Daily British Whig (1850), 31 Dec 1903, p. 5

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0 conduct a advertise day 1's $15 Suits | "'Men's $10 | the custom. pects to find 1ethod of ad- ade ? riends where ey was well. them scrip. rantee every other and so 50, coat at $10. GO. ¢ Hall. | to serve do their been for e are sure Furnisher, ord's. » PSOTOTO00 rErrerTi PPE Bronchial Dis the worst after- rmptoms, Chills Sore, Inflamed 1s in the Limbs, d. UM's SI-KEEN) Grips, | Poeu ores. Dr. T. A. St. W., Toronto, Valuable Prescription } Whi ' if ke owns property in' different wards. ' Py Which | --_-- Is this an evil? I think it is a good Any Man Can Make His Own | . ag ; -- Dayiight fades, gud one by one : i wn { THE thing, for the man who has much atl. The ty stars come through a v Ay to 'Cure Himeels t ADVANTAGES POINTED stake will certainly think before he! THE WAY THE BRAIN DOES Tig Sehr Shuma Creeping ul PT 'Home Sent, Free to All Write OUTBYT. J, GLOVER casts his vote. The man who pays WORK lle Dining thelr wings and : For ity" | . his taxes ought to have the privilege | * f Twilght steals all Meatly, Bh ---- Claims That The Pr of saying who shall spend them. There A Sewdrops kiss the blushing rose, WILL MAKE A man OF You nL 17e. Present System | can be n> question that the man who | How Orders :\re Announce 1 And ip fre Say Jamun the trees, . 3 a oi on in The, Interest of The owns g great deal of ESpey the Obeyed--Dr. Withrow's Views uop ¢ repens, - A ----_ ity an Gen at «1'y 15 more deeply | intereste in it e night hinds send out on the a'r of Chit return ar. at youthiul footing Aldermen eral Election of than' the man who has very little pro- In London Answers, . PL Sweet and melan notes; : 3 ) Detroit " . ty. Lot. us kit po he Tesul Both sides of ihe brain are capable | nature breathes an evening prayer; j Physician and savant is in Possession | Kingston, Dee. 30. (1 > perty. Let us look now at t ults the dutl r { An echo from the hiliside floats. In So at 8e = (To the Editor): | of, the proposed system as attested by | Of performing tbe duties of giving So sweetly soft the low refrain in the pc aer of last 'week 1 asked, | a Toading and honeat man in Lennox and | commands to the limbs, but the orders | That rises throngh the eventide, ' . [ih the interests of the general public, { Acdington. Mr. Millar, of Switzer-| only come from one side, either from Recalls the Mhadows of the past; [svetam of ehers, ee 8 change in the | ville, says that the: outokirts af Cie] toe right or left, but if the sidey upon TW Sur Siew teers Mabon Bua, fae lr ng aldermen to thef township are likely to be neglected which the speech center lies gets In- |: Sore fp LI a in detail, their [ and Mr. Gallagher, of Wilton, says| jured and is rendered incapable ot per. | THE PRESS IN BRITAIN. . reasons have been given 1, then some | that his experience in council has! forming its duty then the othe: side A = " or against the hy la lecticns w , SP awa iy ) ; | clecticns were conducted along straigh America 8 Greatest Specialist. [is pays remembering that 'a change" party line and that ni i of receipt - which he has himsels | 15: NOt necessarily an advance Sion. e 1 ? yD utd in hs oWn extensive private | Kingston, in my opini od iti pression is, although at first faver- practise ° with the most startling | based upon first Tie) on, lodge. pA | 8ble, that the ward system is prefer- sugcdss. Though the years have Passed | Bosibilif es 4 d knowledge, has | gh)e from almost e standpoint . . its' bgual has never' been found And | goed . 8s an educational, resi It gives a good man a better chance with it thousandy of weak men pov. | 9ential and summer ¢ far beyond | of bein, good nce brought about cures they sq un | what the majority of her citizens te of being elated. longed for. 'The doctor willingly sens lieve, and far beyond those ox ne be The above evidence is from men who the Rrmula entirely free to any nan {or ity in Cancer op 0108¢ of any oth- | pave seen the proposed system tried, whe Writes him for it, and they wi find | cant ,anada--shall | say on the | and it would be a simple matter to ita gift Of lasting value. 1p is good | S00tnent ? This may seem foreign to i hi Lila for sexual weakness. lost manhona this letter, but it i. not far : 1 bring much more evidence of 4 similar - . get od, : : ', 3 ar, unless ind. i it ia rOSSATV i > Satie er weak back, emissions, va we' see 10 it that our alder Poa kind, but it i not necessary. It is the cele. Jack of 'force, prostatic trouple men who have faith ; ini | duty and high privilege of every elee- night sweats, inability and the many | ti. ew Mt 1a her possibiti tor to consider this question carefully other endarrassing conditions that befall | HS and future; in, this direction, and an Jue : the sexually imperfect man. Jt creates | "Ot Men anxious to get into the or tlse to refrain from voting for or an immediate social feeling, warmt) and | CH for the name of Yeing the coun against the by-law.--7T. J. GLOVER. good nature, forces active blood to the men with an "axe t , hii or ar Coan muscular tissue, tones the nervous sys. >% 0 grind. can tem and arouses bodily confidence. 1¢ | "OU hope to have' our city, so attrac THE MAYOR EXPLAINS. ¢ makes the man of 65 as good as at 85 | Ve Or 80 wel] looked" after as it oie . and the young man again cager for so | OUght to be. We pus take a prid He Says He Was Misreported in ciety and fit for marriage and parent- [ in making Se onde : hood. Satisiactory results are produced € our Oty. attractive, and His Remarks. in a day's use, few weeks, regardless of cause of your condition If you need such a ren edy send name and address to-dav to the Dr Knapp Med. Co., 1798 Hull Bldg., De- troit, Mich., and in an unmarked en- velope t doctor will at once send you the receipt, as promised, "explaining in detail what ingredicnis to use and Low to' compound them $0 that apy week man can cure him {in his own home without being under fbiigations to any one, It costs youlnothing and the sooner you write the gooncr you will pe cured MAYORALYY 1904. T0. THE ELECTOR} if Ladios and solicit your votes avinfluences to elect me mayor for the yc! 1904 C.I. GRAHAM. Jentlen--1 respectfully MAYORAITY, 1504. earnest solifation of a At the large number of influenti citizens, I have consented to be ajmudidate for re elettion as Mayor forbud In doing so 1 desir€o thank the citi- zens as. a whole for @ confidence they expressed in me in eting me as their Chief Magistrate for 03. If my con- duct in behalf of thety had been sich as to merit your apoval, and 1 have reason to believe thait "has, 1 res; fully solicit your votwany in 1 re-elect. ine as Mayor r 1904 J. H. BELL. ONTARICNARD DR. A.W, RIHARDSON Cordially solic the votes : and influences ' the elec- tors for his rern as Al- derman. ONTARIO ARD. LADIES AND GENEMEN Having been urged offer myself as an Aldermanic Canate in Ontario Ward, I respectfully licit your votes and iffluende to jeleame to represent you in Council for 1% SAMUELARKNESS. | +ONTARIO ARD. TO THE ELECTORS Your votes and infice are fully requested to elecde as Alderm for 1904 ia' Ontario T.. RIGNEY. respect- ONTARIO ARD. TO THE ELECTORS Ladies and Gentlen,--Again 1 am asked to be one Of -yoreprescntatives 1 thereiore respectiully eit your votes and intuence to returns for 1904 : ROBE. KENT. FRONTENACARD. ) n, ho any peo 3 TO THE ELECTORS r Any other. Agsio, how m ny stock company. with a view of furth 1 have been asked' toer myself 4s a , candidates and do justive ? | ering instruction in all branches of candidate for the Courand have con shout hesitation. not ten | music. A school of elocution and dra- sented. I solicit yowrdial supportJ answer, wi y ot how honest or | matic art would be made a special in; the election. UPER pe! geht a : Ho doctors could sit | feature. Many friends of Mr. Telg = DANE co | Jo nt t containing the | mann have advised him to try such a Og re ven and Vote | scheme and if possihlc have examina- FRONTENACARD. : of Ffty or mor men and vole ie ON 0 dotineetion with TO THE ELECTORS : Having been requestes ofier myse as a candidate for Aldan | respec fully solicit your vote tinfuc ne elected 1 will serve youterests io the best of my ability. J. S. McCANN. ---- a espe eccsa-- FRONTENAC RD. TO THE ELECTORS At the request of a li mumlbs of the ratepayers 1 again? myseli fe re-election, R. N. F. MACRLANE. CATARAQUI RD. TO THE ELECTORS : : Ladies and Gentlemett the desire of many of your numberdn again of fering for election as Al@n. sue wil be grateful for your voted influence W. G. SAINGE. ------------------ IIE FOR SAL . A MARINE EoMPOUNIBINE, good as new; made3orcl nly at Daily Ontario & Belleville, t. ; | r of MAKES MEN vicoroys, and a perfect cure in a age, or the your } der the proposed "of the aldermen in the city council . 3 'e would be from the centre of the city | London, Dec. 31. Woman's latest ¢ champion 18 the famous ussian and that they would be more of the sociologht, Prof. Novitoll, who Fans vrof signal charac ter, men ani us to forward some arguments to show be before the public, office-se kers and that there is no basis for the theory { others, equally objectionable, for the that woman is inferior to man. best men have to be sought after, and No scientist, he declared, has 'eves {more Teal to be kon und sought to prove that the tigress is or n their own ware ore system, a man can vote several tim ARD SYSTEM. n given, but' there are l to be said in favor ward system, and | you can space for converted him that it is the only "true and just method and that he back to the | Some things sti] | of the present | hope that | them, { It is a wellknown fact that people often assent to important changes | fraught with serieus consequeiices, be. find ward svstem. of el ven years ii Someone claims that' a chang: | abolished he had to canvass to get | to give orders, and the man gua dually { may Bot Ls Sood Shing: this, 1 hope, { elected, whereas before that he did | regains power of speech after some { Kingston a t) bn He citizens of f not canvass. The mayor, of Hamilton years, \but in many cases he beomes [day. Lex each rs next Mon | savs that "we do not consider that it left hanvlied because now the orders | question before Br rok 2 Hee has given us a better class of alder- from the brain are transmitte@ more taking the responsibility of Er men, and it certainly has intensified rapidly to the left than to the right. his ballot for political feeling . . 8 1 3 » Ci « mT + hare our faith in her hy so doing Kingston, Dec. 31.-~(To the Editor): rr re an Specs outsiders to make | The article copied in your paper in| pa fact that such a thing is possible heir abode w S i We. are wwday's issue wih a ns likely to 1h us, and we are more | Wednesday's issu , where I was ac suggests the questions: How do the et men interested in every cused of saying "It would be a humil city, from its centre to its lating thing for me to have to pre part of t! Ire ference " + : gratin; through the "y ard sys: | side "over a grit council next o 2 " ™ than in any other w ay vear,"" was not correct. What men in the council from Catara I did say in addressing the vari qui and some other wards have shown Ro interest in Victoria ward, the only : 3 for 1904, was: ward in the city where e F "While 1 feel quite sat taking place or where *Ypansion is | jsfied that 1 will be elected yet it take place 1 oy Tr ¥hansion Will | would, no doubt, be a humiliating nion street west has Leen © VK on | thing for you, gentlemen, to have the to the city for two ven 5 008race | mayor and still sit in the minority.' oh 0. years. It is one ure you, Sir, that I esteem the OSL Important walks in the rly every one who comes in. the summer walks Iship end good will of my re friends too much to fecl any re luctance city, for nearly to the city rides out 'that war. T hows a aE at serving the city in any sixty people walking on this of A capacity in association with them one time, standing at my gate. What tions and conduct toward each must 'strangers - think of us ? | What | © pr of the council of 1903 proved, must we think of the aldermen whe | | think. beyond a doubt, that I pre would starve the outskirts of the eity | 5 led over the council without any and disgrace us in the eves of visitors | 168F or favoritism to either side, and did I allow political with my duties in mayor--J, H. BELL. Wn no instance bias to interfere the capacity of to our city ? Visitors from other cit ies have spoken to me dition of this walk Before bringing into this discussion the opinisns of those who have secn the proposed system in operation for Some years, let us look at the ad- vantages of the present system of about the con The paragraph the Whie auoted was taken from. Mayor Bell's friendly or- gan, the News. The reliability of its statement is now up to our contem to establish. electing aldermen, in common sense- | porary way. Under the ward system only tho | ZEIGLER SUPPLY STORES. men: who cin qualify in ard « i represent that wal in the by o -. On Coast of Greenland, Offered til. Now, there can be no question Capt. Bernier. that a man who owns property or who has interests in a certain locality 15 more likely to know the needs of that locality and to advocate them than a man who perhaps never en Ottawa, Dec. 31.--Capt. Bernier has returned from New York, where he ad- the Arctic Club, explaining his plans for finding the pole. He re- wived "a generous offer from F. M. dressed ters it. A man is more 'inten d Lin ler to finance an expedition, offer his 'own vard than in that of Fis] ing him the use of the Zeigler supply ncithbor's. This being the case, every | stores on the coast of Orton part of the city, under the vard ---------- tem, has some one to bing its ie Tenderloin Lights To Shine. before the council: every part of the New York, Dec. 31.--Unusual acti ity has its representatives just as vity in the Tenderloin region served every section and this dominion has as a reminder to those who strolled Its representation at Ottawa that way to-day that a change in the The objection that this leads to administration of Greater New York 'ward pulls" does not affect the Prin- f «ae at hand. Notorious resorts that ci le, or a centre "pull," or a clique have been closed during the Low ad pul or some other "pli" far ministration have been refurnished and worse," would be the result under the redecorated and otherwise prepared for proposed system. Everyone who a grand opening. When Trinity chimes knows men and history knows this. If the city engineer had a free hand, or it™there were paid officials to look af ring in the New Year to-night and al so the first day of the administration of Mayor McClellan and his Tammany ter the needs of the city and thev associates there will be celebrations had a free hand, it wight be a little and festivities in the 'region about ciferent, but the city engineer has not Twenty-ninth street and Broadway a free band. and we have far too which promise to put all past perfor- many paid officials now. mances in the shade. It is more than probable that, un svstem, the majority Scientist Calls Sexes Equal. less intelligent than the tiger. "What wave interests and are * "he : Rh nt irl and to | right have we men, then," he asks, known by all who have the rig } "to make this statement in regard to ay who shall represent them in the women city council. There" are good men in every ward, hut if they wg lige Conservatory Of Music Scheme. Juced to serve the city unde e pre sg duced 1 ye y inlv cannot un 0. F. Telgmann has a scheme under sent system, they certainly « ot un way to form his school into a joint wan, if they The vote a "the best do it i. average elector | Queen's University. straizht party to A Machine Candidate, 'he | Mayor Bell to would either f + « in-Hamilton, according wr of that city, or else was announced as a ould "plump" for a few and let the } (4 oht party candidate. All pretence others .g He could not da other [0 g™ gicoration was thrown aside; wise, It would thus be a simple therefore, though he has no regularly men to secure a m aldermen in the city coun organized party opposition, he is am- enable to all' the criticism that party i, ould endorse s hemes use of municipal machinery evokes. He hrought before it by a company Soe is no longer an aspiring citizen receiv- iw privileges in the city. This is a ing liberal votes on grounds of = fair smember, for so gnany com- s are secking "'concession"' by <tand methods, now-a-days, in + cities, that the people need to or vert them. ty : i! A ben fhe she Io Fert forgotten, In Kingston harbor lying in winter The Po ston, but there are more | quarters are forty nine registered ves- oven an a Tt seems not a little] sels. These constitute twenty steam- dangers J t the advocates of the all-| ers, four tugs, and twenty-five schoon- thn by | ers and barges. Jector's influence ---------- ing that each electors i . : g ne be "widened under that aystem | Six shines 25c., at Guess'; or lerful privilege ! Surely men are room in connection. hot anxious to wake crosses. Ladies, it wil pay you to read Liv- feeling, but a machine candidate, giv- en up wholly to the political game, point to re pani Vessels In Kingston Harbor, strange of city vote try to make a point Pool to the ward system, desires to change N. P. Wood says that his experience. in the council of Er- nesttown, is similar to Mr. Gallagher's and that when the ward system was . that the last two ous candidates for aldermanic honors DAY', - es have not don ® so at all, row in London Answers, \ Lomdon's Whistles, A boy was charged at\ a London po- lice court the other day with blowing a whistle in such a way as to cause three policemen to couvie toward him. police distinguish between a cab whis« tle and a police whistle? {What is there to prevent any ane from blowing a whistle in such a way as to call a po- liceman? A representative of the Graphic who put these questions to a high official of the city poiiee learned that in the matter of attending to whistles, as with his many other duties, the policeman uses his discrezion. Any shrill whistle will attract a policeman, but such a whistle blown at night outside a res- taurant or any place where people con- gregate and cabs are wanted would not bring a policeman to the whistler. The same whistle blown in. precisely the same way in the middle of the city at midday would bring a policeman on the scene at once.--London Graphic, Lakes or snleod. ' The name Lake of Blood or its equiv. alent has been givem to places as far apart as England aw! South America. "Sanguelac"--1. e., the Lake of Blood --was the name given by the victo- rious Normans to the battlefield at Hast- ings, where the Saxons were over- thrown and slain with terrible carnage. For a similar reason Lake Trasimene has borne the name "Sanginetto" be- cause its waters were reddened during the second Punic war by the blood of some 15,000 Romans who fell before the troops of Hannibal Yet another Lake of Blood, called also "Yaguar Cocha," 1s situated in the state of Ecuador. It is one of a series of lakes formed! by the extinct craters of volcanoes on the towering heights of the Andes range of moun- tains. Feared He Had Been "Domne." A messenger boy was sent by an official of one of the big banks to pur- chase a pamphlet. When the lad re turned and handed over the little pack- age he stood toying 'with his cap until the banker said: "Well, my boy, I guess it's all right." "Gee," said the boy, brightening up immediately, "dat's a joad off my mied. When dat bookman took de half dollar an' didn't give me nothin' but dat weeny, dinky bit of readin', gee whiz, I says, he's a-doin' me up fur fair! Why, I don't pay only a nickel fur my books, an' dey're twice as big as dat one." Recommendation, "Didn't your old employers recom- mend you?" "Oh, yes!" | "Their word should ba¥e been enough." "It was. They announced me as the best man they ever turned out." ------------ A Provident Man, Knicker--Did Suburbs leave his fam- lly well provided for? Bocker--Yes, indeed. He had cooks engaged for two months ahead. i -¥ yh. She Settled It, "Sir," began the youth, "I have come to ask for your daughter's hand in"'-- "No, #ir!" snorted her father, "You can't hay her! What could possibly have prompted you to ask"-- "Why--ecr--she did, srl" "Oh, that's different! Also, that set tles it!" ! ------------ Anxious, Alice--How did you feel while Fred was proposing to you? Mildred--Two or three times I felt like supplying the words I knew he was groping for, but of course that wouldn't have been the thing to do at all A Good Word. Ferdy~I put in a good word for you, old chap. I told her you had more money than brains. Algy--And what did 'she say then? Ferdy--She asked me if you had any, money. ~Puck. > : ------ It is objected that, under the ward | ingston's advt. LEFT MINDED.| takes up the work, though it re: juires some time before it can do so pro perly. Supposing a man meets with a bad 1! or accklent of any kind which Spe the speech center on tb » left, he becomes dwmb for the time being. Then the right side slowly learns how You have often experienced, I sup- pose, the curious feeling that you have done some 'hing or met some one at | some time 0." other when in reality you Supposing tlw left side of your bmin conceived the dea that you were xo- ing to tie your %oot lace and that the right side was, say, a thousandth part of a second behindhand in grasping the same idea, tine result, when the right side did grasp it, would be that you would imagine that you had al- ready tied your bow lace.~Dr. With. 81. EVENING, -- Confessions and Remarks, The Saturday Review represented ture. Anyhow, regards my share in it. So far as I can remember, dishones! in the sense of ever defending what took to be the wrong side, infatibility. I wrote with a happy audacity. things in gencral. do with politics! seems to me I reviewed countless books, poses, literary histories. Pretty harmless. be hardly prepared to Justify. chief impression, ferior organisms, taken the coloring contributor occasionally assimilates; he sinks his own individuality and is a small wheel in a big machine. If er lying, nor scamping, he may Le satisfied. The newspaper press is lic opinion' which it utters 8S not that transcendental wisdom and ine fallability which enthusiasts claim for it; and a man who helps to maintain a wholesome tone is doing good service. Perhaps he may give thanks that his anonymity saves him some of the temptations which have weakened the moral fibre and injured the work of so many men of letters who do not wear the mask.--Leslie Stephen in National Review, pr -------------- - Has Alreadf Made Mis Mark. Mr. T. P, O'Connor says of Lord Percy, the new Under-Secretary of the War Office: "Though a young member of the House, he has already made his mark there. This tiny, boyish-faced,. and somewhat low- sized youngster has shown fine ora- torical gifts; indeed, there is a cure ious contrast between the power of the fine resonant voice and 'the cop- ious and eloquent vocabulary, and the smallness of the physique, which is striking; it has often occurred be- fore, as people know, in the case of orators. Lord Percy is, besides, a very high-minded and very honest young politician... Porhaps he has a little too much of the same sacer- dotalist spirit as Lord Hugh Cecil, and as Gladstone had when he was a boy; and Lord Percy belongs to a small and not very work-a-day creed, the Irvingites, who came into exist- ence under the inspiration of Ed- ward Irving and Henry: Drummond the latter a close connection of Lord Percy--his uncle, if I be not mistak- en. I regret that Lord Percy at this moment should be at the Foreign Office; he has traveled a great deal, especially in the Turkish dominions; but I fear he is rather Turcophile, and that is fatal at a moment when Macedonia is trying to break her chains." -------- Yeung Prince Eddie. It is stated that as soon as Prince Edward of Wales, who is now in his tenth year, is old enough, he will be entered as a cadet at the new Royal Naval College, Osborne, which was opened by the King during last regatta week at Cowes. Should this prove true, the Prince will only he following the example of his father, who, at the age of twelve, was sent to the Britannia with his brother, Prince "Eddy"--his senior by just seventeen months--to learn the rules of the sea service. . After spending two years on the Britannia the two brothers started on a three years' voyage round the world on thé Bac- chante, after which - Prince George gradually ascended the ladder of naval rank till, in 1890, he was giv." en the command of a gunboat on the West Indian station. After the death of his brother in 1892 he had to abandon his naval career in order to prepare himself for his ceremonial duties. ---- The Countess of Ranfurly, The people of New Zealand are or- ganizing a testimonial for the Count- ess of Ranfurly before she and the Governor take their depgrture from the colony. The whole of Lord Ran- furly's family have become greatly endeared to the New Zealanders, for they have moved about the colony: a good deal and beeome personally known to nearly everybody. Lady Constance Knox recently went on a voyage to the Auckland Islands, in the remote Southern Ocean, and the Governor himself has made several trips among the archipelagoes of the South Pacific. ; ' ---------------------- Paris has a functionary whose duty fs to hoist flags to half-mast on all buildings possessing the tricolor om occasions, of public mourging. Will positively cure sick headache and prevent its return. Carter's Lit- tle Liver Pills. This is not talk, but ES ------ Sir Leslie Stephen Mukes Some Naive real attempt to raise the intellectual lever of journalism and claimed to be an organ of what is now called cul- I am impenitent as 1 was never, LTE 00% DISCOUNT 8 of some over<confidence in my own certain 1 gave my view of 1 had nothing to or theolagy, but it that I ranged . vver most branches of human knowledgw, from popular metaphysics to the his. tory of the last university boat race. novels, travels, economic treatise and 1 fancy that 1 was Put nares I have some Erason © think that 1 saved one gent oman . from adding an indefinite ih of include : Cantos to a poem; and I' may have Tan indulged in a flout or two at well 9 meaning people which I should mow My however, is differ- ent. I had, not long ago, to turn over the files of the paper for anoth- er purpose. Incidentally I looked for my own, apd was a little startled to discover that I could rarely dis- tinguish them by internal evidence. I had unconsciously adopted the tone of my colleagues, and like some in- of my "environment." That, I sup- Pose, is the common experience. The he behaves as an honest wheel, neith- anyhow a mecessity, even if the ""pub- More Than a Stimulant And Refreshing Drink. Ceylon tea is nutritious "and" delicious. or Natural Green. Soid In sealed lead packets only, By all groc SPECIAL i -------------- ---------------------- PLATED WAR We will sell for the balance al P of December all 3! Ware at a Special Discount of 20 per cent. This Tea Kettles, Tea and Coffee Pots; Spoons, Knives and Forks, Tea Trays. Cuspidors, etc. This discount will make the price of agood No 9 Nickel-Plated Copper Tea Kettle: . . 8 If you require any of the above named goods it Pay you to buy them before the end of the month. McKELVEY & BIRCH 69 and 71 Brock Street. Comfortable Slippers There is nothing nice or better than a | comfortable Slipper. CALL AND SEE OUR STOCK. Every pair at Cos Price for the Next Week. oh A. ABERNETHY Trunks and Valises, 123 Princess Street, eee AT eee : SPECIAL BARGAIN PRICES. ------------ ------------------ Women's Serge and Tweed Suits, few very choice, to clear at reduc Blankets and Comfortables, Men's and Boys' Winter Underwear, Women's and Misses' Combination prices. Suits. gl oa Women's Flannelette Gowns, Dray Women's and Children's Vests and ers, Covers, Skirts, ete, at -redfie. § Drawers. prices. : : : Men's Cardig J § Sweat ¢ + § en & Cardigan Jackets and Sweat Heavy Weight Skirt, Coat, or Suit Materials at reduced prices. Men's Fur Coats, Wombat, worl: $25, for $20 each. 3 Women's and Misses' Wool Jackets. Women's Cloth Jackets and Ulsters. Women's Fur Coats, Capes and Col lars. Men's Coon Coats, worth ep 'omens and Girl's Cloth Skirts. 850 i os w Lig. pecial line of Job Skirts, worth Sa 82.50 and $3.50, for 99%. and $1.50 Millinery--Women's Hats and Cl each. dren's Bonnets at reduced prices. During January and February cur store will close st § p.m. and on Saturday at 2 Sp.m. : ------ CRUMLEY BROS S---- Fuse Wire and ; to, Robins 1 one-storey Rich Man Slept In A Stau. Boston, Dec. . 31.--Su to be the possessor of nearly $100,000, but' still preferring an empty stall in a small, cold barn with a little straw for a bed, John Robinson, aged and decrepit, is as the result of his frugal living, on the "dangerous" list at the City hospital. Robifison was burned as the result of the overturning of an \oil #tove, on which he coo his hospital is contrary will. He pines for his and stall, and seems i Take Life Easy. Sand the evening in a pair of o swell sli i 1¢ cannot be too often repeated, *To 10 telorg"~ Burke; _ truth. One pill a dose. See adver- tisement. Small pill. Small dose. Small price. ' i very pair at oc price for the next few days. At A nethy's, a ; scanty wieals, His detention at the

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