Daily British Whig (1850), 20 Nov 1909, p. 5

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THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1909. Just Published THE FOREIGNER A TALE OF THE SASKATCHUWAN BY : RALPH CONNOR : Author of "The Sky Pilot" and "The garry." The greatest interest in the book-reading world this year centres around Ralph Connor's New Book, "THE FOREIGNER." The advance sales in Great Britain, United States and Canada have reached ecedented proportions. THE FOREIGNER will be a leading gift book for the holidays. For sale by " . R. UGLOW & COMPANY, 141 PRINCESS STREET. Man From Glen- | ming, Miss Eva Rogers, Miss Lillian nent, Miss Leta Carson, Miss hath Gold in ; 3 = Bo LL Jean Duff. Buwiiight | Tells About a Lot of Things in Fo General. | Newman & Shaw's "special." | Blue and Red Grapes, Crawford. - ee a | J. B. Mcintyre, Yarmouth, Ont., Mrs. Joseph Hiscock, William street; |buriied to death in his house. entertained at a large tea, on Thurs- | Rjornstjerne Bjornson, the Norwegian day. Her rooms were very prettily | author, is dangerously ill in Pans. decorated with' white and yellow chry- | Edward Crump was caught in a santhemums, and the guests were | shaft at the Penman mills at Paris, placed at quartette tables, refreshments | Ont., and killed. being dispenséd to them by Miss | Keep in mind the great jubilee ban- Florence and Miss Grace Hiscock, Miss [quet. Fowl supper served from 6 to 8 Anna Hiscock and Miss Dafoe. Among |p.m. Tickets, 35ec. te were: Mrs. C. A. Sykes, Mrs. | George Waller, newsboy on the Soo . E. Sparks, Mrs. J. F. Sparks, Mrs. | train, arrested for stealing $20 from a James Massie, Mrs. I. G. Pogart, Mrs. | a sleeping passenger. A. BR. B. Williamson, Mrs. Oliver | *Talcum and Toilet Powders." I . 2 a British Whig's Special Music Offer "My Bowry Themght 1s OF You "My Every Thought is of ==%=, wl You" -is a high class ballad. The words are by Boston's most popular Tenor Singer, Mr. Charles S. Chapman, the music is by Mr. C. E. Mac- Arthur, musical director of the Gingerbread Company. There are two verses and a chorus to this song. It is not a difficult song to sing. WHIG'S MUSIC COUPON NOVEMBER 20.--"MY EVEPY THOUGHT IS OF YOU.' City or Town Province To obtain the sheet music above, fill out the coupon and en- close ten cents in stamps or coin. Address Music Department, British whig, Kingston. NEW CORSETS : NEW COSTUMES AlF the leading styles in La Deese, A La Grace and D. & A. Corsets are here from 50c to $2.50 New Costumes In Garnet, Taupe, Green and Navy. As these cannot be re- peated be-in-time. Underskirts New Silk Skirts, New Moire Skirts, New Heatherbloom Skirts, | White Flannelette Skirts, David M. Spence, The Leading Millinery Store. AUTHORIZED CAPITAL $350,000.00 THE ONTARIO GONSOLIDATED MINES, LINTED PAR VALUE OF SHARES 25¢c EACH do Acres in the richest part of Cobalt, the world's most famous Silver ield. 4 Acres prospected, showing 6 well defined calcite Veins. Shaft 50 .deet. deep and all necessary buildings on property. Write for prospectus, maps and special letter. Applications filled in order of receipt. For further particulars, apply MERSON & CO., Members Standard Stock and Mining Exchange, to, Canada for stock 16 King St. West, Toron- Social Note From Atchison. things who Atchison Globe. know how an The engagement of Hiram Hardesty { about. and Miss Suzette Snarley is announc- It occurred in Miss Snarley's par- | lor. The young lady are. alwavs curious to engagement 1s brought ---------- Hali-price sale to-night was dressed in ron's, winter coats and suits black, and wore no ornaments. She | Cape Vincent, N.Y., is hoping that did not look unusually pretty, and congress will vote 872,000 to complete what caused the young man's mental |the breakwater there. The needs of aberration §s not known. Neither one | this breakwater have been demonstra- could remember exactly, what wags ted almost daily throughout the sea- suid, and both admitted it- was ot To make it as efficient as it the first time he kissed her. We print {should be it ought "to be lengthened the details . for" the romantic young {to 1,600 feet gg ed at Wald- | son Coins The Money You Save Saves You from worry--want--debt--humiliation. A comfortable Bank Account gives one an easy mind, self-confidence, and the power to take advantage of every opportunity that comes to better one's position. = STANDARD BANK OF CANADA gives Savings Depositors, whether their accounts be large 'or small, most courteous service, Make a beginning at once with a Deposit of One Dollar or move, in our Savings Department, 73 KINGSTON BRANCH, Rn E. RICHARDSON, Manager, Cor. Princess and Bagot Streets, Established 1873 77 Branches 4 Cliff, Mrs, George Mills, Mrs. J. Jen- Chown, Mrs. A. P. Chown, Mrs. Fred- | pays to buy them at Gibson's Red erick Chown, Mrs. T. F. Harrison, | Cross Drug Store. Mrs. John Gaskin, Mrs. L. T. Best,| There was an £100,000 loss by Mrs. Samuel Sutherland, Mrs. W. J.| and water at the Renton, Mrs. J. Hughes, Mrs. W. [ordnance station, Ottawa. Glidden, Mrs. R. F. Greenlees, Mrs. |, Apples and Grapes, J. Crawford. E. C. Hiscock, Mrs. William Craig, | Samuel Gompers clected president of Mrs. D. A. Cays, Mry. J..Smith, Mrs. | the American Foderation of Labor and Charles Smith, * Mr4 Robert Meek, |for tho twenty-cighth time. Mrs. J. M. Elliott, Mrs. R. Gowdy, | At the Hamilton police Mrs. Robert McKelvey, Mrs. James 15. |George Travers was sentenced to Reid, Ms. George Nicol, Mrs. T.|years in penitentiary for forgery. Milo, Mrs. T. Rogers, Mrs. George | Blue and Red Grapes, Crawford. Neither the C.P.R. or G.T.R. will advertise the Montreal winter carnival and reduced rajes will not be granted. Phrography stamped wood, cheapest in town, at Best's. Toronto ix asked to assist in pre- venting an alleged threatened increase in the prige of cement following the recent merger. Apples and Grapes, The Reid Wrecking nia, has received the coutract for re- leasing the steamer James B. Hoyt, athore at Outer Island. "Nyal's Cod Liver Oil" and Nyal's Pinol Cough Syrup. Buy them at Gibson's Red Cross Drug Store. Miss Virginia Gobeil is on (rial at Montreal for manslaughter in connec- tion with the death of James O'Neill, ('oaticook, in her sanitarium, Blue and Red Grapes, Crawford. Dr. John Barr, M.P., for Dufferin, was found dead in his bed in the Cecil hotel, Ottawa. Heart failure is given as the cause. Dr. Barr was about pixty years of age. "Rubber Sponges" from 50e. to £2.50, real beauties. Ask to see them at Gibson's Red Cross Drug Store. The body of Alired Hastings was found cold in death just north of the steps leading up to the Franklin house barroom, at Port Stanley, Ont., on Saturday morning. Keeley's $1salarm clocks are sellers. Put your money into an invéétment in Kingston property that will yield a certain and steady income. McCann has something he would like to show you, Blue and Red Grapes, Crawford. The Knights of Columbus, Quebec, have sold their handsome. quarters to a syndicate of medical men, who in- tend establishing a private hospital, the price paid being $19,000. An Italian was blown to pieces and three other men hurled a great dis- tance by the prematuré explosion of a blast on the excavation for the new reservoir at Vancouver. Are free from all crude and irrita- fing matter. Concentrated medicine only. Carter's Little Liver Pills. Very fire headquarters' court, five kin, Mrs. T. Jenkin and Miss Jenkin. Mrs. Huntingdon Simpson, who was present, sang twice, very delightfully, Miss Daisy Chown play- ing her accompaniment. aa "> > Miss Lily Norton-Taylor was hostess at a bridge party, at the Couatry Club, on Wednesday cvening, when there were six tables in play, and the prizes were won by Mrs. Iva Martin, Miss Franees Sullivan and Mrs. J. P. Shine. The first received a brass fern pot, the second a cut glass vase, and the third a dainty little tie. The oth- er players were Mrs. T. D. R. Hem- ming, Mrs. Frederick Brownfield, Mrs. John Bell Carruthers, Mrs. Walter Macnee, Mrs. Francis Maence, Mrs. | Ramsay Duff, Mrs. James Gildersleeve, Mrs. James Cappon, Mrs. Alan Pal mer, Mrs. A. de Mowbray Bell, Mrs. Campbell Strange, Mrs. Jeremy Tay- Mrs. Arthur Flower Marsh, Mrs, | Percy Stevenson, Mrs. W. R. Givens, Miss Mary Hora, Miss Eleanor Mac- |donell, Miss Lois Saunders, Miss Bes- {sie Smythe, Miss Lettice Tandy, and Miss Carrie Waldron. - - -» There was a supper party, at the barracks, after the theatre, on Thurs- day night, those present including Colonel and Mrs. H. FE. Burstall, Major and Mrs. Norman Leslie, Major anf Mrs. Henri Panct, Captain and Mrs. Alan Palmer, Miss Dorothy Brownfield, Miss Loretta Swift, Miss Marie Carruthers and Mr. P. G. C Campbell. Susie J. Crawford. company, Sar- | lor, We All those who were up on the mili- tary list, for election to the Badmin- ton Club, were successful at the polls on Wednesday. Those on the civic list 1% ho are now enrolled in the. club mem- bership are Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Cun- ningham, Dr. and Myrs.-J. J. Harty, Miss Flsio 'Pense, Miss Eva Rogers, Professor Bayne, Professor Ferguson, and Mr. George Richardson. - we Professor Ferguson, Miss Ferguson | and Miss Nina Ferguson'are now set- tled in 251 University avenue (corner | small; very easy to take; no pain, no of Johnson), and -the Misses Fergu- griping, no purging: Try them. son will receive on Fridays. A very important transaction in asbestos mines took place a few days ago, when A. A. Normandin, mine owner, purchased for himself and a few Montreal capitalists, a very valuable asbestos mine at East Broughton, Que, wee we Mrs. William C. Way will receive at her new home, corner Mack and Albert streets, on the second and fourth Fri- days of each month. > - "> > There will be a "Dutch treat' din- jes at the Country Club to-night, with Captain and Mrs. Alan Palmer as the chaperones. ---- -------- LONG CHASE AFTER THIEF - > "oe Mrs. David Murray, Frontenac street, was hostess at a most enjoyable tea on Friday afternoon. 'The affair was quite large. Crossed the Bonder--Con- stable Wants His Pay. John Lynch, a county constable fro Palmerston, landed in the city, Saturday morning, after a chase of nearly 200 miles after a thief named Albert Rankine, a old Scotch immigrant. The man com- fitted three thefts in Palmerston, stealing $22 from one man, a 10 revolver from another, and a gold watch chain from another. The case was repoitéd to Justice of the Peace. Donaldson, who issued a warrant and Constable Lynch started out on his trail. He followed the man for about three weeks all over the country, the chase ending in.Gananoque a few weeks ago, when the prisoner crossed the border; into the United States. What worries the constable is 'the fact that he paid his own expenses during the entire trip, and, now, when he failed to land his man, the people are not very anxious to pay him for his services. He came to the city to see if Crown Attorney Whiting could Mrs. W. K. T. Smellic is home |not do something for him. azain at "Tho Bellvue," from her | visit in Hawkesbury. She will reeeive for the first time on Thursday next. - ad > > . Mrs. George Creeggan, who has been vigitine her son, tha Rev. Al H. Crecggan, in Deseronto, is back in town, and being warmly welcomed. | Her granddaughter, Miss Annie Creeggan, is with her. Mrs. David Heild, who has been visiting Dr. and Mrs. R..V. Rogers, Barrio street, is now with Mrs. James McParland, Emily strect. The Dean of Ontario and Mrs. KE. Bidwellware home from Toronto. Miss Thorne, of Cobalt, is the guest of Mrs. James Losslie, William street, and will be here for a fow days. Miss Molly Cartwright, spending a week in Cambridge, Mass. 'is expected in Ottawa to-day. Who - oe Mixs Lillian 'Mowat's dance at (Queen's residence, is the event for this afternoon. - > - » Mise Mabel Lloyd, Gananoque, came up for the Queen's dance, and is stay- ing with Miss Ruby Donnelly, Univers sity avenue. Mrs. Solmed and Miss Dora Solmes, of Picton, are in town Mrs. D. D. Young, King streot, is komo from the west, She stayed Toronto on hor way down. Mrs. Fred McGachen, of Orillia, who las been down at Saranac Lake, pay: ing a visit to Miss Kathleen Kirkpat rick, who is already well on the mend, is in town with Mrs. Charles Kirkpatrick, Frontenac strect. Miss Honor Tett is agwin with her sister, Mrs. + R. J, Gardiner, Bagot strect. mn ---------- WAS IT RAPLEY ? Said to Have Passed Through Strathroy. A special despatch from Strathroy, Ont., says that relatives of Barton Rapley, the missing Montreal commer- cial traveller, who mysteriously dis- appeared some weeks ago from an ho- tel at Napanee, now have the assur- ance that the young man is alive and well, and did not meet with - foul play as was at first supposed. Mr. Rapley passed through Strath- roy over the G.T.R., and disclosed his identity to a 'Strathroy man at the station, requesting him to inform his uncles here that Barton Rapley had passed through town. The gentle man did as he was asked, and posi- we We ie { tively' identified Ranley's photograph. { Mr. and Mrs. Halloway Waddell are | i wr tat the Hotel Cecil, in Ottawa. Miss "Lena Dunham was up from | Frederick Potter, of 6% Montreal Frankville for the medical dance, and |rreet, and Morley Valleau, 690 Mon- will stay for a little visit. | treal street, the young men, who re | Mrs. Allan J, Chamberlain, Winni- | covered the body of Metzler Weaver, i peg, formerly of Kingston, has moved | the Wolfe Island fisherman, who was {from 152 Walnut street to 61 Mary- [drowned, received the reward of $50 land street, and will receive on the [offered by the relatives. g | third Tuesday of the month. | Mrs. John Brooke is again with Mrs Bates, Hales' cottages, King street. Miss Iva Gerow, oi Brockville, came {up for the Queen's medical dance, and lis the guest of her aunt, Mrs. George | Aes Armstrong, Alfred street torder to get the man out of the com- | "Miss Marian Lesslie gave a little (munity. luncheon at the Country Club, vester- | Do "something besides day, in honor of Miss Thorne. ~ Her |vour nefghbor "makes were Miss Grace Hem- meet." : J. Received The Reward. ! EE | 35¢. Red Or Blue Grapes, 30c. ! Red or Blue Grapes, Table Apples, i Crawford. i H Uredentials are sometimes given in wonder how hoth ends jother guests |part of strict twenty-one-year- ! of ~~ LORD MAYOR'S SALARY HIS PAY AMOUNTS TO $50,000 PER YEAR. In Addition to This He Has the # Mansion House Furnished--He Derives Congideratle - Wealth From Ownership of Wharves on Banks of Thames. By Marquise De Fontenby. Sir Joan Knill, elected lord mayor of London for the twelve months be- ginning on Nov. 9th; is a Roman Ca- 'tholic, and in consequence thereof was {subjected to some Peckling on the Protestants, while the 'election was in progress, Thus he was asked whether he would appoint a Church of England clergyman as his official chaplain, to figure as such m all ceremonials, and agreed to do $0, intimating, however, that he would have in addition thereto a pri vate chaplain of his own denomina- tion. Sir John was asked if he would 'attend certain religious services in St. Paul's cathedral and in other city cwrches in compliance with ancient custom and tradition, and to this he replied that he would only be pre- [sent at these services when in. actual {attendance on the sovereign, but that on other occasions he would delegate one of the aldermen to represent (him, . --- | Vinally, he was asked not to put the pope before the king, and gave the requisite pledge, as far as all ques- tions of public toasts were concerned. The reason for this uestion was that when his father, the late Sir 'Stuart Knill, 'was lord mayor of Lon- 'don, in 1892, that is to say seventeen years ago, he gave conside rable of- fense to strict Protestants, by pro- posing as the first toast at a ban: quet which he gave at Guild Hall to {Cardinal Vaughan and the Roman Ca- tholic Episcopacy of the United King- dom; not * the -Queen,'> but "'the Holy Father and the Queen."' Called upon for an explanation he declared that it was the Catholic equivalent the ancient time-honored Englich |toast of 'Church and King," or {"Church and Queen," and that nejth- ler the government nor the sovereign [took any cxception to His action, is best shown by the fact that three weeks later the prime minister, W. IE Gladstone, informed him that {Queen Victoria had bestowed upon thim the honor of a baronetey. | At the time of his election, in 1892, the two names submitted as candi- dates were his own, namely, that of a- Uatholie; and Sir George Faudd | Phillips, a professing Jew. Sir Stuart IKnill carried the day and wag sue- ceoded at the end of his term by Si |PetePau Phillips. = x | Sir John, unltke many of his pre- decessors in office, is an exceedingly | wel read and well-bred man, poss ssed of much culture, ard received his edu- ication at Beaumont College, near indsor, whence so many foreign roy- al personages and English Catholics of note have graduated, subsequently tmpleting his studies at the great <'esuit eccllege of Feldkirk, in Austria, He derives his considerable wealth from the ownership of a number of wharves on the banks of the Thames. {| The election of the Lord Mayor of {London was formerly * held on the Feast of the Translation of St. Ed: ward, October 13th, but it was altered {to Michaelmas Day, that is to say, to the 20th of September, by an act of {the common council, dating from the {reign of King Henry VIII. The lord Imayor is elected on that day from among the twenty-six aldermen of the lcity of London, by a body known as the 'common hall"' consisting of the {aldermen and liverymen, that is to {say, the members of the various city guilds and companies, the lord mayor {acting as president, and the shecifis performing the duty of returning offi- | cers. | are confined to the election oi the lord {mayor and of the sheriffs, who cach hold their oflie a year, like the mavor | land the chamberlain. The aldermen {are elected for life by the various city {guilds, and if they refuse to serve are 'vbliged to pay a fine of $2,500, which |can likewise be imposed upon any of | their number who refuses to put ina term as lord mayor. | may add that | the board of aldermen in the bench of Imagistrates for the city of London, 'superintends the administration of jus- {tice and police, and licens® brokers, at {the cost to the latter of $25 yearly, i os : {none being allowed to do business as {brokers, save those who have been {duly licensed, and "sworn as such by {the Jord 'mayor and aldermén. : | Although elected on Michaelmas day, it is not until November Sth that the {lord mayor is sworn into office by the {lord high chancellor, and on the fol- {lowing day he proceeds in state to the {courts of law, to be formally present - {ed to the lord chief justice, and to the | RETIRING FRO 'F. W. Spangenberg, barons of the exchange. Inasmuch as this is made the subject of a great pageant, and of a Yity holiday, the new lord * mayor's inaugural banquet taking place on the same evening at the old Guildhall, where he entertains the cabinet ministers, the judges, and the foreign envoys, November 9th has come to be known as "Lord Mayor's Day." . This year the procession on Novem- ber 9th will be shorn of many of its familiar features. The floats, the men in medieval costume, and all the oth- er mimicry of historic events and of the ancient history of the city, have been abandoned, as detracting from for | The powers of the common hall ! the dignity of the occasion, and the procession, in lieu of a civic pageant, will take the form of a great military parade, in which the London contin- gents of the new territorial army, will all take part. It is merely an accident that Lord Mayor's Day should coincide with King Edward's birthday. Formerly, lord mayors of London were installed on October 20th, the day ° after the Feast of St. Simon and: St. Jude. This date was changed more than 150 years ago to November 9th, by a sta- tute bearing the signature of George IL The lord mayor of London draws a considerably larger salary than any municipal dignitary in this country, his pay amounting to $50,000 a year, be- sides which he has a furnished resi- dence, namely, the Mansion house, a stately building opposite the Bank of England, and designed early in the eighteenth century by Sir John Van- brugh, who was likewise the architect of Blenheim palace. The lord m#yor of London is ex-officio an admiral of the port of London, a general of the Territorial army, one of the chief butlers eign, with the right of officigting as such as coronation banquets, a mas- ter of the city hunt, (which, by the way, no longer exists), a judge in civil and criminal cases, and a comp- | troller of weights and measures. Fur- { ther, hé has, in addition to his sal- {ary -and - his -offictal residence, his | gentlemen-in-waiting, his chaplains, {his purse-beargr, his sword-bearer, his marshal, and, last but not least, his {own hangman; and the sovereign him- | self, as well as his troops, are. de- | barred--theoretically of course--irom |entering the city, without receiving | beforehand the permission of the lord Imayor. These prerogatives, thorough- ly exploited abroad, are accountable {for the awe in which the lord mayor {of London is rogarded on the contin. lent of Europe, where, by the uninitia- | ted, he is pouularly "accounted a far {more important and powbrful digni- | tary of the realm than the archbishop of Canterbury, the lord high chancel {lor, and the prime minister, or even {than all these three combined. MARQUISE DE FONTENOY. A DANGEROUS PRECEDENT. | Established? By the Civic Finance Conmumittee. 7 In Hiscussing the decision of thé civ- lic finance committee on the - liquor {license question, a leading citizen said : | "The finance | against a reference of the guesion the people, has establish lous precedent. It takes the ground ithat the city council is the proper {body to deal with the liquor question, {and not the people. Its decision es tablishes' that. Now, what will be the 'result when the -council adopts the | committee's recommendation ? Simply this © Three or Tour years hence the temperance people can hold the reins (of power in the council. They they'll use the. liquor men's argument, that {the council should settle the question of !reduction when a petition is presented. They'll refuse a reference to the people on precedent, mind you, and perhaps jeut off half the licenses in Kingston. There's what's ahead. The finance committees has been very short-sighted. | It has played right into the hands of the Social and Moral Reform League. It's not yet too late to repent and send the matter to the people, where it belongs." to a danger- { | At The Roller Rink. | The roller rink drew a large crowd ion Friday evening to the band con- cert and grand march. in excellent condition, having been re- jeently sandpapered, and the patrons {enjoyed themselves to the limit. Ex- lcellent music was furnished by the 14th band, especially the grand march, jwhen over a hundred couples took part. "Cadbury's Chocolates," fresh, at | Gibson's Cross Drug Store. The | house of good sweets. {The steamer Minnie M. arrived at Sault Ste. Marie, on Friday night; |and reported passing through wreckage consisting of 200 barrels of naphtha oil and gasoline thrown along the !shore frm Whitefish Point down for tmiles. wip ! We have just received a fot of $1 watches, guaranteed, at Keeley's, and cupbearers to. the sover- |. WATCH PRICES FOR SATURDAY If you want a good Watch--one that will keep accurate timé--one that you can depend upon and at prices that were never offered before in Kingston. Just drop in at SPANGENBERG'S. Seeing is believing. Every Article in Our Stock Reduced For Cash. - ~ 347 KING ST., KINGSTON. AFTER THE CONFLIT THE FINNISH DIET HAS BEEN DISSOLVED. Refused to Sanction Rill Ap« propriating $4,000,000 For De- fence of the Engpire. Helsingfors, Nov. 20.--The Finnish diet was dissolved because of its re- fusal to sanction the bill introduced by the government, asking for an ap- propriation of $4,000,000 for the do- fence of the empire. An election will be held February 1st, and the new diet will assemble March 1st. The conflict in the diet was the same as that which took place in the senate and resulted in the resignation of many Finnish senators and the substitution of a majority made up of Russian military officers. = The senate had expressed a willingness to contri. bute $2,000,000 as an annual appro- priation for the national defence, but double that amount was assessed the Russian cabinet as Finland's 'con tribution for the defence of the em- pire. Pyrography outfit to attach to gas for 15c. at Best's, Three boys, William and Alfred Ir. win, and Charles 'Freeburn, shot a huge black bear weighing 340 pounds, in the vicinity of the Buckhorn road, toward Mississaugan Creek. Two of the lads were about sixteen, the other a little older. Chronic Catarrh Is a Blood Disease Which Can Never Be Qured By the Use of Atomizers, Douches, Snuffs, or Otlier Local Treatments. Long ago physicians found out that the very prevalent disease called cas tarrh was not primarily a local trou- ble, but a systemic or constitutional blood disorder ibstead. ¥or many years hefore. this discovery people were in the habit of using all kinds dF local applications in their ellorts to cure the catarrh, and they never suc- ceeded in obtaining more than tem- porary relief, When the blood is absolutely pure catarrh cannot exist but when it be- comes filled with impurities through faulty elimination, the mucous mem- brane, which lines all the interoal oc- gans of' the body, and normally -se- crotes a clear, soothing fluid, be- éomes inflamed, and the mucus fluid changes to an irritating, poisonous excretion. People in this climate are very much subject to catarrh of the throat and nose, especially in the wiater months, committee, by deciding . The floor was | andthe lining membrane of the aie passages becomes congusted and in- flamed, and this, tegether. with an impoverished condition of the blend, produces the flow of morbid catarrhal secretion. When the blood is impure, it not onlyesends out the excess of impurities through the pores in the shape boils, pimples and carbuaios, but very often eliminates ithrough the mucous memprars, aldo, and the result | a eatarrhd condi: tion. In view of the f ing facts the absurdity "of attempting to cure ecatarrh through looal applications should be apparent to all. STUART'S CALCIUM AAFERS, the great blood-cleansing remady, bas been the mivans of curing thousands of cies of ecatdrrh when "al other remedies, both local and general, have uitmliy ailed. The reason is simple and eas- ily explained. These little walers ontain calcium sulphide and other powerful alternatives and blood- purifiers, which cleanse the blood our- ent sor thoroughly, eliminate the system's/ poisons a impurities so efficiently, that the catarchel ditcuse has nothing to live upon aud thrive | : : 'upon, and the result is the complasnt 'is cured in a marvelously short time. ete, them Stuart's Calciim Walers have long {enjoyed the reputation «i being the most powerful blood-cleaning, skin- disease removing, and eatarrh cure in (existence. Persons who "catch cold" easily, and who are subject to uvy of the well-known symptoms of this com- plaint, such as excessive secretion of mucous in the throat and nasal cav- ity, hoarseness, snuffles, coughs, fre quent sneezing, ete., should use this powerful remedy, and by purifying the system absolutely rid themselves per- mguantly g of catarrh, as well as of pimples, ils, bl carbnuntles and other external indications of im- poverished biood. - aE Purchase a package of Stuart's Cals cium Wafers from your st for BOe and rid"of your aod your - pim . Also send ,us your name and address and' sample will Fe sent vou free. 'Address, F. A. Stuart Co. 175 Stuart Bldg., Marshall, Mien, i § i a 1 { Co L

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