So ay $0 ibbon GE ANADA, but also the best of all orating, resting, wholesome. . to $1 a Ib. --All grocers "ANY FORM your Suit is here. in getting Clothes to fit you--It les will end. man, the Fat Man and the Man ind his Suit here. Forms Perfectly Arge. > garments are correct led. or fitting 'hard-to-fits." D, $12, 13.50, 0 $20 e can do for you in the way of to be fitted, at a price you'll for the 0000000000000000600000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 SLL0L000000080000080000 er Cent, Cutlery PIII Y > ur now famous "determina- intention of disposing of our tlery'--the most complete »uY™ t sacrificial prices. This stock Lib ikinbiididdddbdd Cases, & Forks, Forks, Ivory Handles. zor Strops, SSors, FIIIVIIIIIIVIIIIIR eve eIdeIe Ee se in Cutlery that is to be date hardware store. goods were considered very ur generous 20 per cent., they in and give us a chance to 3. Remember, we make no ntiate, advertise no goods we ¢ no prices we cannot make 5 & So : 4 ns, : j : ng Street. : 3 FIV TIP ISPS IPP IIPS NT RECEIVED Y AND PIC LEA PRICES : Toronto Phone Main 1729 ' EE ---------------------------------- Enjoy Life. Good health makes good na- ture. Ii everyone had a sound stomach there would be no pes- simists in the world. Do not allow a weak stomach or a bad . liver to rob you of the joy of living. Take BEEGHAM'S PILLS "and the world laughs with you. No need then for rose-colored : glasses. Beecham's Pills start health vibrations to all parts of the body, while putting a ruddy tint on lips and cheeks. There's health in every box. Health for every man, woman and child. Beecham"s Pills Sold Everywhere. In boxes 25 cents. LETTS] ABSOLUTELY PURE CREAM | TARTAR. Nearly all goods in this line at the present time are adulieraled and in Jact unfit to use. GILLETT'S is used by the best bakers and caterers everywhere. REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. GILLETT'S costs no more than the inforfor adulterated goods. REFUSE sSuBsTITUTES. E.W.GILLETT Souravy LIMITED TORONTO, ONT. SYNOP:IS OF CANADIAN KGRTE-WEST HOMESTEAD RLGULATIONS, A even numbered section of Domin- fon in Manitoba or North West Province, excepting 8 and 26, not reServed, may be homesteaded by any person the sole head of a fawily, or male over 18 years of age. to the extent of one-quarter section, of 160 acres, more £88. Application for homestead entry or in. tion must we made in person by toe + plicant at the oflice of the local } « Sub-agent. An application for entry or inspection mude personally at any Sub-agent's oilce ! may be wired to the local Agent by the Sub-agent, at the expense of the up plicant, and it the land applied for ie | vacant on receipt. of the telegram guch application is to have priority and the land will be held until the necessary the transaction are went | papers to compiete received by mail. In case of "personation'" the entry will be summarily cancelled end the applic cant will forfuit ail priority of claim. An applicant for inspection must be eligible for homestead entry, and only one application for jaspection will be receiv from an individual until that | application bas been disposed oly homesteader whose entry is In good standing and not have to cancellation, may, subject to approval of Lepartment relinquish it ih favour of father, mother son, daughter, brother or sister, if eligible, but to no one else, on Bling de- claration ol abandoument. i Where an entry is summarily cancelled | br voluntarily abandoneti, subsequent to | fostitution of cancellation proceedings, the applicant for inspection will be en titled to prior right of entry. | Applicants for inspection must state in what particulars the homesateader is in default, and if subsequentry the state ment is found to Le incorrect in mater ial - particulars, the avniicant will lose any prior right of re-entry should the land become vacant, or if entry has been granted it may be summarily eanceled Duties.--A settler 8 rewuired to per torm the conditions under one of the following plans :-- | (1) At least six months' residence up- on and cultivation of the land in each year during the term: of three years. (2) It the father tor mother, if the father ia deceased) of a homesteader resides upon a farm in tbe vicinity of the land entered for bv such homesteader @ requirement as to residence may be satisfied by such person remding with the | father or mother. z (8) If the settler has his permanent residence upon farming land owned bY nim fn the vicinity of his homestead, the requirement may be satisfied by residence upon such land. ore ing application for patent the settler must give six months' notice fn writing to the Commissioner of Do-| minion Lands at Ottawa, of his inten- | tion to do wo. | SYNOPSIS OF CANADIAN NORTH. WEST MINING REGULATIONS. Coal. --Coal lands may be purchased at $10 per acre for soft coal and $30 for | anthracite. Not more than 320 acres acquired by one individual or! company. Royalty at the rate of ten | cents per ton of 3,000 pounds shall be! collected on the gross output. | Quarts.--A froe miner's certificate 'is | granted upcn payment in advance of $5 annum for an individual, and {rom to $100 per annum for a company | according to capital. A free miner, having discovered miner- | al in place, pay locate a claim 1.500% | 1,500 foat. f9e for recording a claim is $5. At least $100 must'be expended on the claim each vear or pald to the mining recorder in lieu thercol. When $500 bas | been expapded or paid, the locator may. upon eve a .survev made, and upon complying with other requirements, pur- | chase the land at $1 per acre. | The t provides for the payment of a royalty of 33 per cent on the sal Placer mining Slnims_ gessrally are 100 | some ? aly are irs is Wahls | men; they bury the'bones left from | State of Ohio, uy ot Toledo, fos. Ake miner may obtain two leases to | their d'nner, | Frank J. Cheney makes oath that hv aT a a i | Buy Castoria at Gibson's Red Cross! is senior partner of the firm of F. J discretion of the Minister of the Interior. The lessee shall have a dredge in oper ation within one season from the date of the lease for each five miles. tal HO ver annum for each mile of river | things " o | T, Royalty at the rate of 2§ per cent collected on the output after jt ex- Oeeds $10,000. W. W. CORY, Deputy of the Minister of the In 2 N ~Unauthorized publication of this - isement will not he nald for een with L671, 188 has 460,000 acres of uncultivated land Mane plants. such : | A Book Issued By Bismarck's' Harry Turner, of London, Ont., is | Physician, spending a few days wilv friends on "The "Doctor," a book by Prof. Kinoston, on his way home from Mon: : treal, { with the whole duty of { his patient. The volume is { med enl fits clai { much as an art, for science and decep art reliable, . swe elected : resi . naked, serene, true, The physicians of WO fir ote . : Pre side Bly ue to-day, through' their raw ienorance, Son; first Yiceqyesiven ' \ es Sas Willie, | make bitter the transit of their pati- Ship: second vier presi ent, 5 1 fam | ents from sickness to health: by their Pi ns Serelaty treasures sles lack of tact and ignorance of the art Yaris: directors, Oy 1 1 dT. - + | called sgeience to their advantage and | . . |'to add to their fame." Rooms Warmed Without Fire. Schweninger formerly lectured on Eleetrie heating rugs are the new affections of the skin in Berlin Univer- est innovation, to make the house i sitv, and had a 1 | and history | weather of the past few days has tak- on. {and colds at once and costs but 15e. | at Gibson's Draw a . OAILY DRITISR WHIG, PERSOJAL MENTION. Movements of The Peqple--Whst They Are Saying And Doing. W. M. Weir, Montreal, is in the city | » on business. . | J. F. Dexter, Cobalt, is in the city on business. Could! G, S. Spencer, VERY CHEAP RATES! MILLIONS SAVED BY THE WATER ROUTE. And Much Better Rates 4 New York, was in i i the city to-day. BN Siven he Sunes PH H. UC. Sparing, Toronto, is in the city on business. J ions Saved to Shoppers. { A. Clayton, of Toronto, was in the Detroit, Mich., Jan. 10s-In a paper, | city to-day on business. : read by Mr. Hodgman, president yf the Police Constable Driscoll is off duty Michigan Engineering Society, at the suffering from la grippe. closing sessi of its annual conven- | Henry W. Benning, of Ottawa,is the tion, Mr, Hodgman said the sum of guest of relatives in the city. : FRO0.000,000 in round numbers, had! Miss BE. Asselstine, New York City, been saved shippers during, the past is visiting friends in the city, J twenty yewrs, ns a result of the diffor- | Harry J. Porter, of Toronto, is (nee in' rates between railway and | spending a few days in Kingston. lake shipment, Last year alone the! Judge Price has returned from at- saving was neark: 290,000,000. Since | tending to his division court circuit. 1823 the United! States had spent Andrew and Miss Alice Grainger, abort 880 000,000 on improvements of | Sydenham, are spending a few days in the great Jukes, on ) which investment | the city. - ea she had enabled her citizens to fave) Mrs. Palmer, of Syracuse, N.Y., is nearly $00,000,000, 4 pretty good in- on a visit to her mother, Mrs. Scan- vestment. lan, Alfred street. Canada, in. the sume time, had ex- Penitentiary Inspector Dawson, who pended $70,000,000 on her waterways, ' spent several days here, returned to but mostly in the St. Lawrence dis- | Ottawa yesterday. trict. With a twenty-five-foot channel | William McIntosh, who has been at mean low water from Duluth to ' visiting at his home in Peterboro, has Buffalo, said Mr. Hodgman, it might' retumed to the city. be possible to make lake rate freights | Henry Baker, of Ottawa, as low as those charged by trans-At-* the city this 'morning. He lantic lines, cepted a position here. Dr. Moxley. who has been confined CREATED A SENSATION. {to the General Hospital for many { weeks, continues te improve, sion arrived in has ac Schweninger; who was Bismarck's phy- sician 'and intimate friend, creates tremendous sensation in medic cles. The hook is Schweninger's re- Vinge for being ostracized for twenty Miss * Annie Johnston, of PP rts | mouth, has been invalided for \two months through blood-poisoning, \re sutl of an acoident to her foot. years by the medical faculty of the | The K. & P. carried several passen- University of Berlin, which has never gers to Ottawa yesterday to attend forgiven his intimacy nor influence the annual meeting of the Eastern with th: Don Chancellor, whose stitution and temperament stood perfectly. In "the Doctor" con- Ontario dairymen's association. he under- N arly all of Queen's students have | returned to the city from their holi days. The railway tickets for the stu- dents runs out on Monday next. The following were among those who leit to-day for Cape Vincent, N.Y.: M, Stoner, J. Wagner, Miss A, Paradis, i. Landon, H. Reddick, W. Red- Schweninger deals the physician more especially to ' a terrible indietment of the average physician's convent onal methods. He scoffs at Mrs. "seitnee," so called, derides dick. mu {o be a science, ridicules its ! empiricism, and declares it is working in the dork. *'Medical 'science' of the present dav will be ridiculed a hund- Of red year® hence, just as the 'science' | of the eighteenth century is ridiculed today." sav: Bismdrck's old physi- clan. "'Mediciné is not a science so to humanity. and AGRICULTURAL ASSOCIATION Kingston Township Holds Annual Meeting. The annual meeting of the Kingston Township Agricu/turyl Association was held on Wadnesday afternoecn' in is obscure % La o " Catararmi village hall. These officers £. K. Purdy. F. J. Bushell, F. Shannen, Mi. Fowler, Gates. 8S. Wartman, 'R. Trudell, and F. Knight. Dr. Edwards reported that there was in the bank. at the credit of the association thé sum of $306. Tn 1902 the surplus was $82; this had in creased to $396 and the prize list had been doh. The township was hold- ing most successful fairs. of medicine they cloud their patients' transit from life to death." Sehweninger attacks the system that gives a university education to medical men, saving: '"'In the uaiver- sities they load themselves with bal- Inst that "is of no earthly use to them; they crow selfish, pragmatical and frigid; thay think only of gain and learn how they can turn their =o- | owner and home-maker smile. February Tochnical World M , Perkins describes them. and comforters so hegt electricity as to warm - the post was rooms in which 1 Think ak "Drofesror of the art ©f a dustless, odorless, noiseless heat of healing." His inr system in your home, which pre were nominal, and it said then SUrYUS gn oven temperature. mak that he wasiforever 'retired from any rouble. requires practically prominent position in academic mudi ©™1 which not banishes cal circles, radingtors, registers and wl! such cum brous, unsightly things, but hides the | very pmesd nee rand a In the The enemi » made by reason of his influence with Bis- F.C marck had him removed from that rugs, carbets chair after the chancellor's death. To case Schen'nger's fall a found for Kim high' position. od by they are used. duties s no was no care only stoves, of its own medinms of radiation in the heart Council Of Bloomfield. of some began Bloomfield, .1g 9.--The firs ou 1 i i Bloomfield, Jan. 9. The first. « N° gifully decorative fabric. It seems cil for the village of Bloomfield was like the perfection of devices. It ean clected_on Monday, as follows: Reeve, po uend wherever. incandescent Hoh te A. B. Saylor; councillors, A. M. Van- are in use. There is no smoke. n cleat, ¥.5.. Dr 1 a ghoon, Alva Bew- _.ohuttion: no gascous hy-product win had R. ee jotsliner, 1 are thrown off; it creates neither dust For the township of Hallowell the po = 4 requires neither fuel, re following council was elected: Reeve, servoir or special apmaratus. Tt doe 8S, E. Mastn: _ deputy reeve, w. B. not ccnstme oxygen from the air La ns; councillors, James 1. Stin- and, spread out flyt on the floor, one son, E. Purtelle, and Herbert "Ichn- of the thermopile furnishes rugs, for instg mikd, steady and perman ent. source of heat, evenly distributed | nen, son. A large vote was polled in both municipalities, H. W. Bedell 'is in Chicago, attend- rege surface. The b Over gp very t of ing a cement convention. Miss Filona persons oceuty a room heated in 3arker ente « ' ~ ) r« Barker entertain 1 a company of (hic wav will always be warm and young people on Thursday evening. their he vis cool Ideal combing The Bloomfield chrese and butter com pany, hold their annual day. C. M. Yarwood who has been in tie North-West during the past sum- mer, has returned home. Finley Stew. art and John Bowerman are on the sick list, Edward Pearce has gone on a two months' trip to Birmingham, England. ) tion meeting to- How much of vour life is spent try ng to got It rexpuires bat a month or less to put the average man or woman on their feet with Hollis ter's Rocky Mountain Teg. or tablets. Mahood's drug store. V That's the house the doctor huilt Job was a sorely tried man, hut if Bell Rock Tidings. in additicn to his own troubles he Bell Rock, Jan. 9~The "didn't have to listen to those of his neighbors he had something to be en a sudden change. The long bridge « thankful for. between Bell Rock and Moscow is! If sick headache is misery, what are again impassible; it should no longer | Carter's Little Liver Pills if they will be called a bridge; it is nothing but a ' positively cure it ? People who have trap, and a public nuisance. Our |used them speak: frankly of their former teacher, Miss Jewel Sigawortr. worth. They are small and easy tc has taken a school near Burridge. ' take. Neily Yorke and his sister, Miss Mag- There is usually a lot of brass in gie, attended the wedding of their the make up of a silver-tongued ora- cousin, Miss Blanche Yorke, at Tam- tor, worth, on New Year's day. J. H. Don't forget you get Swift's Seran Amey is spending a few days at his | ton con! only at Swift's coal varnds home here. E. Sigsworth and daugh-!' Pr. Chown's Buttermilk and Almond ter. Ruby, were callers in the village Cream for chapped hands, 25e. well, 33¢., tea balmy last week. Diamond brand. grape frait, grown -------------- in Florida, at Carnovsky's. Na 5¢. 1h. Carnoveky's. Ir. Parkin is endeavoring to ar Ag a cough cure "Best's Short Btop" | range a new Rhodes scholarship for is excelled by none. It cures all coughs | the provinee of Saskatchewan. ee ------------------------ are wiserithan Some dogs Drog i 8 s No'hing interests a woman more | and that said firm will pay the sum of | than a man who refuses {o explain ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each : and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Curs FRANK J. CHENEY tore. The genuine is sold there. | GPspey & Co, doing business in the Clty Buy: tooth paste at Gibson's Red Cross Drug Store. Phone 230. Sworn to before.me and subscribed in The old' Trebileack hall, in South *} iY, Miestuce, this: 6th day of December, London, was destroyed by fire. (SEAL) A. W. GLEASON, | The New Brunswick legislature. has Seite Gat ¢ ' Notary Public, { all's Catarrh Cure is taken internally. | Pe salle or rusty Wh " and acts ditectiy: oe he blood : rnd 1 > . mucous surfaces of the systern. § or | Oysters, 40c. quart. Carnovsky's. tettimonials free Good stro i ¥. J. CHENEY, & CO.. Toledo, O. rosy sd ute Sold Sold py all druggists, 7 Forest found out first the story of the £ CHIEF INSPECTOR IS A MAN OF GREAT FORCE AND 'WILL, Scotland Yard's Chief Detective is a Terrible Man For the Criminal to Meet--He is Like Iron in His Determination. Chief-Inspector Forest, the strength of whose iron hands is only matched by his adamantine will and cold phy- sical courage, became the executive chief of Britain's detective force at Scotland Yard on November 1. In- spector Forest is perhaps the most famous detective now living, and by sheer force of intellect, character, and courage has worked his way up from the lowest rung to the foremost posi- tion in Britain's detective force. The Man of Iron. At the top of his work, Mr. Forest is a terrible man for the criminal to meet--keen, relentless, afraid of. noth- ing and never unsuccessful. Afifl this man, the mention of whose name sends a shiver through every well known criminal in every country in the world, is a person whom you might meet any day as a man-about- town; a good humored, genial fellow of forty, who can tell a cheery story with the best, can discuss the latest novel or the chances of the favorite for the Derby. Pooh! you would laugh at the idea that this was the man of i of quick decision in danger, and sudden, desperate action. This witty, smiling raconteur, who is on good terms with a thousand acquaintances, a great detective! He is merely an ing companion, fond \of gossip! Fancy a detective being fond of gos- sip! But it will be a wise eriminal who distrusts this detective when he gossips. He never gossips in vain. No man ever had more of the gift of be- ing entertaining while he says noth- ing that matters. He is sed with a loquacious taciturnity. It has proved a trap for many. Committed a Theft. Mr. Forest went to London from Bristol years ago. It was when he was a young detective sergeant that he scored his first big success by com- mitting a theft. An educated young governess had suddenly and mysteri- ously disappeared, and foul play was suspected by her friends. A thousand efforts were made to ascertain her fate, without suécefs, and then the mystery was placed in the hands of the young detective. He thought over all that had been dong, and made in- quiries on his own account, but a week went by without the; elucidation of the great mystery. 1 Then one day young Forest had an inspiration. Near where the missing girl had been employed as a gover- ness there was a matrimonial agent's office. Mr. Forest called on the old proprietor, explained that his visit was to exhaust all possible avenues of information. The old man, evident- ly fearful of being mixed up with any- thing which had the slightest appear- ce of shadiness, indignantly denied at he had seen anything of the girl in question. Somehow Mr. Forest's suspicions were aroused, and noticing photographs lying about the room in which he and the agent were seated, he made a pretext about wishing to see various records, and succeeded in obtaining the old man's absence for a few minutes. Unearthed the Story. Directly the man was gone, Forest swiftly ran through the photographs, and to his surprise found one of the girl's taken side by side with a young man. When the agent returned. the photo was in the detective's pecket Mr. Forest said good-by without an indication that he had met with any success. By means of that photo young governess and then the young governess herself. She had embezzled property, "and had done it all so cleverly that\the world at large looked upon her as the victim of inysterious fate. Narrow Escape From Death. Needless to say, Frank Forest has carried his life in his hands scores of times. Here is one of his escapes. A French criminal moved to London, and Forest holding a warrant for his arrest, did not capture him at once, but had him shadowed in order, if possible, to secure his accomplices. All day the Frenchman was kept in sight, and at night there was always a detective in the house where he slept, with others outside. Four days later the time had come, and the in. spector took his man on the Embank- ment, put him in a cab, and drove to the station. "You've had a narrow escape, Forest," said the friendly Frenchman. "How's that?" "Why, I have known all along that you and your men have been shadow- ing me. I knew I was under observa- tion, and the sensation was terrible. I could not escape. I could walk about, go where I liked, and yet I was pinioned. I could not stand things. I determined to make an end of it all. You remember following me along Piccadilly yesterday? Well, I pulled up in the doorway of the to- bacconist's, took a revolver from my pocket, and determined when you came abreast of me to shoot first you and then myself. By some extraor- dinary chance you did not come right up to me. You turned off a couple of yards before you reached me and went up a passage." "I was going up to Vine street sta- tion," said the detective. "I had an- other man fifty yards along the pave- ment to pick you up." "Well, your turning up that pas- sage saved your life." "Thanks," said 'Mr. Forest. That criminal is now serving a life sentence in a French penal settle- ment for the subsequent murder of one of his friends in Paris, Got His Angwer. An Englishman traveling in Ireland complained that he could find none of the famous Irish wits of whom he had heard. He was advised to speak to the next farmer or teamster he met. turf. The horse had a blazed face. my man!' said the Englishman by way of an opening. os, 4 od THURSDAY. JANUARY 10. -- A little later he encountered a peas- ant leading a horse with a load of "What a white face your horse has, GOING HOME FOR CHRISTMAS, The Khan Writes a Characteristically "Sympathetic Story of a Wanderer. He is dying in a shack in a far-off Alberta town. The 'White Plague got him before he ever started put there, and it followed him about plains and into the mountains and back | again, and finally laid him out. But Death isf merciful] and that inexor- able deafh called [consumption more merciful st of the shadowy pack, for saw a consumptive vet that didn't believe he was going to recover? This morning you could have read a newspaper through his poor, thin hands; his eyes were unnaturally bright, and there was a hectic flush upon his cheek. "How d'ye feel this mornin'? ask- ed his old-time friend. "Oh, a great deal better. I think I will be able to go home for Christ. meas." His friend went out and told the group in the bar. "Boys, he sez he's a-goin' home for Christmas." One of the men shapped his finger towards the ceiling; anothed pointed to the ground--they were all silent. "Boys, he jes' natchelly can't travel all the way to old Ontario the way he is." The drunken doctor who lost his splendid practice in the east, and who went out West to start life over again, awoke in his chair from a two- weeks' batter: "He'll make the trip alright, al- right," he said, with a sardonic grin. "He'll go home for Christmas." Three years ago he was crowded out of the nest. His last evening in the old home country was spent with his sweetheart. He would go out West and take up land and prepare a home for her, and then he would come and claim her--would she wait? Oh, yes, she would wait. Aad she did wait. Hamlet's heartless sneer. S'Frailty, thy name is woman," only applies here and there. How many women in old Ontario are waiting, waiting, waiting ! Patience and Endurance are not the daughters--they are the twin risters ~of God. What would have become of this country had it not been for these twain? The axemen and the loggers, the seythemen and the loughmen, the tail sawyers and the ramers would never have accom- | plished what they did were it not for the divine sisters. The sky above us is a splendid petticoat. So he went away to the West full of hope, with a smile upon his lips, and on the seat beside him rested an impalpable Thing which claimed him for ite own, How his blood leap- ed when a train-hand bellowed '"Nort' Ba-ay!" through the -car door, and "Ra-at Portage," and "Winnipeg," as they rolled over the Louise bridge, and he caught a glimpse of the his- toric Red River racing northward far below. : He will come home for Christmas. He will come home in a noble train thundering east none too fast with its cargo of happy, eager hearts. The smoking car will be full, and the day coaches will be crammed, and the Pullmans will be jammed. Everybody will be hail gellow well met. : "Merry Christmas!' will sound from one end to the gther of the flying bolt of steel and wodd. Going home for Christmas! They will swap stories, they will sing songs, they 'will shout "The Ma- ple Leaf Forever," they will sing the old gospel hymns, "There's a land that is fairer than day," and "Was! in the Blood of the Lamb." Going home for Christmas! They will drink out of each other's flasks, and they will venture on a col- ored song without: precision, like an amateur at a shack wire. They will show each other certain photographs of handsome Carfadian girls. One pie- ture is stamped "Jones, Photo, Pet erboro'"'; another, "8mith, Photo, jarrie" ; another "Robinson, Photo, Halifax"; another' *Beancoup, Photo, Riviere du Loup"; another "Luke Plasant, Photo, Hamilton"; anoth Kodak, Photo, Bullock's Corners" and from an hundred other photo galleries all over the land. And the will say: "That's her--that"s my girl. She's waited for me now four years, God bless her! I've got a home for her now." Going home for Christmas! But where iz he? You will look for him in vdin in the smoking car. He is not in the day coaches; there's no use going into the Pullmans. But when the train pulls up at North Bay, if you will go forward to the baggage car and peep in, vou will see a long pine box. He is inside that. He is going home for Christmas! ~The Khan, [ Canada Likes British Rule. "The Political Cleavage of North America." This was the subject of an address by Hon. Geo. W. Ross, leader of the Opposition, before the Catholic Union at a meeting held in the Bt. Charles Cafe, Toronto, the other night. Canada's past relations with the United Btates were reviewed by Mr. Ross, who made reference to the United Empire Loyalist emigration from the Btates to Canada, the war of 1812, the invasions of 1837 and 1866, the Ashburton and other trea- ties which sacrificed Canadian to Am- erican interests, and the refusal of the Washington Government to negotiate Fegiprocal trade relations with Can. ada. Far from driving Canada into a commercial and political union with the republic, these influences only served to bring Canada «in closer re- lation with the motherland. Canada had been impelled to build up a na- tionality of her own. Denied the mar kets of the United States, she sought those in Great Britain. She preferred the British form of Government, and to-day the Imperial sentiment was stronger in Canada than it had ever been in her history. There are fifteen cables across the Atlantic, vy I y Al trimmed hats, embracing all of the seasén's an ~ most popular styles, at sweeping general price-reduc- tions. Untrimmed hats and ready-to-wears; half * price. $SPENCE'S ™= ram and Mantle Store ~~ | OFFER FOR SALE : s Some Frontenac Loan and Invest- : ment Society Stock ALSO 5 - Colonial Loan Co. Debentures. & J. E. Cunningham *° remem TT | ur January . . Friday Will Be A Bumper Day In some cases the price in ducements displayed by the Jaa vary Sale tickets are on goods you'll need later on. In MOST lines the opportunities are in goods you need every day. In EVERY case the savings offered are sufficiently large to in. duce the buying by every economist who can spare the money. Remember FRIDAY is the day. , "0 Enamelied Boilers and Steamers 5 SIZES, $1.12, 1.40, 1.60, 1.84 and 2.16 We sell either Steamer or Boiler separate if = desired. The boiler makes excellent Stew Kettle or Stock Pot! $ Roger's Tea Knives, $3 doz. Roger's Table, * Ls Retinned | Tea. - Spoons | Table, '50c. * A Good Carpet Sweeper, $1.50. Our Special 10C. Toilet Paper, 3 for 25¢. oy Enamelled Kitchen Ware, 20, 30 and 50 Per Cent. Off Regular Prices. 7 Clean Teeth. To remove tartar and stains from "Sure," replied the Irishman, Tou own will be as white when it has n Take Mall's Family Pills for consti pation. 3 # as long in the halter."'--Birmingham Post. the teeth, try a Dr. Horsey Fibre Tooth Brush. A perfect cleanser polisher. Call and examine them at Wade's Drug Store. McKelvey & girch 69 and 71 Brock Street, Kingston