Daily British Whig (1850), 5 Jan 1916, p. 13

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| PAGE TWELVE | Stange But Tue Story of 2 Stan (Hy Rev. Canon Dyson Hague, in-London Christian Herald.) : staliza to "officer extended "both Once when | was preaching in St. Paul's church, Halifax--the "West- minister of Canada," as it has been called--1 told the following story: "Many years ago, Doctor Valpy, a well kngwn English scholar, wrote a verse of four lines as the lenging of his heart and the confession of his faith. This was it: "In peace, let me resign my breath, And Thy salvation see; My sins deserve eternal death, But Jesus died for me." Sometime afterwards he gave this 8 friend, Doctor Marsh, a notable Church of England clergy- man, and the father of Miss Marsh, the author of the "Life of Captain Hedley Vicars," and the verse be- came a great blessing to him. Doctor Marsh gave the lines to his friend, Lord Roden, who was so impressed with them that he got Doctor Marsh te write them ont, and then fastened the paper 'over the mantlepiece in his study; and there, yellow with age, they ' for many years, a memorial of the beloved hand that traced them. Sometime after this an old friend--QGeneral Taglor, one of the heroes of Waterlod --came ¥ to visit him at Tollymore Park. Lord Roden noticed that the eyes of. the old veteran were always fixed fora few moments on the motto over the mantlepiece. "Why, General," said Lord Roden, "you will soon know the verse by heart." "I know if now by heart," replied the general, with feeling," afd the simple words were the means of bringing him to know the true way of Salvatiwp. Some two years afterwards the physician, who had been with the old general while he lay a dying, wrove to Lord Roden to say that his friend had. departed ir peace, and that the last words which fell from the old general's lips were the words he had learned to love. Years afterward, at the house of a neighbor, Lord Roden happened to tell the story (of the old general and these lines, Among those who heard of was a young, officer in the British army, who had recently returned from the Crimea. He listened care- lessly enough, and no' impression semed to be made at the time. A earl entered the sick room, the dying his" hands to welcome him, repeating the lines: ~and then he added, 'These simple words have been (God's message of peace and comfort to 'my heart in this illness, and they have been brought to my memory by the Holy Ghost, the Comforter; after days of darkiiess and distress." As I was telling this story in old St. Paul's Halifax, § noticed that an old gentleman; who was sitting in a pew just in front of me, was being overcome with an extraordinary emotion. His whole frame seemed to quiver with some unwonted 'excite AA AAA ee 3 D2 ment, and his eyes looked bright with a strange light. 1 thought for 4 moment that it was a passing at- tack of some kind. But as I went on telling the story, there was no doubt that it had in some way seized upon the very soul of the listener and touched his feelings with some strange and indeseribable suggestion. And when at last I came to the part about the Crimean officer, I thought that the old gentleman would have almost cried out in the church, so deeply was he affected. The story ended the sermon. After the sing- ing of the hymn I went into the ves- try. 1 had searcely got there when a knock was heard at the door, and the old gentleman, with emotion still evident, came and said, "Where did you get 'that story?" I told him 1 read it in the work of a modern au- thor whose works are widely- read. He said, "I do not know whether you saw that I was very much touch- ed by it but it almost overcame me." Saved Through Verse On Tombstone. With tears streaming from his eyes, he told me this story. Years Lago when he was a young man, care- less and indifferent in matters of re- ligion, he sauntered one day in his walk into an old churchyard near Wolfville, Nova Scotia, in the land of "Evangeline," ahd seeing a fallen gravestone, he overturned it out of pure curiosity. And there he read at the foot; engraved in the stone, those very four lines, and they took such hold upon him, and so clearly tion? that they were the means of his conversion. And from . that nearly 50 years before, he had, hy God's grace, as a result of those four lines, led . a- consecrated life for Christ, "You can imagine," spid he, about the lines. You brought hac God saved me!" It was not long after that | was sent, for to visit this old gentleman in a sickness which gradually grew more serious. One of the last things he did before he died was to take my hand affectionately, and ask me, as his clergyman, to do him a fa- vor, and that was, that at his funeral! and over his coffin I would tell the story of the lines in the hope that the prayer of a. dying man might be ans- wered and that they snight be a bless- ing to many more souls more. Soon afterwards he died. And at his fun: eral, which was attended by a large and representative body of promin- ence, ihe story.of the stanza that-had been the means of transforming so many lives. I ended by saying that on his dying bed that the words, which would be distributed as his last memorial to all "present, might -------- explained to him the way of salva-| day, | 'my amazement, as well as my de- | light, when I heard you tel] the story | to me the wonderful way in which | it was the wish of the dear old man | the other side the never-to-be-forgot- ten words that had'led:to his salva- tion, "Oh, Pear Rector, I'm a Saved Man." When I told this story in a vaca- tion service in one the charming uoteis in the White ntains, New Hampshire, an American gentleman, a prominent New Yorker, was so deeply impressed that he said, after hearing the words: "lI have rarely heard anything that made such an impression upon me. Never before in my l'fa have I so clearly grasped the way of salvation through faith in the Crucified." And 'to-day there lies on my table a letter from a clergyman in England, telling me thal this story few months later, however, Lord Roden received a message from the officer that he wanted to see him, as he was in a rapid decline. As the was used to the awakening of a man who happened to hear the lines in church one night, and the next day, with tears in his eyes, said: "Oh, dear rector, I am a saved man! It was those wonderful lines. Hence- forth I am going to live for my Sav- ieur." "And", added the clergyman, "he is still walking faithfully." "In peace, let me resign my breath, "And Thy salvation see, ( My sins deserve éternal death, But Jesus died for me." Seven Sentence Sermows. Apologies' only account for what they do net alter.--Earl of Beacons- fidld. What we get we must earn, if it is to be truly ours---David Starr Jordan. Something each day,--a deed Of kindness and of good, To liak in closer bonds Al human brotherhood, Oh, thus the heavenly will eall may do while here: For a good deed every day Nakes hlessed all the year George Cooper. good-breeding will everywhere Lord Merit and make their way Chesterfield And the Spirit of Jehovah shall rest upon him, the spirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of counsel and might, the - spirit of | knowledge and of the fear of Jeho- {ran Isa. xi, 2 "Tis sweet to feel that we may he In partnership, dear Lord, with | Thee; "Tis sweet to feel that all we do To_make our lives sincere and true Is known to Thee, and that we share | As partners all Thy love and care. Mary D. Brine. | Meditation is the great storehouse ent men, I told over the coffin, amid | of our spiritnal dynamics, where di- the most profound and interested sil- | prise and the hero is strengthened { for his fieldi--J. Martineau. No good ever comes from a belat- ed sense of duty. The band-to-mouth man: is never afraid of thieves. vine epergies lie 'hid for any enter-| B. C. AND THE WAR. > tee = : x Times Have Driven the People Back to the Land. The war and the collapse of real fatate speculation are proving bless- fugs In disgulee to the people of the est, says a writer in Toronto Satuf- day Night. One bas induced saner views in the direction of both per- Sonal aud municipal ecomomy, and the latter has removed most of the get-richrquick spirit which was a will stone around the neck of true progress. What the extreme western province has needed for a long time las been more natural production and less living on borrowed capital. The war has cut off the inflow of cap- ital very decidedly, and the hard times, are driving many people back to the land. It may be said at once that British Columbia will.never be a great agricultural province in the sense that Ontario and Alberta are, because it abounds in mountain ranges, water courses and vast tracts which will never be anything else than mining areas, not to speak of the many stretches of standing timber. But there are many fertile valleys and districts which ure suitable for. mixed farming and fruit growing. The more they are culti- vated the less the province will have to import. There is the fertile Fraser Valley stretching from Chilli- wack to Boundary Bay, a distance of about ninety miles, most of which is extremely rich and capable of pro- ducing a vast amount of produce. There are some splendid farming areas on Vancouver lsland, while vast areas in the Peace River district are suitable for raising wheat and otfier grains. The Okanagan is fam- b output is steadily increasing. Okanagan growers are this year considerably extending their mar- kets, according to. information ob- tained from C. P. R. sources. For years past apples have been shipped from this province to the Old Coun- try and prairie markets and a to Australia. This year the field has been widened and B. C. Jonatbans and Wealthies have found their way to South Africa and the Argentine. Shipments to these latter countries are more or less of an experiment, but it is hoped to secure a market and gradually develop it with in- creased production in thé Okanagan. The carload which was shipped to Table Bay last year was followed this season by three carloads. The initial ture of an adventure, and it , was gratifying for tN shippers to learn that the fruit se®t had been much appreciated and that more was de- manded. three carloads of Jonathans and Wealtiies--apples which better stand climatic chahges. It is hoped that this will be but the thin edge of the wedge in securing for. British Columbia apples a place in South American markets. Local freight officials of the C. P, R. state that arrangements have been thade for the shipment of six car- loads of apples to England from Brit- ish Columbia, and there is a possi- bility of another six cars being sent. The last boat to Australia, it is inter- esting to note, carried 2,500 boxes of \ is, of course, some years' standing. but ported -to be developing steadily. rm ---------- shipment was made quite in the na- | His wit is never caustic: the King of Fruits. This Australian | busi a trade of | ous.as & froit-growing ceatre and its | The first shipment to the Argen- | tine, made this season, consisted of | | storm of sighs? {7 A MASTER OF SATIRE, Stephen Yeacock is a RB Subtlety and Vitality, In "Who's Who" Stephen Leacock ia described as a professor of politieg) economy. You might imagine 4 dried-up, stooped, dusty igi). man, through whose spectacles the Joy ot economies still shines, and whoge holiday reading. consists of 'pp. Statesman's Year Book' and (Le ag- ricultural reports. The real Stephen Leavock is 4 humorist with twinkling eyes and a merry laugh, who lectyres in political econoniy when he is not otherwise engidged. : . Prof. Leacock's craftsmanship has improved with each book that he has published. There is a marked differ. Lapses" and that of "Arcadian Ad- ventures with the Idle Rich." A few of the sketches in "Literary Lapses" he bas scarcely surpassed. 'My Fip- ancial Career" is an excellent ex- ample, but as a whole "Literary Lapses" is his poorest book. Prof. Leacock is a master of deli- cate satire. He pokes fun at every-, thing and everyone. No class of so- ciety is proof against his genial thrusts. Clergymen, financiers, and professors are equally favored. Prof. Leacock finds a sort of unholy joy in shattering our prejudices and illu- sions. These who have been thrilled by Captain Marryat and inspired by Horatio Alger must experience a shock in reading 'Nonsense Novels.' Has .the day co when the adven- tures of the poor, honest Heue- kiah Hayloft in ? York arouse emotions, not of sympathetic admir- ation, but of uncontrollable mirth? *O tempora! O mores! Prof, Leacock's methods are en- tirely differen: from those of some American humorists, The latter get certain effects by the use of what is known on the stage as "slap-stick."" Leacock is an artist, not a clown. Only a master can tell a common- place 'story in such a comical way that the recollection of it, even Mm church, makes us clutch our nose in a desperate effort to avoid public: dis- grace. - Our political economist makes quite as much fun of the respectable, unimaginative middle class is Bern- ard 'Shaw, but with what a differ- ence! The Shavian method is that of a surgeon who thoroughly enjoys a gruesome operation. Prof. Leacock loves his characters, even whem he is laughing most heartily at them. In Je hands of a less "human" writer, Mr. Spillikins, in "Arcadian Adventyres," would be nothing, more than a shal- low fop. Prof. Leacock makes him a pathetic little object, ridiculous as he is. Do you remember him when he was telling how Dulphemia had received his proposal, when his 30- inch chest was shaken with a sudden "But at any rate she | was awfully nice, lgt me say--every- thing 1 wanted, and when I explained what a fool I was, she said she didn't | think I was half such a fool as people it is re- | thought me. But it's all right, It tunes out that she isn't thinking of getting married. I asked her if I might go on thinking of her and she said I might." Poor little Mr. Spilfi- kins!--J, 'D. Bush in Toronto Star Weekly. Canadian Singer Returns. Miss Juliette Gauthier, a French- Canadian girl whose musical educa- tion was conducted' under the patron- ence between the quality of "Literary- a - . -- - - ah How to Save ~ Your Eves Try This Free Prescription Do your eyes give you trouble * nn Jou already wear eyeglasses of spectich Chonsauds of people wenr these "Window « Who might easily. dispense with ii You may he cas of these, snd It is duty to save your eyes before it is i late, The vies une mlecind ore any other organ of the entire body. You floish your day's work you sit and rest your muscles, but how about yo eyes ¥ Do you rest them? You 1 you donot, You read or do something cise that kedps your eves DUsyY; you work Your eyes until you go to bed, That Why 50 many have 'strained eyes, and fiy ally ther dye troubics that thre lag, pas tial or total blindness. Eybgiasset are merely crutehes: they never cure. This free prescription, which has benefitted the | yes of so many, may work equal won ders for you. Use ft a short thme, W. you like your eye troubics lo disappear a if by magic ¥ is proscription. to the nearest wide-awake 3 get a bottle of Bon Opte ta wo-ounce bowls with warm wate in ove tablet and allow it to tho 5 dissolve, With this liquid bathe the yes two to four times daily. Just note how | qnickly--yonr aves clear up and how soon the inflammation will disappear. Don't be | afraid to use it; it is absolutely harm loss. Many who are now blind might have saved their eyes had they started to care for them in thwe. This is a simple treat ment, but marvellonsly effective in multi tndes of cases. Now that you have heen warned don't delay a dar; but do what you Can to save your eyes, and you are likely | to thank us as long as you live for pub lishing this prescription The Valmas Drug Co. of Toronto will fill 'the above prescription hy mail, if your druggist cannot. Geo. 'W. Mahood, the Kingston Drug. | gist, will also he pleased to fill above prescription. DARKEN GRAY HAIR, LOOK YOUNG, PRETTY Sage Tea and Sulphur Darkens So Naturally That No- body Can Tell. Almost everyone Fnows that Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly compoun- ded, brings back the natural . color and lustre to the hair when. faded, streaked or gray; also ends dandruff, itching scalp and stops falling hair. Years ago-the only way to get this mixture was to fake it at home, which is mussy and troublesome Nowadays, by asking. at any drug store for "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound," yeu will gef a large bot- tle of this famous old recipe. for {about 50 cents, Don't stay gray!, Try it! No one can possibly tell that you darkened your hair, as it does it so naturally and evenly. You dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning the gray hair disappears; and after an- other application or two, your hair vecomes beautifully dark, thick and glossy, ' SALTS IF KIDNEYS aOR BLADDER BOTHER Harmless to flush Kidneys neutralize irritating acids, Kidney and Bladder weakness re- sult from urie acid, says a noted | authority, The kidneys filter this and rm Ra Ne Package for Overseas Our Meat Department. is tocked with the best. Give ns a trial order. 3. H. PICKERING, Prop. vu 490 Princess St. Phone 530 ee "ook's Cotton Root ma, A Farm for Sale 100 acres, 12 miles from city; good buildings, plenty of water, some wood, $4,750, easy terms, Farm 300 acres, log house and barn, on shore | of a beautiful lake; good fish- ing and hunting, $450, ll W.H. GODWIN & SON | Phone 424. 39 Brock St rrp Coal} The kind you are looking for is the kind we sell. Scranton Coal Is good Coal and we , prompt delivery, BOOTH & CO. Foot of West St, A ey Holida y Season Hockey Boots ! Boys' Hockey Boots Girls' Hockey Boots Ladies' Hockey Boots Fruits of all kinds = Gents' Hoekey Boots Invictus Hockey 'Boots Lightning Hitch Hockey Boots : acid from the blood and pass it on to the bladder, where it often re- mains to irritate and .inflame, caus- ing a burning, scalding sensation, or setting: up an irritation at the neck of the bladder, obliging you to seek! | age of Lord and Lady Strathcona and | Sir Wilfrid and Lady Laurier in Bud- | apest, Rome, and Paris, and who has the British Columbia Minister of | studied under the world's greatest Lands, the total output of sawlogs | masters, has returned to Ottawa, her for the Province, as shown by the | home town, to remain until after the B.C, Output. According to the timber returfis for the month of September issued by Hardening of the Arteries An Interesting Explanation of How This Dreaded nerves; muscles and vital You take ont the garden hose in the spring, 80t hard and brittle the tubing bursts and w The arteries of the human body may be, likened to everywhere through the body and carry blood to the ha Condition is. Brought About. organs. They carry all the blood if this blood is burdened with the liver atrd kidneys are not filtering work, these walls of the arteries. ; The "deposit thug formed gradually thickens and * hardens-the walls of the arteries. The tiny blood vessels of the liver are affected, and thenee comes that fatal disease--cirrhosis of the liver. The eells of the kidneys become starved Bright's disease In health the arteries have the elasticity of rubber, and gate, as required by the demands: of the blood pressure. are like so mnch biittle rubber tubing. The blood pressure comes on, the tubing bursts, and the resulting blood clot on the brain causes apoplexy. It will be. plainly seen that the cause of trouble is in the inefficient condition of the liver and kidneys. turn on the water, and if the rubber has ater spurts out in all directions. small rubber pipes, 'which go nds and feet, as well as to the poisons form a deposit on the inside in the human system, and the poisons left over when properly performing. their for, want. of blood, and ets its start. expand, contraet or elon- the arteries Hardened, Sealing figures, amounted to 92,080 - 493 feet board measure, while 261, 911 lineal feet of poles, piles, and railway ties, 'fence posts, shingle bolts, etc., were also sealed for roy- alty during the month under review. The figures for the Vancouver dis- trict were 53,001,924 feet board measure sawlogs, 14,394 lineal feet piles, ete, and 16,364 eords ties, bolts, ete, the Island district con- tribuling 5,307,218 feet sawlogs, in addition to 2,520 lineal feet piles. |In the Prince Rupert district there were scaled 954,135 feet: sawlogs, while the totals under the same head- ing for the Cranbrook, Nelson, and Vernon districts were respectively 21,595,575 feet, 7,135,290 feet, and 3,349,603 feet. Poles, piles, and props to the total of 328,304 lineal to the total of 15,013 lineal feet. Timber sales recorded during Sep- tember cayer an estimated total of 7,338,000 feet sawlogs, and 2,080 Exports to Britain Jump. An Increase in imports from 'Can- ada of $34,697,000 and a decrease in exports to Canada of $20,498,080 during the first nine months of the present fiscal year is shown by figures props, together with 29,312 cords of | feet were scaled in the Nelson dis- | trict, and in the Cranbrook division | cords of shingle bolts, estimated to | produce a total revenue of $12,876. | | | war. Miss Gauthier bas a charming personality, is artistic in appearance and is gifted with a quaint humor, altogéther irresistible. Miss Gauthier's musical education f began in Ottawa, where she studied | | toria College | i | | the violin at the Conservatory of Music. Later she studied at MeGill Conservatory of Music under Alfred De Seve and attended the Royal Vic- for Women for two years, In 1907 she left Canada: for Budapest, Hungary, where - she was accepted as a pupil of Jeno Aubay and also admitted to the Royal Con- servatorium of Music, which is a high honor as she wax the only Can- adian ever admitted. years' study she passed examinations for both singing and violin and under the advice of Jeno Aubay and David Popper, the world renowned 'cellist, also of Budapest, Miss Gauthier wetft to Italy to take up singing. She re- mained there for four years under Vincenzo Lombardi, the most ecele- brated teacher in . . After a successful debut in Italy she signed a contract with the Bos- ton Grand Opera. She has sung in Several concerts in Canada, and would have. toured the Dominion but for the war, which interrupted Snerytaing of that kind in this coun- Miss Juliette Gauthier is the daughter of Lowmis Gauthier, of Ot- relief two or three. times during the! night. The sufferer is in .constant| dread, the water phsses sometimes with a scalding sensation pnd is! very profuse; again, there is diffi- | culty in avoiding it. ' - | Bladder weakness, most folks call | it, because they can't control urina-| tion. While it is extremely annoy-| ing and sometimes very painful, this| is really one of the most simple ail- ments' to overcome. Get about four ounces of Jad Salts from your phar-| jmacist and take a tablespoonful in al glass of water before breakfast, cons tinue this for two or three days. This will neutralize the acids in the urine 80 it no longer is a source of irrita- | tion to the bladder and urinary or-| gans which then act normally again. | Jad Salts is inexpensive, _harm- less, and is made from the acid of | grapes and lemon juice, combined | with lithia, anc is" used by thou-| sands of folks, whb are subject 'to! urinary disorders caused by urici acid irritation. Jad Salts is splendid |' for" kidneys and causes no bad effects whatever. Here you have a pléasant, effer-. vescent .lithia-water drink, quickly relieves bladder trouble. JOHN M. PATRICK whieh © No No. No. Quick Hitch Hockey Boots : RAILWAY LITRE TRE Local Branch Time Table, IN EFFECT MAY 30TH, 1918. Trains will leave und arrive at City Depot, foot of Johnston street. Gelag Wess. Lv. Clty. 19--Mall seveea 12.20 a.m. 13~Fast Ex. .. 358am, 27--Lel. to" Tor. 5.20 a.m. 1--Intl Ltd, . 1.41 pm. 7--Mail . 3.04 pm. $1--Local ° Belleville 6.58 p.m. Ar. City. No. 1257 am. No. 3.85. a.m. No. Now No. 0. Ar. City. 3.i7am. 3.35am. When these filtering organs are kept healthy and active, and The bowels regular in the removal of Sewing Machines, Ui brellas, Suit Cases, Trunks, repaired and refitted, tawd, and a sister of Miss Eva Gau- thier: who also is well. known in musical circles in Europe and Am- : 8.50 am. No: 14=Intl. Lid te No. 28 al to i for that period received by the Trade and Commerce Department from Commissioner Ray, of Birminghim. waste matter, there is no chance for such dreadful -conditions af hardenin about. As in all forms of serious dis: - ease, prevention is the oply. wise course to, fol. You ean positively depend on Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills to awaken the action of liver and kidneys, and also ensure the regularity of movement of the bowels. It is only by the ae- tivity of these organs that the blood can he kept low, pure and free from stances which form deposits in the arteries and at other points in the human system, causing pain, suffering and serious disease. When you think ills, such thousands of homes. neys and bowels active they cure the common and prevent serions disease. One pill cents & Hox, all dealers, & Co; Ltd, Toronto. rele, Sot fon, 4 you memion ills of life, a dose. . as eolds, indigestion, biliousness, head- aches, backaches, ete. A condition of these organs, vou will better under. stand the reason why Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills are the favorite family medicine in many g of the arteries bring urie aeid and other sub- of the seores of common . Which arise from a torpid By keeping the liver, kid: or Edman- > oe " | importance exists at any The total imports from Canada were $138,917,000, and ex 4 Dominion $49,407,000. . Details are also furnished of the recent steps takem by the British au- thorities in respect to the requisition- ing of all ships of British register, (which regulations closely affect Can- ada. show that rumors that the Government contemplates the re. quisitioning of the. entire British mercantile marine are without foun- dation, but that power has been tak- gal, the requisitioning o a sufficient nyfhber of vessels, with cases wherd an emergency of national particular market owing to the absence of ton- nage, and, further, to regulate the employment of British shipping in the carriage of cargoes between for- eign ports by means of licenses. - r-------- tan ru Toronto's : Toronto last 0.000 worth of municipal debéntures. Una . : To succeed you must be unanimous with yourself, : Ra , rT tii Your supposed reserved seat in Heaven may be occupied by some- body you would not speak to . on py exports to the erica. A Floating Studio, : An experiment probably without a lel on the . continent will be undertaken by Mr, and Mrs. F. Me- Gillivray Knowles, the well-known Toronto artists, in a few weeks when they ll say farewell to studio life on dry land and embark on & Studio on the inland wates of Can- ada and the United States. Mr. Knowles has purchased a commodi Ous yacht, the "Ariel,' and will make it the future home and stadio of himself snd wife. BE Zon The yacht is 80 feet in length, and will be fitted up as homelike Ns Pos- sible. Mr. and Mrs. Knowles will leave Toronto in February for New York, their headquarters. and will then move north and south With the sun, as it were. In cold weather they will be far down to Florida, and come north with the warming winds, spending the summer months pfob- ably in Canadian waters. ox- perience will be unusual, but Mr. 'and inspiring to his work, One thing can be seid in favor of the fool, he acts natural, not affected, like some folks I have in wind. » : are willing to hold out - etrike, doesn't always consist of dollars, or Knowles believes it will be healthful | Saws filed, Knives and Scis- sors sharpened, Razors honed. All makes of Fire: arms M. 0, Agent; 2 - _ Brockville 658pm. 7.37pm. Nos. 1, 6, 7,13, 14, 16, 15, 18 run deity. other train Sunday. Halifax, Boston and For full particula oor LEY, Railiroad and teamship cor. Johnson and Ontario "HERE'S -YOUR TICKET" 3 ork. Es 1, B. man. n streets Your tran leaves Kingston 2.3¢ p.m. Mon., Wed., Fri. da ¥ CONNECTIONS TO AND FROM ALL TEIN INTS. Electric lighted sleepers, dining cars , City Agent; g R. LI. FAIRBAIRN, Gen. Pass.

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