ros noerves ----------------y Feasidbs Deate: mato po . " » wert trim » Your Pith RIL , a ht a TE Wim Ger v re r we ad i PEA pe met - n seAteTL ov . meri oe wor Pow a Sen -- vim it Ea iRe ny Fron Be 2B ER - rer or on ¥ cme Sdodd «Seely ds wr MAP ~ * ¢ Ne ee *e ® soem . t a Eb y ' Li v v ne » For " --. X Seer | Faerveer Totes WRN - Tore HM YORE ot a . x TOSRT Ray Fans * Twnreter or herr w o_ a a re i me NRE OHET REAT SHEWRT ERE DER ETY: IDYSES HEIR TROEEION PALE ST TY mlm Mia iE TY AA Seon rnd Bee Rp ea ee Tey Bay FA ER & -- date wile WER Be Ha TRE AE T OBE Se BB TE Th RT By So gadin B. 5 ARE EAL UT Re WO Vo 2 EO HG Re RLueys TOEATHGD BT MER A FE DUT, BA RR Rh Gre TREE THR A AE SE ie lg I ein Le GR RRTER ATRRCRRRTL TTR Tau on > TRE PS RT ig a. Fo JA Sal Sa TPF HERA | Cd Rl PL ERR To Wearer Direct The raw Skins come to us direct from the trappers, are © dressed and made up in our establishment and represent but one step from tra~wer to This Store holds first place by having no doubt whatever abeut its furs. [his business is not dependent on facts furnished by manufacturing furriers--our knowledge is of the furs themselves. We avoid worry by handling only such furs as we can thoroughly recommend. Buying furs is a matter that requires rood judgment and careful selection, and ought never to be hurried. Direct with us as manufacturers makes Ts John McKay Fur House, $ 149-153 Brock Sr. $ 00000000000 ROGROIOODS OLIVES! We were fortunate in buying a large stock of Olives before the recent heavy advance in price, and for the present our customers can have them at the old prices :-- Olives at 10c. at 15ec. Olives Olives at 25c. at 3bc. Olives at 40c. Olives Olives at 50c. at 5c. Olives per bottle. Apd a full gallon bottle at $3. Jas. Redden & Co, IMPORTERS OF FINE GROCERIE per bottle, per bottle, per bottle, per bottle, per bottle, per bottle, The gold ball on the fifty-six foot flagpole to surmount the Singer build ing, New York, 672 feet above the street, will certamiy be: the famous American high-ball. An $120,000 office building win be erected on Adelaide street east, near Yonge. DAILY MEMORANDA. City Council, 8 p.m. Amusement advts., on Page Three, Excursion to New York, 5 am., Tues av. Wonderland Theatre, afternoon 'and evewing. New Princess Theatre, afternoon and evening. "Made-In. Canada" Exhibition, at Armouries. At the Bijou Theatre, to-day and Tyes- day : '"'Pirfalis of the Stage." Tickets may be obtained for "'Made-In- Canada Fair,' at any of the hook stores This day in history Cape Breton nixed to Nova Scotia, 1763; Parnell died, 1891. Social Five Dafice to-night, Whig Hall, 8.30 o'clock, Crosby and O'Connor's! Orchestra. . WHIG TELEPHONES. 243--Business Office. 229--Editorial Rooms. 292--Jobbiag Department. Legal Forms, all Kinds, at Whig. are Daily is always on sale st bheon's Drug hin Square-- oh tin ay cath © STUDENTS WE HAVE THE STUDY LAMP YOU WANT. Neat Solid Nickle, with a 'green shade. Very easy on 'the eyes, and will make your, work a pleasure. No smokes. No amell Don't ruin your eyes. Hide behedi at ' Robertson Bros. oe! ol ® ministration. T Roller Rink every afternoon and even | g- the | KINGSTON, REARED ON FARM. Educated in th Country. Hon. Anselm Joseph McLaurin, Un- {ited States senator from Mississippi, | was born at Brandon, Miss., March 26th, 1848. He was elected to the | senate for the first time in 1901. He A Senator His Gold Teeth Gave Him Away. | | was reared on a farm in Mississippi He {and educated in a country school. BODY IN A TRUNK as THE REMAIN: OF GER- TRUDE DAYTON. } | Murder Charge at Hong KXong-- Chinaman Said the ~ Robber Who Unlocked Safe Was "the Man With the Golden Teeth." | | Hong Kong, { Oct. 7.--The body ofa' woman, later identified as Gertrude | | Dayton, was found ina trunk on! | board the Royal mail C.P.R. steamer Monteagle, and H. Adsetts, formerly a sergeant in the American legation jguard at Pekin, has been arrested, charged with murder. The ecireum-| s of the killing are shrouded in vy and the forthcoming trial of of | serv ed in fhe confederate army for the entire period "of the civil war, 'and af- ter the conflict was ended studied law. Senator McLaurio was admitted stran- | to. the bar in 1868, and began prac- tice at Raldigh. He married Miss. L. { myst | the suspect is expected to be one | the most sensational cases brought | { before the criminal tribunal here in rve- icent years. The woman apparently gled. The circumstances surrounding the case will not be disclosed before | Ranch on February 22nd, 1876. Sena- the preliminary trial of Adsetts, but | tor McLaurin was governor-of Missis- it is belieyed that robbery was the|sippi from 1896-1900. His home is at motive. Adsetts, when arrested at | Brandon, Miss. | Chefoo had $2400 in gold and several valuahle jewels A Chinaman said that Adsetts, the man with golden | teeth, had unlocked a safe in Hong | Kong The seven golden teeth brought the police first on of the alleged murderer was STOP LEGACY FAKE. Request cf partment. Ottawa, Oct. 7.--The Canadian post office department has Washington requesting the postal au | thorities of the United States to take such steps as are necessary to put an end to the legacy fake which is be- ing worked from an alleged lawyer's of Adsetts the track BACK T0 THE OLD FIGURE. That is Where Text Book Prices a 0. he reduced Office in New York. Athens, C 2 hd ob : Hoon igs ood The department was furnished with pe ee. wo public 0 wo reat at evidence that the mails are being im- only until after the coming provineial |, ,ner)y: used for this fraud. Steps| clections ? Hon. A. G. Mackay, the leader of the liberal party, thinks such will be the case. In an address here in the inter ests of Mr. Lewis, the liberal candidate will be_at once possible, the mails. being for such an end, and the thorities will make an further used American an- endeavor to Sirestly wpansible to you, ® in the forthcoming bye-election, tne locate and punish the author of the] if you come to the right government. accused ... leader of hav- | : store. --- ing let the present contract for the) CHILD'S AWFUL DEATH. production of school text books in an | unfair way to a friend of the ad-|,. | Little One Played With Fire-- js contract was to ontinue for onl a year and a half, Clothes Ablaze. Belleville, Oct. 7.--A fatal burning just long cnough to tide over the gene ral election. accident occurred in Murray township] A leading conservative in at the home of S. B. Yarrow. Mrs. Mr. Mackay said, had declared Yarrow had made a fire when the present contract expired the and then went people would probably have a new set | borrow a saucepan of readers, and that, when the quality | away her three-ves r-old boy played| of the books was placed where it should | with the fire and ran out be, their prices would be back at the | clothes ablaze. A neighbor put the fire Toronto, that While she was old figure. out, but the child died six hours| later, KAID MACLEAN'S RELEASE. -- Seems Possible--Britain Will Give Highly Increased Cost. * New York. Oet. 7.-The increasing Ransom. high ot. of doin: blsities -~ bas wich cost of doing business j= becom- { Tangier, Oct. T.--The release of Kaid | {0 5 vital matter in net earniigs, Sir Henry Maclean, who for some| ior they are gradually, but surely, di- time has been held captive by the minishing. Such a situation almost bandit Raisuli, at least seems to be invariably marks the turn of the tide within measurable distance. Tt isip, july the roads which furnished re- stated, on the best possible authority, | {yng "showed an increase in gross that the British government has ac | nines of $18,500,000, yet over $16, vind Raisuli's roduend dig for [000 000 was absorbed by increased ex- Mac ean $ Ielease, the prin if Wasi in penditures, Figures for, sovon months being $150, Fansom. anc ritsh | of the year show a gain of nearly protection for Raisuli and his family - ihn ieab i of which $93.,000.000 was Great Britain's advance of the ransom leav- $111,000,000, consumed by increased expenses, will be guaranteed by Bultan Ab d'El- ing less than $18,000,000 increase in Aziz. Sir Henry Maclean s brother is| ot "The bulk of these increased ex- now at Rabat, bringing the negotia- peirses. went. to labor in one form or tions with the sultan to a close another, although the higher cost of fuel and other materi be contributed A TLOOR COLLAPSED an important share | And 150 Fell Into Cellar--Lamps Exploded. Waterbury, Conn., Oct. T. republican" rally in the North End | Athletic elub rooms, last night, the floor collapsed, precipitating 150 men into the cellar of the building. By the explosion of a lamp the building was set on fire, and the crowd of men struggled in the flames and debris al- most helplessly. Several persons were injured, one perhaps fatally. Insured Against War. London, Oct. 7.--The interpretation which Europe places upon the policy of sending the American battleship fleet the Paeitic has received its first tical application. A steamship, fiving the Japanese from | Antwerp, yesterday, to join the {line from San Francisco to Japan, in- suréd, with its cargo, against war | risks, the shippers having notified the {owners of the vessel that they would During a large flag, sailed ONTARLO, MOND! Canadian Postofice De- | written to! taken to prevent, if | in the stove| into a neighbor's to] 'with his| prac- | new | OCTOBER 7, 1907. Berlin, Oct. 7.--~Ambassador Tower { has written President Roosevelt, rek- ling that he be permitted to Setire Is To Be Issue Re House from the diplomatic service ne | spring. of Lcrds \ Mr. Tower's reasons are understood | . to be that having been abroad for 1S VERY ARROGANT AND MAY BE IN SACKCLOTH AND ASHES. Certain Bills Passed by the Com- mons to Go Before the House of Lords Again and if Reject- ed Then the People Will Be! Ask to Decide the Issue. Edinburgh, Oct. 7.-T Campbell-Bamnérman_ retury attack on the House of Lords, Satur | day evening, when in an address he fore a gathefing of Scottish liberals, | here, he reviswed thie measures that had been rejected by the House. He dwelt with® * $ehemence upon what he called the arrogance and high-handed- ness of the: lords and said -he hoped to see them in sackcloth and ashes before | another ges€ibn had gone by. It was was the intention of the government to send certgin bills back again to the House of Lords, after their pas sage pro forma, by the House of Com mons, Whatever the result, the pre- mier said 'he believed that, on the! main issue, the government must ulti- | mately go th the and he knew it would not appeal in vain. ro Henry I to the AMBASSADOR TOWER. desires again years, he to live in his-own country have a home there for his sons, who are now ready to go to Harvard Unis nearly eleven and to give his personal a tention to his extensive hinan ial, min. ing and railroad iuiyvedts thet have been left. to the supervision of others during his long absence, SCARES THE BURGLAR. versity, country Tin Horn Used to Good age, mga OVERSUPPLY OF WAISKY. Ns V e-- . et, d- Watertown, Enough Scotch on Hand to Last Four Years. London, Oct, ed to eall a meeting of the Amelia Harris, an invalid at Sacket's iz .. | Harbor, last Wednesday night, proved 7.--It has heen decid: |g most effective burglar alarm Highland | caved her house from being ransacked malt whiskey © distillers to endeavor On ordinary occasions the horn is to come to an agreement with the used to call neighbors in case of ill-| | view of advancing prices during the | ness, | forthcoming distilling season, The other day Mrs. Margaret Crim. | | Owing to the great increase in the mins paid a visit to the harbor as the | | price of coal, amounting all round to [guest of Mrs, Harris. Mrs. Orimmins brought a roll of hills with her, thing like $100 in alk. She carried the wad in a satchel, The women were { weary and retired early. About mid- no margin of profit. | night Mrs. Harris heard some one at | It is fully mecognized that the dif- | the window sash. She reached for her | culties in the way of advancing prices | horn and awaited developments. { are very great, in view of the faet| that there are foo many produgers and | removed. fully 100 per cent., and the high price of barley as a result of the sunless summer, working costs have heen rais- ed to a point which leaves little or some- moment later and a pane of glass was | The woman waited no long- that: the & 'already in bond are | er. As the burglar reached within to overwhehmi ng ris AT amoutch the window, a Cirrifie blast The number of distillers in Scotland | came forth. The burglar did not stop | to. listen for further serenad ecighbors who heard the horn got | out of bed and searched the streets without discovering the would-be house the distillers | breaker. organized and WOULD DIE FOR SON, fis 164, of which 98 produce Highland | malt 'whiskey. and the stocks amount | to 118 million. proof rallons, equal to] over four years' | supply. It is suggested that' effectively | should be that certain distilleries should be closed down with the view of s------ | restricting production, those clos-| Mother Confessed Murder Then | Tried to Kill Herself, Detroit, Mich., Oct. 7.=Impelled by | mother love and a desire to shield and | save her Minnie | has made a remarkable confession in | ing down being compensated out of a fund provided by those working. son, Mrs AFTER BIG DAMAGES. | Wants $25, 000 For Breach of Pro-| Atlanta, Montmorency county. The | wr mise. { woman says she shot and killed her New York, Oct. T.--Justice Seabury, | husband, Charles Chadwick, a mill whose body was found in the | in special term, part 1 of the supreme | loreman, | court, reserved decision on an applica road near his home ten days ago. tion made by counsel for Horace FE Footprints near the body and other Miller for an order directing Paula [circumstances led to Chadwick's son, Klippenburg to file $250 as security | Eu ene, being suspected: of the mur {for costs in her suit to recover 5.- | der, and he is under arrest. In a writ 000 damages for alleged breach of | ten confession, Mrs. Chadwick says promise and betrayal. | she shot her husband with her son's Mile. Klippenburg, said to be an ac | rifle because he shige hex She Sa tress, recently sailed for Kurope after { she put on a pair of the boys shoes, the United States government had de {followed her husband down the road cided to deport her. Sue came here | and killed him After writing the con- | for the purpose ol suing Miller, who | Iesmion she tried to commit suici le, lives in New Jersey, for bre of | hut a deputy burst into her room in Jersey, y 2 % ; B promise of marriage. Miller is a mar time to take the revolver from her denied that he ever the young woman. ried man and has promised to marry Before she filed her sunt to re {cover ¥2 for alleged = breach of promise and seduction, A REMARKABLE LAUNCH, Bow of a Ship Takes to Element at Belfast. ling L000 3 t, Ireland; Oct. 7.--~A most po- Foriar Faets. markable launch occurred, here, this Forfar. Oct. 3.--John Russell: Delta, | morning, when the new bow built for | was in. the village recently N Mat. the new White Star line steamer Sue- i FAs Nate Co (0 replace the one left on Stag- tice has returned home, having spent | ¥ : Y {On RAE a couple of weeks in Ottawa and | rock, near : the Lizard, are ith Brockville. A upumber from here at | last. slid into the water. "The Suevie, og during a fog, ran on the rocks, and af- tended the special services in Athens on Wednesday, which are being con- ducted by Crosdley and Hunter, Owing ter long and ivefiectugl attempts to her. the salvers 'cuf away' her refloat refloated the rest of the ship | forepart, in order to | Advant- A loud | blast from a tin born in the hands of | and | Chadwick | ME THE APPEAL == LY TAPS } | -- * Are Pouring Into the United States. » 15 T0 BE STOPPED EXTRAORDINARY MEASURES TO BE ADOPTED. {Not 'Only Japanese, But Other Asiatics Are to Be Kept Out --Big Increase of Inspectors | Alcng Canadian Line to Keep I~ Out the pus » Washington, Oct. 7 Immigration of | | Japanese: into Aeris ica is increasing (at so alarming a rate that it has | been determined by the United States | government to adopt extraordinary | | | 1 | i measures to prevent the introduction | not only of | into the United States, | Japanese, but also of other Asiatic coolie laborers. One result of the trip of Secretary Strauss, of the de partment of commerce and labor, along the Canadian border and the Pacific coast, has been an order in: creasing the force of immigration in. spectors along. the Canadian border, | with a view to controlling, if possible, the flood of Asiatic immigration into this country. PITH OF THE NEWS. The Very Latest Culled From All Over The World. In the year ending July 1st, 1907, | 209 Japanese became naturalized as | Canadian citizens, Rov. A. H. Moment, | Clark township, Durham dead at Raleigh, N.C. Victor Hane, a young Frenchman, {committed sujtide at Montreal over a a native of county, is | disappointment in love. | On-the 660 miles of the NT.R. now lunder contract, it is estimated over | 18,000 men are now at work. | The principal of obligatory arbitia- tion was approved at The Hague, on Saturday, by a vote of thirty to six. i Massachusetts democrats, in conven: tion, on Saturday, adopted a platform Al | demanding free and unrestricted with Canada. Senator Cox, at informal lunch in his honor, 'at Calgary. ry, urged the 'west to open its doors and invite la | bor from every country, {It is now settled that Hon. H. A {McKeown will re-enter the New | Brunswick cabinet, either as attorney- {general or solicitor-general. | One of the two Indians about to be {tried for murder at Norway House, | Manitoba, escaped from jail into the { bush, where he banged himself, Welsh tin plate manufacturers have {formed a combination to make their ! own steel bars and keep out the Ger man and United States product, At Toledo, Gazea Poka, who. killed {his sweetheart rather than have her {marry another man, and who then | severely wounded 'himself, died Satur- day | Mulni Hafig has 'eaptared a large sup. ply of arms and ammunition intended for the imperial Morocean troops, and has shut bis brother, the sultan, up a | Rabat. Liberal Organizer Copp, St. John, N.B., declares that the nationaliza- tion of the winter ports on the At- {lantic seaboard has been postponed Hor five years. Il. , Brewster, prominent in social, Ihusiness and political circles in Roch ester, N.Y. died in Berlin. With his wife, Mr. Brewster was making a tour | wowiey of the world Coal is selling at this price in the following places : Toronto 87 Niagara Falls, $6 Montrea!, 37.2 St. Catharines, 86 Brantiord, $ familton, 86.75. captain of the the steamer Hartwog was suspended be- cause he raced against the Mississippi The license of while President Roosevelt was on the | latter on his way to Memphis. | The National Sporting Club has of | fered a purse of £10,000 for a fight be- | tween Tommy Burns and Gunner Moir, the winner to take 900 and the loser 200, Burns to be allowed £: 200 for ex- ISOS, The sum of $1,000,000 is divided in| { § | | IPEEL.--At Fergus® i 1 - i isa" i withdraw their shipments unless this to the recent rains, pastures are look : 2! pel By Disvpoia tient. the | was done. Ling better. John Smith, Edmonton, | 24 od ig to SouthIRpLIS, Seete [ten portions of 8100000 each and be-| Petit Journal NM Coez, a retired ma- 9 Ei | was calling on friends at his old home | dhe new. how | queathed to several colleges and jor seventv-four years of age. who The English cricketers sailed for {here E. Barker has returned toh { church and charitable J Sauiamtives Iwas at one time waver' of Elinsoart. home from Quebec on Saturday, | Kingston, to resume his studies. Miss | IE Slave' Trafic {by the will of D. Willis James, of New { Nord, has been killed by disappoint: Watson, a Toronto man, wanted by | Ravig, our school teacher, will attend | White Slave : ' | York city. 2 4 . the police, was arrested in Quebec. | the teachers' convention, in n. | Washington, Oct. . - Secrotary | Mrs. King, an aged lady of | | Despite his BY veArs, be was When visiting the "Made-In-Can- | Miss Florence Johnston, Athens igh | Strauss, of the department of com- {on her way to visit her daughter, in| very a a vat shonbitg ada™ fair, be sure to see the King- | school, spent Saturday and Sunday f mer « and labor and Francis P. Buffalo, was turned back at the Sus a day or two ago he wounded a hare, [300 Hosiery company's exhibit of | with ler! parents. Cleveland Stafford, «| gargent, commissioner-general of im- | pension bridge, by United States im- i : h hoot It | Imperial Crown brand underwear, { Delta, has been visiting here, ~APrgration, have determined to elimin-! migration offivialy; and left stranded Yih spl TRO w ate the "white slave' traffic from the at Niagara Falls. kill af, She Sox Som, ¥. Coes Ty TTT = | Us nited States, if possible All Saints' church, Whitby, has sak | Uae be wg i is ent of They have determined to round up led Bishop Sweatman te appoint Rev. {he 3 -- tha i mpimment of | A tall alien immoral women . in large iA, F. Barr, formerly of Lindsay, as | Bajar that he : him 7 f eitie + and those who have not been in | their rector. He is a son of the re | land ae Iving him to oon he country three vears and were [gistrar of Victoria, county, formerly | Pe. in Fain. fr might here ille wally will be deported [editor of the Lindsay Post. { i Roosevelt Honored. | The Hague, Oct. 5.--In the final act fof the peace conference it was decided | | that President Roosevelt shall be men- | tioned, first, in the introduction of {the act as the summoner of the con- ---- | ference, the names of the Emperor . cholas as its convoker and Queen! Chicago, Oct. 7.---"Ah, true that those are the saddest words of tongue or pen; it might have been; it might have heen.' So ended the letter that told the life tragedy of Marie Sexton whose body w found in the rear of {the home of Joseph Gillespie, the man 'she loved. Wilhelmina as its hostess following. {In addition, President Nelidoff. in his speech at the last plenary sitting of {the conference will refer to President | Roosevelt's efforts in bebali of peace. Lendon Landmark .ivappearing. Loudon, Oct. T7.-- Avother histaric She had seni a bulel mio; he London tavern. Barnard's Inn, in temple. In one hand was clutched a | Holborn, will close its doors on Mon- Bible. The night's' storm had tan {day. The house was the Red Lamp its edges, and the rain had drenched of "Barnaby Rudge," and many men her form. In her hand was the letter whose name: are historic, have {to Gillespit nOY = foregathered in the old parlor behind | "My darling Joe: Tow can you he 1¢0 mean to we, when 1 am iu' trou- {the bar, Marie Sexton Sends ~ Fatal Ballet Into Her" Temple. | if possible, those respons ible for! { and presence in America punished, Clifford 1 Shelton Killed. {| Ottava, Oct. 5.~The manglsl body -- lof (Clifford Shelton, a resident of Hund: | man « Bridge, was found on the ble? All my friends have turned | C.P R. bridge over the Rideau river, against me with scorn, and now, you, { quite near whore the young man made | too, have forsaken me. You the one | his home. Only four months ago Shel-| man 1 loved above all else in the |ton's brother, Henry, was run over 1 do not 'know what will ever {and killed within half a mile of the world. Ibecome oi*me. And I thought always | that you loved me as dearly as any- | : . me could." | World's Only Woman Jailer. Switzerland possess. | spot where to-day 's fatality occurred. | Lol Geneva, Oct 7 The giths iuills be takes to the Hot Spriugs, Ark. for burial, {£8 the: ¢ only woman iniler in the world. She is said to have come from there a She i Mme. Porchet, "governor" of ar ago. At first the police thought the jail at Aigle, in the - Rhone Val- | finding her body indicated a murder ley, for seventeen yrarw. The jail bas accommodation for twenty. offenders, simply one of the, daily 'tragedies ' of , ey mystery. Now they know it was | foe years' imprisonment, A hitch has developed between the government and = Montreal over the transfer of Lafontaine Park and St Helen's Island, the department of militia and defence pow refusing to promise rot to construct a military | school in Lafontaine Park. Williasn Hanlan, Schomberg, { i | { Was ar- intel at his home on charges of for- [gers resulting from his cashing of two {notes, purporting to be signed by {Patric k Garrity, on which he got £200 from the Bank of Commerce and |from the Sterling Bank, Orangeville, lon Thursday last. | Frederick Dorway, taloarnph opevator, claims he 'was bequeathed $150,000 by a New York [woman {wo years ago, was kidnapped at Montreal by a. relative of the wo- iman, and taken to Vera Cruz, Mexico, {where he was thrown in jail. He se-' a Canadian whose gentences range from a month to} sured his release and is now on his way to New York, 8100 | PEARSALL-HBINUHEY --At | DAVIS In Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada, very place apparel ually costs, Hundreds to choose sy, A PRETTY MODEL--Made of fine black beaver silk foished brotelle, ped rapped in- back and N t with buttons. ANOT HEL STYLISH MODEL | ~ Made wal beaver Goth, mace a "tight Iti, dowble SORIIN, Open in Rk 4 mat ean ai models, patch pock snd velvet collar, Fivery the best velue, at the marked, $12.50 to $20. Children's Coats A Specialty. Call ang see themy pic can choose with perfect cons Steacy' S FEPIPIIIVISIIIFIIIINN BORN. KELLY, --At Napanee, on 20th Sept. to Mr. and Mrs. Richard Kelly, a daugh- ter. TOPPINGS. 00, Oct. 1st, to Mrs. James Toppings, Uravel twin sons GOULD.--~At Mount Pleasant, on Sept, 28th, to Mr. aud Mrs, Willian Gould, " daughter. MCFARLANE. --At -Rohlin, Sept., to Mr. and' Mrs. Furlane, a son. Mr. and Road, on th John Me MARRIED. ~CHAMBERLAIN. ~On Sept. Fug 2s oronto, Richard B. Mowry, to bi lane he Fidythe, Sef of the late Ephraim D. Chanbeoriain. Shasnon- ville, on Sept. 8th, Miss Mabel, daughter of "Mr. ond Mrs. B. Hinchey to Herbert L. Pearsall, Belleville. FISHER-BRISTOL. ~(m Sept. 26th, 1907, at Oakville, Fabel Isabel Nelson Bristol, fifth amd youngest daughter of the late Dr. Bristol, Napanee, and youngest dal ter of Mrs. Bristol, Oakville, to Henry Gladstone Fisher, ¢ manager of the Bask of Montreal, ¢ New Denver, B.C, DIED. « Destronto. on Sept, 80th, aged HAay-three years. on Sept. 26th, Fred, GRANT.--At Charles Grant, Peel, formerly of Deserduto, aged 2 thirty-eight years. . YOUNGS --Ia Kisgston, Sunday, Oct. ath, mry Youngs, aged ninety ye Funeral Frivate, took place to-day. x Sept, 17th, 1907, Jane Maria Vane dersiuys, beloved wile S Wm. Davis, formerly of No. 28 « Pydar street, Truro® Comwall, England, in iter sixty-veventh year. CHRISTLEY.~In TR utan, on _Satur< day evening, Oct. th, 1907, William Christloy. The Funeral will take place from his late reswtence, 226 Queen stroet, to morrow morning, at 9 o'clock to St. Mary's Ountbedral, (where a solemn mass of requiem will be celebrated, 5 Friends and acquaintances wed invited to sttend. i 3 ee The Lending Undertaker Phone 577, 227 Princess 51 - y, - = Valuable Properties For Sale, RINGWOOD, magnificent grounds RoSELAR, Mon residence 3 ha Bad, 1 bave alse un Furmiture, that I Foie