Daily British Whig (1850), 5 Apr 1910, p. 8

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MASON HAD ' PROVINCE SALT RHEUM! ON HANDS FOR YEARS--COM- FLETELY CURED FIVE YEARS AGO BY DR. CHASE'S OINTMENT There is nothing worse for eczema and salt rheum than cold water. For this reason many people are afflicted in cold weather only. No class of men suffer more such ailments than bricklayers from ard stone masond wud this fact makes the | adopted. accompuuying letter particularly inter- esting. Mr. John W, Naas, stone mason, of Laenburg, N.S., writes 1] was a t sufferer from eczema and salt hewn for vears and 'eould get noth- ing which seemed to be of any real Pepetit. Five veary ago 1 got a box of Dr. Chase's: Ointment and three boxes of Dr. Chase's Kidney and Liver Pills and this, treatment cured me so that the old trouble neVer returned. My skin became soft smd smooth as & child's after using Dr. - Uhase's Ointment and [ shall always say a good work for it." Very many people suffer from skin affections in the cold weather and tey one thing after another withomt ob taining the marked and lasting bene. fit which comes with the use of Dr, Chase's Ointment. 12 Chilblains and frost bites are quick- ly relieved mod cured by the wonder- fully sogthing, healing influence of this Ointment. Chapped and irritated kin becomes soft and smooth. - Each and every itching skin dis is thoroughly « . Chase's: Ointment, 60 cts. a box all dealers: or Fdmanson, Bates & (lo, Toronto, Write for a free copy of Dr. Chase's Recipes, form Hf Now the birds are singing ; Sunshine's warm bright ; Nature 's to us bringing Something to delight. Grab at all the gladness "Neath the heavenly dome; Get a Wormwith-Weber Piano in your home. 232 PRINCESS ST Ts where the :WORMWITH avo . WEBER- PIANOS are sold. Scme bargains in secondshand pianos and organs, Wormwith Weber Piano Co., Limited 233 PRINCESS STREET, KINGSTON, ¢ HALLEY'S COMET May be hard to find without a tele- seope, but you do not need one to gee the auctioneers commission It's a big thing---too big to lose You enn save all expenses and inconveniences of public auction by selling your effects to me "en bloe" : Antigue Furniture Articles a Specin Come and see me 1 buy, sell and trade all kinds of household goods, L. LEISSES, Cor. Princess sod Chatham Sta, Hingston. 00000 Chiver's Marmalade > All sizes. Ready Cut Macaroni and ity. Oda Fine June Cheese, Fresh" Oysters. D. COUPER'S, .i'hone 76. Prompt Delivery. 7 Q00000000000000000000 Cr KINGSTON BUSINESS COLLEGE LIMITED HEAD oF QUEEN STREET. 'Highest Education at Lowest Cost" Twenty-Sixth year. WF : n yates got hin Sonit, i, AC of 2he largess Rg Wh er oy time. Oall for information. re CALFE, write nn MET tT, 150 Welltugton Street. "OUR SALT 1S ALE SALT. ! katchewan to and. THE SASKATCHEWAN ENIVER SITY ORGANIZED WITH CARE. | Will Profit by the Experietice of the Older Provinces--Ample Provision | i Made for Many Courses. { 1 That it is the intention of the a% of the University of Sas profit by the experi ence of the older vaiversities is .evi- dent after a perusal of the presidept's report Whatever is good willy be For instance, 'the syst of residence in eoliege in vogue in Eng- land 'will be adopted to some extent The governors havy purchased a site of 1.333 acres, and they are set- ting aside pearly 300 acres for a campus. This is to provide for future growth, nearly every university hav- ing suffered because short views were taken in the beginning. The work of higher edneation will -pot be divided among separate institutions, and in this university she instruction will be so liberal that the farmer studying in the College of Agriculture will receive 8 training that will place him on an equality with the most skilful engin- eer or professional practitioner, : In this connection great praise 1s given the University of Wisconsin, which includes within its scope sub- jeets as diverse 'as the eriticism of poetry and the caring of cheese. Plans have been recommended that make ample provision for the estab- lishment of 1. A College of Liberal Arts Beience with Schools of Music, and Commerce 2. A College of Agriculture with Behools of Forestry, Domestic Science, and Veterinagy Science. 3.-A Colipll of Education with Practice Schools 4. A College of Law 5. A College of Medicine with School of Pharmaey and adjacent Hospitals 6. A College of Dentistry 7. A College of Engineering. 8. An Extension Department mak- ine provision for local Technical Schools, 'orresponderice Classes, Lecture Courses, and Farmers' Clubs, The ideals of the new university are outlined in one of the president's concluding remarks "If eur university is to serve the province in the things that abide, it thould provide both the schools of seience, where mastery over nature is taught, and the school of the humani- ties where men learn the 'purpose of life and the art of living. It should conserve the best of the past, and meet the needs of the future." The following appointments have been made: i Wm. .John Rutherford, B.B.A. (Tor.), Dean and Professor of Animal Husbandry. He has served on the staffs of the Agricultural Colleges of | Ontario, Iowa, and Manitoba, and is | Deputy Commissioner of Agriculture for the Province of Saskatchewan. | George Herbert Ling, B.A. (Tor), | Professor of Mathematics. Prof. Ling | was one of the most distinguished | students of his time in mathematics | at Toronto and Columbia. At the time of his appointment he was Ad- | junct Professor of Mathematics in Columbia University. | Alex. Rodger Greig, B.Se. (MeGill), Professor of Agricultural Engineering | and Superintendent of Buildin Mr Greig took his degree in Meeranieai | Engineering at MeGill, and after- wards spent several years in railroad work with the %Canada Atlantic and ! the Canadian Northern Railways Three years ago he was appointed" pro- fessor in the Manitoba Agricultural College. Reginald John Bateman, MA. (Trin. Coll. Dub.), Professor of Eng- lish and French for one year Arthur Moxon, B.A. (Dal), and B.A. and B.C.L. (Oxon.), Assistant Professor of (Classics for one year Fifteen scholarships, ranging from $100 to $75 each, have been offered for competition. and a nomination to a scholarship has been placed atq the disposal of each of the Collegiate Institutes and High Schools of the province, thorities and Art } A Good One on Sir Hibbert. Sir Charles Hibbert Tupper ia tell. ing a story on himself which is caus- ing considerable amusement on the coast, At the time of the recent pro- vincial elections in British Columbia Sr Hibbert found himself unable to accept the railway policy advanced by the Conservative party, of which he has bsen a lifelong adherent. He fin- ally consented to take the: stump against the objectionable policy and spoke in every riding in British Col- umbia with the exception of Alberm and Esquimalt. When the returns came in on the night of Nov. 25 it wns found that | Premier MeBride's policy. had been endorsed and his candidates returned In every eonstituency in the provinee except the two that Sir Hibbert had left 'out of his itinerary. Late that night when Sir Hibbert wag trying to sleep away his troubles he was aroused to receive the foljw- ing telegram from the Conservative association at Nélson: "We unite in thanking yea for the invaluable serviess rendered our party by you in the campaign, and sincere. ly regret that, cwing to ingurmostnt- able difficulties, you were inable to appear at Esquimelt or Alberni." In telling the story, Sir Hibbert says that he appreciated the joke, but could pot think of anything in the way of a humorous reply. Former Aide Married. The marriage of Capt. Harry Gra. ham and Mrs. Hugh Keith Prager, whose fother is 'British Minister at Lisbon, interests many Canadians who Riiewe Capt. Grahem in the days when he was aide-de-camp to Lord Minto The people who knew very little about him are familar with "Ruthless Rhymes for Heartless Homes" and other pleasant ditties, ple remember him for his cleverness ing things pleasant it Rideau Hall Sines those days he hes been secre (tary to Lord Rosebery. and has writ. ten numerous volumes. The bride and bridegroom received a number of beautiful presents, and a tremendous- ly fashionable gathering attended the | marvisge at St. Margaret's, Westmins. ter. Viscountess Errington, who as Lady Ruby Elliot, was marred there to Lord © v's son, closé upon two Jears ago, present, but Lady Chai Fitzmaurice, who was Lady ree i Engineers. | ary, Ottawa peo. | in organizing enteriainments and mak. | COM. iD STEEL, M. J. Butler, the New Chief, Is Quiet Unassuming Person. Naturally there has been muck in- terest aroused by the ammouncement that Mr. M. J. Butler, C.M.G., Depu- ty' Minister of Railways and Canalis has been elected. by the shrewd body of business men composing the boards of 'the Dominion Steel and Dominion Coal Companies as general manager «f that great pose bod sido vin i as naturally, there is some curiosity evineed by tha public as to the char- acter, qualificitions and antecedents of the man, who, without any pervious experience in the particular kind of enterprise he is selected to manage, is given a salary of $30,000 a yegr to start with. , Mr. Butler is a plain, unassuming man of quick dis- cermment and sound judgment, a sparing user of words; but a doer ot deeds. Capacity for work--work of the quiet, persistent, telling kind, is considered his chief characteristic by those who have worked under him and with him. His next conspicuous wal. ity is absolute confidence 'in himseli ; not confide of the small, priggish descriptiqn, but confidence begotten of earnestness, thoroughnesa and steady success. Closely identified with this spirit of confidence is the admirable quality of unalterable determination-- a determination never expressed in words, for Mr. Butler is never a blus- terer; but evinced by the undeviating development of the work under his direction along the lines laid dawn by him. Now as to his technical qualifica- tions. Originality and adaptiveness in design and organization are said to be his strong points as an engineer, and this can be easily understood when the wide range of his profession. al training and experience are con- sidered. He was educated for two pro- fessions, engineering and the law, and he has practiced both. He was edu- cated at De la Balle Institute and at Toronto University as a civil engineer and land surveyor, and at Kent Col- lege of Law, Chicago, Ill, as a law- yer. His name is still on the list as an attorney and counsellor at law of the Illinois Bar. He has the degree of LL,B., is an Ontario and a Dominion Land Surveyor, and a member of the Institute of Civil Engineers, of the American Society of Civil Engineers, and of the Canadian Society of Civil From 1903 until 1904 he was chief engineer of the Locomotive and Machine Co. of Montreal, leaving that appointment to become assistant | chief engineer of the National Trans- | continental Railway; | being appointed Deputy Minister and in June, 1905, chief engineer of the Department of Railways and Canals, to which ap- Ist, 1909, the, duty of chairman of pointment there was added on Apri! th» board of management of Canadian Government railways. Mr. Butler was born at Deseronto, { Ont., his parents being Tobias But- lervand Elizabeth McVery, both na- { tives of Ireland. Didn't Know What They Liked. Markhamites arg telling a good joke , on themselves. The Women's .Auxil- iary oi<the Church of England there gave a pancake social last Shrove nesday. One of the ladies of the congregation, the wife of a local hotel. keeper, offered to provide the dripping | with 'which to fry the cakes, and Mrs. Chauncey, a'life member of the auxil. wes unanimous elected chief ¢ook. On the afternoon of the soeial one of the younger members posted ! off to the hotel to procure the promis- ed dripping and returned with two bowls of beautifully rendered white TEase, ' Thegpancakes were light as Bouthern waffles, and browned to the color of golden syrup. While everybody was voting them the best they had ever eaten, and backing their assertions by encore orders for the delicacy, the donor of the dripping hurried into the hall and rushed through to the kiteh- en, laden with two more pots of snow white fut. All was hustle, commotion, laughter, and suppressed excitement in the smoke-filled kitchen, but only the delicious pancakes found a way to the tables, so well ordered wae the work of the committee. Never in the history of Markham had so many paricakes been disposed of at one sitting. The social was siteh a success that this year it was repeat. ed shortly after the Christmas festivi. ties, The crowd was just as large, the pancakes just as light and their color as delicate a brown, but somehow they lacked the flavor of the year be- fore, and the people said so. This aspersion proved too much for the wiunteer cook and her willing assist- ants. Then and there they let out "the fact that on Shrove Tuesday, 1909, the maids at the hotel had made a terrible mistake which was not dis: covired d@ntil the entertainment was well nigh over--instead of the clear dripping specially rendered for the so- cial, they had sent two pots of goose | grease, and in this the pancakes had been fried. Fully Grown, The old lady had ason who intend. ed to emigrate to Canada hs soon as possible, and, Bs he was temporarily confined to his room, she had promis. ed to find out as much as she. could from the information office. Accordingly she entered the build. ing th® next morning, and was parti- cularly struck by the stuffed head of a Canadian moose that graced one of tha walls. "Young man," she said to the clerk, "what kind of ati animile is that? A hipperpottymus *" "No, ma'am," was the answer "it's a Canadian moose." The old lady took a step back and raised her hands in wonderment. "What "she cried. "Yon beast a Canadian mouse! Well, that beats anything [ ever heard! I wonder what the rats out there is like?" { The Air We Breathe. A person Tequires {wenty enbie inches of fresh air each respiration, or an average of 400 per minute. In ten hours" sleep he consumes 130 en. bic feet of air. The air of a bedroom ten feet square, having its doors and windo#s closed and ied by one person, would become t for respir. ation, in four hours. A woman gets ased to a snoring husband, but every time he begins to Pealk in his sleep she site up and takes notice. : John Bull's diet is not exclusively one of beef. At last accounts Greal Britain had 1,500,000 turkeys. 'yellow oranges, others bring bananas, gflood the island for the next ten days. West Indian lsland Is a Paradise | p Just Now. It is a wonderful experience to sail from dull skies to chudless blue, tw | leave a cold country and to arrive in | 4 fairyland of wopical verdure, a | green island set in an azure sea. We | set out in grey, autumn weather, and | in a week we gre in summer; an | other week, and we are entering King- ston harbor, in the pure air of early morning. © The blue mountains rose behind the town, and all along the shore are red-roofed houses, half con- | cealed among tropical trees and plants. In Kingston one sees signs of the earthquake; here are houses par- tially rebuilt, others in ruins. But over all a bright sun shines, electric trams are running, and the streets are lively with passers-by, white, black, and colored. Fl Up country the cactus and the co | coanut palm are much in evidence, and the railway. passes through plan- | tations of bananas, 'with their great leaves and bunches of fruit. After we alight the country becomes still more interesting. Imagine a road of a | bright red-brick color, bordered by | vivid green banks -- a road which | winds gmong cone-shaped hills cover. ed to their summits with "bush." On either side are orange trees laden | with fruit, feathery bamboos, coffee trees, and here and there a poinset- tia, with its flaming crimson leaves. Suddenly we turn a corner and meet a group of people with shinimg black | eyes and light garments. It is mar- ket day, and. they all carry produce on their heads. Some have a pile of yams, and plantains. We arrive at our destination just before the begin- ning of the torrential rains, which Communieation with the outside world is cut off, the cable is suspend- | ed, the railway is damaged, no let | ters are received, and we resign our- selves to the study of tropical rain, which descends in a deluge and never ceases for a week. But the welcome sun at length returns, the country glows in freshness and beauty, and the days pass, leaving their impress | on the mind, a series of pictures, blue and green and gold. Then there are nights as bright as day, when the cocoanut leaves shine like silver arrows in the moonlight, and we seem to be in a womlerland of light and ty. On a night of starry heavens, in | which Mars glows darkly red and Venus gleams magnificently. Christ | mas Day arrives, with a temperature | of 80 degrees and a fresh and welcome breeze. Sauta Claus fills our stock- ings as at home, we have a Christ- mae tree adorned with wool for snow, | and we dance. and sing "Auld Lang Syne" with a gaiety and fervor quite the equal of that of any gathering in Scotland. But is it December? Is it | not rather June? Surely, it is not Christmas, but . MidsumMher' Day t-- | R. B., in Montreal Standard. The Youngest Admiral. Captain David Beatty will shortly have the distinction of. being the yolingest rear-admiral in the British navy. His forthcoming promotion at | the early age of thirty<ight has been the subject of a special Order im Council. | To qualify for promotion under the i regulations a captain must have serv- ed during peace time for a total per- iod of six yeare, The Admiralty peti- tion sets dorth that, owing to the ab- | nornial sfortening of the time on the | captains list, it is anticipated that | Captain Beatty will reach his turn for promotion - before. he completes the full period of six years. it is wlso pointed out that he was severely wounded in action in China, | and was consequently prevented from receiving an appointment for a con- | siderable period i In these circumstances the Order | directs that Captain Beatty shall be promoted to flag rank in his turn, | notwithstanding the regulations. There is probably no Irish land- lord who is more popular with his tenants than Lord Barrymore, whose | sixty-seventh birthday was celebrated a short time ago. When he was only | six years of age his lordship accom- | panied his father on a driving tour | through Kurope. Two carriages were | used, and the journey lasted three | years, This tour enable hin to see | a great deal of France and Italy, as | well as of Switzerland and Germany. | Driving tours were then by no means | void of danger, for even on the roads | between Rome and Naples people | were often held up by brigands and | sobbed On returning home Lord Barrymore was sent school, where among his fellow pupils | were' Lord Dunravem, Lord Meath, | the late Lord Dunmore, and Sir Her. | bert Maxwell. | { Peer's Cricket Achievements. | Swallowing the Dice. '| Excessive gaming has always been | prohibited by law, and in the time of | Henry VII. archery was the only | game of any kind that was not un- lawful in England. The gaming laws | are, of course, far stricter now than | they were in the early years of the last century; but, says T. P.'s Lon-| don Weekly, even at that ime police | "raids" on gambling houses were fre. | quent emough, and it is said that at) one or two of the west end establish. | ment? persons were retained "whose | sole duly lay in being able to swal low the dice in case of a raid by the | police." } Fogged. | When Queen Wilhelmina was a child her governess, an English | woman, once ordered her to draw a | map of Europe as punishment for some slight offence. When the map was finished Holland was depicted as | an enormous country, sprawling over | tha whole continent, and the British | Isies were invisible. "But where is England: the governess inquired. "That dot there in the corner," was the disdainfuli reply. "But 1 can't see it at all," the governess persist | ed. "No, you can't," admitted Wil | helmina. "You see it's always hiddes | er Only One BO that i a in One Day, Conn e f 2 Days | 'on every 25¢ 'rounds { form New York { from { everybody | the | the | and yellow waters. | De Cosmos Talked | suthicient { and lamps were lit, | were to a private ar 1 a gentleman 'tHern coast A BONSPIEL STORY. --bt-- } Jevial Curler at Winnipeg Had His! Ideals Seriously Affected. big Bo.igdel in Winnipeg, | a} made the western metro-| s lively during the past fortnight, | has started many & good story on the And it would be strange if otherwise, for this annual | ng of curlers is now ond of the | big sporting events. E with stone and broom gathered in Winnipeg this year from all over from Halifax to Vaneouver Dawson City, from Montan Boston, n In Winnipeg | curls, luding of course | mayer and 1 city council, the visiting "brithers" have enjoyed freedom of. the city in quite a literal sense." : In connection with this vear's Ben- | spiel a traveling man tells a story | which illustrates the odd manner in | which a man's ideas are affected by | even wild indulgence in certain red | Of course it must not he inferred that curlers are hard | irinkers ns a class, and it may be | further explained that a Winnipeg | Bonspiel brings with it quite a num- her of sideshows, among which this ice-racing on the Red River. | 30 it is very easy to blame the horse- | racing end of the. Bonspiel carnival | for the incident related by the travel. | er. This knight of the grip landed in Winnipeg when the curlers had ar-| nved in some force and were fairly in possession of the town, and he had great difficulty in securing aocom- | modation 'n a hotel. Finally he | secured a room on the fifth floor of a | good hostelry, but when he went bed his slumbers were not peaceful l.ate in the night he heard an ex-| traordinary uproar, and sat up in| hed to listen. A number of hilarious | 'urlers were ascending the stairway | leading to the floor on which his | room was located, their brooms which | they dragged behind them thumping nd banging on every step. Present- ly they gained the hallway and came | framping past. the traveler's door Just then one of the curlers exclaimed | n a loud voiee 'It's § shame tae put a mon wi' a} jag on oap o' the fifth flu-r-r."' | With the absence of logic peculiar | men in his stimulated condition; | curler overlooked the fact that | has it were zath world's nthus- lasts Canada and and ev id Rec i 8&0 i to | to the y ol A | when he registered at the hotel a day | shadow, a fairyland of witching beau- | r £0 before he was not by any means | a "mon wi' a jag on." KILLED THE BILL. It to Death Twerily-8ix Hours. In Mr. De Cosmos, a member of the | | Legislature of British Columbia, cer- tainly deserved the medal for lung power, and he won it seemingly in a good cause and at grave risk to him- self. The chamber was considering a bill that would drive many settlers from their homes, and there was « majority to pass, it. The end of the session was only a dayeand two hours distant. -At noon on the wrow the House must close its busi. | De Cosmos was desperate. He t stop the bill, and there was only way to do it. He would have to speak right till the end of: the ssion and prevent a division being on ! taken. i It was 10 o'clock in the morning when he rose to "make a few remarks | in regard to the measure before the Honse." Eleven o'clock came noon, | o'clock, and still De Cosmos talked Members in a 'spirit of jest omitted to adjourn for lunch in order to so how long he would keep going. Ti afternoon waned, the sun went down but De Cosmos never faltered ! The situation was b He certainly held the ed likely to keep it tried get eloquence poured oming serious floor and seem. AN sorts of plans him but from him as water | from a mountain spring. He was not allowed to halt for food, though hel was permitted to drink The Speaker insisted on keeping to the jquestion before the House and objdets to him repeating Through the watche Cosmos toiled evaded all traps of He w manfully on with his eech as dawn broke, kept up a slow pace ; the breakfast hour arrived and wi still speaking as th ywly ap- proached the hour of 12 On the last stroke of stopped 1n the middle and fell to the fluor mortal hours he h floor and addressed had nearly killed himself The excitement had ke the end, but when th was schieved his farulti t wa ' 1 to to stop, himself. | f the night on and sucressh clock . 8) that hour h of a or twe gente AVE way re he re blocked, | homes SOV {ave But tho | ill was » gettlers kept their How They B Ne stor An amus 'Canad ner taken ary who the Ind fhe mu port of » There speakers who 1m existence y. zhowing the school and denounce » methods adopted by the opposition. An Indian chief pro. duced some specimens of work at the sehool, and several speakers supported the work as was i done. The climax was reached when | mse and said "1 mote the whole thing bust!" The chairman put the motion "It is moved and szeeonded the whole thing bust!" The audience sprang to the pot | waving hats, velled "Busted!" | ar the door ended the first and fast opposition in that | matter ing in done it that | Record Halibut Catch, Showing that the halibut of the nor. of British Columbia ar anything but depleted, the steam: ng Fisher arrived recently in Van conver with a eateh of two hundred | thousand pounds, trken in two days | fishing, a world's reed It's easy to get Jthe world Simply patronize that way. y The average mun is never as big fool as he might be if he associated with the fair sex' more. up in {only an elevator going | THEY ACTUALLY CURE REEUSATISM Gin Pilis Prove it w to cure Phen to do it A «ga R hednat Kidney Tronkies, Disorders of { "I have | tism 'so bail 1 doctor to the he friend 1 try Gin Py and after 1g a few boxes fectly cured. 1 am { Pills." I WLE Therasis no reason Why Mr. case should Lifferen: from yours, He took Gin Pills and éured himself of Rheumatisy Ww don't yoft tuke them and cure yourself We will let you fst them free. "A sample of Gin Pills will be sent you, ab solutely free, if you write the National Drug & Chers. Co. Limited Dept, B. Torauto, 26 carBon- sOIme WHOLESOME PALATABLE BEVERAGE IAT SSA James McParland 389-341 King ¢ E., Kingstot Had Heart T rouble. Nerves Were All Unstrung. Wherever there is any weakndss of the heart or nerves, flagging energy or phy- gical breakdown, the use of Milbum's | Heart and Nerve Pills will soon produce | | a healthy, strong system. Mrs. Debee J writes ~~" tell you what Mil burmn"s Heart and Nerve Pills have done for me. Three yea so run down I could not my own work. | went to a doctor, and he told me | had heart trouble and that my nerves were unstrung. 1 took his medicine, as he ordered ne to do, but it did me no good. 1 then started to tase Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills, and had taken one box before | stared to feel better, so | continued their use until 1 had taken several boxes, and | am now strong and well, and able to do my own work. Wher | commenced taking vour pills weighed 125 pounds, and now weigh 185 and have given birth to a lovely young daughter, which was a happy thing he family. When | commenced taking Mil burns Heart and Nerve Pills, 1 could not g0 upstairs without "resting before 1 got to the top. 1 san mew go up without terete ets + + 4 Can Do Her 4 + Own "4 + Work + + Now. + + + +44 49444 agolwns do , | any trouble." Price, 50 eants rer box or 3<far $1.25 | at all dedlegrs or mailed direct on receint | of price by Te T. Milbum Co., Limited, | Taronto, Ont. | "exclusively ARLE gradeparts PIR4 TR hard wheat berry. Stronger, finer, Wel hi ELT } and neil {dried wAPLE SYRUP, MAPLE SUGAR. NEW LAID EGGS. Pure Milk and Cream livered every morning the city by milk NEW de all wag. , also with grocery orders ull Stock of Fresh Groceries from Prompt de- pax to choose livery. ~ ge S. T. KIRK, 277-281 Princess Street, Phone 417 Agent for Asselstine's Yarn, Time When vou will be requiring material We have at lowest prices, Doors, Mouldings, Base, Stairs, O Porticos, imterior finish, Kiln- Wainscotting, Coped Siding, Matched Hemlock Fimber iz Shingles r Posts in all qualities, and It for houses all fimes, Frame Columns, Sashes, and Spruce vel and Be and P and A The Froatenac Lumber & Coal Co'y., Chadwick, (A Manager), Successors to the Rathbun Co. | 9000900000000 000000000 Eres Stok of 3 Columbia Batteries. See Our Crystal Window, Hout tri il for Motor and Automobiles Gasoline than cver E tric repairs quickly execut- € Ie d SH. W. Newman Electric Co. a1, (900000000000000000000¢ "Phone, 79 Princess street. | . Carriages For Sale Rubber Tire Runabouts, Top Bug gles, Spring Waggonss Parcel Delivery land Low Down Milk Waggon: i Also Two Runabout in' good order, Second-hand Spring Wag ons and B Second-hand gies Rubber Tire a Specialty. REPAIRING OF ALL KINDS, HE PLACE James Laturney, ! The Carriage Maker, 300 PRINCESS STREET. ' THE CLUB HOTEL | WELLINGTON ST., near PRINCESS, i There are pther hotels, but none {approach the Club for homelike sur- rounding | Located In centreof city and close {to principal stores and theatre | Charges are moderate i Special rates by the week PP. M. THOMPSON, Proprietor, WALLACE & PARKS, Florists, Lay "I'h eo 230. weirs and Plants nd Faneral De Bipped to all parts J. E. Hutcheson AUCTIONEER nnd APPRAISER, te 517 Albert Birest or eft at 11. Waddington's or J lores will receive enderson 8 mpt attention Best references given OUR ROOSIER BRAND OF TOBACCO Baking and Ohewing at forty-five ents & pound, 18 a good tobacco. Why phy eighty-five ceils, Andrew Macisan, Tatario strats WM. MURRAY, Auctioneer | Furniture Sales given special ate | fantion, County Bales of Farms, | Stock, otic, have tees my specialty for lomg / Il farmers wash the hgh oh gt my servicesy MARKET BQUARE: - ---------- a * Wah Long's Laundry First-class work guarantesd Denp me & card and 1 will eal! promptly for tvour laundry 155 WELLINGTON BT. between Brock and Clarence Sta

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