NO. 248 ~69TH YEAR. | Ki at da That exquisite poise of character which we Il serenity is the last lesson of culture; :it life, the fruitage of the Up a' successful Clothing Business there is 'only one sure foundation and ¢ that is True Value [ For every dollars' worth' von sell. Now this is exactly what we are try- ing to do with FIT-REFORM. It is guaranteed to fit perfectly wear well If it don't you get Suics." 1 910, $12, $15 {3 JENKINS Y ca is S01 A. is si and your U L re Overcoats, 114 Princess Street / di S t S Free Yourself From Rents. It's easy to pav the rent to vourself if you only get started in the right wav. We want to help you start. Our plan provides for making a little capital do a great deal. You take po chaness and are surg to win in the end. So easy you can't fail. S0 sure you can't lose. OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS. J. S. R. McCANN, 81 Brock Street. Next to Wade's. LET US MAKE YOUR Be -- The Whiz will be ten pages on Good issue to send to friends. Sun rises Saturday ag 6:27 a.m sets at 5 Tt is not living in the worl of nor Footbull : 1:30 4 In Building Quewn's athletic grounds, Saturday. ta be White defeated the Boers at Reitfont died, died, Londen, Berlin, MARINE BAND OF LOCAL MEMORANDA. The Daily Note Book For Whig Readers to Post Themselves By. Jenkins Queen's college art elections eccur on Sa- turdgy 3 Mecklenberg, drug store. Svdenham dents, § pm. Auction my hatter. eye specialist, at McLeod's street church reception to stu- sale at J. T. McDermott's, 384 ng street, 1 p.m., Saturdav. Saturday. and scts 5 and 5:01 pm; on Sunday at 628 am. p.m. vesterday, in the world of to-morrow, but to- V's world, tat counts. Limestones vs. Queen's IIL, R.M.C. vs. Queen's Il, 3 p.m. in pa; the flowerine of ul. , said James the uncomfortable," times out of ten is " but nine * Poverty Garfield, best thing that ean happen to a young man to man overboard and compelled I have never known a saving." Gen. 1899; nited States troops defeated by Filipinos in uzon, 1900; Chaucer, the English poet, 1400: J. HT. Craic appointed <overnor- Canada, 1807; Daniel Webster, Franz, the German composer, Florida ceded to the United treaty of Westphalia, 1648. to be tossed nk or swim. drowned who was worth the This day in the world's history: of => 'neral 18 184 18520; ed, tates, FRENCH CHINA We Have Just Opened Up Some Very Hand- some Tea Sets. If you want to see some- hing pretty give us a call. We will show you some eye- openers. We will put any et away for you. Come quick and get the best selec tion, ROBERTSON - BROS. (GAWD) OPERA HOUSE. |) MONDAY, OCT- 27th Eagagement of the Justly Celebrated Actor ROBERT WHITTIER in the Eccentric Comed TANGLED RELATIONS Carefully selected cast, immense success in Paris, and New York. One night of pure solid fun. Prices--28tc., 35¢c., 30c. Box Seats 75c. Sea's 'on sale at Hanley's, L Wednesday Oct. 29th: "GIANNINI'S REVAL ITALY." OVERCOAT FALL SUIT. OUR PRICES ARE REASONABLE. John Tweddell, Merchant Tallor, 131 Princess St. pw] Correct Styles. Good Workmanship T S CRAWFORD & WALSH, Tailers and Importers. DRESS SUITS A SPECIALTY A THE DELICATESSEN 354 KING STREET. Table Board by the meal, day or week at very reasonable rates. Prepared to serve families at re- duced rates. « MEALS AT ALL HOURS. W. J. STINSON, Proprietor. Y WANTED." A NURSE. APPLY TO MRS HUGH. C.| Nickle, 149 Earl street. AT ONCE. APILY AT | Brock strévt © SMART Boy Livingston Bros', FEW INTELLIGENT LADIES AND G tlemen, straight salary. Apply, Box 333, | Picton, Ont. ° ENTS TO - HANDLE OUR SPECIAL brand Teas, Coffees, Etc. The Starr Co., 185 Wellmvton strest, Kingston. R O CAPITALISTS: TO INVEST IN Estate, paving 7 to 12 per cent. 8S. R. McCann, 31 Brock Street. AN ENERGETIC MAN 'CAN FARN PROM $15 tw $18 a week selling our goods Large demand. Write for particelars. C. R. Fegan, Feuwick, Ont. REAL net. J, WORK £3 wr BOYS AND' GIRLS, WHO WILL steadily and earn from 82 50 (0 week. Apply to Gould's \factory, streef, opposite 730 Princess street AT ONCE, AT Academy, good by measure, Mme. Elder, NEW 'YORK DRTSSMARING . to J cut ov gning, t 166 Princess St. Ki GOOD, "SMART INTELLIGENT debver all kinds Cookald Meats, Fresh Pork Roa-ts, Tenderloin} Sausages, ete For particulars apply to . J. Myers, Pork Market, 56 Brock St hone §70. Orders promptly attend v. ANOTHER bov, to of w and tedious at every performance. Ladies, To e GOOD ROOMS LA -| United States bon | siden | at La Victoria. | putated, (VICTORIA) THEATRE) TWO WEEKS COMMENCING : MONDAY, OCT. 27th, W. B. SHERMAN PRESENTS The Castle Square Stock Co, HE ELITE OF REPERTORIE=Opening- Bill the great Military Drama in 5 acts "rik DESERIER." TEN BIG spccialtics every meht--mo delay wults. EXTRA--ERMANI, spectacular dancer MATINEE ON of bill every Book the 25 25¢. 15¢., Entire and change Prices--10c., ATUKDAY. night. Plan oren Saturday at. McAuley's Store. QUEEN'S ATHLETIC GROUNDS SATURDAY, OCT. 25. 1:30 P. M, LIMESTONES vs. QUEEN'S III 3 P.M. RM.C, I vs, QUEEN'S I dmission to both eames, in- cluding grand stand, 5 to west side SE NIE, oo is oe Bleachers, 1Uc. extra. LOST. AFTERNOON, Finder SIL- to A please LADY'S return FSTERDAY VER WATCIL this office BOARD. AND FIRST-CLASS BOARD: also table board. May be had at Mrs Breden's, 24 Stuart street. ARGE FRONT ROOM, ALSO TWO SINGLE rooms, Wit modern conveniences, cen- tral, not far from City and Macdonald Parks. Suitable for a party of from three five, 195 Earl streot. to ARRESTED AT MONTREAL. Band Sergeant Charged With Theft. Oct. MM. --Frank ©'Con to two weeks ago was cant of the band of a United tee reciment stationed at Fort Kansas. was arrested vesterday <teamship Lake Ontario just Montreal, who up 1 at he was aboutgto sail for Liverpool. Connor charged with stealing the pav of men of the band. He I to return without ex dings, is onsented tion. proc ound Rebels. Ve ruela, 24 attack in the To Surr Victona -- s Wednesday Mn + vut 1st ) occa naar Pres Castro hopes sur the reac oe Canaelo Cn brother of the pre of Venezuela, was seriously ounded in the leg in the recent fight tro 2 His leg has been am- | 8 KINGSTON, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, .OGTOBER 24. 1902. MAY GET POST James Sutherland May Be Named TO TAKE PLACE CROWN TIMBER AGENT IN THE YUKON. Hon. H. M. Martin is Civen the Office-- A Pronouncement Upon the Tariff Issues--The Government Stands for Revision, But Not for Revolution. Ottawa, Oct. 24.--Hon,_James Su- therland is acting minister of public works. It is within the range of pro- bability that the portfolio will pass to him as a permanent arrangement. Hon. L. P. Brodeur may retire 'frcm the speakership to the department of marine and fisheries as successor to Mr. Sutherland. The pronouncement that stands as embodying the decision of the minis- try on the tariii issue is the finance minister's budget of last winter, in which he said : "We postpone for the present the question of tariff revision. When the moment for revision "arrives the public of Canada may rest assur- ed that the government will under- take the work in the spirit of moder- atfon and caution that has prevailed in their past actions in tarifi affairs, avoiding the extremes which almost always find-advocates, and having re- gard to what is best not for particu- lar industries or particular sections of the country, but for the interests of the people of the whole dominion." After all that the public has had to cloud its mind upon this duty ques tion, perhaps it is not unwise that this assurance should be repeated. It does not mean that the matter will necessarily be dealt with at all this vear. Neither does it mean that the ministry is pledged to an increasé of the duty rates. The word revision cannot be found with that meaning in any dictionary published. Those in touch with the government believe that it means in this case simply a re-arrangement. It was never contended that the pre- sent tariff was perfection. There are some inequalities in it that can be re- medied, the government being anxious to do, full justice all round. - The min- istry "itself could pot say more than that now. The details have not been gone into, Some people say that raw mater- ials may be cheapened that manufac- turers have to bring in from an out- side world. They can be helped, too, by a reduction of the duty rates 'on imported machinery for manufactur- ing purposes; the duty mav be remov- ed from bituminous coal and from coal oil. But who can tell ? "These are mere possibilities. Where revenue is sacrificed in one quarter it must be made up on something else. Isn't that what a revision stands for ? How many reasonable men in -the industrial life of Canada could ask for more ? It is not the word revision that defines Mr. Tarte's programme; that would be revolution. ' H.-M. Martin, '"derk-in-the territor offices PITH OF THE NEWS. The Very Latest News Culled From All Over The World. Thomas Christie, a son of the late member, was nominated by the liberals of Argenteuil for the commons. The Canadian Manufacturers' Asso- ciation has decided not to send a re- presentative to South Africa. The Allan line steamer 'I'unisian, from Liverpool, passed Martine River, inwards, at 8 a.m. on Friday. Four hundred and thirty Toronto public school -teachers went to De- troit on an excursion on Thursday. Sir Wilirid and Lady Laurier left Ottawa for Montreal on I hursday and will visit Quebec and Arthabaskaville. George G. Boyd, a laborer employed at Brain Bros'. brewery, Milton, Ont. was found drowned in Sixteen Mile Creek. A severe electrical storm is reported in Western Ontario. Many barns in London and Woodstock districts were burned. It is understood Sir Henry Strong will retire after hearing the Yukon cases, and will be succeeded by Jus- tice Armour. The Allan line steamer Numidian, from Glasgow and Liverpool, sailed from Halifax for Philadelphia at 10:30 p.m., Thursday. The Copenhagen government pro- poses that Prince Waldemar, the king's youngest gon, he made governor of Danish West Indies. Samuel Haryett has been appointed police magistrate at Bancroft in place of William Cleak who had to resign on account of old age. President Roosevelt has accepted an invitation to hé present at the an- nual banquet of the Chamber of Com- merce, of New York, December 11th: He will make an address. Karl Inger, a former officer in the Austrian army, reported to be acting as the chief lieutenant of the Mad Mullah in Somaliland, has been stay- ing at Buda Pest for some time. The coroner's jury at Bathurst, N. B., has found a verdict of murder against Frank Lymon, a seaman, for the slaying of mate Burns Mason, of the United States schooner Georgia. The operators have decided to add fifty cents per ton to the sale price of coal on the ground that the cost of production has been increased through impairment of plants during the strike. A There is absolutely no foundation for the report from Little Rock, Ark., regarding the engagement of Miss Alice Roosevelt, daughter of the pre: sident, 'to John (Greenway, of Hot Springs, Ark. In the French Chamber of Deputies, on Thursday, Prime Minister Combes, said the government was prepared to intervene in the strikes of miners and dockers, with the object of securing an early solution of troubles. The general opinion expressed in Quebec liberal circles is that Mr. Tarte will soon he found. leading the eon- servative party in the province of Quebec; and that it is only a question of a short time when his prestige will die out. At Farwell, Mich., Mr. and Mrs, E. D. Linsea, separated since last spring for the eighteenth time in a period of twenty years, were reunited as hus- band and wife Friday and were treat- ed to an old-fashioned charivari that night. President Morton of the Interna- tional Association of Stationary En- gineers and Foremen, says all * mem bers will be ordered tp refuse to handle anthracite coal until its mem- ial government of the Yukon, has been appointed crown timber agent inthe Yukon, in place of Mr. Gosselin, who was promoted. to be as- sistant gold commissioner, The Dominion Iron and Steel com- pany case against the crown to recov er bounties withheld on iron provdnced at Sydney. and disputed by the audi= tor-general, was to have been further proceeded with in exchequer court to- dav, but an adjournment was made owing to the absence of A. B. Avles worth, K.(C. : Great Britain _has asked Canada to permit" a force of 5,000 men to he raised and maintained in Canada for imperial defenée purposes. The sition was made by Mr. the imperial conference held in Ione don, but it was not entertained bv the Canadian delegates. The latter held that Canada's primary military obli- gation was to keep an efficient force for the demands of its: own _territor- ies and that this force must he under Canadian control. The imperial auth- orities offered to contribute a share of the expense of a force raised for im- perial defence but the offer was de- clined. mtr ter een TROOPS TOO LATE. propo- . Brodrick, at Was Hanged Before' the Soldiers Arrived. Tallapoosa,. Ga., Oct. ' 24.--RBen Brown, a' negro, charged with "hav ine attempted to assault Mrs. Henry Dees, a white woman, was taken from the jail last night by a mob of 300 men and lynched. Troops had been order- ed from Atlanta, but did _ not arrive until an hour and a hali after the ne- gro had been hanged. On learning that troops had been | despatched, the mob stormed the iail | and, after securing the negro, carried him to a spot near Mrs. Deés', haneed him «to a bridge and filled his *bodv with bullets, READY TO BEGIN. Hopes Duties Will Be Conipleted | Before Christmas.' Washington, Oct. 21.--All the mem hers of thé arbitration commission ap pointed by the nt to investi conditions in of Pennsyl: | Pr report on | on Judge Grav expressed | n would | Christmas +f gate and the vania are lawares in ope that anthracite th cry int in Boy's Overcoats. hase the long raglan effects at | ¥, ih*dark grev, just like the men are wearing. Jenkins, ! ! Biddulph, who { of the late Queen Victoria, { visited | death. bers in the mining region are rein- stated on the basis on which the min- ers returned to aork. - Justice. Harlem, Washington, sixty- nine vears of age, jumped into a stu- dents' combat at the Colombian Uni- versity law. school, and stopped it. He caught the ringleader of the as saulting party by the collar, dragged him awav, and 'then ordered a cessa- tion of hostilities, which immediately resulted. rt DEATH LURKS IN MINES. Resumption of Work There Must Proceed 'Slowly. Wilkesharre, Pa., Oct. 24.--The re- sumption of mining throughout the anthracite region was not as general as expected. Unlooked for difficulties were encountered in the shape of water and "acewmutated and dangerous roofs: which threatened to fall and en- tomb the workers were also discovered in many of the collieries. The mine superintendents would take no chances and the mining of coal was put off until all parts of the under ground workings can be made safe. This will take a few days vet and in will take weeks before the mines can be put in full operation. Although work was carried on in the best of condition, no accidents were reported. In quite a few: of the collieries the machinery and evervthing else conneet- ed with the hoisting of coal acted bad lv and it was found necessary to close down after steam had been raised and the miners were ready to go to work. From received from the en tire anthracite region, the number of mines ine operation is oiven as a little less than two-thirds of the total num ber. but the output of coal was less than half*the normal. gas, some cases it reports Non-Union Men Quit. Scranton, Pa., Oct. 24.--The non- union man = avas a scarce article around the collieries vesterday morn- ing. True to their declarations, the companies did not disnfiss the men that "had worked during the strike, but with the stockade living quarters gone and the almost impossible task of securing hoarding houges confront ing them the non-unrionists' packed up and leit for other and more imported | congenial places? Lady Biddulph Dead. Oct. 24.~The Hon was a. life-lone died Tadv friend at ward her London, Windsor, wvesterdav. King Lady Biddulph just befor / © : Mfr. Brake I BOSTON, (R fl FAKES. U.L.L. Convention. [SH A Letters Purporting to Com From Somaliland. LAWYER'S WORK DONE IN A MISTAKEN SENSE OF HUMOR. He Thought He Was Doing Some- thing Excruciatingly Funny-- Deceived Many Persons, In- cluding the Foreign Office-- Made a Confession. London, Oct. 24.--Three sensational letters, purporting to come from the British ofhicers fn Somaliland, detail- ing the awful plight of. the British troops there, who were depicted as be- ing entirely at the mercy of the Mull lah, are entirely bogus. The Express has ascertained that the person who sent them to the Central News is a London barrister with a mistaken sense of humor, who concocted them himself, thinking he was doing some- thing excruciatingly funny. The re- markable feature of this senseless and cruel hoax is not only that he deceiv- ed most of the newspapers, but actual- ly deceived the foreign office. The war office letter was sent out under the auspices of "Di 0. Galmore Greene," a person who has no existence, and whose letters were written for him by the barrister with the dislocated sense of fun referred to. On Tuesday the Express made an effort to find this "D. 0. Galmore Greene." Its repre- sentative went to the address given by Greene, but the place was found to be a comely restaurant, where Mr. Greene was unknown. The Express in- vitel "Greene" to send his address, and in response to the invitation "Greene" called upon the editor and made a complete confession as to his conduct. Heé is a well educated, gen- tlemanly person, and a member of the bar. "lI .am heartily ashamed of the whole thing," he said. "I had no idey the letters would create such a stir, and I have nothing but regret for my part in this stupid business. I hardly knew where Somaliland was, but 1 faked up the letter. It was a real coincidence that a few days after its publication some actual information resembling that which I intended was dis losed by the government. I had no knowledge whatever about the Mul. lah or the: country, nor do I know anyone with Col. Swayne's force." Cruel And Wicked. New York, Oct. 24.--The Tribune's cable says: The feeling of relief caus- ed by the official news of safety of Col. Swayne's force in Somaliland is accompanied by expressions of indigna- tion in parliament and elsewhere over the untimely practical joking practis- ed by a London lawyer in inventing alarming letters, purporting to come from an officer with the column. This silly hoax is denounced as cruel and wicked. THE EARTH DO MOVE. Evidence of it Was Shown by. an Experiment. Paris, Oct. 21.--An interesting ex- periment under the auspices of - the Astronomical Society of France, took place yesterday afternoon, when ocu- lar proof "of the revolution of the earth was given by means of 4 pendu- lum, sting of a ball weighing sixty pounds, attached to a wire, sev- enty vards in length to the interior of the dome of the Pantheon. M. Chaumie, minister of public instruc- tion, who 'presided, burned a string that tied the weight to a pillar, and the large pendulum began its journey. Sand had heen placed on-the-floor, and each time the pendulum passed over it a new track was marked in regular deviation though the plane off the pendulum's swing remained un- changed. The experiment was com- pletely successful. cons Toronto Can't Get Bills. Toronto, Oct. 24.--Notwithstanding that, several cars of civic fuel occuns the side tracks adjacent to, the 'ity vards, none of it can be distributed to-day, the railways not having vet handed in ithe bil's of charges. Street Commissioner Jones expects to get these bills to-day, and if he does, says he will have fuel ready to sell to the public early to-morrow morn- ing. In'the meantime retail dealers are getting their fuel and in enormous quantities. Fifty cars of coal arrived vesterday, most of it soft, but some of it anthracite. as General Navarro Captured. San Domingo, Republic of Santo Domingo, Cet. 24. The government troops have recaptured Monte Christi the north Santo Domin near the Haitian border), after 4 ficht, in which each side sus tained heavy losses, Gen. Navarro, the ex-covernor, who revolted and took nossission of Monte Christi, was captured and brought here a prisoner. Many arrests have heen made rela tive to the' revolt. All is now quiet in Santo Domingo. 'on donst of go severe Japs Cannot Become Citizens. Wash., Oct. 24.--The has decided that a cannot become a citizen of United States. The: point came directly in the majtér of admission of @ voung Japanefe lawver to the bar of this st the law r r Pitizen shiv a quali ion for Olimpia, sup reme court ose nun Bibby's. " Overcoats.' Bibby's. "The Grosvenor," the lone 'overcont, 8X, R210, 812.50. The Bibby Co. swagger H. D the steamer. x ¢ He Speaks at Closing Session of Boston, Mass; Oct. 23.--Hon. Ed- ward Blake, M.P., was one of the speakers at the closing session of the convention of the United Irish League. The presiding officer introduced him as a patriotic Canadian. who haa taken up the cause of Ireland and crossed the Atlantic to take an Irish seat in parliament. Mr. Blake gave a lengthy history of the conditions un- der which Ireland has struggled. "I hold it to be wonderful," he saia, "that you kept alive that sa- cred feeling of affection so successfully in this country. 1 recognize its diffi- culties and they are increasing, difli- culties, which we must all recognize ana against which we should all guard. We have one great advantage in this great continent. This country is an example from the -pole to the gulf of the sacredness of local govern- ment and its institutions. There is a love of the Irish cause from end to end of the continent. But we want from those who spring from our race more than that. We want them to feel that, though they may he generation after generation removed from those born on the other side they should re- tain the feeling toward Ireland as the country, after all, from , which they sprung, and sympathy for that coun- try, where their father, their forefa thers, lived and loved, suffered "and died." Mr. Blake then explained the me thods of procedure in the Irish courts, presided over by removable magis- trates. He told of the high salaries of these Irish judges, and, of the un fair means of bribery afd intimida- tion used by the constabulary and the courts to secure the conviction of lo- cal agitators for British |constitution- al rights. Y TORONTO MAN HELD. Thomas Wright Will be Sent to Home in England. Montreal, Oct. 24.--The authorities of the Allan line are investigating the case of Thomas Wright, believed to be of Toronto, who was to have heen a passenger for. England on their steamer which sailed from this port last Saturday. The man was found on the street on Sunday with his throat cut, and taken to'the hospital. He had to all appearances attempted to commit suicide. The wound, al- though serious, was not a fatal one, and the man has since heen remanded to jail for medical examination. It was found that Wright had two children with him, a boy of eleven and a girl of ten, who both left by th A cable was sent to Lngland by the Allan line, directing that the children should be taken care of on their arrival. Not Identified. Toronto, Oct. 24.--Inquiries at local office of the Allan line 'give little help towards identifying Thomas Wright. - The clerks say when the man bought his ticket here, he was with another man, but the two" children were not with him. He is thought to have come from the country, as he took a steerage ticket to Liverpool rather than London, although the price is the same. The officials think liis_ home must be' near the: former place. the THE JOLLY PEDAGOGUES. Had Fast"fun From Toronto to Detroit. Detroit, Mich; Oct: 24.--"Phe fastost running time' ever made by a passen- ger train, betwéen Toronto and De troit, was made last night, by the hig "Toronto Teachers' Special," over the G.T.R. The train which left "To. ronto at 4:11 p.m., arrived at the Grand Trunk depot in Detroit, at 8:05 p.m., Central time. Between Ko- maka and Chatham, the train was timed for fifty-five miles in fifty-four minutes; at times the train was driv- cn at the rate of seventy miles an hour, : : To-day is being spent by the teach ers in looking over the Detroit school system, and in the evening there will be a reception in Central High School at which Mayor Maybury will 'speak. Most of the teachers will" stay till Saturday. : ------ Burned To Death. NY, Oct. 4- Capt. Green, watchman at tae boat company's freight sheds, was burned to death in the fire that de stroved the shéds on Wednesday night. The hody was found in the ruins this morning. Capt. Green was SIXty-nine years old, most of which he spent up- on the lakes. He'was in command of the Northern "King until recently, over Buffalo, rence Law Stin McLean's Denial. Toronto, Oct. 24--W. F. Mclean, M. P., smiled broadly when his attention drawn to a' Montreal despatch suggesting, that he is in alliance with Hon. J). Israel Tarte, "1 have had no congmunication, good, bad or indif ferent with Mr. Tarte. for six months," said the member for East York, em phatically. was Officers Chosen. Toronto, Oct. "24. --The shareholders of the new Metropolitan Pak met to dav and elected officers. The provision- al directors were permanently chosen and A with Dr. . Arrived In The City. T. H. Ferguson, ceived "a larg shinment of Jamaica oranges. They are snocially fine 'ones, and sell at 2 to She. dogen. He bas aloo a good display of | snow apples, lemons and; othér fruits «Ames was-chosen president Warden, vice-president, King street, to re SAV eet Se a 'Peaches For Saturday. Our last for 'this All half dollar baskets unsold at 6 p.m will go at 40. 8 pm., 3c, 9 'Carnoveky's, offer geadon. p.m. 25¢. downtree's and. Cadbury's chocolates ! at half price. Jas. Redden & Co. LAST EDITION WEATHER PROBARILITIES. Toronto, Ont, October 24, (11 a.m.)--Ot« tawa and St. Lawrence, south und south west win Milder: Occasional showers. Sa- ! turday, fair and warmer. Some KID | GLOVE Suggestions for Afternoon and Even- ing Wear, NEW EMPRESS KID GLOVE--In Pearl, Grey, with Black and White Stitching, one large pearl fastener, Special 75c. MARCELLE KID GLOVES--In'White with Black Stitched Backs, also self backs: also Light Grey, Tan and Fawn Shades, with 2 Dome fasteners, Special Sl. OUR SPECIAL KID GLOVES--In all ing colors, also Pearl, Grey and White, with Black Stitched Backs, 3 Dome fasteners, . Special $1.25. NEW ALEXANDER KID GLOVES-- All colors, also White and Pearl « new Stitched Back, 2 large fasteners, Special $1.35. WASHING KID GLOVES-In White amd Pearl Grey, finest of French Kid, 2 Dome fasteners, puaranteed to wash with soap and water, Special $1.65. NEW SUEDE GLOVES--24 Button lengths, in White, Black and Cream, Special $2.50. at $1.50, $1.76 v, earl Alo. a good line and $2.25. SCOTT--At Gananoque, on Oct. 14th, to Mr. and Mrs. Gideon Scott, a son. ENGLISH--At Pittsferry, on Oct. Mr. and Mrs. A. Engiish, a son. ATKINS--At Wilsténd on Oet, 14th, and Mrs. F. W. Atkins, a son. DIED. Kingston, © on "Oct. William M. Germaine, aged 28. Funeral to-day at_one o'clock from his sis ters "residence, Klwington Ave, (Mauoua papers please copy). NOTICE TO CREDITORS. ALL CREDITORS AND OTHER PERSONS Laving claims against Burton Grimshaw, of toe City of ningswon, late proprictor of the Levere Hotel, are 'requested to furnish the undersigned with fall particulars of said cams. on- or before the 29th Octdier noxt. T RIGNEY, Soliutor, 114 Brock St., Kingston. October, 1902. DR ESSMAKING. MME. ELDER, Dressmakiasg Parlors, 166 Princess St. EVENING COSTUMES, TROUSSFAUX, Tailored Gowns, Colts and Wraps. Best of references; and best of work. Call and sce it. THE SKIRT SPECIALTY COMPANY. DRESS SKIRTS MADE TO ORDER. SAM- ples, - Designs, Materials, eto. Call on Mise Sutherland, Cor. Brock and Barrie Sts. Rimgatom. 19th, to to Mr, GERMAINE=In 22nd, Dated 23rd May Be Trouble. Winnipeg, Oct. 21.--A Free Press special from Helena, Mont., says. that international complichtions between Great Britain and the United States are likely to follow the action of the Canadian Mounted . Police in driving hack into the United States ga hig band of wandering Cree Indians, right- ful wards of the Canadian govern- ment. They are tdrriblv afflicted with dlpox, and the entire © northern part of Montana. and particularly in the vicinity of Houre, exposed te the contagion. 'The matter will be laid the Unitea States depart- ment of state. is before Jresstransen seesesecal ' ' ' : 9 ¢ ! ' ' Buyers Are taking advantage of the inducements we are giv- ing in reduced prices. Our sale is unique, as you ave the most modern goods o select irom. h t The Cut Prices . Are For Cash Only. AC, JOKNSTON & BRO. |. ' 4 ' ' ' ¢ ' ' ' ' ' ¢ ' ¢ ' ' ' ' ' ' / ' ' ¢ ' on img SRN ND RA nN