Daily British Whig (1850), 28 Sep 1905, p. 5

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is Delicious tely Pure, 280., 30c., 40c., 50c. and +0s,,,, hest Award, 8t. Louis, 1903, | BIBBY COMPANY, Suits that look as if the , belmgy 1g and tailoring 10 make they lored with so much tal emselves to the fig Sot and ure with y ice indicates that the Clothes | 0. $7.50, $8.50, $10, $12 # Raincoats eel sort. Overcoat and 50 to $18. Rein e and do worse, but you can't A Our New Cver:oats. y Anderwear a hobby of ours. We hae Fleece-lined, Natural Wool, Lambs Wool, etc, See the 1 Underwear we are selling at arment up to $2.75. 50¢. fo $3.50 y our Glove stock is too great Invite you to come here with ec or requirement you may e. 'BIBBY CoO, ERDASHERS, OAK HALL. idee er 2. IU STYLISHLY teed goodness for the least business. How well we are ingly exemplified in our new I.L-AND WINTER SUITS IS AND BOYS I inspection at our store, and mine and try our garments ly find the fabrics and work- tions of excellence, but that want to pay for dependable $18. 6.50 to $18. to $7. 3 to $7.50. e People's Clothier Iden's and Crawford's Groceries. 0OOCO 0O99E0E0 00] Shoes § wear that stands the § fort thrown in. up to $2.50 best to: be had at the ! send your boy to us. OO OOO ROO SHOE STORE OCOOe® 000ee@ roughout Hungary, against the vn 'ty 1s increasing, It i= stated that 'q emperor has issues] orders that in e event of disturbances harsh mea res must be avoided if possible. Your A satisfied, aloo yore eketbook if you get your "glasses" Dr. Chown's drug store. Buy Mclonkev's and Huyler's high SS candies at Gibson's Red (ross ig Store. Ladies English spats in tan and vi felt. The very latest at the Loc tt Shoe Store. Cou'll see it all in the Whig. eves may eat a biscuit and not taste There is li. but when you think of bis- cuit eating you think instantly of | Mooney's Perfection ; Cream Sodas Crisp, delicious and tasty. Absolutely and distinély superior to any other make. Say "Mooney's" to your grocer. Specials in Gouches This Week See Our Window Display Fancy shades of Velour Couches. only 50. Fancy shades of Tapestry Couches, | only $5. | Wilton Rug, Plush Banded Couches, | ouly $12. | Leather and Imitation Leather in great | variety. Also some snaps in Parlor Saits, which we intend running next week. | | JAMES REID Tuvedor with friends in Napanee and on | The Leading Undertaker, _ WE HAVE Just received another import- ation of Tennant's Celebrated German Pilkeuer and Munich Beer | This Lager has met with wond- erful success on the Canadian market. It is absolutely pure. Selis for $1.60 Doz. | | Try it!) ANADA | FLAKES | The Food, of Qualify and Quantity | | GAR DINER"S| | insurance and Real Estate. } ¥ieht Companies at Lowest Raves. Monev to Loan on Real Estate. I5! Wellington Street. | I EEE EE ---- HONORS HEROES. | home Unveiled a Tablet Heroes. Vancouver, B.C., Sept. 28% --At a drum-head service, in which Sir Fred- | erick Borden, minister of militia, took part, this city has just seen the up- ! veiling of a tablet to the Vancouver to African the world | | last night, say "Good-bye" to the yacht club 'dance season of 1905, It between | has been an exceptionally pleasant and a ; y one, and always made a happy eating bis- reak in the weeks which were dull so- y . cially, All the visitors in town were cuits and Ndighted with the weekly hop, and ory people who were entertaini strang- biscuit eat- "s found the yacht -- the ve . place to take them, and introduce ing. Onel|ihem to their friends. Last night's | Toronto on her way Regretinfly did the y dance was kept up later than usual, the thaberte, Mrs. Almon, and Mrs. W. F,. Nickle being very good, and waiting as long as the young people wished» them to. There were several olit-of-town people there, among them Miss Monk, of Denver, Colorado, Miss Vera Grey, who intends spending the winter with Mrs, Cleaver Sullivan, and from now on will be regarded as a Kingston girl, the Misses Collier, and ths Misses Williams, our bright Amorican visitors, Mr. White, of To- ronto, Mr. Elmer Jones, of Brockville, and' several others. .- es v0» The singles in the croquet tourna: ment are going on this week and on Tuesday Mrs. Herbert Dawson, beat Miss Gertrude Strange. Yesterday, on Mrs. Ramsay Dufi's lawn, Mrs. Walter Macnee and Mrs. R. E. Kent played off, Mrs. Macnee leading. Play goes on, today, on the lawns of Mrs, Kent and Mrs. Duff, ; . - . * A Miss Minnie Moore asked a few girls to a little party, last night, and all enjoyed themselves very much. . . -. - in- | formal little card party, on Tuesday | evening. : Mrs. T. McKay Robertson is giving a 'tea this afternoon for Miss Bessie Robertson. - . \ . | Mrs. W. J. Robinson gave an | . . . . | Mrs. Benjamin Tett came up from | Bedford Mills on Tuesday, and spent a few days with Canon and Mrs. Grout. Mrs. Tett will return to Delhi, N.Y., {to pay the Rev. Herbert and Mrs. | Grout a visit, after Mr. James Grout's | marriage. | Mrs. Edmund : Tett, also of Bedford | Mills, is staying with her aunt, Mrs. James Gildersleeve, Mrs. RH. Temple, who has been staying with her sister, Mrs. J. R. Black, and Miss Ada Temple, returned [ to Torontp, yesterday. . . . - | Professor' and Mrs. Manley Baker, reached the city on Tuesday, and are domiciled at "Romilly House." The Missek McDermott have return | ud to town after a pleasant six weeks' spent down the river, Miss Hinch and Miss Grange spent Mrs, 1. J. Christie is in town, her way to Ottawa. Mri *E&vton' Burns is expected home to-morrow from her visit in. the west. Mr. Stuart Sutherland is land. Mes. D, Mrs. Francis Birley, Albert has returned, Miss Nellie Fortescue, and Mise Ger- trude Fortescue will go to New York, on the excursion. Mrs. Lennox Mills returned home on Tuesday evening, from Toronto. Mr, and Mrs, H | Teaving town on Saturday, will have |g JAS. McPARLANID | 339 and 341 King 8t.| *Phone 274. behind many friende; who will sincere ly regret their departure. Miss Jessie Smith returned to town | vesterday from Brockville. While there she ame in for the farewell gaieties given in honor of Miss Kinney, who is to be married next week. to Mr. James Crout, « eo =» Mr. Herbert Clarke went up to Tor onto, to-day. The Misses Welster, visiting in Brockville, to Rockwood hospital. who have have returned Mrs. Buxton Smith came home, last night, from Toronto, bringing Mijss Reid, of. Sherbrooke, back with her. Miss Gertrude Strange went to New York, yesterday. Migs Macaulay, King street, home, last night, from Toronto. Miss. Cunmie Drennan left to-day for her Toronto, whore she will make with her uncle, the Rev, R. J Moore, of St. Margaret's, brothers went down to-day, to Mont j rey will spend the winter visiting the staying with Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Suther- E. Starr's present address {is 875 Bathurst street, Toronto. | street, with her children from | their summer outing down the river. . * . - . E. Pryor, who are been came Her two various cities in India. gh y age of a (who as Miss Virginia Lowry, s ter of Mrs, Hayter Reed, lived in avghte for some timc) to Mr. Pierson, of New York, took place in Montreal, on Wed- nesday. ! | - Ld . . thn, H. . Wilson went up to Ham: iton, on Monday, and will spend about a fortnight theve. McMILLIAN--PRITTIE, A Wedding Ceremony, on Wednes- | } { day Evening. | The home of Mrs. Thomas Prittie, 431 Princess street, was the scene of a! very pretty wedding, last ev when the marriage of her dn Katie, to William McMillan, of this city, was solemnized. At 8.30 o'clock, while the strains of the wedding march were being played, the happy pair arranged de benoath a pretty arch decorated with smilax, carnations and wedding bells, and Rev, William T. Prittie, B.A, Vernon, brother of the bride, in the brief and happy form of the Presbyterian church, performed the ceremony which made them man and wife. The bride looked charming in a dress of white duchesse satin trimmed with silk chiffon. She was given away by her brother, Rich- ard Prittie. Miss Minnie Prittie, sis- ter of the bride, also attired in white duchesse satin, performed the duties of bridesmaid, while Salem McMillan, cousin of 'the groom, was best man. After the ceramony, the fifty happy guests repaired to the dining-room and partook of a sumptuous repast. The room was tastefully dressed with bunting and evergreens. The tables were arranged in the shape of a horse- shoe and prettily decorated dahlias, astors and carnations. The usual toasts were drunk and the many excellent qualities of the bride spoken of. The bride ix one of Kingston's bright young ladies and greatly tcemed as a member of Cooke's church, in which congregation she has always taken an active interest, servin in the choir, Sabbath school anc toria Guild. She will be greatly missed from these departments. The groom is one of Kingston's popular young men, a journeyman tailor and at present employed with Crawford & Walsh. Up to two years ago his home was in Brockville, Mrs. McMillan was the recipient of many beautiful and costly presents from her numerous friends in the eity and from Montreal, Brockville, To- ronto, Salem: {Mass.), Ottawa, Nap- ance and Vernon. Amongst them were a carving sett from Cooke's church choir; a picture from Victoria Guild; pletire from her Sunday school class; handsome oil painting in frame, paint- ed and presented by Frederick Wil- liams, of Brockville, eousin of groom; massive bronze lamp from staff of Crawford & Walsh; McMillan piano from her mother; sideboard from moth- | ¢r of the groom. The groom's present | to, the bride was a gold watch, and to | the bridesmaid a gold pin set with | pearls. The happy couple, amidst showers of rice, confetti, old boots, and with a collection of tin cans tied to the bridal carriage, clanging and jingling, they sped away to the midnight ex: press to spend their honeymoon in Toronto, Buffalo and Niagara Falls. Upon their return, they will take up residence at 212 University avenue, and Mrs. McMillan will be at home to her friends after October 20th. The bride's going-away gown was a smart tailor-made suit of gray tweed suit ing. DISTRICT TELEPHONE LINE the American Telephone company, and . P. Young, superintendent of con struction, for the same company, are here from Watertown, N.Y., for the purpose of making 5 survey for a dir ect telephone line between Kingston and Watertown. At presént telephone connection between these two places is got in 3 way of Ogdensburg. What is needed is a line over Wolfe Island to Gonnect with Cape Vincent. There is a Bell telephone line from Kingston to Wolfe Island, A survey was made to-day, with the result that satisfactory ar- rangements can be made for the con struction of a line over the island. It is likely that work upon it will be shortly begun, OBSERVANCE OF LAW Will Be Best Course of Liquor Men. Toronto, Ont, Sept: 28. Referring to the article in the Christian Guar- - | dian, by dr. Chown, on the liquor real, to their sister, Mrs. H, Christ- | situation in New Ontario, the provin- mas. cial secretary, Hon. Mr. Manna, said ei 8 to-day : "Ii the liquor people are Mrs. Gamsby home heroes who laid down their lives in | gia. 3 the Boer war. Three South African! Mrs, Norman Fraser will not re campaigners whose memory is thus! turn to town for a few days. henored were Private W. Jackson, | Private: W. F. Whitely and Trooper F. C. Mackintosh. Jackson and Whitely served in thy Second Royal Canadian Regiment, and Mackintosh in the | Strathcona Horse, All belonged to the 6th Regiment of this city. Sir Fred- Captain and Mrs. Norman Stuart Leslie returned to town on Saturdgy. Miss Marguerite O'Connell, of Peter boro, has returned to course at Queen's. Miss Gertrude Cameron, burg, will spend K of Morris went up today to to Geor- resume her the winter with her alive to their own interests, they will not only strictly observe the law themselves, in New Ontario, but will see to it that others do likewise. Any other course on their part might jus tily a severe remedy. Dr. Chown sug- gests in his article, regarding that part of the article in which he makes reference to new hotels being ereoted, that licenses were promises, but I can only say they have not the promise of a license in any case nor the prospect erick was especially moved by the ser- | aunt, Mrs. W. B. Ferguson, Alfred of one." viee far ha lost his only son in [street and will go to Queer'. Ca South Afri PEEP MISD Mis. C.F. Orton, and Miss Leila i _" : | Wright, who have 'een spending a New York Excursion. Quality Counts. i In blood especially, nothing shows | more quickly than impoverished | blood. Pimples, boils, skin eruptions | of all kinds should be treated through | the blood. Wade's Iron Tonic Pills cure | these diseases bv driving them out of | the blood. In boxes, 25c. at Wade's Drug Store. Money back if not satis- | factory. Bright red spectacles, accompanied | by internal forms of calomel, forin 4 new German specific against seasick- | Miss Laura Mills, University avenue, ness. To get relief from indigestion, bili- olsness, constipation or torpid liver, without disturbing the stomach or prroind the bowels, take a few doses | "Carter's Little Liver Pills, they will | Please vou, : i Have vou a bad taste in your mouth ? Feel bilious ? Sour stomach ? | Laxatives will give you relief, | { couple of months in Rochester, N.Y. were in the city for their way to their howe in Napanee - - - . Mes. E. McKelvey Bell Toronto and Kingston, about Oetob er 10th, Miss Montague Maclean, daughter of Mr. Neil Maclean, Watertown, N.Y. will be the guest of her aunt, Mrs Sidney Day, for several weeks. Miss Daisy Mills, who has been vis iting her cousing, Miss Frances and will return home to Peterboro, to Morrow, Mrs. WH. Christmas returned to Mon trea] to-day. Miss Rathbun, f Deseronto, for Farland last week, a few hours, on leaves for sailed | ,| Low rate excursion from Kingston to New York and return, Tuesday, + | October 3rd, and Wednesday, October 4th. Only 87. Tickets good to re tarn_ten days. Leave Kingston Tues- - | day, October 3rd, 6 a.m. and 2 p.m, arrive New York, 0.30 p.m. and 7.25 f | am.; and Wednesday, October 4th, § jam. and pm, ve 6 p.m . |e? 725 am. For full particulars apply to Howard 8. Folger. agent, - IN. Y. C. & H. R. RR., Kingston. d - Wreckage washed ashore on Kanga- - roo Tsland points to the loss with all | hands of the ship Loch Vennachar. ! which left the Clyde, June 14th, bound ! to Adelaide and Melbourne. | The natives of Guam are well lens. od with the sovereignty of the United Miss Marv Hamilton, daughter of the ; Btates and that there is no sentiment Bishon of Ottawa, and Mre, Hamilton, | accompany Mrs. Charles | One box of Dr. Chown's Tittle Pink | Cheney, of New York to India in = - expects tn oomber. Miss Hamilton and Mes armnang them for independence. H you require a truss go to Dr. Chown's drug store. "Perfect fit guar anteed." with | Bank bullding a spring was discovered Vie- | To Ee Built From Kingston to Watertown, N.Y. L. E. Carson, electrical engineer of a roundabout way, viz., by | As ese | | tal weight on the pillars of 28,800,000 | pounds, or 14,200 tons. ™ | | strikes {| of the bullet. | target I step forward and pull the tar- | above the sidewalk THE TRADERS BANK IN = TORONTO, Description of Piers, Pillars and Other Foundation Work to § rt the New Structure. The na.ural foundation on which To- ronto is bullt is the best known on this |! | consequently the excavation tor the Traders' Bank building at Yonge and Colborne steets has been the stra tical proposition possi- says The Toronto News, New York, built on a springy island, has Ho end of trouble with getting foun- dations for its skyscrapers. There it to bore clear down to the 4 _somet'mes at millions of dollars' expense before a solid bottom is reached. Chicago, built on a marsh, i= in a similar predicament. Big build. ings there built up'on steel founda- tions which thrust themselves far down into the tricky subsoil on which the business part of Chicago trembles like a big lump of jelly. The steel founda- tions, unable to find rock fn that prai- rie bottom, literally float like. huge barges. The subsoll of Toronto is remarkably firm, and ts engineering problems com. para dvely simple. The chief difficulty is in springs of water--which often per- colate the clay. Sometimes an old well is encountered fifty feet deep, requiring either to be bridged or 'filled up. Sometimes the bed of an an- clent oreek. full of trickling water- courses i discovered. In making the excavation for the Alexandra Palace, for instance, the workmen found the bed of Garrison creek. which necessi- tated making a much deeper pit than was at first intended. ; In @ndlog a base for the Traders' which kept the workmen digging down and down tiying to get beneath it. "And if we had stopped at ffteen feet," sald Mr. H. 8 Baker, the archi- tect, "we should never have found that spring unless it had been discovered in the subsequent settling of the walls." Twenty feet down goes the excava- tion for the Traders' Bank, with the blue clay intended as a bottom for the heaviest bullding, according to ground- room, in Canada. Ten feet are to be used for building up the steel and ce- ment plers, which, when all built in, will occupy at the base nearly all the ground area. They will rise taperingly to the base of the thirty-six steel pil- lars, the huge legs on which this sky- scraper will stand. These pillars, 'with thelr accompanying girders, will make the real frame of the building. * The walls will be merely curtains, and may be started ten storeys up if necessary. In order to overcome the springiness of the subsoil it was found necessary to decrease the load of the pillars ace cording to area by making the base of the plers larger. The maximum pres- sure as at present figured is 5,000 pounds. to the square foot. Some of the 36 pillars in the building sustain a welght of more than a million pounds each. One carries 1,380,000 pounds. The average is not less than 800,000 pounds to the pillar, making an approximate to- With the solid foundation of steel and cement this huge mass is expected to stand without settling half an inch any- where. The walls will begin to rise just as soon as the foundations are laid, Each storey, as it Is bullt, with its fire- proof ceiling, will be waterproof, so that the floor above will act as a. roof beneath which the men can work all winter. The intention is to bulla a storey a week after the work is really begun. The ten feet above the founda- tions will be used as an underground story. The lower ten feet will be fully occupied by the plers. The topmost point of the building will be 200 feet WHAT A MARKER SAYS. Rifle Shooting Is Expensive--Cost At An O. R. A. Meet. The man who comes to the Ontario Rifle Association's annual meeting at Long Branch from anywhere outside of Toronto is as a rule' a man that can shoot. A few of them are combining pleasure with the outing, but as a rule shooting is an expensive sport and the competitor wants to make his ex- penses. The average marksman does well if he does cover expenses A marker stands in the pit in the shelter trench facing the target. The shelter trench Is about 8 feet high. The targets from the platform where the marker stands is 8 feet. He has that much protection "I'm a marker," sald one of them "f stand in the trench steady in front of my target gazing upwards at the face of the target to see where a sho! I can usually tell by the sound If a shot has struck the get down and after locating the shot I raise the signal showing the value of the shot. If it's a bullseye I paste on the target the previous shot recorded there and insert the spotting disc which has a wire hook in the new bullet hole, and then raise the target and pull down, the signal disc showing the competitor where his last shot struck. "In the event of a challéenge the man in charge of the telephone receives the challenge at once goes to the target! challenged, having it lowered and in- spects it with the marker. Then the telephone man sends the reply. It takes about three minutes. "If they really hit the target oftener there would not be so many chal- lenges," sald the marker. If a marksman competed in every match his entrance fees would amount to about $10. For a man domiciled on the ranges the tent dues are $1 for the four days, and he has to provide his own meals. The extra geries matches, which start early every day, fit the men who stay on the ranges, demand an en- trance fee of 35c for every ticket at each range, highest score only to count in the competition, but they can buy as many tickets as they like. The extra series ranges at the 200, 500, 600 and 800 yards and the prizes are cash, which helps along expenses. ---------------------- Senator Wark's Piety. In his private life, as in the public eve, Senator Wark was simple and un- affected. His view of life was well {i- lustrated in a letter he wrote for the young readers of The Globe on the oc- casion of his 100th birthday, which he concluded as follows: --*I now ask my young readers to open their Bibles at the 25th chapter of Matthew and read from the 3ist verse to the end, and learn that, whether life is long or short, the important point is to be prepared for its end." Fl . HU BUILDING William Lovell Fidley's Interesting De- scription of Their Hatching. At first the little capsules of humming birds' eggs had a wonderfully delicate flash tint of pink, writes W. L. Finley Calendar. Then, one flicker, and braced herself against the nest-side. She craned her neck, and drew her r-like bill straight up above the nest. She plunged it down the baby's throat to the hilt, and start. ed a series of gestures that . seemed fashioned to puncture him to the toes, Then she stabbed the other baby un- til it made me shudder. It looked like the murder of the infants. But they were not mangled and bloody; they were getting a square meal after the usual humming-bird method of regur- gitation. They ran out their slender tongues to lick the honey from thelr lips. How they liked it! Then she settled down and ruffied up her breast feathers to let her babies cuddle close to her naked bosom. Occasionally she reached under to caress them with whisperings of mother-love, Ramble in the Far North. Since the historic day when the Un- fon Jack was hoisted on Ellesmere Land, the possibilities of Canada's country in the far north, with the pe- cullar and interesting characteristics of its people, have loomed largely be- fore the public, and there is a natural and ever-increasing desire on the part of Canadians to learn more of their wonderful fellow-subjects who now form an integral part of our vast Do- minion. The ball was, 80 to speak, set rolling by Commander Lowe, and some further entertaining. side lights' were thrown on the great Arctic territory at the Toronto University a week later, when Right Rev. Dr. P. T. Rowe, Bish- op of Alaska, delivered a lecture on "A Ramble in the Far North" He gave some vivid descriptions of the lives and habits of the Esquimaux people, After speaking of the ancestry of the people, and mentioning. the ancient Sanita) of Russian America, where the ol reek Church still stands, with its fine paintings and ah 'Beantitul Madonna on the walls, Bishop Rowe went on to allude to the Ewquimaux people, and the following word picture will be of interest: "I have seen them," he sald, "in such a condition as to make me doubt very much whether it would be possi®le to lift up such creatures and make them what we would regard as human beings. They seem so low down and so degraded, but they live under conditions that help to make them so. They do not always cook their fof, and certainly never in winter. They use blubber to melt ice, 80 as to obtain drinking water, but they do not use the water for any other purpose. They oll themselves instead of washing, and at the end of winter you would, in or- der to discover their features, have to £0 through a process of excavation," Dr. Rowe mentioned that the Esqul- maux eat a good deal of whale, which was not so bad when it was cooked, but even then a white man required a very keen appetite, and_to shut his eyes before hp could get fnrough with it. He also gave some Interesting in- stances of how the Esquimaux women | brought their refractory husbands into submission and obedience by a few ju- diclous clouts with a snowshoe. The people generally were fond of sending each other presents, but always ex- pected something In return, very much on the same lines, remarked the Bish- op merrily, as more civilized folks give a dinner, and look for the compliment to be repaid. In order that white men might get on well with the various tribes, It was necessary for them to assume to be of great power, equal, If not superior to that of he chiefs them- selves. Dr. Rowe alluded to the re- gion of the midnight sun across the Arctic Circle. There, he sald, the sun {ilumined the vast fields of ice with a splendor which was beyond the power of the artist to paint, or the tongue of man to describe. Notice in a Bar, The following notice has been posted in several places in the new Hotel Nor mandie, Clinton: "Take notice that no one under 21 years of age will be al- lowed 'in the barsroom or sold intoxi- cating liquor. It will be considered a favor, If anyone, knowing a young man to be under age frequenting the bar, will report same at the office" All ho- telkeepers should make the same rule, and strictly adhere to ft. 3 -------------- His Passion. "I was examined for life insurance to-day," sald Mr. Timmld, "but I'm afraid I'll be turned down "Oh, my! Why?" asked Miss Koy. "While the doctor was examining my heart I unfortunately got to thinking of you, and it jumped something aw- ful" $1 Rochester And Return $1. Steamer North King leaves Sunday, October Ist'gt 5 pom. All dav Monday in Rochester and howe Tuesday morn- ing. Full information from J, P. Han- ley. Dr. Chown's pecial Iron Tonio Pills make women strong, plump, heal with a pink complexion. "The ath blood medicine for women known, 25¢. | SPENCE'S, ™isniicy, a ye ALUMINUM OIL HEATERS Smokeless od | Odorles Each and every stone is warran ed. If not satisfactory, money will be refunded. © % "The Invi a big statement, but no better. Ladies, Gents anid Boys. "THE BEST. CL Happy Home Range The Happy Home range is one of the most powerful water heaters made. It is popular because it is econo- mical on fuel, satisfactory to operate, artistic in appear- ance. ; Before selecting any other make we would ask you to see the A 0000000000000 000000 >. - G. A. BATEMAN INSURANOE BROKER ALL KINDS OF FIRE INSUR- ANCE AT LOWEST RATES, DISTRICT AGENT SUN LIFE ASSUR- ANGE COMPANY OF CANADA. 61 CLARENCE STREET, KINGSTON. a For Real Estate Or Insurance Count with GRO. CLIFF before buying st 65 Clarence Stroet. h New Hickory nuts, Carnovaky's, hard or corns, he ot Wade's drag stom $ Bc. Tape Girder corset for 35c New York Dress McKELVEY & BIRCH 69 and 71 Brock Street. Are the Best Shoes in the whole world. This may seem shoes have "THE. INVICTUS " are made for . "$3.80, $4, $4.50 and $6. In all styles and kinds of leathers. HAPPY HOME RANGE" : « ELLIOTT BROS .. 77 Princess Street. fd? FINANCE AND INSURANCE a ------ - n themselves to he Only one quality and that MOORES - weston PE DOOO00000 00000 OQ000EC 00000

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