o DAILY BRITISH WHIG, FRIDAY, OGTOSER 10. ] Nestlé's Food is a perfect Infant's Food becausé it contains all the elements necessary to nourish and strengthen. It is invalu- able as a preventive of Cholera Infantum ard Summer Com- plaints. In order that every mother may prove its virtues for her- self, we will send a sample-- enough for eight meals --free on request. LEEMING, MILES & CO., SoLk AetnrTs, MONTREAL. TRAVELLING. Kingston & Pembroke & Canadi Pacific Railways Will Issue Return Tickets THANKSGIVING DAY, 1902, SINGLE "%. FARE CLASS Good going October 15th and 16th. Good to return up to and including 'Cctober 20th. Full particulars at K. & P. and C. P.R Ticket Office, Ontario St. F. CONWAY, F. A. FOLGER, JR, Gen. Pass. Agt. Gen. Supt. [HE BAY CF QUINTE RAILWAY NEW SHORT LINE FUR Deseronto and all local te. in leaves City Hall Depot at 4 p.m. R. J. WILSON, C.P.R. Telegraph Of fice, Clarence stroet. an Thankseivine Day Excursions SINGLE FARE LIFE THERE AS SEEN BY FRANK NORRIS Conditions Vary--Many Miners. Comfortable, Others Wretched --Secme of Them Earn $150 a Mcath. Frank Norris, the author of '""The Octopus," contributes to Everybody's Magazine tor Septentber a study of the anthracite coal region of Fennsyl- vania in strike time, which is of un- usual iuterest just now. After re counting his surprise at the guictness that pervaded the region, and his ex- péctation to shudder at the miners' hovels, and dreadful shanties, he says: The reality presented itself to the consideration in the shape of really charming little, suburban residences. Residences, as often as not, set in bowers of shade and of honeysuckle, with gravelled walks, trim fences, and the . spacious, smooth, cool, well- groomed lawns spoken of above. Ham- mocks and arm chairs were under the shade trees, smart little curtains dra- ped the windows; shining bits of brass set off the doorway. One's self would have been quite satisfied to live in some of the better-kept "'hovels and shanties of these down-trodden ' fel- lows." And the ex-miner, who was my guide, told me, if you please, that for the most part these down-trodden ones own these little cottages. Some even own two or three and let them out at fifteen, vcighteen and twenty dollars the month. But no déubt this class of miner must work double tides to reach and maintain this pitch of prosperity. | I was particular, then, to find out the duration of the time spent "below" in order to earn $150 a month, --the aver- age earnings per man in the Wilkes- barre district. Seven hours a day at the 'Yery outside and under normal conditions ! "Why," said the 'daughter of one of the men, "Father is often home for the day at eleven o'clock." Work over at eleven o'clock in the morning after seven hours of drilling: $150 a month, free medical "treatment in case of accident, fuel during the winter at a price ridiculously small, a good--home--free--of mortgage. an as ance of steady work--andovet a strike of almost unprecedented magni- tude. Into the merits of miner versus oper ator, 1 will not enquire. The rights and wrongs of the Wilkesharre collier are not under discussion here. Here only iz a statement of things seen. And chiefest among these latter stands forth the thet that the average coal striker in the Wilkesharre country can earn at an| time about treble the amount of money per man per month that remantrates the work of many successiul diamatists, most novelists, and all poets\ Just what is the divect, immediate, actual cause of the strike:is not at all easy (to determine. Each man is apt to propound a different grievance. Mort, however, seem to unite in de. claring that the cart as they « come su [IN COAL MINES loaded from out the mine should be weighed at the mine's mouth, not at the top of the breakers, to reach which they must be hauled up a railway of [forty-five degrees, so canted and in- clined that all the "head-up" tumbles off, The operators answer this by declar ing that the "head-up" which is lost. stands for the stones and "waste! coal in the car itself, which is no: paid for. by the retailers, and that it is a proven fact that dishonest min- ers, to "make weight" cover the floor of the car with houlders. Whether many or few of the cars are "'doctor- ed" ~ by the miners below is a de- batable point. The fact that the cars are weighed at the top of the break .ers after the "head-up" is lost is: an admitted condition. With this. condition then in mind, and also with a consideration for the good pay, short hours, and cheap fue! that 'are now enjoyed by the Wilkes- barre miner, his attitude in stri ng may be viewed in one of two ways. You may conceive of him as an arrogant, bullying man, who does not know when he is well off, who tri-s tc dictate to an indulgent employer, an who is willing to jeopardize the wel fare of his family in order to gain an advantage which is practically a non- essential. Or you may with equal plausibility picture him as a man o priceiple and sturdy ideals who does not strive for "the fow extra dollars re presented by the "heap-up," but for the abolition of a petty and harassing injustice visited upon organized labor by corporate greed and soullose capi tal. One * reason, ro doubt, why the strike is so quiet is that a great many of the miners have gone away. Nearly thirty thousand have left the district. Some (it was harvest time during the days of my visit) were at work in the outlying 'farms, some had turned (Famps, and nearly fifteen thousand had gone back to the Old Country. Then, tco. though they were no long er mining, the miners must none the less earn money--especially the men with families, and there are some thousands of them odd iobbing all over the state--and thus keeping out of mischief. Singularly enough one way 'that these miners supported themselves and families was hv selling of coal. Close to each breal i every mine, and quite as conspic is what is call ed the "culm-hank." Tt bears the same relation to the coal and the collieries as the "tailing" to the mines. It is a gigantic rectangular pile, easily two thousand feet high, of refuse, of coal dust, and of worth coal; a vast. black, horrid mass. smoking with fine, jetty dust in the breath of every wind. Most of these culm-banks are out- side the mine enclosures, and in each and all of them, is a certain' percent- age of good coal--just as there is al- wavs some gold in the most carefully nrilled tailings. At the time of mv tour through the coal country, these culm-banks were the object of at tack from a very large "number of men and boys, women and girls, who dug into the waste-heap, re-mining good coal of which they secured a surprising' quantity. They filled a wag con load of this in a 'comparatively short time and, then industriously peddied it about the streets of Wilk- esharre. The very fact that they were striking gave them time to do this, and the. very fact that ~they were striking had made the coal they ea thered of unusual value. And the "company" in no case interferes with their business, shough 'it could casily do and ep. well within its | rights. Generously enough--so it would | appear--it allows the strikers to take irom it the very means of the strength | which they use against it. does gold less | SO Other Side Of The Shield. Then came Hazelton. The moment the town itself: was left behind, the moment the creaking, rapid travelling buggy began to draw near the collivr- ies, the sensation of a dhfferent atme able. Under the pelting of the rain at the end of thai bleak day on that bleak kill-top it 'had resolved itself to mere soaden mud--mud that clung, and stuck with "the tenacity of oil, and streaked and stained everything it touched. The hilltop was shut in by five enormons culm banks, that made of the plateau an amphitheatre. Une en- tered Melonsville between the piles of black grime .as if into a walled en- closure. In the centre, as was said, rose the Breaker, recling to its ruin ana around this. laid oif ints two or three very narrow were the rs' houses. "Che Polanders live 'here mostly," said the miner who drove me. hey don't live no bétter than dogs." This is" not so. 'Lhe' Polanders of Melonsville live a great deal worse than any street cur would elect to live if he had his way and say in the matter. They live in houses built of shéet-iron"and boaras, about fifteen feet square, gud sunk about three fect in the ground. Of course there is but one room, and in this room the fam- ily--anywhere from six to ten hu- mans--cooks, eats and sleeps. Al though there is plenty of space, thes: hutches are crowded together like troopers' bunks on a transport. The streets are £0 narrow one may almost touch 4 house on either side simul- taneously; each house shoulders the other in its place: the smoke from the two stoves mingling two feet above the roofs. ' And 1 saw this place at the end of a chill afternoon, the light alreaay waning, the rain falling steadily, the wina droning and sighing about the angles of the tottering breaker. There was scarcely a soul in sight. Occa- sionally a woman's face, flat, broad-- the face of the Slav--looked out from a dustrimmed pane. Two draggled geese, soiled with the all-pervading ime, spattered and cluttered in a n and black puddle. A chila, a virl of seven, her head in a handker- chief like the picture of an emiorant. peered out from between the slats of a fence made of railroad ties. And that was 'all. Nothing stirred. \ sound of human life broke the 'st ness. The pain fell with an infinite wide murmur. fehind the | hutches great heap of ashes--the dump from the, furnaces that ran the mine en- uines; 5 redaish-brown heap, packed hard by 'the rain. For obscure reasons parts of it were yet hot and steamed under the contact of the veil of wet. And this mass in cooling threw off a stench like. that of burning bones, an acrid, foul odor, sweet with a nause- ating, revolting sweetness, powerful, unescapable, that pervaded the entire community of Melonsville. And not so far from this place but what we could hear the call of robins in its branches was a great forest- world, beautiful, green, thick with odorous and abundant life. Jut the black, damp culm'banks, and the reek- ing, smoking ash-heap shut it from view as effectually as though one were at the bottom of the mine it- self. Never 5 shoot of green, nor sight of it. Never a breath from the for- est, never a touch of unpolluted air invaded this prim amphitheatre. The only - change. its inhabitants coula know was "the change from the sur- face 16 "the shaft and tunnel," toblack darkness and burrows cut in walls of coal. "And the company don'l give us no more cars no matter how hard we work, and the coal in these mines is hara--harc."' Thus they spoke at Hazelton and Melonsville. It may he so, it may be a lie. But Melonsville, its meanness. its grime, its rain, grayness and Blackness and sordidness, its foul sweet stench and huddled hutches, its hideous promiscuonsness and execrable, maddening" dreariness a truth. a fact: a thing seen. the other side of the shield. B He Strae sy enit diffi {ina fron A the was ing her revi was vou Fi ban ry the G W Bai eve inte her stretched a] an ag Sm she "I anc ma Cov ten Cre Vie at bor bor pro "doc dre T mo at Che 1s kin mo the is It is I Q : : the On Saturday we will publish a letter he on the coal strike from the Rev. I. De H Du Vernet. I sou SERVIAN RULER AND HIS Vienna, Oct. Tag, scribes a renewal King Alexander, owing to financial Draga's $100° a month. herself scene hefore the courtiers, who queen to lénd him money from savings. She refused, and then there whelmed her with the bitterest proaches. He accused her of endanger- curse of his life. Despite stead she abused him coarsely, Pushed Another Girl Into River, L rival in the affections of Henry Nolen, this confession to the chief of police, young woman replied indignantly that "1 from' the water," which Whether New ther the whisk was rye, Crawford that it was cream pufls--all cream; son's, OXED HIS EARS CONSORT QUARREL is Short of Funds, Says a Correspondent, and She Won't Lend Him Any--Her $400 a Month Pin Money Cut Of-- --Violent Scenes Before at Court. 10.--The Neues Wiener blatt's Belgrade correspondent de- of the domestic am- les of the Servian royal pair. culties, recently stopped pin money, amounting to The queen revenged by creating an indescribable were protect the king Queen llv obliged to Or eases Do nos eke out Agi sho curhs No names oa envelopes or packages--No! DR. GOLDBER or Ver eXcuses--no matter young, eld er KIDNEYS AND BLADDER. Ba in the Tero ets dul alte 8 Ms ves of he quite * fre oy is Is in a sty, color, ust colored sediment; Somplications will set in. "My Aron tment ] FREE, Modloines far Chemie ro tio rges ng sens C. 0. Wi 208 WOODWARD AVE,, i Cor. Wil ® 0 oETROIT, -All duty and n her violénce. week later the king, driven hy utmost necessity, appealed to the her The king over- re- another scene. the throne, and called her the in In- and he her this the queen persisted refusal to lend him money. ved the old accusation that carrying on a liaison with nger sister, Helene. inally, the queen boxed her hus- d's cars and he, in trying to par- the blow, struck. her violently on arm. IRL DROWNS HER RIVAL. Causing Death. hecling, W. Va., Oct. 10.--Rodella n_has confessed that last Monday ning she pushed €ay Smith, her causing mae le » the Ohio river, thereby death. The voung woman I a charge of murder was hrought inst her. She said she asked the ith girl to give up Nolan, and the would not do so. looked to see how far we were said the Bain girl. pushed her hard and she fell over l never screamed." The young wo- n is guarded by police. "She js re. 'ering from the effects of chloroform she drank ye terday with in- t to commit suicide. PEIVR ev OoPvc #0900000 ---------- KILLED IN DISPUTE. it Was bon. Orleans, Oct. 5 wiord, Lone Lake, La., killed John kers, bartender at Hagan's saloon Shreveport, over the question whe- served him was Bour- 1 or rye. Vickers insisted thay it Bour- The bartender endeavored to ve his point -with a knife, but the tor, who had a pistol, got the p on him and killed Lim instantly. ---------------- The Very Latest. latest skilled TP. H wlot te Rye or Bour- 10.--Dr, G. R PII SO Vv TOO. - 1. idea in cakes and the baking are to be found Ferguson's, King street. Russe, chocolate filled with whipped Pies? Yes, we have every d--cocoanut, pumpkin, custard, le n, orange and peach pies, They are finest" vou can buy. At IFereon next door to the Whig office. Sama EL Cre An Enormous Moose Shot. redericton, N.B., Oct. 10.--One of biggest moose ever shot in New wswick fell before the rifle of N. J. maw, New Albany, dudiana, on the thwest Miramichi this week. It had he st eclairs, for stove platings. ENP RT OUR BRANDS :} "King Edward" "Victoria," "Little Cornet." -------------------- ~ BURNISHINE For Cleaning and Polishing Nickel, Silver, Brass, : Copper. Zinc and Tin. Burnishine works easy and quick and is specially goed Nothing better for door knobs and trimm ings. It polishes as easy in cold as warm weather. McKELVEY & BIRCH, 69 and 71 Brock Street. PELE 229900009000 1 00 Don't be induc- ed to experiment with other and inferior brandy. | USE + EODY'S No Sulphur PARLOR. MATCHES No Disagreeable Fumes 1,000. "Headlight" 500. "Eagle" 1C0 and 200. The E. B. EDDY CO.. Limited, } | J. A. HENDRY. Agent. ABSOLUTE Little Liver Pills Hull, Canada. Kingston. Try our mew brands, "King Edward" and "Headlight." ADL ADEY LH GLIR SVB FALL ADL IPOCRPPD uit ow steered bbb _ EDUCATIONAL. SCHOOL OF ART Classes Re-opened on MONDAY, Oct. 6th, 1902. - Afternoons of Monday, Wednesday and Fri- day, from 2:30 to 4:30. Saturday mornings, 10 to 12 o'clock. CIIAS. E. WRENSHALL, Principal. % MUSIC % MRS. CLERIHEW WILL REOPEN HER classea in Flatcher Music Method on Septem- lst. For terme. and particulars apply at University Avenue. PIANO LESSONS Miss C. M. Clerihew, undercraduate Toron- o' College of Music, 211 University Avenue. KINGSTON COLLEGE 'BUSINESS SECURITY, Genuine Carter's 211 Must Bear Signa .are of an antler spread: of sixty-three inches; with thirty-two points. Another moose with an antler spread of* sixty inches phere, of differént conditions, of erent ways and méans and modes and KINGSTON. : TORONTO, CO LLEG The Connaught Peasantry. London, Oct. 10.--A striking. proof FOR ROUND TRIP, BETWEEN ALL STATIONS. Going Dates, Oct, 15th and 16th. Valid ret:cning on or before Oct 20th, ) : J. I. HANLEY, Agent, City Passenger DOMINION LINE WAIL STEARSHIPS, LIVERPOOL SERVICE *Irishman.. 18th Caniornian + 25th *Norseman... . let *Turcoman Colonian .... 15th *Irishwan asides ean . Nov. 21st. Siwamert marked *"do not carry passengers. RATS OF PASSAGE--Saloon, $65 end wpwards, single according, to steamer and sorvice, Second Saloon, '$37.50 and up wards, single, according to steamer and ser- vice. Third class, $26. Depot. ..0ct. 18th *Manxman : . FROM BOSTON. Merion ae : New Englar NEW SERVICE "rie tg te Vancouver, Oct. 18th: Cambroman, Nov. 8h Midship, Saloon, Electrio light, Spacious promenade decks. J. P. Hanley, J. P. Gildersleeve, Agt. G.T. Station, . 42 Clarence St & Co., Gen. Agta. Montreal and Portland Lake Ontario & Bay of Quint Steamboat Co., Limited. -- STEAMER NORTH KING ROCHESTER ROUTE Steamer leaves Sundays at 5 p.m. Rochester, N.Y., calling at Bay "BAY OF QUINTE Rou STEAMER ALETHA Commencing Sept. 2nd, leaves weck pm., for Picton and intermediate Quinte ports. On Tuesdays, >Thur Saturdays steamer calls Belleville. For full intormation apply 'so J. P. HANLEY, ' J. P. GILDERSLERVE,{ Ticket Afenta. Jamas Swift & Co, Freicht Agents STRAIGHT BUSINESS W. Murray, Jr., --- and or Savan, Mer. for of Quinte 1E davs at Bav of sdavs and at Deseronto und 3 BUY NOW Don't put off your shoe buying until "Jack Frost" sends the mercury tumb- ling down to the zero point, Our New Fall Styles are all in but double quick time. why we think it to your they'Hl go in | and set to blowing drearily. That's | advantage to buy a pair of our : MEN'S $3.50 SHOES Now while the sizes are compieie. DON'T YOU SEE IT THAT WAY ? SHOE Wcbemmoll's *% Right Now Is the time to purchase a gas grate. We have a large stack and will_sell them cheap. Yotlo Lamp Lamp the | Incandeseent times is the sol. It livht at and sce it. BRECK & HALLIDAY ATTENTION ! ULST- CASH, PRICE, PAID FOR NEW d Second-Hand . ¢ Clothine. Furnithre s "Alwave on han | s Drv. Goods, at slaughter prices Second Hand St Princess Street. odds, H fry, Musical bave a amd Fu space. 1 Instrument 1 of 2 sth 2 sok! for wa from a nes public. Give evervthing suit th buve hor to shor to an call. . I. ZACKS, Second door below Corbeit's, 271 and 273 * | | elton, were- Call | + Princess St. | the prospect. But B | manners began to make itself felt with | the distinctness of a whispered «word | behind the ear. Appropriately enough it commenced to rain, The evening was closing in; weather was cold; overhead the sl stretched out gray, lugubrious, lower- ihe. A wind up somewhere from behind the pines and the eastern hills cot And there was coal-dust underfoot, and cold-dust in the air, coal dust on the leaves of the underbrush, coal | dust. in. thé. puddles of the wheel | tracks. A marsh that began to open {up to the left of the road was fouled | with water black with coal dust. and | with slime inky with the same impal | pable matter: and out of this marsh | rose dead pine trees, denuded of nee | dles, spectral, osseous, and like every- | thing else in thé werld, plastered and ! powdered with dust of culm-bank aud | pit mouth. : The foal is very hard in the Hazel ton district, infinitely harder then I that of the. Wilkesbarre mines, and | consequently extracted with more la | bor-and much, much more slowly. 1i | the miner earns fifty dollars niv | guides told me--he is doing well. IH {he is willing to work eighteen hours lout of twenty-fours it avails nothine, | for the company will allow him but a certain number. of cars. AH this max | I cannot tell. To get an wc curate statement about anv important | feature of the great strike a gotern | ment court of enquiry and months would first he neces- ary. But this is certain. The mipes and the miners' houses_that 1 saw Melonsville,. three miles out of Has let us'sav the obverse of { SO i be lies. of | testimonyv-takin | al lat the shield. | Melonsvillet You hilltop as bald of créen the middle of Broadway. In the centre dilapidated, like the =k tgantic prehistorie sari mmoth breaker, inkv bl J the boards warped, ht od, the to a' growth as monstrous, sil of some ready raunt } ure nr ¢ sends it eves and in choki Every wind throshes it ac in weather if anything, even more disap: the ropdwa to th clouds. nostrils wet is, v of the poverty of the Irish peasarrtry is afiorded by the census returns of the province of Connaught, which have just been published. The popula- tion of the province is 648,932, or just over ten per cént. Je than ten years ago. Nearly ninety per cent. of the total number of families were in occupation of premises consisting of than five and of these twenty-four families lived in part of room only, 10,392 were occupants one room, and 47.513 of two rooms. in the 10404 one-room tenements i the province there were 556 ir where the, occupants exceeded s by his in rea ed fro he $1; T less rooms, a of ' rc 2.3 ret day sons, and eight of twelve or more per- sons living in one room. The emigration figures are startlin In the last decade }M7,750 persons left the province, while in the last hali- century 617.255 persons have emigra- ted from Connaught, the large major. ty of them going to fhe United States. J lan pric Crime Increasing In England. London, Oct. 10.<-England's criminal population is rapidly on the. increas as is shown by the figures containe in the annual report just issued by the commissioners of prisons, How I the against the previous vear is shown by the state that there were 17.163 more sentenced to' ordinary impris- | onment and 183 more to long terms | af penal servitude. So severely in lon- | don has the criminal population press ed upon prison accommodation. that during the wear between three and | four thousand prisoners of both es have had to be transferred to pro the 'commitments in the inereased from 35 Hin d901, WO Bi A merease is as the offe ment pe rsons at vincial jails, having to 2 rox lis in 1591 was shot Prevost, of the New York clothing store, | lish If you want this week on the Tobique a Boston sportsman. BUSINESS TORONTO. See Fac-Simlle Wrapper Below. : Largest and best equipment in Canada Fall Importation Of 1902. 'rock street; has 'received all fall importations for order work hig tailoring department. His dy-made department is well assort- and a large assortment to choose m. For low: price and durability defies competition. . And Return. $1. Wickets, 81.25, Roehester hanksgiving Dav, wl peing Wednes ay, Oet. 15th. } pn, or Fhursd: at 5 Vv. 2 am. and irning until 6.40 p.m. train, Thurs ; $12. $12. ust. received to-day, long overcoats, dark oxford prey, melton, regular price, '¢ while' they last, 812, Jenkins. IS '" Oalt Hall." comfort, try our underwear, The H. unshrinkahle $1.50, $2 a by Co. ol, suit. practical proof of the efliciersv of | Anglo-Japanese alliance has been | red hy the <s of the n loan was put on the London market | much } er figures than the previ ! loan, and the subserip- | large and satisfac | long<horemen increase of es for an dive their the ton an coal at Robie ol | "| Allan Line 1 6 vhton, killed while walk aL 11 3 here, and vou won't Expected To Retire. ashington, D.C... Oct. to-day my lat var on the + bench and eco ligt for retirement his full salary SHLOBO a vear. 10 .~ tes ten . ouch no for an tri topped the hair from com- | a. i. Hats Hats. Oak Hall. le and price of Vi buy it Con wrong. Mails . The H. D. Bib The st hat «le ~ 1 C J ends upon where 25, R1.50 snd SK: Lost Hair ee "My hair came out badly, i fie s fast turning gray. 1 PT wer ad wa It c d Ayer's Hair Vigor. Cruggisin. © J.C. AYER GO., Lows], Mass CA Who, has rubber tires on their carriages. are the ease and comfort they enjoy in driving, if "you have not them should send to LATURNEY have them on and enjoy drives. JANES Very small and as cosy -, Jarriages -------------------- 390 Princess St. 'ng out and restored the | J Ee or."---- Mrs. M. D. Gray, | cir N>. Salem, Mass. | ; FYAC All ICE YACTH Box 53. ' CURE SICK HEADACH Unequalled facilities for securing positions. 821 Queen Street, Kingston. SEND FOR CATALOGUE Confederarion Life Buildings, Toronto, TO-LET. to tako as sugar. yo | FOR NEADACRE. RTERS FOR DIZZINESS. FOR DILIDUSRESS, FOR TORPID LIVER. FOR CCHSTIPATION. FOR SAMLLOW SKIN. FOR THE COMPLEXION GENUINE Must rave ATune, Purely Vegetabl Feel | Af » #00D FURNISHED ROOMS, WITH on without board, 101 Queen strest. HOUSE 191 BROCK STREET, 9 ROOMS, All modern improvements. Apply to C. Livingwton & Bro, 3 1 WOUR GOOD FURNISHED ROOMS, WITH board, with all moders conveniences, at 191 University Avenue. | (iarpiages EVERYBODY 43 KING STREET, WEST, BEAUTIFULLY situated, facing the Harbor. Rent $240 and taxes. Apply to Kirkpatrick, Itogurs & Nickle. AND 13 WEST STREET, Montreal street, 6 rooms igs, stores and offices, Cann, 51 Brock street. 199 BROCK S81 & 1 condition; modern improvements; 11 rooms. Apply to The MH. D. Bibby Ca. 8 to' 82 Princess street. | ! BRICK well [ 3 pleased with got you and your on your carriage STORE OCCUPIED BY R ALEXANDER, NO. 111 Brock street, with refrigerator, i tures, ete, for pork and: meat trade. Ap- ply to John McKay, Jr., 151 Brock street. - LATURNEY, CARRIAGE MAKER, « Kingston. | POSSESSION AT ONCE, THAT AIRY DE- able house on the corner of Bagot and Gore stree near the park. Modern in every way. Daisy hot water heating and in perfict order. Apply to Felix Skaw, 115 Bacot street. = ARCHITECTS. ts, - Liverpool end Londonderry Royal Mail Steamers. From Monteeal. From Quebec, SON. ARCHITECTS, ' MERCH Xa nis' Bank Building, corner Brook and Wellington strects. "Phone 212 | WM. NEWLANDS, ARCHITECT ® OFFICE, ! second floor over Mahood's Drug Store, corner Princess and Bagot streets. trance on Bagot street. ka t pm y g » | ARTHUR ELLIS, ARCHITECT, OFFICE |" w#ite of New Drill Hall, near corner of Quoen and Montreal Strects. HENRY P. SMITH, ARCHITEOT, BTC, nchor Building, Market Square, "Phone ANYTHING TO SELL, MAM ? { This is whaf the secondhand dealer { aeays when he'calis at your" dior, and promptly ea nog without n | might, © The Kingston Rag and Me { tal Co. only ask you to drop them a card to 380 Princess stfeet after vou have sorted over all your old stuff nd. they will pay "you highest cask gud we i i Mentreal to Giasgew iret < ' Weodn Kos { ' wv Cliy Passanger T, ONE YEAR OLD: APPLY P,Q. | "cy . oi