6 APENTA ITS ONLY. t Aperient for Morning Use. ER iQ 2 2 g a @ a @& dd eee PA REEEAR ERR TR [ERE NER Overcoat money, Sir, our splendid line. Our oats can not fail to win sk to see: Edward Overcoat. rial. ington. 8 s New. 2 BIBBY G0. E CLOTHIERS. REE ERENEER ER 2 0 0 3 IAL AND ONLY GENUINE. edicine ever discovered. vn Remedy for , COLDS, RONCHITIS. 1 ENTERY & CHOLERA. 'ASMS. Checks and arrests th. ER, CROUP asd AGUE. Fiat 100 LGIA, GOUT, RHEUMATISX. ps, graduated di B Rind Creates a calm Sepoernng eas + when all other remedies fail: leaves no other medicine can be tolerated. CONVINCING MEDICAL TESTIMONY WITH EACH BOTTLE. Sold by all Chemists. Prices in England : VI. 20, 4) Sole Manufacturers: 1. T. DAVENPORT. LONDON, SE. FIRE coal roiling, and Start- Has No Equal. ze Paper Sacks. NTS. . ' & BIRCH' CK STREET. heard of biseuits----and read i eaten biscuits-- bet you don't know biscuits--auntil yu try Mooney's Perfection Cream Sodas. They are everything that the ideal biscuits should be. The air - tight, moisture - proof package brings them to you fresh, crisp, inviting. Practically every grocer in Canada has MOONEY'S., Yours will get them if you ask. Int & 3 Ib. pkgs. SU -.. THL ELE ELIT LAT CREE LLL AR LR | Princess street woulil soon convince r {anyone that thé much written = of Synopsis of Canadian Northwest | Rocky Road to Dublin," would be | | HOMESTEAD REGULATIONS {as a billiard table, compared with ABy even numbervd section of Domin-| 1 rinces Street It is not the worst jou Lands in Manitoba or the North-West | either. There are many more. The Provinces, excepting 8 and 26, not served, may be howesteaded son: the sole head of a lamily, over 18 years of age, 0 the e tent ISHAUGHNESSY'S SHS re-| old by any per- or "male of | but. on many THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG,. FHURSDAY, Ce L OCTOBER 24, 1907. C.P.R. MAGNATE PLEASED WITH INSPECTION. Says Angus Shops Can Slow Down--Have Been Working at High Pressure--Heaviest of Season's Traffic ir6over. Montreal, |Shaughnessv { i | | Oct. 4.--Sir Thomas | president of the C.P.R., iveturned from his trip of inspection over the road, to-day, well pleased with what he saw, orders that new work was to be un- {dertaken at the Angus shops of the {company in this city, but said that there would he much less activity {there than there had been for some {time past. He explained that the company had; for some time, been em- iploying the plant at high pressure to | (Gill the requirements of the company's loffice, but that it would not be n sary to do so any longer for the pre- fsont. This, coupled with the slackness {which comes always after the harvest fd the greatest of the season's rush {of work is over, would make consider- {able differénce at the shops. LIKES THIS BURG. Bellevillian What a Sees in Kingston. Belleville Ontario i { { | | { | In wandering about the streets of Ontario's oldest gity one is struck 'by one thing---the roads and avalks. Belle- ville citizens who think Front street lis in" bad shape should take a trip to { Kinston and zide over some of the imain streets there. A bugev ride over boardwalks - are rapidly passing f rranolithic, truck by e finish- away to nfuke. place for streets one a section; of 160 acres, "more the poor way in which they or Jess. ol. Those later laid are bv: ft n Application for homestead entry must || e Tater Jai rey a the be made in person by the applicant at a|l'est Dominion Lands Agency or Sub-agency.| There are many things so be learn Eutry by proxy way, however, be mad [od here and many more could be at an Agency om certain conditions by. } . a " the father, mothurwsaon, daughter, broth. | 1&4 ht to the Kineston council. The er or sister of Sq, intending homesteader, | market is a tine one, but is not sa An application for entry or. cancella-| well attended by farmers as is Belle tion made personally at any sub-agent's min rke . Stor 3 A office may be wired to the Agent by the ville market, but the hucksters abound Sub-agent, at the expense of the appli- and one thing to be noted is the cant, wd if the land applied for is vacant | tasty way in, which they display their on receipt of the telegram such applica: vegetables. tion is to have priority and the land will papers to I here. be held until the necessary complete the transaction are received by mail In case of applicaht or if entry summarily "personation' has been cancelled. granted it An application for cancellation must be just hotel in the city pplicant must be utry, and only one! VHT a will be re- Telier, formerly ccifed from em iodividual pntil that ap-fAmerigap. made én person. The a eligible for homestead application for cancellation plichtion hag been disposed of. Where an gotry 4s cancelled sulsequen to {nstitutiop of: cancellation procecdings, the applicant. Yop canceliation will bo en- {ploy as a clerk and titled to prior right of entry. Applicant for cancellation must state in I. what particulars the homesteader is in| default. A homesteader whose entry is not the |, a fine business subject of cancellation proceedings may subject to the approval of Depart- ment, relinquish it in favor * of father mother, son, daughter, M eligible, but to no one else, declaration of abandonment. DUTIES--A settler is required ing plans i-- 1) At least year Quring the term of threa years. 2) A nomesteader sires perform the duties by living on farming land solely by him, not less than eighty (80 acres in extent, in the wicCinity of homestead. Joint ownership in land wil pot meet this requirement. (8) Ii the father (or mother, if father is deceased) of a homesteader has| tomers i farming land not less than ( (80) acres in extent, in the Vicini- ] : home- he has made and kept hosts of friends ence on him, permanent resid owned solely by eighty ty of the homestead, or upon a stead entered for by him in the vicinity such howesteader may perform his residence duties by living with er (or mother.) (4) The term "visinity" in the ug no#: more than nine line, eXelusive of the width lowans crossed inthe measurement. (5) A homesteader intending to Yetform,| I with! or | How on faking 'land owned by himsed must accorylance his resiiflence duties 'in parents the above while living with or fraud the will forfeit all priority of claim will be to per-/derman Bu form the duties under one of the follow-| hotel busiy six months' residence up pn abfl cultivation of the land in each may, if he so de}. required residence owned his harber own the fath-| two | worse preceding paragraphs is defined as mean- miles in a direct of road al- Belleville is quite well represented Among the -Bellevillians may be noted Capt. W. S. Conger, paymaster of the forces for the eastern district, He is a deservedly popular officer and if a general favorite with the stafi. The is probably the British-American, conducted by Walter clerk at the Anglo- ness. Barleigh Ostrom is in his em- is verv popular, (i. Lockett and his son, L.. Loec- kett have one of the most modern | shoe shops one would wish to see and Stephen Rough of Kingston, husiness me- is the "Burrows shows-by his aggressive brother or sister thods that he has profited well by the on filing . experience gained from his uncle, Al ows. Another successful is that of the 'Grand hotel, in the opera house block, con- n| ducted hy, Messrs. Victor and James Eccles. They have a splendid, well- business and are deservedly popular with all classes. Frank M )| Ginty presides over a chair in Hunt's shop and is most popular happy smile draws custom, and His the his big tonsorial skill keeps his cus Then there is the redoubtable Goodman, wine clerk at In his short time here | "Duster" 'ongress Hall. here may be many others here, but s0 far the writer has not met any of Taken all in all, there are places to live in than the oid Limestone City. --QUINTE. | them. | RECESSION OF TRADE. It is Coming--The ning is Here. He stated that he had not given any | He conducts a modern, up- | tito-date house and does g large busi- Begin- | sixth birthday, potify for the district of such | . A o DoH ie Agent iow | Relative to the shape in which the Befo#e making application for patent! f,rthcoming recession in trade will > 2 hs' notice | _ . 34 Gol x . : the hd Bt Ee A a Do. | show itself, a representative of one of : e ss minion, Lands at Ottawa, of his the largest groups of capitalists in tion to do so. | the United Stat perhaps the larg- SYNOPSIS OF CANADIAN NORTH-| est, gave his view to your correspon WEST MINING REGULATIONS. | dent as follows: COAd--Coal mining rights may' bel pj tinh interchange. and trans Jeased 'for a period of twenty-one years| vy He An I AD! at an gnwual rental of $1 per acre. Not portation, together with .consumptive more than 2,560 acres shail be leased to| demand, have not begun to show any one individual or company. A royalty pelsuch reaction as they will yet have the rate of five cents per ton 1s f I iE collected on the merchantable coal mined to. Bank clearings are beginning to QUARTZ--A person eighteen years of shrink, and railroads are telling a age or over, having discovered mineral in similar story through their earnings ior soon will do so. Already they place, may locate a claim "1,500x1,500 foot. ° | have begun to cut off orders from the companies. You will recall inten- The fee for recording a claim is $5. At least $100 must be expended of the big steel laim each year or paid to he nw a . recorder in lieu thereof. When $500 has that the United Sta been expended or paid, the locator may | tion reported a shrinkage upon having a sufyey made, and upon | cant in complying 'with Sther requirements, PUI*| ago ? Well that should have been 40 chase the land at $1 per acre. | ag Bs Dn as 3 The patent provides for the payment | instead of 25 per ¢ : pf a royalty of 24 per cent on She oni : . Placer mining claims generally are 1 the o ward movement hus. Tar : : r-| ed the downwa 1 Jot square : entry fee $5, renewable Yea! yak the own akiog o showing on "An applicant may obtain two leases to| secumulated |orders, and the end of dredge for gold of five miles Suh liify that sort of thing is not far off. Build- wey ) the In-| ing enterprises must slacken soon terior. | (Bradstreet"s to-day reports that the Suey shall fave a dredge in O | August total at sixty-four cities isin ation within one season from the Sate ' e ve les, P : sok a Sash. Bee Tile of - river] pared with last year), and enquiry at leased. Royalty at the rate of a per ther banks might reveal the fact that ceeds $10.00 Sn the outpv aijer B8 they will not finance undertakings of W. W. CORY. that character as freely as heretofore. Deputy of the Minister of the In erior.| A]] this will mean a release of a great 8. --Unauthorized publication o! this] oo ainployvees from work, and a advertisement will not be paid fore cutting down: of the total wape-fund = with a eansequent reduction of con suming power of the general public, of 25 per tates Steel corpora- | new orders a month or, so| the sales. | « gone off, and has not finigh- gtoe] Map gone fhe wilds of the North-West. A evidence of a marked decline as com-{ | SHOT THEOLOGICAL STUDENT. | Shot Eureka College Student | From Jealousy. | Eureka, Il, Oct. 24.--Drew M. Wil- {son, a student at the Eureka College | Theological Seminary, stood in the door of the classroom and shot John | Walsh, another theological student. | The bullet lodged in Walsh's neck, but | did not touch his spine, and he will | recover. Jealousy overagirl to { whom both the students had been pay- ing attention is believed to be the cause of the shooting. | The class in biology was assembling | when Wilson appeared in the doorway | three feet in the rear of where Walsh |sat, He carrjed a revolver in his hand, and one of a score of young women students in the room screamed as he raised the pistol. Walsh turned and dodged and thus probably saved his life. Several of the young women fainted as the shot was fired. Before Wilson could fire again half a dozen students | had grasped him _and thrown him to i the floor. . Walsh has been at thg seminary four vears, and Wilson two vears. Walsh's | home is at Sydney, Australia. Wilson | is cradited on the books of the eollege to Missouri, but came from Pennsyl- vania, and says he worked in Chicago as a strike .breaker during the teams- | { THIRTY-DAY CLAUSE TAKEN ADVANTAGE OF BY HARLEM BANK. Two Small Banks Suspended To- Day--Run on Trust Company Continues--Lincoln Trust Will Meet All Demands. New York, Oct. 2M. --The Empire City Savings bank of Harlem, taking advantage of the thirty-day elause in its charter, refused to pay checks this morning. The Twelfth Ward bank and the amilton National bank, both small institutions, suspended this morning. A run B impending on the Lincoln Trust company. The officers of the concern announce they are pre- pared to meet all demands. The run on the Trust company of America con- tinues, The World says the Consolidated Steamship Lines compaiy, organized in January, by Charles W. Morse, is to be re-organizgd. Morse is to. be supordinated, and the control of 'the o¥mpany is to be resumed by the in- terests from which he obtained it. -------- FRONTENAC CHEESE BOARD. ter's strike several years ago. ASIII %| The Frontenac cheese board met at! one or two other points. g BIG MINE EXPOSED. 4 | the Whig hall on Thursday afternoon.| Archbishop Duhamel dedicated the we uw | There was boarded 195 boxes of white {new Lignorian Theological College -of ¥ St. Petersburg, Oct. 24.-- 3: |cheese, and 441 boxes of colored. The | the Redemptorists at Bayswater. The ¥ A mine, heavily charged 3 following factories boarded : spot was selected after their removal |% with explosives, has been | _White--Morning "Star, '35; Outario,| from Ste. Aune de Beaupre. discovered * beneath police ¥|30; Oso, 40; Forest, 60; "Sunbury, 30; At Cincinnati, Daniel O'Leary, sixty- headquarters. There have al- w! total, 195. : . a - four vears old, : the veteran hevl-and- { ready been several arrests. | Colored--Cold = Sprin 50; Glen: | toe walker, finished his self-imposed | . Ww aruic, , Ulenyale, : Hastingron, task ol walking 8 ile poh the Sylar [ ALA ARIA aoa | 38; inchinbroak, 35; Latimer, ning of each hour for 1 consecutive | FRIIS ose Hill, 30; St,' Lawrence, 30; Wolle | hours TONY PASTOR TALKS. | Island, 40; Silver Springs, 30; Thou- According to the growers about St. | . : Lng Islands, o Neirutha, 30; Col Outhinrine, a good deal ol Jadnite a {lines Bay, 25; total, ' was dome to grapes, still out, hy fros | Silk Dresses Brought Women tol At 124e. Mr. Gillespie bought the | on Wednésday night. lee formed a | | Shows. { I had Lelieved for a long time that {women ami families oudht to attend { variety shows, says Teny Pastor. To demonstrate my theory | formed a with Samuel Sharpley, well-known manager of Togethe we leased Jowery. | partnership who was a minstrel an opera house at 201 was in 1565. We at shows. the women to come and enjoy our | show In those days the east fine section. The side was a door residential Ibe given bugs to be present. | policy necessiry. plates of old Knickerbockér families |p, project 48 mimew one, and the| The provincial secretary's depart sill showed on thousands: of homes | members feel $RAF it will take some |ment has received from Owen Sound, ur success was gratilving, but our |. to work it'out. the presentment of the grand jury, of main object was not attained The 1 0p 'account of next Thursday being | the assizes, which contains strong cri- women wouldn't come I announced distributions of bon bons i of dolls--of lowers. Still they were coy. 1 had | adies' nights" every Fridav. adver | AN TLLE . z 1 1 | tising far and wide, that husbands | D CE AT MARYSV : might bring their wives and voung | 4. 8 | men their sweethearts free of charge. | Kingstc nians at Fine Affair Held {In vain. I tried more substantial ar- | By C.M B.A. guments. I gave away bags of flour, Under the auspiogs of the C.M.B.A, tons of coal-hams--even sewing |a fine dance was held at Marysville machines. Still wouldn't flock to the box office. At last I announced one day that L vould * give away _ twenty-five silk they I'hat caught "em. {day at a Sixth avenue department You ought to have seen the {lobby of my theatre after the women had read the announcement ! . Next I {announced bounets--twentv-five free | bonnets Did it work ? "Twenty-five | policemen had to be present to keep | them from breaking ranks At last I had induced them to come to a variety theatre and ther have {been coming ever since. But [ wasn't left long to { store ! This | invited all | Sales Made at the Meeting on Thursday. offecings of the following factories { Hiuchinbrooke, Wolfe Island, Thou | sand Islands, Cold Springs, St. Law- | rence, Silver Springs, Glenburnie; Me- At the same figure Mr. Mur- | Graths. | phy secured the cheese ofiered by Har- {tington, Latimer, Collins Bay and Glenvale. At the offering of Oso and Ontario. W. Pillar and D. McLean | Thanksgiving day, 'the board adjourn- ed for two weeks, number of Kingstopjans being in at- 7 ¢ pe hl 9 ashore, Wednesday afternoon, on Me tendance. Napaigq.. and -.Deseronto Queen's Ledge, Big Glace Bay. The j were also well represented. About crew got ashore with much difficulty, wees to women attending the show | two hundred people were on the floor, Falk about bargain | and the dance proved to be one of the Crosby | | best ever held in Marysville. | & O'Connor's orchestra, from Kings ton, went up for dhe ocoasion, an | delighted the merry crowd of dancer pwith their The | was quite lengthy, brought to a close early in the morn ing, : 7 Dances promise 10 be just as popu { lar in Kingston this season, former and already arrange music. years, 1280. Mr. Gibson hought | next two months. | boarded | hogs, but there were no buyers pre- | sent. It was desided; however, fo con- tinue the hog board, and that notice {on Wednesday night, quite ga large programme | Jyioe have postponed for a month the the affair being | (ale of auction of the jewels of as in| OF THE NEWS Toga PITH | % The Very Latest Culled From All 1 ' Over The World. Sidney Guest' was found dead on the railway at IL SS. Manchester Shipper, inward, at Father Point, at noon. E. S. Webster is spending a week duck shooting at Big Bay. A tine Macdounell, engineer, of was killed in a runaway. Eighty shoe workers of the Victoria Shoe company, Toronto, went on strike, A mysterious leak 'occurred in the C. P.R, steamer Empress of China at her dock in Vancouver. : Orillia was selectéd as the next place of meeting for the Provincial Sunday School Association, rv Some three hundred pounds of silver was extracted from Colalt ore in a plant on Lombard street, Toronte. Podgorny was committed for trial for manslaughter at Brantford in con- nection with the Dobroski stabbing. Edward Yateman, Watertown, N.Y. long wanted 'on a chdrge of grand lar: ceny, was arrested in a spectacular manner, Wednosday night. z Charles Stinchcombe, who has, of late, been active in the burglary line, was sentenced at London, Ont, to two years in Kingston penitentiary. The prospects are that there will be a professional hockey league in Ontar- io this season, comprising teams in Toronto, Berlin, Guelph and perhaps 4 { quarter of an inch thick in St, Cath- | arines. Hon. A." B. Aylesworth and = Mrs, Aviesworth - are - leaving Ottawa, on Friday, for New York, where they will spend a few dave before going to Clif- ton Snrings, where they will spend the Speaking at Binghamton, N.Y., W. J. Bryan said it was not President Roosevelt who was to blame for the financial crisis, but the unscrppulous financiers who made the president's ticisms as to the conduct of the House of Refuge-at Mardale. Capt. Robert C. 'W. MacCuaig, Ot- tawa, for over twenty years measur- ing surveyor of shipping for the do- minion, died, Wednesday night. He was an efficient servant of the custom department and loomed large in sceial + | circles. +| The. schoonet James R., from. 'St. Pierre, for Chelicamp, was driven during which their vessel pounded on the rocks and threatened to go to | pieces every moment, 2 : | "At the request of Princess Louise, 1 divorced last year by Prince Philip of * | Saxe-Ugbourg and Gotha, the autho- the {late Queen Marie-Henriette of Belgium, {for the benefit of the creditors of the * | princess. | It is feared that two lives have been {lost in Lake St. Louis as a result of > - The Standard Bank pays interest four times a year on all Savings Bank deposits, : Ce Soviegs Bank Department 1a 3 : for Millinery from this store have a decidedly out of the ii ¥ and up-to-dateness about them, also being very reason= © ably priced. w department now complete. Coats just opened. a a -- an] Beautiful Millinery For Fall and Early % The most convincing reason of the greater demand ° line t is the fact thatour goods ordinary air of distinction | Children's, Girls' and Ladies' Mantles.--This = Some very pretty Girls' The Leading Mantle and Millinery Store, enjoy ; prosperity nts » being 3 The .: {alone. ( Smpetition : _ i, Fospel A i) nt Wo ie ing made for the - The | =" collision between the steamer Nor- Enel Toft ! 1 sprang I £ sung Ee une - ave giving anot her of | walk and the barge Jacques, of the | : t er pops oF ances on Detaber Sok, | Montreal Transportation company i and on anksgiving night, a dance | f P res0Ott W ith fl x 1 Th p col- | Value Of Expectation. | » he Cape: = Vince: {from Presco i axseed. . Youth 3 ¥ 2 | wil be held - at ape Vincent, for {lision occurred Wednesday three miles outh s Companion, | which a number of Kingston people | , Lachine ? | A popular New England preacher says |}. eo received invitations. Crosby & above Lachine. { that if his sermon ever stretches be (Connor's orchestra has been asked to yond the twenty minutes to, which he} play at both of these events. | means always to limit it, the words of his little daughter ring in his ears, and | he reflects that some of his { tion "are doubt! feeling as she did on | a memorable occasion. The occasion was the little which chanced to come jon Thanksgiving day. we went to church with and sat quietly through The sermon minister could not chelp | had plenty to say, and said it fluent- ily. | "How did you like my sérmon ?"' he | asked his little eritie--+as they walked home together, her small hand in his big one. "You preached awful long, father," | said little girl, "but I beared it be- cause I love you, and I knew I'd have | a nice dinner when I got home, and forget what I'd been through." girl's her mothe: the serv unusually was good, the | The Child Vision. London Argomaut When Lord Elphinstone was in Am- was {erica a couple of years ago he | entertained at dinner by a family, the head of which was to accompany his lordship on his hunting trip through child {of five years, named Ethel, during the | dinner, was big-eyed and big-dared with | wonderment--in fact completely over- {awed by the presence of the dis- | tinguished foreigner. Ethel heard her {mother and father say {some of this, my : ithat,"" the dinner being a purely in- formal one. Finally, when the mother | daughter of ) was interested in the conversation ofier, Rodman another guest Ethel noticed that wmi- Jord was gazing interestedly at aldish the | wedding the bride {a of relish quite out of his reach. child thought ielear voice, exclaimed : congrega- | thinking: he| 'My lord this| Saturday evening. {and my lord that," or "Will you have| performed the ceremony. lord, or some of | wore a brown travelling suit and was she saw a chance to {please Lord Elphinstone. and in a frm, | and upon their return God | Watertown. | A THRILLING DRAMA. "Factory Girl'"' at Bijou-- Pugi listic Exhibition. Large crowds were drawn to Bijou theatre, yesterday, the performance of the realistic melo- drama, "A Factory Girl," and in the space of fifteen minutes they experien- ced all the thrilis that can be obtain- led in a two-hours' theatrical nerform- ance. The play deals with the affairs of two mill workers "Jack" Sturdy and Mildred Goode, and with the me- chinations and persecutions of their emplover, Basil Goldmore. There are twa hand-to-hand encounters between the hero, and the bravos lured by Goldmore, and a great fire at the mill, during .which the hero scales the {walle of the building to effect Mil- dred's rescue, and then' leaps into a net to save his own life. After the melo-drama, "Bill" Squires. the Aus tralian heavyweight champion, boxes three rattling rounds with his spar- ring partner. It is a splendid exhibi tion of hrugeamanhood. The same bill to-night. Genge-Pooler. The marriage of Edward A. and Miss Lena Pooler, both of Water town, N.Y., took place at the parson. age of the Arsenal Street Methodist Episcopal church, Watertown, N.Y. Rev. D. F. Pierce The bride Genge Miss Pooler is the only and Mrs. Perry Pool The groom is a well known voung man of Watertown, but formerly of Canada. "Following the fe and groom leit for short wedding trip through Canada will reside in . { unattended i i i "Mamma, which ought to make it plain, with- ; , exelaimo HERE'S Hy further comment, just how and wants some pickles. -- eT | why there is to be a recession ol busi- i ness in commercial and industrial lines SOMETHING NEW IN in the not far dis ant Satire wen zs POST CARDS [Ji ia" imecimens "markets. -@Greetings from King | Srt-- : ston, Models" Hot ashes dumped in the rear of S. Corbett's store, Princess street, set | fire to the fence, to-day The blaze and |. extinguished with very little dam- st Life Death At Glenburnie The death occurred at (flenburnie Deceased was thir township council v | and besides her hus- ty years of age; Ernie Marks and his big company, commence a three nights engagement, at the Grand on Monday, October 1 » suddenh on Wednesday even- a . hs eof Mra. Reid, wife of William 25th. The opening play will be "Sin Ree a member of the Kingston! and It's Sorrow,' with a lot of new | svecialties between the acts. There will be a change of play and specialties i band, is sugvived by four children. | nightly. , ------------------------------ Mrs. Reid ~ was a daughter of James : - : za george, of Sunbury The funeral will] Quite an interesting scrap between dogs was pulled off in the The | 2 to witness SPECTRE HORSEMAN. Gruesome Tale of Rider Who Haunts Wycollar Hall. Tradition says that once every year spectre horseman visits Wyeollar Hall, near Colne, England. He is at- tired in the costume of the early Stuart period, and the trap his horse are of a most unecc scription. On the evening of his visit roads, and the residents of tages the road at full speed, and, af ing the narrow. bridge, he stops at the door of the H way up the broad oaken st ful screams, a= from a the road he came. His body can be seen those who may chance to be his horse appears to be rage, and its nostrils stream The tradition is that one of to pay dicted the extinction of the which, according to 'the been literally fulfilled. -------------- The Improving. New York, Oct. 24.- lence morning, George : ! Pierpont Morgan & Co., waid factorily. Confidence stitutions of the city are day ' than to-day. aminets it wild his victim. She is said go have with Secretary Cortelyou, W. Perkins, of J. pings of wuth de- the wea: ther i= always wild and tempestuous. There is no moon to light the lonely the dis. trict do not venture out of their cot- When the wind howls loudest the horseman can be heard dashing up er cross suddenly all. The rider then dismounts and makes his airs into Fone of the rooms of the house. Dread- woman, then heard, which soon subside The horseman then makes his are into groans, appearance at the door, at once mounts his steed, and gallops off by through by present; with with fire, the Cun- | liffies murdered his wife in that room, and that the spectre horsémmn ' is the ghost of the murderer, who is dobmed an annual visit to the home of pre- family, story, has CONFIDENCE RESTORED. Situation in New York is After a confer this 1 "The situation is working itself out satis. is beine restor- led and 1 ean sa that the finance in- perfectly solvent. To-day is better than vester- and to-morrow will be better At the office of the state bank ex- wis stated, todav, that . | age . a ie Fride MNOO! : 2.30 {two bull . i 4 Views; | YS teinway abd Nopdheinter pinos,btake nlace Friday afternoon, at two | ol, do ast avenine [op 0 10:45. 0.40.» they had received Nl as vB Fal ook |g ommee af Kiripwtrick's Art Store, fo dock. Fo wos wifhessed by a large érowd [the report of the suspension, of suly 2 J . , apenee at ¥ : : was Wilness Jarg a Lone inami have a 100K: | pines street. 1 cashmere Tompant Sop" is soldlof spectators. One canine was = xo three suburban Bashi MIE Chop |" The steambarge Navajo cleared, this { Gibson's Red Cross drug store. badly cut up_that it will have to be [lieved by th examiners that uo Othe | afternoon, for Whitby, © load harley {8 3ibeos ' done away with, suspension Wo! ye "EE a" u y or Montreal. Phone 230. ' at - | Spe nce"s, 119 Princess 'Street. = Overcoat Better to Have Looked at Ours 'Than to Have Wished You Had. 127 Princess St. Is Here. The crisp, cold air is lively enough to make you feel its presence. We are pré to "Over- coat" you, and we willalso say we can "Suit" yon. Our Overcoats are made from the latest and most trustworthy fabrics and trimmings-- tailored by the best tailor hands. In fact they impart that fine finish sadn fit formerly the exclusive characteristics of the high-priced tai- lor's product. . Overcoats at $4.75, 6.00, 6.50, 7,50, 8.5 Still better ones at $9.50, 11.50, 13.50. And the best at $15.00, 16.50 and 18.00. Of course others can show youn Coats at above prices, but ours dre better materials _ all through. In fact" we guarantee a saving to you of $2.00 to 4.00. . 3 £0 ss EY & CO. The Store that Sets the Pace. RON We have a sortment of High Cut e Sporting Boots, in black § and tan leathers. . Extra High Tan Strath- § cona Boots, | * Goodyear welt $8 00 : soles - - ~ = {oe Extra High Laced Tan e Boots, Ideal shoe for hunting $6.50 * Black Hn Boots, : 4 good soles $5.00 ss length - - Also High Rubber