V k store for. fall opening. He nd had fo give up all thoughts -- happened to hear of this. He 'and Up- ts, _ Raincoats, Silk Blouses, vth and Bearskin Coats, All Sheetings, Pillow Cotton, Lin- Joys' Suits, Overcoats, Rain- r. announcements, which will Wis PUT IT? vait you. RRL IE AE HAASE, - incess St. 180 Redden's and Crawford's r Baking Powder--free of hosphates. : hful--and makes Biscuits, hot. only deliciously light he as well. pmber of novel dishes--and to . Write for a free to the bh oF CANADA, ted, treal. lines from the bests, ¢ will be pleased to. nd & Bro, Shoemakin eg. "ny THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, FRIDA Y, SEPTEM: BER 6, 1907. -- When Mrs. William McKinley died, a few months ago, she left surviving three other women whose husbands had been president of the United States. Only two, however, had been mistress of the | White House, and one only for a brief period. These were Mrs. James A. Gar- field and Mrs. Grover Cleveland. Mrs. Benjamin Harrison married the former president after his retirement from pub- lic life. ! These wives of former chief magis- trates live quietly, and peacefully, and their doings are rarely chronicled to the world. Not one of them has evinced a deep interest in social. events since retir- ing to the quiet life. ¢ Mrs. Garfield always loved the old family home at Mentor, Ohio. There her happiest days have been spent, and there her children were raised. Since the tragic death of her distin- guished husband Mrs, Garfield's - chief interest in life centred about the careers of her sons, one of whom, James R. Garlield, has steadily climbed the ladder of prominence until he is now secretary of the interior After the death of President Garfield, the nation made ample provision for his widow, so that she should never lack for worldly comforts Deeply attached to the memory of her husband and drawn hy some irresistible force to the seenes of his political tri- umphs, Mrs. Garfield, for a number of years after his death, spent her winters in Washington. She lived quictly there, however, and did not take advantage of the social position that would have been hers, had she desired it. » Much of the time since then has been spent in a delightful retreat near Pasa- dena, Cal, where she has 'a country "#IXED BABIES. Piquant Position of Young Mother "After Vaccination. A curious mistake recently at the hospital at Amiens, France. young women had been there. Une had given birth to a boy and yen birth to a girl. 8 ; taken from them to be vaccinated. After | deal for the vaccination the babies, in their swad- | dling clothes, were returfied . to their | mothers, who went away with them. | Soon afterward one of the mothers returned to the hospital in tears. Her child was a boy, but on returning home she discovered that the nurse had hand- ed her a girl. She insisted on her baby being returned to her. A scene of great confusion occurred, as nobody knew the address of the other woman. At toward nightfall, the other mother arrived, greatly excited, complaining that she had been given a boy in mistake for her girl baby. The change was duly executed and the two mothers went away happy. f Some Day. There is a' big: field for endeavor in {and reading. | estate sufficient to occurfed | Two (freight office (in _ Jeesey City suffered | call all women angels, but to my mi nd, Their babies were consulted a phys DEN 7 27 Garson the windows a splendid Sierra Madre mountains home. From view of the may be had. The house is built of shingles and cob- blestones, and sits cozily on a beautiful green hill. Below is a' vaudy, colorful and fragrant with flowers, and above tower the cloud-capped mountains, Mrs. Garfield spends her time sewing She is a sweet and kindly| old wonran, gracious to all who call upon! her, and always willing to talk of the | days when she reigned beside her hus- band in Washington. { Mrs." Benjamin Harrison devotes her | time to the education and traiming of her pretty 10-year-old daughter, Elizabeth. Mrs. Harrison is a typically fond mother, and she watches over her child with the tenderest solicitude: She is living in | Indianapolis, Ind. Part of her time she spends at TuxedosN.Y. The second Mrs. Harrison was form- | erly Mrs. Mary Dimmick, the favorite niece of the first wife of the former president. She became a member of the {arrison household prior to General Harrison's election to the presidency, and in the White House she figured prominently in all the big functions. During the last illness of the first Mrs, Harrison she nursed thé invalid tender- ly. She was married to the former pre- sident at Indianapolis in April, 1896, and on February 21, 1897, little Elizabeth was born. Z : When Mr. Harrison died he left an give his widow a comfortable -- even handsome -- income and to provide nicely for his daughter. A family difference took the matter into court, but the Widow was upheld. That little Elizabeth . enjoys all - ad- vantages cannot be doubted. Among the itergs - of an account submitted: ta the court some time ago were. physical cul- ture lessons, art lessons, photographs, -- > Grover Encitierr Cleveland German, French and music lessons, books and art materials, and _travelling expenses. There was a tour of Europe, with a French maid. Although very young, the child can speaks both French and German fluently. = A woman of rare culture and charm, Mrs. Harrison is popular in social cir- cles of Indianapolis. Her chief imterest in life naturally centres in her little girl. In 1902 Vice-President Fairbanks, then senator, introduced a bill granting Mrs. Harrison a pension of $5000. There was open opposition to the. bill, both among members of congress and relatives of 'the late president. When Mrs. Harrison learned of this, she re- quested that the matter be dropped. She said she agreed claimed that as she married the presi- dent after his term of office had expired, she was not entitled to the pension. Tii "appearance Mrs. Harrison is tall, with a wonderfully youthful face. hair is dark and her the Jeaturch of chiseled type of the cathco. Her chief | She | gracious | a charm, however, is in her manner. is said to be dbne of the most and tactful women who have ever graced the society of Indianapblis. At Princeton, N.J,, iin a comfortable and delightful home lives a woman of unusual beauty and softness of manner, the 'most beautiful woman, many say, whogever presided in the White House. Thisvis Mrs. Grover Cleveland Ip the lapse of years Mrs. Cleveland had" IBst little of the-beauty for which sherwas famed when she was the "first lady of the land," although- she is now more matronly in appearance For the first time since she White House Mrs. Clevelartd appeared ati a prominent So function in Pitts- burg last November. "Mr. Cleveland de- livered an address during the ceremonies | of Founders' day at the Carnegie Insti- with those or] ] { Her | left the | ¥ f taken out of the millions who now in- habit the "The preachers will | exert thei on the dead, who tute there. During the summer the ¢ peace ful quictude of the home is generally inter- rupted by a vacation when the family goes to New England. Last summer Mrs. Cleveland took to mountain climb- ing. And she became an expert moun- tain climber. She scaled Mount Wash- ington, the top of which is 0,288 feet above, the sea. In Princeton Mrs. Cleveland is re- garded as the hostess royal. Her visit- ing list is the largest in the city, and on it'are many persons who do not belong to the ultra-exclusive society of the city. The wife of the ex-president takes an active part in chiirch work, and herself visits_sick and poor families. She is, without doubt, the most popular woman in the town, just as Mr. Cleveland is the most popular man. Mr. Cleveland hob-nobs with the coal man and the ice { man; and Mrs. Cleveland bows to and smiles upon every ope she meets Mrs, Jevelamt 4 decidedly a home- loving 'woman. - The home, "Westland," is a big, square, rambling house, plain nd unpretentious. Here Mrs. Cleve- She devotes her life to her four, Es- Francis land reigns. { children, of whom there are | ther, Manion, Richard and Grover. 3 | The girls go to Francis G.,, the youngest, is | years of age. He i the picture of his mother, but in activity i keenness of {mind is a "chip from the old block." The house rings with his cries and laughter; and both father and mother. dearly love to romp and play with him. In 'her home Mrs. Cleveland dresses' simply. She is noted for her kindness | to her servants; On entering the Cleve- | land house one: feels he is in a genuine | home. * On meeting Mrs. Cleveland one's | paramount impression is that he has | met a good and genuine mother. nu private school. only 34 JUST KICKED AT A CAT. * Cure For Rheumatism Discovered * By Clerk. A clerk in the Pennsylvania railroad from spasmodic twinges in his right leg, an 'and spent'a good but - continued to medicine, grow. worse.' One morning recently the office tom- cat in a spirit of friendliness arched his { back and rubbed against the afflicted | calf. The clerk gave a vicious kick with his bad leg and a gray streak' shot through the air. He hobbled to a chair and sat down with a few stirring re- marks about cats and rheumatism A few minutes later he gritted his teeth hard and arose. He shook his leg and feebly smiled. Then he walked like a drum major across the floor and bois- terously shook hands with himself. The sharp twinges had, disappeared and there has been no recurrence. of pain. The clerk's doctor corrected his diag- nosis when asked for @m:explanation of probably mistook for rheumatism was seman WOMAN WHO IS VAMPIRE. Preys Upon Chivalry. Until He/Be- comes Slave. It is one of the tenets of chivalry to writes Lillian Bell in the Delineatdr, | the other had | which he attributed to rheumatism. He, there is a trace of the other . thing in {those women who ensure big-hearted Imen and hold them captive through a truly iniquitous display of weakness. The spurious invalid; the perfectly weth and strong nervous wreck; the fat {and healthy dyspeptic; the athletic well tof tears; the woman, in short, who [preys upon a man's sympathy, pity, | tender-heartedness--what you will--to | keep him in subjection to her, is a vam- { pire beside which -the vampire of Burne- Jones and Kipling was a babe in arms. Every grown man who has cut his wis- | dom teeth can defend himself against | the peroxide blonde dressed in red, but the drooping violet dressed in mauve. or ! gray, or the ingenue in white swiss, or | the limpid-eyed siren in baby blue will | ensnare the hig-hearted man who knows | around at her heels." Then some day he | caused by a twisted ligament. The kick | finds thut he is more a slave to her | the problem of how to use.the waste of |. tho oat straightened out the twist and { ;ssumed weakness than was ever a the world, says the Milwaukee Journal. | The western farmer wastes almost as much land as he cultivates. The price of his acres requires that he must culti- vate fewer acres with less waste. There is a great waste in effort because "the round man gets the square hole," and vice versa ter system of education must find where men belong. In a thousand ways we spoil almost human m as much as we make . Vhat a chance for the inyentor's brain. Some day the mighty force of the tides, now useless, will be harnessed and the power that is in them set to doing the work of men: Some day the currents of air that wander idly over the earth's surface, doing no task save that of the turning | of a few wind mills, will Je tamed into | submission and used. Some day the heat "of prodigally distributed, will be warm the houses of men. Some day the resident forces of elec- tricity that lie latent will lift many a burden from the shoulders of men and women and little children. Some day all these great forces will be stored up and ready to be released at the touch of a button. These powers of nature overflow in wealth. By their surplus energy 'they g ve hint of théir ability and desire to help us in our tasks. And we will never be content until we get all that is coming to us from them. And--Dbest of all--the solution of how fo use their waste holds the Key to bet- ter living. le sun, nade. to Needed Special Guidance. An old darky who_had not been to church for a Jong time appeared one night at prayer meéeting. His presence at the meetings was commented on by one of his brethren of the church. - The conversation between the two was some- thing like this: ve Srother Jolmson, I ain't saw you heah at de meetin' house for a con- siderable duration." a "Dat's 50," replied Brother Johnson; "I'se been very busy." "Well, how come you heah to-night, Brother Johnson : "Well, you see, it's like dis, Brother Jackson. I'se repairing a chicken coop for some white gentlemens, and I'se got a situwations putting a fence round a! watermelon patch for another gentle- nrans, and I needs special guidance from temptation." ot There is no royal road, no special A bet- SO removed the cause of the trouble. An Outdoor Gown. | | | { human being who was sold at the block. ! HAD PREMONITION OF DEATH. | -- -- | Employee at Bellevue Foretold His End. : New York, Sept. 3--Karl Lorentson, who died yesterday in Bellevue hospital, was a veteran of the German cavalry, well-preserved for his fifty-nine years, and enjoyed excellent health until he was prostrated by heat on Aug. 13. Recovering from this in a short time, Loremtson resumed his duties. The first that was known of his premonition was two. days ago, when he asked per- mission of Dr. Kempf to relinguish his duties to say good-by to friends in the city. Dr. Kempf asked him where he was going and Lorentson replied : | "On a long journey that we all must take." io Df. Kempf granted the permission amd "Lorentson left the hospital. He returned yesterday morning, annguncing that he had said his farewells. At the dinner hour he sat at a table with John _ Poell and another employee of the hospital, They were surprised when Lorentson at the conclusion of the meal said : "I believe this is the last dinner we The illustration shows a handsome gown developed = in English embroid- erod muslin. The skirt is made long and hangs gracefully. The blouse has an embroidered frott. The back is plain, "with the exception of a few tucks. The sleeves are made very short and full, the coat ds cut in three-quarter length. It is developed in the 'white muslin to match thé gown, and is hand-embroidered with the. Japanese flower -desigews--The sleeves are made Japanese style and are also embroidered. $1.25 Watertown Return $1.25. Tickets going Saturday, 5 a.m. and 2 p.m., returning Monday. Ma says when a man uses indelicate language in the presence of ladies, he should be reminded 'that the garbage- bucket doesn't belong in the parlor. CURE gift, "It is the rut, the plod, the. grind, the humdrun that win," Hidner Troubles | will ever have together, and I want to say farewell." 3 : To humor him they shook his hand. He went to his room and closed the door. Two hours later an attendant entered the room and found Lorentson dead. It was obvious that he had com- posed himself as if for sleep: Lorentson came of an excellent fam- ily. © His father was a judge in the fatherland. He came to this country twelve years ago ------ . Got The Teacher. Washingtow Star. " ie "There was a new superintendent" ap- pointed" to a certain school--a_ zealots man, but a choleric and hasty one as well. "Now it happened that on the day of his arrival at the school, while he was working hard in his office, a maddening I noise arose in the room next to him. | "The superintendent stood this noise las long as he could. Then he looked lover the glass partition into the uproari- {ous room and saw among the noisy lads {assembled there a tallish chap who : | seemed to be making more of a row 'GIN PILLS : | than all the rest combined. "Beside himself with rage, the'super- intendent reached out his arm, seized the tall hoy by the collar, dragged him over the partition, and bastiged him down into a chair beside his desk. "Now, he said, 'sit- still there, and 1 | nothing of women, until he will think it | | the sudden cure and said that what he lis a privilege to pay her bills and tag | EN SUES NAS, don't open your lips till '1 give you the word. "Fhen he bent over: his papers, and jn he ensuing quietude worked away busily. "Some fifteen mingtes passed. Then the head of a small boy, peered timidly over the partition, and a meek little sir, you've got our teacher." RESCUED FROM SHARKS. Officer Picked Up Time. New York, Sept, 3--W. H. Temple- ton, who is drill officer on the Atlantic liner Minneapolis, yesterday reached port from London, was the principal in an exciting rescue off George's Bank, Newfoundland. He was instructing a crew of six men early Sunday morning as to the proper way: of lowering the starboard lifeboat. The boat had been lowered half way to the water, with the third officer standing in the stern, when one of the fall ropes caught in the block of a davit. Templeton gave the rope a sharp pull and it gave way. The stern | of the lifeboat shot down and Temple- ton fell into the sea The Minneapolis, although making only half speed, quickly left the third officer far behind. For two days the ship had been followed by sharks, and | the captain, remembering this, ordered {a boat lowered as quickly as possible, [and at tHe same time turned the vessel out and headed back. Templeton's head appeared on the crest of a wave a quarter of a mile astern. The life- boat crew rowed the distance in record time and soon had the third officer safe aboard, none the worse for his, ducking. Within a few minutes after Templeton had been rescued several sharks ap- peared astern of the ship. Just in WORSHIP ONE NIGHI YEAR. Historic Church Opened Only on Christmas Eve. There stands upon a hill in the village of Uphill, in the county of Somerset, a small and very old church, which is sur- rounded by coves in which the bones of all kinds of animals have been discov- ered, says London Tit-Bits, This his- toric place of worship, which looks down upon Uphill Castle and the village itself, "was at one time the only place of worship for miles around. For several years no Sunday services have been held within its walls, and the only time that the public is allowed to worship there is one night in the year-- on Christmas eve--when the vicar of Uphill or some other clergyman offici- ates. There is a footpath Jeading up the hill to the church; but 'as the hill is a very steep one and the distance great, very few people visit the church. [It is by order 'of the Ecclesiastical Commis- stoners that it is opened to the public once a year, . ' Curious stories are told regarding the interesting edifice, one of which is to the effect that the 'church was pur- posely built on the top of the hill so that the preacher could feel convinced of the sincerity of the faith of those who ac- complished the task of climbing it. The church has been visited by people from all parts of the world. It 'is the only building in England--probably in the world--in which divine service lis con- ducted omly once a year; PE -- END OF WORLD IN 8 YEARS, . Member of Dawnites Thinks Mil- lennium is Due 1915. 'Only, eight more years in which to enjoy life. That is the prediction of Mrs. J, C. Lot, a member of the Mil- lennial 'Dawnites, who believe that the world will come to an end in 1015. In that year, according to Mrs. Lot, every living thing. will be aléstroyed. "except the few elect who will be saved to preach." Only 144,000 persons are to be he will rise: from their graves. With the beginning "of the nial dawn will commence the geem Sabbath which is to last a thou years. The.vear 1915 is selected by reckoning 1,000 years as a day, phe years that have passed are the days mentioned in the Book of Genesis as the workday period, to be followed by the millennium. emt WHERE MATCHES ORIGINATED «"0ld Match House' Near Wash- ington. > Washington Herald, i Sixty miles north of Washington, in Maryland, at the foot of the Blue Ridge mountains, stands the little old one- story stone house in which the first lucifer match was madé. It was the yroduct of the ingenious brain of Joseph Veller and his brother, Jacob Weller, I This discovery was made in 1825. everal relatives of the Wellers still live at Thurmont, where "the old match house, as it is known, occupies a prominent place on Main street, near the centre of the little mountain village. The father of the inventors was the first settler at Mechanicstown, the name of which. was afterward changed to Thurmont. In 1811 he started an ex- tensive edge-tool factory which gave the hamlet its first gognomen. The Wellers were hard workers and early risers, Every morning the father and sons were at their tasks long before daylight. This brought to Joseph the thought of devising some means of doing away with the use 0f the old-fashioned flint and steel every time a light was de- sired. Joseph Weller and - his brother spent their leisure time working * on their scheme. They made a brimstone mix- ture, and continued to experiment. Time and again the mixture failed. In act, it was months before the concoc- tion was made so that any results de- veloped at all. Little did the young men realize that they were working on an invention which in the coursé of the next generation would be used by every civilized country of the world dnd millions of times each day. Late one night, while working on the brimstone mixture by the dim light of home-made tallow candles they found the key to the situation, The mixture fairly glistened in the weak light of the candle. In the fluid was dipped a small piece of wood. Then it was allowed to dry, Striking the new invention on the wall, they found that it ignited. There was light. It burned. The boys were astounded. They laughed with joy and hurried to their father to tell him of their success. Then Joseph and Jacob Weller, Jr, went to work to supply their neighbors with the new light- maker, which was quicker, easier and more convenient than the flint and steel. In a corner of one of the rooms of "the old match house" they had their work- shop for a time. The matches (they weren't called that at that "time) were first made intp blocks, and subdivided, first by? hand, and then dipped, one at a time, into the brimstone mixture. Then they were al- lowed to dry and later packed: ito boxes, which the brothers retailed out to the neighbors and those passing through that part of the country 'at 28 cents per box. The sale included a little piece of sandpaper with verbal instruc- tions as to how to ignite the 'end of the little pine sticks, Fhe business of the 'Wellers began to grow immediately. Curious people came or miles to see them work and buy their goods. The flint and steel was a thing of the past in that locality within the next few months, Gradually the trade began to extend more snd more, and the brothers eventually selected a ite and crected a factory. Then maghingry was introduced intoghe works to asst them fin filling their offers. Twice the factory { burned, the blaze heing dug to the care- | lessness of wor ithe' manufacture {of the matches, #! | "The Old Matcl¥ House" is now oc- cupied by Charles Domer and his family. Several years ago it was sold to its present owner, who started to tear down an old ivy vine, which adorns the west wall of the structure. The vine had been in jts place for nearly a century, and every citizen of Thurmont had learnéd 'to admire the growing shrub every time he looked at the historic building and - thought of the invention that was. made within its walls, When the owgler began the destruction of the old vine" there was a protest from all corners of the village, and he was in- duced to leave it unmolested. The old ivy still clings to the old stone wall, hanging strongly, securely, as though it 'had life and would dislike to give up its position on the side of the structure, which is exhibited with pride to every visitor ot Thurmont. Mrs. M. M. Crouse, a granddaughter of the Wellers, still lives in Thurmont. At Gettysburg, Pa., 16 miles to the north, J. W. Sefton the dean of the battlefield guides, makes his hore. He was a boy at the time of the great conflict between the states, and he witnessed the battle of Gettys- burg from Big Round Top, the highest point on the field. "The Old Match House" is in a good state of preservation., Since the inven- tion of the match under its roof the shingles have been replaced several times. The old shutters, the chimney, and the windows remain, however, just as they were years ago, when no one in the world knew what a match was. Silently the old dwelling stands as a monument to the two young men who made a° discovery for which the whole world is indebted. Within its walls the modern match is used by its occupants who never have occasion to think of the trouble the people of the early days were put to for light. "The Old Match though few people know where it is located. v hottle of 0s A big pure fresh lime juiecs for at Wade's drug store. Buch tools as hanepty, order, pa- tience, seli-denial, aceliracy, prompt ness, punctuality must be always at Yond, oiled and sharpened. Be ready ot emergencies, and nover doubt. wich an excellent blood and perve remedy ae " Tablets are to be had. They the blood with red and reose clearing i 1) : eh and make life le a op bs ed a SAR Miva Bised Tonic. and House" has an_international reputation, | of RHEUMATISM MUNYON'S 3X CURES Le tM K Cure. Mowe It fails. -- vitalhirer weak men strong and lost vowers. SECURITY. 'Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of Synopsis of Canadian Northwest HOMESTEAD REGULATIONS, Any éven numbered sec of Dominion Sands in Mani itoha or fhe orth-West not ed, be homesteaded by any person the sole paar of a family, or male over 18 years of age, to the extent of onequarter section, of 100 acres, Were Or less, Application for homestead entry m made in person. by the. applicant at he ofige of the local Agent or, Sub-Agent. Eutry by glosy may, however, be made on e ions by the father, mother, sdn, daughter, brother or sister of an intending homesteader. An application fog pty or inspection made personally at 'any Sub Agent's office may be wired to the loci | Agent by the Sub-Agent, at the expense of ne applicant, and if the land appli for is weant on receipt of the tele am such Ai¥licanon is to have priority and the land will be held { the necessary pa- s to complete the transhetion are received mail. In case of 'personation" en will be summarily ' cancelled and the oi will forfeit afl priority of 'claim. An application for inspection must be When You Buy "COAL i From : P, WALSH Iain he handles nothing else. I It you wish tend The Kingston Business to be successful wt Limited, head of Queen street. §§ i CANADA'S HIGHEST GRADE § business school, shorthand, graphy, rl moretal wubjoots and by | thoroughly taught Put in Your Tank at Our Dock. A large stock of Dry Bat-* teries, Spark Plug and Coils always on hand. Sy SELBY & YOULDEN, LIMITED. profit. stone we soll has ou guaren- Belt Pina, Pin Lee, Souvendr Boas, Brooches, Cuff . Links, Trays and Hat Pins. Kinnear & d'Estérre, in Jeti, The applicant must be for estead entry, and only one appli for inspection will received from an indi dual. wri that application hus been dis A homesteader whose entry is in good stand Al (1) At ths' residence the term of three years, 2) If the father (or mother, if the father uw deceased) of a hom der es upon a farm in the of the land entered for REGULATIONS, Coal.--Coal mining rights may be leased, for a of twenty-one rs at an annual rental of $1 per.acre ot more than 2, acres shall be leased to one individual or com- pany. A royalty at the rate of five cents ton shall be collected on the merchanta coal mined. Quartz.--A teen years of age, or wer, ha! Br in place, may ocate u cli 1,500x1,500 feet. - The fee for recording a claim is $5. At least' $100 must be provides for the of » kent, on (he. saiss. aims generally are 100 feel jour aod aot able NS angeilat a m favor of father mother, on, daughter, | © 'The sudden ch in or sister, e e, to no | one to sugges wisdom tse, on nang declaration of a ment. putting in song Food Conte We an entry is summarily cancelled or | ® L01" 00g" onl. i'n the kind that Soluntasily abandoned, subsequent to ins o out heat, and flos of cancellation proceedings, the Applicant makes the home Q 5 it's tly the statement is found ant will lose a ee el an vor Ti ol shotilia i. Oe vacant, or if entry has been granted it may be ly t A settler is required to perforni the under one of the following plans: least six mon { nd cultivation of the land in each year dur | wo) Carpenter and Jobber, g comfortable. the best money can buy, there is none better mined. you clean and {& very bottom 2 We deliver it without slate, at prices. { BOOTH & CO. Phone 133. Foot of West St WORORC i THE FRONTENAC LOAN AND INVESTMENT SOCIETY - ESTABLISHED 1863. President--Sir Richard Cartwright Money loaned "oni City and "Farm Pro- Jertion; ustiolpal County Deben- "ecoived and allowed, - : 8. C. McGill Director. Office; 87 i, Managing Kingston. ~C. H. Powell, "103 Raglan St. Wm. Murray, Auctioneer 27 BROCK ST. New Carriages, Cutters, ete., for sale. : Sale of Horses every Saturday. SUMMER WANTS Screen Doors and Wi