Daily British Whig (1850), 19 Jan 1904, p. 5

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; , ail" . clothing until the ed. double f some ad- th of their n--sihce it to distin- s. That's e could we own ? + for their, at it - does, ST 310 1 ST $10 n't pats, Suits, ickets, Pants, ers, 5, House, i Crawford's. ht Unfon- tor's house, where all his pockets, the the finger, covered In spite of the fact | been off two hours wee again, and has rely. rpr-- 1ying elsewhere, sce orsets, ordered of York Dress Reform. y gas and elec "and save discount. "fiuch sickness and pain, says 'Miss Alma Pratt, if they will only have faith in the use of 'Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetsble "+ Judging from the lofters she is i feced from so many you r believes Yat ne eis &re often the limit of the adays in our public schools and sefin- B is allowed to intorfers with recover the lost i = | Gieties were then presented and were often it is roves recovéred. Mish Pratt Prvgnax womea h Pinkhauts a egotable Qompe has 9 for me. I was comp y , unable to attend school, and did pot cars for any kind now I feel like a new person, a gained seven pounds of flesh in, three and unanimov ths. "1 recommend it to all young womén who suffer from female wealk- ness" -- Miss ALMA Pratr, forféit if original of adove fetter cannot be precduced COSTLY POTATOES. Galfer Receives $750 For a One Pound Tuber. weight, for $750. perjtugnts have been going on to pro duce potatoes that can resist kind of disease to which the tuber is, It has been, and is at pre sent, a most costly process to produce every ton, the great Reading gardener, sail that they only grew five tons of these cosily tubers in the year. they are selling the smaller specimens these--or rather they them--at $15.75 per lb, for the farmers and gardeners, so that the érop: would be a good paying one. Last year, but one, in 1902, a potato expert #ha had 'been much interested in this dress. tuber, procured a few as a favor for which he pard $4 per few he | to weep than to laugh. However, were selling to "Hew "discovery" days afterwards he looked high, looked low, 'he searched all over the potatoes. They had gone. His wile was called to. aid inthe search. On be ing asked, where they were? he was reply, "My | years of bondage have robbed of every for dear, you had them yesterda; potato is a great producer here, if. we can get the ones free from dis case they would fetch enormous prices. Medes and Persians; from it there is To Knock Out Colds. { And cure them in an hour without | resorting to nauscous drugs just use | The dre Catarrhozone--the i 8 CT and certain " Cea | has become the special fad of the fash medicine to take, you simply breathe the balsamic vapor 1% never: fails to of Catarrhozone. root out the worst | A Short-Coming About Milestones colds and is so simple and convenient | Washington Star. : to use that no one can afford to canst.--Modern Proverb. if your luck scems An' the clouds ard dark as nignt, An' there ain't mo sand leit in you the future's far from Don't give way to grief, my brother, Set your tecth an' show your grit; Buckle in, and. take another stiffer hold on it. Pull your belt up tight an' try, you'll git there by an' by In Coldest Weather. x " 1f you use a broom' you have to op dust out. Buy one of Lemunon, Claxton do chilly room, | Catholic Union while sweeping. It's a big labor saver, Discount prices all this week, The official call for the assembling p i S s democratic con- of the Dut flat Semore oh . is | dies non, and the young man need not yentionis, Sh. uh oy ? carry out his promise to wed, if he so a: ) hio, City of Toledo, c in the ounty and state afore- said, that said firm will p sum of ONE HUNDRE each and every case of Catal and subscribed in n 1 x Sworn to before me. S00 of December, | the religions of the world. Ile places my presence, his 6th d and acts directly eel imanials free for testim aN EY ANNUAL MEET OF LOCAL UNION OF CHRIST. TAN ENDEAVOR. There Is An Encouraging Amount Of Vitality In The .Organiza- tion--The Officers Selected. The annual meeting of the City Un- jon of Christian kndeavor was held last eveming in the First Baptist charch. In the absence of the presi- dent, removed from the city, Kev. D. Laing presided, and conducted the op- ening and devotional exercises, as- sisted by Rev. Thomas Brown, Sidney Salsbury presiding at the organ. The business of the evening was then taken up. The minutes of the last annual meeting were read by Miss L. Gardiner. The angllal report was presented by Miss Bdthey, correspond- ing secretary. This report showed that whilst there has been_no great vigor manifested in aggressive work, there s still am encouraging amount of vi- tality. One mew society, that in Beth- ¢l church, had been organized and has joined the union, while that in Queen Street Methodist church. one of the oldest societies in the city. has withdrawn, The treasurer's report was presented by C. Anglin. and showed a balance in the treasury of over five dollars and all obligations met. At this juncture Miss Marshall sang a solo very sweetly. The reports from the individual so- all of A hopeful character. In a num- ber of cases a very considerable + in- crease in membership was reported, and all recorded netivity in Bible study and active Christian work. The junior societies of which a number were reported show a very commend- able activity. The report of the nominatine com mittee was presented by Acel Abell, lv adopted. The following are the officers. elected for the ensuing year: President, Rev. Thomas Brown; vice-president, -- Acel Abeli: recording secretary: Miss Gard iner; corresponding secretary. Miss Barney; organizer, Ir. Lake; treasur er, ©. Anglin; superintendent of juniar work, Mrs. Muirhead. After thé election _of officers, Rev. Mr. Brown, president was introduced wdience, by the chairman of the evening. and gave a very vractic making | al and inspiring address. At -the close han a big fat ox at the great (of this address) the officers elected Christmas show and field, but a few days since. Nor was it | the meeting closed with a hvinn and for a solitary specimen that these big | the benediction. prices were offered for were installed by Rev. Mr. Laine and One ------ one pound BAN PLACED ON CORSET. : grown by Mr. | Girls Under Eighteen Not Allowed Findlay, a Scotch grower and exhibi- tor, 8350 was refused by the owner. To Wear It. What will happen next ? The corset is banished from Germany. The fraus and the irauleins of Em- peror Wilhelm's vast dominions are to be seen everywhere, at home and abroad, taking their ease in corsctless comfort. It is not all a fad or a fancv--not altogether a decree of Dame Fashion. It an with the 'dress reformers, and physical culture coterie, but it has ended in an imperial edict. Yes, Emperor William studied the corset question and uttered en im- perial condemnation of that lone used, fondly cherished article of a woman's When the kaiser = said," 'The corset must go," feminine Germanv laughed no longer--it was rather a time Not for every woman in the empire has the corset been condemned--shades of shapelc rotund fraus forbid ! The corset slave, the woman whom particle, of power to stand upright intending | unless braced and stayed may be a grower said that dinner had cost_him corset slave still. She is past salva 1.000. The increased price of diseage resisters," wi would have given him the price mn tioned. Some of our Manitoba farmers | anv habit if they be taken in time. might prpcure a few specimens; as our For them the emperor framed his and | edict--no girl under eighteen may wear the | tion. crop, But in the voung lies the hove of the future. They can be trained to a corset. It is as the laws of the no appeal. And now German women are adapt- ing thomsel to these new and mar- velous conditions. s reform. clubs are flourish- ing 'and desioning corsetless costumes jonable dressmakers. -------------- be The late John R. Proctor, president without 'it. Carry a Catarrhozonc in- | of the Civil Service Commission, was haler in your pocket, use it occasion: | a student of the University of Penn- ally and you won't have colds. Com- | sylvania in 1863 and 1564, and in his plete outtit, 81; trial size, 25c. -------- Poem To Forget. college days liked nothing better than to set out early on a frosty morning and walk twenty-five or thirty miles | through the country. thou Once he met an Irishman on the road to Morristown. He and the Irish man plodded along together a matter of six or seven miles. They stopped and read each milestone, and Proctor said : "I think that milestones cheer a road up wonderfully, don't you?" "Faith, and 1 do that," said the Irishman. "I find them a great com fort. It"would be an improvement, thought, if they was nearer one an pther, wouldn't it?" A Leap Year Warning. A hint to. the dear young girl read ors--and the old girls as well--who contemplate taking advantage of leap vear. Don't "pop the question" on Qunday, for in law the Sabbath is agrees, unless he feels like it. Very recently a ypung woman who was su ing for breach. of promise was non- y makes oath that Be «vited because the deal was made on is«senior partner ol-the firm Sunday, not a day of contracts. ay the tnd 2 Religions Of The World. DOLLARS for » Cat rrh that can- Herr Zeller, head of the bureau of in- t Hall's Ca-| io national statistics at Stuttgart, has published an interesting table of the aggregate number of human be- ings on the carth's surface at 1,544, Notary Pubi- | 512,000, of whom only about one and | third, or Send | of Chri 534,940,000, profess any form pity. The adherents of pumber 300,000,000, cf Conh . Toledo. O. | 5} ma 173,200,000, and of Buddha 121,000,000. The number of Jews in the world is given as 10,860,000. Rev. W. T. G. Brown, preached mis- ionary sermons in Pembroke on Sun- day. Adolphustown on Sunday end lectured Local Notes And Also Things in in_the city on a brie to town from Ottawa, and is with her aunt, Miss Penn structed a splendid skating rink on the old Garvin property, Ordinance street. until the 26th inst. It was to have met Tuesday of this week but was postponed. of St. Luke's parish, Peterboro, for three months, during the rector"s ab sence in Germany. light committee hereafter will be held on th: Fiiday succeeding meetings of the «ity. council. ville, N.Y.. to resume her studies as nurs in the city for a few days. He is now in the rear of Frontenac, but will re: turn in a few days. down to the home of W. Vanhorne, Pittsburg township, and despite the cold weather had a pleasant outing. js situated on Madison avenue, New men of the R.C. expired, left the serv increased pay they say they would re cept a position. Montreal, guests of James Stewart, day. They are having a fine yacht ceremony to-morrow. The young lady number of friends -at a progressive art will congratulate him on the good fortune that has fallen to his son this cold day. Mr. Stewart is a stirring fellow and just now is confined to his home with a cold. College this morning, the thermometer registered thirty degrees below zero. This afternoon, the weather had mod erated, and the mercury was getting up near the zero point. kent room. Buy Low Saloons And Replace The fastest ice yachts of the United States and Canada are INCIDENTS OF THE DAY, General. Rev. E. B. Lanceley.' Port Hope, is visit. itev. Eber Crummy preached at yn Monday on Japan. Miss Dorothy Cotton has come back Earl street. The men of the R A. have con The county council will not convene Rev. J. L. Holah will take charge The regular meetings of the fire and Miss Irene Armstrong wil return Sa turday to the sanitarium at Dans in-training, } W. 1). Mace, Winnipeg, was a visitor A party of young people . drove St. James' Methodist church, Rev. Allan McRossie, pastor, of which men tion was made in last night's issue, York City. Br. Pearcy and Gr. Calder, two good whose time has ce to-day. With join agalp. J. 1. Shea, late of the 14th Regi mental band, and tenor soloist of Queen Street Methodist church choir, leit to-day for Pittsburg, Pa., to ac- J. D. Laing and 'A. E. Thomas, of Wellington street, returned home to huitt by Davis & Son. Alfred Thomas, a Brooklyn, N.Y. , reached the city this after noon to take part in an interesting in question resides on Union street west. On Friday night last Miss Linton, Sguth Division street, entertained a euchre party. There was a large at- tendance and a most pleasant time was spent. Everybody who knows "Joe" Stew At Queen's and the Royal Military An officer of the R.C.F.A. stated to-day that he would not be surprised to see the government build new ar tillery barracks in Artillery Park. It may be necessary to close up a por tien of Bagot street to obtain suffi CHURCH TAVERN TRUST. Them With Clubhouses. London, Jan. 19.--There is no whis ; trust in Great Britain, but a sort of public house trust has been started, with the Bishop of Chester as president It must be remembered that the British workman regard his * 'ard an' 'arf' in ths light of a constitutional prerogative and gencrally he doesn't soem to care what surroundings: he takes it in. Consequently a great portion of the public houses of . Lon- don are places of gloom and dirt. The Peopla's Restaurant House As co iation has acquired one of the low est saloons in Southwark, torn it down, and built a fine three-storey house, with clean, light dining-rooms and bars, the idea being to make a sort of club to inculcate into the low. er classes rome of that self-respect whith too often is lacking in London. ee ---- Aged Man Choked By Meat. Ogdensburg, N.Y., Jan. 19.--While at supper, Hudson Hold a retived lake engineer of this cit choked to death, a piece of beef steak, whi~h had lodred in his throat, heing the cause. Mr. Holday's teeth were not good, and he had cut off a large piece of meat with the intention of, gwal ow: ing only the juice. T he members of the family did all they could to re contesting for the world's championship this week on Gull Lake, near Kalamazoo, Mich. 4 ------------uErepeg SPAIN'S MOUNTAIN OF SALT. ---- It Isn't Safe To Explore This : Natural Mystery. Spain's salt mountain pose: ses cig formidable 'foe, who slowly, Lut re that it seems poweirlss to do harm. visitor may enter if he be so inclined segin by warning him that it is pru ing so, since owing td the work'of the slides oceur. in the narrow channels time to crash down 'upon the explor er, crushing him like a fiv--the sounc detach them from the roof. few steps further from the eciling do pend stalactites of =alt of immacu handeliers; the streamlet seems te soueezed sponge; it is hardly percep tivle to the ear, and vet it sounds a warning of an imminent salt alide interior of the mountain, . The mountain of Cardona being pri vate property, three or four gor Jimpid is the substance that xpeatacl glasses can be made out) of the mor they sell to tourists for a few pese {as. -------------- LOST WHOLE FAMILY. Theatre Fire. London Advertiser, here recently on phrenology, lost hi He had been intending to quit the lec looking forward with pleasure to tha death. nue, this city, has received a lette a bleeding heart that I answer you kind letter of inquiry and sympathy nesday last. I know nothing except found the bodies at the differen the children so bright, but the whol world is as nothing mow---nothing bu work, work, to keep out the awfu horror." -- Portland Township Council. The township of Portland chunc (nt: Henry McMullen, reeve; G. Smith, John Tallen, T. B, Townsen tion and cath of office and the min utes of last meeting was read an and E. E. Day were appointcd aud man, member of board of health three years. By-laws were passed cor firming the appointment of townshi balance of taxes was extended till Feb ruary lst. Sums voted : $2.50 to I error in assessment; 86 to J. H. Tal len, burying pauper; $9.70 to E. 4.1 Mills, charity;. $2 to Maggie Revel charity. Counril adjourned to mes 11 am. - Tt Prices That Talk, Men's 82.95 box eali hoots, now $1 59; men' lieve him, but were unsuccessful, He was seventy years of ages wiss these at Sutherland's sale. lentlessly gnaws it from the inside, | Scattered about in the mountain are | Scotch, ¥; Canadian, 254; American, tiay openings--'imonkey holes," they | mi are locally stylod--and from out , of | denomination cach of these comes a rivulet, so tiny But little by little these subterranean write, 308%; cou'd neither read nor springs drill their way through the write -entire thickness of the mountain, dig- | ging out long tunnels, into which the | fift The guide accompanying him will |- years, 81; over thirty-live and under dent for him to make his will ere do- | jostructive streams, continual salt { sixty {ive and undor seventy five years, ireat blocks of salt are liable at any of one's voice, the weight-of one's | boiler mak body on the roil being sufficient to | keep Let the visitor, however, proceed a | trimmers, 1; carters, 2; clerks, 5; doc: ' » F * jl late whiteness, to all appearances | ers, 3; laborers, 150; lawyers, 1; ma- flow along a crystal bed, and the painters, 1; peddlers, uop of water hanging from the | soldiers, 3; students, 4; stonc-cuttors, sharp point of each stalactite wintil- | 2; servants, b; sailors, 19; tinsmiths, lates like a diamond by candlolight. | 2: tailors, 8; no occupation, 26: total, Suddenly the guide pulls you back, | 910, calling your attention to a feeble | Number of times imprisoned in po: sound akin to that emitted by a lice & and it becomes imperative to retrace | 30; abusive and grosely insulting lan one's steps without having been able to penetrate further into' the fairylike geously uniformed kecpers are entrust ed with the duty of seeing that the inhabitants of the surrounding coun | try do not cote and "help themselves | to salt; it is, however, an easy mat | ter to take away a crystalline frag { ment by way of memento, savs a | works, 2. infraction of city by-law, re tourist in the Pliladelphia Ledger. So { | | | transparent |ixcs. The men employed at the salt works turn out crosses, | tion of city by-law, re health, cosaiize, goblets, and bottles, whi h | support of wife, 1; non-payment of Prof. Alexander Suffered By The | wages, 1; suspended sentence, 2; Prof. 'Alexander, who made many | During the vear there were 86 glarms friends in this city, when lecturing | of fire, 60 truants and absentees re entire family in the Chicago disaster. | lights reported out. ture platform in the spring, and was time. His wife and two children--a 2 . B boy and a girl, four and eight years News of the District on. Both old respectivelv--were all burned to Davis, of 707 Lorne ave William Hillis, Athens, is chief of from him at Springville, Utah, in D. W. McClary, grocer, of Lans which Mr. Alexander says: "It is with All mv family avere laid away Wed: | very suddenly there on Sunday, from morgues. Our lives were so ha» and | ronto as city manager of the Canada met on January' 11th. Members pres M and James Yorke, councillors. The members subscribed © to the declara adopted. On motion BE. M. Yorke tors; W. J. Vhillipg, assessor; | homas Cowdy, caretaker of haW; N Sted- | UN . for | skins. officers, Dr. Lockhart and Dr. Claxton There is no harder work than that were appointed medical health officers. | The colfector's. time for callecting the | buying ° a washing machine, which Revell, work; £1.85 to R. W. McKay, | over a steaming tub, if she has one of order books and township supplies; | our perfected washing machines, They £2.07, to Ezra Husband, rebate taxes, | make wash-day easy. From 33 to 85 Pence, printing and advertising; 8 | to A. A. Ward, job on road; $1 to oJ. | Death Of Miss Van Horne. in Verora on Monday, March 7th, at | Van Horne, died at Sir William's rexi- £1.50 Packards, $3.50: all men's $2.50 boots, now $2.50. Don' 3 | ---- ' 101 Statistics Compiled In The Police De v At yesterday's meeting of the police commissioners, Chief of Police W. M. Baillic presented his annual report as here given : Ofiences for which persons were ar: rested Assaults, 7; aggravated. as saults, 1; assault and Sy, 1; beg: ging, 4; carrying fire arms, 3; drunks, 195; disorderly, 5; drunk an! commit- ing nuisance, 1; drunk end disorderly, 1%; drunk end swearing, 1; drunk and fighting, 4; drunk and begging, 1; em- bezzlement, 1; exposing his persom, 4; grossly insulting language, 2 insane, 2; indecent assault, 1; non-suppory of wife, 1; obtaining money by false pre personaticn, 1; thefts, 38; ng language, 1: trespass, "8; m1] mind, I; vagrancy, 10; total, 310 How disposed of--Bound over to keep the peace, 1; committed for trial, i: discharged, 27; disr od, 91; Lined, 102; five months in jail, 1; one month in jail, 9; one year Mercer Reforma tory, |; ome year Central Prison, |; «ne year V'castanguichene Reformatory, 1; ono year and 364 days Central pri son, 1; sent to House of Providence, 1: sent to Rockwood hospital, 2; sus. pended sentence, 15; six mc nths Cen: tral prison, 5; six months Penetangui Fchene Reformatory, 2; six months In- fants' Home, 1; three years Kingston Penitentiary, 1; two months in jmil, 7; three months in jail, 1; two years hingsten penitentiary, 1; two months n jail, 7; three months in jail, 4; two years Kingston penitentiary, 1; tivo { years Penctunguishene Reformatory, 1; thyee months Central Prisen, 2; whip- ped with consent. of parents, 26; with- drawn, 1; no action, 2; total, 310. Nationa'itios--Knglish, 12; Irish, 26; dlancous, 4. Protestants of all i , 171," Roman Catholics, Males, 301; females, 9; single, marticd, 81. Could read and 2% Under fifteen years, 12; over n and under twenty-five years, 66; t over twenty-five and under thirty-five forty-live years, 61; over forty-five and uniler fity-five years 35; over fifty-five a | and nder sixty-five years, 34; over 13; over seventy-five and under cghty five vears, 5; total 310. . Occupations--Agents, 5; bakers, 5; } | bricklayers, 1; butchers, 2: barbors, 3; 7; blacksmiths, 1; book- commercial travellers, 2; carpintors, 11; cooks, 3; carriage tors, 2; druggists, 1; en ineers, 7; farme 8; hotelkecpers, 1; house-keep- 2 yl chinists, 9; moulders, 4; printers, plumbers; 1; jon--First time, 204; second | time, 35; third time, 11; total 310. n Summoned for an infraction of city by Inw and other offences--Assanlts, grace, Oo aggravated assault, 1; cruclty to animals, 2: drunk and house breaking, 1; dizordeily conduct, 13; damage to property, 3; fighting on the atrectd, 7: fwmious driving, 1; infrac. tion of limor license act, 39; infrac tion of Humane Society act, 1: infrae tion of penitentiary act, 2; infraction of city law, ro carters, 4; infra tion of city by-law, re opera house, infraction of city by-law, re water cabs, infraction of city by-law, re butchers, 2 infraction of city by-law, 33; infraction of city hy law, re second hand stores, o »- { wages, 1; street loitering, 1: selling goods on the Lord's day, 5; thefts, 6; trespass, 8; total, 201, How disposed of--Bound to keep the peace, T; dismissed, 56; discharged, 3; {ned, 85; one month in jail, 4; paid | «tands, 1; * withdrawn, 19; left the | (ity, 2; total, 201, s | rorted and attended to, and 1,188 (Be pod 8, IN OUR OWN CIROUIT! t Sides of The Line. r | police for 1901. downe, has made an assignment. Mrs. J. W. Leach, formerly of Brock- ville. but latterly of Iroauois, died r I | heart failure. t| BE. H. Bis Brockville, goes to To- e| Life Assurance company. He will start t | on his new duties, February 1st. 1 { 'Mrs. Milton Andresser, wife of the | well-known St. Lawrence steamboat | captain, died from an attack of la | grippe at the Brockville General Hos- it | pital. : i C. FP. Smith, a wellknown resident of Belleville, died as the result of a stroke of paralvsis, on Mondav, aged seventy-two. The deceased leaves a widow and a son and dauchter. Two men were heavily penalized in Peterboro for infractions of the same laws. Nelson Windover, got a fine of 230 and costs. for selling venison; Stephen Nicholls, 830 and costs, for | unlawfully = disposing of two otter i | j- | | 1 ------------------ | pi Hardest Kind Of Work. of a woman washing, Make it easy by »- | lessens labor and use of soap. A wom- 3. | an does not have to stand exposed l- | at Lemmon, Claxton & Lawrenson's 3. | this week. at | Montreal, Jan. 19.--Miss Mary Van | Horne, youngest sister of Sir William | Cence in this city. | * There are many forms of negvous = | debility in men that yield to the use of Carter's Iron Pills. Those who aré troubled with nervous 'weakness, night | | : i Morning 6 No matter how expert the chef, he cannot pro- duce a better breakfast dish than a steaming bowl of Tillson's pa Good Oats. Ti \ Pan- = WV Hotel en, when [ came out | was some better bat not cured. It was then I saw Doan's Kidney Pills advertised. Since taking them I have been completely cured and any trouble with my kidneys since." sweats, etc, should try them, Had a severe pain in the small of the baok. Was treated In the Hetel Dieu, Kingston, but not oured. Kidney trouble was the trouble. Doan's Kidney Pills We. George Graves, Pitts Ferry, Cured Oot. of a very bad ease of kidney trouble. ans fe tells about the cure in the fol! words: '1 cannot recommend Doan's Kidney Pills too highly. I never took any. thing that did me so much good. [hada severe pain in the small of my back and could scarcely get up or down help. I could hardly urinate, but when i did the pain was terrible. 1 was in the ingston, itiaoaask last winter and ve not had Doan's Kidney Pills, so cts, per box or 3 for $1.25, all dealers or THE DOAN KIDNEY PILL 00, TORONTO, ORT, KILLED BY IGNORANCE French Women Being Instructed in Matters of Maternity. The French, and the Parisians in particular, are becoming alive to the urgent necessity of arresting the des- truction of infant 'life. A hundred and fifty thousand of the infants of the age of twelve months or under die every year in France--a high propor: tion in a population of about 38,000, 000. The statisticians, including the chiefs of the medical profession, hold that the lives of at least 1100000 of these infants can be saved, Myriads of babies die because their mothers--be- longing ptincipally to the working classes-- do not know how to take care of them, or because poverty pre vents them from taking sufficient rest before and after birth. As a remedy for this evil, the senate has just giv- on its approval to a proposal probi- biting the employment of laboring wo- men during the t weeks preceding and the four weeks following ~ the birth. The prefect of the Seine has just inaugurated in every one of the twenty arrondissements of Paris a permanent system of conferences in maternity for the instruction of wo- men of the working classes, or of any others in need of enlightenement. These conferences are to be held at the headquarters of every municipal divi sion of the capital. They will be pre sided over by the local mayors and by the leading scimtific men of Paris. ---------------- Somehow a man generally loses his nerve just when he needs it most. more certain cure. The effect is "It makes strong bodies andquick, active brains. A food, not a fad. Try it for breakfast to-morrow. Oats dried: STOSKS, GRAIN AND COTTON We execute orders in all New York stocks in lots of and upwards upon a five-point margin, commission only for buying or sdling ; grain on throe:point margin teenth comm stion; cotton on margin of $1 per & por hundred bales. Direct wires to Chicago, New and Montreal. Correspondynce invited. McMillan & McGuire * * "5 ooe 68 Quee| PETERBORO : 134-136 Hunter St. KINGSTON: ores, oO Real Estate office, 51 ON APRIL y iba Store. at. preset ocshpied by " : RE or AAR British American Assurance : INSURANCE. EMPORIUM ao. Market Square, MONEY TO LOAN IN LARGE OR small sums, rates of an Ll Sores. Apply 4 y Fron or YR POOL, LO! ARCHITECTS, EENRY Toa yr y SF ARTHUR ELLIS, A fice site of New Drill f Queen and M Metropolitan Stock Exchange CAPITAL $100.000 FULLY PAID. KINGSTON BRANCH Clarence Chambers, Clarence 1. Ly Peltiah Amariotn Hotel. J. J. McKENNA, Manager Bonds, Stocks, Grain and Provisions KINGSTON BUSINESS COLLEGE TORONTO BUSINESS COLLEGE TORONTO, +" ; Unequalled facilities for securing posi Largest and best equipment in Canada. Many people are veritable human {uterrogation points. They invariably want to know why? ; 2 Gin Pills are superior to other Kidney remedies. One reason is that Gin Pills are antiseptic in their action, cleansing, heal purifying from the stant, Jherthy effecting a speedier a mmedigte, All Druggists, ects. per box, 6 boxes for 52 30 or direct from THE BOLE DRUG CO., WINNIPEG, MAN,

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