Gloves for } and ths . expert judge--or 5, to help you-- ation" in buying dt 5 on this ins' is sitikingly aminers are your glove go out if bout it. And if a --well, Perrins' d the buyer will sing 'grey, ity, with fine strong «ilk linings in tan, brown and black Tp J well finished, all" wan i, 1 1 - S1zes, per pair ....... . "and | Long Kid 6 an Sid Gloves, of good qualite well * finished, oo dis . lengths--8-button, in fawy corey, black, aud white, at 1-50. 12 hat. qual on, in black and white, ot | go. ahd 16-button, in black gen at 1.95; and 16-button, 2 in tan, black and white, at per pair nd Less one a beauty. per yard only able Plaid { fine quality, in the special, per yard only 75 and 9c. fine quality, true shades, special, LAIDLAW & SON re Gloves for Ladies iidre Chiidren iyone how much more comfortable er than the kids. If ll need a pair--and, nbroken, you'll be able me 1 Ladies' Knitted ith i plain shades, od and finished 25, 39 and ...... very fine Children's Mitts, in the well as | L - dv, 1 | each price, pair 13, 20 anc LAIDLAW & SON -- 00, , Neat Stockings e lines of stockings are made for boys and successfully work to supply the you money in the long run-- ng them ask to see and examine them it Stockings, 15, 18, 20 or 25¢. a ne, it Stockings, 33¢. a pair for the aller sizes, Stockings, the best to be had at ice, 35 to 4%. a pair--according a. To-morrow Regular 20c. 23c. for 10¢c. . A 4% yards only, in many ; different effects--every Widths from 33 to 5 inches regular prices of such qual- ities and designs, are actu- = ally 20c. and 25¢ See them in our win. dow. Promptly at 7.30 o'clock the sale begins-- lasting until all are sold. Your choice of 'the lot, fancy Ladies' Mocha Gloves, 10c. Silks Here zines and notice how often they're ill, see the large number that are being | you'll know better then, how stylish To-morrow we'll show thesé dis- true , . ou re going to y coming to- to please your- Gloves, as well as fancy mixtures, well sha x per Ladies" Black Winter Silk Gloves, of heavy warm silk mixture, with cashmere at 49¢., and strong dome fasteners at ...... .. Knitted plain Night wrists mixtures, thr prices--not all colors at Shough--- * DD Fall ESOd qual and The yard. clan 49 patr, Gloves and had shades: as quite 200 ons at Half-Price \d of Others Yourself the Best to you. Is on sale now that will « | our Men's Bargains at not ourselves buy the the carload. . © Hl broken up, best sizes I ends. a pair of shoes, have € past, or will likely to us, vy lem Over anyway Pr Te tt Shoe Store t i g hs future, it will certainly r + The Towa "YEAR 73. NO. 263. We Mean Business' E will ask for it, hunt for and get it, and when we get it we expeet to keep it. We go slow but we get their just the same. Have you tried our capacity yet to leasc--satisly and surprise ? f not, give us a call. Come once and You'll come back. They all do. . Robert |. Reid Furniture Dealer 230° & 230% Princess Street 6 Doors above the Opera House Telephone 577 Ambulance Call 577 ---- Queen's Football Excursion TORONTO Special Train G. T. R. 12.45 p.m. FRIDAY, NOV. 16th Tickets good to return by any train except No. 4, up Ae Monday might, Nov. 19th; Fare, $3.70 Return Auction Sale OF CATTLE, HAY AND STRAW The Property of William Duff will be sold, on Tuesday, Nov. 13th, at 1 o'clock 100 Tons of Hay will be sold at 2 o'clock. Terms--Under $10 cash, over that amount 13 months credit, at 6 per cent. by furnishing Epprovéd notes. WILLIAM: MURRAY, Auctioneer. ion Sal A a ges Sale of the Effects of the late R. J. Dunlop, Pittsburg, takes place on WEDNESDAY, Nov. 14th, everything goes. ' WM. MURRAY, r Auctioneer. Dissolution of Partnership -- THE = PARTNERSHIP HERETO- fore existing between tho undersigned under the mame of R. McMilian & Co. is this day dissolved by mutual consent. Dated, K on this 9th day of November, A.D., 1906. - (Sd.) R. McMILLAN. ¥ (Sd) FRANK BE. HARRISON, TAKE NOTICE For a Hall Stove, Parlor Stowe. Kitchen Range, or any other Stove come and gee me as I have the largest stock. 1" have ever had ; also a lot of Furniture apd Carpets. . Everything cheap. $ TURK'S SECOND lian STORE We Guarantee to Fit Your Feet! Durability and Style in Our ix ak: Wear: | Shoes Aiiews tMILITARY BOOTMAKERS 84 Brock- Street Boxing, Wrestling "and Development Athletic Clb will be opened raat Sign of Golden Boot CARY, winher of many hard fou battles, at 182 jis. Bouts will "he gut on Weekly. For particulars, those wish- once, to CARY, oin, write care Whi office, at ¥ 292 Jobbing Department. DAILY MEMORANDA. Nobhy New Hats® And fine Furs at Campbell Bros. Walerworks' Committee, 4 p.m, Moh- Zegphra rehearsals, and evening. The sun rises Sunday at 6.48 a.m. and sets at 4.39 pan. Royal Scottish Concert Co. House, Sunday, 8.18 p.m. Prof. Workman, Montreal, preaches in Old Convocation Hall, 8 g.m., Sunday. This day in history :--Livingstoen and Stanley met, 1871 : Kingston bombard- Monday afternoon Opera ¢d by Yankees, 1812. Martin Luther born, 1483. ---- WHIG TELEPHONES. 243--Business 229--Editorial [Bleu de Roi" NE Ae. The latest triumph in Ceramic Art A very handsome wide band, rich blue, speci- , ally adapted for Dinner Sets . Don't Fail to See it at Robertson Bros. HEADQUARTERS « In buying ordinary Furs you get something that even the man who sells them probably knows very little about, You're glso paying the profits of the skin dealer. The Commission man, The Jobber and the Retailer. On the otlier hand we give you the choicest selected specimen Furs, at Manufacturers prices and guaranteed in every respect. If you want the best you must come to the best store, never any question as to which that is. We have a magnificent collection of Sealskins, Persians, Russian and Hudson Bay Sable, Chin. chillas, Eastern Mink, etc. We invite you to call and ex-. amine our Skins and Models. JOHN McKAY FUR HOUSE 129-153 BROCK STREET KINGSTON Elspeth Mofiat's Home-Made Specialties ROBERT J. REID THE LEADING UNDERTAKER 'Phons §77, ° 227 Princess St. IMPORTANT y British Columbia A mated Coal Co's. Stock at . before the rise, Nov. 15th 10 50c. w 3 now may A JOS. ¥. SWIFT, ihe 2 TINANCIAL To Sever Relations. Madrid, Nov. '10.--The Imparcial Says it is reporied that the mincio will leave Madrid when the re- port en the associations' law kf sented tg the cortes! thus severilig re lations between the vatican Spain, i ---------- It's An Undisputed Fact. That the best 82 derbiés are sald at Campbell. Bros., the style centre in Kingston for men's hats. ; latest in plaid belts, 256. il iad d stock. New Chow Chow per bot 30 cents Onion Picciola per tle ts. Green Tomato Re per byttle 30 cents. Red Currant Jelly per pot 30 cents. z Crab Apple Jelly per pot 25 cents. Marmalade per pot 25 cents. Citron Preserves per pot 25 cents, Raspberry Preserves per pot 30 ts. James Redden & Co. The Home of Good Groceries Hunters Abound. Detroit, Nov, 10.---A Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, dispatch says there are 10,000 hunters in the woods of the upper peninsula waiting the open- ing the deer season to-day (Satur day), according to the estimates of the game warden's department. Do puties t every section filled. Five hundred ders. a day have crossed the straits the past week. Many are - Governor Wants A Reason, | Sandwich, Oat., Nov. 10.-- William Sparks, who has = been displaced as governor of the couniv jail \is nou satisfied with the way in which the government dispensed with his ser visge, aud Eaiimates he: will zesiat he ing removed until the = governmen gives a reason for his discharge. He says none has been given him. . Grapes, peats, "apples. Crawford. . i y In That Condition Over : Two Years. : ON THE STREET WHILE DE. SCENDING A TRAM CAR. ---- ¥ Scientists Are (Purzled--Subject Looks Like a Wax Figure, and Eats His Meals Regular- i! . Belin, Nov. 10.--German specialists In nervous diseuses are purzlod by the case of a man who thas been asleep for two years and four months. The man is a former civil serviee of- ficial named Arnheim. aged forty-five, living in Wilmersdorf, o western -sub- urb of Berlin. During two years and four months Arnheim has never once opened his eyes, never uttered a _ syllable, and never shown the least signs of con- sciousness, Before falling asleep Ariheim was o healthy, vigorous man without any {nossa} characteristics. It is stated owever, thay he belongs to a family whose members have shown a decided tendency t6 nervous disenses. Arnheim was descending rom a tram-car on June 10th, 1904, when he slipped" and fell backward, striking head on the curbstone. The doctors were unable to discover any injury to the brain, but from that moment Arnheim "showed an unconguerable de- sire to sleep. After slumbering with interruptions for ten' days, he fell asleep on June 20th, 1904, and has not been awake since, Arnhéim is lyine on his back in his bed in a modest flat at Wilmersdor!, his head turned slightly toward the right, and his forehead wrinkled as though the sleeper is troubled by bad dreams, ri He is not merely asleep, but 'in sueh a condition that his body remains in- different to all outside influcnce. All sorts of attempts have, been repented: ly made to "arouse him. Professor Eulenbere the eminent specialist, thus! describes this experiments 3 &kin has lost #ts. wen ss; deep needle pricks have not produced. the slightest effect, and other incisions in the flesh, paitful for normal beines, have not succeeded in awakening the sleeper. "Dealfening noises made elose to the ears have failed to arouse him, and dazzling licht turned on the eves has likewise been ineffoctual. "The sleeper is regularly fed; he chews the food placed in. his mouth slowly, and swallows instinctively." When Professor Eulenberg last vis ited Arnheim the patient's wife, remoy- ed him from the bed, clothed him and placed him in an armchair near the open window, "Thus I found him," say¢ Professor Eylenberg, "and I must sav he had a surprising avpearapee. The . chastly pale man' sitting -there with closed eves, had something uncanny about him. The sleeper reminded me irresisti- bly of those. wax ; figures placed in natural (positions"in wax-work shows to deceive the visitors into the belief that they are "real human beings." Professor Fulenberg considers that a sudden awakening is possible, Many medical experts have visited Arnheim and watched the sleeper for lengthy periods without coming to J ony definite conclusion as to the cause of his long sleep. Dead At Age Of 101. Malone, N.Y. Nov. 10.--James Brady, probably the oldest ex-solldier in the United States, died here, aged 101 years. 'He was born at Concord, Md., October 18th, 1805, and was fiftv-one years old when, in 1862, he enlisted as a private in company C., 118th-New York Volunteers. He was honorably mustered out of service nt Harper's Ferey, Va:, May 10th, 1865. The deceased had 'used' tobacco all his life. ' Declined Responsibility. Melbourne, Nov. }0.--Premier ' Dea- kin said to-day, Australia did not ac- cept any of the responsibility for the New Hebrides agreement, hut womld carry it out loyally and completely. At the same time he hoped that when the Panama canal was completed the Union Jack would t on all avail able paints in the Pacific. Decision Against Jury. Amsterdam, Nov. 10.-The Detch hiteot concerned have obtained unitedly a judoment against the de- cision of the jury respecting the award for the desiom of the Camegis Palace of Peace, on the grout the jurors violated the rules under which® the competition was organized. «. Seeking A Sea Route. St. Poterfhur- Nov. I0.--Jt is stated the ministey of marine is con- siderin~ the question of sending an expedition to seek a sea route . to Rehrin Straits, via the Arctic Ceean. Passed The Bill. London, Nov. 10.--The House of Commons, vesterday. passed the third reading of the Trades' Disputes' Bill without a division. 3 Buy Honor bright stove pipe varn- ish: the best yet, at Strachan's Ward- ---------- Bibby's for cardigan jackets, KINGSTON, ONTARIO, SATURDAY. WILL HAVE MUCH TO DO In Regard to the New British : Battleship. ' SIR JOIN DURSTON, London, Nov. 10,--Sir John stom, engineer-in-chicf of navy, is owe of t wders in the fight for a greatly increased soa fight- ing force for fiyeat Britain. He will have much to av reaarding the: new battleships to 'wo. built to eclipse the Dreadnaught. 1S A SOLEMN DUTY NOT TO REDUCE BRITAIN'S FIGHTING FORCE, But Hopeful That ' Dur- the English at 'a Later Date the People Can Look Back on These Times as Barbarism. and Wonder Over Waste of Millions. London, Nov. 10.--At the lord mayor's bandguet, last night, in the Guild Hall, responding to the toast, "The Imperial Services," War Sere tary Haldane . said he and the first lord of : the admiralty, Lord Tweed- mouth, realized it was a solemn duty on their part not to diminish the Spun 's fightin whit, t athe duty of "8 . Poo - ple, the speaker continued, fo set an example by reducing the expenditure for armaments, but unless they had a response from other nations this was imnossible. The 'speaker hoped the time would come when nations would loek back upon these days as a period of barbarism and wonder why they had spent millions in this man- ner. But until that time arrived it was in the interest of peace itself that no nation lot down its strength, and it was the duty of Great Britain to maintain its fighting efficiency. The Marvuis of Ripon revlied to the toast, "His*Majesty's Ministers." He expressed the covernment's satisfac tion that it had been able to con tinue the foreign policy of Lord Lans downe avd said he was glad to be able t8 declare, after consulation with Sir Edward Grev, that, at the pre sent, all indications pointed toward peace. 'We wish to be, and we he lisve we arc" said the margpis. "on friendly terms with all nations." PITH OF THE NEWS. The Very Latest Culled From All Over The World. The pope has decided to hold a ron sistory December 6th. Martha Doyle was acquitted of mur der at Morden, Man, During the last two months there have been S87 executions in Russia. Domestic science classes will be es tablished in Hamilton. ' Senator Forget is satisfied that James Ross is tryine to break up the Dominion Steel company. Governors of University of Toronto, have decided to establish faculty of education in the university. Several large © corporations in the United Stats have given all round in creases of sulary to their employees An election for the Philippine as sombly is to be held. on July 1st, 1907, providing there i8 no insurree- tion in. the meantime. Gepergl 1, Yon Moltke, champion of the kaiser's gubmosed reactionary. poli- ev, is mentioned as likely to suciced Chancellor Von Buelow, A Now. York capitalist has a scheme for improving the navigation of the Richelicn river, which includes a can two more schools at '1 al from Chambly te Longueuil, Dr. Torrey will not ga to Hamilton in January. The drill hall carnot be sceured and the famous evangelist de clines to mrénch in the churches. Capt. Griffin, of the steamer Prig cess Victoria, which ran down a ferrv steamer near Vancouver, has been ae quitted of the charge of manslnugh- for. There ix» renoft at Quebes that Hon. J. Adelard Turgeon will go in to the senate as successor to Senator Bolder, who becomes sheriff of Que bee City, A New York man, in St. Peters buro, for the purpose of stadving trades unionism there} was arrested vesterday. and held by the police for several hours. The minister of militia ddthorizes the announcement that thére is ne frundation for the rdport that there is to be an exchange of British and Congdipn ragtmite. If is beine § "on good authority that the Won. Charles Fitrpatrick will in a short time resion the 'office of chief justice, to moesnt a position as ey Bibby's working mitfs, adviser to the Grand Trak Pacifie. NOVEMBER 10, Perpetrated In. A Man- chester Centre. . GOLD PILES TAKEN THE POST OFFICE WAS HELD 'UP. Not a Word 'Spoken--Robber 'Covers Postmaster With Re- volver and Coolly Helps Him- self to Cash. Manchester, Nov, 10.--A post office situated in one of the busiest thor- oughfares of Manchester, has been "held up' by an armed robber, wha, nofwithstanding the presence of = six persons, got safely away with about $400 in gold. It was a quarter to eight last Wight that ¥. J. Smith, postmaster of the Knott Mill branch office in Deansgate, began to balance up his cash. He had counted out several piles of sovereigns when a man entered the door and walked quitkly to the counter where Mr. Smith was standing. On looking up, Mr. Smith found himself staring down the barrel of a revolver. Not a word" was spoken by either man. Smith was rendered inert and struck dumb with amazement, The robber held the revolver in his left hand, With his right be clutched two of the piles of gold--$100 each-- which he put into his overcoat pocket. Again he nimbly snatched two other piles; transferring the money tp his pocket. And still no word had been uttered, In the office during this strange scene were three women clerks and two telegraph messenger boys, all of whom were apparently bereft of the power of speech, The man, who never for instant took his eyes' off ' Mr, Smith, still covered him with the as he backed to the door, when, with a final sweep of the weapon, he turned and was seen no more, The whale. incident did not last a minute, and not a single sound of alarm was uttered hy any one. standing together at the counter, which joins and rune at right angles to tho one at which Mr. Smith 'was counting the money, The women did not realize the situ- ation, though tney knew something unusual had=happened when they saw the man walking out of the office backward holding a revolver in fropt of him. One of the messenger boys ac- tually saw the man pocket the gold, and after he had gone the lad picked up three or four sovereigns which had dropped on the floor. At the moment of the robbery a policeman was standing outside in the slreet, which at this point is brilliant- Iv livchted, "within twenty yards of the office. The thief is described as a man about thirtvfive vears of age, clean shaven, eather tall, and wearing a black. bowler hat and dark overeont What ovidegee there is points to the robbery ine cleverly conerived, Either the regulations of the post of fice. ahont making up the cash night. Iv were known to the robber, or else he had systematically watched Mr, Smith counting the cash at the corner of his: desk. . Many Want Remission. Windsor, Ont, Nov. 10.---Following th: decision of the court of revision sustaining the appeal of George Scott, an employee of the Michigan Central railway against his assessment for income tax, on the ground that. wages by the day do not constitute an in come, an application will be made to the city council for. the gemission of the income tax assessed against about three hundred employees of the differ- ent railvays here. The railway men allege they were -unjustly assessed; as they are paid only by the day. The Seottr case .was brought as a test. To Be Acting Ambassador. London, Noy. 10.~Esme Howard, British consul-general at the sland of Crete, has been appointed to the re- cently ecredted position of éouncillor of the British embassy at Washington, and will be acting-ambassador during the interim pending the appointment of amucccssor to Sir Henry Mortimer Durand. King Of The Congo Brussels, Nov. 10.---Prince Albert, of Flanders, nephew of King Leopold, of- ficiglly declared the successor of the king as sovereign of the Congo Inde- pendent state. This puts an end to the controversy over the political sta- tus of the independent state in the event that Belgium does not annex it. Church To Raise A Million. Syracuse, N.Y., Nov. 10.~The hoard of church extension of the M. E. church, which convensd in this city, | decided to raise $1,000,000 next year. Of this amount $780,000 will be used for home mission work, and $250,000 for church expansion. Henry Norman Knighted. London, Nov. 10.--Amonr the king's Birthday honors is a kmichtheod to Henry Norman, the distinguished jour- nolist and member of parliament. Give your eyes satisfaction by hav- ing thont fitted with glasses at Chown's slvug store, New neckwear at Ribby's. a ae austbinett J of , which is fitted w i % two vides: The "| of smoke. ' Murray Township Boy's Breast Torn Away, ; Belleville, Omt., Nov. 10.--A fourteen . vears of age named son of John Lake, township of Mur ray, met with an accident that may possibly cause death. The V was handling a gun, when it exploded, and he ved the full foroe of the chasge in his breast, which was literally torn away. His chances recovery gre shim, < > 1 Wrestling Matches In Montréal. Montreal, Nov. = 10.-Steurs apd Pietro won their matches, IaSft night, ot Sohmer Park, after i t bouts, the excitemiént ing intense during the Pietro and Maupas match, and a' good deal of feeling being shown by the public against the onne. Steurs wrestled four 'men, managing MINING TROUBLES DISPOSING OF SHARES, + Mine Concerned is Well-Known Cobalt Property -- A South: African Veteran Charged With House-Breaking in End of Toronto. Toronto, Now. West- uit injunction ¥, at noon, by against H. C. Barber broker of Toronto, the Canada M latter company is also restrained transferring any from shares of ite capital | stock to Barber. o The Abitibi mine is a well-known property in Cobalt. : A South African veteran is in the grip of the law underra charee of housobjeoking in the west end of Toronto. He is Christopher Seymour, and was caught, last , after a diligent watch of the police. A lot of house-breaking has heen on in the west end lately, and Seymour is supposed to be the guilty man. was remanded for a week, in lolice. court, this moming. the Instantly Killed. 3 Canora, Sask., Nov. 10.--~The four. year-old son of P. Raglun, sections foreman. while with some other boys in a neighbor's housé, was shot and almost instantly killed by a loaded gun which had been left in a corner of the room. The children were playing with the weapon when it was i charged, the contents entering the boy's stomach. : A Railway Disaster. Cincinnati, 0., Nov. 10.-- Passenger train No. 5, on the Baltimore & Ohio Southwestern railway, is reported, wrecked at Pleasant - Plains, about thirty miles from Cincinnati. One person is reported killed and many injured, Cause as yet is un Ohio, - Died At Palmerston. Pabnerston, Ont., Nov. 10.--Rev. J. M, Aull, pastor of the Presbyterian church here, for the past twenty-five! years, who was token ill with con- gestion of the bowls a. week age, died today, aged seventy-two, A widow and two grown-up daughters survive him, : To Build An Hospital. Regina, Sask., Nov. 10.--At a meet ing of the hospital directors, held last. night, it was decided to anvroach the city council to have a bydaw present ed authorizing the building of a muni- cipal hospi to cost $100,000, Movements Of Vessels. _ Father Point, $8. CoRR line, trom $ristol, joward, 6:15 a.m; Sa koto, Elder line, from Mexico and West Indies, inward, 6:50, a.m. ag "Lady Curzon" and "Lady Ruby bias. filled corsets, sold at New York! Tires' 3 Table Pears, green or blue grapes, one baskets apples, oll Minder Ty, Crawford. Tooke's collars at Bibby's. Opera. House Sunday Evening, Sacred Concert By the Royal Scottish Concert Company. The programme: will | The Company is Simply. Grand. to throw them after fifty-five 'minutes |, AN INJUNCTION TO PREVENT | spear |, 4 $a in 3 nck © hanging ar # WAAAY New Roman Strips Belts, 3 Ss ile they last 500 ce 5 Call TO. SRRo and ses hb he TILTON. ~ln Kingston, on 1904, pr RR ooighas ol" ie. Funeral Sy of the late slob Gullivan, aged sie rungral wil take blace at 9 am oo They em rosie mas Wil 1 CUMMINGS Lad K . on Friday, Nor ve Goo. 8: Carmine TH w Funeral w o'clock ay ABERNETHY November Took: