Cregg omen who Haven't e [or Skirt ksgiving Day. Per- t off the purchase, uy just yet. R CHANCE, e largest in King- r Fall are distinct- 5 scores of women oats, Coats, w Coats, New Coats. roadcloths and Fan- , come and select a have it placed aside lerwear ear, 25c, 30c, 33c, 'S to match the e assortment in Inderwear. Se, 90c, $1.25. PHPIVOIPVOV0H0049T9 OES CHILDREN ll as Shoes ire Clumsy. for all kinds and all sizes es 3 to 5, White or Black, » === << -.81 and $1.25. Lace, Light Soles. Wide "taaai anna - - $1. Lace Boots] Good Soles, 5 » L 50. ; --. ~.--a-80 th Boys' and Girls', at $2. sizes 11 to 134, at $2.50, wasn = = == $3.50. hoe Store. reeeastesasesattons Dail ritis YEAR 74. NO. 253, ------ GARMENTS Made to order style, fit and quality GUARANTEED. It pays to pay for quality. | No obli- | Come in to-day. gation to buy. x | I -.X ETT IT IT III IIIT TITY SBRDAS a i ---------------- FOR HALLOWEEN Almonds Walnuts Filberts Hickory Nuts Butter Nuts Table Fige Table Raisins Snow Apples . St. Lawrence Apples. Jas. Redden & Co. Importers Of Fine Groceries. FOR THE BEST INSURANCE in all its branches, go to | SWIFT'S Bnteevss, TAKE NOTICE. I Bave the best line of Heaters I ever fad, 1 have also an enormous stock of Furniture, that I wast, to dispose of at wery low ices, a8 1 want the room for Heaters: TURKS Second-Hand Store, 898 Princess sweet. DAILY MEMORANDA. Yacht Club Smoker, 8 p.m. Roller Rink every afternoon and even- Ig Wonderland Theatre, afternoon and evening. Lecture 8 pm. Marks' Company, Grawd Opera House, 8.15 p.m. City Wed: Princess Theatre--Moving Pictures and Illustrated Songs. ; Auction Sale of Furpiture, at 333 Earl street, 10 a.m. to-morrow, This day in Raleigh beheaded, 1618 ; Erie, 1814. Thanksgiving Night, Illustrated day" Y.M.C.A. Seats, 23¢., 35c. At The Bijou 'Theatre--' "The Black- smith's Sister,"" (Dramatic) "Soldiers of Roumania.'* the R.C.H.A. will perform the manual of arms in the evening. With srumpet accompaniment. WHIG TELEPHONES. 243-- Business Office. 229--Edilorial Rooms. 292---J obbing Department. Legal Forms, all kinds, at Whig. Recital, Convocation Property Committee, 4 p.m. ¥. Battle of Fort Frank The Daily Whig is always on sale at | Preventics. Market Square-- Gibson's Drug Store, Open till late each evening. history --Sir Walter Vi Yeigh's Lecture, "The Canada of To- A squad from Tablets ca drum and ventics FATE HANGS 'On Piece of Paper In British Museum. HSIN OF $45,000 00 IS INVOLVED IN THE STRANGE CASE. | Claim to Its Owmership is Made | By Descendants of Countess i Civry, Formerly Lady Colville | ~--Before Brunswick Courts. | London, Oct. 20.--On a document | found in the British Museum depends the fate of an estate valued at no less {a sum than £9 000,000. The estate in question is that of the late Duke of Brunswick, Karl II. The claim to its ownership is made by the descendants of the Countess Civry, formerly Lady Colville. The case has been before the Brunswick courts for a long period. Karl II. was the son of the famous Duke of Brunswick, who fell at Water- loo, and, with his brother, was left to the guardianship of King George IV. He proved a hopelessly dissolute prince | devoting his time to prodigality and | the accumulation of precious stougs, of which he left one of the finest collec: tions in the world. He died in 1873 at Geneva, leaving a portion. of his "im- mense fortune to that town on the condition that a statue was erected to him. . The Civry claim is based on the fact that the duchess--then Lady Colville-- was Duke Karl's daughter. The claim- ants allege that she was formally legi- timized by the duke, and, as her heirs, his private fortune, taken by his brother on his death. should be theirs. Tn 1804 the action they brought was decided against them but was taken up again a year later on the ground of a new fact. chment in which it was allpeed Lady Colville had been legitimized, the ori- ginal having been destroyed when the dueal Schloss was burned dawn by the insurrectionary Brunswickers. The plaintifie' counsel contend that the paver found in the British Mu- coum had as high leopl standing as the oricinal. and that #< validity had been recognized by the English courts, On the other hand the defence sought to prove; from a French hrochure of the vear 1805, which dealt with the bulky subject of the duke's love af did not recard Tady Colville as kis legitimate daughter. PHILIPSVILLE NEWS. Rain is Much Needed--More Tele- phone Patrons. Philipsville, Oct. 23.--The farmers are getting along well with their fall ploughing. The ground is getting rather dry. Rain 1s needed to raise the water in the wells. Ii cold weather should set in without rain in plenty, there would be a water famine. J. Elliott intends spending the win- ter with his son, Arthur, at Brewer's Mills. Miss L. M. had a call from Plum Hollow. last Thursday to take charge of a critical case there. D. P. Algwire has return- ed from the North-West. visit his mother, who has been very ill, but is somewhat better at pre- | sent. | Achison brothers are shipping to | Montreal a large number of old cows. |W. B. Phelps has just unloaded a car | of flour and feed. A number from this | place attended the auction sale on i the farm of the late William Barker. | Mrs Julia Davison is somewhat under weather. | Some onc borrowed Samuel Carr's ditching tools last Monday night and forgot to return them. They were found four days later hid behind the church shed. Potato digring is over. Some had good crops of the tubers, while others report very small pota- toes, and only a few in a hill. The Bell Telephone people have been in this days putting in pri section severai {vate 'phones. To check a cold quickly get from | your druggist some little Candy Cc led Preventics. Druggists evervwhers are now dispensing Pre » for they are not only safe but decidedly certain and prompt. Preventics contain no Quinine, mo lax- {ative, nothing harsh nor sickening. {Taken at the "sneeze stage Pre- ventics will prevent Pneumonia, Bron- chitis, La Grippe, ete. Hence the name, Good for feverish child- ren. 48 Preventics 25c. Trial boxes, {5c. Sold bv all dealers. cardine township, 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 smoke. No smell Don't ruin your eyes. ---------------- See them at Robertson Bros. were broken and a lung punctured. He was sixty years of age and unmarried. Smart Weed and Belladonna, com- bined with the other ineredienty used in the best porous plasters, make Carter's 8. W. & B. Backache Plasters the best in the market. Price 25c. | The Michigan Central railway has | decided to pay the $25,000 fine im- {posed by Justice Riddell for the - |Jessness that caused the explosion of | dynamite at Essex, Ont. | Winter, summer, fall or spring, | If ailing you may be, 2 you'll surely find a quick relief : In Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. With every 82 photo sitting on Thanksgiving we will give alunmanim souvenir. Studio open at 8 am. | Weese, Princess street. ; For first-class storage on carriages, ! furniture, ete, 70 to James Latur- Iney's Carriage Works, 390 Princess St. This was the discovery in the British | Museum of a certified copv of the do-| faire, that at the time in question he | Blackburn, nurse, | He called to | William McFavden, a farmer of Kin-| was gored to death | by a bull in his barn yard. Three ribs | KINGSTON, ONTARIO, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1907. POET AND CRITIC. Voluminous He Has Been a Writer. Edmund Clarence Stedman, the poet and literary critic was born at Hart- ford, Conn., on October 8th, 1833, He graduated from Yale University in 1853, and shortly afterwards decided to take up journalism as his profes sion. He went to New York in 1859, and was put on the staff of the Tri- bune. When 'the civil° war , broke out Mr. Stedman. became thy war corre spondent of the New York Yorkd, and performed this important * Quty from 1861 until 1863. Returning to New York he became a member of the stock exchange in 1869, and retained his membership in this body until 1900. His home is at Lawrence Park, Bronx- ville, N.Y. He has written many poems and critical articles. Soldiers May Gather Grapes. Paris, Oct. 29.-- The vine growers of the Champagne district have petition- ed the minister of war to send them soldiers to gather the grapes. There are too many grapes this year --or rather too few grape pickers--in in the Champagne district, and the vine growers are afraid that the weather will ruin the grapes unless they are picked immediately. The celebrated grapes of the vines outside planted by Louis XIV were Sold, to- dav. There were 11,320 bunches of splendid grapes, which fetched $4,935. BOY THIEF AND LUAR INSANITY CURED BY SUR. GEON'S KNIFE. Restored to Morality By Re- moval of Skull Bone--Other Cases Cited. London, Oct. 20.--Can insanity be cared by surgical operation ? An extraordinary case of successful | treatment of mental derangement by trepanning was given by Dr. Hollan- der, the well-known physician for men- tal diseases, at a lecture before the members of the incorporated British Phrenological Society last night. Dr. Hollander described the case of a boy, aged sixteen, who was a liar, thief and bully, and, notwithstanding his youth, a terror to his family, and who, after the removal of a strip of i bone from his skull, was restored to perfect morality. The advantages of individual atten- tion and healthy mental stimulus, in- stead of the massing of hundreds of patients in big asylums, were explain- ed by the doctor. Milder cases, he said, frequently get well when removed from the associa- tion of other insane, When the derangement was serious, | the lecturer pointed out that the dam- | age to the brain did not always in- volve the entire organ, but--at all ev- ents, in the early stages--was limited in extent and often amenable to sur- gical treatment. 3 "As regards the localization of men- tal disease, nature herself has furnished us with the most valuahle lessons: for it has been found, according to the particular area of the brain which has been injured, so will be the symp- toms." Thus Dr. Hollander showed that fif- ty cases of injury of a particular lo- cality of the brain were followed by serious mental depression and melan- cholia: one-half of these cases were subsequently operated upon, when they . | - . oe 4 Cold | regained their normal condition. Blows { and falls on another region were fol- lowed by violent and homicidal mania: on another region by klepto- mania, ete: and when the source of irritation was removed, the excited faculty was restored to normal activ- ity. "Surgeon and lunacy expert should work together." he urged. "Therein | the operation." i ABYSSINIAN REFORM. °° {| King Menelik Forms a Cabinet on | European Lines. | | Adis, Abeba, Abyssinia, Oct. 29.--| | King Menelik has taken an important | | step in the direction of giving Abys- | sinia a constitutional form of govern- | {ment in issuing a decree providing for | the formation of a cabinet on Euro-| pean lines. Simultaneously with the | sa 1e- | publication of the decree his majesty ! Chance announced the appointment of five] ministers. who will preside respective-| { lv over the departments of foreign af- | fairs, justice, - finance, commerce and war. | -- i A Wireless Station. | Yictoria. B.C., Oct. 20 --The wireless | | station at Shotbolts Mills, Shoal Bay, | which is to be operated under the de partment of marine and fisheries, as an aid to navigation, will be opened on | November 1st. the palace of Fontainebleau, { were also an i stomach. They Grow Fine Quality of Grain. SEEDING. MONTH LATE AND STILL ALL THE CROPS WERE GOOD. First Frost August 30th--Wheat Wolves Killing Colts. Vancouver, B.C, Oct. 2] -F, 8, Lawrence, who has been commissioned by the dominion government to estab- Vermilion, four hundred and fifty miles north of Edmonton, has arrived in the city on his way to Ottawa with samples of the products which he has brought down from the north country. Mr. Lawrence is an old-timer in the north, having first gone to Fort Ver milion in 1879, with his father, from Montreal. Mr. Lawrence and his brother now have valuable farms at the Fort. He is taking with and vegetahles grown in different parts of the north. They include wheat in straw and threshed from Fort. Vermilion, pumpkin, squash, cucumber, citron, etc., from the Peace River Crossing. Though seeding was a month later than usual at Fort Vermilion the grain was good. The barley was all ripened. About hall the oats anc about one-third the wheat did well, the remainder being frozen, but, how- ever, is all right for food for stock. The first frost was on the 30th of Aucust, when it registered twenty- eight degrees above zero. If Aucust had been a good month the grain would have all been ripened and no damage would have resulted. Potatoes excellent yield in Ver- milion. The grain yield at the Peace River Crossing was the heaviest crop for vears. All the wheat ripened before the frosts and is avera~ing forty bushels to the acre as threshed from the field. At the famm of Allie Brick, M.P.P., a field of wheat averaged fifty bushels to the acre." Mr. Brick has over 7,000 bushels grain, 4,000 of red fife wheat and' L000 of eats, all in excellent condition, having been cut hefore the frost. At Lesser Slave Lake some of the grain was frozen, but a great deal was saved in good condition. Oats were averaging forty-three pounds to the bushel, so Mr. Lawrence stated, from his own observation. settlement in the fall wheat thouch the spring wheat did not fare as well. At Grand Prairie and the Spirit River the conditions were much the same as at Vermilion--part frozen and part ripened. Mr. Lawrence reports great ravaces from the timber wolves, only five colts being left at the round-up at Fort Vermilion, and the same condition prevailed at Peace River Crossing This state of affairs it is expected is soon to he rimedied. owine to the government bounty of S10 per head which has indused a campairn of ex termination. \ TO REBUILD VILLAGE Be Rebuilt in a Safer Locality. Rome, Oct. 29.--Slight earthquake shocks were felt, yesterday, in Cala bria. Many dead are still unburied at Ferruzzano. Many troops have sent to the village. These are em ploved in demolishing houses, which threaten to fall, and burying the dead The weather is ! work is proceeding well. It is pro posed to rebuild the destroved village in a safer locality near the seashore. HOKE HY 3 STARVE OR WORK. Is to been # Winnipeg, Oct. 20.--Peter Verigin has ordered his Doukhobor followers t) sell ¥ * & visions for the deluded Douks. Verigin's supposed = object is to impoverish his | people so that they will ¥ be compelled to work on ¢ his newly-acquired lands. ¥ * Ino Cough Experiments. _ | Don't lose time and mvite danger by thinking any cough cure will do Get the Diamond Cough Remedy and | you can know that you have the best colds, sore | one made. For coughs, throat or hoarseness, it gives prompt, positive results. 25¢.. at Wade's Drug Store. me tn pr -- Western Card Row. Vancouver, . B.C... Oct, 29 --James died, Tuesday, at result of a fight over a came | Chance accused Walter Gross Gross pulled a gun and Chanee's Princeton, as the of cards. of cheating emptied the Gross was arrested after a contents in | hard fight. "Three Swallows." Sir Jokn Power & Sons, : "Three Swallows" Irish Whiskey, ! Famous for over a century, Of highest standard of purity, |Distillers to His Majesty the King, | IN FAR NORTH === =~ LATEST NEWS Averages Forty Bushels to Acre at Peace River--Timber! lish an experimental statigm at Fort | him to Ottawa | about 500 pounds of samples of grain | There was | also good success at the Prairie river: | visit here Queen Alexandra and her sister, the Empress Marie Feodorovna, | surprised the workers by driving into | the yard of 'the Tubork brewery, ac Despatches From Near And companied by King i ing | pumpanied bi Sik he Jing Distant Placés. | Duke Michael of Russia, Princess Vie toria and several Danish princes and princesses, J y The queen had given a luncheon party | and afterwards proposed the visit to | the brewery, which was hailed with | enthusiasm. The queen and her guests spent two hours on a tour of investi- gation, watching all the processes of brewing. They talked freely with the workers and the workgirls, asking as | to their wages, the conmitions of work {and other matters, | At the end of the visit the (ueen { climbed to the roof of the brewery, 110 feet high, whence a picturesque view of the Villa Hvidore is bad, and tl ere her majesty requested that lager ber should be served to her guests. In a conversation with the manager | the queen thanked him for the splen- {did gift of "convalescence beer," which the brewery sent for the use of the { English troops diving the Boer war. | She accepted souvenirs of the visit, jand the party drove off amid the | plaudits of the workers, . who were granted a holiday for the rest of the aay. GIVEN IN THE BRIEFEST POS- SIBLE FORM, Matters That Interest Everybody Notes From All Over--lLittle The authorities of Toronto univer campaign, Many Japanese claims for dem in Vancouver will be disallowed by Mackenzie hing. William Langtord, who escaped from Mimico asylum, was taken into cus. tody at Urangeville. The trousseau of Princess Marie Bon- aparte for her marriage to Prince George of Gredce is to cost $300,000. "At Portage La Prairie, Joel Wynn, found guilty of attempted murder, was sent to penitentiary for seven years. The formation of a' laymen's union {in connection with the Presbyterian churches of Ottawa. is foreshadowed. | "Knox church, Owen Sound, vacant | since the middle of June, has decided {Oxen and Pigs Found Dead inf = "kev T. A. Rodger, of Orillia. : Their Trucks. Judge Grosscup, Chicago, has been Vienna, Oct. 29. Twenty oxen and [selected by President Roosevelt to form several dozen pigs were found dead in [a committee to plan ways to reform their trucks, on arrival of a train from | corporations. Hungary this morning, fourteen hours| John Ludwig is in jail at Brook- j overdue, owing to the passive resis- lyn where he confessed to setting fire | tance strike of the men against their io over twenty buildings just to see | conditions of labor. They have os in) C fire engines run. | STRIKE KILLS CATTLE. | ed traffic by the exaggerated delays in| General Maximofisky, St. Petersburg, order that the strict letter of the com- | djrector of the department of prisons | pany's instructions may be "qbeyed." {of the ministry the interior, was | Milk, vegetables and poultry are now [shot and killed on Monday. | being brought here by motor cars. | Frank B. Polson, president and man- | The fact that the strikers increase aging director of the Polson Iron | their demands every day seems to in-|Works, of Toronto, died suddenly on ! dicate that they intend to ruin the | Monday, from acute indigestion. | private railway companies and to in-| Hom. A. B. Aylesworth has returned | sist on state ownership. Claims for from New York, whither he had gone | late delivery have been made against to consult a specianst im"regard to {one of the lines by 800 Prussian ex- | his deafness, He is much improved in | port firms, | b L0 SF RELATIONS. The Ben. Franklin, said 1 be the largest balloon in the world, landed at Belcherton, Mass., Sunday, after a 500-mile run from Philadelphia. Her FRENCH'S MISSION EXCITES [pilot was Samuel A. King, seven . years of age, and this was THE TEUTONS. HHorty-fith. ascent. | Berlin Newspapers See in It Over-| CRASHED INTO BREAKWATER. | tures of King, Zdward to i -- | A Vessel Damaged in Entering Russia, | Berlin, Oct. 27:~A large section of | Dover Port. Oct. 29.--While the the German press is exercised about| Dover, Red | Gen. French's visit to Russia. Eng-|Star liner Finland was attempting to | lish generals, it is said, do not go!enter this port, last night, to land | there for pleasure or personal profit, ber passengers for England, she | therefore it is inferred that Sir John |erashed into the southern end of the | French, who is intimate with King breakwater. Her bows were badly "Edward, is on a mission from his ma- smashed and about twenty feet of her | jesty. deck planking was ripped up. The | One press agency asserts that Gen-!damage she sustained extends below { eral French is in Russia to advise the the water line. Tugs brought the | Russian authorities regarding the re- | Finland alongside the Prince of Wales | organization of their army, but this steamer, where she will have her bulk- view is scouted by numerous journals, | heads strengthened before proceeding on the ground that the British had [for Antwerp. The breakwater was | better reorganize their own land forces | considerably damaged by the collis- NOT EXPENSIVE ECONOMY, BUT 'REAL SAVINGS. sity have started om a tree-plantingy™ Extravagance is usually an some kinds of economy are expen- expensive game, but It's the pound sive too. wise and prices we substantiate thie. . to $1.88. All Wool = Venetians, 60c., T5¢., $1 to $1.25. All Wool Broadcloths, T5¢., $1, $1.25 to $3. All Wool Panamas, at 50c., 60c., T5¢. to $1.50. All Wool Serges, at 60c., 5c. to 90e. All Wool Henriettas, 30¢., 50c., 60c. to $1. Every piece we offer guaranteed a perfect weave and fast dye. You'll do well to see them. Steacy's Penny foolish economy," we avoid in our prices. Cheap goods are dear at any prices, but it's not his hearing. Mr. Aylesworth may often you can get erchan- |leave shortly for a vacation, but this Qise of our quality, at the does not seem to be quite settled yet. ask. These items. 50¢., at at at before they offer advice to others. | won, The Hamburger Nachrichton knows | all about the general's mission. He | IIe has gone to Russia to extend the TO HAVE A TREATY. {scope of the Anglo-Russian conven G a United States -- tion. At the present time the copgen. | Yrmany . an ni ROBERT J. REID {tion only applies to Asia, avd Kylg| Getting Together. ns a | Edward is anxious it should apply to| Paris, Oct. 29.<~The Berlin corres- Lane rand BIE European questions as well, and has |pondent of the Matin says the various sent this able general to assist in this marks of esteem and friendship, be Canada's Business. | railway i process | fice, says this | diplomatic skill, it would have place no obstacles in France's path in Mor 5 ) occo, and 'would have devoted all its such an hypothesis, but improving and all | epergies to win Russia to the cause of learns that the * provisional Germany more closely together. CONFIDENCE RESTORED. Depositors Come Back With Cash to Re-deposit. New York, Oct. 29.--Savings bank fact that the deposits of every sav- ¥ | ings bank increased, vesterday, over| the second floor to tell him to hurry Saturday's deposits. President Quin- ¥ lan, of the Greenwich bank: President | his room door. ¥! Wood, of the Bowery bank; President | ¥ | Mills, of the Drydock bank; President | Trotter, of "the Harlem bank, state lice the guarantee for the success of | SHSSISISERREREERIIIIIGEEE | (hat in a number of cases depositors, | who had drawn considerable sums on Thursday, Friday and Saturday, were back, yesterday, asking that they be permitted to re-deposit. Is Suing Michigan Central. St. Thomas, Ont., Oct, 9.--David Cottrell, M.C.R. engineer, of this city, who was seriously nitro-glycerine exploded, has issued a writ against the Michigan Central company, claiming damage of 815.000. Mr. Cottrell is still suffering from the injuries received in the expio- sion Piles Cured In 6 To 14 Days. Pazo Ointment is guaranteed to cure any case of itching, blind, bleed- ing or protruding piles in six to {fourteen days or mouey refunded. Se. { Matin's In The Dorothy Dodd. We havern black cloth top patent button shod, very stylish, $1.50. The Lockett shoe steve, Had the German foreign of-| tween Germany and the United States, organ, only sufficient have attracted notice and are being In that case neither woukl regulating the present commercial re the recent convention have been sign-| lations between the two countries, will ed, nor would Gen. French now be en- be transformed i gaged in welding England and Russia tieaty of long duration. : injured at Eskex | on August 10th last, when acar of] Ottawa Oct, 3. --Canada's export || taken as presaging a rapproachment. business to Newfoundland is increas. 1 : vhi init State -| The correspondent is unable to verify ing, while that of the United Sta Low. says is dechiming. Canada iast year passed the United States and now stands next Aseord, to Britain as an exporter to Newfound. land. According to the report of Commissioner Arnaud, Canada's re presentative at St. Johns, Newfound land's imports from Canada inereasgd 2 & - | Toothache Causes Suicide. by 2000 30 . low! uf 3.6560, 00, nd i Philadelphia Pa.. Oct. 29. --Tooth- those for the nited S at a | ache coutinuin a week ia believed by 162,000 to 6,442,000. Canada thus Fs ' 1 1 Wil Bg. H Ka 13 Ts © | passed the United States and assumed . Muam Mt. Kurz, a sixteen- |g, second position. {year-old boy, of this city, to commit {suicide by hanging in his room last into a commercial Heart and Kid- all their sheep, chickens ¥ ich | that the iod | nd i i i i Stomach troubles % ~ | presidents are agreed that the penoc | night. oping to distract his mind r a i 8 and cattle. This means HE | of fright is over and that the people from the excruciating pain his elder | PY ailments, can be quickly sorreted fewer supplies . for. the are getting confidence back. sister, Mary, had intended taking him with a prescription known to druggists market here and less pro- ¥| jae their opinion principally on the go a theatre. Winam went upstairs Syeeywhete as De. oTmop's Restart i V, i 3 ve. oe promp al $ Ig p- {to dress, and when his sister went to Hof which. this: remedy immediately is . ; i brings is entirely due to its Restora- [she found kis body swinging - from tive action upon the controlling nerves of the Stomach, ete, Sold by all dealers. i Sleep Walker Is Killed. Prohibition in Prince Edward Island |. Cleveland, Ohio, Oct. 29.--Awakened |. according to the Charlojtetown {from a sleep in which he had strolled {cl iii) 5 decided success. In the {about the house and down one flight city of Charlottetown since it was en- of stairs, Timothy Donohue, twenty- [gi Cj ibis paper says they have bet- nine years old, a' time-keeper, toppled [0 Loo 00 better sidewalks, steadier {to his death down the cellar stairs employment, better wages, better ho- lin his home, at No. 3,421 Henniger | =o 4 general order, content and { road, S.W., early yesteeday morning, prosperity. when his wife called to him to be!" williams' Pink Pills," for pale | careful of his steps, people. - aye fresh at Gibson's Red "ross store. a Cros ae ad Wine, "Our. 0 = St. Petersburg, Oct. 20.--As a result /make. Pint bottles 50c., at Wade's 'of two days' balloting, 327 members {drug store, ' = {of the lower house of parlidfnent have | There will he no railway strike "in been chosen. They are divided as fol England between new and Christmas, [lows : 1539 conservatives, 95 october- it is predicted. iste and modérates, 41 cadets, and 29 | ems-------------- | radicals. | eet Are Your Hands Raw ? | To Sue The United States. Annoint them with the healing pro- | Paris, Oct. 29.--According to the! perties of Dr. Hamilton's Ointment: it Berlin Sarin. TE the | cures the soreness, smoothes out the Krupps are about to start an- action|scaling roughness, makes the skin as | against the United States, for viola- | firm and smoothe as _ velvet. For !tion of their patent rights, making {downright goodness, no ointment pos- | Gen. Crozier, chief of ordnance, the |sesses half the power and merit of | defendant. Dr. Hamilton's, Tey a B0c. box, .- The Various Kinds. A | i