BASE TER RIB R BRT, be.; 35¢. and 0c. dts at Se. cach, ns, Corsets and Kil Glogs e Stockings at 25:. ir pair, Laotes™ All Ww, Cash ) } \ nd toe, full, fashione ar, erchiefs, 25¢. Kind, - it 2 for 25c¢c. vicfs, plain and fancy edges, bare in need of Handkere, ts and Drawers odd "values in' raedium ve ason of the year. r., Toes up to $1.00 wv, and save money. © Store, 180 Wellinzton 5, | res You Best At All Times ad ang . right Under. Starting in price a garment, ea \es of lity 1 and Toggery there's BBY'S." uit for business or for place like BIBBY'S." at or Overcoat, there's BBY'S." ir of Trousers for any no place like or the Boys, there's BBY'S." the correct Hat, the e's no. place . like ly Says It t pleases us--music e appreciate the good aod so, we're crow- LIFE INSURANCE Of Founded Liverpool oY. Eng. R A 1845 Ee 814% x. ANGE. 2 INCOM Same profits paid for past 40 years, Premium rates and particulars on spplics- tion, W. J. B. WHITE, - Kingston A. E. Hero TRU FIT combines your pecu* liar Foot needs. With our ABILITY and choice of leather giving you Comlort and Durability. 286 Princess Street BRITISH - AMERICAN KINGSTON - - ONTARIO Has uadergone alterations and 1s now open to the travelling public. W TELFER Proprietor blows it X Both box and wrapper of Baby's v U. PE-AU-MA STRENGTHENS THE ENTE SISTEM. Mr. Alfred. Pleau, an expert machinist, 7¢ St. John Street, Quebeg City, Can. writes: "Two years ago, an accident neces- sitated my confinement for several weeks. The good health I had enjoyed was slipping away and there developed a complication of 'diseasés. My phy- sician said my case was one of general debility. "Among the many ailments which developed was a serious attack of ca- tarrh, which annoyed me considerably and kept me awake whole nights, "J decided to give Peruna a trial and soon found it acting as a wonder- ful tonic to my system. The catarrh grew less severe and shortly after- ward disappeared, as did also the various other maladies. "I attribute my promptrelief and ulti- mate curo entirely to the use of Peruna and gladly recommend it." Dr. Hugo's Health Tablets for Women Make Healthy Women If You Suffer with Fe : Rheumatism Dr. Shoop's Rheumatic Remedy Will Bring the Utmost Relief that Medicine Can. 'The one remedy which many physicians rely Bpon to free the system of the Rheumatic Pois- ons which are the cause of all Rheumatism, Lum! Sciatica, Gout, is DR. SHOOP's RHED MATIO REMEDY. Dr, Shoop spent twenty years in experimenting be-A\fore he disgovered the ined chemicals almost always 1 Master Wiifrid Fralick, litile son of INAPANEEANS SAFE Vere TWELVE ON THE HAR- | Bad Accident to Little Boy-- 1 Electric Lights in Trim-- Madden Bros. Still in Busi- ness--Several Visitors. Napanee, Sept, 15.--The street elso- tric lights huve bem in working order for the past geoek, and are giving uni- versal sition. Miss Ilovence Fraser, New York, is spending her holidays with her pas j rents, Mr. and Mrs. J, A, Fraser, John strest. John and Percy Madden {have taken over thé grocery and | butcher business of their unc 2, Sie 'phen andi Andrew Madden, Jonn street, 'and on Monday morning as- sumed charge of the business. The firm of Madden Bros. has been known tin Napanee for the past twenty-three years. M.:H. Fralick, South Napanee, mot twith a painful accident on Monday. 'He was riding ony waggon and in tattempting to get off he fell, and the | Waggon passing over his foot and orushed ~it. "Luckily no bones were broken, and a few weeks confinement "to the houpe will heal the injury. i" There were many ious ped anxious people in town, when the papers came in with an account of the accident to the 'harvesters' excursion near Sudbury, i But through the thoughtfulness of one of the passengers who wired the day before that "all Napaneeans on the | froig Were safe," the anxioty subsid- ed. But it very cull There were tem or twelve from Na | paneey'but luckily they were in a rear tewin' andescaped all injury, -------------- i was a close 'have been circulated in France recent- DAILY BRITISH WHIG. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 18. SOME WILD STORIES i Attempts to Be Made on Life of Fallieres. PRESIDENT PALLIER SS Paris, Sept. 15.--Some wild stories ly. The latest one appeared in the con- servative newspaper yesterday telling of the rumored attempts to be made upon the life of President Falierres, while he is at Marseilles. So far as can be learned, all these stories are sensational. M. Fallierres left Paris last evening for Marseilles. There was the customary demonstration at the railway station, whenee his departure had been announced in ! WIRELESS AROUND WORLD. 1 Planning Overland-Over Sea Com-' | bination. | Sydney, N.S. Sept. 15.~During his visit to Cape Breton, Signor Marconi said that he was now cone | sidering; the question communication of establishing | overland by wireless with Vancouver, and thence across the Pacific to Yokohoma. | The object of the invention is to, eneired by continuing the | extension to Sydney, Australia, thence | to India, and thence to Cape Town, Brazil, and finally back to Glace Ray the globe Stella Statements. | SteHa; "Rept, 14.-A severe electric { storm passed. over the i-land on Thurs | day. Lightning struck and compl tly "destroyed the barns and stahles be longing io Arthur, Howard, along | | with about 150 tons of hay, amd his Some of the | grain still in stack. He also lost a valuabls horse, and a hay load- er and waggon, with some other arti- clas. Tt was just about an hour from the time that the barn was struck till | {it was a mass of smoking cinders, Tha oWntr 'himself 'was knocked down and stimned in the stable while getting a j horse ont. The light shower of rain. which fell Gust after the fire broke out, kept. it from spreading. The dwelling house and a small cottage which the hired man lived in, the drive house and nearly all implements were saved. The barns were partly covered by in surance. Building operations will fixe ly commence at once. Mr. and Mrs Hugh Filson have returned fron the Toronto exhibition. - Miss D. Caught, Jdr., attended the Allen-Vermilyea wed ding in Belleville on Tuesday. Visi tors : Mrs. Bliss, Cleveland, Ohi, at Mrs. A. E. Howard's; Mr. and Mrs Raker apd davghter have retimed home after spending a week with Mrs season's erop of grain. was Not that Dn. v SHOOP'S RERU~ MATIC Remepy Stevenson, Mr. and Mrs. Mackensi» can turn bony joints into flesh and daughter, North Bav, have re aah finpossinie turned home, after spending a few Jom the, plood Phe days with Mrs. P. Allen. voisons w ° . ---------- th pain and ' " swelling. And then that is the 'Made In Canada. of the pain and swelling= potorhoro Examiner theend of fering -- the end . stees of Queen's University matism. isremedyneves | h¢ trustees qf x : falls where a cure is possible. Itismow do not troulfe themselves with put up in tablet or 1i- quid forto--ask for (he "Made-in-Canada'" idea. They ! io Who cred ud 816 Sut. 1. vo appointed William Blair Ander ring today from pains' and aches which you Pi : Ww to be Rheumatism; you ho experience son, a graduate of Aberdeen and ess or twinges of pain in damp thery bridge universities, professor of you who easily become stiff and Tam witne ambr/g ' TG Cre Just ty DR SHOOP'S Rs Latin in Queen's University. Mr. A 1 that acco t ' tlk %S 1a Of rem derson's nationality is not mentioned, meaded by , "l *p but it is to be presumed that he is #ALL DRVGGISTS.Y You don't wash With the box! Own Soap are plain, business like and cheap. All the money is in the Soap itself, which is as " wholesomely" pure and fragrant as money can make it. Baby's Own Soap is much imitated as to appear< ances, but delicate skins soon show the difference. ¢"Baby's Own' costs YOU no more than the imitations. If air at ordinary temperature does not move at more than one and a half feet per second, , no draueht is felt. a Tol 'money on contracts will be yhot a Canadian. There must be scores of graduates of Canadian universities, | capable of filling such a position, and available besides, It would Te a strong proof of the confidenge of | Queen's trustees in the efficiendy of their university if they should appoint one of their own graduates to the pro frssorship of Latin, Called To Rome. Rev. Dr. M. F. Fallon, superior of the O.M.L: in the United States, anh son of 1). Fallon,, Brock street, would present the case of the Irish Catholies in Canada before the capter of the oblate order at its annual meeting in Rome on September 19th. The Irish Catholics of Ottawa, are not in accord with their co-religion- ists of the French race in the adminis- tration of the separate schools. The alleged negelect of English Catholic | schoolé anil inability of the Irish to get a' faire portion of the expenditure some 1 of the issuts treated, Had A Good Run. Twenty boys took part in the pa- prr chase of the Y.M.C.A, juniors {o- day. They had a good rin to Lake Ontario Park. The hares were Les Meek, William Goodearle and Calvin Day. Goodearle was winded, Meek was located his paper bein~ exhausted. On the ran hack Calvin Day beat the hounds to the Y. M. C. Lost Everything. F. H. *Pense was in the Gilmour hotel fire in Ottawa, but telegraphs that he is safe, - though losing every: thing in his room. His father and mother, who were visiting him this week, only loft the Gilmour house on Friday. The man who always has the sins of others beforé him puts his own in | bis side pocket. y 3 Buy Dr. Shoop's Laxets at Gibson's Red Cross drug store. Fresh there, Most men are willing fo prey for their enemies to get the worst of it. It's never hand to find a good argu i her home to dny, the news. papers. It would seem strange indeed if real plotters would let such specific news of 'their plans reach the Papers as have been published here. Neverthe. less, it is announced that not only have fifteen thousand additional troops ben assembled at Marsvilles, but that while the public will he ad- mitted to the presidential enclosure, everybody must enter empty nan ded President Fallieres will be in Mar seilies two days, Many warships will take part in the ceremonies attendant upon this recoption. With the vreeau- tions taken, no anarchist attempt js likely, notwithstanding the fact that the Paris newspapers have been filled With storis. of nlots to be earried out on this octasion, PERSONAL MENTION. Movements of the People--What They Are Saying and Doing. Robson Black of the News staff, loft to-day "for Toronto, B. W. Folger returned to from Toronto last night, Rev, Dr. Tucker is the guest of Mr and Mrs. MH. Tandy, Johnson street the condition of Kev, Futher 0'Gor- man, of Gananogpe, still remains eri Kingston tical, Mrs. Wenborn, wife. of Capt, J, M. Wenborn, Cuaeen Sede, was stricken with paralysis about sixty-five Canon Loucks , visited Uataraqui school, yesterday, cand made pleasant remarks to 'the children of the vari ous last night. She js years of age, classes, Mr. WW. Woods, Cashens from an dhscess in gressing favorably lall, suffering the head, is pro towards recovery. JA. C. MeCallum, representing the Railway and Marine World, Toronto, Was in town, to-day, on 4 business Vv He left again for the maritime provinces, James kK, got Pros, plumbers, He leaves a widow, James McParland, of this city, and Michael Mclgrl and, of Gananoque, The Misses Julia and Birdie Foley Westport, are visiting in on this week, Albert Menkins, guest of Kenneth arnmouries, Robert Meek 0, to attend Grand Lodge Rev. Dr. Macgilliveay pulpits: on Sunday, with Coun, Napanee, Miss I. V Nicholson, Rinoston the ouest of her cousin, Mps, ; Crouter, Deseronto Rev. F. B. Stratton will occupy the privit of the Western Methodist church in Napanee, on Sunday. Miss Hazel Vicars, Powers, Montreal Bagot, of the firm of Ba Chicago, is dead. a ster of Kingston Port Arthur, is the McCullough, at the loft to-day for Toron the Sovereign LOOYF will exchange Rev. J. R. is WW. K visiting Mrs returned to to Uxbridge, br, Campbell, a practising cian of Minneapolis, paid his aunt. Mrs. Code. Gor Mise Mary Gavin and Gilpa'llon, Scranton! Pa at Mrs. P. Walsh's, 0. G. Johnson has returned from Montreal. from which port his sister in law sailed for England on Wednes day. Mie. Alfred McCutcheon, Roblin, and street, physi a visit to street Misa. Gertie , are visiting Wellington street her dauchters, Misses May. Lillian and Daisy, are spending gw few |days in Kineston: $F W..H. Comstock and G. 1. Mgllory, Brockville, were in the city, to-day. on business in connection with the cereal works company, Miss Hannah Ball, Cataraowi, has returned home after having sent a pleasant visit with her sister, Mre. B Hetherington. Deseronto, Mavor F. Hugo, Watertown, N.Y. wax i1 Kineston on Friday, visiting his parents and his brother, Ex-Mayvor T. W. Huro of Duluth, Minn. ------ A Precious Vase. In the ancient cathedra! of Genoa a vase of immense value has been pre- served for six hundred vears. It je eut from a sincle omerald. [te principal diameter ix twelve and a half inchex and ite heicht five and three-quarter inches, It is kent under several looks, the keys of which are _ in different hands, find it is rarely exhibited in public, and only by an order of the senate, When exhibited, it is suspond- éd round the neck of a priest by a cord, and no one is allowed to touch it but him. It is claimed that this vase ix one: of the gifts which was made to Solomon by. the (Queen of Sheba. A London is suffering from a pla of. mosquitoes, 'Another American n ot PARKS OF LONDON $228,000 SPENT ANNUALLY IN LOOKING AFTER THEM. Lungs of London Controlled By City Touncil--3,000 Men Em- ployed--City's Gardens Com- pare With Any in Europe, The lungs of London are controlled in Part by the County Council and in part by the Office of Works. In the last offi- cial year ng Gardens was resgbns- ible tor open spaces, having a total extent of | ly 5,000 acres, and a per- manent outdoor staff of 900 men. Upon Jia department the annual expenditure reached about £128,000, and since the County Councli was formed, Af. teen years ago, it has spent rather more than.a million steriing upon this public servige. In addition to this there is the city's contribution of £100,000 a year towards the maintenance of Epping Forest, Burnbam Beeches, and else- where. It will thus be seen that the | maintenance of London's open spaces | Means an aggregate expense every year of at least a quarter of a million, while | employment is given to nearly three | thousand men. { Some of the showiest effects are pro- duced at a trifling cost. Thus the Lon- don County Council spends £500 on bulbs, and for this sun fbtains no few- er than 320,000 spring flowers. The bulbs are delivered by the contractors at the end of September, and the task of planting them is at once proceeded with. They represent 455 varieties, of which one-half comprise hyacinths, tu- lips, and crocuses. The most popular sorts In the three classes respectively are King of the Blues, Keizey's Kroon, and the Large Yellow crocus. The to- tal number of bulbs of all kinds planted In Battersea Park alone exceeds 40,000, At the end of the summer the annuals | are removed from the ground, cuttings are taken from them where they admit of this treatment, and the surplus plants are distributed to school! and poor citizens for window and backyard cultivation. For both the municipal and the. royal parks there are large pro- pagating grounds, where the seedlings and cuttings are carefully tended dur- ing the winter months, in readiness for bedding out in the spring. The days when the geranium and the calceolarin represented the extent of the Imagination of the public gardeners are over, and an enormous variety of plants is now rals with the result that London's gardens may compare with any In Buiope. For many a year the wonderful show seen along Park Lane and round the Ser pentine has been raised to a large extent under the sha- dow of Kensington Palace, In the greenhouses, of which the chief was planned out by Sir Christopher Wren. But Lord Windsor is now spending £12,000 upon new frame grounds near the Magazine, where the coaching clubs meet In the ses An interesting son. ature of the Kens. ington fiame-ground is the hospital In the early winter this is crowded with bananas, ins palmettas, fan palms, and other sub-tropical plants, which, In the early summer, are brought out into the open and give dis- tinetion to ce:tain corners of Hyde Park, or to the forecourt of the Na- tional Gallery Another important department con- sists of the conveniences for boating Since the beginning of the century the London County Council have taken over this section from the contractors, and have made an additional profit of £500 a year, although they have reduc. ed the hourly charge to the nimble six- pence, and have put a couple of motor boats into commission, with a charge of a penny for each voyage. That much work has to be undertaken in repairing and re-painting the row-boats will be understood when It 1s added that in Finsbury Park and Vietoria Park alone more than £200 is spent upon this ser vice during the winter. The care of the waterfow! also cecu- ples the attention of special keepers told off for that duty. The breeding- gounds have to be made ready, the due proportion of widgeon and cormor- ants, swans, and crested grebe, is main< tained by a system of exchange and purchase, and the ducklings receive special 'attention during frosty weeks, the result being that the lake life of the parks is brought up to a piteh of perfection, Many scores of attendants devote themselves to the task of preparing the cricket pitches, which naturally require a good deal of attention after the hard work of the football season. This is Another story; suffice it to say that Spring Gardens provides more than 300 reserved pitches, upon which 14,000 | matches are played during the summer, | Still another branch of activity com- | prises the arrangements for the bands of music, which cost the London Coun cil upwards of £10,000 every season. The first duty of the musical director as the: spring comes round 1s to listen to the bands who offer themselves to emiilate the work of the Council's own bands. The selected ones must submit | their pepertories, to his experienced | judgment, and the program for each of | the 1,200 performers has to pass the | scrutiny of the authorities before it 1s | printed. -------------- A Bit of Spiritualism. Archdeacon Colley, speaking at the | Spiritualists' Convention at South- | place, told some strange stories of al guardian spirit which had many times | befriended his son, an army officer. | The spirit occasionally materialized | itself In the shape of a white dove. | On _one occasion the office; found him- | self' "leviated" in an hour of special | need over a wall 6 feet high. Recently, | the archdeacon added, he received a letter from his son, now in India, in which he sajd that on a certain Sunday he had "a strange sensation of the number 237. 1 wonder If you preached that sermon." The archdeacon search- ed his catalogue of sermons, and found that on that particular Sunday he preached sermon "No, 237: Wings like a dove" -------- Only Four Unwed. Of Queen Victoria's 21 granddaugh- ters only four now remain unmarried. These are Princess Victoria of Eng- | land, Princess Beatrice of Saxe-Coburg, Princess Patricia of Connaught and | Princess Victoria of Sleswick-Holstein, An Anti-Climax." One of the best judicial utterances Is that ascribed to & rural justice of the | peace: "Prisoner, a vasion. J _"Frech Kisses," MoConkey's. 'Only | meantime, | yacht racing circles is one of absolute WILL BUILD BRITANNIA 1. His Majesty Again to Take Up Yacht Racing. For ten years past, remarks The Lon- don Standard, it has been the practice of those directly interested in the high- est developments of yacht racing in British waters to refer to the seasons In which the famous old Britannia Jed | the racing fleet round the coasts as ty- pifying the high-water mark of the sport in Britain. There is little doubt that the magnificent sport enjoyed dur. Ing these seasons owed much to the di- rect interest and participation of the then Prince of Wales, and there have been those who held stubbornly to the opinion that the keen and enthusiasm wo never be reached again unless the King returned to his first love among the sports, and en- rolled himself again among the racing owners. 'Whether the revival initiated so sno- cessfully this scason by Mr. RM. Young of the Nyria and Mr, Myles B. Kennedy of the White Heather, would have developed far enough in another season to have falsified this opinion remains an open question. In the the universal feeling In satisfaction that the matter has been put beyond doubt by the decision of His Majesty to hoist racing colors again to the truck of a first-class cut- ter. This decision--or, rather, the nego. tiations which preceded it--gave rise to a variety of rumors, mainly con- flicting, and wholly premature, and the result is that those who have fol- lowed the matter with the closest in- terest are most mystified as to' the exact position in which the matter now stands. It may now be stated that, although the negotiations have not reached the point at which the pro- posal to build becomes an actual con- tract, they have advanced so far as to put it beyond all reasonable doubt | that there will be a mew royal. cutter in the class which will lead the racing fleet through the regattas of next year In the lifetime of the late Mr. Geo. Lo Watson, the most eminent of British yacht designers, he was the authority to whom the King turned for expert advice on all matters pertaining to yachting, and the cutter Britannia, which he designed for the King when Prince of Wales, was easily the most consistently successful racer ever bufit in the first class. On the death of Mr. Watson, the business passed---undeyr the provisions of his will--to Mr. J, T. Bar- nett, his chilef draughtsman and assist- ant. It is with the same firm, there- fore, Messrs. Geo. L. Watson & Co, that His Majesty has been in negotia- tion for the buiMing of the new racer, and whether the new craft repeats all the success of her predecessor or not, there are circumstances which will mark her an. epoch-making vessel, The keenest desire of the framers of the new International rule of ating was that the change might db some- thing for the encouragement of inter. national sport among the yachting countries of Europe, and the fact that the first important racer to be bulit under that rule will be for the use of King Edward gives the best reason for belleving that this hope will be ful- filled. In the sketch plans Which have been made the definitions of the fram. ers of the new rule find definite ex- pression. Britannia IL, unless some great and unexpected alteration Ys made in the plans, will conform to the latest fashion in the bulllding of racers by avoidmg altogether the extremes which began creep in when designers were a little hard pressed to find a means of check- ing the victorious career of the pre- vious Britannia. On the measurements suggested she will rate so closely to the rating of the first-class cutters, Nyria and White Heather, that the measure- ment allowances due between them will be of a very trifling description. This goes with the spirit of the new rules; but even more valuable support to thelr provisions is the fact that the new vessel will be of exmctly the staunch and useful type which It is specially desired to cultivate, Thore will be nothing of the "freak" or of the extreme racingsmachine in the de~ sign. m---- London's Infant Slaughter, John Burns, the English Labor mem ber and Cabinet Minister, the sixteenth member of a family' of eighteen ehil- dren, nine of whom survived, sald to the national conference on infantile mortality in London: "1 belleve 1 am well withindthe mark when I say that there are roughly 100,- 000 lives sacrificed in some form or an- other every year, not to man's inhu- manity, but to neglect, carelessness, thoughtiessness and ignorance. It is pathetic to know that in some districts from 30 to 60 per cent. of the gotal chii- dren born din under five yeasts. Wealth has increased, but the infant has nos shared it. Physical comforts have In- creased, and yet the weakest) and the smallest bear an undue share of the burden of death. It seems as though material progress is hitting the child too hard." Affected the Verdict. .' "You see, gentlemen," sald the seoun- sel for the defendant complacently--it was a compensation case--"1 hav. ot the plaintiff into a very nice dilemma. If he went there seeing that the pace was dangerous, there was contributory negligence, and, as his lordship willitell you, he can't recover. If he did notesee it was dangerous, neither could my client have seen it, and tilsere was no negligence on his part. In either case I am entitled to your verdict." 'The Jury retired. "Well, gentbemen," said the foreman, "I think we must give him £300." All agreed except a stout, rud- dy gentleman in the corner, who cried hoarsely, "Give him another £050, gem~ men, for getting into the: dilemma!" Verdict accordingly.--London Graphic. i Kitchener's Sarcasm. During Lord Kitchener's recent wisit to the Indian frontier defences he Hn- spected a new fort, He was astonished to find that it had been so placed as to be commanded by a nearby hi". Tie officer who had chosen «the site was present with the panty, and Kitchener called\him forward. Instead of the oat burst that the staff expected Kitchener merely hdd out his hand and said: "1 congratulate you, Col. What a capital place for a fort! When do you begin to remove the hill? Some men don't want to talk ab ont justice after they get it. No advance in the price of shoes will keep men from kicking. The way to duplicate a fool is to interest' Underwear Most refreshing between-meal ger Brand" -- A little cup or two in the middle of the afternoon will rest and invigorate. Black, green, mixed--28e. to 81 & Ibi grooars beverage for men and pa bop er ---- pr BE ter é kets and | 'med with ur. Upholsterin Is a great fea- ture, as we do noth- staff, which is at your service. JAMES REID, The Fa ing but high-class work; as we do all our owir in Parlor Suits, Couches and Mattresses, We keep a "Phone 147 for the White Ambulance. a FINANCE AND INSURANCE yo i ostering Leading Undertaker F - CUSTOMS BROKER - The business of the late Cy GO. Oliver, will be carried pm in his office, 79 Clarence stress: G.A. BATEMAN ; Who for the ve years | } ' 3 bean asepciated with Mry Oliver. Money to Loan Mcintyre & McIntyre ©: BARRISTERS King Street : : : Kingston aah WHAT IS THE REASON ? Will Not Open North Manchuria Ports. London, Sept. 15. ~The Times cor- respondent at Tokio cables : The Ja: panese press compenis strongly on the fact) that, whereas six places in the oooyontion of Japan in South Man. churia have been opened, according to the Ching-Japan treaty, not one of ten places ocoupied by Russia in North Munchuria has been opened, though designated in the same treaty. - These ten places are all on or near the rivers Amur and Sungarin and are important trading centres, vet no Ja- Russia rr Alter Hall a Century Servide, Or Insurance, have oa © talle with George Zeigler, *®)" SATE ox | 67 Brock Street. ri FARMS FOR SALE ee Tang 0, Sr \ - list T. J. Lockhart to what vou theot, Woadstock, Ont., Sept. 15.--Rev, w. x NeMullon, one of the 8 widely known Presbyterian divines Canada, who for the past fort: years has been pastor of Knox chy in this city, has anhouncud thy will resign and retire Irom the p torship i Jocw as the matter can. arranged' by the Rresbiesy i -N vember next Dr. McMullen wu, 1 complited fifty years in the Prissy ian ministry, He is exmoderato the general assembly. EE panese subject has been allowed" tat set fooy there. : . ---------------- Another Consignment. i Of our popular $2 derbys have just! been received and will be opened ip | ready for to-night's selling at Carp bell Bros. the store ol vadnes in Prevost, Brock all bis fail and for order ro partibént, consi blue and black of | hliwk a spl