THE DAfLr W¥H)G, FRIDAY, AUGUST 15 : A Man's ey Clothes Should be selected with all the care possible. From our stock you can pick out the suit to fit you perfectly, and it will have all the quality and style of the best custom tailor- ing--BUT FOR. LESS MONEY. They insure long wear and lots of service at short prices. ' JOS, SILVER. (Successor to B. Sliver & Co.,) VACATION TIME. You want Fishing Tackle, Lines, Spoons. ' "We have some lovely Poles, from HAMMOCKS, $1 up. COAL OIL STOVES gnd REFRIGERATORS. W. A. MITCHELL'S HARDWARE .. OUR .. Optical Work Is giving universal satisfaction. We give this branch of our busi- ness our painstaking attention, and are handling successfully many difficult cases. Repairs of all kinds promptly attended to. t------ SMITH BROS. Jewelers and 350 King Opticians. St. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY. Owing to prospective retirement from business the old established PHOTOGRAPH: BUSINESS - of SHELDON & DAVIS is for sale. Apply on the premises. TO LET. ; HOUSE 191 BROCK - STREET, 9 ROOMS. All modern improvements. Apply to J Livingston & Bro. COMMERCIAL, ---- MONTREAL PRODUCE MARKETS Montreal, Aug. 13.--Flour receipts, 1,100 bbls., patent winter, $3.8U0 to $i. patent spring, ¥4 to $4.10; straight roller, $3.90 to $3.70; stromyg bakers, $3.60 to £3.80; On- wriv vas, - $1.70 to $1.30. wheat, No. 2, Manitoba, * North:, 78c. to 80e.: corn, 70c. to 72c; peas, 83c. to 85c.; outs, 46c. w 47c. beriey, 530. to 6Ue.; rye, 6d0. to 670.: buck- wheat, 640. to G6c.; oatmeal, $2.30 to $2.40; cornmeal, $1.50 to $1.60, pork $24 to $25: lard, 9c. to 10c.; bacon, 140. to lbc.: bams, 180. to l4c.; cheese, 9c. to 10c.; butter, townships, 19e. to 20v., western, 160. 170.; eqs, 12e. to l4e. ap---- MONTREAL STOCKS. to Canadian Pacific Duluth S.5. & Com. Tol«lo L. & P. GE Montreal Street Ry. . Toronto Street. Ry. ..... . Halifax Street Ry Detroit Unitod St. John's Electric Twin City Transit Winnipeg Electric Rich. & Ont. Nav. . Com. Cable . Montreal Telegraph Bell Telephor i Bell Tdlephy Nova Scotia Steel Montreal Power, ... .. Dominion Iron & Steel Dominion Iron & Steel! Ogilvie Flour Mills, Prd. Montreal Cotton > Can. Colored Cotton Dominion Coal Montreal Bank ... Toranto Bank Mfzona Bank . Merohants Merghants of tmion 'Halifax ...... Hochelagn +... THE 5 P.M. EDITION SECOND EDITION NEWS ALSO ON PAGE FIVE. What is Going on in the Business World--The Market News. There are 50,000 costermpngers in London. There ar: 1,600 shoe factories in the Umi- ted States. : : {. Beans, $1.25 to $1.30 per bushel im sacks; hand picked, $1.35, ; Trade mn hops in Toronto is quiet with prices steady at 13c.; yearlings, 7c. ; The outlook for honey is for lower prices. ! In Toronto strained is guoted at Sic. per' Ib.; combs, $1.75 to $2 per dozen, | On the Montreal stock exchange to-day Dominion Steel, common, Was the ' feature. | 4,500 shares sold at 72 to 724. 'Rails, De- truit, Twin City and Toronto were strong. A strike of sulphide ore, carrying 4,000 ounces of silver and a large pefeentage of copper, has been made on Bull Hill, the very centre of the Cripple Creek district, at a depth of 1,365 feet. : In the Unmitvd States more $60,000, 000 are invested in the making of fertilizer. Canadian apples would meet with a rzadier sale if put up in smaller lots than the bar- rel now. in use. ltis sand the barrel is in disfavor among British dealers. The production of amthracite goal in 1900 Germany was 100,000,000 tons, as arainst 101,000,000 tons in 1899; the pro- duétion of lignite coal was 40,000,000 tons in 1900; and 34,000,000 tons in 1899; raw iron, 8,500,000 tons in 1900 and 8,100,000 1899; copper, 35,000 tons ih 1900 1899. than j vom in end 34,000 tons in KINGSTON'S BIG FAIR. Will Give All Who Come a Fine Time. The directors of the Kingstan Fair extend a hearty jnvitation to you and vour friends to their "At Home" dur- ing fair week, August 25th to 29th, and in return for your company they promise one of the happiest times in your experjence. The directors also wish to thank the business men of Kingston and others for the hearty support and encouragement which has been extended to them, and to say that arrangements have been made for the largest crowd ever seen in good old Kingston. Those having been for- tunate enough to secure space in the palace will Kindly remember that next week is the week to commence prepar- ations so that the display will eclipse all former efforts. The booth privileg- es are rapidly being taken up, and the 'entries are coming in above the average. Tuesday, the 26th, Society day, will really be the opening day, and in addition to the attractions.an- nounced last night, a baseball game will be played betwen the Ponies and Gananoque for a purse of $150. This game will be far away and the best of the scason and will be played all through strictly on its merits. Local exhibitors kindly send in your entries at once and five the office stafi a chance to keep even| with the work. The fair office will be 67 Princess strect, until the opening of the fair, where a staff of courteous officials are ready to impart all necessary inform- ation. An Afflicted Home. Many will sincerely sympathize with Mr. ani Mrs. James Leslie, 265 Uni- vels.ly avenue, in the afllictions through which they - have and are passing. Last night they were be- reaved by the death of an infant daughter, a month old. The little babe was attacked by: whooping cough soon after birth 'and suffered severely until released by death, "For more than a month nurses have been in the house, one caring for Mri Yeshe; who has just e wrged irom an atrack of typhoid fever, while the eldest daughter has been a painful sufie from _ whooping cough. Mrs. Leslie too, "has been worn out by anxicty and wakefulness ipcident to a home of much aflliction. There Is a Difference. The owners of Wellington Terrace, F Montreal street, in front of which «tands the dilapidated retaining wall; so much complained of, have signed a document for presentation to the council, in which they agree to ac- cept a quit deed-of the land on which stands the wall, providing the citv will pay half the cost of repairing the wall. The council at its last session 'adopted. a resolution deciding to deed the land to the owners of the proper tv on the understanding: that the own- would stand all the cost of put ting the wall in repair, and maintain: ing it in such condition. Oné Of Many Fruit Bargains. Black Currants, 10c. a quart, Satur day at-The Carnovsky fruit stores. Jenkins' Summer sale in full colored shirt in the store for Toe. bates Fall hats. fall hats. Small shipment of the new fedoras in black and slate, £1.50. The H. D. Bibby Ca ers is swing, Any Livingston's Are ever, beca than in greater demand i satisfy use they please and BM everybody. Give them a tridl. , You will find them better fitting and better value than ever. Variety the largest. Prices--$16, $18, $20 and $22. Perfect Fit Guaranteed, LIVINGSTON ' 'BROS, 7577-9 BROCK. ST, COMMERCIAL MATTERS. | while A SCALY FISH STORY ' TEUR ANGLER. ¢ 'Fish at Three Dollars a Poéound-- No Longer an Amateur, But.a Professional Gentleman Ang- ler. : Below is given a few extracts from a letter written by a former resident of Kingston to friends here. It deals truthfully with the experiences of a fisherman : "Here 1 am back: again from my fishing outing to Indian Lake. When, I say | had a good time, I am guided in my statement by the migration from my purse to parts unknown of sundry fives; one.must have had © a good time in order to spend so much money. As vou well know, it was my first outing as a professional gen- tléman fisherman; - all my life-1 have considered myself & fairly clever ama- teur, but now I look at my past ca- reer in a disdainful light and relegate myself to the ranks of bungling no- vices. 1 used to be satistied to go fishing ofi Cataraqui bridge or with such amateurs as Charlie Corbett and ". Men. Kobertson, up around the Brothers', with my angling outfit that cost me less than one doilar, and I used to catch some pretty fair sized fish, which never cost me more than fifty cents a pound, but. since I have blossomed out as a gentleman profes- sional angler, when the cost per pound -of my catch runs up into the dollars, 1 am almost ashamed to con- fess that 1 ever angled when my catch cost me not more than fifty cents a pound. "0f course you know how I was per suaded into taking this trip; our friend, the captain, would have me go, picturing visions of seven pound bass that were only lying in wait in the cool waters for me' ta come along and haul them up. On the day and at the hour appointed 1 was on the wharf, but had to wait one hour and a half for the rest of the party; 1 am given to understand that it is an unwritten lav among professional gentlemen anglers' never to be on time; 1 have made a mental note of this and many other facts. Well, simultaneously with their arrival came a grocer's rig: bear- ing four cases of bait manufactured by the Toronto Brewing company, half a ca-¢ of bait manufactured by Joe Seagram, and used for catching » the larger fish that always get away; also a plentiful supply of bait put up in. square black bottles and maiu- factured in the land over which Queen Wilhelmina rules. 1 never went out on a fishing expedition be- fore where we had more than one quart bottle of bait, and we seldom had occasion to use that much, but in these strenuous days one needs to be well fortified against disastrous emergencies, so my fellow anglers made sure that the trip would not be a failure for want of accessories. | forgot to mention that the grocers rig also brought a pound of cheese and a tin. of soda biscuits, which proved to be more than ample for the four of us. "After 8 pleasant an uneventful run, we arrived at the - fishing grounds; had theré been any secret about the locdtion of these, we would have divulged it by the -irail of corks we left in our wake and which would have served as a guide to the spot. To make a long story short, we' lost no time in gettiffg the two skills ready, two of us pairing off for each. In getting their fishing tackle ready, my companion indulged in consider- able talk about steel rods at 310 a rod, silk lines, gut leaders, and spoons of all kinds, shapes and manufacture. To tell vou the truth I felt ashamed of my new twenty-five cent pele, which-1 purchased from 'Billy' Paul, and my ten cent line; my sinker did not cost me anything as I made it myself, and the reel 1 had I borrowed from my father-in-law. When 1 sur- veved my outfit and compared it with the flashy gear of my companions; I felt like an unrepentent' sinner, who had got into a strange church and entered the wrong pew. It was agreed heiore 'we left the steamyacht that we were to pool eur catch and then share and share alike. Jack; who was in the <kiff with me, was the first. to hook a bass; he went. about the playing of it Jike_one who had made a close study Sf the habits and eccentricities of fish. and knew the "whole gamut of landing them. He felt as proud as the provernial = peacock, when he at last got his eighteen ounce green bass in- {othe skiff; T-am certain he-pitied me with my cheap outfit, and only the fear that 1 might take offence kept him from offering to lend me his cost- ly one to catch a fish with. As he was making. a cast, 1 hooked a big fel- low and after a little play, during which 1 wholly ignored the directions shouted to nie by my expert compan: jon, 1 landed him; he weighed a few ounces. over four pounds. Jack took credit for landing the fish, saving that had I not followed his advice, the fish would certainly have escaped. "Some minutes elapsed before Jack hooked another one, and meanwhile I had brought up three more. Of a sud- den Jack exclaimed confidently, 'Ha, I've got him." The next instant there was a splash, then. Jack's $10 vod bent double like a little boy who had eaten too many green apples. 'Snap' went something, and Jack held up his rod, which' was minus ab- out six inches at the business end; the fish also vot away, as the silk line seems to have cut on the sharp edge of the break. I will not attempt a description of Jack's lan- guage, but will content myself with saving that if used in parliament it would not be included in the press re- ports. Shortly - afteryards we' rowed bark to the yacht and were later join- od by the other two who each had pulled in twd fish. Our tosal catch now numbered 'ten: weight about twen- ty-five pounds. After exhausting our bait still more. we went ashore. where we played cards. smoked and "after a had a sfiooze. We stayed -at the hotel all night and concluded next morning to return whence ave cae, as fishing was mo" good no how.' "1 have 'just been making up . and find that my two fish, expetises which my the generosity of their heart. to bring back cost me Xb a pe une: we tht engineer the two smaller and divided the eight big fellows am ong ourselves. The summary of mv experience? reads thusly : Four pound of fish, §12; a red nose, &" sore, sun- ones, a steel | burned neck, hc'f a dozen painful mosquito bites, and a rawflesh spot one hip, caused by lying on a hard unoven bed; not to mention an -up- set stomach, ete. . "P.S.--I think I will confine my fish- ing tours. hereafter, to tris along the front with Charlie Corbett. P-8.S--Jack got my four pounder to gpnsole him for the damage to his $10 pole." eee-- PITH OF THE NEWS ---- The Very Latest News Culled From All Over The World. The International Typographical Un- jon meets next vear at 'Washinzton. The Omaha street cax line has been sold to a New York syndicatz for $6,- 000,000 in cash. . Large orders for pure bred live stock are being received from British Columbia and the territories. Robert R. Remington, Newport, I. 1., is engaged to Miss May Van Alen, grand-daughter of Mrs. William As- tor. : Three; American steamers of the Ori- noco company forcibly 'detained at San Felix, Venezucla, for government use. The steamer Tunisian reached "Ri- mouski wharf, Que., at 12: .m., to- day. There are 183 cabin, 235 second; and 750 steerage passengers. Twenty-three coal mines lying ar- ound Springfield, Ill, will be incor- porated this week in New Jersey with a capital stock of $8,000,000. The Allan line steamer Ontarian sails for South Africa on October 18th, and the next in November, both from Montreal. The winter sailings Will be from St, John, N.B. and Halifax. At Father Point, Que., the SS. Vir- ginian, Leyland line, from Liverpool, passed inward at 12:40 p.m. Capt. Prentice seporispfesing two' large ice- bergs ofl Be Ele and one inside the Straits. \ ' Simon Burshawa, an employee of Welsh & Co., tanners, Hastings, Ont., while 'engaged in starting a large wheel, this afternoon, was accidental- lv caught in the belt of the saw and thrown with such force that his spinal column was severed. He may possibly live a day or tivo, but cannot recover. Wall street, New York, was startled, this morning, by a report that Charles M. Schwab, president of the jillion Dollar Steel corporation, is shortly to retire from that position, and that James Gayley, the present first vice-president, might be his suc- Cessor. : ' Only two English newspaper men have arrived so-far, Messrs. Arthur E. Copping, London, and J. M. Howe, Scotland. They arrived at Quebec on Thursday night by. the steamar Lake Megantic. The others are. on board the SS. Tunisian, which arrived this afternoon. . Notice Of Appearance. Notice of appearance has been enter- ed by Symthe & Smythe, on behalf of the former locomotive. works machin- ists, on whom writs were served, claiming damages for interference with the company's employees. The plain- tiffs are now open to enter their state- ment of claim. They may. also, ask for a permanent injunction, restrain- ing further interference. The ex-em- ployee are confident that all will end well. Wife Of An Editor Shoots. North Tonawanda, N.Y., Aug. 15.-- Florence E. Warner, wife of Thomas Warner, former city 'clerk and proprie- tor of the Daily Argus and-.Tonawan- da Herald, shot herself, shortly before ten o'clock last might andthe physi- cians say she cannot survive the day. Temporary insanity is the reason as- signed. Was A Disastrous Fire. Hamilton, Ohie;--Aug. "15. --A mest destructive fire took place here early this morning. The large dry goods store of T. Howell & Son, where the fire originated, was completely wrecked. The losses are estimated at a quarter of a million dollars, mainly in the Howell and Second National bank building Had Drifted From Moorings. Brockville, Ont., Aug. 15.--The mys- tery concerning the wrecked gasoline launch found by Mr. Massey at the foot of Grenadier Island has been cleared up. The launch belonged to a party at Chippewa Bay, and drifted away during the night to the place where it was found. . Very Violent Scenes. Paris, Aug. 15.-+Reports from Brit- tany show that yesterday's execution of the congregation decrees there caus- ed the most violent scenes vet record- ed. The angry peasants tore the gend- armes from their saddles, throwing them under their horses. A number were seriously" injured. | - > : Moonlight Excursion. Next Wednesday, No.. 2 Co., 1lith Regiment, will have a moonlight ex- cursion. "An hour at Gananoque to those who desire it. 14th band on board: Tickets, 25¢c.; leaves, 8 p.m. Several Miners Killed. Washington, Ind., Aug. 15.--An ex- plosion occurred -in the Blackburn mine, last night, and it is reported that several miners were killed. , ------ Saguenay Blueberries. By the box or quart. Fresh lou ex- pected. Saturday morning, at "The Car novsky fruit stores. v Misses Cartwright and Hora have complained to the police that while enjoving a game of polf on the Barrie- | field links, a thief entered the golf house_and _earried--ofi_a gold watch and chain belonging to the first nam- ed. and a. gold buckle and purse con- taining money belonging , to the se- cond named. ' Dennis Farney, clerk of the British my | companions allowed me: in | gave | American hotel. 'is a patient in Hotel Dien. Some time aco he bruis- od the flesh of one of his legs, and the wound refused to heal, turning.to a | painful sore, which necessitated coing to hospital for treatment. Efforts are to be made again to se- | cure the release of Robert Mackie from He has served four years of a ten-year term ° Mrs. 'R. Edward arrived home by the steamer Kingston this morning, after spending two weeks with niece. Mrs. Y. Andre, Toronto. | Prof. Goodwins was a, speaker at the | Halifax banquet to the Canadian manufacturers, : prison, the | his | | | her | 9 CAST HERSELF IN RIVER 1 a SUICIDE OF A YOUNG WOMAN AT ALEXANDRIA BAY. Was to Have Married Sooh--Miss Ella Turkington Rented a "Boat, Rowed Into the Stream and Jumped Into the Water. Alexandria Bay, N.Y. Aug. 14.-- Shortly after midnight last night ' a well dressed young woman rushed to a boathouse bordering on the lower bay here and untieing a boat, she stepped in it, quickly rowed to the centre of the bay, and then standing up threw herself into the dark waters of the St. Lawrence with a farewell cry. The young woman proved to be Miss Ella Turkington, twenty-three years of age, a domestic employnd in the family of W. E. Raynor, Corn- wall Bros." head clerk, and who fifteen minutes before had parted from ber affianced husband, Constable W. 8. Jones of this village, in apparently the best of spirits. At least two people heard the wo- man's last cry and the splash of her body as it entered the still water, but no aid was near enough to rescue her from her own act. Thirty-five minutes later Policeman Charles G. Witt found the body with grappling irons in the weeds in the bay and brought it to shore. It' was then taken to the home of M. Knight, a relative of the suicide. ! The girl's large blue hat and long coat were found in the floating. skiff. Just what she said when she threw herself into the water is undetermined. Mrs. W. H. Brown, who lives in a nearby house, happened to be on her porch when she suddenly heard a moaning sound, then a voice saying, "Good-bye, mother !" and then a splash. °° Sv A man returning. from a day's out- ing reported that he heard a woman's voice saying, *'I told you I would do it and I will." Miss Turkington came to Alexandria Bay about eight years. ago from Brockville, where her mother, two sis- ters and three brothers still reside. H. S. Jones and the girl have kept company for the past six years and their marriage was regarded as a cer- tainty. Yesterday Mr. Jones went to a fu- neral at Evans Mills without telling Miss Turkington, and she, it is said, thinking he had gone to the circus at Claytom with some gone else, ,became despondent. She went down street and greeted her friends last evanipe in her usual light-hearted manne; and met her lover at the boat on his re- turn and spent the evening in his com- pany. It is said that they quarrelled, but in an interview to-day Mr. Jones denied this. . : We parted the best of friends about twelve o'clock," he said; "the rea- son 1 did not accompany her to her door being that I had leit my hat and coat at my own house. Miss Turkington was naturally gay and light-hearted, but has threatened to take her life before this." "Can you assign any reason for her action ?"' was asked him. "We were to have been married within two months," was "the answer "but a number of people told her that [I would never marry her and this made her despondent." Miss Turkington was a fine looking young woman of graceful carriage and bore an excellent reputation. * Yacht Upset At Stella. A sailing 'yacht containing Warren Lockett, Miss Edna Lockett, Edward Cousing, Kingston, 'and Mr. Bell house, Napanee, upset off Stella on Wednesday, and the occupants didn't turn a somersault on dry land either, or-mysteriously re-appear. in the. boat. They went where all other capsized sailors ~go=--into .the deep blue sea. Mr. Cousins was skipper, but the wind did the cleverer manoeuvring, and it was all over with the happy party. Miss Lockett, who can swim, was not inconvenienced, but climbed with her dripping comrades on the top of the usturned boat, and waited patiently for the rescuing came, Garnet Lockett and Mr. Irving, of Napance, propelling a row-boat to their friends at sea. After a snapshot photograph was taken a bee-line was made for shore. : Accident To Captain. A message from Toronto states that Capt. Peter Ostrander, South Bay, of the schooner Queen of the Lakes, had an arm and two ribs broken Thurs- day night, just outside hat city. A boom struck him. ee "No. 2 Co., 14th, moonlight excur- sion, Wednesday, Aug. 20th. Band on board. 25c. NOTICE. In the matter of the estate of Jen- nie Goldblatt, of the City of Kingston, in the County of Frontenac, doing business un- der the name of the Ontario Rag and Metal Company, in- solvent. SEALED TENDERS WILL 'BE RECEIVED by the undersigned at his office, No. 63 Clarence' street, Kingston, Ontario, up till four o'clock p.h., on WEDNESDAY, Aucust 20th, 1902, for the undermen ioned stock of goods, en bloc, or in lots, the said goods being now in , or about the premises Nos. 202-204 Ontario -street, "in the said City Iron: 23,100 lbs. wrought iron_sorap, - 695 Ibs. stove platé, 5,000 Ibs. stove prites, 20,000 lbs. -burnt grate bars, 2,550 Ibs. steel No. 2, 1,000 Ibs. maleable irom, 3,000 Ibs. small iron mixed, 200 Ibs. wire cable, 1,915 lbs. baling wire, 430 lbs. wire nails. Office fixings," plant, ete. One desk, one ctove, two sets platform scales, one cutter, one buggy, two waggons, one tedstead, ome baling press, two setts harness, one bav mare. one gray horse, and sundrv harness Metals © 320 Ibs. zine, 4,252 lbs. lead, 200 Ibe. brass h. red, 330 lbs. brass h. vellow, 119 Ibe. licht brass, 114 brass kettles, 1 turnings, 167 Ms. brass break 64 lbs. babbitt, 195 Ihe. coprer bottoms boilers--with copper lis. heavy copper, 100 Hs, lead dross, bottoms SO Ibs Rags, wool, ete. Ths. i r 1 15 mixed canvas, wool carpets, 240 The 1 58 Hos Ibe and shoes < 58,286 Ibs. rare 33 Ihe in Ihe wipers, 65 Ibs. linsevs, 1.458 Ibe. soft wool, 350 the. wool pickings. Hoe coarse chips, hard wool, horse hair. Rubber Tha. hicwele heavy 1,799 lbs. boots 394 tires, 59 black. 98 Ibs 159 Hs. solid 25 Wis. steam hose 1.617 Ibs. manilla rope, bottles, 1,210 Fs. bones, at Kinveton AD, 1902 M' DONALD MOWAT for Yaa signee of said Estate. 1 this Fiftesnth Dav of August, : J . Coben, As contingent. It soon 2 Special -- Bargains SATURDAY." We have just secured the following goods from a Toronto wholesale firm who were selling the balance of their summer stock at greatly reduced prices. You reap the benefit of this price conces- sion . TO-MORROW. : .- Pairs Ladies' ? | Fast, Black § Cotton Stockings - Fine make : 3 - With Cashmere soles. These are sold regularly at 'asc. pair. : Sale price t.o-morrow 5 c. Pair. : Fine White Crochet, Quilts Good size With woven edges. Regular price $1 each. Sale price to-morrow 69c. Each. Sale opens at 9 o'clock. JOHN LAIDLAW & SON halon ile. du diag Am : | | | | ! | A Special Shoe For Saturday. Among Many Other Bargains we Will Offer On SATURDAY. : # 31 pairs Misses' Genuine Patent French Calf Skin Lace Boots, with full extension soles, made by J. D. King Co. Sizes 11 to 2. Regular price $2.50. For.........oveiiiinnininidinne. $1.25 The Same 3oot, Sizes 8 to 10, $I. These are very stylish and 'very desirable Boots and should give excellent wear. It's the chance of a life- time. 8 STRONG TEMPTATIONS. 8 F. G. L.ockett. "Home, Sweet Home" BARGAIN TABLES LOADED WITH Without the Necessary Kitchen Utensils ; Is a Sad State of Affairs. Our Agate Ware Is neat, serviceable and cheap. More than that-- 1t lasts for years. Call in and look over our shelves. .. ™ ' \ Lemmon, Claxton & Lawrenson, KING STREET KINGSTON. | | ' / Bargain