The finest fabric is not too delicate to be safely washed with Sunlight = Soap. When other soaps have injured your linens and faded the coloured things, re- member the word Sun- HOTEL DIRECTORY. DESERONTO. Go to the STEWART HOUSE. Leading Sommerelal Hotel. Rates, $1.50 per JAS, STEWART, Prop. TRAVELLING. RETR Eastern Ontario Live Stock and Poultry Show \OTTAWA, ONT., JAN. 16th to 20th. Round trip tickets will be issued Monday, Jan. 16th, to Friday, Jan 20th, inclusive, at $3 70 Jan. 2N Sleepers to good to return until Through Pullman and from Ottawa every night For Pullman reservations and all in formation, apply to J. P. HANLEY, Agent Johnson and Ontario Streets KincsTond PEMBROKE RAILWAY "ius RAILVAY Corner NL CANADIAN PACIFIC "EASTERN ONTARIO LIVE STOCK AND POULTRY SHOW Ottawa, Ont,, Jan. 16th to 20th. From Kingstoti, Round Trip Fare $3.70 Going Monday, Jan. 16th, to Fri- day, January 20th, inclusive Re- turn limit, Monday, January 23rd. Full particulars at K. and P. and CPR. aicket Office; Ontario Street ----- si-------- BAY OF QUINTE RAILWAY. isaves !'nlon Station, Ontark Bay at aaly (Sundey excepted; for Tweed, Sydenham, Napanee, Deser nto, Bannockburn and all points north To secure yuick despatch to Bannock burn, Maynooth. and ints on Centra Ontario rou se your ipments via Bay of Quinte Raliway. For further part} sulars, a pi © Ww ICKBON, nt Sara #aone o THE AMERICAN CAFE 185 Wellington St. The Up-to-dnte Restaurant and | Eating House. Separate appartments. Well furnished and lighted. Try our full' course dinner, Se. 2 THOS GUY Prop. BOGAN OhAGS Odiadl ddd Don't Persecute your Bowels 'Cut out cathartios and purgatives They are tai-harsheuanecessary. Lry CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS Purely vegstable. Act genily on the liver, eliminate bile, snd soothe thedel:- catemembrane ofthe bowel Care Con pe A Small Pill, Small Dose, Small Price Genuine mus bear Signature Best by Test 'Try:One in Your Home They are sweet Feasonsdy priced. | KINGSTON'S - LEADING MUSIC HOUSE. ain SUDLIEE 20a Jamie Orders promptly filled. toned, and NO MOU The Old Year: --"I'm afraid I haven't too m y elections "Punch A A A NN PPS THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1911. £ RNERS been very popular. Too littie sun and AAA A Some of King George's Speeches are Models of Lucidity, Happy Ex- pression and Eloquence Although King George, like his lamented Royal father, is by natural | aptitude and training a ready and eloquent speaker, he has naturally nor the knowledge many of long neither the time DEeCessary to prepare sphgches he has to deliver. example, the opening of a new wing to a hospital for which it is necessary to give a history of i.e hospital and its work, to refer to the umn "guished men it has given to the world to the part has played in advancing medical and surgical science These arg matters which call for ex- pert knowledge, and of which the King is naturally as ignorant as the aver: age layman, Here the hospital author ities come gallantly to his assistance and practically prepare his speech for him. A committee of the principal Huw the | Take, for | Lepid HIS MAJESTY, 600D SPEAKER range a conference with the King's Secretary, who makes such sugges tions ard amendments as he thinks | advisable. The revised proof is then submitted to His Majesty, who fre- quently re-writes it to satisfy his indi vidual taste, and when it has thus received the Royal approval the man- uscript is sent to the printers and reproduced in purple letters on vel lum, in which gorgeous form it is sent to His Majesty In his earlier years King Edward used learn these prepared speeches by heart; and, atded by an excellent memory was able to deliver them with.all the natural effect of impromp- tu utterances. On one occasion, it is the speech was to be delivered at tne Royal Academy banquet---he had omittel Mi. , avant go 2rd fur ther, found to his dismay that he n-d forgotten to take the copy with him." He proved, however, more than equal to the emergency, trying as it was to an inexperienced speaker, and de livered one of the best speeches of his | life, to the surprise and delight of his | auditors, to whom he confessed his ! predicament. In later years, when experience had begotten confidence, His Majesty was | content to master the facts and figures {of his speech, and to trust to the in- spiration of the moment for its deliv- {ery. How happy this invariably was-- { how natural and gracefully 4Xpressed | --those who were privileged to hear | him well know. "King Edward's { happlest efforts, however," Lord Rose i quite innocent of any preparation. officials is formed, the records of the hospital are carefully scarched, the result of the committee's work is embodied in a speech of perhaps an hour's duration. The speech, or state- ment, Is then carefylly revised and cut down to the required compass of about @ quarter of an hour at the outside, and invested with as much interest and literary merit as the committee can put into it. Purple Letters on Vellum Four typewritten copies of the fin: ished speech are them made, and, srmed with these, the committee ar- PRODUCTION OF GOLD More Than One-half of the Precious Metal is Produced In the British Empire In Great Britain there occurs gold- bearing quartz in several districts, notably in Cornwall, the Highlands, and Wales. There is a regular gold- *l mine in operation on the banks of the River Mawddach, near Barmouth. Itis worthy of note that gold is found only fn the oldest rocks in this country, and could never be expected in the clays, gravels, or chalks of the South of England. At present the two great gold producing countries of the world ure South Africa and Australia; gold is also found largely in the United States of America, Japan, the Ural Mountains, India, Ceylon. and Bur ah. Also there is gold from one end bt the Rocky Mountains in Alaska-- the Klondike neighborhood--to the fsthmus of Panama. The Andes, from the extreme north to the southern ex- tremity of South America, are also auriferous. The richest deposits are, however, within the bounds of the Bri tish Empire, which produces more than one-half of the gold marketed every year. . , HIS LAST TOAST A wedding at Berwick on Boxing Day was followed by a tragedy. At Jue breakfast the bridegroom's father, Mr. MacKenzie, sixty-nine, Quay of North Shields, rose to pro- po se the health of the bride and bridegroom. when he fell back sud | denly and died. Guard Naval Stores. Ottaka, Jan. 17.--Sergeant George . of the dominion police, will be in charge of a detachment of six nen to guard the naval stores and | ry says. "were those which were In grace and simplicity of language, deli- cacy of humor, and dignity of utter- ance, the King's impromptu speaking { might well challenge comparison with i that of aty after-dinner speaker I have ever hc " | On many subjects, too, King Edwasd { was ah expert who needed no help in 'preparing his speeches; and many of his best efforts, on such wide-apart subjects as art and agriculture, were entirely of his own production; and, { like all his speeches, gained consider- {ably from his clear enunciation and | his beautiful, well-modulated voice. { The King is a Born Speaker King George is, if possible, an even better speaker than his Royal -fatKer. Indeed, some of his speeches are per fect models of lucidity, happy expres sion, and natural eloquence. Although the material for many of them is sup- plied on lines similar to those des- cribed above, he has long passed the stage whea he had to rely on his mem- ory. A perfect master of his facts, he" is able to clothe them in words which, { by their happy choice and smooth | flow, proclaim the born speaker. In- {'deed, in perfection of expression many of them are well entitled to rank with | the finest examples of English oratory. i A A APN | A MODEL AIRSHIP | For Twenty-8ix Years G. Daw, South | ampton Row, Has Been Peg. ging Away at It : In Southampton Row, one of the | principal thoroughfares of London, the passer-by will observe on fine days an elderly gentleman standing guard over a model airship. For twenty-six years Mr. G. Daw has been pegging away at perfecting an airship that will have the advantage of | travelling with a &ew of three against | a wind of unuspal velocity. His model is perfect in every detail and quite | capable of demonstrating its origina- | tor's theories. : | Instead of being fashioned cylindri- cally, the portion of the airship en- closing the envelope is made shallow, very broad, and with a sharp cutting edge. The wind In every way is cleaved, and it is claimed to be de- cidedly superior to those airships fashioned on other lines. To bufld the airship will cost about $10,000, but the inventor possesses only a couple of thousands, and is now trying to collect the remainder from interested spectators. ~ FAMOUS REGIMENTS The regiment that has won the most V.C's is the South Wales Borderers, with sixteen to its credit. Ten of these sixteen were won at Isandlhwana and Rorke's Drift. The Rifle Brigade is second on the list with fifteen, and the Sth cers, the King's Royal Rifles, and the 'Gordon Highlanders come next with thirteen each, and they are followed by the Cameronians and the Black Watch with ten each. Wedded Fifty-seven Years. * Dixville, Que, Jan. I17.--Mr. and Mrs: Lyman Martin, Disville, - have just passed the fifty-seventh anmiver- sary of their marriage. Mr. Martin was born in Scotland, ei =basca to Fort Chippewyan. THE ARCTIC MAIL. Lonely Outpests In Frozen Areas Will ! Get Their Letters Late For Xmas. Receiving Cnrist pas mail in Avril is in store for whalers who are 1g in the . neighborhood of hel Island, Early last month a i Edmonton, six hundred of it, no more, no less, which i» designed to carry the season's cheer to the trapper, the Hudson Bay em- ploves, the isolated constablés.of the Royal Northwest Mounted Police, the pioneer homesteaders along the Peace, Athabasca, and Mackenzie Rivers, and, eevntually, to men who are win- terbound in the Arctic itself An Edmonton exchange tells thus of the remarkable journey: . ' 8ix hundred pounds is all that the Hudson Bay Co. wil] agreé to carry to northern points, and so if it hap- pens that the large number of papers, detters., and postcards consigned to the inhabitant of the winter-bound re- gions exceeds that weight, the post- office authorities must go through the mai! and cut out what they believe to be least important in order to re. duce it to the maximum allowance. When the mail was being made up it was discovered that the total weight of the northbound parcels on hand was 692 pounds. Ninety-two pounds were accordingly laid Aside; newspa- pers, catalogues, and other of less im- portant) matter were cut out and will be forced to wait for the next mail. Some one up north will not hear from home this winter as a conse- quence, but- the postoffice authorities are 'doing the best they can in the present stage of the country's develop. ment. Lac La Biche is the first stop of the mail carriers. The bags are taken to this point by team and sleigh, and after the Lac La Biche mail has been dropped off, the remainder is car- et by means of the Hudson Bay Co.'s dog teams. In charge of experienced runners of the trail the 1,249 letters and 57 postcards for which isolated m®n and women are patiently and anxiously awaiting, continue the northern jour- ney over frozen streams, snowy plains, and through wooded bluffs. From Lac La Biche the carriers strike northward along the proposed route of the Al- berta and Great Waterways Railway to Fort McMurray; then up the Atha- The next stop is Fart Resolution hy the frozen witers of Great Slave Lake. CI the last place that could | possibly be reached before Christmas, | and if there was { Prictmas mail for pointe farther norfu#-arrived too ate, From there the mail will be carried to Fort McPherson and on through to the Arctic Ocean where the whal- ing ships lie ice-bound around Her- schel Island, and the crews of the whaling vessels are passing away the | time telling stories of sea life in ex- | ¢hange for stories of the plain and for- est told by mounted police stationed at that lonely post The mail will reach Herschel Island in April, just when the Arctic world is awakening from a long cold sleep, | and the men of the land and sailors at that most northerly port are long- ing for some activity, and some news of. the outer world from which they have been cut off since the Hudson Bay boats 'left the post during last July. | His Stydent Studies. Now that Rugby is fast being for goiten for the present season at least, young athletes are turning their atten- tion to hockey. One institution of learning where the puck-chasers pro- mise to be prominent this year is Qs goode Hall, and the young men who study in the shadow of that ancient pile are busily organizing a team for the toming-winter. The presence of these future lawyers on the ice recalls a story of the late B. B. Osler why took considerable interest in the Cana dien nudonal winter sport. Some six years ago three of the students in Mr. CANADA AND TRUSTS. New Anti-Trust Law of Dominion May Solve the Problem. No | Canada has a pew anti-trust law that makes the utmost penalties of our Sherman act look like an engross- ed endorsement for superior moral character. As an object lesson to us the Canadian Government is starting to fight against the United Shoe Ma- chinery Co, which our Congress, State Legislatures and Department of Justice have -repeatedly given up as ane impregnable. combination. Under this new Canadian law six citizens may go to any court and charge that any trust is oppressing or overcharging the customer. If they make a reasonable showing the court orders the Department of Labor to in- vestigate. The complainants name one, the trust a second and the Gov- ernment the third member of a com- mission 10 do the investigating. The commissién may call 'for persons and papers, administer oaths and lock up folk~ who don't obey or who perjure themselves. If it finds the trust un- lawfully enhancing prices, it can, sus- pend any tariff duties which protecs the trust's produets. Think What that would do to our sugar trust, steel trust, lumber trust, rubber trust and all the rest of them. ! 1s commission, if it finds that a bad trust is the owner of patent rights which enable it to increase prices and promote monopoly, may issue a sweep- ing order suspending or abrogating all these rights. That is the provision under which it is expected to bring the shoe machinery trust to time. The shoe machinery trust, as you will remember, has come nearer than any other combination ever formed to maintaining a -world-wide monopoly; and it has done this through a won- derful system of buy\ng up patents and suppressing inven . The Minister of Labor for the Dom- inion is now proceeding vigorously against the shoe machinery trust un- der this remarkable law. He expects to drive the trust out of Canada and to bring competition in. If he sue- ceeds he will give our American trust busters a valuable lesson.--Hamp- ton's Magazine, Not at 'All a New Idea. notable event, any unusual, adventure always sets people asking: "Was such | a thing ever done before?" or "How did the idea of doing such a thing originate?" - For example, now that Ontario is to be lighted by a publicowned plant operated by Niagara power, people are | asking when and how the plan for | harnessing the Falls was first con- sidered. ; Niagara poweral ¢ driven machinery, in various citice, SMy a few years But the possibility o! utilizing this gigantic source of enefgy were dis. cussed by practical engineers' 4, least thirty years ago. In 1584, Dr." Sie "When, a little more than a twelve- month ago I visited the great Falls of Niagara, I was particularly struck with the extraordinary. amount of force which is lost, so far as the use- ful purposes of man are concerned." He estimated that 16,800,000 horse power was going to waste there, and added: "In order to reproduce the power of 16,800,000 horses, or, in other words, 'to pump back the water from below the fall, it would require an an- nual expenditure of not less than 266,000,000 tons of coal, calculated at an average consumption . of four pounds of coal per horse power per hour, which amount is equivalent to world Dr. Siemens further said: "In stating these facts in my in- augural address on assuming the presi. dency of the Iron and Steel Institute, I ventured to express the opinion that, in order to utilize natural forces of this description at distant towns and centres of industry, the electric conductor might be resorted to. This Osler's firm played hockey, and were | prominent members of the Osgoode | team. The famous lawyer noticed that their interest in sport did not add to their brilliance when at their work, but he found no fault with them. only rebuke was a very mild one ad- | ministered after the close of the sea. son at a dinner given by some en- thusiastic followers of the team. One | of the students handed his menu to Mr. Osler and asked him to write something on it. When he received the slip of cardboard again, he found | these words: "They played at law and { studied hockey." | weit } A Bear and a Moose Stunt, | A story of more than ordinary in. | terest comes from Oyster River. A | T'think it is "The Merry Widow's Win- | man named Morrison, who resides in | that section, on Saturday last shot | a bear under unpriecedemted circum- stances. The bear was enjoying a ride | across the country on the back of a moose. Whether this Barnum-Bailey stunt was premeditated on the bear's | part with the intention of getting | across the river in an expeditious | manber, whether Bruin fell from » tree by accident as the moose war passing underneath or whether the bear deliberately attacked the moose, are questions the answer to which would provide the key to the mystery Mr. Morrison shot the bear while standing on the bridge. It is said by the farmers that owing to the failure of the blueberry the bears are in need of fogd and are more than us- ually bold in consequence. --Chatham, N.B.,, Commercial. The Canadian Lynx. <i: The lynx has a bad reputation even for a wild cat. It is said to do niore harm than goed. It eats grouse and other birds, hares, rabbits and Jams i §11 Yooki; It has a large head with tuft. ed ears, a : View was at that time unsupported by, experimental data such as I have been able since then to collect." Among the Highbrows. ol ugh Toronto prides itself on ita highbrows, some of its citizens are re- sponsible for remarks which strongly suggest Mrs. Malaprop. During the recent visit of the New Theatre Co., the following conversation was over. heard in a local street car. Two friends | 'happened to meet on the way to the theatre. "Are you going to the show?' asked one. "Yes, Mrs. Jones invited me to go down with her." "What are you going to see?" *Bhe is taking me down to the--a--a dows'. Another lapse for which there was | perhaps less excuse occurred in the iness office of a certain institution | where students are taught the high arts. A concert 'had beer given and a report of it was sent to a local news paper. It contained the following uni- que sentence: "Miss J. gave a seho- larly interpretation and displayed real dramatic insight in her presentation Beth'." China .Dog License. Wictoria, the capital of British Col- umbia, has a peculiar municipal fran- chise. Every person who pays a $2 dog tax is enti to vote in elections for mayor and aldermen. Needless to say, the system has led to abuses. It way recent discovered that six en. terprising ladies had voted ou the strength of a single dog. while one ingenious lady, unable to get a real 'dog in time to qualify, took out a lie cense for a china dog on her mantel piece. Municipal franchise reform is rega as a question of urgency in Victoria, and unkind association of dogs with mayors and aldermen is doomed, ; Teachers For Canadian West. W. J. Stewart, a member of the Board of Education of Alberta, was in St. John, N.B., recently to sail on the Empress of Britain for Ireland to engage one thousand school teach- ers for Alberta and Saskatchewan He says new districts have been opened so rapidly; in 1910 that teachers can- not be found to look after the schools. pt PB ach gti a. Landed a Company. Welland, ~ Jan. landed its first Canadian A Any sensational achievement, any | mefis, in an address at Glasgow, said: the total coal consumption of the | of the sleep-walking scene from 'Mec- | 17.~This town has factory for 1911 in the: IN BRITISH HOUSE. Quite a Few Canadians Elected and But Three Defeated. The number of Canadians who were candidates for election to the House of Commens in the recent cam- paign 'was surprisingly large Dr met with deteat--Mr. Bonar Law man of Toronto, who contested a Scotch division for the Unignists. In fact, these three Canadians who met with defeat, were Unionists. Dr. Mol. son has been twice beaten in North- { east Bethnal Green, and this is Cap: tain Campbell's second defeat. Sir Gilbert Parker, Unionist, was re-elected for Gravesend Mr. Dongld McMaster, was -getarmed unopposed Chertsey division of Surrey. Mr. W. M_ Aitkin, Unionist, won Ashton-Under-Lyne, for his party. Mr. J. Allen Baker, Liberal, was re- elected in East Finsbury. Mr. Joseph Martin, Liberal, was re- elected in East St. Pancras Mr. Hamar Greenwood, won Sunderland for his party. Dr. T. J. Macnamara, Liberal, was re-elected in North CamberweH. Mr. Ign Malcolm, Unionist; was re- elected for Croydon. Quebec Captain E re-elected for Kidderminster ranched for years in the Northwest, and married a Winnipeg girl. In a number of public men who have recently visited Canada, Cana- dians will take an interest. Mr. H. Vivian, who lectured in Toronto and other cities on town-planning, was de- feated in Birkenhead by his Unionist opponent. Bir Alfred Mond, Liberal, was re- elected in Swansea. Mr. T. P. O'Connor won, as usual, in the Scotland division of Liverpool Bir*W. Priestley, a recent visitor to this country, was re-elected as Liberal member for East Bradford, { Mr. J. A. Colfax, Unionist, one of ; our recent visitors, was defeated in Southwest Manchester. Unionist, for the Dominion, was defeated at Shoreditch Sir Clement. Kenloch-Codky, another recent visitor, was 'elected | member for Devonport Mr. A. D. Steel-Maitland, Unionist, ham. Sir George Doughty, Unionist, who addressed the Canadian Club in To ronto a short time ago, won Grimshy for the Unionists Major Norton Griffiths, who is set- tling Staffordshire people in the Cana. | member for Wednesbury Major E. F resident in Canada, was elected Un. | ionist member for Lewisham. - Mr. L. 8. Amery, Unionist, who has raveled in Canada and married a Cansdian girl, was Hefeated in Bow and siremley Marke ng Eel Grass. During the last i766 or four months several hundred toiis of eel grass have been exported froi} Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, to the Untied States, where is sells at $10 to $12\per ton, while freight from Yarmouth tos Bos- ton is about $1 per ton. ed up, but those engaged in gathering and curing in this district have been quite busy. The supply on hand is { greatly larger than at the same time for a like date for any previous year. Two or three gatherers of this grass, trade, the buying up from | ed miammoth sheds and are busy stor. ing it away. They report market in the United States is well supplied at this time, and that, with the exception of a few small lots, there will be very little exported dur. a --t------] British | And of | them all it would seem that but three | E. Molson, and Captain Duncan i Campbell, an old Trinity University { Liberal, { He was born at | Knight, Unionist, was | He | The Hon, Rupert Guinness, Union '~ ist, who had just madé a tour of the , Unionist | | who recently spent some tTme in Can- | ada, was reelected in East Birming- dian west, was re-elected as Unionist Coates, M.P., a former | Last year's Tvop, is Hew about elealty = PAGE ELEVEN. Epilepsy, Spasms, St. Vitus' Dance "I suffered many years from what Some people call epilepsy, Dr. Miles' Restora- tive Nervine cured me, and you can imagine how thankful I am." M. 1. COFFMAN, "Coldwater, Mich. "My daughter was cured with Dr. Miles' Restorative Ner ne, "after having been affiic.ed with fits for five years." PETER McAULEY, 'Springfield, Mass. "For a year my little boy had spasms every time he got a little cold. Since taking Dr. Miles' Nervine he has never had one of these spasms." MRS. MYRTLE DAGUE, i ; Rochester, Ind. {| "My daughter couldn't talk or walk from St. Vitus dance. Seven bottles of Dr. Miles' Nervine entirely cured her." MRS: NANNIE LAND, ! Ethel, Ind. for i "Until my son was 30 years old he had fits right along. We gave him seven bottles of Dr. Miles" Restorative Nervine. He has not had a fit since he began on the fifth bottle." MRS. R. DUNTLEY, Wautoma, Wis. Price $1.00 at your Sruggiat. He should supply you. If he does not, send price pre Di © Y forward id, "OR. MILES MEDICAL CO. Torenta OUR BEAVER BRAND Of Flour for bréad or | pastry is Price ig m A. MAC 2 . | Qutario Street resets meme -- +00K § Lollon iKoot Compound. { rs TN © great Uterine Tonle, and = pony safe effectual Monthly @ Herulatoron which women org dex Sold in three degrees bh 1; No, § J e painphlet. Adur x - ry : | Song Memos 0a, Toronto, ONY Cormardy W ! a ------------ Afternoon 168. c. Will be complete with some of 3 GRIMM'S Delicious lce Grea Phone 797. LEER RRR RRR ERE RE ebb FN Car Lr ema Your Liver is Clogged up 2 . , 2 | "That's Why You're Tired -Out of Sort? who appear to monopolize the export | smaller | gatherers what they cure, have erect! ing the coming year, and not a great | | deal until 1912, grass, where it is used building, packing, cheap mattresses and mixing with other fibres. Efforts have been made, and are still being made, to utilize the grass for rope, twine, rug | and other mat which {.and other stout, long, | suggested that it might used {advantage in paper-making. Han | dreds and thousands of tons of it could | be secured near Yarmouth every vear, just for the gathering, along the sea- ir | shore. a Daniel "Wilson's House. { cipal of the University of Torento, used in earlier days to live near Lau- riston, in Beotland. One day Dr. John } Beddoe (who has just written an auto biography) set out % figd him. "Hav ling." he says, "no Clee idea of the | situation of the house, I entered St | Margaret's Lane, which I conceived { must lead in the right direction, and, | meeting a gentleman just about to is- | sue therefrom, asked whether he could j direct me to Dr. Wilson's new house He looked hard at me sand inquired " 'Do you know Daniel Wilson?' '1 do.' * 'Intimately #' 'Yes, intimately.' 'Then follow this road till you see a house that lodks as if it belongs ta Daniel Wilsyn, and that will be it." 1 thanked him, and, following his ad- vice, had no difficulty in identifying the house. It had a window which coritained some tracery of a pattern which "knew Wilson considered pe- culiarly Scottish." "« " Seats For All The story of the week at Ottawa centres about the doing of Captain Jom Wallace, the. Parliamentary heavyweight on a Bank street car, Tom was sifting quite comfortably watching the brilliantly lighted stores flash by, and dreaming of his little general store, with the ne oil igmp, sway back in Woodbridge. The ear was crowded, and a woman with three children, and with her arms fl- ed with Christmas parcels, entered. Tom gallantly rose and at- ed the newcomers with seats! Smallpox Near London, Ont. Loudon, Ont., Jan. 17. There is con siderable alarm in » town- to Dr. Daniél Wilson, afterwards prin- | oe JOOO OOOO oe i { | | -- Have to Appetite. CARTBR'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS will you right in a few days, They do their duty. Care Consti- pation, eam Biliousness, Indigestion, and Sick Headache. Small Pill, Small Dose, Small Price. Genuine mus bear Signature that the | Boston is a very large buyer for this eee. Yous - = OUDOOOOOL nd Discount Off all Felt Boots and Slippers The Sawyer Shoe Store FOO Y JO PEEEE EE) g. & 212 Princess St. PHONE 159. by su lilinois men,