Daily British Whig (1850), 22 Dec 1903, p. 3

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think you have cured h or cold, but fing king cough remains s danger. Take J amption The Lung Tonic at once. rengthen the lungs stop the cough. c., 80c."and $1.00 , WELLS & co, Can, LeRoy, NY. inkenness on and y Drugusing Over 300, CURES" * Address Keeley Institute Queen St., § p 788 fe, Toronto, On at Weese's for 2c. . alendars for - 35¢. d Pictures, at 15¢. Paper, 20c., to 25c¢. 'ors at bargains Novelties at for Qhristmas. E & CO. on & Risch Piano. ay Books Boys. Girls. ooks for Sun- Schools. S. ards, etc. SBET, ' Book Store. low om cnn T00 SH BN vers one oe 10 00 secure gents' lock arly. ' . W. Richardson, Sec--Treas. TRATED : HOME- ork Sausages, Ten- Hi Cheese. Al AL Bacon aad fou: at 60 Brock 090000 ft's 3 nton ¢ Al! 1 you are sn't satis- you want Fs : 4$ $ ° © 4 ® ® D T & 50. so000 'EMAN iE LICENSES, IRE INSURANCE 89%. . EXCURSIONS ._roafls, headquarters of the British North W. F. DEVER & 00. | TRAVELLING, | Le 118 SYS Christmas Delicacies Turkeys, DTRO ! CHRISTMAS AND NEW YEAR'S HOLIDAYS, CHRISTMAS SINGLE FARE--Good going Dec. and 325th. Return mit "s an Des. 28th. FARB AND ONE-THIRD--Cood going Dec. 38rd, 24th and 25th. Return lim. it on or before Jan. 3th. NEW YEAR BINGLE FARE--Good going Dec 81st, Jan. 1st. Return limit, on or be fore Jan. 4th. FARE AND ONE-THIRD--Good Dec. 80th and 31st, and Jan Tat one turn limit on or before Jan. 5th J. P. HANLEY, Agent City Passenger Depot. Fresh Salmon. Fresh Lohsters. Boneless Haddies,' Wild Duck, Malpecque Shell Oysters, Blue Point Shell Oysters and Booth's celebrated Naval Brand Oysters, which have no equal, ---- a ------ Kingston & Pembroke & Canadian DOMIN Pacific Railways. 63 INION FISH Co, -- 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 h, 1908. Good going December 3lst, , and Janu- ary 1st, 1904, valid for return until January 4th, 1904. AT FIRST-CLAST FARE AND ONE- THIRD--Going December 23rd, 24th, and 25th, and December 30th, 81st, 1903 and 'January 1st, 1904, good returning until January Oth, 1904. HOTEL EMPIRE, Full particulars at K. & P. and C. P. R. Ticket Office, Outario St Broadway and 5 A CON a , : ) 63rd Street, N.Y. City. F. CONWAY, F. A. FOLGER; Ji n . 3 Vole S02. wins LC : i Ih Telephone in Every Room - Rooms $1 per Day and Upwards. THE BAY OF QUINTE RAILWAY NEW | , ron Grand Content Station take SHORT LINE FOR Perry ua reach ota Eatpire in tt on luinutes. All suriace cars of the ** Metropolitan Transit Co.," pass the Hotel Empire The restaurant of the Ewpire is noted for the excclience of its cuisine, its ef- ficient service and moderate prices A fina library of choice literature for the exclusive use of our guests. The Empire has long been the favorite Tweed, Napanee, Deseronto, and all lo- cal points. Train leaves City Hall De- 2t at 4 p.m. F. CONWAY, Agent, 4. Q. Ry., Kingston. hotel for tourists visiting the Metropolis ---------------------------------------------------------------------- RC Orchestral concerts every evening PORTLAND--HALIFAX--LIVERPOOL a in ten minutes of amusement and ing centres. n > . Empire is the headquarte ! From Portland. a From Portland. Canadian Society of New as o1 the Tauric, Dec. 26 Nomadic, Jan. 16 Send for Booklet Canada, Jan. 2 Dominion Jan. 23 i Ottoman, Jan. 9 Tauric, Jan. 30 W. Johnson Quinn, Prop. Pasmongor steamers west bound call at Halimx. For all particulars as to freight and pasige apply to '-- J. P: HAN J. P. GILDERSLE The Dominion Line, Jand. .. BERMUDA .. THG NOW FAR FAMED BERMUDAS, with sable communication and equable winter temperature of 63 degrees, bLeau- Siful soenery and 100 miles of good Metropolitan Stock Exchange incorporated Under the Laws of Massachusetts CAPITAL $100.000 RULLY PAID. KINGSTON BRANCH Glarenca Chambers, Clarence St. . Opposite British American' Hote!. "Plone 409, J. J. MCKENNA, Manager. Bonds, Stocks, Grain and Provisions bought on margin or for cash, EY, G.T.R. EVE, 42 Clarence St. Montreal & Fort American Squadron, is unrivalled in its Stiractbiveness, reached by the first-class fron steamers TRINIDAD or PRETORIA fa forty-eight hours from New York Sailing fortnightly up to 1st January smd every THURSDAY thereafter. The | islands, including SANTA , 8ST. KITTS, MARTINIQUE T LUCIA, BARBARDOES AND DEM - RA, also afford beautiful and interest- tours, all reached by steamship of the Quebct Steamship Company, sailing wom New York about every 10 days ee tee Far deseriptive pamphlets and dates of sailin, apply to A. EMILIUS OUTER ood Coal BRIDGE & CO v, New York; J HANLEY or J. P. GILDERSLEEV Kingston, Ont ARTHUR AHERN, Secretary, Quebec ALLAN LINE Liverpool and Londonderry. The central Wood and Coal Yard Is located at 236 Earl Streot. All kinds of good hard wood, cut and split to suit, dry kindling, always ROYAL MAIL STEAMERS under cover Prompt delivery. Prices From St. John. From Halifax. | Fight. None but the pure Scranton 'Tunisian, Dec. 19. . .. . Dec. 21. Coal--no mixtures. : Parisian, -- --. .. . Dec. 28 Py Tan 4 ii i|¢ B. BARNEY '¢ RATES OF PASSAGE First Cabin Tunisian, $60 and upwards; Parisian, $55 and upwards Other steamers, $535 and upwards, PRESSING AND REPAIRING: A SPECIALTY. YOUR OWN CLOTH Second Cabin -- Liverpool, and Londonderry, Tunisian, $40 Other | made into up-to-date suits. THOMAS steamers, $37:50, London, $2 extra. GALLOWAY, 1381 Brock St. next Bib Third Class -- $25 and 26, Liv- |by's livery. erpool, Derry, Belfast, Glasgow, London --through tickets to South Africa. NEW YORK TO GLASGOW. Corifithian, Thursday, Dec. 24th, 1 p.m, 1st Cabin, $45, $383, 3rd Class, :$26. . J. P. HANLEY, Agent, G.T.R., City Taseen Depot. J, P. GILDER RLEBUE., Clarence street. 2nd Cabin, MAYORALTY OF 1904 ALD. W. G. CRAIG Requests the votes and influence of the Electors of the Municipality of King- ston, for Mayor for 1904. Xmas ad in the la fellow a war MAYORALTY 1904. 50 THE ELECTORS : Ladies and Gentlemen--1 respectiully tolicit your votes and influences to elect me mayor for the year 1004 Bennid he a C. J. GRAHAM, the Lh done through lack ristma of reliable coal or wood Tel. 568 tter lot us have your order Established 1890. vou want voup fuel a certain dav or in a certain wav. that's 159 k and Bond a or ¢ just the way we'll give it to you We ton Stree ingston ; Wie for our Datly Market Letter R. CR AWFORD, K. F. RIOE, MA p . Foot of Queen Street. 'Phone 9. JOHN H. MILLS \_The Leading HRISTMAS with the QUEEN By Sarah A. Tooley the Copyright 1003 by Agency National Press If there is one season in the year which Queen Alexandra loves more than another I think it js Christmas. Around the fistive season gathered the pleasantest associations of her youth. What gay, happy times she had as a child in the old Gules palace, Copenhagen, when, with her five bro thers and sisters, she danced around the Chiistmas-tree on holy eve, while Dring parents looked on. Then there were vi its to her grand parents, the Landgrave William of Hesse, and the Princess €hatlotte, in their palace near by ie at the Frue Kirke or the Chapel il, the giting and re- ceiving of presents, wreat ing the holly and mistletoe, clapping hands the Yule logs blazed, and, greatest lelight of al!, getting a new fairy story from Hans Andersen bimseli, an viitor to her childhoods honored home. The queen had nothing to learn about Yuletide festivities when she quitted the land of the' Vikings for ALisn's shore; rather indeed was she coming to a land which:-had barrow ed its customs from her Norse and German ancestors, Her majesty's first Christmas in her adopted country was passed quietly at Windsor with the then sorrowing queen, but in after Years it became the custom to spend the season in her beloved Norfolk home with h¢r husband, children and retainers in d "old English style, and for forty vears the tradition, with a few exceptions, has been meiatein ed When the king succeeded, the good folks at Sandringham fared that they had seen the last of the accus cme Christmas festivitiss, though some shoo' their heads huowingly and declared that the queen would still continues custom of sichildren Christmas tree giving never willinply forsake the old place. The forehodings weve justified when t was announced in 1901 that the king and quéen would keep Christmas at Windsor. This was but following a rational custom which had its begin ning nearly a thousand years ago, Brain Controls 3 Every Muscle Injury to Brain or Nerves, De- ficiency of Nerve Force, Mean Paralysis and Helplessness. Dr. Chase's Nerve Food, | Every muscle of the body controlled by the will is connected with the brain, end every muscular action is originated bv nervous force, generated in the brain and transmitted along the nerves to the muscles, When the norves are mpjured « eased, when theré i¢-a deficiency in the paralysis, iprm of r dis Nervous ataxia supply' of energy, locomotor or some helplessness results because Ahe brain no longer Kas control of the muscles It may he peak heart action, in ability to digest food, fnilure of the lungs to purify the blood or impaired action of any of the vital organs, but the cause of trouble is with the nerves The- restorative action of Dr. Chase's Neewe F is soon felt throughout the entire system, because it restores the vigor and vitality of the nerves fills them with new nerve force, the vital power of the - body; weakness, nervousness, irritability, sleeplessness and low spirits disappear and new energy and strength take their" place Jehn McKegg, carter, 19 Lansdowne street, Kingston, Ont... states : "1 was eo very nervous that | would start up without any caus: ahd seemed to have no control over my nerves. 1 also suf jercd from a weak back which ° came no doubt from my hging exposed. to all kinds 'of weather and consequently from my kidneys being out of order. Since having used Dr. Chase's Ner ve Food my system seems to Le much strengthened," the sudden startings have ceased to trouble me and I am relieved of the distressing peins in my Lack." Dr. Chase's Nerve Food, 50c. a box, six boxes for $2.50, at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto. To protect you against imitations, the portrait and signature of Dr. AW. Chase, the famous receipt bok au- Auctioneer. thor, are on every box, { cannct extract one word as to joicing. when the Norman hinge held their wassail. on the royal Li'l, and " Many a carol old and saintly ng the mingtrels and the waits There is indeed no royal residence more intimately associated with the Christmas festivities of the court than Windsor Castle, dnd it seemed in the order of things that his majesty should eloct to spend the first Chiist mas of kis reign where his predeces- sors had done. it will be remembered that the indisposition of the queen prevented the plans from being car tied out, and compelled their mmjes- tis to remain at Marlborough house. When the mext anniversary came round it found the 'king and queen en joving the festive season as of old at Sandringham. Whether this i: to be a N x " ho NR SNR Afternoon and early ovening stripping t spent in d rded as a precedent for the future it is unwise to prophesy, but in de- scriving a Christmas with the queen we have still to travel to Norfolk. We take the liberty of the designers of Christmas cards, and imagine that reg as the season approaches frost and snow come in its wake. I have seen Sandringham at all scasons of the year, and never is it more picture or exhilarating than when the woods are turned into shimmering wrenths and garlands of hoar frost, the moorland a carpet of snow, the lake in the park frozen over, and the broad gravel roads, which are the de- light of the Ling, give out a metalic ring. Peaccfully the hamlets and vil- lages lie around, with here and there a red-tiled roof peeping through where the snow has melted in the sunshine. 'I he estuary of the wash gleams white in the distance, and the air is keen from over the North Sea. The "Hall"--and 1 sympathize with the natives who cling to the old name iu preference to the jodern appella- tion of Sandringham 'house' --stands out picturesguely, with its red-and white Elizabethan architecture show- ing' against the ft and fine trees. It is the centre from which radiates this Christmas-time kindness and good cheer for all the country fide. 'I here is not an ailing or infirm person in any of yonder cottages but has re ceived some token of the queen's thought; not a chil who does not bless her for present or expected plea #ures; and every laborer on the estate has received from the king a substan- tial addition to his Christmas fare There is not a house, however humble, in the parishes around the hall with an empty or even an ill-filled larder, nor anyone lacking warm clothing For a great number of years it was the queen's custom to give a red cloak to each gil, and a red cap to each boy in the village school at Christmas, but though this is not as vigialy observed as formerly other things take their place. Let us in imagination enter Sand ringham house on Christmas eve. Hol ly gleams cn the walls and mistletoe hangs in the hall; crackling pine logs from the estate send pleasant gleams through the cosy rooms! Everywhere is the comfort and brightness which we associate with "a country house at this reascn. Fleasant talk and laughter is heard on all sides, for their majesties' fnmily guests have arrived. 'Granny' is all smiles and mystery, and the lit tle Ladies Alexandra and Maud Duff what Sgnta Claus has got in store for them. The queen enjoys her own surprise presents as much as the young people do theirs, when the special courier from Russia arrives bearing, according to the yearly custom, gifts from her beloved sister, the Dowager Empress, and other members' of the imperial family. Ii Christmas morning dawns clear and bright, and King Frost has done his duty, it is a fair scene . of park, gardens, and lake on which the queen looks out from her boudoir. Within all is pleasant confudion. Presents, know not how many, from her majesty's kith and kin beyond the sea, and in timate friends nearer home, with piles of letters and dainty ¢ards, cover the tables, while from the private tele graph downstairs comes message fier message of greeting. The queen invari ably spends the carly morning hours in her own apartments, and thither come children and grandehildren to with her a merry Christmas, The Duke and Duchess of Fiie's little girls bein in the house get the first chance . seeing "Granny"; but the preity quar- tette of grandchildren from York cot- tage, led by Prince Edward, are early on the to be followed by the Prince and Princess Charles, who drive over from Appleten Hall if they #re not alceady at Sandringham. On this joyous mom their majestics have a complete family cirele around them, save for the loved lost one, and to him the queen's thoughts turn at this season, and she will slip away to the Duke of Clarence's old room, where everything remains a3 he left it, to place flowers upon the table, or to give some mute and loving token that he §s not forgotten in the general re- scene, usually walks. The church has been we prettily decorated, not by the queen, | : as 'is Iroquently stated, but by Mrs. and Miss Hervey, the rectors wife and daughter, some of the flowers and ever greens having, however, been sent from ingham, The choir of = school: thildren sing the time-honored hymns, and their majesties, in common with the sil gs folks, juin ia the universal thanks i. mg, "Unto wus a Child is Born." Service over, the queen pauses at the lych gate to smile 'good wishes to the people standing respectiully around, and enters the cak omnibus to return to: the Hall, the king proceed: ivg on foot as before, 'All their majesties' family and guests, including the grandchildren, as semble around the luncheon table, forming a very merry circle. The after. noon and early evening are spent in stripping the Christmas tree in the ballroom, and'in games and amuse- ments for the juvenile members of the house-party, "Granny" presiding over the family tea-table with her accus tomed vivacity. Later the little ones retire with their attendants, and the king. and queen with the elder portion of the family dime together in pod old English style, the orthdox dishes gracing the sideboard, and toasts and good wishes cictling round. There is a Christmas-tree for the servants, and every membér of their majesties' house- hold hus received a personal present. The queen generally makes a prettily- chosen gift of jewellery to the ladies of her entourage. * In days gone by, the laborers on the estate used to have 4 Christmas din- ner in the coach-house at Sandring ham, decorated for the occasion, and the women and children were entertain- ed to tea. Of recent years a gift of } 4 littause it nach Howly Progressive heef and tea to each head of a family year. now better, b has token the place of the dinner, but whole getting more deeply and firmly the quecn Still continues the custom aera re Pe drm Soe lo which she started forty years ago of 3 tarrh. It is hard for one whose constitu- giving the school ch lren a Christmas. tion holds him up Yor years against the treat at the Hall. This is held one af- Progressive encroachments of catarth, tc a i eative. ok realize his danger, and think of the time ternoon during the festive week, and when, sooner or later, vital organs will it is a great sight to sce the young. pe reached, or some acute cold will fan sters, some five hundred of them, com- the smoldering fire of catarrh into that ing up the dri many in red cloaks Yevastating systemic conflagration--con- ~ hay 3 3 . sumption. and caps. They assemble n the ball So many neglect the beginnings of dis room, at one end of which is a gigan- case and allow it to become firmly seat tic Christmas tree gleaming with fairy ed and vory dificult td dislodge. lights and covered with toys. The Only physicians who are familiar with tables are arranged down the sides of the room, end the queen and her the history eof all, that in a large num- daughters distribute the giits from the ber of fatal sicknesses, has led up to the death, realize how often a supposedly trivial complaint neglected brought ab- tree, serve the little visitors with tea ©ut the condition that cost life. Case at- 1 caked 1 se the ith ter case of Consumption can be traced and cakes, and amuse em wit to neglected Catarrh Catarrh is a prevailing plague, the | foremost scourge of America. Its steals { thy approach and lingering stay make it ia dread to the physician and a pest to Ithe patient. It is vastly more than just 'a filthy and disgusting disease, making the breath odious and repulsive, causing one. to choke, snuff, blow, sneeze, cough, Kughe hawk, spit and do the disagreeable | things catarrh sufferers are obliged to do." but if allowed to rum, it sooner or {later becomes dangerous to life. | Because catarrh is is not alarming in its early stages, it is commonly allowed to progress until many, so many, deaths are due to diseases having other and various names but of which catafrh is the primary or basic cause. Catarrh is the beginning of more dis rases than all other causes combined. It ix capable of attacking most fluids, tise sues and organs of the hody. The pois 'onous secretions following up the mucous { tracts get into the throat and injure the voice, into the head and impair hearing, into the stomach and produce dyspepsia, - into the Lowels and result in chromic t \ * diarrhoea, into the blood and become i I p i | scrofula, into the skin to be known as fe lin y eczema, into respiratory organs and 2 " caure consumption, into the urinary or- Consciousners of their pleasure gives gans and entail Bright's disease and queen a happy Christmas bladder troubles, into the pelvic organs and develop various annoying and dis games. The servants come to look tressing conditions generally referred to cn at the merrymaking Rin iin ®t. fenfale Weaknons. 3 ng Catarrh of the eyes, nose, ears, throat, some respects a repetition of the tea hronchial tubes, lungs, liver, stomach, which her majesty gives the children bowels. kidacys, bladder ad they Ro p> i lay. cel xans, is but a local manifestation of a on her birthday, December lst, and lurkine, systemic or constitutional dis. hg two accasions are her great de- ease. hence the folly of attempting ita light. The queen is never more in her eure with local applications alone, It element than when performing the du: neede searching. systemic medication to Is An Open Gateway for the Great White Pla now worse, but on the ment will only suppress. its outward manifestation in one spot, drive it.in, to perhaps attack some more im F and deeper seated structures. 3 3 if you have catarrh, even in its Joss. common or ordinary aud supposedly orm, and are gifted with uncommon ense you will not delay seeking or it but endeavor to drive it out of the system before it develops into a 'hat gives little promise of hope of cure, True, all eatarrh sufferers do hot do velop consumption or Bright's but. careful enquiry will show that #ho have died of these common fa- ial ills were, previous to lungs or idnaya, afflicted wi eragni; orm of Ath. # Stuart's Catarrh Ta cure che ost, swourge, They are taken internally, »y searching out and antagonizing tarrhal poisons, wherever and hig means in every nook and corner of the y. . This Is how they have won their great reputation ime, A leading druggist of Albany says: "I have sold ny catarrh cures but such Kensal " satisfaction as " or drive in and suppress catarrh at somes losal point, with drying or as! t aptlications, but this is onl able subterfuge, a makeshil A soon be apparent when treatment is continued. No so with the radical . tutional cure by the use of Stuart's Ca- tarrh Tablets which, though not so ra~ pid of action as suppressing is lasting and satisfactory in the catarr! first little cqld does not brin return of the disease. The vermanency o cures Stuart's Catarrh Tablets the fact that the multitude of pe % who have wu thom are so lav in their praise, 4! If you love health, a sweet breath, and a clear head," if you wish ta rid. voursell of the systemic as well as the disagreeabls local mani tions of Catarrh, Stuart's Catarrh Jets are your hope, and, il persistently uwed for reasonable time, will vour redemption from this preve loathsome and eventually dangerous ease. Stuart's Catarrhal Tablets are convenient, safe, and cheap. They bought 'at anv drug store for 50 hunted al constitution once ng avo b effectually eradicate this blighting taint ties: of a chatelaine,and at these an He conatit tion. Parely heal trats nual festivities she has seen--though . box and taken easilv and privately. Try them snd vou will be pleased. * one finds it difficult to realize jit, with her ever-youthful appearance--the chil- dren take the place of their parents, ! who, as boys, and girls, came to her or tea-parties in the sixtiés, Annual balls for the country, tenan try, and servants used to take place at Sandringham in continuation of the Christmas festivities, On these occa sions their majesties were indefatigable among the dancers, going up the mid ' dle and down again ip a style which would have delighted Sic Roger de Coverley. These gay dances ceased af ter the death of the Duke of Clarence and their majestic were prevented from resumibg them by the successive deaths of the: Duchess of Teck, the Queen of Denmark, and Queen Vie torin. Whether the balls will be reviv ed this year, if Sandringham again witnesses the royal Christmas, it is premature to predict. One cannot a record of how the queen spends the festive season without reference to her never-failing thought for sick children. Toys for them are always a part of her Christ mas selections, and are sent by special wessenger on Christmas eve, often with greetings written in her 'own hand, to the, children's hospitals of which she is the special patroness. The joy with which these afflicted little ones hail the coming of the gifts can he readily im agined, and the consciousness of their pleasure must help to give the queen a happy Christmas. close Jenkins' Neckwear. This department has always enjoyed the reputation of being pre-eminently the largest and best assorted in the : > . city; this séason it is bigger and loads. Read: i ver. Christ ' brighter than ever ristmas Ties 0 only. Amorind. Pattern. Salad are always a favorite. Jenkins. sg Bowls, best semi porcelain ware, mark- ed 20c. and 25¢., on sale 2 for 25c. 4 only Imported Dinner Sets, beauti ful patterns, the 87 quality for $5.25 Pudding pans, cake dishes, agate- ware--a big display to choose from if you go to Lemmon, Claxton & Lawr enson's. EC ------------_ The Best Remedy For Croup. All Fapey Lamps were reduced this week, but for Wednesday an extra 10 From: the Atchisén. Kan. Daily Globe Pet seat. of, is is the season when the woman 24 a . who knows the best remedies for croup stl $50 Dolls tor only 2208 is in demand in every neighhorhood. One of the most terrible things in the world is to be awakened in the mid dle of the night by a whoop frém one of the children. The croup remedies are almost as sure to be lost in case of croup ad a revolver is in case of burglars. There msed to be an old- fashioned remedy for croup, known as hive syrup, but some modern mothers say that Chamberlain's Cough Remedy All other Dolls, 20 per cent. off. Cut prices on all Sleighs. £2.50 and $3 extra fine Bibles at one price, $1.69. Other priced Bibles, 49¢. up. As the hour for service oaches, the roomy oak omnibus stands at the ' hall door. The quien and the princesses enter, end drive to the pret: little parish church of St in the park. The king i J : » by the printes and SANA 7, . ene Mary M ced! is better, and does not cost so 'much It causes the patient to "throw up the phlegm" quicker, and gives relief in si er time. Give this remedy as soon as the croupy cough appears and fr is aaat o ET ot sale by all driggisth; GAT An Avalanche of Bargains for WEDNESDAY Only two days more to do business before Christ- mas and we purpose cutting prices, so that Sauta Claus will have to hire extra sleighs to deliver his ------------------. I -- ot . WOODS' FAIR -.. 8 O'CLOCK. Rob Roy Mixed Candies, all bright clear goods, Se. a Ib. Peppermint Humbugs, 5c. a Ib. ¥ Job lot of Ladies' Black Cashmere Howe, plain and ribbed, all sizes, ox- tra value at 25¢. and 30c., on sale 19¢c. pair. 3 20 dozen Fancy Bread and Bubter Plates, 6 for 19c. Ladies' White Wool Gloves, marked 25c. and 50¢c., on sale 15c. and 20es Big shipment of silvered steel Knives and Forks, good wearing cutlery,spe- cial price 6 of each for 49c. ; See the set of Knives and Forks at $2, worth $3. Large 400 page Illustrated Books, value 60c. and 75¢., to clear 35¢. : Celluloid Pin Cases, 10c., 15c., 28. Another shipment of our special Bagster Teachers' Bible at $1. % 20 dozen Men's Linen Handkerchiefs, large size, $1 a dozen, on sale Se. each, 100 dozen Fancy China Cups and Saucers, 10c., 15., and 25¢c. a set.

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