received by us dur- ir value. Some of table for Christmas a little. fuslin and fine, and just or any other pur- 27 inches, and it is ck, 15¢ Yard. s' Cashmere 81, 9, 9} 10 inch. | 2, 25¢ Pair. it and all we could get. ung Girls' 10c Pair. alue in King ston of The most wanted howing {id Gloves. Are in style and will be worn. : D4 When looking for a gift you may be suited with a Bracelet. Our stock is larger and e replete with all the latest signs from the best § makers, Our new expanding Brace- let is one of the best made. It ranges in price from $5 up. Spangenherg JEWELLER > Issuer of Marriage Licenses. The skating season is § ; here, and we have af good assortment of the y best kinds of Hockey Boots i Men's Patent Inside An- y kle Supports ,a splendid | shoe, $2.50. X », $2.85. me shoe, $2.85, ; key: Protected Heel, In- & Ton gue, $2.00. DID BOOTS. SHOE STORE. YEAR 74--NO. 286, LASHED IN PRISON Not the Best Place For Punish- ment. The Condemned Man as He Would at His Crime Was Committed. Within the past few months various judges throughout the country have been committing men to the Kingston penitentiary, to be flogged in addition to their term of years. The latest one to be so sent is Eccles, of To- ronto, who will likely be whipped within the next few weeks. It is questionable whether this is a most desirable place to do the flog- ging. The authorities here think not, but rather that the punishment should be inflicted at the place where the crime was committed, thus being a greater punishment than if privately and quietly, as js the prison here. When a man is sentenced to be flog- ged, the order appears on his com- mittal, specifying the time and the number of lashes to be given. The carrying out of this sentence is al- ways subject to the prison surgeon, who must pronounce upon the man's physical condition before the flogging is begun. The convict is strapped to a tri- angle, his body being protected from his loins down, and also his head. The whipping is confined solely to the back, across the shoulders and above the pit of the back. It has been stat- done in whipped | Does Not Get the Tat the Place Where ---- functory duty, and, therefore, do not wield the cat with the vigor that might be done if the punishment was infiicted, say, upon the home town square, and by those who felt ag- grieved over the crime that had becn | started from the explosion of a lamp. {son shot and killed his committed. In the prison here the! keepers feel that they have no. grudge! whatever against the condemned man, | and, therefore, are sparing in strength | in giving the lashes. ! ! When the for punishment, the words on the com- | mittal paper are read to him by the warden; the surgeon and deputy War- den attend the flogging the deputy warden counting aloud the strokes] given. During the flogging the sur- geon notes the condition of the man being flogged, and afterwards has a towel of salt and water applied to the back, which is seldom heavily covered with welts or even the skin broken. The punishment is given in private | and it is extremely hard to secure anv particulars of the thrashings. The | time at which it oecurs varies accord- | ing to the physical condition ofthe | man and he has no previous warning. In the prison the cat is seldom used for any breach of prison discipline, { the paddle is generally used. This isa ed that the punishment is very severe, | piece of leather about fourteen inches but those who have seen the work per-| long and four inches wide, and placed formed say that it is not, that it ison a wooden handle The leather has | quite'a gentle affair, and this is due to the fact that the keepers who do the Jashing, taking turns in giving twelve lashes cach, regard it as a per- | little holes punched through it in sev- | eral places, with -the hope that it will | make the weapon bite more severely | than if simply flat | the Island of Heligoland, in the North condemned man is ready | © PITH OF THE NEWS. OLD MAN RESCUED. The Very Latest Culled From All | House Discovered to Be om Fire in Over The World. Early Morning. The Sheflield Musical Union will visit! Brockwille,Unt., 7. Rescued just in Canada in October, 1908. the nick of time, his house was Lincoln and Welland people want a! burning , Was the experience of duty put on national gas. Thomas Miller, a farmer, living alone Jobbers claim that freight rates in| about ffteen miles from Brockville. Ontario are much lower than in the] It was just before daybreak that the west. attention of meighbors was directed Amelius Jarvis & Co., Toronto, are| to the seeps by the reflection of the making large offers for Winnipeg| blaze. Miller, who bonds. . and am odd character generally, ha Hastings county's new House of Re-| come outside and was about to re fage was opened, on Friday, with | enter for some valuable papers he had special ceremonies. f ten, when he was restrained by The G.T.R. station at Harrisburg, | forces. The house col Ont., was burned, on Friday. The fire | utes later, destroying the entire con- tents. --------iee DISTINGUISHED ANCESTRY At Smithville, Texas, E. W. Swen- former 'wife and her husband and then committed suicide. Stanley Brown, the bank teller from Port Hope, who suicided at Winni- peg, claimed he was driven to his rash act by ill-health. The government has completed plans for the construction of a harbor on Those of Senator Redfield Proctor. Hon. Redfield Proctor, United States senator from Vermont since 1891, whose present term will expire in 1911 Were Sea, at a cost of $7,500,000. Arthur Drummond, an American, is held at Winnipeg for extradition to St. Paul, on the charge of swindling F. A. Sprado on a bogue check M. Juhlin., Stockholm, who resigned the office of minister of the inte on account of dissensions in the cab inet, has heen appointed postmaster general. Monks, near Pskova, Russia, drove! offi a band of bandits who attacked | their monestery and troops pursued the robbers and put them to the sword. The Winnipeg milk supply has been curtailed so much people are greatly alarmed. Dairyvmen are selling cows, saying they can't make the traffic pro fitable J. WW. la > Forster, R.C.A,, is in Ot tawa engaged in painting portraits of | Hon. W. 8. . Fielding and John R.| Redfield Proctor. Booth. This is understood to be at the request of the governor-general. & . S Fejuest ol. Lie gO¥erNor genet Proctorsville, 'Vt., on June Ist, 1831 He graduated from Dartmouth College in 1851, and later from the Albany Reports for the railways in the west show an enormous increase in traffic generally. A fuel famine is not feared this winter. Winnipeg has a stoe coal of 50,000 tons vear. : wk of | Vermont courts in excess of last aml was very suc his state and accumulated a large DAILY MEMORANDA. Popular Prices . On Fine Furs, at Campbell Bros'. Waterworks' Committee, ¢ p.m., Mon- Ve Wonderland Theatre, afterncosi and) evening. Service in Convocation Hall, 3 p.m. Sunday. Princess-- "The Inukéeper 8 At The Wife," a Spanish Drama, and "A Young | Verpe, a scimtific wonder. Jules This day im history '--Rebels defeated | at Toronto, 1837 ; Kitchener left Lom- don for Egypt, 1808; Marshal Ney shot, 1815 ; First Railroad in Germany, 1885 Bijou Theatre-- Historical Drage, "The Midoight Ride of Paul Revere," accom- pan by The Victor Orchestra in a Fotendid rendition of Wagner's "Ride of the Valkyries. Caruso and Scotti and sing. WHIG TELEPHONES. Legal Forms, all kinds, at Whig. The Daily Whig is always oN sale at Gibson's Drug tore, Market Sgquare-- Open till late each evening. --------------------------------" Turkey and Game Setts Just opened some very pretty DGULTON SETS, and very cheap from $3.50 to $15.00 Quaint old odd shapes and pretty designs. A very appropriate pres- ent at this time of the year. See Them At Robertson Bros. London, Dec. 7 of the United States, there can be no formal exchange of diplomatic notes between Japan and Canada respecting ceive verbal assurance from the Jap anese government that MAY SHUT ALL OUT There is Hope Over the Japanese Immigration Matter. A Tokio despatch | will be issued as to immigration that confirms the reports that, in the case! will save Canada from embarassment immigration, but Mr. Lemieux will re-| ing to the instructions | and Canada. The Proctor served from lieutenant to col onel in a Vermont regiment in 1898, shortly belo of the Spanish-American war, and on his return his speeches against the terrible regime kept up by the Span- ish made him very popular. Heiress In Hiding. Geneve, Dee. Wy and heiress to great wealth, has been hiding in Switserland, under the pro tection of Russian socialists, for four A strong movement has developed, | months supported by a former member of the| Her parents, who have made path cabinet and others, it is added, look: | tie appeals to the Swiss police to hel prohibition of emigration them, have now returned home in de United States | spair of ever secing the girl again police discovered her when but informed the parents that of all laborers to the abouts, WANTS THE PEOPLE. The Finance Minister Answered Many Questions. From Our Own Correspondent Ottawa, Dee. 7.--There was nothing of outstanding in st in the debate | on the addr which was continued vesterday afternoon, the old ground heing gone over again by Mr Craw- | ford. Portage la Prairie, for the lib- | erals, and Mr. Armstrong for the con | looks as if it days servatives. The debate efor conservatives being anxi- all the capital they can several | would ec longer, the out of it. Mr. Crawford combatted the idea Jia to make | | | that immigration sk ywald not be as | | sisted further. He wants to see a mass of people pouring into the great lowest. Hon. W. S. Fielding answered a number of questions in regard to the | outstanding debt of the dominion. | The loan of £9,3763%6, falling due | on May Ist, 1911, with the option un- | til April, 1910 of converting into Do- | minion government three per cents. 12 MORE HEATERS ONLY. e---- These Stoves will go, and must gC due 1938, at the rate of £105 of three | per cents. for each £100 of four per cents. Since July 1st, 1906, the government | had borrowed £230000 on secu- | rity of treasury bills at 4% per cent. for six months, through the Bank of Montreal, in London. These were re- > | deemed om May lst last. On Aagust this mouth. Remember, Come and get a | 17th, the government borrowed £500 - bargain. 3 good Parlor Suits cheap, 8t| 400 on the security of treasury bills TURK'S Second-Hand Store, 398 Priv cess St. 'Phone, 705. FOR SALE Oboice Brick Residence, Barrie stroet all improvements, location. Double Stone bath, gas, etc. Dwelling, Earl street, | (oo 0ec from this side or by | at 4} per cent. for one year. There are no overdrafts or banks in | Canada, but the account with the | Bank of Montreal in London, had | been overdrawn on current account as | usual, these being carried by remit- treasury London is bills. The overdraft in Frame Dwelling, Albert street, bam. | gq) 619 hearing the current Rank of ghed, large lot and many others. SWIFT'S Real Estate end In Agency. ¢ ---------- loans at present is £500 000 Climber Loses His Memory. Geneva, Dec. 7.--Joseph Rubin, who ! from Chamonix | © started a week ago for a climb in the unable to find his way home. His body was to-day found at th bottom of a 750-foot precipice on Col Balme (7,220 feet), into which he | had fallen. Rubin had written on an envelope Oct found in his possession: "1 canno remember my home nor my name ee Try. Bibby's nobby $1 shirts. Christinn Scientists, Toronto, erect a magnificent new deled afier the structure in Boston. THe Provincial Bank o opened business in Montreal. . Pivers' Drug Store. Boys' sweater coats, are k surance | England rate, mountains above | the town lost his memory angl was structure mo-' S67. léaving a f Canada has deemed sachet powders at Chown's $1.50, at: Jen- ing'. i i bates, 59% See Bibbys box DIACES; VIS es temporary on se- The total amount of | curity of treasury bills from one year at 4} per cent. A portion discounted utside the Bank of Montreal was at | the same rate with the addition of § per cefit=to the Bank of Montreal in | accordance with the agreemént re- ! specting the government's business in °c the | London. To Mr. Borden's query, What por- tions of debt have fallen due since, | her 31st. 1906, and how sich in- t | debtedness has heen met Mr Fielding | gaid - the 4 pe cent. loan of 1876, which fell « November 1st 1906 | amounted to £2.500,000. Against this o! there wns a sinking fund of £658, balance of £1.841132 to be provided for The whole was re- Three and a half per cent currency ginally ma tured Decem {ssued out on presentation. The cent loan of 1574 extended to May Ist, 1907 for £1,926; debentures for £500 000, ori- December 18¢t, 1901, and Ler 1st. 1008, were paid four per | per cent stock due 1935, at the rate 3 b I -- -- ~-- | as she was just over eighteen years through underwriting, as in the case of age, and had been subjected to no | ME of the previous extension at the same ; violent e, they were unable to inter rate of interest for four years with | fere. option until April 30th, 1910, of con- | ne . | HUNDREDS ARE IN DANGER verting into Dominion government 3 | AIEEE Jf £105 of 3 per cents. for each £100 FOWLER GOT IT. of 4 per cents. * » Portions oi debt falling due 1908, yg Washington, Dec.' 7.-- are : # President Roosevelt sent to Four per cent I. C. R. guaranteed,|%¢ the senate the nomination loan, £1.500,000 maturing April, | 8 of Egward S. Fowler to be agninst which the goverment holds [38 colldftor of customs of the ¥ New York. Mr. Fowler is the present ap- praiser of the port. The nomination gave the first information to the senate that Nevada N. Stranhan had retired from the col- lectorship, although it was known that his health was very poor. Mr. Fowler's appoint- ment is attributed directly to George B. Cortelyou, secretary of the treasury. They are old friends, Mr. various novinte yades the prestut | % Fowler is a man of ability Zr eeane ang the amounts MAM b : og vi the first figures or By un- i 3 and has won promotion by, ¥ his good work. The ap- der old arrangement ere! I$ pointment, in made on 'resent sinking funds £1,197 915, leaving | £302,055 to be provided for. Four per cent loand of 1878-9 of £4,500 000, mg turing November Ist, against which the government holds a sinking fund of £1890979, leaving a balance of £3,409070, to be provided for. Arrangements asx to payment have heen. sui t to commumcation with financial agents in. London, but in view of the condition of the money arrangement had port of market no delinite been made The finanpe minister also informed 5 the house that the amounts paid the | EERE EEEEREREE ¥¥E previously . Agreement. 1% merit solely. Fire swept the east side of south side of Firs weda, Sask, British Columbia Pp. B . . 160,525 | ctreot | Saskatchewan .. - ABO, 167 p 16% | Avenue, at and the See the large [ing camp there. values at| Hurmet's | Stare ble present for a man assortment and superb Campbell Bros.' perfumes EEPS AT OWN GRAVE WEEPS AT OW. Buried. Port Huron, Mich., Dee. T.--At the} have since that head of a grave in Flint cemetery is § white marble tombstone begr- | a small, enting supper there me "John Gallagh the door pree knock er." and information to the effect | to find bersell i that he died twenty vears ago, hav- ing been killed by a train This after morning, John But mother « to Flint to weep ch ' ing the inscription to lace stranger "Hello, mother! " x r to-morrow noon Gall at his own grave n Twenty-eight vears ago Gallagher: sto leit home and nothing was heard of Gall him until it was thought he waskill-! a ed bv a train near Flint. The rela a it took som soe her that her bo or is going travellnd lobe , Was revewed tives buried the remains in Flint, snd | lunguages during his sojourny ONTARIO, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 7, ------ is very old, deat | 4 a few od H R l e. was born of distinguished ancestry in| AN INNOCENT VICTIM 'Served Twenty Years In Penitentiary | at Georgia.' ardon Granted at Last--»He Was Accused of Taking Part in a Prison Revolt---A Sy, 1 | Atlanta, Ga., Dee. T7.--~After serving | he declared at the time. "My jmogle { twenty = years as a convict in the | live in Pittsburg and are well to do. | Georgia penitentiary, Wilson Palmer |l am an innocent man." jn pardoned by Governor Hoke, After Palmer had served eight years | Smith and left for his home in Pitts. | of the burglary sentence, a number of { burg, Pa. The prison commission in | convicts mutinied and killed two | recommending pardon, declared that | guards, before the revolt was quelled. Palmer seemed to be a viotim of cir- | Palmer seems to have taken no part cumstances and had probably beea| in the mutiny, but he was tried with wrongfully convicted. other convicts and given a life sen- Palmer, soon after coming to Geor- | tence. He had served ten years of | gia, twenty years ago, then only | that sentence when his case was in- twenty years old, was arrested in| vestigated, and it was decided that Thomasville on .a charge of burglary. | Georgia had probably been punishing | There seems to have been hardly any | an innocent man for twenty years, | evidemce against him, but he was a Palmer is now forty years old. He | stranger and was eonvieted and sent | saves some members of his family are to prison for ten years. Palmer | still in Pittsburg, and are well to do, | strongly declared his innocence, and that they will aid him to make I "I don't have to do such things," another start. ASHIK KNJX A CANDIDATE. Washington, Dec. 7.--The boom of Senator Philander C. Knox of Pennsylvania for the presidency was formally launched at a notable banquet in this city when the Pennsylvania re- PRINCE EDWARD ROADS. Great Improvements Next Year. | Dicton, Dec. 7.---The county fathers of 1%7 made their final bow as an executive body with Whrden A. B. Savior of Bloomfield in the chair on Thursday and Friday of this week. This council has grasped one of the largest propositions of county inter To Receive | | est in many years, when they took the step saying that Prince Edward should take publican congressional dele- ation placed itsel! square- y on record in faver of Law College. He practised law in the! cessful. He invested in guarry mines in | fortune. Daring the civil war, Se nator | He went | to Cuba as a United States senator | the outbreak | | Mile. Rebecea done) ing an expenditure of $7,366.64. Miss nin, daughter of 3 Russian landowner, | Lenbra HERE PEFEF EES REFERER RF ERE # cleaning Goldfields, | Murderer 2 Alberta . ------ 0.798 oe out the business section and causing Manitoba = . fk Ce . a loss of $200,000 { Kine companies of United States | Umbrellas. | traops have started for An umbrella makes a most accepta- Nevada. to maintain order in the min-| at Chown's Drug | time believed the man dea } © While his mother, Mrs. John Rom and she opened it with a simed the man t know her son, so nearly several times, and 5 learned more or less of ga 1F advantage of the "Good The by-law of the last the Pennsylvania senator Roads Act." EEERRAES EEF AE RRN EEREEEFEFEFFAREE | session to spend 8100000 on fifty-four s President Roosevelt's miles of county roads has been ap- successor. | proved by the licutenant-governor-in- a» coumeil, the government to stand for | one-third of the expense. Councillors Clemison, Hazel and Mastin have been appointed to buy road making ma- chinery. According to the report of | Put it on Again and Ran For | Hugh Mulholland, county road sur Physician. | veyor, $1,958.51 has been spent dur-| St. Thomas, Dec. 7.Dscac. Little {ing this year to improve the condi- | pet with a strange accident at Un- | tion of Prince Fdward's highways. | ign, where the Bell Telephone { Lieut. -Col. Bog handed in the annual ny is doing some work, Mr. 4 report for Picton Hirh School, show- | iy foreman of an erecting gang, had gone up a high pole to make a fastening. The wire was at high ten: sion and as he approached it broke, { coming down across his face in such | John Bolton, of the Metropolitan | a manner that it made a clear cut of | Rank staff has returned from a holi-| his nose. The organ was left hanging, dav in Ottawa. Messrs. Charles and | and the unfortunate man held it back Henry Chadd, Chieago, are in town [in place and immediately visited Dr. having come fo attend the funeral of | Jackson, wha stitched it on. The nose their father the late H. J. Chadd. B.| may be saved, | R. Hepburn has returned from a trip | to New York eity. HIS NOSE CUT OFF. Kelly | court stenographer | Dunning resigned. was appointed local over Miss R. Try BRibby's 25¢. children's toques: Feared That the Great Explosion Caused Many Deaths. Monongahela, W.V Pec. 7.-Six even to explain how thoy reached the Is it custom prompts the n Christmas Wifts Should not the Christinas present te something more than the thing itself ? Should it not be the embodiment of Christ- mas and love ? As such di it not need to be well and\ carefully chosen ? The haphazard choice falls Use Right now when our display of Christmas goods are most comprehensive. i THE GREATEST SHOWING OF: KID GLOVES for Men. Women and Children. Stock Collars, Real Lace Pieces, ete. Silk, Cashmere and Lisle. ital designs, all new beau styles. . 1 HANDBAGS and PURSES, New York's latest, in Beaded and Leather Goods. ASK TO SEE Ladies' Stock Collars, at The daintiest little pieces you ever saw. Each one in a neat gift box, charred and blackened bodies lying | surface. They state that immediately : back of them, when they began their in an improvised morgue ve » | 1 i I gue, live men | frantic xt for liberty, was a hoveris g between life and death from' roe nu { mon wiul bruises sustained and the | similar stru while still further inhaled in a temporary (back in the workings was a Inrger tal, and 380 men imprisoned by number of whom they knew nothing tons of It is believed the men referred to by V gases coal and mine debris in the when last seen were caught back of the eave-in of coal and mine roof, and the most accurate summary obtainable | that they could not. have survived of yesterday's mine explosion | more than a few minutes in the dead- The explosion occurred shortly after |ly gases with which the entry filled as 10 a.m.. after the full force of 400 | soon as the ventilation was interrupt men had gone to work in the two (ed. There is more hope for those in mines afiectod. These mines are Nos. | the more remote sections of the mine, 6 and 8, of the Consolidated Coal {as they were near workings where located on opposite sides of {fresh air is supplied by other open- river, at this place, lings, but at best only the most slen- der hope is entertained for the sur chances all alive, is mining town, with the against a single one being company, the West Fork but merged in their underground work- i Ontario . -- $1.064.3%6 | a Ee lA " | Quetwe . S43, 289 | Qn a ICIINISIOIE FREE ings and on the surface by a great | vival of any one of the men in the Jee Brungeies 305283 | WL teel tipple and bridge I mine until the debris can be cleared Rrassh | Columina - 261.0 Main The living men are unable to give |away and communication with the tiany details regarding the disaster, or | outside re-established. i A HAPPY EPISODE. CAID MACLEAN'S CAPTIVITY. Reprieved on Way to |Negotiations With Moroccan Bcaffold. Bandit Blocked For Present. Berlin, Dec. 7.--A miner named Cur- | Tangier, Dec. 7.~The question of schuss, who was sentenced to death at | Raisuli's residence still blocks the way | Dortmund for murder, was temporari- | for negotiations for the release of {ly reprieved as he was being taken | Caid Bir Henry Maclean. The grant | froma his cell for execution. of 860,000 to Raisuli is made condi- ! Spectators were waiting round the | tional on his abiding in Tangier, | scaffold, and Curschbuss had been in- which he never dared to enter, even { formed that his last moment had ur- |when he was governor. As a British rived, when a telegram was received (protege, Ruisuli would, in case of mis- from the criminal court of appeal or- | sonduet, huve to obey the summons he ering the posiponeme of the death [of the British horities, or foreg Didn't Know That He Was Dead and|i:iii™ ™™" * ™™% fi foun ©" = © The prisoner's counsel had succeeded | Cand Maclean has now been a pris- on Wednesday in bringing | oner for twenty weeks. As an exhibi- to light new incts suggesting the in- {tion of impotence, the negotiations nocenre of Curschuss, and had lodged {are unexampled. by telegraph an urgent process in the There are persistent reports that the criminal coyrt of appeal. brigand, El Valiente, bas captured a Owifig to the exceptional nature of | Frenchman. the ease the judges were summoned, | - and held a night sitting, at which it i Fought All Day. : decided that a new trial should take! paris, Dee. 7.--Gen. Taitury, com- place { mander of the French flying column, Hin Algeria, reports that the first move Campbell Bros'. Iot the French forees to punish the el The store of big values in fine furs, { BenisNassan tribesmen was made on | Thursday, when a force of Arahs was Faney leather goods for Christmas | routed; only two Frenchmen were at Chown's Drug Store wounded. Plain and fancy silk mufflers, at E. | caily all day. Jonkins' . - See Dibliy's 50¢, knitted gloves evening { fn ¥ engaged in & | SIIIIINIIISINNIIIIINIY depths of the = hills surrounding this | the rescued men as having been alive The fighting lasted practic Steacy"s | BORN, | HINCH.--At Hinch, on Dec. 2ud, to Mes. | F. GC. Hinch, a son. MARRIED. | BURG BSS--IRISH.~On Doc. 4th, at | Palges Re Edward Haris Irish, Yarker, to Miss Ma Burgess, da ugh | ter of David Burgess, North Frade | ericksburgh. -- ims DIED, { ROCKWELL. ~At Rochester, X.¥., on i Nov. 27th, Dr. Starr Rockwell prothe | er of B. 8S. Rockwell, Napanee. | SHAW.--~In Boston, os Thursday moras | img. Dec. Sth. 1907, William J. i Shaw, son of the late James Shaw, i of this city, : ROUTLEY ~In Kingston, on Friday Dec. Ath, 1907, Joba Routley, ag fifty-five wears. 3 Funeral will be held om Monday, at 3 b.m., from his late residence, 1TH i incess St., to Cataragul Uemelerys ee ------------------------ es ROBERT J. REID, i The Leading Undertaker. | "Phone, 577. 227 Princess' street. Some New Goods French Table Prunes, in slass. Finest Figs, in glass, $e Pulled Figs, in 2 1b. boxes. : Washed Figs, in 2 1b. baskets. Crystalized Cherries, 1 Ib. boxes, Crystalited Fruits 1 1b. boxes. Bishop's Stuffed Prunes. § Pascall's Pralines, in glass. » Pascall's Satine Gems, in wlass: 5 Jas. Redden & Co. . . : | IMPORTERS OF, FINE GROCERIES: i 1 | The Anglican congregation at lace ' Lo Wolle Island, bas purchased; ' : Sot adjoining the {church and burial" ground. 3 | Bibby's the place to buy men's Car- digan jackets, §1, $1.50, $1.75, $2 to wit $1,400, "a farm