Daily British Whig (1850), 13 Nov 1903, p. 5

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good fea- our Over. preclaim e. area doze, d ~tyles, 3 your.par- reierence ? ort or me. Ne have it, flake Overcoat which one leserve to 15 to $18. ifs 2.50, $15. From now and Child- nonths, A acturers of Hats. stock for ry hand. hing, ipnishings 3 Possible. this 'store e. Always the store ase you on, § Street. qin PE OE) 1 Ww EEK CO NDAY, Nov. 16th. EBrgagement of i .. MARKS BROS .. No. 1 Dramatic Company. supporting MAY A. BELL MARKS, presenting & repertorie of popular plays. onday Evening, The Duke's Daughter Change of bill nightly. 2 Big vaudeville performances. " Papular Prices, i0c., 20c, Seats on fale; 80¢. TO-LET. - LARGE FRONT ROOM, WITH BOARD, at 240 University avenue eee ere STORES, OFFICES, OR DWELLINGS, furnished or. uniurnished, at Mc Canu's, 51 Brock Street. THREE ROOMS, OVER THE G.NW Telegraph Co's. office Heated, Ap- ply to Walkem & Walkem. eta ramet me ee A LARGE FRONT BEDROOM, WITH bay window, also a Study, first floor. sunny aspect. Apply 85 Wellington street. FURNISHED ROOMS, WITH OR without board. Enquire at No. 426 Princess streot, Vaughn Terrace. modern improvements. re ete PE HOUSE -- NO. 207, IN BRICK Terrace, University Avenue; Cheap rent. Present occupant leaving city. Apply on premises, or 293, next door. fe mee TWO LARGE SHOPS, 42 and 44 PRIN- coss street, also two dwellings, and stone stable. "Rent low to a desir- able tenant. Apply 249 Brock street. = TWO LARGE OFFICE ROOMS IN Exchanges Chambers, Brock street Awply to Geo. Cliff, Real Estate Agent, 95 Clarence street, or John Made. FOR SALE. IN GOOD VIL- no op- R. Watt, BLACKSMITH SHOP, lage, doing good trade and position. Hasy terms. Plevna, Ont. COUNTY OF FRONTENAC GAOL SUPPLIES SEALED TENDERS WILL. BE RE- ceived at the office of the County Clerk, Court House; Kingston, up_to 12 o'clock noon of the 19th day of November, 1903, for the wundermentioned supplies for the gaol, for the vear 1904 Bread, Barley Oatmeal, Cornmeal, Salt, Pepper, Beef, Pork and Mutton at ---- per poumd. Milk, Molasses and American Coal Oil at ---- per gallon. Peas, Carrots and Potatoes at ---- per bushel. Straw, (hand threshed) at ---- per bundle of 12 lbs. Brown Family Soap at ---- per box of 60 hars The whole of the above supplies to be of a geod quality, and to be. delivered at the Gaol as required, and subject to the inspection of the Gaoler or. some other person appointed by the County Countil. Separate tenders will be received for parts of the above supplies Security will be required for fulfillment of con- tract J. W. EDWARDS, R. J. SPOOR, County Clerk, Chairman of County Property Court House, Nov. 7th, 1908. Metropolftan Sfock Exchange Under the Laws of Massachusetts APITAL $100,000 FULLY PAID. KINGSTON BRANCH, Opposite British American Hotel. "Phone 409. J. J. McKENNA, margin or for cash. The Ale that's always good. AT ALL DEALERS. Busy JAMES SWIFT :& OO, "Phone 135. Clarence Chambers, Clarence SL. Manager. Bonds, Stocks, Grain and Provisions bought on THE CAR STRIKE RIOTING EXPECTED IN CHI CAGO OVER IT, Trains Started With Increased Public Protection--There Was | No Interference With Mail Trains. Chijago, Nov. 13.--More tioting was | expected in fhe street car stiike to day when the news was spread abroad | that cars would be started with in- | creased police protection. It was ex- pected that a picked force of police | would be aboard each car started and that a heavy detail of patrol men | on foot would guard the' street rail way lines, while at prevent, a few squares apart, patrol waggons would be stationed. Two mail cars made the trip from the outskirts of the city | to business centres and return without | the = izhtest interference. Consider able interest attached to the move- | ment of the mail cars for the reason | that any application to the federal | tribunal would most probably be to [ prevent the mail service being inter rupted by acts of violence. The state courts on the other hand would be appealed to if leaving out any ques tion of the mails an inju n should be sought solely to prevent interferen- ces with non-union traction employees re-establish endeavoring to passenger service. Twa cars , on Wentworth | avenue left the Seventy-Ninth street emen on each. on the trip barns with fifteen pol Ten cars in: all started toward the centre of the city within hali an hour, all on the Wentworth avenue electri: line, Non-union crews | charge 'of a lientenant or sergeant and twelve pelicemen. manned' the cars and each car was in | A Strike Ordered. littsburg, Pa., Nov. 13.--Officials of the Builders' Exchange . League an nounced, to-day, that the lockout of all the buiding trades in the city affiliated with the Be Trades Council will go into to-night and will continue indefinitely unless all sympathetic strikes ave called « About 10,000 men will be affected. Bombarded The Plant. Portsmouth, Ohio, Nov. I3. At South Webster strikers have bombard ed the biick plant 'of the Harbison Walker company, and it is alleged fir ed upon a stockade where non-union men are housed. 'The sheriff last night sent deputies to the scene. The situa- | tion is grave. IN OUR OWN CIRCUIT. News of the District on Both Sides of the Line. A branch of Molsons Bank will shortly be opened in the Snider Block at Walssy-with Mr. Whitney, of Morris burg,. as os 3 Lhe G.I.R. tast express going east now stops at Morrisburg as the re sult of a petition presented to the of- ficials by the Morrisburg residents. Mrs. Gene Hagerman, Mallorytown, who underwent a very critical opera- ation at dhe Brockville General Hos- pital, is now in a fair way to recov ery. W. H. Mosher has sold his farm, acres, parts lots 20 and 30, conces sion 1, Elizabethtown, to Vincent Booth, Yonge, for $2,500. Mr. Mosher intends removing to Brockville, Stanley Acton, while practicing with the Gananoque. football boys last Wednesday, had the misfortune to break his arm' just above the wrist. He was one of the star players. A very pleasant event took place on 21 For the Whir said he was well acquainted with six | of the boards and would bring {in { in the ordinary walks of life. | presenting the action of playing ball YORK. FUN IN NEW cidents That Relieve a Teacher's Life of Monotony. from a Canadian The principal and teachers in a cer tain east side school expected a heap of fun when the father of a young German threatened to come around with "six boards of edumenca- tion," as he put it. The girl had heen sent home because she had more in her head, than any member of the class | and still refused to apply either hot vinegar or kerosene. She returned the | 1 following morning with her father, an who vowed, to the angry Uerman, er 1 r rincipal, he would again come back | er eye or senses. One could only | a late member of the varsity as | inside a few days for the purpose of | gaze in wonderment and adore the | having "left. He Has gone down." The first person you en- having all the teachers discharged. Hej them home because she had been ill, and | § was told not to return until she! Royal and the woods of Montreal Is- A , brought a medical certificate, lo prove | land, with journeyings through the of course, as elsewhere, footer che was all right. Hali an hour later | Eastern Townships, one might think | (Fugger or socker). ,.The early meal Last day of the big three days sta- she returned with her father and mo- | he had seen all that there could be is always broker. But there 1% | ionery sale. ther, who were lugging a heavy frame! of autumnal forest beauties They also a purely varsity meal known as containing a marriage certificate. The | were fortunate travelers that passed "brunch." This takes place on Sun- 500 Envelopes for 33c. ' father shook his fist under the prin-| along the Great Northern Railway | dav. It is a combination of break- x : cipal's nose and demanded to know | last Friday and Satarday--perfect fast and lunch, and does duty for 2c. Imported Note Papers, 0c. a why she sent his Minnie home. There | days--and saw the fringe "of the Laur- | both. Tt is taken after chapel, at | quire. j& our marriage certificate." he shout. | entides. The railway is splendidly | about 11.80 o'clock, and men usual- an . ed. Of course it took some time to] built and the passenger cars very ly dispense With any other meal un- 10¢. Writing Pads for Se. convince the angry parents, that what | comfortable and clean. After passing A . . X was required was a doctor s certificate | New Glasgow, the blaze of* glory of}. 1t.is well to know that you do not Packages Toilet Paper, 8 for to prove that their Minnie had fully | the woods was with us all the way, on hE Cambridge, 54 yp 2500 3 recovered from a contagious disease| even . to St. Paulin Station, whero on Will be as hare ¥ wid 3 . she had been suffering. wo stopped for a dive ibto the heart keeping?'* when friends inquire your 100 Rolls Toilet Paper, 7 for 25e. A teacher asked ome of the big boys | of the great masses ol the woods for address, If inside your college, you { to give an example showing how sub-| nineteen miles, says a writer in The wit him a Keep in sells t : on " . BD racking so Se ou don ro any 4 fraction could be pat to practical u Montreal Witness. Xeining In halle' but .if they -t] Lo k He 1 Well,' said the boy, "My Aunt Elizer went to the grocery to buy a quarter's iy worth of eggs and got sixteen. On the way home four of them busted up, sof she went back, gave the grocer-eller |" fits. That left twelve." I A small boy was asked why he was absent, the day "Me baby | ¢ she died," piped out the small voice, "And me father stay home and bury it, and me wanted to come to school." The day plained his absence teacher he out against Tammany Hall. When why he was against Tammany, he said previous, made me election a hoy ex- by telling his] electioneering | e before was An elderly man with a long beard An applicant was asked whether she could read and write. "I can't read reading," she said, "I can only read writing. That is because my eyes trouble me. I went to the dispensary to sec about it and the architect told me my eves they are loese." A class of small boys were taken by the, teacher one delightful Saturday to the Bronx Zoological Gardens. The following Monday the children were | asked to write a composition on *'| he Beautiful Things We Have Seen." One boy 'wrote : 1 saw the nicest, real, live monkey, picking the lice off its head." In an illustrative drawing lesson the pupi's were required to illustrate, "Their Fathér's Occupation." The picture drawn by a sturdy little fel low, consisted of only two figures, re or having a dance; so the teacher thought. "Kays," said the teacher, "ls this a picture of what your father ed in marriage Samuel Watson, Merrickville. Americans who have been shooting, trapping and fishing in Canada often to the seizure of the complete out of Sanford McCue, and Lacey, Alexandiia Bay, by Game In spector Robert Murchie. The game has been donated to the poor, and skifis to inform the Brockville post of fice that there is a direct line from Brockville to Newboro. They may not be aware of it, as there is so much of the mail goes around by Kingston. A letter of importance mailed in Gan anoque on the 7th, stamped Brockville 7th. came to Newhoro by stage Kingston on the 9th. An application for probate of the will of the late George Edward Shields, Brockville, has been made. The estate amounts to $75,000, about $66,000 cash in the bank and = stock in trade. $1.000 each is be~ueathed to Georre E. McGlade and Mrs. .W J. Bradley. nephew and niece respective ly, and £5,000 each to Hattie Bresnan and Emily Bresnan, two To Jamas R. Bresnan is eiven the property together with the plant used in the coal business and the remain- der of the estate goes to Mrs. Bres- nan, sister of the deceased. from nieces Portsmouth Teacher Resigns. board held a regular meeting last ev ening at which considerable routine business was transacted. The resigna tion of Miss Bradley, teacher, was ac cepted. by the board. The secretar was instructed to advertise for a suc- cessor. Big Bargains In Boots. At Abernethy's to-morrow, special and valises. B---------------- tolls of bitter, 22¢. Crawford. Seedless lemons at Carnovsky's. H Cosy Bright Fire Is an attraction for every one. The cheery glow and immense heat of our coal will make itsell felt with pleasure during the cold weather. It's just the kind to cook with, too. Let us fill your bin with : November 4th, at Merrickville, when Miss Aggie, second daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Fitzgerald, was unit- | in the close season, may take warning | Oriel | guns, etc., may be redeemed for $250. | Some of the Newboro people would | dock | The Portsmouth Separate school discount on all leather goods, trunks | is working at while you are at school ¥*' "Yes, Miss. D.-- "That is what me father does while I am at school, fighting me mother A father called to inform the princi | pal of the death of his child. 'So both of your poor little ones are now | | dead from diphtheria," said the teach {er, sympathetically. 'Tt certainly was | | | | "Oh, no," re ter loss; a great loss to you." was most no plied the parent. "It rible sad, but it was both were life insured.' INCIDENTS OF THE DAY. very Newsy Paragraphs Picked up by Reporters on Their Rounds. Cisecoes at Carnovsky's Potatoes or tub butter. Crawford. | Rev. Alexander Laird, B.A., preach es in Ottawa on Sunday. Mayor Bell will call a public meet ng for Monday night to considler pub | lic library matters, a pressing need In an educational such us King centre ston. Nelson Brock and James Tuft, on charges of horse stealing, wi'l Sin | coe, spend three years in Kingston peni tentiary. They reached that institu tion this morning. New crop Lima beans, from Cali- fornia, at Carnovsky's fruit store. Invitations are out for the marriage of Susanna E McVean, youngest daughter of J. McVean, Johnston street, to G. H. Strawbridge, of Stiat | ford, Ont. The wedding is to take | place on Tuesday, November 17th. | Fresh Huyler Candy. Red Cross In the whole realm of pic there | nothing to equal those that Ferg | makes. All kinds--lemon, apple, 1 | tart, orange, and pumpkin pies. Fresh LO MOTrow. At the police court this morning Harvey Campbell, Barriefield, was a raigned on a charge of assaulting his wife. There was not any evidence of fered that he had been guilty of such unseeming conduct, so the case was | dismissed. i m nee, -- i Big Bargains In Boots. At Abernethy's to-morrow, special discount on all leather goods, trunks and valises. er ------------ Medal For Commander Peary. London, Nov. 13. -- Commander Peary; the Arctic explorer, was pres ented with the Livingstone gold med- al by the Royal Geographical Socie ty at Edinburgh last night, and at the same time was made an honorary | member of the society in recognition | of his work in Arctic exvloration. The Livingstone medal was founded by a daughter of the late Dr. Livingstone. Big Bargains In Boots. A DELIGHTFUL DRIVE IN ! Gorgeous Picture yond anything the painter with eith- with veneration for the creator it all. Quite a few Montreal gentle- from George W. Stephens. the creameries were pleasant with in two. or three places a Saw- mill, see ~ farmers painting _ their houses means the presence of good tim asked | ally fairly well oft--the result of the high price for cheese and their abil- that if Tammany won there would be} ity to produce it economically and lessons in all of the schools on Satur- | good. In St. Paulin there were days as well as other days storekeepers actually laying water pipes for house service indoors. GRE appeared one day, dragging an elder erally the farmers were thrifty, and lv woman hy his hand. He pushed | their families well looking. "There her into the principal's office .and | was no sign of anything but thrift shouted, "Dat .is my bride. I want | So. we drove through the sunny air she tals United States." and the glory of landscape, and the sun went slowly down in a sky the blue of which what could picture? river, Tourse | Queness that might easily have born ---- COUNTRY. nae of Tinted Canadian Maples in The Laurentides. The glow of 'an autumn sun on ast week. made pictures gorgeous be- pen or brush might convey to eithe and of such maniticent landscapes, of | © ng seen our Own glorious Mount Lac a I'Eau Claire, nine miles drive St. Alexis, was the objective yoint--the country seat of the Hon. St. Alexis, was , ten-mile drive from St. Paulin. I'he way was along the banks of the sretty winding river, and the farm- ws and their homes, the flocks of 'attle and the milk preparations for __. sea, where the power is good. To for »aint is a luxury. So, those = srs who were doing this -were gener- Winding hither and beyond ran the its banks very heavily clad with folinge and suggesting a canoe of pleasant smoothness mile up after mile until of a sudden an rearing of the hillside showed a fall of more or less torrent-like pictures- the original that Jan Ridd desarilxs in "Lorna Doone" as the back door to the Castle of the Doones. A pause to examine and enjoy the wealth of color all around, and then the pony swiftly on a detour! of carried us more than a mile We came through the rear of a farmer's yard. Past byre, barn and home house Then from the rise we saw Lac a "Eau Claire. It was delightful. 'The sun- light upon the home house, boat- house and bathing-house tinged the white paint with mellow light and thé yellow sheen of the mirror-like surface of the lake was only dimpled here and there with a fly or trout ripple. The forest fringes of the lake were reflected vividly, and one might easily imagine from the opposite is- land the lady of the lake and the boat coming to meet us at the silver strand-only the strand was rather of the golden hue, It is safe to say that never in all his life did Sir Wal- ter Scott view a more romantic scene than this. Neither did he hear the cry of the loon--nor the swish and scream of Canadian wild duck. But the sunset left no gloaming, bright as was the setting it gave to the picture, when the shadows were cast by its going down. Flip went the fly-cast at early morning, the deft hand dotting the lake surface with the life-like fly hooks and feathers. Again and again the cast, and here and there the flies danced and flecked, until suddenly came a leap and the surge of life from the water. A lusty trout was at its battle for life with the angler at the other end of the line Five minutes and a beauty three and a half pounds in weight was in the landing met. Soon afterwards - the same deft hand had captured a three-pounder. That was enough for the hour. Exploring the lake, inlets or bays, and examining the island wore away much more time than fishing. Then the log fire in the spacious fireplace, the library and the story followed. The farmers had killed a moose three miles on the railway side of St. Alexis, and considered the feat no small one. They had not heard of these animals having been so far in- to the cultivated area before, and it was explained that the incident was not to be taken as indicating any increase in the moose family, but merely that one had lost its way ard had thus been' discovered and shot on sight by the farmer who could get in the first load of buckshot. ng Museums for Indian Relies. In Orillia and in Collingwood it is proposed to follow the example of Penetanguishene, and set apart a space in the public library as a mu- seum for the collection of Indian re lics. Orillia has been moved to this step by the fact that Mr. C. W. Hartihan of New York, who was in that locality this summer, went about 'among the people and bought up at small prices a lot of rare In- dian relics which he carried off to New York to be presented to a pub- He museum. There are many private collections in Simcoe County, ---------------- . Explained. Smith--Why is it that intellectual women do not make mothers? ---- Only Used At The Great Univer- than had to know one or two ele mentary phrases only used at the For instance, he is not Autumn | 'varsity. going "'down™ to Cambridge, but "up," wherever he may be traveling from. He is never 'in' Cambridge, but always "up," If he is leaving Canadian maples in the Laurentides college for a day or two, he will tell his friends that. he is going "down." | He is not son's Weekly. not your landlady. Football (Rughy or association) is, til tea time. "keep a hall." el." and if you attend thay of King's | 4 College, you say you are going ** keeping" among very They do not smoke a pipe, theatre, concert or meeting, it is a case of "keeping."' all at home, or a meeting with your | § or final examination for honors de- gree, trip avhat is intended is only that you sity. n Before going to Cambridge a fresh- asked where, says Pear- One does not speak RX qunter on entering your rooms is She is yowr bedder,"" Which is an abbreviation all with him. What he really meant | men and ladies Who visit Ste. h was that he was: acquainted with six | Agathe have talked of the beauties of "bedmaker. In sowe colleges | members of the board of education of tree-clad hills, slashed ull with the | there are male bedmakers. These There is really more fun to be bad | fawme-tinted maple, softened by the | are known as vgyps." The custom | one of these down town schools, yellow-tinted birch and the deep of abbreviating words and adding | than you could find in a theatre. green cones of the spruce and balsam | the affix "'er is universal at Cam- About a week ago, a pupil was sent | shooting between like spears. Hav- bridge. One does not go to ones "lecture," but to one's "lecker." | dinal and You 'keep a chap- to "keep a King's." The practice of has passed all bounds slangy 'varsity men. but If they are going to a "'keep" one, You even "'keep' | tutor. If you are taking the tripos, you afte going to "take a "If you hear yourself referred to as "stinks man" you might think people were speaking in uncompli- mentary terms of you. It would be well to make sure first, however, for are taking tho natural sciences tri- pose, which is known as "utinks. The laboratories are, of course, the "labs," those devoted to physiology the "phiz labs," The dissecting rooms are known as the 'meat shops." Mathematics are "maths." A man who allows himself to be suspected of too hard study and too little sport is known as a "smug." 11 he locks himself into his rooms to discourage callers, he "'sports." To | "sport™ 'is to lock the outer door | of your rooms. Men do this when they go out for any length of time or wish to remtain private. Your door, by the way, is known as your | Sank." Some expressions much used outside the 'varsity are never heard | among its members. For instance, | Inobody ever talks of an "under- | grad." He is simply a "man -- | though his years may not entitle | him to the description, 1f his rank has to be referred to at all, one | gave 'undergraduate' in full. There is no such thing as a "prof," though | frequent use of the word, *'profes- | sor' suggests the abbreviation. You | never talk of a college man or a col- | Jogian. Anyone "up" at the univer- sity is known as a "'varsity man." The names of the colleges are abbre- college is "Lady Margaret,' while | Caius College is pronounced "Keys." | A man who poses as a sporting | grandee by wearing exaggerated | sporting clothes, or indulging in dis- | pliys of wealth, physical prowess or | other showy forms of conduct, is re- | ferred to as a "blood." To be de- | tected by proctors breaking regula- tions by omitting to wear cap and | gown at proper times, or by going | to prohibited places, such as public= | house bars, is known as bei "progged."' The men who assist the | proctors in running refractory umnder- | graduates to earth are "bulldogs. If your offense is serious you ar confined to college after 8 o'clock ev- ery. night. This punishment is | i known as being "grated." ee ------ As to Twe Evils. Theodore Hallam, one of the most | celebrated of legal practitioners, once | defended a burglar, and the case gave | him a story that he never tired of | telling, The prosecuting attorney was fghting vigorously and had "You are the wife of the prison- er?" he asked her. "Yes," she replied. "Did you know his mode of life when you married him?"* "1 did, sir." "Will you tell us, then," went om the prosecutor, surprised by this admission, 'how yo came to con- tract an alliance with one of his kind?" ""Well,"" she answered ingenously, "] was getting on, the other girls had all been married, and I at last had no choice but between him and a lawyer who was courting me." ---------------- England's *Celtie Fringe." There are some who profess to be- lieve that the "Celtic fringe' of Fugland's Government is soon to be- come an all enveloping mantle. Ire- lind, with the promotion of Sir (ico. White, has three fisld marshals. The adjutant-general is an Irishman, the quartermaster-general a Scotch- man, the Permanent Under Secre- tary for War an Irishman and the Commander-in-Chief of India is Irish born. There are four Scotchmen and three Irishmen in the Cabinet, both Archbishops are Scotchmen and the Commander-in-Chief of the Chaunel Fleet is an Irishman, Go where you may, you can't beat us 2 style, quality or price. Roney & C ; At Abernethy's to-morrow, special discount on all leather } trunks good Brown--They Jane, usually get iption to. us. til, decorated, including a, dish and six small to match, at 65c. set on sale at 8 am. 3%, | nal. nave and rose color, tucks. Price $1.75, for only 9Se » | $3, for half, 81.50. Seed, 1 Feather Duster and 1 Large Glass Salad Dish. 20 packages for 20e. gular 50e, a dozen. Sale 2 Be. . WO Heart and Nerve Pills. viated, as most people know. St . : Peter's College is ""Pothouse,'"" St. | She tells . follow Catherine's is "Cat's,"" Magdalen is i ing a tails of ur sxpariegos In the a pain "Maudlen."" St. John's is always | in my heart and for six years. "John's." and the boat club of that | Most of the time I could not lie on my left | THE T. MILBURN CO., Limited, | | the defendant's wife on the stand, { On your way from the doctor brine : 25 only. China Salad Sets, 17 Mercerized Silk Waists, in cardi: new styles ith corded frouts, and hemstitched 6 only Velvet Waists, in myrtle, car black, newest makes, value 100 1 Box Matches, 4 Squares of Blue, Bottle Extract, 1 Package Bird While they last Bie Shipnift of Water Glasses. Re- for "Se. 20 Dozen China Breakfast Plates, Nue Decoration, 90, 'a dozen, Sale, each. § : 12 only. FNtra Strong Coal Hods, 94 only Heavy Carpet Brooms. A FAIR Could Not Lie On Her 1 Left Side. WAS TROUBLED WITH PAIN IN HER HEART FOR SIX YEARS. Expected Her Friends Would Find Her Dead. MILBURN'S side. 1 consulted a doctor but liet and was completely did not think 1 would live ed my friends would find fri brought me a box Heart and Nerve Pills and 1 please her, not thinking t any good. I had not when | commenced to feel m: better and by the time I ha boxes I was completely cured and can re- commend them to all sufferers from heart trouble." 3 g -t ai i E £ J ve" HOLIDAY Beginning at 8 a.m. We the Tot are many' "laber \ Odd lot of Paper Shades for dle Sticks; ty , slightly anor, Sigh Heavy on Now in full swing. ; " Dolls' Swings, Be: each. ©. 4 Dolls Be. to $3.50. ° i deen, only Sec. wo ian Rolled Gold Watch sale only 25¢., fine patterns. Toydom L¥ 50 Su rprise Packages', for the 2 Hour Candy Sale Salted Peanuts, 100. a 1." Wrapped Caramels, 10c. «Ih. Tribly Caramels, 10c. a Ib. | Molasses Kisses, 100. a Wo! © "Big sale of wide Taffet This Week At Reduced Prices. | JAMES REI Por Ambulance *Phine TORONTO, ONT. ABSOLUTE SECURITY. . Carter's | Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of a the wo and all for WARD & CO 30¢. "8.

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