fHE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. FRIDAY, JULY 9, 1909. THE SLY FOX | Dead In the Dairy, But Lively When He Got Outside. Beveral years at an old-fashion. ed 'farmhouse led Tittle Hall, in Boxted, a small village lying between Sud and Bury St. Edmunds, Buf- | folk, England, there lived a farmer and his wife who thought much of SILL OTHE EMPIRE Do $1 a Cake Could Buy No:Better If you were to offer us $1 for a single cake of Infants' soap, we could make no better than our Ji ight. lene . Cow For we have put our very into this cake. TRAVELLING, ere Law Comes Cheaper to Jews of the London Ghetto. 18 SET- | In a small turning out of "Petticoat | Lane," in the heart of the Jewish | quarter of London, or "Ghetto," is | situated the Beth Din. It may well ibe termed the 'Poor Jew's Law | Court," for not only can disputes of INGSTON [PEMBROKE BURY 7: IN CONNECTION WITH Canadian Pacitic Railway BRITISH EAST AFRICA TLER'S LAND OF PROMISE. | Col. Owen Thomas Writes of Britain's ALASKA-YUKON PACIFIC EXPOSITION | Wash., June 1st to Oct. 16th, | 1909, | Itound Trip First-Class Tickets will be! sold until September 30th, 1909, to SEES" 1683.90] Honttle, VICTORIA, B.C. HEAT E, Wash, TACOMA, Wash, PORTLAND Ore. SAN FRANCISCO, Cal. LOS ANGELES, Cal. 399.25 Good to return until Oct. 31st, 1909, HOMESEEK:RS' EXCURSIONS Round-Trip Second-Class Rates will be issued on following dates ; July 13th, 27th; Aug 10th, 24th; Sept. 7th and 21st. Good to return within 60 davs, Full particulars at K, & P. and C, P, Ticket Office, Ontario St. 'Phone; 50. F. CONWAY, Gen. Pass. Agent. Low i BAY OF QUINTE RAILWAY. Train leaves uniom station, Ontario street, 4 p.m. daily (Sunday excepted) for Tweed, Sydenham, Napanee, r- onto, Bannockburn and all points north. To secure quick despatch to Bannock- burn, Maynooth, and Joints on Central Ontario, route your shipments via Bay of Quinte Railway. For further particu- lars, apply R., Wj DICKSON, Agent, Phone, he: 8. ar H Hom 6 s6ckers' Exgursions Mani- Low be Sud- To the Canadian North-West, toba, Saskatchewan and Alberta. round-trip, second-class tickets will fssyed via Chicago, North Bay or bury, on following dates: June 1st, 16th, 29th; July 18th, 27th; Aug. 10th, 24th ; Sept. Tth, 21st. Good to return within 60 days from palhg date Alaska Yukon Paciic Exposition Heattle, Wash., June 1st to Oct. 16th, 1009, Special round trip tickets on pule dally May 20th to Sept. 80th, good returning on or before Oct. 81st. For full particulars, J. P. HANLEY, Agent, Corner Johnson and Ontario Sts. Ve pe of lo ar ee | OT Quebec Steamship Company LIMITED. River & Gulf of St. Lawrence Bummer Cruises in Cool Latitudes fet "Campana,". with electric lights, bells and all: modern comfort FROM MONTREAI, ON MON- p.m., 19th July, 2nd, 16th August, and 13th September, Pictou, N.S. calling at Quebec, Gaspe, Mal Bay, Perce, Grand River Charlottetown, PE. BERMUDA $30, by 5.500 #8 eleceric SAILS 13 ul Jo0th und © Bummer Excursions, $20 to the + Twin Screw "Bermudian," tons, 17th and 28th July, at 11 a.m. amd every 10 days thereafter from New York. Temperature cooled by sea breezes seldom rises above 80 degrees The finest trips of the season health and comfort: ARTHUR AHERN, For tickets and staterooms apply to J. P. HANLEY, or }, 8. KIRKPAT- RICK, Ticket Agents, Kingston, Ont. m for Secretary, Quebec. 8i Lake Ontario & Bay of Quinte Steamboat Co., Limited. STEAMERS North King & Caspian 1000 Islands--Kingston-- Rochester." Commencing June 27th, steamer leaves for 1,000 Islands, Alexandria Bay and Gananoque at 10:15 a.m., daily, except Monday. Returning, ;steamer leaves at 5 P.m., for Bay of Quiiite Ports and Port of Rochester, N.Y. . STRALETITA~I eaves on Mondays at 6 p.m., for Picton and intermediate Bay of Quinte ports. y< is is st ---------- Ww Full information from E. E,. HORSEY, J. P. General Manager, 0. 8, Ont. JAS Agents, HANLEY, KIRKPATRICK SWIFT & CO. Kingston. Kingston, oO Thousand Islnd ad 1. Lawee River Steamboat Companies In connection with the New York Central and Hudson River R. R. Co. er cu be Yeave Kingston dall 65.00 am. and 2.00 leave Kingston, and 2.00 p.m. Making: direct connections at Cape Vincent to and from all points in New York State. Through sleeper Uape Vin- cent to New York. Week end round trip rate, Kingston to Watertown, good going Saturday or Sunday, 'returning Frondny $1.65 For excursions to Brockville and Ogdensburg and the Thousand Islands, tee local advertisements, vy. except Bunday, bm. Sumgay, 7.30 a.m. | w a The Peopla's cme Str. Stranger (CAPT. HAMMOND.) Wharf, Foot Clarence St. Scenic Route to Gananoque, leav- ston daily, (Sunday excepted.) St. Slip, 3.30 p.m. ; O'Brien's 1.30 p.m Cadiens. 4.50 p.m; Lodge, 5 p.m. ; arrive Ganan- w w » daily, except Sunday Depot Wharf, 7.45 a.m. ;| 8.30 Lm O'Brien's arrive Kingston, 9.40 oque Kingston, Saf return Saturday 7 pm; at ' Gananogqge. Faroe, leaving will rananoque, hour in round trip, 40ec. : one " - k STR. ECELWAT | Will start regular trips to Kingston Mills, June 12th. leave Swift's Wharf, foat of Clarence street, 10 a.m., return aa Leave 2 pm return at five 1 at 9 Return \ 1oave p.m fare WHALEN, ) Captain, ly Thomas in The Standard of Empire. Whether theology mise, ment seems appropriate when white settlement in Africa is the subject under discussion, for in that great continent many goals have lured the Englishman, many El Dorados have shown for him a fleeting panorama. South Africa, North Africa, and the § poisonous West,. the mysterious Cen- tral distriets--attractive by the very uncertainty in which silence have alike wealth--each across the seas to the British pioneer, will be part of the our people, regarded as means to an end. first basa was appointed in 1592, and the era of Portuguese control said Considering the duration of this oec- cupation, re ot. this great country lying between the Indian Ocean and the big lakes. The partition opening of the whole area dates from the grant of a charter of incorpora- tion to a German company in 1885 Three years later the Imperial British East Africa Company established history began in the Empire sense. The first rail of the so-called Ugan- da Railway (of which not one yard convenience in, travel, still, and will long be, an unrealized | dream. Mombasa to Lake Victoria Nyanza, traversing in its course each succes- traveling camp life forests and along untrodden stretches of pathless wilds, peopled the whispering memories tive tracker, ordinary routes, lions and leopards, elephants and crocodile, 'giraffe and zebra, host settlements, Tr | flats and valleys of the tropical coast | other hand Hills could provide the planter of tropical \ ) ife and children within reach of his | | royal !in the Highlands | Rritigh fhe children are as rosv, strone-and | full | Cousins British East All 3 the. country for the | capital beyond his manhood--great {ns that asset is when the possessor has the good fortune to be British | The difficulty for the man without Jao , | capital of reaching his market prae- | ing the old patterns for saucepans or tically exeludes him for the present. | Potato boilers. ~~ | had a block | propellor and ragids when a tug came others Little Known Possession, on the East Coast of the Dark Continent ~--Slaver and Missionary Has Opened Up the Land, But Travel- ing Is Difficult, Au Oriental proverb has it that seekers after Heaven not infrequent- Owen | & 4 {ish fugitive and the Portuguese emi- mise Paradise, says Col. be sound not sar- the senti- the or but statement no I will at least distance and wrapped their in its turn has called id has reaped its harvest in econ- quered nature, extended Empire, and Narrow graves. "Because on the bones of the Eng- lish, the English Flag is stayed." No man who regards Oversea Set- tlement as I regard it regrets the lives laid down by these earthly eaven peekers; it was, and is, and but I to the east, I | | community. all kinds be settled here, but nc charge whatever is made for the use of its services, the expenses of carry- ing it on being borne by the Jewish Its sittings ere usually | presided over by the Chief Rabbi. | grossest |& Here resort obtain advice--the Russian refugee and the Roumanian outcast, the Pol- grant, old Jews with hooked noses and straggling beards, young Jewesses with glittering eyes and coal-black hair. Here sits an sged Israelite, his ! small skull-cap stuck far back upon his few remaining hairs. Two long curls, or "peahs,'"" fall on either side of his face. Those ere regarded by orthodox Jews ¢s evidence of piety and learning, and are never cut. His clawlike nose, his long, matted beard, his olive-tinted skin, complete the picture. You almost expect to hear him claim his "pound of flesh." + His claim is, however, of a less in- human kind. Hs friend has called him a "Shabsel Tzirnick"--about the insult one Jew can offer to another, implying he is a follower of the impostor Messiah of that name. The rabbi elicits the fact that the complainant only received this insult after himself calling his friend a "Ter- deganov," or horse thief. Oil is pour- ed on the troubled waters. apologies are exchanged, and both parties leave history-making of | the court friends do marvel some- | times that so few have marked our little Paradise away where the Indian Ocean laps a wide | new land of infinite promise. Then follows a claim by '"Minyan" men for extra payment, According to 'wish custom, on the "Jahrzeit," or wiversary, of the death of a parent, a special prayer, called the *'Kad- And now to lift very lightly and (dish," is offered up for the soul of comprehension of the Britons of At the outset of Euro an visitation the whole East Coast Africa seems to have been mainly The Portuguese governor of Mom- may to have continued till 1729 the tangible results were markably few. Moslem rule fol wed, and lasted with various ups id downs into the lifetime slave dealers on the direet attention we hand and her began to of Fast Africa and was likewise by Royal Charter, and in Uganda) was laid" in 1895, the Protectorate having meanwhile been established, and its 584 miles reach- ed completion at the end Already penditure, though it must be some, perhaps many, years before the capi- | tal expenditure is written off. of receipts far outweigh ex- quickly a corner of the curtain that | the departed. 'ils the real British Rast Africa from the the Empire! be present, thirteen being regarded by | This is call- | At least thirteen male Jews over thirteen years of age must Jews as a lucky number. | ed the "Minyan." .Certain of the poor er Jews attend these services to make up the full complement of thirteen, ind are for their attendance. paid | This dispute is about what amount is | to | | Bach | truth, and generally does. the { | be | io be paid. | compromise is arranged. After much argument, a Now come cases of all kinds. A Jew unsuccessfully seeks damages from a fried-fish vendor, because, he alleges, the oil in which the fish he Ne | purchased was fried was not "kosher" 0 e i present generation, when the explora tion of Central Africa and the activi- ties of Christian missionaries on the i.e, prepared in acordance with the Jewish law. A servant sués her mis- tress for wages due. Various money- lending cases, disputes between land- lord and tenant, ete., follow. In the Beth Din no oath is taken. party is expected to tell the When, however, there is a very distinct and direct conflict of evidence, statements | can be repeated on oath. It must not be supposed that the sole function of the Beth Din is judi- cial. It also decides questions of ri tual, appoints officers for the perform- i ance of Jewish rites and ceremonies, and examines converts to Judaism | Questions relating to the Jewish die- i tary laws are also decided here. There | These few words about the railway | of but modern that is ay suggest a country The main line runs from ve belt of the Protectorate, but im- mediately the traveler or settler gets away from falls back upon safari as in days of that one iron road "Safari," let it be understood, expression for the amid primeval re, the Swahili only by of primi- man. - For British. East Africa still the Paradise of the big game and on safari, away from rhinoceros, buffalo hippopotamus and and a haunt the and wilderbeast, of other animals ranger's wanderings It would be impossible for riter to convey to the homelander, the smoke of whose neighbor's chim- ney is rarely out of sight, a convine- ing impression of that weird experi- ence, however, the wanderer, whatever his | particular idiosyncrasy, must happen the first safari. Presently, 1 what appears to him to be the pick of the earth; to one man, per- haps, the wonderful sweep of the iormous~-grazing areas-in the High- lands, to another the ravines of the great Rift Valley, the wanderful agri- the Highland of rich districts of the big game areas the 'extraordinary 1itural kamba. or rlt. Somewhere the settler with an eye for land ean hardly fail to mark + the man-hungry country which cries to him, individually, for settlement For the predominant feature of Brit ish variety and the scope it affords every kind of land settler course, unheflthy districts for whites, i and East Africa is its remarkable of There are, there are considerable areas any | is still in existence a law, although it is obsolete by now, by whi¢h water 1901. [ left overnight should not be drunk, { for fear lest there might be a ser- pent's sting in it. A Cosmonolitan R.A. + "The son of American parents, born in Florence, trained in Paris, living in London, a citizen of the United States, speaking Italian, French, Ger- man, and Spanish almost as fluently | as he speaks English." Thus has Mr. | again he | M A | taste for hunting | told of a visit he once paid to Fair- | | ing, and his host was changing his | { rible! Horrible!" preceding from Sar- Alarmed, he rus ed | Sargent, R.A., whose pictures are amongst the most notable at Burlington House, been described. r. Sargeant also pleads guilty to a ford, the residence of his compatriot and brother Academician, Edwin Ab- | bey. They had had a long day's hunt- clothes when he heard cries of '"Hor- gent's bedroom. | in; only to find his friend woefully | surveying. the ruins of a new top-hat | "My dear féllow," -he cried, "what's | | | | | | | | | | | | | | in | bring a richer harvest the matler?"' 'You see that through it to-day. I was thinking how | terrible it would have been if my head had been inside it." Flower Trade of the Scilly Isles. The Scilly Isles, five in all, lie out the" Atlantic forty miles off Cornish coast. The development of their flower trade has changed them from poverty stricken spots into lands of the blessed. Not many years ago the inhabitagts eked out a pre- carious and scfnty living by potato culture, but one day a man of wise forethought named Trevelick came to the conclusion that flowers would He could see them growing riotously in the little | gardens, and he collected a few bulbs | here | | | | and a few there until he had enough to start business now spoken of with something like reverence. With the passing of the years flower culture has settled into a well organized trade, providing oecu- pation for everybody who wants to | work on the islands. here it would not be wise to take | voung family. even though On the the slopes of the Shimba products with a home for the coastland, while awav where the bulk of has taken place. ork on settlement of spirits as their English man with no on Lake of wood caught in drifting into to the s were ahoard Temiskaming Her the roscin steam was eral passen No man wrong has Lord Marcus Beresford's Advice. At the time when Lord Marcus a | Beresford took over the King's horses healthy man could. with reasonable | His Majesty had only a very moder- precautions, do well enough ate lot of animals in training. | what do you think of them, and what | would you do with them il they were i over Treflectively WL not ss yet yours?" he asked Lord Marcus string at work on Newmarket Beresford looked the horses for a moment and then said bluntly, "Shoot most of them, ~I think. "' "Shoot them by all means, then," retorted the King Heath. Ingenious Paupers. Leicester Corporation is bringing into use a new pattern of drain-trap, as it has discovered that many of the poorer inhabitants have been us- 'No question about it Neilson's ice cream has ro equal in Kir or any other place. Said a lady Red Cross drug st ton mn (ithson's ore on any rights that kad Thursday. She buys the bricks 'most [Ottawa firm. every day. [ ews of ll classes and | nationalities to adjust differences, and | There is a story | hat," | said Sargent. "My horse pui his foot | the | with, . and | | the first consignment he sent to Co vent Gardens brought prices that are | "Well, | one | morning as they were watching the | thelr cows and dairy, pt they Were rather pestered with foxes, as the squire of Boxted Hall, an ancient | mansion, being lord of the manor, | did not allow them to be molested, : | as they were reserved for sporting, | and so it happened that the farmer's wife on going into her dairy one | morning was horrified to see a fox 'of an enormous size lying dead, as she supposed, on the floor. The dair- | ies at that time were large and airy, | with large lattice windows and floors | paved with clinker bricks, which were | often scrubbed down with a birch | broom and mueh water. A brick was | left out of the wall level with the | floor for a sink hole, where al the | refuse was washed out. | his nightly prowls around the house appears to have seented the cream through the windows or sink hole { and, as he would like to taste it, | squeezed himself through the hole in- to the dairy and made his way to the cream pot, and as it was so very nice he ate it all up. He swelled | himself up to such a size that he could by no means get back through the hole again, and, hearing footsteps coming, he lay down on the floor and | | feigned to be dead. The lady, sus | pecting what he had been doing, look- j ed into her cream pot, and, finding it all gone, she was so exasperated | that she took him up in a rage, think- [ing he was dead, and with an ugly | word threw him out into the back- yard; but, to her great consternation The fox in | and dismay, as soon as reynard found | | he was at large and once more free | to use his legs he bounded off at full | | speed, leaving the lady to grieve over | | the eseape of the audacious and crafty i thief. Municipal Ownership. Municipal ownership of the gas plant has proved to be not only 'a profitable undertaking for Man- city | chester, Eng., but economical for the | consumer as well. The city's profits since the works | were taken over 25 years ago have | been $6,750,307, while the price of gas in the Manchester district at | present is only 56 cents per thousand | cubic feet, according to a report to | the bureau of manufactures In addition to furnishing gas j cheaply, the Manchester corporation har provided free of charge gas stoves to all householders requests for the same. A movement making | is on foot to reduce the price of gas | {to 49 cents for sundry ing purposes and a graduated reduc- | tion for ordinary uses To illustrate the growth of manufactur- | the business, it is stated that the pro- | | ducing capacity of the works is 26,- | | 900,000 cubic feet per 24 | against 13,000,000 in 1883 hours, | An invest- | | ment of $i3,382°875 capital is repre- | | sented. | Manchester | about 600,000. | How Sir Thomas Dewar Won Success. | "Grasp opportunity and put it in your pocket," is the favorite motto of | Bir Thos. Dewar, who early in life, long | before he became connected with the | famous whisky which bears his name, | started 'in business at home ag a rat- | killer. A penny for each tail produc- ed as evidence of his skill was the | rate of payment allowed, "and Sir | Thomas has since confessed that he earned a good dea' of pocket-money | at the business. Not only as a com- { 'mercial king, however, but also as a | keen and enthusiastic sportsman, has Sir Thomas won admiration. Once he came near winning the Derby, with Forfarshire, in the year the race was won by Diamond Jubilee. On the course, Sir Thomas heard an anxious Scotsman, who had half a sovereign on, tremulously inquire of his neigh bor, "Where's Forfarshire?"' And the withering reply was, "A county in the north of Scotland." Appropriate. It was at a concert held in the vil- lage schoolhouse. business man, was not much of | a scholar, He intimated that the next song would be 'Ora Pro Nobis." The singer made a terrible mess of | In the chair was a | local merc¢hant who, though a good | has. a population of | ! | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | it, and consequently it was a great | relief to the audience when she had finished - the last verse. The chair man did not know the meaning of | "Ora Pro Nobis," so he applied to the man sitting next to him. He also | did not know that it meant "pray for us," But, not wishing to admit such | a thing, he said: "Oh, it means 'we thank you.'" There was a great burst of laughter from the audience when the chair- i man, as the lady was leaving the platform, rose to his feet and said: "Miss Smith, 'ora pro nobis.' "-- | London Answers. His Hobby Is Work. There is a good story told regard- ing General Sir Beauchamp Duff, | whose name is mentioned as succes- | sor to General Bir O'Moore Creagh | as Becretary at the India Office. Not | long ago a reporter tried to find out | Gen. Duff's recreation. "Dao you play | bridge much?' he asked. "Not much," answered the general. liards, may {of." *'Chess?"' door sports?" | "Then what on earth "The rarest thing possible | British Army," said Gen. { work." "Badly." "At long. intervals. in Duff; A Clergyman's Sacrifice. "Bil | 'Nothing to speak | "Any out- | do you do?" | the | " | From time to time taunts have been veld at the clergy in "Yeghrd. to | their) efforts to obtain "fat" livings | Here is a case, however, which proves | that they are not always influen {in their choice by monetary consid- erations. Rev. F. Swainson, vicar of St jected the offer of a living worth ap- Barnabas, Holloway, has just re- | | proximately $8,000, although his pres- | (ent income is under $1,500; and sim- {ply because he is so deeply attached | to the working p&ple of his parish | | that he will not leave them. me ------ A large quantity of bogus 82 hills have been madv in Canada {said to in Western | was circulated | vania | William Anstiss is missing, counts ave $300 short, and his collector on The | ac- i i Pennsyl- | | oil. There we pay often double pay. oils and boil them doubly long. in our 43 years of experience. tons to press out the moisture. perfect and delightful soap. fair as an infant's. Delight. Order one cake today and see different it is. see how it leaves the skin as soft smooth as silk. Note the dainty perfume -- Bulgaria and costs us $100 a pound of this Otto of Roses. exquisite. Please try it and see. Cents a We go to the gardens of France'for We bring cocoanut oil more than 12,000 . miles from the isle of Ceylon. Then we mix thes » After this we send them through our own special milling process -- one that we have perfected only # From here they fall like flakes of snow into huge bins and are.then crushed under a weight of 30 yy ~ofope -; Then they pass through granite rollers and come out in miles of silky ribbons, after which they are dried eight times. The result is the most It is so pure and clean that it leaves the skin So we call this soap Infants' 5 » Note the rich, creamy lather and 3,000 pounds of rose leaves to make a single ounce The fragrance is simply At All Dealers pure vegetable what we might bow, ' for yourself how as velvet and as it comes from . But it requires Cake Don't Risk even a penny--until health returns. And I mean just exactly that. I am the one physician who says to the sick, "1 will, out of my own pocket, pay for your medi- laine if it fails to bring you help" And fo® 20 years Dr. Bhoop's medicines have been used and recommended in every city andl hamlet in America. They are positively stand- other unwarranted and uncertain medicines? Thousands upon thousands have in the past or Kidney nerves fail, thesesick ones) bring them back to health again. But best of all, they positively take no money risk whatever. that test. And for that testa full 30 day trent ment is freely granted. All druggists sell Dr. Shoop's Restorative and Dr. 8hoop's Rheumatic day test. So g 1] dropmea Hue please--for I havea ppoint help, no pay," medicines to the sick. Tell me also which book you need. notwell, Besides you are perfect 1y free to consult me just as you below are yours--and without cost. Perbaps a word or two from me will clear up| jard in every community --and everywhere. successfully used he 8hoop's Restorative. know how quickly Dr They know that when health fails to return Dr But write me first for an order. Remedy, but all are not ed an honest and responsible druggtTn almost} | The books below will surely open up new and would your home physic. some seriotis ailment. 1 have helpid thousands) Get Health Then why pay the cash, ahd at your risk, for When the Sto- F i mach nerves, Shoop's Re- ! IS storative will Shoop will himself gladly pay the druggist for This will save delay and disappointment, Jauthorized give the 30 jevery community, everywhere, to issue my no} | helpful ideas to p those who are] ian. My advice a yi the book upon thousands by my private prescription or personal advice plan. My best effort is surely Afterwards worth your simple request. So write now while fou have it fresh in mind, for tomorrow never, comes. Dr. Shoop, Box 12, Racine, Wis. Which Book Shall I Send You? No. 10n Dyspepsia No. 4 For Women It's high time to discard the hea- vy shoes and give your feet a SUMMER HOME in a pair of comfortable Oxfords. We have the skilled makers know Black leathers or Ian. best Oxfords that how to' build. No slipping at the heels or gaping at the sides about our Oxfords. Oxfords for Men, Wo- men and Children. Oxfords from $1.25 up to $5.00, but what's the use of quoting a string of prices without seeing" the Oxfords ? 2 Come in for a look. J. Hi. SUTHERLAND & BRO. The Home of Good Shoe Making. No.2 On the Hears No. 5 For Men No.8 On the Kidneys No. 6 On Rheuma fies" Gasoline 6c. A GALLON Put in Your Tank at Our Dock. Garage Repairs to Automobiles = ar Marine Engines promptly attend: to. Selby & Youlden, Ltd. Ontario St. CURE Bick Headache and relieveall the troubles inef- «dent toa bilious state of the system, such as Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress after eating, Pain in the Side, &e. While their most remarkable success has been shown in curing SICK Headache, yet Carter's Little Liver Pills are equally valuable in Constipation, curing aud pre- venting thissnnoying complaint while they also correct all disorders of the stomach, stimulate the siyes ang regulate the bowels. Even if they only eu Ache they would be almost priceless to those who Robt. J. Reid, HOW wl EA D ; AAAI SICIICIIIISISIISIGH A400 DINING ROOM FURNITURE We are offering a few special lines A for this week. A Solid Oak Polished Frame Dinner Leather Seats, 1 arm chair and 5 small chairs for $16.00. Surface Oak Leather Seat, 1 arm chair and 5 small chairs for $12.00. Hardwood Frame with Leather Seats at $2.00 each. Good, Plain Dining Chairs, 75¢ and $1.00 each. 230 Princess Street Telephone 577. ri ma-- AIAN Holiday Shoes Sc HHO HA + Children's Canvas Boots, 60c. Youths' Canvas Boots, 11 to 13, 65¢. Boys' Canvas Boots, 1 to 5, THe. Girls' Brown Canvas Oxfords, 11 to 2, 50c. White Canvas Oxfords, Child's, Girls', La- dies', Men's. Barefoot Sandals, 75¢, 90c and $1. THE SAWYER SHOE STORE SEACIASIASIIIOR A HAIR HAH HE HH 22 AHS H+ suffer from this distressing complaint; but fortu- nately theirgoodhess does notend here, and those who once try them will find these little pills valu- #ble in so many ways that they will not be wil ling to do without them, But ACHE Is the bane of so many lives that here is where We make our great'boast. Our pills cure it while others do not. . Carter's Little Liver Pills are very small and very easy to take. One or two make a dose. They are strictly vegetable and do not gripe or purge. but by their gentle action please all who use them. CARTER MEDICINE 00., NEW TORE. Sal FL fl De. Bl Bin J. 0. HUTTON, TE ---------------- {AL ESTATE 'Mem Stone dwelling, 9 rooms, B. and C, . Frame dwelling, 8 rooms, Garden and Brick dwelling, 8 rooms, heated by 'stoves .. New Brick, 9 rooms, good verandah, hot air Solid Brick, 9 rooms, large barn and shed" A choice list of building lots. CITY BROKERAGE J. R. C. DOBBS, 41 Clarence St., "Phone, 480a, $1,900, 2,200. 2,600, 3,200, 4,600, --18 Market St., Phone, #03, ¥ :