ne Sure inKable lerwear uro Knitting Mills was able Underwear. vas, and is, this process 2ld's is known from dominion to the other, as "that doe$ not shrink." ays depend on it, ld's now--and after y warm all winter--you . "asy--just as shapely--as i. ear that won't shrink--- SIST on 's--the ell- nes the The Swa e of ly oang oh r up- . Will be highly pleased with $3.50 es. | and $4 Shoes. They are the swellest 8s | and most satisfactory shoes produced by ny manufgcturer. The styles are | Just right, with not a freak of fash: HE | on omitted, and the price is as low RE as the best grade shoe can be sold ad The youhg man with a desire to wear elegant shoes can be satisfied to his entire satisfaction :-- Valour Calf, Gun Metal Calf. Box Calf, Waterproof Patent "Colt, leathers. 3 Cali, Patent Kid, t, and in fact all the best Come in, Mr. Good Dresser. BRO THE{HOME OF . GOOD SHOEMAKING Ca n- 0 it : will be able to save money, f the hidden material and | taste in decoration. tistic Hardware design and the real economy show you the Sargent De- linate on your requirements. y & Birch k Street TEEN HET nd trip tickets will be sold at low. Roe way First Class Fare. Going dates . Wednesday and Thursday, Oct. 17th and 18th. Valid returning from destination ox or before Monday, Oct. 22nd, 1906. Hunters' Excursions At Single Fare Going Oct. 9 to Nov. 8 To points in Temagami, points Mat- es tawa to Port Arthur, to Savt 'Ste. Marie and Port Arthur, via Northern Navigation Company. To Georgian Bay and Lake Superior points via N.N. Co. (Te points on Northern Navigation Company extra charge will be made for meals and berths rejurning). To certain points in Quebec. Going Oct. 25 to Nov. 6 To Penetang, Midland, Lakefield, ull points Severn to North Bay, Argyle to Coboconk, Lindsay to Haiiburton ; points Madawaska to Depot Harbor : points on Muskoka Lakes, Lake of Bays and Magnetawan River. All Tickets Good Returning Until Dec. 8 Reduced Fares to Kootenay and Pacific Coast Points From August 27th 'to October 1006. 31st, For tickets, Pullman accommodation, and all other information apply to J. P/ HANLEY Agent, Johnson and Ontario streets Id NDR NRE eh Rina ions LY REE» .V | K,7/.\ diet In Connection With Canadian Pacific Railway SPECIAL RATES TO THE <~SEATTLE SPOKANE COAST $46.30 Ha $43.80 [roiscaws Second class one-way, on sale only un- til Oct 31st. Proportionately low rates points. Full particulars at K. & I'. and C.P.R. 'Ticket Office, Ontario street. Fr. CONWAY, F. A. Gen. Pass. Agent, Bay of Quinte Railway New short line for Tweed, Napanee. Desoronto, and all local points. Trains feave City Hall Depot at 4 pm. F. CONWAY, Agent B. Q. Ry.. Xingston, INTERCOLONIAL RAILWAY SPORTSMEN SATISFIED Reports from all the Game Sections of the Maritime Provinces indicate a most successful season. Write for to other FOLGER, Gen. Supt. ** Fishing and Hunting" "Trail of the Mic-Macs™ * Week in Canaan Wouds "Moose of the Miramichi" TO GENERAL PASSENGER DEPARTM ENT, Moncton, N.B. QUEBEC STEAMSHIP COMPANY LIMITED River and Gulf of $1, Lawranes Summer Cruises in Cool Latitudes Twin Screw Iron S.8. "Campana. with electrie' lights, electric bells and all modern comforts, Salls from Mootreal on Mondays at 2 p.m. 10th and 24th Sept. for Pictou, N.S., calling at Quebec, Gaspe, Mal Bay, Perce, Caps Cove, Grand River, Summer- side, P.E.l,, and Oharlottetown, P.E.L BERMUD, er . Excursion, hew in Screw WS, ud- fan,** 6.500 tons. Seiline from New York, 12th and 26th September. Tem- nerature cooled by sea breezes seldom rises above BO degrees. The fineit trips of the season for health and comfort. the ARTHUR 'AHERN, Secretary, Quetec.' For tickets and staterooms, anply to J. P. HANLEY, or J: P. GILDER- SLEEVE, Ticket Agents, Kingston, * ALLAN LINE Royal Mall Steamers MONTREAL TO, LIVERPOOL. Tunisian Victorian . . Jonian . . Virginian ......... MONTREAL TO GLASGOW. Moterate Rate Service. Mongolian... ... Oct. 4. Nov. 8 Cavinthian =... ... Oct. 11, Now. 15, Sicilian | Oct. 18, Nov. 22. Por rates, apply to J. P. HANLEY, New. York Gentral & Hudson THE SIX-TRACK Shortest Route to the United "TRAVELLING. River R.R. TRUNK LINE States Via Kingston and Cape ¥Wineent, N. Y. Lv. Cape Vihcent, N.Y.C. 7.25 am. Arr. Watertown, N.Y.C, 8.20 a.m, Arr. Oswego, N.Y. C,, 11.56 acm. 8.57 p.m Arr. Syracuse, N.¥.C., 12.11 p.m Arr. Rochester, N.Y.C,, 120 am. Arr. New York, 5.40 pm. 515 a.m Passengers ' wishing to take 5 a.m. Steamer may secure sstateroom# aboard. Cenvenient traim servige In directions PULLMAN, SLEEPING AND PARLOR CARS 2 Cents a Mile Books for 500 miles of travel on New York Central and leased lines within State of New York cost only $10, while books 1.000 miles over New York Central, Boston & Albany. Buffalo, Rochester & Pittsburg, Philadelphia & Reading and Central R.R. of New Jersev © $20. Secure further information and purchase tickets from H. S. Folger, New York Central Agent, Kingston, Unt, obrosite for C. F. DALY, Passenger Trafic Manager, A; H. Smith, General Manager, Ga 0. Gridley. General Agent. Lake Ontario and Bay of Quinte Steam- boat Company, Limited Sin STR. CASPIAN 7000 islands-~Rochester Commencing Sept. 2nd, steamer leave Kingston, Sunday only, at 10.15 aan, for Alexandria Bay, Rockport, Gananoque Thousand Islands. Re- turning will leave at 5 p.m. for Rochester, © N.Y., calling at Bay of Quinte Ports. STR. ALETHA Leaves daily, except Sunday at 8 p.m., for Picton and intermediate Buy of Quinte Ports, on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday Steamer calls at Deseron- to, Northport and Belleville. For full information, ar~lv to BE. E. Horsey, Uencral Manarer, Kineston: J. P. Hanley, Ticket Agent; Jas. Swilt & Co., Freight Agents. will -- __ CURE relieve all the troubles fuel @ent to a bilious state of the systom, such ae oss, Nausea, weiness, Distress after eating, Pain in the Side, &o. While their most wemarkable success has shown in curing avesdache, yob Carter's Little Liver Pits ave ly valuable in Constipation, curing and pre- venting thizannoylugeomplaint, while they also oorrect all disondersof the .tomach stimulate the ver and regulate thie bowels, Bven if they culp oured 'Bohe they would bealmost priceless to those whe suffer from this distressing complaint; but fortae ately theirgoodness dors Dotend here,and thoss whoonoe try them will find these little pills valor in so many ways that they will not be wih 0 do without them. t ACHE ie bane of so many lives that heres where make our great boast, Our pills cure it while JAbers do not. Carter's Little Liver Pills are very small and wery easy to take. One or two pills makea ded... Yhey are strictly vegetablo and do not gripe es ones but by their gentle action please all them. In yialsat 23 cents; five for $i. by druggists everywhere, of seit by mall. CARTER MEDICINE CO, New York, Spal Al foe Dun mall Pros 4 ¢ Economic { marriage bond' to WOMAN'S RIGHTS THE MOVEMENT IN JAPAN IS GROWING. Girls Refuse to Marry Nowadays Until They Knew Their Hus- bands--Jap Men Object. Literary Digest. The Japanese woman is the last of her sex who would be acoused of hav- ing women s rights aspirations--she is supposed to be a paragon of svbmis- sion and self-effacement. But Mr. Lu- dovie Nadeau, writing in the Paris Joutnal, says that a very extensive woman's rights movement is now in existence in Japan, and that it is constantly growing, Mr. Nadeau speaks as follows : "lhe movement was started by-a few women in the upper classes who had come in contact with European life. Their object here was to f their pretty compatriots from nly tutelage and marital slavery, to - de- velop the sentiment of responsibility and individuality, to strengthen the passion for liberty and to stimulate the will. Thus it happened that at the same time socialism was bom in Jap- an the woman'srtights movement came into existence. "Among the women who are devot- img 'their lives to "the liberal profes sions and among the female students the revolt is now complete, and just how deep the rift is thay be inferred from the fact that a short time ago' a number of Tokio girls refused to marry unless they were first permitted to meet and know their future hus bands. Other girls have come out boldly. and declared that they feel the be entirely incon- sistent with free, individual life "Another significant event was a strike in the latter part of 1906 of girls employed in a cotton mill at Kuranagi--these girls, to the number of some nine hundred, boldly marched out to the demand of shorter hours and higher wages. For the Japanese woman to do this, however, means far more than the average European can surmise, although this is a fact am- ong many similar ones which go to prove that the Japanese woman of to day is far different from what she was ten years ago. "Naturally the propaganda is meet- ing opposition in a country where wo- man has been systematically ground down for centuries, and it is not pos- sible. -to achieve emancipation quickly or without a struggle. But as Japan develops along modern lines, as she makes her army and navy stronger. as she builde railroads, mills and schools just as surely will modern so- cial and ethical movements be started and unfolded. Of these, socialism and femininism are distinct working forces in Japan to-day." MONSTER CRACK IN EARTH. Its Walls Are Almost FPerpcn- dicular. The - second largest crackin the earth in the United States has been discovered «in a remote part of the Terlingua quick-silver district, nincty miles south of Marathan, Texas, ac cording te Dr. William B. Phillips, formerly director of the state mineral survey, who is now operating mines {in that section. Dr. Phillips says this crack is fourteen miles long and no less than 700 feet wide at any point. It is 1,800 feet deep. The walls are almost perpendicular. The country where it is located has an altitude of about 3,000 feet. Care- ful exploration of this remarkable crack has not yet been made. It is belinved that search may repeal rich | minerals, particularly quicksilver. The 'crack is far from any human habitation, with the exception of the crack of an old Mexican; who lives in its gloomy bettom. He was found by a party of hunters, but fled at their approach; and reached the bottom of the crack by means of a rude rope | ladder, which he had made from the fibre of the cactus plant. Indder and cornered him in his house, The old man could not be induced to talk much. Only a glimmer of the sin clougl be seen from the bottom of the pit and the Ainericans did not tarry long. * They noticed that a stream of pure water bubbled up near the Mexican's shack and that he seemed to be well proviged &ith vegetables and- other edibles. Goats grased upon the grass and shrubbery, . which covered the floor of the-éavern, and chickens were gathered 'around the home of the her tmit, 'The old Mexican said he came three years before from Mexico. How long he could not remember. He liv- wanted to be had visited Bogpillas, a thirty miles distant, a od there because "he alone.' He town about few times. Beaver Flour actually makes "MORE bread to the barrel than any other. Itis the richest in Gluten--and it is the gluten that takes up the water. ~ pound for pound -- gives Dealers, write for prices on all kinds of Feeds, Coarse Grains and Cereals A T. H. Taylor Co., Limited, . Painioe, and not sstrio gent or poironous. Bold by Draggiste, or sent'in plain wrappes Agent, Ja P. GILDER- BLE! ; @. TT. bi & 00 003 Wallen ot 3b. Uircalar want od Tego } pursuits after lt | girl The rendezaous of this freak of na | ture recalls the fact that the Big Bend | country was until a few years ago, the | rendegvous of erate outlaws, | Mexicans and Americans. Many futile these murderers and United States de thieves wore made by f thisve ; Beaver Flour ||. ee eter, © { plain how these criminals ev rd cap. MORE leaves of bread MORE ture so easily. It is believed that cake--~MORE Fo than any | they made the cavern their rena other. Your first baking will | deavous. prove this. Try it. | AT YOUR GROCER'S. sa Diplomacy. Saturday Night Toronto's musical institutions are open for another term. Perhaps some sufferer who lives in proximity to an overworked piano may be able to use the following story with some cffect. 'Last winter a well-known Toronto musician, noted for his urbunity and charm of manner, was much plagued by the donstant piano practice of a {lady who lived in' a flat above his | own apartments. He could not bring | himself to adopt any- rdfle tactics in | the direction of rclief, but one day he hit upon 'an idea. Meeting the lady, with whom he had. a speaking ac- umintance, as she was going out with indsort | her little daughter--a child of five or #iX_vears--he paused snd in the most | colirteous manner said : "Your little plays remarkubly well for her age. | hear her practising every dav." Sunlight Soap is better than other soape, but is best when used in the Sunlight way. Buy Sunlight Soap and follow directions. \ DAILY RRITISH WHIG, FRIDAY, -- - -- ------------ | The hunters followed him down the* dressasassesstrteracenen | ADAMANT" Wall Plaster Ready for use by adding water. 4 Put up In bags, 100 Ibs. lo each, White Rock Finish Put up In Dags, 50 Ibs. ia euch 55-57 Rarrack t P. Wals St. "Phone 109 Besrretssnasarerrvesesd WANTED All the Furniture and Stoves. Highest prices realized by JOHN H. MILLS, The Leading Auctioneer (anadian (Chinese Restaurant } 831 King Street Open from 10.80 a.m. to 3.00 am The best plite to get an all round Lunch in the city. Meals of. all Kinds on shortest notice. English and Chinese dishes a specially, "Phone, 655. THE FRONTENAC LOAN & INVESTMENT SOCIETY. ESTABLISKED 1863, President--Sir Richard Cartwright Money loaned on City and Farm Pro- perties. Municipal and County Dehon- tures. Mortgages purchased, Deposits received and imterost allowed. $8. C McGill, Managing Director. Office, 87 Clarence street, Kingston. NewYork Chinese Restaurant 83 Prinpess Street . Open from 10.80 a.m. to £,00 a.m. Tho best place to get an all round Lunch in the city. Meals of all Kinds on shortest notice. Fuglish and Chincse dishes a specialty. Opera House Orchestra No wedding complete without music. Specinl rates for "N partice and afternoon teas E. H MERRY, Leader 3 155 Sydenham Etreet Violin Instruction [>°frdenh Ye Old English Floor Wax re A Troms .. Strachan's Hardware .. suitable Out"' OCTOBER 5. THE QUIET HOUR. Meditation Is Solace To Take a woman, sweet in hei ifture, gracious in bearing, noble in her aims, pure, womanly in her methods, does she leave no light by which her sisters may walk. In this age of some women's noise and coarse desire for notoriety, does it do no one to think of the life .which devoted itself quietly to God and without stepping out a hair's breadth from the modest Jrivacies of home, the tender docility of wifehood? The life that lived and did not talk; tirat worked and did not only play at the pretence of importance; that never forsook its natural duties, never forgot its womanhood; that loved, and was beloved, and in whose presence folly was struck dumb, and impurity hid it- self abashed--has that no vital influence on memory, no purifying sweetness, no sanctifying power? Surely yes, and surely of such a one we may say 'she does not die' She passes away from sight but she lives in her good deeds, in her dear love, her exquisite memories, She is the possession, the friend and daily companion of each one who loved her; and those who loved her best would feel it most an act of honor as well as of duty to live up to her stand- ard so far as they could. Knowing what she would say and think of cer- tain things were she to see and hear them, they would shrink from offering a disloyalty to her memory by doing in her absence what th would not have done in her presence. Love, when faithful, does not ask to shake itself free from that allegiance to memory it would have paid to the person; and here again being dead, she lives. The dear dead! They lie in their quiet graves, knowing nothing of the sorrows that lives in the tearful groups about them. They have gone to their peace: we who are left have still to bear the burden and carry the chain That wonderful peace, calm as an p- tian statue, which settles on the face of the dead--how inscrutable it is, and yet somehow so consoling! It seems to speak of a state where sorrow and pas- sion are not; where the earthly life has faded away but another has begun. lt is s0 quiet, so grand, so full of mys- tery and so sublime in its voiceless rest. It is the same and yet another ; the crea- ture we have loved, but with a differ- ence. What had been familiarity be- comes now respect, and the tenderness of love is hushed into the solemnity of awe... Our own has escaped. We are no longer masters, parents, holders of that dear life. It has passed away from our hands and we see there only its shadow: we are baffled by the strength of the Great King who has invaded our domain and stolen our treasure while we held it. But time dries the first: bit- ter tears, scars over the first deepest wounds. Our beloved dies--and we live; but the past is never lost out of our remembrance and in the midst of the smiles and the tumult of. pleasures, the active duties and the absorbing in- terests of life," our thoughts go back to the sweetness we have lost, the dear dead we have buried; and ever down in the depths of our hearts they live, like brooding angels, quiet, restful, beloved images 'of the fair import, thoughts of | t ing, dead yet living, and The Wm. Murray, Kictioneer 27 BROCK ST. New Carriages, Cutters, Harness etc., for sale. Sale of Horses Every Saturday Try a Pound of Myers' HOME MADE Sausages For Sunday's Breakfast. 60 Brock Street' EE I SI Tn SoMa" FORGET-ME-NOT. What a Gentle Murmur Secured to Say. When the heavens and the carth were finished, and the host of men, the Al- mighty appointed man, the crowning work of all creation, to give the other created beings a name by which they might be known. And Adam named every living creature, every fowl of the air, every beast of the field; but to the flower; the herb and the grass which @rew at his feet he gave no name. And at his feet rose a gentle murmur like the whispering echo of the summer breeze, which seemed to say, "O, greatest of God's works, thou hast named the living things which dwell in the water, or fl in the air, or walk upon the earth, ooh down on me also--Forget-me-not! And Adam looked, and behold a pale blue flower, half shrinking from the gaze, it had invited, blossomed before 'him. And Adam smiled and repeated, "For- get-me-not."<. And ' ever since, when Adam's children are parted, scarce hop- ing to meet again, and their footsteps stray o'er far distant lands, does the little flower gracefully raise its head to greet the wanderer, recalling the mem- ory of the absent loved ones, and breath- ing_their last parting words--"Forget- me-not."--W, H. Draper, C.B. The Chief Justice's Allegory. A correspondent, writing to the Mon- treal Gasette, says that on turning ovér the leaves of an old commonplace book a few days since he alighted on the fol- lowing beautiful allegory, from the pen of one of our most eminent Canadian judges. The correspondent says: "Lit- tle thought, indeed, had I, when I cop- ied the allegory some years ago from the album of a very dear friend--a re- lative of the chief justice~that I should be a resident in this country; and I daresay, little did he himself think that his graceful and exquisite composition would ever find its way across the At- lantic. [I-trust its publication, for the first time in" your columns, will not be deemed any breach of etiquette." The following is the allegory: "Let There Be Light." Rev. John Marriott (England, 1780, 1825), student at Rugby and Oxford, tutor in the family of the Duke of Buc-- clench and Anglican mihister, was of such quiet, retifed life, as to be unknown but for this one hymn. Few of the many thousands who sing the inspiring song in the churches ask as to its au- thor est of hymns, being used in the opening of churches all over the world. It was written about 1813, and first published in Lyra Britannica in 1867; to-day it is found in every hymn book that makes any pretensiougiigampleteness. Yet it ranks as one of the great-- dear always. A month's accumulation: of the mus- tard wasted in London on the edges of plates would give St. Paul's a beau- tiful coat of primrose paint, The Happy Married Life. Delineator, . If marriage meant the wedding of a saint and an angel there would be no problems to solve, no perfection to at- tain, no progress to make. This may be why there are no marriages in hea- ven. On earth it is different; husband and wife are strongly human. No mat- ter how lovingly united or how sweet their accord, they never have the same temperaments, tendencies or tastes. Their needs are different, their manner of looking at things is not identical, and in varying ways their individualities. as- sert themselves. At any critical moment if both express at the same time, a de- sire to defer to the other's taste, the re- sult is foreordained for happiness. This makes matrimony not merely union, but unison and unity. The spirit of com- promise does not mean a continuous | performance in the way of self-surren- der and self-sacrifice; it does not mean ceasing to be a voice and becoming an echo; it does not imply or justify the Joss of individuality; it means simply the instinctive recognition of the best way out of a difficulty, the quickest tack- ing to avoid a collision, the kindly view of tolerance in the presence of weakness and errors of another, the courage to meet an explanation half-way, the gen- erosity to first to apologize for a discord, the largeness of mind that does not fear a sacrifice of dignity in sur- rendering in the interests of the highest harmony of the two rather than the personal vanity of one. No minister who rehearses his ser- _mons can be accused of failing to prac- ice what he preaches. : The Life Beyond. Fresh suggestions and analogies are continually being brought to light by the discoveries of natural science to illustrate the Scriptural doctrine of a resurrection into changed conditions of life. "It is sown a natural body; it is raised a spiritual body" are the words which St. Paul employs in his great argument on the~Resurrection. 'hey are applicable alike to Christ's resur- rection and our own. It seems ai ob- vious deduction from what is revealed to us in Holy Scripture that each be- liever in Christ counted worthy to at- tain the resurrection of the dead will, in his measure, enter upon ah infinitely extended sphere of activity in which a glorified body will be the unfettered or- gan of his redeemed and purified soul. Little as we know for certain of the conditions of future. existence, it is at feast clear 'that the incompletencss of being which death produces by separ- ating the soul from the body cannot be the final destiny of man, Mounds Of Prayer. Tibet has been long an unknown land, and. only of late years have facts about the people's habits come to light. Be- ing a country of priests, the folk in- dulge largely in prayer of a more or less mechanical sort. They have pray- ing wheels, one turn of which is equal to a prayer: In the hill passes wayfar- crs raise cairns or heaps of prayers, add- ing a stone to the mound as they pass, as a thanksgiving to the flods The top of each mound is usua adorned with a prayer fi In the villages these structures are built of stone or of stone and tarf in alternate layers to the height of eight feet. any » f All Grocers. PATRON OF TRENCH KINGS, The Martyrdom Of St. Denys and His Memory; In the beginning of the fhird century the persecutions of Severus and his suc- cessors had almost extinguished the light of the faith in Gaul, as France was then called. About 245, seven missionary bishops, were sent by St. Fabian, Bishop of Rome, into that then forlorn and hea- then country. One of these prelates was St. Denys (or Dionysius), who carried the faith the furtherest into that coun- try, proceeding towards the northern rovinces. Fixing his episcopal see at Paris, he converted many oy his ser- mons and by the evidence of miracles. In the course of time a church was con- secrated, and a body of clergy was ordained to its service. Bishops were sent to Chartres, Senlis, Meaux an other places. At length the storm ol persecution fell upon the infant church, and St. Denys was enrolled amongst its early martyrs, St. Rusticus and St. Eleutherius, his priest and archdeacon, suffered along with him, all three be- ing beheaded on a hill, subsequent called after them, "Mons Martyrum, now Montmatre, This event h: A.D. 273, during the reign of Aurelian, The bodies of the martyrs were ordered to be thrown into the River Seine, lest they should be awarded Christian . jal, but they were rescued from "the hands of the soldiers by a woman, and were deposited in a secret place about six miles from Paris. When peace was restored to the church, the same devot- bodies honorably interred not far from the place of their mart m. Christians soon afterwards built a cha- pel over the tomb. In 469, through the pious exhortations of St. Genevieve, Patroness of Paris, a Stately shurels was erected on the site, which became much For your next breakfast try a cup of A, SE 'BENSDORP'S Its double strength saves THAT'S THE COCOA WITH THR YELLOW WRAVVER Send 10 cents for telal can. STEPHEN L. BARTLETT CO., Importers ed woman, Catalla by name, had the your cocoa. ¥ I, who died in 638, abbey in this ee 3 terred an or many was the usual bu ng place of he: French kings. Pepin and his son Charlemange were Ia : benefactors to this monas- tery, which was subsequently magnifi- ce Re Mo Bd were} kept Jere in three silver shrines. t. Denys has ever been considered the patron of the kings of France. in the eve of their expeditions they in state to the abbey to implore his. sistanice and on their prosperous their first act was to return t the thirteenth century St. Louis hs Funiing a ngs and ; rance rom 3 interment thro ut the carried to the of St. during the infidel revolution no the saintly association of dred years availed to protect this sh Rowe sacqilege, In recent years church has undergone a No less than storation, No | England are churches in founded the great n which he was in- | 8 i 2 : gE £5 fim $355 lately made Wales religious Tngtrumion ; school hours in the elem was the rul provi of entry to give ; William rt------ ; resorted to by pilgrims. King Dagobert FULL 0.80 o'clock, a . to none in Canada. 'Phone 440. JAS. McPARLAND, AGENT, Ales, Wines, Liquors and Cigars, - NIGHT SCHOOL Kingston Business College Limited, Head of Quoen Streot. Ea Bessions-- Monday, Wednesday and Friday overiugs, 7.80 to Individaal Instruction Equipment and Teaching Stall second The College that appeals to university graduates as well as all other ambitious young men and women. ar RE * Register now. Rates moderate, « Office open duy aad evening. HM. F. METCALFE, Principal, . FINANCE AND INSURANCE roceived at MecAuley's book store, from tested, natural spring water, selected bare ley malt, and a blend of the choicest growth of hops. No subs stitutes for hops or barley J are used. An aid to. diges- tion and a cause of comfort meals, RGR INT RTI APN] alter 339-341 KING BT. [| Aw - CUSTOMS BROKER - The business of the late C. G. Oliver, will be earried on in his offive, 79 Clurence street. G.A. BATEMAN Who for the last five vears has been associated with Mr. Oliver. 'Money to Loan © Mclntyre & McIntyre If You Want a Home George Zeigler, ™4" &iA0%kos 57 Brock 'Street. FARMS FOR S want wy. nd i ar 8 have ud the price Is rien