v is s keen pleasure in 'and SHAPELY. ir ONE DOLLAR A i {lege in continued pending the develop. | Yio" Lis held and the reputation for probity fre But i upon it | The city council will meet on Mon Firanapires that a must be day evening and proceed to the erected and equipped, and the World | selection of a city clerk, probably egged on to Tel the pub- 2 : : The Forester, (the official organ of It ix suowostod that the city nods [the LOF), is strangely silent a new high school, a Mth, and that 8bout the insurance investigation. the government shoukl provide it, |This is remarkable, This, in irefosches Big any i Mr. Foster was terribly anxious: to Ee weed for educational | 11 What he knew about the land deals. And he has not improved his reputation as a consequence. Of the 885,000 which was handed back to Mr. Fowler hy Mr. Ryan, in the lumber deal, Me, Borden got 8100; What Borden was. this ? 'which [would be worth sonwthing, the city should erect the new school and the government should maintain and run it "A government school with a special foo and proper sipment," says the World, "can bs made almost -- ory "wholly sell-spporting. A city | Hamilton has the power of produe- school cannot. Then is it not a ~ood | ing three long distance champion run bargain on both sides for the city to | ers, and possessing the worst street provide the expenditure on capital ac- railway outfit in Canada. ways | FL c-- td id Su a ot Ne The U.S, federal government is at vince saves the initial outlay and the | '*mpting, by legal proceedings, to dis. city is relieved of the subsequent an- | *olve- the Standard Oil trust. Upon nual cost. The province can recoup | the result depends every trust in ex- ftsell by running the institution on iWtemce, has absoly A yuinaiples, amd fu The federal 'government may be cantrol of pedagogical suffering in Ontario for the indiscre- : : tions of those members of the gov- he Bie fon oe . y the 'ernment who hail from the other pro- Hand people Ir ok " ment of Toronto's plans, Hamilton has an institute in the same building with the college nnd they work har! moniously in every particular. The idea ' of building a new school in Toronto was tot projected, but everything goes when the experts get into action. AE Ret * Public Nen Did Wrong. } Webster, the revolting fishery clerk, being now whitewashed is eligible for election to the best place in the gift of the government. He served his masters well, ---- The Montreal Gazotte thinks the [Bast Elgin election is n condemnation « lol the liberal scandals. Likewise it is a condemnation of the conservative RL, Bicdun 1s y. apple arid | Soandals. Or an. approval of ; them, Judgment to avoid the meshes which | en? -- [his aides in parliament would lay for | A conservative paper heads 's report him. The temptation to join in a of the royal commission, thus: "Mr. scheme which' promised large rewards Foster free and above board. His wan very great, The men who had at- (dealings in western lands perfectly tended him on his western tour had legitimate." You pay your money and roccived valuable tips from a reliable (you take your choice. wource, and the way was open for | ¢ tamer him to enter into a most profitable | You romember Mr. Wobster who as a J speculation, and he firmly declined it. clerk in the fishery department bf On- All honor to him in a decision which tario, was guilty of insubordination, ided tem in which he He was lafer the chief witness against has 8 0. Shy wo hh Mf Bastedo. Now the government : i » eriti- | finds that he is not guilty of any ha eriti- ) any hich rs Yen -- int ! wrong-doing. He merited decapitation. y » ¥ . because he did not repudiate the men | SPIRIT OF THE PRESS. who would drag him down to their { -- level, There is no doubt that they did | A Suggested Cure. a great wrong in seeking favours from tO ear. could oh oa t 3 ig would much les Nr. Mann and Sir Thomas Shaugh- ! sen the circulation of ten-dollar bills nessy, of the Canadian Northern and in London elections. C.P.R. and in putting themselves at | -- the disposition of the great corpora: | Libel On Kingston. {tions when they sought favours from Montreal Herald. SIA HINER & GESTERRE 100 Friscess St. thai as ; yo} ingstonians must write a very park 14 wana great concession Goarée hand," remarked the idiot, € {on the part of Mr. Mann to give to 'they use such a big pen down ] the speculators the line of route so there, it ; that they could select the land ae- : > late to cut adrift 'I new national party and does not pro: Jpose. that. Mr. Borden shall be its Likes To Be Poor. Ottawa Free Press. on, George E. Foster says he has rates. It ended become a poor man through polities. If thix be so, the wonder is that he desired to remain in politics so long. cordingly, and a great advantage on! the part of Sir Thomas to give them ! 'this land at bargain their independence ' on parliament, however. They were sold to the rail way magnates at once and forever, It is on this account that the Telogram thinks Mr, Borden should | havo d ged the, act, alleging that it put them in the position of a judge om the bench who fakes gifts , Ruin," from a litigant whose case he will | ----- have to decide, It may not be tos mba Value Of A Name, ! from the friiers, Hon. Gear k. Foster says he & a th the Telegram's idea in replace | poor man. Sha espeire would J have ---- Lofurgy with Mr. Maclean will agreed with him. "Hp who filehe®Trom 3 me my good name robs me of that hot do since the World man wants a which [, . leaves me poor indeed." i : Locating The Bacillus. Toronto Glove. An inoculation ward is evidently needed in the London hospital. Re- search work should be begun for the bacillus that causes "the itohing The Great Offenders. Peterhoro Examiner. + So long as the politicians are per y ; . mitted to exploit the funds of a great : The Result Is Local. | benevolent order to make themselves pores with "rich, how, asks the Stratford Beacon, Thets. Ste. Tatioun. they : a i | can the enuntry hope to provent the an -- EN el Jerry Collinsés buying and silling at wi h issue © votes? | Beople ? The tariff, the salary grab or [{ the virtues of the government? All | thse had in "airing incidentally, but leader, ! -- The Original Corn Cure. No substitute has ever heen devised j that gives the quick, painless results of y ixtractor, For 1 been un. thorgugh street, has received | winter importations his tailoring ot, Brock oF an and for order work in sell lized cave, while the tempest raged. missioners oroanized. the didate day change Mr. Millburn had imeell ; 3.The tchers of blame. The limelight is on a man who he oy Ah Flite Tho seen public favours, and he cannot hoard Antertuisied walk circumapectly, Even then he t the Campbell house. will. a without cause. en Mighly delighted with the The delegted = liberal, Mr. Haight, seh vi and the equipment in has no cause to feel disturbed over his ari eho ell, Intely of the in Lawra Mitchell, 3 2 "experience. He ra lephorie company, = Napanee, i uried on September 21st, at .. to R. E. Thompson, t of er Fast, Henderson, an old and re- resident of Napanee for many years, is at ent very jill. . MP. Sywdngton, who spent the st three months in Scotland and ps Agland, arrived home on Thurmlay. W. A. Rockwell, Welling. ton, is spending a few davs in Nav panes. Dani dl Purdy and bride spent a few days, this week, with friends in Napanee. / . and Mes. W. ( . Bruton and fam- to Namanee "after several years' sojougn in Torento. They will np a fruit and confee tionery in "the Wilson block, Dundas street. W. F. Hall leaves, to- day, for Winmipeg to spend a few weeks. His son, G. E. Hall, Mon- treal, accompanies him. Mr. and Mrs. George A. Cliff Lit; A onday, for New a coed Mee James Mrs, Irvine Van alstine returned, vesterday, from Chi cago, where they were visiting their son, Dr. E. Vanulstine. Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Davey lft this week for Winnipeg, Man. where they will re side. "THE HAYSTACK MEETING." sionary Enterprise. Henry R. ElHott in the Century. . ¢ 5 Just one hundred years ago this summer, probably in August, a group of Wilhams' ~ College students took the step which by common consent, marks the creation of the foreign mis- sionaty movement in this country. This is the centennial summer of "Ihe Haystack Meeting,". which the whole 'Christian world is about to celebrate as one What has invested r this prayer meeting with such vast importance ? Not circumstances, certainly which were these : Five country boys, students at Wil liams College, got in the way of mest ing frequently for religious conversa- | tion and prayer. They were studying | geography, among other branches of learning, and ope tradition has it that out 'of Ulieir interest in this study was born a profound compas- sion for the great unknown heathen | world, the very territory of which was only a blank area on the | | map, | Geography, as studied at Williams in 1506, was a very different thing from geogra, to-day knows it, The lending Epirit in this group was phy as the schoolboy of | | | a youth just entering college from | Torrington, Conn., named Samuel J. | ills. Even as a lad he had been | touched by the heroine quality in the | missionary work of Elliot and Brain- erd among the wild tribes that si) swarmed in the American forests, and it was with a well-defined purpose in his own mind to devote his life to world-wide missions that he went up | to college for fuller preparation. * 3 The five boys held their prayer | mectings in their. rooms at college or | in the adjacent woods, and the call | to sesfice in heathen lands was the | prevailing topic of thought. While thus | enga , in a maple grove near the college, on a mid-summer's afternoon in 1806, a thunder storm burst, upon them, and. théy hurried for | shelter to a haystack in a nearby | clearing. Burrowing under its | tecting slopes the five students tinued their services in suddenly | con, | this extempor- | During the shower, Millis urged his | associates to a decision that the time | was ripe for an attack on the heathen | Peoples of Asia, and called upon them for personal enlistment in the cause. One of the group contended | that such a movement, in advance of 1 the military conquest of Asia by Christian armies, would be Prematu But the eloquence of Mills prevail "We can do it # we will," ed, uttering the now famous watch- word of the missionary world, and in a rapt prayer of consecration, amid the peals of thunder and flashes of | lightning, he commitged = himself and | company to the mission cause. Presently the skies cleared, the rain re. | rq ed. | : he exclaim- not move so quickly a cen- tury aco. but in 1808 a secret society Was organized in one of the college Raf a result of the meetings | sthadily continued durine the "two | years, the members of which nledeed | themselves to the mission cause Tn 1810. Mills was graduated Williams. and went to Andgver Theo- logical Seminary to prenare himself for missionary labors. Here he. met the three njoneer 'missionaries to Axia, Newell. Nott apd Judson. He offered himsilf to the churches at the same time. but in the judement of - friends it was thouoht best for him to remain at home and enlist the churches in the support of those who went. And thus it may be mid that the first mission ary ¥ in America began, since, it was larwele on acount of Mills' of forts that the American board of com- 8 for foreign missions was from How far the havstack nraver meet- ing was an intitiatin~ ting mao Definite Beginning of Foreign Mis- | September | the most memorable dates | 1 in history, 4 shel. which | with the pads made of dimity or of { with indelible ink | that they are kept together and meet | priest Pheautiful marble to demote strength?' OCTOBER 6. EE ---- whether the ace Bukes-the man ar the man makes the ave: What is cértain 4 publis, to Samuel J. Mills #tack prayer meetine is attributed, #0 far as human enervv «oes the de- '| finite berinning®of the foreign mid- sionary enterprise in this country, --------------n GANANOQUE NEWS. . A Barn Burned--O.P:R. Engineer Wi in Town. Gananoque, Oct, 6.--Yesterday mormn- ing W. No Rogers' boil in the rear of his dwelling, corner King and William stroets, caught fire. As the blaze had gained considerable headway all that the brigade could do was to prevent its spreading, which was accomplish- ed. Cause of fire unknown. Building and contents were total loss; par- tially covered by insurance. Engineer Ardagh, who is-in--theem= ploy of the UC.P.R. locating the mew route, is in town for a few days. Keen interest is taken by merchants, manufacturers andthe general public with the hope that the town may he among the fortunate localitipe, S 'Dr. Daniel O'Gorman, of St. Louis, Mo., is in town for a short tinie, hav ing, come over to attend his bro" ther's funeral, Mrs. O'Callahan, sister of the late Father O'Gorman, who, is a resident in Boston, was also in attendance, *Rev. Father Walsh, of Providence, RI., was in town in at tendance at the funeral. Z. Prevost, of Kingston, spefit yos- terday in town. Adjutant Sims, of the Salvation Army, Kingston, was in town yesterday, and acted as chair- man at the lecture in the Salvation Army barracks last evening. Mr. and Mrs. William Stafford, King street, are spending 'a short holiday wenson with relatives in New York. Harold Ryan, son of Mr. and Mrs. (Chief) Ryan, Princess street, is spending the 'week with friends in Toronto. Mrs, Horace Griffin, King street, who has been spending the past month with relatives in Douglas, Man., turned home yesterday. Ryan, Princess street, is - visiting friends 'in Rochester, N.Y. Mr. and Mrs. James Taylor, Stone street, who have heen spending the past weck with their daughter, Mrs. (Dr) Spence, of Brooklyn, N.Y., have re- turned home, re Miss Myrtle The Linen Closet. The "woman who ean get a whols closet aside for her linens and Cun {have that closet' shelvéd to her fancy in a fortunate individval, indeed, for there's never a woman living who doesn't like linens kept just so. Fach kind should have its separate should be covered with paper, or, better still clean, white jcheese cloth, lined with perfumed wal ding. Lavender is the most pleasant perfume to use for linens, especially the lavender flowers, sprinkled thickly in the padding and perhaps sewed up in little flat bags as well, which are laid here and there among pillow cases and. sheets. No other perfume has quite so clean and fresh:a quality about it for the purpose. Sheets and pillow cases alike should he marked (unless you prefer to embroider everything), givine each set some distinguishing "mark, so the same A change allowance, amount of wear and tear. for each bed is the usual ---- Edison's Latest Discovery. Thomas A. Edison's latest discovery appened to be in the realm of esthe ties and criticism. "A few years ago," he said the other day, "when the talking machine business was still a dubious provosition, a list of new records was often handed me for ap provpl. After hearing them 1 would id 'Goodl," "Fair," or 'Rotten' against the compositions so as to class them for the trade. The 'rotten' ecords always made a hit with the public." Why Onyx ? An Irishman took his haby to the to have him christened, The priest asked the name, and the father replied." Onyx." The priest reniarked that it was a beautiful pame. "I christened your little girl Lillie, as she was so fair," he said. "I sow pose von name the bov Onyx after the "No," sail the Irishman, "we" are going to call Lim Onyx because he was on-expected."' ------------------------ New sweaters at Bibby's, Buy Bu-Ju Kidney Pills at Gibson's Red Crass Drue Store. Fresh theres Herr Joseph Ronchett, of Ornavasse, near Novara, is said to be the sessor of the biggest beard in Eur It is nearly six feet long. Not Sick but "Tired | and Weak . You do net like to think that are sick, but you lack the snap vigor of other times, Not only are You weak bodily, but the vital or gans are also slow amd uneert: in in action. The heart is weak, digestion is imperfect, the liver is torpird, the bowels sluggish, and the system run down in a genoral way. What you need to start you on the way to health is a restorative, such as Dr. Chase's Norve Food, to form new, rich blood, jo increase the amount of nerve force, and instil new vigor into the whole body. It is marvellous what this food cure will do for a run-dow: pos- ope. you and great n hu: man system, and what it does is not in the way of temporary assistance, but rather of certain and lasting bene ause it actunlly build up the system. " Note your increase in weight while | using Dr.: Chase's Nerve Food, 50 cents, 6 boxes for £2.50, at all deal ers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., 'To- ranto.- net. Pure salt is ju#t as important as pure or pure'milk, TABLE SALT is that by the common consent of the intes. at the hay = Announcing the Arriva] of our Nobby Clothing Hats and Toggery A . Pleasant weather may still linger, but Jack Frost lurks around the corner ready to pounce upon 'you at any time. SRE ; : : We're ready for the 'new season with everything your wardrobe will require. New French' Back Suits, in latest fabric $10, 12 50, 14, 15 to 18 50. New Owercoats, French B ick, Paletot, Paddock and Bannerman, $12, 14 50, 15.00 to 20.00. Boy%s-Suits and Qvercoats, $4.50, 5.00, 6.50, 7 50 to 10.00. New Hats New Gloves New Shirts The H. D. Bibby Co. THE MEN'S WEAR STORE 78-82 PRINCESS 81, FOR THE AFTERN OON AT HOME fragrant, aromatie Tea is the must delicions-- Blue Ribbon Tea has no rival in health giving flavor. It!€timulates the enervated and is a wholesome tonic! . for all. Black, green, mixed --25¢. to $1 a Ib. All grocers' THE 201 CENTURY TREATMENT, The source of all Power, The Founiain of Youth, ecm o> . The result of 50 yenrs of scientific research, Lost manhood brought back after years of weakness and despair, Nature's Secret restored by combining three of the rarest chemical reagents in the world, This if no experiment. itis proved by its use in the Hospital ? of Curore. Tens of thousands of weak and hopelesd i. cascs cured by 30 days treatment. This is a fact] Prove it yourse!f by atest. AS days treatment with full particulars sent absolutely free: 'All packages are carefully sealed ina plain wrapper with no mark, A full 30 days treatment (18 doses) wih guaranteed cure or refund of money, for $3.00. imonials received wiihin the last twelve months, m MONTREAL ratories of Dr. Send for sworn Canadian test De. KCHR MEDICINE GO. P.O. Drawer 2341. HINARI Mawiessceton dosmsamreny STYLISH .SHOES.. Style is not ever shoe style without q ything that should be in a uality is of little or no use. Even style and quality are not the height of good shoe making --a shoe should be made to fit comfortable. These are the particular features of oar shoes. We can give you style, fit and quali- ty at almost any price We recommend the In- Victus Shoes for men, women and boys. Invictus 'Shoes : SELL FOR $3.50, 3.75 and 4:00 for Women ;$4.00,. 4.50 and 5.00 for Men $3.50 for Boys tn SOLD. AT ABERNETHY'S ROBABLY every cas fion begins with a col Consumption is gener: a hereditary disease, bu! is not hereditary. A constitutional weakn which renders one liabl tion. Even people who have may aequire consumptio Mrs, Addie Harding, 13 Ave, Syracuse, N. Y.,, wi "T have been a user of | last twelve years and « say that there is'no bette earth. "With me it is a cure p cald othe hon be of Peruna. Two or three am troubled with my th "1 always had to have my physician two or thre case. "Although a user of P thought of taking it for r about two years ago. "I tried Peruna to chec grest delight 1 was not the smothered and chok never have since. "I can cheek Peruna. «I certainly "vomld no Peruna one minute," "A SURE PREVENTATIVE." it eve I VERY STYLISH TW with velvet collai full length pleats very special, $9 u o GANONG' THE FI