Daily British Whig (1850), 3 Jan 1907, p. 7

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ba Trousers of every style, | kind and size. Never mind the size of "+ your waist. Wasp-like or inflated, , Never mind the length of your. legs, abbreviated or extended, Come here with con- fidence, for we have . Trousers tq fit you. Our Trousers are made perfectly and fit perfect- ly ; manufacturer can make them right. Ours are made by ex- perts. , or dress, Trousers for business $ the workingman. 50, 2.75, 3.00, 3.25, § 34,450 & 5 ). Bibby Co. PEOL0L00P0000000000000000 Jur Showing of NING PERS Ve have a few of those swell 1V Gibson Ties een great favorites with the rice vo Dollars rland & Bro. USE OF GOOD SHOEMAKING / ton bride, to-day, when at high noon, Miss Helen Graydon, daughter 6f John H. Graydon, was quietly wedded to jAmes J. Forde, a prominent dry goods merchant of Lindsay. Rev. S. J. Shorey, Ph.D. formerly of Picton, now of Oshawa, officiated. The First Methodist church has just been presented 'with a handsome silver individual communion < 1 set, by Mr. 2» | and Mrs, W. H. Williamson. This mag- nificent gift includes four hundred cups and four tables to be used as stands. Rev. J. J. Rae, the pastor, has announced that hereafter. com. manion will be in church monthly. A fund has heen started to relieve the almost destitute condition of the widow and family of the late William ance, who was b{irned to death in the terrible fatality \§hich visited the village of BloomBeld week gyro. Mrs Vance was-also badly burned: The Buvaiter of the family . invalid for years and the savings of -the father pe habearnu most all used in doctor bills. He was an industrious farmer. : yilise Helen Leavens left to-day for Ottawa. She will be assistant kinder- garten 'teacher, under Miss Loucks of Kingston, at Ottawa Nor- * Miss Nellie Fretz has heen accented as vurse.in- training hoe the board aw the Hamilton General ospital. Miss Futz will leave town shortly to enter upon her work, M «TT. Ross, "The Gables," enter- nd the Misses Cout 1 Miss Bog, of Toroney tard, Wire. pd NPN Wo eS A We 23 4 Correct Trouser mak- ing isan art. Not every 7 won ak Si SYNOPSIS OF GANADIAN NGRTH-WEST HOMESTEAD REGULATIONS, Any even numbered section of Domin in Manitoba or the Norn West Province, - excepting 8 and 26, not reserved, be homesteaded by any person the head of a family, or male over 18 years of age, to the extent of SAequsiter section, of 160 acres, more t Application for homestead entry or in- Wtion must ve made in person by the plicant at the oflice of the local Agent I > An applicgtion for entry or inspection wude nally at any Subagent o ofoe may be red to the local Agent bLy Lhe Sub-agent, at the expense of the ap- plicant, and if the land applied for is vacant on receipt ofl the telegram such application is to bave priority and the land will be held until necessary papers to complete the transaction are received by mail. - ln case of "personation' the eantry will be summarily cancelled snd kori cant will forfelt all priorisySol im. An plicant for inspection ' 'must eligible for homestead entry, and only one application tor inspection will he recei from an individual until that application has veen disposed oy A homesteader whose entry is In good standing avd net lini Lo cancellation, may, subject to approval of Lepartment, relinquish it in favour of father, mother, aon. ter, brother or sister, if eligible, but to po one else, on fling de claration of abandonment. Where an entry is summarily cancelled be voluntarily abandened, subsequent to institution of canceliation proceedings, the applicant for inspection will be en- titled to fprior right of entry. Appli ts for jmspection must state io what particulars the homesteader is in default, . and if subsequeniry the state ment is found to Le incorredt in mater lal particulars, the apoheant will lose any prior right of reeawry should the land become vacant, or if entry has been Kranted it may be swnunarily cancelled Duties. --A tiler is recuirdd to per formu the conditions under one of the following Pp 1) At t six months' residerice up- on tivation of the land in each year Waring, the term of three years. (2) If the father {ur mother, if the father is deccased) of a homesteader resides upon a farm in tne vicinity of the land entered for by such homesteader the requirement as to residence may be satisfied by such person remding with the father or mother. (3) If the settler has his permanent rani ce upon farming land owned bY Aim In the vicinity of his homestead, requirement may be satisfied by residence upon such land. Before making application for patent the settler must give six months' notice in writing to the Commissioner of Ilo minion Lands at Ottawa, of his inten- tion to do so. SYNOPSIS OF CANADIAN NORTH WEST MINING REGULATIONS. Coal.--Coal lands may be purchased at $10 per acre for soft coal and $20 for anthracita. Not more than 320 acres can be acquired by one individual or company. Royalty at the rate of ten cents per ton of 2,000 pounds shall be collected on the gross output. Quarts.--A froe miner's certificate 'is granted upcn payment in advance of $5 3 annum for an individual, and frony to +§100 per annum for a company according to capital. A free miner, having discovered miner: al in place, may locate a claim 1,500x 1,500 feet. The fee for recording a claim is $5. At least $100 must be expended on the claim each year or paid to the mining recopder in lieu thereof. When $500 has been expended or paid, the locator may. upon having a survev made, and upon complying With other requirements, pur chase the land at $1 per acre. The patent provides for the payment of a royalty of 24 per cent on the sales. Placer mining claims generally are 100 feet square entry Jee $5, remewable A free miner may obtain two leases to for gold of five miles each for a term of twenty years, renewable at the discretion of the Minister of the Interior The lessee shall have a drodge in oper ation within one season from the date of the lease for each five miles. Rental $10 per annum for each mile of river leased. Royalty at the rate of 24 per cent collected on the output after it ex- ceeds $10,000, W. W. CORY, uty of the Minister of the Interior. N.B.--Unauthorized publication of this advertisement will not be paid for. "Significant and Inter- esting to Prospective Assurers."' The Blue Book for (1905) Shows that "The Canadi 'Life A Company" Profity to its 81,194 650 15. lian Companies, 14 ar surance Gash aid by y Policy holders in While in the sam Bri . 16 American, in all 51 othe companies operating in Canada, paid by wav of Cash Profits to their Polieyholders, $1,022 05 02 which shows that » Canada Lif Assurance Company" paid more to its Policvhokders than the other 51 Companies put together way « The Canada Life, for each 5 veurs of its 60 years experience, has added o |» Bonus Addition of $1,000 to every $10,000 insurance in force Full information how a Poli would shape for vou cheerinlly g at the office, 18 Market street, Kings ton J. 0. HUTTON, Manager Telephone 703. J. R. URQUHART, 152 Special Agent. \lived St. The Unique Grocery Among other good things we have is Heinz Sweet Mixed Pickles 'at 25c. per quart Heins Sour Mixed and Chow- Chow at 15c. per bottle. Our Tomato Catsup is delicious. * Try our goods, : C. H. Pickering, PROP. Cor. Pine and Patrick Sts. Phone 530 Neatly and promptly done me to us for good work at reasonable prices. Our work is sure to be satisfac- W. G, FROST Warehouse in con- nection : te rates. EE NGLE PEN-ANGLE Pen-Angle Under wear is form-knit so it can't help fitting your figure, --it's made of long = fibred wool i Ce ca. 80 it won't shrink : al Ryle, --and it's guaran- women, men and to replace instantly and y whole idea is to make it.so good ou can't afford not to buy by the trademark (in red). 205 where that London : 4 ; 1 You may get as 4 GOOD, but you i cannot get bet- b . 1 p 3 ter whisky" any. LIQUEUR r E SCOTCH Amalgamat:d Distillers Co Mgantreal 4 L 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 < $ ¢ & 4 € «© 4 < <4 < < 4 d 4 <4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 < 4 4 * 1 Glasgow FEES PIPPI PIPPI IPI Weak Kidneys Brights Disease and Diabetes Use Dr. Shoop's Restorative to Care the Cause, If You Suffer From These Symptoms. Here are the symptoms of Urine laden with sediment, Kidney complaints: brick dust in prine, highly colored urine, greasy froth or 'blood In it. stri mucous in urine, unusual de- sire to urinble, pain ia passing water, pain in the back and over the kidneys, hot, ¢ry and An Improp- § ment is often cines get their remedies called \ gl are practioally \§ sciing as cathartics They excite the kid etic reqmedies are them ¥ so: cause of serious kidney di doctor the kidnevs thems: bara them. Their on power. Dr. Shoop's Re Ql IS Kidney medi. effect from diuretics. These kidney physics, act on the bowels. Deys to unusual ac- strain. These diur- ves the frequent ase. Don't try to trength is nerve ve vitalizes the verves that operaie the Kidneys. Sold by ALL PRUGC FISTS. -- f ruest of Kingst Head of Queen etre Canada, devoted to mercial and Shorths II Commercial sw Individual instructi Fwening closses. F (per 810,000 ASSUR to life and endowm the five years ending rate of Bonus untiroken YEARS, has for the lov Policy, apply to the W. J. B. White, A on Business College (LIMITED) t. Kingston higher Com- and education. hjects taught. on. Dav and ner ar time. Rates moderate, Attend the hest H. F. METCALFE, Prin. A Bonus of $750.00 ED) was added ent policies for 81st December, 1904, and it is noteworthy that this been maintained we pericd of 40 For particulars of a Life Insurance ROYAL INSURANGE GO'Y (of Liverpool, ENGLAND.) gent, Kingston ? TTB BVBBBBVLT TRB TRS When Scranton h andles n : : ¢ else You COAL From P. WALSH Youget genuine Buy : : | : as he Sahin VTVVVBVVVVVTVRTTROCS s BRITISH - AMERICAN HOTEL KINGSTON - Has undergone i now open to sublic. ¥ TELFER - - ONTARIO alterations and the travelling Proprietor VIFIIIIIIIIIVIVISIPIIIISIIIsIIvIY } Avlesworth oo DAILY BRITISH WHIG. THURSDAY. JANUARY 3. A ROMANTIC, EVENT! Poe rusor womev,-.- LOCHINVAR CAME FROM REVELSTOKE, B. C. New Brunswick Girl Engaged to Woodstock Man Changes Her Mind When the Old Lover Puts in An Appearance--West- erner Wins By One Day and Carries His Bride Of to Revelstoke. : Woodstock, N.B,, Jan. 3.---A roman- tic wedding took place at the home of the bride when Miss Lena Burtt, daughter of Wilmot Burtt, Jackson- ville, was married to Norval Brittain, and the couple left for home in Revelstoke, B.C. Before the departure of Mr. Brittain fcr the west some years engaged to marry Miss Burtt, Their correspondence continued until recent- ly. In the meantime Miss Burtt be came engaged to a prominent young Lusiness man of Woodstock, and' the wadding was arranged, An announce ment card was sent to Mr. Brittain in Rovelstoke. He promptly sent some presents to the bride-elect, bu just as promptly followed; arviving here a few days ag@s He arranged another date, one Sorior to the moposedwedding wish the Woodstook mar' and carried his lady love off to his western home. SE ----------. PERSOJAL MENTION. Movements of The People--What They Are Saying And Doing. J. 8. Raysdale, of Carp, is in the city, L. J ness, L. J. Robertson, Toronto, is in the city on business, W. J. Fuller and L, J." Robertson are in the city on business. Miss Rac Muirhead, of Brockville, is the guest of Kingston friends. Robert Cousins, night watchman at Richardeons' elevator is ou the Day is in Toronto on busi list, Mrs. William Cooke, Ridean street. spent New Year's with friends in Cornwall. Harry W. Brown, of Toronto. has returned from a visit with iriends in this city. B. G. Ostrom, Belleville, has aceept ed a position as clerk at the British American Hotel, . Miss 8. Haney, Bagot street, has returpied to the city after a pleasant visit in Toronto. Rev. Thomas H. Billings, M.A., and parents, of Brockville, spent New Year's with friends on Alired street Rov Avlesworth and bride left Tues- day night for Montreal, where My has secured a new posi tion. Judge Forin, of heen elected a Colonial uraduate Nelson, B.C., has Fellow of the Royal Institute. He is a Queen's Flynn, superintendent at Nich- ardson's feldspar mines, pear Bedford, was in the city yesterday, oan af ter some business, Miss M. Murphy, Bagot street, has returned to the city after a pleasant vacation spent with her parents, at Brewer's Mills Miss Lizzie Shine, Gananoque, re turned home to-day. after a plea in vicit with Mrs. W. Telfer at the Dit Hotel. i-h- American W.T.Y as the "guest of Dr. and Mrs. on Frank street. Robert son, Frank Smith, of New York, who | has been visiting in Kingston, the John Purdy, Willium street, returned Lome to-day TRAIN JUMPED TRACE. { > J, Soldiers on Way to Kingston De- layed. Cornls. Chapman and Sele, of the 14th Fiokl Battery, Minny crrived n.the city, this morning, to take a + of instruction at ks, They were de three months' con Tete de Pont Barrage laved twenty-four hours in the train upgn which they wer velline" havink jumped the side of Winnipeg. Yesterday while nselves upon the ueing: the were v surprised to fish hole in the vicinity upon the ice and y weighing comin tra track this skaters were enjoy rink on the barracks, they « a large Dear at an aw It was pulled out proved to be a lenge, Wout forty-five pounds: - gnd negrly four feet i length, It was dead hind marks upon it indicgted that, in gli probubility, it had been struck some | time aro by 'the wheel of some steam- | to-day receiving tulations of his frionds at ks upon the arrival at his night, of twins. instruction in Stroud is r, last A short artillery and riding opened to-dav at course of All the have 1s¢ durin~ the Christmas holidays have returned and the gene ral routine of work has again com- menoech : the barrack vhen who \ . wen on Ix Wouldn't vou like a ton of really good coal for 5 change? Have us send vou up a ton to-morrow Swift's coyl vards. . Keep Best's "Short Stop" in the house. It cures all coughs and costs hut 135e. At Halifax, N.8,, was drowned. He from Maior O'Delvane was chief ordnance officer. He went through the ice while skating. For the very finest Malaga grapes rhoveky's thy blacksmiths', you must go to Comberland, at Swift's. coal It Rings In Your Ears. That same cough is everywhere vou hollow, because con it was catarrh, which cured by Catyrrho- never neglect go. deep and sumplive. First could have been zone. Moral, never trifle with catarrth, go to your druggist and get Catarrhozone. It's instant death to colds, cures them in a few "minutes. Throat trouble and catarrh disappear ys by magic. Cue tarrhozone is the great throat, nose and bronchial remedy to-day. Thow sands use it, doctors prescribe it why, becuse it does relieve quickly end eure. thoroughly." Two sizes, 23e, and $1, at all deglers. their future ! ro h gi rd : AO LoS | calves $220 and his board for a year. | sick | Neish has returned from | s. for you will only | Ottawa, where he spent the holidays | a told. } How One Scotch Infmigrant Returns Home For Christmas. *I am going back home to spend Christmas a to tell some of my friends that they better come out | here. i Robert Leslie, a young Scotchman who came to Canada some time ago, | smiled as he said this leaning against | the wall of a corridor that leads into the immigration offices at the Union | Station, says The Globe. He looked | out from under his somewhat faded | cap and carelessly scuffed the floor | with his foot, as though he had in | his mind a picture of the pretty spot | seven miles from Edinburgh where | he expects the holly will be hanging | Som the centre of a room to greet A year ago he came back to Can- | ada, having gone over 10 Scotland for a visit, and was sent up to work for | ¢ farmer near Gorrie. He was to re- | He worked the entire time, finishing | his term a few days ago. When he | quit he had $200 handed to him by | the farmer, having drawn only §20 | dunng the twelve months. He al- ready had saved $100 from the work {of + previous year, which he had ings of this y#ar he had with him yesicrday. He- was in the immigration ofhoe to have a chat with Mr. H. J. Tutt, who is the officer in charge, and who sent him out to Gorrie. Ho wasw--warmly dressed,' and though wearing several days growth of a downy beard, his - appearance was that of an industrious, saving youth, who had visions of a farm of his own some day. When asked how he liked Canada he made the above remark, and added that while sometimes a | man coming over here could not save $200 as he had done in the same | length of time, still he much prefer- nig ines home the first time. His sav- i to make a livelihood. "I worked steady," he remarked, "an never drew much money, and now I have $200. I came to Toronto with cattle, and am going across the ocear in a cattle ship because I know won't cost me anything. After Christ- mas I'll come back to Canada and start working again. I'm going to tell | all my friends about how r found things out here, and tell them, too, thai they better coms out in the spring." The other immigrants who stood around looked on Leslie with rather envious eves because he carried what to them seemed so large a sum of back home to have a merry Christ mas. Boys On the Farm. At last it seems to have dawned upon people that the holding up of successful lawyers and doctors and preachers to country boys as the only models worthy of adoption has been one of the main causes of the exodus from the farms to the city. It was all nonsense @ expect that the boys would sthy on the farm when every teacher was holding up for their emu- lation. Horace Greeley, Abraham Lin- coin, Edward 'Blake, Fev. Dr. Caven, Dr. Osler and many others that might be mentioned. These are great men, bu they all possess one characteris- tic that they all left the farm to ae- hiev success, or at all events ac- hieved it in the city. If the agricul- tura. college has done nothing Ise it has created new ideas, .it has pro- | duced men who in their life work on the farm are worthy the emulation oi boys both in city and country. Men like Burbank, or Powel! of Briar- chff Manor, or Hon. John Dryden, or | Frof. Baunders, are worth any amount | of newspaper or parential advice in | heeging boys on the farin. Ridgway = | Weekly, in referring to a movement just inaugurated in the United Statos with this object in view, says very truly :--*"The supply of farm labor ca. be met best by keeping farmeic | sons on the wl. This can be accom- | plished most effectively by infusing | the curriculum of rural schools with | a nigh grade agricultural spirit. The exodus from the farm during the past generation was largely due to the pro- city tendencies of rural tuition. The National Education Association has already taken steps to orgamize a de- partment of rural and agricultural education. By means of nature study courses, town and city, schools are really taking more interest in rural life than the country schools them- | selves. Meanwhile country boys are studying about men who achieved dis- tinction by leaving the farm." Fish Story Hard to Swallow, The other day, while Mrs. Louis Allard, of Madoc, was attending to her duties in trapping along the lake, | she noticed a ripple on the surface | of the water, and vestigation saw that it was a large maskinonge. As she drew near with her boat the monster disappeared, but presently appeared on the surface again in a sort of torpid state. She quickly despatched it with her | hatchet, and after a severe struggle in which her hands were more or less The fish in; endeavoring to swallow a ling got ehoked, and would no doubt have died in*a short time. Mrs. A landed hier game, and on wejghing it found it tipped the beam at 32 lba. i --- S------ Lofty Scientific Station. The highest scientific station in the- world stands on the summit of Mount* Misti, an extinct volcano in Southern Peru. The altitude of this station is 19,300 feet above sea level. No one lives. at-the station. No one éould ex- | ist-there, a= the' air is too rare and | cold. The thermometer on the top of | Misti often falls to 25 degrees below zero. Once a month an observer climbs up to the station to take the records of the instruments. It oeccu- days to.return. She Was Suspicious. People are more interested in science than they used to be, remarks a high authority. But it is quite possible to be too scientific. A friend of mine | got into serious trouble by express- | ing a fondness for ethyl hydroxide in | the hearing of his wife, whose name | happened to be Dora, i pn | Sale of made-to-order suits or cloth i Leaving the city; everything | pany contemplates | at cost. must be sold. A, C. Waggoner, Wel lington street. People cat bread when the | when it is mild, twenty per cent; moro eather is cold than rec this country to his own as a place | how to' handle cattle, and my. trip | Gary money in his pockets and was going | upon further in- | | cut, succeeded in landing her prize. | pies two days to climb up and two | ACRES. The First 'in Canada Will Be Prince Rupert Which Will Be Built By the Grand Trunk Pacific Company. A few generations hence the Ara bian Nights will have lost their charm. The fictitious marvels in that wonderful chaplet of astonishings| tales will app quite pl { and the flying carpet and Aladdin's | Lamp will create only a feeling that | the age which enjoyed them must | have been a period of darkness in | all that relates to science and me- chanics, | It is not only in ancient Arabian | tales that cities magically appear on | the deserts. Now towns are blossom- | ing on this continent almost every | day, towns which in a decade are | cities. The Canadian west has been | prolific in sprinkling towns along the | lines of new railways. More interest { ing than hasty town building is the | proposed building to order of a. great | commercial city on the British Col- | umbia coast by the Grand Trunk Pa | cific Railway. Prince Rupert will be | the first "built to order" city in Can- | ada, but not. the first one on this con- tinent. The United States Steel Cor- | poration has at the present time 15,- | 000 men engaged in building the city of Gary, Indiana--destined some day to become a second Pittsburg, The site chosen for the new city of Gary, is in the northwest of Indiana, just | where Lake Michigan touches: the | Hoosier state. A year ago it was an immense tract of land studded with | & few spruce trees and some rank | undergrowth. To-day 15,000 men are | working over this desert, .and in three { years it will be not only a place on | the map, but the thriving city of | , an infant phenomenon, with a | population not far from 100,000. { ~The story of the building of Gary is one of the romances of industry, and is fit to inspire the writing of | an epic on the age of steel. For Gary | is to be a steel city. That is what | it is being built for. | City of 10,000 Acres. | About 6,000 acres have been ao | quired by the big steel corporation at a cost of about $3,000,000, and it is expected that eventually 10,000 { acres will pass into the hands of | these new city builders. Three thous- | and acres, or nearly five square miles, | of land will be set part for the steel | mills, furnaces, docks and railway | terminals, the mills occupying the northeast corner of the tract on the | lake and the railway centre the north- | west division. All the land south of | the river is to be Yeserved for mer- cantile and municipal buildings and for the homes of the employes. A" CTY T0 ORDER] IT WILL BE LAID OVER 10,000] isn are clear. ALL lltdldidldlddtlldddldddidididldlddd POPP PIVIPIIIIIIIIPIIIIIIVIOPIOPIOIOO Medical Authority Decries the 4 Use of Solid Foods Between Meals, Blue Rib 1 Tea affords a light, delicious, wholesome beverage that strengthens and tones the system. « ; Black, green, mixed --25c. to §1 a Ib.--All grocers = "Holiday Bargains" UTHLESS PRICE-CUTS afford an un u R opportunity to purchase seasonable merchandis and holiday goods for personal use or for gi purposes at the lowest prices anywhere. % WINTER MILLINERY--Trimmed hats and millinery trimmings general reductions. All untrimmied and ready-to-wears, half price. | WINTER MANTLES -All remaining wo men's and children's ocoats--only a very few left -- at enormous price suis to HOLIDAY SPECIALS -- Neckwear, fancy belts, collars, handkerchiefs, toques, mitts, hose, ribbons, plumes, and all holiday goods at special prices. SPENCE'S "= Leading Mitineiy § \\ James Reid J isrriana B+ Jaek cere---- at sweeping Store A FEW FANGY TABLE} Lyfe over feo n aac Case aw Sis Fancy Parlor Tables in Oak and Mahogany at reduced prices ; also Gentlemen's Cheffoniers in Oak and Mahogany, at *om "Phone 147 for White Ambulance Gary, which is designed to be the | greatest steel plant in the world, is | about 26 miles from Chicago. Why | the particular site on Lake Michigan | should have been chosen for the ea- tablishment that is to help meet the | demands for iron and steel is rather | obvious to a person acquainted with | the steel industry in the United | States. The least important .consid- eration of all, perhaps, is that it will be close to the second largest city and one of the greatest industrial cities in the country. Chicago is a centre of skilled and unskilled labor. Upon it the Steel Corporation will be | able to draw {& men in emergencies. Gary will have the benefit of the sup- erior railway connection of the West- ern metropolis. That is a vital con- | sideration in a business age that + makes every minute, every inch and every cent count. Outweighing every other argument in favor of the site which Gary'is to occupy is the loca tion of the wonderful iron ore ranges from which raw material will be | drawn. If one were to stand with a compass in what is soon to be the mriddle of Broadway in Gary the nee- dle would point across the waters of Lake Michigan almost directly toward the deposits of red hematite in the Mesaba, the Marquette, the Gogebio, | the Vermillion and the Menomines ranges, which furnish 80 per cent. of all the iron used in the United States. Six Railways Meet. Bix great railways will be connected with Gary. A harbor twenty-five feet deep is being constructed, and the | four or five miles of lake front will | be provided with immense ore stor- | age docks. From a residence and so- cial viewpoint Gary is to be as at- tractive as its creators can make it. | The streets will run at right angles and will be 100 feet wide. They are to be macadamized or paved with | brick. The sidewalks will be of con- | crete, twenty feet wide. The main | thoroughfare, running north and | south, will be called Broadway, ac- cording to tentative plans. Its mate, running east and west, may be nam- | ed Fifth avenue, the two names be- ing in compliment to New York city, where the steel kings live. In disposing of the lots the Gary Land Co. will see that none of it falls into the hands of mere specu- lators. Bills of sale and deeds will | darry the provision that the purchas- er is to be a bona fide settler, and | that he is to erect a building for busi- | ness or residence purposes. Lots sold for mercantile purposes will have a frontage of 25 feet and ;a depth of" 150 feet. Those for residences will be" 30 feet wide and 125 feet deep. The cultivation of gardens, flowers and ehrubbery, and the tasteful adorn- ment of homes will be encouraged in every possible way. | Latest figures on the extension and | capacity of the mills indicate the com- | pany will handle 5,000,000 tons of ore | annually and will produce 2,500,000 | to 2,700,000 tons of steel. There are to be 16 blast furnaces, 34 open hearth furnaces and six rolling mills. In steel rails the prospective production is 75,000 tons per month, or 900,000 tons annually. The portion of the plant equipped for the manufacture of steel | rails will cost $2,500,000. housekeepers anee at prices that mean Cutlery, sule These good Hn every respect, A Hodge Podge ig Good Comes. fast. States are in summer, wear dead men's shoes, English speaking he worker with usually lantic. your own dishes. According to present plans the com- SR | of 95,000 men and a cit rge enough. | to socommodste 100,000 inbabitants. no rick "better find better quarters. said to have introduced dle for ladies into, England. ---------------- tn ----.. Here's news that must command the phe It tells of our "determination" to of our immense Christmas stock of Agateware and Tinware und a'so our fine and complete ling of up-to-date heating stoves, A Saving to You of 20 Per Cent. Space forbids our listing even a few of the articles wo are offering. Suffice it to say that practically Agatoware, or Tinware, comes within the scope of this are not old in any especially for our Christmas trade, and are guaranteed fiest-cluss Don't miss this opportunity of replenishing your household stock. Such a chance may not come again in years. Call . and see how we are slashing old prices. Lemmon & Sons,. BITS OF EVERYTHING. Out of Which To live too fast is also to The heaviest rainfalls in the Prospective heirs are usually glad to people besy foreheads and eyebrows. To lose one's head is often the imme- diate preface to losing one's feet, T the most, sand is the first to raise ie dust. Between 1870 and 1800 ele¢en marine cables were laid across the At | Seph If some of yopr china has been in the | family for vears, yon probably" wash When the - poor young man finds a wif," he also is apt to , wife of Richard Ill. ix let oo ve" iF the side-sad- | Store, In 1840, J. Saith, of Leeds, interest of all ccontmieal sacrifice the bal- * everything that can bo called respect, having been ordered 351-353 Street. an electric clock, which ran - further attention for fifty In 1735, a lady die too | The chamber in which the Lords sits is forty-five fect United | Houseyof Commons is a toot The song of 'the nightingales'n so mournful because mom morning they find their bills" al = 8 have the The 1 . statio' argest bronze "no world is that of Peter the Ben sub- = £ s a 3 headaches, - b ok e, Babes Rocky Me male you Ji ."Blne Grass" made | fire" conl at Swift'

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