Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 23 Oct 1907, p. 5

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: w-------- Cidney Troubles Vegetable Compound is al in Curing This Fata] has done for me. When I fi I had suffered for years with whey ob al doctor called kidney trouble and congesti of the female organs. My back ached dread: fully all the time, and I suffered so with that begring-down I could hard} walk across the room. did not get oi better, so decided to stop docto: with ny Physician and take Lydia E. Pinkham's egetable Compound and I am thankful to say it has entirely cured me. Idoall m own work, have no more and all bad symptoms have disappeared. cannot praise als e Jour medicine enough, and would kidney trouble to try it." suffering with Mr JW. I i New York, -- 01.626 Third Avenue, Dear Mrs. Pinkham :-- "I have been a great sufferer with kidn exe able t it that les. om= ents rine I and | 3. raged. I heard Ly Pinkham's Vegetab) - _-- cure kidney ay bound would and it has cured me when thing ing had failed. * I have Yecommendel it to ry of peoplesnd they all praise it very highly' eet, Mrs. Pinkham Standing Invitati 8 = 's she] Women suffering from ki ted jor any form a ge ing | invited to promptly communicate with m's| Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mas. The n's | present Mrs. Pinkham is the ter- in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham, her assistant before her decease, and for twenty-five years since her advice has been ly given to gick women. Out of the great volume of experience which she has to draw from, it is more than likely she has the very knowledge that will p your hat | case. Her advi nd | helpful. ulvice is free and' always nd; 2 Woman's Remedy for Woman's lls. p-- \ar- na, RR oR ERR RR RRR RRRRERERRR Overcoat money, Sir, 1 our splendid line. Our Coats can not fail to win Ask to see: EERIE ETI RRR YR® i Edward Overcoat. erial. rlington. t's New. } BIBBY CO. LE CLOTHIERS, Ry ERE RE ralue 'TH'S. possible, in High Grade ed to Redpath Extra Granu- a » A PELVIC DISEASE o Which Peruna Cured Me In a Very Short Time LIFE. WAS SAPPING MY SREY i A ee : Gold in Guwilight Dh Nr. and Mrs. Clark Hamilton were surtomged, yesterday, by their imme-. diate family; it being their golden wedding "anpiversary. In consequence of recent bereavement the event was kept as quiet as possible, but it did not prevent dear friends gathering from a distance or the arrival of a large number of cablegrams, telegraph messages, golden gifts and flowers. Ar. and Mrs. Hamilton were mar- ried in New York, the bride being Miss Nixon, of that city. One of the bridesmaids, the present Miss Nixon, was among those gathered here, ves- | terday. The life of the bride 'and | groom of 1857 has been a very har one, and in Kiugston, where nearly all of the fifty years have been spent, | they can each count their warm and | admiring friends by the number oi | their acquaintances. Mr. Hamilton's | elder brother; with his devoted wife, reached the golden wedding anniver- | sary two years ago. | Mrs. J. M. Machar, Bagot street,| 'RS. SOPHIA CALDWELL, 1122 McGavock St, Nashville, Tenn., | writes: | «Atter doctoring for a year and find- | ng Do relief from leucorrhea resulting | from proldpsus uteri, and which was | sapping my life forces away, I finally tried Peruna, and when I found that it | was helping me every day, 1t sedmed | a tea for Mrs. George Horsey, as a Y.. last Saturday: almost 00 good to be true. "But, it not only helped me and In a very short time. «] am now enjoying the bestof health. «I am strong and free from pain, and 1 certainly feel thatall praise and honor are due to Peruna." Thousands of women will read the testimonial of Mrs. Caldwell as above given. = Thousands of them will be induced to try the remedy that saved her. Thousands of them will have the same experience she had. Peruna is the remedy such women | - meed. Peruna comes like a boon to 8uf~| 7p. winners in the second round of short trip to Brockville. fering womankind. Mrs. John Hopp, Webster Ave., Glen- dale, L. 1., N. Y,, has also been relieved of pelvic catarrh by Peruna., EDUCATIONAL. ---- pe Rettttectestsceecssses "IL I you wish to be successful at- tend The Kingston Business College Limited, head of Queen street. CANADA'S HIGHEST GRADE business school, Rookkeeping, shorthand, typewriting, tele- graphy, all commercial subjects thoroughly taught by competent experi teachers. Day amd night classes. Enter at ally time. Rates very moderate. 'Phone, 440. H. F. METCALFE, President, J. BE. CUNNINGHAN, Secretary. ES III Bestssetesessestetenes IMPROVE YOUR EDUCATION an INCREASE YOUR EARNING POWER Day and Evening Classes at the Frontenac Business College, Barrie and Clergy Sts. N. STOCKDALBE, Principal. T 680. "Phone, & PSPSPS IISISIEIPISW | him when he was but twenty-three. | HERE'S SOMETHING NEW IN POST CARDS Greetings from . King ston, ° Life Models" Kingston Views. Come in and have a look. T. McAuley 0000060000000 Women's Pains "I received your sample of Zutoo Tablets, and took them for severe pain (monthly) and headache. ~ At the end of 30 minutes I was entirely free from pain and experienced no more throughout the period. 1 suffer a great deal at these times and feel grateful that I now have a remedy which affords quick re- licf. Every wontan in the land should Fhow about Zutoo Tablets and what thev will do." MRS. ALLEN WRIGHT, Fulford, Q. Zutoo = and Crescent Wire & Iron Works Wire Railings, Flower Stands, 1 Guards, Ash Sifters, Builders' and Coal Dealers' Screens and Wire Work of all kinds menufactdred by 275 KING artridge & Sons, *" se Cook's Cotton Root Compound. ie ems ite ls, 8% depend. Sold in three Re rength=No. 1. $1 me, It cured | shortly for England 1 » . . Wire| 'wonen oan | ES eh | AEE 3? of nab a | poliday aud weturn home with him. gave an informal little tea, last week, | for some of the visitors in town. i oo. .. Mrs. John Waddell, William street, is entertaining, at tea, this afternoon, in honor of the wives of the mining school prdfessors. a) . Mrs. H, H, Horsey, of Ottawa, gave | good-bye to the latter, who will leave | Interest in golf and tennis still | keeps fresh-among | people, and every day has: seen | girls there for play, and the subse- | quent cup of tea. { - . | | There is a wedding coming off about { the middle of next month which is going to take a very sweet and much- | beloved girl away to Winnipeg, . aml tpeople are wondering just how King- | ston is going to get along without her, ait ee the gol tournament will have to draw and play off now, aad the champion- ship stands between Miss | Hora and Miss Dorothy Brownfield, both of whom play a splendid game. eo Tate The Hallowe'en, or the next day fo Hallowe'en, is the topic of interest among the girls, and thoughts of it | are keeping their spirits up under the | dearvu of gaiety in town just: now. | as 9 will not the {| Miss Macaulay, King street, {be at home, on Fridays, until lend of November. | «oe . | | Mrs. Edwards Merrill, of Toronto, | announces the marriage of her young- | est daughter, Miss Muriel, to Mr. | Christopher Holden, {fnciand. The wedding took place in Winnipeg, on October 17th. | - » - - | Mrs. John Macnaughton, West street, | has asked a few people to a little | bridge, tosmorrow night, in honor of | Mrs. Norman Fraser eee ow While in town. Dr. J. {| Bell, or as his friends still call him, Max Bell, will be the guest of the | Principal and Mrs. Noniel Gordon, at | Queen's College. vingstonians are {very proud and pleased with the hon- | ors which thé boy they knew and | liked so well has won. Although the | Royal Geographical, Society never cre- ates a man ga fallow in its ranks till | he has reaclidd the thirty-year mark: | so pleased were its learned members | with the freshly-written report of the | north country which Dr. Bell gave ai- | ter his two years' life there, that they conferred the honor of fellowship upon Harvard made him a Ph.D. in 1901, {and he has received many a flattering | notice in the dewspapers, and many a complimentary. reference in speeches in | college halls, N <a Captain apd Mrs. Alan Palmer. vis | iting | wa during last week, were the guests | of honor ' at many bright functions during their stay. Mss. 'Gilbert Fau- quier had a dinner, Miss Ethel Perley a tea, Mrs. Ward Hughson a luncheon and, Saturday evening, Colonel * | on | and Mrs. Rutherford entertained at a { | charming dinner party. Mrs. Palmer held a reception for her friends at her mother's home also. Captain and Mrs, Palmer are now in Kingston, and will live in Colonel Henry Smith's house on King street. y . - - . Archdeacon Harding and his bride had a very busy time of it yesterday afternoon . Numbers of the archdea- con's friends flocked to the British- American, to greet him and meet his wife. 'All were glad to see the arch- deabon looking so well, and were charmed with Mrs. Harding. The lat- ter wore a pretty gown of soft dove groy silk with lace about ft. and seemed band's friends of the days gong by as they were to see her. Archdeacon and Mrs. Hardin went west to-day. CL = \ Mrs. Robert O'Hara, William street, loft. ! yesterday, for a fortnight's visit in Toronto. Mrs. George™Grover, went, yester- day, to pay Mrs. R. Vashon Rogers, Barrie street; a little visit Miss R. M. Philips, of Fergus, is en | pension at *'The Avonmore." i Mrs. Charles Abbott, of Stratford, | came down. from Hamilton, with her | aunt, Miss Macaulay, King street. Mrs. D. Norton-Taylor and Miss Lily Xorton-Taylor, have taken rooms at "Romilly House" | i . » | Mrs. T. Merritt, William street. left. {on Monday, fora short visit in Mont- | real and Cornwall. | Miss Keenan, who has been down { among the «Thousand Islands since | she left town, has gone home to Ot- | tawa. . Miss E. { turned, on Saturday, from New York. |" Mr.' Norman Prager. may be up from | Aylmer, for Thanksgiving, and if he can manage to, get off then, Mrs. Fraser will remain here over the Quebec, a home from. her visit in the old land, some time next month. street. has gone down to Three Riv- | ers, to take part in the wedding pre- | putations of her cousin," Miss May | | bame from New York. | who hms | ne the Country Club | near Saskatoon, the | home -in- Kingston, fo Frances | dance at the Royal Mili-| late of London, | Mackintosh | Colonel and Mrs. Irwin in Otta-| girlhood | as pleased to meet her hus- Sutherland, Earl street, re-| Miss H. Mair, Union street, will be IS A REPUBLICAN PARSON TAKESWARM PART IN He Believes That the Preacher is Miss Mildred Maemorine, Barrie hs - » - Mry.: Alexander, of Ottawa, who spent a week or so with Mrs. Robert Meikle, Clergy street, has gone home, after making many new friends here. Mrs. A. Jordan and her children are down from Port Hope. They will be en pension at "The Awonmore," till they can get into their house, which will be in a few days. Mrs T. M. Fenwick, University ave- nue, expects to leave for Belleville; at the end of the week. Miss Katie Cotter, Alfred street, is back from Montreal, . Bric-a-Brac or Dominie With No Mind. New York, Oct. 28.~Rev. John L. Scudder, pastor of the First Congre- gational church, Jersey City, presided at a re) i mass meeting in that city. He madea warm speech in ad- vocacy of re-election of Mayor Fagan. The minister prefaced hi: re- marks as follows / "The minister of the twentieth cen- tury is something more than pious hE # 1 : ic-a-bra ivie Wi luties as adjutant. Mr. and Mrs. R. Uglow, Barrie |bric-a-brac, or a dear old dominie with |" ! Ea -- street, have gone down 5 New York | no mind of his own and just about Bandmaster Payette has returned ' z g i dfrom a holiday trip to Montreal. Cor- for a few days. fitted to say sweet nothings to the . h . ladies at an afternoon tea. He is a I O'Neil has also returned from Drand Mrs. David Allison, of Wil liamstown, N.Y., came back from there with Mrs. Allison's mother, Mrs. William Roberts, and. are staying at the rectory, Adolphustown. prophet of God to denounce sin in high places and to stand up for the; right no matter. what the consequenc: ed"be. 1 am a parson to preach the gospel, but I am a citizen in free Am- Miss Nellie Fortescue has reached | E© R Montreal, after 'her trip to the far|®nca, and on the platform 1 reserve north. the right to speak my mind and fight n openly for righteousness and "recent Mr.and Mrs. James Bute and Miss Bute left at noon for their home in Houston, Texas. They have been here since last June at the Randolph. government." SAVES FAST TRAIN. Presence of Mind of Miss Mabel Wheeling. Welland, Ont., Oct, 22.--By her pre- sence of mind and prompt action Miss Mabel Wheeline a country school teacher, on Monday night, saved the fast Michigan Central Express from almost certain derailment and prob- ably averted a great railway disaster. Hugo Craig, | Miss Wheeling wis walking along the been enjoying prairie life, [tracks from this town about nine all summer, will be|o'clock. at night when she discovered x She severest of (a pile of iron en one of the rails on {the west-bound ' track. Taking in. the | situation at a glance she tried to Lift | Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Wrenshall| the heavy pieces from the rails. : { have left their Albert street home and. | For several minutes she toiled, | esterday, with the Misses Annie and knowing that the speedy express was abel Wrenshall, left for Owen Sound, (almost certain to arrive at anv min- Mrs. Watson Walker, Sydenham street, has returned from a six weeks' visit with her aunt, Mrs. Shuldhgin Hill, in Quebec. rs. George Fenwick, University avenue, came back from Brooklyn, N. Mrs. George Mahood, Gore street, is It is probable that Mrs. | our winter weather. . | .. 0.0 | where the rest of their family is, and jute. However. her strength was not {will make their home theres sufficient to clear the. track. Sher | Miss Annie Mackleston, William | could not even lift one end of some | Mise Jf the steel. Retaining her presence of { mind, she dashed back to the signal ckles o has been | tower on the west side of the canal. Maelleston, who lise Bar. Arriving * there breathless and ex- Old hausted, she told the signal man of the condition of the. track. Without delay, as the train was almost due, the station was called up by tele phone, and just as the express neared the semaphore = the lights flashed "the danger signal and the engine was brought to a stop. The iron was re moved from the track by some of the railway officials, who went out from Welland station in a handcar. It was stated that twe rail-spreaders and & has) eh-plate were placed 'on the inside in | street, came home, last week, from her Mr. J. S. | visiting Canon and Mrs. + street, 160 'town, yesterday? have enjoyed his visit among | friends | them. : | Mrs. George Warner and Miss Carrie ! Barnum returned from Baltimore, on Saturday, and are at "Heathfield." - . So pleased were Rev. Dr. Barretts congregation to see him and Mrs. Bar | rott back in Philadelphia that a de {lightful reception was arranged for | their home coming. Dr. Barrett { been elected to go to the synod such o JBARNEE BSW Is. {Atlantic City next week, and Mrs.| 0 the engine ould + Ry Taye | Barrett will take the trip with him. ditch. [They will both be guests at their fa-| pojoctive Moynihan arrested. Ed- vorite stofibing plise, Haddon ylall. {ward Palmer, who lives with a'farm- 1 De, and i i § are home|. pear he spot. ag being: the guilty oO ; % . , : " { t party. Palmer, who is twenty years | Mrs. D. E. Mundell, Brock street,| i ne confessed to the officer, and {got off on Monday for her trip . to when arraiened before Magistrate Bur- Selkirk, Man. gar, pleaded guilty and was remand- led. He gives no good reason for at- r Emily | tempting to wreck the train, and ap- feat, are home from New York, : pears bright and of average intelli | Mrs. John Mchay, Jr, ayc enham gence. street, is expected home from Toronto] ---------- to-morrow. | WORK OF "THE CHURCH. | Mrs. Charles McKay, Johnson street, ! and her little boy, are spending a day| Archdeacon Harding Talks or so in Gananaque. | h-W. i { 3 is -Wes: . Mrs. R. Allen, of Belleville, will give | a So st Affairs : [a large house party from Thursday | 2rd eA.00n Har ing, of the diocese [the 31st to Monday, November 4th, (of QuAppelle. formerly Ccurnie of Bt are ak 1 f seorge & oathedral, arrive in he Ag Kec FOm| ity, vesterday, on his way to attend | Among those who Kingston to join it are Miss Nellie : : | ge ¥ ellie} po meeting of the Missionary So - . | Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Albree, of Bailey and Miss Irene Rees. la wh | oc « . - | ciety of the church in Toronto, on ie : 4 > iT S r, Octo > \ ol Mrs. Daniel Gordon, Queen's col Thursday, October Mths The arch deacon has been working in N " lege, had a most agreeable surprise a lwo \ E orking in orth jew dave apo. when her: sister | West anada during the last fifteen | ys ago, . . {years, and reports great development | Macphersbn, came up from the lower | the 'work ni ti Church of. Br SS Le. hie y WO © ch of Eng provinces to pay he ra visit. land. in the diocese of' Qu'Appelle, | Mrs. James Pennington Macpherson, |pypert's' Land, Calgary and Saskat { who has been the guest of the Misses chewan. In the diocese of Qu'Appelle | Macpherson, Brock street, for some where the archdeacon labors as ene Howe, left the end of last week for|, uy} missionary, there are now hity | ay C. Carter. Ki _ {five clergy, eighty churches, some | Mrs . C. Carter, Ring street, isiqhirty stipendiary and honorary lav | expecting a-wisit, shortly, from her { mother, Mrs. McWhirter, of Belleville readers, and fifty { Sunday schools. A hostel, or training school, for Mrs. Wilson, of Montreal, is the! leroy, has lately been established in guest of Mrs, J. F. Baker, Alwington| Regina, the capital; with Rev. C. R. avenue. . . . { Littler, B.D., St. John's Collere, Win | ; . {nipee. as warden, and glready there Engagements announced are seven students preparing them- Miss Muriel Barwick, daughter. of the! selves for the work of the sacred late Mr. Walter Barwick, K.€.. to Mr. | ministry. The bishop and the execu- { John Burton Holland, son of the late | Mr. Ralph Burton Holland, Toronto Miss Muriel Whitney, eldest daugh {ter of Mr. F. G. Whitney, and grand- | daughter of Mr. J. 'W. GG. Whitney, to Mr. 0. M. Biggar, of Edmonton, ekl est son of Mr. C. R. W. Biggar, of Toronto. Miss Muriek Bond, daughter of Col- {onel and Mrs. Francis Bond, Mont {real, to Mr. John Meagher | ae ee | The marriage of Mr. Alan Campbell Ewart, eldest son of Mr. J. 8. Ewart, | K.C., and nephew of Mrs. Herbert Mason, Crinleight, Toronto, to Miss] Mary Randolph Clay, daughter of Mr. | and Mrs. Henry Gibbs. Claggof Phila- delphia, will take place in that city on Wednesday. ive committee of the diocese are now {carefully planning for the opening of new missions in the spring of 190%, The archdeacon says the sreat need of the diocese, at present, is men, in holy orders, specially fitted bv educa- tion and experience, as well as physi cally, for the strenuous labors at- tached to strictly pioneer work in the North-West 1 | 'BERGERON IN A FIRE. He Saved His Brush and Comb From Burning. Hamiota, Man., Oct. 23. Within two hours after R. L. Borden had re- gistered at the Hotel Cecil, fire broke out in the kitchen basement. The maids ran through the house, bring- | ing forth the contents of their ward- yobes, the guests rushed for their | grips, and J. G. H. Bergeron, the con- servative leader's doughty henchman, was seen gliding downstairs, carrying his hairbrush and comb, having heen disturbed in his toilet. The fire was | fortunately quickly put out, and the company forgot the panic in a hearty supper. 4 | What The Poor Suffer. | "Housekeeper" writes the Whig as follows : ey would like to bring to the notice {of the public that some amongst us are feeling the rise in the price of bread. A mother with five children | (one an infant of two months), who lives close to me, feels the rise acute-| { Iv. She has been using six loaves of | bread a day. Now she" has to use nearly eight do make up the difference in weight, which means an addition of fifty-six cents a week. To make up this, she has to take on extra work from outside, which means wearing | and erushing the life out of 'the poor to A Valuable Chairman. Next woek the annual meeting of the hoard of governors of the General Hospital will be held, when officers will be elected. G. Y. Chown has been chairman of the board for two years, mother, who already wus overwork-| and some of the governors would like ed." | him to remain in office longer, in view | -------- of the attention he has paid the hos- | Greatest Show On Earth. | pital. On account of his nearmess to | London, Oct. 23.--Shareholders in| the institution, both in residence and at Queen's University, he has been | to sell the business to Ringling bro- | able to give invaluable aid almost thers for 3410000. The meeting was | every day to those in charge, whose { heated but concluded 'with all stock-} burdens have thug been lightened. holders agreed. The sale was due to] d ne : | the corporation's inability to pay| Steinway and Nordheimer pianos, the Barnum and Bailey circus votad THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1907. ie] AT TETE DE PONT BARRACKS. Notes of Interest in Military Circles. the P.AMC. and the PASC, the rade Barriefield Something More Than Pious|™ a Dear 01d! f the P.AM.C., have returned from Petawawa, where thoy were sent to look after some stores. ° Quite a number of recruits have been taken on at the barracks the past week or so. pital and with a fractured wrist. The member several days' furlough. the | members of the R.CHA., the Privates Smith, Dixon and Guertm, Dillon is laid up in the hos- suffering from a sprained ankle, 'Bombadier Rolson is in hospital was injured in the recent tug-of-war. Capt. Alan Palmer has resumed his Sergeants Smith and Rider have ie turned from Halifax, where they made a most creditable showing in their examinations. Football practices ave been com- menced and some games will be ar ranged later. SAVED BARGE. Line Parted While Iroquois Was Towing Barge. Oswego, N.Y, Times. . The steamer Iroquois, Capt. John Doyle, formerly of the Bothnia, came into port from Charlotte, Monday night, with Iwo barges coal laden. The steamer was light and a heavy sea was rolling. As she rounded the breakwater . the baree Valencia broke away and distress signals were sound: The barge drifted down the lake some distance and was being foreed toward the beach when the tug Sey mour, which went to the assistance of the boat got a line to the drifting barge and towed her into port The | Iroquois loads coal here for Montreal and will take one barge there, the Bothnia taking the other. . A HUMAN SKELETON. It Was Found Floating Water. While City Scavenger Roeves was at work around the water front, just back of Tete de Pont barracks, he no- ticed a portion of a human skeleton in the water, but before he could get his nets out, the skeleton was washed away Mr. Reeves has been engaged in cleaning the water front in that ity. removing all the weeds and that has gathered together in the viel refuse there A sharp lookout was kept for the skeleton again, but so far it has not been located. There was at first rumors going the rounds that a body had been recovered from the water. Run On The Banks. New York, Oct. 33.--The state bank- ing department has taken charge of the Knickerboker Trust company, and FOR 15 "QUICK FIRE Charcoal | { Toasting, Broiling, and Start- | ing Fires, it Has No Equal. Pat up in good size Paper Sacks. {i MCKELVEY & BIRCH 69 and 71 BROCK STREET. CENTS. it 4¢ announced that the doors of that institution will not open to-day There isarun on the bank of the] trust company of America, and also | on the Dollar Savings bank at The | Bronx. i J. Pierpont Morgan has assumed | command in New York financial cir} eles. He is striving to bring order out! of chaos, and to protect the large in- terests now in jeopardy. | The Pittsburg stock exchange did] | not open, this morning, owing to the | | demoralized feeling = in Westinghouse | Electric. The Security Investment com- | pany is involved. This will necessitate] a temporary suspension or Yeceivership | of the Westinghouse Electric and Manu | facturing company, the Westinghouse | Machine company, and the Nerst Lamp | company. The manufacturing compan- | jos are in an absolutely solvent &on-| dition | Serious conditions on the Paris bourse were prevented owing to pre cautions taken by Rothschilds and other leading bankers, who had been anticipating New York's financial trou- | ble, ---- Point Traverse News. Point Traverse, Oct Manly Doward, with his new separator, pass- | ed through here threshing. The work i did not take lone, as erops here are | very light. More than half the farm { ers here will not have enough to win ter their stock and are selling off quite a number as they cannot pet ford at any price. Nelson Minaker took a load of hogs to town on Fri. Fishermen are now in the trout . which is very good, ND. Dul- mage, lightkeeper at False Ducks, will move to the mainland to spend Visitors : Mr. and Mrs M. Head, Mr. and Mrs. C Dulmage Mr. and Mrs. 'A. Robbins, Mr. ard Mrs. I'. Collier at J. D. Collier's, on | Sunday: Mr. and Mrs. Emmet Wood at D. Woods'; H. Ostrander, of Syra- | cuse, at Mrs. M. Minaker's. | .- 9 day busin the winter Prescott's Prosperity. The George Hall company will next | season handle at --its Prescott plant | all of the coal used bythe, Canadian | Pacific railway on its entire eastern division. To take care of this immense | business it will be necessary to enlarge | the derricks so that the plant will] have a season capacityt of 300,000 | tons. It will be one of the largest coal | derricks on the great lakes chain. The C. P. R. have made an appro-| priation of $10,000 for Prescott yards | this winter, and next spring $100,000 | will be spent on improvements and al new station. Those expenditures put at rest any doubts entertained the New York Central would utilize] the Cornwall bridge for their interna-| tional traffic instead of Prescott fer | ries. 4 : i | | -------- A Collection Of China. Philadelplia Press { "Yes, 1 saw her buying a piece of | rare old china at auction;she told me she was going to start a collection." "Yes, she's got about a hundred piec- es now." "Why, it wax only the other | day that 1 saw her buying the first | 1 piece." know, but her servant girl has got busy in the meantime" -------- : Olive oil with the delicious nutty | dividends since Bailey's death with- | agency at Kirkpatrick's Art Store, out an adequate successor, | Princess street. : flavor, at Chown's drug store, N Y 3 nished rooms : Parlor, Library, on ground floor. try, Br unions, ta latest d sels. All t At James Reid's. . 'PHONE, 147. Brass and Iron Bods See our up-to-date Fury Dins! ing Room and Bedroom CARPETS--See out, lineof imported squares, signs. Prices moderate t - y : ' Men's Boots Built of Quality Smart, crisp shapes that impart rich tone to one's 4 apparel. As different from ordinary footwear as night from day. The economy in buying S Invictus Shoes soon makes : itself apparent to -the most 3 sceptical. The cost is but a trifle more than that of the . lower grades. Men's, $1.00, 4.50 and 5.00. $ Ladies, $3.50, 3.75 and 4.00, The Sawyer Shoe Store. ww Edward's Nervine Compound - A Wonderful Blood Purifier. It HAS NO EQUAL for STOMAC TROUBLES. It acts directly through the : Liver, Kidneys and Bowels The best Family Medicine in Canada. Hundreds in Kingston can testify to this. For sale by all Druggists. Demand and TAKE NO OTHER. 25 and B0c. or 5 for $1.00. The 8t. Lawrence Sugar Refining Go;, Ltd. MONTREAL Manufacturers of the choicest & REFINED SUGARS Granulated and Yellows. that| Sugar. Be sure you ask for "St. Lawrence." Canada Life Assurance Company. § i -- ------ $110,000,000.00 43,000, Assurance in Fores Over ....... Assets Over Profits paid The best holders. The best com places, BELLEVILLE, ARNPRIOR, also snother fidentially. Apply to 4, tricts, 18 Market street, Kingst licy-holders in 1906 over IVIDEND PAYING COMPANY: The Paby or he SMITHS FALLS, CARLETON PLACE, agent wantod Kingston, Applications ten years ov ------------ GENTS wanted for 4. ©. WUTTON, Mgr. Ceatral Dntaric and Ottawa Valley, Dis Made entirely from cane

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