[ere are Winter r assort- i sacks, hen you of com- § wz wind up points in ~ v "wear, 0, on. rl Jake ur Mantle r it issafe * of varie is season. s goodness al anship, "appear. only look built to re- y' ve been 5 at prices or | g il i i i winter -cam- die Khe Juttoce CL id. And 1 do she. is tried to can, first he field, | in the calibre: ¢ are coming. s of %: low fo SE 5 i 5! : but a PR Tie i : s32BZ HLH : sk on THE DAILY. 8, : stituents of meteorites, olivine, pyrox- H. was not right. Local horsemen fel B he silic S-- ! Tia "conta . ea beat Gal : . ene, and eldspar. et ween sili : Notes On Baseball, Lacrosse And ry uite conlident he can oe] 2% Deseribeld By An English [,, grains are fine particles of nickel 5 agher, p : vl a iferous iron, i a variety of iron sul- * Other Sports. match consummated. 'It would proh- Amongst all the varied glories of Phide 'trighter only found in ie £ Bobcaygeon won the championship | ably require big inducements for R. nature, perhaps one of the most strik- " » it 2 willis rie cal p page 'McKenzie to send the brown geld- |; ificent i i ones. structure very {i of the nawartha Baseball Le ague. J. MeKenzie to sen : wn | ng and magnificent is a sunrise as grained and compact (massive), and The automobile run from Chicago ing cast, but the match is within pos- | gun in the pure and rarified air of the color greyish. The metallic con- ' : +» in BS rs § sibility "i i : N Yish. g 3 to New York was made in 58 hours ibility. Si Rail, 4 lotty mountain, Halt stituents seem to be very uniformly and 45 minutes. -------------------- an 10 rare, 1h ays © | constructed through the body of the 'IL he junior series of the Quebec Rug- Balancing Accounts. great luminary become visible the by Union has lost two members, Me Peruna is recommended by fifty members of Congress, by Governors, Consuls, Uenerals, Admirals, Eminent Physicians, many Hospitals and public institu- ousands upon thousands of those in the hurhbler walks of life. STE TR SPORT REVIEW." Gill and Pritannia. Pittsburg secured third place in the National Baseball League, hy winning . Majors, Captains, Clergymen tions, and th two matches from St. Louis President Brush has Enally refus- ed to allow the New York Nationals to play the New York Americans. Hazlett will scrimmage on Saturday, improvement.--Montreal be a great trim? Bat rouomber. of all of it you had a Star. Sod half doe, ih & ) The Philadelphia National League x _ eneath, the valleys are shrouded baseball club is in financial difficulties | Now, what do I owe you. O maiden |), a pall 'of heavy cloud, which rolls and may - sell their franchise at the For ther moonlight walks 'down the } ON jin over varying aspect; now great ¥ close of this season. shiny 'bench « ark masses piled up by the winds i Unless Al Herford balks at the | For the Joys I knew on the driftwood] yuminst, neighboring ~ mountain, 3 : ory. seat, agai to be broken up and driven terms demanded, there is now every 3 Wore afar. anal alone. with ] 2B p c i prospect of a fight between Joe Gans Wien We wer gr away by a current of air gendered in and Britt within the next thirty days. | Now what do I owe for the lvok in your | its . wide-cleft chasms; now serried of thes Eantorn Boemest Loneet: | hehictar ny sou lead out. to aunt: | Ske of gyrating cloudlots specding ing of thes Eastern Baseball League Cone, whisper me, dear, how the bal- | along until broken up by impact with to be held at. New 1 ways andl 'means of reducing team ox- penses. The scrimmage of the Varsity foot- averages over 200 pounds will be at least the £ ball team Sper average, to the stage game alone. to the Demon asked match H about a possibly man. Queen's 8 twenty pounds less than this on and But he play in the Montreal and should York to discuss Jim Corbett says he intends to stick leave the fighting will probably throw out a challenge now and then just to remind people of his determin- ation.--Buffalo Times, ; At Philadelphia, the intercollegiate tennis doubles' championship was won by K. H. Bebr and Yale, F, J. Sulloway and J. , of Harvard, being defeated, 6--4, 4-6, 2-6, 6-3, 8-6. A largely attended theatrical benefit G. Bodman, of B. given the members of the baseball players representing New York, in the National League. The theatre, ohe of the largest on Broad- way, was erowded. Joe Gans says he will never get in same ring with Walcott again. They met on the street in 'Frisco the day after the fight, and the Gans to m of win pions, Gallagher, 2.03 : H., 2.033, best attraction 'carnival at oe, re, . . have Sk a a th year, at Colum The would prove that could anna' io Black ake another match with him. "You have had vour chance," replied Gans. "and vou could not whip me, and vou won't get ane other ovvortunity." Kid McCov and Jack (Twin) Sulli van, two of the best and cleverest middleweights in the boxing game have agreed to fight a return mate} in Los Angeles, Cal., during the firs of the Ascot races, which begir November 24th. on the Pacific coast Roth fighters feel confident Winnipeg Telegram : That proposed race on ice for the mid winie at Ottawa between. th Houston (Texas) Post For the sunupers For the wooded nook and flung skiff; anes lies, But, remember, of all of hali S Now, what do J owe you? account The pleasure it gave me te up. Up the scarred old cliff it w = mount; The pleasure it gave me to cup Where your own red dripping rim. And tell we, oh tell we, lips light grows dim, remember, of all of half. But Saturday kept many Camden fair at threshing machine is in our the grain is turning out The stoué crusher is in th away 'ng spent a few days wi Miss Lucy Jordan, Forest spending this Ming Amiie Incoldsty, ther. They ~ripe, cause burning 'axative is Dr. ccedingly mild, composed health giving vegetable extracts. ments of the ness and disordered digestion ivine on earth makes such vema sures a¥ Dr. Hamilton's Pills. and do not For the joy 'that shall last till life's Steam Thiesher Moving. Centreville, Sept. 28. ~The rain Centreville. gravelling up the roads, George Flem- here. H. Huff and family, Bufialo, N. Y., spent the past week with P. Van- dewater. Mrs, W. Kenny and Mrs. Curry. Kingston, spent Sunday hers, week with her cousin, T. Halev and sister, and Miss O'Reilly, Frinsville, spent Sundav with P. Cassidy. Alton Vandewater spent Sunday with his fa- Purgatives Are Dangerous. make the constipated condition worse. Physicians say the most ideal Hamilton's Pills Mandrake and Butternut: they are ex- Hamilton's Pills restore regular move- bowels, strengthen the stomach, and purify the blood. sonstipation, sick headache, | | tory, owing to the fact that Harold * sow what do 1 owe you for all of this? y joy by wood and the iss; For the iright and delight in the seca- For the fingers, cool and pink and slim, it you had Take into » help you as owrs to touch the ouched the it you had on from the The midst, and very well. is vicinity th friends J. Mills, stolen AURORAL GLORIES. peaks and domes of the snow-capped range' of mountains on the western horizon have gradually come into view; the pure whiteness of the etor- nal snows ever augmenting and bright- ening with the opening day, soon a roseate hue of extreme beauty mant- Entwinul with ine, and the happy ling the virgin snow in its auroral cobalt, « romium, tin, mangancse, laugh ? radiance; ever growing deeper and yet ete, with sulphur in combination with Come, what do I owe you, O maiden | deeper, until the mountains are on fire in a splendent blaze of lovely car- some upreared rocky barrier; or now fields of vaporous undefined mist which scarce veils from view the land- scape beneath. But in the meantime, while we have been lost, spellbound, in the contem- plation of the ever enhancing , prand- eur and sublimity of the scene, the brilliant glow in the east continues to crease in vivid splendour more and Truly that rolling sea of clouds be- neath is pow a pageant almost awful in its sublimity th solemn and august. grandeur. It is a very ocean of curling billows, quite dazzling in their brilliancy, and though ever mov- ing, vet apparently as solid as though carved of the purest white alabaster or chalcedony. And as those long lines and ranks of su ing rollers ad- vance across the broad valley with a majestic and. resistless movement, it ON EXHIBITION AT THE Fell From The Sky And Lit In a Field Near Shelburne, Ont.--It Is The Third Authentic Case Known To Be On Record. There is at present an exhibition in Onturin Bail, School of Minin, a fine examp a meteorite, cen and brought to oe all ot "meteo! -- y 4 a rite is a Canade very rare event in , and only. two authenticated cases are on record, The investigation of these heavenly ies, is a matter of the highest scientific value, 'as it offers us sub stantial evidence of the composition of other spheres than our own, The stone mow in Kingston has at- tracted a good deal of attention, and is of especial interest to us, as it has found its way. from the outer bounds | METEORITE, : yearance a glowing fireball more, until, a very blaze of lory, the fe red gin ro the thou flashing rays of the orb of day have Mr. Shivld's evidence, however, fatistud nnd dinposud the last Vos. shows that this was not the case with: te of the gloom of the waning night, he st , : had ' and a flood of sunshine Mires all. one be found. 8 gy fell near Shelburne, Ont., on the even- ing of August 23th, about eight p.m, many. Observers say that it with a loud explosion, into four piee- rate two 'stones "have been unearthed up to the t moment, Kingston, fell in an 6at-fild on the about three miles from Shelburne, When the crop was harvested a couple of weeks later, it was found imbed- ded in the earth at a depth of eigh- teen inches. The other barely missed striking the house of John Shields, about a quarter of a mile distant. It splashed the window and wall = with house within two feet of the verandah. The family in the house were started by the roar and crash, but the cause of the commotion was only found the following morning, when a fourteen pound meteorite was unearthed. The fall of the meteor was aceom- panied by a loud detonation and a peculiar sound like the rattle of a drum, and what the observers des- cribe' as a musical tone. The fall of the fire-ball was distinctly seen in several places, considerable distances from Shelburne, Chesley, Durham and Elmvale. Observers in North Egre- mont and Boothville, compared the detonation to the roll of distant thundering. In form, the meteorite is polyhedric and has six principal faces, half of which are smooth, the other half be ing covered with pethugs or "thumb marks." The smooth part which was probably the bottom side, was no doubt planed by the friction of air. The rough top of the stone has ac- quired a pitted and many-sided char- acter by the influence of the air, in the descent. The stone is covered with a black, i crust, 1.25 to 1.50 of an inch hick, as though the surface had been fused, 'by the heat generated by the friction of the air. On the surface it can be seen that the stone is peme trated hv veins of native jron. The stone itself is composed largely of silicates, probably the usual econ: stone, and a peculiar characteristic of this particular specimen is that it js covered by a veins of a metallic mineral, largely iron. A rough quali- tative analysis by Prof. Shuttfeworth, of Toronto, has shown the presence of most of the usual meteoric compounds, iron allayed with nickel, traces of iron; in the stony minerals are found, silica and alumina with lime, and alkalies. This meteorite, as others, is a body, which has come to the earth's surface from space, and without doubt had an initial speed comparable with that of other heavenly bodies, roughly about 200,000 feet or more per second. The velocity was immediately reduced by the resistance of the air, the moment it reached oor atmosphere, From the depth of the hole we can estimate that the velocity of the meteorite on reach- ing the earth was incomparahl small. er. By comparison with the depth of holes made hy cannon balls, we can | calculate that the velocity of these last moments, was only about 300 to (00 feet per second. One would naturally believe that a meteorite, which in passing through the air, had the ap- with it into 'the earth, & green leaf, which was not charred in the least. The onlv conclusion to be drawn from this is that the stone was not sensibly | hot and scarcely even warm, ¥ The meteorite will be on exhibition to-night in Crew's jewelry window. hi ---- * RAILWAY TAXATION. wv Provincial Commission Sat 'Till would appear that even the towering : Late Hour. ranges of mountains could scarcely Sppeiu} to the While, The . stay 'their onmarch. But as the sun oronto, Oet. ilwae Provincial continues to rise higher and higher, na On on Taifway taxation, com- " the mountain breeze drives before it posed < . Ki citypiece, M.P.P., that alabaster ocean: at first great Prof. Shortt, ingston, and J gaps revealing the beauties of the landscape beneath, until at length the whole glorious panorama of lake and forest, 'mountain torrent and Klacier, cornficlds and broad pastures, with scattered chalets, chureh #pires, and. picturesque villages , #8 un. folded to the view. are the same ax spe- cial committee of the legislature which Bell, Chatham, met this morning, at the parliament buildings to hear the views of the railway H on the subject. They expect to sit to a late hour to conclude the hearing. 1. F. Hellmuth, K.C., is chief counsel for i and his contentions presented to the of space to our very midst. The stone the and was witnessed in its descent by Sutil > es before reaching the ground, Atany The larger fragment, at present in farm of Thomas Johnson, who lives mud, as it dropped at the rear of the ston about thirty years ago. Hi ier of the charging embezzlement funds. Barber snd age is estimated at $150,000, Special to the Whig Port fo! through the 740 feet the land end of the pier force to send streams about 500 f into Greenwich street. were ales played from the river end the pier into West street, road and those of the Sompany ut in the apparatus. Should alter an glann four engines may do bul end of the may Theefire department merely o question of all big piers will be Old Central CUEEN'S LAWN TENNIS. On Play. had been hoped by afternoon, which low, giving the first in cach case : winner to enter semi-finals, guson vs. Miss Williams, 6-3; 6-3. Men's kavra, 6-4, 6-3, low, 6:2, €2, €0, Maclnnes vs, G1, Richardson vs. Cornett, 6-3, 5-7, 6-3. -------- WOMAN IN ROBBER GANG. Confesses. then leaped from the nozzles with sullicient Four streams The firemen were delighted with the tests, as were the officials of the rail- that the t not be om hand immediately much service by conuecting with the pumping in river ar Ja a be connected with the city mains, it as brief time when fitted as are the ominion pier and the Jersey or, The Rainy Weather Put Damper The rainy weather, to-day, interfer ed to a considerable extent, with the lawn tennis tournament at Queen's. It the tennis club executive that the four courts would have been in use both morning and would have re duced the contestants for champion- ship honors by a considerable number, The results of yesterday's games fol- name of the winner Ladies Singles--¥irst round match Miss Fer- |. ' mi 'Gage and Richaadson inary Mi Men's Singles.--First round, winners to enter second round. Smith vs, Ug 7-5. Ramsay vs, Cartwright, Pentland, 6-3, Pringle, 6-3, 6.3. Nicoll ve. Weld, 00, 6-4. Strachgn vs, Maclnnes, 6-2, C-4. Prof, Campbell v8. Malloch, 61, 00. Mikaera vs. John. ston, G3, 01, Baker vs. Smith, 8.6, (13. Wilson vs. Fee, (10, 6-0. Wood vs, Wife Of Railroad Station Agent Fairmont, W. Va., Oct. 8 Mrs. H. {. Jacobs, wife of the former station n 200 | pach time loweri feet of 3} inch hose, with two 1{ and | doopor, until finally two 14 inch nozzles. They were work- into the sea. el 200 pounds pressure. 'lhe | 'Thy fish which swallowed Jonah hose was attached to the 3} in bulk- | was created in the very of head or street connections of the 6 | the world for that wr purpose. inch Pie. Water from the river was Therefore this fish 0 a eet of sy mouth and throat that Jonsh A it as easy to pass into its belly tho fn great pearl s of the fish that was in the The fish i to asked to be taken hus he spent three and three nights in the belly the fish, but t v od then Tived to put him into The new cathedral of Liv , corner-stone of King Edward, stands on St. J Mount, 155 feet above The two highest other English cathedral. The Jongth will bo feet ; nave up to the entrance of the choir MO feet, The tals of Th So t yy Rormed Jonah that he was | be devoured by Leviathan. Jonah made The Coming Great Cathodral: the ob) a a ye 4s agent of Worthington, W, Va., has been arrested for being implicated in the robbery of the Baltimore & Ohio | and ninety -cight railroad station at Worthington, ° In| weeded out, leaving five in for the fin- jail she confessed Watson in a few months, in the house house was scarched by officers large was found. -------- Died At St. Paul, Minn, James Morrow, brother Stroud, Kingston, is dead at Paul, Minn., after tvwhoid fever. Deceased lived in King- ¢ has resided in St. Paul for many years St. and was a traveller for a large boot and shoe one won, and three daughters, and four brothers and four sisters to mourn his loss, vight years of 'age. firm. He leaves a widow, was about forty- ---- Theft Laid To Two Men. Cambridge, 0., Oct. 8.--Herbert 0. larber, former vice-president of the de. funct Commercial Bank of Cami y who disappeared Jone 1 1th, with his Patterson, cash- Commercial bank, returned ome and was arres on a warrant of the bank Patterson's short- rother-in-law, P, C. ---------- Canal Repaired. Dalhousie, Oct. B~(1 pm. j= 'he break in the Welland canal has heen repaired and light boats have commenced to lock unt thin nei he will raise enough to load. ed boats to lock a up. It will take before the water . There ave d turn, 1 ------ For Saturday we will sell 1 1b, Java rains and | And like these clond of mist : and Mocha blend coffee, regular price, even | dispersed by the revigifving rays "ot [considered the new assessment act. 35c., for Me. This coffee cannot be the sun, so under the influence of the 2 beaten. Mullin's, 4 ir of | Son of Righteousness, and with the | Print butter, 18. Crawford's. Churches whould put in special en- never refused help of the Holy Spirit | If a young man would get up with tranees for men who have the side- only of Jof God, will the clouds of doubt and the an he sligulda t stay a lai ) habit. a bart es +4 Dr. | unbeliof disappear; and nitent | than pe with any a man who isn't quite sre cnuirer will | ho able to grasp the | . Society amen who appear in sven. the Bible has unlimited faith fn great fact that the atonement of [ing dress are candid--at least, almanac. : 5 For | Christ cleanseth from all sin. don't to conceal much. i The old-fashioned horehound candy bilions- pr . . ia knee pants, 2 to 28, 39%. is sold at Gibson's Red Cross Drug no med. | Four packages laundry starch, | li me, 5 rkable | 20¢.: 4 pack of corn starch, 2c., B0c. See our ali-steel filled corsets, 50c. at Mullin's. gee New York Dress ana Le Try a Print butter, 18c. Crawford's. to Deputy Sheriff that she is a member of a gang who have cginmitied at least twenty robberies in Worthington with. Mrs. Jacobs said that the gang met of one of the robbers where the plunder was stored. This and a amount of flour and groceries of Mes, a week's illness of through here above and below | al lie how wouldn't kill or health, Mes, College, wear Windsor, = + The Bishop of * Londen thirty ydars old, made Dean of Salis- bury. aged sexton ho asked veteran in the service and received this cheart ** Yes, an' Tve buried six deans al ready," wizi vacdy and delicate that al good om in dining. Verona, Oct. 0.~The revival '| have closed for a short time. Mrs. E. M. Yorke is on the sick list. Mrs. Pet. test. Mr. Scott is a Roman Ca- and was educated at Pointer For The Dean. was, when In his first meeting with the if he were not a ul reply up the propor- of the | dean, and adding with a : "I've watched 'em, persons wot a seven<ourse di one and has ---- To Take Over Business. ore is somew hat improved in