and 80c. per 1b. ' At all . LOUIS, 1904. S WR wh, wm g R STORE--BIBBY'S TOCRry | he Tailors re Rattled excellent values we are yay of Suits and Over- custom tailor's prices. e sleep thinking of the g with our line of 1 Overcoats bd Suit or Overcoat at frankness and "sincerity yur Money u see our line at $12.50, 2lish Tweeds, Cheviots, yle and tailoring of ovr nce stamp them as ur- 7. till Going On 3IBBY CO. ar Store. RR wh wh § UARY SALE § ON are | pers, etc. 1es at special price, in- , Nail Brushes, Shelf ncing Knives, Whisks, ake and Bread Knives, ipa Half Price Tab'e yoods, some odd sizgs, goods. Some excellent general sale, so we have hey must go. We lose An out tag ends and get and see our display it , Horse Blankets and Packed at the Oven's Mouth i : - bs . : lings, Montreal. Clea : I Mee Ww. Barber is ntertalaing | Mics Edith Molson, only daughter | A Pisce SH Cle #,Rensoning. of at tea this _aftermosn, © lof Dr. Molson, to: Mr. Ri. V.-Van | ya RY e.,® Horne, both: of Montreal. | I was once in' the market place of a Mrs. Roderick Mackenzie has asked Miss Madeline Stevenson Burns, of city in the Decean, listening to a This a few people to tea at the Bank of | Mantreal, to Mr. John McFarlane, | tian Brahman preach the gospel. A Montreal, this afternoon, to meet Mrs. | Jr, eldest son of Colonel John ~~ Me- student from a college in Ceylon trans. Brigstockg, who came to town for | Farlane, V.D., J.P; DL; M.V.0, of | lated his words for me in excellent her son's wedding. | Kolvinside, Glasgow. ' | English. The preacher spoke of the ; PERFE g § . =u \ . » | Miss Gertrude MN cdeden. of Toronto, | pature of God, Infinite, 3h, sad. 1 Mes." Honky ~ Merrick has sent out {to Mr, . Wilfrid. Bulloch, Ganun- | sone all loving, When a Hinioo in cards for an "At Home' on Wednes- | oque. congregation began vehemently to oh 4 ; day, "January 17th, to meet 'the bride | te eu tradict. . The dispute bacon, 1 tee Ean oe and groom of last week, Dr. and Mrs. | 'The marriage of Miss Marguerite | gang tering a garden near at hand, | £ ELIA SRV TT No 5 AAU RRR) = tocke-Lesslie wedding party at lan- | Qames Methodist church Montreal, on vs: 3 sg ) pdis Mg eal, the Christian follows: "You declare matter where or when j cheon, to-day. after . the ceremony, fy 18th. sol pion Anite "Yes" "What is th The Bean and Mrs, Buxton Smith | rp the meaning of, infinite?" "It means you buy em. were included among the guests. | limitless." "And what part of speech * They come to your t ra. is good?" ¥Gqod is an adjective." "And "od o ud 1 what is the grammatical function of ble just as inviting and de- licious as though you ate' them at the ovens in the bakery. At all grocersin 1 and 3 Ib. paskages, | vesterday afternoon, class cadets. and from town. The young people played | games, and enjoyed it all very much ATMEETING THE ELECTORS OF KINGSTON the Candidature MR MCINTYRE, will be held in CITY HALL SRE, Fe TUESDAY, Jan. 16th delivered by R. R oF to promote DONALD M, Addresses will be Gamey, M.P.P. for Manitoulin, Mr. J B. Lucas, M.I*.P., for Centre Grey ElcCtors are invited to attend. Seats on the platform will be reserved for Ladies Chair to be taken at 8 o'clock. ri ------------------ CAUSE OF FALLING HAIR. Pandruff, Which is a Gernr Disease --XKill the Germ. Falling hair is caused by dandrufi, which is a germ disease. The germ in burrowing into the root of the hair, where it destroys the vitality of the hair, causing the hair to fall out, digs up the cuticle in little scales, called dendrufi or scurf, You can't stop the Talling hair without the dandrufi, and you can't cure the dandrufi without killing the dandruff germ. "Destroy the cause, you remove tho! effect." Newbro's Herpicide is the only Ki preparation that kills the dandruff germ. Herpicide is also ade lightfu] hair dressing. Sold by leading druggists. Send 0c. in stamps for sample to the Herpicide Co, Detroit, Mich. G. W. Mahood, special agent. a eim---- nem anil ENTER NOW Shorthand or curing Business Course. $ ao Busingss College : ¢ | For a Civil Service Head of Queen Street Kingston - - - Canada Spacious apartments, complete equipment, excellent results Thorough graduates individual petent every out and ex department the whole free. . J.B. McKAY, H.F. METCALFE ¢ President. Principal. % » > DR. A. W, CHASE'S 25c. CATARRH CURE... is sent direct to the diseased pits by the Improved Mlower licals the ulcers, clears the aif 5, stops droppings in the throat and permanantly cures Catarrh and Hay Fever. Blower free. All dealers, or Dr. A. W. Chase Medicine Co., Toronto and Buffalo. UNIVERSAL MEAT CHOPPERS, Carvers in Sets, The New, Easy Washing Machine Clauss' Shears and Razors all guaranteed at Strachan's Hardware Store. "Nash's News Depot Clarence Street, Opposite Cab Stand Removed from B. A. Hotel ALL THE LATEST MAGA- ZINES AND PAPERS 'Phone 490 ! 's. Cotton Root depend. hheth--o. 1, for ordinary enews, 31 per box: No. 2, \ stronger for he Eases, 58 per box. Sold by ali druggists. . Ask for Cook's Cot fon Hoot Compound ; take ne substitute. The Cook Medicine Cos passa; "a Windsor. Ontario Grand Union Hotel Rooms From $1,00 Per Day Up 3 Opposite Grand Geqtral Sutien BAGGAGE): FREE FOR SALE. {Gold in the { has lon Tuesday evening, January: tertained at & on raine Lesslic stocke. 1 Su John Bromley. . r . Miss Macaulay entertained the Brig- Mrs. John. McKay, Sydenham street, | cued cards for an "At Home." | 16th. Fuchre. - - - - pleasant little dinner, honor of Miss Mr. lo- | R. W. Brig- | Tuesday, i | Colonel and Mrs. Hunter Ogilvie en- | and | } Taylor gave a little tea, for the second Mrs. ET a few of the girls ifitleed. The first point match in the Ladies' Carling Club series, was played. this morning, and was won by Miss Flor- ence Cimningham.. "The point matches | are to be Thursday morn- | nings. and the | month will win the prize. { played on the best score of The Chicago banker and newspaper wo 88 | owner. who became financially involved | and life and death and my own soul The meeting of the Pah-pah-ping | and was ve on Oe us 'banks | --all are such stuffs as' dreams, having Wah Club was postponed i'l next | Ste iy self-made'. wien. He is one | no real existence, for that which is is f Xt | of Chicago's self-made wien. He began week. a an Ta mewsboy about. thirty | the Infinite. My own existence is illu- * * * . | vears ago. sion, like all the rest, excepting as 1 3 ; 1 If with the Mrs, Samtiel Birch . asked a few | RN Ir oni come to {identity myse friends of Mrs. Edgar Birch to tea on THE WEEK OF PRAYER. changeless, timeless, limitless, inde- | ---- Tuesday and Wednesday afternoons, to have a quiet little chat with her daughter-indaw, a. pleasure. that the smallness of both affairs made possible . - - - * Mrs. R. W. Garrett's party for Miss Mamie Garretty on Wednesday night, was a very jolly affair. Dancing cwas the amusement for the whole of the evening, and the boys and girls pre- | ye sent entered into it with heartwhole | Rev, . A. Mackenzie took for the | nought which is in the minds of most enthusiasm. subject of an interesting address, | English men and women to-day. To - . . . "Nations and Their Rulers." He | quote further: » | Mrs. John Macdonald is. entertaining at tea; this afternoon, for her daugh- | of . fc The *eatlets: wilt bé the hosts at ab; Mis. John McKay, Jr. will give a| tea to-morrow afternoon. aE ee Mr. Thomas DB. Macgillivray, who |s has been in' town on a two weeks' | § visit with his pavents, Rev. Dr, and | Mrs. Macgilliveay, has returned to New York. Miss Muriel King has returngd from Toronto. Mrs McKay, Sr... came from Montreel, last week, and is the | | | | | | John | { guest of her © daughter-in-lawy Mrs. | { | 1 up John McKay, Jr ; - - - . Mrs. Turner and Miss Isabel Turner, of Belleville, have come to Kingston to reside, and are staying at "Thistle. | © down," No. 132 Earl street. 1B) - -. * - | { Miss Mamie Garrett has been grant. | Mes. © Ro: 3). Mackie, and her little |t daughter, Marion. and son Dopelas, | are the go sof Mr. and Mrs. Alex- ander Mackie, on their way home from Ottawa, to Oshawa . tion. Mrs. Robert White, of Smith's Falls, | an old friend of this morning's bride, came up to see her married. Mrs R White is Mrs. Murray's, and will remain for several days. at Mr. E. Van Lesslie came up from Montreal, last night, to be present at his sister's wedding to-day. Mrs. Conroy. and Miss Loretta King- | sley, left on" Wednesday afternoon for | Boston, to spend a few days with | their brother, Dr. Kingsley. i gone down, 18 Pembroke for a few days' stay with relations. la 0 i» Captain Hector (. Reid, son of Mr. | George P. Reid, of the Standard | Bank. Toronto, showed sympathy for a closer union of the colonies, by | wmurrying Mig FE he Brock, of Woodville, Adelaide, South Australia, whom he met while at Mafeking. They are now in England, and will sail for | anada shortly, where the captain will be attached to the Army Service Corps. . ., . Kir James and Lady Grant will eele- | brate their golden wedding at -their | residence in Ottawa on January 22nd. | Sir James, although in his seventy- | fifth vear, enjovs' splendid health, as PIANOS, ORGANS, and Sewing = Mach second hand, all cheap at George, EONS en and 114 Gore he savs himself, ag well as he did hire res cee dady. Grant. who was a dawghter of Fdiward Malloch, 3 p., ior Carleton count for twen- sibs ------ Viy-five : - health. * | . Miss Jessie, daughter of Mr. Thomas | Fisher, to Mr. Fred Cr Godfrey, both ! Smith's Falls, will take place in | tended the week of prayer meeting in | Cooke's Presbyterian church, Wednes- day evening. This is the largest at- | tendance of the three meetings held at much profit to, all. The pastor, Rev. { Dr. MacTavish, presided. thought we should study the history | ter, Mrs. W. T. Miller. ing to be able to pray, intelligently, - » - skating party at ~the Royab-Military-4 by Reve. T. RB. Windross, Dr. Eby, | dle "lightly and raise a laugh as fre- College, to-rizht. and 1D. Laing, for Canada and the | quently as possible. In "society" the ih. | canversationalist who is habitually British empire, because we are of them: for the United States, because | they have a common destiny with us; | for and for Japan, because she is flushed with victory. | Queen Street G. S. Oldrieve Was Elected Presi- ing of the Kingston Horticultural So- ed. In the absence of the secretary, the financial report was read by the presi- od extension of leave and will not re | dent. It showed that aiter paying all | with an earnestness after serious turn to schocl until Monday next. expenses, there was a balance of $9.57 | thought in the great mass of people. . . in the treasury. A hearty vote of | Qur summer schools and correspond- during the past year. . | Harty, Edw. J. O11 friends regret very much the con | and Dr. Platt; president, G. 8. Ol . tinued. . serious illness of Mr. 'C. F.|drieve; vice-presidents, H.-W. Rich Divorce In Burma. Gi'dersleeve, and anxiously look for | ardson, W. .J, McNeill, R. J. Bushell, | Divorce in Burma is free It can be news of .an improvement in his condi- | W. H. Maen socretary-treasurer, L. | claimed by either party for any good . ce. vu 0» iT. Ww. Daly, M. E. a Yeuncis Bottersl came up from i Harowsmith, dan. iL he district ! his or her own property, and ail pro- real, on Tuesday, to attend Miss | L.0.L., of Portland held their annual | party acquired, jointly during married Lesslie's wedding : meeting at Harrowsmith, choosing the | life, as by trading, ls divided equally Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Ransom and following officers for the incoming | But the claimant of the divorce must their family, came to town, on Mon- | year x W. Wallace, -D.W.M.: W. R. | jeave the house and all the household day, and many people called at St. mek, D.D.M.; B. X. Buck, D. Chap.: | goods to the other. If it be the wo- James' rectory on Tuesday to see R. D. Wartman, D. recording-secre- | man, she may remove her Joom; if it be Mrs. . Ransom. tary: B. Wallace, D. financial secre- | the man, he may take nothing. Thus Mrs. Arthur Ross wint up to Camp- | tary: J. Truscott, 1. treasurer; W.! there is a certain penalty on claiming bellford, yesterday, and will remain a Jamieson, D. treasurer; W. Jamieson, | a divorce, but it is not a large one.-- woek "or ¥0. D. director of ceremonies; George | Blackwood's Magazine, | Sharpe, J. committeemen London Daily | following morning il was found in its | | of the 6700 constituencies have sent in| returns, and these indicate the return | ; TT i ' : - THE DAILY - WHIG, THURSDAY, "oi weir INDIAN PHILOSOPHY 'he engagement is announced of : | 2 YA CHRISTIAN BRAHMAN IS PREACHING GOSPEL. Years, x y ud 9 fof Toronto. The marriage will take | Premier, Sir Henry 4 ilight {place on the 17th inst. | Camphell-Eahuerinan, in "Mainly ¥ | Miss Laura Snowball, daughter of | . ut People." Here are some of the & @ | the Lieut.-Gov. and Mrs. Snowball, Odd Dispute Between a Hindoo '| things he says: : i - | New Brunswick, to Mr. Henry Rol- | and the Christian Brahman-- | C.-B. will indeed be an easy task- llivan. daughter: of the late Mr. W. | of St. t§ sit dowir under the trees and have the discussion to an, end. The sub- stance of it was this: The Hindoo asks Sullivan, to Mr. Robert Lyle, an adjective? "To limit a noun." "How, then, do you apply an adjective to God, calling him good and thus lm- iting the limitless?" By this philosophy, therefore, God cannot be described,' no adjective ap- plies to him, and we can neither preach about him nor urge any to worship him. How, then, can we have anything to do with him? In the conversation' de- scribed above the Christian Brahman took his turn in asking questions: "You belleve in God as infinite?" "Yes, 1 so believe." "And you say that no ad- jective can be applied to him?" "1 so affirm." "How, then, can you distin- guish him from nething?" You ecan- not by logic or discourse, but you may by long process of contemplation or of asceticism bring yourself to a place where you will understand. Then it will appear to you that God is the on- ly realily and that everything which men regard as rea) is an illusion--earth and man and sky and devils and gods JOHN R. WALSH, scribable ultimate and absolute. ------------ The Rage of Flippancy. What the editor of London Truth calls a revival of the flippant spirit which had almost died out in the mid- dle of the last century leads that pa- per to indulge in some sharp criticisms of English seclety. It says that the flippant spirit is a feature of the mo- ment, "Give me information or enter: tainment, but not instruction," is the Cooke's Ohurch. More than four hundred people at- it, and it is felt that they are of In the House of Lords and House of Commons the earnest, argumehta- tive speech is either extinet or is not listened to; the speakers who command attention treat the subjects they han- f the nations and their present stand- yw them. A very sweet solo, was sung v Mre! Nelson. Prayers were offered part | disposed to suggest serious matters is avoided--unless the subjects he men- tions are' connected with the making of money. The simplest.nonsense is considered the best. The carefully written leading article in the neWwspa- pers is being rapidly replaced by lead- erettes which may be described as para- graphical escapades. The private let- ters of the day are almost always writ- ten in a flippant style among those who affect to possess intelligence and the mental attitude of their generation. Long accounts of experiences and im- pressions are diminishing in number rapidly in private letters written by men and women of the kind, and in their place are attempts to be witty which are not always successful." This spirit of flippancy has made {ts appearance in certain circles of our own country, but it is happily offset Russia, because tate of turmoil; he is awakening of her present for China, because from a long sleep; The meeting to-night will be held in Methodist church. HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. dent for 18906. Wednesday evening the annual meet- ity was held in the city buildings. he president, Lieut.-Col. Kent presid- ence clubs are evidences of a wide- spread thirst for useful knowledge. The flippant style and the flippant thought are in vogue in certain forms of literature, but their effect is evanes- cent. hanks was passed to Licut.-Col. Kent | or his energetic: services as president | For 1906 these officers were elected: {fonovary presidents, Hon. William BB. Pense, Dr. Ryan ---------------------- reason; such incompatibility of tem- per, and' carries no slur with it. No lawsuit is required. They go to the village elders, in a town to the elders | of the quarter, and a divorce paper is | drawn up that defines all arrangements as to property and children. The law as to property is this: Each. retains A. Guild: directors. Lieut.-Col. Kent, | England. GG. W. Bell, 8. N. Watts, H. Philips, Nicol, James Flanagan and W. F. Nie George kle. District L.0.L. Portland. Smith, J. R. Godfrey, lecturers: A.J. | Truscott, L. Ruttan, = J. Buck, 'W. Bradford. Uisge, Whiskey. When you ask the peasant boy in Scotland whom you meet after your dip in the river what is the name of the river, and what is the Gaelic for Mail. water, the river, he says, is called tht Jamieson, B, $. Dog's Long Journey Home. Mrs. Parson arrived vesterday from |. An instanen of the homing instincts | pox and the Goelic for water is uisge Montreal, to visit her sister, Mrs, | in dogs is reported from Buckingham- | «rjsge!" you say. "That sounds very cue at "Edgehill." shire. Constable Atkingon, having | much like whiskey" And so it. is un- Leta Carson returned from |} 8 transferred recently from Wrays- | questionably, as the schoolmaster may Bell » yesterday. | bury to Long Creedon. took his re-| toll you, ulsgebeatha, the full Gaelic Dr. and Mrs Johy Bromley have' triever dog with him, while on night | for the strong drink of the mouritains, 3 , duty. He missed the dog; and on the nor less than a being neither more compound of uisge (waler) and beatha J[lite), evidently the Latin vita--eau de vie, ag the French call it. But what is uisge, which appears also in the name of more than one Scottish river? Esk is simply uizge, the water, the old- est form of the Latin wood's Magazine. old home: By the most direct route the jour- ney is over fifty miles, and had been accomplished in little more than seven hours. ------------ How C.-B. Will Fare. { The London Daily Mail is canvass | ing ' the electoral districts of Great! Britain td gauge how - the next house] will stand. Five hundred and fifty out | Swinburne's Lost Vote. Algernon Charles 'Swinburne, poet, lost his vote at the Wadsworth revision court, of 320 liberal, labor and home rule Theodore Watts-Dunton. The claim candidates against 230 Unionists. | 'was resisted on the ground that Mr. Thal. means a net gain for the new! Watts-Dunten only was recognizéd as government of ..+ seats. ------ Danderine for the hair i= sold at] i Gibson's Red Cross drug store, struck off the list. Clever Journalist Talks of the New about the new master. In private life--indeed, in pub- . fic life as well--C.-B. isa't in the least like the caricatures which have been published of him by those whogdo not J know him, He is--I think I have writ- ten this before----more like a Scotsman of the eighteenth than of the twentieth century. Nothing would have delighted him more -- nowhere would he have been more at home than among those wits, students, philosophers and judges who made the table of the capital of Scotland one of the wittlest in all Eu- The aqua. --Black- the He claimed a quall- fication as the occupier of a house in Putney, which he inhabits Jointly with { the occupier by the landlord. and al- | though it was stated that Mr. Swin- burne paid half the rent and shared the household expenses, his name was British Premier. Mr. T. P. O'Connor has been talking rope. He is also un eighteenth cen- tury Scotsman in his intense love of French literature. There is no. more constant student of modern. French books than the Liberal leader, though Mr. Balfour and Mr. Chamberlain run him hard. Mr. Chamberlain, I have heard, when he is utterly fagged out can read a French novel when he can't look at anything else. Mr. Balfour, it F Janua LADIES' COATS in black, grey, Oxford and Tweed effects, some loose back and some semi-fitting, all lined ; price were from $5 to. $10. Clearing this week at GIRLS' COATS. choice goods in fancy navy, » Oxford and dark fawn, all lined ; to Clearing thy week BL .ueeeresnsssisesassiasisiiassussasansnas { GIRLS' SKIRTS dark greys and navys, nicely self-trim- med and finished with buttons, "sizes 24 to 29; wer $2.25. Clearing this week at cocina LADIES' WINTER SKIRTS, sizes 38 black and navy : were priced at from Clearing this week at .........ccos Any Untrimmed Colored Felt Mat In stock, 26e. I be not mistaken, has a good supply of French literature in the House of Commons to console him during the long hours of waiting which are im- posed upon him by the necessity of being always at call during every sit- ting of the House. But I doubt it either of these two distinguished gen- tlemen could pass an examination in modern French books with C.-B. 1 have never known him, certainly, at a loss, even when one talked about the obscure figures in the lesser-known: books of Balzac's immense library. C.-B. has also a very ready wit. His wit flows spontaneously, continuously, and without either - effort or pause. That was a delightful answer he gave on the spur of the moments to one of" his followers who asked why it was that when he went to Bath the streets were ajl ablaze with the advertise- ment of "C.-B. corsets." "I assure you, my dear fellow, that my figure is perfectly natural" To appreciate the joke one has to realize that C.-B. has the stout, strong figure which is characteristic of the hardy Scottish race to which he belongs. If you do not realize this side of him when he speaks in the House of Commons It is not that he does not say plenty of wit- ty things in his speech. But he has not, as he himself puts it, the "gift of the gab" or, at least, he imagines he has not, and the result is that he prepares his speeches with great care, and almost with labor. Before him as he speaks there is always the manu- soript, which, if it does not contain every word of the speech he is deliver- 4ng, at least contains almost every word. An orator thus tied and shack- mere fact that it is read, not spoken. But if you read his speeches you will realize how clever, how adroit, how full of the humor Scotsmen call "paw- ky" they are. Finally, C~B. is the least pretentious and one of the best- natured of men. You will see him in the lobbles of the House ready to listen with equal patience to even the ob- scurest members of his own party; he suffer fools gladly. Steady nerves and easy temper, tremeftdous self-control, these things enable him to endure an amount of boredom that would drive other men mad. He says himself he has no ambition; but no man is with- out ambition. ee ------------------ "Familiar Quotations." John Bartlett, author of a book which has proved a boon to millions of read- ers, dled recently, and the obituary notices call attention to the'fact that his compilation of "the finest lines in literature" has grown In half a cen-~ tury from 200 to 1,200 pages. Collec- tions of quotations have been in exist- ence in the language of all learned races as far back as the records go. Incidentally they have been invaluable in helping busy brain workers to a tell- ing phase and correcting a treacherous recollection. And there Is really no pastime in literature which has more honorable traditions than the search for jewels of phrase. Macaulay, Hallam, Tennyson and Figgerald were among its devotees. Kipling in a recent story quotes two passages. which, in his op- inion, transcend all other poetry, and that means that he has searched not a little among the gems of verse. One is from Samuel Taylor Coleridge's mys- tical fragment, "Kubla Khan": A savage place, as holy and enchanted As eer beneath a waning moon was haunted By woman walling for her demon lover. This passage does not appear in Bart- lett's collection, but the other, from Keats' "Ode to a Nightingale," is found there: . Charm'd magic casements opening on the foam Ot perilous seas in faery lands for- lorn. 'A quotation book materializes, as it were, the wraiths of long forgotten and cherished phrases and makes access- ible without original search passages which the user knows are there. Bart- lett's work supplied this need and has grown to wide usefulness, BASE London's Craze For Palatial Flats. London has the -palatial flat craze. Rents' are to be $15,000, exclusive of taxes and rates, in the new milllonaire's flats, as the building on the site of Gloucester House is already called. In this structure there will be all eleven ropm suites, with an unheard of lux- urg, a servants' hall! The drawing- room and adjoining boudoirs can be thrown together, making a roomy ball- room, and each flat is to have three bathrooms, but unless the greatest pre- cautions are taken to pad the walls and floors those possible balfrooms will be a nuisance. One might as well live in any old flat, where neighbors pound planofortes and singing exercises goon all day and night, as to pay $15,000 rental fos this ballroom, servant hall magnificence, ett -- A Mutilated Adage. The apparently selfish saying "Every- one for himself" is really only a part of the original proverb, which, when used in its entirety, bears a very dif- ferent construction: it should be: "Everyone for himself is care for all." Pain from indigestion, dyspepsia once by taking ome of Carter's Little Liver Pills immediately "alter dinner. Don't forget this. : JAMES REID, ™&. Phone Clean Sweep of Ladies' Ski dies' Cloth Skirts on THURSDAY MORNING we begin a most. e markable slaughter of all the and too hearty eating, is relieved at} Sectionalf/ : z ay EN a A house is incomplete without a : Sectional Bookcase. SR Also Brass and Iron Bedsteads, Spring Mattresses to fit, Friday and Saturday ~~ * of all the odds in La- In order to clear and make a clean sweep Fall and Winter Skirts remainir Jed to his notes is rarely as effective . . y as he might be, and a brilliant speech stock. The assortment is very incomplete, the sizes i y . » ie ie may be made to appear dull by the { oyery line. We are making two lots of them---the $3.50 ones $1.79 and the $4.50 grades for $2.17. $1.79 FoR SKIRTS WORTH § © About fifty of these all pure wool cloths and made in the winter styles, in sizes from 38 to 42 lengths. $9.17 For skins worth $4, In this lot there are only twenty all wool, light-colored tweeds, } made of best imported Scotch materials, but all short - lengths. Only sizes 38 and 39 left in this lot, and not one worth less s_than $4.50. Thursday Morning - TH The James Johnston Store 180 WELLINGTON STREET. Sidi wining, YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN There is no investment that will give you greater your Lime and money than that invested in procuring & or wi bructioal BUS EDUCATION-It makes : Frontenac Business College % SOR. BARRIE AND. CLERGY STS. i: orough courses in mercial subjects. A de wens and experienced pment none. Der very moderate and Eps Bi good .o $ FL DAY AND EVENING CLASSES. Fy Call, write or 'phone for catalogue and full information ¥ Phone 680, T. N. STOCKDALE, Principal. * SHANNON FILES & CABINETS: Transfer Cases. Card 'Index Outfits. Special "Patient's Record" Cards for Doctors and Dentists. he Typewriter Ribbons and Carbon Papers. J.B. C. DOBBS & (0., 171 Wellington § Typewriters for sale, to rent, repaired. = | SPE 85 $EPPPPPP OOO OOOO GOO000OO000000000Q000 FINANCE AND INSURANCE G.-A. BATEMAN | [f You Want 2 Home : Or Insurance, have a ALL KINDS OF FIRE INSUR. : ANCE AT LOWEST RATES talk with District Agent Sun Life Assur- ance Company of Canada. 69 Clarence Street, Kingston For Real Estate or Insurance 'Consult with GEO. CLIFF before buying st 65 Clarence pers shh "> OOOO OOOOOO0O000 i Corsets 25, 40¢., 50¢. and up. New| Reform. 7 uart rubber hot water bo (seamless) st Wade's. sey,