Baptist Church bogine teaching the FALL TERM MONDAY, Sept. a1st. Plano, Voice, Theory and Church Organ Bnquire for terms at the UP-TO-DATE MUSIC STORE, 286 Princess Street. oan well our "ee ANY OLD AGENT === and Rolidey Becky EE selves. Nine beautiful hooks shown in one Prospectus, They Bot the world's best record. Books from Se. to 6. 96 ales in 100 call. #6 Prospectus free on promis: to canvass. Send Si, for postage. Dig comasiesion on $2.00 & day salary contmot, Linseott Publishing Company, Brantiord, Ontario, or its appearance see our display. McKELVEY & BIRC 69 and 71 Brock Street. I? MISS NEAMATA VAN decided to in Ki specially for mechanics and 3 is given individually to suit all trades. CHARLES E. WRENSHALL, Roows 280} Princess street. KINGSTON BUSINESS COLLEC ; KINGSTON, TORONTQ BUSINESS Col MONEY AND BUSINESS. ten lars © QODY 'S Anon" IM. over TO RENT. NEAR THE PARK, A LARGE WELL furnished house All mofern sen- Ea veniences. Apply to M., Whig Offige. COMMERCIAL, ---- NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE. Oct. Oth. Wabash 'anew Atchison U. 8. Steel, U. 8. Steel, Com. Union Pacific .... Amal. Copper » Sugar ' Pennsylvania Miss. Pac. . CPR, sw Southern Pacific | Central... Rock Island .. ... New York Central . 2 0 Baltimore re : ------ MONTREAL MARKETS. ¢ Oct. Oth. Sell. Bu EEE y. John Electric Ry. Cable Sasitits 2 « Bi ank Dominion Steal 238 - suspendegs. Our woes multiply, NEY TO LOAN IN po low rates small sams, rs a AND 'o LIVERPOOL, DO Fire oN

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