opular ashionable Styles. did collection awaits C ) ou Tailored Skirte~smasie, » and if you are looking for z exclusive or different ordinary skirts shown, we ent we can give you ab- isfaction. : ick a, few to mention. many other styles equally "ol t. | skirt, trimmed' id on alternate very pretty | specially to $4.50. sh model in one 5 box pleated is cut very full by an expert, raceful skirts. $5.75. ging skirt, 17 med with but- an extra good enetian Cloth. $8.50. ed skirt, made nch Venetian trimmed with re black, navy; $9.50. re made from cloths stitched with silk kirts. ns brought out for idy and the prices , 8.25, 4.50. JARGAINS LADIES, We hav e n in sizes. cher Cut Boots, 1 o , 1deal Winter Bott Tepes ution Degss Sho, plain tor, 0 Dongola Kid Lace Boots. Ri busin, mull 200 Shoe Store. YEAR 74. NO. 24%, | BR ' MEKAY Bt URS | | A" 4 4 % A 4 ' " x 8! | 4 | 3 : : $ 4 4 A 4 i } 4 } Ca A > i E | 4 ji IS 3 +> 2 ® ¥ ( \ Le WV | 2) d Xl % ® | x | » | <4 > | 4 i ! \ 0 © "A Cl "4 »> | x ¥ "4 s 4 pe % ® R) | % B In Persian Lamb Jackets. X 2% We lead as in other Furs. 2 i SELECT YOUR | SKINS. Cl " ¥ 9 Cur styles are absolutely ¥ 4, ccrnect. We guarantee + Fit & ot and Quality. Models NOW 4 ready. Your inspection in- § h vited. © & ® A ee ® * 3 John McKay Fur Houss, 4 --- } 149-155 Brock ST. 0 2 - 4 2 KINGSTON. x " » Cheese! a eee Fresh shipment just arrived of Oka Cheese Tilsiter Theese Canada Cream Cheese Primrose Cream Cheese % 1b. Primrose Cream Cheese, lbs. Imperial Cream Cheese (Small, medium and large). Jas, Redden & Co. Importers Of Fine Groceries. S hos Master Charles Moore, ten-year-old son of Frank Moore, Newboro, was the victim of a serious accident Mon- day, while Playing with a bottle of black powder and a lighted match. Bibby's special 25c. cashmere The powder exploded and the pieces | tistics regarding of broken bottle striking him, his face and neck were badly lacerated. Bibby's for Penmans wool wear. DAILY MEMORA A Fact 'Phat most Men know, The Hats of style and quality, Come from Campbell Bros': Civic Mipance Committee, 8 p.m. Amusement advts., on Page Three. Roller Rink every afternoon and even ing. Wonderland Theatre, afternoon and evening. This is the Festival of St Evangelist. Princess Theatre--Moving Pictures and young Woman. Illustrated Songs. There will be a 'Tea at the Club, on Saturday, 19th. There will be a Club, on Suturday. Oct. 19th. "Bonnie Brier Bush," Matinee, Opera House, 2.80 p.m., Saturday. Rugby to-morrow i--Queen's vs. McGill, | sha Black 2 's s. M.C., 2.80 p.m. : Queens I vs. R at Rerenzan Telind. Military College Campus, 2.80 p.m. At The Bijou Theatre--The Spectacular | Pantomine ~The Fairy of « the Blac Rocks,' and Club."' This day in history '--Sir Oliver Mowa made lieutenant-governor of Ontaric 1807 ; Lord Palmerston died, Rico, 1898. -- WHIG TELEPHONES. 248--Business Office. 220--Bditorial Rooms. 992--J obbing Department. Legal Forms, all kinds, at Whig. The Daily Wing is always on sale at St Gibson's Drug ore, 'Market Squar Open till late each evening. STUDENT ----------------------------, 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 smoke. No smell Don't ruin your eyes. ---------------- See them at Robertson Bros. | iron pipe and under-| ted, and Luke the (had become conve! County! Tea at the Country | Grand "The Raid on the Nemo! damage was not serious the much exasperated by incom- 1865 : | United States took possession of Porto} | We have Waterman's "Modern" foun- -- A SAVED BY A SAW iit 18.--0Over 600 workmen employed at the Bufialo Union Fur- nace company's plant, along with scores of people living in that vicini- ty, very narrowly escaped being the victims of a terrible explosion yester- day. The catastrophe was averted by! mere chance. y In the machine shop, connected with the big foundry, it was found neces-| sary to cut several lengths of large Stephen H. Regan, a machinist, put a long piece of the re- quired pipe into a sawing machine to divide it into ten-foot lengths. He had cut several pieces, and finding that the saw was dull, replaced it with a new one. Regan, finished another length, and aiter taking it put of the machine, placed it on thé floor along | Buffalo, Oct. | with "others, while he proceeded to ad- just another in the machine. ! KINGSTON, ONTARIO. FRIDAY, A BANK FAILURE. Hamburg, Oct. 18. ~The old bavking failed, lis authoritatively stated, will reach %7,500,000.. The assets of the firm have not been ascertained as yet, but in banking eircles the capital of the | partners is declared to be ¥2 250,000. Nearly all the joint stock and private failure, but a number of thee their claims are adequately secured. {The difficulties of the firm arose |chetly from its connection with a mining company at Tepntz, Bohemia \ pany AB A GREAT RAILROADER. , { Presently another employe of the| : f the G { firm entered the machine shop and go-| He is Head o the Great Wabash ing over to where Regan was at work | System. noticed something sticking in the end | President Jogeph Ramsey. of the Wa- of the last pipe which had been cut. | bash railroad, and one of the chief ad- Regan examined the pipe and found 'ministrative officials in the Gould sys | that it contained about seventeen | tem of railroads was born in Vitis | large sticks of dynamite, through the | centre of which the saw had passed. | Why the dynamite did not explode while the saw was passing through the | pipe, is beyond comprehension unless, | as explained by the workmen at the foundry. the new saw, which was a sharp one, cut through the pipe with so little friction that the dynamite was not subject to sufficient concus- sion to explode it. ! There was sufficient of the explosive found in the pipe to have blown the | entire plant to atoms, and' caused ter- | rible destruction and loss of life. FORTUNE ON BASEBALL BET. { Pittsburg Man Makes $42,000 on Chicago's Victory. Pittsburg, Pa., Oct. 18.--Shad Gwil liam, the Pittsburg sporting man, { made a fortune on the baseball series between Chicago and Detroit for the | world's championship. The night be- | fore the series opened, at the Auditor- jum Annex, in Chicago, Gwilliam bet £50,000 to #42,000 that Chicago would win the series. Most of it came from Detroit men. The only bet that he did not win was one for 35,000, that Chicago would leapture the first game As it was a draw, the money was tak- en down. In the world's champion- | ship series between Boston and Pitts | burg, Gwilliam lost 3 2 000. He won { 810,000 when the Giants beat the | Athletics, and lost £30,000 when the | Chicago White Socks defeated the Chi- i cago Cubs. Renfrew Factory Closed. Renfrew, Ont. has closed down, not a dozen employees. {ery has not been | three weeks, and the few men | kept at. bench work. Soon after the {old company (the P. R | Manufacturing comp: wert |in Renfrew, financial trouble made it- about two years |Canada : | self apparent, and ago a new company Was founded Alexander Barnet giving it a financial {Britain upon and guaranteeing rent of | building to the town until November. It is gathered that the business out-'distance. the company | status, | look does not warrant | continuing and it is now clearing uj | affairs. | Executed, Murdered, Wounded. | St. Petersburg, Oct. 18.--Police sta- terrorism occurring {during the month of September, show {that thirty-four persons were execu 207 persons, including se officials, i ee e-- venty-three | various afirays. The figures do not {include the casualties in the anti-Jew {ish riots at Odessa, Rostov and Sim- feropol. | ------ { Asked To Be Imprisoned. | Michigan City, Ind., Oct. 18 lescaping from the state penitentiary "lin July, 1906, Allen J. Lawrence, © i Laporte, Ind., came back, vesterday | and gave himself up. He said that he rted and wanted tc | finish his punishment sentence with extra time for the es cape. Serious Charge Odessa, Oct. 18.--A crop o is expected to follow Sea transport Drunkenness amon | the officers and crew is said to hav « Although th k| caused the accident. t | ment is y. | petency. ee One Dollar Fountain Pen. tain pens from $1 up. filling fountain pens |dern), from $2.50 to ¥5, at | drug store. eee Try Bibby's special $1 sweaters. Qct. 18.--The Cum- | ming Manufacturing vompany, limited, | affecting, happily, The machin- running for over Cumming {following any) was installed Laurier transmitted by raphy from the Marconi station in Took a Fit of Coughing. were murdered, {and that 172 people were wounded in Aiter | for attacking a He will serve out his Against Officers. yesterday. { suicides | cross the the stranding of machine, in Prueth, on to his residence, but became confused, psarrounding rural distriet, The Leeds county Women's Christian | Temperance Union convention was held Methodist church yesterday | partment or govern. number of the chafieur present | partment 10 (Waterman's Mo- | cessation of PAYS 60-YEAR DEBT. Was Relic of Partnership of Her Father. Dubuque, la., Oect 18.--Fifty thou sand dollars of the Russell Sage mil- lions will go to the heirs of Ezekiel Oliphant, living here. The history of the payment .dates back more than sixty years, when there was a part burg on April 17th, 1850 Young pership in the salt business between Ramsey was given an ordinary public Joseph {afterward General) Slocum | school education and graduated at the and Ezekiel Oliphant, at Syracuse, | Western University of Pittsburg N.Y. The business failed. Slocum re- | where he studied engineering. He mar- mained in New York state and Oli- | ried Miss Laura Palmer on April Sth, phant, with his family, came west. | 1875. He first joined the engine The eldest. daughter of Mr. Slocum be-| corps of the P. €C. and 8t. L. R. R. in 1869 and stayed there one year. He The families lost track of each other | was chief engineer of the Pittsburg and an old debt of Joseph Slocum re- Southern railway from 15879 until mained unpaid until the matter re 1882. From 1991 until: 1893 he was cently was presented to Mrs. Sage's| the general manager of the C. C, C attorneys. She ordered the debt,| and St. L. R. R. known as the 1 grown through interest from $2,000 to | Four system. His home is in St. £60,000, discharged. { Louis, Mo. Wo | Joseph Ramsey came the second wife of Russell Sage of the New York supreme court, try has no idea of war with the Un | ited Stated or any country, being fin- ancially ed to the i It Was So Sharp It Cut Through! 56 wii "550% | Says Justice Truax Of New York The Dynamite. # Buffalo Furnace Company Plant Has a Close bax in samba avo aficcod by this "+ Call--Saved By a Mere Chance From : a Great Catastrophe. Supreme United States And Canada Need Have No Fear Of Japan As They Are Copyists Not Originators. Justice Truax,!ly explained that it was en just | foreign labor agitators, and did not] indicate the true feeling of the Cana- | dians for the Japanese." Vancouver, Oct. 18 returned from Japan, says the coun- | handicapped. People are tax: limit and dre busy paying | i the country's bills. The only idea of | war is in the vellow journals of Am-! 1 Ol erica. He says neither Canada nor the Un- ited States have anything to fear from the Japanese commercially, for despite their cleverness the sons of Nippon are mere copy ists and do not originate in mechanical arts Regarding the Vancouver riots Truax said: "To the credit of the Ja panese the affair has seareely created a vipple of excitement. The feeling was one more of surprise that such 'an oc currence should take place in the ter: vitory of a Japanese ally Talk of riots soon cnded when it was official GROW RICH. FARMERS Wheat and Barley at $1 and Flax! The Very Above That. | Fargo, N.D.. Oct .18.~North Dakota farmers are rolling in wealth, Out | side the famous Red River valley the! actual yield was not so large this year | as last, but it was taken off cheaply and the farmers are realizing heavily. Wheat is selling at move than $1 a] bushel at all stations in and at some stations barley has al- ready reached that figure, 'while flax | ranges away above those a oats and corn are bringing higher | prices than ever before in the history | of the state i | | Mrs. Oakes, a lady of between sixty | and sixty-five years, and well known | pl in the vicinity of Athens, died Wed: | matte sion. nesdad night at Oak Leaf. See Biouy's. special 25¢. caps. n------ # Sen LAURIER'S MESSAGES. Greetings to the People of Great Britain. The Daily +1 London, Oct. 18 Chro- » [nicle, this wireless tele- to the people of Great the attainment between | the British and Canadian coasts of | New York, Oct. {nature's latest greatest triumph over onables 2 | and aristocratic The Express published the following | at the rencontre which y from the Canadian premier : | widow, who lives on "Welcome. By this bond between there, forced upon herself. Britain and Canada one more triumph for the empire and science has been achieved." I'he Daily Mail message from "Loyal Canada." "Greetinos best described by which she placed in a also published a | newspaper : FOUND NATURAL GAS. imposing ' | | Vases Smelt it at Greenfell and | vy; Address, i Applied a Match. Regina, Sask., Oct, 18. Natural gas {ers of many letters she vesterday, miles | Quickly an interview was arranged was struck, four north of Grenfell. The spot where the | she, wearing a bunch of lilies-of.the-! out | strike was made government road allowance. The discovery was made by a farm- who detected Fwas to arrive on the 9 bh! York express, eastbound, yesterday. e | ' ier living in the vicimty, a smell of gas being evident, a mate was applied with the result that the gas at once ignited FIGHTS IN GANANOQUE. | p | { A Woman Killed By Ants. | - | Hamburg, Uct. 18. Prince Von Bue- | Constable Thomson Struck in have recently published sensational | | low, the imperial chancellor, was in a | Face With Frying an. tatements imputed to J. A. Osborne, | Times of Fort Frances, fatal automobile accident, near here, i Gananoque, Oct. 18.--Wilson & Sons editor of the An aged woman tried 10 | annual sale of cattle, horses and car front of a hired | riage took place to-day and attracted ' part the shore road in which he was proceeding | oa "unusually large number from was run down before the * cab Her death was in- ok He {in Grace d ¢ - 1 od hicii = Ham! an gi | afternoon. Delegates ued his journey to Hamburg on i€ | from all over the county. ¢ {and e could be stopped. he stantaneous. The prince were electric cars. Rev. Norman McLeod, of the First | erréneously, : | I'resbyterian church, Brockville, gave borne. Meanwhile letters have been | | 3 » , : | Smoke From Vesuvius Ceased. |... interesting address on "Moral Re. | sent to that gentleman on behalt of Naples, Oct. 15. --A panic was caused | the volcano. ERY PEC | Sue for } Brockville, Oct. 183.--An { entered in th { damages by | for Mr. and Mrs. W. B. { Gananoque, against M of the Factory Town, negligence resulting in the death their daughter, Lucy Maud. on 18th last. The case is a the ontcome will particularly | contravinrs, { pomber culiar ane and awaited with interest. i residents of Gananogue. {18th last the young lady jet while skating on some thin iow front of the town io com action was e ligh court for unstated W. B. Carroll, as counse k Pegnock, ! before the itchell & Wilson, On December was drown- any with al might otherwi ~ | the name of : | Bedell, of Merrickville, an island |Skated Where Ice Had Been Cut and P drents i ile ext oh jews, sud : | « Messrs. Wilkinson & Hall, who con- A New Plan Proposed in London for Home Rule. business here Damages. ducted a baking | some time, have located in young man, whose life was Falls. Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Mitchell & Wilson are the owners of King street, have loft and two days | phia to spend m relatives... P. Bingham, 1. Merchants' saved 1} a small tug and scow'; accident their returned fro Rockport boats to lay for | them up for the winter. On arriving of | at Gananoque they found the ice so De- | thick that a channel about 300 feet chants' Bank pe- | long had to be cut in order to get days this be | the tug in the hones, and it Was The Misses Le by | in this channel that the young lady of Saginaw, Mich, | skated. broke through and subse- | spending some time in quently mot her death, as the ice, it {guests of |, was not =o thick as it] Flunder, so have been, home, ar of with manager ol who 'have town, track street, have ind x alleg | ering, lie | There She Was Waiting at the Station and He 17.--All the fashi:! The widow, although well-known, is this 'personal,' Philadelphia came time well-to-do, desives to mar- " The lady, who is no older than she fellow, | feels, chose her aflinity from the writ received. is situated on the| valley in her corsage, was to wait at| her corsage | the Pennsylvania railroad station; he, form and with a red, red rose in his coat lapel, «1 will die a widow, am. New suid to { form," in Grace church last evening, handled, being struck over the bead Broekviile he will go and in the face with a frying pan by a man named Bryan, from Seelov's western asylum Bay, who was promptly landed in the | lock-up. Ac George Whitmarsh has purchased, his daughter, Mrs, (Dr) the | Bank, in Prescott, and | for several years on the staff of the Mer- tion here, spent a couple of | government week in town ah oe. English leona' and May Flunder, . toe rt . thorities in close touch with minister | gir 'Anthony MacDouhell, their grandiather, Fdward | returned | formative stage REPLIED TO HIS MA'S AD. kd Ad the station; the express stopped ; from a car dropped her stalwart son "Hello, are vou doing here ? Next instant he saw the bunch of the lilies-of-the-valley; "A lady of mature age, but looking | tune fit of coughing, which could not | | young and feeling so: a tall blonde, and graceful, and at the "ml --grot hide her confusion, however off to stammered her son, twenty-three vears old, a gay employed in Philadelphia He rushed to the news-stand, grab young bed a paper, and threw ground them under her feet intimate, "confidential" male friends Asked To Explain. of James Bay and As this urea in extent impossible for the mounted police confirm statements take the si LM for Smith's Morton, for Philadel I" the coming winter with . London, Oct, 18.--A new plan Jrish home rule of the statesmen en 3 the | Jul circles Though the scheme is still in | tically denied, Vancouver, Shaughnessy has joined Hays in favor Interviewed, 'To me Morrow. said : opposition to the Japanese in many respects they ave equal to] the whites." mise of faster route "have only white labor in the jon. but did not think rapid develop | ment could ' other labor, particularly in Columbia. tion Mr. Osler sees no cause for alarm or uneasiness. ference will take place at to-day to Oakville, to | outbreak. the state,| price of " price of grain figures and} make any nomination mons vavaney. 50. doen elected president of the Baptist Asso- {lo ciation of Untano and Quepec around the world, lation in land which he saw going on | in Canada | family will vist Cana » The widow, looking extremely youth: | in Burlington, N.J., an old] ful and handsome, waited at the ch-- town, are laughing a matronly Federal street | ture, ia credited with a desire to en- | mother," he cried, "what, she the rose hel wore, She blushed far redder than the | rose: and was seized with an oppor- | ! wore awarded to get a peper,"'y the Canada Foundry company. who is about] | Winchester, Wednesday, reporting his serambled aboard | the last coach as the express pulled | Hix mother tore the lilies from | them on the plat- * she has since a. fe- | Gilchrist flect, was sunk, in a collision | with Ottawa; Oct. 17.--Some newspapers Ont., as to alleged cannibalism on the | i i pt wae ac of Indians between the eastern | David Langford the Renfrew pedes- overs territory | ie 2 . : covers territory larger| 0 "ie morning, ten minutes be | hind schedule time. de-1 o'clock on his way to Port Hope. He or deny. they)! in fale condition in all respects, but which have been imputed, | it is believed, to Mr, Os than civilized Europe it 1s either the Indian de the government asking him for details | or for a deninl of the assertions cre-| William to London tol medical superintency of tw} of { that it was suggested by based on a modifica | American system: of state | is under consideration by | according to aw and may be diploma- | study the there js little doubt | standpoint, Court. ------ | { Japs Equal Of Whites. i Oct. 18.--Sir Thomas | the Japanese. "1 cannot see why there is such 1 believe | He re-al E. B. Osler said it was desirable to! domin- be accomplished without British Upon the financial situa- OF THE NEWS. Latest Culled From All Over The World. The closing session of the peace con: Ihe Hague PITH has seat help smallpox | Dr. Sheard, Toronto, check the | Toronto brewers have raised the beer ou account of the high London liberals have dec ided not to for the com Rev. Dr. Gordon, The Michigan Central railway has | eaded guilty, at Windsor, in r of the Essex dynamite explo A combine of athletes bas been sug { | gested in connection with the propos | od trip of a Canadian team to Sue} land. Phe liberals of bury St. John, as their commons. Queensbury and Hu nominated Col. Hugh Mclean, | candidate for the Keir Hardie, writing of his tour | condemns the specu members of the royal | la in connection | with the centenary of the landing of | Distinguished Champlain. | R. A. Thompson, North Wentworth's | ntative in the Ontario legisla | represe ter federal politics. Francis. Day, Elgin, died as the re-! sult, it is alleged, of a dose given him by a doctor from. a bottle which was wrongly labelled. | The widow and famil | Meddaford, killed at Goderich last fall | | £2,700 Trooper Mulloy sent a cablegram to «afe arrival in Glasgow, He is proba- | bly at Oxford University now. i in Toronto, a petition is in active | circulation, nsking for the appoint ment of a governnsent commission to determine whether coal dealers have unlawfully combined. The wooden steamer Case, of the the Pittsburg Steamship com pany's steel steamer Mariska, oppos ite Amherstburg. The crew was saved Inquiry of the post office department | goes to show that the increased rate] of postage on newspapers and periodi- cals from the United States has had! the desired effect of cutting off tons | upon tons of printed matter from | oss the border. . 1 1 i trian arrived back at Oshawa, at 10.40! He left at 11.05 | his feet are in Very bad shape. He | had to stop at a farm house to have "| his feet washed, treated and his toes] | bandaged. ------ Falls, a Brown, Smith's Also the self- here, yesterday, owing to the sudden |gnder the auspices of the w.CT.U. J . smoke 'rom all the cra- A 'considerable amount of 'scrap dited to him. | hyrakesman in the employ of the C.F. Wade's | ters of Vesuvius, accompanied by loud | ping' took place along the principal | mt ete | R., was struck in the face by the Jev- detonations which usually mean a | treets oi the town yesterday after-| Try Bibhy's new "he. golf caps. | or of la semaphore, which he was op- | resumption of activity on the part Of inoon. In one of tne tilts 'Constable, . If Dr. Moher medical superintendent | erating at Hochelaga on Sunday John Thompson was pretty roughly of the Eastern Hospital, leaves 'hree of his teeth were knocked out and an ugly gash was inflicted on his face, from his chin to his nose. See Bibby's great $1 gloves. een. IRELAND AS A STATE Ambassador Bryce, who was Irish secretary before his appointment to the British nis ! sion in Washington. . The idea, in brief, js to mw Jand a state of the United Kingdom under' sec- | rotary for Ireland. is understood to a {have visited Ambassador Bryce to matter from the Irish cooler. cool ; light frosts. gineered by WO 1 od the pro . . vessels i the Pavific Ladies' Fancy Handker- Montreal, Was | Hapdkercheils were offered us at a very | them. cheap, and now want them. the | many of them v "TO-MORROW, at 13s. vy of Emanuel in Dainty Dresden and damages from! ot hut what is worth We. | are good | MORROW, at 18e. i make Ire: | winds,, fair, be- coming muc Saturday, fair and quite pecials chiefs Femstitchod Eanbroidered w price to clear t We 'bought We couldw't help it they were so there're yours it you All dainty terns and 200. - and 20c. qualities. ' ' Fancy Ribbons Of Lovisiene, Taffeta and Guuse Silk, Roman Stripe , widths run from four to sis nehes, and there is not a ribbon in the and wasy value at 33c: On Sale TO STEACY'S. Agents for Home Jourhal Patterns \ MARRIED. PHIPPEN~TAYLOR --At the residence of the bride's parents, Yonkers, the Hudson, on Oct. 13th. 1907. Miss Augusta, duughter of Mr. and Mrs, ¥. Tavier, to William 8. Phippen, formerly of Kingston. Gntario. ---- e---------------------- -------------------------------------- FERN Guin 1 have the test dos of Rad, 1 have also Purniture, that T° A 898 Prinesss striet. The Life Of Trees. Reazilian cocomuut palms live from 600 to 700 years, and the Arabs as | sert that the date palm frequently reaches the age of 200 to 300 years, savs the Dundee Advertiser Wallan's oak. near Paisley, Beotland, is known to he over 700 years old, and there are eight olive trees on the Mount of Olives, near Jerusalem, which are | known to have been flourishing in 1008, The vows at Fountain's Abbey, Yorkshire, were--old__ trees when, in 1132, the abbey was built, and a red- wood in Mariposa Grove, California, is a manifold cententarian. Baobab trees of Africa have been computed to he over 5,000 years old, and the de- {eiduous cypress at Chapuitepec is eon- | Gdered to be of a still greater age. | Humboldt said that the Dracacna Craco at Orotava, oR" Tenerifie, was one of the oldest inhabitants of the earth. 2 ee C. S. Buckley; aged fifty, died at | Schenectady, N.Y. He was a Cape Vin- | cent man a his remains wers buried © | there, He was with the American Ex- | press company for -- PE Se special §2 club sweatorsy real nobl ik § Fart . |