Daily British Whig (1850), 8 Oct 1907, p. 5

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n't You Like Look? you your Fall Suit, your New Hat, | ight to be yours, at any rate. A $12, $14, $15, $16.50, $18 and $20. cy a s, $10, $12, 814.50, $15, $16, $18 and just see them, $3, $3.50, $4, $4.50, $5. ¢ nd Soft Hats, $2. 't and Stiff Bosom, 50c., 75¢c. and $1. me Neckwear rbys and Flowing Ends, 50¢. iery, 40c¢. 2 pairs for 75¢c. ). BIBBY CO. ABLE CLOTHIERS. THE WELL KNOWN. INVICTUS SHOE The Invictus Shoes wear better than most all other shoes. They look better. They are the most comfortable fitting shoes. best grades of leather used. inship in every pair of them. n Vici Kids, Box and: Velour Patent Colt. and 5.50 for Men nd 4 for Boys. and 4.50 for Women. all Styles are now ready. $ ® ® ® ® *® ° eo ® " * ® eo. ° » "* o ° ° ® ° ° . hethy's Brass and Iron Beds See our up-to-date Fur- _ nished rooms ; Parlor, Library, Din- ing Room and Bedroom on ground floor. ~ CARPETS --See our lineof imported squares, unions, tapestry, Brus- sels. All the latest de- signs. Prices moderate. es Reid's. oOlates § ~ G. B. Chocolates. re the Best. 66 Princess Street PROF ISVIVIIISIVEEIVERA sew UGe 'Is not only a saving of cash, but & 'saving of labor. When you buy cleaned coal, you don't buy dust and: slack. You con't carry dirt into the home or office in your coal buckets.' This coal is the pride of our city. .It helps "AND COAL Co. A. CHADWICK, Manager Successors of The Rathbun Company. Phone No. 67. SPD OGOOH OOO DIO PROPDEPI4 ® i COAL! The sudden changes in weather ought to suggest the wisdom of putting in some good Coal. We sell good Coal. It's the Kind that sends. gut the most heat, and makes - the: home comfortable } it's the lest money can buy, and there fs mone better mined. We deliver it to you clean" and withoi t slate, at the very bottom prices . BOOTH & CO., Foot of West St { OOOO OOOO 6 4 | b | { b » ) BB 8.5.0 BIB | BEST'S SHORT STOP CURES ALL COUGHS ALWAYS. AND COSTS BUT Rg pe oom houxh nervous nen new | ¥ . Ritond i nh elna,_Lures Nevo. ous Debility, ei a Brain Werry, Donddency. Bisual Wediness, Fosiarions: Sper [ators Nea, and Kffcets of £byssor 31 per box, Six for $s, six will cure. Said by ai} ruggists or plain on of price, New pam, mail The Medicine Ont. C. H. Powell, Carpenter and Jobber; 103"Raglan St. | EE AS GOLD PRODUCER, SCHIONERS WREGHED Range light, and sank | had covered much rang Hof t THEY WERE DISABLED NEAR SOUTHAMPTON. 'The. Eric Stuart Knocked Things ", About and Sank Beside the _* Pier--Another 'on a Rock "Bottom and 'Pounding Hard. Southampton. Ont., Oct. 8.--Last night a north-west gale was responsi ble for two wrecks at this port. About 9.30 o'clock, the schooner Erie Stuart light, from Chatham for Parry Sound, while endeavoring to make the harbor struck the north breakwater, - on Chantry Island, disabled the North immediately. ad { only time to jump to the Pier. The vessel is a total loss. About four o'clock this morning, the Fhooner Ontario, loaded with camp supplies from Chatham for the north shore, tried to make South- ampton Harbor but, owing to the north range' light being disabled was obliged to try to make the Saugeen river, She struck on the bar.at the mouth of the river, and now lies -on a rock hottém about one hundred yards south of the entrance and about the same disfhnce from the shore. She is: pounding heavily and will likely be a total loss. The crew are all safe. The cargo can be saved. BURGLAR GASHED HIS ARM. -- Blood Trail in Store Disclosed Movements. Brockyille, Ont., Oct. 8.--The large fur store of Robert Craig & Co:, on Ring street, was entered from the rool, through a rear window of the third sforéys © To get' af the catch holding The window fast, the intrader smashed a pane of glass, cutting his hand and arm severely in the opera- | tion. A stream of blood followed, and the movements of the man showed he « of the premises, stopping at the safe on the ground floor, This, however, 'was not tam- | known, Services' Held in St. Mark's Church, Barriefield. Oa Sunday, Oct. 6th, the annual Harvest Thanksgiving services were held in St. Mark's church, Barriefield, which was beautifully decorated with fruits. and flowers, grain and vege: tables, intefspersed with moss and berrids, presenting altogether a most atiractive a ance. The congrega- tion which the sacred edifice re- presented nearly the whole parish, the spacious shed, 105 feet long, not' af- ovding, accommodation for all the ve- hicles, several of which had to stand outside. The service commenced punc- tually at eleven o'clock, and the mu- sical- portion was well and effectively rendered by the choir and organist, particular pains having been taken.in previous practices to offer such an outward evidence of hearty praise and thanksgiving as the Harvest Festival annually. suggests, Morning prayer and the ante-communion service hav- ing been completed, the incumbent, Rev. Dr. Nimmo, delivered a sermon from the 1st verse of the 107th Psalm '0 give thanks unto the Lord for He is good, for His mercy endureth for wert? At the celcbration of the holy com- munion a large ber of parish 5 partook of the sacred feast, and the congregation was dismissed with the wpostolie benediction. The special offertory was quite up '0 the standard of previous years, wd represented the contributions - of he great majority of the members of he church. In the evening, owing to a down- pour of rain, accompanied with high winds, a comparatively small ' congre- gation assembled, who were well re- paid, however, for facing the elements, or the vivid pidture drawn by the Rev, Edmund James Peck, a mission- wry 'arnong the Ksquimanx, of his ex- periences in the land of snow and ice, where vegetation is practically un- ) was one well calculated to iti the hearts of all whe heard him. His address, based on John XII,- 10-24, no doubt will have a stimunla- ting efiect upon the members of the pered with, neither is it known what stock, if anv. is missing. The burglar | went ont the, same way he came in. | Enquiry of every doctor in town failed 19 give any trace of the guilty pariy. | 5 5 "Mr. Lewis' Charges. Brackville, Ont., Oct. 8.--When seen | iat his hofie after the result was an-9 nounced, Mr. Lewis made the follow: | mg statement : "By a liberal use of monew plas inthe hands" of liquor licensees for distribution throughout the riding. hy. the coercion of 7 3 Jomo | ¥ oo jon of govern- ones and Inviguratesthe whoie + "cnployees atthe Brockville asy- lum and elsewhere, and hy 'the direct | promite' to: spend "875.000 at the said asylum immediately if the government candidate, was returned, "Mr, Donovan succcedad VW. carrying the Brockville riding By:a:8ithstantial majority. Not- he reported disaffection Bolisérvatives on account distribution of patron- age, the government made amends thercfor by handing out to the dis- ected unts and others a share of the plums during the*fortnicht pre. ceding the alection, and brought them '| into the "foll." Others looking for '| similag, favors were also not forgot- | teh, fo the extent that the liberal can- | didate found arrayed against him Amor The Transvaal Has Forged Away he might be justified in expecting to recive Ahead. Mines and Minerals. | The Transvaal was a bankrupt coun- | try in 1877, but it is now producing gold at the rate of $120,000,000 jer ammum. The white population of the Transvaal is about 300,000, and about 114,000 of this population being locat- ed in the vicinity of the mines. There ave 100000 natives and 53.000 Chinese employed in the mines of the" Wit- watersand, and there are about [0,000 natives employed in other occupations in and nedr the mining towns. The police constable that he had been in- 114,000 white people of the various sulted. The Dominion liceman occupations on the mining area of the went. to arrest the couple, on a Witwatersrand are supported directly or indirectly entirely by the mining industry, and their numbers have in- creased proportionately as the mining industry has progressed. When the mines were first discovered only the high grade ore was mined and treat- ed. At the present time the average value of the ore mined and treated is only $8.50- per ton. It requires econe- mical mine management to produce $10,000,000 per month from ore ging $2.50 per ton in a country where hv- ing expenses are twice as high as they are in the United States, and to pay interested bn capital invested. The skill. ed labor is performed by white men, and, the unskilled lahor by negro na: tives or Chinese under* the direction of white men. A Linguistic Gramophone. Chicago News, Near Amsterdam a tourist who does not know a word of Dutch recently saw in a shop window: the announce- ment, "English spoken." He entered the shop. "English Sir?" asked a vouth behind the counter. Then he picked up a cylinder, placed it on a gramaphone, and the ipstrument duly sang oui--but in German : (Sir, or madam}, the proprietor, who speaks German, will be telephoned for, and will return to the establishment in Jess than "five minutes. Will you be 3 seated ul Being familar with German, the tongs ist seated himsel. © In came the pre prietor, who, it timed out, spoke ef- cellent English. The stranger asked why the gramaphone did not talk English. The explanation wag: "It's my, stupid assistant'. 1 have a cylio- der on which is reerded the message in English; he used the wrong one. "There is no excuse for him,' econ- tinued the annoyed proprietor. "My English, evlinder is tinted red at the ends, and the German one blue, Lucky for me, Sir. that vou understood Ger- | man, else Ts might have lost an es: teemed | customer. = £ -- Wound Ly Cow's Horn Fatal, Brockville, Ont., Oct. 8.--A [farmer named James Githooly, residing be- tween Newboro and Westport, was hooked in the leg a week ago by al heifer which he was leading, and blood | poisoning set 'in; from which he died: | Gilhooly was eighty years of | best known farm) Sunday age and, one of the ers in the district. charge of disorderly conduct, and one of the women $1 costs, and the other three, Frank were discharged. No further facts est b being about $125,000. The Hochelaga £72,000 and the Quebec Bank, $8,000, dent "ol Canadian Manufactarers' Association, was, torday, © appointed to the board several whose 'support in a fair ficld | i -- { SIE 'WAS INSULTED. | 3S SATS BA A ---- | Couples Asked Chief Justice For a | "od "Match. | Ottawa," Oet: .S.--Last evening Sir | Charles Fitzpatrick, chief justice, was walking arotind the lovers' Walk, be low the parliament buildings and passed two men antl two women sit- ting on a seat. They asked him for a match. Sir Charles coniplained to a was so annoyed she threatened the constable with a piece of rocks, At the police court the wo- man, Alice Nagle, was fined $2 and Wiggin. James Tucker and Rose Rory of i the alleged insult to the chief justice { than a request' for a match were | proffered to the court. | Ready To Withdraw. Hamilton, Ont., Oct. 8.--~While the Tigers have decided to withdraw from the inter-provincial union, rater than take duchaiice on having the members of the te professionalized, as - were the mm of the Montreal and Argo teams, last year's Canadian champions' are stil hapeiul of being able to play their schedule without getting into trouble. They hope to convince the CXAU officials that they were wrong in refusing a certificate to Ernie Russells Montreal, and in plac ing under the ban the men who play- ed with and against him last Satur- day. With that ond in view, President Sevmour and -Manager Thomson went to aophios this morning, and expect tosget tangle straightened before they retain x : YY pt-------- o Montreal Despatches. ¥ "Oct. 8. --Gravelle and Du- estlers -in wacriage hardware, $f abandonment of their creditors, the liabilities Bank is intefested to the extent of scorge We. Drummond, former presi- the Board of Trade and of "diséctors "of Molsons Bank, to fl | the v cy. caused by 'the death of Lieut.-Col. Henshaw. | | "New Order Of Nugs. i ot wa, t.. 8.--A} new order of ins had arrived in Ottawa te take charge - of "the Catholic Emigration Association's headquarters in Hinton- burg. 4 ladies, of whom four have | reached lie capital, are members l the Sisters of Charity of St. Paul the | Apostle. The order is one established | in. Birmingham, England, and will be | augmented in Canada, should the ne- | cessity arise in connection with wy gration work. | |sent forth missionaries to teach | shortly. | were responsible for much of the Ja- graph royalties to China. | here, last might, and crashed into the church; in inducing then. to contribute more cheerfully than ever to the do- mestic and foreign mission fund. To the credit of the Church of England be it told that in the vast domain in which the Rev: Mr. Peck for thirty veats has been laboring, she alone has the people of the frozen north the way to eternal life. : TO COLONIZE COREA And This May. Affect Japanese Emigration Elsewhere. Tokio, Oct. 8.--A large colonization company is being formed here, headed by Prince Ito, Japanese resident-gen- eral in Korea, for the development of the natural resources of Korea. The company will purchase large tracts of land * from the Korean government, which lands will be subdivided and leased to Japanese settlers, or sold tor peasant proprietors. The scheme is ex- pected indirectly to affect Japanese immigration to America. In this. con- nection it may be stated that the regulations recently adopted are stricter than it was believed: they would be. . Six emigration companies have been already dissolved and sev- eral others will go out of 'business It was these companies that panese agitation against the United States, ARE VERY MERRY" Over a Turnover in Brockville Constituency. Toronto, Oct. S.--Premier Whitney and his colleagues were quite happy, to-day, on the result of the Brockville bye-eléction. Regarding the charges made by W. A, Lewis, Premier Whit- ney said there has been no bye-eleg- tion in this province for a generation the resu:! of which' "has 'been so sig- nificant, "We let our record go before the 'people on its own merits. alone, and subject to the attacks of Hon. Mr, Graham. As to the charges of Mr. Lewis; 1 think he erred.: The! people of Brockville know the election was the first free election that' has oecurred there since Mr. Fraser was their repre. sentative." RUSSIA GETS IT. The Manchurian Telegraph Systen Turned Ower. Pekin, Oct. A new telegraph con- vention between Russia and China was signed here, yesterday. Under it China recovers | all her preyious tele: graph rights in Russian Manchuria, and 2,000 miles of lines and connect- ions are formally turned back to her. Russia surrenders the privileges she has exercised since the Boxer ont- break, and in the future will pay tele B-- Notes From Lapum. Lapum, Oct. 8.--Service will be held in the school house, on Wednesday evening, at 7.30 o'clock, by Rev. D. Williams. Mrs. Jennie Hicks is mak- ing her farewell visits here, and in Wil ton,. before returning to her home in St. Catharines. Mr. and Mrs. Wilkie Pringle and daughter, Gladys, and Mrs. William Love, spent Sunday with friends in Napanee. Mrs. Henry Bush has returned from a three weeks' visit with her son, Cyrus Bush, Thompson- ville. William MeGrimmon and Allen Reid were, on Sunday, guests of James Huff. F. E. Brown is doing the interior work on Wilbur Love's house. Visitors :. Miss Annie Fields, Gretna, with her sister, Mrs. William Lapum: Mrs. Sidney Bush, with Mrs, Cyrus Bush, Thompsonville; William Hystd, with his daughter, Mrs. Levi Brown. Ran Into Open Switch. Tweed, Ont,, Oot. 8. --A west-bound C.P.R. freight train ran into an open swileh "of the Bay of Quinte railway, demolishing seven cars the engine badly. A Bay of Quinte line Quinte train, and damaging brakesman of the was slightly hurt. Metals get' tired as well as living beings. Telegraph wires are better con- ductors on Monday than on Saturday, on account of their Sunday rest, and a rest HARVEST THANKSGIVING. | Guelph JO.ALC. football been admitted to the intercol series, dina wupam Bose and bis son were drowned by the upsetting of a cance ofi Sunnysade. 3 'The battleship Kentucky went Sueoutd Artny off Lampert s Point, K, Ma. The education department is consid- ering the advisability of abolishing home work for younger pupils, Premier Cl cea, in an address at Amiens, repudiated the actions of the socialist allies of the French re. publican party. : Miss Kathleen Parlow, a Canadian, P aged seventeen, has caused consider: able stir by her violin-playing in Ber lin, Germany. The police commissioners at - St. Th decided to take mo action in the dispute between Magistrate Hunt and Chief of Police Armstrong. Work has been started by the French government - transforming the Eiffel tower, the tallest structure in the world, into" a powerful wireless sa" tion. i Robert J. Moorehead, head distiller at the big plant of the Roxbury Dis tilling company, Hagerstown, Md., was instantly killed by a train on Monday, while driving his automo- bile. The rotail niifkmen, of Toronto, af- ter reaching an agreement with the producers, decided to advance prices one cent a quart after November lst. team has inte The. Ontario Railway Board has granted the request of Berlin to be allowed to increase the rate of in- terest on its debentures. The increase is from four and one-half to five per cent. on $122,000 reguired for general improvemeats, : lewis Stewart, second engineer on the steamer School Craft, fell into the hold while the hoat was lying in North Tonawanda, N.Y., harbor, on Monday, and was killed. His neck was broken, and his skull fractured. The remains will be interred at Thorold, Ont. The cruiser Philadelphia, refezred to in a despatch from Sydney, N. 8, which =tated that a wireless message from Manila had been picked up by tha station at Morien, C.B., saying the cruiser had reached Manila is at the Brerton pavy yard, Seattle, Wash, She is out of commission and is now employed as a receiving ship there, Inquest Not Necessary. Dr. Ross decided that an inquest was not necessary in the Kivell drowning, as no evidence of foul play or of the man committing suicide was forthcoming. The general verdict is that the unfortunate victim was walk- ing along the whari and that he fell in. No cfy for help could have heen made, as there were men asleep on the barge not ten ieet away {rom where he fell in. The fact that the body was found floating, Jooked as if the man was dead before he jell into the water; this might be the case, as he might have been seized with heart failure. Loughboro Day. A carload of farm produce arrived to-day, for ithe Made-in-Canada exhi- bition, the gift of Loughboro people. A big waggon from the same district, is on ite way here, loaded with home- made bread, buns, cake, candy, fruit, ete. These goods will all be opened up to-morrow morning, and offered for sale -at the farm products booth at the armouries, which, for the day, will be in charge of Loughboro ladies, Sydenham village and the surrounding conmtryside have done their duty nobly. Had A Thrilling Voyage. Southampton, Oct. 8.--~The American line steamer St. Paul, which left New York' September 28th, stedmed into this harbor, yesterday, twenty-four hours late. Her voyage is described as having been thrilling. She encoun- tered scvere gales and mountainous seas washed over her. Haviag gone through this peril, she ran into dense fogs and had to grope her way to Plymouth by means of the lead. English Lecturer Appointed. J. F Macdonald, M.A., at 'present English and classical master . in Lindsay Collegiate Institute, has been appointed lecturer in English at lecturer was required by .the increasing honor graduate of 1809. He has ac ly begin duty here. To Made-In-Canada Patrons. Visitors to the Magde-in-Cavada ex- hibition are cordially invited to call at Kirkpatrick's Art Store, Princess street, and se¢ Canada's standard high grade piano, the '"Nordheimer." A special jive is offered Tor one of these pianos; which 'has been rented for short time. Sent Up For A Year. Hamilton, Ont,' Oct, 8.--At the police court this morning, King West, | the colored Tollower of the horses, | who fired several shots at another| colored man to enforce the collection) of an alleged debt was sentenced to one year's imprisonment. 4 The New Books. "The Daughter of Anderson Crow." by George Barr McCutcheon; "The Weavers,"" by Sir Gilbert Parker; "The Empire Builders," by Francis Lynde, author of "The Gralters;" "The Traitor," by Thomas Dixon, Jr., su- thor of "The Clansman." MeDermott Bros. "Phone 773. Chief Elmer says that if people would use the telephore for fire calls ax well as the altrm boxes it would lead to quicker action of the depart ment. The telephobe is baudy to al- most everybody. 3 5f three weeks adds 10 per cent tothe conductivity of a wire. the | cepted the appointment and will short- | TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1907. : F-------- ET | | Queen's University. The addition of a| i },is Jife was spent on Wolfe: Island. classes. Mr. Macdonald j& a een's | Mrs. Christopher Croshy, Landon, Ont., dropped dead. 4 Says Rising Has Place in : World not all bad, according to the Rev. W. t church, Chicago, who addressed Des Plaines camp meeting recent- The "goo-goo' kind, so long as express pure joyousness, and even e warbli as '"Moonbeams," "Star Gleams," "I'm Lonesome To: A. odiy the night" and "Won't You Come Over to ; My House ?" need not come under the ban. The preacher, whose sage epi- goams and oratory have stirred the camp meeting daily, holds that along with kissing such happy effusions have their legitimate place in the life of the world. "The saddest sight 1 ever saw," said Dr. Quayle in sermon, "was a man eighty years and more old, swearing. Think of it, swearing at a time he should have been smil- ing on his way to heaven. Lips were)' made to sing, to speak words of cheer and wholesome thoughts and praise God : "It's a pity when so much has been fiven to us." Dr. Quayle likened men to lost coins, and preached from the scripture par able. of the woman who having ten coins lost one and searched for it dili- gently. Dr, Quayle's views of finance as ex- pressed recently follow : "A pocket piece {8 a humbug. A man gave me. one once and 1 spent it. 1] did not want a pocket piece, but a | piece of bread, | "Money is one road to do good, | when we spend it in worthy ways. "Money is the force which moves the business of the world. Quayle, pastor, of St. James' Meth. |. day the New York tumes, lovel styles and pre colors -- Gar Navy, Black and Dmber Checks, pre trimmed wit! fancy silk braic velvet and bu "tons. Only one a Size, ranging price from Handsome nev Black Beave : Coats, late style collarless or with collars, r ; =n $7.50 to $22.50. "The misgjon of money is to be do- ing. business. i "Money is fleets of ships freighted | with grain and steel. It is made to | purchase education, enlightenment and | truth. ' i "We are God's money, and must be | used in his service." Dr. Quayle also discussed the uses of the picture postal card. "You can't walk into people's hearts," he said, "You must kneel your way in. We must pray for each other. But don't send a person postal cards and say I'm praying for you.. There is no need of being a fool when not born one. Men, he said, had been "utterly lost," like the coin in the parable, but had heen "witerly found again, through love of Christ. Men, Dr. Quayle said, could not he saved through Whittier's poems, or study of Millet's pictures. The audience was the largest week- day gathering of the series. Just he fore the. sermon, the Rev. M. C. wil- cox, of Okina, sang "0 Happy Day, according to the Chinese version. Nany of the ministers attending the camp meeting had luncheon with | about 200 Manxmen, who held a pie | nic in the grove just beyond the camp | grounds. ---- THAWS IN OIL. Family of White's Slayer Rich in Stock. The Pittsburg rumor that John D. | Rockefeller, who was an old-time | friend and associate of William Thaw, had expressed a readigess to aid the Thaw family with any amount of money they might require in connec. tion with the defence of Harry Keo- dall Thaw, is believed to have started through the discovery that the hold ings of the Thaw family in Standard Oil stock are iarge. . : The list of shareholders in the oil trust, which paid $80,000,000 divi dends last year on a capitalization of $100,000,000, was made a. part of the record in the government hearings be fore Special Examiner Franklin Ferriss last week. The list which showed the holdings on August 17th last gives the names of eight members of the Thaw family who own among them more than 5, 000 shares. The Fidelity Title and Trust company; of Pittsburg, has 200 shares as trustee for Harry Kendall Thaw, The. same company holds, as trustee for Alice Cornelia Thaw, the Countess of Yarmouth, 826 shares, J. D. Lyon _ is joint trustee for 426 shares All of Harry Thaw's brothers and sisters have large holdings, and his mother, Mrs. Mary Copley Thaw, owns a block of 1,400 shares, worth at $110, the market price, $616,000 Her dividends for 1906 were in the neighborhood of $112,000. Death At Lake Opiricon. Lake Opinicon, Oct. 8.--Darius Warn- er passed to rest on the 2nd inst., al ter a lingering illness. Deceased was born seventy-three years ago near Cape Vincent, N.Y. The greatest part He nioved to Sharbot Lake where he ran a general store. The last twenty vears were passed here in which be was the local postmaster for ¢ighteen years, One brother and two sisters in Michigan survive him Rev. George 0. Tredinnick, Parham, ham, will conduct missionary services next Sunday. A number from here will attend Westport fair to-day. Edward Stokes leaves for Watertown this week, J. (. Judd is prospecting on his various properties here. Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Barr spent Saturday and Sunday at Arthur Campbell's, Leland. Visitors : Miss Florence Orser and | "Queen Quality' Shoes. The reputation SPENCE'S, ™ Ley wieery < _ LAmwous SHOE roe WOMEN $3.75, 4.00, 4.80, 8.00. : It is natural for the intelligent pur= chaser to depend more and more upon' big trade mark names for security. Take cost a millign dollars, Can the of that name and it is worth that today. makers alford to stamp that any shoe that 'didn't. they afford to sacrifice quality? know it stands for our protection. That's why it easily leads all other Women's Shoes in the world, Just try one pair. J: H. Sutherland & Bro, The. House of Good Shoemaking. COAL OIL! The Best is The Cheapest. We carry in stock three 'grades of OIL, , and will deliver to any part of the city, the best American Oil that is manufactured, for 20c. Per Gallen. Try the Brilliant, ELLIOTT BROS. Telephone, 35. 77 Princess St. Mrs. R. Lindsay, Sydenham, at 8. Lindsay's; Harry Kelso and Miss] Georgina Cumpson, Elgin, at Orra} Cumpson's; Miss Tillie Thompson, of | Maple Leal, at A. A. Barr's; 'Mr. and Mrs. Wellington Kerr at Melvin Hugh: | son's. i k Remarkable Collection. Queen Alexandra has a remarkable collection 'of hats and bonnets which she has worn for the last forty years or more, says an English exchange. A label is attached to each bat or. bon- net, and bears the date of its pur- chase, together with some of the most notable occasions upon which it was worn. Her majesty, too, in exceeding: ly fond of collecting walking sticks. There is one room at Windsor castle secially set apart for the results . of hobby. | at sts "He Goes To Church On Sunday," the big song success, sung hy "Eddie Fov. in "Tho Orchid," for sale. 'at McDermott Bros. * - t © -------- THEE. B. EDDY COMPAN ANY, LIMITE HULL, CANADA. w here in Canada. Ask for Bddy's Matches | Blacksmithing, Woodwork, Painting, Trimming and Fixing, Rubber | Tires. All work done by Specialists in the different trades connedt- ed with the Carriage trade. We can supply anything in the Carriage line. : = Sleighs and Cutters in trim Now is the time to get your for winter. I'HE WAREROOM WITH THE WHEEL WINDOWS. JAMES LATURNEY, 390

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