ing took pla: ednesday, De- cember 4th, when Miss Allie Patter son, only daughter of Mr. apd Mrs. John Patterson, Keelerville, and Wil- liam McAlvoy, Seeley's Bay, were un- ited in marriage. Miss Annie Patter- son, Mount Chesney, assisted the bride, while Ermest Collinson, See- ley's Bay, acted as maman, At one o'clock a cab and team of white horses pranced up to Mr. Patterson's residence, and the party drove to the Preghyterian church at Sunbury, to be married by Rev. Mr. Stuart. Im- mediately after the ceremony all re- turned to the home of the bride's parents, where a sumptuous repast awaited them, only the relatives of | the bride and being present. 'About tea o'cl the couple drove to Seeley's , to the home of the groom's ia . The bride was the re- cipient of a great many useful and beautiful gifts. Miss Patterson was a great favorite among the young peo- ple of Keelerville, and she will be missed very much. She was a teacher in the Sunday school and organist in the church, and many friends extend hearty congratulations. The box so- cial held in the school house on Mon- day night, was enjoyed by all; the proceeds will clear the debt off the organ. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Anglin bre in the city to-day. Charles Clark at- tended the turkey fair at Lyndhurst. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley will leave ina fow days for Watertown, N. Y., to speryl the winter among friends. lee has taken on the lakes,and Jack Frost has been finding his way into cellar windows. Miss Compton, our teacher, will not remain here another year as she intends to resume her studies at Queen's College. A number of dancing parties have been helt lately. Alexander Duff is visiting at David Sleeth"s angd R. Duff at J. E. Anglin's. y Kil blir HN) Squirrel Whiskey Flows. "Odessa, Dec. 4.--Mrs. Ann Decker, aged seventy-four years, died at her daughter's, Mrs. Dr. J. E. Mabee's, on Saturday, November 30th. On Man- was held. Sincere sympathy is ex- tended to her daughter, Mrs. J. E. Mabee, and sons George and Charles Decker, Bufialo, N.Y. The election of oflicers for 1908, for the Methodist Sunday school, took place on Tues day. About twenty-four were present, and T, H. ison, Kingston, ad- dressed them on. Sunday school work, after which refreshments were served. Word was received, hore, of the death of Dr. Ashbel Starr Rockwell, aged sixty-four years, who died at his home in Rochester, N.Y., where he had resided for the past thirty-two years. He was born in Eroesttown and mar- ried Rosamond Booth, of this place, who survives him, also two sons. Mrs. Hawley's children were called to er bedside last week. They are Mr. and Mes. N. Hawley, Peterboro; Mr. and Mrs. Henry KEecuyer, Rome, N.Y. Mrs. Hawley is a little better at time of writing. ay was quarterly horse fair day, here, for the barter and exchange of horse hides. The fra- Jerniey ore all present with the ex- ception of the gypsy element. Squir- rel whiskey and the usual old Firion were in evidence. It was not | this way under the late government. There is a good opening for the inspector and commissioners to "get busy' here #® "hoss dicker day," and we extend a cordial invitation to Mr. Rose for the uext one. The township commit- tees are getting in their respective places for next year. B. G. Hamon and J. F. Dawson, as roeve and de- puty, will likely go in hy acclama- tion, as it seems to be the people's wish. We are enjoying great times now skating on the old pond and fish- ing on skates for pike, on the lake. UNDERWEAR Cure That Cough! YOU CAN DO IT BY USING + Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. The Most Perfect Throat and Lung Healer in the World. t : 3 : 1. - Re Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup' gives prompt relief from that choked np, stuffed up feeling which is so distressing, it loosens' the phlegm. shocks the rasping and useless cough, and hea. and soothes the irritated breathing organs. It is a pleasant prepar. ation to take and is therefore specially adapted to the coughs and colds of children and those who dislike nauseous mixtures. Thisis va vin: boast bot a fact oan by unimpeachable testimony. One 25 cent bottle, indeed, a trial doss, will prove ite merits. Mr, Frank K. Purdie, Brandon, Man., writes: "I have used your Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup for some years and have always found it a sure remedy for all colds, coughs, sore shroat, hoarseness, ete. 1 cannot too highly recommend it to any one suffering from any effect of cold." u get genuine nton, as he dies nothing ww Hinchinbrooke Council. Parham, Nov. 30.--Members all pres. ent. Several communications were read: also local option petition. Mov- ed, McMahon-Dwyer, and carried, that Sound Sit a local option by-law. y-law for option was brought up by Couficillor McMahon, and, te phd I on, it was read twice. On mo- tion, MeMahon-Leslie, clerk to notify JAlired Haddock to remove obstrue . C. Campbell was voted $7 for assisting to audit accounts of 1906. On motion, Leslie Dwyer, the lowing were appointed foputy returning officers for the ensu- bell; 2, Thomas Homes; 3, Peter Finn; + Poll 1, J. E. Camp-j . BY THE CUT OF HIS COAT. Thus One May Know a Stranger's Nationality. are difficult lo dis- ting wish execpt some peculiarity of or fywre. ir clothing is re- glaring peculiarities which character- sis the products of other countries. erally quite too collar of his cont is exceed- ingly narrow, and the shoulders and F £ The Frenchman is dressy, his gar ments are close fitting and decidedly "waisty." He favors the frock and the morning coat, which he has finish- ed with as much ornamentation as ible. Silk fecing, braided edges, ond fantastic flaps are all features of his dress, while he pays a good deal of attention to his hat, tie and cuffs, The German is in many instances a modified American. He likes plenty of room, especially about the chest, which part of his anatomy he de lights to make much of, consequently there is often a seam up the front of his coat irom the waist. In cut his garments ave angular, and in style he favors the lounge. There is a lack of personality about his attire, and cne can invariably detect the result of his military training in the uniformity of his garments. The Spaniard is a modified form of the Frenchman. His garments are tasteful and neat. If the weather is suitable he discards a vest, and his jackets are close-fitting ang finished with a low roll. Generally speaking, there is less peculiarity to note about the Spaniard's dress than with many others. The Austrian and Hungarian parti- cipate in the characteristics of the German, but are more tasteful in the ent and finish, suggesting a skilful blending of French and German no- tions. On the other hand, the It:iizn type is a Germanized French style, so that you get more of the artistic fim- ish of the French in their clothing than you find in the Austrian, or Hun- gatian The Norwegian and Dane are seldom distinguishalle from the Englishman as far as their clothes are concerned, except it be in &. prociseness that is apt to suggest stiffness in places of that ease and grace which mark the English garments, The Colonial is invariably attired bin utilitarian garb, tweed lounge suit in a model Eaglish style, cut for com- fort and made up for strength. He has decorations, so that he is rarely seen in a frock or morning coat. Wade's Cold Cure. A scientific remedy in. convenient tablet form. Laxative in its action. It cures colds in twelve hours. It stops colds in the start if taken in time- It will prevent and qure La Grippe in the same way. It is 5 convenient and effective remedy for headache and constipation. In boxes 25c. Sold only at Wade's Drug Store. Money back if not satisfactory. To Be Like Him. Lyman Abbott. 1 will pot and I cannot enter into polemical discussions about Him; 1 will not and cannot enter into meta- physical is of Him. 1 have no capacity to defing with fine phrases His relation to the lufinite and Kter- nal God, and 1 have no wish to do 80, 1 rejoice in the mysteries of His being which 1 cannot solve. But to be like Jesus Christ is my deepest and sincerest desire; to have some share in the work He is doing is my su- premest ambition; in His teaching 1 find the sum of all spiritual truth; in His spirit the secret of all life;® aud in Himseli an object of love nd re- verence such that all I have is too little to give Him. If ¥ try to put this experience inlo a form of words, I can find no better phrase than to say that I believe that the Eternal Presence, whom no one can_sen or comprehenyl, manffested Himself in this one human life that all might sce andl comprehend Him; and that through Him all might come to be sharers of His life and be conformed to His image. "Packing Of Of Widows." Some curious customs in the way of Justimen prevail in Korea. Among the arming classes there is one known as the "packing off of widows." This means a raid on a certain Mage known to contain a young widow, A" widower, accompanied by friends, en- ters the village, carries off the woman in question and marries her. Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea purifies the blood, regulates the bow- els, aids the kidneys, cures stomach troubles, builds up the nervous force: makes vou well and happy. 35c., Tea or Tablets. Mahood's Drug Store. With nothing but good health vou have a right to be thankful. truly brave man is not a boast- er when the danger is past. on motion, Leslie | only be destroy out of ten are which is nothing but of the mucous sur Hundred Dollars for 2. ! American's mts ae gens i sein large for [ery time you have a bad cold. His Tavorite garments are the lounge | very common and most objectionable no desire for show, and cares little for| "So (¥ hat market of fifty cents tisement save that of the press, find- ing. shat they who didn't rad & daily | , SATURDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1907. A Few "Don'ts"' Don't call a wharf a dock. Don't use "liable" for likely, Don't light the fire with coal bil. Don't call a railway station a de- pot. Don't call a stable a barn, or a horse-barn. Don't say "loan" when you mean Don't neglect to pay small debts promptly. Don't throw banana peelings on the sidewalk. Don't imagine you have the grip ev- Don't spread more sail than the bal- last on your keel or in your hold war- rants. Don't use "some" for somewhat--a error. Don't think a livery stable horse has no feeling, or that there is no limit to its endurance. Don't drop envelopes or other scraps of paper on the sidewalk, as you come from the post office, Don't smile when a dentist's adver- tisement guarantees painless dentis- try. Many terms are relative. { Don't idle because y6u can't get you think you are entitled to. Don't--if you are a young man~ stand on the street corners, and make an objectionable loafer of your- self, Don't waste the city water because it does not appear to cost you any- thing. It may be dirt cheap, but real estate comes high just at pres. ent, Don't let your imagination swamp your discretion when the next smooth-tongued stock-peddlar offers vou "a dead sure thing" for half its value. Don't refuse a seat in the city council next year, if your neighbors think .you are fit for the position, and wish to elect you. Don't be too ready to criticize your minister. Think for a moment what vour minister might say about you, if he were disposed to be censor- ious. Don't imagine you have read the Whig unless you have read the adver- tisements. They ought to be made profitable 10 you every day of the year. Don't imagine that you are econ- omical when you spend five cents worth of postage and stationery and fifty cents worth of time buying your goods by mail to save ten cents in price. Don't forget this year to do your Christmas shopping as early as cir- cumstances will permit. You probably intended to do so last year, but didn't, and were sorry for it. Charmed By The Price. Nashvills American. The price tag fools the best of us ; Ulgars that for a nickel go We pass with scorn but smoke with joy If they are in the tem-cent row. Would hardly seein to be a fit ; The same one priced three ninety-eight We see and «a dive for it. We see a pioture on the wall That to our eye appears to be A tem-cent chromo, or perhaps A work of art that comes with tea, But when the owner comes and says He paid a thousand for that bit And thinks he got it cheap at that, Then we sit up and notice it. We see a rooster strutting round With pride that seems almost absurd He has some feathers and a tail And seems like any other bird ; He looks to be a common scrub Until we get his pedigree And find he captures every prize, And then his beauty we can see. That is the way with everything, From marbles to a cake of ice, We may be experts in the line, But still we judge it by the price, Were it a diamond in the rough And worth a fortune any time, We wouldn't give it storage room If it were listed at a dime, Whales Plentiful But Wild. San Francisco Chronicle Captain Porter, of the steam whal- er Beluga, which arrived from the Arctic Wednesday. with 16,000 pounds of bone, seventy-two fox skins, and one bear skin, confirms the report from Unalaska that the other ships of the fleet are safe and are coming home with big catches Captain Porter, who has been going to the Arctic for many years, says that never hefore were whales so plentiful as this season. Nine whales fell before the harpoons of the Be- lugn's whalemen. Captain Porter add- ed that he never saw the whales =o wild. There were thousands of them. but they were very hard to catch. The Beluga lost four whales which had been harpooned. In each case the wounded mammal took refuge under the ice. which necessitated cutting the line which held him prisoner, Sportsmanlike Fairness. Leeds Mercury. At a recent cricket match, married ve. single, the former took first inn- ings, and chiefly by the aid of some blind hits, by one of the vlayers, nam- ed Jones; made a score of eighty-four. Just as the bachelors were about to commence their innings, news of a lo- eal railway accident in which some of the passengers had been killed, reach- ed the field. "I'm in a bit of a quandary," «id Jones to the curate, who had organiz- ed the match, "my missus was in that train." "Dear me I'm sorry to hear it," was the reply. "You're anxious to get awav, of course ?"' "Well, no sir, it ain't that, 1 was only thinking if anything has' hap- just the work you prefer, or the wages Shirts that bear this brand fit perfectly because they are cut custom-fashion, not by ordinary shirt- factory methods. They're made of fabrics we KNOW are the best money buys for the price. They satisfy men who want real shirt-value, with- out paying fancy prices. There is no shirt made that excels a Regatta Coat - Shirt for style, wear and comfort. . ¢ Demand this brand,and get more for the same money Makers of At Berlin Canada Good Shirts i JUST A DASH OF 1 Lea LPerTims Soup, Roast, adds the finishing touch to make the perfect Chop, Steak and game. ASK ANY HONEST GROCER FOR THE BEST SAUCE. H. IS SURE TO GIVE YOU L EA & Prraiss 1 J. M. DOUGLAS & CO., CANADIAN AGENTS, MONTREAL E38 [oe ook fu Foe he To [oo oc oo Co [Fo [oe 'HOCKEYBOOTS Mute Hioe Hockey Boot | eo eT] Boys' Hockey Boots, S1.75, 2.00 and 2.50. WN] Men's Hockey Boots, $1.50, 2.00 and 2.50. By Invictus Mule Hide 3 a2) Hockey Boots, $3.50. The Sawyer ShoeStore x MN on eo Fo To oo ee fo For sale by H WADE, Druggist, cor. King and Brock Sts,, Kingston ® Suitable ~~ - Christmas ve Gifts Very little time to choose. Christmas will soon be here. You can get service and best choice of gpods by shopping now. Below we give/small list of most aceept- able Gifts: ° " ° ° * . . ° ° ® . ° ° i" * ° ° * ° . ° * - | Warm Slippers, Evening FOR WOMEN Shoes, Street Shoes, Over- gaiters, Deggins or Spats, Skating Boots, Overshoes. FOR MEN Warm Slippers, Fancy or Plain = Leather Slippers, Hockey Boots, Overshoes, a pair of Invictus Shoes or Suit Cases. » e ® ° ° ° ° e » * ° ® . ° * - ° ° ° . » ° ® » * ° pened to my Mary, 1 ought to be play- ing for the single chaps. :. Pla) 5 FOR BOYS | Rubber Boots, Moccasins, -- : | Hockey Boots, Slippers, Two Evident Truths. 2 { Over : A soap million dre and an actor-| © eishions and Rubbers. fer ee talking business. : | Skating Boot Sh x "L"" said the actor-manager. "have| o DK £ ols, Slippers, discontinued the use of poster. My FOR LS | Leggi y 3 announcements aprear in the newsna- . | 1s REIns, Oy ershoes and pers exclusively. 1 have learned that| © arty Shoes. who don't read the papers don't | ® go to the theatre" 3 "You are wise." said the soap mil-| o 4 lionaite. "And I do like vou. lLong| ® ' since I discarded everv form of adver 3 ne Y S * for soap." 0000000000000 0000000 0000000 90000000000000000000000000000000000300 $0 000000000000000000000000000000000000000006 BABY WASTED "MERE SKELE In Torments a Year and a Ha Terrible Sores on Face anc , =Hands Tied to Stop Scra i and Tearing at Flesh --B CURE BY CUTICURA COMPLETE AND SPi "My little son, when about end a half old began to hav come out on his face. I had ician {teat him, but the Sores gre: Phen y began to come on other. of his boc Jo gow d I had to tie hi in ths at night to keep hi scratching the sores and tear t to be a mere sl ardly able to wal aunt advised me to try Cuticur Qintmen Cuticura Soap to try and ¢ Cuticura Ointment, XI took it without any faith, but to pleas tried it, and it seemed to dry sores a little, I sent to the dru and got a cake of Cuticura Soa box of Cuticura Ointment and the directions, and at the end o two months the sores were all we has never had any sores of ar since, He is now strong and | and I can sincerely say that ¢ your most wonderful remedies ) cious child would have died fro terrible sores, I used only one Soap and about three boxes of Oi Mrs. Egbert Sheldon, R. F. D. 'Woodville, Conn., April 22, 190 ITCHING PIMPL Cured by Cuticura in Neb "I had suffered with itching for years. At last a friend tol get Cuticura Soap and Ointment so and in three weeks my fi entirely cured. I am so pleas Cuticura Remedies that I will mend them to other sufferen Florence Delavergne, R. F. D. Auburn, Neb., Aug. 28, 1906." xty) to Purify th wd. § id. Potter Drug & Chen wp Boston, Mas a-Mailed Free, Treatment of Humors of & A Phenomena Record of si worl As a tree is known by its fr so also is a Life Insura Company known by its ac results to policyholders. The actual results realized un the policies of have never been excelled by Canadian Company. Allits surplus belongs to, and is tributed among its policy-holders- It has the Lowest Expense Ral income --notwithstanding the fact its net business for the past ten has increased more rapidly than th any other native company -- Not a dollar received from its pe holders has been lost, out of millions invested for their security. Write Head Office, Waterloo, On or call on S. ROUGHTON - Distric Kingston. Dyeing with Soap! Maypole Soap is the Household that washes and dyes with one 0 tion. Used almost exclusivel England. Yields fast, brilliantc Dyes to any shade. No streaks above all-CLEANLY, SAFE, Si Maypole Soa 20¢. for Colors--isc. for Blac Frank L. Benedict & Co., Monty | SAYS THIS IS BE A leading health journalina ing the question, " What is Yl iption to clean and puri Blood * prints in a recent iss following : Fluid Extract Dandelion one Compound Salatone, one oul Compound Syrup Sarsaparill ounces. Shake well and use in teasp doses after each meal and at be A well-known physician stat these are harmless vegetable dients, which can be obtained any good prescription pharmac This rhixture will clean the of all impurities. J In just a fer the skin begins to clear of sore: and pimples. It puts vigo emergy into run-down debi men and women. For many Sarsaparilla alome has been cons a fond blood medicine. But it built up and made now bloo impurities remained within a good accomplished was only te ary. Sarsaparills, 'however, used in combination with Com Salatone and Extract Dam works wonders. This combi puts the kidneys to work to and sift ont the waste matte acid, and other impurities that disease. » Jt makes new bloc relieves rheumatism and lame and bladder troubles. VIVITITITITTITTTT00000000000000000090909000090000000000900909