changes of tem lds which need only MOonia, to most minds the Turpentine. , but because it pa y coughs and colds eumonia and even emed of no avail, reat favorite with d healing properties i. ONSumption ; many icine, and prudence in order to prevent id to quickly cy ld-yid€ Teputatio nd Turpentine his Refuse subst 3 merit to utes ake a ing the ~W. Chase on the , out, States 11, mpanied with I tri several remedic. but end I a bottle of Dr, d found that it relieved the e bottle my cold was gon id remedy for coughs and tes t--*" My boy, fourteen hest last winter, and I was | y all the time and spit up n we heard of Dr. Chases one bottle he was greatly npletely cured him. | know ratefully recommend it to pentine bottle, family size, Toronto. Jhase, the famous Receipt ver | Finer Nl Stock ! alled Price Values, Unrivalled Variety --IN-- immed Millinery, to-Wear Hats, and Children's Jackets, kirts, Underskirts, ete. USE WAISTS New Royal Walsts, In 1, Lustre, Silk, Sateen, , ote, a The Leading Millinery Store. v's Sale Box Calf Lace r lined. «$251 t 10 o'clock. Juariess for nks and Valises. IN VIEW. dest begin thinking about the ts you will have to have for have all the newest kinds of TWEAF or Ladies are a trifle lighter this ses" heels a little higher. Ladies Lace Boots at 2.50 and $3. "THE D KINGSTON, ON ARIO, 'MONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1903. RITISH WHIC 0TH YEAR, NO. 249. $00 ¢000000000000000000 . : Men's : Underwear Fall and Winter - Dr. The healthful kind. : "Wycliffe English Wool, best g wearing; unshrihkable. Stanfield Truro Brand. new garment if it sinks. 's Penangle, Smooth -pott. Enit-to-fit Suits. , Fleece Lined; All qualities. Boys' Underwear. All sizes. ¢ > sooo NOOOOEOBOOS Combination A 0900900000 000000N0000000 000000000000000 = "> ° $99000000000000000000¢ MEMORANDA. DAILY « et City council meets, 8 p.m. Pay water rate and save discount. Announcement advertisements on page ve. Vanluven, the erocer. has a Bargain offer to-day. Oak Hall is making a fine display of men's gloves. ead Josenh challenge clothing prices. ** When We house, 8 p.m. + Crosby & Thornton's assembly, Whig Hall, to-night, * The five "volcanoes stroved 60,000 lives Paper, pianos. photos, specialjigs--the three Pa. Kant Krack rubbers are to be had in great variety at Abernethy's It costs monev to advertise, hut it costs a good deal more to stagnate Of 51,588 divorced people in the Units ed States over two thirds are women. Love may laugh at locksmiths, but it never gives the poor instalment collec tor a pleasant look. In contemplating what he Mas done for others, the average man is apt to over- ldok what others have done for him. Yesterdav was the anniversary of Balaclava conflict, and to-day recalls the battle of Chateauguay, both creditable to the empire Sale of lands for taxes Frontenac; at Court house, Kingston, Tuesday, Nov. Abramson's Were 21," Grand opera + " active ludt year dg- are, Weese's 10th: Lanark, at Court house, Perth, Fridav. Nov. 6th ~~. October 26th in histery:=Von Moltke born, 1800; battle of Chateavguay, 1813. Transvaal formally annexed to British Empire, 1900; battle Nun's Creek, 1864 Lord Sack inl iam sed as_British ambassador 'to Uni i States, 1888. MILLINERY ntrimmed Hie" lack, Hats, Squirrel, Hats. Silk, Velvet, Plush, Silk and Velvettp Hats! Feather gouds of all descriptions, all at the very lowest cash vrices. Poarsall's Millinery, "298 PRINCESS STREET. ve ats: made late. Brown and Navy Blue Beaver Chinchila, Mink and Brmib Fall Suitings, Winter _(Qyercoatings $ Large selection. . Crawford & Walsh, - LBADING TAILORS, * Corner Princess and Bagot Streets. <4 on TAXES! TWO PER CENT. WILL BE charged on" all unpaid taxes, after Oct 31st, 1908. GEO. THOMPSON, . Collector Kingston, Oct. 24, 1908 LONG EVENINGS And your eves won't stand' prolonged roading or study. Perhaps working even a short bothers considérably. time A pair of properly fitted glasses 'will wet 'over all this for you. Let us get you over your troubles." We are doing this work every day. SMITH BROS.. Jewellers and Opticians, 350 King St. ¢ . WANTED. RET rrr rn AT ONCE, GOOD SEWING GIRLS, AT Gourdier's Fur Store, 78 Brock 'St A GOOD PLAIN COOK, AND AN EX- perienced housemaid. Apply at this office. A FIRST CLASS LOCOMOTIVE FIT- wer. Apply to The Central Ontario Ry., Trenton. TO EXCHANGE, FARM FOR CITY property, McCann's Real Estate Agency, 51 Brock Street, A HOUSEMAID. APPLY IN THE evening, to Mrs. Henry R. Smith, Ringwood. King street, West. A GOOD GENERAL SERVANT. ply. in' the evening. to Mrs, obertson. 161 Earl Street Ar- Ww pee eo tp AT LEAHY'S, A CAPABLE YOUNG man, to drive delivery wagon and make himsell genorally useful. Must have a knowledge of horses. ~ WRITERS TO 'ADDRESS 10 EN- velopes for us at - 2 A at rate of $25 per i and Contract. E. Penfield Co, HAVE YOU SPARE TIME? Crease income by work t o are doing T. Our woods very everywhere. te & Co., teas, - don, Oat. 1gn MENS TO LEARN BARBEH TRADE Efactical course that saves y - ew weeks reyuired Tools od. fiven each gradaate, plicunts Write for rticulays. Moller Barbe: College Chicago, i}; PERSON 70 OAL. for 'ON RETAIL cents for Founta "\ rrangements for distagt ap< local 'ing formed to exploit the system. English, French and German China [Din- ner and Tea Sets in Endless Variety. Set of 97 pleces for - $5.40 Handsome White and Gold Sets, worth $10, at - ..h $1.50 ROBERTSON BROS. SERRE NOT HERE | | If it is not of the highest quality it cannot be found here. We exclude from our stock any article that falls short of the highest standard. OUR WATCHES Are as near perfection as human skill attdins. We are official agents for the famous Regina Precision Watches. Ask to see them. Your money refunded if they don't give satisfaction. SP. B. CREWS x JEWELLER, @ Cor. Princess and Wellington Sts. EREEEERIONERED a --, Found ! At No. 332 King St. The best place in the city to get yowr meals. Special rates to table boarders. Short Order Work a Specialty. "WE NEVER CLOSE." CONGRESS RESTAURANT CON. MILLAN, Proprietor. ~ INSECURE ENTERPRISE See our Special English Dinner OO © A German's View of U. S. Finan- cial Matters. Berlin, Oct. 26.~Considerable inter; est is excited by the publication of i book by Ludwig Max Goldberger, giving the results of eight months travel in the United States in the ca pacity of a member of the economic committee for the preparation of commercial treaties. Goldberger, while recognizing the extraordipary develop- ment and the practically \unlimited re- sources of the United States, finds that the future of United States en- terprises is somewhat compromised by the insecurity of the financial founda- tions of industrial activity, as exem- plified by excessive capitalism, the de- generation of the trusts and. the de- velopment of labor organizations. Goldberger advises the Germans to est United States competition by ac- lquiring an intimate knowledge of Un- ited States conditions bv keeping up centres of information with a staff of CHANGE FAT Macedonians May to Save Their Lives, CANON SAYS GERMANY IS AUTHOR OF MIS- CHIEF IN TURKEY. ' The Periodic Massacres Which Have Occurred During the Last Ten Years, Organized in Con- stantinople. Vienna, Dect. 26.--Numbers of Mace- donians contemplate changing either their citizenship or their church to escape distress. Some are about to seek homes in the western states of America, others are on the eve of go- ing over en masse to the Greek United Church, the head of which in Syria is Patriarch Cyril of Damascus. This change to the Melchote rite would in- volvé no change of dogma or ritual bevond the recognition of the Papal See as the head of the church. It is believed by the peasants that when thay become Catholics Rome will find some means of protecting them. The widespread charitable activity of some of 'the Catholic orders, chieflv the French, also encourages the change. Massacres Organized By Turks. Paris, Oct. 26.--Speaking yesterday afternoon at a meeting to protest against Turkish misrule in Armenia and Macedonia, Canon Maccoll produc. considerable effect bv saving that the periodic massacres which 'had been occurring for the last ten vears had been organized at Constantinople. The Canon's remark that Germany was the great. author of the mischief in Tur- key and that Emperor William was nursing she sultan for future purposes like a cannibal fattening his victims for the spit, was grected with loud cheers. er RUSSIAN FINANCIAL CIRCLES. Apprehensive Over Drafts of Men And Munitions. London, Oct. 26.~A Times' Moscow special, referring to the frequent drafts of men and munitions from the home government, for the far east, says that Russian financial and business circles display apprehension, and are not 'sharing the optimism of the lead- ing organs of the continent. One hundred and eighty-five thousand men, the despatch adds, are either at pre gent there, or en route for the far east. A Bellicose Article. Berlin, Oct. 26.--The Cologne zotte reproduces the following article from the Novykra, the bellicose organ of the Viceroy Alexieff : 'Without ef- fective support from a considerable number of British or American land troops Japan could hardly attack the Russian colossus with eny prospect of wy Russia was never so well prepared as now. If the paeilic czar were not averse to all drastic plans it would not be a matter of impossibi lity at the present juncture to fight Japan with almost certainty of suc- cess and at the same time conduct a victorious campaign against India, while Germany and Austria would cover us in the west and against Tur key. The attitude of these powers is far more important than the attitude of Frange in the event of a war he tween Britain and Russia." Ga- z SHOT A CONSTABLE. He Was Badly Wounded--Case of Burglars. Hamilton, Ont., Oct. 26.--Mrs. J. Pidwell Mills, 170° North Catharine street, about 1:30 o'clock, this morn- ing, heard burglars trying to enter the premises and called aloud for the police. Constable Willian Barron heard the call and respondéd. When he reached the house two men, stand ing in the shadow, ordered him to throw up his hands and three shots were fired at him in quick succession, one of the bullets lodging in:his chest just below the heart. The constable staggered up Gore street to the Roy al hotel, from which place he was re moved to- the City hospital The physicians were unable to extract the bullet, but succeeded, this morning, aided by the "X" rays. The robbers escaped, but Mrs. Mills was enabled to give a good description of them, hating seen them plainly standing ander the electric light in front of her house. Constable Barron is forty sight years old, and has been twenty five years on the police force. Chicago Horse Show. Chicago, ill., Oct. 26.--Chicago's horse show, the annual fall social ev- ent, opens in the Coliseum to-night, and froth indications it will be the most notable event of its kind ever given in the western metropolis. As regards entries, the exhibition this year surpasses all previous years, not only in the number of classes filled but in the class of horses shown. Soeiety is in eager anticipation of the event. The fact that Miss Alice Roosevelt will be among the prominent guests practical men in the leading industri al districts of that country. Earth Rival To Marconi. Rome, Oct. 26.--~A new system of wireless telegraphy, in which the earth is used for the transmission of waves. Italian, of Leghorn, was tried fully at that city. A company is SUCCPSS he- -------- Currant = buns, Cl bins, tea So-morrow pt LSrRUse invented by Dario Campana, a young { falifax and Peoples' F runsy i has caused much stir. or ee eet One Bank May Be Absorbed. Toronto, Oct. 26.--It is understood a big banking deal is about completed whereby the Metropoliten bank will We absorbed by the Peoples' hank of bank of New tc) thus giving these in- itutions a much desired opening for business in the provimee of Ontario PITH OF THE NEWS. i ® The Very Latest News Culled From All Over The World. ! Germans 'are being mobbed in Ja- pan, for acting as spis for Russia. Ten w were killed and four injured by a cave-in in the New York subway. The British army under the new scheme will want 50,000 recruits an nually. °° Bishop Ridley College, St. Cathar ines, was destroyed by lire early on Sunday. Loss, 850,000. A heavy snow storm prevailed over Lake Supetior on Friday, making natigation dangerous The village of Karguahat, Brittany, France, was destroved by fire. Seven persons lost their lives The king bas approved the appoint- ment of Sir Henry Mortimer Durand as British ambassador to Washington. A ten-year-old daughter of George Brooks, Niagara Falls, was burned to death, hér dothing catching fire from a stove, Excavations in the centre of Rome have brought to light remains: of the Ara Pacis, a monument to peace set up in B. C. 9. Two men have been arvested at Ish- peming om suspicion of being the rob bers who stele $15,000 from the post office at Superior. » Noah J. Gareau, Pembroke, Thomas Murphy, M.I'. of the plice, for 25.000 for slander, but fondant got the verdict. lord Stapley and H. Arnold Fores ter, recently. appointed British post master-general and scoretary of war, respectively, were re-elected. A despateh from Rome says a move- ment is being orgonized to force Merry del Val to resign the secretary- ship of state, The Rampolla party is opposed to him. A German expedition of engineers and miners will leave early in No vember for Portuguese Kast Aliica, to develdp what are believed to be King Solomon's Ophir gold mines. An anarchist of the name of Michael Cristi was arrested at Rome on Friday. Jt is believed that he had made preparations for an attempt to assassinate King Victor Emmanuel. Since January lst, 1903, some 1,235 people have been injured in the streets of New York by cars and other ai cles. Of the total number of accidents 250 resulted fatally. The Dishop of Tennesee strongly ad- vocated chahiging the name of the Pro testant Episcopal church in the Uni ted States at the Pan-American con ference of bishops in Washington. Surveying rties sent out by the Ontario government to op«n up new townships in Lake Abittihi dis trict bave been umable to complete theit work.. New expeditions will have to be sent out mext spring. Mrs. Goughy a widow of Stamford village, ran po a neighbor's with her throat cut with a razor, saying a strange man hdd $6 kill her. The police think it ah attempt at suicide The woman will probably recover The revised assegsment roll, of To ronto, for 1904, according to Assist ant Commissioner Foremen, will show $141,667,775, as compared with R128, 645,995 for 1903. This shows an in crease in taxable property of £3,021 780, or a gain in taxation of over £60,000, Archibald sued same de Augustus Mann, a negr who claims to be 115 years old, was struck by a Lake Erie and Detroit River train at London, on Sunday picht while picking up coal beside the tracks. He had a number of hones broken, but will recover. At a special meeting of the Strat ford, Ont., city council the agreement with the Stratford Radial railway was ratified. The city gives the company a fifty vears franchise with the option of purchasing outright at any time after the expiration of twenty five years, PREMIER MURRAY Will Retire From Local Politics to Enter Parliament. Halifax, Oct. . 26.--Premier Murray is to retire from local polities to en ter the federal parliament, as repres< entative of the north riding of Cape Breton, Attorney-General Longley suc ceeding him, 'with D. D, McKenzie, se | nior member for Cape Breton, and Nr Murray's law partner, as attorney general. It is said, the despatch adds, that William Ross, M.P., now repres enting Victoria, is to receive a sena torship, thus paving the way for Mr. Murray's candidature. ---------- THE ROCHESTER CLUB. May Join Lake Skiff Sailing Asso- ciation. Hamilton, Oct. 26.--At the annual meeting of the Lake Skiff Sailing As sociation, heid here, President G. H. Birley, of the Royal Hamilton Yacht Clubl, announced that the Rochester bClub was likely to join the associa tion before very long, in which case, international races would be held. the club alreadv had adopted the associa tion's dinghy class rules, and had been | making enquiries about the proposed new l6-foot ballasted class. Mr. Bir {lev was reclected president of the as sociation. Apples From The Coast. Vancouver, B.C., Oct. 26.--The first carload of apples ever shipped from British Columbia to the old country was despatched this week. T > ples were grown at Kelowna on Ok- anagan Lake and shipment made by Stirling & Pitcairn. The shipment which was Scotland, consists of winter apples, chiefly Northern Spy variety. Parker Knows It All Lendon, Oct. 26.--Sir Gilbert Parker opens the Cambridge University union | debate on November rd on the fiscal I pelivy. The event is antidipated eager- 'ly, for Parker is credited . with know "A $5,000 building; owned by Almond Reade Fosboro, has been destroyed by consigned to Glasgow, WLS BIRYD Paper Mills Gone at Strath-| cona. # 'WILL NOT BUILD. THIS IS MR. FINLAY'S PRES- ENT DETERMINATION, There Was an Insurance of Eight "Thousand Dollars--Many Of The Villagers Out of Employ- ment--Cement Works to Close. Newburgh, Oct. 25.--At 6:30 o'clock this morning fire was discovered in the paper mills at Strathcona, owned by . J. Finlay. The fire was first seen by Engineer Pettit and the alarm was at ohce given, but despite the heroic efforts of the village people the whole works were destroyed. Part of the stock was saved but there was little or no insurance on the stock, Mr. Fig lay having only this week cancelléd $3,000 insurance on "it. The building was insured for $5,000, which will on ly partly cover the loss. The fire will prove a great loss, not only to the owner, but also to the village, as many are thrown out of work by the conflagration. The month- ly pay roll of the milli was 8600. The buildings are one mass of smoking ruins and Mr. Finlay told your report: er that he will not. Rbuild. We also learned, this morging, on re- liable authority, that part of the cement works will close down one week from Saturday and will not open again till April. ------------ MARKED HIS MOOSE. Railway Man Has Peculiar Ex- perience in New Brunswick. Hull, Que., Oct. 26.--~James King, a locomotive engineer on the Intercolo nial railway has a fine big moose with antlers sixty-four inches across and warked with his name fattening for him down in New Brunswick. He got him near Richibucto and arrested him in the first instance for stealing the company's property. ing was running slowly toward Kents Junction when he saw the moose in the bushes alongside the track, with a railroad crossing gate attached to his horns. As he passed, King noticed that the creature was inextricably caught in the branches by the wire gate, and at once stopped his train, Together with James Card, the con- ductor, and two brakemen; he stretch- ed his tape measure over the magni ficent horns, and then deliberately scratched his name upon them. The big fellow was quite tame in their hans, and stood fairly well until the gate was lifted from his head, when he was allowed to escape. King considers the moose his meat, and is only waiting for-a favorable moment to beg for a few days off to go after him with a rifle. 4,500 DEATHS. Appalling News Received by Pres- byterian Mission Secretary. Toronto, Oct. 26. Forty-five hun dred deaths out of 5,000 cases is the record of the plague now raging in Mhow, Central India: A heart rend ing letter was recci.ed by Rev. Dr. McKay, Presbyterian Foreign Mission seoretary, from Rev. Mr. Harcourt, whose wife fell a vittim to the plague a few days ago When Rev. Mr. Harcourt wrote it was to send the particulars of the fatal illness of Rev. Dr. Menzies, and contained no foreboding of the im pending aflli-tion in his own family. Fhe letter states that Dr. Menzies from Sunday to Saturday. for six Jays, fought against the terrible tide ol\ thé" poison that was overwhelming Lis system. Three doctors and a nurse were in attendance most of fhe time It-was the terrible ppeumonic type which is almost always fatal. The let ter says that there have been thirty four attacks and twelve deaths among the children of the mission. This is "a good record" compared with the official figures of the plague in the city, which number 5,000 attacks, and only 300 saved. + SAY THEY DESERTED. mnie i Premier McBride Denies the State- ment. Victoria, B.C., Oct, 26--A "report is published by the Liberal that, having refused one of the vacant cabinet po sitions, John Houston (conservative), elected at Nelson, has alienated his «upport from the government. Harry Wright (conservative) from Yamir, fol lowing him. This would make both parties even, and precipitate a crisis as soon as the legislgture convenes. Premier McBride denies the report. Adds Another Year. Washington, D.C., Oct. 26.--Presi- dent Roosevelt was born in New York City, October 27th, 15856. He will cele brate the forty-fifth anniversary' of his birth in an entirely informal man- ner at the White House to-morrow, luncl ing and diring with, such mun bers of his family as are in the city, and with a few intimate friends. Mr. Roosevelt will spend the day in pub' lic business as usual. putting the fin ishing toue to his message to Con- gress, the birthday celebration being incidental and quietly observed only in the domestic circles. ai pp---- Will Be Junior Judge. Cttawa, Oct. 26.---Tn a few days the announcement will be made of che aj His Position Bombarded By An Italian Cruiser. Rome, Oct. 26.-Thé government has received the following information con- lian cruiser Lombardia and the forces of the Mad Mullah near illig, in Ita: lian Somaliland : "Owing to the close watch kepts on the Somaliland coast by British and Italian ships. the Mad Mullah was unable to get arms and ammunition by sea as previously; he decided to make 'a desperate attempt to take possession of a point on the coast with 600 wen, who, on the ldth in- stant, attacked the Italian boats and killed. several men. The following day the Lombardia bombarded the, Mul: lah's position and obliged his followers to retire.' A PITCHED BATTLE Between Portage La Prairie Police And Italians. Winnipeg, Oct. 26.--A pitched battle between the Portage la Prairie police authorities, and a gang of fifty Ite lian railway laborers, occurred. Some 1 fty shots were fired, while the aif for a time was thick with stones, clubs and other missiles. As a result of the fracas, Detective William Cox is severely wounded, having heen hit with a huge stone in the head, ' and injured in the back and leg by flying debris. Three of the Italians have been arrested and more arrests may follow, The trouble arose over an assault by the foreigners on Foreman McDonald, who has been regarded with hatred by his men, one knocking McDonald down with a club. - QUEEN OF THE TURF. Lou Dillon Again Lowers The Trotting Record. Memphis, Tenw, Oct. 26.--Lou Bil lon, woned by ¢. K. C. Billings, Chi- cago, and driven by Willard Sanders, on Saturday afternoon, proved = her right to the tite of queen of the tui by trotting a mile under adverse conditions in the remarkable time of 1.584. The mare was paced by two runners. The track was in excellent condition, but a strong north wind swept down the long back stretch, and the announcement was made that too much should not be expected of the trotter, REDMOND'S WARNING. Speaks Against the Emigration of The Irish. London, Oct., 26.--Speaking at Killarney, John Redmond, the Irish leader, declared the time had arrived to start a campaign against emi tion, The cause of emigration "that ought to be removed, he said, was the ex rated prospect held out to Hoh boys and girls if they went to Ainerica. He criticiced Andrew Car negie's recent speech at Waterford, and said the poor laborer in Kerr; was happier than the munjority of rich workingmen in the United States, TO BE HONORED. A Monster Gathering Will Greet Chamberlain, London, Oct. 26.--Mr. Chamberlain's meeting at Liverpool to-morrow will show the largest gathering of mem bers of parliament ever seen in that city. Most of the Lancashire and Cheshire unionist representatives have accepted invitations. Sixty thousand applications for tickets have been re ceived. Mr. Chamberlain will be pre sented with a solid silver casket and a vellum address, illumivated with the arms of Canada and Australia, New Zealand and South Africa. Smuggled By Women. Windsor, Omt., Ort. 26,--For some months past the country within fifty miles of Windsor, has been flooded with cheap goods. It was finally dis covered that a large number of As syrian women were smuggling the goods across the river beneath their clothes, For the past two weeks these women have been searched and the of- ficers have not vet caught one who was not smuggling. The goods have been confiscated. Damage From Fire. Sacramento, California, Oct. 26.--A that place, has been burned to ground, that several million feet lumber in the vards are on fire, that the water supply of the town is run ning low and \ghat it is, feared. the en- tire town will go. Several Injured. New York, Oct. 26.--A rear-end col lision between the Easton & Chester express trains occurred, to-day, at Orange, N.J., on the Delaware, Lacka- wanna & Western railway, damagir the rear car of the Easton train an the engine of the other. It is report ed that several persons were injured. Works Have Stopped. Chicago, Oct. 26.--~The Hinois Steel company has laid off 1,000 lahorers in ite mill, at South Chicago. No no- tice of the contemplated action had heen given the men, who were merely told that there would be no work for them at present. Vessels Wind Bound. 7 Port Dalhousie, Ont. Oct. 26.--The first snow squall of the sehson visited port this morning. A str gale from the north-west is blowing. The steam- er Resolute and barge, bound fof To- ronto with coal, are wind bound here. Potatoes, Potatoes, Potatoes. We have them, finest, dry, mealy. Crawford's. dough: Tarte pointment of B.D. Lek KA move of the inside history of terzeon F 0 be | nuts, ceining an engagement between the Ita- | dispatch from Truckee states that the lumber mill of the lumber company of the of 'Toronto, Strong 0 mostly fair, da: modera But Cone 'and Se the Goods. Children's Underwear a 15¢., 20c., 986.580e, i o., 50c., 60c. ¥ Extra Fine (Suatity,' " Brand," 88¢., v Ladigs' Vests and Drawers, spec. ial, 20c., 25c., 88¢., 50¢. up. Fleece , Lined Stockings children, f 12je., 18e., 18ec., pair. X Bays' and Girls' Worst ings, special line, a Ladies' Kid Gloves, 20 d makes, Special lines, all 85¢., $1, $1.25. : Blankets, Fine White, All W $3, $3.50, 94, $5. Bed Comforters, all new. $1.25, $1.50, $2. BRADDEN--In Pittsburg, Oct. 1908, Kdwurd Bradden ¥ Funeral will leave his vesday mornin at Friends aud ly invited to late enc 9:30 o'cle ALL COLG Cashmere Boguet, ner cake. i Cashmere Bodauet, (large size), per cake. stick Silver Soap, 10, per cake. Rosodora, 10¢. per cake. Viodora, 10¢ per cake. White Clematis, 8 cakes for 28e, White Castile, 3 cakes for 35¢. Brown Windsor, 8 cakes for 38e. Oatmenl' 8 cakes for 3 Iw. Fi! Shaving Bticks Garge sire), 206, per And other varie Jas. Redden QUEENS FOOTBALL EXCURS TO TORO Friday, Oct. By 'shecial' train, leaving GT. City Depot at 1:00 pan.. sharp. Tickets good to return by any up to Monday, Nov. FARE, i. 4 $3.70. FOR SALE. { A SPECIAL BARGAIN, Fan lage, do! trade tion 8 Ey terms. | R. Plevna, Ont. 3 IN OUR OWN CIRCUIT. News of the District on Sides of the Live. "Arnprior's tax rate this vear i 410 mills on public school su ers and 34 mills on separate supporters. . estport Oddfellows have a PG. jewel to their Rothwell, P.G., St. Lawrence Brockville eBride, from field," died at Broghe«ilie fhe insane, dn LH inday, A \wido amily furvive. . Etta, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. ry Price, residents 'at the Tin died ut St. Vincent de Paul ho Btockville, from typhoid. | Sandford Corer, 4 South Afric: war hero, was uni in marriags Miss Martha Levere, that place, on Thursday. . | Stanley Davis has di i farm adjoining North Augusta, ; Andrew Mofiatt, Wolford Centre, will take possession in the spring. r------ Kant rack. - Rubbers. Kvery : p