ANT TO WwW YOU al $12.50 or English ncoats. Our New Fall Suits. Single and Double Breasted Styles; $12, $15 and $18. Our New Fall ~ _Qwercoats Short Medium and Long Lengths $8, $10, $12 and $15. < E4600 0000006050000 000000 A Perfect Beauty, for $15, made of fine Black Cheviot, Silk Faced and Handsomely Tailored. Our Great $2.00 English Hats. . BIBBY GO. BLE CLOTHIERS. Cost Less than Stoves A Hecla Furnace, installed on Hecla principles, will keep your house comfortable throughout the winter at less fuel expense than it would cost you for stoves. It is the old story, of course, of concentration meaning Hecla, you get all the heat from the coal where you want it. The whole house and evenly heated and ventilated. a Furnaces severe weather--always ready for any are the only hot air furnaces that are the Fused Joints that patented feature of of gas, dust or, smoke into the house an out these Fused Joints and about other will be interested. write * Clare's Furnace Builder Ak Sad Cnc Hider Limited, Preston, Ont. s: ELLIOTT BROS. " Japan Tea ww ality : The very best! Ww W om your dealer, 'S. A LB. ITED, Wholesale Teas, Coff 'ees, Spices, 'AUL 8T., MONTREAL, Canada. ww ct ¢ Y OPENING. Be sure to visit Our Millinery Rooms these days. A sight of all the pretty things will repay you for any trouble you may have in getting down town. Hats to suit everyone; and by leaving your order now you will be sure to have your hat just when you want it, All Our Fall and Winter Goats, Skirts and Furs are here now, and while em to you. Cash Couyo is. N J >yY Bros. NY YeRYRYe ¥ A TIME OF PAIN AND PERIL Miss Emma Cole Says that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound | Saved Her Lio an8l Made Her Weir How many lives of beautiful yo girls have been sacrificed just oy were ripening into womanhood! How many irregularities or displacements have been developed at this important period, resulting in years of suffering ! » | Miss Emma Cole \ A mother should come to her child's aid at his critical time and-remember that Lydia E~- Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will prepare the fae for | CRISIS OF GIALKODD | i (Seeettceeseesesaeeeses i Gold in - Guwilight { FIIIIININIIINEIINNNNN { Mrs. E. T. Taylor gave a tea on {Saturday at the R. M. C. com {mandant's residence, in honor of Mr. | Kenneth Blair's English bride, and it | was very enjoyable. It was chiefly a {military afiair. Among the guests in- |vited were the Dean of Ontario and | Mrs, J. Le Farthing, Canon (Starr gnd Mrs, Ladd, Colonel and IMs. W. D. Gordon, Colonel and Mrs. | R. Kent, Major and Mrs. F, D. f Lafiorty, Major and Mrs. Norman Stuart Leslie, Colonel and Mrs. F. Strange, Mr. and Mrs. Iva Martin, | Mr. and Mrs. John Bell Carruthers, | Mrs. Francis Macnee, anid Miss Mary | Hora, : | - _. WTR fe ere have been several little teas | this week, particular notice of which | is not given, by special request. : . - Mrs. W. G. Craig, West street, gave a tea, this afternoon, when her guests {had the pleasure of seeing Mrs, Mac | Kerras" lovely wedding gifts. Pf ee ey I'ie most enthusiastic members of the coming chauge and start this trying | the. Sketch Club held a picnic at the period in a young girl's life without Bin or irreguldrities. weer 3 Miss Emma Cole of Tullahoma, Tenn., writes ; Dear Mrs, Pinkham: "1 want to tell you that I am enjoying bet ter health than I have for years, and I owe | it all to Lydia E. Pinkbam's Vegetahle Com: pound. © "When fourteen years of age I suffered al most constant -pain, and for two or three years, I had soreness and pain in my side, doctors all failed to help me. "Lydia E. Pidkham's Vegetable Compound was recommended, and after taking it my health begin to improve rapidly, Rr think its 1 my life. J sincerely hope my experi ence will be a help to other girls who are | pusiog from girlhood to womanhood, for know yout Compound-will do as much for them." If you know of any young girl who ie gick and needs motherly advice ask her to write Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., and ghe will receive free advice which will Ju her on the right road to a gtrong, yealthy and happy.womanhood. Mrs Pinkham is daughter-in-law "of Lydia E. Pinkham and for twenty-five years has been rd vising sick women free of charge ee ---------------------- *To-daytime's Best. T. A. Daly in Catholic Standard. Po-daytime is the time for me Jo walk and grow and play I wish To-day could always be Amd pever go away ) and so wide, ar, beside are ; 1 tooken me in a tra IL followed every place that we Was at. and home again To-nighttime don't go anywheres, Instead t stays upstairs, wy little 10d One time see To-nighttime there Because 1 had wu pain, And. Ma she rocked mé in a chair Pill 1'm asleep aga n And when 1 waked again and spied To-daytime here once nore; Fo-nighttime runnad away to hide Behind the eloset door. Ma savs To-nighttime gives her rest, It keeps so quiet and still, And so she likes To-nighttime best, will In Warm Weather s as delicious as a fresh and as soothing as can be Vinol orang to the weak, irritable stomach. It coaxes back lost appetite, improves digestion and creates strength throughout the whole system. We strongly recomme wl Vinol to all who are Xveak and rn-down from any cause,-- particularly to delicate women and children, old people and for those who have pulmonary toubles. Money back if you try Vinol and are not satisfied. GEORGE W. MAHOOD, DRUGGIST. Maypole ! a cake of soap that dyesand washes at the same A household world in England. No mess, no trouble, no uncertain results, The tired women's best {riend--an Economical Home Dye. no streaks, MAYPOLE SOAP ©8 00. for Colors--15¢. for Black, Frank L. Benedict & Co., Montreal, 0000006000060 0¢ The Ingredients of utoo One ingredient is soda -just old-fash- ioned soda, that our grandinothers took to settle the stomach, and there is noth- ing better. Among the other ingredients there is | Mr not one that didnot come from old Moth- lie here for his er Earth herself. There'is not one that isnot approved j,,5 returped from Detroit, the British and American lj. very pleasant visit. » by both an Pharmacopceias,--the highest authorities in the world. medical There is not one that your family phy- The 1 friend, would sician, even if a persona not approve of and prescribe. If you are using som Zutoo instead ? Tt will cure 3 dies. Zutoo tablets Are Harmless as Soda. {ri we other headache remedy, why do you not change and use our headaches and colds just as quickly and safeguard you against | At bad after effects which may some day come from using the ordinary reme- fort on Saturday, andgspent a most enjoyable afternoon. + . 4 The Yacht Club dance, to-night, will | * ge to which hostesses can take their visitors, and be sure of be 5 goiety THE DAILY BRIT A marriage has been arranged and Irwin, Scots, son of Colonel win, Lynehow, Carlisle, Cumberland, England, and Florence Morna Hamil: ton, only daughter of ( Mrs. Brown Wallis, of Ottawa. The marriagexof Kathleen Gladys Murray Jarvis, niece of the Misses Yielding, 16 Clfi street, Ottawa, with whom she resided, to Mr. John erifi Turnbu'!, S.E., of Trail, B.C., is announce: 1 oo take place at Owen Sound o 26th inst. The mar: .ge of Miss Irene Hutchi- son, daughter of Mrs. Charles Hutehi- son, of Ottawa, to Mr. L. Frank Hoy, of New Westminster, B.C., will take place quietly, September 25th. | YOUNG AGE PENSIONS. Eminent Doctors Say More Money Should Be Spent. London Daily Mail Much argument has been aroused by Sir Lauder Bruton's® suggestion, as | stated in the Daily Mail, that it would {be found a great deal cheaper to spend on children than pounds. on paupers, In 'urging "youngage' rath ler than "old-age" i y emi- {nent 'physician that if more money were guard- ing the weliare | would minimize the number of helpless {old people: children given a sound | penoe declared spent on of young people it | bodily' health by the aid of the state ! | would be able to - take care of them lves in aiter years. George ~ Livsey said: "What | seems to be far more important than a150dily health is mental health. = We pleasant evening for them. There was | : ' EY OF them Phere was | (ught to do more towards'inculcating no tea. there, this afternoon and jtis|. . g | principles of honesty and industry, and wrobably the o 3 aR > t 1 A ! de wt the Wednesday, as a| tho, we would have fewer obi people weekly affair, wil y abandoned. andl n Sinan Ball Ihe aba : oned, and L asking" for pensiens. ] | teas given only speci Casions. headaches and was dizzy and nervous, and | ia hi 8 ecial oc ASIonS Mrs. Lawrence Henderson, Bagot {of enchre, last night, and all spent a of enchre, latt night, and all spent a most pleasant evening. . thao | Miss Marion Redden was the lucky | any | zirl who caught "the bride's bouquet, this morning, and, the Wise ones say, | : fwith it alwavs much future hapoiness | ah Mrs. William was "At Home" will receive her wening, in honor | marriage. Hazleit, Barriefield, this afternoon, and friends again, thi of her daughter's fawn » Mr. and Mrs. iE. J, I}. Pense an Miss Gertrude Strange have been de- | tained at the seaside, near Branch, through 5 week's illness ir bed of Mrs. Pense. In a trip througl ng, snd with recurrent aftacks. been staying with Low in Ottawa, is expected in tow wet thet guest of her brother, Mr harles Low, Union street. «wie Mr. and Mrs. Frank 1AWin will leav {the end of the week, for Moosomin NNT, - Miss Abbie Burgess, of Wolfville, N with her sister, Mrs Kirkpatrick, 3, is staying Stafford F. [etreet. | Miss Leavitt. has heen up from | Brock vill or a short visit to her old |triends hér Mrs. wo McLeod, of St. John of Pictou, N jn and Miss Gordon, | S., Principal Gordon's sisters, are the! Jonselli plays | quests of Mrs. Daniel Gordon, at |The day o their arrival it was the Fi Se countess who stated that they wanted - - - - 1 x a rool with bath and asked the | . Miss Maud Betts, Beverley street, | price. When told this would be eigh { will leave on Saturday for Brockville, | teens hillings she promptly declared I Mrs. Ogilvie Dobhs. On Monday she |i go on to Sheiter Island, N.Y | Mr. and Mrs. Charles W renshall wil leave in a fortnight or_so for Ower | Sound. They will be greatly missed by their" friends in fown. Mise Hart, of St. Paul, Minn, i | he guest of Mrs. Vere Hooper, Prin cess glreet. | Saturday. for Toronto, where she wi Ibe one of the bridesmaids at Mis: | , : » {Wary Osler's wedding on Wednesday | September 25th, { . | Mrs. Robert Carson, Brock stueet,i | home from Toronto. | Mf. and. Mrs. George {nox Mills. ~at "Bishopscourt." | "Lady Kirkpatrick, who has been re | . . { cently paying visits in Ireland, ha tor are, however, not decided. Miss Clara de St. Remw. of Ne | York, ise staying with Mlle. de St | Remy in Portsmouth. | . - - - will leave for Ottaws { Mis Penner fon her visit in town | tasmorrow, after {for the summer. {heen much enjoyed b Miss Charlotte v her friends Macaulay. Hamilton - and. Stratford. Professor Ferpuson and the | Fereusons wha: are in St. {oxpeét to return to Kingston in comber. Major E. gone down to Ott Irwin wedding, to-dav. . ei. N. Scott, R.M.C., 1 > | Bown, wife of Dr. Brown, of [treal, are in town for a few days. | with Migs Ethelwyn Loucks, Istreets w J. Walter Hazlett, of Torontc sister's wedding. | Miss Maud . - - engagement is announced ¢ Mist Leila "Hanson. second dausht lof Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Hanson, Mor trenl, to son of Dr. and donald, 12 Bodiord Road. Toronto. ae Miss Et 'win'gs wedding, Miss ol Palmer, Miss Louie ( sie Cotto and Miss Isabel White w Miss Jessie Ham be bridesmaids. 1 he the maid ton, of Quebec, will Captain Quebec, the best man. | Christie; Mr. Long Frontenac | immediate need of funds. vhove she will spend the week end with Miss Kathleen Harty will leave, on Hague, of [Wontreal, are the gnests of Mrs. Len- | rotnrned to England. and may, be out Jin November. Her plans for the win New King street. intends leaving, on Friday, for Misses Catharines, in De- bag | Was awa for the Palmer- | "zis. Fitzgibbon, Montreal, and ie Iplaced an thi iss Violet Gearing, of Picton, 1s | Barrie Publow, €lergy street, where she Mr. Angus Macdonald, eldest Mrs. Albert A. Mae- temmill, Miss El Hugh Frpser, Mr.. Roy' Flower de nat wan | teaching the children independence | merely- some of them are too indepen- {dent already. But our schools do {need to he more persistent in making {young people hone and enterprising. | Let us go in stronger for moral prin ciples, and then, with good health, the start in life will be founded on solid rock." | The Hon. J. P. Whitney, premier of | Ontario, believes precautions for chil- drénjs physical welfare are" imperative. "Tt is» mseless to try 'to inculcate will shortly take place between Regin- C ES ald S. 3rd Battalion, Raval | OCCURREN RECOUNTED and Mrs. Ir-| Captain and | Matters That Interest Everybody Mon-| Rev. BD. W. Christy was inducted as , | verdict of ISH WHIG, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1907. tt % x ey -- ---- os - and Mr. Hamilton Irwin will be 'the | : ushers, i . { y L ---- IN BRIEF FORM.| i --Notes From all Over--Little of {Bverything Easily Read and Remembered. { pastor of Reid Avenue Preshyterian | church, Toronto. | Arthur Dunn, 4 young Scotchman, | was crushed to death at the Canadian | Pacific coal elevator, Toronto. ~ | The Presbyterian Foreign Mission committee appointed Mr. Bay an | Indian, as missionary to, Okanasel Sask. . | The Toronto Ferry company propose to construct a double-deck dock at the foot: of Bay street, to replace the one destroyed by fire, | At Hopewell Cipe, NB, for the {third time, Thomas F. Collins was {placed on trial on the charge of mur {dering Mary Ann McAuley, housekeep- or for the late Rev. E. J. McAuley, Catholic' priest of New Ireland, N.B. {At Pistsbory, Pa., the jury in the | trial 'of Ludwig Szezgiel, the Roman Catholic priest from Chicago, charged with "the murder of Andrew and Ste- phen Stapyneki, brothers, returned a murder in the second de- { gree. At Walkerton, Ont., the trial' of the four Lancaster brothers; charges with Tioting, in having, oni August 20th, raided a tent at Wiarton, occupied by Agnes, Thomas and Stella Lamont, the affair resulting in Mv. Thomas shoot- ing and killing \Philip Gilbert, came to close; on Tuslay. Robert Lancas tor was discharged: nnd the "others; John, William and Walter, withdrew Clipped From Our Various Ex. changes. William Taylor completed his fifty. first year as a citizen of Carleton Place, on Saturday last. Arnprior's municipal raie this year will be 26.76 mills on the dollar. Se- parate school supporters will have to pay 30.34 mills. In Smith's Falls, the C.P.R. pur" chased five acrés from John Mossop. We understand the price paid was $3,600 for the land and house situa: ted on it. % A writ has been issued] by the father of deceased 'against the C.P.R. for $1. 000 damages, in the death of Wilirid Arcand, in the DPerthe yards, dome weeks ago. Denis MeCarthy, Franktown, ond his brother-in-law, A. Cascadden, Bur ritt's Rapids, Have leased the, woollen factory of Robert H. Ferguson, of the latter place. Owing to low water the Gillies Pros, 'company, at Bracside, have hung up their cedar drive in the Madawaska. There are some 150,000 pieces, which will remain in the water at Stewart: ville until next year. | ¢ The Rosamond woollen mills in Al monte are closed down. The demand of the warpers for more pay is paid to have caused the action' taken by the company. It is hoped an amicable settlement will shortly be apranged. Kellerville Budget. Keelersville, Sept. 17.-- A few of the farmers have not finished petting in grain antl marsh_hay, -ande are find. ing great difficulty in saving it with- out a loss. School is closed for. one week, to make necessary improve ments. Miss Compton, teacher, will spend the week at her home in King ston. Cattle buyers have been through this vidinity -and bourht up a fine lot of fat stock, Charles Clark at: tended his brother's wedding at: Syd enham, last week, Samuel Yateman's litt girl, who was very sick, is bet tér., Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Hanley at- [their -pleaiof nat guilty and pleaded | guilty. Thes\ were remanded for #m- tence. SAVED HIS LIFE. i Dying Woman Dashed Weapon From His Hand. New York, Sept. 18.--Mad - with jealousy at the girl for whom he had (given wp a military career, country and wife, Lieut. Julius Haffman, late of the Austro Hungarian army, early, to-day, shot Miss Draga Siegel, moral prineiples when physical prin- . ciples gre neglected." he said, speak his former colonels daughter, and J A duds. The physioal heiress' to a: one "hundred thousand | condition must he looked after along dollar estatel and thon furned the 1 | with the other." | COUNTESS AND PIANIST. 1 \ jhe highlands w contracted sumach | Business. | poigoning, se.eral degrees worse than| london, Sept. 18.--~The wy poisoning, painful and disfigur- | Montignosi and Signor Jonselli, t | Italian pianist, whom the former Mrs. George (*. Mackenzie, who has| Crown Princess of Saxony expects her wother, Mrs. | marry i i» special lie their hotel shortly by from 1 | drove away . lovening. As usual they avoided spook. ling to anyone and went straight . 1 their room. ¢ | have received neither visitors nor cov , | respondence. So it is believed th countess has kept her whereabouts complete seeret' even to her lawyer. 1 . | the meantime she apparently is in nq This morn ing before startfhg on her drive she 1 {changed a thousand lire note into Lng lish money. 'This she carefully, count od 'and placed in a silver handbag The countess, in fact, seems to man self, whil age all business afi the role of spectator in excellent English, it was too much and she finally . | for filteen «shillings, 1 Jonselli, she smilingly 1 | in Italian that she had struck a bar "| gain. Lhen, warming t, informed hin The princess, up to the present, has f had an annual allowance of (Saxon £0,000. By the torms of the agree | ment she will lose this on re-marriage | penniless, Former Crown Princess Manages Countess | jut arvived fron in a by rushing about the end of the month and will | hansom and didn't return till late last | prices for the fruit. Since their arrival they |stances to net a a means secured an apartment Jonselli is believed to be practically | weapon upon' himself only to have | the dying. woman dash it from his hand. The Export Apple Trade. Trade, Bulletin. | Liverpool apple importers who have to commence the new soason, state that the prospects are good for a profitable export business. HIT buyers here will take care and not repeat the mistakes of former seasons in and paying too high It is feared, how | ever, that too high figures ave al y | ready been paid in a number of in profit on the other the fall apples they e two or three weeks late, which that that period will be lost y for their consumption, as when that portion of the season is passal the demand passes with it. Parties just v Lreturned from the principal apple sec tions of Ontario and New York state - {that they "found apples whe vr they went, not in abundant quantities, but the erop appeared ta them to be more than usual. That there will ent for both home and ex side. As regards » quirement price doubted Che late rains. will do an immense deal of good in swelling the fruit and transforming the small apples into fair sized ones. For the winter fruit {different prices have been paid, rang ing from ¥2.50 to $3.50 per bbl, fob Ameri port 1 [extravagant 18 not ) [cars in Ontario ak to quality |e can buyers have been looking around in the west for winter varieties, but | they assert that ne business can be done for their. market, as prices are ) : i; too high in Ontario to admil of pay ing duty into the states. The Commissioner's Decision. | Montreal, Sept. 18. Commander Spain, wreck commissioner, to-day, '| STEAMER ADVANCE LIBELED. [BW (C0, judgment in the ons Sailors Hold Boat ® Are Paid St. Catharines, Ont., Sept. 18. --Th | steamer Advance was held up in * th Welland canal, at Thorold, oy Tig Constable Boyle, who compelled Pur: |yied her into scr MacFarlane to return to the city {Havana The sailors | the sigmal wires of the Prescott were : the vessel was not led with a speaking tube to the Enghsh seven days' . pa; ®lto show why four discharged without should not be settled with. was heard by Police Magistrate Con fort, and the men told by Capt them v {When the because they were Scalp Torn From Head. Chatham, Ont., Sept. Shaw, fifteen years of age, met wit a terrible accident while at work a the Bent canning works, yesterday While passing closa to a belt, her hai caught in a rapidly | wheel, which tore her scalp eompletel She was at once take | from her head. to the office of |sealp was thoroughly cleansed, wad again, though i ~ Would Not Be Wise. Boston, Sept. 15. >, | of the New York, New Hartford railway save that it | er steps towards Boston and Maine with the present his road ¢ a et of wv n- Rome, have broken out again in Cannot Cope With Them. Sept. 18.--Agrarian troul | cien} to eope with the rioters. ho! The\Delineator for October is ill | entertains. It : il | magazine which all must admit. of | "Frosh Huvler's high class candy The case |provic \ #tory of seven | days' wretchedness inflicted upon them Daust, who finally discharged English. evidence was taken Mac : 1 | Farlane settled with the men and paid {fou vear old Her stay, here has | the costs and the boat proceeded. 18. Ada jon he was lodged revolving a surgeon, where the | and | lis thought unlikely it will grow again. | 4 President Mellen, | Haven and southern Tealy, The troops present are insuffi- hraezy Youmbet, fyll of everything that is a first-class fashion | of the Prescott-Havana collision, on Until They |; io ond, censuring the captain, of the Prescots, and J. K. Noel, inspec flier of hulle. The R. & 0. steamer e | Prescott ran inte a, Lachine canal h {look gate and the rush of water ca | collision evidend v {ont of order and \- {engine room. Awful Deed Of Insane Father. wowed, killing her instantly fand two men, who were present, wer unable to overpower the man. | in jail, and while Ih | there attacked and t {another prisoner. i r Death In Burning Ship. London, Sept. 18 ~The y | steamer Taifan Maru is passengers are missing. Idispaich estimates = the t dead at one hundred, {| High class perfumes are sold at { Gibson's Red Cross drug wtore. It pave to go there. . at {drag store. About all some men get for of having the swelled head. | they are unnoticed in { wretched make. | Beautiful new sponges at Red Cross drag -sters. "Phono 230, an {motive by the way it whistles. sold | tis easier to keop a secret than it is to kesp a promise. y vard, of ¢. at Gibson's . Red Cross Ss. ewan Gibson's ed . Yous drug Bow loud the door hangs whith 56 3 show in Armouries to-might. one else slams it! : si without resort to | with the showed that Fedmundston, N.B., Sept 18.-A Baker" farmer, who suddenly fn went in fsterday, strucy his {join Rev. R A. aughter with a piece of His wife r nearly murdered | Kingston, preached Japanese | C7 hus corn . binder. burning at! 04 no who visited friends at Cape! {testing and_fitting such assist- Pr. J. Solmes | of: Oswego, N.Y | | Visited friends here recently. Mr. and | Mrs. Hammond are visiting relatives | | Bellville. Miss Limie Ellerbeck Ching Kiang. Many of the row sud | Vincent, has returned. number © The dredge Sie Wilfrid hae lft Port vould Hope for Toronto, where be unwise for him to take any forth Lil] be taken in charge by the Polson any merger of the compaiy and repaired. nd Rira seed, three one-pound packages stage of public opinion. fr 25¢., only at Gibson's Red (ross the dredge their Jes | efforts to be dignified "is a reputation "There ure lots 'of happy people, but the noise the son's "You can't judge the speed of a hoco- Big tended the harvest dipner at Sun i bury, George Patterson spent Sunday iin Kingston. Mr. and Mrs. Henry, o | Lyndhurst, snent a few days visiting at Charles Clark's last week. Delbert Ames, carried away first prize on his carriage team of dapple greyve, at , Harrowsmith fair last week. J. E. An glin is fitting up some fine hors to show at Inverary, Lyndhurst gnd Del ia fairs this week and next: Sunday school practice is held at Mrs, Stan- ley's every Friday night" "to teach- the young to sing. R, J, Bon! shipped | a load of pigs to Kingston last week. Thomas (lark antl family, Cedar Lake, visiting at Charles Clark's; Miss Liz f vie Sleeth, visiting Charles Sleeth, her { uncle, for a week, Dr. Bridge ond wife of Ohio. at J. E. Anglin's. Miss Em ma Compton, Kingston, is spending a week or two with her friend, Mrs. Al lic Patterson, Fergus Jardine has his new house nearly completed. Picking | cranberries is all the rage now. Rev. Mr. Waddell will preach his farewell sermon here September 20th. Grievance Against Government. Hamilton Times Crumley MILLINERY OP! The big Millinery Show-rooms at Crumley Bros. were to-day with Lydies anxious for a first glimpse of the Fall and Winter Hz 1 And they are well worth seeing. all kinds of pes are sh and broad and flat and large and small, to t all faces, a colors were never richer, beautiful Wood Shades, Soft Greys, Shades, Bright and Dull Reds, with some pretty shades of Blue Pink. Purple too is a leading shade. One model was made of Pansies shading from Pale Mauve to deep Dark ) } coming model was made of Wine Colored Velvet, w pretty over the hair in the back and was trimmed Feathers of the same shade. The effect was very jaunty. An pretty hat was a Soft Grey Felt fitting down close in the back an with three large Grey Plumes falling over the brim on the left the rest of the trimming being of Grey Silk to match the hat large headed pins. Any number of Black Velvet Hats are sh too, trimmed with Plumes, Cock's Feathers, or W . Taken together the showing will well repay a close inspection. ha * & Crumley Bros . rT HIN 1 BOTH GAS'AND One range for both summer and winter-- gas in the summer and ter--how's that ? coal in the win! : The PERFECT IDEA + range is fitted at the back 3 with gas burning rings. On kb a hot summer day, you can 5 have a fire going with a single match; and in the winter time, the gas attachment will not interfere with the use of your range for coal or wood Par The PERFECT IDEA--the only ff range on which the gos attachment is to he found--takes the place of two ranges. THE GUELPH STOVE CO., Limited Branches st Montreal, Winnipeg and Calgary. ¥ RO OE The Dundas Star has another griey ance against the Laurier government.' A man and wife and six children with | I tickets for Dundas arrived at the Dun das flag station of the H.&B, Sunday wight, and, smd to relate, Laurier had sent nobody to meet them Land welcome them to the Valley City Star "Arriving in a atramge land, with no one to meet or ! direct them, it must have been a chil ly experidnee."" 14 must been chilly. The experience of this family will raise the ire of thousands of our ple who were immigrants them solves, and. who will recall the fact that the government of their time al Saye the have ways had the mayor and a brass band | af the station to meet them, aml a table groaning with delicacies and wn suite of rooms in the best hotel awaiting their enjoyment Amd this man who got to poor | Sunday night, 'had actually to wait i till Monday morning before he could fget a job as a blacksmith at good | wages in the Bertram establishment ------ Rev. G. S. Milligan Resigns. Wilton, Sept. 17.~The anuual meet [ing of the Bible Sogiety was held in {the Presbyterian church. It was nd Liaressed hy Rev. Wo 1. Hassand, To I ronta, the Bible Society sefretary for this district. The many friends of { Rev. Gi. Milligan rege tted very much to hear the announcement, on Sun day. evening, of his resignation of this pastorate. Mr Milligan intends tak {ing a post-graduate course | the Teading universities, Milligan is spending a fow d H Mills', previous to her departure {for her home in St. John, N.B, KE. Milligan spent an few davs last friends here. Mes, Wel week vigiting lington Babdock is visiting her aunt, | Mrs. %. Babeock, Herrowsmith, Mrs. | Mize Whattam left on Friday to Whattam, at Wood ville Glenvale Gleanings. Glenvale, Sept. of Sydenham street. Methodist church + a very Sunday evening. John sermon on be lark had a "raising" on Monday. He | { Curvature for Spinal Cur- is building an addition to his barn | Willard Coulter has commenced ope Mrs. 3 | Watts and famil near is spending a few days in Kingston ---------------- Getting Arpund The Law. During the last elections in ® Russi an orator at a public - meeting. presided over by Professor Milyoukov eonclud ed his discourse by exclaiming, "Hur was interrupted by a police officer, whe ladies and gentlemen," said the ora tar, "Warrah for that which it is for biden to mention!" hurrah followed. Fifty Cents Will Buy. I askets peaches, plums ai pears, all this week, at Carnovsky"s cough. , Dundas, on | . PARLOR SUITS--1 5-Piece Suits worth $80 (special), reduced to Miss | 17.~Rev. Mr. Sykes, elogue nt | ruh for the ecnstituent" assembly 1" He » and Effects of SE | EE constitue assembly. "H, en, on in pi A tremendous oa -- "Have you a cough?" Try Gibson's Red Cross cough syrup. It cures any | | | | despair, { of the rarest chenr cal reagents | no experiment, tis Tens of B IN ull particulars sent ; )) carefuily sealed in & [lain full 30 days treatment (180 cure or refund of money, { Send for sworn Canadian téstimon fals received within the last twelve mon m i De. kK! HR MEDICINE GO.. P.O. PrawarL 234i. MONTREAL | Furniture Sale } - i Reductions from 15 to 20 per cent, and a large selection. | our stock before buying. | PARLOR SUITS--5-Piece Suits worth $25, reduced to $20. PARLOR SUITS--2 3-Piece Suits worth $48, reduced to $40, Summer | | - - $60. : | LOUNGES--Our $7 Velour Lounges, reduced to $5. | LOUNGES--Our $12 Velour Lounges, reduced to -$9.50. { Bed Lounges and Davenports, all reduced. FADING UNDERTAKER. __R. J. REID. ™™ "ie Surgical Aids to the Afflicted Our Appliances Authors & COX rome tess Since 1800, we have bro piness to the homes of ies with our appliances. Am of arms, feet and ! = ormed and misshapen hud and bodies --rupture-- floating kidneys--practically ALL afflic- tions can be helped, and, im many cases, y our appa 4 Spinal | vature, Partial | | Paralysis, ete., are the resuit of | 1 half a century's experience in ants. We know just what apparatus will relieve, or help to cure, each case, Our expe ience also tells us just How to fit the aguiiance so that it will be easy com nd ful. satus. Write for free advice. LE " 5 Wood's I Tein thes whole nervous hi w es makes in nl sin, Cured onl Ee d oe EE nD pore ond of Abuse or Fescesses will six in GRAND UNION HOTEL 1 Opposite Grand Central Station i » MEW YORE ov Rooms $1.00 & sndupward : You get oeny cranton, I "handles noth