H Ends in; Indigesti Use your teeth on your food or your stomach will suffer. Quick lunches, hurried eating, bolting food, are sure to end, sooner or later, in some form of indigestion, more or less troublesome, : Ud quickly relieve the distress caused by hurried eating: They act direct- ly on the stomach nerves and actu- ally help the food to digest and assimilate, They are particularly good for nervous dyspepsia, bloat- ing, hiccoughs, bitter taste in the mouth, and flatulence. With rea- sonable care in eating, Beecham's Pills will soon _ Put an End to Stomach Ills Sold Everywhere, in Boxes 25 cents. Fh 4 Like the sun, which dispels all darkness, the Pen-Angle trade- di 41Ye mark perses ALT) Be) TS ars, which enshrouds the buying of underwear. Pen-Angle garments fit best, wear RT Figs TTS a lt oh ERTS AUC COI FTYHIS Brooch is beautifully made in heavy 14k. gold. The pearls in the Maple Leaf are of a very fine quality, It is enclosed in a handsome velvet lined case--and is sent post. paid to any address in Canada-- except the Yukon --upon receipt of $5.00--order by the number 308. SEND FOR CATALOGUE/R Our handsomely illustrated 144 page cata~ logue of Diamonds, Jewelry, Silvérware, Leather, Arts Goods and Novelties, free upon request. RYRIE BROS. Limited 134-138 Yonge Street TORONTO Has stoves to sell, but nobody * can give that value that we can. We have all kinds, cheap for cash. * We have all kindsoof House Fur-g nishings, from the lowest grades ; to the most beautiful Antique Furniture. 1 Don't fail to' come and see our stock before you buy elsewhere. L. Lesses, Cor; Princess and Chatham Sts. Kingston: Ont: BOYS FROM THE "PLOW SECURE MANY OF THE WORLD'S BIG PRIZES. City Boys' Idea of Success is to be in Pos- | session of Money For a Good Time--The | Country Youth Starts in to do Things. Why is it that so many of the big prizes of the world are won by country boys? Why have so many,of the big things that have been turned out m the world's workshop been first dreamed of by boys leaning over plow handles or sweeping out country stores or working in country printing offices or wondering about things in general in quiet lanes and bush lots? Why is it? In the first place, the country boy sees and learns real life, while the city boy | sees and learns artificial life. The country boy is brought up in a workshop and among the big, natural forces at the bottom of things. The city boy is brought up in a parlor or factory of some kind--all city work or busi- ness being like factory work--and in seri- ous things has no knowledge of anything but a superficial understanding of finished pro- ducts. The ambitious city boy aims to earn money and position. The ambitious country boy aims to make something--to do something. But the country boy's advantage goes further. His circumstances lead him, force him, to re- flection. If he is stupid and stolid, he will rumigate. look out for him. He will dream dreams al- together beyond the average city boy's ex- perience; and after a while will probably find his way to 4pe city to build something sub- stantial on dreams. Suppose it is, a fine Saturday in early sum- mer, and that a group of small boys in a city * and a group of small boys in the country start out to make the most of the day. The country lads steal off to the bush, to the "crick," to one of a hundred places they know, to follow a hundred moré or less mysterious pursuits, The city boys take to the streets or to a vacant lot. But there is no romance Or mystery or freedom there. For them there are no robber caves, no hunts-for wild things i woods or river, ne pets to care for and study, no rugged: self-invented games that call for initiative and stimulate fancy, no hours spent in simply "wondering" about things in open places under the open sky. These days boys in all American cities are spending a whole lot of time, and incidentally doing a lot of damage, gathering horse-chestnuts. A country boy would call this foolish, for the nuts are useless, He is perhaps as destructive i as the city boy, but when he smashes a tree, { it is a beech or butternut or a fruit tree. For, although the country boy collects a lot of stuff which to his elders appears to be trash, he rarely gathers anything which is. noi to himself useful. The city boy spends too much time gather- ing metaphorical horse chestnuts--pretty, shin- ing things that are useless, and some things : not even pretty. As he sheds his knicker- Lockers, he gathers a fine crop of slang phrases and sporting and theatrical knowledge. But smart as he thinks himself, he knows remarkably little about the real things of life, His idea of success is to be in possession of money enough to "have a good time." The country boy likes to have a good time too, but he knows the difference between essentials and non-essentials, and he starts in, at the first chance, to do real things and be some- body, not merely to look like somebody. It is not the city boy's fault, but his misfortune, that he is at,a disadvantage with the country boy. A boy can't very well dream of future conquests in business or in art in. a little ; backyard or 'a vacant lot or 'ina noisy street: ! Some boys have done this no doubt. But the i practict is far easier when one can lean on a plow handle. And in youth the qualities that make for success are more readily developed by teaming railway ties in dead earnest, with thoughts of future advancement, than in working in a comfortable city office with no thought or desire more serious than one which concerns 'hustling home as 'soon as. the place closes, to get ready to take one's best girl to the latest musical comedy. | Is a Sane Organization. | + The Women's Clwistian Temperance Union, { which has a great strength in Canada, has been holding its. annual session at Denver, Colorado, and it'is pleasant to read in a daily { newspaper's editorial column the kindest of | words regarding it, since we all, in or out of the Anglican Church, should bé inferested in moral reform. ="It has forty departments of work, but its greatest interest is in the | prohibition cause. It is a pioneer temperance body. It has passed through the baptism of | fire. Tt has been called nearly every name | that ingenious opponents could apply to it, not the most disrespectful of which is that of "a society of meddlesome grandmothers." It _ has weathered the storm of criticism and abuse and has grown steadily in influence and power. It is without any exception the best organized and most effective working body of prohibitionists in the world. Its remarkable success has been in a large measure due to a sane policy of reform work. It has avoided both extremes for so many years that it is one of the best evidences of woman's ca- pacity the world has yet had. Sane advocacy of a sane cause is always to be commended. Hysteria gets us nowhere, unless it be to the sick bed. There are too many pyohibitionists who are stumbling blocks rather than stepping stones in the path of progress. There is too much tendency, particularly on the part of the prohibition press, towards absurdity. The dictionary is thumbed black in the search for sizzling adjectives that prove nothing. . The truth about the liquot business is sufficiently damning." The Real Parties to Blame. It cannot be too strongly urgedithat in deal- {ing with neglected children, ejpecially those guilty of offences against the Taw, it is not the children but the parents or guardians who should be held responsible. A child brought up in ignorance--its faults uncorrected and its better promptings unencouraged--is sure to be a source of future trouble, and the pym- ishment is visited on its unfortunate head iin- stead of on those who neglected their duty and ignored their responsibility. There is a greater cruelty to a child than physical ill- treatment--the cruelty to the mind and heart, that Jeaves it in moral destitution and robs it of its high purpose and mission in life. dt is cruelty to a child to expose it unnecessarily to contact or association with vice or anything that defiles or contaminates. It is cruelty to deprive it of education-- of a moral as well as secular kind--or to shut it out from those happy anticipations and pleasures which are the right and heritage of childhood. But if he has imaginatién=--then Preachers Can't Support Wife and Family on Small Salaries. Bishop Williard Francis Mallalieu, of the Methodist Episcopal Church, 1s:opposed to the diminutive salaries that cdhgregations able to do better .sometimes pay their pastor. "I once knew an excellent young man," said he. "He was in the church, just married; on a small salary, but contented and happy. Twelve or fifteen years went by. I had Igpt sight of the young minister--forgetting him, as we all do sometimes--when 1 met him, dressed well, but not clerically, We shook hands. He said he was doing excellently. said. "*Oh,' he said, 'no church--the wholesale hat business.' ; "But why did you leave the church? 1 asked. x " 'For several reasons,' said he. "And what, said I, 'were they? "+A wife, he answered, 'and six children." No one 1s tdhder of a good story or can tell one with greater effect than Dr. Clifford, who will lead the Nonconformist Emergency League against the Lords, should necessity arise. His father and mother worked in a Lancashire lace factory, and when the preach- er was ten years old he, too, entered the fac- tory, and often worked twelve or fourteen hours at a stretch. He relates how a piece of new machinery s being hoisted to the top room of the factory; the rope broke and the machinery got a damaging fall. "Well, I never!" exclaimed the manager. "To think I've hoisted with that rope for fifteen years and nowt never happened!" Former President Patton, of Princeton Uni- versity, once preached upon faith at Fifth Avenue Collegiate church. He spoke of the blind faith of the client who puts himself at the mercy of a lawyer in preparing an action for trial, and the confidence of the sick in entrusting themselves to the physician. *A case of blind faith," said he. "The doctor writes out a prescription. Oftener than not you can not read it; you don't know what it is. He tells you to take it. 'Yours not to reason why, yours but to do-and die." Whether or not Dr. Patton meant it, there was a refreshing ripple throughout the con- gregation. A young preacher, staying at a clergy house, was in the habit of retiring to his room for an hour or more each day to practice pul- pit oratory. At such times he filled the house with sounds of fervor and pathos, apd emptied it of most everything else. Philips Brooks chanced to be 'visiting a friend in this house one day when the budding orator was holding forth. "Gracious me!" exclaimed the Bishop, starting up in assumed terror, "Pray, what might that be?" : "Sit 'down, Bishop," his friend replied, "That's only young D---- practicing what he preaches." At a meeting of the Woman's Foreigh Missionary Society in a large city .church a discussion arose among the members present as to the race of people that inhabited a far- away land, Some insisted thatgthey were not a man-eating people; others that they were known to be cannibals. However, the question was finally decided by a minister's widow: "I beg pardon for interrupting, Mrs, Chair- man, but I can assure you that they are can- nibals. My husband was a missionary there and they ate him." An AlabSima negro became possessed of a seedy and forlorn-looking dog, to which he assigned 'the name "Moreover." "Jefferson," he was asked, "how did you hit upon such a name as 'Moreover' for the dog?" "I gits it outen de Bible," he replied. "The Bible?" "Sure, sah. Doan' yo 'member where it says, 'When Lazarus lay at de rich man's gate, moreover, de dog, come an' lick his sores'? . Small Nettie, seeing some large insects on the back porch, asked what they were, and was told they were ants. The next morning she discovered a number of small ants among the large ones, and exclaimed: "Oh, mamma, the aunts have bringed their little nieces with them to-day!" The Pope's Personal Life. Delineator. k._ In his apartments in the Vatican the Pope has a piano and a pianola. These are inno- vations in which he finds great relief and solace from the weighty cares under which he struggles. He has always been particular- ly fond of his own favorite organist at St. Peter's, for whose education he himself paid, the Abbe Perosi. The world knows well that it was the present Pope who restored to the Roman . Catholic Church the old Gregorian music, which of recent generations had fallen into disuse. The violin is also a favorite in- strument of the Pope; in his younger days he was considered a considerable master of the bow. . It is a true story that when Cardinal Sarto journeyed from Venice to Rome to take part in the conclave to elect a Pope, following the death of Leo XIII, that he bought a return- trip ticket. He, at least, had never dreamed that of all the college of cardinals, many of whom are eminent in scholarship and learp- ing, others skilled in the worldly diplomacy essential to the Head of the Church, that he of all these would be chosen for that high office. When the seventh ballot of that famous conclave was cast and Cardinal Sarto was de- clared the Pope-elect, the old Patriarch of Venice was so overcome with emotion that he fell back in a half swoon and restoratives were necessary. . Cities of Decaying Nation. Teheran, Persia's capital, is one of the least interesting cities of that ancient land. The houses are mean, the streets narrow and dirty, and even the palace of the shah is not a thing of beauty. It has no history worth mention- ing and is only redeemed by the birth of Haroun-al-Raschid in a neighboring village. Its importance comes from the presence of the court, but it undergoes a sad decadence in summer, when the unhealthful climate driv- es the greater part of the population to more sanitary places, Ispahan, the former capital, is far different. That city was once girdled by x wall of twenty-four miles, and Shah Abbas in the six- teenth century loaded it with magnificence. It contains splendid mosques and ancient pal- aces which appeal to the imagination. But Ispahan, too, has fallen upon evil days. Hous- es, bazaars, mosques; palaces, whole streets, writes a traveller, are in total abandonment: AE N01 " 'What church? I} 8, WAKE tire. A SAD CONDITION OF AFFAIRS IN NEW YORK CITY. Words That Cannot be Read Without a Feel- ing Akin to Shame--The Gospel of Chivalry Needs to be Preached Over Again. After an attempt at suicide by a Canadian girl in New York, was found a letter address- ed to'her mother, which she had not despatch- ed. It was an appeal for money to carry her home, a theatrical venture upon which she had entered having failed. The concluding sentences were: "New York is a bad place for a girl who has no money. A girl dare not make friends with anybody." Few can read the words without a feeling akin to shame. Migs Mary Kingsley, Miss Bird, and other women travellers have journeyed unprotected and unmolested amongst the uncivilized races of tHe earth, In the greatest, wealthiest and most highly developed community in the west- ern world a girl in dire need "dare not make friends with anybody." The pity is that in such a community there would be hundreds of good women, yes and of good men, who, if they were aware of a human soul at their®oors; crushed with despondency, would" hasten with their aid, and think it a privilege to help the sunken one out of the depths. But how are they to be described? True hearts bear no outward symbol; silk hats and silk dresses convey no assurance of honor or kindness. Indeed if a needy girl were to make an appeal to a stranger she would be safer to stop the man with his dinner pail and the grime of toil on his hands and face. He might not be in a position to do much for her, but he would give her honest advice, and if he had little money to help he would have still less to harm. Everyone has his particular remedy for the ills of the world, but assuredly the gospel of chivalry among men woutd--tessen---some of them. If eighty out of a hundred men were as eager to be helpful as their worser nature too often prompts them to be hurtful, what oceans of sorrow and shame would be banish- ed from the world! Could there be a greater commentary on the civilization of a Christian city than the words of a girl, desperate to the verge of self-destruction: "A girl dare not make friends with anybody." Perhaps it will be conceded that Church Life was doing a public service in exposing the hard-hearted- ness of the ¥Y.W.C.A. of New York towards friendless girls. Sports Have Degrading Features. "A man cannot be an athlete and a decent man," stated J. M. Robinson, of hdunlton, at the Provinc'al Sunday School Convention, Toronto. "The minute we admit the athletic spirit to enter our Sunday school we lower its moral tone. I make a distinction between athletics and physical culture as given by pub- lic school teachers and in Y.M.C.A. gymnasi- ums, But I haye seen so many young fellows dragged into the mire through participation in athletic games that I am convinced that our Sunday schools have no business with them whatever." In reply J. Howard Crocker claims that half the missionaries in foreign fields were the best of sathletes 'while at college. Athletes breed a spirit of manliness and conception of honor and duty that make positively the best men for religious purposes. "Not only as a priest, but as a citizen, I forbid this disgraceful exhibition. .Stop right where you are." This said Rev. John J. Pres- ton, of St. Lawrence Roman Catholic church, in Weehawken, near New York, in the rooms of the Plymouth. Athletic Club, into_which he forced an entrance while a prize fight was in progress. As the priest reached the ringside, a "pugilist; known as "The Dixie Kid," was leaning, battered and exhausted, against the ropes. Rushing at him was Charles Sieger, his victorious opponent: Men in tthe crowd were calling to Sieger to "go in and finish him." "Get out of here, all of you," the priest said, "You boys, fifteen and sixteen years old, ought to be ashamed of yourselves; but you men who permit boys to see brutal fights like this 'should be more ashamed. Get out." Fighters, officials and spectators took the priest's advice and in less than three minutes _| the hall was empty. An Adamless Eden at Last. No man will be allowed to own a share of stock or a rod of land or to hold office in the industrial colony about to be started in Western Australia by a number of British wo- men, and which will be situafed within forty miles of Albany on a great rock facing the sea. The land has been secured from the government as a freehold property by Mrs. Emily Crawford, president of the household ers' league; Miss Cooke, an expert lady gar- dener, now chief of the women's agricultural college established by Mrs Martin in Wor- cestershire; Miss Hetty Sawyer, M.D, a suc- cessful London medical practitioner, and others. The moving spirit is Mrs. Crawford, a novelist and artist, and wealthy. Much of the capital is being supplied by Mrs. Martin, better known in America as Victoria Wood- hull, the famous advocate of woman's rights, who married the late John Biddulph Martin and settled in England. Mrs. Crawford states: "It is solely a question of the parliamefitary vote. There is no security in England for women's financial enterprise. We pitch our tents in Australia because there women have the franchise. Consequently, they have pro- tection and the advantage it affords." ------------------------ Ingenious Theory Shattered. Lately the press gave currency to an article of the Jewish World regarding the ages of the patriarchs, claiming that in the earliest times the month--the period of the moon's circle, was called a year; Methuselah's age 969, was cut down to 7834 years, and that of 'Adam's 930 to 75%. Now, supposing 'this to be correct, we will have to accept the same for other events of the same period. Seth would be only eight years and nine months old when his son Enos' was born. Enoch would only be five years and five months old when his son Methuselah was born; Selah 2% years when his son Eber was born; Nabor 2 years and 5 months when his son Terah was born; Terah five years and ten months old when his son Abram was born. Nahor would be a grandfather at the age of eight years and three months. Cain and Abel were grown up young men. But supposing they were only lads between 15-and 16 when Cain murdered Abel, they must have been born five years before their father for he could: then be only ten years old on the scale of the Jewish World. "FRIENDS, Working Out Same Principle as the Canadian |. WOMEN'S CLUBS OF MEMPHIS. National Council of Women. Delineator. . Memphis (Tenn) women women's clubs tan do. Co-pperation is the new watchword with these organizations throughout the country. At a gathering of the clubs at Memphis three thousand: people were present. Many had to be turned away from the Lyceum Theatre, where the meet. ing was held. Mrs. Virginia Frazer Boyle, the writer, presided. Fifty-three organizations were represented. As Bishop Gailor, (Angli- can), rose he said, "The ethical ideals of a nation will never be higher than the ethical ideals of its women." This served as the key- note of the meeting. The Memphis Housekeepers' Club is typical of the organizations of that city. It gave the city its first playgrounds, seven in number. It instituted the Annual Cleaning Day, and introduced domestic science into the public schools. It so stirred up the city fathers that a Civic Progress League was organized. Through its efforts shade trees 4re being planted over the city, and money raised for a tuberculosis hospital. = Its latest work,is the establishing of hygienic family laundries in every ward of the city. Each of the fifty-three clubs had progress and good work to report. The Béethoven Club of Memphis, an organ- ization of women, with 408 members, aims at musical culture for the whole city. It has established a permanent symphony orchestra and annually gives four concerts, for which artists of world-wide renown are brought. Then there are monthly concerts by club members. There is a philanthropic depart- ment, through which each month a concert is provided for some charitable institution. Set- tlement work is conducted through a corps of volunteer music teachers. The Junior Bee- thoven Department has seventy-five yonig musicians iff training for club work. The Christmas Club of Memphis was or- ganized to provide holiday cheer for orphans and others in need. One December it raised $1,612 and another year $1,785. They dis- tribute each year about 700 baskets. » have proven what Doing Justice to Punch. The Record of Philadelphia lately tqld a story of Archbishop Ryan of that city, illus- trative of his fondness for children. Seeing a small boy anxious to get at the bell-pull of a house, and believing the youngster wanted to get in, the archbishop stepped to the rescue of the lad and sent a "clanging summons through the house." As he looked down the boy exclaimed, "Now, let's scoot; 1 was play- ing tricks." It's a good story, but it originat- ed in Punch about 1875, with a fine drawing by Charles Keene over the dialogue. But the good archbishop need not feel that he "has been alone put upon by friends, for two years ago a story was current about Rev. Funk, of Funk & Wagnalls, to the effect that when a kid he was extremely smart. One Sab- bath, when at Sunday school, the superintend- ent asked him, "What commandment did Cain break when he killed Abel?" And the youth- ful Funk replied, "Please, sir, there wasn't any commandments then". However, this joke was published in Punch away back in the '60s, about an Englishman and had a drawing about it either by John Leech or Charles Keene, Ayelr ago a stofy circulated in Washing- ton, saying that Mr. Taft was such a polite man that, when 'a street car was full and he was seated, he got up, doffed his hat, "and gave two ladies a seat" This is also an old Punch joke of Clarles Keene's. In Punch a very stout lady is standing at the omnibus steps and the conductor is bawling inside, "Will two gentlemen get up and give a lady a seat?" Evangeline Booth's' Policy. Evangeline Booths policy in the Salvation Army is always to meet the greatest need. Upon any one's distributing the charity of the public there rests the responsibility of seeing it worthily bestowed. Therefore, in- vestigation practically éliminating the possi- bility of imposture is an especial satisfaction. For instance, at Christmas time, when the Army feeds tens of thousands. in America, not one ticket is given away without the family being visited and its needs verified. She has two other rules: "To make the smallest amount go the longest way. Economy has been our principle both perforce and by choice. Our aim is to make each gift méet some need and to reduce the dost of fransit from donor to recipient to a minimum. This method is only possible by the officers being almoners; their expneses he. ing simply such as will cover their bare sub- sistence. "To rob charity of its greatest foe--the risk of pauperization. It has dlways beed my bélief that -a gift that does not detract from a man's self-respect is worth double its value. The few cents paid for a garment in ouf s&e- ond-hand stores, the bit of honest toil for food and bed in our Industrial Homes, or the garment made or cleansed in our. Rescue workroom or laundry, all fight for the reten- tion of this principle." False Hair Has Been Banned. Rev. Percy Stickney Grant, rector of the Church of the Ascension, New York city, has won his fight against rats and puffs and all forms of artificial hair upon the members of the choir of his church. The matter was broached by the rector a year ago as a sug- gestion. No effect was visible. On Friday when the choir was getting into vestments for the Ciyde Fitch funeral, Henry Warren, choirmaster, issued an order, prompted by Mr. Grant. Whatever hair had not accrued in the ordinary. course of events simply had to come off if the women wanted to stay in that ir. Of course, all wanted to stay, so righ ere in the dressing room hair began to fly and within a few minutes every one of the fluffy heads was as sleek as the most straight laced could wish. On Sunday the order was re- peated and must be obeyed right along. A Woman and her Names. Site began as Elizabeth Bird, in Harrison County, Ky. and ventured from the home nest when she married Bud Martin. When Mr. Martin died she married Edward Crow, a farmer. When the time came to change nests Khe allied herseli 'with- William Robin and lived happily until the matrimonial season of Mrs. Robin again rolled along., Then David Buzzard, a widower, more attractive that his name would indicate, appeared, and Mrs, Robin became Mrs. Buzzard. Into the Buz- zard roost Mrs. Buzzard carried one little One little Buzzard was already there to wel- Martin, two little Crows and one little Et come the other birds, oe ~ tion of the liver and bowels Dr. A. W. Chase's Kidney & Liver. Pills Bo BT 12 Splat, Ky EE vely cure liver ness, paint, and kidney disease. or Fimanson, 25 cts, hn, 8 bax. at all deslea Insist on getting what you ask forg Heart 'Trouble Cured. Through one cause or another a la majority of the people are troubled wi some form of heart trouble. The system becomes run down, the heart palpitates, you have weak and dizzy spells, a smothering feeling, cold clammy hands and feet, shortness of breath, sensation of pins and needles, rush of blood to the head, ete. : Wherever there are sickly people with weak hearts Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills will be found an effective medicine. 44444444 Ms. Wm Elliott, + 4 Angus, Ont., writes. + Heart 4 "It is with the great- 4 Trouble 4 est of pleasure I write 4 Cured. <4 you stating the bene- «4 _fit 1 have received by 44444444 using Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills. 1 suffered greatly from heart trouble, weak- ness: and smithering spells. 1 used a great deal of doctors' medicines but re- ceived no benefit, A friend advised me to buy a box of your pills, which 1 did, and soon found great relief. 1 highly reeom- mend these pills to anyone anitang from heart trouble." Price, 50 cents per box or 3 boxes for $1.25 at all dealers, or mailed direct on reveipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. "GOOD GROWING WEATHER." When the New Sealp Antiseptic is Used. A good head of hair is as much "crown of glory," for man as it is for woman, notwithstanding all the poetry on the subject applied to the female sex exclusively, In the season when flies bite the bald-headed man ean sympathize with = the Egyptians, who were so sorely plagued on ac count of the children of Israel. Why not try Newbro's Herpicide ? Others have been benefited and are loud in its praise. It cleanses the scalp, kills the germ at the root of the hair and by keeping the scalp sweet, pure and wholesome, the hair is bound to grow as nature intended, regardless of the temperature. Try it and be convinced. Sold by leading druggists. Send 10p. in stamps for sample to the Herpicide Co., Detroit, Mich. $1 bottles guaran: teed. G. W. Mahood, special agent. MICHEST _FOO-VALUE. Eppe's Cocos is a treat to Children, A Sustenant to the Worker, ' A Boon to the Thrifty Housewife, ' EFPES S BREAKFAST SUPPER a * RISE OF THE United-Empire Loyalists An Informing Sketch of Ameri can History, Valuable for Librar- ies and Research. By VISCOUNT DE FRONSAC. Price, 50e. Address British Whig, Kingston.