This is one of the first si st signs of stom. ach weakness. Distress after eating, sour Stctations, sick headache, bil- conditions are' all indicative that it is the stomach that needs assistance. Helpit to regain health taki for they are a stomach remedy that never disappoints, They act quick- ly and gently upon the digestive mans, eaten the contents of the y , carry off the disturbin elements, and establish healthy -- ditions of the liver and bile. | The wonderful tonic and strength. ~ ening effects from Beecham's Pills, make them a safe remedy--they - lrvral districts of the ~ SECURITY, Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of SEs Fret Seo Pac-Simile W) \pper Delow. - Sk «nd as casy fc tak, wagan ' RTERS FOR NEAMEAE. FOR DIZZINESS. VE FOR BILIOUSNESS, FOR TORPID LIVER. FOR CONSTIPATION, * FOR, Ww SKI FOR THE CLMPLEXION A A CROWN OF GLORY. As Well as a Mark of Beauty is Lux. urious Hair, It has been truly said that the owning glory of our race is a luxuri int head of hair. It used to be thought that this was me of the blessyngs which the gods be- OW capriciously, and it is only re tly that have discovered hat it: beauty in: dependent upon the sence of a minute germp which flour hes in the hair follicles, where it de froys the life of the hair To restore this Kfe and kill the germs hich cause the mischief is the mission Newbro's Herpicide FHerpicide surely kills the germs, and the bent wentists hair dressing: on the ma It contains no grease or oil, neither l it stain or dye, Sold by leading druggists. Send 10c. stamps for sample to The Herpicide Detroit, Mich. $1 bottles guar. teed. (3. W. Mahood, special agent. CLEANING and DYEING - [f° Evening gowns and waists, silks, sating and laces, ostrich plumes and gloves; draperies, curtains, gentlemen's clothes, ete, can all be cleanod to look like new, by our faultless French Process. { | © most delicate costume can safely be entrusted to our skilland experience. Our Dry Cleaning is done without rip- ping any part of the garment Our book tells about our work and rices. Write for free copy. xpress charges paid one way on out-of-town orders "My VALET", FOUNTAIN THE CLEANER 30 Adelaide St. W., Toronto, With Maypole Soap With Ease at Home With Sure Results 20c. for calovs, 15¢. for bach, Prani L. Benedict &¥ Co, VAR "M GUARANTEED > NONE BETTER MADE ery mother knows a lot of good - for 'raisiig other people's child- briunate is the husband who is al- d tw spend a little of his own va - | migration | OUT : | [micn LANDLORDS HAVE DRIVEN i MANY FROM LANDS, i A Picture of Conditions Which-Badget Alms to Alleviate--Country Deplet- | ed and Filled With Poor. { | i Witt a spectacle, says the Lowlon | (England) "Daily News, would the | Home Counties present reveled from | a balloon hung over London! Below ywould be the, greatest city on earth ith: financial centre, the ma', © Ua depot of the world, and the Thames massed with ships from every port on lesrth, in chief bringing food for the people. Not corn and meat alone, but {butter from Siveria, from Wttle Den- | mark, from bush farms in Australia, fourteen thousand miles away, from Canadian farms, for six months under 'snow, Of butter, cheese, bacon, fruit, eggs, and other minor products of |the farm Britain imports each year {tens of millions of pounds worth, |and the bplk of it comes to this | wonderful market beneath ue. The Dane {thrives on_what he sells in London. London prices prosper 'men who cu! their way with an axe into the Aus- | tralian wilderness, and jill with gold the lap of Our Lady of the Snows. {At the uttermost par:s of the earth ime till the soil and grow rich by {scl'ing 'the produce in London | And now what mavvel is this we see {below us 7 Ro rd this mart of the (world, right at our streteh dhe ilome 03, Counties, Lr iy, desolate, tha villages deceying, the people passing away, driven out' of tne raradise into "which they were { born, not by an angel with a flaming {sword for having disobeyed a Divine |command='but by peer and plutocrat |to make way for the game preserves {und pleasure grounds. 'ould the {tion so visualize th: Home Count'es | there would be revolution in Freyland | Let us coms earth, ihe Pet worth estate of Lord Leconfield Aypi- fis the conditions prevailing in the |Home Counties at the gates of Lon- don. Here is an estate of about 40,000 lacres containing many parishes, évery one of which is shown by the census returns t6 be in process of decay. Un- {der the walis of his deer park Petworth, that during the last thirty | years has lost twenty-five per cent. of {ite population--a township strangled | by the locked-up acres of the lord. | Recently there appeared before the | magistrates at Petworth a laborer | charged with having his Wife and chil- {dren in the workhouse. He pleaded {that he had obtained work, but had {been unable to find any cottage at Petworth in which to house his wife {and the children she had brought into the landlord's world. | So 'the unemployed are manufactur- ed out of men driven from the coun- tryside, where work is offering. i he |peer's bread is safe, and his water |sure, as owner of over 100,000 acres, and recipient of amighty tribute by way of royalties, as owner of the iron stone land of Cumberland. Such are the ways of life' in the Home Coun ties within fifty-five miles of London. Lord Leconfield voted for the rejec- tion of the budget. : "I have travelled England--north, south, and west--investigating the land system, and if 1 wished to stagger any man with its folly I should take him to Hatfield and show him the vasty empty expanse, and re mind him that it is within half hour's run of King's Cross," says R L. Outhwaite, "writér of the article, "It from abroad, he could not 'but ex claim, , 'What fools these English be! Here ten peers hold over 82,000 acres, and, with fifteen great nearly half the county "When I : na to lies east an landowners, Hatfield I which was at land was shown enclosed once been calls the commons, teounty, when the census returns sult when heavy the lund. rural districts, eight population, jn 1901 of the ten registration districts, Wat ford and St. Albans ard the only ones not showing a loss by migration." lefore N into Bucking hamshire, we may note on the border Lord Rothschild at Tring, which marks the ~begrinning of the Rothschild-enm Rosebery territory-- the land of the that about fact Or 53,494 one-eighth of y oy parliament the inevitable of the of the enclosure acts The re acres were stolen ruled show the curse peer peer is Of the twelve had a smaller than in 1891, and on passing over deer." Jere resides in royal state the fin ancier at whose bidding the lords | threw out the licensing bill, who has led the city against the budget, and who, in the brave words of the chan cellor of the exchéquer, has ereceed a all the paths of reform, Nath SIgn-post on "No aniel thoroughfare.~By order, Rothschild." As we pass over into shire we. find Rothschild by Rothschild estate in tens upon (ens 'of thomsands of acres, and. Lord Rose- {bery, amid the fraternity at Ment- Here, again, we hae depopula- | tion within forty miles of London, the | life squeezed out oi the countryside by {the monopolist antl plutoerat. . | (fF the eleven rural districts of | Bucks, six had a smaller population {in 1901 than in 1891, and this one |county as a whole suffered a loss hy in the ten vears of 10,415. {| The following is the record for the re- igistration district. containing the rich - Vale of Aylesbury, within the | Rothschild sphere : . JActual decrense, {Excess of births ov er by migration © . Five peers hold 87.954 acres, with seventeen great landowners 1036 acres, twenty-two proprietors fihus {holding 205,999 or osaer two-fifths of The peers helped to steal enclosure 162,841 acres OF land, representing one-third county Buckingham- more. 1891.01 deaths i Loss {the county. {by acts of "ommon of the British Tax On Food. Star MacNamara's book, reat stir, he the tories laid a tax which brought-in oronto {. In Dr. {is making' a «x { that "in 1002-3 jon flour and corn 00,000). After a year they took | this tax off, though they wanted the money badly. If they are--as they pro- fess to be--the egpecial friends of the working man, amd if--as they contend ~--the tax meant a lowering of tie Which shows h he the village green, and this f estate lving | THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, FRIDAY, 'DECEMBER 3, 1909. beneficent influences after a year's trial *¥ no He adds that Michael Hicks- Beach, the tory chancellor of the ex- chefquer, who put on the tax, said, on November 5Hth, 1903 I thought that my duty, last Year, on corn was small that it would price of bread. | found the baker raise and, therefore, | lief that adding new dairy single Sir $0 the not incre mistak cases it h io § bread my he. made au that in not few ad efiect of giving an ex to the must doubling 1hat price. of conde duty, and also duties upon meat and must increase the cost of food of the working classes" And Mr. Ritchie, the tory chancellor of the exchequer, who took, the tax off, said, in the house, on April 23ed, 1903 : "Mr. Chaplin says the corn tax has not increased the price of bread; but that is au impossible thing say. Undoubtedly the price of bread has increased. to 'the amount of tax, and= good deal more; and, as a good many people make their own bread, the cost of the latter been increased." produce, to the Be Free From Rheumatism. Many people who have suffered more or less from this afiection for years, andwho have tried ordinary remedies without avail, aro apt to drift into the idea that they can't be cured. As a matter of fact many people who have becn crippled and almost help- less for years have heen thoroughly and permanently cured with Dr. Hall's Rhemmatic Bure. Don't be concent to suffer, You can Ix freed from rheumatism and * all its complications by the use this remedy. Dr. Hall's Rheumatic Cwe is a great blood purifier and spring tonic. In bottles, 50 ents, at J, B. Meleod's drug stord, corner King and Brock streets (Wade's old stand), corner Prin ces Montreal ontirely of and and streets A New Graft Game. Manchester Guardian. Dwellers in the suburbs a three-yard by two grass lately the attention an artist I'he operator to work on the prass hear mowing with much respectfully to that 'the "Mach l have of sets with lawn been receiving in bluff boldly and after show of industry the door oh concern is comes and announce done, and it nuepence out. iy 'the 'owner of the lawn that fhe 'job'" 0 request. done without invitation oF "Wusn't you the gentleman me vistd"y af tole to do it 7" Generally the ninepence is paid, the work wanted win as met me especially if really doing = Une was ily scared when the tenant stimulation of "What ? You've cut my just go and put it back artist, however, momentar- with a real exclaimed ¥ Now in. Lf vsfi horror Prevent and Relieve Headache "It gives me great pleasure to be able to refer Miles Anti-P'ain Pills as the best rem- edy we have yet had in our house ' for the p-evention, and cure of headache. My wife who has been a constant sufferer for a number of with above complaint joins me in the hope that they may fall into the hands of all sufferers." JOHN BUSH, Watervleit, Used Them Four Years. "Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills are the best I ever tried for the relief of headaclte. 1 have used them for nearly four years and {io Dr. years they never fail to give me relief. I have tried many other edies, but have never found any better." JOSEPH FRANKOWICK, 834 1 rombly Av., Detroit, Mich. I'heré is no remedy that will more quickly relieve any form of headache than Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills. rem- I'he best feature of thi re- is the fact that the stomach markable remed it does not derange or leave any.disagreeable after- citects Druggists everywhere sell them. If first package falls to benefit; your drug- gist will return your monev. MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind. not artifi- cially charged with (carbon- ateds are some ales, but is allowed to mature the natural way keurized, it retains delice flavor and and fore Is in Not the ite aroma of the malt Taken meal it stimu late the appetite and prevents | constipation. hops be- | WHOLESOME] NPALATABLE | | \BEVERAGE price of the loaf, why did they delib erately deprive 'the working man of its ' (JAMES McPARLAND 839-341 KING ST. E, KINGSTON. ist have expressed when itTs pon t0d™] Tknown, a showed "$50 on One Side, $100 on| U CAN iF . Other. -. rarely do imperfect or misprinted bank notes evade the vigilance of i/ncle Sam's inspectors in the Bureau of Bugraving and Printing. Perhaps; lithe most extraordinary misprint that ever slipped through was a $5Ho0 national bank note. This, is appears, | actually found its way into circula. | jon Phe manner of its discovery was] odd, sayy the Chicago Tribune. Aj lerk in a western hotel, in making | 1 Fup his accounts one day found a dis-| crepancy he eould not explain. He | placed the pile of bills at his left] hand, and as he counted each one, | turned the note over and deposited it on a pile at his right. A He found that when he counted from left to right his cash balanced | exactly, but when he counted it back | again a shortage of $50 was shown. Le consumed two hours in vain en- deavor to find out what was the mat- ter, and finally was obliged. to call on | the manager for assistance, : The manager himself had no better | SUCCes Again and again he counted | 'the bills, always with the same re- sult--one time the cash balanced and the next the shortage was developed. Finally each bill wags examined separ- ately, both obverse and reverse; whereupon the mystified men discov- ered the cause of their trouble. One of the bills had the design of $50 on the obverse and that of $100 on the| reverse. It further appeared that the clerk had received the bill as $100. Communication with the Treasury Department was had and it was found thaf that department had a record of the bill. It was discovered in 1890 that one sheet of bank notes printed for a national bank of Kansas City had been reversed in the press. plate bore the obverse of a $50 bi}l at the top and the obverse of a $100 bill at the bottom The other plate bore the reverse of the two notes. After each had been printed it was laid aside to dry before being run through for the obverse printing. In some way the pressman had turned one sheet upside down, with the result that two misprinted bills came forth-----one with a $50 obverse and $100 reverse, the other with a $100 obverse and. a $50 reverse The cashier of the bank was the first to become aware of the error He found that something was wrong after he had paid out the note with the $50 face and the $100 back by coming across the one with the lov face and the $50 back. The note held by the cashier was returned to the treasury and destroyed, a perfect note being issued in its stead Errors were discovered in the de- sign of the 1880 silver certificates These were more the fault of the en- graver than the printer. On the 1880 notes is found a treas- seal entirely different from any other ever used by the government. The key, which is one of the mos. important symbols of the seal, shows a handle at the left hand side instead of at the right, as-en all others The. shield is of different shape and the stars are larger. Thé two ends of the band sprrounding the symbols are fastened with a buckle, which in no other instance plays a pard in the design of a treasury seal This is the only issue of notes on which the peculiar seal was used, and collectors of paper money include them among the errors or freaks. The $1, $2 and $5 silver certifi cates and the $10 legal tender bills of the present issue occur with what are known as inverted backs. As a mat- ter of fact this is an erroneous devia- tion, inasmuch as they are really in- verted fronts. These bills. are sought by collectors, who pay a premium for them when in fine condition. Another curiosity is a $1 note. of Second National Bank of Ra Ohio This lacks the signa- tures of both the president and the cashier, although it was circulated and never challenged \ §! national bank note First National Bank of Fall Mass., also lacks both which seemns notsto have with its being offered and money. Still another $1 note of the First National Bank of Indian- apolis, Ind., lacks the signature of the president only. Slight as are these errors or omis- sions, they give additional value to such bills in the eyes of collectors of paper money, who are glad to pay a premium for them. It is not known how many bills of the present issue are culation with inverted design, is not thought there are many. A legal tender note of 1860 shows an oddity. On the face of the note is a portrait of Webster, while. to. the right is' a representation of "Rolfe presenting Pocahontas to Queen Elizabeth. ~ At the bottom of the ur} of the River, signatures, interfered accepted as of the in cir- but it Onegyy) centre is a small eagle. Upon invert- ing this bill the . eagle presents a faithful resemblance to the head of a donkey Whether this was intended! py the engraver as a joke is not but the resemblance is so close as to indicate premeditation on his part. A Famous Country House. M lton Abbey, where the king recent'y the guest* of Sir Edward Alexander Hambra, is one of the most attractive seats in a part of England famed for the scenic beauty of many was | in i century, by f.upon 1 Renedictifie Priory, Milton Abbes | i | ¢hased of 1ts old ancestral homes. Erected, most part, during the eighteenth the Earl of Dorchester, the site once occupied by a ; still retains many interesting: features of its early days. An appanage of the crizinal monastic foundation is. the! ancient. chapel of St. Catherine, £1 tuated om the crest of an eminence, and shelfered by finely timbered woods. . The Abbey, which was pur by the late Baron Hambro (father of Sir Everard), was visite] by Kinz George 111, in the early part of his reign, - Was No Hurry. Winnipeg Yost - Speaking some time ago f Shakespearean subject, Sidney Lee, whose name figures prominently in connection with the National Theatre movement, told an amusing story of a scorcher who was (riding through Stratiord-on-Avon. He was bent over the handle bars, and beads of perspir ation were trickling down his face "Hi, sonny," he called to a passing youth. "Am I right jar Shakespeare's house ?" : "Yer, you're rizht, mister," was the dreamy reply; "but you neédn't hurry, Shakespeare's dead." : ol BE SURE E ITISGO0D% BER-IF LABEL " just before retiring -- crackers and cheese with a bottle of sparkling"Salva« dor" brings a restful night's sleep. Brewed and thoroughly aged by 3 REINHARDTS' OF TORONTO | Local Agent, E. Beaupre, SOLD BY LIQUOR STORES AND HOTELS 196 = Kingston, Jel. 313 TAIL OF THE COMET. lend of April. Earth and comet will | then rapidly approach each other, and jon May 20th the distance between them will be ordy 14,000,000 miles. On the night of May 15th, the earth and comet will lie in practically the same straight line as seen from the sun, Since the tail of a comet is" directed away from the sun, should it be 13.- 000,000 miles in length (and it is prac- tically certain to be more than this) the earth must go through it. There is no reason, however, to anticipate any bad results, as the tail of a comet ix of exceedingl,: rarified mater "The Earth Must Go Right Through "em Halley's comet, after December, though rapidly approaching the sun, will be getting further from the earth in consequence of the latter's motibu, and the distance will have increased by March from about 100,000,000 miles to 176,000,000 miles. It «will then be on the far side of the sun,' and will become invisible till it bursts into view in the morning sky towards the ials, and it appears that in 1861 a similar occurrence (wok place without disaster. 7 i ----------------_ | * Sentenced To Immediate Death. It happens overy time you treat a corn with "Putnam's"--Corn dies never returns. Nothing so certern and painless as Putnam's Corn Extractor- try it. Fifty years' success. guarantees its merit, ---------------------- It costs a voung man more to un- ecucate himself than it cost his fath- jer to educate him. ¥ HR EBRATED ALE. PORTER! ve rE, NOTED FOR PURITY, BRILLIANCY AND" fn "UNIFORMITY Smok eless Oil Heater The automatically-locking Smokeless Device is an exclusive feature of the Perfection Oil Heater. This Automatic Smokeless Device ERS. doesn't allow the wick to rise to a point 'where it CAN smoke, yet permits a strong flame that sheds a steady, glowing heat without a whiff of smoke. No other heater in the world com- pares with the i PERFECTION Oil Heater (Equipped with Smokeless Device) Turn the wick high or low--no smoke, no smell. Burns for 9 hours with one filling. Instantly removed 'for cleaning. Solid brass font holds 4 quarts of oil-- sufficient to give out a glowing heat for 9 hours--solid, brass wick carriers--damper top--cool handle---oil indicator. Heater" beautifully finished in nickel of, |. Japan in a variety of styles. 1f Not At Yours, Write for Descriptive Circular to the Nearest. Agent of THE QUEEN CITY OIL CO. BaREzaREagRagRny Every Dealer Everywhere. Said the Miller-- EAVIER FLOUR is a blend of Ontario Wheat and Manitoba Spring Wheat Each supplies what the other lacks. It is as good -for pastry as for bread--best for both. At your grocer's. Beaver Flour DEALERS --write us for prices on Feed, Coarse Grains and Cereals. The T. H. Taylor Co, Limited, Chatham, Ont. HIGHEST GRADES GASOLINE, a COAL OIL, LUBRICATING OILS, FLOOR OIL, GREASE, ETC, PROMPT DELIVERY ' | } { | | | re W.F. KELLY Toye's Building, Clarence ané Ontario Streets, A | 40220800 20440040040040004% 4 KINGSTON BUSINESS COLLEGE (LIMITED) HEAD OF QU STREET. 'Highest Education at Lowest Cost" Twenty-Sixth year. Fall Term begins August 30th. Courses' in Jookkeeping, Shorthand, Tele- graphy, Civil Service and English. Our graduates get the best pos - tions. Within a short time over sixty secured. positions with one of the largese railway corpora- tions in Canada. Enter any time. for _ information. CAFBFE, Principal, Call or H. FPF. write MET- vrrreve YY III IY IIIT IIITIINYI IY Ta -- >. Don't - Forget TO TRY M. Nolan FOR YOUR GROCERIES, 338 Princess S# Our Coffee at 25¢. and 35¢, can- not be beaten. "Phone; 720. Prompt Delivery. mp -- ah eon Spun IronWorks Office Baskets, Desk and Waste Spark Guards, Wire Mats and Wire Goods of all kinds manufactiired at Partridge & Sons, King St. West. "Phone, 880. ~ SPECIAL Catspaw Rubber Heels put on at 40¢. a pair. Done while you wait. All kinds of Rubber Heels carried in stock. JOHN GREEN, 285 Princess S. Who said "Sour Kraut 7° IL js pow read wr vse and you can depend on its bLelng Clean and properly made, as made it . myself H. J. MYERS, én J Brock St., "Phone, 570. After a man has flattered woman she Keving to think it over and de- cides that ke really meant it.