<a . Then he works them (throy nerves) till they get so 5 : that Exercise that they , any more help to do their du But Dr. Cascaret wan . the spot, in your Po where he can regulat Muscles all the time, out of health, Because, even the stro Muscles may be overwori Heavy dinners, late Suppers, ine, or beer drinking, nervous excite. ent, sudden exposure to o or Fe 'd a dozen other every day likelihood a e Bowel Muscles, Em In such cases a little Cascaret worth fifty dollars worth of Treatment ter on, to say nothing of the suffering scomfort, loss of Business Energy, and ss of Social Sunshine it saves, it : --it is weakness 1 dan, s beright on cket or Purse, e these Bowel. in health, ang in time - Old Dr. Cascaret carried constantly. in ur Vest Pocket, or in "My Lady's" urse is the cheapest kind of Heal rance, and Happiness - Promotion, that rer happened. Little thin enamel Cascaret Box, hat thick as your watch, round i nooth-edged, and shaped so tice its presence. oi soc. a box At all druggists [When Indigestion (irips You is not merely "something you ate' at the last meal n the stomach, A pain signal that something is wrong. Indigestion is the tomach's way of telling you that it cdn't or won't work, NOW is the time to take FRUIT-A-TIVES. These fruit tablets rest the stomach--bring out a copious flow of gastric juice at meal time--and make the stomach and intestines digest everything you eat. You know that Fruit-a-tives are doing you good --because there is * po more pain--no more sour stomach--no belching gas, Fruit-a-tives keep the stomach clean and bealthy--and ready to digest any sensible meal you eat while the constipation is entirely cured by their use. " Pruita-tives are most valuable in the home, We have used two hoxes and are to-day getting a third their merits. 1 find them especially good to take aud very cleansing in their action." Mrs. F. M. NORRISH, Calgary, Alberta. Fruit-a-tive: are pure fruit juices in tablet form. They act gently on all the organs of digestion--strengthen, invigorate, and cure, If there is anything wrong with stomach or bowels, curt yourself with Tne or Fruit Liver Tablets. Manufactured by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa Nature's which tells our opinion of for the children, pleasant ' Contains six Candy tablets--Price Ten! en(s a Box at any Druggist's. Be sure you get the genuine, made only r the Sterling Remedy Company, d ver sold in bulk. Every tablet stamped SCC." A Big box of tablets (to refill pocket-' x) at 50 cents. i Carry Cascarets constantly in Vest ocket, or Purse. A sample and the famous booklet, "Curse Constipation," Free for the asking. Ad- ess Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago New York. 69 BT tch the Scotch When you can't get without Aud have your feet comfortable, But it you perfer not to wear Rubbers. We can supply you with pair of Heavy » Sole Boots. One or the other is neccs- sary. let us show you what w OTCH Kings, good for iled on the estate te of Argyle by 14 nr Stans Distillers, Argyles Lire. a Specialty, Inspection of work invited. will be cheerfully given. 1 bave none but the best plum guarantee you first-class work. Brock Street. They cannot t. tantly ; simply d Pads not possibly be grip is fast; adjusted 40d corsets, "It's all in the clasp." Better and no dearer. Very pair guaranteed, CH Westwood & Co., Limited. A -- ee Re a magazine : Guided 1, ad 1 a B¢ A X y Those Whe ake. Issued Kiow » Have Bought Land > b (ots! 11] u 1 Caan e*pionatle evidence of confidence in i CS x Bartle," "Baste Company property at A nv b } the fact 1, rm Cuba, is furnished by J } i ve el 8! p | + "ho » al every intending purchaser. Yok SE tt Pron conciusive ar hay rr td, St. Jo 111} P. 1) ihe the pied with the fertility of the at "Bartle." C The Cuban' LIMITED Apply Telephone No. 70. 311 yu ifle per? GAME Bharani BE mbination R a go to TR Ree a A I 2 vorday SDHC vant 'man en'( 0 ad Woody, a Blackhog ph The Time Has Gome along any longer Rubbers! i, JENNINGS, King St, Plumbing ana Heating Hot Water Heating Estimates DAVID HALL "Phone 335. Fine hose ~ suffer no' injury if you use the C. M. C. hose-supporters clasps to hose unnecessary. Women's, Misses', Children's. At all dealers, Ask for them. CUBA LANDS © tavorable 1 y with the tr ocation of their lands, all : Prospect uy, "00 for Maps, Plans and Realty Co. e have. bers and slip or "Toronto. Price of Lands, $25 Acre J. 0. HUTTON, Agent Aiversity Ave, Kingston. necessar- "on More Terrible Than War! More terrible than war, famine or pes- tilence is that awful destroyer, that hydra- led monster, Consumption, that annually sweeps away more of earth's in- habitants than any other single disease known to the human race. 'It is only a cold, a trifling cough," say the careless, as the irritation wpon the delicate mucous membrane causes them to hack away with an irritable tickling of the throat. en the irritation settles on the mucous surface of the throat, a congh is the result. "To vent Bronchitis or Con- sumption of de Lungs, do not neglect a cough however slight as the irritation spreading throughout tho delicate lining of the sensitive air passages soon leads to fatal results, If on the first appearance of a cough or cold you would take a few doses of Dr.-Wqod"s Norway Pine Syrup you would save yourself a great deal of unnecessary suffering. Dr. Wood's Nor- way Pine Syrap contains all the life-givin| roperties of the pine trees of Norway, an or Asthma, Croup, Whooping Cough and all Throat and Lung affectionsit is a speci- fic. Be sure when you ask for Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup to get it. Don't be humbngged into taking something else. Price 25 cts. Miss Lena Johnston, Toledo, .Unt., writes + "I have used Dr. Wood's Nov. way Pine Syrup for. throat troubles after taking numerous other remedies, and must say that nothing can teke the place jof it. I would not be without a bottle of it in the house." MISTAKES OF THE WIRE. \ Oddities of the Telegraph Cause Queer Mistakes. The telegkaph operator, seizing a favorable" lll} said : "In: my. business a man has strange experiences. 1t 'was only yesterday GOVERNOR - GENERAL SENATOR KIRCHHOFFER TELLS A FEW INTERESTING STORIES. Earl Grey Spoken of In the Verna- cular at Ottawa as "The Real Thing"--Entirely Free From the Vice of "Incuriousness™ -- His Ex- cellency's "Wants to Know" of Value to the Dominion of Canada. Hon. J. N. Kirchhoffer has written for The Londen Outlook a personal sketch of Lord Grey as he is known by Ottawa officialdom, which differs materially from other biographical notes on Canada's Governor-General The article is, in_part, as follows: It may be said that all Governors- General of Canada have been popular. The office itself is popular, partly be- cause it symbolizes the Crown to a loyal people and partly because it has been occupied by a line of hospitable and agreeable nétables, of whom not a few have been men of brilliant 'parts. Canadians relished as an _entertain- ment the wit and vivacity of Lord Duf- | ferin, valued the steadiness of Lord | Lorne, admired the grand seigneur in | Lord Lansdowne, thoroughly liked @nd respected Lord Aberdeen, and were de- THE DAILY WHIG, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18. . TET sense of the hugesemfaract overhead, it is not surprising tthe workmen are not fond of seeing Visitors, ially ladies, in the great drift. . Jv , they have evolved a rs! "on. this point, perhaps be 'a0 accident. At any rate, are Supposed to bring or threaten bad luck. "It would be different if theyehud any business here," said a sowyr forgmah. :. ° How the $s Won: Him. Perhaps the countess had heard of all this. So she proceeded to have busis ness there. She wished to lay a brick, ' one of the millions in the lining. The workmen watchéd her take a trowel, work up deftly her allotment of mortar and place her brick in good shape. A lady capable of that feat could scarce- ly be dogged by demons of bad luck injurious to respectable workmen. Lady Evelyn enhanced this favorable view by skilfully fnsitating her mother, Her brick being well and truly lald, the Governor-General desired to put one in, but it oceurréd {0 him, fortun- ately, that however permissable brick- | laying by the ladies might be, no man might lay one in that tunnel without infringing the fron rule of the brick-! layers' union against work bY non- members. It would never do for him to cause a strike! Could not the mem- bers present waive a point and admit him to the union then and there, on payment of the usual entrance . fee? They could and did. He laid his brick to general satisfaction, and congratu- lated himself on being thereafter free | to take up the trade in any part of | lighted both by Lord Minto's soldiery and sportsmanlike qualities and his re- markable development .in statesman- | ship. Perhaps it was because each of these Governors seemed peculiarly identified with 'some distinct school of thought, or some set, or some party, or some method, of taking pleasure, that none of in the vernacular as "the real thing." Canadian eulogy can say no more. He his predecessors on the divinity which doth hedge a Governor-General with- a gallery can be said to exist in a country so little cumbered by either of the mild- Canadian variety, trying to definé the Earl's charm, art consists In his seeming uncommon- ly approachableness in consequence of himself approaching all sorts of peo- ple with genuine interest. Free From Damning Trait. But his most remarked quality, and it may account more than any other for his success, is an entire freedom from the vice of incuriousness, which Kipling selects as the damning trait of many Britons. Lord Grey always "wants to know." Now almost every- body . who does things and knows things likes to give information about them to sincere seekers for it. A rea- sonable inquisitiveness is as 'much a Canadian as a Yankee characteristic. He who possesses and evinces it, who takes and gives information readily, may be sald to "belong" all over North America. Lord Grey's shrewd curiosity is of great value to him, and not a lit- tle to the country. It helps him as a host, it often leads him afield for in- Spections, occasionally enables him to diffuse useful Information, and fit ¥ prompts an inclusive hospitality. Not only the official staff, but the unofficial friends, scout for interesting guests. To give one instance of many, Lord of growers and dealcra and s.!ppers dian staple, by imparting, in a public speech, some of the valuable informa- tion gained in table-talk with Nosse, the Consul-General of Japan. the same excellent authority, British Columbia. salmon-curers might profit by remembering that the heads, ; tails;ang fins, now treated as refuse of the canneries, are highly valued as food by the Japanesg and Chinese. Why not "Horse sense," says the typical Cana- dian, rubbing his eyes to behold a Gov- ernor of parts so practical Value of Curiosity. that 1.sent this message to a White players happened fo be telegraph oper o v ators, "Telegrams | are never punctuated Yon Know that. Well, this fact lost a Washington ~ man 8500 last May His wife was very low and he wirel to a Philadelphia specialist to come An hour latet the woman died, and the husband sent another wire, saving: 'Don't come. Too late.' "But, since the message arrived un- punctuated, "the Philadelphia, spe cialist abandoned 'everything and shot inte Washington on a special train. "Of course, he had to be paid, speciul train and all. where a lost period, a lost flyspeck of ink, was the same as a lost purse con- taining five: crisp $100 bills." % Balt For Cattle: Common. Seose' and 'many experi- ments teach that the proper way to 'ealt cattle is 10 provi it 'in suffi- cient quantity and make it accessible to them at all times. Salt should be placed: at' at least two different points where cattle' rux and they should be it. 'An animal will eat is absolutely 'he in this while if salt is given at frequent tervals, cattle, and particularly tening sieers, are apt to eat in- fat- much an important factor in preparing cat- tle for market, and the same care should be given 40, its use as to feed- ing. " -- Not ome 4n- twenty are free 'from come little ailment caused by inaction of the liver. 'Use Carter's' Little Liver Pile. The result will Be a pleasant sarprise. They give positive relied. The trust magnate believes in taking the world as he findd it, rouble . is he '4 ip. Mountain: hotel : "Hold. room for self and wife. Ten days." The answer came baek at--omee : 'We don't take dogs,' and: the couple that wanted to go to the hotel were horrified. Later the" explanation came. My message, it seems, had been incorrectly traps mitted as 'Hold room for self and wife. Ten dogs.' "Two sportsmen, one in Chicago and one in New York, plafed a game of billiards « by telegraph three vears ago. 'The two tables went divided in to small numbered 'squares, and at the ¢nd of each shot the location of the three balls would be telegraphed to the other town, where they would | be set up and tackled anew. The game Jastod « four davs, and would have, cost. a "mint ol mdney only the It was a case! allowed, 'to 'getidt whenever they want' no more than! way, more than is good for them. Salt is As an instance of the value of cur- fosity, not long ago there met at the Jovernor-General's table two men of diametrically opposite creeds. Mr. | Ralph Smith, M. P,, of British Colum- bia, represents, cherishes and is cher ished by the extremely Radical and a gressive Labor interest of his prov- ince, three thousand miles from Ot- tawa, on the Pacific coast; Col. Pel latt, of Toronto, interested in street railways, lighting companies, Niagara Falls electrical development, steam- boats, railways, a South American | power company and his regiment, the Queen's Own Rifles | suspected him of being also one of the largest shareholders in those coal mines of Mr. Smith's balliwick, con- cerning whose labor condition the Gov- ernor-General asked a question Ralph Smith replied shrewdly that the gentleman on the other side of His Ex- cellency could discourse instructively on the subject, as he paid out three or four million dollars a year to British Columbia labor. "At the rate of three to four dollars a day to each of the How foftunate for the Governor. Both sides of the great labor controversy present, and ready to talk. It may be tafely assumed that Lord Grey went | to bed that night knowing more of the | matter than he could have gathered in a month by any other plan. { . ¥ A Sour Foreman. Incidental to this discussion, there i was some talk of the Nidgara Falls electrical development. Lord Grey had heard something of the enterprise. It involves a prodigious tunnel under the huge cataracts above the Great Fail The exit of that tunnel is ih the mid- dle of the Horseshoe Fall, 150 feet un- der its brink, and curtained by a tor- rent 20 feet thick, the whole of which pours down 1,400,000 gallons a second, or the volume of about 320 rivers each discharging as much water as thy Thames at Teddington. The tunnel will rent 27: feet a second, and equivalent | in volumé to sixteen Thames. A fort- night later ghe Governor, his wife, far under the furious river in oflskins, motion of spray/and compressed air which is visiblé from the tunnels mouth. What with occasional dropping of bits of stone, tunnel, which cannot be wholly lighted by electricity because explosions of dynamite wrecks electric lamps, and a er ----------------rse---- - WATER-COLORS AND OILS, CHINA revelation kiln - to fire, Materials (of China , Pa sold. China mended "to st | Earl Grey "The Real Thing" } | was, as Earl Grey is, generally spoken | has insisted perhaps less than any of | out any air or playing to the gallery, if | nobbery or snobbery. As one Radical | said, his | Grey greatly pleased the whole tribe | concerned with wheat, the great Cana- | Mr. | At the same time he remarked, on | that | save for, and export to that demand? | Who could have: Mr. | downtroddesi miners," sald the colonel. | carry down to the lower river a cur- daughters and 'suite had all gone down | and witnessed that tremendous com- | the dimness of the TRACHRR OF CHINA PAINTING Canada. THE CLAY BELT. Varied Resources Shown In Report of Explorer H. L. Kerr. A detailed account of the resources and nature of the territory in the val- ley of the Mattagaml, in the neighBor- .hoo@l of Abbitibi Lake and river has been submitted to the bureau of mines by Mr. HA L. Kerr, Mr. Kerr went north in charge of an exploration par- | ty sent out by the Department last | spring. 'The expedition consisted of a | meologist and an 'agricultural expert, together with a number of surveyors { and voyageurs. Its chief purpose was to report on the possibilities of the country in the clay belt for settlement.' The following is an extract from his report: "Most of the time was spent on the Mattagami River. Topographically, that country may be described as made up of a vast plain with very oceasion- al abrupt elevations of considerable al- titude, from the tops of which the view extends for miles on all sides over land as level as a prairie and timbered large- ly with black spruce. = Towards the south this passes - into the . Rocky- Huronian belt. "The Mattagami itself is a splendid stream ranging from four chains in width In the upper part of its course to seven or eight chiaffis in its Tower stretches. It has in general, an even, gentle current, broken in several places by rapids and waterfalls. Several among the latter--Sturgeon Falls in Mahafty Township, Yellow Falls two or three miles below Speight's first base line, Island Falls, a mile below this, and Jump Over Falls, about three and a half miles below the mouth of the Mus- leg River,--offer splendid facilities for the development of water power. "Most of the rock exposures were | encountercd «ix or eight miles north | of Niven's Iirst Base line, and consist of various Huronian schists, with in- trusive masses of diabase. In places the rocks have been disturbed, and the | only economic mineral seen was lo- | cated. The small vein consisted of { galena, and the general make-up of the region, where the rock exposures occurred, would suggest that ft might be worth prospecting. The soil In this section of the country is sandy, and is forested chiefly with fair-sized jack pine and black spruce, Hurricanes of recent years have wrought havoc with the timber, and for miles we encoun- tered continuous windfalls. ' "North of this area the country be- eomes level, with good soil of elay and clay loam. Black spruce rather under the average size makes up thé greater' part of the forest, although some fine white spruce and frequent stretches of magnificent poplar and' balm 'of Gilead and white birch were observed. By far the best country from' an agricul- { tural point of view seem during the summer is that section lying west of the Mattagami, and between Niven's Third Base and Speight's Second Base. Here the timber is larger and the land dryer, being drained by three rather fair-sized rivers, tributaries of the Mat- tagami "Muskegs, which were met with only occasionally in the southern part of the country, became more frequent to- ward the north,+and In the extreme north cover considerable areas. Some of these contain several feet of ex- cellent peat, which may eventually prove valuable when the 'country is opened up. From the MNttle work done on the Frederick House and Ablitibi River I would infer that these peat bogs are more abundant in that region. "The Indian inhabitants are not very numerous, but those whom we saw seem to be prosperous, and some more industrious than others have begun to cultivate the land and raise potatoes and other vegetables." The expedition saw trates of beav- er, moose, 'red deer, bears, martens, ete: WHA currants, gooséberries, red: raspberries, and both high "and low bush cranberries, all comparable to Ahose in Southern Ontario, were abun- dant. Although slight frosts occurred in the early part of the séason the first of any consequence was on Sept. 28, when 9 degrees were registered. The Feeling of Autumn. On the 18th October John Burroughs wrote: . > The beginning of a change in the weather from very warm to cold and _rain, the birds suddenly very numerous 'and friendly, robins all about the ground piping and darting among the apple trees, sparrows flitting and chip- | pering about the house. A moment ago A sparrow came and tapped on my window and looked in foguishly upon ' me. Snowbirds are here, 'too, with their quick and almost spiteful ways. | Social robins dn the vines Shout and call in+festive mood; Ruby kinglet in the spines, Clucking ¢hipmunk in the wood. Alder berries red as blood w Gleim above the darkling flood; Drifting threads by spider spun Glance and tremble in the sun 3 botths flavering extract, 25c.: 2 tins choipe baking powder, 25c.; 1 1b. best eoroanut, 25e., at Myllin'«. Lilly White potatoes, dinest roll or print bidfer. Crawford FINE HUMOR AT te i MUCH OF IT 18 UNCONSCIOUS, BUT OF FIRST ORDER.. ~ . What Occurs When a Child Is Taught Orally and. Without Explanations-- Dr. Macnamara, M. P,, Gives Some Remarkatile Examples In His Work, "Schoolroom Humor" -- Some. Ab- surd and Amusing Stories. Dr. Macnamara, M. P, in his book, #Schoolroom Humor," has made a col- lection of children's mistakes and ab- surdities which is very amusing. Some of the stories are examples of uncon- scious satire; such, for instance, is that of the case of the boy who said that "the ¢narriage customs of the ancient Greeks were that a man had only one wife, and this was called monotony." Other stories show us the working ofa child's mind in the way in which it" has béen taught. For example, a boy who had learned his "Duty To- wards God" orally, being asked to write it down, produced the following: "My duty toads God is to bleed in Him, to fering! and to loaf withold your arts, withold my mine, withold my sold, and with my sernth te wirchp and give thanks, to put my old trash mn Hin" This example is fifty yéars old, but the book contains more modern results of bad teaching. Thus, a "child wrote down this ver- slon 'of the tenth commandment: "Thou shalt not cumt thy neighbor's house, thous shalt not cumt thy neighbor's wife, mornin' circus, momin' 'oss, mornin' ass, nor anything that is his' Many of the answers in the book show that the childrem had been taught mere isolated items of information, which they supposed to have no object ex- cept to provide questions in school. In such cases what is learned is only words. A child, being asked to name the chief mountains if Scotland, answered: "Ben Nevis, Ben Lomond and Ben Jonson." Dr, Macnamara thinks that girls are more conscientious than boys, and see sooner what is expected of them. ! A boy, being asked "Who was Guy Fawkes? replied: Guy Forks is a man made by another man," whereas a girl said: "Guy Fawkes was a man who tried to destroy Parliament." A child was asked to think of a crea- ture that wriggles about in the earth and sometimes comes to the top through a hole. "A worm," replied the child. He was asked to think of another ¢reature with the same habits, and cried in triumph, "Another worm" Lessons to that" boy were a kind of game of question and answer. Some other questions and answefs follow: "What is a celestial pole? "A heavenly perch" "What is poetry?" "Poetry is when every line begins with a capital letter" A child wrote of an imaginary expedition to the north pole. "At last we reached the morth pole. We sailed into the harbor and went to see the town" ; In an account of the Salvation Army & child wrote of the women: "They have names on their hats like sailors. They make a deal of nelse; the worsed two is called captain and leftennant." Another child defined a nib, as 'the thing (here Isn't when you buy a pen," whilé still another youngster described a fishing-net as "a lot of little holes Joined together by a bit of string." A teacher after explaining the use of the hyphen asked a boy why there was a hyphen in "bird-cage" The bay answered: "It is for the bird to perch on, sir" That boy, Dr. Macnamara says was among the dunces, but | was piobably because he was more in- terested in birds than in hyphens. His answer showed he had a trick of learn- ing things for himself, A Kindly Scot. The late Dr. George Macdonald was noted for his kindness. - He once went into & chapel at Malvern, records a blo- grapher, and was distressed beyond en- durance at the worn aspect of the dis- pirited preacher. When the service was high time he took a holiday, and that it was his duty to do so. He was met by the statement that it was Impos- sible. He asked that the officers of the chur¢h should be summoned. When théy came in he revealed his Identity, there and then the conduct of the ser- vice for the next month. But now # fresh difficulty arose; the gratified min- ister had nowhere to go, so George Macdonald told him that this was ess: fly settled. He could go te his own house at the seaside; and so the com pact was settled. correspondent), he went into a shop in the town in which he then résided, and seeing at a glance that the gir! who servéd him looked fragile and ill, he at the counter all day, and nursing a sick mother overnight. "Then" said he, "I will just semd one of my own girls to take your place every day for an hour or two, while you get a breath of fresh air'--and he was as good as his word. The Earl of Darnley. The Earl of Darnley, who took his seat in the House of Lords as one of the Irish representative Peers, says The London Star, restores. the number of thése noblemen fram Ireland to the full total of 28 provi under the act of union, a number not reached, In a #tricl sense, until 1886, when the late Viscount Powerscourt, sitting as a -re- presentative Peer, was raised to the Baronage of the United Kingdom. Though the Earl of Darnley enters the House of Lords in this manner, all his predecessors in the title since 1722 sat there In their own right as Barons Clifton of England. The Earl 8f Dam- ley is Baron Clifton in the Irish Peer- age, but he is only helr to the Barony of Clifton in England, now lield by his niece, the youthful daughter of his brother, to whose Irish Earldom he succeeded nearly five years ago. . The English barony descends through the female line when there is no direct male heir. The new representative Peer is a kinsman of the late Mr. Charles Stewart Parnell, having had a common ancestor in the father of Sir Henry Parnell, first Baron Congleton, a dis- tinguished' member of the House of Canumons in Lis time. Oculists will ride with engineefs in tha cab on the St. Paul to test the eyesight of the men, Theré are 701 Chinese laondrics in - Over one million ballots were cast in over he told the preacher that it was and described himself*as a preacher out of harness, but prepared to take On another occasion (says the same enquired the cause. She was standing THE beauty in every line of a "Canadian" Rub- _ ber pleases ,your . " ¥ eye. THe fit com- forts - your foot. The wear suits your pocket book. Look for "the mark of quality." Jn Overcoat That Should Appeal To You. As a man of . taste, the "PREMIER" ought to appeal to you. Tt is designed and tailored for just such men. i Fit-Reform patrons demand that their garments be the best that can be had for the money. See how completely the "PREMIER" Overcoat . sustains the Fit-Reform reputation. Ie Re $18, $20, $22. « Kingsto MAGNIFICENT Blue Fox Ruff FRE NO MONEY REQUIRED Think of it. a beautiful Na fashionabls (ur worn, given Was never made fotors. 1 is that wa arpanged for thes he dull season ju the t. The Ruff is 41 4 mehes wide, wide of tha handsomes very rich, soft and fully he samo shade ol "Picture Post-Cards ta peiint 10, a set (4 anda to a set.) They are bol rey rage, and sell Nike hos cakes. 2 - of Blue Fox, the most ately free. <Hueh an only reason wo bai to do handsome Furndur ng 1 at oon rio ver Yotore fo the wou en ¢ oi Yon emant 'y anything in the a ould look richer, be mare becoming. We Svs Jost Pt, Colon »~ Do not Jet King Frost worry you this winter. Get a FAMOUS HEATER Pinte pL nongep TL aig ls it, which takes the cold air from the floor and distributes it heated around the house through the top of the sto: Call and let us explain this heater to you. : LEMMON