Starvation Treatment a Failure The Sensible Cure for Indigestion » is "Little Digesters", Probably because the taking of food causes such intense discomfort, many dyspeptics think that by abstaining from this and that--practically stary- ing themselves -- they can cure the trouble, Of course, where Indigestion is caused by sheer gluttony, cutting down the food would no doubt do good. But in most cases Indigestion is caused, not by overeating, but by lack of physical exercise, and consequent lack of vigor in the organs of digestion, Partial starvation still further impairs the bodily vigor, and makes the trouble worse. The dispepticneeds plenty of good wholesome food, He can eat it, and DIGEST IT, TOO, if he takes a "Little Digester" after each meal. "Little Digesters' help the weakened stomach to do properly that which it cannot do alone--digest and assimilate the food ueeded to build up the system. At your druggist's, or by mail from the Coleman Medicifie Co, Toronto, for 25¢ a box. 30 ops Stout (Non-Alcoholic) LEMON SYRUP, LIME JUICE, RASPBERRY VINEGAR. D. COUPER, Dealer In Pure Food Groceries. "Phone, 76a, 341-3 Princess St. Ignition Dynamos, Storage Batteries, Spark Plugs, Carburetors, Ete. TRY OUR DRY BATTERIES. Turnbl Eetrical Mi. Go. Phona. ATH, 873 Bagol B84 Get Well First Don't risk even a penny--until health first returns. And I mean just exactly that a fam the ore physician who says to the sick "1 will, out of my own pocket, pay for your medi. elu if it faiis to bring you help!" And for 20 years Dr. Shoop's medicines have been used and recommended in every city and hamlet in America. They are positively stand. ard in every community--snd everywhere.' Then why pay the cash, and at your risk, for other unwarrented and uncertain medicines? Thousands upon thousands have in the past successfully used Dr. Shoop's Restorative. ney nerves fail, these sick ones know how guickly Dr. Shoop's Restorative will bring them back to 1 take no money risk whatever, They know that when health fails to himself gladly I h e I 1 pay the drug- gist for that test. And foi But write me first for an order. This will save delay and disappointment, Shoop's Rheumatic Remedy, but all are not an. thorized to give the 30 day test. Bo drop me a line sponsible drug- st in almost every comniun- ty, everywhere, to issue my "no a help, no pay." which book .you The books below will surely open up new and helpful ideas to those who are not well. Besides you are perfect. physician. My advice and the ow are yours--and without cost. Perhaps a word or two from me will clear up upon thousands by my private prescription or Jecsonal advice plan. My best ef- 0 ort is surely request. 80 write now, while you have it fresh in mind, for tomorrow never comes. Dr. Shoop, Box 12, Racine, Wis. When the Stomach nerves, or the Heart or Kid. health again. But best of all, they positive return, Dr, Shoop will that test a full 30 day treatment is freelr granted. All druggists sell Dr, Bhoop's Restorative and Dr. please--for I have appointed an honest and re- medicines to the sick, Tell me also need. ly free to consult me just as you would ou home some serious ailment, I have helped thousands worth your simple Which Book Shall I Send You! No. 1 On Dyspepsia No. 4 For Women No. 2 On the Heart No. 5 For Men No. 3 On the Kidneys Wo. 6 On Rheumatism. Dr. Shoop's Restorative : "Wood's Phasphodine, a F v BR rhe Great English Remedy. "i WF Tones and invigorates the whole aot corti system, makes new & Blood in old Veins, Cures Nerv- pus Debil Venta! and Brain Worry, pond 1 Weakness, Emissions, Sper matorrhea, and ffects of Abuse or Kxcesses. Price $1 per box, six for $5. Une will please, siy will cure. Sold by all druggists or ma ded 1 plain pig. on reouipt of price. New pamphlet mailed Yre'. The ood Medicine Co. Sormcrtu Widson) Toronto, Ont Asphalt Roofi ng Gravel and Sand Surfaced P. Walsh, Barrack. St., Kingston M. P. KEYS Antiseptic Barber Shop Hair Dressing and Shaving Parlor, Three Chair. Quick Bervice. ronage solicited. 336 King Strz:t Next door to Wade's Drug Store: THE FRONTENAC LOAN AND INVESTMENT SOCIETY ESTABLISHED, 1868. President--Sir Richard Cartwright, Money issued on City and Farm Pro- pertive Municipal and Oounty Deben« tures Mortgages pure . Deposite yeceived and interest allowed: S. CO. McGill, Managing Director, 87 Olareuce street; Your pav | A WIZARD OF THE PEN Thrums Was Very Much Upset When Jamie Repudiated the Kirk and Took Up Authorship as a Bread- Winner--Even His Mother Chuckl- ed at the Idea of Anyone Publish- ing His Efforts--Boyhood's Games. "Wher I left the University," Mr. J. M.-Barrie says, "two maiden ladies asked' what 1 was to be. When | re- plied brazenly, 'An author," thé flung up their hands, and one of the Saelaimed reproachfully, 'And you a pressed the general feeling of "Thrums," the little weaving town in Forfarshire, where the future author of "The Little Minister' had been cradled in one of the meanesy of its cottage. For Jamie, who might have become a minister and an ornament of the kirk, to throw himself away on a seribbler's trade was--well, sim- ply "an awfu' waste of a gude 'edu- cation." i ; His mother's heart, too--that moth- er whom he ha# so tenderly and beau- tifully immortalized as "Margaret Ogilvie" had set her heart on Jamie becoming & "meenister," and it was a sad digillugionment when she realized that her boy meant to live and die a mere author, And how the dear old lady ehuckléd at the ddea--when she had got reconciled to it a little--of Jamie ever expecting to find anyone foolish enough to publish his writ- ing, "You may picture," her son once wrote, "the Editor in his office thinking he Was behaving like a shrewd man of business, and uncon- scious that-up in the north there was an elderly lady chuckling so much at him that she could scarcely scrape the potatoes." But Jamie meant to be an author, let who would scoff at his ambition. "The malignity of publishers," he says, could be no humdrum dreadful pro fession for me; literature was game." found a gold-mine in it, we Of course the weavers boy of Thrums was born a writer. As a child he lived in a dream-world of his own. His favorite companions were "Rob- inson Crusoe' and "The Pilgrim's Progress"; and he was ideally happy when he had converted the tiny strip of back garden into Sloughs of De- spond, with peasticks to represent Christian on his travels, and a buffet- stool for his burden. His schooling at Dumfries and his reading for his Edinburgh M.A. were only an irksome preliminary to the life-work he had vapped out for himself in many a wakeful hour in the cottage attic; and the first thing he did after he laid aside his college gown was to write a -three-volume novel, which & publisher offered to give to the world ~--if thet writer would make it worth his while! In these 'prentice days the great- man-to-be was proud to see in the local paper his report of a cricket- match or a letter, signed "Paterfami- lias," advocating longer holidays for schoolboys. How, in process of time, he drifted to Nottingham to serve his pprenticeship to journalism ; how he found his literary feet in The St James's Gazette with the first of a series of "Auld Licht" sketches which were to make Thrums and himself fa- mous--this is part of literary history, as are all his later triumphs of the pen. To-day the man who was proud to earn three guineas a week on The Nottingham Journal has an income far advanced in five figures, and is said to have drawn $250,000 from the book and stage rights of "The Little Minister" alone. And never was man less spoilt by the smiles and gifts of fortune; for Mr. Barrie is to-day as modest and even bashful as when he walked the streets of Kirriemuir, a lad of dreams and silence, He is, to quote Mr. G. W. Cables "A smallish, sedate, reti- cent man, of a breadth and square- ness of brow that would, claim the at- tention of any passing stranger. His shoulders are square and stirdy, his eyes pensive, and his hands prone to seek his pockets for resting and hid- ing. When he speaks his word come in low procession, as though he were writing them. His voice is soft in tone, and 1 do not remember that in my three days of constant inter- course with him it ever rose to a high note." His smallness, by the way, was a sore trouble to his mother, who feared that when the editors saw her Jamie they would form a poor opinion of him. ; One day Barrie, who is, of course, an inveterate smoker, came across a youth whom he employed smoking a dirty, reeking clap pipe, packed with black twist tobacco. Barrie lectured him severely on the terrible evil of boys smoking -- especially smoking such vile "twist." 'Fhat night some friends came to Barrie's rooms. He went to a cabinet which he kept stor- ed with the choicest cigars. But the cigars had all gone. So had the boy. lustead was only a screw of paper, on which the boy had written that Mr. Barrie was quite right. It was a bad thing (as Barrie had told him) for a young lad to smoke thick twist. So he wrote he had decided to give it up. Meanwhile, he would put up with the cigars. They would help him along till he was of the right age for clay pipes and "twist." Insects Mave Thousands of Eyes. The eyes of insects present several peculiarities. Often in the same in- dividual we shall find two sets of eyes, the simple and the compound, these latter having a large number of mi- nute hexagongl facets, each of which is in reality a Cornea, and the mar- vel is that every single facet belongs to a distinct eye, with pupil, iris, lens, all complete. The number of these corneas varies very consider- ably. While the ant possesses fifty only, the ordinary housefly has 4,000, | butterflies have no fewer than .17,000, and some beetles rejoice in as many as 24000. --London Chronicle, > 5,000 Out Of Work. but i Not men, corns that were put No eorn can live if It is safe, pain Putnam's. Corn Extractor | treated by Putnam s less and sure. Use only And these horrified ladies but ex-' "could not turn me back; there | my | And with what magnificent | Auccess he has played the game and | 11 know." | out of business last week by Putnam's | THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 25, 1909 ". BEHIND THE SCENES. Difficulties With Which a Young Actor. Had to Struggle. ' An actor's life, although often in- teresting and frequently useful, is by no means easy. When Frederick Warde, the [English tragedian, brought his wife and children to America to live with him while he made his way there he was, after various ups and downs, engaged by Mr. Booth to play certain prominent parts, In "Talks In a Library" Mr. Laurence Hutton relates some of the difficulties with which the young actor had to struggle. The company, long associated vith Mr. Booth, with the single excep- tion of Warde, was not assembled, { and there could be but one or two Mrehearsals before the first perform- | ance. Warde had never even) seen: {the play of "Othello" and had nd { idea how to dress it--a very 'mport- | ant item to a man who had little money to devote to costumes. | There were, of course, professional persons who could have fitted him out from wig to sandal, but to those he could not afford to go. He read the tragedy many times, studied his part till he was what is called "letter perfect," and at the Astor library copied many drawings, colored by his own hand, of the dresses he had to wear. These gar- ments and effects were made out of the cheapest material from his ~wn patterns, cut and sewed by his wifs, and for six weeks nothing in that house was thought of or talked about but "Othello." The young man, realizing what it Pall meant to him, was exeeedingly anxious about the results, as was i his wife. They lived in a poor, hums ble little apartment, and he was to | take a midnight train to the scene | of his great effort only a day or two | before he was to make his debut in {one of the most important and try- | ing parts of the English drama. | I went to the train with him, and | just as we were starting Mrs. Warde came. down and said: "I've just been putting the chil dren to bed, and I must tell you what Arthur prayed." Arthur was then a lad not out of his frocks. It seems that the child, kneeling by his little cot, had gone through the regular formula, "Our Father," "Now I lay me," 'Please, God, remember papa and mamma and little sister and dear grand- mother in England," and had then added, as an impromptu, "and, O God, do please help papa through with 'Othello.' " I told his story at a dinner one night, as I am trying to tell it now, and was startled by an inquiry from the wife of a clergyman, who, with wonder and doubt in her voice, de- manded, "Do you mean to tell me that actors' children say their prayers?" Lawn-Tennis Champion. The stamina of Mr. A. W. Gore, who beat Mr. Ritchie in the contest for the lawn-tennis championship of England, astonishes everybody. He is a little man, spare, and even weak- looking, and yet he can wear down the hardiest opponent. He has in his frame a reserve of energy and spirit which keeps him going through 'even the hardest match, and a hotly-con- tested five-set game at lawn-tennis at Wimbledon is about as severe a test of physical power as one could devise. Yet there is scarcely a sport in which Mr. Gore would not count as a veter- an. He has played in lawn-tennis us long as most people remember lawn-tennis, although it is only with- in the last ten years that his chances of the championship have had to be iogsly discussed. He first won vent in 1901, and he has out- whole series of players who rior 40 him in their day. A Sarcastic Tenor. Roger, the celebrated French tenor, on one occasion was engaged for the sum of 1,600 francs to sing at the house of a rich financier. Roger sang his first song magnificently, but no one paid him the slightest atten- tion, and the guests talked their loud- est. Presently the host thought the time had come for another song and sent for Roger. He could not be found and that evening was seen no more, Next day a note came from him, ac- companied by the sum of 2,000 frances. The note ran thus: "I have the honor to return the 1,500 francs which I re. ceived for singing at your party, and I beg leave to add 500 francs more for having so greatly disturbed the con- versation of your guests." Afghans Must Be Good. News has been received in Simla from the Afghanistan frontier that the Ameer has issued strict orders to the Afghan officials on the Kurram bor- der to refrain from creating troubles in British territory. He has also in- structed the border officials not to correspond with British officers, but to refer all disputes to Kabul, in or- der that he may correspond personally with the Viceroy. The notorious Mul- lah Powindah is reported to be col- !lecting a number of penwioned Indian Army Sepoys, offering them good pay and a share of the property collected in raiding the British border. Rifle Enthusiast Quits. Lieutenant-Colonel R.,W. Schma- cher, the well-known promoter of vol- unteering in South Africa, and the donor of the 100-guinea Empire Day Challenge Cup, competed for annual- ly by military and naval rifle teams throughout the Empire, has resigned his colonelship in the Witwatersrand Rifles, alleging that the Transvaal Government's attitude is unsympathe- tic in the matter of financial grants to volunteer corps. = Dangerous ' Guns. At Sheerness are two 9.2 inch guns to defend the coast. About two years ago they were fired, but the concus- sion smashed so many windows that they have not been used since. Washed Away by the Sea. Since 1883 the sea has washed away 419 acres of the British Isles, but it has also added 30,763. The land gains ed, howeyer, is at present useless. some kind friend will tell vour voung son vou smoked corn silk cigarettes wher a lad. i { H. Cunningham, piano tuner from Chickering's. leave orders at Mo Auley's Book Store. Jt is only a question of time when | "HE MADE HIS KiCK. The Man Who Had Long Ago Bought an Eight-Day Clock. "You don't remember, I reckon," said he sour-faced man, putting his arms on the showcase, "that 1 bought a clock ot you twenty-five years ago?" "I /eertainly do not," answered the | elderly jeweler, "but I'll take your word for it if you say you did." "Well, T did. It was twenty-five years ago last Monday." "Remember what you paid for it?" "Yes. I paid you $10." * aver had to get it repaired?' a "It's a pretty good clock, then, isn't it?" 'Oh, yes. The clock's all right, but I've found out something about it that you didn't tell me™ "807" "Yes When, I bought it I asked you how often I'd have to wind it. You said once a week." : "Well?" "Well, I've just found out that it'll go eight days without winding." "Certainly! Most clock are eight day clocks. That's to allow for your forgetting to wind it sometimes." "I never forget to wind it, gir. Re- gularly every Monday morning for twenty-five years I've wound that clock. That makes fifty-two times a year. 1f I had known it would go eight days 1 would have woufdd it on the eighth day, and I would have had to wind it only forty-six times a 'year. It takes me about two minutes to wind it up. I've wasted twelve minutes every year on the thing. See! In twenty-five years I've put in 300 minutes, or five hours, the half of man's working day, stand- ing on a chair and winding up hat blamed old clock when it didn't need winding!' "Well," said the stupefied jeweler, "what do you want to do about it?' "Nothing, sir. I-only wanted you to know it, that's all. When you sell an eight-day clock to a man you ought to tell him it's an eight-day clock. Good day, sir!" Straightening himself up and pull- ing his hat brim down in front, he turned on his heel and stalked out of the store with the air of a man with a grouch who had freed his mind. A Good Enough Excuse. A memorable instance of presence of mind was the adventure of a cer. tain Desaugiers at the time of a popu- lar uprising in Paris, when the peo- ple took possession of the Tuileries. The hero of the ineident sagely acted upon the theory that a poor excuse is better than none and sometimes better than a better one would be. He was an inquisitive person, and, regardless of the danger, he hastened to the Tuileries at midnight to see what was going on, At the gate he was stopped by two revolutjonists of ominous appearance. "Wh¥ do you rot wear a cockade, citizen? Where is vour cockade?" they asked. A mob gathered about him and de- manded fiercely, "Citizen, where is your cockade?"' Desaugiers took off his hat, turned it around and around, lboked at it on all sides and then said in a tone of mild surprise: "Citizens, it is strange, very strange! I must have left it on my nightcap." : How to Learn. "The best way to study nature is to go right up to it." | "1 suppose so." "Oh, I know it. I was once disposed to doubt the industry of the ant, of which so much is said." "And you learned better?" "I did. I had a controversy with a naturalist over the question, and 1 thought I had him beaten until he gave me a demonstration." "Took you out and showed you the ints at work, did he?" "Well, not exactly that, but he took me along on one of his scientific ex- peditions and then maliciously pitch- ed my tent over an ant hill. By the time I discovered what was happening the conviction was forced upon me that ants are really and truly indus- trious. They are small, but they made me move, and some of them went right along with us to the next camping place." Not to Be Cheated. "This is a mighty dishonest world, you know," said an actor, '"'and it doesn't hurt to be suspicious of some people. 1 sympathize with the old negro who came to a watchmaker with the two hands of a clock. "'l want yer fer to fix up dese han's. Dey ain't kept ne correct time for mo' den six munfs.' " 'Well, where is the lock? de- manded the watchmaker. * 'Out to my cabin.' "*But 1 must have the clock.' " 'Didn't I tell yer dar's nuffin de matser wid the clock 'ceptin de han's? An' here dey be. You jess want de clock so you kin tinker it and charge me a big price. Gimme back dem han's."" How Much Gold Can a Man Carry? If a man of average muscular strength, a strong man and a very strong man were t8ld they might have ag inuch gold as they could carry a mile-- The average man might carry 100 pounds of gold a mile. He would have over $26,000 if he succeeded. The strong man could perhaps get to the end of his mile with 150 pounds of gold. He would have about | $39,750. The very strong man could possibly strugg:e to the end of his mile with 200 pounds. That would give him about $53,000. To Offset the Starch, Eleanor's mamma disapproved of her daughter making an entire meal of potatoes, because, she explained, there was so much starch in them. One day Eleanor was putting a great deal of hutter on her potatoes. Her ant remonstrated. . Eleanor said: "I have te, wys they are too stiff." "Why. Eleanor," said that lady in vrprise 4 Mamma "1 did not say so! 3 "Why, yes you did," she replied. "You said there was too much starch on them." whi -------- Great Clearing Sale. Prevost, Brock street, has made a t redaction' in prices in the or- der and ready-made clothing depart- ment. Also in the gents' furnishings = SALT ROCK. It Reveals to Us a Place Where Once thing d among he rocks deep down in the earth. What does rock salt tell va? red gravel and brown quartz. Germany once had a tolerably deep sea, not very salt, and the bot- tom surface of it shows coral reefs. There are signs in it of great fishes armed with strong teeth, enabling them to crush the shellfish upon which they fed. These swarmed below the sea in thousands, North England and the midlands have the Keuper beds, where the "seas" were hlways shal- low and where we can trace the marks of raindrop filterings and sun cracks. The rock salt is often in a layer 100 feet thick. It is supposed that one part of these seas was separ- ated from another part by a bar of sand, over which the waves toppled only now and then. In the cutoff sea evaporation went on through the ages, and of course a deposit of salt was formed, while the occasional overflow from outside replaced the water which had evap- orated. But really this is not known for certain. It is only clear rock salt that contains the minerals we find in our present sea water--bromine, iodine and magnesia. Generally this salt is not mixed with fragments of a different sub- stance, but is in columns of rough ¢rystals. Now and then there is found a layer of rock salt, with one of marl and shells under it, succeeded by rock salt again, showing that for a time a change had taken place. Upon the land near these shallow salt seas lived some singular animals, unlike those of our earth in the later centuries of its history. There were remarkable reptiles belonging to the frog or batracchian family. One of species was the size of a small ox, with peculiar complicated teeth and feet which left prints on the earth so exactly like the impressions of the human hand that geologists gave it a Latin name¢, meaning "the beast with the hand." Another strange creathre was a sort of lizard with a horny bill and feet resembling those of the duck. It had somewhat the appearance of a turtle, it is supposed. Then there were some warm blooded animals about the size of a rat, which had pouches in their eheeks and preyed upon small insects. ------------------------------ World's Largest Animal. A colossal skeleton in the Museum of Christchurch, New Zealand, is claimed to represent-the largest ani- mal in the world. This is the re. mains of a large specimen of the blue whale stranded on the coast of that country. This whale is probably the largest of all living animals. The length of the skeleton is 87 feet and the head alone is 21 feet. The weight of the bones is estimated at nine tons. This gigantic whale gets its name of blue whale from the dark bluish gray of its upper surface. The tinge of yellow on its lower part has led to the name "sulphur bottom," by which it is known on the western side of the Atlantic, An 'interesting fact is that the chief food of this gigantic animal is a small marine crustacean known to the whail- ers as "'kril."' Another species of the same shrimp-like group has been ob- tained in thousands from the stom- achs of mackerel caught on the Corn- ish coast. The nearly-related opos- sum shrimps found in enormous num- bers in the Greenland seas form the chief food of the common whale. Balzac's Poverty. An anecdote of Balzac shows the strange condition of poverty in which he lived even after he had won fame. He made a visit one evening to the house of one of his pet admirations, Rossini, where he found a party as- sembled and among them a great singer, then the rage, who had de- clined to favor the company. Igno- rant of this, Balzac begged her to sing a song. "For you? Why, of course, at once." And she did. "Who on earth can that be?" asked an aston- ished guest of Rossini. "Don't you know? It's M. de Balzae." "Oh, reas ly! Then no wonder." And all the morning Balzac hsa been trying to borrow a few francs. The Wit of Evarts. Once when twitted on his stall size by a statesman of the strenuous type the late William M. Evarts retorted, "That remark proves what I have al. ways asserted -- that in your eyes measures were more important than men." To another critic, who found fault with his habit of stringing out a whole paragraph without a break by the use of renthetical clauses, he said cheerfully, "I have noticed that criminals object to long sentences ™ The Falling Barometer. The rich man was enjoying his first cruise on his new yacht. Suddenly the captain came alt. He looked anxious. "What's the good word, captain?" the owner asked. "The barometer is falling rapidly," the skipper nervously ch "You must have hung it on a loose pail," the owner pleasantly si Some people believe that death ends all, but the numerous lives of great men to be found in bookstores tend to disprove the theory. Beware of the stranger who displays to make room for his fall and wan-) ter importations. a friendly interest in you; the chances are he has an axe to grind. is the most you can buy. will make a cup fragrant, nutritious flavor that is characteristic of Cowan's. Buyit uying. Queen Quality and E. P: Reed Ladies' Stamped Price $4.00 Oxfords, tn Tans, Black and Patent Colt. $2.98, Ladies $1.50 White Oanvas Dxfords, also a line of Blak Dongola Ox+ fords, Blucher Out, Patent Tip, worth $1.50 BOTH MARKED ...cw. 9% "All Our $3.00 Patent Leather, Tan and Viel Kid Oxfords: NOW $2.98: Chances For Men The Best American makes of Men's Oxfords, Blacks and Patents. All this season's $5.00 Shoes. NOW sesnenet $8.96: All Our Men's $4.00 Oxfords go in this big sale. Tans, Patent Colt and Calf, in all the new snappy, smart effects. NOW woven $3.98 Our Windows show tb big money making opportunity for Oxford wearers. Come in and examine the goods: J.H. SUTHERLAND & BRO, The Home of Good Shoe Making. NOW ticisiummrnsninions masismmemmsensssssinesonios in Tans, Ice Cream 60c. PER QUART. IMPERIAL MEASURE. Always on hand. Best in the city. Packed in bricks. A.J. REES, 166 Princess St. 5 oe 'Phone 58, : Fime Flys--Only Few Days Left. Before the closes of our Big Furniture Sale. LOOM AANA CARA 3 $3.50 for this big, easy, comfortable Rattan Rocker, only $3.50. Buy early and get the choice. James Reid's, The Leading Undertaker. Phone 147 for Up-to-date Ambulance iy CALLL0E0040000080800000008800000000000000004 Chocolates! We have a most complete line of Chocolates in ulk or in boxes. See Our Special Box Line at b §50c. Fruit of al] kinds arriving daily. R. H. Toye, ** "8.5 141 RNR EER EERIE ERE VIFIIIVIIIIIIINIIIIIIIIY Regular $3.50 and 4.00 Oxfords for Women in Pat. Colt Skin, Wine Calf, Tan Calf and Vici Kid. All new goods. FOR $2.50. See Our Window. eid & Charles. 1 ¢