s. Life days of uild up, yzone,-- any wo- 1 health d-form- ishment ich gets zone is see that y to cure a tonic. adds to nd foun- ten. onderful 7ill have digestive ularities ensures joys ac- to-day, from the hen you m. Saturdays, umber of un- this season's ter steck. | To » offered :-- to $1.25. ments; and: re- ill be coming-- y Jacket must one, or know nf antlo Store. JOOOKS Better Quality J : 8, ETC. )® ©000® e---- S ALE rket. from the best ops... | Agent. ry Zings. ONTO, ONT. > Surpasses in 5 Purit on He Came To , Mo., Jan 2.--George --~ rin gh ir ves He a: ' . --_". » . '. was ty-two CEYLON NATURAL GREEN tea sold in the same | yom ot ae Un0 U0 wrks"agu he £ ¢ " was. strong wi every day a as the famous 'SALADA is pike. Saynard het ite . $ mal wi N Sold in sealed lead packets only. By alt his is the ey of his startling ex- a A | eR A A «FA : was co! ame FA 8 5 Gloucester, _ England, - where 1 was SAFE ~~ SURE RELIABLE | A Tailor-Made Suit That Looks buried, While he 10 haul Staw Incorporated 1833. Cupital Fully Paid, $1,000,000. 'the a a Sitchtork "It xy Sd N to! were GODWIN'S INSURANCE EMPORIUM one a] them insisted that Teiepnony 494. Market Square. my sondition was 40 to a blow = - m---------------------- SS, head at WEY To LOAR IN lAnos of pleurisy. AL any rate, two weoks dap. on ci ald farm ptopariy. Loans sal wd wy "aves 'closed in supposed ER io] an peatily_somiote the Post Ofcs. i closed, but I heard my ee ------------------------------ WVERPOOL, LONDON AND GLOBE Fire Insurance Cempany. Available assota, SL180.00 In addition to which policy holders security the umlimited all the stockbelders. Farm pre; insured at lowest possible rates. lore renewing eid or giving tes from new business a STRANGE & STRANGE, Agents. for ARCHITECTS. dENRY P. SMITH, ARCHITECT, otc., Anchor Building, Market Square, 'Phone 345. POWER & SON, ARCHITECT, MER- chants' Building, corner Brock and Wellington streets. "Phone 213. ARTHUR BELLIS, ARCHITECT, OF 7 site of New Drill Hall, near cor- 'we: of Queen and Montreal Streets. WM. NEWLANDS, ARCHITECT, OF- Mahood's fice, second floor over EE E------E-- KINGSTON BUSINESS COLLEGE KINGSTON, TORONTO BUSINESS COLLEGE TORONTO. Unequalled facilities for securing posi tioas. Largest and best equipment in Canada. Kings m Guetn SLraets Fagor. 05. brown chevoit or serge, stitchod in Ute Building, T $e silk of, the same color. approached the table opened my Uenfederation . The dart in the coat can be made mouth, when, by superhuman effort, TO-LET from the shoulder down, thus making | my eyelids were slightly raised. The ee it easier to fit. This is then covered | next thing I heard was, "Look out, DWELLINGS, FROM MAY 1ST, ALSO with a plece of the cloth, Inuly = 'the | you fool, he is alive." " stores, offices and storage. McCann's ed on, and bound on either side by a " 'He's dead," rejoined the other Real Estate office, 51 Brock street. bias band of the cloth, also stitched. | doctor. This makes a very pretty trimming | * 'See, he opened his eyes,' con for a cloth suit. tinued the first doctor. The other COMFORTABLE ROOMS AND BEST table board, if desired. Can be had at 189 Earl street. Modern conven- iences. ---- 44 PRINCESS LARGE SHOP, 43 AND also and stone sta- desirab! dwelling, street, ble. Rent low to a le ten- ant Apply 249 Brock FINE STORE, 166 PRINCESS street. P on Dec. 1st. Altera- ossessi tions to suit desirable tenant. Ap- BY to ©. H. Powell, 108 Raglan -- et WON APRIL FIRST, 1904, THAT DE- sirable Store, at fprossiy occupied by lor & n, as Tinsmiths Plumbers, un Wainglon street, with large wor Pp rear. ? Apply to Felix Shaw, 115 Bagot St. FOR THE CHILDREN Cheap and Useful Children's 3-Piece Toy Sets, Red or Blue. Children's Wood or Rattan Rockers. " Children's High Chairs, with Tray. Also anything one could sug- gest in Furniture line ; Suitable presents for young and old. Our Christmas delivery promises to be the largest yet. JAMES REID, 264 Princess Street. Mail orders promptly attended to. LET ME HAVE YOUR SALE And I will guarantee you satis- factoey results. We don't brag, but perform the work. Nothing sacrificed, but your best interest stitchin Flavor, rity and ~The finest Japan tea grown. down Buffalo, that has been dog owned by Oak Orchard, dog rugs, ago, when the morning steali dog had~a master's yard, the dog escape. Berlin, Dec. lowin, been All passen, fully clean acid and- by Every pi tain at gienic 1 Want eration of all to © nar Union! to amend the ing meetings studied. W. J. MURRAY, The Auctioneer. Zc N.Y., Dee. 31k sonment for stealing is the punishment little of The stole continually from Spaulding's neighbors and carried the stolen a ti cles to his master's home. Door mats, carpets, milk cans, brooms and similar things were taken daily by the dog and returned nightly by Spauld- clusion of long tri The upholstery steam every two weeks. Instead of carpets the floors are to be covered with linoleum. assenger carriage must con- least one hygienic spittoon. em- Conductors and © with pas- ployees coming in contact sengers must be provided with hy- and their home must contain a bathroom. candidates for the federal the Lougheed Anti-Juterns bi minal code, prohibit- of = workingmen during strikes. Resolutions were passed con: demning the immigration policies of the Ontario and federal = Hl Kbi, L Ho) Zo Hittin Grumess, Strength A® This is a good design for a tailor made suit, and can be easily made at home if one has a good pattern of a three-quarter loose coat gored skirt. It is very p The skirt has the same straps and front seams. This colonial shape hat, with & coque feather for trimming, popular this winter. It should be of the same coloring as the suit. the two meted out to a James Spaulding, Orleans county. ing. The limit was reached a few days in the wood from a pile in the yard of Fred. Achilles, who lives opposite the Spauldings. By big pile of wood in his and Spaulding spent nearly an hour in returning it. hen was sent away to Spaulding's farm, where he will be confined in big field from which there will le no dog n| 2 a caly Sleeping Cars In Germany Dirty. against the the fol 31.--Agitation "dirty sleeping cars" has caused minister of railways to issue decree, which is said to have awn up by the kaiser himself: r carriages must be care after each trip, carbonic soda to be used at the con- wl to be cleaned er railway All To Help. Hamilton, Ont., Dec. 31.--The trades and labor council, at a meeting held last night, decided bill and also the crit and a seven: retty made in has bécome very night the to seek the co-op- all trades councils to pledge elections governments. HOW IT FEELS EXPERIENCE OF MAN SUP- POSED TO BE DEAD. They Started to Dissect Him to Determine Cause of "Death" in his eyes, and sympathizing. friends consoled him by him to dry his tears. "As soon as the undertaker arrived I knew I was to be buried alive. Try as 1 would nothing could break the spell which bound me. "Well, the tiffie for the funeral ar- rived, and then the burial. uy effort to move proved futile, and the close air of the coffin seemed stifling' to me. Suddenly the shovelling and the silence of the tomb was complete. 1 did not seem to have the fear then that a person would naturally expect under such circumstances. All 1 re member is that the grave is a lonely lace and the silence of the tomb was orribly oppressive. A dreamy sen sation came over me suffocation became apparent. "How long 1 remained in this condi- tion I do not know. The first sense of 1 returni life came over me Ww heard scraping of a spade on my coffin lid. I felt olf raised and borne away. 1 was out of my coffin, not to my home, but to a physician's office, 1 beheld the doctors who had awaited wy me at my home dressed in long white aprons. In their hands they had knives. All this 1 witnessed through my hali-opened eyes. My sense of hearing was remarkably acute. Both physician let the, knife drop, and a short time after that I commenced to recover rapidly. Instead of cutting me up they took me home. There was great rejoicing among my relatives. I owed my life to the doctors' dispute as to pat ailed me during my ill ness." ~ ------------------------ ESCAPE OF CASHEL. Believed He Is In The Wilds Of Montana. Okotos, N.W.T., Dec. 31.--At a court held* by Mounted Police Inspector Duffus, who came from Calgary to in vestigate the conduct of constables sent on murderer Cashel's trail around High River, Constable Webster, of MacLeod, was sentenced to 810 fine and fourteen days at hard la- bor for creating a disturbance in Oko tos. Six other constables were sum- moned and some of them mildly dis- ciplined for infractions of the rules. Inspector Duffus stated that the mat- ter, which came before him, could in no way have interfered with the work of capturing Cashel. Calgary, Dec. 31.--There is a grow- ing suspicion that some people in the town, besides the relatives of Cashel, had something to do with the esc had something tO hore is also a fim conviction in the minds of many that he is out of Canada apd in the/wilds of Montana, where capture would be almost impossible. P.. Nolan, his so- licitor, is still in the east. Tights Going Out Of Fashion. London, Dec. 31.--So near have tights for the stage come to losing popularity that manufacturers of this ent declare if it were not for the holiday pantomine the trade would suffer greatly. Musical comedy lends itself less and less to the display of tights, and theatrical managers have decided that lingeries and ekirts are more artistic than the amazon cos- tume. The manager of the theatrical department of a big shop said on this account it was necessary to introduce many improvements in the manufac- ture of tights of every kind. Delicate shading is now introduced, he said, and when it is found impossible to se- cure the exact shadings indicated by the designer of the costume the tights are hand painted and by a long and careful process of dipping in the dye the tights are shaded so they become paler and paler in tint toward the feet. Religions Of The World. The total number of Christians in Asia is 28,636,493; in Africa, 8,359 - 849; in Australia, 4,167,202; in Ameri- in Euro ammedans, 202,048,241; Brahmans or Hindoos, 210,100,000; old Indian re: ligions, 12,113,756; RB he » b ts of Confucius od ancestor worshi 253,000,000; Tao- ists, 32,000,000; hintoists, 17,000,000; fetish wosshippets and other pagnus, 144,700,000; other religions, 2,544, 482. Out of the ion of the world, which amounts to 1,539, 000,000, 35.7 per cent. are thus Chris- tians, 13.1 per cent. Mohammedans, 0.7 Pe cent. Jews. That is to say, -1762,102,000 are monotheists, against 776,000,000 who are poly' heists-- that is, nearly half the population of the world believes in one God. 3 | Stredigth and Vigor Can Only be THEY ARE WED. Action . That Caused A Divorce ; Sensation. MISS ALICE MOORE. Kast Aurora, N.Y., Jan. 2.--Miss Alice Moore became Mrs. Elbert G. Hubbard on January Ist. Miss Moore was Aamed a on the di- vorce action ught ha Craw- ford Hubbard ainst the famous head of the Roycrofters, and the suit created a sensation, as Fra Elbertus had travelled all over this country and Canada lecturing and referring to his devotion for his wife, IN FORM OF PLAY. Pastor Writes, Stages And Pro- duces Drama. Baltimore, Md., Dec. 31.--A moral lesson can be taught better in a play than in a sermon, is the theory of the Rev. A. Fi Sterger, pastor of the Trin- ity German Lutheran church, who produced Sunday a drama wiitten by himself. The play, which is entitled "An Or phan," was given in the church, and the auditorium was crowded. The pul- pit was converted into a stage. An admission fee of ten cents was char- ged, and the proceeds will be devoted to a fund for the poor of East Balti- more. Every member of the church who could get there was present, and all brought their families. . Dr. Sterger explained that he gave the performance on Sunday might be- cause many would not be able to at tend on a week night. Dr. Sterger, besides being the author of the play, was also stage manager. His daughter was one of the principal characters in the cast. All wore cos- tumes appropriate to their parts, and the scenery and stage accessories though modest, were in keeping with the requirements of the play. The performance was given in Ger man, It evidently pleased those pre- sent, for they manifested their approv- al in a hegrty though decorous way. All the characters were well taken, Dr. Sterger proving himself a good drill master. The plot of the play is simple. An orphan girl is left penniless through the embezzlement of a funds by an aunt and is forced to seek employ ment. Her employer is a hard nok: master and refuses her permission to attend church on Christmas eve. She kneels in prayer and sees visions of angels who inform her that all will soon be bright. More misfortune comes, howevek. She loses her position, but soon after receives a letter from her aunt, say- ing she was about to die and had be come conscience-stricken. Her aunt reimburses her for all that she had stolen. All ends well for the orphan, and the end of the play finds her again living in prosperity. Mr. Sterger is going to write an other play, using the life of Martin Luther as his subject. It will be call ed "From the Cradle to the Grave." Five per cent. business is the of the cost of doing average expenditure for advertising . of a big clothing or furnishing store. In a small city it runs as igh as ten per cent. Watery Blood, Declinirig Health, Maintained by Means of Pure, Rich Blood. Dr, Chases Nerve Food. nt For many generations doctors have realized the importance of the blood as the source of life and health, but iv is only in more modern times that sci- ence has discovered the best means of forming new blood and so rebuildiag the wasted tissues. Dr. Chase's Nerve Food is the re sult of careful study of this problem, and has proven by far the most suo cessful method of restoring weak, watery blood to a healthful condition. Anaemia, chlorosis, nervous exhaua- tion and prostration and each and every disorder which arises from in- sufficiency in the quality or quamtity of the blood are readily cured by the lar and persistent use of Dr. Chase's Nerve Food. By noting your increase in weight while using this food cure yov can prove beyond" dispute that new, firm flesh and tissue are bein fl J. W. Groves, a soldier, fivin at 268 Johnston street, Kingston, mt. states : "I have # a great deal with pain in the small of my back and my nerves have been very un: steady. Since having used several boxes of Dr. Chase's Nerve Food I can say that I found this remedy most helpful to me. My nervous system has been toned up, the pains in my back have entirely ed and | feel better in every way. I hope that others who see this statement of my case will be equally benefitted by the use of this excellent medicine." Dr. Chase's Nerve Food, 50 cents a box, 6 boxes for $2.50, at all deslsrs, or Edmanson, Bates & Company, To- ronto. To protect Jou against imita- tions, the portrait signature of Dr. A. W. Chase, the famous receipt book Salve will cure 15¢c., at Wade's. 1 with stiffness of the muscles. "for kidney troubles. Respected By Day, a Bad Criminal By Night. Paris, Dec. 31.--Louise Rougier was a most exemplary person at Sartrou ville, some miles from Paris, where she lived with an elderly, respectable looking man who passed as her hys- band. She had many friends in the jittle borough, and was considered to be a serious women and a model bourgeoise. In the mornings she look- ed aiter her poultry and her kitchen garden, and occasionally received visits from local matrons. On {ne afternoons the excellent bour- geoise came up to Pais, and it is what she did here that has led to the revelation of her extraordinary double life. Louise Kougier was nothing less than what is known by the new name of "entoleuse," which means one who decoys men and robs thom. ticed her system of "'entolage" around the bourse, near which she rd rooms, and for these she jd $300 yearly. The men whom she tked generally said nothing, being afraid of exposure with its consequences. Lately she de- coyed a commission agent, who, while drinking chathpiue with her in her rooms, was of $400, This man was not afraid of sspoNure, and as soon as he discovered his loss he re turnod with a policeman to the place near the bourse where he had been robbed, but Louise Rougier was not to be found there. Her address at Sartrouville was subsequently ascer- tained. She went about quietly dressed, and it is thought that she had seve ral accomplices. The man with whom she lived at Sartrouville is supposed to have been ignorant of the fact that she was leading a double life, being a staid matron in the morning and a decoy in the afternoon. em ------ CURIOSITY KILLS A BOY. Tried Hanging Himsell To Find Out Sensation. Dec. 31.~It is not an un- common thing, perhaps, for lads of an inquisitive bent to try all sorts of queer experiments to find out resulis for themselves, but few go to the ex: tent of hanging themselves, as a young student at Latymer school did the other day. The sad part ol the ex- periment was too complete a success, because the boy was found dead in a bathroom by his father. : During his fourteen years of life, Sydney Cummin earned a reputation of venturing into the most risky ex: periments. He was a bright, cheerful, and apt pupil at school, and was not able to content himself with the expla- nations of phenomena found in text and other books. On one scasion he jumped from a high tree, using an old umbrella, as a parachute, on an other he nearly blew himself to pieces gunpowder while investigating the force of explosives. The other evening he decided he would attempt to realize the sensa- tion of hanging and cutting himself down before he became unconscious. He went into the bathroom of his fa ther's house and locked the door. Af ter a time his father became anxious and burst open the door, to find the dead body of his son suspended from a nail at the top of the door. The knife with which he intended to cut himself down was found open in his pocket. ---- WHERE DID HE GO? London, No Trace Can Be Secured of Him. Quebec, Dec. 31.--Detectice Patry has made a report on the result of his investigation into the dis in September last of Paul Pelletier, from the lumber camp of W. J. Noble, Somerset county, Maine. The detec tive visited i St. Apollonaire and various lumber camps, and ako the Noble camp at Somerset. r. Noble stated that Pelletier arrived si cinity, Pelletier went to work and was all right when Mr. Noble left. The camp cook said that when Pelletigr ar- rived he was tired and sick, On the 29nd he took a heavy supper of vege tables and shortly afterwards lost consciousness. When he recovered he seemed mentally unbalanced On the 24rd he left the camp. He was fol- Jowed, but refused to return and while the searchers returned for aid he dis- sared and was not seen again. Search was made in St. Camille, St. Magloire, and other parishes where he was very well known, but he had . not been seen by anyone Mr. Noble con sidered his disappear fgxplisable, as men were arriving on all sides 'to work in the woods, and Pelletier. was well known to all of them, -------- The Montreal fire chief says local theatres are fairly well protected, but claims fire escapes in winter are al most useless owing to being conted with ice and snow. 8 escapes should be enclosed. Monkey Brand Sonp makes cop ike gold, tin like silver, croc I marble, and windows: like crystal. author, are on every box. See our all steel filled corset, at 502. worth 8c. New York Dress Reform. Is the proper performance of the function of the' from the blood. Uric acid'causes rheumatism, 'neuralgia, pains in lating and toning these important organs. It is the latest -PBu~Ju-EE She prac: | pear- | i on the kidneys, healing, Bu-Ju acts directly scientific remedy hi, 4 ; . Is now on and vill con nue throug month of January. "To better the best" is always our endeavor, = Ye intend for uality an ces this Sale all ow vr! is predecessors. The whole of our Hige stock and fine assortment WARE is under a Special Discount of 20%. = Buy early in the month and early in the day. We are ready for customers at 8 am. and we don't close until 6 pm. Remember, first comes gets first choice. What you want may be gone long before the end of January. = ; of ENAMELLE Dm Asis usual with all our Special Discount Sales, the cut prices are for Spot Cash Only. : Se MCKELVEY & BIRCH 69 and 71 Brock Street, Kingston. Comfortable Slippers There is nothing micer: or better than a good comfortable Slipper. ; GALL AND SEE OUR STOCK. Every pair at Price for the Next Week. a A. ABERNETHY, Trunks and Valises, 123 Princess Street. CARPET SWEEPERS A good one for $2.50. A better one for $2.75. The best one for $3. 3 CLOTHES WRINGERS From $2.50 to $3.50. Have your Christmas and New Year's Dinner cooked on a " HAPPY HOME" Range, the largest and most economical range on the market, i .. ELLIOTT BROS .. 77 Princess Street. : Telephone, 36. Che London City and Widland Bonk. Bini 5 Ohreadneedle Sz, London, Gnglana, Botablished 1856. £5,000,000. Ly APH Fond . . £i,000,000 i