Daily British Whig (1850), 23 Oct 1905, p. 7

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ING DAY y for Thanksgiving Day, h a pair of good comfort- > wet and slush of winter lo be thankful for a year heavy weight Walking $1.50 to $4.50 and Norwegian Grain $3.50 to $5.00 nd & Bro. | Shoe for Men. BARGAINS s High Class Overcoats. JERCOATS at great sacrifice 1 of ready cash. We put the ALL THIS WEEK. $18 and $20 at the low $10.00. 12 and $15 at the low $8.00. $10 at the low . $5.00. well-made Overcoats, of 58 and ok at them. Not Satisfied, p-Town Clothier TREET. LIPO 0044 PER. ANTIMONY & TIN & D, TORONTO. POOP 040004 0 TITRE Thanksgiving DO Day Thuisday, Oct. to all} ' kets will be ore) Bow © iW orida at SINGLE FIRST. AY oat Wednesday Bids r = 25th, and 26th, 2908 grad pturn ing Jom destination om or Valid ci. 300 th, pefore Mondy CURSION $46.30 ory Mg en sqveral JUNTERS' RATES, | a poin hy Nagtava te "Port A Arthur BES A Sig, 5 Tuskoka Lakes, Midland, Take fais "hi Sa ons Argyle to_ Cobo Nor Sav, Poitls OB ay Co: jood Going Oct. 26th to Nov. vision). © nn, tickets valid returning' until De amber Br particulars, tickets and all apply to P at other ilar: ation HANLE City Pa aNLbY, CL Lit RAILWAY IN CONNECTION WITH CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY. SINGLE LE FARE THANKSGIVING DAY ing October 25th and 26th. until October 30th 546.30 Tiexets on sale umtil ~l Re Ret ATTN Yancouver Jiotoria | Oot. 31st, 1905 Tacom | SECOND CLASS FROM Portiand | KINGSTON. Very Low Rates to many other West- ern Points Full partieuiars at K. & P. and C. P. R. Ticket Office, Otarib Si F, CONWAY, F. - FOLGER, JR. * Gen. Pass: Arsut Gen. Supt. . Bay of Quinte Railway Sew short line fer Tweed. Napanes Daserento, and all local points. Train leave City Hall Depot at 3:36 p.m. ¥ DONWAY, Agent B. Q. Ry. Kiagsten ALLAN LINE "V™iBSmmmumn ROYAL MAIL STEAMERS. From Montreal. From Quebec. Parisian, Fri, 5 a.m. 27, 12 pm. Bavarian, Fri., Gam. 3, 6 p.m. Virginian, Fri., Nov. 10, 6 2.w 10, 11pm Tunisian, Fri. Nov. 17, 6a mi. 17 4p MONTREAL TO GLASGOW, DIRECT. Sicilian Thurs., Oct. 26, (daylight). . MONTREAL TO LONDON. Sarmatian, Oct. 28. Pomeranian, Nov. 13 P. HANLEY, Agent. G.T.R. City Depot. J. P, GILDER- Clarence Street, 10,000 MILES OF EGGS WHAT IT TAKES TO FEED LON-. DON EVERY YEAR. 'Ten Million Sacks of Wheat, 2500 Tons ~~of Coffee, 65 Million Gallons of "Milk, 80,000,000 Pounds of Butter, 450,000,000 Eggs, and a Great River of Beer Are Among the Startling Figures. "Two butters, one bread." repeated the waiter, glibly, as he made a husty hieroglyph on my bill, handed Tt to me with a yet more hasty "Thank you, sir--much oblige" and darted away in response to a regular cus- tomers imperious "Albert!" The scene was a busy restaurant in the heart of London's business "city," and the time that rush-and-scramble wr 'when every "city man" may be found taking in food, says The Edin- burgh Scotsman. All around were silk- hatted men intent on nourishment, darting here and there and everywhere were perspiring waiters bearing dan- gerous piles of dishes; much rattle of knives and forks and human voices: Dishes were emptied and seats vacated. A hasty flick by the waiter disposed of the last customer's crumbs; a clean knife and fork, more bread and a fresh customer filled the vacancies, and hey, presto! off they go again. I checked my bill, in spite of "Al- bert's" hasty figures. My bread I saw was responsible for a modest penny, my butter for two moze. From what distant countries [I wondered had come these two to meet through the medium of the waiters introduction upon that city table? Ten Million Sacks of Wheat. The supplies seemed plentiful enough, but my imagination took me to piles upon piles of penny rolls and circular pats of butter, one for each inhabitant of that huge county, and imagination staggered. Russia, India, Canada, Hungary, the States and Aus- tria all aid under contribution to make penny rolls! What a capacious mouth has this London which consumes more than ten million sacks of wheat year- ly. Look at it in figures--10,000,000. Is it not a portentious meal? I would sit awhile and ponder, and so ordered coffee, of which your Lon- doner takes increasing quantities, while the imports for the country re- main aimost stationery. Anon, Albert brought me a Jittle share of London's annual coffee heap--some 2,500 tons, equivalent to about 11-2 Ibs. a head. I poured in the smallest drop of a dub- fous-looking bluish fluid -- London's milk. Its. annual milk pail holds some 65 million gallons of milk--no, I check- ed the base interrogation as to water; that is only used to make up some seven million gallons of the fluld re- sulting from "condensed." "Butter," called my near neighbor, briefly. T watch the waiter dive a fork into a bowl of water and extract a slab of oleaginous yellow---quaint fish, indeed, for such queer fishing. Fifteen pounds a year is a conservative esti- mate of a Londoner's need in that di- rection, making the total amotint of butter consumed 80,000,000 lbs. nine- tenths of which is foreign. And what of substitutes? Margarine, "cooking" Lake Ontario and Bay of Quinte | Steamboat Co., Limited. STR. "ALETHA" Leaves at 3 pm Bay of Quinte Ports. Full information trom J. P. Hanley, J P. Gildersleeve, Jas. Swit & Co. Agents; E. E. FORSFV, Trafic Manager ARCHITECTS. WM. NEWLANDS, ARCHITECT, iP fice, second floor over a store, corner a aye streets Enterance Bagot street Telephone 008, + ---- ARTHUR ELL: ARCHIEOT. OF- fic site of New Drill near cor ber of Queen and oll Strests. eee POWER & SON ARCHITECT. MER chant's Bank Building. corner Brock snd Wellingtoa streets. 'Phone 313. IENRY p we., he aah Ras Metropolis is Scottish, unre. A0Shor, Bu Kingston daily except Sunday | . for Picton and intermediate | butter? I gasped at the mere thought. ! Ten Thousand Miles of Eggs. | From butter to eggs. New-laid eggs, i fresh eggs, cooking eggs, and -- eggs, | as the lamented Dan Leno used to | sav. Here provision must be made for _an extraordinary appetite, because inhabitant of London County, man, woman and child, accounts for | some 80 annually--450,000,000 eggs of all | sorts--four hundred and fifty millions | --or, if lald (apt expression for eggs) | end to end, upwards of 10,000 miles of eggs annually, and equivalent at a penny each to a total egg bill of near- ly £2,000,000--enough to strike terror into the heart of any housewife. 1 sipped my coffee reflectively. Oh for the chance of supplying this won- derful customer for but a day. 1 saw my fishermen collecting the daily portion of the twenty million oysters, the 26.000 boxes of salmon, and the 200,000 tons of fish which stray to | the London fish markets at Billings- gate and Shadwell yearly. I pictured myself with lands, herds, and wealth of all kinds. I grew expansive; I or- dered 3 second coffee. Half the salmon consumed in the about one- eighth Irish and about one-twentieth | each EY CATIUNAL. ~ SINGING Hiss Cora wouise Larke, A.T.C.M. { Hermann Klein, New York. eal structions St. Margaret's & Soprano | Soloist Syd- t. Me thodist church. Pupils pre- lor Conservatory and University 3 ts. Concert Engagements. Romilly House. 72 Barrie St. Yr \ Coliege ethan Sere L300000000000000000008 Students Enter Any Toe Sept. 5th Kingston Business Gollegh LIMITED Head of Queen St.. Kingston - - Ont A MODERN, PERMANENT, RE- LIABLE SCHOOL. . -- Established in 1883 . Practical, compléte, fricion | mp in thee ough, Roe od alo veronghe nroughout | the wl ogve 4. 6. McKAY, rn "THERE IS A TIME FOR ALL THINGS." Now, while prices are W, is the time to fill our coal bin with best uality SCRANTON COAL 5 0 © o 3 ® SE « Walsh's Yard BARRACK STREET. BOP BRBRRBEBTIOTRRW the r inder being supplied by the useful foreigner; good profit there, I thought. The foreigner only sends about 20,000 tons of fish, but a greater portion of the $0,000 tons of potatoes. Evidently there must be more Irish in London than the census re- turns allow! But what a glorious pro- fit I would take out of that quarter million pounds butter bill, or the £650,~ 000 which was to pay for some 7,000,- 000 bushels of fruit. Evidently the city dweller knows of the. health-giving properties of fruit. Does he neglect that other healthy exercise, the cold bath? Could I be blamed for assuming that he didn't, with a water total of one hundred and twenty thousand million gallons? Sure- ly they don't drink this, notwithstand- ing the infusion of 36 million pounds of tea? If tea drinking is a vice, as some have us believe, London must have a very bad attack! A River of Beer. And yet so huge 8 mouthful of that dry commodity, cheese, as 30,000 tons must need some washing down. But, , how would beer fulfill this last duty? "vie a thirsty London, for it needs, according to Mr. Charles Besth, six million barrels of beer each year to quench its thirst, and a barrel holds thirty-six gallons -- seventeen hundred million "pints of beer" What a river! The city men around me were de- vouring steaks, joints, fish, chops, all with a healthy disregard for digestion. The huge needs of London troubled them not so long as immediate indiv- land; "Surrey" ls--from Russia, butchered to make a London luncheon "They served up salmon, venison, and wild boars By hundreds, by dozens, and in scores, Mutton and fatted beeves, swan and 'bustard" --350.000 tons of meat In short they Try Myers' for MEA : Liv halt uf | which come from 'the British Empire, and nome of which comes from Europe outside of these islands. It was a pleasing picture I had con- jured up: The world paying tribute in meat meal, and malt for the hunger- satisfyingsof great, over-grown ! How seldom does this question of sup- ply enter into the minds of visitors to London. ' How vividly do these figures bring home to us the unwieldyness of this Empire City. | But now I had wandered far away in thought from my city restaurant. | I was picturing vast armies of cows, | of sheep, pigs, and fowls marching on London as if to overwhelm it, and yet being devoured as fast as they mrriv- ed. Anon I pictured all London laid out as one tremendous cornfield and its five and a half million people singing the words of R. D. Blackmore: "The corn, oh, thé-corn, and the yel- low mellow corn, "Thanks for the corn, with the bread upon the board"; and yet quite futiley, for the whole area of 'London if cultivated would | only produce about one-eleventh of the amount required to feed the singers for a year. So little spare room is there that everything capable of béing im- ported ready for consumption is so im- ported. Yet commodities are cheap Sumpared with many Continental eit- es, I saw a picture of armies of butch- ers, bakers, milkmen, and waiters ministering to London's needs, The picture seemed to fade and finally re- solved itself into "Albert" bringing me a supplemental bill for my coffee. The restaurant was nearly empty. The workers had returned to their hives. My phantom armies of cows, sheep, butchers, and bakers had disappeared, ! and my last coffee was cold. "Was it indigestion, or have I slept? I asked myself as I paid my bill A MAN OF THE DAY. "A Descendant of One of William Shakespeare's Ancestors." Mr. W, A. Hamar Bass, the present proprietor of The Era, is, it appears, "a descendant of one of Willlam Shake- speare's ancestors," says The London Star. As everybody knows, Shake- speare's mother was an Arden--Mary Arden, the great-grandmother of Wal- ter Arden of Parkhall, Warwickshire. Emily Jane Arden, who married Mich- ael Thomas Bass, M. P. for Derby, in 1835, was directly descended from this Walter Arden; and their eldest son was Michael Arthur Bass, now Lord Burton, their second son being Hamar Bass, the father of Mr. W. A. H Bass. His wife, Lady Noreen Hastings, Is the daughter of the thirteenth Earl*of Huntingdon, The Peerage changed hands in 1819, when it was y claimed by Hans Hastings, then a simple post-captain in the navy. The story of the claim, written under the title of "The Huntingdon Peerage," by Henry Nugent Bell, reads like an amusing romance. A nobleman in the ' captain's neighborhood had a favorite fox, which the sailor killed. This led to a quarrel, in which Hans challenged ' the nobleman, who refused to meet him on the ground of inequality In rank. On which Hans retorted that If he troubled to put in a claim he would be even higher in rank than his oppon- ent, His friend, Henry Nugent Bell, struck by the remark, started a search after evidence, which culminated, after many droll adventures, in the discov- ery in Doctors' Commons of documents conclusively establishing Hans' claim, which was allowed, with the support of he grefit Sir Samuel Romilly, in 1818. A Sad Sight in India. No sadder sight Is to be seen in In- dia than the spectacle of "The Men With the Planks," staggering along under their burden. Here is a grimly pathetic picture of them, drawn by Sir Frederick Treves: "They are hillmen of the poorer sort who carry planks of sawn wood Into Simla. Each beam is from twelve to fourteen feet in length, and two or three make up a load. The men are ill-clad, and the sun and rain = have tanned them and their rags to the col- or of brown earth. They bear the planks across their bent backs, and the burden is grievous. They come from a place some days' journey toward the snows. They plod along from the dawn to the twilight. They seem crushed by the weight of the beams, and their gait is more the gait of a stumbling beast than the walk of a man. Their long black hair is white with dust as it hangs by each side of their bowed- down faces. The sweat among the wrinkles on their brows is hardened into lamentable clay. They walk in single file, and when the path is nar- row they must needs move sideways. The path is in a solitude among bare and pitiless hills; the road is as old as the world; and in the weary dust of it many hundreds have dropped and died. Along it steals this patient line of groaning men, bending under the burden of the planks up- on their backs. Behind them a rosy- tinted light is falling upon the spotless snows, and it needs only the pointing figure of Dante on one of the barren peaks to complete the picture of a circle in. Purgatory." A Costly Error. The want of punctuation in tele. grams has sometimes been followed by serious complications. A notable case occurred some time back when a cer- tain nobleman, while at his house in the west end, despatched a wire to a celebrated Edinburgh physician, the favorite doctor of his wife." Almost fm mediately following the despatch of this telegram another followed it stat. ing that the doctor would not be re- quired in the following terms: "Don't come. Too late" The telegraphist made the message: "Don't come too late" The medical man, construing this as urging him to the greatest haste, ar- rived in London, claimed his fee and expenses, amounting to £200, and by jegal proceedings obtained that sum.-- London Tit-Bits. A Wonderful Spider. The superintendent' of the London Zoological Gardens has called attention to a remarkable habit of the Austra- lian spiders of thé genus desis. These spiders live in the crevices of rocks between time marks on the shore and by spinning a closely woven sheet of silk over the entrance imprison a mass of air in which they are able to live during flood tide, Fire: destroyed the warehouse of P. J. Melbermott at Minnedosa, Man. end threatened for a time serious eon i 1 ot ingatonians. talk of god T= DAILY MONWHIG, DAY, a -- i -- | man's A asad Ts NEW ihr When the a harvests on *Neath my childhood's southern skics, | When with each September dawn They gather Sweets and Northern Do they think of me afar "Neath the spruce and birches' dume, 'Where no trees of apples are? Do they think of me at home? Through the pléasant eventime, Do they think of me at home? 'When the milch cows thréugh the dell, From the stumpless, stoneless sward, Passing by the ancient well, Enter in the milking yard, With the cow-bells mellow chime, Lo! the shining bucket"s foam, "Round .the barn at milking time-- Do they think of me at home? When they're gally husking corn, Whenthe day is past and done, When the swaddling clothes are torn From the babies of the sun; 'Mid the daughter and the song. Do they think of them that roam? Do they miss me from the throng? Do they think of me at home? / Now the night owl's cries begin, And the sparkling stare come forth; Oh I'm homesick, sitting in My lonely cabin in the north, I am rich in countless trees, A Rich in lands of virgin loam, But an answer would appease Do they think of me at hom:? ~The Khan. DO YOU EAT CORRECTLY? An Aristocratic Torontonian Talks of Common Dinner Table Errors. "I wonder if the present generation's manners couldn't be improved?" sald a member of one of Toronto's aristocra- , tic families to The Toronto Telegram. "It seems to me that they have gone back in the last ten years, The human hog is in evidente much more now-a- days than formerly. "Do you know what I advocate?™ he continued, "a class of table manners, for instance, at school, where the youngsters could be taught the simple rules of polite society at the table. Much more beneficial would it prove than many of the Studies no now atang- ed by the educational board. he doesn't know how to eat correctly. 1 personally Know really worthy fel- lows ing to-day whom their employer would be pi to invite into his home circle only for fear of their display at his board. "You have seen that common cul- prit who eats with his knife, of course. He's in evidence everywhere, and only last week at the best hotel we boast of one of these 'sword swallowers' occupied a seat at my table--until I could be moved. Then there's the fellow who can't possibly drink his coffee unless the spoon Is sticking up in it. He somehow makes a combination clutch of the handle and the spoon. Of course this action is ac companied by a noise as if it was hard work to draw it from the receptacle. "A common violation is the tucking of the servieite into the ¢ollar, and eat- ing fish with a knife--two violations of the laws of polite society which stamp a man as without the pale. You have noticed, too, no doubt, the flend who carefully collects a portion of everything on his fork, and by remark- able deftness conveys it to his mouth. He's on a par with the one who hates to leave any gravy on his plate, and so proceeds to mop it up with some bread. "Probably the worst are the gluttons, who smack their lips and occasionally comb their moustaches with their forks. I have noticed all these specimens, and you cannot escape them any more surely in the best ho- tels t in the cheapest 'joint', "Oh, if tho~e who offend in these things could only know how others feei toward them--how wide the gulf be- tween them, how utterly impossible for a gentleman to associate with men guilty of these far too common sins. In the days of the Commune, when the rabble rose, imprisoned and afterwards beheaded the aristocrats, no murmur ever escaped the French gentry and gentlewomen. They dressed as if in their own homes, they played cards, told stories which were often interrupt- ed by the call of the exegutioner, but never by a single word did they ever try to bridge the chasm, with their persecutors--the canaille, sword- swallowers and pigs of those days. So in the same way do we feel to-day: unless a man eats correctly be is im- possible." Told On a Buffalo Robe. Mr. E. M. Chadwick; barrister sf To- ronto, has presented to the Provincial Museum a buffalo robe which carries on the tanned side one, or perhaps two, stories pictured by Indl it originally belonged. hom it is believed part of the last century, and It is known that it was once the property of a man who accompanied Cantlin, the American explorer, on his journeys among Canadian and American In- dians. The picture stories are very well done, in the pigments commonly used by Indians, and seemingly relate to one or two encounters between white men and Indians, as they include sev- eral representations of fresh scalps, some hanging on a pole to dry, one sus- pended from the nase of a horse rid- den by an Indian, and three in a row, besides the head of an Indian chief. There are also pictures of an old-fash- foned prairie schooner, a white man carrying a gun, a buffalo shot in the side with an arrow, and of tepeés, all apparently worked out on a preconceiv~ ed plan by the Indian who sought thus to hand down to his family or tribe one or more interesti ,, Curator Boyle is doubtful if the tales can be properly translated by any one, Indian or white, but will submit photographs to a number of authorities on Indian matters with that object in view. - His Limitations. "I understand he's a Hinguist." "Yes, somewhat of a one. . He told me yesterday he understood French up to a certain speed and German down 10 a certain depth!" "Three Swallows." Sir John Power and Son's "Thrive Swallows" Irish Whiskey, famous for over a century. Of standard 2 thay altars mens Tues. OCTOBER 23. ee ee eee . man, entered into conversation with ; of the Middle Temple. His explana- that the robe dates back to the early } TIPPED WRONG MEN. Three Stories of Nobles Receiving Monetary Recognition For Service. Visitors at an English country house are allowed to do whatever they like during the forenoon. An eminent geo- logist, who was entertained at one of these houses, asked for coffee early one morning, and started out with a suit of old clothes and a bag of tools to make a special study of the rock ledges of the estate. During the forenoon one of the coun- try gentry came upon him by the road- side, and, supposing him to be a work- The stranger talked with him in a ratronizing way, and while not re- ceiving an intelligible account of the work on which he was engaged, was Impressed with the supposed work- man's Intelligefice and good manners. Inder, he fumbled in his pocket and brought out a half crown, which he tossed to the man with the mallet The geologist seemed . but picked it up and put it in his pocket after thanking the gentleman There was a dinner party at the country house in the evening, and the same gentleman was introduced to the eminent geologist, who at once began to laugh. "I have the half crown™ he sald at once, "and I shall not give it up. It Is the first tip I ever received, and I shall show it to my friends as a trophy of superior intelligence." Lord Jymes once had a similar ex- perience. He was strolling through the Temple Gardens in London when a party of tourists encountered him, and asked to be directed to some of the most Interesting places. He volunteered to show them about. and took them first td "the Temple Church and Goldsmith's grave, and finally to the famous Elizabethan hall tions were lucid and interesting, and when he parted from his new acquaint- ances one of them gave him a shilling, and remarked that few guides were equally intelligent. The nobleman took the shilling demurely, and thanked the, stranger. He is sald to have kepv it to this day, and to have frequently told the story of his experience with the innocent tourists in the Temple Gardens, Another story is related of an Eng- lish duke who was standing at the door of his house when a carriage roll- ed up. A near-sighted gentleman alighted, asked If it were the duke's residence, and on receiving a respect- ful nod from the supposed servant, gave him a shilling. The duke, perceiving that he had been mistaken for a footman, kept the shilling, raised his hand to his fore- head, and made the usual salute. The near-sighted gentleman went into the house, and in due time was presented to the duke, and never had a suspicion that he had tipped one of the highest members of the British aristocracy at his own door. The duke could hardly have offered & more striking proof that he was a gentleman by Instinct as well as by birth than by pocketing the uninten- tional affront to his dignity. Pigeon Records. Homing pigeons are the craze in England just now, and on one recent Saturday between 200,000 and 300,000 birds were released in various compe- titions. A number of these were raced to London from Retford and Branston. The distances are 127 and 113 miles, respectively, but no birds of the sev- eral thousand released made the trip in the traditional mile a minute, al- though every circumstance of wind and weather was favorable to record break- ing. Much better time was made in a from T be to London, in which one bird made the 108 miles in ninety-four minutes, an average of sixty-nine miles an hour, and = more than one hundred exceeded a speed of sixty miles an hour, One of the oldest homers is a bird which makes its home around the rail- way station at Liege, in Belgium. There is a train from Liege to Waremme which starts every morning at 10 o'clock. As soon as the train pulls into the station the bird com- mences to circle in the alr, and as soon as headway is gained follows the. train to its destination, returning immedi- ately home, where it flies about the station for the Test of the day. It pays no attention to any other of the trains and no one is able to offer an explanation as to why this particular train should be favored. A Great Irrigation Project. A great irrigation project, involving an expenditure of about $26,000,000 has been authorized by the Secretary of State for India. The area commanded by the canals is about 6250 square miles, although only a small part of it will be reached for a number of years to come. In this ares, it is estimated, about 3,000 square miles will be irri- gated. The water will be f1kén fggm the Jhelum River, in which there Is now ynappropriated at the site of the head- 'works a flow of 5800 to 7,900 cubic feet per second. It is believed that the investraent of public funds in these works, great as the sum. may be, is well warranted by the economic advan- tages of the undertaking, and the rea- sonable assurance of ample Interest payments Shunned Obligations. Two Scotch fishermen, Jamie and Sandy, belated and befogged on a rough water, were in some trepidation lest they should never get ashore again. At last Jamie said: "Sandy, I'm steering. and think you'd better put up a bit of prayer." "I don't know how," sald Sandy. "If ye don't I'll chuck ye overboard," sald Jamie. Sandy began: "Oh,'Lord, I never ask- ed anything of ye for fifteen years, and it ye'll only get us safe back I'll never trouble ye again, and--" "Whisht, Sandy!" said Jamie, "the boat's touched shore; don't be behoia- den to anybody." > City Ownership of Hens. The Mundesley (England) parish eouncll, which struck out a new line in municipalization by starting a poul- try farm, has realized profits on the first year's working which are equal to a reduction in the pari'h waxes of a cent and a fifth an the dollar. At Phillips, Maine; robbers blew op- en the vault of the National Bank, and secured $749 in silver and cop- tsh them all in will anor he deintiest fa clothes n nor x ree alls ka to destroy Rd ty balanced No Try Sunlight. Your maney refunded Hf you don't find t best. Make Home Dyeing Stu : : By Using Ag. there are weak, adulterated and worlhjess pi names sold by some dealers to w large hs the home success and comfort of our women and who ask for DIAMOND DYES to see that each " DIAMOND PACKAGE DYES Roware of common Jochen age dyes introducsd in fend to dye all materials ually well with one dye. relies snares and delusions. They ruin good dresses and all other ing, and are da ws to handle. #24 The Diamond Dyes are the popular howe slyes ull over dies at all times can depend upon their strength, beauty colors. Refuse all crude and weak dyes and to the relia Dye, and you are sure of suocess in home ---- DAINTY foe MODE RUBBERS They wear just twice as long as most Rub. bers, Any. one who has worn them will tell you that, WE ARE SOLE SELLERS. McDERMOTT'S SHOE STORE $0000 I@ WE FOLOO OBS a es - HER MAJESTY STEEL RANGE Is one of the heaviest and best Steel Ranges made, WE HAVE A SNAP In one of these that has been in use only a few months. It is a good size, No. 9, with top warm closet. Regular price, $48. It is Yours for $35 Spot Cash. REMEMBER--It carries with it our guarantee of satisfaction or money refunded. McKELVEY & BIRCH, 69 and 71 Breck Street, Kingston. Empire Typewriter Gives more value for the money than ary machine on the market. Visible writing--Very nortable. _ Price, $60. TT Second-hand machines rom $5 to $50. ceovEs os eee J.B. C. DOBBS & €0., 171 WELLIN STREET PROG OX ¢eNasmith"s Special Cakes. Crumpets and Muffins for Saturday at A.J. REES', Princess of p . Distillers to His Majesty hr. Pr vou buy Toye's hread you can be sure yo are best,

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