Daily British Whig (1850), 4 May 1904, p. 5

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Suit an who goes to he same king material, same n't he heard of other men are not. Are you cuts, the best THAT! kclusive tailor Investigate S SUIT N TIE ord for Ladies, Patent Colt | an) Calf, he ry Tie and Dunn. ; STORE ain List HY SALE Suits. $2.50, $3 $2.50 each, $8, Ad $7 each. Hats. $1.50, $2 $1.25 each, weed Suits. IC WILL CLOSE, Reached To Sus ness Entirely. No one can tell vi ls will be akle d this tincertaimnty ¥ sible for shippers 10 in is going forward es to the seaboard, unulating in' Chicago the time w hen ves captains' union Come ines have inf formed at no freight, will be transit until? fur 'he - Western Transit . line, Lehigh Valley v, Union gunboat a-Atlantic con pany. company. Mutual Jt is declared bY the determination riers' Association 10 scale asked bv the sclare a lockout. ---- Crawford's, ° 4 > Af her while HOT WEATHER, NERVOUS WOMEN. BLANCHE GREY. 188 BLANCHE GREY, a promi- nent young society woman of Memphis, Tenn., in a recent letter from "$74 Alabama street, says: *'To a society woman whose nervous force is often taxed to the utmost from lack of. rest and irregular meals, 1 know of nothing which is of so much benefit as Peruna. I took it a few months ago when I felt my Strength giving way, and it soon made itsell manifest in giving me new strength and health." ---Blanche Grey. 'Peruna is without an equal as a nerve tonic and vital invigorator, Buy a bottle of Peruna. 1f you do not receive all the benefits from Peruna that you. expected, write to Dr, Hart man, Columbus, Os TO HOME SEEKERS, SNAP FOR FEW DAYS. OWNER leaving city that very desirable residence, No. 241 Queen street. Ap- ply to Geo. Cliff, Real Estate Agent 95 Clergce street THE CROP OUTLOOK. s From \ Are The Re Many States. Washington, / May 4.--The weather bureau in its' wee kly summary of crop conditions, says : "With the exception of 'Kansas southern Missouri and Arkansas, corn planting has progressed slowly, but preparations for this work through out the corn bell\have been extencive "In Nebraska, Kansas and Mis souri winter wheat has advanced fw vorakly, In Mlinois, Kentucky, néssee, the Virginias, Maryland North Carolina an improvement indicated, but in India Ohio, an Pennsylvania much will ploughed What be up, and the outlook in Michizan i poor. "With practically no rain in the spring wheat region, seeding has been vigorously pushed, except in the Rea river valley, where the ground yet re quires a week of dry weather "Oat seeding is nearly finished ir the northern portion of the central valle and is well advanced in the lake region. "'Unseasonably cool weather, gen erally throughout the cotton belt, has been unfavorable for germination and growth of cotton. "In Tennessee, Kentucky and Ohio tobacco plants are small and growing slowly, but in Virginia and' North Carolina they are in thrifty condition "While most reports indicate that peaches have been extensively killed, the outlook looks promising in = sec tions." Just * CY XK.» London, May 4.--Jefiries Bodger, a cashier of San Antonio, Texas, was to-day condemned to pay seventy-five pounds damages and costs as the re sult: of a suit brought against him for breach of promise by his cousin, Kate Reddan, of London. The plaintifi claimed that Bodger became engaged he was on a visit to A number of amusing epis d in court, manv of them Y. K." The plaintifi ex' that this meant 'consider vourself kissed." i COMMERCIAL. MONTREAL MARKETS. London thes ave Pending plained "( Pacific Canadian y Montreal Street Ry Montreal Street Ry Toropto Street Halifax Sires Detroit Unite Street St. John Str «ot wim City Transit Te » Electric xy. Rich. & Gn Commerc) Pemdnion Nova Scot Ogilvie Mil Montreal ( Canada' Color Dominion Coal Co Bank of Montreal LANG Merchants' Rank 000 Molson's Bank 200 Unicn Bank 000, NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE. April 4th Rid T'nion Pacific 842 St. Paul 1431 Manhattan 142] B. R. Transit 1 Sugar Stee Steel, Pref Fenn. Coal & Iron Miss. Pac Southern Cnt. & Wes ' S. Rubber NYC !Touis & Narh Rock Island Pennsylvania RR Atchison . Amal. Copper ms ------ PLAYED HOOKEY, Ww ""FISHING--DISAPPEARE Billings Bridge Ma search has failed-to locate them. seems they played and with fishing tackle, they went a southern suburb. Their where are the boys? It seems had madé a proposal to anothgr to skip out. The disappearance of Martha B aged twenty years, causing a lot of guessing. ally accepted theory about Miss | is, that her body will be found ir Ottawa river. Robert Hurdman, aged seventy one of the pioneer lumber Ottawa Valley, died suddenly, morning, of heart failure. equal to G.0.C. to inspect the militia only. fered: a site at Barry's. Bay new central training camp for the itia. It is tweive miles 'distant the Canada Atlantic railway. In supreme court, to-d ernment appeal in the case D. was allowed. The court fc that the American Deag-was in C dian waters at the "tim for illegal fishing, by schooner Petrel. the findings of the ourt below grants the owner's case in full. the the The court upsets all govern MORE INDEPENDENCE Dr. Sullivan. by pefitics in the senate. "There i 'Men coming fresh fron commons have no time to change, imbued are they with poli sentiments that they are never to get rid of them. That is all more reason why greater care sh be exercised in the appointment senators." Dr. Sullivan, though a conserva is of the independent type, in fac is too broad for his former poli friends and associates. "I would to see more independence in the ate," he said. "The time may. when we will have it, but if not, quote the words of Lord Chath 'If reform not within, it | with" a ve should orig the commons, now devoted In the time Mills, some ginated in the he said. sO does will come from ance." | think the inate bills just 'gs wel and thus fill in' the to forced adjournme of the late Hon. D. valuable bills were senate." come Vivid Pen Picture. Booklovers' Magazine In Senator Quay's sophy there is no such word as He does not always carry his through, but his personal inter seldom suffer. His astuteness is traordinary, future little short of miraculous, his methods of action Napolec There is little sentiment of loyalty in | When sweethearts wrote in olden day his make-up. All coy their goosequills tripped, He makes a separate combination And Denied the words that they might for every campaign, and after elec In fine Italian script tion dissolves it. Apparently he is | So ladvlike each proper sign! : ; tl ach page in sequence wrought ! . : i v be wht 1 afraid of a machine ; which ma) Bold characters and scrawly line come stronger than himself, First and Indelicate ' were thought ! South Africa, and officers in Canada who have been en the rank' of full colonel. His ture given . gratuitously for Andrew's 'Highland Cadet Corps w in need of further is Bel] returned from where she has been funeral of her gran rguson, who died Mrs. G. W, panee to-day tending the { ther, Mrs. F { 2s aged eighty-four. in the Rideau, at Billing's Bridge, school books and tackle were found under t'. bridge, and the interesting question is, last Thursday, The gener men of , whose duty it shall.h The militia department has been of for of Kitty f the seizure, Wanted In The Senate, Says Hon. Hon. Dr. Sullivan, who is home dur ing the senate adjournment fill he 18th, was seen at his house this af noon. He expressed regret over the death of the late Senator Rid, of British Columbia, whom he described as a mild, a reserved, but a well- in- formed man on all British Columkia matters, Senator Sullivan expressed his re gret over the prominent part played too much politics in the upper house, from without political philo party his power of divining the gained renown for his brain work in is one of the few accoutrements SCHOOL BOYS|" Ta evil D Books And Tackle Found Near rtha | Burke's Disappearance Causes Guessing--Pioneer Lumterman Of Ottawa Valley, Dead. Ottawa, ps 4.--John Gagnon, aged thirteeq, George Phypher, agel eleven, ro school boys, have disan- and an anxious all-night | { i truant, yesterday, fich- they boy urke, Burke n the five, the this Sir Fred. Borden gives notice 'of ro lance to a hospital, and it may be solution providing for the appoint |Recessary to amputate the Re- ment of a military inspector of militia | AUX was taken into custody, Ba has at a salary of $5,000 per annum. Ho been released en bail. may be either a colonel of militia «. 3 of his 'majesty's regular army. In Let Children Use Left Hand. other words there may be applied to Dr. G. M., Gould, in Science an officer who shall have a salary I have 'never seen anything but bad the m.! from gov und ans ment and far 1 the and tical able the ould of tive, t he tical like sen ome to am + nate I as time nts avid on fail. ests ex- and mic. last he has both fought and warmly » supported nearly every republican | MY sweetheart writes, her desk before i ithin her dainty den-- leader, great and small, in the state. gpa uses dips of ok lors e has no sentimen mn he matter. nd scratchy is her pen He | t th tt A ¥ He plays to win. He has confounded | Her "b's" reach up, her "g's . reach ; . oN down his allies, frequently, by truces with Bath character has spines the. enemy while under fire; has often | *1i1l like a bristling forest frown deserted them, to their complete, sur The serried rows of lines prise. What he promises be folds H | Page ane she fils, in strokes half score, he ean: but he throws nothing in for And dashes then to three: loval service. There is no clement of | And back to two, and next to four-- chivalry. 3 is: conduct. No man A system odd, but free, hivalry in his k I nse of the | And pond'ring &'er the plan thereof seams to have a keener sense o 16 Darvel, wall may weak spots in the armor of others. | That 'midst the labyrinth hoor Love He appeals only to self-interest, aud Tho' blind still finds a wa he pays the price. He will throw over -- any ally for a stronger one. Mystery One On The Doctor. always surrounds his plans. He sel- | Philadelphia Ledger | dom takes counsel, but acts radically This story is told of a well. known and rapidly on his own initiative, Philadelphia physician who lives not with hawk like swiftness and reckless | any miles: from the city hall. He daring. - The republican party in | was called recently to the bedside of Pennsylvania for more than a gene- | a man whom he "had never before ration, in spite of its nominal' major- | seen. itv, has always presented the aspect "Why" asked the physician of the of a fountain troubled patient's wife, "did vou delay sending ae--tt-- for me when your husband was un A Colonel Of Repown. CONSCIOUS . "Oh said she, tearfully, Col. Sam Hughes, MP. whe tee- >» as he retained his sens tures in the City Hall on Friday akdn't Tet me send A . er : 3 « o , night, for the benefit of gt. Andrew's § "© nd. lor your Highland Cadet Corps, was on vari ous -occasions with the Mounted Rifles The Wages Of Sin. and "CC" Battery in South Africa, and New' York, Mav 4.--Adolph Koenig, took a large humber of photographs | a butcher, awoke during the night of men and officers, among whom are to find that the young married wo many from Kingston. These he is to} yan he had taken from her husband, show during his lecture. Col. Hughes, lav dead beside him in bed. The wo who is a brother of Capt. W. 8.} yan, Mrs. Anna Kaufman, ran away Hughes, of the 14th P.W,0. Rifles, | from her hushand two months ago. giv lec St. which Na at dmo Mon LI 5th, Puck. S LEG CRUSHED. a Trap Set By Girl's Fath- wer. Paris, May 4. ~Having eartnd from his daughter, a young dress-mauker of/ twenty, that she hud been betrayed by a lodger in his house, Alain Re- navy, a cons living in the Roule- varde de Me 'nilmontart, walled upon the lodger, a workulan numed Le- notre, to marry his daughter, but met with a flat refusal. Determined to have bis revenge, the father procured an old wolf trap, apd, having set .the spring, placed it on the stairs just before the hour when Lenotre was accustomed to return. The latter fell into the trap and the whole household was awakened by his screams. Lights appeared, and presently Re- naux approached the victim bearing a piece of paper and a pen, followed by his wife holding an inkstand and a i candle, The document was to promise to marry the young dress-maker on May and the parents called upon the man to sign it as the price of being liberated from the trap, which was crushing his leg. Mad with pain, the betrayer made frantic but useless ef- forts to release himself, but was ul- timately set free by the other people in the house, who took pity on him. He had to be carried on an ambu- werge, results from the attempt to train chil- dren to use the right hand instead of the left when there is a decided ten- dency or habit to he left-handed. Moreover, the attempt is never suc- cessful. The hest consequences are poor, and are onlv awkward mixtures of the two forms, which yield confusion and in- decision during the entire subsequent life. One 'is that of a naturally left- handed friend. who by arduous and continuous training during his child- hood was compelled to write with his right hand. For all other acts he is lefthanded, but he can use his left hand for writing. Although now past fifty he has always hated any writing, the mere act of doing so: and he can not do any original thinking while writing. He is for this purpose com pelled to relv on a stenographer and then his ideas flow freely and rapid- Iv. If he tries to think, plan or de vise, and to write at thesame time. there a positive inhibition + of thought and he must make sketches, epitomes, several efforts, copvings, ete, in a painful and most unsatis factory manner. The attempt at ambi dexterity has been a life-long obstacle to him in his professional progress. The chief centres most closely inter related in writing and thinking are thus demonstrably better harmonized when in one side of the brain. The mechanics of neurology are plainly less difficult than could be achieved by anv foolish and unsuccessful ambidex- terity. Beaten By Democrats. The great republican majority in congress is not often beaten in the tricks of legislation, but the demo- crats executed 'a 'coup d'etat 'the oth- er day. Some weeks since Mr. Willi- ams, the minority leader, introduced #wvo resolutions demanding to know Why * 'the. .attorney-general had not prosecuted the coal 'trust conspirators of the Northern Securities merger. The republicans smiled, and referred the resolutions to the pigeon-holes of the judiciary committee, a cemetery where such resolutions have no hope of resurrection, But. the democrats on the committee kept taboo ie repvh | licans, and getting 1 Jem Hoo' or. out | of the capitol hy varicuy devices, call, ed a meeting of the committee and in- stantaneouslv adopted the résolutions and recommended the house to pass them; the republicans brooded on the dilemma for a week and then passed them having decided that to defeat them would be still more damaging. The Letter. When Koenig found the woman was dead he seized a sharp butcher knife and inflicted fatal wounds in his ab domen. He died while on the way to a hoépital. Abram Shaw, Kingston, grand Z. of the grand chapter of Canada, will vig. it Palestine chapter, Royal Arch Mas ons, St. Thomas, on May 12th. Bung, rolls, chelsea buns, tea buns, J0c. a dozen. at 'Ferguson's. Finest seed potatoes. Crawford's. STOCK GIRL. Claims He Was Swindled--Sent Fee For Legal Opinion As To Rights To Marry And Got Ad- vice of a Bogus Lawyer, Woodstock, Ont., May 4.--William Henry Smith, alias William Moore, who 'married Mary Ball, in Fredonia, Fv N.Y., in May, 1931, and Miss Emily C ver, of Woodstock, in this city in January, of this year, the last matrimonial venture, was, yesterday, sentenced to - tix fiionths in the Central Prison by Judge Finkle for bigamy. It was brought out in evidence that Smith was legally married to the Fre- donia woman by a Plymouth Brethren minister, DOW an ex-convict, but a regular minister when = the marriage was perform: According to Smith's story he was the victim of a swindle. He sent 810 to a street car employee in Fredonia named Martin, asking him to get the advice of aylawyer as to whether he was a free man or not. Martin wrote back stating that he had seen a law ver nained Robbins, and #the latter had said the coast was clear if Smith wanted to get married again. The Fredonia witnesses, however, stated fo being his third the court on Tuesday that there was no such lawyer in the city as Rob Lins. Martin was subpoenaed to attend [ the trial at Wondstits ul he was killed as the result of allway dc. dent in Fredonia a few weeks ago. Houses Are Scarce. Philipsville, May Feed is getting somewhat scarce in this neighborhood, owing to the length of the feeding sea- son, and no out-door feed yet. Farn:.- ers turn their cows out an hour or two on fair days. There has "been soma ploughing done, and some have sown grain, but the snow .and rain th: past two weeks left * the ground very wet: A number of cows have died and some of the farmers have lost voung cattle. Death was not cause by want of feed. The Philipsvills cheese factory is making cheese every day. The proprietors will have thy milk from eighty to one hundred cows more than they had last year. Tk are a good many cattle sick in this section; some that have been under the weather are on the mend, others ave under the doctor's care. J. V: Phil ips, who has been confined to his bed for the past six weeks, has been ab': to be up a couple of days this week. Philo. Haskin buried "his bahy boy some. three weeks ago. The next dav he himself was taken sick; and hus been very low ever since, but is some what better at present. Geo Lockwood is 1 ; fears are i very low with pneumon entertained for his recov- ery. Whitmore has been con fined to the house for the past ten days with a complication of ailrhents Thomas McGrogan is purchasing a large number of calf skins this spring iss A. Alguire is having her house renovated with paint and paper; she will have the outside painted too. Joseph Halladay is moving from Sin. gleton's Corners, to this: place, and will work for R. C. Haskin in the cheese box mill. Houses are scarce; it is almost impossible to go George one either for love or money. Great crowds visit Halladay's ~ millinery rooms every day. Germany Has No Tramps. National Magazine, Boston T lot of the laboring man in Germany is in many respects better that that of ours. The German state recognizes the right of every man ta live--we do not. When the German la borer becomes old and feeble the state pensions him honorably. In Germany théJaboring man can ride on the elec 8 lor two cenits--we pay live, erman cities have public baths, pub lic laundry establishments, big parks, free concerts and. many other features which soften poverty, although they may not remove it. : The corollary to this is that the emperor permits no tramps to ter rorize his highways. The police is or ganized for rural patrol as well as city work, and every loafer is stopped and made to give an account of him self. In England vagrancy has heen | a public nuisance for generations; with us it has become of late years al most a public danger. Germany has no tramps. The man who is without work in Germany finds no inducement tore main idle. A paternal government Is him to such hard work that the would-be unemployed finds it to his interest to seek some other employ ment as soon as possible, : ---- Intense Cultivation. M. Clark of Higoeanum, a well-known specialist in grass in a recent address before the county, Mass., Farmers' In stitute, declared that the time is now at hand when the boys and girls should stav on the farms and produce more brains and make not only a liv George Conn. culture, Norfolk ing but money for themselves and others. "They can do that easily," he says, "il they go to work in the right way." And he claims that they have a better chance at where else on earth. -------- Drew The Nail Out. Louisa Cherry, a small girl, Lake City, swallowed a ar lodged her bronchial tube physician who was called could get at the obstruction with ments The nail had been with X rays, a powerful electric magnet, which he attached to a curved piece- of steel. An incision was made in the. wind- pipe, the magnet was inserted and it drew the nail from the hronchial tue. -------- Elginburg Wafts. Elginburg, May 4.--Our school has been re-organized ; officers are home than any Salt HY h The not instru locat. in Sunday the Miss Tredrea, sm Tl u dant; Mr. Silver, assistant; Miss Counter, treasurer; Frank Tolls, secro tary; Alexander Silver, librarian. Quite a number from here attended quarter ly service at Kepler on Sunday. J. H Lake, ill for the last week, is about again. ¥ Visitors : Miss C. Marshall, Kingston, at J. Noble's; Miss 3. Townsend, Kepler, at H. Lawson's ---- Tie oto Crawford's. & rE DAILY 'WHIG, WEDNESDAY, HAY a GOT 6 MONTHS. MAN WHO MARRIED wWOOD- dt IN OUR OWN CIRCUIT, News Of The District On Both Sides Of The Line. : Helen Stone, the girl who left her baby under the seat of a G.T.R. car- riage and was tried for deserting it, was acquitted before the county Judge in Belleville, : The dwelling house owned Ly the family of the late John Welsh, near Picton, Station, has been purchased by the C.O.R.,, and will be dumolish- ed, in order to wtraighten the track into Picton Station. ! Meetings of the Woman's Institutes to be sem by Misses Blanche Maddock and Jessie Evans, Guelph, will be held at Adolphustown on May 24th; Sillsville, May 25th, and Stella, Amherst Island, May 26 26th The friends of Mrs. William Walker, Picton, will be pleased to know that Dr. Heaslip successfully removed the piece of needle from her hand on Mon- day, which has been lodged there for nearly four months, and was about one-half "inch in length. An unfortunate shooting accidént occurred on Sunday to a young lad employed at the grocery store' of Al- bert Powers, Picton. He was wan- dering around in the Waring 'woods 1 and the doctor obtained I {with a gun, when it was by fingers and a portion of the Land. | took up her position beside the groom | Mamie some means discharged, shattering one hand so badly that he stands to lose two -- A Re-Organized Sunday School. Desmopd, April 30.--A number from | hore attended the burial of Marcus and Lorenzo Switzer .at the White church cemetery this week. Jacob McDonald was buried "at Camden Fast, under the Orange order, on Sa- turday last. Miss Cora Switzer has gone to Napanee to spend the summer sewing with Miss Allison. Sunday school was reorganized last Sunday, with T. Wagar as superintendent. We hope old and young will take the in- terest they should and attend regu: larly. Percy Switzer has gone to Peterboro for an indefinite time. Mr. and Mrs. P. ing at J. W, Cranston and brother, at Belle Hills. Rose, spent Friday even- Stewart's. Miss Dora spent Sunday We are pleased to see Miss Price able to resume her duties at the school after three weeks' ill ness. Mr. and Mrs. Levi Evans, Mos- cow, spent Sunday at F. Henderson's, Mugh- sympathy is extended to our highly-respected school inspector at the death of his eldest son. 'There will be no service here next Sunday, owing, to the quarterly service which will be held at Centreville. Married At Toledo. Charleston, May 2.--The home of Mr. and Mrs. P. C. Yates was. the scene of a pleasant gathering on Wed- nesday, April 20th, the occasion be- ing the marriage of their eldest daughter, Charlotte Maude, "to Fred erick Hewitt, Smith's Falls. At eleven | o'clock the bride, leaning on the arm f of her father, entered the parlor and | | an arch of evergreens. The bride looked lovely in a dress of stone blue satin cloth and white silk. She 'attended by her sister, Miss Yates, who was attired simil- arly to the bride. The best man was Joseph Hewitt, brother of the groom. After the edroviony, which 7vas pet: formed hy Rev. Howard, Irank- ville, the happy Fi sat down to an elegant wedding breakfast, af- was ter which the newly-wedded pair leit for their home in Smith's Falls, amid the best wishes of a host of friends I'he popularity of the bride was shown in the handsome array presents she received. The groom's gift was a gold bracelet. Valuable Horse Lost. Murvale, May 3.--Overton Redden had the misfortune to have the lig of 'a valuable horse broken. Farmers have commenced seeding, and some are almost through. Thomas Miller has purchased a new bicycle. George Irwin, and Miss Annie Purdy, spent Sunday at Elginburg. John Taggart was on the sick list, but is convales- cent. Miss Gloria Wallace was the guest of Miss Annie Purdy on Sunday. Miss Della Snidér, our popular school teacher, spent a lew days at John Irwin's, Elginburg, last week. Vis itors 7 Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Storms, Florida, at William Wallace's. Fred, ant, at Max. Purdy's. L. Stormes, Florida, at William Wallace's. Max. Purdy, at Miss M. Taggart's. Miss Bertha Curran, at David Murton's. Potatoes, table or seeding. Craw- ord's: h A large order of Huyler's New York candy just arrived at Gibson's Red Cross Drug Store, W. F. King. dominion astronomer, will leave to take a survey of the boundary line between Alaska and the Yukon territory: Abernethy's Shoe Store. Pure, Healthful, Refreshing: Apollinari ris "7 he Queen of Table Waters" Raaasadasss dad our = ji The shoes hat fashion says you must wear are here. We arc showing a grand line. Shoes for dress, business and out-doour wear, in guaran- teed Patent Colt, Russia Calf, Vici Kid, Enamel Calf and Box Calf leathers. We have shoes to fit and please every man in town, regardless of e what his shoe needs may be. You'll like our shoes, sir, if you give them a trial. Shoes at z & $250, $3, $350, $4, $4.50 and $5. "None bet- 5 ter" is.a strong statement, but it is exactly what - we say about our Men's Shoes. : > J. H. SUTHERLAND & BRO, & THE LEADING SHOE MEN. Sssads PPP PEP PPPIPIPP sates! STOVES STORE Having one of the best store-houses in 'the city we will take down, remove and store your stove for the season for $1. All orders promptly attended to. " ELLIOTT BROS 77 Princess Street. Telephone, No. 385, Residence, No. 56, / Tils Pipa and Fittings constantly on hand. Summer Footwear Now is the time to buy your SUMMER FOOT- WEAR. We have all the newest styles in high shoes or Oxfords in Black or Tan at the lowest prices. Largest stock of Trunks and Valises in the city. Stvie No. in advance ing dn exactnessof| FI A new model, distinctly any yet u ¥ Fete ere uni. \ io ive thew droeping ips C ored 30 as to the waist, Made in silk popiy cloth, XN, sifkc stitched trimmed with wide Valenciennes lace and satin bow. Price $2.50 @ By the adoption and continual wearing of an E. T. Corset beauty of form can be cultivated. @. There is an E. T. Corset made for you that will give you the , ful curves of the fashionable a ok oe dealer tay you oh the corset that suits your figure. THEY ARE FIREPROOF CANADA METAL CO' OODIOOOIOOIOOI TOO OOO) ©0e0e® IF YOU EAT 3 = ® ® Bread you want the best, the most » That's TOYES. "Try ° it to-day. 3 0006 00OCOCOE® OCONEE 0 00s @ wholesome. fo have direct private wires to two of Chicago Board of Trade and can give or corn. McMillan & Maguire, S-E. Cor. King & Yorge Sts. BRANCHES Hunter St., PETERBORO ; Brock 5t., KINGSTON Babbitt your bearings with BABBIT T @ Corsets

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