Daily British Whig (1850), 14 Feb 1907, p. 5

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smile With Every Suit vorth Suits rice, pays it. We tell him that we'll nd send it to him in an hour, he al- 1 it td Fd 4abd thd | r the smile and but a moderate price | .50, $15, $18 &$20: ttractive this season and the Suits its we know anything about. Smile waiting for you, Sir. ale of Overcoats is On. D. Bibby Co. 90000000 *o0 HSA AAIHSICIICIISICIIIIIICIIR s Week . 2.49 re are selling a lot of broken [igh Laced Shoes, consisting lour Calf and Patent Colt. larly sold at $3.50 and $4. HAAS HAAAAAAS HK SHH HACIA mM in Window Week Only 2.49 SHOE STORE ethy's AAA AACA AH OR AISA HACK AAASIIACKAHICIOIIIIA AH > Qos s The Age 'Why 2" y things blindly or 11 understood reasons and call for rand." | FEAL PELL ie people give for buying and using a ught" Kitchen Range of their neighbors use this wonderful its praises constantly as beautiful in king and easy on fuel. 89 and 71 BROCK 5 Birc 3 STREET P0000 000000000000000000000Y promiscuously ; SLOP VV000 VLVVVPVVIV20PVVOOLTO0N " BLOCK TIN METALS Co, L William St., Toronto' de "Phone Main 729 ] ------ "1 CAN CURE ANY DRUNKARD" My Golden Remedy For the Whisky Curse Will Save Your Husband, Son, Broth- er or Father From a Drunkard's Grave. I Will Mail Free to All Who Write a Trial [Package in Plain Wrapper. I am savine thousands of drunkards every year amd restoring them to their loving wives and families. I will save many more as a resialt of this advertises me, 1 ment. To all who write will Worships His False God, Whisky --Wife in Tears--Children Neglected--Home Forgotten Life a Lingering Death-- ~--And Lrink Did it All. The Drunkard Cannot Save Him- self--Yow Women Must Do it ~ For Him. send free by mail, in plain wrapper, so that no one can know what it contains a trial package of Golden Remedy for the Liquor Habit. Though absolutely harmless, it never fails to cure the worst cases of drunkenness eof how Ton standing. It ¢ administered without the know le of the subject jn coffee, tea, soun milk, ete., and he will be cured in a few days and cured so he will never drink again. Golden Remedy contains no dangerous drugs or minerals. It does not ruin the digestion or destroy tho tissues of the vital organs and endanger life and health. It| counteracts and expels from the system all alcoholic poisons and puts an end to all craving of appetite for liquor. Under its influence the subject regains his health, will-power and scif-respect. His eye becomes bright, his brain clear his step elastic, his vigor returns, and | he once more feels and looks like a man. i If vou have a "heloved husband, son, brother or father who is afflicted, send Your name and address to me at once in the coupon below, A ttm Se Sai. FREE PACKAGE COUPON, If you fill out the blank lines below with your namv and address, cut out coupon and send it to me, I will send you absolutely free, hy mail, in plain wrapper, a trial packwee of my Gold- en Remedy. You will ba thankfull as long as you live that you did is, Ad- dress Dr. J. W. Haines, 9030 Glenn Bldg., Cincinnati, Ohio. eon ares RELIABLE FOOTWEAR FOR BOYS - Just what time of year, stand the Jwn't fai to see our fore you purchase. Our Price $1 50 and $1 75 you 'want for this something that will wear and tear. Boys', Le- | infamous H.Jennings, King St. Waggoner's | Big | Clearing Sale | Now On. | Call and see the great values now be- | jog given in Suits, Overcoals and Trousers. Suit lengths sold by the plece. Gcods must go at once to clear up stock. Alex. Waggoner, 188 Wellington Street. P. WALSH You get genuine Scranton as he handles nothing else NewYork Chinese Restaurant 83 Princess Street Open from 10.20 a.m. to 3.00 am The best place to wet am all round Lunch fa the citys Meals of all kinds on shortest motice; English and Chinese Wishes a specialty. -- 'William Roach, a Guelph cashier, is "0 it is alleged his ae are seven hundred dollars LETTER FROM CUBA KINGSTON PEOPLE INTER=- ESTED IN LAND THERE, The Town of Ceballos, is Not Five Years Old, But is Up-to-Date --Sunshine -and ,Z Wanuth All Through the Year. Ceballos, via .Uiego de Avila, Cuba, Feb. 7.--(To the Editor): Nelson Sharp, of Violet, Lennox county, who is here with us for the winter, has asked me to write you a letter, tell- ing you something of life s con- ditions on this sunny isle. Sharp comes down here winters toSenioy the fruit, and the '"'orange-laden air of Ceballos," and as to the former, it would only be necessary for his friends up no th to see him just one morning, cating King oranges and drinking erape-fruit, to realize how thoroughly he does enjoy himseli. Quite a number of Kingston people have invested in land in this American colony here. The town is not yet five vears of age, but already it possesses an electric light and refrigerating plant, bank, school, administration building. a handsome park. or plaza as such things are termed here,--a magnificent marble-floored hotel, and the Berlin system of sewage, more parfect than any that has been ad- opted by northern cities; add the acres and acres of citrus fruit orchards, and sugar cane fields that surround it and you can have a faint idea of what it may be like. Back toward the north coast on the one side, aml the sommolent Cuban town of Ciego de Avila on the south, the enercetic colonists are pushing the tangled, forest jungle. Fasily to fire and machete the forest and rank guineas orass yields, and the rich, pinky-red soil is uncovered to the in vigo"atin~ rays of thé sum, and where re:hajps, but a few months hefore the land lay an uncultivated waste, to day we see it planted with young orange trees, or deliciously tinted pincapoles. There is a Cuban saying regardirg. the land, "tickle it with the hoe, and it smiles with the harvest," which seems true, for the soil is very rich and productive. For years it has yielded nothing but guinea grass, which after growing to a great height --ih many places higher than a man's head, when. on horseback--has simply | gona down again, to add its quota of | nutriment. to the soil. Pioneering here, of course, has its drawbacks? but vastly different is the lifo from that led by the.sturdy pio- neers of our own home land. In stead of snow and ice, here one has sunshine and warmth every day oi the year; instead of tracklessy forests the * railroad runs past one's very door; instead of months of isolation from the outside world, here is a daily mail with the latest news served up in the most approved manner by the Havana Daily Telegraph and Daily Post, both printed. in English, ol course. Then, if one can read Span- ish, there are Spanish papers. in abundance, chief of these being La Lucha, which prints one page of news in English, Real up-to-date papers are theses well printed and well edit ed, Cuba is a land of picturesqueness It is a land where the amateur photo grapher fould soon go bankrupt, for turn which way you will, the meets something that would make an exquisite .. picture. Here it may only be a tree weighed down by orchids, or a Cuban palm-leaf shack with its batkground of luxuriant tropical foliage; there it may be a group { royal palms, tossing their tufted heads in the trade winds and giving character the landscape, or agajn the trim-straight rows of the Ameri can planted orange groves, with the voung trees weighed down by balls of golden fruit. Ceballos lies along the line of th old Spanish railroad which spans the island at the central and narrowest part, from Jucaro on the south coast to San Fernandez, on the north. This old railroad marks the line of the Trocha. Here a kilometer apart . the Spaniards erected block houses, and crowded them with diers. Tons upon tone of barbed wire eye ol cool to sol wope stegtched from block house to block house, across the island, to form entanglements for the of the unwary Cuban, who was daring enough to attempt the crossing of that dead line. Here the tyrant Wey ler reigned supreme, and one after an other the bodies of the Cuban pa triots went to feed the vultures. Im- possible now, it seems, that such a condition of affairs cver existed here 'rue, the old block houses are still standing, but these old monuments of Spain's tyranny, are to-day, to the careless ol server, but a pictures uo of a happy, sun-kissxl coun The Stars and Stripes float ower the new town that has taken the place of the barbed wire entanglements. A parly of the 7th regiment of the Un ited States iafantry tis stationed here, and the soldiers hunt deer along the old Trocha. Last evening, in the Plaza hotel, the colonists entertained the officers of the regiment, and the gentlemen in evening suits, and the ladies in the most up-to-date ball cos- tumes, danced to the music of the regimental band. Certainly some features of ing here are unigie. But all the while the orchards are growing and grow- ing--the orchards that are ta make of this place anything but a pioneer town. "This winter the Development company i8 making shipments of grape-fruit and oranges. Next winter my husband, Portland Benson, ex- pects to make a considecable shipment from his sixteen-acre grove, and since all southern fruits arc now allowed into Canadé duty free, in all proba- fem tare my pioneer- | bility ours will be sent to various points in Ontario, and, no doubt, some to Kingston. -- 1 understand J. 0. Hutton, of King- stom, has sold a considerable quanti- ty of land in and around Ceballos to Frontenac people, and to them 1 wish to say that although politically, af- fairs on the island may scm to be in an unsatisfaptoryt condition at pres- ent, the time is not far distant when this will { all be righted. The Ameri- canization of Cuba is every dav be- coming morc and more an established fact; and all over the isla os formed 'American is no Cubane ron are 1 : By Lady Well-Known od States, and there is not an Am- ertcan, or Canadian colopist or inves- tor, bat looks forward to that issue and wishes the day of that ultimatum not far distant--Yours very truly, MAUDE BENSON. LETTER FROM JAMAICA. in King- ston. In a ter written from Jamaica, to Miss Machar, Sydenham street, by a lady well known in this city, Miss More, who has visited Mrs. David Marshall at "Elmhurst," a graphic picture is given of the earthquake. The shock came out of a particularly clear sky. The writer had been in Kingston that morning attending the meeting of the agricultural commission, at which the speeches regarding the pee- sent aspect and future outlook for Jamaica, had been most optimistic. An invitation to lunch, in Kingston, was refused, and a return to the vil- lage five miles away made. Fortun ately the writer and her friend, who at the time of the shock, were dvess- ing to go. ont, were at one end of their long room. She says: "Without a moment's warning the great parti- tion wall fell in, bringing tons of brick and mortar down on beds and dressing table. We ran to the passage only to see the falling ceiling. Once out in the large grounds surrounding us we were able to get safe" shelter from falling walls. Darkness comes on suddenly, about six. so I knew pre- parations for the nicht must be made quickly. The streets were filled with a thriecking mob. Mos of the men were in town. and cars' had stopped Our house, old and built in slave times was surrounded bv eabins and stables and these gave shelter. Soon the tales from the city came in--dveadiul, dreadful. The saddest were those tell- nr of search for the missing. There is no possibility of exaggeration of the degree destruction--it is utter There will be great distress among the amployed class, who have lost oth positions and homes. Hapoily there is little damage back in the country; fruit and vegetables come in, as usu al, cheap and plenty, meat and bread have not yet failed, and there bananas and oranges." The writer adds that the U. S. marines on shore were a great comfort of GRAND OPERA HOUSE. The Marks' Company 'Again Has a Large Audience. The Marks Bros. Dramatic company, drew another large audience at the Grand Opera House last evening. The company are increasing in popularity as their engagement is drawing n-ar to a close. The piece presented was a mode of life in the southern states in reconstruction days. The ground work of the plot was laid in old Virginia . DAILY URITISHE WHIG, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14. ATTACKED BY WOMEN!,___ . SUFFRAGISTS STORMED THE HOUSE OF COMMONS. ' Over Sixty Were Arrested--The Leader Threatens to March One Thousand Angry Females Into Parliament. London, Feb 14. The Woman ! Suffragists, whose leaders have sworn inot to desist in their violent agita- tion until parliament has granted their demands, appear to be about to give the authorities considerable trou ble. Yesterday they made a more de { termined and b tor organized demon- | stration than over before, in the | course of which over sixty women arrested. It nearly mid- were was night before they were all bailed out. Miss Annie Kenny, one of the lvad- ers, who has been imprisoned thred times, declares that if wertan suffrage is not granted thix sefsion, she will march ore thousand womun cotton operatives from the north, who will confront the ministers on the floor of the House of Commons From an. carly yesterday, un til ten o'clock, at night, a large foree of police had their hands full mde fending the precinets of parliament | from suffragist raids. Every entrance to the House of Commons was guard- od by detachments of policemen, while other officers were engaged in clearing adjacent streets. Fifty constables were {kept in peserve fo { As the house w hour emergency 1s about to adjourn | Clade George Hav, a member of the { house, ealled attention to the dis { surbamess and protested against the houses of parlinment being used asa {fortress to be filled with police to | protect the members against women | Home Secrctary Gladstone replied {that he had little knowledge of what | was goihg on but that the { measures employed were for the gene- | : 3 : i ral convenience of the members, unnecessary out sic and i : violenoee | he was sure no had been used | PITH OF THE NEWS. are | | The Very Latest Culled From All pc Over The World. Manitoba elections will take place ton March 15th or thereabouts Sir Perey Givovard and F. H. Phip- pen have been elected to the Royal | Colonial Institute | Eighteen tenders received for the construction of five sections to be let of the Transcontinental railway. Dr. Stockton, M.P. for St. John, 'N.B., was so much improved to-day in health that an operation may not Ix necessary. | Ottawa Valley .lumbermen ask that a dam be constructed on the French river in ofder to keep Lake Nipissing were "A Girl From the South." Gracie Tod Marks (Virginia Peyton), gave a - a Pig ian level b tall of Ah lucid interpretation of a blind gir) in Ota tity ont a er ~ her daily life. She dre y sympathy |: ¥. MugIneer aad ! er daily life. She drew the sympathy | pointed city engineer of Prince Al of the audience. Her acting was real istic and she received much applause. Elizabeth Bates, a haughty beauty, whose treachery and abandonment of the blind ¥irl gained her the disfavor of the sympathetic "gods." Emma Ballard. as Aunt Dinah, a colored ser vant, carried ont her part well. (', E Kinwedy, M. Standiord, M. Wilg J. D. Herbert and J. Nalon, cained ap- preciaticn hy: the clever manner in which they carried out their part The specialties were much enioved, especially the Sours in their fascinat ing work of the inferno act, and their contortionist and acrobatic Th illustrated congs by M, Wilgus and Gracie Marke, were admired. M Wilgus also sang in fine voice, 'Sister, sOenes My Little Sister," and being recalled cave, "Those Endearing Yo ny (harms. Some fine views were shown on th moving pictures. Tonight "The Limerick Lass," will he presented A SCHOOL COMPLAINT. A Mother Charges That Her Daughter Was Abused. A complaint has been Whig by a Mrs, year-old daughter had been dll-treated by her teacher, who had "knocked her on the head and thrown her clothes at for palling down a blind, and would not allow her to re took a strapping, which fuse Mrs. Couling know if she will be to keep her daughted home ol entirely Inspector Kidd was asked about tie matter, and stated that the teacher in gentlest in She made' to the her' the girl re: to do wants to forced from s ahiestion wus one of the the public schools, with children had not harmed the girl, but had sent her home for taking an examination paper from another pupil's desk and in to the teacher with her to it He found sided with the sending it wn. name signed that the all teacher in the matter, and thut it was most essential for the discipline of the school that the young girl accept punishment for her actd class ELECTRICAL POWER. Hon. Adam Beck to Give An Ad-! dress Here. The board of trade announces that Hon. Adam Peck, of London, Ont. and the power commissioners will | speak in the City hall to-morrow (Friday) evening, on "Electrical Pow- er." All eitizens are cordially invited to attend and hear something about the latest schemes of power develop- ment and its supply to the various municipalities. Kingston iz interested in the matter of cheap power, which, it is said, ean be supplied to this place from the Trent River at a com- paratively small cost. The informa- tion that Hon. Mr. Beck and the pow- er commissioners of Ontario will give will be decidedly interesting. A tissue - builder, reconstructor, builds up waste foree, makes strong nerves .and museles. Some people do not realize what a great remedy Hollister"s Rocky Mountain Tea is. 35 cents. Tea or Tablets. Mahood's drug store. Mrs. Alexander Moffat, wife of Postmaster Mofiut, Pembroke, passed away in Montreal, on Wednesday. where she had been under treatment and also underwent an operation last week. ah 1 gy English Rose tooth paste. Specially recommended for smokers. Two tubes for 25c., at Gibson' Red Cross. Prug Couling, that her ten- | turn till she | | en ath. bert, Sask,, at $1,500 per year. Settlers of Saskatchewan are to be relieved . from doing two months' homestead © dutics on account of the severe winter and scarcity of fuel. | The minister of the interior has or {dered immigration officers to send {relief to thos who are being located ale P. between Sas katoon and Battleford. The hotel which the Canadian Pacific Railway company is erecting at Vie toria, R.( is rapidly approaching completion. | It is to be called the Em press Hotel. At the Winnipeg bonspiol, was defeated the Williams' in the Walker Flavelle twice, being beaten by Medical College, 8 to 6, and losing his game in the Empire by 13 to 4 Professor S. Russel Burner, M.D, head of the Los Angeles, Cal., sana torium, and widely known through the east, was found dead on Wednesday from chloroform poisoning. John Charlton, ex-M.P., it is re | ported, will succesd the late Senator Dobson in the upper house. Mr Copp, MI'. for Digby, is spoken of us likely to cure the vacant Nova Seotin no torship The provinee of Quehee section of the Canadian - manufacturers' association is taking steps to combat the proposed vight-hour work per day legislation to be the commons ir of the labor party. introcluced ip the interests | An Ottawa civic deputation waited on the premier gnd Hon. Mr. Fielding to-day, asking * that the government while receiving rental from its re cently acquired property on Sussex street, should not avoid city taxes. The village of Pont Viau, Black River, about eight miles from Mon treal, was practically destroyed by fire, this morning, including 5 carriage fac tory which was the principal industry of the place. The loss is estimated at £46.000, { According to a schedule of losses «anthered by Allen 1D. Roberts, the Kingston representative of the Phila Adelphia Commercial Museum, the damage done by thé recent earthaunke nnd fire in the city of Kingston is es mated at %13,000,000 | INVESTIGATION Of. {The Officers of Deaf and Dumb In- stitute Deny. Belleville, Feb, 14.--The investiga tion into affaire gt the Deaf and Dum} Institute, so far, has been productive only of denials. R- Mathieson former superibrtendent, denied that matters were not conducted as they shoul { have been. He hud never taken part in polities. W. Cochrane, bursar, deni ed having taken any part in the elec tions of 1905, either in Prince Edwar or Hastings counties, Allegations of this kind had been made, Miss Ross the matron, testified that, so far a she knew, the childeen always hac been well fod and well treated The investigation is being continued to | day. i . Don't forget the sale of Blaud's Iron Tonic Pills, at Gibson's Red Cros Drug Store. Not one dull moment, Monday night. Thomson-Seton makes wild animals almost humangin hit inimitable way. Tickets. 25c., 35¢., 50c., 75c., without extra charge at Uglow's. All cough mixtures are guarantecd at Best's. The se of a 25¢. bot- tle entitles you to a guess in the STAGE REALISM. and Courtesy of Irving In a Reply to a Critic. The late Sir Henry Irving's famous production of "Henry VIIL* ended with the christening of the in- fant Pringess Elizabeth, for which, of course, a large life-like doll was used instead of a real baby. The play bad run a good many nights when one day the actor received a letter of protest from one who made it plain that he was a firm believer in real. ism on the stage. "The complete success of 'Henry VIII' was marred last night," the letter ran, "when the Xking 'kissed the baby. The whole house tittered. -Howewith I offer he hire of one r y--my own--for the purpose of personating the offspring. It was a delicate matter for Sir Henry to decline the services of a man's own baby, but with the help of his manager, Mr. Bram Stoker, the famous actor composed a reply which combined courtesy and humor and which has been incorporated in "Personal Reminiscences of Henry Irving." "Mr. Irving fears," wrote Mr. Stok- er, "that there might be some diffi. culty in making the cha you sug- feat with regard to the cess Eliza- th in the play. "If reality is to be .achieved it should of necessity be real reality and not seeming reality, for that we have already on the stage. A series of difficulties then arises, any of which you and your family might find insuperable. »y Jou real baby were provided it might be difficult or even impos- sible for the actor who impersonates King Henry VIII. to feel the real feel- ings of a father toward it. This would necessitate your playing the part of the king and further would require that your wife should play the part of Queen Anne Boleyn. his might not suit either of you, especially as in reality Henry VIII. had after- ward his wife's head cut off. "To this your wife might naturally object. But even if she were willin to accept this form of reality an you were willing to accept the re- sponsibility on your part Mr. Irving would, for his own sake, have to ob- jeot. "By law if you had i wife de- capitated you would tried for mui But as Mr. Irving would al 80 be tried as an accessory before the fact he, too, would stand in dan- ger of his life. To this he distinetly objects, as he considers the end aim- ed at is not worth the risk involved." The Glencoe Tragedy. The New York Herald has the fol. lowing special cable from London: Messrs. Puttick & Simpson will short- ly offer for sale at auction an import. ant and quite exceptionally. interest- ing document, namely, the original of the order for the massacre of Glen- coe, by which the McDonalds were al- most exterminated. The wording reads as follows :-- "You are hereby ordered to (fall upon the rebel McDonalds of Glencoe and put all to the sword under seven. ty. "You are to have special care that the old fox and his sons doe on no account escape from your hands. You are to secure all avenues that no mau escape. "This you are to put in execution at fyve of the clock precisely, and by that time or verie shortly after ile strive to be att you with a stronger party. If I doe not come to you at fyve you are not to tary for me, butt to fall on "This is by the King's special com- mand for the good and safety of the country that these miscreants be cut off, root and branch "See that this be putt in execution without fail or favor, else youn may ex- pect to be dealt with as one not true to the King nor the Government nor a man fitt to carry a comnmissione in the King's service "Expecting you will not faill in full filling hereof, as you love yourselfe, subscribe these with my hand att Balicholis, February 22, 1692. "R. 0. DUNCANSON "To Captain Robert Campbell of Glen Lyon." Animal Maternal Instinct. "1 have a young retriever, gentle, well bred, handsome," says a corre- spondent of an English paper. "Her kindly disposition has won her much popularity, and she is loved by the family cat, the green Amazon parrot and the village children. A few days ago some poor little superfluous Aber- deen puppies had to be drowned. But when the man went to get the little bodies to give them a decent burial two had mysteriously vanished from the pail in which they had found a watery grave. For a long time we searched in vain, much puzzled at the unaccountable disappearance, un- til a servant volunteered the informa- tion that 'Maggie had two little dogs in her bed." And here we found them, two little corpses, licked clean and dry and gently daid side by side on the straw. She had fished them out of the pail, carried them there and ap- parently done all she could to revive them. She has never had any puppies of her own, so this seems a curious in- stance of maternal instinct." A Salmon Story. Here's a 1: story: A sports fishing for salmon in one of the streams that run into the gulf of St. Lawrence discovered a spot where he was convinced that a salmon ought to be lying. As he made his way through the bushes a cast which he had wound around his hat became loosened. As the sportsman peersd over the bank a fly on the loose cast genMy touched the water. Immediate- ly a salmon seized it and rushed away upstream, carrying both hook and hat. Long Speeches. London's lord mayor gave the mem- bers of the Bavage club at their an- nual dinner not long ago a sentence March next. both days inclusive, Toronto, 23rd January, 1907. The Pure Fluid Beef somusel' over Europe. VITA" ia rots, suitably spliced GIRLS' $2.25 Skirts 08 arr ahe . GIRLS' and CHILDREN'S RIBBED Vests, 15¢., 10 12jc and - ~ « - + « « . GIRLS' nd CHILD- REN'S RIBBED 15 Drawers at - - - . WOMEN'S RIBBED VESTS, 15¢., 25¢., 50 36c. and « « «2 + = « . WOMEN'S FLEECE- LINED VESTS - - - - 33 OF CANADA DIVIDEND No. 65 Notice is hereby given that a dividend at the rate of Twelve per ce r annum upon the Capital Stock of this Institution has been ded or the quarter ending 28th February next, and the same will be payable the Banking House in this City on and after Friday, The Transfer Books will be closed from the 18th to the 28th February, By order of the Board, With Entire Confidence, Use Pasteurized French "VITA" A concentrated extract of beef and vegetables delicious ly favored. which composes the traditional French 'eon it is the true formula famous Parisian concentrated consomme is known TA" is made from choice fresh beef, hones and extracts of the following turnips. parsnips looks, celery and of which are Warm or eold ft is exquisite. Axk It from your doaler. For Sale by JAMES McPARLAND, Kingston. "February Bargains" A VERY FEW--the last-of the Tweed Coats at $1.00, sizes 30, 32, 34, 36 and 38, only «= $1,00 the Is: day o G. P. ScuowrigLp, Gen. An through which the all vonl's marrow vegetables Care WOMENYS RIBBED DRAWERS, bOe., 35¢. and « = « + Jad aa. GIRLS' and BOYS' HEAVY WOOL HOSE 23 3 Drawers, 25e., for - - worth 50¢., for «.« - « 35 WOMEN'S FLANNELETITE S "Any untrimmed felt hat in the store, ~ SPENCE'S ™ CHILDREN'S and GIRLS' F LANNELETTE 15 WOMEN'S FLANNE- LETTE DRAWERS, CORSET COVERS, 2 worth 50¢., for - - « DD : 1 25 > Leading Mil and Montle tery A p ee a $ 3 i <¢ © ® $ 4 a ¥ PALRLALAEOLLL0400000400RLLLLLLLANNIRALAS BUTTERETTES Delicious Candy, 25 Cents Per Pound. MINT CUSHIONS Extra Strong, 30 Cents Per Pouad. A. J. REES, 166 Princess Street IPP VVPIVIGIIIII ISR IIRIPIT PIII GIVI -- Commission Orders Executed on all Exchanges ES fl which, he informed them, he propos- es to inscribe in letters of gold over the entrance to the Guildhall and in the Egyptian hall of the M house. It ran, "Nobody likes long Speeches except those who make Real Estate Transfer. { I | MONEY TO LOAN | KING STREET: KINGSTON | | BARRISTERS { President--Sir Richard Cartwright Mage need recatved and rs -------------- eet BONDS AND STOCKS Bought and Sold Investment Both Listed and Members Long Distance Telephone Main 5200-01-02 I CE SRR ITC RA A mm {| New England Chinese ecurities Toronto Stock Exchange ) Restaurant 331 King Street The best place to fo ar tast notice. Entosh shortest n " Dishra g worelally, 'Phone. Cif Farm Pro

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