Daily British Whig (1850), 7 Jan 1907, p. 5

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ught and Sold rission tany of the best properties in the urnish reports upon same to our LDING, nes Main 7450, 745% 3 » o you have seen our Handsome uy in a ry $8.50, $10, $12 and 315 | the money. 1, unless you have already FE) best Tailor Shops in this are handsome, and if you look e'll get your Clothes money, * P14 you'll miss the best. ler to wait until you have i i 1" have arrived. Bibby Co. <: "otecsessssssstttens resents ful for a Xmas Present g articles: oppers, all sizes. nd Coffee Pots. d Tea and Co¥Mee Carpet Sweepers. I5¢. to $10.00, ives, Forks and numerous to mention. BROS, S STREET. FITTS III III IIR. FIPS IIPIIIIIIIIIFIGNG Pesssssrsren <« "EPERS p, 25¢. ight, 35¢. SHOE STORE | INAPAAAAAAPPPPPPPPPIID nen : Panama Is Safe. Heoico City, Jan. © safety of the stéamer City of anama, which was caused by nding of prov isioned life-saving rafts ashed ashore on the coast north of anta Cruz, was allayed, vestorday ternoon, by the rece ing of stonday am from Mazatlan, signed by Unit- | States Consul Kaiser, All saying e Panama had been sigieted WAAAY aA 7.~Alarm over 6 iv said the nurse; "When my patient got "I said -- Bovoril Who sald BovRiLe| WOrsSCom - re voc Phosyhéting, | | The Great English Remed Zh ones and invigorates the whole SI iervous system, makes holo | h jtiood } in old Veins, Cures Nero- | il and Broin Worry, Des- Sexual Weakness, omissions, Sper- nd Effects of Ahuse or Ercesses. r box, six for $i Une will please, siy ro, id by Fal g rs o pa mphle | 3 on foeatnt of Yor eo pam, ei fre: Wood ma formosty Wi Hedy Gran GionFonl Fe prot hi, Rooms From $1.00 Per Day Up OTE CW YORK STATION | MONEY IN GANARIES profitatie than poultry. Ea Our new 'ss Experience unnecessary. We Money in Canaries, tells all about it. . rd SL Sen Pircls from vs. Birds Shipped anywhere s betore buying. Addre: coriam BIRD SEED HE EXPLAINS Mr. Geo. W. Mahood Tells What He Knows. A Réporter Investigates the Merits "of Vinol. A Bubject That is Agitating the Whole Country. There has vegched us rumors of a new discovery. Semething that will revolutionize the practice of mudi A remedy that has given suffer from wasting diseases hopes of re newad health and prolonged life. Of enough importance have these stories appeared that a special into view with Me. Mahood, our well known drucgist, was thouxht ad visable. . "Why," said Mr. Mahood, "this 1s discovery it was fir no more pn New the moon throuch a existed simply in out g f we were might be con what we have fc known and fiothing more or less then valugdde medicinal properties thyt have alwavs existed in the cod's liver, and for which cod liver oil has bem prescribed hy physicigns, Cod liver oil. is something that is very valuable in all sorts of wasting diseases, and in itself is extremely tha mn Was when py telesec f finding truth method covery, but or ves £0 Mmyny disaoreegble. For those who have a tendency to sore throat, bronchitis, courhs colds, for everyone of an anacmie disposition, it has alwavs been considered as simply invg and vet it hgs more often cessary to abandon its use to devise nn ne than it a wav of has heen possible administering it. "Ywo ocminent © French chemists started in and got interested in the matter. and after vears of study they have sucecoded in extracting from th liver of the cod just what is necessary ond have left behind that obnoxious, greasy, vile-tasting fatty matter, the thoueht of which even has turned the stomachs of thousands. They found a way of getting the kernel out of th nut. "That is how the about Vinol is made. It is the con centrated essence of medicine found in the cod's liver that does the good. The grease is like the shell of the nut, absolutely useless; only it is different from. the shell of the nut because be sides being useless it is extremely ob- noxious and dispereeable to sight, taste and smell. "We have now taken this extract and put a sufficient quantity of it in a delicious-tasting wine. We have also added a small amount of « nic iron. This heightens . the twnic et of 'the wine, The extract of the eml's so much talked liver comes in just the right propor tion to do the gréatest amount of wood." "Herd, drink this" said Mr. Mahood, as he reached for a bottle, and-poured forth a glagsiul of Vinol. "The revorter, after carefully tasting and drinking the glass of Vinol, hanl- od him. found it to be deliciously palatable and in every way exceeding. v a~recgble. You have just taken, condensed, of the curative principles of the cod's liver what. you would find in fifty per cent. of its volime of cod liver oil. You ean therefore imagine that if it is necessary to take this remedy How much easier it will be to derive bene- fit from it than it used tobe when cod liver oil was administered. Do you regplize that formerly vou only obtained 5 small proportion of these same curative prope rtieg' in a whole pint of that horrid oil ¥ Doesn't that tell the stary to vou?" The péporter thanked Mr. Mahood 'for his kiminesd. and left him, won: derine to himself whether after all a man had to be born on purpose to be famous, or whether notoriety and goog fortune al non sometimes come as a matter: of } | under the feet of | She was { did not rally. THE CHILD DIED. A Sale of Residences downe Village. Lonedowne, Jan. 4. is felt for Mr. in Lans- Much sympathy and Mrs. Freemam Doak, whose little daughter; Bessie, passed away from the effects of the injury sustained, when her sleigh pan a team of hor injured about the head and The remains of the late Taylor, Brockville, were and placed in the vault. here for many years, and Mrs, Taylor was wid ly Iniwn and esteemed. At th: last meeting of Yanadoons Lad ce, No. 270 1.0.0.F., the officrs were installed hy | Mrs. Joseph brought Jer following D.D.G.M., Wook J.P.G, W. J. Webster; N.G., George T. Potter; V.G., W, W. Frew; Ver." sceretary, W. I. Meikle, M. D.: Fin, scevetagy, William McConnell; tr as ner, Frank Surplis. After the in- stalla'i nan enjoyable oyster supper waz held. Th: windows of the have Merchants Rank been improved by wold lettering, the work of eur sign writer, S. C. E, Dixon. Mr. ay Mrs. D. A. Haig soent Christmas holidays in Toronto, Dun- Calk gnd other western places. Robert and Joseph Latimer, Boisseyain, are visiting their mother; Mrs. R. F. Lati- mer. Frederick and Dow Cornett, of Kinsston, spent a few days here last week. NW. Sparrow, Merchants Bank staff, spent Christmas--at his home, Brampton. Mr. and Miss Dow- ser, Metealie, Ont., spent Christmas weak gt William Mitchell's. Miss Me- Kinley, Sceley's Bay, visitine at 1. H. Warren rman ('ross has purch- usd the store and residence lately oe- cavied by I.'Cole & Son. Brock Trues- dell has bought Mr. Cress' late resi- denca. Gordon Peck has sold his livery business to Joseph Latimer. A. M. Dixon has secured the servi Reid, an exrert Scotch t E. McKay, harness manufacturer, sold his farm to N. W. Webster, who has in torn so'd it to E. Warren. Mr. McKay las bought a sidencg from W. W. Webster, WOMAN'S DEVOTION. Offers to Share Punishment of Bigamist. London, Jan. 5.--An unusual story of a woman's devotion was told at Birmingham yesterday, when FErnost Alert Smith was committed' for trial for bigamy. After the first marriage in Septom- ber, 1901, had been proved, Florence Mabel Lawley said that she went throngh a form of marriage with Smith in 1903. She knew he was mar- ried, "Then why did you marry him? the stipendiary asked. "I married him," she answered, "be- cause he had no home and no friends I took him as a friend. His wife left him. She came to the house where I was at service, and where fe picked up She left him to an empty | with me. house, "He has bern a friend to me," she | continued. "In fact, he has been more | than a friend. T am willing to share half his punishment whatever it is. It is his own wife's fault what he did. He has always behaved well to me and the children, and al wavs will, worships his little children, BOOKS INSPIRE MURDER. Lad Builds Cave and Leads Gang. Berlin, Jan. 5.~Paul Lehmann, 4 to-day, to ten yegrs' murder fourteen-year-old bay, was, sentenced at Kotthus imprisonment for the wirl playmate of the October. The boy confessed committed the crime deliberately The evidence established that the of a same age in voung murderer became a criminal through reading "peony dreadiuls." He had built a cave in the woods, where he set un hegdegmrters for bov thieves, 'whom he. induced to steal money with which to buy revolvers. He said : ------------------ Croup can positively be stopped m twenty minutes. No vomiting--nothing to sivken or distress your child. sweet, pleasant, and safe syrup, called Dr. Shoop's Croup Cure. does the work and does it quickly. De. Shoop's Croup Cure is for croup alone, remem- ber. 1t does notgclaim to cure a doz- en ailments. It's" for croup,.that's all. Sold by all dealers. Prevost, Brock street. will give 'a choice of $I8 and $20 suiting. to-order for $15. Good fit and trimmings, a genuine bargain, A fool etn talk without knowing what ho "ought to say, but a man's silence is what he ought not to say. Always use Burtch"s pure' fresh grated horseradish. only 10c. a bottle. Ask your grocer for it. good Red Cross Drug Store. go there the important festival of the | was observed. that he did'| I know it for a fact; he | agmin, + I that h | made- | wise | due to his knowing 3 -- DAILY A \ "REVIVAL NEEDED TO RE-ESTABLISH SPIRIT OF REVERENCE. BRITISR WHIG, MONDAY, A INCIDENTS OF THE DAY. Newsy Paragraphs Picked Up By Reporfers on Their Rounds, Oyitors, #0e. quart. Camovsky's. jeen's hockey team arrived from Pittsburgh this morning. 3 | Capt. Thomas Donielly's marine lee- Rev. Robert Laird Says There is f Lee, at old collegiate building, to- : :_ | mght, a -Deplorable Lack of it In The staff-sergennt® and warrant bfii- 4 Canada--Foreign Mission [cark at Tete de Pont barracks, fre Work of Church of England. | "Reverence" was the subject of a | forceful discourse by Rev. Robert Laird, M.A, of Queen's University, at the Sunday moming service in Chal- mers church. The men who had the pirit of reverence, he said, walked closer to God than the rest, and in their presence we feel as though we are passing among the pillars of sac red cgthedrals. But, said the preach- er, there is today a deplorable lack of reverence, and a revival to re-es- tablish that hexvenly quality is sorely i Pont barracks to-day | holding a dance to-night. Sleighing is stil fair on some of the | country roads, but cannot last ng | with continued miki weather, There was a half holiday at Tete de in order to al- lowthe men to exercise their franchise. Extra mild cured bloaters, finnan haddies and ciscoes, at Carnovsky's. Kent Bros. have leased the old "Hotel Dien, an Brock street, and will turn it into a mica picking factory. The Americgn Vitograph company is booked to appear ut The Grand on needed in Canada. With the conumer- | Friday and Saturday of this week, cial growth of this countty men have | With a series of new moving pic become sordid, and they fail to re- | tures. : cognize the hand of God in their pros- The feeling around man. of the perit-+, Self-sufficicney is the evil that: exists, aml this sclf-sufficiency is the chief cause for the flight of that reverence which wa¥®so strong in the fathers of Israel. For the re-estgblish- ment of the spirit of reverence is need: ed the recognition by myn that God is their Father, that He has given them all they have. With the humble and contrite heart will come back that spirit of reverence which is the angel of the world. At St. Paul's Church. Rev. Hugh J. Spencer, of Chicago, 4 work. Mr. Spencer, also read a letter from the rector, who referred to his illness and the appointment of a viear for the church. He asked that the new vicar he given the prayers and sup- Gh of every member of 'the church. i ---- | St. Mary's Cathedral. | In St. Mary's cathedral on Sunday | Epiphany His grace the archbish- op presided, vested with cope and mi- tre, surrounded by his various assist ants. Grand mass was celebrated by Rev. Fr. Mea, dean of Regiopolis col- lege. The rector, Rev. Fr. Hanley, preached a practieal sermon, touching on the various incidents in connection with the magis' visit to the infant Sa- viour with their offerings. Lhe choir rendered Milliard's mass. At the "of- fertery the "Adeste Fidelis" was given. In the evening grand vespers were sung followed by the benediction of the holy sacrament, The altars were hand- somely decorated with flowers. SCHEDULE DRAWN. For the Games to Be Played Soon. The schedule of the junior intercolle- glate hockey league has been drawn up. The doves of games are : dan. 9.-K.C.I. ve. Queen's 111. Jan. 16.--R. 57 re, Queen's 111. Jan. 21 ens 11 vs. K.C.L Feb. 1.--K.C.I. vs. RM.C, II. | Feb, f. RM.C. H vs. K.C.1. { Feb, 12.-Queen's 11 vs. RM.C. II. | The Officers Named. The emplovees of Macnee & Minnes hs wl their) meeting, Saturday, anize and elect officers for ey team in the City follow nr officers were dent, Willian Minnes; to or their hoe League. Th elected : Presi vice-president W. H. Macnee; seerctarv-trogsurer, ( Kerr: captain, A. Houghton: man ager, Stanley Trotter | Picton Team Here. + The Picton hockey tean arrived in the ody, at noon, to play Frontenacs, to-night, in the opening game of the | junior OH.A. series at Kingston. | They are a husky lot of boys and ex pect to win to-night's game. Picton | will line up Croft, goal; Thorne, | point; Bedborowgh, covery Benson, | rover; Wilson, centre; Reid, right | wing; Williamson, left wing Curling Rink Deserted. Owing to the mill past few days, the been deserted in' game are for a spell of cold we interesting matches will be weather of the | curling rink * has | Followers of the looking to old probs ther. Several pulled off | as the ice is in eo Shipe | as soon { Had To Be Postponed. Kingston and Napanee were to have | met for a game in the series, to-night at the curling rink, y soft and the oontest poned. . "% but the ice was too had to be post { LAD HAS BAD LUCK. | * Funds Were Short and Seeks Pro- | tection of Police. | With but a few pennies in his pocket | seventoen-year-old lad called at the | 3 ice headquarters last night and ask- | ed Mo be allowed to stay over night. | He said that he I Kingston. He | The Wd stated that he c fall on one of the Calvin boats from Detroit. all summer, city. He had secured work for a few weeks at a time in different lines, but had not been able to get steady em- | ployment. The little he had saved while on the boat he had spent. ; Old-Time Oarsman Dead. Brockwille, Ont, Jan. 7. Henry 1 Mathen, a prominent resident and ex- councillor of this town, died, Sunday afternoon, a victim of paralysis. He was sixty-nine y younger days was a noted oarsman t having defeated the late Edward Tin- | i ning, Toronto, for the championshin { of Canada, in 186%, _Mr. La wife and four daughters. A 50c. bulb syringe for 25¢.. at the renuwine rubber goods sale at Gilgon's | Among other long-felt wants is that of Be sure 'you of a political eandidate who will live ! up to his campaign oratory. | scrapping, amd { work. | eron" and Ruth | attorney had no friends in| and only wae taken in, | son, came here last | He was working on the boat | but was discharged when | the vessel made her last trip to this | When | he left the police station this morning | he said he would go back to the states, | cars of age and in his) polling subdivisions, this was thgt Mowat had the contest cinched, Quit' a number of this district will attend the meeting of the Kastern Omtario Dairymen's Association, to be held in Ottawa on Finuary 9th. The Queen's-Yale matches, at Pitts burg, Pa., drow the biggest crowds of the season. The people over there are tired of the professional hockey teams' prefer clean afternoon, mayoralty dairymen from to see The teams in the City League are organizing for the preached . at both services in St. [busy 9 + coming sea- Paul's church, Sunday son. The first game will be played At the morning service Mr. Spencer { next week. With a teams 2 the 'read a report of the foreign mission. | MOY a A Rood series of. PANES \ - i > Dr ary work done by the Church oi Eng- | ars oromised. Clul al hold their land. which contained an earnest ap | pe, Lan EE: ub Will "hold "ther peal for thé continuance of the good { Dext fortnightly' party and dance on Wednesday evening, January 9th, at the gunners' mess room, Tete du Pont barracks. Parties who had invita- tions for previous affairs are invited to attend, An insane man was 'brought to the asylum, this morning, from the coun- try. At the railway station he ere ated quite a scene by shaking his fist at the meople and making faces at them. He was removed from the sta- tion to the asylum in a cab, WILL IT SELL? The Report About the R. &C Navigation Co. Montren! 'Witness. It is rumored that the C.P.R. in- tends absorbing the a & On- tario Navigation company. Rodolphe Forget, M.P. the BR. & 0. compuny, stated that he had heard something of the mgtter, but that at present no official an pouncement | could be given out. "Sich an Wportant matter," said Mr. Forget, "will have to wo before the shareholders of the navigation company, but it is quite likely that they would consent to such a deal if it. were to their advantage to do so." The Grand Trunk railway for years has enioved practically a monopoly of the Richelicu passenger traffic, which president of | prefers the railway jowrney from To rento to Kingston, and the boat from | Kingston to Montreal, on account of {its more direct route to the Lime stone City, but if the C.IP.R. obtains {control of the Richelieu, the Grand Trunk wonld likely be cut out of this traffic, which it now enjoys as the former will no doubt control such trafic even in spite af its longer route, THE WOMAN HELD. | Where Toronto's Prominent Were Found, Toronto, Jan. 7. vs. Elizabeth Jackson, whose hous® at 14 Church Men | street, was raided by the police Satur day night, appeared before the police magistrate, this morning, and was fined $30 and costs for keeping a dis orderly house, The raid was made as a iit of revelations of Grace Cam Wilson, the two girls on charges of forgery. sai To have named qo number of préminent citizens of To ronto as being among the frequenters of the hous The wo® not allowed said he more serious under arrest The girls are Jackson woman to go as the crown charge. MARRIFD BY PROXY. | Bride and Bridegroom 5,000 Miles Apart. Berlin, Jun. 5.~A marriage by vroxy has just taken place at Mar burg, a bridegroom who is 5,000 miles away being represented by a substitute. The bride was a pretty voung farmer's dauchter, and she was | married to her childhood's sweetheart, a younr carpenter named Stephen Kotz, who emigrated to America ta seck his fortune 5 few vears ago, and who is now a prosperous artisan in Cleveland. Ohio. Kotz was too husy for the weddiny and comrade to say "Yes" to come over aster] a former on his behalf. Pulled Him. Mcntreal, Jan. 7.-Montreal's firs Chinese constable, made his first arrest, he victim being Lin Top, the firs lestial ever hauled to a Montrea court on a Lin, however, succeeded the first pumshment on' his race, fo that crime, that he was sick and :"dlunk," was allowed his freedom. and h Victim Oi Cenfidence Men. Winnipeg, (Jon. 7+~John Smith, c Deloraine, who left a few davs ago t | spend the | fidence men on the train at the depe in Deloraine, Clean Teeth. To remove tartar the teeth try a Dr. Horsey fibre tooth brush, a perfect cleanser and polishe Call and examine them at Mathen leaves | drug store, | Dén't wait for Dame Fortune | knock at your door. She may be kic napped by someone who is willing | meet her half way. . " 4 with a flogging proposed to lay a Lee John- last Qight, charge of drunkenness in escaping by putting up the plea holidays with friends in | Kingston, was relieved of $68 hy con- Wade's | which shows that the half-yearly re- JANU ARY AT GRETNA GREEN OLD FASHIONED VILLAGE OF A SINGLE STREET. How This Famous Place Looks To-Day--Weddings That ' Made it Once Important Are Now Altogether Nil. Nowadays .one does not dash mo Gretna behind a pair of smoking bays thoy and & mud- bespgttered coach. The Glasgow & Southwestern Railway carries one comfortably; though in case of pur- suit by angry parents a special train may be hired to whirl one to the Green. Instead of the old inn at Cars lisle, where is was the custom for runaway couples fearing capture to hire for the day ever available steed and coach, the start is made from the commaédious citadel railway sta- tion. The train whirls northward, cross- ing the Eden and Esk Rivers, and eveptually penetrating into Scotland by way of the new bridge over the Lark. Out of the carriage windows one may catch a glimpse of the old Lark toll britige by which the. border was crossed in prerailroading days, writes a correspondent of The Wash- ington Star. Fancy depicts a coach with its smoking horses standing at the toll gate, while another vehicle comes down the hill in chase of the' eloping couple. "G-r-retna Green!" roared the por ter at the neat little station, with its beds of Beottish bluebells: Over the station wall I saw the village--a sin- gle street, long and clean, with white- washed cottages and a church by ne means in good repair. The Green it- self was an irregular patch of grassy sod in front of the church. Nearby is the more modern settlement of Bpringfield--a sort of Newer Gretna. Beyond the village stretches the dreary expanse of Solway moss, where 80 many sanguinary fights took place in the days of border warfare. k- ing toward the south one sees the mountains of Cumberland, blue against the fleecy sky. The old hall is, of course, the first place toward which travelers turn in Gretna Green. Here more than hall the Gretna weddings were solemnized, though the direct line of "lay par- sons" has for some time abandoned the place: This I discovered in con- versation with the proprietress of the old hall. "Yes," sshe admitted, "Lang claims to be the heir of the old lay parsons now, but he lives over in Springfield. My late husband married many peo- ple, however, after the Langs left the old hall." The general belief is that Gretna Green marriages are things of the past.. That is not so. Hardly a week goes by that one or two weddings do not occur. I witnessed one myself-- the contracting parties being a weal- thy merchant's daughter of Carlisle and a stalwart young tenant of the estate of Eden Hall. \ The Most "Human" Bishop. "Strong and gentle" are the two adjectives that best describe the Most Reverend Randall Davidson, Arch- bishop of Canterbury. Even with those to whom he is in the stron est opposition over the education bi 1 he is most popular, and his genialit of manner and sunny disposition e him to everyone. He has been 1 ribed by one of his clergy as "the most 'human' Bishop that ever lived," a phrase that very aptly sums him up. It was his breadth of view and his deep learning that first breught him prominently under the notice of the late Queen Victoria, and he remained her favorite preacher and adviser to the day of her death. A. P. tells that some years o. when he was Bishop of Rochester, was about to appoint a man to Be minor office in his domestic estab- lishment, when one of his cha lains ventured to raise a protest. "What is the matter with the man?" asked Dr. Davidson in some surprise. "Well, he is a Dissenter," szid the other. "Dear, dear, how dreadful!" cried the Bis- hop.. "And does he eat his vietims raw or cook them first?' Needless to say, the man got the job. Despite their recent difference of opinion, the Archbishop and Mr. Augustine Birrell are the firmest of friends, and it is génerally believed in politcal circles that Mr. Birrell submitted to him the draft of the education bill long be- fore it was presented to they House of Commons. A Great British Contrn~'or. One of the greatest of Briiuish con- tractors is Sir John Jackson, LL.D. R. 8., who at the present moment, with the new Admiralty docks at Devonport and Singapore, and the new Admiralty harbor, Simon's Bay, South Africa, is engaged upon under- takings of a value of no less than ten millions sterling. Sir John Jackson, . A. P. tells, is a Yorkshireman, born in 1851, and was educated at York and Edinburgh University, afterwards going thoroughly through the "shops," as engineers call them, and acquiring that mastery of civil engineering which was to lay the foundation of his great fortunes. His first big contract was for the last sec- t | tion of the Manchester Ship Canal; then came the foundations of the Tower Bridge, Dover Harbor, t | other works of 'magnitude. In appear } | ance Bir John is on the short side, but broad and deep of chest, with the engineer's ically \ square brow, bearded, 8 and keen of eye, and of a quiet, unassuming demeanor which conceals an iron will and inflexible determination. Apart from his work, he is known far and wide as a model employer, firm, but just and kind, and unwearying in his efforts to improve of | the workingman's lot, and to teach o | him to improve himself. In short, an employer against whom not even the r >t | word to say. | Queer Balance Sheet. Perhaps one of the quaintest bal- and stains from | ance sheets issued is that of the Gar- stang and Knott End Railway, one of r. | the smallest working linés in England. most socialistic [of Socialists has a The effect of Scorf's Emulsion ont pale children is magical." ope It makes them plump, rosy, active, happy. White Wear Sale Ne wish to announce our White Wear Saif which begins on SAT. © "URDAY and continues throughout the month of January. Every- thing which goes to make up a complete stock to be seen on the! second floor. Gowns, Drawers, Corset Covers, Skirts, Infonts' 8 wear, ote. Come and inspect them. 3 Crumley Brothers » ---- Our January Sale We are now into the second week of the best January sale we Moro goods than ever before bought at closer prices. Shop early if you wish to do itit in comfort--but come anyway, ever put' on No. 8, 72c¢. No. 9, 88c. A nice line of Enamelled Sauce Pans, 30 per cent. disesunt. Sond odds and ends at half price, OUR BARGAIN COUNTER has on J pow: Dish Mops. Eu Coat' Hooks, Butcher ives and Stoxe Polish. McKelvey &Birch 69 and 71 Brock Street, Kingston $000 VERY IMPORTANT SALE OF WOMEN'S FINE NEWBLACK COATS HESE fine Coats were received after our regular season's stocks had been largely disposed of. They are beautifully made in the very latest effects and will be qui as for immediate use, but owing to the as fashionable for early spring comparatively small number we have | decided to clear them at the great Janu- ary Sale price-reductions. § Come quick for cholcs--the bar gain is a most genuine one and the quantity extremely limited, SPENCE'S ™- 'isis ceipts were £2,117, and the expendi- ture £1,208, leaving a revenue of to] £009. The rolling stock comprises wagons, and the mileage of thie com- miles seventy-nine chains. 1 two engines, six carriages, and 41 [3 pany is - xiiis - -- n Returned From Port Arthur. shape for winter John Donnelly returned, on Satur- . Vesna 3 day, fram Port Arthdr, where he spent the past two weeks getting the steamers Waheondah and Ionic into

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