3 bu., as | am rr A ov, dnd. : -- NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE. "0 Close will be worn as alone sa ph | branches of Christ » Ready-to-Wear hn Overcoats as Fashion dictates sensible styles. : We assume all responsibility for fit and style. Your lasting satisfaction will Our Ready-to-Wear Overcoats are strong and good looking. Just right for the man they are meant for, You will certainly riake no mistake if Jou buy your Winter Overcoat here wrongs wrighted witliout controversy. & Bro Clothiers, Brock Street, private ince the this year at about, 100,000 7 ,000 3 compared with 1 875, 000, 1,000 orang Iallures in Canada last little 'Ait of inf would have passed the lon mark and doubled all pre- records. A -------- IN EVERLASTING SLEEP, Is Mrs. E. M. Smith--A Sufferer At Rest, The death of Janet McMillan, wife of Edward N. Smith, Chatham street, took place Sunday. The deceased was a sufferer, being under medical care eleven years. During the past five years she was confined to bed, but throughout her long ilthess she was a patient sufferer, bearing her affliction with the spirit of a true Christian, meekly, uncomplainingly and resignedly, The late Yo Smith was born in Perthshire, Scotland, sixty-four years ago. About forty years ago = she came to Kingston with = her family, shortly afterwards marrying her life partner who is left to mourn the de mise of a devoted wife, The deceased was, before her illness, a faithful at- tendant at Bethel Presbyterian church, and took a interest in all n work. She is sur. vived by her husband, three sons and two daughters; one son is at home and two reside at Fort William; one daughter is Mré. John Conley, Ren frew, and the other Mrs. atthew, this city. The late Mrs, Smith was a sister of the late John McMillan, at one time in the local customs house, Cheese Sales. Cornwall Ont, Oct. 31.-At the cheese board 1,431 boxes were boarded, of which 741 were white, 620 colored, and seventy American. All sold except sight vis xes; the white bringing We. and the colored 10jc. lleville, Ont., Oct. 31.--At the meet of the cheese board 'here to- day, 2,90 boxes white were boarded, and B85 sold at 10jc. Balance unsold. Watertown, N.Y., Oct. 31.--Cheese sales on board of trade to-day were five thousand boxes at 10je. to 108e. for large. About hall the factories are closed for the season. Secures A Large Risk, W. J. Fair, district manager North- American Life Insurance company, left this city for Chicago Friday last and arrived home yesterday, after closing a large insurance contract for his com- puny. This is quick work, and de monstrates the popularity of this pro. gressive Canadian company in the western metropolis. Pine Street Sensation. A sensation was caused on Pine street about half past nine o'clock lust night when a man in bedroom at tire rushed down that thoroughfare shouting, "God save King Edward |" A ---- followed the man, captured him and took him home. Inland Revenue Collections. Collections at the inland revenue of fis for October, 1908: Spirits, $6, 765.05; malt, $1,745.79; tobacco and hy ,136.10; bonded factory, (wii r), $209.04; methylated spirits, 858.33; other receipts, $27; total, $12, 001,31. Received Appointment. H. F. Smith, assistant light keeper at Tibbets Point, N.Y., has recently received the appointment of mechani cal engineer and electrician at the na- val station, San Juan, Porto Rico. Mr. Smith will leave for Porto Rico this month, , ------ Jenkine' overcoats wear well. Overcoats this season. ' Ours will wear you want them to. Dame us, be three women 43, bu. last week with twen- - AO. pS ERLE tans tne ty 3 hy that A is merely sullering from a statements made in the there has been a and it will be neces wheat abroad. There {IN A NEW YORK JENCMENT Blaze in Twenty Minutes and $7,000 Covers Property Damage--Iit Was 4 Lively Blaze. New Yerk, Nov. 2.--T'wenty-one 1 gen, snd a ten-month or the five-storey tenement . 420 Flevewth avenue, which the, police ond coroner believe to have 'seen of incendiary origin, Tf the peculiar Lsatuces of the : | cianster are that the fir: was practi- cally extinguished in tw.mnty minutes, that the police could leaim of but one person infured, oth er than those who lost their ives, and the property loss was only $7,000. The only person injured, so far as can be learned, is Mary Jane Quiun, forty-weven years old, who was baen- second floor to the gr S In several apartm¥nts in the tene- ment Hallowe'en par'ies were in pro- gress, and the guests at these added tly to the number of persons in house and 8 Increasac! the al to escape. Although riding was Jlontitally provided with fire escapes, ront and rear, escape hy this means was cut off a few minutes after the fire started by the bodies of the dead which became w | in the openings leading to the ladders. 'The fire had been burning some minates before it was discovered. It had started in the basement and, rushing upward, had attacked the stairway leading to the apartments. In a few minutes the flames had enveloped the ' stairway, making egress in this direction impos sible. The building from the third to the fifth floor was gutted. At windows, front and rear, bodies of men and women were jammed, showing that the desperate struggle to escape had been the cause of many suflocations; Perhaps the most tragic find the firemen made was on 'a bed alongside a window at the rear of the fourth floor, where the bodies lof five men lay. Each had clutched tte man next to him in an endeavor tw push him aside in order to reach tly fire escape outside. The features of the men were distorted, some wit h rage, others with agony, and in two instan ces the men had gripped each other so hard that blood had been drain. On the third floor were foimd the bodies of Maculeta Deresi and her baby. The mother had crawled to the front window and had succeeded in grasping the sill when she suffoca- ted. In her arms lay the body of her child. On. the third floor in an apartment where a Hallowe'en party had been in progress when the fire started the general panic, John 0Toole, one of the occupants, started to go to the |* street. He was met by a volume of smoke as he opened the door. He ran to the fire escape, followed by all those in the apartment, with the ex ception of his mother, whose charred body was found later door of the hall. O'Toole and the others escaped. y When the firemen reached the scene |v flames were burning through 'the roof and the heart-rending screams of wo- men and the curses of men filled the air. Many daring rescues were made by the firemen yo use violence in their attempts to guiet the nic stricken human beings, struggling in vain attempts to reach safety. One fireman climbed a ladder to the second floor and then mounted to a fourth floor window, which was filled with- a. wedge of people, each person fighting to get out. He struck the heads of all the men he could see with Weis fist and they fell back. He then handed down to the firemen on lad ders below three women and a baby. Another fireman performed a similar feat and rescued two girls from an upper storey. Life nets played a principal part in the work of rescue. The firemen drop- | 2 wd men and women, dead and alive, the men standing on scaling ladders news, held by policemen and firemen in |w The building was known as "The | h House of All Nations," because of the its rooms. HALLOWE'EN TRAGEDY. n Chief of Police. Chicago, Nov. 2.--The celebration of Hallowe'en was responsible for the killing of chief of police of Morgan Park, a suburb of Chicago, and a threatened race war early yesterdav It was only after a desperate struggle between the police and an armed mob of enraged whites that a double lynching was prevented. A woman's Hallowe'en prank started the trouble. Mrs. James Payne, who is a sister of Mack Wiley, a negro, and three friends were overturning a lumber pile, when it is said the woman was struck hy Chief of Police Alrie. & fight resulted, in which the chief was Jabbed in the neck and killed by Wi- oy. A crowd of white men and boys col- lected and marched to the jail, where four of the negroes had been locked up. While the mob was clamoring for vengeance officers attempted to get Wiley 'and his companion away, but the enraged villagers rushed on the prisoners, A fierce fight followed, in which the negroes were severely cut and bruised with sticks and stones. but the officers finally managed to wet the negroes away. Wiley has con fossed. New York Mayoralty. New York, Nov. 2-- The Herald which has been taking a secret ballot forecagts the re-election of Mavor Low by a margin of 13,143 over Me Clellan. The Herald figures give Low a plurality of 20.329 ia Brooklyn, and 2.532 in Richmond. McCleHan i¢ con ceded 8.218 in Manhattan and the | child by force and after a struggle the Bronx, and 1.500 (estimated), in | uncle ran down the corridor with the Queen's, little one in his -------------- Robhers scared a mother and dauch- clothes, in 25 LIVES LOST] confessed to many offenses. revolutionary society was arranged at months ago, of the Alfarist, or physi cal force, faction of the society. has written to Wyo., stating that he had a succes. ful tour of west show and congress of all nations, " man, Muir has each against the Mail & Empire, and Evening Telegram, Toronto, for re- lying mear the | porting that her accidental suicided owing to domestic troubles. excavations at the Roman Forum, and who Vandalic, Rostra Augusti. This is considered a at times had to | most important find regarding the his- tory and topography of the ancient heart of Rome. He Reached Toronto To-Day--Re- morning, and was met at the station mily, and by a few personal friends. He will be tendered a banquet at the King Edward to-nirht, for his servic es to Canada in connection with the Alaskan boundary. The tickets been pouring in from all parts of the rom one floor to another and finally | country. on the first floor let them fall into the | fees the street. ket was opened but the city's market t tion and the fees consequently will be many different nationalities occupying | charged again. sion duties from the Alexander Man- Woman's Prank Causes Killing of | ed eoually between Percy A. Mannin~ and Mrs. Hume Blake. Some £50,000 is left to the home for incurables. The Very Latest News Culled From All Over The World. Le Combat, Montreal, favors the an- nexation of Canadas to the United States, i George R. Carter has been appoint- ed governor of Hawaii. He was the former secretary. The great strike in Bilbao broucht good results, as the workmen will not have to live in such deplorable condi- tions. United States sheriff and deputy were killed in Douglas, Wyo., while attempting to arrest a band of Indi- ans for stealing horses, etc. The state supreme court has aw- arded Ole Hedlund $500 for having his whiskers pulled by Julius Cresein, a saloonkeeper at St. Paul, Minn. Friends taking the body of Mrs. Kate Lewis to the cemetery at Con- cord, N.C., were struck by an ex- ress and four persons were instantly illed. Harry Gardner, a showman, charged with abduction, enticine a voung girl from her home and other crimes, has MISS MINNIE J The famous will be principal members of the stafl of 'New York's new woman's daily, which makes its initial appearance to-day. REYNOLDS, newspaper woman, who night editor and onc of the been held without bail for court by Magistrate Smith, at Chester, Pa. Burglary elaborated to an art has brought discomfiture to eighteen-year old Arthur Emrick, member of a wealthy Baltimore family, who is un- der arrest in Chicago, and who has A plot for the removal of four Ar- menian members of the Huntchakist seven meeting held in New York, Col. William F. Codv, (Buffalo Bill), friends in Cheyenne, England with his wild 'l have made mv last trip as a show- writes Col. Cody. The widow of the late filed two Ernest G. writs for $5,000 . husband, killed by discharge of a gun, had Signor Boni, in charge of the in 1888 unearthed the Rostra located and uncovered the -------- AYLESWORTH ARRIVES. impose Fees. Toronto, Nov. 2.--A. B. Aylesworth, -C., arrived from London, Eng.. this y members of his firm and of his fa- have Il been sold and applications have Toronto has decided to re impose at the cattle market. The fees ere taken off when the junction mar. as been able to stand the comveti d Ontario will get $40,000 in succes. 1 ing estate. The estate is estimated t $700,000 to $800,000, and is divid- A. E. Ames, wag examined before of navigation, as there is a mand from the lower ports as long as strike occurred this morning, effecting three big Canadian power companies, employing about 1,500 men, being the tractors taking effect $1.75 to $1.50 pen contracts of the Niagara Construction company and H. D. Symes, who are constructing the' Ontario Power com pany's work. On tract for the velopment company, about 150 . men NOT ALLOWED TO SPEAK AT BOO TH-TUCKER FUNERAL Twice Pleads For Permission-- Leader of Volunteers of Amer- ice Tries to Arrange for Fami- ly Gathering, But Efforts Are In Vain. 4 New York, Nov. 2.--Funeral services over the remains of Emma Booth Tucker, late consul of the Salvation Army in America, were rid 2 Sun- day in Ca ie ke P was tia ids waited outside until after the, ceremonies, when they were allowed to view the remains. The services, conducted by Col. J. Higgins, chief secretary of the Salva- tion Army in America, were most im- pressive, and consisted of a musical programme made up of the favorite hymns of the dead leader, and of eu- logies of her lite. Commander Booth- Tucker knelt sobbing at her bier dur- ing part of the ceremony. Gen. Ballington Booth, of the Volun- teers of America, had endeavored to arrange for a family gathering and short private services before the pub- lic funeral, but upon learning that this could not be done, he left the hall, saying that he did not care to stay for the public demonstration. "Herbert Booth, his brother, at the request of the general, remained to represent the family and, if it was convenient, to say a few words to the audience. Herbert Booth twice asked permission from Commander Booth- Tucker to speak, but each time it was refused. Commissioner Eva Booth was to have spoken, hut was overcome by grief. At the close of the services, she renderéd a prayer. The ceremonial partook somewhat of the character of a military funeral, the officials of the army participating in the funeral procession. Commander Booth-Tucker and his seven children followed the casket. The commander occupied the centre of the stage during the service. A cablegram from Gen. William Booth, of London, was read at Car- negie Hall. It said, referring to Mrs. Booth-Tucker's death : "Her death is an unutterable loss. She was a Salvation soldier of incom- parable worth. A long and memor- able record on well-fought fields is be- hind her. Perhaps of no one in mo- dern times, of her years and oppor- tunity, could it be more truly said: 'She has fought a good fight.' "'She loved righteousness and hated falsehood, unfaithfulness and wrong. 1 found her a true woman and prized her beyond rubies. She was every- one's friend and no one's foe. She had a great soul; her sympathies were as wide as the world's need; they reached the utmost limits of human sorrow and suffering, and made her ready for any sacrifices to meet what was within her ability. "God bless you. My heart turns toward you with deep yearnings to day. You share my sorrows, feel you-do. Let us then join in dedica- ting our remaining days, few or many, to the Christ and the souls for whom He died." The Apple Trade. Messrs. J. R. Clogg & Co., in their weekly circular, say : There is not much change in the apple market since our last citcular. Winters are now arriving freely and meeting with a good demand at good prices about as follows for No. 1: Spies and Kings 82.95 to $3.25; Greenings, £2.20 to $2.75; Faumouses, $2 and £3, other goods, $2 to $2.50. No. 2 apples are in good demand for the cheaper trade oF The Wea of the Fit ei Why do ladies go to an expensive tailor (not _acheap one) if they want a jacket or coat, par- ticularly well made ? Because of the fit AND THE WEAR OF THE FIT. The fit somehow holds their shape. That's why we lay so much stress on the tailoring of our jackets, the shaping, stitching and staying. These jackets we are now show- ing are made by tailors 3nd the cutters employed are the most up-to-date and be men to be had, The fit is a matter of a few minutes here because we have such a variety of shapes and sizes. The wear of the fit is a niatter of years. These jackets hold their shape until worn out. « NEW JACKETS Arriving Constantly You are welcome to come and examine and not to buy. You are never 'urged. Buy if you are satisfied only. JACKETS may be chosen and placed aside until required if you so desire. -.JOHN LAIDLAW & SON... Sh £@ at prices according to quality, $1.50 to 82.25. We look for a good demand for apples from now until the close good de the boats run. ¥ ---- STRIKE AT NIAGARA. Over Reduction Of Wages--Police Called Out. Niagara Falls, Ont., Nov. 2. -- A the entire work of construction of result of an order issued by the con- vesterday, re- of the men from day.. The order rincipally effected the muckers, Ita- ians and Hungarian laborers. On the ducing the wages MN. P. Davis' con Toronto, Electric Ih- speculation. 0 Men Who Think To most men the buying of a Boot or Shoe is a They do not know shoe values or what is needed inside the shoe to make sure of good service. The value they get-for their investment depends very much on the firm from whom they purchase. Over 30 years of serving the public has won for us our reputation for dependability. Only by fair dealing and reasonable prices was this obtained, and only by fair dealing and reasonable prices will it be retained. Our stock of Gents' Boots this fall will surely help m-- 70TH YEAR A Matte Of Cust Only The more cust the more busines This is your fi imitate the good your - neighbor with us. : Good furnirdt prices. ROBT. J. 222 Princess S 2 Doors Above the Opera Ambulance Telephone 577 BY JOHN. H AUCTION SAI FINE FURNITURE, H N.Y. Cabinet Grand Pia WEDNESDAY, Nov Haines & Co... N.Y. Piano, Hair Cloth Parlo and other carpets, Oak ble. Black Walnut Sid Top, Centre antl other t and other Lamps, What } Couch, Clocks. Hat Rack er Curtains, Hooks, Dini Room Sets, Springs, Mat Secretary, Desk, Bureaus, Chamber Ware, Dinner Glassware, Piated Ware, | Range, Kitchen Utensils, er articles. Piano at 12 I have received instruct P. Redmond to sell at he 21 Division St on t Sale at 10:30 am. Tern JOHN H. MILL! China for Decoratin We have just re few we!l selecte of FRENCH CHI the prices are rig KIRKPATRICK EST: ISHED 1! Emrmmbesaeeseeoee A FIRST CLASS COUK. es. Apply to EF. W A RELIABLE BUSINE ¢woman. Please call Street A GENERAL SERVANT. ! once, at 111 Wellingtor wages. AT ONCE_TEN STONE Apply Williams & Fall Ontario AT ONCE, A GOOD GE! vant, for family ef thre 90, Barrie Stree MAKERS ket, Steady jobs; 1 Vigar Works, Newmarke AN EXPERIENCED C housemaid. Apply to ter Ogilvie, 196 Johnste Pr ---------------- CRANE MEN, SAILORS used to hitching, prefe: to. Capadian Goneral Peterborough, Ont. PURCHASER FOR SIN( dwelling, sevem rooins ; uick sale McCann's gency, 51 Brock street WE WANT A FEW PEOPL locality te werk for us time. Pleasant work Imperial Company, Lon« ---------------------------------- BE INDEPENDENT, EMP sell. Establish a bv goods are used everyda) body. Men make fortur Marshall & Co., london the master at morning, with reference tions between his own firm, the Atlas Loan Co., St Wallace. Their tions were examin tail by W. the latter R. There ter out of their house in their night Ardmore, Pa. Osgoode Thomas, and A. E dealings and specula Cp railway and GT.R tried undertook was a painful and this morning ten days' time was given in which to reply The mother endeavored to take to the writ. arms and disappear- Ganone's chocolates, 23c. and -50c. a box, at Ferguson's. ' Hall, this to the rela- ed info in great de- H. Hunter, acting for the liquidator of the Atlas Co., the Na- tional Trust Co. Mr. Hunter produced 4 statement to show that the Atlas conipany lost $406,979 through Ames & Co., but Mr. Ames declined to ans- wer until this statement could be ver- ified and the statement will be exam. ined by accountants Th#é examination of Mr. A. several davs. The Toronto reached an agreement, with reference to the crossing which to make over the street railway into the freight yards on Front street, and con this afternoon. mes will last this morning. the injunction sequently was withdrawn. The G. to maintain the crossing for all time, and Collingwood Schrieber. deputy minister of railwavs was aereed uwnon for case of dispute. arbitrator in scene before Chancellor Boyd this morning. "W. J, Cronyn and wife, a few years ago, the | year's expenditure was $94,000, The, are 'employed, of whom about twenty five per vent. guit work. At Dawson and Riley's wheel pit contract of the Canadian Niagara Power company, - J employing 250 men, * there are only © | some dozen men out. The latter did not guit work of their own accord, however, but the men from the other works, 200 strong, swooped down on them, pelted them with rocks and chased them off the works. The On- tario Power company has closed down its entire works to avoid violence by the men. Chief Mains, of the Ontario police force, and men have charge of matters, and are getting the employed men out of the works and off the sites, and it is mot expected there . | will be any further violence. The dif ferent contractors claim they have been overpaying the laborers, on ac- count of the stringency of the labor market, the past year, and now when they can get any number of men for 81.50 per day, they cannot afford to pay 81.75. -------------- Anxiety About Home Missions. Toronto, Nov. 2.--Considerable anx- iety is being caused by the state of the Presbyterian Home Mission fund. to October 26th the receipts hags not reached within $8,000 of the amount $110,000. Fully one-half of this was required for the first six months. Last increase is accounted for by the open- ing up of new fields and the raising of the status of others, placing them un. der ordained ministers, whereas they were supplied by students. or cate- chists. "The 'present debt of the Home "HAPPY THOUGHTS" sold in Kingston, number of your friecds have them. The bef. re. Mission fund i. $10,000, us in preserving our worthy reputatiyn. Good values in Box Calf Lace Boots at $2. $2.50, $3, and the well-known reliable Slater Boots for $3.50 and $5. THE LOCKETT SHOE STORE Aa SALESMEN, TO choice HAN] specialties during Winter. Whole or part Weekly Elegant. outfit Bros., Nurserymen, Galt, -------------------------------------------- MEN TO LEARN BARBI Practical course that = Few weeks required diplomas given each Special arrangements for licants. Write for oler Barber College. Ch: AGENTS, IN EVERY C( sell *' Scalp Food," "MM Cream." ** Martin and a and discoveries never b to the public. Some of make over $10 per da; pondence solicited The Limited, Hamilton, . APPLE PIE El Is the good old stand-by. It is particularly appetizing at this time of year, when our longings are for s 'methiog finest pies in Canada bake them in a "HAPPY THOUGHT" RANGE McKelvey & Birch, 69-71 Brock St. slightly tert 1f you want the 80 you will probably find that a sale this yeat is' larger than ever LOST. CAPE -- BETWEEN CHA and Victoria Park, Sund a Child's Green_Cloth ( the finder kind®§y leave it drug store WILL. THE house a PARTY A7 Millinery p delivered by mistake « gave their infant girl to an uncle, | emised during the corresponding period dav of last week Kindly c James Hewston, Srngreiin to be of the previous year, whereas z Je ox- . " . a Sue' with. the firm w brought up. The mother now desires | penditure was £0,500 in excess. The es- We think this is the best range on earth. Don't, however, take oar opin- -- mm aril this meee! ber child again | timated expenditure for the year was [ion alone, ask some of your neighboucs about it. There have been over 1,500 i BOARD. TWO LARGE, WELL Fi rooms, modern convenie dinner Also table boa 240 King St, E Goo BOARD AT » prices, Also rooms." fu unfurnished. at 200 Will potatoes, and Satie, Me. a Yond a