BBY'S << SPRING | S READY because it's built just as you woulg isive tailor would build it, ang all { asuring, fitting, chalking, trying op cy price the tailor would surely st of Cutters | Tailors into our clothing that it is possible 4 4 pleasure in showing you Your Suit. 4 yurs indeed after you see it. : he cuts are new. $10, $12, $15 to $20. 4 Special $15 | rge Suit : { 4 4 "2 p 4 4 lenware ~ Pails and Tubs t be out of place. The E. B. Eddy .¥ GUARANTEED against factory ur interest to see that the mame DY ge you buy. a, ask for EDDY'S MATCHES. A TN ET ER SS SA - A yy. Y FEELING IS UNKNOWN 'HO BREAKFASTS ON DDED VHEAT kfast on the BISCUIT. r Luncheon. a carton, or 2 for 25c. UR CA II m------ Big Sale of Furniture We intend rebuilding and require the room to make alterations. Everything at Close Out Prices 1D. THE LEADING UNDERTAKER PI EN NiGHTS | SELLLLLLL00000000000884 RETTES 25 Cents Per Pound. USHIONS , Cents Per Pound. 6 Princess Street WAV WVAWAAAY > ® Ack for the Purple Package." "RELIANCE" BAKING POWDER insist on the Genuine, FREE BEAUTIFUL PICTURE POST CARDS To anyone 'writing us answering th . lowing questions we will Rindly eat = solutely free, prepaid, a set 8 of four /of our ition of beautiful 4 picture'post cards lithographed in brilliant > colora:-- tet. Name your grocer. 2nd. Name this paper. 3 INTERNATIONAL FOOD CoO., TORONTO, CANADA 8 AAA LARS LHLLLL0000008000800000 You cannot buy finer Whisky than CHAMBERLAIN LIQUEUR SCOTCH ! Amalgamated Distillers Co L ondon Glasgow & Montreal PUGERC PEI ITV TORIES ORES EYEE CLL004040000000060/08000808000800¢8 PIV III III III RB ORDERED |! FOOTWEAR If you have any Foot Troubles, bring them to A. E HEROD |} 286 PRINCESS ST. TEE HOUSE OF QUALITY dow SYNOPSIS OF CANADIAN NORTH-WEST HOMESTEAD REGULATIONS, . Amy 'even' fiumbered section of Domin- ion Lands in Manitoba or the North- West Province execpting 8 and 26, not reserved, me be homesteaded y any person the sole head of a family, or male over 18 years of age, to the extent of one-quarter section, of 160 acres, wore or le --- ASKED FOR POLICE, TO AID IN MAINTAINING THE | BAILIFF"S AUTHORITY. 1 ture, he Opera Audience. With a hero _ LECTURE LAST NIGHT. House Held Fine wolf he began his lec- i i, . IN BRIEF FORM. with a hero wolf he ended | and every moment between, when he DAILY BRITISH WHIG, TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 19. NEWS OF THE WORLD OCCURRENCES. RECOUNTED | told stories of other wild animals be Cattle Owned By the Doukhobors has known, did. Frnest Thomson Matters That Interest Everybody Were Seized For Taxes--The | Seton hold the audience at the Grand --Notes From All Over--Little Foreigners Recovered Them jOtvare House on Nowlay wight. "Aida of Everything Easily Read i : Ve »tter as a lecturer than a writ. and Remembered. and Finally Used Pitchiorks. a id a man who knows the wild y sh Gilmor ed . i Yorkton, Sask., Feb. 19.--Last Sat- when the vivid stories, rosy stlmour died sudkknly at improvement distriet, South of Inver nay, seiged the goods and chattels of 198 Doukhobors for taxes due on wrday, Mr. Se A things well h \ ] ¥, Mr. Scott, bailiff for the local | with their beautiful limelight illustra- | tions were y B. Pense, | M.I.P., the chairman, spoke of Cam- | Mr. Thomson-Seton, many } ! ada's pride in any homesteads amounting to $3,000. | who is one of her sons mn all but the over. Edw. J. It is reported that Mr. Scott and his | accident of birth. deputies seized about one hundred | head of stock and other chattels. Thew were later attacked by the Doukho bors overpowered and the chattels re- taken. Mr. Scott scoured the assist- tance of twenty more deputies and again took possession of the stock. It 18 reported that, on "Monday morning, | OV is not w taught him by gunpowder." land there have been 'no wolves nearly two centurie of European countri | to-day, but at one t | Europe was | 1131 a huge | France tho hundred Doukhobors armed with pitchforks again attacked the bailiff and his deputies and agaiiftook pos- {session of the chattels, Mr. Scott has askefl assistance from the : k Royal North-West Mounted Police. ye TORONTO COMMENTS On the Match Between Kingston : and Midland. Toronto World : The 14th } iment hockey team, of Kingston, surprised the hockey craks, last night, by de- feating Midland = at Mutual street rink In a senior 0.H.A, sudden-death game by score og 8 to 6. While the east ermers did not have any 'the best of the play, they were more finished and seasoned hockey players. © Their de fence blocked well and were hard to get by, while Midland's were easily drawn out at times. The gw was vary clean, considering so much was at stake. Wclemman put Vanhorne donwn for the count, while Powell want od to take a round out of Switzer Vanhorne was foreed to retire for awhile, Beatty going off with him. Foronto Globe : In the last half it was a toss-up, cach team finding the net three times, although one goal scored by Kingston was disputed" by Midland and a change of umpires was called for before the match proceeded Edward Wettlaufer, of Berlin, was the referoe, and he had to hustle to keep the particifants in subkction. It whe hockey of a strenuous nature, the checking being close all through, and methods pursued by a few of tne play- crs were anything but legitimate: Mid land had much more of the play than Kingston, but lacked effectiveness, the forwards shooting wildly and px sing too much when in close. Kingston played coolly and systematically and de ed all their goals. Potter and T Richardson were the pick of the Kings ton bunch. Vanhorne lost his efiective- ness after he was bumped. by McLen- nan. Hiscock played a great game in | goal. Congratulatory Messages. Congratulatory messages were re- celvéd hy the 14th team at the rink, last night, immediately after the game, from many interested Kingston- ans. { | | | | Home From Toronto. The 14th hockey team arrived from Application for homestead entry or in- spection must be mude in person by the | applicant at the office of the local Agent | or Sul it. { An lication for entry or inspection | wade sonally at a ub-agent s othoe | way be wired to the local Agent by the | Sub-agent, ut the expense of the ap-| plicant, and if the land applied for 1s | vacant on receipt of the telegram such | application is to 'have priority and the | land will be held until the necessary papers to complete the transaction are | received by mail | In case of "personation" the entry will be summarily cancelled and the appl | cant will forieit all priority of claim. | An applicant for inspection must be rible for homestead entry, and only application for inspection will be received from an 'individual until that application has Leen disposed of. A homesteader whose entry is in good standing and not liable to cancellation, | way, subject to approval of Department, | relinquish it in favour of father. mother, son, damghter, brother or sister, if eligible, but to no one else, on filing de- claration of abandonment. Where an eutry is summarily cancelled or voluntarily abandoned, subsequent to institution of cancellation proceedings. the applicant for inspection will be eon- titled to prior right of entry. Applicants for inspection inust state in what particulars the homesteader is in default, and if subsenuentry the state | went ig. found to be imcorrect in mater | inl particulars, the applicant will lose | any prior right of re-entry should the | Jund become wvacant, or if entry has been | granted it may be summarily cancelled Dutics--A settler is required to per: fora the conditions under one of the following plans :-- (1) At least six months' residence up- on and cultivation of the land in each year during the term of three years. | (2) If the father (or mother, if the father is deceased) of a homesteader resides upon a farm in the vicinity of the land entered for by such homesteader the requirement as to residence may be satisfied by such person residing with the father or mother. . (3) If the settler has his permanent residence upon farming land owned by him in the vicinity of his homestead, the requirement may be satisfied by ragidence upon such land. Hefore making application for patent the settler must give six months' notice in writing to the Commissioner of Do- minion Lands at Ottawa, of his inten- tion to do so SYNOPSIS OF CANADIAN NORTH- WEST MINING REGULATIONS. Coal.--Coal Lands may be purchased at $10 per acre for soft coal and $20 for el anthracite. Not more than 820 acres can be acquired by one individual or company. Royalty at the rate of ten cents per ton of 2,000 pounds shall be collected on the gross output, Quartz.--A free miner's certificate is granted upon payment in advance of $5 yer annum for an individual, and from $50 to $100 per annum for a company according to capital. A free miner, having discovered miner- al in place, may locate a claim 1,500x 1,500 feet. 'The fee for recording a claim is $5. At least $100 must be expended on the claim each year or paid to the mining yecorder in lieu thereof. When $500 has been expended or paid, the locator may. upon having a survey made, and upon complying with other requirements, pur- chase the land at $1 per acre. The patent nrovides for the payment of a royaity of 2% Jer cent on the sales. Placer mining claims generally are 100 fest square entry fee $5, renewable vearly. A free miner may obtain two leases to dredge for ~ojd of five miles each fora tern of twenty years renewable at the discretion of the Minister of the Interior. The lessee shall have a drudge in oper- ation within one season from the date of the leasa for each five miles. Rental $10 per annum for each mile of river leased. Royalty at the rate of 24 per cent collected on the output alter it ex- ceeds $10,000. $ WwW. W. CO RY, Deputy of the Minister of the Interior. | season. Toronto at noon Of the players, | three are carrying marks of the game Vanhorne, Powell and Potter were all hurt. Vanhorne's knee was put out, and is quite stiff, but it is not the knee that has been bothering him all | otter is suffering from a | lame ankle, and Powell got hit all over. The boys will rest for a couple and undoubtedly will Ix ready for 'the finals when they are ar of davs, ranged. For City Championship. | The talk in sporting circles, this morning. is all on the proposed city hetween this game be ar championship game and Mth. Should ranged it. would undoubtedly prove a deawimg card and would also serve to | keep the 14th team in condition for | the 0. H. A. finals. Though it is possible to/ decide the relative strength | of these two teams as they have play- ed in different is generally Queen's ims | leagnes it is felt that the 14th would beat | Quern's. The game would prove inter | esting and' the teams would undoubt- | edly make money by such a contest. | -------- | Peter Will Be Ready. London. Feb. 19.-1t is to-day, that in the %homas Lipton's failire to again chal lenge for the America's Peter Donaldson, a well-known yachtsmen, | will immediately issue a challenge. announced, event of Sir Cup. Buttermilk soap, three cakes 25c, at Gibson's Red Cross Drug Store A eritic is a man who couldn't have done it himself. NOSE COLDS, SNEEZING. Simple Cure Has Been Discover- ed. Few escape a cold this weather, bat, alas ! many colds rum into catarrh Neglected catarrh is the straight gateway to consumption So look out--act now--use "'Ca- tarrhosone" and be cured ! Catarrhozone is a germ-killer--de- stroys the microbes that cause ca- tarrh. Then it heals and soothes, This relieves the cough, gives throat and lungs a chance, cleanses the nos- trile, clears out the phlegm, You feel setter in an hour. In a day you're greatly relieved, and on goes ~the curing of Catarrhozone till you're well. ad No treatment eo dirfbt. Catarrh- ozone goes right to the spot--acts quickly~cures thoroughly es bronchitis and all throat affections Complete two months' treatment for 81, goaranteed. Sample (trial) size, 25¢. All dealers, or NX. C. Polson & Co., Hartford, Conn., U.S.A, and Kingston, Ont. If a man ever veagns to lead a dog's life it is when he sees a pretty girl fondling a measly poodie. It costs some men an awful lot of monek' fo keep out of jail and it costs some others even more to stay in. N.B.~Unantharized publicntion of this advertisement will not be gaid for. speak of his foundationless is the charge that er-humanized the beasts "The modern Yes, that's the right, ripple passed "He has learnt it ise to molest man, and we've In Eng- for | sion to control Burlington Beach. has ov which wolf is educated word---educated" one day had beast's picture. impress at Directly you hear this animal lover h vou realize how loves he has written. as a the audience. s are ne the he got 1437 wolf, with fmally eree this Paris, bought out in the ly, when lost in « the wild, scomed to consider knew home at any rate. He she series of pictures of « heavily the time. All touched it this man who has lived den wilderness. His theor as he knows them is, the shot him. in the , in Holland alone there none whole terrorized by them. gray wolf appeared killing sheep and cattle, till the taste of blood, and thereafter sought men | meat. In or the "bob-tailed," besieged the city on the ice sunken under Courteau. his band mto ping west, and which brought him back to camp safe- human | Ingersoll. The body. of an infant was found in a box car at Welland, John Yule, Goderich overdose of laudanum, The late Ex-Governor Olean, N.Y., left an £12,000.000, ho The Toronto Elevated Railway of | pany has petitioned the for a private hill. The. Buckingham, riot cases are being proceeded with at Hull, but little new evidence is produced, The government is expected to in- troduce a bill appointing a commis died from an Higgins o estate of over com- government Que, J. Wo Flavelle has forwarded his re signation us a member of the board of | of governors of Toronto University In The little town of M: 3 Algoma in | with a povulation of ht hundred people, has increased its ligguor licens fee from $250 to $750 ast PERSONAL MENTION, Movements of The People--What the | They Are Saying And Doi and killing many before vy JIE un 018g. drawbridge, Re ro > I . ww. De. Eby weached in Ottaw Notre Dame. Mr. Thomson-Seton was | woo End Method nt church on Su . one of the wolvers in the great gov- { dy sun ernment hunt in the west from 'S3 to | Yienry Evans, of Toront ; oid 4 A vans, of Toronto, spe 88, and there got the material, at ting a Tow divs in this te he one first hand of the wolf story, in "Wild {of relatives. , ¢ guest Animals 1 Have Known. | Mrs. Somerville of the Somerville There are fool horses, as there are | 2 ane } . : i | Co., left on Saturday, for New York fool men. thinks this artist-writer, | Tp 3 : | and Toronto. but he told a story of a beautiful, | 7K 0.8 Strange 1 % weoll-broken horse, rising four, that he Ls 2 SLignge has been appoint | ed manager in the Sovereign opened in Hintonburg Bank that he George H. Halloran, of Toronto the rond | Was in the city to-day, and will go to wed the | Montreal to visit friends, of which he said always felt ashamed: never before after did he hang his head so low as the day the camera children, horses won't show off before company. A delightful part of thé evening was the fe oer, bears the mark of anything that has enough to leave an things have a meaning, all things tell a story to untrod of animals have Like he Henry M. Ferguson of Ottawa, ar or | rived in the city to-day. He will visit friends here and at Sharbot Lake Charles Fallon returned yesterday, to the city, after a two weeks' busi ness trip to Ottawa and Montreal. Rev. Dr. sary Jordan sermons in St preached anniver Paul's Presby en by themselves, so to speak, by flash torian church, Hamilton, on Sunday light after Goorge Shirres, an ama- Miss Annie Switzer, Queen street teur American photographic enthusiast who has been nursing at Saranac had laid the strings about in places | Lake, for the past few weeks, retumn where the animals roam. Incidentally ed home to-day he told some interesting things Miss F. Hentig, senior fourth clas of the birch tree, or the quaking teacher of Frontenac school, is on aspen, and the curious way it forever the sick list. Her place is being filled by Miss Amglin. George Walker, of Ottawa, has re turned home, after a pleasant week's visit with wls at Watertown, N.Y. Lieut.-Col. C. W. F Medical Corns, has Kingston and Army appointed Gorpell, the been KIPLING AS A TYPE. French War Novel Hero Centres About English Author. "Dingley, the Famous Author," which has been awarded the "Prix Gonecourt" as the best French novel of the year, it generally regarded as based on a study of Kipling. Anyhow, the fictitious famous author bears a striking resemblance in many re- spects to the living one. He is portrayed as an Englishman of letters who has won fame at 40, whose verses soldiers sing when they set out to fight, and who has supreme confidence in the mission of the Anglo-Saxon race. While his country- men are getting the worst of it In the earlier stages of the Boer war, ha conceives the idea of stimulating pa- triotic pride by writing a novel in which a worthless loafer enlists and in the field finds himself and develops into a conquering hero. That sounds quite Kiplingesque. To get the proper local color for his book he goes to Cape Town with his wife and child. Leaving them, he starts for the veldt. A message - es him that his child is dangerously ill. On his way back to Cape Town he is captured by a Boer, who, on hear- ing his story, lets him go and assists him on his way. By this means he succeeds in reaching his child in time to kiss it before it dies. In the course of the war the Boer is taken prisoner and condemned to A Great Skirt. Sale = 27 SKIRTS in fancy tweeds, kersey and vicuna, all nicely trimmed, no two alike in the lot, but all sizes in them from 38 to 43, colors navy, oxford and black, 1.75 black regular $3.50 to $6 good s--TO-MORROW they go fOr GACH ~ » » = wv su » = nv sum nuaaw -.-e ea GIRLS' SCHOOL SKIRTS, in navy, oxford and kersey, nicely trimmed with self and buttons, sizes 23 to 20, regular price, § 2.25~TO-MORROW to go At ACh « ~ « cs nc cam sE RTF. mma. 98 25 SPENCE'S ™ Lats Mttaey ea. A SALE OF FELT HATS ALL THE VERY LATEST STYLES, in black and all colors, untrimaned ; prices were $1 to $2.75--now - "ee ee ean se mee. aR Eee sE EAT. aa. death. It is then Dingley shows that he is no true Kipling after all. He re- fuses to intercede for the chivalrous foe who had befriended him and he is executed. Dingley's novel makes a hit. Its dramatic incidents are shown by a bioscope in a London music hall. And the picture of the execution of the Boer arouses tremendous enthu- siasm. , The book is not calculated to pro- mote the entente cordiale. And friends of Kipling will resent the association of his characteristics with those of a dastardly ingrate. But it is a power ful, vigorous work. It is the joint pro- duction of two brothers, Jerome and Jean Theraud, who are not yet 30 years of age. They are journalists by profession and devote their leisure to writing novels. Their methods are those of Kipling. They insist on seeing things themsel- ves and studying Jife in all its phases at close range instead of depending on their imaginations for characters and incidents. Fame has come to them earlier than it did to Kipling, and brilliant literary careers are prediet- ed for them. John Burns As a Minister. Mr. T. W. Russell, M.P., has lately been giving his views of various par liamentary colleagues. What he has to say about John Burns is particular- ly interesting. After reminding us that Mr. Burns is a Scot who has come south to show the mere Baxon how things ought to be done, Mr. Russell proceeds :--*An engineer by trade, Mr. Burns has combined hard work with effective social and political agita- tion. He has dealt with 'niggers' in Africa, has defied the law in Trafal- lady went into the yard, nt the rear of | her home, on Momlay night, to bring in clothes, and fell on a stone slab Though in pain, Mrs. Clarke gathered the clothes and carried them to th kitchen. On setting the basket dewn her thigh bone snapped. "Pr. Bogart was called and set the bone Mrs Clarke spent a good night and is re ported doing well this morning The injured woman was in the em ployment of the Board of Education, holding the position of caretaker of Louise school for thirty-five vears A curious phase of the accident rests in the fact that the bone snapped abput five minutes after her fall, which is a remarkable occurrence. Clarke is about seventy years of age LAST NIGHT'S CURLING. Mrs There Were Several Games. Interesting Two interesting games were played at the curling rink, on Monday night The first resulted in a victory for Dr. Ross' rink over E. 0. Sliter, and in the second contest L. L. Henderson defeated Lieut. Palmer by the score of 12 10 11. The teams were W. Kent, J. Hooper, R. JJ. Hooper L. 1. Henderson, skip--l2 Lient. - Col Massie, Young, John Elliott; skip--11. Col Palmer, Lieut Lieut ------ pr. Chown's Special Iron Tonic Pills make pure, rich blood, 5c. and 50c. . Bvery self made man thinks other men ought to borrow his, pattern, Try semi-ready (Clothing. home on go visit Lennox County Napanee Beaver L. L. Gallagher, warden, and Charles Anderson, chairmen ¢ bridges committer, this week, in consultatic were Dr. Reaums, minister of public works over our county road vexed question has been dangling be public for some time, and a fore th disastrous upshot was the above gentlemen, with the assist ance of our local memk islature, Messrs scored a splendid yas of the county council of last minister. After present all its aspects, and after ment, to department give it ex the nating cormty roarls proved of and the gov | of moneys expended la purchase of road machinery and build Probably. ing bridges should be paid to the Dupont--I think your son will be counts The government cheque willl gglobrated if he lives long enough. be upwands of £6,000. McGill's foundry, Chatsw ter, has heen sold to H. A. McEwen, Cgrleton Mace, and all w standing idle will he reopened at on "Blackthorn oil" is Ciheem's For perfect, fitting Chown s drug store, Carscallen and Paul, victory in the disagreements between the deputation sent by the iderntion and arrived at sonclusion that the Red Cross Drug Store. For the Convlestcenls and the Exhausted Grippe and 'Typhoid Fever debilitate the system and =. cause a state of extreme weakness, which should be relieved at any cost. Tore- store strength rapidly there is nothing equal to ILLER'S EX- RACTOF MALT The richest in tonic and nutritive propeitiey, the purest, the most energeic. For sale by H. WADE, Druggist, cor. King and Brock Strests, : Kingston. Thoroughly In Three Canada Metal Co., | Ltd. Toronto, Ont. -- "GENERAL" BREAD MAKER Kneads Bread Minutes McKELVEY & BIRCH, 69 & 71 BROCK ST, KINGSTON. FOR SALE: ENGLISH PIG LEAD puidance of instingt. to a certain limit, | Mrincival medical officer of military § gop square, been at least once in gaol | they have reasoning, to a certain km Sioeries No. 4. for a period of two | Loved hard on the County Couneil-- iy they tan be taught, also toa jt ale, still harder in the digum of gms ed extent. In fact they are mentally SE RR NG mons--is strong in and mind. endowed, much gs humans, though to WOLFE ISLAND NEWS. And as President of the Local Govern- | = a less degree in every particular above : er ment Board he has now to deal with mentioned, Getting Ready For the Island's | the most acute of all our social prob- | 4 Kingston's grateful thanks are due to Ice Races. lems--the -poor law and want of em- the Y.W.C.A. management for bringing Woife Island, Feb. 18-The ice races loyment. And it is a problem which Mr. Thomson-Scton to the city. here, the last of the month, promis he wisely refuses to have rushed. Mr. ---- to furnish » big days for the vil Bure, siting in Charles street, haa lage. The horseme ton. a fine scope for his powers as a states- BADLY FROZEN. Cape Vincent are okie Ring: op au man, and sven for his imagination, : the eve ) which sometimes runs away w : Brought to Hospital For Treat. he a The hay DUSCTS arc | 1h the erucial question of unemploy- ment. Yo the Chars and K a we good crossing | ont it was a stody to watch him Nicholas Babcock, an old resident of | jy... de ty 0 dealing with the Socialists last ses- Olden, was brought to the city on | po 05 ns wen ill. with pneu [ jon, Tuesday morning in a precarious cot | ol to hear he ny rion s aro plens "What Mr. Burns would do--seated dition. On Monduy neighbors in pass y ANT | J > np 0 ing Ih La in Mr. Gerald Balfour's chain-is a k \ tl Ie s last nweting at ' » Be Te en | yd ye i, neti st 0 { soe chet, mnt ti, | ang inside fe e stretel 3 . x on Fo Ry ~ ran Hoi ed opin had a slight | wanted to know what he intehded to HT ee an he. Ten ate | Soluce of typhoid lover, but is gectitg 1. do--when the Tuctployed BRE st knoes down. were frozen. Babrosk was better. iss Andrews is still ver ferred to in the King's Speech was n 1 a as low. R. Payne is on the sick list. A going to see the light. 'All in good } stout Sixts Fears Sf aire, " is said | McRae, returnad from Toronto, say time," was the invariable reply. 'T am | o have been subject to wen pell that the marl there are wood, ane not going to be rushed. I must have one of which overtook him on his gan - i rtainlyv take a rise hos Jou BoE into the whole question. ing his house, supposedly on Sunday will leave for Toronto | T don't believe in your processions evening. On being discovermd 1 sn a detritation. in the in | in your women marches--and all the Gain of Olden, was called and ex county. and alo os dele rest of it. T know all about that sort peri 1 considerable difficulty in re- | the annual Associations of | of thing and it does not impress me. viving the injured man He was | Exhibitions Miss Stall Nor do I believe in the clamor about brought to the city by the Kingston | Spoor is taking a course in King tor | farm and labor colonies. I have seen and Pembroke railway, in a low con: | Business College. Mrs. A. W. Vincent | theee agencies at work. I don't dition. Little hope is held out for | of Dhphunilie, N.Y., and Master Vine | SVeR believe in certain Salvation saving his legs, which will likely be | (nt, are visiting her parents, Mr. an Army methods. .T believe the un- amputated Mrs. ( Halliday Mr. and Shs. EOP oyed are tos large Sriat the Mr. Babcock i=-well known in the | Goodiviend, of Howe Island, are spend unemployable The loafer is largely | od at most of the villages along the | Mary ( s visiting frionds te y a | railway. He is a widower and said Meer Ny Tonk drole in Wo . mean _business--but of a real kind to have no family alive ws AT ad \ B Two hundred thousand pounds will : ali to Toronto, this week, in the interest § be available from the State, should ROR of county romd grant. Matthew Flynn | necessity arise during the winter. And BROKE HER THIGH. has just rently returned from Water when 1 have closed my enguiries and town. Mrs. James Doyle, of Kings | finished my studies I shall lay the bill An Accident to a Venerable | ton. is visiting Misc M. Lyons. H you desire to see on the table--not Lad Fawcett. will take charge of Wolie afore.' "' - A or ¥- i M Isdand factory for the coming year A serious accident ocowrred to Mrs | 47 Allury, of Pittsburg, is renewing a i Sarnh Clarke, motherdndaw of J. F.| old acypointances. Miss Mattie Davis, . A Gra Enginser. Cruse, Nelson , which resulted in | Cape Vineent, spent Sunday with he Sir Alexander Kennedy is one of a fracture of hee ghigh bone. The old | parents here, Mrs. 8. Winhourne i the foremost figures in the engineer- ing world. It was in 1875 that Sir Alexander devised and established the engineering laboratory at Univer- sity College, which was the first of ita kind in this country. He has act- el as chief engineer to the Westmin- Roads. } Yule ant 1 gter Electric Supply Corporation, Lim- oront n onto, § jied, since its formation, and design. m with Hon ed the whole system of its various stations. A grest number of Scottish and North of England towns owe their system of electric lighting to Bir Alexander's schemes. The South Lon- don, electric tramways, and the Wat- erloo and City Electric Railway are other enterprises for the success of which this distinguished engineer is in the main responsible. But possibly Sir Alexander's greatest claim to pub- lic gratitude was his unflinching at- titude in the matter of engine and boiler trials at sea. He emphasized the necessity of separating the boiler trials from those Dh engine and iz- | although hia ideas eceived with great opposition, he eventually obtain- ed permission to carry out such trials. This by-law. looked for, but pers of the leg face of mem ear before the he the case in full argu proceeded to bylaw d should be ap drnment's st year in the share Durand--In what way? Dupont--Why, for his great age. orth, Ont. That's all. "Nuf said, when von say ce that Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea sold only atlis the greatest family remedy on in earth. It does yon good going and i go to teooming. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets | ™ * | Mahood's drug store. 3 ol / Royal Insurance Co'y W. J: B. White, Agent, Kingston ---------------- he population pf Fi 000 cubic fect of water into the seem hours. oelaine thowe of Japan are made prin LOOK LIKE 30c. The Profits Paid By Some Companies. When. Compared With The OF ENGLAND. Business In Force $100,000,000 Lite Funds . . | 41,000,000 Profits Paid 14.1700 Profits, 1005 8,226 00 Ezpsmses To Income 8) per cent. We Invite Your Investigation. INDOOR SPORTS BNW ? Men of sedentary habits require When You Buy exercise. The inventive genius with ths CcO Al, physisians knowlédge has invent- ed. Rrom EXERCISES That will develop the muscles of almost any part of the body de- sired. For that tired, sluggish feeling, make a selection of some good Exerciser from our stock of Sporting Goods. ANGROVE BROS. 88 and90 Princess St. P. WALSH Youget genuine Scranton as he handles nothing else wiat the time of the Co ne. exceed two millions, all told. 5 The United States is said (0 have a lower peremtage of Wind people than any othe: country in the world, A | From the bird's vidwpoint 'a <ogle {nich is woth a doen hands. Sik t : The Thames pours about 1,000,000 the course of wvery $wenty four The coins of Siam are made of por- sally of iron.