ii, ur Hospitals [lumber of Operations Per. ' women May Avojg them, "I was in a very serious conditj Wrote to you for advice, | had iL Wien 'male trouble and I could not carry achild ) maturity, and. was advised that an oper- tion was my only hope of recovery, | Hd not bear to think of going to the hos- IE, 80 wrote you for advice, | did as yon structed me and took Lydia B Pinkhan's stable Compound; and I am not only a ell woman Joday, but have a beautiful aby girl six months old, | advise all sick nd suffering women to write you for gd. ce, as you have done so much for me," Miss Lilian' Martin, Graduate of raining School for Nurses, Brantfo nt.; writes : ear Mrs. Pinkham: "While we are taught in the training hools through the country to look down pon patent medicines, and while the doc- rs in the hospitals speak slightingly of em to patients, I have found that they ally know different. I have frequently 10wn: Physicians to give Lydia E. Pink- \m's Vegetable Compound to women suf- ring with the most serious complications 'female troubles disp lacement of organs, id other disorders, They would, as a 18, put it in regular medicine bottles and bel it "tonic" or other names, but I knew was your Compound and have seen them 1 it in prescription bottles, Inflamma- on and ulceration have been relieved and red in a few weeks by its use, and I feel but due to Ion to give Lyd'a E. Pink- im's Vegetable Compound pr. »per credit," Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com. und at once removes such troubles fuse to buy any other medicine, for u need the best. Mrs. Pinkham, daughter-in-law of ydia E. Pinkham, invites all sick wo- en to write her for advice. Her advice d medicine have restored thousands to alth. Address, Lynn, Mass, md Succeeds Where Others Fall, PA ---------- Ww, ww § The H. D. Bibby Co. ui rr 10" Suits with every town. ER SUITS 1apely backs and ailors weep when , 14, 15 FOR THEM. The Cut Faultless. BIBBY CO. 'the Town, Sn, ln, ule isms. -- EE te Canvas Oxlords, $1, $1.50, olate Color Gibson Ties, $1.50, 50 and $3. . Colt Gibson Ties. Christy Blacher Oxfords, $2.50, 8, ial Gibson Ties, in Grey Voze y and Colbred Ganyas, o many other lines of : [ONABLE FOOTWEAR. pan shoe Store Cn -- LAGE CURTAINS AND DRAPER Never Before Such Un- "Jig | NOR i matchable Values, Never || RESRONN Before So Many of m. Them any well-informed woman in Kingston wirere to go when one wants to be sure" of obtaining de- pendable merchandise at right prices, and the an- swer always is : "GO TO STEACY'S." Curtain Values To-morrow LACE CURTAINS § NOTTINGHAM Priced from TWO VERY SPECIAL LINES--At Fine double lace, bound all around, 3} FISH NET CURTAINS--Double net, dainty patterns Giod value at $3. Special price At a saving of 20 per cent. 2c. to $3.50 00 and $1.25 x1} yards. 34x11 yards, [2.50 F1s1l NET CURTAINS-Vory fn: n t, beautiful designs of im tion handmade lace and medalli n, size 13 special at CURTAIN MUSLINS--From. NET AND MUSLIN CURTAINE MADRAS MUSLINS, ART DENIMS. ita- yards. Very TES--From ...... ART. MUSLINS, CUSHION CORDS, ete; LINEN BARGAINS! If you contemplate buying Household Linens this spring we shall be glad to have you come in and examine our stock and see for yourself the large as- sortments and the exceedingly low prices. Some Very Special Values UNBLEACHED TABLE?LINI Good patterns, 60 inches w ide, worth 10e., for Mpc liian . Ve. HALF BLEACHED TABLE Strong useful linen, inches wide, worth 50¢., for . 39c, "LIDDEL'S" TABLE LINENS (Pure Linen)<~Half bleach, very fine, 66 inches wide, worth 65c., for ............. very, DOG, BLEACHED LINENS (Liddel's Gold Medal)--Fine quality, diinty patterns, width. 72, 000., £05 icin inmmiii W . 50c. Linen, 2 speeigl lines, . 81.25 and $ TABLE NAPKINS (Best Irish Lincn)- Pur DID = at ..... J75 dozen Great Towel Values ALL LINEN HUCK TOWELS--Full bleached, hemmed ends, ISx36, a great bargain at... size + 3¥ivsreenes vi 25¢. pair Come To-morrow and Soe Them. wn -- o® oy a Set x wn = © aN a « gO SS SSS SS Sessa sce ec aaaae~ : STIIIIIITAIILIITILIIIIIII estate BP COMMERCIAL MATTERS, RICH WIDOW FOR BAIT. What Is Going On In the Business | Postal World--The Markets: ' Ng results have followed the >I cotton planting in South- I'wenty-five Authorities Scheme. Kill Washington, June 1. ton, supposed SEO SSSR IIITIIIA TTT Tvs sansa BP I TTL S TVVTVVAVTTTTLLTTL TLL LTVLLVLVLL LT LLV LLL S */e ae GUILD FOUGHT HIM ANDREW MACLEAN GAVE EVI- DENCE AT HAMILTON. "You Are Only One in Sixty," Said Sir' George Drummond, When Appealed to -- Some Lively Evidence. Hamilton Times. 3 | After being adjourned from time to {time since last March, the hearing of levidence in the * conspiracy charges | against officers of the Dominion {Wholesale Grocers' Guild was resumed lin Hamilton, to-day. | The first withess examined was An- {drew Mclean, Kingston, a wholesale |grocer, who was frequently referred to in the correspondence, already put in las evidence. Mr, McLean said he had been in business since 1851, and up until 1888 "was able to buy sugar dir ect in lots as low as twenty-five bar- rels. ; | "In fact, I was able to buy every- | girect up till that time." "How did the refusal come ?" "From the Macdonald Tobacco com- | pany, | "I suppose you are going to bring Mr. Macdonald here," suggested Mr. | Bristol. | "Oh, anything these conspirators say is all the same," remarked Mr. Washington. | The letter gnd Mr. Macdonald's sig Inatire which was produced by Crown {Attorney Washington was identified by the witness. McLean said he never | bought * anything until 'he had the {money to pay for it, and in all his {orders he had the manufacturers draw {on demand, so that he could not have been refused for not paying promptly. Meeting Manaper Stewart, {of the Macdonald company, in Mont {real, he asked him why his orders had | been refused. . | "Because there has heen so much an- Inovance from complaints," was the reply. McLean interviewed himself, and was told ter would "be decided | Manager Stewart called on him and [told him to sell his' tobacco at the {same price as the others. He agreed {to this and his orders were filled for [two years, and then suddenly ceased, | Magdonald refused 'then to answer his {letter. When he went to the agent to { get a price list, he was told he could {not have it because he was not on the { Macdonald list. McLean, said he or- |dered a carload of tobacco valued -4t | 87.000, in September, 1888, and was [ positively refused. | "Was that the end of the tobacco | business ?"* asked the crown attorney, | "No," said the witness, "I went to. | Montreal and saw S illiam Mse {donald the middle of this month." Siz William, he said. blaméd the {other fellows 'of the guild. He still re- {fused to put him on the list and told | him that although it might not seem true to him it was his own fault: he was not being treated like others. Mr. McLean said his exverience with the sugar refiners was similar to the } trouble he had over tobacco. When the {refiners cut him off he went to Mont Mr. that Macdonald the mat- that evening. [sixty we are selling to, however. You (lare.only one. We must make money as | well 'as you." Manager Watson of the Canada com- {pany advised him to see Mr. Laporte, {the then president of guild. He fused to do this. | "How much sugar were vou able to {buy 2" | "Anything from | train load." re a car load to a "Did you ever try to become a mem BY es sases Good -Higgins & Bar- {her of the guild ¥' | "Yes; and they cornered me." He |said hé would give the facts without { telling the names of men, who might {get into trouble. "I was getting my ugar: and tobacco from other soure- es," he continued. "They traced these | men up and stopped them selling to {me. I became hopeless and made ap- | plication to, the guild to become | member, but this was refused." McLean also related his troubles ab- |out getting rice. He said if the gov- jernment would now slightly lower { the duty on sugar and rice he thought jall the dealers could get along nicely. | he result of all this on ph a | "What was t your business ? tony Nut I'wenty. acres yielded . p to be doing business { TI kept me down. J aun seventy: four Tn = aif of the yieid has been at 500 Fifth avenue, New York,, are {years of ace," said Mr. McLean, "and cellent #Xport. "The quality is ex ( debarred from the use of the mails for [still fighting to he a wholesaler." or Lon for the erection of a new operating a matrimonial scheme to he | "Do you want to be a member of reidhial ter, Star Mine at Ross- |, violation of the post laws. the guild, now ? asked the magis Wher oh Raat iE WHL | pyiining 8 Barton advertised | them- | trate. 1 » be the largest lode min- RE & : 1 sia . »" or ho n, Canada. It will have o]selves as a firm of lawyers, | hey in- | "No; it is on its last legs, I guess, steam, ri 120 horse-power, and will be formed "eligible men' through the Letters dated 1889, from. the Gold- or Uipwents from the noft of [newspapers that they had as a client Sten Tobacco fumpany, Montreal, were bones To, last week wounted to 48,820 a_ widow twenty-six vears old, worth read. One of them told Mr. McLean Corresponding weok of HO a i TB ae $75,000, who had been advised by her | that if there was any change in the ship ice the first of the season |Physicians to remarry. Tt cost £100 to combine*awherchy they could sell him » 140.889 hoxes, as against for the corresponding oXes : cording to Toronto issued to earnings for Railway for directors, shows advance. month of $231,- get an introduction to the widow, ge the advertisements, and 810 of this amount had to be. paid in goods, they would 1a him know With- jout delay. Mclean had a similar ex- perience with the MacKeHean company | of Montreal, when he tried to. get to t S201. 710 The inspector who investigated the | bacco from it. They said it was im- st $201,717 last year, an in- tiers : | i rder $30.717, 'The net revenue is|case reported that Higgins & Barton {possible to. fill orders on account of Bainst $87,646 last vear, an {wom not lawyers. and that the voung | the other Kingston dealers rising . i. Net 1 widow existed only. in their imagina fue against them if thev did. On Sep- increas 70.745. tions. The postmaster at New York, | 16th, 1905, the © Ontario Sugar com- * Week ending May 21st of each 5 been instrieted to mark the word pany, of Berlin, rehised to supply him ve v ha n I ar the CP... returns a : ? as follows : "fraudulent" on mail addressed Higgins & the senders. 1901, $673,000 ; 1902, $867,000 ; 1904, 895 000, and 1908, the week 1.213 000. June, 1908, Since earnings have practically *d below the million mark e biggest week's record he- The New Styles In Hats. 900 in the seven davs ending of last year. r 1905, says the. Wall Street Crow's Nest Pass Coal Co., Pros.. the s ® Northern Securities has a m's S, ined 881,938 tons of coal, , Men s hat il to more than half of the ion of the Province of Brit- Are all here $1.25, $2 50, 83,- $4. olumbin for 'the year Only abouts] Genuine orange wood sticks for the wholesale. There 'as an argument be- | twelve feet six inches in circumference. Ralf of 11 product of Lr rs ul nails. Gibkon's*Red Cross 'drug store, | tween the magigtrate and counsel for To-day it measures fifteen feet four wearketud 2s coal. Of the remainder ne Magistrate Sparham, Smith's Falls, 'the defence, when Mr, Bristol began to |<inches, a gain of an inch a year in tion ol rains Ta. a Tor the At irs gave three tramps three months each'| make enqui s about McLean's retail | diameter, : . ; of roe rates 'used Tl ey cutput in Central, for breaking into a C.P.R. 'busine 82. The court could not see Lydia Pinkham 8 Vegetable Com- duced vy ase. the coal and coke pro-| car at Sharbot Lake, and stealing what was to be gained br taking np | pound is fresh at Gibson's Red Cross firoximately $5 75 000, Tom ori e 1 liquor. : {time going into that, but Mr. Bris- | drug store. f Gray X25 folluws :--Coke value, $1.-] Highly polished shell nail cleaners, tol was persistent. William McFarlane, Prestonvals, has "B23 coll vale, $1:194.4%6. Gibson's Red Cross drug store. The letter written hy Secrgtary Wills | had a 'new bank barn raised on his ; § © S-- lananas, lots of them, retail or refusing Mclean admission to the | farm. The framework wae put to- Tues Cheese Markets. wholesale, at Toye's. ; : | uild, was identified a "him when | gether in two hours and was, put up Sohty piny ve se red and Dissatisfied with the way Perth «read over acain, by Mr. Bristol. [y | m three, : ie balance refused re and 11 | municipal light plant has been run, stated that if he conld prove he was | Strawberries, strawberries the ver, Mario May 31. --To-day ats w Jobs 'Code his resiguel. } N E ouitiinate yoltier, he would he | choicest for Saturday at Toye's retail O15 sata 1oday 8135 vere . ir Py vi 0 ve la 0 p . is i parton" 215 sold at 118e., and 600 at A falling cornice buried three, Mon- | | store, King street. One man' was Killed. Best's "Korn Killer" soft corns, 10c, : -------- A woman's iden of a picture hat is t reminds 5 man of a chromo, Gal adh to Barton, and return it to derbvs and fedoras £1, | Campbell | » centre in Kingston for | treal bill posters beneath the debris, | cures hard and | {when they found out the facts. | "You ask how this has affected business," said the aged witness, he arose from the chair he occupied, | "It has held me down. For sixty {years I have worked like a slave ard | these men have kept me from the po sition I think I am justly entitled to | occupy," | Cross examined hv Edwund Bristol, {McLean saidl hig. business was chiefly my as wrote back that if Wills would come within two miles of Kingston, , I wonld po out to kick him." McLean explained to My. Bristol THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, FRIDAY, JUNE {. that his_real reason in going to see the refiners this month was to see if they would relent. If they had he said the crown-attorney. would have had to send a policeman to get him to come to -lamilton to testify. A _ABOUR NOVEL. Story. Readers of Miss Agnes Maule Mach- ar's new , "Roland Graeme, Knight," will be grateful to her for the coining of many apt phrases, quite mnart from pleasure they re- ceive from her story. The book deals with the labour question in a very striking way, snd doubtless many philanthropically inclined ladies will be led to think, and to think hard, by the reading of it. The servant irl, the factory girl, the mill-hand prob- lem is not all one-sided, and the nov- clist has shown many points of the question in a clear light, her prastical experience standing her In rood stead. Incidentally, Miss Machar has worked up a pretty love story, and has given us glimpses of some really charming children. The picture of Rey. Mr. Al den is an alto~ether delightful one, | but that of Rev. Mr. Chillingworth, is rather overdrawn. It is doubtful if the sermons of a man represented as he is, cold, selfish, self-centred, would have heen given the prominence in "The Daily Mirror," week by week, which our authoress tells us is the case, There is a trifling disposition, on the part of the novelist, to descend to colloguialisms, not to say slang in her working out of the fortunes of the young knight of. labour, and his friends. and the proof-reading has been of the careless order. The book 'is well worth reading, and il some of our young women, and old- er women, too, are led to' emulate the very attractive heroine, Nora Blan- chard, and Janie Spencer, a trained nurse, in their whole-hearted, unselfish devotion to the cause of the noor and sick, the kindly authoress will be in- deed rewarded. The book is published by! W. Briggs, Toronto. "First It Was Ordained." A book that has created much talk in church as well as secular circles is Guy Thorne's "First It Was Ordain- ed," a very vivid story in which are forcibly brought out the duties of marriage and the sin of trifling with this ordinance of God--a sin which is £0 common to-day in all countries, and particularly among the well-to-do people who have no desire to be both- ered with children. Guy Thorne, an English author, pictures the awful re- sults that follow when women refuse to allow nature to run its course. They become dwarfed mentally and physically. The book is written to show what a country like England may expect in vears to come should the marriage ordinance continue to be trifled with. Besides loss of papula- tion the nation might become a na- tion of weaklings. The Bishop of Lon- don recently preached a sermon along the lines followed by the author. ------ RAILWAY MATTERS. Miss Machar Tells An Interesting ; NEWS OF THE WORLD OCCURRENCES RECOUNTED IN BRIEF FORM, Matters That Interest Everybody --Notes From All Over--Little of Everything Easily Read and Remembered. Joseph H, Choate, ex-ambassador to England; is ill. - John D. Rockefeller has sailed for Europe, on the steamer Deutschland. Joseph Hollop, Osweed, N.Y., com- mitted suicide by taking rough on a aropian officials deny being im- plicated in the Guatemalan revolu- tion. Peter Gillis was struck by a train while driving near Owen Sound and killed. Within eight days 2,000 Scotch ploughmen will leave Glasgow for Canada. Angther large seizure of fish at Nia- gara Falls, reported to the fisheries department, Ambherstburg's town treasurer has been suspended pending an investiga- tion into his books. Over twenty-two thousand = imuni- grants have come into Toronto since the beginning of the year. | Gilbert A. Smith was 'appointed principal of Jameson avenue col- legiato Institute, Toronto. rev. David Rogers, of Thorndale, Ont., kas been elected president of the London Methodist conference. It is said that Police Inspector John Hall, Toronto, may retire from the service on account of ill-health, George E. Howes, ex-mavor, capital- ist ;and prominent' clubman of Battle Creek, Mich, committed suicide by shooting. 'ILhree alternative been made by the railway companies for the construction of the Yonge street bridge. W. J. Sherring, ' of Hamilton, the Marathon hero, will he at Brockville, on Wednesday, August 1st, "one of the principal days of the re-union," and will give an exhibftion run of two or five males. proposals have COURTEOUS SPANIARD, Have Peculiar Ways in Sunny } Spain. Of the courteous manners of all Spaniards. a traveller writes ¢ "So anxious is every one to be of ser vice to others that the stranger is apt to consider the Spaniards are in- quisitive people. An experience in a Madria tram-car was enlightening in this direction. A woman in getting in- to the car appeared to have slipped and hurt her foot. She and her hus- band began an animated discussion upon the incident, and of the dozen others in the car every one except ourselves craned forward to listen. The passengers were well assorted, ranging as they did from a captain in uniform down to'a woman almost of the begpar class. But one and all i n N Both C.P.R. and G.T.R. Are! {real and interviewed some of the man- Flourishin \ |agers. Failing to get n satisfactory M 1g 1 on i i th {reply by letter from Sir George Drum- o Yonires i x une h Fil era 5 8 mond, he went to him nersonally. [ois FallWay have : been 'in. com- "We have no complaint to make gh. | munication for some time with the out vou," said Sir George. "There are | toWn council of Strathcona, Alberta, | 4 ' . in connection with a proposition that the town should have the terminal | facilities of ,the companys lines in Northern Alberta. The town agreed to! give all the land necessary for the purpose, if the company agreed to spend. 850,000 in improvements in the town.- The two bodies have Just reached an agreement, and the seals and' signatures will be attached to the | documents within a few days. Messrs. Hays, general manager, Fite | hugh, Mr. McGuigan, and other ficials, of the G.T.R., returned, to- | day, from an inspection of the line. i They are optimistic over thie prospects | of- of the read being able to handle ity! share of the grain crop in 1907, ---- SENATOR COX Was Too Wily for George F. Shepley. Toronto, June 1.--Senator Cox be- gan his sccond day oh the witness stand, at the Dominion insurance com- mission, and 'again proved his ability to withstand the examination of . F. Shepley. His evidence was interesting, as dealing with the connection between the great financial institution on King street, 'such as the B. the Central Canada Loan, the Dominion National Trust compan ada Life. Senator Cox gave a pictures- que history of his duel with the late George Gooderham, for the possession of the old Temperance and General, and the episodes in connection with his subsequent control of the stock, ank of Commerce, Savings and Securities, the vy and the Can- ---- ORE SHIPPED OUT, It Ran 360 Tons in Three Months. Toronto, June 1.--The bureau of mines announces that for the three months, ending March 31st last, 360 tons of ore were shipped from Cobalt district to the smelters, The silver contents aggregated 580,825 ounces, an average of 1,071 oumees to the ton, and valued at $362,128, The cobalt contents amounted to ten tons, worth $10,360, Since the latter part of 1901, bre has been ship- ped from Cobalt to the value of $2,- 250,000, on hirer vears ago a {ine old tree th¥ Graham property, Perth, measured out exciting the least resentment, op- in turn joined in the discussion with- inions being apparently welcomed. Gentlemen arriving at their destina- tions ceased arguing, rafsed their hats and went out. leaving others in possession until the principals left. "There is no hour of the day or nicht which a Spaniard deems inap- propriate to practice" of smoking," the same writer observes, "Whenever he finds time hanging heavily, which is frequently, he lichts a cirarette, Time hangs heavily on a Spaniard's 'mind inthe brief interval between the courses at lunch and dinner, whenever he wakes at night. when travelling be- tween station and hotel in an omni- bus, and always when in a railway train, regardless of ladies. The prac tice of smoking is so universal in Spain that railway compartments for non-smokers exist in theory only, and the habit combined with that of loud talking at all hours of the night and moming, makes the average Span iard undesirable as a travelling com. panion, especially at night." CHRISTENING OF CANADA. Due to a Historic Blunder by Portuguese. The name Canada perpetuates a blunder. According to an eminent au thority when the Portuguese under Gasper Cortereal, in 1590, first ascend ed the great St. Lawrence they heliev- od it to be the strait of which they were in quest, through which a pass age might be discoveréd into the In dian sea. When, however, they arrived at the point whence they could clear ly ascertain. that this was no strait, but a river, they exclaimed repeated in their disappointment, "Ca Nada" ("Here nothing.") These words, re- membered by the natives were repeat- ed to the next Europeans who visited the land. The newcomers, hearing the phrase so frequently used, conjectured that it must be the name of the coun' try, so "Ca Nada" it remains. P ----mnn Twins Have Arrived. Sunnyside, May 30.--Mr, and Mrs, J. K. Hamilton were visiting friends in Kingston, on the 24th, Bom on May 27th, to Mr. aad Mrs; Fred. Ad- rain, twin boys. W. M. Dier and J. Marks were visiting friends at Elgin on Sunday, Miss A. Thorpe took a business trip to Brockville ' on Tues- day. Edward Grothier, Watertown, N.Y., was the guest of his brother, H. Grothier last week, J. H. Hamil. ton: was elected councilman for North Crosby by acclamation last week, Mas- ter Loo White visiting in Perth, me turned on Monday. -------- $2,000,000 Worth Of Cars. Summer corsets, several styles, 50c.- and 65¢. The organ in St. James' church, Perth, will be rebuilt this sugimer, 5 a HE : ¥ New York Dress Reform. | Montreal, June 1.--The C.P.R., to- day, placed an order with their Angus chops for the supply of 1,000 box cars. With a previous order this makes $2 - { 000,000 worth of box cars in course of ronstraction. ---- The weather being so mild now we | had to discontinue cream goods and establish custard goods instead. These are most delicious; try them. Tove's King street store. x] Buy Warner's Safe Cure' at ( sibson's Red Cross drug store, "THE QUEEN OF TABLE WATERS! : HAS CONSTANTLY and STEADILY INCREASED in Popularity and Esteem, and is now ACCEPTED THROUGHOUT the ENTIRE CIVILIZED W i as possessing all the properties of an IDEAL and. PERFECT TABLE WATER. : Put Yourself in Our And we will make you look the gentleman you are, in so far as stylish, well-fitting garments can make the attire match the man. No waiting here, for. our clothing is ready--not only to put on' but to wear, saye a shortened sleeve or trousers--the matter of a few mo- ments to our skilful tailors. fancy prices. OUR GUARANTEE goes with every Your money will be cheerfully refunded wanted. No fairer proposition can be made. Co garment. MEN'S GOOD STRONG WORKING - SUITS only $4.95, 595and 7:45. «~~ *% 2 Lae MEN'S FINE SUITS, best tailoring, $9:50, - * 11.50, 12.50 and 15,00. OA IS YOUR BOY TO Come and look at what We have made a special effort to furnish e' best specially low prices and we believe our efforts will appreciated by parents Confirmation Suits - at $2.50, 3.50, 4.50 ad 5, Come and look at the goods. Roney 127 Princess } xe es wi x rod ogee -- » We do not charge you i yx v Sok re ah Na Tha pi BE CONFIRMED? we are offering in this li oy ra & Co Street. Baby Carriages and Go-Oarts Sunshine and fresh air Is essential to the baby's health. Wheel the baby out in one of our mp-to-date Go-Carts, or Carriages Have your old one made like Bows, Send in your repairing and upholsters ing this Is the season for fit. Use our Furniture Restorer, to give your housecleaning a finish: JAMES REID, The Leading Undertaker. GOOG £3 CACAO NENA 0 k CARCI ANAND - CUSTOMS BROKER - The business of the late OC, @. Oliver, will be carried om im his office, 79 Clarence streets G. A. BATEMAN Who for the last five years has been associated with Mr, Oliver. - Money 'to Loan Mcintyre & McIntyre :: BARRISTERS . GANONS'S G. B. THE FINEST IN THE CITY 50c. per Ib. A. J. Rees, 166 Princess St. a 0 FINANCE AND CHOCOLATES. INSURANCE If You Want a Home Or Insurance, have a George Zeigler, ™4" STAT os 87 Brock Street, EB WANTED A good brick dwelling with 4 or 5 bedrooms : modern conveniences and good sized lot, - Paying debts is a terribly expensive $ T. J. Lockhart 159 Wellington Street.