Also most forms of the following. oe y Liver Tog es Ww oud) » inflammation Ouen's y, OF Catarrs : Masey --usually indicate oo Sibu blood. In parr debility © 3 germ arige, Mb remarkab) Liquozmue ac ® results, to let the product itself es you, accept it 3 Justice to t it today, for it plas. 20, obligations won Pe you Liquozone costs 50c. and nhs COUPON Under SUPPLY ig 8 500 DOUID [160 1 wii) tan na 0- Fil it out and mail it te 10 The Liguozgng ie [ Pay, 68-164 Wabaah Ave, Clicage, > o My disease ls.............,... & 1 have never tried Liquomone, but 18 eee: y- Note that this offer applies to Any physician or hospita, ne aL will be gladly supp For a ross *t U8 Liguasy Tale Vichy Water : ¢ French Republic. | ..Mantrealy [ak ------ E TES you have any doubts about umbing and drainage not be- fect, have it tested, don't be d by other imaginary tests. he best. We have the ma- , and the workmen, and hav- t introduced the system in' ality are in a position to give atisfaction and security from ases. Our charge is mod- y be the Only Test for Plumbing, T B ROS " 'Paone 35. ho: upied by Thomas Mills. 'Y d by Fenwick Hendry & Co. ion, 'occupied by G. S. Briden. e, occupied by W. Bowen e, occupied by Mrs. W. Benn Princess, occupied by C. E de Car Princess, gceupied by Mrs. F. Cotter, Princess, occupied by J. P. H. Ferris. of Union, now occupied by Dr. Hors t, 1905, and may be inspected between ul, A full lot deep, soil and first on property," wmorth of Princess 1 drainage. street, near Union. urchases, A : sh, _and balance may remain on rs or less, ld subject to present tenancy. bloe. : en for rental for a term of » Pos 24nd 4 pan JNNINGHAM NERS CE STREET pected between is the life of Vil. Scotch." ting it and comparing it he market it is found "4 tillers, Argyleshire. peautifu 4 A Painting, size ing Oil sated on fine pli fising matter is gl coupons, one the very bottle of BOVRIL. This Bonus mium pictures. most ¢ On the grass 16 & Chi a ons i i Christendom plan- \hiree beautiful children have sp: picnic table cloth. the allied fleets of Christen lan- | ls. As in other seaports of the Le Sr yihing indicates wealth and helt or ban. the cake ani ned to make a demonstration against walls. he i i) i also, though Rally in Force. frail Siidren are daintily attired. Standing abort and gazing with the Turk. Faetional fghla etme the | it consists of only six or seven sweit- | Newburgh, Feb. 18.--The' Epworth wonderin wistful ro ner Barefoot and evidently fortu- sympathizers of the Ce m ety law | meat and tobacco 'shops, terminating | Loague rally in the Methodist church a tiny BI Sly possessions. 3 ee tot Greek patriots in Le " {| at its further end dn, an open air | on Monday evening, was a t sue Bhe picnic party, visi sou of the best, bE the, Tuneheor a5 flats months threaten to make the haunt of | blacksmith's forge for shoeing the | cess. Over 130, members leagues, carried before her. is gentle grace her 1° FheSittle barefoot the Minotaur the scene of mens Ae n> | pack-donkeys of the island. | irom Wesley, Colebrooke, Camden Jenseting. nba yet del ighted by this mediate prospect of al complications. Samos has been ald Just beyond. the: forge lies the bee | East, Morven, Violet and Selby, and. good things and,is shyly putting out a little brown hand to receive. the lime light several times since { ginning of the roadway: leading up to | of the Christian Endeavor of . Altogether the picture is one of the most charming con- ceptions, and is sure to please and delight. rime beef is concentrated in four ounces of BOVRIL Bovril is prepared ouly by BOVRIL LIMITED, LONDON, ENG., and MONTREAL, CANADA By special appointment Purveyors to His Majesty King Edward VIL Seve Coupon overneck of Bottle and secure this Picture. Eight pounds of p The New Bovril Premium «Little Lady Bountiful" | gravure reproduction of Mr. Fred Morgan's 2834 inches by 193{ inches, ate paper 40x 30 inches, with no adver- ven Free to users of BOVRIL who save" of which will be found over the neck Picture must not be confused with cheap It is a work of art worthy a place in the ultured home: « The subject is extremely interesting. Ss Si a lake a mother { @ I k 9 i DIAMOND DYES iaduce' Speculators to. Introdué Weak and Yarthion re, true home helpers mothers and every woman's DIAMOND DYES, and money Savers for i are dear 10 heart. A Recently, specualiors have _gone in- to the package dye tghde with the view of gaining a share of the im- mente and ever inereating trade held of the DIA- bv the manufacturers ¥OND DYES, but all such efforts will, as in the past, result in failures, popular, for the simple reason they have not one good quality to boast of. The merchants of Canada who were induced to buy these adul- trated package dyes now find them dead and worthless stock. The progressive and busy druggists and dealers of Canada sell only. the MAMNOND DYES, which have an es- tablished reputation of over twenty- five years. The. modern merchant has not the time or inclination to en- coutage the sale of worthless and de- ceplive goods. If our Canadian women desire full brillant and fast colors, they should at. all times ask for the DIAMOND DYES, the only guaranteed puckape dyes in the world. When buying pack- dyes, see that the words DIA- MOND PACKAGE DYES are on each fathet handed out by vour dealer. ells & Richardson Co., limited, Mon- tral, P.O, will send free to any ad- dress their New Dye Book, Card of Iyed Samples, and new book in verse entitled "The Tongiohns' Trip to the Klondike." This little book is inter- | sting thousands. Dollar Package FREE 'Man Medicine Free You ean now obtain a lar ge dollar size I Package of Maa Medicine--{ree on request. oe Medicine cures man-weakness. Man Medicine gi the Jostul satis ysical pleasure, the keen sense of " don, the luxury of life, body wer and body. Shion trea. Man Medicine does it. deb iedicine cures man-weakness, nervous Y. early decay, discouraged manhood, Hoa! ailure, vital weakness. brain fag, he, > ostatitis, kidney trouble and You an cure yourself at home by M; . She, and the full size dollar Package wil Mon. full dies y ee, plain wrapper, sealed, w Sister OW to use it. The full size dol dg ©, no payments of any kind, no 1 al S, 00 promises, no papers to sign. It is tree. hs wani to know is that you not send- i t out of idle curiosity, but that you want well. and become/your strong natural self pore. Man Medicine will do what you hake you a real man, ma-1ike, A address will bring 1t: all you send and get it. We send jt free iraged one of the man sex Inter~ CouqrgLuck Bidg., Detroit, Mich. Powe =), Your name Mave todo is to Wevery dis Site Remedy TO MIS MAJESTY THE KING & SirJohn Power& Son Led. ESTABLISHED AD. 1791. THREE SWALLOWS IRISH WHISKEY Famous for over a Century for its delicacy of flavor, Of highest standard of Purity, It is especially fecommended by the Medical. Profession or Account of its peculiar DRYNESS" ® To Remove Onion Odor. © 8 band I have been handling onions : » remove the ad {your hands, ru, them well Fgh Eating celery will re- ion of \eelery ove i the odor of onions from the me Extended Popularity of | FREE FROM TUBERCULOSIS. fhe crude and worthless: dyes Wrought out in opposition to the DIAMOND DYES, can never become that } Manner of Preparing Food is Benefit to Health. That the Jews until recent vears had been tolerably free of tuberculosis was the statement made, Thursday nights by Mise--Annio--Damer,.Superin:. tendent of the tenement work in con- nection with Bellevue hospital of New York in speaking before the Nurses' Alumnae Rion in the Y.M.C.A, parlors, i The original laws as laid down by Moses were still adhered to by the orthodox Jews and the manner of pre- paring the food was one of the great- cst preventives : of the spread of the disease. The work, said the speaker, was in the slums of the city. Details of how the roof tops and. fire escapes in order to let the = sick have the fresh air were given. In many of the rooms there was abso- lutely no light. "One of the greatest difficultics we have to cope with is the refusal of the men to stay away from their families long enough to efiect a cure," said Miss Damer. "They are of the opinion that their families are in want. To ameliorate this some-of the charitable institutions have got together a fund of some $20,000 to be paid for the sustenance of these families." Miss Mitchell, of the general hos- pital out of door "tiberculosis Work, said that Wer experience with = the Jews™ of Toronto. although of only short duration, led her to believe that tuberculosis had heen an almost unknown quantity until three or four were used years ago. Even now among the stricter Hebrews it did not seenre much foothold, anr-------- A WRONG ADDRESS. -- Really sthe Praise Belongs to Laurier. Toronto Star, The Ottawa Journal pays a pleas- ing tribute to Mr. Whitney for his fair- ness and good sense in appointing Mr. Hastings inspector of buildings mm or der to compensate him for his loss of the office of license inspector." Mr. Whitney's critics, says the Journal, will say that he takes this means of removing a powerful opponent from the field; but it is more probable that Mr. Whitney was actuated by a desire to repair the wrong done by his col- leagues in the premier's absence, "He has shown his ifdependence by ap- pointing an avowed liberal to a place of some responsibility wnder a conser- vative administration, and he has giv- en his enemies within and without his party some evidence to convince them that he is master in his own adminis- tration." Mr. Whitney, as he reads this eulo- gv, may heave a sigh and wish that it had heen deserved. Possibly, also, he may not feel sorry that the reparation to Mr. Hastings has been made in a vicarious manner by the Laurier gov- ernment, from which the appointment did come. The Journal, though it is in error as to the source of the appoint ment, is souna as to Mr, Hastings' qualifications, it points out that he was a practical builder before he en tored the civil service, and has always been known as a man of common sense, probity and fearlessness, "a good combination of qualities for the public service." All it has to do is to re-address its letter, and have it mail- ed to the Laurier' government. Unreasonable Men. Men say they cannot stand paint, powder make-up cosmetics "of - any kind or anything that many women use to make themselves look fresher than they really are, yet they expect wo- men to have an ever youthful complex- jon and never to look fagged or worn out, They relegate to women all the petty eares of the houschold and often leave the wife in the-morning in a with the old worn out advice : "Now, complete chaos of domestic afflictions don't worry." a------ The Feminine Appetite. How many women are there bless of with a healthy appetite which isa constant source of . martyrdom to them. No matter what her inner crav- ings Way suggest, when a woman dines away from home she knows that the interest she awakens is not un. connected with the many good things she refuses. : | e-------------------------- To get relief from indigestion, bili- onusness, constipation- or torpid liver, without disturbing the stomach or purging the bowels, take a few doses of [AN AGEAONG SLEEP ISLAND WHERE ST. JOHN appearing in history. day it was the ancient Lesbos, in modern times by the i old-time capital, Mitylene, at which investigations and Fuboea have kept in the public eye. Very few, t tlie members of the Grecian archipela- | go, barren they are, have entirely of notice. antiquity, hardly the apostles, Patmos, ) miliarly spoken of, though seldom vis- | breadth of the Christian world edifices stand in commemoration St. John. Great and grand, cathedrals, churches and chapels, they cover a period of tory extending from the day the conversion of Constantine Christianity civilization down to the present time. St John passed the long days of-his to ome Present Day Scenes--Many |, the Picturesque Spot Around Which Cluster © Historical Facts. The Isles of Greece, "where burning, | apho loved and sung," are forever re: Just the other same of its | © ireek war for independence, and the European and Am- Delos, Aegina | those islands | in fact, of of rican archeologists. in untenahted though ' drifted out | and Even the least known of them all in 1 mentioned by the ic writers, but made famous | sions of the best-heloved \ we-histc d of | is frequently fa- | ww the | out the length and | many of { small, humble ted. For through and his when made of the official religion At one end stands the little chapel built by the piety of the simple fisher men of Patmos above the cave w here banishment from the mainland of Asia Minor. At the other are the central areh and the columns of the cathedral of St. John the Divine now erecting at the cost of a king's ransom and years of thought and patient toil. The | contrast between the capital-of the new world and the barren island in the Grecian archipelago, between the wealth of the twentieth century and ! the provincial village of the Roman empire, is typified-by the unlikeness of | the two structures, High up on a steep hillside of the little island of Patmos is still to be seen to-day the natural cave in which | St. John lived for many years and wrote his "Revelation." The cave, roughly divided into two compart- ments, is cut deep into the solid rock, the walls are damp with the natural moisture of the earth, and the only light comes from a simple candle burn ing before an ancient shrine. The island itself lies well away from the beaten track of the commercial | traffic of the world. An occasional steamer, perhaps some brig or bark- entine blown out of her course, an island trading vessel now and again and the native fishing hoats belonging Woman's Need At the Critical Periods of Her Life and How it is Best Sup- plied By DR. CHASE'S NERVE FOOD. We are sometimes asked why Dr. Chase's Nerve Food is so successful in curing the ailments peculiar to women | and this is 'the explanation : The feminine organism is a regular network of nerves, and consequently requires an enormous quantity of rich, | nourishing blood. | At the critical times such as the dawn of womanhood, the child-bearing | and nursing age and life, nerve force is consumed at a tre- | mendous rate. | The blood is drawn away from other | parts of the body, and the result is neuralgic pains and aches, failure of the digestive system, and a run-down condition of the body generally. Dr. Chase's Nerve Food supplies ex- | actly what is most needed at these | times--the very elements from which rich blood and vital nerve force are made. | Women who suffer from weakness | and irregularities, from painful periods | and distressing headaches, froin tired, | wornout. feelings, and the disorders of digestion, will be surprised at the | benefits obtained from the nse of the) great food cure of Dr. Chase. ! Mrs. Charles Keeling, Sr., Owen Sound, Ont., writes : "It is a pleasure to tell what benefit 1 have derived from Dr. Chase's - Nerve Food. I am about fifty-five years old and for about five years my life was one of great suffering from nervousness, weakness and extreme physical ex- haustion. I could not sleep and hot flushes would pass through my body from feet to head. 1 consulted my fa- | mily physician and two other doctors, | bat they told me that about my time of life I was likely to be troubled that way. 1 continually grew worse and despaired of ever beiny cured. Dr. Chase's Nerve Food came to my no- tice and as we have Dr. Chase's re ceipt book 1 have confidence in the doctor. 1 was so surprised at the hel 1 received from the first box that bought three more. They built me right up and made me feel healthy and young again. They have proven a great blessing to me and 1 hope this testimonial will be of help to some weak nervous women suffering as I did." It is well worth your while to put Dr. Chase's Nerve Food to the test, and, while the blood nerves are being revitalized and the form round- ed out, note your increase in weight, $0 that you may have positive proof of the blood-forming value of this great medicine. 50c. a box, at all dealers, or Fdmanson, Bates & Co, Toronto, Portrait and signature of the change of | Carter's Little Liver Pills; they will re] you, | to the place are the only ones that ver call there, AR . As one approachies: the shore from the north a wide the John the: Divine rising stone hy stone on Morningside Heights in this city, are works far bevond the resources of yoadstead opens out | the simple fisherman of Patmos, but the dark blue-- | to the English church and to the Fpis- p' of Homer's | copel church of America, which is its i lineal descondant, the island cave and view, The sea is | "wine-col LIVED IN CAVE. | phrase--and the : ground swell breaks i continually on the stretch of t Shrines and Cathedrals Mark | ghraptly | topmost crest of : walls of ay old, forgotten city stand dazzling white sunlight of the nated close od | eastern towns | narrow | vecupies (the entire' space between the the summit of the hill. Thic is paved with large flat slabs of stone, irrégul- |'ar in shape and of varying lines. All | | the colors are pale, | sunlight. | the hill m a series of three or | equally content. The houses are { alike, square in shape, plain and un- | adorned, 'of one or two storévs in height and covered with simple, flat roofs, There are no sidewalks in the | No horses, or waggons, or | train { hang behind the small | suggest that | chapel, | tlements, i the hill from | tion, but | probably means that it was built lines of combers | t beach. Beyona barren rugged hillside rises in lo ix, the {d where the | w beneath the glaring | east. The landing is at %o the beach. "As in most | ther with winding: streets so | i up t b t a train of pack-donkeys ERNEST MORTON; OF WAUKESHA A member of the State Senate of | Wisconsin, and one of the most pro- | minent Democrats of that state, has an- | nounced his candidacy" for natorial nominations | the gubers | yas il faded . out after centuries of exposure to strong of | } The city is built arennd the peak four tiers. One finds no peorer district and no exclusive quarter. The inhabitants appear to be equally prosperous or equally poor--and "if either event | all streets, which again, like the road- way, are paved with ~ slabs of stone. traffic 'of kind, with the exception of the of = paek-de ®,0 ever pass through, Flights of stone steps in va- rious places, lead upward from one tier to another until finally a second massive gateway is. reached which marks the entrance to the main court- vard of the monastery, ' The dwelling houses ave white and clean; in most lace curtains square win- dows. The pavements of the streets they haye heen washed and dried only this morning, The in- any cases jects of special interest. from the water's edge tothe | orn province of what is mn even | was converted to Christianity and missionaries came to spread the . pel in England. The great cathedral a little village sit- | of St. John in New York is bow "the houses are all jumbl- | nineteen centuries long. Epworth Leaguers Attended the | Presbyterian church, Newburgh, ere | present, | spent. D. A. Nesbitt presided, and' in- | troduced gramme. | Gertie Conway, Percy Nesbitt and F. | 1, Moore, a duet by Miss Warner and | and loudly applauded, and a duet hy | Rev | ved cake and coffee, and all spent a party to forty of | on Wednesday evening, William Shorey, California, is visiting his brother, J. J. Shorey. Rev. Manley | is visiting her sister, Mrs. Mears, at | the Patton: Joséph Davy arrived home from Winnipeg last: week, Miss sister, Mrs. P. D. Shorey. George Anson Aylesworth was elected chair man of the board of education last | week, There is no truth in the rumor that the Newburgh Dramatic Club are going to play "The Boats at the Swan," in Yarker, before putting it | Que,, says : he chapel over it must always be ob $ It was by isciples of St. John that the south: what i$ now France it as from these provinces that the to he little Patmos chapel by a Vink NEWBURGH NOTES. and a very enjoyable @ening a Very teresting pro- There were solos by Miss Mr. Martin, which was well rendered, Dr. and Mrs. Benson. Rev Messrs, Mears and Gandier gave short speeches, Rev. Di. Benson followed with a short address. At the close the members of the local league ser- very enjoyable social hour. Miss Aleta Scriver gave a valentine R I her young friends Benson and Mrs. Benson, Perth, spent a few days this week with J, W, Courtney. Miss Thompson, Toronto, Elda Haight, Canifton, is visiting her on here. The people of Newburgh and vieinity will themselves have the first opportunity of seeing this great Eng lish farce. The people are getting in their ice supply. The public library was moved this week to the room formerly used by the Hornerites. Mr, Gallagher has moved into Miss Price's house. Mr. Funnell and Miss Funnel, Morven, spent Sunday with Miss Me: Kim. How To Make Baby Sleep. The baby that cries half the night does not ery for nothing. Tt cries be- cause' it is not well, and the chances are the trouble is due to some de- rangement of the stomach or bowels, which would be specdily removed if a dose of Baby's Own Tablets were giv. on the little one These Tablets make children sleep soundly and naturally, because they remove the cause of crossness and wakefulness. They are a Llossing to the little one, and bring relief to the tired, worried mother. Mrs. A, Abbott, Hudson's Heights, "1 have found Baby's Own Tablets a splendid medicine for stom- ach and bowel troubles, from which my little one was troubled. Thanks to the relief the Tablets have given my haby now sleeps quietly and natural C. habitants, attired in their strange cos- sumes, move here and there about their daily concerns without reither haste or confusion. The alder people sit in the flights of stone stéps in the warm sunshine. The exact date at which the earlier part of the monstery were first con structed is still a ture, hut according to the conditions of life which existed in those far off days it had been built with the pur pose of providing a refuge for the peo | ple in times of war as well a8 a re | treat for. the pions in times of peace. Huge stone battlements completely surround the court-yard and the little with battlements within bat- and corridors and hidden passageways leading up to the differ ent points of vantage behind the par- apets, The monastery stands, a mas- sive fortification, enclosing the church on the hill-top. The cave itself is situated a short distance down the northern slope of the city wall. - In the present day a =mall chapel stands above the entrance. Yon are informed that the chapel is of recent construe: this word "recent" is plisd after the manner in which per iods of time are counted by the inhah- itants' of the The informant island ter the death of St. John, In appear- ance the chapel looks to be as old as the roek itself. From a door in the interior of the stone dips downward abruptly into the earth. This stairway is comparative- Iv dark, illuminated merely by a shaft of meagre light from the open door of the chapel above. At the end of the first Hight of steps you are given a and are advised to move with cau. tin over the slippery stones, The cave lies at the bottom of the second fight. Jt is divided into two compartments, the main body of the cave, where the shrines still stands, and a natura) sleove in the rear in which, it is said, St. John spent most of his time, working and praying dur- ing the day and sleeping there at nicht. In the solid rock of the wall, dose down to the flooring of "the al- cove, iz a smooth round hole which was used hy St. John for a pillow, and directly above this, seen when the light is raised, is a long fissure ron- ning diagonally across the ceiling, Through this fissure the spirit descend: ed and inspired the "Revelations." All this, however, hebongs to the his tory of nearly two thousand, years ago. Since then, in better known parts of the world, cathedrals have been built and dedicated in the name of the esint who lived and worked in the 'cave of Patmos, where still to- day, as ever before, a single candle burns perpetually in front. of the anci- ent shrine. Structures like the Church of St: John Lateran in Rome or the Pr. A. W. Chase, the [famous receipt book author, on every box. A far larger Protestant Cathedral of St, matter of conjec- | ap- | af- | chapel a crooked, twisted stairway of | candle to light your further progress | Jv, and is in the best of health." And { the Tablets are absolutely safe--they i always do good--they cannot possibly { do harm. They will cure the ailments | of a new-born baby or a well.grown i child. "Sold by druggists or sent hy | mail at 25¢. a box by writing The Dr, | Wil iams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. What To Read. nye --t ' * A CHURCH ON FIRE + | But Luckily the Damage is 3 Serious H ® Brookville, Feb, 19.--About fou [++ clock, on Saturday, several little noticed smoke issuing from the ' ond of the Wall Street Meth church and called the attention any | man to it; he hastened to give i | alarm, and in a very short time fap fire brigade was at the scene o Bast trouble. After a stiff struggle i of succeeded in saving the exterior a the | large part of the interior of the . fico. There had been no fire in Pr 1 hurch for two days and the card ke tine | °F 15 at a loss to understand how t. | fire occurred #5% | The fire was, confined to the * | west corner of. the hutch where | ! Australia Uses Powdered Milk. | London Express, | Australia has adopted the system of { drying milk, The milk is evaporated { between steam rollers and sold as | powder. As nothing but water has | been abstracted, the addition of water makes wholesome, clear' and sterile milk. A leading medical office is re ported to have said that the adop- tion of dried milk at some of the asy- lums for consumptive patients and in | general hospitals has proved a sue | cons, Wrist Protectors. The short-sleeved street coats have created a demand for additional pro- tection for the lower arm. The fur: riers have come to the fore with long cuffs attached to the mufla and of peltry to match. A long cull or fore. sleeve of chamois is another device to insure comfort in cold days, $y * . « * --- Thieves in Great Britain are said to steal $10,500,000 worth of property every year, : I --.------------------------E LIQUOR AND TOBACCO HBITS A. MeTAGGART, M.D, C. kK. 76 Yonge St, Toronto Canad References as to Dr.McTaggart's fessional standing and personal faerie petmitied by : Sir W. R. Meredith, Chief Justices. Hon. G. W. Ross, FEx-Premier of On- 0. : Rev. John Potts, D.D., Victoria Col r. MeTagenrt's vegetable remedies for the liquor and tobacco habits are health- | ful, safe, inexpensive The only nourishment that bread affords is that which the flour contains. 5 Bread baking is merely putting flour in appetising form. Flour making is merely putting the nu- tritious part of wheat in shape for bread making. : Sale Cod milling is the kind that takes froth + the wheat all that is nutritious, nothing else. Royal Household Flour is made from carefully selected Manitoba Hard spring wheat. Every pound is almost a pound of food} clean, white, pure and nutritious. It goes farther, does better baking and is more satisfactory in every way tham any ---- other flour. : Your grocer knows he cannot keep store so well without Ogilvie's Royal Household. Oglivie Flour Mills Co., vLwmites, MONTREAL. "Ogilvie's Book for a Cook," contains 130 s of excellent recipes, some never before published Your grocer can tell you how to get it FREE, : 3 We have the largest and most complete range of TRAVELLING GOODS in Kingston--everything from the cheapest that's good to the very best. Trunks from ...........ccconninnnss. $2.50 to $18.00 Valises from...........cciivrnens +75 10 7.00 Suit Cases from ........... 1.5010 15.00 Club Bags from .......svs 90 to 8.00 We have a real goo! Trink which we will sell at $5.00, well made, iron bottom, waterproof can- va3, brass trimmings. Ask to see our Special Svit Case at $5.00. Abernethy's Shoe Store Me and Porter § are Nature's Best Tonics. Pure Malt \ products, made from the choicest barley and best selected hops. are very healthful and aid digestion. s are palatable beverages and agree with the most delicate stomach. . 5 JAS. McPARLAND, A +339 and 341 King St. No hypodermic alectionn: Bo' SUBNCILY. no lam of time from business, and & wor correendesee fayited, w Phone 274.