Daily British Whig (1850), 12 Apr 1907, p. 5

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4 Come Here For § Clothes You'd be astonished, if you | knew the number of men that p now come here for their clothes, | 'who formerly patronized the 4 Custom Tailor. 3s Our detegmination to exce] | in the Clothing business ang p cine has even ap plainly and no other m our constant efforts to make Manufacturers come up to our § atandard has resulted in the production of such clothing a any man would be glad to wear, * > me Serge Suits at- $12.30, in Fine Tweeds, Cheviots eds at $12.50, 15, 18 & 20. OR SEMI-READ [LORING finished in two honrs. TVVVIVOOOP0009090900009)0000000¢ © FOO G CVO ll liana COOOL El MELON pi 1 \ 0 0) eak ci fil of : one Better Mad -- place for everything and ything in its place, which § 1nterpreted, means that $ ything worth menticning ine Shoes, will be found 'e place for Fine Shoes. SAWYER SHOE [STORE | VARA ARAAAAAAA AA AAA a ------------ LE: G LEAD Winn for women'sdtls. The wonderful Pinkhax Vegetable . the di of womahkind is not it is a stimulant--not because it is a pal- liative, but simply because it is the most Jreconstructor ever discovered - to act directly upon the , positively currve disease arid displacements and restoring health wonderful tonic 'and female and vigor. Marvelous curés are reported from all arts of the country by women who have I n trained nurses who have witnessed cures, and physicians who cared, have mized the virtue in Lydia Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and are fair enough to give credit where it is If physicians dared to be frank and open,; hundreds of them would. acknowledge that they congtantly pres- cribe Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound in severe cases of female il; as they know by experience that it wil due. effect a cure. Women who are troubled with or irregular periods, backache, bi (or flatulence), falling, inflammétion, in ceration, that "'bearing-down" feeling, dizziness, faintness, indigestion, nervous prostration, or the blues, should take im- off the serious consequences and be restored to health mediate action to ward and strength by taking Lydia E. Pir ' ham's Vegetable Compound. advice. It's free and always helpful. GETS BIG OR Has - Memphis, Tenn, Months. April 12. The lox plaut- of the American Car and Foun dry company has recsived - orders 1.830 cars, distibuted Mlinois rears lowing roa national, dum; coal and 500 fiat cars, and the National re way of Mexico, SU cars. for ores; This plant is now putting the finish: ing touches on 885 cars, 600 of which are box cars for the New Orleans a livered in the next few days, The demand for cars from south roads 1s very large, 1 the ment of this plant states that are enough . orders now in hand keep" it » months. The thre Mrs. D. Smith's Falls, to sleep and slept continuously four days, less ten minutes. All forts to awaken the little one without effect and - it had to nourished by injection. We do not know a more practic maw on pedagogies the Principal of the collegiate i stitute. n's should secure him. Perth separate school hoard has ji ccnclyded a bazaar which gnetted $ 200, =, Gilbert, or better \ Qu er ---- ® | A E HEROD | ORDERED FOOTWEAR [Now is the time those Re- {pairs are wanted. Our anti- [squeak is used on all work. ------ 286 PRINCESS ST., THE HOOF USE QUALITY OF COURSE YOU CAN CURE YOUR RHEUMATISM | No matter how long you have suffered or what remedies you have tried without relief, Bu-Ju will cure you. We know what Bu-Ju has done for people, bedridden and helpless. We know u is doing every day for people Sciatica, what Bu-J tortured with Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuralgia. Bu-Ju, The Gen Kidney Pill, cures Rheumatism because stops in the it acts directly on the kidneys and the poisonous deposit of uric acid bload, which causes Rheumatism. Biju will core'your Rheumatism, Take our guarantee that your money wi'l be pro ly refunded should it fail. soca large box. mical Co, ted, Windsor, Out, so -- logting Anyway, write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for Work Enough to Last Niné among the f Central, 500 handling Gulf and Ship Island, North-Eastern, and these will be de manage there running steadily for nine vs-old infant of Mr. and went of- wer be lruggists or by mail from The Claflin i Limi : ' Thousands ds of Women Simply and surely because of its ster ling worth. The reason no other medi: i roached its success is tively because there is icine in the world so good power of Lydia E. Compound over because E. ful ul- nk- cal for ol ail nd rn to or ro al nn n- 1st | | tle of At PURE FOOD INSURES GooD Herm = THAN SUPPLY" v troubl their west- Does Make Sick Women Well, : ts 'Profer] to Cast there was no trouble on w thousands of Cana- _ Their Lot in New Provinces or | Mrs. Alexander Gunn, Galt, seldlzrut~ din Wout have been restored to health hig Selmlia. a u hue 100th. birthday, She was born y Pinkham's Vegetable Com- innipeg, Man., April\12.--Yesterday | it Aberdeen s fe pound. Their letters are on file in Mrs. | witnessed another big rush of settlers et maliip ansivals : ; ARTA inkham's office, and prove this state- to the west. Seven dred came on | Sicilian at oli ; unisia i ment to bea fact and not a mere boast. the 'trains from Montreal. The new- porte Lo ale eland, im SL medicine, and 3p the su ot Somers are gli destined fox points west tdin an item of $10,000 for coloniga- f Winnipeg, many i : : ? : : ital other medicines and treatment for | =~ a British Colonie rg tion roads in the clay belt in New Omen they will take duties in the coast |' 6 ; * J Cotopond aeeomabed may psy. | Hfovinee: 375 Toropeans who. wer | ihe Toronto boas of conteol deci ble Com sach wide- al Passengers on the Virginian, of providing a wider devil-strin on spread results for ? and 150 British who crossed the" At. King street. ~ Why has it lived and thrived and done lantic on the Kensington. A large George Etienne, twenty-five years of its glorious work for a quarter of a | number gre bent on going to Alberta was arrested in Montreal charged century. ployment. Applications for hel to be pouring in by situations for the new comers. With the near approach of spring great anxiely is being not nearly applications. particularly being felt in Manitoba many of the men their lot in and British Columbia. INCIDENTS OF THE DAY. sg-great as the quota of Reporters op Their Rounds. have been pretty willl collected. New coloripgs in neckwear. Bibby's, You ned a hat, try a "King," Jenkins'. x Our new cakes are Try a sample one. strect. Will Ald. Carson reduce water rates in great demand. R. H. Toye, King Jenkins', be a Civic Improvement adorn your Will there Society this year ? It 'was a helpful organization. 8 Ibs. washing soda, 10c.; 10 lbs. whiting, 10c.; 4 ten-eent monia, 25¢., at Muliin's. Sale of stockings, 2 pair undervests, 3 2 pairs dres 25¢. New York Dress Reform. See Bibby's new $1 shirts. G. E. Mpedonald, whe has been at- tending Queen's, left to-dav for his home at Leduc, Alberta. H. Cunningham, piano tumer, from Chickering's. Orders at McAuley's Hook 'Store: ""Phne' 778. pkgs. am- hields, 4. A. Boswell, superintendent of the Dominion Express compuny, Mon- treal, is in the city on his annual toor of inspection. Our Navel and Valenéia oranges is choice and prices low. R. R. Toye, King street. Miss Keith, daughter of J. Keith, Lindsay, has been appointed superin- tendent of the new hospital at' New Liskeard. - Miss Keith is a graduate of Kingston hospital. See Bibby's displav of fancy hose. The caretaker of the court house lawn, Mr. Grant, says Kentucky lawn grass sed has no equal. Last summer the court house lawn was the most beautiful in Kingston, the result of using this well-known grass seed, Sold cnly in Kingston at Gibson's Red Cross drug store. For hat excellence the "King" bats them all. E. P. Jenkins Clothing Co. stock of ------ Choice Of Studious Japs. The . most widely known English writer in Japan is Carlyle. All stu- dents of English literature read his works. Next comes Macaulay. The new style, called Hanyaku, or trans- lation style, was practically created through the borrowing of his lan- guage by the Minijushamen, a literary band in Pokio, Emerson is admired by some students of English, and the fluence of his writines can be seen among Japanese journalists. Mill and: Hérbert Spencer have made a monu- mental impression upon modern Ja- panese thought. In poetry, Tennyson, Longfellow, Wordsworth, Byron and rav and Dickens, are the best known. Milton, and in fiction, Irving, Thack Irving's Sketch Book, one of the first hooks to enter Japnn, still heads the list of Japanese. favorites. Plotters Foiled. There has been a startling sequel to unsuccessful libel actions against Scot- tish newspapers, in the arrest of four men, Robert Simpson, William Me- Dougall, Joseph Ferguson, and John S. Taylor, on charges of conspiring to defraud the propriddors of the Glpsgow Evening Times and the pro- prictors of the Glasgow Citizen, by inducing them to publish false infor- mation. Simpson, . a bookseller in Glasgow,. claimed £8,000 damages against the newspapers, the proprie- tors of which, at the trial, alleged that he was himself the author of, or a party to, the statement comblained of, that he had been sarrested in con- nection with a murder. ---------- Mighty Queer Prayer. At Austin, Tex., Chaplain Joyee, of the house of representatives, tm his i, morning prayer, said: '"Hun- dreds of men in the state are cursing tion of "fifty Russian the laws recently enacted. Why do they not come and curse the lawmak- ors ? Perhaps they have a wholesome fear that - their teeth will be knocked down their throats by the fists of the smart lawmakers. Hundreds of thousands are blessing those laws why not bless. the men that passed | them ? The enactment of reform legi- lation has brought the members of the | lagislature to eomsiderable criticism. ---- ee The University of Berlin has admit- told 600 women students to its lectures this winter term. The further addi women is ex- GROWING ANXIOUS DEMANDFOR HELP GREATER Manitoba Suffers Most--Many of where many have already secured em- still continue undreds Yo the immigration officials, who are taxed to their utmost in providing suitable felt by the farmers, and the wages being offered show a substantial increase over the figures of a few weeks ago. Even as it is the number of available men is The dearth of help is preferring to cast Saskatchewan, Alberta Newsy Paragraphs Picked Up By The statute labor taxes for the year at Robe ris is agein attacked to| The journalist members of the On- the engineer's department. tario legislature entertained the megm- oating soap," Colgates, sold. at bers: of the legislative press gallery | son's Red Cross Drug Store. and editérial representatives of the James. Polson, University avenue, newspapers in Toronto, on Thursday returned yesterday from | Saranae, nivhg, ; er N.Y twenty per cent ? The finances could fees also come high stand it. "1 : 4 hi A a a : shall in all probability d Try a "King" and your hat will probability row | PITH OF THE NEWS. The Very Latest Cnlled From All Over The World. The' Bisley téam will sail by Em- press of Ireland 14th. An official of the C.P.R. stated that " wh attempting to rob a woman at the point of his revolver, At St. Petersburg M. Purishkevich, monarchist, was suspended from . the lower 'house of parliament for insult- ing President Gofouin. lomigrants at the Union statfon, » { Toronto, stated that 'they did _ nat want to go on farms if other em- ployment could be secured, Major F. L. Vaux, P.AM.C.,, Stan- ley barracks, Toronto, will be Canada's representative with, the British army flat Aldershot training camp this year. Rev. Robert - Brown, pastor of the » | Chinese Christian mission, Toronto, was committed for trial on the charge of solemnizing marriage without au- thority. Robert M. Crow, twenty-two years old, stood up in a box during a per- formance at the Grand opera house, Pittsburg, and fired a buller into his abdomen. He is still alive, Abbe Jouin, réctor of the Church of St. Augustin, Paris, was arraigned to answer the charge of incitement to re- bellion from the pulpit' in connection with the taking of church inventories, Ths Thaw trial has cost $300,000, The expenses will fall heavily on the Thaw family. Some $250,000 is their share. The foes to lawyers alone will ageregate about $150,000 and experts' George Towns arain,"" was the state ment made by Rddie Duman, the To- ronto ogrsman defeated by the world's champion in Australia, March 2nd, on his arrival at Victoria; B.C. ------ Remarkable Vagaries. The island town of Kirkwall, capitgl of the Orkney group, which has a.pop- ulation of about 4,000, has been af- flicted for months with strange night outrages, and the perpetrators have baffled all efiorts to capture them. Re- sidents have been awakened after mid night by loud knockings at their doors. One of the local policemen went down to his door and a pail of cold water was dashed in his face. Private houses are daubed 'with crosses and circles in colored paints. A five-barred gate was cgrried some distance and deposit- ed at prison door. The most dar- Ing outrage was when fifteen trees, which the local patriotism of some inhabitant had planted around the mediaeval cathedral, were cut down in one night. The police station was con- temptuously given a comt of yellow paint, and the empty paint-tin was laid on the chief constable's doorstep. An anonymous letter to one of the residents asks: "If the British army could not capture DeWet! how can' the police catch us 1" ---------- No Use Crying To Strangers. Kansas Citv Star. A boy living on Lynwood 'Boule- vard came back from the skating pond during the cold weather last week, wet to the skin. He alighted from a Brooklyn avente car and went 'slosh- ing' down the street towards home. He uttered no complaint. But when he got within twenty rods of his home he let out a yell that was heard two blocks and then ran into the house crying. ' "Son! son! what on earth is the matter ?" exclaimed the fond mother. ""Sk-sk-skatimi'--an'-fell in," he blub- bered. : "Well, my: boy," chided the mother, "why did you wait until you got home to cry?" "Well," stuttered the future Great Success, "there wasn't none o' you there t-t-hear me. What good would it a-done 2' -------- There is". an' enormous number of smell landholders in Egypt, 5,000,000 acres being cultivated by over 1,000,- 000 landowners, of whom 6,000 are Europeans, owning on an avérage, a little over 100 acres. Nine hundred and forty peasants hold under five acres each, or 23 per cent. of the whole cul- tivated land; while 12,000 men of means have holdings above fifty acres, their total being over 2,200,000 acres, or 4 per cent. of the whole, proprie- tors of between five and twenty acres having 21 per cent. At' St. Osyth, England, an eject- ment order has been granted against a tenant who, it was stated, had paid no rent for forty years. Norway has fewer arrests, in propor- tion, than any other country. LARDER LAKE SYNDICATE 24 shares for each ($1.00) sub scribed being Syndicate Price fox 35--40 Acre Claims. from Quebec, 'June' KINGSTON sublic. W. TELFER r Rheumatism, Dandelion, one 1 8) Compound Salatond, one ounce, . : (8. Syrup Barsaparilla, Mix, shake well, and take in tea- spoonful. doses after meals agg at bedtime, The above Prescription, from a wellknown physician, is said to be the Dest cure for kidney or fe) bladder troubls of any kind, re- lieving Rheumatisry, Neuralgia, Selatica, Lame Back, Sallow hy Skin, ete. in a short time, and. ® curing perinanently in a few weeks, if directions are carefully followed. This simflle prescription is one which ig. Guite inexpensive if \ "mixed at bowe, and knowing the ability of the physicians and the good results he has had from it, we do not hesitate to recommend it to any sufferer. . PREPARE E BSTAELISHED (1847) This Canadian Com made LR te Vl by [a adian people 60 years ARO has now Assets Amounting to -- wersei -n.. $82,280,518.00 Assurance Yn force $112,572,038,00 Surplus (or Profit Account) i $1,882,750.00 nl Stands In a unique al position all ong ine. Have the hest Life or FEndow- ment Assurance hy selecting the CANADA LIFE. -If you. call in the Office, 18 Market street you will be cheers ful) shown the 20th Century Pol issued by this Company, the Annual Guaranteed Dividend Policy, which is modern to the moment, also actuhl results to Kingston policyholders. Telephone 703. J. B. URQUHART, 153 Alfred St., Special Agent. Stomach Troubles To wrong action of tho stomach and im- paired digestion a host of diseases owe their origin. 'When the food is imperfectly digested the fullpengfit isnot derived from it by the body, and then storaach troubles start to appear. Thus you/become thin, weak, nervous and debilitated, epergy is lacking, come dullness, dizziness, Joss of appetite, ain 80 it can properly digest the food an the easiest, a and best way te do it is by the use of BURDOCK BLOOD BITTERS Miss Lizzie Furlotte, Jaoguet River, N.B., writes: "I was much trou! with my stomach and did not know what to do. I consulted several dootors, got medicine from them, but all to no purpose, and was constantly ing worse. One gay § bad the good juck to meet with a friend who had troubled in the same way as ysl. My friend teld me of the wonderful cure Burdock Blood Bitters had made with her and advised me to try a bottle. I did so, and what a happy change the first bottle made. I took two mere and am completely cured, and I shall ever sing the praises of B.B.B." Priee §1,00 per bottle or § bottles for $5.00 . It's blended. Manitoba Spring Wheat Flour is rich in gluten--takes up water readily--stands up in the oven. Ontario Fall Wheat is not so strong but makes ideal cake and pastry Beaver Flour is a blend of Magiube a Tid Pent in the right proportions of each to make the most whole. some, most nutritions bread-- the whitest, lightest cake and Pastry--and yield the MOST of each to the barrel, AT ALL GROCERS. Dealers, write for prices om all of Feeds, Coarse Grains and Cereals. 5 Taylor Co., Limited, a BRITISH - AMERICAN HOTEL ONTARIO Has undergone alterations and Is now open to the travelling v Proprietor The Subscription List of this | Syndicate is being largely sub- woribed and will close at an early date, as the amount is well taken up: Don't miss the getting in on the opportunity of ground floor. THE FRONTENAC . LOAN & INVESTMENT SOCIETY. ESTASLISRED 1863, | President--Sir Richard Cartwright Money loaned on City and Farm Pro- List open now at . perties. Municipal and County Depene J. 0. HUTTON'S OFFICB, | =i i Bisnis. *nn A ; 79.8 C. McGill, Managing Director. 18 Market St, Kingston, Ont. Office, 87) Clarence Stasoty Kingston. IDAY, APRIL 12. ~~ Canada Life Assurance Co'y. d. 0. HUTTON, Manager brightness, snap and vigor are lost and'in their place [A YACHT MOVEMET HAVE RACES BETWEEN DIS- ~ TRICT CLUBS. Watértown Wants Kingston, Gan- anoque and Bay of Quinte Clubs to Combine--A Local Racer Likely to Be Built. Secretary C. S. Kirkpatrick, of the Kingston Yacht Club, Hs received the ) | following letter from the Watertown, N.Y.. Yacht Club secretary: "We have had some dence in relation to & aol ing at oEson of tatives , of vo h mind and Creacent Vacht Clubs, for the purpose of forming a racing schedule for this and coming years. As someone must go ahead with the project, we suggest that re nta- tives meet at the British-American at Kingston, on the afternoon and ovening of May 1st. Kindly advise us | if this date is agreeable, and if repre- sentatives of your club can be present at that time, "It seems to us here that all we need to ensure' active racing at the foot of the lake is to get together on some satisfactory schedule and car- ry it out. If the movement is oare- fully planned, we have no doubt but clubs the other end of the lake will be gla® "to send boats and make the schedule a very interesting one, : "We note with pleasure an item in the local papers that you are _com- mencing operations for the building of an eighteen-footer. Our boat is well under way. We think that this class will develop into the largest racing class on the lake if properly handled at the beginning." (5) of your "cocoa. by using BENSDORP'S tis double strength and a most healehfil drink. No better cocoa made for flavor, punty or nourishment. MEERSCHAUM DEPOSITS. Sufficient to Break Turkish Goe- | of an eighteen-footer, to contest with the Watertown boat be ng built. Plans are being prepared for the construe- tion of the craft that will represent Kingston, . COWBOYS' BOOTS. fore held by the Turkish government will be"broken and pipes of that ma- terial will be lessened in cost. Until recently all the mesrschaum used in the commerce of the world was produced from a mine in the plains of Eskihi-sher, Anatoly, Tur- key, in Asia. In those mines are em- ployed 10,000 men, The output of the mines was owned By the Turkish gov- ernment and it kept the price up. It is said that enough meerschaum has been discovered in Grant county, New Mexico, supply the world's needs, There is a popular belief that meer- schaum is petrified sea foam washed up ages ago and solidified 'by some | store, its unique properties of high degree ous electrical and two pounds Why Plainsmen Want High and mined. \ = Sharp-pointed Heels. < s City Star. i ir, ng Kan., there is a factory which makes 200 pairs of "cowboy boots" each week. Each pair of thesa hoots is made to' order. The com- pany has a catalogue, which it sends to the, cattle ranches throughout the south-west, It tells the cowboys how to take measurements of their own feet. These are sent to the factory and the boots made and sent out. A "cowboy boot" is in a distinct class by itself. The log must be de- cyrated with fancy lines and curves ed into the leather, and 'above oferything else the heel must be at Jeast two inches high, must curve in- ward from the back and the bottom of the heel must be very small, A cowboy takes especial pride in two things, hid hat and his boots. He often pays 250 for his hat, and the best of the cowboy boots cost from Seo Bibby's nifity $1 "shirts. to kins'. 'Beautiful Spri Ribbed NDERWEAR & ces | 88 to 816; The ordinary shoemaker tions tire Soptemivn dud laugour a peat Satie camot'make boots to suit a true cow- those whose occupations req to get the sto ine Pe boy; he cannot get the heels right. freedom of movement. And so the cowboy sends away for them, and) pays a big price and ex- press charges besides The factory in Olathe employs fifty men. All of the work is done by hand, and some of the shoemakers were brought from Germany and Eng- land especially to work in that fac- tory. ! Cowboys say they have hich and sharp pointed heels' to their boots not because of vanity and pride, but asa fortable. liness. matter of convenience. - The high heels prevent the heels from passing through the stirrups, and they are also a brace when on the ground rop- ing an animal. As the steer pulls to get away the cowboy sinks his sharp heels into the sod and this prevents him from slipping. No. Interruption. Nashville Banner. Down in"Cochran, Ga., the affairsqof civil justice are administered by Judge Edwards, who is also an enthusiastic farmer. one cloudy spring afternpon court was convened to try a peculiar- ly tortuous and perplexing case. Judge Edwards listened with growing unrest. He was observed at last to scize a slip of paper, scribble a few words, place the document beneath a héavy paper wvight and reach for his hat. "Captain," he called, cheerily, "cx- cuse me for interruptin' you, suh; you go right on with your argument, which is a darned good one. It's suah goin' to rain this evening, gentle men, an' I got to - set out my pota- toes right away. But you go right on, captain! When you an' the major get through you'll find my deci- sion under this heah paper weight." The door closed upon an astonished orator. TA TX -XATTE HAMILTON ONT contain alum and acid phosphates." «¢ It seems to me that folk ought to be mighty careful what baking powder they use."" «1 know, if | baked my own cake and y that there is only one baking powder I would buy. That's . . Chinese Economy And Character. An insight into the Chinese charne- tor, frugal to the point of shortsight- suid, nbsorb everything, and have so bared the northern hills as to leave scarcely a tree. They are paying dear- ly for their foolish shortsigitedness, for, by acting thus, they have prob- ably altered the rainfall, which now descends in sudden heavy bursts, flow- ing quickly down the bare slopes, con- veying with it- much fertile soil, And often crops as well, besides causing floods and wholesale devastation in the lower reaches of the rivers of the Great Plain:g In mitigation of the evil, however, is the fertilizing nature of these lands once the floods have subsided. With a judicious svstem of reforestation, the region beyond the Wall would support a much larger population and enjoy a thore eéquable climate. . and inviting, but wholesome as well. Jresent old favarites lst wel 'Write for a free to the A TIONAL Drug & Carmicar Co. oF Canapa, This spring finds us with. er staff of upholsterers makers who are at your 'Our Big Se There are many ships which burn from 100 to 200 tons 'of coal per day, the Jowest consumption being when The vessel is going at a moderate rate. The ocean, passenger steamers often' burn from 3, to 3,500 tons during a paksage of six or seven days, Artistic comfort is the feclipa en- joyed: when wearing one of Jenkins' King hats, ia a PHONE 147 strange process of nature, Meerschauy is a mineral known to scienti : as del . The matter will be considered by the . olite." : It is composed - local vacht club executive. It is like- ernment Monopoly. pally of silica and magnesium. Tt js ly that the scheme will be carried into. | Kupsas City Sear. . found in fissures in the rock, where effect. Because of the discovery of vast de- Yolcani action has forced: it up 'to the Lieut.<Col. Strange has met with posits of meerschaum in the moun- | surface. : 1 condierable success in regard to se- | tains of New Mexico it is likely that Meerschaum is used not only fob : curing subscriptions for the building | the monopoly of that mineral hereto- making tobacco pipes, but because of resisting of heat and its ready ab+ sorption of water, it is put to vari mechani uses, In the mines of New Mexico a solid block of meerschaum weighing forty 'was taken out. Ht was the largest block" of meerschaum ever Did you ever try a King Hat? I #0, you are a happy man; il not, come and get into that state, at E. Polen new sponges," ' at '10e., 15¢. and 25¢. Gibson's Red Cross ng Needle NSHRINKABLE is favored by athletes 'and all Being elastic, it is peculiarly com Cannot be pulled out of shape, , even by the most strenuous exercise-- because of jts special 'Spring Needle'! stitch, which ensures its invariably springing back to its original shape St. George's Baking Powder edness, was given ina lecture, at dhe It is a enuine Cream of ajar. Baking Powder--free of Royal Geographical . Society by Col. : . ia an OS tes. A.W. S. Wingate. Yihe Chinose, he alum, acids, lime, ammonia and phosp ST. GEORGE'S is healthful--and makes Biscuits, Cake, Pies, etc., that are not only deliciously light Our Cbok Book tells how to prepare a number of novel dishes--and to drug. ¥ 4d La Ss

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