Daily British Whig (1850), 20 Dec 1911, p. 10

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OUGH COUGHS COLDS WHOOPING C STHMA NCHITIS CATARRH ESTABLISHES W799 A uimple. saf« and stfective trestment for bron. chial troulies, 2voliing rug Vaporiced C reso. Terry tom Ag antipte, inapited with every breacning easy. southien the wise throet ond stops the cough, aasdriog © gl maghts, It i= ovale bie Ly mothers with young chidren. Sen | us prtal lor descriptive boovdet. 09 ALL DRUGGISTS o Try Cresnlens Agti- peptic Thioat Tabicws for the fevie ated thes They are «imple. etdect fve and, antweptic. OF ar <irugghet of from us 0c. i stities. HE PRESERVES PEACE SERGEANT-AT-ARMS HAS A SINE. CURE IN COMMONR Picturesque Parliamentary Official Who Is Supposed to Imprison Re- fractory Members Has No Place | Wherein to Confine Them--Manipu- | lation of the Mace Is Now His Chief Duty--Present Incumbent. The Bergeant-at-Arms is the officer who has in his keeping the peace and safety of the House in general and of the Speaker in particular; and in ad- YAPS CRESOLERE £0. Leeming -Miles MONTREAL OUR CRYSTAL BRAND Of $msdard Granulated Sugar Aer been tried and found exccliont foi preserving snd table ure, Price © elways righ: ARUREW WACLEAN, Jintarte Street. ve Dr, de Van's Female Pills 4 velizhic French regulator; never fallr. These pile are exceedingly powerlul in regulating che graerative portion of the temale system, Kefuse #il cheap lmitations Dr, de Van's are 50d at £6 a box, or theres lor 88 Aailed to any address. Boobell Drug Co. St. Catharines. Ons. J For pale at Mahood's Drug Store. FIRE, LIFE, ACCIDENT, SICKNESS AND GUARANTEE INSURANCE EFFECTED, Real Extnte Bought, Sold & Exchnnged Call or comiminicate with : ' 2 J. 0. HUTTON, ¥ 1% Market Street, Kingston; Ontario. GRAND UNION] #& HOTEL = ame 2 44. ETSI Cook's Cotton Root Compound. The great Uterine Tonle, und PIE. sain. effnciusl Month tegulator on which women can depend. Sold in three degTecy of strength--No. 1, $1; No. 2, 10 dogroca stronger, 3 No.3, or | CABOCH, r Bod BY all d yor wont Propel of price pam; Book Memon 00. Tonos, hlet. ; ur. ormerly Windsor} Thomas Copley PHONE 987. . op & card to 19 Pine Street wwe, wanting anything done in the Carpen- ter line. Estimates glven on all Kinds repairs and new work alse. Ew od a hoor of all kinds. All orders w receive prompt attention. Bhop 40 Queen Street. ---- HE N ENCH REMEDY THERKPION KTR , Ised in French Hospitals with great success. . Cures blood son, bad legs sores, discharges(eithersex weakness vigor &vitalforce, drains losses &c. Either No.at d sor Mail $1 from Fougera & Co. , 90 Beekman St., work City, or Lyman Bros. Co.Ltd. Toronto. doubt No. required, send self addressed envelo res book to Dr. Le Clerc Med. Co. Haverstock Rd. Hampetons 3 Londan Rg. Try newmDragée(Tasteless) plom, easy to take, safe, lasting cure, Be Rid of the Pantry Pest Keating's Powder may be. freely used around the pdntry to drive away cockroaches. Al- though Koating's is odorless and stainless, and harmless except to eve form of insect Ite, it 1s na thor ib 1a ughly efficient as C potent and generally harmful exterminating compounds. Made in England and sold by drug- gists throughout Canada. ass In tins only : 104, 20c¢.. 36¢. To Enjoy Life you need a healthy stomach, ac- tive liver, kidneys and bowels. These organs--and the nerves and the blood --are better, do better, when helped by BEECHAM'S Your orders will be tilled satis: Atal you deal there at 'P. Ww + 56-67 Barrack Street. . of Constipation ly be overcome by R'S "% by the ¢rown, "and remains in office "| ing the segsion, dition to those onerous duties, he is responsible, according to the book, for the safe-keeping of the mace, furniture, of the House, and for the conduct of the messengers and infer ior servants.' Should. it be necess: to take into custody anyone in the chamber--mem- ber or otherwise -- the Sergeant-at-' Arms would be the man for the un- pleasant task, and ghat is probably one reason for his wearing bravely a sword at his side. "He is entitled to a fee of four dollars," says an author. ity, "for all persons who hall have been committed to his charge." Where would he keep his prisoners? { About the House the theory is that the prisoners would have to be incar- cerated in the tower, somewhere be- tween the committee room on the se. cond floor and the big bell that strikes the hours far up near the look-out Safe that ¢rowns the top. he Bergeant-at-Ammb is appointed during pleasure or until he is super- arinuated." He is given a handsome "big chair--a sort af miniature throne, 'Math a desk before it, and they stand Juda the foot of the gangway, but a ittle to one side, and just within the bar. The Bergeant:at:Arms, there- { fore, fates the Speaker, and the mace, | which repdses ou a cushion stretched across the foot of the table at whose head sits the Clerk of the House. To guard the Speaker and adroitly handle the mace are am the Ber geant's most important and certainly moss conspicuous duties. It is in the matter of processions that the Sergemnt-at-Armg particularly shines. There he leads while all others ~fotow =gverr the Prine Minister; the head of the Government, and the Speaker, who is the head of the ouse. There is a daily procession, small, #4 is true, bui as dignified as it is small, and important, too, because it is a preliminary but essential step in the opening of each day's sitting. Shortly before the hour fixed for the opening of a sitting, the Clerk in his robe and the Sergeant-at-Arms, in his semi-military coat, and with sword at gids, wait upon the Speaker in his apartments at the end of the eorridor leading to the main entrance of the chamber Besides living im these ap.rimonts, the Speaker Ro keeps under lock and key the huge gilt mace, which is both the emblem of the authority of the House, and also the Sergeant-at-Arms' second weapon of defence. Centuries ago both sword and mace were needed by the Bergeantpat-Arms in the Britith House, for members then sat in Parliament armed, and it was well to provide the Speaker's guardian with the means of running an asseilant through or breaking his head, for which purposes a sword and a mace A were very convenient. | When the hour for the opening of | the sitting strikes, the three high offi- | cials emerge fro1 the Speaker's quar-. | ters, and with nv asured and stately, | tread march dowa the corridor into the chamber. With mace on shoulder and sword at siflé 'the BSergeant-at- Arms heads the procession of three. At -the Bergean"s heels comes the Bpeaker, while the Clerk brings up the rear When the House is called to the' Bar of the 3:nate to hear read from | the thrord the speech opening or clos- the procession of | | mentbers from one chamber to the | | other is lcd by the Sergeant-at-Arms, wit, heavily armed, goes ahead to make sure that the way is clear for the Speaker and his faithful Com- mons. ® During 'the sittings of the House the Sergaant.at-Arme has much to do in connection with the mace. When the Speaker is in chair the mace reposes on its cushions at the lower end of the lgng table, but the instant the House goes into Committee of the Whole, and the Bpeaker lemves the chair, the Sergeant-at-Arms. re. moves the mace and conceals it 'by hanging it on two padded hooks or brackets that project from the legs of the table. ~ When non-contentious bills are be ing put through, the House will make a number of rapid changes into and out of Committee of the le, and the Sergeant-at-Arms has handle the mace with despatoh, . t would happen if the mace should not be on the table when the Speaker is in the chair, no one knows, not even greatest Parliamentarians. However, e Sergeant-a takes good care to see. that it a y of Sergeant.at-Armg is Robert Bmith 18.0. ADC. ; and jt te t too muoh to 'that the office na" nevad) filled with more di ye "efficiency, and satisfaction to cerned. A 5 ; . Col. Smith is a Parliamentarian of \ wide experience, for he was Deputy Sergeant for twenty ans, nd er, i e a r Henry Smi kK. where he iéd the old Grammar School from which Sir John A. Macdonald graduated before entering a law office as an articled clerk. Col clasps. He was again during the Northwest 1885, when he was mentionéd in: despatches and also won a ke Sergeant-at-Arms building, and | second { the office'; He ; South African Whites Losing to Cole ored Builders of Nations. Tak the whole Union of South Africa, the white population increased by only 161,219 in the last seven yecrs But the native and colored popula. ion increased by 621,456. In I904 the 'black and brown races formed 78.5 per cent. of the total population'pf the Union. To-day they constitute 78.55 ° per cent. In the Union of South Af- rica to-day there are only 51.338 male whites more. than there were seven years ago. But there are 336,089 more males in the native and colored popu- lation, } These census returns do not include Basutoland, Bechuanaland or Rho- desia, in which the black people far outnamber the white. Nor must it be forgotten that the death rate among the blacks' is decreasing, and that in years 10 come their percentage in- crease will still grow more rapidly. The whites in South Africa are not holding their own to-day. They are Talling back. It is a tendency which usually becomes more rapid the longer iv lasts, They are losing ground because the whole history of white colonization in South Africa has been a record of a fatuous attempt to build up a white nation upon a basis of colored labor. One of the most curious things in | that land of curious arguments is that with all, its "cheap" black labor is. lives largely upon 'the foodstuffs pro- 'duced . by "expensive" white labor thousands of miles oversea. South Af. ricans--will be heard declaring that white farm laborers are impossible ecau¥e they are too expensive. And he véry men who say so eat food- stuffs grown by white men in lands 6,000 miles across the sea. Black labor is actually encouraged by the laws of the land. The opera- tion of the Pass law in Transvaal, the terms of the workmen's compensation act, the very system of taxation--all aim at giving the employer as much cheap and easily controlled black lab- or as possible. ° Naturally this policy, extending over generations, has had the effect of creating in the mind of the white man a prejudice mgaingt manual labor. Ali rough work i¢ '"'Kalfir's work," degrnd. ing to the white aristocrat. Honorable poverty, a decent subsistence upon charity, is preferable. The objection is breaking down slowly, but for years | it 'must help those who are frankly in Tavor or the evlored inbor systenr," whatever the ultimate effect upon South Africa may be. Under this policy white South Africa is going back. Whole industries «re drifting into the hands of the colored races. And unless the system which has obtained for more than two cen- turies is 'altered--Bouth Africa must become a black man's land. It may pupport a nation. But it will be a {black and brown nation--never a white nation. " Byron at Prevesa. The Turco-Italian war is likely to' provide the literary gossips with plen. ty of "reminiscences." For instance. it is interesting to recall that it was Prevesa, in the Gulf of Arta, where the first shot of the war was fired, that Byron landed for his tour through Albania, and there also he began the canto of "Childe Harold," which he finished, by the way, at Smyrna, -another landmark in the present war, for an Italian squadron was reported in that quarter the other day. Prevesa.is in the vilayet of | Janina, where it is recorded 'in the Hon. Roden Noel's biography of By- ron, the poet was supplied by order of the Pasha with a housé, horses and all necessaries gratis. Ali himself be- ing absent besieging Ibrahim, in Illy- ria. Readers familiar with "Childe Har. old" will remember the very graphic description of the Gulf of Arta given by Hobhouse in a note to the poem. 1t is a vivid account of a night scene round 'the camp fires, with a back- ground of ragged rocks, and Albanian soldiers dancing in the firelight and singing fierce bandit songs, with the refrain, *Kjephteis, Pote Parga" "Rob- bers All at Parga." On leaving Ja- ninas Byron went to Missolonghi, thence to Vostizza, where he caught his first glimpse of the heights of Parnassus.--Pall Mall Gazette. Something About Pens. With what kind of a pen did Bir Walter Scott write the Waverley Nov- els? The question is under mild dis- cussion in The Athenaeum, Londen An Oxford tutor showed Ruskin & "silver pe" -with which, he said, Sir Walter wrote the Waverley Novels. "When I entered, Ruskin was read- ing one of the original manuscripts of the Waverley series. He took the pen, and, laying it reverently oti the page, said, 'Ah, they should never be parted.' And during the whole of thas visit to Oxford, and indeed for some time afterwards, I had to allow him to keep the pen." To this story a correspondent objects that in all prob- ability Sir Walter used a grey goose quill, and recalls that he has seen at Abbotsford a quill used by him. It is suggested that he used a quill in- deed, but with a holder of- silver. i": Started a Gold Rush, As the result of a small boy's epirit of play' there has been a great ol Ey Pambula recently. The lad, ating he 'was 's 'prospector, chipped © jioses of quartz in an abandoned mine situa in that dis. trict in New South Wales. e of his elders happened to see-the quarts : found it heavily studded with gold. They went to work st once and opened up a lode averaging two to four hundred ounces fo the ton. The entire vicinity was soon out pessed. Conservative prospectors doubt ths permanency of the camp, but the dis- covery has caused intense excitement. Gummed Stamps. | The inventor of the gummed stamp Hen pretel {was a» Scotchman, James Chalmers of Dundee, who in 1834 suggested the use of adhesive slips. He was much i doctors, who would PASSING OF "JEHU." The Bus Driver Was Wittier. In Fic. tion Than Fact. Who of us has not heard of the Lon- don bus driver? "He has been for years a stock character of all sorts of fie. tion and has furnished a theme for innumesable dissertations and essays. His philosophy has been commented upon and his wit has been eulogized. e¢ have all 'or rather the majority of us have at some 'time or other made more or less definite plans to travel snd have always included in our. route the great Metropolis of London, the bus driver has always been a part and parcel of the eity and in i fact one of the institutions. His day, | however, has set and he has had to { give placé to the more mechanical | and less romantic method of locomo- | tion. The following article will 'de- scribe the typical old time London bus driver: : Here and there in Central London you may now come across yards that are full of buses--buses that are al- ready exiled from their own yards, to which they will never retums; buses that will never leave the yards where they are now huddled except to pass under the haromer; buses that i never trundle along London stree again. "And in the , Bowes repositories are now hundreds of bus-horses that ! will never drag them again, perhaps never again hear "Hrrup!'--which meant "Higher up!"--but are to be dispersed, "fresh out of work," among "jobmasters, parcel carters, trades- men and others." Both 'buses and horses are.pathetic, for they have the pathos which at- taches to all passing things. But more pathetic than either -- because he is not only human but an old friend -- is: the bus driver who is passing with them, who will never again mount his perch or cry "Lipoostree!" and when an old friend is passing gome tribute 13 his due. 5 He was not only friend, but philo- sopher; and how he came to be a philosopher is not difficult to under- stand? Both his altitude and his atti- tude were favorable to the practice of philosophy. He had all a cobbler's leisure for self-communion with the advantage over the cobbler of being nivfe in touch with realities and his fellow humans. From his perch he daily passed a whole world in review, noted all the comedy of the pave- ments, and goteinto the habit of sum. ming..np,.a. sudden. TOW, A curious ero wrongs of an accident, and all the oddities of chance and circumstance that the tide of London's streets throws up. And as the germ of all piitiosoplies is criticism of one's fel- ow creatures, the bus driver became a philosopher malgre lui. But he had human weaknesses that should not belong to the true philo- sopher. Generations of tradition had convinced him that philosophy was expected of him, and so he tried to live up to a reputation that was really higher than his deserts. Generations 'of ¢ountry cousins, and even of ad- miring townsmen, had+=encouraged and even a little spoiled him by hanging on his words until he came to regard himself as not only qualified Sitnation--a street | wd, the rights and | whatever problem might be presented to him. And when his philosophy failed to meet the case his wit stepped into the breach. His wit! There again his reputa- tion went a litfle before him, a dan- gling carrot which he could never quite catch up. He was supposed to excel in that branch of wit known eas repartee, though in practice it wos found that he rarely adventured be- yond variations, and those rarely sub. tle, on the old theme of "You're an- other!" But we so spoiled him by great ex- pectations that we angled even for the bit of wit that was to turn the laugh against 'ourselves, and we humored him and ourselves by see. ing more in his jokes than was some- times to be found in them. We would take no denial; and he, recognizing what was expected of him; gallantly did his best to maintain the reputation of his tribe, relying on the charitable ears thrust forward from the front seat, confidént of the laugh that was ready to burst out on trust, solaced in the last resort by convie- tion that if his inspiration failed we should ascribe his failure to our own clumsiness in prompting him, "or ut the worst to our ill-luck in stumbling across one of his rare "off-days." The Wife of a Poet. The intricacies of a great man's character are often simplicities to his wife. "Once when the present poet laureate of England had paid a visit to Tennyson, his immediate predeces- sor, Tennyson walked with him as far } as the gate which led to the highway. There, says Alfred Austin, in his re- cent "Autobiography," while the elder poet stood leaning on the gate a party of wide-eyed sightseers appeared. "What a vulgar people the English are!" Tennyson exclaimed "They come here to watch for me dnd when they see me they say quite loudly, 'There's Tennyson!" : Mr. Austin afterward repeated this to Lady Tenngson, who smiled tea- derly but arcidy" "My husband would be much more anmoyed if the people didn't come," said. Constabie and His Pictures. Constable, the eminent British painter, oncé sat on the hanging com- mittee of the British Royal Academy when a small landscape was brought up for judgment and pronounced "aw- fully bad' by everybody but himself, He rose and made a short and starti- ing speech. "That pieture was paint ed by me. I had a notion that some of you didn't like my work, and this is a pretty convincing proof. I am very much obliged to you." When his colleagues recovered from their stupe- faction the head carpenter was bidden to bring back the picture. But Con- stable would pot have it. "Out it goes!" he said grimly. 2 Painfully Frank. Wordsworth on one occasion when talking to his wife referred to a time when, "as you know, I was better looking." ; "But, my dear," ied she, "you were always very y." A swelled head is often the direct aftermath of fatter. . v . talks foolishly when the Toh, ta ld of it. | bet was never set | British | ant car is arduous, 1: ! ee | in cylinders, and i * JOHN BRIGHT. Great English Statesmen's Centenary Was Celebrated Recently. The centenary of the icth, of ohn Bright, the great English Qualkfér, ora tor and progressive statesman, was celebrated on Nov. 16. By English- men John Bright is remembered as' one of the chief advocates of the re- peal of the corn laws, of the'exten- sion of suffrage and the establish. ment of a national system ol' educa. tion. Toithe Irish he was a consist. ent and powerful friend in all their struggles, except the final one for home rule. y the Hindus he is ratefully recalled for his fight to end eo abuses of the East India Com- pany and to bring India under the direct control of the crown. To the world at large he stands as an advo- cate of peace, of the rights of works ingmen and of humanitarian move ments. John Bright has been classed as the foremost orator among English statesmen of the nineteenth century. In his directness, his outspoken op position to wrong and his moral and religibus force he has been likened to one of the Hebrew prophets. His diction was well chosen and his voice full and musical, but perhaps ! greatest power with an audience } in his simplicity; honesty and estness. e was cere. Yet with all these er used them for self aggrandize- ment and never failed to use them in behalf of the poor and downtrodden. He employed short Anglo-Saxon words, humor and epigram, logic and facts. He fought always against the aristocracy and for the commen peo- ple, yet he dared to go against public opinion if he thought it wrong, suf- fering cbloguy to denounce the Crime. ean war and leaving the Cabinet be. cause of the bombardment of Alex. andria. ! He had little education, going into his father's business as a spinner at the age of fifteen John Bright took his religion into (ne of his liest fights i nie R ard credit of b - Take him ne of the purest the, world has ing ire all in types seen. : Quaint Old-Time Army Bets. Daring wegers between army RREE BE DAR. £8, offi- ntal befting-book of the 11 be read the hton bets Mr. of port Mr. drunk before five nighta To this there is the "Lost by Mr. More hum- Johns will be from this date." significant addition: Johns (et nullug/ error)" orous is a subsequent entry Ewan bets Mr. Hallett one bottle of wine that he (Mr. E.) will kick the apothecary of Dundalk from one end of the town to the other'"'--a bet that was not decided. xk 1861 _a Lieutenant Hayter bet Dr. Seaman that he (thé lieutenant) had more hair on his head apd face than the doctor; and the sequel reads: "Decided by the majority in the room, decidedly the worse for drink, Lieutenant Hayter losing." Finally, there was a dramatic end to a wager made in India in 1856. A - Captain Crawford bet a Captain Wright one bottle of ¢hampagne that neither of them would-be killed in tion with- in twelve months from that date. The ed, for a marginal n Crawford and note reads: 'Capt | Captain Wright both killed." The Traveling Restaurant. Every long-distance railway in the Is! has its restaurant car either restricted or liberal, ac ing to circumstances. The ma- jority of the companies manage the cars themselves through the agency of their hotels department, but there is at least one case where the cars are sub-let to private caterers. The work of the crew of a restaur- and more unremit- ting than people suppose. Generally, the staff consists of a head-waiter, three' or four under ters, a chef, and an under chef They take pos- session of the car long before the train is due to start, and, whilst the chef prepares the first meal, the wait- ers are busy laying table, cleaning cutlery, and polishing up the interior of the car Cooking is done by gas contained t the fumes of service, this gas in a confined area that makes the work somewhat unhealthy. On a recent journey the chef of a- restaurant car in Ireland had an un- expected rush upon his resources. First he ufflized all the gas at com- mar, then a little methylated spirit he had by him, and finally he was res duced to cooking by the aid of bacon fat left in the frying-pan. The Simple Rulers. The Indian Maharajah does not sit down to breakisst covered with dia- monds and rubies, and except on state occasions is oftem conspiuous for the extreme simplicity of his dress. He does not build palaces by the dozen, of order motor cars by the score; for every case of wilful extrava- gance on the part of an Indian ruler, 1 think I could name half a dozen where personal expenditure is limited almdst to frugality. . . ' They dé not, as a rule, marry with ardent enthusiasm at frequent inter. vals, though there are exceptions. They mingle with their people far more freely than the minor European princes, I have often been struck with the almost democfatic relations subsist ing between the prince and his sub- | jects in many native states. The First Wheel, Although it seems difficult to rea. lize a world withhat wheels, these usefu} spheres, which have now be. come necessities, were not used in England until comparatively recent times. > 'It was not till the year 1568 that the. very first carriage with wheels attached was made. This was build for, and by the orders of, Queen Elizabeth. x The first public conveyance that pliefi for. hire as a cab was not in use until 1625; whilst the ancestor of our dear old horse 'buses--the stage- --did not arfive on the streets till 1650, esl Sa TE amon, than Abbey's fen Salt voscent A soft answer 4 tunrneth away 4. wrath, and a little of Abbey's Salt sweeténs a sour stomach. 25¢ and 60c. Sold everywhere. Do s>essesssescsecs THE CLUB HOTEL WELLINGTON STREET, {Near Princess) There ere other none approach the homelike surroundings Located in centre of cit close to principal stores theatre hotels, Cind _ Charges are 'moderate Special rates by the week .» M, THOMPSON, Proprictor, I lish gins gubntesihow vi A nervous system, makes Blood in old Veins, Cures Nerve ous Debility, Mental a Brain Worry, Des. pondency, Sexual Wea 58, Kmissions, Sper matorrhea, and Effects of 4 buse or kreesscs, Prico $1 per box, sixfor 85, One will please, six will cure. Sold by «) dropggists or mailet-in plain pkg. on receipt of price, New pamphlet mailed free. The W ne Co. formerly Windsor) Toronto, Ont Christmas and New Year Holidays. Round Frip-Tickets' will be issued at SINGLE FIRST CLASS FARE ing Dec. 231 and Return limit bth; also going ist, 1811, fan limit, 2nd, g iood 25th good and Jan Return Tickets will also be issued at iood going De 1: nor For ur 21st, 1911, to Jan , Inclusive Good to re before Jan. 3rd, 1912 ther' information apply, to J. P. HANLEY., Agent, Se] Johnson and Ontario 8ts 1st, 1 urn « Corner TRAV BELLING, z Kincstong PEMBROKE ~ RAILWAY Christmas and- New Year Exeursions. ~~ Return Tickets between all stations east of Port Arthur on sale SINGLE FARE Good going December 23 Return Dec at and 25 limit, a6 Also good going Dec. 30 Retu and Jan mm limit, Jan. 2nd, 1912 Single Fare And One Third Good going D Jan. 1a 1912, inclusive 1 3 1 to Re Full partic UPR turn limit, | Ticket Office F.-Conway, Gen. Pass. Agent BAY OF QUINTE RAILWAY. Train leaves- Unlon Station, Ontar! ftrect, 4 une dally' (Bunday excepted for Tweed, Bydenham, Napanee, lesa mito, Bannqci vd all points sorth, To secur k despatch Bannockburn, Ma Sentral Ontario Ro y fa Bay of Qrinte Rallw er particulsre, apply, Wele rt. Agent; J 0 Phones No % IDEAL WINTER RESORT. a: TOURS CABIN 88 frie GUBA Where rigorous northern w exchanged for wonderful Cuban Hie Sailings eactigy Thursday for Vera Cruz 8 connection ti bh, Pass Agon! New BRAZOS ther 1 necting also semi York to Baill Thur and gs each lay aturday avana Co ~Lal sont 0 ir Ballings ea Friday for Tamplos for Mexico City interior of Mexico particulars fons SEW YORK AND CUBA MAIL 8.8, On, General Offices. Pler 14, East New York Also FRED A. FOLGER, Kingston. for 4 ir ans about rates and accommodat River ®. GRAND CRUISE TO THE ORIENT By the most palatial cruising steamer sfioat . s.$. "vicforn Luise" (16.600 Tous) Sallleg from New York JANUARY 30, 1912 iE Lon a TH Days' «© PORTUGAL, "BEATA MEDITERRAN the ORIENT a Lf the EAN and, Cost $325 "VICTORIA pped with every , providisg every comlort ou lovg : = Also Cruises to Weel Indica, Routh Americ Around ihe World, Italy end Sgwpi, elo. Bend for Wistrated Booklet, HANMBURG-AMERICAN 'LINE, FARE AND. ONE. THIRD. |." 2 REMOVED. > T. J. Lockhart, Real! Estate and Insurance Agent, an. nounces that he bas removed to larger offices over Bank of Montreal, Clarence Street, Kingston, where he has better facilities "for conducting his business ROYAL ICE CREAM PARLOR AND QUICK LUNCH ROOM. All kinds of Lunches and Hot Drinks Ice Cream. and all kinds of Fruit _and Candies. M, PAPPAS & CO 154 Princess Street. ! KINGSTON BUSINESS - COLLEGE (Limited) "Highest Education at Lowest Cost' Twenty sixth year, Fall Term begins August 30th. Courses in Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Tele raphy, Civil Bervice and Eng- ish. Our graduates get the best poxitions Within a shirt time over sixty secured positions with one of the largest railway cor- porations in Canada. Enter any time. Call or write for informa. tion, H. ¥ Metcalfe, Principal Kingston, Canada Seasonable - Goods . Heinz Mince Meat Chivers' English Plum Pudduing, Prime Western Beef, AT PICKERING'S 490 Princess St. "Phone 530 Special Just Now CHRISTMAS CANDIES CONSIDERING get this idea warm weather inte al all seem to ink for ey tt WORTH At Des dr 7 il ny 1 to appt 1 beneficl Bros, The THOMPSON BOTTLING CO. phone 304 temo WwW. C Tumber, yusiness Princeas ate 8. J Prop al Notice! Beunett, has 3 Tinemith and temoved his place of from 373 King St. to 191 Street, voxt ddor to the Horsey's Hardware Store ' there he will be pleased to meet all his old customers and as MANY hew ones as require fire's slags Tiesmithing and Plumbing lone; also agent for the Souvenir Range Phone 1033 06EPPIDROPPOROIROOSOOIOIOS Highest Grades GASOLINE, COAL OIL. LUBRICATING OIL. FLOOR OIL, GREASE, ETC. PROMPT DELIVERY. W, F. KELLY. Clarefice and Ontario Streets, Toye's Bullding. Ct 0000CSCOSOOOCROPOOOOOOISET ®ooccecvcccenocsonceas PENI OROOSOOIRNORROD $0000009000000040 bee eee ¢ CHRISTMAS GIFTS 2 ¢ Buy something useful we would suggest. i HOCKEY BOOTS: : I* Quick hitch or light- ning hitch. NICE WARM FELT . SLIPPERS. Tan, * Chocolate Black Kid Slippers. DRESSY EVENING SLIPPERS In Pat. Colt. Kid, Gun Metal, Velvet or Suede, ore § s------ PUMPS or STRAPPED SLIPPERS, - OVER- SHOES heavy or fine. Rubbers, Moccassins, Overgaiters, and Leg- gings. to eet make glad. Everythin your THE BOC I0000PCOPVCIVOINVV0I00PCVON POONER POPP P0P0090P90000 41-40 Wway, N. ¥., or loenl agent. Store Sawyer Shoe BS

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