All other' causes combi. ' tho body. It 1s the oh. vers ominously over every pe he cast a dark steal da pest to the pat! h of aa She latent. it of In its withering Braap nr id spectral and the healthy aay oS odogh takes tha ors hr ont, impair Reg ne out from many a house. os. somo stage lurks e slightest cough "or ool gue" -- uy fon. Few *S; muscles wither, nerves & presence. It devastates, sery and death, It 1s not dious and repulsive, but if wing g up the Tucous the throat and rd aad produce dyspepsia, Re and cause consum iption, E ec of this disgust: ing and destruc. re Is catarrh that to Invent aspiring Physicians, ve been ¢ by Stuart's iblets ie the cure of people who have observed ro health, a sweet breath ear head, you sh 50 cents per box, ae iy Enns er -------- URE ating Stoves we have {} INT HOW HEATER th duplex grates, and is ve made in Canada with If you require a new 6 it will pay you to in he Radiant Home is the ER MADE TO-DAY. BIRCH, treet. WAY AO MAKE her locality round. Will gladly make some money, SON, Brantford, Ont. )R SALE, {ES AND BOILERS, IN ition, nearly new, com- fittings; 12-Horse-Power Boiler, cost $200, for Hiorse-Power stationary $135; for $100; 8-Horse ontal Mugine, cost $170, Horse-Power, Reversible, table Engine and oiler, his light work or steam $175, for $90. S Hangers and ,. Gould & Co. f Queen street. uit, es, Lemons, me fet ', Priacess St. . MILLS ading Auctioncer. "There' s a Ric A Fulness: a Purity about 5 Ceylon tea that no Sold only in scaled tead packets, other possesses. Black, Mixed or.Natural Green. THE DAILY hness" By all grocers. -- EDUCATIONAL. murray = "Sebool of Hrt Evening 'classes, Tuesday and Twurs day. 7°30 to 9:30. These classes are specially for mechanits and Instruction is given individually te suit all trades, CHARLES BE. WRENSHALL, Rooms 280% Princess" street. ROO iar iim KINGSTON BUSINESS COLLEGE . KINGSTON, TORONTO BUSINESS COLLEGE TORONTO. Unsqualled facilities for securing posi- aegest and best squipment ia Canada. | 831 Queen street, Kingsign. SEND FOR CATALOGUE. Confederation Life Building, 'Toronto. MONEY AND BUSINESS. SAFE. SURE RELIABLE I 1883. Cupital Fully Paid, $1,600,000. ncorporated C X British American Assurance Co, | All Classes of Fire Insurance Written. GODWIN'S INSURANCE EMPORIUM Tewpnone 484, Mirket Square, MONEY TO LOAN IN LARGE OR sioall sums, at low rates of interest on city and farm property. Loans granted on city amd county deben- tures. Applv-to 8. C. NMeGILL, manager of Frontenac Loan ard [u- vestment Society. Office opposite the Post Office. WYERI'OOL, LONDON AND GLOBE Fire Insurapce Company. Available assets, $61,187.315. In addition to which the policy hoiders have. for security - the unlimited liability of all the stockhelders. Farm and city property imsured at sowest possible res Rafore Jenawing old or giving busine: 43 rates SrRANGE - THANG, Agents --------T---------- 0000099000000 The Quality and Modern Facilities for Handling it Make Swift's cranion Coal ® ¢ i ® ® The Favorite ¢ 3 4004S * i 0 3 Fuel. JAMES SWIFT & G0. 'I'hone 135. 0000000 000000000000 od HOTEL EMPIRE, Broadway and 63rd Street, N.Y. City. Telephone in Every Room Rooms $1 per Day and Upwards. From Grand Central Station ars marked ' Broadway to Fort Lee Ferry," and reach Mletel Empire in scv- ®& minutes. All surface cars of the Transit Co.' pass the Hotel Empire. The restaurant of the Laupire is noted for the excellence of its cuisine, its ef- ficient service and moderate prices. A fine library of choice literature the exclusive use of our guests. The Empire has long been the favorite botel for tourists visitine the Metropolis Orchestral concerts every evening fithin ten nanos of amusement and &h ning cen The ere fs the headquarters of the | Canadian Society of New Send " kle w. neon Quinn, Frop. CEI Standard rom: from ! 646662086000 take ! i « Metropolitan | ' for | ESF RaNegRttY Orr Catalogue is a veri- table bank book, wherein l every article illustrated means to our customers a direct cost saving. ready Nov.us, ulable value to every persoa into whose haads it comes, | It will illustrate articles of high quality only at the | - | extreme lowest prices. Write for a copy. It will | be forwarded free of cost. MUE URSE LEASING RICES Buyers must Appreciats ITS CENTENARY THE BRITISH AND FOREIGN BIBLE SOCIETY. ------ Noble Religious Worker-- Its Humble Origin and Great Accomplishments--Colporteurs Are a Vast Army in Them- selves. "The Centenary of the British and Foreign Bible Society, to be caleba. { ed next March by a "Universal Sunday," calls to mind a humble ont that led to the founding of an insti: tution which has had a great influence A po the spread of Christianity in the last i red years. The longing of a oor Welsh girl to have a Bible of er own, and her delight at ownin copy alter years of toil---for were as hard 'to earn a Lo ago as dollars are to-day--came home with such force to the Rev. Thoma Charles, of Bala, in Wales, that he went up to London to urge the pa lication of the Bible in the Welsh language." &t the office of the Tract Society a committee of the society was in session, and the idea of a separate society to give the Bible to every nafion in its own tongue took shape from the remark of one mem- ber, that a society should be formed for publishing the Bible for Wales, "and if for Wales, why not for the world?" Thus the "immortal long: ing"' of an obscure girl was the im- mediate canse of the establishment of a society which has circulated over 180,000,000 copies of the Bible, and has translated it, in whole or in part, into 367 different languages and dia- lects, while, at the present moment, it is promoting translations or revisions in over 100 other languages. The labor and research involved in these transla- tions are without parallel in litera ture, and the records of the work con- tain incidents and special providences as strange and romantic as any to be found in professed fiction. The approaching centenary of the society recalls one important phase of operations, the magnitude of which is and subsequent revision of the serip- tures, but it is content with nothing short of placing them in the hands of the people everywhere. Many have been accustomed to teeming great cities with the population in congest: ed masses that they forget that the human race lives for the most part in villages or in isolated dweliings scat tered over wide stretches of country. Only" one out of every nine Russians lives in a town; in India, one out of and the goods such as every day. list: bs. Laundry Starch, {our prices, [are are nee ded |! Observe the 3 lis. Corn Starch 4 Ibs. Molasses Snaps, 4 Ibs. Sweet Biscuit, | 2 packages Triscuit Biscujt, 113 Bars Brown Family Soap, 2 Cans O-we-kay-no Salmon 11 hh. Tin E. B. Cofiee, Starch prices special only for Friday EF. W. VANLUVEN, 240 Princess Strect. Phone 417. A TRAGIC EVENT. To End Scaffold. New Bern, N.C., Dec. 1 | case embracing many interesting unusual omes end to-day with the exceution of | Cie Iixon in the Craven county | Jail. frey Webber, a substantial far- | mer, was shot from ambush near his home, November 22nd, 1901. He lived | only a few hours, and while dving ex pressed the belief that Dixon was the | assassin Dixon was tried and con | victed of the erime, the strongest evi | dence against him being that | pages of a magazine used as gun wad {ing and of the same magazine | found in Dixon's house had these two | | pages missing. After being | Dixon broke jail and escaped ted last Career On The A murder and to a tragic features « Goo a copy sentenced He was near Chester two years murdered d wa | ré-arres | field | freedom. The man had bec liv | , accord trial, wa Dixon and the married We Webber latter being a discarded ing with him the to the te prom girl were pted hy al rarts vard before The means she Webber. who sweetl ap peared' as suitor | man of { Dison and mar some $ Dufferin Doings. Nov. 27.--Rev. Mr the pulyit in St church on Sunday, November 30th Bruce Hitcheoek, seriously ill} with | prnumonia, is A number lof our Wood John's Jufferin, wil occupy recoverir the people at nber | dence at - ille on Nov 24th. Miss Mossi lish has returned from | Warchester, Moss Miss McAlpin is | engaged as teacher for Pitts for the following year. Kobert is ve busy drawing hay and grain to | Kingsto J. O'Neill has moved on to the farm lately occupiad by Mrs tithe. Mr. McAllister has moved in to tis locality. Mabel Hender- pron, the st of her cousin, has re | grrned hot cured in 5 minntes with Powders, 10c. and * Headache" i Milier's leadacho Gonorrhca and Runnings | 27 at Wade's IN 48 HOURS. ' 'Cures Kid- (It vonfidence is apt to mark the ney and Bladder Troubles. covaid = e---------- ---- tr po wr -- fr --) . Were are furo Ours. and, Hie Hinds fea . elf of Hem. Llove thor do two | ber { ten. Thro 80 f me h yradual experience the ed that the most effcctual of distribution was Colportage. Colporteur's occupation is to Fn from hamlet to hamlet, and more especially to scour the bye- and remote o-tracks of civ His pack is filled with cheap T ments and printed in the language spoken by the people of the country. He is nearly always a na tive of the district in which he works His calling entails great hardship at times, while in some lands he takes his life in his hands. Only last year two of the society's colporteurs suf fored martyrdom. One, a converted Gospels, Moor, was murdered by fanatical Moslems in Morocco; the other, an aged Chinese, who had heen many years in the society's service, was brutally massacred by Boxers in Szechuan. Dangers frequently arise through lawlessness of the people. This year one of the rociety's agents, while travelling up the Yangtse river, in China, was attacked by pirates and narrowly saved his life. A colporieur writes from Persia: "Between Behbe han and Naseri we were stopped by armed highwaymen, and I was severe ly beaten. They took our goods, money and horses, leaving us only the | clothes in which we stood. We had | to listen, hound and blindiold, to a discussion between the robbers as to whether they should kill us. One argued that as we were not Mahom- medans it was no harm to kill us, and that death would ensure our silence as to the robbery. They finally released us." he colporteurs seem undaunted by | difficulties. Their tracks make a net work over the world. From the opics 10 the arctic zone, among the | islands of thegsouthern. seas, and the | lumber' camps of the far west, to all | sorts and conditions of people they {carry the Word. One Russian col | portenr has recently visited the most I northerly post in Siberia. He sold a i New Testament to the headman of a t tribe, who said: 'Although I am un- | able to read it, I know that this Book should be in every camp and hut anyone calling at my hut, who is able to read, will read the Book and we will all gladly listen." Among the convicts and emigrants in Siberia the colporteurs work indefatigably. The society's agent traverses the plains of desolate Mongolia with a small 'cara: van of camels, visiting the nomad tribes in their tents. In this be nighted region, where no other Chris- tian organization is at work, he re cently made a tour of 2,000 miles, having to carry all the provisions he needed, utensils for cooking, barrols for carrying water in the desert, ete., since nothing can be bought in Mon golia but mutton. As the Mongols have no money, he had to trade the Bibles for sour milk, rotten cheese, pieces of silk," and fuel.. Another col porteur has recently completed a four teen months' tour in an equally: no- gleeted country, Bolivia. In Jamaica, one colportenr tramps long distances without boots asd with hix bundle on his head. In many out of the way 1 place where small provision shopa are opened by Chinamen and East In dians, the demand for Bibles indnor: these strangers, who more often than pot cannot read, to keep a small sup ply for al The Man with the Jook" 11 sometimes o'lowed to enter tertifery from which the missionary no foreign Ty on ag- is excluded. For instance, missions are permitted to cs gressive work in Russi the Bible ociety's colportears ao Ziv every encouragement by Church and State, and even granted free rail and steamer transportation. In the Soudan, for political reasons, missionary work will not be permitted vet among the Moslem population. Bat the Bible so- ciety has been selling scriptures in a dozen different languages, while native Christian colporteurs are at work. seldom realized, In the eyes of the | world, the great work of the society consists in the translation, printing porteurs abroad, number which not been translated. en. In China, sgn miles. In bre hundrec we its M.: Culver, who Dr. Everett M. ( vorce snit for $300,000 on J. tion of made his case Senator would fight daughter there Mr first st to name is no coll suit voree id daughter and D for divorce, In Ver 1s an eming vied my daughts brilliant carcer tween him and imposeibis to he to me, told mr nected with the «aid that it we wr to live with "We talked of pleasantness the plication for div that divorce w Mrs. Culver file with my full k edvice, will be entered mut be answe ever been one in fatuation for he is old enous 0 'd even take How happy wi 1d sig if 1 Last the Bible society "emplo; od 'over 830 mative Christian col: Say' of 1,830,000 copies. the wide extent of work: accomplished much still remains to be done, are millions speaking languages into a single Gospel has vet is for more colporteurs and biblewom- for only one colporteur to claims passing wpon the society from every side, it is proposed to cele: ing a special centenary fund of at least $1, 150.000, HE DEFENDS HER. Denies That There Has Been Collusion. MIS ERETT MALLORY CULVER New York, Nov. 30.--Senator Wil liam A. Clark, father of Mrs. Everett and is herse Vlasto fo Via d the alleged nliens to's affections, has atement regarding the declared that he the end to his and to prove that wien in the present di ny once and for ull "the insinuation that collusion betweon: my The proc vor. is indisputable, question of a fe red in open court, the world can be the judge if there has art of impropriety I. wish T had a billion ; of Mion igie who sold the record Despite There The ery on every side there is 10,000 the example, every order to meet ith birthday by rais- i« suing her husband, ulver, for absolute di Ii defendant in a brought by Mrs. Sol r. Culver? in her action many respects Dr. Cul nt man. When he maw 'r he gave promise of a A bfeach came be his wife which it was | al. My daughter came ery eirtumeignee con ir disagreement, An wld be impossible for the doctor any longer. the notoriety and un at would follow an ap- orce. When it was or the only remedy, her suit of complaint wledge and spon ty in my daughter's and it is only a evidence submitted the referee cannot Three applications of Peck's Corn m anv other recommendation. Salve will cure bard or soft corns, The suit of Mrs. Viasto against my | 130, at Wade's. daughter is infamous. I shall not al "An idea." observes Fields philoso- lew Mrs. Culver to pay five cents to | phically, "is a sort of dream, only settle it out of eourt, The charges | vou don't wake up." be By By lecal applications ss they cannot tween my daughter and Mr. Vlasto. { reach the diseased portion of the ear A« to Mr. Viasto, he was introduced | There ix only one way to cure deafness, into my home and to my daughter hy | and that is by constitutional remedies skalf. Deafriess is caused by an inflamed Dr. Culver himueli. Any talk about her dition of the mucous lining of him is nonsense, Why, *h to be ber gramdiath bliging. a million, ith a thonsand had twenty, w days-whéh a decree in her favor. Under the and I would never tested Ack for so gocd. Carl A PAINFUL INJURY. Workmai, Lost Thumb and Parts Of Fingers. Napanee, Dec. 1.-On Saturday al ternoon last Samuel Davy, a work: man in the employ of Charles Stevens, had the misfortune to lose the thumb and part of two fingers of his right hand. He was working the planer in the hoop factory whem a sliver of wood became lodged in the rollers. This he endeavored to pull out when his hand was drawn into the machine with the above result, The thumb was cut completely off and the flesh from t front of his hand tora away. The injury is a painful one and will lay the young man up for a long time. Mrs. Hooper, mother of Mrs. Mor- ley Wilson, is very ill at the home of her daughter, Bridge street west, with but slight hopes of recovery, "Hurst has been confined to the house for the past weck suffering from a severe attack of catarrh of the stomach, The funeral of the late Henry Douglas took place this afternoon and was very largely attended, The re mains were placed. in the Eastern ce metery vault, Skating on the river is perfect these days. The bova are enjoying the fine clear dave and the perfect ice, They even venture as far as Deseronto on their steels, and 'come back with faces aglow with exercise, Wagarville Waftings. Wagarville, Nov. 21.--School has re dpend after a week of holidays on ae count of the teacher being sick with | quinsy. H. Smith, W. Ruttan and W. J. Wagar have gone to Bolton Chain, N.Y., to work for the winter. Miss P. Fox, after. a week's visit at M. Cronk's, has returned home. E, Snid | er is moving into A. Wager's resi | dence. Mrs. W. Wagar paid a flying visit to the Lino e city on Thurs- day, accompanied by Miss F. Bert: ram, Parham. Miss G. McCumber; al ter a couple of weeks at Parham, has returned home. Mrs, J. Wagar intends going to Brownville, N.Y. to visit r, Mrs Ernest Walker. Mr, saw mill is running now. Visi Cronk at G. Sills'; R. Wagar Bertram tors: B. at Vanvolkenburgh's; E, at W. Cronk's; G. Alton at C. Sills; 4. Warren at W. McCumber's: B. Wagar at H. Smith's; H. Cronk at A, Wag ar's; B, Sparks at W. McCumber's; 1. McCumber at J. Ruttan's. Stella Items. Stella, Nov. 28.---Trooper gave an interesting lecture Afrisa in Vietoria hall 20th. Mis. Cicvin has rented her farm and moved to Stella. Fred Gir vin has returned to Kisgston to re sume his studies at Queen's. A large crowd attended the sale of farm stock and implements at L. Girvin's; good prices were obtained. The steamer Aletha made her last trip to-day. W. C. Wright paid the island a flying vivit this week, Mulloy on South on November Lever's Y-Z (Wise Head) Disinfect- ant soap powder is better than other powders, as it is both soap and dis- infectant, DEAFNESS CANNOT BRE CURED Fustachian Tube, When thin tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound of lnperiect hearing, snd when it io entire ly closed, Deafness is the result, and un- less the Inflammation can Ye taken out and this tube restored to ita normal cop dition, hearing will he" destroyed forev- er; nino eases out of ten are caused hy Catarrh, which is nothing but an in- flamed condition of the mucous services We will give One Flundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused hy catarrh) that cannot he cured by Hall's Catarrh Carling's springs were discovered' years of searching and the brewery te only when Government analysts deposed that the water Hops used in Carling's Ale are grown In lind and certain favored parts of Southern Europe, particularly Bavaria--no cheap hops are used as in common ales. The Ale that's Always Pure EPPS'S an absolute necassity. The scivent: powers of water aro so great that few springs produce water pure 'enough for brewing. Bo less than 99.08 degrees pure. ing S. and dally use great mn a (A. ABERNETHY, 125 Princess Street, Hoadauarterater Trunks and Vallses. We have a fine assortment of Gas and Coal Oil Heaters from. .......u.... HLBO to: $10. EXAMINE THE HAPPY HOME. Before purchasing, the largest and most Ls range on coal made. 3 vy x .. ELLIOTT BROS . vo 77 Princess Street.' doadies a hitdren 5 have the truest ring. Every garment is: notable for the fine stitching and bracing, , heavy ; ; EY & Cure. Send for ecireul J. GHE G0., Toledo, O.