Daily British Whig (1850), 22 Oct 1907, p. 1

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I'TOW lies' d Coats se handsome Coats embo- very last word on good le~for this season. de from a fine Broadcloth and od quality muskrat. olors are Black, Dark reen, Navy, Brown. ie have Alaska Sable and Revers, others with 'ersian Lamb Collar and and the brown has Isabel- 'ollar and Revers. quality lined se Coats we will offer at st now, we invite you and, if you wish, can . placed aside until \ --y * a sforLadies Them Back in Style e have several nice lines dies' Dorothy Dodd A Cut Patent Leather, dies' Dorothy Colle, Patent Button, $450. dies' Vici Kid Dorothy lon, nice and dressy, $ es' Kine Vici Kid Tur:- ole Dorothy Button, $4. dies' Empress Kid But- comfortablekind, £3.00. yles. We will be pleased Shoe Store YEAR '74. NO. 247, 200000800 000000000000 0000000000000 000000000000000000° A low price seems to be the whole aim of some people in buying Furs, It lacks Little Value Good far value of its own--like a fine diamond. We give our fur has a ¢ ® ° garments quality and style : . always to make them perfect and void worry by selling only ¢ such garments as we can © absolutely guarantee. We © urge shoppers to do their buying early--not only be- cause of the better service we can give, but because the variety is greatest now, and some of the styles are limit- ed to one or two of a kind. We invite inspection do everything in our power sense inferior. a guarantee of excellence. We make everything we sell, and guarantee everything we make: ® KINGSTON. 00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 Turgeon Is Ahead. Prince Albert, Oct. 22.--All twenty-three of have been disposed of. Turgeon still Joads with eighteen votes and his election is practically assured. Special value boys' sweaters, Boe. toques, red, navy, white and 25c. New York Dress Reform. Saskatoon has sold $250,000 of de- Scottish bentures at' ninely, to.a firm. DAILY MEMORANDA. To- Night, Sig George Mills & Co's formal Continues. Music until 10 o'clock. Rolier Rink every afternoon and even Dg- Wonderland Theatre, afternoon and evening. Orgén Recital, First Congregationa Church, 8 p.m Compton Comedy Co., Grand House, 8.15 p.m. Princess Theatre--Moving Pictures an Illustrated Songs. Neot i M.C.A., 8 pm Auction Sale at Mrs. T. M. Fenwick's.| per to-morrow, 10.30 182 University Ave. a.m, j day Cr ty i shat At The Bijou Theatre, to-day on are the greatest offenders in the chew-! mony took vlace, Mr *The Gendarme's Boots, nlso Wood Industry of Canada.' This day in history :--RKieg Richard | they introduce it 11. born, 1450 : Marquis of Lansdown made governor-gene an Pirst British parliament, 1707. -- WHIG TELEPHONES. 243--HBusiness Office. 299--Editorial Rooms. 292--Jobbing Department. g fegal Forms, all Kinds, at Whig. The Daily Whig is always on sale Gibson's Drug St Open till late each evening. ® from fourteen to sixteen @ | nesses declared . @/|used to make them more amenable. and °| @ | maintained a harem, an The McKay 3 The trial label on Fur of'any sort is 9 [tween the ® | ocal authorities the ° | relations @ | sionaries sent @® | gross immorality, John MeKay Fur House. $ | made by defendant and his friends to ay § @/| prove that the missionaries not only | 300 protested votes | jzation bladk, | opening | Opera | a | good manners regarding Liquor Trade, Y. ral of Canada, 1854 TO HAVE NO SUCCESSOR. Leader of the Christain Science Church. Boston, Mass., Oct. 22. Prompted hy the report that a successor had been chosen to take the place of Mrs. IWFIL STORY eee. Sct et Christian Science church, after the death of the present leader, Alired Farlow, the official spokesman for the denomination, bas issued this state: ment :° Revealed. successor. "Neither Mrs. Augusta Stetson, the leader of the New York church, nor the" Lady Dunmore, who has been pro- minently mentioned, will ever fill the position occupied today by Mrs. IMMORALITY PRACTICED IN A GERMAN COLONY. African "Girls Subjected Hy |Fddy. . Officials to the Grossest In- "With the death of the aged leader, Alenitiss abd Out Th the Cliristian Science church will have gn rage--dihe |, single personal leader. Story Told in Court. Berlin, Oct. 22.--The action for libel brought by Herr Roeren, clerical mem- ber of the reichstag, against Herr Schmidt, formerly an official of the German colony of Togoland, is con- cludéd at Cologne, but judgment is de- ferred. Herr Roeren made a speech a year ago in the reichstag deseribing the scandalous state of affairs in Togo- land, and severely, censuring Herr Schmidt for immorality 'and other of- fenses committed against the natives. In" a pamphlet published by Herr #The business of the organization will undoubtedly be considered by a board of directors, while the memory of the founder and discoverer will re- main _the only name ever connected with the faith." FAMOUS ESSAYIST. He is a Writer of National Re- putation. John Burroughs, the famous essay- ist, was born at Roxbury, N.Y. on April 3rd, 1887. He was educated at the town academy, and, on September Schmidt he said that when Herr |13th, 1857, married Miss Ursula North. | Fi Roeren made his statements he was | He taught school eight years and be- | urs aware that they were untrue. came a clerk in the treasury depart | This was the ground of the presentment in 1864, holding this position | of action; but public attention has not | until 1873. Since J874 he has lived | been directed so much to tHe person-| al quarrel between thise-two as to the | shocking state of affairs in Togoland | revealed by the trial It was stated | in evidence that it was customary to] {force natives to work, and to flog | them if they refused. With wounds on | their backs as * large as one's hand | they were forced to labor. . { Herr Schmidt himself seems to have | been a gentleman of very amorous ten- | | dencies. Not only had he supplied | | himself with a native "wife," but he} {travelled about = with a harem of] | black girls, whether at the cost of the {empire was not stated. - Those girls who declined his advances were forced {to comply. The ages of these wretch- | ed beings were variously stated as! Several wit-| whip was | that the Kersting, | institution | Another official, a Dr. to help you mabe intelli @| (}ih has since been prohibited by the | gent comparisons. imperial government. Chief Justice There's no room in this o | Mayer had a native girl as "teacher|on a farm and studied animal life business for anything in any @| of languages." | closely jrom first hand observation further revealed that be-| and is noted as a naturalist. He lives mission stations and the| at West Park, N.Y., and has written worst possible | nearly twenty successful stories on the existed Because the mis- | habits of wild animals. home reports of their Schmidt and others raided the mission station to obtain | possession of a number of incriminat- | and "attempts were | CARL WHEELER KILLED. Shot By the Accidental Discharge of a Gun. N. Y., Oct. | ing documents, | Watertown, 22. --Carl ® | winked at the irregularities of the of-| Wheeler, Holly, was accidentally shot 149-155 BROCK ST. e and killed on Lake Ontario near Sac- tors in carousals of all sorts. These | kets Harbor on Sunday morning, while attempts failed signally on a duck shooting expedition. The It was a disgraceful picture which | charge of a double-barreled shot gun ficials but were themselves participa- sunk in coarse debauchery. | the trial revealed. Enslaved and de- struck him in the abdomen, and death moralized natives on the one side, | sncued before his companion's eyes. | and on the other men who! Por some time Wheeler, who was a but | ought to have been proneers of civil- | young married man has been employed | at the garrison at Fort Ontario, as a me. | lineman. Plans were laid with friends A VERY BAD HABIT. {to go out after ducks. Wheeler start- towards Snake Island, | ed out, going | Chewing Gum Even in God's | four miles from the harbor. Tt was House | there that the accident occurred. The men were in a skiff at the time. Some- | Ottawa, Oct. 22.--The chewing gum | habit was handled without gloves by Rev. G. 1. Campbell, in a stirring ser- | mon in Bell Street Methodist church. | The habit was declared by the] preacher to be almost as great an evil as the tobacco habit. In some respects it was worse, for while the | tobacco user could indulge his ape i WEDDING WAS A FAKE. thing went wrong with the rudder and Wheeler turned about to fix the diffi- culty. The gun slipped in some way, striking the trigger and exploding. As soon as the man's companjons reached Sackets Harbor, Dr. Dings wag called, but Wheeler was dead. tite only in certain places, the gum | omnipresent, being seen | _| chewer was : even in the house of God. | Clever Swindle Worked on "It is very bad taste as well as in | Pennsylvania Farmer. jurious to the health," he said. ""Whe- | pjgtshurg, Oct. 2 i. B. Temple ye farm near Ad- 1] ther it be the natural product or thel gon who owns a | manufactured article, its use is detri-{ rian, wants to recover £300 or cause mental both to the system and to}ghe arrest of a swindler dressed like a But few people know | minister. The latter asked for a nichts that poisonous acids are used in the ly doing, which was cheerfully granted, preparation of gum, such as nitric| 30d the next morning a man and wo- acid, chloride, salts of lead, and cop-| man drave up to the farm house, said | they heard a minister was there, and who are emphaticini co nig {0 get married in a hurry. The stranger consented and the cere- Templeton and worse than all, | his wife acting as witnesses. Both of on the street cars. {yon gigned what they thought was a ©! behind the counter, on the streets, and | marriage certificate Later they learns {even in the hou : | od from the First National Bank in of God. . E BECOMES A WIDOW Fast Brady. that it was a progissory BRID! . "Some people i | their denunciation of the tobacco evil | ing gum evil, and, | note for $303. Several other farmers | have suffered similarly' After Six Months of] ave Married Life. | ASK FOR $20,000. Ont., Oct. 22-Word was London, at JIA lt ilar i the death | gr: f Suit For $ weived here, last night, of the death | gry) Get New Trial o ote, Maker Squar of William Bowers, a former London : = 4 hoy, who, for the past two years, had | eT une + 3 4! Toronto, Oct. 22--1he divisiona hoon workiog on the Pl oot has allowed Edward Smith, a STUDENTS EE -------------- 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. Ne smoke. No smell: Don't ruin your eyes. > EE -- -- 'See them at 3 . N jculars outside i Calgary. ao Jentieulers, killed and merchant of Prageott, a ew trial of e fa $ 1 ] vd Sm i cay | his n against oseph : { that the body is on the way home | his aetior a Wh nlingo { " to hand. Mr. Bowers was | conteacior, and the } ere Ny n hae eA ix months ago when he | of Canada for alleged conspiracy In x a) to Miss Mary Richardson | eonnection with the possesion of cer- | West L he Cot i ai {sx in Prescott. Smith claims ! n r 'tain lands in Pr | West London, the couple leaving for t Sreith Siniime > "reside . | 820,000 damages. The . [Calan " Where they resided until the | ne at Brodville, {time of his ¢ | | missed, in ; \ owing to the i of the plaintiff. ee Pinned Under A Tree. Brockville, Ont., Oct. 22.---John Earl received fatal injuries while working lat Burnham's camp on the Northern Adirondack railway. : 1 "Earl was engaged in felling a tree | Pears ! Pears ! Pears ! when it split, pinning the unfortunate | Bartlett and pickling pears. The Red man to the ground. Durine the half IQiar, Edwards & Jenkin, 274 Prin: (hour, it required his fellow-workmen to chop down the tree and release him he cess street, { rt implored them to put an end to his r <6 The ® re re- | We are turning out custom clothing | misery. The instant the tree was "Three Swallows." | Sir John Power & Sons, | "Three Swallows" Irish Whiskey, Famous for over a century, {Of highest standard of purity, Distillers to His Majesty the King. e-- R obertson Bros. [os usual prowptly, Livingston's, [moved be expired he Daily B KINGSTON, ONTARIO. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1907.' =r NTS What An Action For Libel! Mary Baker G. Eddy, as head of the And Mulal Hafid Won the "Mrs, Eddy, founder of the faith} and to-day in supreme control of the] Christian Science church, will have no | ------------ : : { tion of a holy war to which he is op- posed: | have deserted him and come to Tan- a PEN FAG TO FAG Battle. WILL PROTECT ALL FOREIGN- ERS AT MOROCCO CITY. Controlling Certain Moorish Sects Who Are Demanding a Holy War--Raisuli Credited With | Making Threats Regarding | Kaid Maclean. { Tangier, Oct. 22.--The first conflict | between the forces of the rival sul- | tans, Abdel Aziz and Mulai Halid, oc curred on October - 17th, near Hettat, between Shawla and Mequinez. "Aec- cording to reliable reports received here, from Mazagan, the troops of | Mulai Hafid, south, defeated the forces | of Abdel Aziz and captured Kaid | Bushta Bagdani, commander-in-chief of all the imperial forces in the field, who had with them eight pieces of modern field artillery. Mulai Hafid, it is announced, start ed on October 19th for Charab, the listrict between Tangier, Rabat and Fez. He has issued notice to the ef- fect that he guarantees the protection of all the foreigners at Morocco City. Hafid is showing a strong hand in controlling certain Moorish sects, which are demanding the proclama- Some of Raisuli's followers ~iven for the de Raisuli, in retalia- » in the » of "intends to {oier, The reason sertions is that tion for the French interfere steps taken to secure the Kaid Sir Harry Mclean, kill McLean by inches." ---- Casa Blanca Expedition. Tangier, Oct. 22.--The Casa Blanca expedition has cost France half a mil- lion dollars up to date for the land operations alone. Including the opera- tions of the French fleet in Moorish waters, the expense totals $33,000 per day. Spain's refusal to join France in overstepping the terms of the Algecir- as convention, which has been accen- taunted by her abandonment of the proposed combine mission of the two nations' enveve to 8 at Rabat, has caused general satis | faction in Morocco. The long fast of Ramadan is telling on the spirits of | both the sultans and the two armies, and real fighting before the end of the month is improbable. Ia the meantime at Morocco City Mulai Hafid's_ hands are full. Powerful factions there are clamoring for a holy war, which that political leader knows would be sui cidal folly. Sixty 'women, forming part of Sultan Abdul Asiz's harem at Fez, have arrived at Rabat, which suggests that the sultan has no im- mediate intention against his brother and rival, the sultan of the south. ei | DIRECTORY REUNITES COUPLE HFROISM OF LIEUTENANT. New York, Oct. 21.<That a turret accident on board the United States battleship Connecticut, similar to those on the G ia and several oth- er of the United States' big fighting ships, was averted by the presence of mind and heroism of Lieut. William Pigott Cronan, has just come to light through the summoning of a of enquiry at the New York navy yard. According to the story, Lieut. Uron- an was in command of one of the vight-inch. guns. on the Connecticut during recent target practice off New England. As the powder charge was thrust into the gun the lieutenant no- ticed that from a small hole in the bag a quantity of powder had escap- od and fallen into the threads into which: the breech-block of the gun screws, Realizing that tlie action of screw: ing the breech-lock home would ignite the powder before the block could be firmly screwed home, causing the en- tire charge to explode, as happened before, Lieut. Cronan issued ap order that stopped every man as he stood, except the man who was closing the breech of the gun. He did not hear the shout and continued to swing the block home. Lieut Cronan sprang for- ward and thrust hie hand into the breech of the gun. The breech dosed on the hand, badly mangling it, and cleanly outting off the first finger, which fell into the grooves an caus. ed the closing mechanism to clog. The sailor at the breech of the gun faint- ed when he discovered what he had done. and what he had narrowly es- caped doing. 1f the breech had been closed it is likely that every man in the turret would have heen killed. The hoard of enquiry was called to determine how the hole came into the powder bag. Lieut. Cronan refuses to discuss the incident. HHA DINE WITH EMPEROR, FERRE EEFELFEER Tokio, Oct. 22. Thomas J. O'Brien, the American ambassador to Japan, Bas been invited to the luncheon with the emperor and empress on November 18th. Its purpose is to BEZEL EVLXEEXERERE emphasize the desire for friendly relations between Japan and t.: United States. Husband and Wife Vainly Sought Each Other. New York, Oct. 22-No less a volume than a telephone directory, vesterday, reunited a couple who had been strangely separated, For ten vears they had heen seeking each other. John Iuchta, the husband, who that number of years ago was an engineer on a trans-Atlantic steamer, sent word to his wife in America to meet him in New York, but she found it hard to read the letter, mistook the name, and went to Europe They passed back and forth several times, and finally gave each other up Another panic occurred at Mogador fusing to submit to the orders of Mulai Hafid, the third division of whose army now threatens to ocoupy the city. An attempt was made yes terday at Blanca to embark Turkish troops there on a French war shin for transportation to Rabat, but Casa owing to the given up The hopes of (the release of General Maclean seem to be as far from reali zation as ever. No sooner do the Brit ish authorities accept certain condi tions than Raisuli wants something fresh. and the impression is growing that the bandit chief is simnlv yer ing at the powers ------------ DEATH OF W. F. COLCLEUGH. Pioneer of the West Dies Full of Years and Honor. Winnipeg, Oct. 22.--Death™removed one Bf the west's oldest settlers yes terday in the person of W. F. Col cleugh, former M.P.P. for Selkirk While coming to Winnipag a week ago on an electric railway the deceased was stricken with apoplexy. He was removed to the hospital in an unconscious condition, remaining so until death, He was probably the oldest Selkirk resident. He was mayor of that place for five years. Sixteen years ago he was elected to parlia- ment by acclamation, He was in his sixty-second year. ------------ Americans Arrested. St. Petersburg, Oct, 22.-William Lrglish Walling and Mrs. Anna Wal propagating revolutionary = doctrins. Kellogg Durrand, another American, and a friend of Mr. Walling, who has been in St. Petersburg gathering ma- taken into custody, but later was re- leased. Mr. Walling is thirty years old. He is a son of Dr. Willoughby Walling, of Chicago, former ~ United States consul at Edinburgh. Mrs. Walling is a graduate of Stan- ford University, Cal. Jewess, twenty-six vears old, and was {born in Russia. She has lived in the | United * States since childhood. Her {father is a business man in San Fran- | cisco. | Dooley And Kipling. | Montreal, Oct. 22.--Peter Dunn {(Dooley) arrived in the city. this morning. from Chicago, his purpose {being to meet Rudyard Kipling, who | {also arrived, to-day, from the west. {Roth gentlemen are gests of Sir Williasan Van Horne, and are spending {thei time playing yesterday, owing to the local kaid re | heavy sea the effort was ling were arrested here charged with/ terial for a series-of lectures, was also, ment. She has done considerable literary work. She is a as lost Yesterday, Mrs. Puchta, who kad | set up a millinery shop in Manhattan, saw her husband's name in the tele: phone directory for. . Westhampton leach, Long Island. She took the first train there and found her hus. band repairing automobiles in a gar age. ELECTED A MEMBER. First Time a Canadian Gets the | Honor. Toronto, Oct 21.--R. F. Stupert, director of the Toronto observatory, has received word that he had been elected a member of the International i Meteorological committee, in place of Dr. Von Bezaid, of Germany, who died The meeting at which he last year i TT was held recently at Paris. The International Meteorologi- ical committee is composed of . ten « | members elected for life. This ia the [first time that a Canzdian has been | made a member, but two Americans I belong to ghe committee | Trying To Cover Distance. Port Hope, Ont., Oct. 22. Jimmy Reynolds, the walking barber, loft {here at six o'clock. this morning, in {an attempt to break Dave Langford's Crepard of thirty-nine hours from Port {Hope to Toronto and return. He ie {accompanied by Kit Henderson, ths {famous lacrosse trainer, who believes i Revnolds will accomplish the feat 1 Mr. Reynolds reached Bowmanville at {1:40, looking fresh and walking | strong, thirty-five minutes, ahead of | Langford's time { White House Dream Over. | Manila, Oct 22. At a banquet {given in his honor in this city, Secre- tary Taft made a significant state He was referring to the fact that he had already visited the Philip pines three times, and in sayin~ that {he purposed to come here again, he used this phraseology : "1 hope in 'another two years to visit Manila | again, but then I will probably come 'as a private citizen." Youths To Wed. | Windsor, Oct 22 ~The police ar lrested two vouthe and two sirle who ran away from Nortonville, Michigan, to be married here. The younger girl was only thirteen. The combined as- sets of the quartette amounted to | fifteen cents. An officer is coming, for {the runaways. To Be Sold By Auction. Montreal, Oct. 22. lerienn Wrecking Co., limited, has de feided to sell the Buvarian, which now "The North Am- Despatches From Near And Distant Places. THE WORLD'S TIDNGS gree SS gee Matters That Interest Everybody Notes From All Over--Little of Everything Easily Read and Remembered, Strathroy is to have a new armory. Allan Studholme, M.P.P., is stump- ing in London for the labor candidate. Gans engines have been installed in the Mdiary stove works at Lodnon, The Montreal World is to be issued soon as a daily at one cent. It will be a liberal paper. Charles 'Treemeer, St. Catharines, succumbed to heart failure on Satur- day, while shooting, There is a plan on foot in England to outspeed the Lusitania by turbine engines .driven by electricity. The seal of the South African Re- public has been saved from auction by the intervention of the colonial office. Thomas Donnelly, Peterboro, Ont, while temporarily insane, attempted to commit suicide at Rochester, N.Y. The striking miners at the Spring- hill mines have promised to return to work. il a new board ol conciliation is appointed. x a A gang of Chinese coolies, at New Moderfontein, in the Transvaal, muti- nied on Sunday, night and attacked the police. The attorneys of the Standard Oil company have discovered twenty-five reasons why the fine of $20,240,000 should not be paid. The New York clearing house was called upon, Monday, to meet the debit balances of two banks, to the extent of over two million dollars. The report of the foreign missions committee, presented to the Baptist convention, at Woodstock, is a strong arraignment of the opium traffic, R. Bickerdike, M.P., Montreal, was struck by a street car and badly hurt, One of his arms was fractured below. the shoulder, while his shoulder was dislocated. . Sir Francois Langelier and Justice commission to inyestifiin the Hour: assa charges against + Mr, Tur geon, Mr. Prevost and others. The advisory union of Algoma muni cipalities met at Blind River and pass- od resolutions favoring the control of which the lands are situated. W. Brown, of 'Kingston, Eng., used electricity to commit suicide with, He put his hands on two of the ter minals, and instantly thereafter he fell down dead. He suffered from re ligious mania. J. J. McGovern, Ottawa. went to Ireland on a visit to old friends, There he met a bright girl, wooed and won her. On Saturday night she reached Ottawa and they were wed. The maid was Miss B. Martin, of Kil lenshandra. Michael Molutyre, a promising stu- dent in theology died at the age of twenty-one years, in Montreal, of brain fever, probably broucht 'on by overstudy. He was in his second year in theology when his death occurred. The voung man came from Baisdale, Cape Breton county, N.S, AT THE POLICE COURT. An Offender's Little Excuse Did Not Go With Magistrate. Heory Haines, who takes great de- light, when under the influence of liquor, to note the fact that he is English, was the only offender in the police court, this morning. He was gathered in about 10.30 o'clock Mon. day morning, by Constables Naylon and Timmerman. Haines, who has been before the court before, gave an excuse for his conduct, but it did not go with the magistrate, He told the magistrate that he had been waiting on the corner for a gen- tleman, and us it was rather cold, he had taken a glass of beer, but be was not drunk, by any means, Of this fact he was sure. "When | was standing around," said Haines, "I suppose that it made me look rather suspicious." "You looked very suspicious comifig across the market square, with a po- lice constable on each side of you," remarked the court. A fine of $2 and costs was then imposed. Haines holds the record in police cir- cles for talking. He talked steadily from the time of his arrest until four o'clock in the afternoon. As usual, he was quieted down in time for the court proceedings. ------ Stomach troubles, Heart and Kid- hey ailments, can be quickly ob with a Jreactiption known to druggists everyw! as Dr. Shoop's Restora- tive. The prompt and surprising ve- lief which this remedy immediately brings is entirely due to its Restora- tive action upon the controlling nerves of the Stomach, ete; Sold by all dealers. The ladies of Princess Street Metho- dist church realized the sum of $105, at their recent jumble sale. Mrs. Sproule, wile of the pastor, received a cheque for $10 from a friend in Tor- onto, the money tobe devojed to- the new parsonage. cof, Iron and Wine, "Our Own" make. Pint bottles 50c,, at Wade's drug store. The Ht and workmanship of all suits and overcoats guaranteed, Liv- ton's. 3 Charbonneau will compose the royal} public lands by the municipalities in { { Autumn fashions are established, there is hardly & style of skirt that can't be found in our collection. Hundreds of styles are here, and you can choose with perfect confidence. o Ladies' Walking Skirts eli : ys A Pretty Model Made of All Wool Venetion full plea model, trimmed with buttons aod stitohing, in colors, Cardinal, Navy and Hrown Extra well tailored. SPECIAL PRICE, $06.75, JUST TO HAND New Voile Skirts Hendsome Black models of All Wool Voile, nmde in box pleats with gore of side pleats between daintily trimmed with Tuffete Silk bands, beautifully fwished and very stylish. SPECIAL PRIUE, #10, 2 Call nnd see them. You'll lke ® every one. i STEACY'S + » SOFIIIFIIINIIINIIIII A BORN ARE, --On Sunday Oct 20th, (B07, ] to the wife of Boos Ge Hare, 119 Hegot St, a son. oy i 14th, William . Macdon of Gilpin, Alberta, to Gorman, "Chiat vs , / DIED. SMITH. --In Kingston, on Oot. 23nd, 1807, , 90 Gore Hi, at her late residence, a MACDONALD GORMAN. --At Brock ithe on Oct 4 s Fresh shipment just arrived of Oka Cheese Tilsiter Cheese Canada Cream Cheese Primrose Cream Cheese | Ib. Primrose Cream Cheese, lbs. Iinperial Cream Cheese (Small, medium and large). : Jas, Redden & Co. A ------ oe J Valuable Properties For Sale. RINGWOOD, magnificent grounds § © HOSELAWK, I ne « Full. information a -------- 5 wards the expense in the erection : of} Jes at Point. Levis, by audtion. It is believed that she can realize §125,000, Oysters, Edwards & Jenking |

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