and cole a ar 47a + work promptl, LiF) OLL~--Best polish on earth. CURE: Use Big'G for unnatura: hi oy o flamthations ) Gaurimne: i Eriintias or ulcerations "Bok 10 triste, mucous membrames oa Contd ion. infos, and not astrip ut in Real Estate ou when and investments can be you from Per Cont. to 1 tal; $360, . CURTAINS~Test ur Specials, at sual values. R SUITES--50 styles, $16 h Our Coverin from Europe, awd wo ¢ designs per Wilton at$,1.05 | : Made Up, 4 The old price for these goods : 3 was $1.75, 'They Are Worth ia To-Day $2. ing. x WEN £ND WOMEN 80. gent or poisonous, Sold or sent in plain by express, 'Is a good place to save money, placgcto make money, and I can nots és w ,800 Earl St., Double . Brick, Ren St., Four Tene- Collingwood St., Double ental, $144. ? ~ We can arrange a loan on favor able terms on any of the above, are imported rings. suitable © for any ra in £1.50 to $3.50 exceptional SSION T0 PERU -- :C. AUSTIN TELLS OF HIS CALL YO wom, Volunteered His Services. - An address dealing work was last night given in and it was only with t difficulty that he was ie to text chosen was 15 and 16: selves. ing of * ready to our hand." Mr. Austin explained how it was that he had decided to become a missionary. He had boen led into the work, he said, after listening to a missionary address delivered at a convention in New York State. Rev, Mr. Hamilton, pastor of First Congre- gational church, London, Ont., was with him at the time. The speaker, at the convention, had delivered a most inspiring address, and at the close, asked for volunteers for the work, to rise to their feet. people arose, and he (Mr. Austin) found himself among that number, to | Four years previous to this he had thought of entering the work, but at that time did not think that he was prepared for such a great task. In referring to the work in South J America, Mr. Austin said that it was rather a neglected continent. Work Stretchers that should be done by the Protes- tants is neglected. Spiritualists were Tout il getting in their work, and after a $1.95. 81.50 |person had been educated to these and $1.75. teachings their case was almost hope- y done. less. A trbmendous responsibility rest. ® | res) PPR i, od upon the people of the Christian land, and every effort possible should be put forth to spread the gospel. If this was not done, God would hold us nsible. There was a great untouched field for the grand work, but it was in- spiring to know that much good had been accomplished. There had been many conversions, and some of these were referred to. "These people are worth saving," said the speaker. "I wish that vo could see some of them, and notice their faces; they are as noble and in- telligent as the people here in Canada, and. God is surely working among them. You should all have a share in this work, and if you cannot as- sist in a financial cause, you can help along the good cause by your pray- orn." '| gregational church in the morning, and in the afternoon addressed the members of the Sunday school of that church. His addresses were all of an inspiring nature. At St. George's Cathedral. Rev. A. S. Zenana Society, . preached in St. Sunday, the foundation of his sermon on the piteous condition of India's women being Christ's talk with the woman of Samaria. St. John could have chosen no theme, which would (wore clearly illustrate our Lord's div- ino character than the story of his talk with this woman of alien race. For in his time the Jews had imbibed heathen ideas regarding the treatment of women, a rabbi was not allowed (0 speak even to his 'wife on the street, and the Talmud declared the Law had better be burned than taught to a woman, The zenana, meaning in Persian, the house of women, was knbwn in Fs- ther's time, and was one of the hideous evils which Mahommedanism is the best where good made paying 0 Per Cent, introduced into India about 850 vears ago. To-day 150,000,000 women are living in sadness, hopelessness and helplessness in the zenanns, untanght, uncared for in sickness, knowing al- solutely nothing of God's world of nature, slaves of their husbands. There 'is no family life, and in their language there is no such word as home. A vet sadder fate is that of the - 26,000,000 widows, 118.000 - of whom are under ten vears old, A not- writer ond statesman has said that India's moral, socinl and religi ous troubles arise, mainly, from wo- mon's degraded position. Christ showed Himself ns the Mes. siah to the woman of Samaria. in divine compassion, bursting the honds of ignorance and superstition, rnd raising woman to a new plane. The call to Christinns is great to win the wives and mothers that the wenera- fone to rome may know Christ and His church. Man and woman rise or fall towether. Tt ie ours to show . nr eratitude to God for Wis goodness to us. bv shoring the light of the vosnel with those who are verilv in darkness and in the shadow of loath, A Western Wedding. Word has been received from Deer River, Minn., of the murriage of Miss Maymé E. Johnstone, youngest daugh- ter" af the lute Thomas Johnstone, of Stella, to Prof. Frank K. Gregg, of Minneapolis, Minn, by the Rev. Father D. Bucchlee, in the St. Charles Roman Catholic church; on Monday, April 2nd. Miss Johnstone, who lived with her parents at Stella, has many friends there and in Kingston, to whom the news comes as quite a surprise. She has been in the United States for several years with hor sis- tor, Mrs. Arthur' Kneeland, during which time' she has been teaching. Up- on leaving her home at Stella last fall, where she had been visiting 'her mother and sister, she went to Diver River, Minn., to take a position in the public schools of that place, un- der the supervision of Mr. Gregy. The wedding was quiet, only a few friends of the bride and groom' being present. Miss Lizzie Lestico, of C Lake, act- bridesmaid and Carl Reightner, groomsman. The then the Was Touched By An Address Given at a Convention and been + 0 with missionary Bethel Jchurch by E. C. Austin, Canada's first missi to Peru. Mr. Austin is fi Tom an attack of la iver his ad- dress, which was very interesting. The II Corinthians, 14, "For we stretch not our- . beyond our measure, as though we Toathed not unto You; for we are come as as to you also in preach- ing the 1 of Christ. Not bhoast- without our measure, that is, of other. at's labors, but having hope, when your faith is in- creased, that we shall be enlarged by. you according to our rule abundant y. To preach the gospel in the re gions beyond you, and not to boast in another man's line of things made Twelve | The Mr. Austin spoke at Calvary Con: Cavalier, of the British George's Cathedral, at evensong, on erecting On Their Rounds. which all fy A about *'Decembering. weather. Two first , this morning, claimed by a bellows or a file, verse, to being poisoned.' number of stories and the handsomest. accompany the Engineer Sinclair to every fire, ist church male quartette Shea, composed Messrs, "The Benedictus, 'ening service the rendered 'Hark, Hark, My Soul" day Morning. on Market street, and was held in high esteem hy large circle of friends. to Canada when a many was the proprietor of the Bay Quinte hotel. In Roman Catholic, and in liberwl. He was a member of C.M.B.A. He ago, and is Mrs, Delaney and Mrs, McDonald, Kingston, and take place on Wednesday. -- Death Of Mrs. Macdonald. Ss turday night, from the effects of married life extended over fit the same time. TO DECIDE CONTEST. To-night. balls up, for a Hunt holds the title and has been defented in a match, while turning Junior Artilleries Won. ternoon, the Junior Artillaries defeat 11. The same teams will play next Saturday afternoon. His Team Will Play. "Chaucer" Elliott, wego baseball team, in the tue, spent Sunday in King- "Chaucer" ston. will make things hum this séason Hi has already signed a team would When it comes to running a team, Chaucer" generally makes good, and his team is expected summer, Hard Luck Expedition. the mayor, spent Saturday and Sun- pedition. According ta, party spent most of doors, owing to the their time in extreme cold party included Mayor Mowat, Messrs, Jearance, Moxley, Shorey and Hora. New Freight Agent Appointed. city to take over the duties as genes ral passenger and freight agent of the K.& P. railway, with headquarters here. Mr. Dickson's arrival will great- ly lessen. the duties of F. Conway, acting superintendent of the company -------- To Work At Marlbank. A party of twelve Italians arrived in the pity this morning from Mon- treal, Janpl left this afternoon for Marlbank, where they will be em- ployed at the Portland cement works. The foreigners spent the morn- ing walking around the streets. Mrs. Thomas Bowes, Dalhousie, died on April 30th. Two years' illness had attended deceased, and finally paralys- is came on and brought the end. Mary MoMillan was born on the farmstead where she also died. Her age was sev- enty-five years and six months. The Napunee Canning company is a large addition to its al- Fg Newsy Paragraphs Picked Up By It'is 'the versatility of May to Down in Montreal they ure talking "A whole lot of things in nature have "postponed on' account of the appearance drunks were given their liberty at the police court harbour resembled a large mill pond this morning. The water was rfectly calm after yesterday's blow. | text was M Xx, : gy curtains may be nicely re soap and water. The holes should first be cleaned out with |in. If Kingston lovers of dogs turn to the last chapter of Revelations, 15th they will find the future state | pressated--he seid the first lesson was of their pets, which is sad in addition were more copies of the Nati- onal Magazine for April sold than of any previous number, and it was the first that had been placed on sale at the advanced price of fifteen cents. A lots of good features make the May number not only one of great -interest, but one of The Chatham engine arrived with the fire department's apparatus at the fire at Johnston's tailoring establish- ment, Saturday night. The cify fath- ers have at last complied with the or- ders of the underwriters in this re spect, and the Chatham will in future brigade in charge of The music in Queen Street Method- on Sunday was very fine. 3 . " of { no one who in those meetings resisted H. Crumley, Bradley and Manhard, sang delightfully, at both services, in the evening singing "The xxiii Psalm" and "The Wayside Cross." At the ev- chbir excellently DEATH OF CHARLES LYONS. Old Resident Passes Away Mon- Death claimed an old and much re- spected resident of the city, early Mon- day morning, in the person of Charles Lyons, who passed away at his home On Tuesday last, Mr. Lyons suffered a paralytic stroke, and this was the cause of his death. Deceased was of a genial disposition, # | « Another lesson and one of encour- The late Mr. Lyons was horn in the county of Wexford, Ireland, and came boy. For vears he was a steward on the lake boats, and for twenty-five vears of religion he was a politics, a ners looking wife died some vears : + the survived by two sisters, of one brother, Patrick Lyons, of this city, The funeral will After lingering for over three month Mrs. Hector Macdonald. died, on Sa 2 | Christian formation. We must lay the fractured hip bone. Mr. Macdonald passed away during the winter, so that | the remains of the old couple, whose seven years, will be interred side by side gt The Pool Championship is on The city pool championship will be decided to-night, in two contests, 100 side bet of $100. P. never his to Children. opponent, Arthur Willey, though he In his usual short address to the has been defeated, feels confident of the tables on the champion. In a close and exciting game of base ball at Frontenac Park, Saturday af- ed the Shamrocks by a score of 12 to again who, this sea- son, will manage and captain the Os- Empire says that his team which make the big leaguers hustle. to do well this A party of Kingstonians, headed by day at Tamworth on a canoeing ex- reports the weather and the snow storms. The W. R. Dickson, formerly of the Ot tawa and New York Railway com- pany, Ottawa, has arrived in the VICES POINTED OUT. Sunday Evening Sermon By Rev. J. Charles Villiers at First Congregational. - Rev. J. Charles Villiers preached, last evening at the First Congrega- tional church, on "Lessons of Encour- agement and Warning from the Recont McMaster Evangelistic Services." His 15 : "Whosoever shall not receive the kingdom of God as a litde child, shall not enter there- After a reference to the enthusiasm displayed by the evangelists--an en- thusiasm warranted hy the cause re- that disclosed by the urgency of en- treaty by the evangelists that deci- sion be made for Christ. There were moments when the speaker seemed to realize, as unfortunately we do not to-day realize as frequently and as profoundly as we should the value of the individual soul. The congregation to him was not a mass of people, merely. They were men and women, each having individuality; each man and each woman @& bring in possession of a life not limited hy time, but stretching out into the realm of eternal realities, a realm of weal or of woe, according as each man and each woman would detide. In view of that faet the evangelist was urgent even to importunity. that the people in that solemn hour of evangelical appeal should decid for Christ and for the life eternal, for he know that the importunities to receive Christ as Saviour and Lord, but did so to the peril of his best and highest interest. A second fsson drawn from the services was attendance at the meotings. It brought home to our minds the fact that in spite; of the religious pessi- mism of the hour the people had not lost interest in religion, A mighty religious meeting for more than three weeks, and long continued each night, we might suppose would prove a weariness to the flesh, and that at- tendance on it would wane. Such was not the cas:. Throughout the attend- ance was good, far better at 'the end than at the beginning of the cam- paign, giving evidence that the com- munity has not lost vital interest in religion. agement was in the youthful years of thé copverts. A majority were young people, many of them only children, It is a matter of rejoicing when men and women of mature vears are brought to an ' acceptance of their position before the cross, to acknowl- edge as well as know themselves sin- to Christ and believing on Him for salvation. There is joy in presence of the angels over the conversion of such. But there is not less joy over the conversion, the win- ning to the acceptance of Christ of a young per:on, even a child of tender years. It is a common complaint to- day that ours is a godless and seli- absorbed age. If it is to become the * | converse of that/then we must have "| not only Christian reformation, but foundations of character in the young the principle of Christian religion. We must believe and we must. act as thonoh every child born into this world has a pleee in the covenant of divine orace. When Christ seeks for a sion of heavenly sreatness He finds it in the soul of a little child. Phen, too, we must find it, and must remember that Christ stands behind the life of every child. KEEP GOOD COMPANY. Rev. Dr. MacTavish Gives Advice children at Cooke's church on Sunday morning, the pastor, Rev, Dr. ' Me- Tavish, gave out some good advice. He told the chiidren that they should at all times keep good company, and that they would derive no good from being out on the striets after dark, when a great deal of bad language was heard. He was surprised that so many people allowed their children to walk around the streets at night, and strongly urged the children not to do 'en should they be given thewp- ty. The speaker also referred to the large number of immoral pictures in circulation. These should all be de- stroyed, as they had an influence to- wards evil, --t------ A Very Hot Shot. Winnipeg Tribune. A Toronto banker has been trans ferred to Montreal. Quite a change. It's some time since Toronto bankers have heen able to got further east than Kingston. Wiliam Swaine, piano tuner- Orders received at McAuley's. Phone 778. Kingston's Famous Fur Store. A SPRING HAT. Have you bought yours yet ? not, why not 7 There's nothing to be gained by wait- BRITISH WHIG, MONDAY, MAY 6. REVIVAL _ SERVICES LESSONS ON RECENT SER=|on sale daily April 19th-to November stiggested by the large | for the examinations. | Calgary: JJ. CITY AND VICINITY. New York Central Excursions. To Jamestown exposition. Tickets STR. PLUMMER CARRIES IT 30th. Choice of routes. Detailed in- TO FORT WILLIAM. formation of ticket agents. Back On Duty. Constable "Nick" Timmerman was back on duty, to-day. after his long The Movements of Vessels on the Lakes--A Raft to Leave Garden Island For Quebec. siege of illness, and he received a a : warm welcome from his host ' of | The steamer Clara has arrived from friends. Oswego with coal for Booth's. ' The steamer D. D. Calvin goes on Piles Cured In 6 To 14 Days. the, dey-doek on Wediuslny. York i i The steambarge ity of New K Pazo Ointment is guataaited bo Sure left the jeer) this morning. any: caseof 'thing, blind, blesding Or The steambarge lowa has arrived protruding piles in six to fourteen from Erie, with coal for the Locomo- days or money refunded. 50c. ton Works. : Hk : ¥ The schooner Tradewind has arrive On Road To Recovery, at Gananoque from Oswego with coal Word was received in the city, to- for Robson's. : day, to the effect that Master Hugh The steamer Westport has arrived Hendrie, spn of the late Hon. J. S. [in Kingston with a cargo of slabs Hendrie, Hamilton, was recovering |ior local dealers. The steamer .J. H. Plummer, from from his severe illness, and now on ) the road to recovery. Fort William, with a cargo of grain, loads rope for Fort William at Swift's. The steamer Kenirving passed through Kingston, Sunday, en her from Oswego, to Smith's Falls, The Great Snowfall. The records of the observatory show that the only year during the last [way fifty'two years' "which: will compare [With ecal. L with the present, so far as May snow-| The steamer Randall has arrived at all is concerned, was 15875, when | Richardsons' with corn, from Wash- three inches fell on May day byrn, and will clear to-day with corn for Washburn. io} "Three Swall " The tug Frontenac clears, to-night, ' , 5 i rs. for Quebec with the second of the Sir John Power bs. Sons : Calvin company's raft of timber, "Three Swallows" Irish Whisky, bound for Europe Famous for over g century, Tha o bid Pian a 1 Of highest standard of purity, : The steamer Ford River was unload Distillers to His Majesty the King. ed of its cargo of corn at Richard- sons' elevator at 2:30 o'clock, Sunday morning, and cleared for Chicago. Swift's : Steamer: Belleville, down to-day: the steamer Rideau King ar- rived yesterday and cleared to-day for Ottawa: the steamer Aletha, down and up to-day. The schooner Ford River has arriv- ed from Chicago, with 18,000 bushels of ' corn, for Richardsons. Capt. Chauncey, Daryaw, of Kingston, re- To Try Ontario Council. A large number of young doctors and medical students inténd trving the Ontario council medical examina, tions," this spring. A number of "meds" are still in the city studying A Guaranteed Corn Cure For 25c. Putnam's Painless Corn Extractor is [ports a very rough voyage. guaranieed to remove hard, soft or A Port Colborne, Ont., despatch bleeding Corns in twenty-four hours | says traffic was resumed through the without pain, Take only Putnam's, | Welland canal, at 11.30 o'clock this it's the best. ! morning. The damage caused by the tug Schneck, bound from the Soo to Kingston, in colliding with the Michi- gan Central bridge, near Welland, has kesn repaired. A large fleet of hoats both down and up bound had been de- layed by the accident. Sleighing At Sharbot Lake. Sharbot Lake was visited by an- other snow flurry on Sunday, and as a result there was six inches of snow on the streets. Several of the vil- lagers enjoyed a sleigh ride, The peo- ple there are beginning to think that DISTRICT DASHES. winter is going to stay the year : round. y Items Snipped From Our Various ---------- Exchanges. "At The Grand." E. J. Williams, Brockville, is open- The production of "As Told in the |ing a branch drug store at North Augusta. Kenfrew's new post office will be on the east side of Muin street and in a central location. Malcolm Kirst, Elgin, died on Wed- nesday, at an advanced age. A widow, two sons and five daughters survive, W. 8. Boyd has been elected to a seat at the Gananoque council board, in place of Thomas Dempster, resign- Hills," which will' be seen at the Grand on Tuesday, May 7th, is one that has a number of up-to-date spe- cialties and abounds in bright, clean comedy, while the plot is strong in its originality and 'written in a man- ner that makes the play one of the best produetions of the year®rom a literary: point of view. Met With Accident. John Kehoe, a shovéller, slight injuries on Saturday while engaged in unloading coal on J. D. MeDougall, Lanark, killed a bear last weck that weighed 337 lbs. The animal was sheep stealing when received afternoon the barge John Gaskin, at the M.T. hot il not nl re . sev 1 Co's oi : lle. not only are severa o's. slip. One of the mast heads was private residences to he built this broken, and'a bucket of coal grazed his shoulder. He was removed to his home, and Dr. A. C. Ross was called to attend him. He suffered a sev shaking up, but no serious results anticipated, summer, but several larger structures are projected. Macdonald is appointed a, sub-collector of customs for the out- port of Wellington, under the survey of Picton, Ont. The Renfrew Journal has become a A Small Blaze. the property of a joint stock com- The firemen recived a eall to .John- pany of: local capitalists. it came in- ston's tailoring establishment, Prin to the ownership of the plant on cess street, about eight o'clock on Sa- May Ist. turday night. Two small 'boys upset The a large lamp in the third storey. An James : officers of the Cape Vincent, N. Y,, fire department for the ensuing alarm was sent in, but the fire was | vear are: Chief, R. J. J. Newman extinguished before the brigades ar | first assi tant chief, Walter H. Grant. rived. ' There was little damage done, | second assistant chief, Frank H Ben- though the hardwood floor was char. nett. v x red where thie burning oil had heen Willian Conners has left Lanark for spilled. é Saskatoon, where he intends to én- gage in his trade, carpentry. Mr. Connors is a splendid artisan. He has been a citizen of Lanark for many years. : Picked Out on London Street. "When I saw you away off, | recog- nized you by your walk," said a citi- zen to another, 'and | wondered what you were doing so far out of your way." Then story telling began." was in London, Eng., and was hurry- | the Dominion house, in Renfrew, and ing along," said" one of the men, | will erect a handsome brick residence "When a man out of breath came up {and office. to me, and tapped me on the shoull-| The creditors of the insolvent es er saying, 'z have had to run to [tate of A..C. Miller, Brockville, award- catch up, but I knew vou from your |ed the k to Mrs. Elizabeth Miller back and your walk."'* The man w ho | Smith's Falls, mother of A. C., , came up to the Kingstonian was | tender of 23 from Toronto, "and," said the Kirg- | was accepted. stonian, "I had not get him many times here, so I regard the cireum- stance as something remarkable." Dr. McKillop, veterinary surgeon of Forester's Falls, has purchased Archibald Smith property from above whose 1-3 cents on the dollar Are In A Maze. A wide circle in Kingston is stirred by a controversy as to the area in | st square miles of Canada as compared with the United States. No two auth- or.ties, encyclopedia, year-book, or geography} are alike, Some ive Can- ada the lead, others do not. The lat- est statement is in the Canadian Magazine, by John Waddell, who ac- cords the United States, including Alaska, but presumably not the Phil- Ippines, 3,622,933 miles; Ownada, 3 - 755,016 miles, An authoritative state- mour, New York: Aug. Lomineus, | ment will be requested from the de- Courtrai, Belgium: Jno. P. Wanna. | partments of the interior at Ottawa maker, New York: Dr. Frank Zwick, | and Washington. Meanwhile the dis- John Brown, Stirling: P. Dn. Sprung, | putants can resume their lawful avo- B. Shortt, J. E. Storms, | cations. B. Lewis, St. Paul; Leo- i Arrivals At The B. A. Hotel. J. B. Bostour, W. E. Bartley, H. J. Hurley, Montreal: A. Alexander, ~Na- panee; Wm. Clifiord, Mildred Steven. son, Duluth; A. GG. Dwight, M. T Weston, Watertown, N.Y.; F. M. Hep- bugn, Morrisburg; J. A Lang, J. 'H. Seels, wife and son, J. A. voort, Toronto: Jas. P. Plunkett, Chicago: J. A. Cameron, London: A. Fitzpatrick, New Liskeard; J. Gil Vander- I~ Winnipeg: JJ. nar P. Alcombrack, Knoxville 4 Tenn. James Joflers, Two Bar Gate, RICH BLOOD THE SECRET OF Tennessee; Lewis Abramson, Oxville, HEALTH. Nebraska. tesa ; Druggist George W. Mahood Re- commends Vinol For the| Blood, "The blood should have winety-five per- cent. red corpuscles. With a less amount come weakness, sickness and suffering. "We sed every day on our streets many people whose faces plainly show impure, impoverished blood. "We want everybody in Kingston to know that Vinol purifies, vitalizes and Engineers' Certificates. The' legislature of Ontario at its re- cent session passed an act respecting Stationary engineers. After June, 1908 no engineer will be aliowed to operate a stationary steam, plant of fifty horse-power or upwards unless he holds a government certificate. To three classes certificates will be grant- ing. It's just like cutting off ||. one end of the blanket to lengthen the other. Buy now while our variety is at it's best. ur range is m= mense. f t g'neers .in locomotive engineer's certificate; sec- ond, engineers who on the above date were in charge of a plant of twenty- previous to the passing of thig act, not less than two years' experi in A the operation of such a plant in\ the ! province. Others will have to pass the ed without examination: first, those who on 20th April, 1907, (the date the act was passed) held certificates from an association of stationary en- Ontario, or a marine or enriches the blood, increases the red corpuscles and creates strength. "This is because Vinol contains in a highly concentrated form all the medi- cinal, blood-making and hody-building en from fresh cods' livers, the useless oil elimihated, and tonie iron, a need- ful constituent for the blood, added, "We guarantoe Vinol will purify and enrich the blood, create strength, and build up every run-do person in » ive horse-power or over in Ontario: hird, engineers who ny at, any time Kingston, or return the oney in ey- ery case where it fails George W Drug RD Ea i SHE LOADS ROPE; "saarens macnn 3 044404400000 0000000 LL000.:00404060006000600¢. ses store. than other stores offer, while the pair. [a 8c. a yard and up. White Curtain Muslin, 15¢c. a yard and up. White Quilts elements of cod liver. oil actually tak- An the best 98c. and up. On 'Advertised and "Just as Good" Articles. Jan. 1907. "To make advertising pay vou simply have got to have a gol article to gdvertise, That is hy, when you ask for an advertised article in store and the clery tries to sel store and the clerk tries to sel] iv is a million chances to one that it is not just as good. It can't be, or there would be no repson to substitute it. So if you want the best paint, soap, cocoa or any decent product in sist on getting the advertise] thing, the best of its kind that exists on earth." This is the' very reason why vou should" insist on being sy plied with "BABY'S | OWN SOAP" every time. It is the best of its kind. Nome of the substitutes can be as good. They are sold to the dealer at about cne-third lower price mercial reports) and yet give him a bigger profit than kh gets from "Baby's Own." "BABY'S OWN" is sold as low as the high quality and great purity of the ingredients will allow. Refuse substitutes--get what you ask for--Insist on having "BABYS OWN SOAP." ' FIFI II III III IIe ---------- ' Seal ? Skin (see com PP PP PPV PPV PT VP PY VPP VSI PP PV PPP VIP PVPS P PPE PP i a Sacks MADE OVER AND DYED. ----BY W. F. GOURDIER EXCLUSIVE FURRIER 78 and 80 BROCK ST. 'Phone 700. At present, our Stock of Desirable Cut Glass is more Complete than ever. Choice :--Spoon. Trays, Relish Dishes, Jelly Plates Fruit Dishes, / uses, Cream Jugs, Carafe's etc inspec- We invite tion, SMITH BROS. Jawelers and Opticians Issuers of Marriage Licenses. Phone 666. your Furnishings ! bochien Are having a big sale at this The values are much better yles are particularly new ari popular. Lace Curtains Hundreds of pairs of LACE CURTAINS, at from 35c. to $7 a Eiass Curtain Poles will fit any window, complete for 15. Sash Curtain Rods, Oc. White Wood Poles, complete, 15¢ Stair Oil Cloths Neat designs, 12ic. a yard, compla a, Floor Rugs, a few samples at wholesale price. Art 'Muslin rE a ala frilled, exceptionally big range of values in the 'city at O00 0000004 " Fin And Dainty Footw pretty. Our Sprin HIGH } To be had on the ) For those who that have a style ) stand by Home ma Makes. The ASH Now, w judges SEALLELLALALLS Evang G. E THE VER A. Jd. RI Leaded iil] Lace C T We are going t tain Nets this week, we will be pleased tc Lace Cur With Sheetings, Pill 'ings and Table Nap THE JAM]