THE DAILY WHIG, SATURDAY, OCTOBER | 25. YOU WILL BE IN TIME YET TO TAKE ADVANTAGE UF OUR SACRIFICE SALE JUST GOING ON. We must reduce our stock or be everlastingly muddled up between our heavy burdened counters. Now is your opportunity buy your Clothes and Gents' Fur- nishings to your owm taste your own price. Needless to say anything about our Furs. You know they are the best and cheapest that can be got. JOS. SILVER, (Successor to B. Silver,) 102 PRINCESS STREET HAIR BRUSHES If you need one wait 'till FRI- DAY and see them in our window AT 50c. They look as good as REAL EBONY. H. B. TAYLOR, Pharmaceutical Chemist 124 Princess St. Phone 89. Successor to E. C, Mitchell. TRY DR. HOWARD'S Tar and Wild Cherry for that cough. 8 Compound Syrup of phites, 85c. Beef, Iron and Wine, 65c. Harry Webb's Chocolates. Hypophos- ST and EF. L.EBBELS, cuemisyaps Market Square Drug Store,| Cor. King and Market Sts., Kingston. INVESTMENTS --IN=-- REAL ESTATE Mining and Oil Stocks See GEO.CLIFF, 115 BROCK STREET. TO-LET. u00D FURNIS HED ROOMS, Wil'H 0} without board, 101 Queen streas. FOUR GOOD FURNISHED ROOMS, WITH board, with all modern conveniences, at 191. University Avenue. ----------p-------------------------------- 43 KING STREET, WEST, BEAUTIFULLY sitmaved, facing Ys Harbor, Sens $240 08. P) to Kir] trick, Rogers & Nickle. py ow no IMMEDIATE tral part of city, heates by hot water, all modern conveniences. Apply "H. G.,* this oflice. POSSESSION, HOUSE CEN- HOUSE, 7 ROOMS, NO. 56 BAY STREET between Bagot and Rideau streets; also stable and sheds in rear. Apply 46 Wil-'| liam street. 115 STUART STREET, water heating; Also stores and offices. J. Brock St. 9 ROOMS: HOT other dwellings, S. R. McCann, $1 RESIDENCE, 199 BROCK STREET, condition; Modern improvements; 11 rooms. Apply to The H. D. Bibby Co., 78 to 82 Princess street. RICK Al STORE OCCUPIED BY R. ALEXANDER, NO. | 111 Brock street, with refrigerator, fix- | pork and meat trade. Ap- | tures, eto. McKay, Jr... 151 Brock. for ply to John street. POSSESSION AT ONCE, THAT AIRY DF- sirable house on the corner of Bagot aud Gore streets, near the park. Modern in . Daisy hot water heating and in perfect order. Apply to Felix Shaw 115 Bagot street. MONEY AND BUSINESS. LIVERPOOL, LONDON AND GLOBE FIRE Insurance Co 3 Available assets, $61,187,215. Pe addition to which the polly holders have for security the un- imited liability of all the stockholders. Farm and Citv Property insured at lowest possible rates. ore renewing old or iving new business get rates from STRANGE @ STRANGE. Agente. MONEY TO LOAN IN LARGE OR SMALL sums, at low rates of interest om city and property. Loans granted on city and county debentures. Apply to 8. C MX Loan 0G! manager Frontenae Investment Society. Office op posite the | Post Office. . TWO HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS IN | sums from oa. thousand to ten Jlsons llare. or particulars AaPpiv GODWIN'S INSURANCE EMPORIUM over Express Office. Market Souare ARCHITECTS. WM. NEWLANDS, ARCHITECT. second floor over Mahood's |] corner Bagot trance an Bagot street. POWER & SON, ARCHITECTS, MERCH ' Bamk Building Brook ants »__Oormer and Wellington streets. ~ 'Phome 212. ARTHUR ELLIS, ARCHITECT, site of New Drill Hall, near corner Queen and Montreal Streets. OFFICE, Store, En OFFICE of HENRY P. SMITH, - Anchor Building ARCHITECT, ETO, Market Syuare. 'Phene UNDERTAKERS. Tr. F. HARRISON CO. UNDERTAKERS, ©" 233.296 Princess Street. , Quafity and efficiency the Prices tiie. lowest "Phones--Warerooms, 90. Night Calls-- T. F. Harrison, 51. 8. 8. CORBETT, FUNERAL DIRECTOR, 281 Princess Street, Kingston, Successor. to W. M. Dremman. * . ' \ to | and | CHURCH WORK. \ GENERAL REVIEW OF RE- LIGIOUS , DOINGS. Mormonism Flourishing -- Had | | Adam Any Ancestors ?--Arch- | bishop of Canterbury i i Preach to Lomdon Working- | ! men. | Mrs. A. Turner, Liverpool, bequeath- | | ed $40,000 to English missions. An open air pulpit erected outside of | St. James' don, has been consecrated. .. | The Bishop of Liverpool, Anglican, | | complains of the great lack of clergy | | and loss of needed work. Rev. W. Lea, has presented a $25,- | [ 000 school to a Beverley, Eng., par- | ish, as a memorial to his father. ! The Misses March of Yorkshire, have | given $7,000 for a yacht for Anglican | | mission work on the River Tee. | In Baluchistan there were no Christ- | [ians among the native people 'ten | | years ago, and now there are 4,026. | An English curate has been dismiss- | ed because he was a poor cricket play- | er through no fault was found with his | theology, S. Forde Ridley, M.P., for Bethnal Green, London, has given a Bible to every Sunday school scholar in his constituency. A single church in bdinburgh, Scot- land, has, in the last ten years, sent out from its own membership twenty- six missionaries. At last a memorial in St. Paul's cathedral, is being arranged for Mrs. I'ushell, who gave $500,000 to the Bis- hop of London's fund. At the annual farewell to mission- aries of the C.M.S., England, fity- eight new and 123 returning after fur- lough were wished God-speed. The Mormon church now numbers 300,000 members, and has 1,400 mis- sionaries. The power of the Mormon priesthood does not seem to decrease. The Archbishop of Canterbury will preach at the annual service for work- ingmen which will be held in St. Paul's Cathedral on "Thursday, Octo- ber 30th. Rev. J. A. Ballard, rector of St. Al- ban's church, Grand Valley, has re- signed and is likely to accept an in- vitation to the Knglish church in Mexico City. Rev. R. McNabb, formerly of Beach- burg, has received a call from a charge | in Western Ontario. Mr. McNabb will | likely accept. Since leaving Beachburg he has resided in Pembroke. Rev. J. B. Dunwoody, of Waterboro, S.C., finds himself, at eighty-six years of age, an object of national interest. He performed the marriage ceremony for President Roosevelt's father and mother almost forty-eight: years ago. Jesus. never taught. His wisciples how to preach--only how to pray. He did not speak much of what was need- ed to preach well, but much of pray- ing well. To know how to speak to God is more than knowing how to speak to men. At the Thanksgiving service at St. John's, Westminster, Archdeacon Wil- bérforce told the congregation that. the words, 'When 1 was in trouble 1 call- ed upon the Lord, and He heard me," which were interpolated into one of the coronation prayers, were written by the king's own hand and sent by him to the archbishop. Dr. H. K. Carroll, appointed by the United States government to take the religious census, reports the - total church membership in the United States in 1901 to be 258,090.637--an in- crease over the preceding year of 730,- 027. 0f these 28,090,637 church mem- bers 9,159,741 are - reported Catholic, thus leaving 18,030,890 Protestant members. Crossley and Hunter month's service in the dist Episcopal church, Philadelphia, on the' 26th. They are to begin a series of services in Jackson, Mich., on the 30th of the present month. It has been arranged also 'for them to inaugurate a season of evangelistic work in St. Thomas, commencing on New Year's eve. Ir closing an article discussing the question, "Had Adam Any Ancestors?" the New 'York Weekly Witness, says : Scientists generally have adopted the guess that man was evolved out some lower form. of animal life as at | least highly probable. Many of them |! look upon it as a proved proposition. | We do not. But we have no objec tion to it if anyone can prove it. We | donot regard 1t as at all contradic: tory: of the. bible; for the bible does P not sav how long it took to form man out of the dust of the ground. nor in what manner or through how many processes the result was obtained. It only requires us to believe that in whatever way it was done it was God's doing, and that the man, after being formed in the fashion which God had designed, . became *'a living soul" hy the direct interposition of God, who "breathed into his nostrils the breath of life." The wardens of All Saints' church, | Windsor, were . drawn into a conflict with the congregation of the Chapel will close a Tioga Metho- | of The Ascension, a branch of parish activity. The people of the chapel de- clared their independence of the big church, and would not, among other short comings, render statements of accounts to its 'wardens, who were very good fellows, by the way. and | clous. | Bishop Baldwin and he sent forth Can- {on | tion two | | | | | ' B. Taylor.--64. not .of the aggressive order. In fact the little congregation were what of ficially would be styled contuma- So the wardens memoralized Young as a conmnissioner. A con ference of the two congregations was held. and the proclamation of rights on both sides gave to the canon one of the interesting, occasions of his life. But the good man secured, as a com promise, a committee of management ta. control the affairs of the chapel and report to the wardens quarterly. The wardens appoint one member, the rector one. and the chapel congrega And now all is peace. ----ec----, A Casket Of Pearls. Dr. Von Stan's Pineapple Tablets would prove a great solace to the dis- heartened dyspeptic if he would but test their potency. They're veritable gems Th preventing «the seating of sto; mach disorders, by aiding and. stimu- lating digestion--60 of thesé health "pearls" in a box, and they cost 35c. Recommended by most eminent phyvsi- cians. For sale by Henry Wade and H. 8 a THE SNIPE SEASON. church, Piccadilly, Lon- | : You first find your hunting ground. = 9 (i? il, | 4 Wf A 7 ih \ J lid el Sn a [{ Hi Er Ik NPI, Al J) 4 Zi of | Then you beat for snipe. 'f20 AND [Tar Luncw JBN) Ph git! " 2% ir If the season happens to be a good one, and the snipe have arrived cording to schedule-- 0 SDT) HARON h 3 Wl | GCL $C} A Sa SAL) tm) i i CHR 1 ltreas rte i HE at een Br, ' J FT} a a J) lit et "17 7. / / ie ell i pr Y ii \ \ Td SW = //c a Nt A You'll go home' with a Tull bag an d have something to : boast of winter, NEW ZEALAND THINGS. The Postmaster a Utility Man-- Cures Drunkards. The right and only man for the tra veller in trouble over the language or anything else to seek out lis the post master. New Zealand's jpostmasters pretty near being "the whole thing." They are registrars of births and deaths. They collect all taxes, municipal and governmental, and all customs and internal revenues. They insure their fellow-citizens in the gov- ernment 's! life insurance company, and receive their deposits in the Post Of- fice Savings bank.of New Zealand, al- so 'a governmental institution. This bank has 212,426 depositors, and the money aeposited by them ggogregates $32,000,000. Over one-fourth of the island's population keeps its money in this institution. . Aut it is as a performer of wedding ceremonies that the New Zealand post- master most fondly regarded and most famous. There is neither fuss nor flurry in the ceremony that the postmaster per forms: neither does it 'cost a penny. A month beforchand the love-sick swain fills out a declaration of inten tion in the presence of a postmaster. At the expiration of thirty days~he and Kis blushing bride seek out the official, and in the presence of two witnesses, sign their nes in a court er and fo their own marriage certificate. And that's all there is to it. Custom doesn't eaen demand that the bride let the postmaster kiss her. The postmaster who holas the we cord for marriages is 'a maiden lady' in gn interior town. The lads and las stes of hep district will have none of preachers, 'tis tradition that every marriage which she officiates i~ a 'happy one. - New" Zealand hold their. jobs plenty and countryside about come is regis because at post masters long enough for tradition Saws to up around and them. ter. miscanduct on him from his life's job. New Zealand's leading utility man is easilv the postmaster, his closest com petitor is the railroad station agent grow ahvayst a postmaster, for onls As the government owns the railroads, | : NAL SATEEN OR Eo Fam (rd gm \, 7 ) ; id ye a 0 ATL al it demands of its agents that they attend to all the wants of the people that the postmaster can't convenient- ly look after. Hence, when a farmer J decides sto. sell poultry, he carts a few hundred squawking barnyard residents to town ana turns 'them over to the station agent. The agent kills 'em, and dresses 'em, freezes 'em, packs 'em in refrigerator cars. and" sees 'em started on their way to Auckland, Wellington, Australia, or London. The government acts as the farmer's com mission man, free gratis, all the way through. The government tries in every way to encourage thé farmer. It will lend himi money at a low rate of interest, and sell him rich land for a few paltry dollars an acre. It even forbids the railroads to whistle at country road crossings, so that John Dobbin's easy- going mare won't get frightened and try to run away. One of the most unique of the vari- ous governmental undertakings is the sanitarium and hospital at Rotorua, the island's chief health resort. It is tor the benefit of all indigents though- out New Zealand. If a man has broken down under the strain of too much work. or has contracted a bad Once ga New Zealand postmas:, case of gout or rheumatism, and 'has | not the wherewithal to undervo treat- | ment. the government gives him three | months of free treatment in the sani- tarium. with free to all the mineral baths. If. at the end of three months. the patient still in bad shape, he given another three {| months' treatment. The sanitarium has I the island's foremost physicians at its head. 4 corps of graduated nurses and splendiel clinical and surgical facilities. | | Access | | 3 I is Fall Importation Of 1902. Prevost, of the New York clothing store, 'Prock street, has received a! nis fall importations for order work in his tailoring department. His ready-made department is well assort- ed and a large assortment to choose | from. For low price and durability he defies competition. a his part can separate | Harsh purgative remedies are fast giving way to the gentle action and | mila effects of Catter's Little Liver | Pills. If you try them. -thev will cer- tainly please. you. : \ PRETTY DEAD. SO HARRY LINDLEY THINKS OF BOUNDARY COUNTRY Cause of The Trouble--Rail roads Built Along the Moun- tain Side--The Home of Back- sliders. Harry Lindley, in Hamilton Times. Phoenix, B.C., Oct. 13.--Bntish Col- umbia is a land of developments, in mining parlance -- aud the boundary country is no exception. It is an in- fant, and its font 1s outside capital, without which it expires. 'lhe "'boun- dary' geographically is the, strip of mountain territory which may be said to extend irom Cascade to renticton, embracing the towns of Grand Forks, .kholt, ¥noemx, Greenwood and mid- way, with the United States as its barriér. Five years ago these towns were ablaze with speculation and fu- tures. Greenwood, now at a virtual standstill, had twenty-one licensed saloons, two or three mammoth con- cert halls, and the usual gambling and 'other accompaniments of a boom mining town. 'l'o-day they are still there, but their glories have fled. 'I hey are waiting for Hills' R. R. boom. It is strange, but you will hear a deni- ven of Grand korks, even now - say boastfully. "We are a wide open town" and an outsider say dispairingly, ""©h, it's a den of grafters."" There has been a little too much trickery in the district, whether as regards mining or railroading. A railroad aptly styled "Hot Air R. R." is built forty miles, and another parallels it to Republic, Wash.; the object of which is scarcely apparent. In fact, the one built by Toronto syndicate opened-and is now semi-dormant. Railfbad building in this country opens one's eyes to mar- vels of engineering. Take the C.P.R., from Robson to Midway, and it fair- ly takes away the breath when you look down 2,000 feet" on the Columbia River, -and reflect that you are being carried very gingerly on the side of a mountain, which towers 3,000 feet above you. It seems in this country, with all these boom towns, a case of "We're here to-day and gone to-mor- row," but the pluck is there all the same. There is no doubt plenty of rich ore, but there' myst be smelters, and fuel, the stoppage of which in the late Fernie strike has completely pa- valyzed the boundary, but now they are on the road to re- covery. Each, is dependent on the other. Grand Forks is depen- dent on Phoenix, and its mines; Greenwood on the "Mother Lode," Eholk, on the B. C. mines, and all of them on Fernie ana its coke. They are all uncertain save Phoenix, which is a phenomenal town, about the highest in British Columbia, and its "Granby Mine," about the richest and most extensive, standing 35,000 feet above the level. The "Glory Hole," is a marvel. Fancy the cap or top of the mountain taken off, ana see the open mine belching forth flame to the accompaniment of dynamite discharges and flying stone and you can imagine you are at Mont Pelee. 4 Hundreds of miners are there, and if | smelters were properly arranged, room for hundreds more, as the supply of ore is inexhaustible. The town itself is, of course, on a perpetual ascent, and its, altitude a little uncomfort- able, whilst snow has fallen in Sep- tember and will continue so to do un- til May. The miners are very conser- vafive, and their unions very strone. The Chinaman is a lost proposition. He dare not show his face in Phoenix, and yet four miles down the mountain at Greenwood he is omnipresent. In all these towns there is a preponder- ance of saloons, but many stores are empty awaiting a revival of trade. The Sabbath is not very rigidly ob- served. At Grand Forks I had occa- sion to telephone on Sunday to the mayor of Phoenix, and received for reply, "You can't talk to him; he's umpire at. the baseball game." 1 no- tice, too, that a good man from On- tario, when he reaches this territory, is apt to become gz backslider just as quickly as the rest, but still they ure liberal to the churches. The price of living is generally high, although there now a declension, but the price of stimulants keeps up in these regions and the price of beer, two small glasses for two bits (twenty-five cents), startles the easterners. There is no emigration at present in this section, and perhaps wisely, as there is no great demand for labor, but it i struck me when 1 saw eight four- | horse waggons loaded with lusgious 4 | 18 pears; plams, and peaches, conte into Greenwood from the "American O'Ka- | nagany" why cannot the Canadian do | the same in his own ""O'Kanagan val- | ley," just past Midway ? They have | the soil. the same capabilities, but it | wants the tiller, ana the ordinary | B. C. inhabitant sees no earthly ad vantages except from the pick and shovel, mountain and rock. There are nooks and villages sighing for occu- pants, which would breed more wealth than any other section of the domin ion, and which will grow anvthing. Witness Kelorona, which is making ga | name for its tobacco, and the whole | shore of the "Lake O'Kanagan' for | its peaches, are now going to the re- | public in the republic. | | | | She Could Be Trusted. Mrs. Hiram Offen--"The most honor- able woman I ever met, really ! She is | exceptional." | Mrs. McCall-- 'You don't sav." Mrs. Hiram Offen--"Fact. Why, she wouldn't even steal another woman's cook !"' A good mégory sometimes in handy to forget with. AN HONEST DOCTOR. Editor : If any of your readers suf fer from sexual weakness resulting from youthiul folly, premature loss of strength and memory, weak back, varicocele or emaciation, my Latest Method Treatment will cure them, So positive. am 1 that -it is an infallible cure, that nothing need be paia until the cure is. effected; this is certainly a fair , propegition, for if I had any doubts as to its efficacy, 1 could not make this offer for patients to pay when 'cured. It makes no difiebence who has failed to cure them, let them writer me gnd 1 will send my book and blank for home treatment free. They can aadress' me in confidence, Dr. Goldberg. Dept. M., 205 Wood ward Ave, Detroit, Mich. > ~ A ScENE IN A GrocEr's Storm a tt ara Sone Slay . to tell Yes, but I sent what I usually send in such cases. What you usually send ! der Mrs. Moore, my neighbor, com- plains of her clothes wearing out; I find you usually send her the same soap. But, madam, I always give my cus- tomers what they ask for. Had you brand of soap you of brands ? But I know better now, and I know what ruined my blankets--and my hands are in a nice plight, too ! to sell anything that will be injurious to either the hands or clothing of my customers, and I _shall be glad to know how you prove that what I sold you injured your blankets and your hands. Well, I was telling Mrs. Neill my trouble, and she lent me a little cut- ting, and here it is; you can read it: "Dr. Stevenson Macadam; Lecturer on Chemistry, Surgeon's Hall, Edin- burgh, describes the destructive pro- perty of soda upon wool very graphi- * After mentioning how strong alkali such as potash and soda, disastrously affect cotton, linen, and wool, he says : : " one occasion I employed this property of soda in a useful way. There was a large quantity of new blankets sent to one of our hospitals, which, when given out, were said by the patients to be not so warm as the old blankets were, and that led to an No won- | WEAR EEE will more slowly, but with equal cer- Ek tend to destroy the woollen re." Now, I want to tell you that we neighbors' have had a talk over the matter, and we are not going to have our clothes and hands ruined in this way. Several of our neighbors who know have proved to us that Washing Sodas, Potash, Chloride of Lime, and " soap substitutes " are most injurious to clothes and hands. " Free alkali" in soaps is practically the caustic soda that burns the clothes. , you dare not keep Caustic Soda in a tin canister; it must be in an earthen jar, or it will even corrode the tin! Now, it's for you to provide us with pure soap without free alkall, or we must find it elsewhere. Madam, you enlighten me! So many soaps are advertised as pure, that I really took little heed to any difference between them. I have one, however, that has medi- cal certificates of its freedom from free alkali. It is guaranteed pure; and the makers offer $5,000 reward to pany one who can prove it is not pure, and further, I am authorized to return the purchase money to any one'find- ing cause for complaint. Let me see it! Why, Sunlight Soap! It's a beautiful clean, fresh- looking soap, and this Octagon shape is very handy. Give me five bars. (ACJ. REES, Princess St. comes | investigation as to Whether the blankets were genuine or not. .They looked well, and weighed properly, and I got a blanket sent to me for examination and analygis. We found soon that there was cotton mixed with UNION MEN, ATTENTOIN! The only Rubber Factory in the world au- thorized to use the Union Stamp is the We control the Kingston Agency for these famous goods. The prices are just the same as the best Canadian makes, Call and see this line. There's lots of wet weather coming and very soon. EOE LL 64S J. H. Sutherland &Bro. The Shoe Association's Cash System is a money saver for shoe buyers. FAP diinin nn NN CANONG'S : B. CHOCOLMTES Unrivalled in Quality, Unexcelled in Flavor, The Finest in the Land. Telephone No. 58. EDUCATIONAL. KINGSTON LADIES' COLLEGE KINGSTON, CANADA. Residential and Day School for Girls. Address MISS M. GOBER, M.A., - Principal VIOLIN MISS GRACE EVANS, Teacher of the Violin, 123 UPPER UNION ST. SCHOOL OF ART Classes Re-opened on MONDAY, Oct. 6th, 1902. Afternoons of Monday, Wednesday and Fri- Saturday mornings, 10 to. 12 o'clock. CHAS. E. WRENSHALL, Principal. | KINGSTON COLLEGE BUSINESS KINGSTON. > : FUEL LOG. - Wn COLLEGE CALL AND SEE IT | TORONTO. * AT | Largest and best equipment in Canada - Unequalled [facilities for securing positions. STRACHAN'S HARDWARE. PS) ET Se) oe) A RT RTD INFANTS' DELIGHT SOAP Superior te all other for the Toilet and Nursery. Made by John Tayler & Co., Toronto. ARTIFICIAL CONCOCTIONS, NATIVE OR FOREIGN, POSSI- BLY COSTING MORE, CANNOT REPLACE THE MAGI WATERS, GUARANTEED FROM THE FLOWING CALEDONIA SPRINGS IN ONTARIO. : | day, from 2:30 to 4:30. | ' 821 Queen Btreet, Kingwton. SEND FOR CATALOGUE Confederation Life Buildings, Toronto.