Daily British Whig (1850), 15 Dec 1903, p. 3

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The Lung Tonic es consumption-- n't leave it too long, Try it now. oney back if it doesn't benefit you. 2Bc., 60c., and $1.00 . C. WELLS & €0. o,Can. LeRoy, N.Y. unkenness rigusing Over 300,000 3 _ CURES Address Keeloy Institute, 786 Queen St., W, Toronto, Ony oing down to buy my ant that Picture, Work aper, Fancy Frame, and Books, six for a dollar best of anything 1. have )éen peering around.' Seq arior Mirrors CESE & CO, ristmas Goods. m & Risch Pianos.) day Books or Boys. or Girls. Books for Sun- Jay Schools. XLS. Cards, etc. ISBET, 'ner Book Store. last People Drink - MAGI ATERS vell. abt of this advantage in prings Waters. dealers everywhere. AVE YOUR $S guarantee you satis ts. We don't brag, the work. Nothing t your best interest AY, The Auctioneer. E. ELDER AND DRESSMAKING Ferma, produces new at once, prevents falling cures Dandruff, Neural- Latest styles in Car- ng Gowns, Tailor Made | Wraps. Ladies' Waists ch in fitting. Elocu- and Recitations for so- and entertainments L specialty), E. ELDER, et. I Wood ated at 236 Earl 0d hard wood, cut and dry kindling, always rompt delivery. I'rices ut the pure Scranton Ss. ARNEY I'MAS BOX ronation," utiful."" alnut.'" xmberiain.'t a ir Christmas we "will give in Pianos! LSSOHN * has po su ATE "MUSIC STORE cess St., City. THAN EVER OT Re ATEMAN RIAGE LICENSES, ad FIRE INSURANCE "solicit your votes and influences to elect - HOLIDAYS. CHRISTMAS SINGLE FARE--Good going Dec. 24th and 25th. Dec. 23rd, 24th and 25th. it on or before Jan. 5th. NEW YEAR SINGLE FARE--Good goin, Dec. -8lat, Jan. 1st. Return limit, o or He fore Jan. 4th. FARE AND ONE-THIRD--Good going Dec. 80th and 31st, and Jan. 1st. Re- turn limit on or before Jan. 5th. Tiekots to certain points sold in ac- cordance With the above will not be good for passage on train No. 1, or train No. 4, J.P. HANLE « B. Y, City Passnqud Tot. Kingston & Pembroke & Canadian "7 Pacific Railways. For Christmas and New Year's Vacation WILL ISSUE RETURN TICKETS. . GENERAL PUBLIC .. AT SINGLE FIRST-CLASS FARE-- Good going Dec. 24th, 25th, valid for return until December 28th, 1903. Good going December 81st, 1908, and Janu- ary 1st, 1904, valid for return until January 4th, 1904. AT FIRST-CLAST FARE AND ONE- THIRD--Going December 28rd, 24th, and 25th, and December 30th, S1st, 1908, and January 1st, 1904, good returning until January 5th, 1904. Full particulars at K. & Pp. C. P. R. Ticket Office, Ontario St. F. CONWAY, F. A. FOLGER, JR., Gen. Pass. Agt. Gen. Supt. ------ ee THE BAY OF QUINTE RAILWAY NEW SHORT LINE FOR Tweed, Napanee, Deseronto, and all lo- cal points. Train leaves City Hall De- "ot at 4 pm. PF. CONWAY, Agent, 4. Q. Ry., Kingston. DOMINION LINE STEAMSHIPS PORTLAND--HALIFAX--LIVERPOOL From Portland. and From Portland. Manxman, Dec. 19 Ottomen, Jan. 9 Tauric, Dec. 26 Nomadic, Jan. 16 Canada, Jan. 2 Dominion, Jan. 28 Passenger steamers west bound call at Halifax. For all particulars as to freight and assa, apply to :-- y x J. ¥ HANLEY, G.T.R. J. P. GILDERSLEEVE, 42 Clarence St, 5 The Dominion Line, Montreal & Port- and, « BERMUDA .. THG NOW FAR FaueD/ BERMUDAS, with eable communication and equable winter temperature of 65 degrees, beau- ful scenery and 100 miles of good roads, headquarters of the British North American Squadron, is unrivalled in its attractiveness, reached by the first-class iron steamers TRINIDAD or PRETORIA in forty-eight hours from New York, Sailing Jortniehly an to 1st January and every THURSDAY thereafter. The tropical islands, induding SANTA CRUZI, ST. KITTS, MARTINIQUE, ST. LUCIA, BARBARDOES AND DEMER- , also afford beautiful and interest- tours, all reached by steamship of the Quebcs Steamship Company, sailing from, New York about every 10 days. For descriptive pamphlets and dates of sailing apply to A. EMILIUS OUTER- BRIDGE & CO., Agents, 39 Broadway, New York: J. P. HANLEY or J. P. GILDERSLEEVE, Kingston, Ont ARTHUR AHERN, Secretary, Quebec. ALLAN LINE Liverpool and Londonderry. ROYAL MAIL STEAMERS From St. John. From Halifax. Tunisian, Dec. 19, o w wu « 21. Parisian, ~-- --. .. .. & « a . Dec. 28 Pretorian, Jan. 2, .. .. .. . Jan. 4. RATES OF PASSAGE. First Cabin -- Tunisian, $60 and upwards; 'Parisian, $55 and upwards; Other steamers, $65 and upwards. Second Cabin -- Liverpool, and Londonderry, Tunisian, $40. Other steamers, $37:50; London, $3 extra. Third Class ~-- $25 and $26, Liv- erpool, Dérry, Belfast, Glasgow, London --through titkets to South Africa. NEW YORK TO GLASGOW. Corinthian, Thursday, Dec. 24th, 1 pa. 1st Cabin, $45, 2nd Cabin, $35, 38rd Class, $26. J. P. HAYLEY, Agent, G.T.R., Cit ' 0 e, GitoRR. shun Bn. Tr MAYORALTY OF 1904 ALD. W.G. CRAIG Requests the votes and influence of the Ele¢jors of the Municipality of King- ston, for Mayor for 1904. MAYORALTY 1904. T0 THE ELECTORS : Ladies and Gentlemen--I respectfully We mayor for the year 1904 C. J. GRAHAM, Established 1800. Tel. £88 W. F. DEVER & C0. - Stock and Bond Brokers, 159 wi Street, Kingston arket Letter, Write for our Mi KF. RICE, MANAGER. JOHN H. MILLS Return limit, on or before Dee. FARE AND ONE-THIRD--Good going Return lim- 8000300020000 0a00 a It was ¢ shabby old room, but it look, 1 know the father boys dropped down in the comfortable ~ chairs on their way in and out from the office and college. 1 know the girls brought their fancy work to this room, and that the mo- ther waited for them in the twilight time, sometimes dreaming before the fire, sometimes reading the evening paper, or a book, or magazine. Books were everywhere. Palms and ferns brightened the window with their green. Three carnations drooped from a tall glass on the mantel. The piano stood open, There wasn't an expen- sive bit of furniture in the whole room, and the carpet and hangings, the chair and couch coverings, were old and faded. The fire-irons battered, but shining, The room well-dusted and the old-fashioned at the window was clean. 7 When you took an inventory of the room you wondered what attracted you. It wasn't the shape of it, for it was square and hopelessly inartistic to begin with. It wasn't the decora- tions, they were old and discolored, and on one wall there was a suspici- ous bulge as of plaster ready to fall. But in the arrangement of the chairs and tables, in the assorting of colors in the very look of living, that oe- cupation had given the room, there was something very alluring. It. beck- oned you from the threshhold. It kept you sitting by the fire long af- ter the clocks had struck the hour of going home. It gave you pleasant re- coliecctions, > What was it can $ou tell me that this gray-haired mother of grown men and women had put into her lit- tle front room ? She had put herself into it--her own sincerity, her own practicality, her love of home and nature, and her fondness for her hus- band and children. There was no stif- ness in her nature. There was none in her room. She had no pride in mere possessions. Her house . indicated that. She was not extravagant, nor over. ambitious, and the well-worn acces- sories of her drawing-room revealed her contented and prudent habit of mind. How seldom you see a room like that, and how very often you find one furnished too elaborately for comfort, too expensively for peace of mind. There's nothing to do in the fashion able 'drawing-room, except perhaps, count the bits of bric-a-brac and spe- culate as to the reason for making and buying certain elaborate cabinets and uncomfortable chairs. There isn't a book about. No one would dare to bring a bit of hemstitching or sewing there, even if the light were good (which it usually isn't). Even a news- paper seems out of place in a proper drawing-room, and a litter &f maga- zines would spoil the effect of angular shopinegs. The family live in ap up- stairs Sitting-room. It is perhaps very small. It may or may not have a were was net Snevecece sd hii the WA, since its formation, seven: n_ years , her generosity, h wise iy. Ay helpfulness ln any and every emergency, presented her, on behalf of the W.A. throughout the diocese, with a life membership in the society, Mrs, Straubenzie, at the same time pinning on her breast the gold Winchester cross of life member ship. This is an honor, in the bestow- ing of which, the auxiliary feels itself the honoured, and the privileged one, as their first vice-president is not only deeply rooted in the affections of its members, but holds their respect for rare good qualitids of mind and heart, 'After the presentation the cathedral J.W.A. served refreshments, Mrs. Coyle, and Miss" Laturney, being in charge of the tea-table, which look- ed very pretty with its wreathings of smilax, and its W.A. cross in red. Amongst those who were present be sides the officers and representatives on the board were the Dean of On- turio, Archdeacon Carey, Canon Grout, Rev. William Lewin, Rev. GG. L. Starr, Mrs. Gildersleeve, Mrs. James Gilder sleeve, Mrs. Frank Kirkpatrick, the Misses Kirkpatrick, Mrs, Deacon, Mrs. Torrance, rs. Irwin, Mrs. Rogers, Mrs. John Waddell, Mrs. Creegan, Miss Crisp, Miss Betts, all of whom had come in response to a gencral invita- tion extended by Mrs. Buxton Smith to Miss Gildersleeve's old friends, and to prominent W.A. workers - . . . The afternoon dance given on Sat- urday by Misi Mowat for her girls at the residence was not limited to them, but a number of the girls from town came in for invitations, and enjoyed Miss Mowat's little treat quite as much as the maids in the halls of learning. -. . » . ' Mrs. Graham, of Bath, was in town vesterday. Mrs. Armstrong, also of little frock of black and white check.' "Plaids are to be;in high favor." "The newest and most fashionable color is golden-rofl, in all its tones from sumach red bright yellow." "The ripe, rich red of the sheaf of wheat i& being imitated in every known fabric." "There is talk of a green craze this winter," "Don't miss having a little frock of 'mauve, for mauve is to be the thing." . - . * Love that needs proving is counter feit. Friends are kept by silences--not by The world's verdict is easier to ov. er-rule than that of one's own con- science, ; * When jealousy sleeps, love is dig- ging her grave. He whom a child takes hy the hand lives close to God. Ecstacy is happiness magnified into pain.--From Everybody's Magazine. WARM TIME. A Dispute At The Town Council Meeting. Deseronto, Dee. 14.--On Sunday week a mem otial arelee was held in the vesbyterian church; out of pect to the late Capt. MoMaster and hi son. Much sympathy is expressed for Mrs, McMaster in her sad bereavement. Miss Leah McGaughey and Miss Pearl Valleau were, in © Kingston for a few days last week. Mrs. E. W. and Mrs. F. S. Rathbun are visiting iriends in Toronto. Charles Baker, of the head office stafl, leaves this week to accept a position in Montreal. While Law- son was on the sick list for a days last week. Mrs. Egar has visiting friends in Belleville. Herbert been Bath, had, like Mrs. Graham, come . a down to the presentation of the life | membership to Miss Gildersleeve. . . . The German club, of Queen's, met at | Mrs. Malone's, Brock street, last | night. | * . - -. 1 Mr. Willie Breden was one of the committeemcn in con- held the hard working nection with the bachelors' ball last week. He shared in making event the success it 'was. Miss Ida McDermott has gone up to | Detroit, to nurse her brother, Dr. Me Dermott, who is ill Mrs. Edward Moore and Miss Car i rie Waldron, have stayed over for a day or so in Cobourg, but are expect ed home to-morrow. Mr. Percy Fortescue is staying with Mrs. Fortescue, at "Edgehill." * * . . Mrs. Lyons Biggar's tea given in honor of Mrs. Cheney, Ottawa's lat- est social acquisition, was a most de- | lightful affair. Mrs. Biggar received at the entrance to her charmingly pret ty drawing-room. and was becoming- ly gowned in white lace over white taffeta. Mrs. Cheney, whose first ap pearance it was in Ottawa society, re- ceived with the hostess, and 'certain- ly made many friends by her charm- ing manner and appearance. Mrs, Cheney's gown was a lovely one of cream crepe de chine elaborately inlet with chiffon and real lace. She wore | feather cream ostrich 3, . a + | fireplace. Tt is a makeshift liv ing room, but it hasn't. and never can have the dignity, the homelike cosi- ness, and the convenience of the care fully-arranged downstair living-room-- that common-sense successor of the prim and fornial "parlor." It is not always tidy--that lived-in front room but it is always comfortable and, shabby or not, it has about it some. thing which impresses you with the fact that therc is in the heart of the house-mistress a great respect i - the comfort of her own dear home-folk. --'"'Madge Merton." - - - - An event which has a wide local in- terest, as it coneerns perhaps the most interesting person in the city, took place at vesterday's meeting of the board of the Woman's Auxiliary of the Diocese of Ontario. The president, Mrs. Buxton Smith, after a graceful little speech, in which she spoke of Miss Gilderslecve's unfailing interest Kidneys and Liver Affected by Colds. Backache And Pains in The Legs The Common Symptoms--Cure Comes With The Use of Dr. Chase's Kidney - Liver Pills. Exposure to damp, cold weather is a frequent 'cause of kidney disease. Sitting in a draught so as to chill the feet and legs is frequently enough to bring on congestion of the liver. Colds settle on the liver and kid: nevs as well as the lungs. The re- sults are diseases of the most dread- fully painful and fatal sort. As yet there has never beer discov- ered a preparation equal to Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills as a prompt and thorough cure for de rangements of these great filtering or- FANS, g Pains in the back, headache, urinary disorders, biliousness, liver complaint, dyspepsia and constipation seon dis- appear when Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pils are used. George Gould, machinist, Deseronto, Ont., states : "Dr, Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills are beyond doubt the best riedicine that 1 ever had in the house. 1 was in ill health for some time, suffering with kidney disease and very severe pains across my back. The pains were at times something dreadful and I did not know what would become of me if 1 did not get relief. I heard of Dr, Chase's Ridvey J fves Fills, began using them, obtained prompt relie 0 now entirely cured. 1 bad tried a great many medicines = but never found any treatment so effective ag Dr, Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills. Ir. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills, one pill a dosé, 25c. a box, at all dealers, or Edmanson; 'Bates & Giks Tosonta, To tect you against imitations porurait and signature of Dr. A. w. Chase, the famous receipt book au- Miss Margaret Anglin will stay at the King Kdward while in Toronto. Many little affairs will be given in her honor. ° Miss Purkis, of Prescott, is staying with Mrs. Edgar Horwood, in Otta wa. x The marriage of Miss Lily Jackson, ! eldest daughter of Mr. R. H. Jackson (Peterboro), to Mr. Frederick 8. Clarke, formerly of Barrie, will take place on Wednesday, the 16th, at Pet erboro. The wedding is announced for the 5th January, 1904, at St. John's church, Bishop's Chapel, Halifax, of Sophia, Almon Boswell, daughter of William Boswell Graveley, manager of the Bank of Montreal, Halifax, to Mr. Franklin Clark, of the Admiralty, Halifax. The prospective bride is the grand-daughter of the late Hon. Sen- ator Almon, and great-erand-daughter of the Hon. Captain Walter Boswell, ! R.N., also niece of Lieutenant-Colonel J. Vanee Graveley, senior ordnance of- ficer of this militia district. The engagement is announced in Montreal of Miss E. Daisie Davis, eld- est daughter of Mr. Charles W. Davis, to Mr. John Raymond Howard, Jr., of Montclair, New Jersey. . oe * + When a woman wislies she was a man is when he gives his hair a neat little slick with a comb, and presto! | his coiffare is complete. When the children cry and he can whistle a tune get his hat, bang the door, and go | out. When the dinner is spoiled and he ! chats unconcernedly, and all the guests pity him because he is mar: ried to an incompetent, fussy, discom- posed woman. When he trips up the street ahead' of her on a rainy day with his trousers jauntily turned up and no skirts to kick."When he swings easily on and off a moving car with- out danger of tangling his heels in his petticoats. When he stows things away in his multitudinous pockets and saunters on with unencumbered hands. When he can wear his best hat in the rain without getting the curl out of the feathers. When he doesn't have to twist his arms to hook his bodice up the back. Nor drag six superfluous vards of dress goods behind him, and do it gracefully, too. Nor kiss his sworn enemy and tell how sweet he looks. Nor emile seraphically all through the play while a hairpin is jabbing in his head. Nor move heav- en and earth to look pretty while sui- fering the pangs of the third place. He ean just look as miserable and as vel. low as he feels and folks only pity him. These are just a few of the times when the most contented wom: an in the world wouldn't mind being a man--Effa Webster in Chicago Jour- nal. 3 * . * . This is the coming color, according to exchanges and various fashion ma: gazines. Our readers can take their choice. "Brown is to be the leading color of fall and winter." "Pepper red is the newest and most. modish color." : "Modish girls will cling to heavy white frocks way into the winter, thor, are on. every box. - - white still leading." , | Jessie a becoming hat of cream velvet with ! J Hatch, of the Deseronto Iron come pany, left last Friday for his new home in Indian Head, N.W.T. The Descronto skating rink is near ing completion under the new manage- ment * of Mr. McDonald. There was quite an exciting time at the meeting of the town council, on Thursday night; a dispute arose between the mayor and one of the councillors, and they grew belligerent. Mr. Fleming, of the Bank of Montreal, has been re- | moved to Ottawa. The mission band of the Presbyterian church held a sale of fancy work in the Union hall, on Fr day afternoon dnd evening. Miss Lane, Napanee, spent Sunday as the guest of Miss Maud Allen. PERSONAL MENTION, Sr ---- Movements of the People--~What They Are Saying and Doing. On December 15th, 1593, the saint of anglers, Isaac Walton, was born. Very Rev. Dean Murray, Brockville, came up to Kingston, on Monday. Rev. E. A. Chown, B.D., Toronto, is in the city to attend the funeral of his father. Thomas Hazlett, ex-police constable, after' a successful season on the lakes, has returned home to remain for the winter months. R. J. Baiden, reeve of Portsmouth, has made up his mind to retire from municipal politics. He will not again enter the political arena, Mies Jean. Kirk, third daughter of . M. Kirk, and granddaughter of the late William Nickle, died in West mount, Montreal, on Sunday. Capt. Gaskin is being urged to stand mgain for the mayoralty, He has the matter under advisement, and will give a definite answer in a few days. The Brockville Times says Mr. Bor ley, a Queen's College student, has a splendid delivery and fine pulpit ap- pearance. He is bound to come to the front. DR. OSLER GETS $10,000 FEE, Called From Baltimore To : Mil- waukee. Baltimore, Dec. 15.~Dr. William Os- ler, a native of Dundas, Ont., who has been for some years dean of the medi cal department of the Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md., was called into consultation with physicians of Capt. Fred. Pabst at Milwaukee, Wis., on Tuesday last. While the captain's condition was not considered desperate, yet his fa mily would not be satisfied until they had consulted the highest authority in the country. Dr. Osler arrived Tuesday afternoon, had a consultation with the other phy- sicians, saw the patient for about five minutes, pocketed a fee of $10,000 and returned home in the morning. May Be Opposition. Evidently the eastern ridings are groing restless with their representa- tives in parliament and the atest in timation is that that veteran conser | vative whip, George Taylor, M.P. for South Leeds, is to be opposed in the coming convention, by Edward Dono- van. In 1900 Mr. Donovan withdrew to allow Mr. Taylor a unanimous no- mination in the assurance that he would get the support of the conven- tion at a later date. ' Friends now say the time has arrived: South Leeds has been represented for forty years by two members, D. F. Jones, from 1868 to 1852, and Mr. Taylor, since 1882. K. & P. Railway Directors. The K. & P. railway company direc- tors had a brief meeting on Monday. In: attendance * were C. W. Spencer, general manager; R. V. Rogers, R. Crawford, Hon. William Harty and W. D, Hart. Only routine business was transacted. It was reported that the company's business for the year had been much larger than in 1902. The annual meeting takes place on Febru. ary 14th. Three applications of Peck's Corn Salve will cure hard or soft corns, 15¢., at Wade's. ; Taylor's for Christmas perfumes, I I EE Gained Forty Pounds In Thirty Days. For several months our younger brother he been troftled with indi- gestion. t| several remedies but got no benefit from them. We \ esed some of Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets and he commenced taking them. Inside of thirty days he pounds QUARTERS.OF EARTH. eee------" Matters That Interest Everybody --Notes From all Over--Littls of Everything Easily Read and Remembered by the Public. The fire at Bathurst, N.B,, destroy- ed about a dozen buildings. Loss $30, 000, } George D. Grant, M.P., was nomin- ated by thes North Ontario liberals for a second term. The United States Steel corporation' will make a reduction of from five to twenty per cent, in the wages of 150 employees, It is reported that Britain and Hol- land will demand that Panama as- sume liabilities for $15,000,000 of the Colombian debt. Henke & Pillot's sugar factory, at Houston, Texas, was estroyved Ly fire, Two men will probably die as a re sult. The loss is $50,000, : A thousand specific charges of cruel- ty are laid against Lieut. Schilli of the 9th Regiment of Infantry, the Germany army, whose trial began at Metz, Cashel, the escaped murderer from. Calgary, has been located in the hills near that place, and the Mounted Policv and a large number of citizens are pursuing him. Ex-Congressman Alexander McDon- ald, of Arkansas, is dead at Nor wood Park, N.J., During the civil war he maintained three Union regiments at his own expense, John W. Lendon, who came to Tor. onto with Eva Long, aged seventeen, of Rome, N. Y,, and married her, has been arrested on a charge of abduo- tion laid by the girl's uncle. A mob tried to lynch Town Marshal Harmon, at Brazil, Ind., because in trying to quell a fight he killed a minor, Failing, they wrecked his son's house, driving his family into the sitet, Engineer Graham was killed, Fireman Chambers probably fatal injured by their train running into a hard-packed drift near Killarney, The men fly to the cellar in an agony of ear. They barricade tho doorways And soon tone bursting in; a, wt 1 nd then the merry siuggin, ™ shoking will begin. Sglug, And the wen 1 conclude my visit there are al ways broken bones i And all the 'house will echo with the It fuse of their moans. ell you il' you want to hav Y sanguinary sport ate Some Ou want to get a job ag hat le an official of You need the proper implemonts, course, to have some fun-- A pair of knuckle dusters and a billy and a gun. Of course, you have your papers which your purpose is to serve, You also bring a Wagon and a large cast-iron nerve. Then if an aged woman opens up the door You grab her and you choke her and you throw her on the floor It's best to kick some ribs in; then she'll learn while you disport It isn't safe to fool with an ofMeial of the court. . of comes and Had a severe pain In the small of the baok. eer eed ree deepen Hams both men belonged to Winni. the pain was t at in the ng. eu, Kingston, winter I ry Doan' Lay Of t was saw Doan"s Chicago. Nowe, The Constable. Pills advertised. Since ta than hard 'the women shriek and shudder when been cured and have not they see we drawing near, nay my since." | Don't let the child suffer. Tastank relief with "The Perfected American fe on re ; American Waltham Watch Companys W: Mass. Waltham Watc J Wy Old friends to trust. Watch," an. il ¥ Pops oA {lastrated book | pri Doan's Kidney Pills FEE TEE good fuel. And. you receive more qet deliv ti your on AS. Yo rin We* Ay: We ter. Of course, there Will be others; you hit out left and right, And when they are disposed of you grab everything in sight, You dri off with your and that's all there is to do. They'll only Say: "That's Greenbe putting some poor devil through." They'll always tolerate you if you never take a crack At any sort of people who are likely to hit back, And while your pals stand by you you can always hold the fort And nobody will bother an official of the court. -------- Why Like Clocks. "Husbands are like clocks," obser- ved the spinster. "In what respect ?" agked the then plunder, wo: man who had been married three times. "Steady going ones are the best," replied the maid with a theory. "Oh," said the experie; one, with an open'faced sigh, "I thought perhaps it was because when t ey have a tendency to be fast it is hard | to set them right." ------ Business And Advertising. done up stylishly, - take it to the "SING DOO LAUNDRY or by leaving word, will call for laun- dry and deliver it again. With one trial you will always 'SING D The Brightest Thing in Stove' Polish I ~~ STRAGHAN'S HARDWARE -- STAMPS { RUBRER STAMPS OF ALL KINDS, GHINESE LAUNDRY IF YOU WANT YOUR LAUNDRY finish, O LAUN DRY" Cerner Darris and Wiliam streets. X-RAY Goes twice as far as paste or liquid | polisu~No drying up--Lasts longer--At Don't forget weather strip to keap ovt the cold. AND MARKERS, EEE Philadelphia Record. That the monthly business of an es- tablishment bears a direct ratio to the amount of the monthly advertising bill ié 'a statement «which las Deen made recently by three diferent busi ness meh in communications to Print- ers' Ink. When experimnse has taught this fact ta a man, advertising np- pears to him to be in truth the life of trade. So ------ Why He Advertises. Philadelphia Record. One of the reasons given by a grocar for advertising in the newspapers is that the women of his own household are eager readers of the advertising columns and know when and where to buy things. "As my women folks are not unlike most other women," he says, "I concluded that advertise- ments do influence purchasers." { Why Suffer with dyspepsia, indigestion, flatulence, sour stomach, ge or vaterbrash when thers is a remedy at hand, Wade's Dyspepsia Cure ves the trouble at once. at Wade's, As the result of a head-on collision on the C.V.R., near Stanbridge, Que., W. E. Goddard, 8t. Alban's, Vt., was killed. He loaves a wile, formerly Misa Rose Rogers, Montreal. Livingston has exclusive control of Welsh Margetson best English neck- wear, the most correct cravats ever shown. "A good idea." The Red Cross drug store is taking orders for the de- | livery of Huyler's candy, Christmas eve. Henry Cunningham, piano tuner, from Chickering's. Orders received at McAuley's book store, Princess street. Corsets of every destription at 28¢., 40c., 50c., and 'up. New York Dress Reform Ladies--Sp inl bargains in corsets. a look at our stock, Hew York YOUR GRATE. It lasts all night, Try it.

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