Tooke Collars, 2 for 25¢c. Austrian Collars, 20c. each, ] 3 for 50e. Full Dress Protectors, 75c., $1; $1.25, $1.50. Full Dress Neckwear, 15e., 20c., 25c. Full Dress Shirts, $1, $1.25, $1.50. , Cuff Links Shirt Studs Tie Retainers White Gloves, 50c., 75c., 81. 10c., White Silk Handkerchiefs, 25¢., 50c., 75c. and $1. ; White Full Dress Vests, 82 and $2.50. BIBBY GO. LE CLOTHIERS. IE EEERERRERRRRERRRRDRET THE WIFE'S TEARS e!'Can Make Husband's Heart Faint | Within Him. Harper's Bazaar, which is settling ir | all feminine problems these days, has *- | turned its brilliant editorial attention ly | to the subject of marital disagreement. id {This month's issue (December) gives s. {the husband's opinion of his wife's of | tears--an opinion in" which thousands rs | of suffering husbands will concur : + | One night he woke up and found her 1- | erying; nor will he, long as he 8- | lives, forget the ifs this caused g | him. The firg douridation.of his little % aE under his feet. He so wanted her to be happy; as far as he re knew he did everything to make her h- | happy, and here she was awake in the re | night, crying. Nor would she tell hin mm why. No woman fully understand< rs | the awful ship-wrecked feeling it gives c- |a man to see his wife cry. He never Bs, J5ste used to it; he may get accustom- le led to anything else, but never to, ire | that. A man whose wife cries often in- | mav learn to put a stoical face on it | --grit his teeth, and bear it without m- | wincing outwardly, just as he may eir learn to bear some ever-recurring he | pain; depend upon it, however, * his ni- (heart ds water within, him. There id ite | nothing that so saps one's manhood Ar- las tears. Men have different ways of he | showing this. Some it makes brutal her | from sheer despair; others are 'dumb on, [in the face of tears, unable to utter a ey | cheering or sympathizing word; while, the | again, others' take refuge in flight. of 'gince they can't bear 'the unnerving my | spectacle. However, » wan iakes it, dor 'be sure he suffers all his worst enemy ed | ould wish him .to. Tn cases where 10, Imarriage is a warfare the woman has sed (here a weapon at her command: that as |can always rout her opponent and am [give her the final victory. The death took place in Ameliasburg on Monday, of Mrs. James Gorman, a yn- | very highly respected lady. She was he [Seventy-two years of age. Nearly all wes | her life she had resided in the town- or Ship of Tyendinaga. or. At Perth, Ont.,, on November 26th, ng } Tohn A. Stewart, son of Robert Ste- re. | vart, and Jessie Mabel, daughter of a | Mrs. J. T. Henderson, of Thuresson or | Place, were married. or | George G. Jones, a railway mail he § clerk, died in Brockville hospital, on Monday, aged seventy-two years. for "THE KIND THAT CLASPS" f= : : ; : The fact that ive | ll have Bo sharp edews to scretch the Rin sufficient stly to for ut children ; hut that is only ONE of their MA ot NY points of superi- Sold at 'all Dry Good Stores. mena on Gihsgn's Red Cross drug store. Paone Is Rp . THE RIGHT MEDICINE FOR PELVIC TROUBLES : FOUND IN PE-RU-NA. RS. CAROLINE KRAMER. For} Collins, Col., writes: ¢ "The majority of women who are suf- fering from disordered periods and other pelvic troubles, have such strong faith in doctors that they allow them $0 experiment on them for kidney, liver or stomach troubles until they become completely discouraged and their money is gone. "This was my unfortunate expe- rience for nearly two years when my attention was called to Peruna. #] hardly dared believe that at last I had found the right medicine, but as [ kept on using it and was finally cured, 1 could only thank God and take cour age. #I have had most satisfying results from the use of your medicine and have advised dozens of women who were suf- fering with woman's ills to use Peruns and let the doctors alone. "Those who followed my advice are better today and many sre fully restored to'health." Mrs. Wilda Mooers, R. F. D,, No. 1, Lents, Ore., writes: "For the past four years I was a wretched woman, suffering with severe backaches and other pains, leaving me #0 weak and weary that it was only with difficulty that I was able to attend to my household duties. «| used different remedies, but found no relief until | had tried Peruna. "Within two weeks there was achange for the better and in less than three months I was a well and happy woman. #All the praise is due to Peruna." Just two kinds of soap -- the genuine made from the very finest vegetable oils and flower perfumes--and the imitations: made from chemical perfumes and chemically bleached animal fats, toresemble, as much as possible in appear- ance, the genuine "Baby's Own" Soap Absolutely no expense is spared to make "Baby's Own'* as good a soap as cen be made, yet it costs you no more than the inferior imitation. 607 Albert Soaps Ltd. Mirs., Montreal. 0000050000000 Harmless Zutoo In twenty minutes it will cure Headache which has all withstood. And in every case 'tis sure To leave the person feeling good. It's as harmless as the soda, Which of the tablets forms a part. Itdoesn't, therefore, like some drug cures Affect the stomach, nerves or heart. StopsHeadache Soe hd PoP IPeee Great Scheme. Mrs. Simpson, in her "Many Memo- ries of Many People," says of Arch- bishop Whately : He was utterly re gardless of appearance. If he came to us without a servant and perceived a hole in his black stocking he would put a piece of sticking plaster on the corresponding part of his leg to con- ceal the defect. Australia, Figi, New Zealand. Hear Prof. David Marshall to-night. St. Andrew's church hall. Limelight illustrations. ------------ The members of the Chicago Univer- sity football team strongly object to being vaccinated. And it must be ad- mitted that smallpox is about the last thing they are liable to catch during a game. fea and sale by ladies' guild St. Paul's church on December 5th, in school room; tea from 3 to 7 p.m Sales and home-made table and works table. Good programme in evening. Admission, 10e. Long whisk brooms." When you rieed them romember they are sold at A ood mahy people are =o sure of happiness in heaven that they do things' in this life that arouse consid- erable doubt about their getting there. The: steamer Plummer was at the government dry dock, this afternoon, on her way to Montreal, with a gen- eral cargo. from the west. "Rath Mitts and wash rags." Puy them at Gibson's Red CFoss ° drug store. Phone 230. Differ 'with thc egotist and he is at once disgusted because of our lack of goed judgment. I would not count much on the HE 1S RECOVERING HON. DR. REAUME WILL of SOON BE AROUND. Veteran Grage Servant Critically Ill. Toronto, Nov. 27.--The Hon Dr. Reaume, minister of public works, who is at Windsor, recovering from an operation performed at Grace Hospi- tal, in Toronto, is making very satis factory progress, and is expected to be at . his office' in the parjiament buildings to-morrow. Theodore Taylor, formerly account- ant in the crown land department, is dying in Grace' Hospital. Mr. Taylor retired from the civil service about two years ago. largely Presbyterian is shown by the i following figures compiled om _ last : ny : x session's registration. All other Theadore * Taylor is Dying in [students combined, however, outwum- STUDENTS' RELIGIONS. The Figures For Last Session Just Compiled. That Queen's students are still very bered the Presbyterians, by 617 to 522. The figures are as follows : Presbyterians, 522; Methodists, 2064; Anglicans, 151; Roman Catholics, 111; Baptists, 26; Congregationalists, 17; Disciples, 4; Friends, 3; Christian Sci- entists, 2; Apostolic, 2; Jew, 1; Greek Orthodox, 1; Christadelphian, 1; Holi- ness, 1; Evangelistic, 1; Lutheran, 1; Brethren, 1; unclassified, 40; total, 1,139. The unclassified consist of those who failed to register their religious belief. Buttons As Wedding Gifts. Jewellers' cases full of buttons-- which are now so pronounced a fea- Matthew Bailey who, as assistant to the sergeant-at-arms, has heen a familiar figure at the provincial legis- lature for the last thirty years, is | seriously ill at his residence here. He is in his eightieth year and may not recover. Alleging that, at her husband's re- quest, @He signed documents which she did not understand whereby the Bank | of Montreal obtained possession of | her fortune of $258,000, Mrs. Jacques Stuart, Toronto, brought ac- tion in the non-jury assizes, this morning, to have the documents can- | celled and her fortune returned = to her. Her story, as told in the witness his will, certain real estate and a sum of $250,000 in various securities. When the Sulphite company was formed in 1886, her husband became interested in it. The company from time to time increased its capitalization until at the time of the failure the gmount was $1,000,000. As Mr. Stuart's hold- ings increased, the bank wanted fur- ther. securities, and Mrs. Stuart said that her husband brought her papers which .the bank wanted her to sign, and shaisignedithem without any le- gal or outside advice. When the Sul- phite tompanyi failed in 1901, and her husband became liable @o the, bank for $125,000 'plaintiff found that the papers she signed gave the bank own- ership of her property to the value'of $250,000, and is now suing for the return of the property on the ground that she did not understand the real nature of the documents ghe signed. Representatives from almost every point in tne fruit district, at a meet- ing, this morning, decided to appeal Lo the railways for better shipping fa- cilities. 1t was stated that there was a great scarcity of refrigerator cars in the province, those present estima- ting they had béen able to obtain only 125 during the past two weeks although - to 250 were needed The Grand Trank railway, which gets all but about thirty per cent. of trade, it was stated, had put on about fifty new refrigerator cars recently to accommodate the fruit shippers, those present at this morning's meet- ing maintained they could not notice any difference in the situation. The inadequacy of Portland, Maing, as a shipping point was also emphasized and' it was decided to demand that shippers receive the option of ex- porting via Boston or St. John, Port- land or New York. Hannah Weise, of this, city, is suing John Jacobs for $10,000, for alleged breach of promise. As the plaintiff is under the age of twenty-one, her brother, Harry Weise, is acting for het. The enquiry into the management of the civic parks department opened, this morning, before Judge Winches ter. John Chambers, parks commis- sioner, was on the stand for two hours and a lumber deal, in which he participated was probed into by } E. Raney, the city's lawyer. Some frame buildings at the exhibition grounds were torn down some years ago and Mr. Chambers was instructed to sell the lumber for what he could, since the tendets were not satisfac tory. The total amount was about 21.200, and it came out that Mr Chambers had kept no record of these transactions. There were several smaller deals in which the same thing was apparent. Mr. Chambers simply had handed the money to the city treasurer, bit could not tell from his own books the exact amounts. COMMERCIAL MATTERS. pret What is Going on in the Business World--The Markets. Earnings of the Toronto railwav company increased. last week by $5,- S00 to $63,915. A contract for armouries at Strath- roy, Ont., has been given to Nagle '& Mills, of Ingersoll, for $13,000. Grand Trunk railway earnings from November lith to 2lst, 1907. 8934 ,- 184; 1906, $870,186. Increase, 857.- 8. C.P.R. trafic earnings for the week ended November 21st, 1907, ¥],603,- 000; for the weck last year, $1,375, - 000: increase, $225,000. Experts estimate that the value of all the diamonds in the world exceeds £510,000,000, and that more than one- third of the value is owned in the United States. A coutract for the construction of a section of the Trent canal has been awarded to Lewis P. Nott, of Mon- treal. The section extends from the present termination of the canal to Rice Lake, Ont. The contract for the erection of the new armoury and drill hall at' Sher- brooke, Que., was signed, Messrs. Si- moncau & Dion being the contractors, for the sum of £82,500. The Dominion Park company, limit- ed, Montreal, will rebuild the portion recently , burned so as to be in time for. the spring season opening The goneral arrangement of the buildings will be the same as before. J. K. L..Ross, rocontly appointed commercial manager of the Dominion Coal company, saye the output this friendship of the man who has not a liking Tor the des. Jer's George Washington taffy," sold only at Gibson's Red Cross drog|of year will-be 100,000 jess than last {year, the shortage being due to lack labor. The company will keep the all intel, oe the | but ture of feminine attire are being sold jor wedding and birthday presents. The buttons are worn on everything-- | from the hat to the boots. Cameo buttons are being worn again, and scenes after Watteau, ex- quisite court beauties of the Nattier | type and the Romney and Gainsbor- | ough belles are pictured in the adorn- ment of the pompadour evening robe and boudoir negligee. Those that are Jane | rimmed in old paste or small diamonds Hat buttons are mounds, or mac- |carons, as the French call them, as as a half penny bun, covered embroidered and pailletted vel- buttons are | largo lvet and satin, and boot box, was identificd very closely with ' the fortune of the Maritime Sulphite | variously made, some of mother of company; limited, Chatham, N. B., | pearl the size of sixpenses, pierced which closed its doors in June, 1901, |like a shirt button, the capitalization of which was 81,- : 000,000. John Stuart, the Satntiffs | History Of Telegraphy. husband, was largely interested. Mrs. Scientific American: a Stuart said her father left her, under Long before Prof. 8. F. B. Morse word "telegraph' was used for a sort of semaphore. In the French revolu- tion a "telegraph," assisted by tele- scopes, was devised to carry news over immense distances. Forty years before this time, however, there was published the first detailed scheme for communication by means of electric ity. It is outlined in a letter to the Scots magazine, written on February , from Renfrew, and signed This was to transmit a "charge from the conduc- tor of an electrical machine at the sending station "along an insulated wire to the receiving machine, the presence of the charge being indicated by the behavior of a light pith ball or the passage of a spark." Each let- ter of the alphabet was to have a sep- arate wire, so that any word might he spelled out and any message sent. suggestion A Tender Heart. Argonaut, Mme. Strakosch sometimes enter- tains a youthful friend. Recently at a meeting over the table plum gelatine with whipped cream was served as a sweet. - Usually Ethel evidenced a de- cided penchant for desserts, but this day she shuddered as the gelatine was {placed before her. When Mme. Stra- | kosch turned her attention to the jelly | she noticed that it shook from side to {side of the plate with a vibratory |movement. "Ethel," . she said to her , "why don't you eat, your des- " "I can't," said the young- ster, gazing wistfully at' the shaking dishful. "And why can't you?" "'Be- cause," said the little lady, pushing away the plate, "because it's too ner- vous." His Brother's Forethought. | Lippincott's. A Tammany man tells a story in connection with a caucus held in Troy some years ago as illustrating how fully alive the Celts of that city were to the opportunities of American citi- zenship. During the caucus in one of the lower wards of the city, a certain Michael Mulcahy was nominated for a minor position on the ward ticket to be voted for at the charter election. Some enquiries 'were made of Thomas Mulcahy as to who this person bear- ing the same name might be, as no in the neighborhood. could call him to mind. "He's me brother," explained Tom, with cheerful alacrity. "He's not ar rived in the counthry yit, but he tuk ship ave a Wednesday, an' "ll be here in toime for the election." one A Paderewski Story. Harper's Weekly. During the last visit to this coun- try of Paderewski, the pianist was in- terviewed by, a young Woman news- paper reporter who was anxious to get a good *'story'" out of the Pole's early struggles. : "I have heard that you had g pret- ty hard time making both énds meet in your youth," said the young wo- man enguiringly. "Would yoy mind telling how you kept the wolf from the door?" "Not at all," replied the Polg, with a grim smile, "I did most of my practising at home !" Frontenac Hockey Club. the City Hockey League, this year, to hold the senior championship, which they won from the Wanderers, The club will players and menbers in the Business College on Nov. 28th, at 8 p.m., and all last year's players to attend this meeting. ment will try to retain as many as possible of the players who won tne championship, but it is understood the defence of the team will be chan- ged, The manage | "Death Of 0. Féubister. 19 Charles street, on Wednesday morn- ing, ness of only two weeks' duration. The | deceased, in his twenty-first year, was a boiler-maker by trade, and had al wavs resided in the city. His mother has the sincerest sympathy of a host of friends in her bereavement, the sec- ond in a vear, her husband dying ooly a short time ago. "Fresh ,on Tuesday," a large order of Huvler's high-class candy, at Gib- { son's Red Cross drug store, | The Deer Park Sanitarium bas bec placed in the hands of a liquidator THE DAILY BR way cost for a set of six over £100, | ad perfected his great invention, the| The Frontenac Business College Hoe key Club intend to put a strong team in The death occurred at his residence, | IN BRIEF FORM. Matters That Interest Everybody ~Notes From all Over--Little| of Everything Easily Read | and Remembered. W. C. Simmons, YA'.P., will be the liberal candidate the federal riding of Medicine Hat. At Jamestown, N.Y. a heavy snow- storm prevailed, Tuesday. The snow is from ten to twelve inches deep. An order was granted for the wind- ing up of the Stark Telephone, Light and Power company, Toronto. Amy Proctor, an unfortunate wo- man, living on Albert strect, Winni- peg, tied of life, suicided to-day by NEWS OF THE WORLD OCCURRENCES RECOUNTED PERSONAL MENTION. Movements Of The People--Wazatl They Are Saying And Doing. F. Coaway is in Montreal on busi- ness. Dr. Curtis returned from New York to-day. Frank Conway, Jr., returned from Montreal to-day. . B. S. O'Loughlin, C.P.R. agent at Yarker, is in the city. © F. J. Moran, Brantford, is visiting his business friends in the city, Daniel Whey, Princess street, return- ed from Cape .ncent, N.Y. to-day. Cornelius Bermingham and wife have returned from their European trip. The many friends of Samuel Turpin, Moi street, are sorry to hear that he is ill. Frederick Muckler, freight clerk at Swift's, is confined to his home through illness. Rev. H. H. Sproule will move into drinking carbolie acid. Hon. .R. H. Sutherland, speaker of | House of Commons, left Ont., for in readiness for the opening Windsor, | An action for $10,000 damages, tak- en by Miss Appeline Belland, Toron- to, against Dr. R. B. Nevitt, for al- jloged malpractice, was dismissed. {nox College students, Toronto, will | install a memorial to the late Rev {C. R. Jamieson, who lost his life near | French river, while attempting to save {the lives of two ladies. It is officially anpounced thyt the | kaiser's catarrh is now cured and his | general health is most satisfactory. | The statement of certain newspapers | rogarding laryngeal or ear trouble are quite without foundation A woman, subposed to he Cornelia Loveridge, of Buffalo, N.Y., commit- ted suicide Wednesday afternoon, hy jumping into the rapids above the American falls, at Niagara Falls, N.Y. She had been ill and eluded her nurse, RELATIVES ARE PUNISHED. Widespread Misfortune gBrourht About By Murder. Chicago News. Wrongdoers. in China bring misfor- tune on all their relatives. Not long ago a man murdered Governor An Min of Anhui. The murderer himsell was caught and beheaded, and now the law demands that his female re- latives be sold into slavery, that his male relatives, sixteen years old and above he decapitated, and that his male relatives younger than that be compelled to serve in the imperial palace. The ancestral graves of the rebel are also to suffer. The tombs are to he razed and despoiled and the bones and dust within scattered to the four winds. It is hoped, however, that the authorities will not exact the full penalty of the law. According to the Chinese opium re gulations of last November, all teachers, scholars, soldiers and sail three months wherein entirely to re- linquish the spivm habit. Information has reached the anthorities in Pekin that some soldiers are paving no at- tention to these regulations, so in- structions have been issued to the ef- fect that any officer or man found smoking will be at once beheaded, By The Garrulous Man. Chicago News. Won't you please sit down and while tell you in detail tention ? I will tell you how my breakfast seems to fai And the things they cook to tempt 1 will mention. I will tell you just what diet 1 have al ways liked the best And what things 1 find are hard what are easy to digest, 1 will tell you exactly ; I will slight And I'm sure that delight ang you will listen with | It you'll just sit down and Hston anc not try to break away 1 will tell you of my cousin's disposi ion. I will tell you whut regarding it uncle used to say. 1 will tell you of my ambition It is absolutely foolish or effort will be in vain. dreary and the 'trite And I'm sure that you will listen delight, It you'll just sit down and listen anc not try to talk a bit I'l relate a lot of stories ball for gotten I can recollect the portions that are destitute of wit they are rotten I will maunder on of trifles which I al ways keep in store, Which if anybody dwelt on but mysel For my lungs are eapacious 3 my larynx is all right, And I'm sure that you will jisten delight wih «Cleverality." London Times There 1s a was always tai.ing about clever peo ple, such as Johnson and Sheridan "Now, youn don't know the meaning © {elever," she said clever--scamps often are--but Johnso hadn't a spark of 'cleverality' in him. That lof Johndon and the key to the grea | qualities of his work, for in his cas hold a meeting of its | even more than in most the prose was] "cleveral Th i the man. Whoever wants ity" had best leave Johnson alone. are requested | signal merit of Johnson's writings is | he says He| may often have talked for victory, but| {that he always means what and always says what he means. except perhaps in the political phlets he always wrote for truth. pam Threatened To Use Knife. The police were notified, at o'clock this morning, that a man un- {der the influence of liquor, {employed in running the picture ma- chine at the Bijou theatre. Sergt. Nesbitt went to the theatre, but when he arrived the alleged offender = had taken flight. out for his arrest The basketball meetin, called for last evening, at the Y.M.C.A., did not come off, for only oné or two turned up. The meeting was postponed until next Tuesday, December Sed. Anyway, a bald man doesn't have to, worry about gray hair, a | parsonage to-morrow. Ottawa, last night, to be | {ned from Vancouver of parlia- {spending «ie summer in the west. ment to-morrow. | + ing. ors of all ranks were to be gllowed | lister What 1 think is very worthy your at- appetite for il it there is nothing | was paid to Dr, William Carey and his { ) my grandmother's Ay | exceedingly | of Southern sane, | But you needn't try to stop me, for that Fi I'm assuming you've a passion for the| goo Ly his book-keeper, who ahscond with | Though with age and rust end mildew }* story that Charlotte Bronte, when a girl of sixteen, broke out angerly at some one who said she| "Sheridan might be! remark really gives the essence] 9.30 | had + ~ * . | . | 9 of Oliver Foubister, after an ill- { threatened to use a knife on a man No warrant was taken | the new Princess Street Methodist . -~ ision street, re- to-day, alter Dixon, Div Herbert Walter Hazlett, who was, this sea son, chief engineer on the Rapids | King, returned to the city to-day. | Master Alexander MacMaster, boy | soprano, sang '"Jerusalem," very {sweetly in Zion church on Sunday night. Point Road Budget. { Point Road, Nov.127.--The recent | fine weather is certainly a great boon {to the farmers, as their young cattle and colts are still ranging the fields The farmers on this road are busily engaged hauling hay to the market at $20 a ton. Some of the farmers around here will be on the retired list next year. Mr. and Mrs. Hickey and family, city, were the guests of Mrs, Barrett, on Sanday. Mrs Draper, ill for some time, is recover B. Wilmot has taken over Mr Gardiner's route in the milk business B. Quinn and V. Fowler spent Sun- day at the corners. L. Woods has re turned from his hunting trip. He cap tured one deer. H. Leheup, hide in {spector, is doing a rushing business [in the skin line. Miss L. Keenan is the guest of Mrs. Joseph Barrett. The tax collector, C. Kincaid, is busily en gaged delivering the tax bills, whicl are certainly an eye-opener, thanks tc our good council. ---------- Must Die Standing. The Emperor of Austria during his illness has insisted on transacting State business as usual. As soon as he left | the nursery he began a course of train [ing to fit himself for the high position he was to fill. At sixteen he was an accomplished linguist and scientific expert of no mean degree. He could ride and hunt with the tireless energy of a hardy sportsman, and his studies in literature and jurisprudence were con- ducted under the most celebrated schol ars of Continental Europe. That such a course of graining did not react upon his. health is doubtless due to his re markable memory, which even now is said to enable him to recall the face of the humblest of 'his subjects, no matte! how long the lapse of time. It is a tradition of the Austrian royal house that no Emperor must die lying down He must stand up to receive the last dread messenger.--Tit-Bits { Cost Of Translation. It may astonish many people to know that the bible is now translated and read in 400 different tongues. W. G. Fitz gerald rekates in Harper's how the vast undertaking has been accomplished. It has cost many lives and many millions of dollars. In addition to the first cost of translating, there is the expense of | revising The last revise of the Mada | gascar bible cost $15,000, and $150,000 | staff for the Setampore version of the h : bible in Hindustani There are 2,000 | linguists continually employed by =the 1| British and American Bible societies which have this work in hand The Late Edmund Penner. Winnipeg, Nov. 27.<Edmund Pen e of the best known merchants ner, o! Manitoba, died, vester | ay, at Altona of cancer of the | | throaf. Deceased was robbed of £150,- ed about a year ago, and has not t heen heard of since, you alone, Do you know fine assortment. range $3.75, 4, 4.50, 5. waste of time. what it means to put your foot into a shoe that feels as though it were made for you, and One that seems to become part of you for the time being, so perfectly does it fit. If yon would experi- ence this pleasure, just try a pair of our new Queen Quality Dress or Walking Boots, of which we have a Prices roast or_fowl, making it juicy without worry or PRICE 90 CENTS. Shoes that are hon through and through. The new lasts have quite the: style of the $5.00 and 6.00 shoe, but we don't pretend they are made of as fine stuff. They'll wear as long though. We want men to see our Four Dollar Shoes, and rote the newness of the \styles--to try them on and realize the comfort of their perfect fitting -- to wear them and learn their splen- did service they give. They're the best $4.00 Shoes in town, Patent Colt, Vici Kid and Oalf. J. H. Sutherland & Bro, THE HOME OF GOOD SHOEMAKING. -------------------------------- PERFECTION SEAMLESS ROASTER Strictly sanitary, Self-Basting Roast- er. By the special construction of the top, the condensed steam drains to the centre, and bastes every portion of the McKELVEY & BIRCH, 69-71 Brock St A "Fresh Huvler's high-class candy" on | Tuesday, at Gibson's Red Cross drug | store, Phone 230, fi I} i i - | ---------- { { | It is the magt valuable thing A few me oy when you feel chilly your being laid up.' kinds of coughs. There is simply nothing so go you so quickly. ALWAYS, AND COSTS BUT HRYRRI] CURES ALL COUGHS 5¢ LIBRARY FURNITURE Tables $6.50, regular price $8.50. Easy oa, $5.50, regular price Couch $5.50, regular price $7.50. Book Cases $1.50, $3 to $25. Sectional Bookcase, $2.50 to $4.50 per section. Couches and Davanports, Spanish Early and Golden Finish. Robert Reid, 230 Princess St. Telephome, 577. C. H. Powell, Carpenter and Jobber 103 Raglan St. pre------------ Any Cold---Any Kind of Cough Grippe in any stage Can be Cured by athieu's Syrup of Tar & Cod Liver Oil It is also a tonic making it better able to resist the cold. to have in the house this weather. and shivery will prevent Mathieu's Syrap is a thorough cure for all The cure commences with od to take--nothing that will cure __it braces your system up-- GIVE IT TO YOUR CHILDREN --they thrive on it, and grow up stron It does not contain any Oil scientifically combined with the g --Syrup of Beech Tar. Get a bottle to-day | From all dealers. 35c. large bottle. J. L. MATHIEU CO., Props., Sherbrooke, Que. g and healthy. harmful drugs, just the finest Cod Liver reatest of -all lung healers Very pleasant to take. so as to have it ready. |, LO RS EVR . We We oe 5 the first dose.