°y JLICY continue go- ng $20 or $25 Coats we are d us. Some '? These are once get our will have no you, Rip Van u that smart. do not. er, The Gloster , $ 10, $ 12, Y GO, Oak Hall. Se POOTSEEEITNe EATHER. AIT Until you geta d cold and spend > price - of an ercoat on doc: s' bills and dicine . before a decide to buy "UR - LINED a FUR COAT some other ym fortable VERCOAT. e proper time do it is now, order to pre- it all these ubles and that 14nay enjoy the uforts of life 1 at the same e be properly except to pro- when you can nably. nit or Overcoat to your own e you money. > for yourself. and Gents' 0 Princess Street. rocers.] ade Overalls 5; few at $8.50. 25,500 head; active; higher; heavy, 84.75 4.70 to 84.75; York .70; pigs, $4.85 to to $4.20; stags, $3 he--Receipts, 29,200 bs, $4.50 to $5.75: thers, $4 to $4.25; 3.50; sheep mixed, Sneezing Colds. n a few minutes and in one hour Ly in- aling Catarrhozone. es with Catartho- * head and nasal ca and heals the in smbranes, prevents ing, clears away the ng in the forkhead. d Catarrhozone got t on your next cold. at the efficiency of ler treatment which cause it eures #0 outfit £1; trial 'factory results. ---- ? ALL THIS WEEK THE SUMMERS STOCK: COMPANY Presenting the following high class Re- pertoire © 7 N GHT, "RIP VAN WINKLE." wednesday night, ** My Cla Kentucky me. Ho ersday, "True Irish Hearts.' Frivay, ** Resurrection." y Saturday, Mat. ** Pawn Ticket, 210." People's Popular Prices; 10c., 20¢., and 80c, Box seats, 50c. . Matinee. 10c. and 20c. Seats on sale at Hanley's. [S\N Ze HAGA Thy pyramids have sto d for ages. Our business has stocd for over a quarter of a century. We're proud of it--and we've a right to be 11ouest methods, honest coal and wood, honest prices. That's the bulwark of cur busire 8s : Give ns & trial order. R. CRAWFORD, DEALER IN FUEL, KINGSTON. Wn srsnrmmamssrmrenrsris Mitopoltan Stock Exchange Incorporated Under the Laws of Massachusetts CAPITAL $100,000 FULLY PAID. "KINGSTON BRANCH Clarence Chambars, Clarence St. Opposite British American Hotel, "Pron #8, J. J. McKENNA, Manager. Bonds, Stocks, Grain and Provisions bought on margin or fur cash, Established 1854 JAMES REID, The Loading Undertaker Open day and night, See Our Window Display of Parlor Sets and Couches ye Trese Are Only Samples : Special lines of heavy Vel- our Couches, fringed all around, only $6: 50, and heavy Velour five-piece Parlor Suite only' $25 Also odd Chairs, Screens and Easels, Mail orders promptly attended tr» JAMES REID, For Ambulance "Phone 147. H Cosy 4 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 fll your bin with -BOOTH'S COAL - 'Phone 133, foot of West St. TYPEWRITERS FOR SALE TO RENT All Kinds REPAIRED OFFICE SUPPLIES Telephone 480 J. R. C, DOBBS & GO., 171 Wallington Strect. LET ME HAVE YOUR SALE And I will guarantee you satis- We don't brag, hut perform the work, Nothing Sacrificed, but your best interest studied. : W. J. MURRAY. The Auctioneer, The Brightest Thing in Stove Polish Is X=RAY Goes twice as far as paste or liquid polisb--No dryleg ap--Lasts longer--At = STRACHAN'S HARDWARE -- ER HOUSE | ------ = ---- FIBROID TUMORS CURED. Mrs. Hayes' First Lotter A - ing to Mrs, Pinkham Sopa), * DEAR Mas. PINkiaM :--I have | under Boston doctors' treatment esa Jong time without any relief. They tell me 1 have a fibroid tumor. I can- not, sit down without great pain, and the soreness extends up my spine. I have boaring-down pains both back and' front. My abdomen is swollen aad I have had flowing spells for three Jet iid Spfetite is not good. 1 cam- alk or on pe length of time. sy est for any "The symptoms of Fibroid Tumor given in your little bool accurately, « eseribe my ease, so 1 write to you for advice." -- (Signed) Mps. B. F. Aves, as 52 Dudley St. (Roxbury), Boston, Mass, Mrs, {Iayes® Sccond Letter: 'Dzar Mra, Pixma: --So ago I wrote to you deseribing m wm oms and asked your advice. You re- and I followed all your diree- irefully, and to-day 1 am a well « of Lydia E. Pinkham's 1 le Compound entirely ex- pelied the tumor and strengthened my whale system. I can walk miles now, ys "Lydia E. Pinkham's Yego- [table Compound is worth five dol- lars @ drop. I advise all women who are afflictod with tumors or female ouble of any kind to give (ta faithful " rned) Mrs. E. F. Haves, Dudley St. (Roxbury), Bosten, Mass, -- $5000 forfeit if original of above fetters proving genvineness cannot b2 produced. « Vac IN OUR OWN CIRCUIT. News of the District on Both Sides of the Line. It is reported that Hon. Clifford Sif ton will next summer build a hali mil track near his' smnmer homie at Whit rev's Point for the use of his family Rev. Father: Spratt, Elgin, has left fcr Bermuda. to spend the winter. I'a ther Sy t's poor health has forced Fim to seek a warmer climate for ti winter. Mrs. Benson, aged eighty-five years one of Belleville's mest respected resi dente, died at the home of her daugh ter, Mrs. Gecrge Boyle, » was a Presbyterian. Thomas Steele, aged twenty-three vears, a native of Perth, who had been under treatment in the hosvital. for tl eat Brockville, is dead. "Pharos," of the Children's Circle, Toronto, Globe, makes an appeal for junds to continue the education of Caroline La Rose, whose heroism, wherdost in the woods near Charles ie, ins toh lake with her baby sister, in 1508, will long be remembered She asks for! twenty-five cents each from two hundred contributors Gained Forty Pounds In Thirty Days. For several months our younger brether had heen troubled with indi gestion. He tried several remedies but got no benefit from them. We purch aged some' of Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets and he commenced taking them. Inside of thirty days he had gained forty pounds in flesh. He is now fully recovered. We have a good trade on the Tablets.--Holley DBros., Merchants, Long Branch, Mo. For sal hy all druggis Goes To St. Mark's. St The congregation of Mark's, Barriefield, sent three names to the bishop for the filling of the vacant in cumbeney, the first named being Rev. J. H. Nimmo, forme t now of Roslin. He was approved his lordship and promptly accepted. An hz cl 1s heen accorded to this fine h and faithful people. nr eateas-- Is Alive And Well. late coachman for Lieut.- of the Royal Military Col disappeared mysteriously about "a month ago. He is now resid- ing in a small town in Montreal, The reason of his sudden departure is unknown. The fact that he is alive and well will be a relief to A. Laird, Col. Reade, lege, who his many friends; who feared that something had happened him. When you stop to think that home-made tea biscuit cost but five cents a dozen, is there any reason for buying at the baker's? Made with Cleve- land's Baking Powder they will taste better and will be more wholesome and appe- tizing than any you a Bw. Don't forget weather strip to keep on* the cold. at "Y5otD a5 5 3 : LARGE QUANTITIES AT | i | gators fully corroborates the rumors i which have been rife, of late, concern- | ing the discovery of some wonderfully | out the aid lof a glass. Several piec- rly of Pittsburg, | by | rnest worker and able preacher | Word has been received from George | Quebec, near | FOUND WEBBWOOD. Veins Forty To Sixty Feet Wide --~Rock Everywhere Yields "Calors"--Exodus From Both Soos to Shakespeare Mine, Sault: Ste. Marie, Dec. 1.--The Soo is all agog over the news brought in by a party of local business men, who { have returned from a trip to the new- ly-discovered gold ficlds at Webbwood, | Ont., a short distance from here. The - | s¥bry brought home by these investi- rich veins of gold-bearing quartz. To substantiate their story, members _of the party are exhibiting samplé of the rock which show free gold with- es of the quartz have been pulverized and pannéd, and in every case "'cal- ors" were found in surprising quanti- ti The first information which the general public received of the discov- ery of gold-bearing rock at Webh- wood, was contained in the announce- went of the sale of the Shakespeare claim to Minnesota parties, by James Miller, of the Canadian Soo, for $676,000. Miller paid $2,000 for - this claim last spring. This sale was the occasion of a general influx of pros. | pectors, into Webbwood, and as a re | sult of thiz invasion, the country has | been thoroughly secured and the vein { upon which the Shakespeare mine is | located. has been traced for three or | four miles, It ranges in width from forty to sixty feet, and its femarkahle | feature -is that rock broken off the | surface almost anvwhere, and panned | will show "'calors." A month ago the stock of the Shakespeare mine was | selling for ten cents a share, to-day, it is finding [times that sum, | claims have al companies ready buyers at five Already four other been laid oat, and sever have been formed to op erate. The party of prospectors . who | have returned, state that they have | an option on a large claim located | Just outside Webbwood, and that they will "organize & company, apd hevin | operations within thirty days. This { party includes W. H. Peck. lumber | man, and vice-president of the Ci Savings Bank. Fred. R. Price, Inrvey, Captain Josenh . Engress and Frank G. neral exodus of mining prospectors from both Soos into the district around Webhwood has already hegnun, | ens { Thomas RR. Ganley, RR, Lennox INCIDENTS OF THE DAY. Newsy Paragraphs Picked up by Reporters On Their Rounds. The management committee of the Board of Education met last night. Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Small, Toronto, 1 the city. Mr. Small is the lessee of the Grand Opera house The court of general se yng, com- monly known as the county court, will meet one week from to-day. It's as dificult to see how money makes the. man as it is to see' how some men make their money. Workmen are engaged in covering the floor of the arena in the armouries with a preservative paint, to prevent the cedar blocks decaying. Strange, was it not, that flags were not flying over the city buildings un til after noon to-day, in honor of the queen's birthday anniversary. A number of local Oddiellow last evening visited Gananoque and took part in initiation ceremonies there, afterwards putting on the Oriental de- gree J. Noonan, deputy collector of Jand revenue, Perth, is in for time, to duty at in- in the city, to He 'has been Clarke's malt rema | assigned house some indoor basehall are not being directed towards the formation of a local league. It is high time the teams were practising. 0. C. Bissell, cheese exporter, after a successful season here, left at noon for Brockville to spend the winter with friends. He will be greatly miss ed here, socially The meeting of the pronerty owners' association will be held in the police court room on Wednesday evening, in | stead of the council chamber which is otherwise engaged William Gokey, of Prooklyn, N.Y. arrived in the city this afternoon to complete arrangements with Davis & Son for the building of a fine steam- { vacht. Mr. Gokey is one of the popu lar Prooklynites who summer on Wolig Island. John W. Washburn, Smith's Falls; is a candidate for the O.H.A. exeru Me has followed the game very and is one of the hest posted nin Eastern Ontario. He can de pend on having the support of the | Kingston. teams and his many friends here wish him success. interested in are asking why steps Those tive i closely, SUMMERS STOCK CO. Successfully Began a Week's Run Last Evening. The Summers Stock company open- ed a week's engagement at the Grand Opera House last evening under fav- orable auspices, The initial perform- ance, "The Prodigal Son," attracted a large andience. The play js a five. act melodrama of considerable merit, and was presented in a very satisfac- tory manner bhy.an ahle company. George H. Summers, as Lazarus, the Je « the life of any production in which he appears. He personified the | Hebrew character to perfection, and | won his way into the favor gf the an dience before the first act wes over. | The company possesses a clever lead. ing lady in the person of Miss Belle | Stevenson. She has a good voice for emotional parts. Paul Bennett as the | prodigal son, made the most of a difficult role. These people are sup- | ported by a strong company. The spe- | cialties between the acts are interest. | ing. The singing of George Summérs | and Barry anlon, was splendidly | done. and numerous encores were de- | manded. The company carries its own scenery, and some of the stage set- | tings last eveming were very pretty. | No doubt the week's engageinent: here will be a successful one. Tonights the pee ons ipa --- BE - New York, Dec. 1.--After an absence of several years from America, Marie Tempest, the English actress, an an engagement at the Hudson Theatre last night, at the conclusion of which she will make a tour of the chief cit- MARIE TEMPEST IN NEW YORK, jes of the United States and Canada. 8he is to be seen in "The Marriage of Kitty," an English comedy adapted by Cosmo Stuart, who also has the leading male role in the piece, THE WAY OFT, Weonldst live? Then suffer much] i" Drink deep the draft'ef pain, He has not Nved or he has lived In valn Who Xuows not sorrow, has not felt the tou ' ' Of pity for another, weary strife, False guided hopes and love. These things are life. iL cn Wouldst hope? Look not behind But step upon the past to higher things And seek the sunshine. Upon. fortunes win You rar ast soar, and fortune can be kind, Why not? Al life is change, a To all who truly. hope Naught Is too strange, "iy Wouldst dream? Look In the west! Drink in the glofdes of the dying day; Where cloudy headlands dot the glowing bay, Where lie the heavenly "Islands of the Blest! There love is true, and things are as they seem, And all is-good and fair; "Tis sweet to dream! A Wi t rest? Keep conscience clear Jouldst thy work nor heed the hurrying throng a That tempts aside or bars the way, Be strong: Year cep faith; go bravely on without a fe I onacious virtue. They alone know Who labor long and well and © their best. , -------------- ABOUT THE MOOSE, Grand Upper Ottawa and Lake pews y Region for the ier. The range of the moose in North America is of enormous extent, from Nova Scotia in the extreme East. throughout ~ Canada and: certain of the Northern 1 nited : States, to, the ! limits of tree growth in the west and | north of Alaska. Throughout this | vast extent of territory but 1wo | species are recognized, the common moose, Alces Americanus, and: the Alaskan moose, Alces gigas, of the Kenai peniasula; but it is 'probable further exploration will bring that 1 3 to light another Species near the headwaters of the Laird River and to} . | the Cassiar Mountains of Tiritish Col- umbia; and still another farther north in the neighborhood of Colville Riv- EE Under Gen, Shrine, 'hy nos + Dec. 1st. Canada Pacific Ry. . . AN hl Toledo Ry. .. . 24 a Montreal St. . 201 IW Toronto St. Ry ne 8 ¥: St. John Flustric Ny, . ny 7) Twin City Transit ... Cominercial Cable .. 165 150 Their Unification Vref correspondent of |F the The Melbourne The Chronicle writes regarding obtained the Government's assent to is practically this: The complete or capable of being sent anywhere in Australia at, short notice, and (2) a garrison force designed to defend the vulnerable spots in cach State. Both these forces are composed of volune teers or militia acting under the in- struetions of some 1,500 professional soldiers who form the nucleus of ar- tillery and garrisons required for fix- ed defences, the technical direction of er it will be possible for Australia to put in the field or at her forts in tine of war at least 68,000 trained men, made up, approximately, as fol- lows: Field force... Garrison force Rifle clubs...... With a physically fit manhood popu lation of 700.600 to draw upon, the 68,400 trained men would become the backbone of an army of hall a mil- lion should invasion actually occur, For the purposes of broad general- ization the Federal army now sthnds divided into cighteen regiments of Australian Light Horse, thirteen bat- tories of Australian artillery, three {ld companies of Australian ¥ogi- neers, and twelve regiments (three rhe upper Ottawa and Lake Kip- | pewa region has been a grand moose | country in recent years, so far as the size of the antlers is concerned, but the moose are now rapidly push- ing further north. Twenty-five years ago they first appeared, coming from the south, probably. from the Mus- koka Lake country, into which they may have migrated in turn from the Adirondacks. The northern move ment has been going on steadily with in the personal knowledge of 'the writer. + Ten years ago lhe moose were practically, all south and east of Lake Kippewa, now they are near- ly all' 'morth of that lake, and ex- tend nearly, if not quite, to the shores of James Day. How far to the west of that they have spread we do not know; but it is probable that they are re-occupying the range lying between the shores of Lake Superior and James Bay, which was long abandoned. Northwest of Lake Superior, throughout Manitoba and Jar to the north, is a region heavily wooded and studded with lakes, con- stituting a practically untouched moose country. E In the Oftawa district mooss. call. ing, while practiced, is not apt to be successful, and in the western mount- ains 'it is practically unknown, / al- though a substitute is found by mak ing any unusual noise, such as pro duced by rapping a tree twice with an axe in imitation of the double cough or short call of the bull, or by beat- ing alders with a stick to imitate the antlers threshing in the bushes. These contrivances sometimes attract the attention of a bull who is close at hand, and bring him out into the open. Calling in Maine, however, will 'always be a popular but un- sportsmanlike means . of hunting the moose; unsportsmankike he cause everything depends on the guide and nothing on' the ' hun- ter, the only skill required of thé hunter being the ability to sit still on a very wet log or en very cold ground. Whatever shooting is done is at close range and in the dusk. --Madison Grant, in Field and Stream for October. brigades) of Australian Infantry. Each arm is given an excess of offi- cers in proportion to the peace ¢Stah- lishment of privates. Peace cadres, with their full complement of trained officers and non-commissioned officers can therefore on mobilization in time of national emergency be expended to war requirements withou} any danger of crisis through lack of eflicient Jeadoers, New Governor of Australis, Lord Northcote, G.CITE.,, C.B., at present Governor of Bombay, who has been appointed to 'succond Lord Tennyson on <his relinquishing the appointment of Governor-General of the Commonwealth of Australia in December next, was born in 1826, and has had a varied political and diplomatic career, The second son of the first Earl of Iddesleigh, he was educated at Eton and Merton Col- lege, Oxford, taking his B.A. degree in 1860, and M.A. in 1873. At the age of 22 he became a clerk in ~the- Foreign Office, and in 1871 was at- tached to Lord Ripon's special mis- sion to arrange the Alabama treaty. In that and the next year he was secretary to Queen Victoria's: Claim Commission under the treaty of Washington. He was private secre- tary to Lord Salisbury on his. em- bassy to Constantinople in 1876-77, being appointed third secretary in the diplomatic service in the former year. From 1877-80 he was private secretary to the Chancellor of the nancial Secretary to the War Office; Surveyor-General of Ordnance from July, 1886, until the abolition of that office in the following year, afd a charity commissioner (unpaid) 1891-92, For nineteen years on- wards from 1880 he sat as M.P. for Exeter in the Conservative interest, and was appointed to the post he now vacates in 1900. Lord North- cote, who was created & Baronet in the year of Queen Victoria's first Jubilee, was elevated to the Peerage on taking up his duties in Bombay. He marrjed, in 1873, the adopted daughter of Lord Mountstephen, Kant Krack 'Rubbers. play is "Rip Van Winkle." Sold only at AUSTRALIA'S FORCES: 7 ~f Hatifax St. rnin Nutton's Plan Into Federal Army, Montreal Montreal Cotton Co. War Eagle Mining .. unification of the Australian military Ii. & @. Nav. Co. forces that what General Hludton has | Bank btrval Merchal Dominion Steel .. Dominion Coal ganization of (1) a mobile field force | netroit: Uni Winnipeg Hy. ... Montieal Power Nova Scotia Steel . Ogilvie Milling Co. Wabash Atchison. . forts and mines and a military tu- U.S. Com. airs ition staff. The Australian field Snion asic force will consist on a peace footing | Sugar .. of 18,911 men and sixty guns, cap- Redding able of expansion in time of war to Hunting Vail 26,638. wen and eighty-four gums, Min] aie The garrison force will be composed | Southern Pacific JEM 465 of 11,806 men and twenty-six guns, | iis. Central ., 120% 180 exclusive of the rifle clubs, which now Rock _lsland rer i Es total over 80,000 men. Taking the [New rk Central ci oor 30} #1 two forces and the rifle clubs togethe | poitimare 0 Ml Exchequer; from June, 1885-86, Fi- | COMMERCIAL. Telegraph is jell Telephone Co. KW YO! STOCK EXCHANGE. NEW RE Nov, 80th. Pee. 1st. U.S. Steal, pid. Lead Pipe, Battery Zine, Fu se' timony Lead, and all White Metal mixtures. THE CANADA METAL The Strathcona Title. fod Apropos' of . Glencoe, where Strathions has hopght a small pro- perty snd built a big house, it was an open secret the time of his elo- vation as o jubllee peer in 1807, that he was anxious: to assume the style and title of "Lord Glencoe." Such an appellation. would have aroused some feeling in the famous glen, where the chi f of the Macdonalds, of Glencos, | though paor dispossessed, and exiled, still rotuafus the chiet. Ba Donald Smith had consequently compose for himself the title of Strathcona, which (especially when ned to Mount Royal) has a satisfying 'and sonorous sound, more particularly in trans-Atlantic = ears. Tt. matters Tittle that it eaused the men of Glencos to smile, for in truth, it is not a "strath" at all but a narrow gorge or glen, through which Ossian's Cona (now the rushing Coe) hurries sea- wards. The heiress to the barony is Lord Strathcona's only daughter, who is matried, but has no issue~M. A. P. More causes of sick headache, bilious- ness, constipation, can be cured in less time with lees medicine, and for less money, by using Carter's Little Liver CO., TORONTO, ---- enable us to repair i I. ZACE ment. PRESSING REP A SPECIALTY. GALLOW. Pills, than by any other means. Side nin rides mits, by's livery. Westport. will hold a turkey fair on December Sth, { ,