Va FER RREER EERE REE YRRERER FREER RARER RRRRRIRR $18 HAND OVERCOATS dy to try on. in two hours' BY GO. RRRRARRERERPREAREEOR DJTHIERS. 2 0] REREEEIERREERERA ce Company. also an AGENT for confidentially. IN 18 Market St, 9 Kingston, Ont reeseceeseeiecers en ; Nuts, nuts, nuts. ncess Street HOWE EERE EE Almonds, ninum Immediate Delivery. td. Toromo, Oat n the end a man grows old ids himself impoverished. 1i I get the governorship I shall re- private life. I'm through with use. Keep Kidneys Active. kidneys filter every drop of in your body several times each f they cease work the blood is ately poisoned and serious re- nust follow. At the first sign kidney, liver or bladder trou- se Peck's Kidney and Liver They strengthen and regulate Ineys. Money back if not satis- . In boxes, 25c., at Wade's tore. Died While Making Will. sels, Oct. 29.--M. Samson, a ent merchant at Namur, died under tragic circumstances, to- uffered from heart disease, and at a notary's for the purpose king his will. 'amson wrote steadily for seve- nutes, then stopped and leaned orward as though in deep it. The notary waited for a and then spoke to him. M. n did not reply, and the ro- vent to him $o find that he was Ye Corsets heyge the smartest mo-~" els known to the Corset Aanufacturer's art, science nd sense having achieved wonderful triumph. Prices range from $r.00 to hoe fill Improve Your Figure. t THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1907. re ---------- So ------n------ o_o] -- "I'm a Malta-Vita [foo ts Rome Kid, you bet! No heavy food for me.' The xp. Malta -Vita is flaked and malted wheat, shown by science to be the most perfect food the earth produces. The malt's a tonic and the delicate malt flavor is delicious. 'as 3 Are ! It's the best cereal that ever | Prince Ferdinand of Bulgaria, both of went onto a table. All grocers. Maita-Vita h10: ~ WARMTH--FIT COMFORT--WEAR The four essentials you demand in YOUR under- wear. And these are the four features of Stanfield's Unshrinkable Underwear that will appeal to you. Absolutely unshrinkable. Every garmentguaranteed. All sizes from 22 to 70 inches. -3 weights. 144 I's Nutritious Beaver Flour corteins all the nutriment --all the blood, brain and muscle-bulding propertics--of the wheat kemel. Beaver Flour i ing Wheat is ablendofthe choicet Maritcha Srring oe The grade of wheats selected for Beaver Flour--being the fine grown m Canada-- require no bleaching or electrical treatment. If you want ideal Bread, Cake and Pagiry, just ty Beaver Flour. Your grocer will supply yoo. Dealers, write ws fur prices om ents, Coarse F vais end Ce he H. i 's. ENTITLED TO PARTICULARS ® Ope ounce Fluid Extract Dande- lion One ounce Compound Salatone ; Four ounces Compound Byrup Barsaparilla ; Mix, and take a t nfal after meals and at bedtime, drinking plenty of water. ; The above prescription has been found ai in the treatment of kidney, bladder and urinary troubles, and diseases arising therefrom, such as rheumatism, sciatica, lame back and lumbago, and we feel that the public are entitled to particulars Sn hysician states that A minent physician the bud mo Botha that have been obtained from the use of the mixture are due to its direct action upon the kidneys, assisting them in their work of filtering all poisonous waste matter and cids from the blood and expelling same in the urine, and at the same time restoring the kidneys tos healthy condition. © He farther states that anyone suf- fering from afflictions of this nature wiil find it to be very beneficial, and suggests that it be given a trial. 15 URGED 10 00 50 | | MIXED MARRIAGES FIND NO FAVOR WITH POPE. | | | May Exact Pledge From Greek | Prince Ere He Consents to | Bonaparte Nuptials. | Rome, Oct. 29.--Another complicated | matrimonial afiair is occupying the atlention of the papal court. It con- jcerns Prince George of Greece's mar- riage with the Princess Maria Bona- parte. The former belongs to the {orthodox church, and the latter to the Roman communion. Pius X has taken a strong line against the policy of compromises in | the matter of divorces, which, under the less ill-sounding name of annul- ment, were fairly casily obtainable during pre- .iGus ~ pontificnies in cases where money was no object, and he has | shown redoubled severity toward the question oi mixed marriages. So seri- ously is this the case that by a re cent papal decree various unions hitherto tolerated under certain con- | ditions will, when contracted after next Eastertide, be regarded by the Roman church as concubinage and as null and void. --~ The two biggest mixed marriage scandals of recent vears were those of rince Waldemar of Denmark = and whom have notoriously violated the {pledges given to the Holy See, parti- cularly as regards the upbringing of their offspring in the Catholic faith. These and similar reasons are urging his holiness to attempt to exact a formal written and sworn pledge en- {forced by legal guarantees from the Greek prince as a condition of the {papal consent to his marriage with | the Princess Maria Bonaparte. i | PITH OF THE NEWS. | The Very Latest Culled From All | Over The World. The death rate in Ontario during September, was 12.9 per 1,000 | Gi. H. Bradbury was nominated by the Selkirk conservatives for the com- mons. | The South-Western Traction com- pany ran the first car over the new | tine to Port Stanley. James Grass, employed on the De- {troit river tunnel, fell off a derrick, forty feet, and escaped with little in- jury: On_Monday in Ottawa, Archbishop { Duhamel celebrated anniversary of his elevation to the |]y and found the woman dead. He re- | ieh | episcopate. | Patrick T. secretary-treasurer, was unanimously | reelected by the Eastern Baseball League, and without opposition. In its presentment the grand ju n | the court of quarterly sessions, To- | ronto, advocated the use of the lash | in cases of assault upon little girls. A committee of the Toronto city council will decide whether charges again®t Park Commissioner Chambers' management of then parks should go to the county judge. Members of the Theatrical Carpen- ters' Union and representatives of New | York actors have asked { Hughes to enforce the law against | theatrical performances on Sunday. The king and queen of Spain, en. route to England, entrained at Paris last night for Cherbourg. The train { left the rails on entering Cherbourg, | | but the royal party escaped injury. i The discount rate of the Imperial | | Bank of Germany was raised, to-day, [from 5} to @} per cent. The change as dircetly due to New York's demand | for gold which it is feared will lead to gold exports from Germany The polling for the dominion bye- | election for London, to-day, s is pro- ceeding quietly. Vehicles are in use for both candidates. but there is no bustle or excitement. The weather is favor- able for polling a large vote, Pyfern & Desjardins wires from Ant- | werp that Hon. Mr. Laflamme's accu-| :ations are untrue. In the Abitibi matter his dealings with Hon. Nr. Gouin and Hon. upright and never was an election sub- | seription or anything like it suggest- oc | Governor ors wns convicted of murder in the first degree, for killing Fred. R. Ol-| nev. near Middletown, October 6th, 1905. Rogers is also under indictment for the murder of Willis Olney and Alice Ingerick. at the same time. The Victorias. of Ottawa, cham- Renfrew team, champions of the Otta- wa Valley League, will probably be ordered to play a sudden death game or a series of matches to decide which <hall meet the Wanderers of Montreal, for the Stanley Cup. Miss M. A. Jones died at the home of her nephew, Dr. L. B. Powers, Port | Hope, at the age of ninety-five vears. | She was a daughter of the late Elisha Jones. who settled on land lving west | of Cokonre, on the Port Hone road, {in 1793. The family were United Em- | pire Loyalists. eet SET FIRE TO BUILDINGS. ) Wanted to See ehe Fire Engines | Run. | New York. Oct. 20.--Confessing that {he had set fire to more than twenty an ironwork- | buildings, John Ludwig, ¢ \ 18 a prisoner er, twenty-six years old, i A ] street jail, Brooklyn. that on July p p in the Raymond { He said in his confession ! b [15th last the uncontrollable desire to p | tee engines race through the streets {and i fire came over him and that he set fire to a Vvacgnt house. Since p | then he has burned more than & score 4 {of buildings. ; ------------------------ 4 Death Of William A. Hill. !| Hamilton Times William A. Hill passed away at the b | residence of his brother, Sackville Hill p p y p p , p > bp > {who formerly |where her parents are have lived. Before coming here and | | The annual meeting of the Hospital | munity, | unlicensed hunters in At Goshen, N.Y., Charles H. Rog- tion of No. 1 ; struck him with such force as to | pions of the Federal League, and the| Saturday | two years. LEADER A MARTINET.' Would Fly Black Flag and Raid the Seas. Paris, Oct. 29.--Six small "Apaches" under the leadership of a boy of thir- teen, named Denis (lairvois, were ar- rested at Lille to-day for systematic and extensive robberies. The eldest of the boys is fiiteen and the youngest ten. The six children last week robbed a jeweler's shop, three other shops and a private house. Clairvois was the Raffles of the band, rather, part Raffles and part Jack Sheppard. He belongs to a good family, and has a winning way with him, which gets him invited out a good deal. He has always intended, he TO EAT HUMAN FLESH. Beaches. St. John's, Nfid., Oct. 29. --Canni- balism has been resorted to by the Eskimos in the Ungava Bay district and on the shores of Hudson Strait, according to Rev. Mr. Stewart, an Anglican missionary to the Ungava Bay Eskimos. He says that owing to says, to qualify for a successful crimi- the severe nal, and wherever he has been of late |of game, many of the natives in re- he has kept his eyes open for a possi- {mote regions have perished from star- ble burglary. Denis Clairvois is a rufian and very strong for his age. | He ruled his "Coliseum Band' with a hand of iron, and is particularly proud of having cut off a finger of ono of the boys because he dropped an alarm clock when they were escaping from a lo > ] {some of the jeweler"s shop in the Rue de Coude, and they were very nearly caught in consequence. Their. booty on that oc-| casion included eight gold watches. Denis Clairvois now says that his ambition is to be sent out to the pe- nal settlement in New Caledonia. "Tt is no good sending me to a reforma- tory. for there is not one that I could not break out of." he told the magis- | trate. : One of the hoys confessed that their ambition was to buy a ship and be- come pirates. They intended to raid | vation and exhaustion, and the sur- sturdy young | vivors have been forced to canni- balism to sustain life. Recently land vessel, which was in Many Die of Starvation--Crew of a Newfoundland Vessel Dis-| anther helped to .increase the dull- cover Thirty Skeletons on the ness of trade, yet really good cattle and unusual scarcity the crew of a Newfound- |35; Ungava | $3.50 to $1.40, ESKIMOS CANNIBALS... ee... UNGAVA NATIVES FORCED Centres. Montreal, Oct. 28.--The live stock offered for sale at the Point St. Charles stockyards this forencon con- sisted of about 1,650 head of butchers' cattle, 463 calves, 1411 sheep and lambs, and 2,081 fat hogs. The wet brought firm rates. Prime beeves sqld at 4ic. to dic. per Ib; pretty good cattle, 3c. to dc, and the common stock; 1jc. to 23c. per lb. Calves sold at from $2 to %10 each, or from 2c. to near 5c. per Ib. Sheep sold at 3jec. to 4§¢., and the lambs at 5ic. to near 6c. per Ib. Good lots of fat hogs sold at from 6}c. to 64c. per lb, Chicago Prices. Chicago, Oct. 28.--Cattle receipts, about 21,000; market steady. Beeves, $3.60 to $7.10; cows, $1.20 to calves, $4.50 to $6.75; Texans, Westerns, $3.20 to | Bay, discovered thirty skeletons lying £5.75; stockers and feeders, $2.40 to unburied on the beaches. It is sup- |The continental shores of the ba- and { north. | | 14th P.W.O.R. Matches. | { noon. The scores were : Second Class. | {S. S. Skinner ... | Pte. H. Swaive . ri | Lt. Manhard--(Spoon) | Capts Dawson .... and, if possible, capture America. | Sergt. Holland | 'Capt. Birch ... SUSPICIOUS DEATH. . m-------- | Third Class. icti Points Helen Worth a Victim of Alleged | . | Sergt. Pratchett ots Malpractice. | Pte. G. Smeaton--{(Spoon) 44 x a | x ' New York, Oct. 29..--Coroner Shrady Phe. Heaship us aiteas we 48 has ordered an autopsy in the case of | Capt. Taylor . 38 mysterious death, yesterday, under |pPte. R. Green . a1 suspicuous circumstances, indicating |S. s. Twigg Sis § malpractice of Helen Worth, or Helen Burke, the name she went under here, resided thought to taking up residence with a Mrs. Hall, said to be a nurse in apartments at 110 Forty-Ninth street, | was a handsome brunette about twen- tv-two, had ¢ considerable money and clothes. Dr. McLeod, of West Fifty-Eighth street, says he was called, Saturday, and treated with simple remedies for a by no means fused to issue a certificate of death, from either a husband or a lover, signed, "Allen MacClaspie," extendine~ for a period of one year and post- marked western cities, was found. TO STOP PRACTICES. The Game Laws to Be Better Looked After. Toronto, Oct. 29.--Messrs. Thomas Upton, president; H. Barnard, vice- president, and 'W. Hendrie, secretar; of the Hamilton branch of the Fish and Game Protective Association of Ontario, waited upon Hon Dr: Reaume, this morning, to ask that the growing practice, particularly among the foreign element of the com- of using guns and rifles for should be checked. The practice of shooting deer tracks, also minister's attention. along railway brought to the to. such practices -- STRUCK BY A TRAIN. Killed. Whitby, Ont., Oct. 29.--Brakeman W, Leahi-- of the northern division, Grand Trunk passenger train, from Lindsay ing. In switching his train around the *'Y," on the main line and the second sec- train, from Montreal, throw his body over forty feet, kill- ing him almost instantly. Leahy had been on only a few days. His home was Lindsay. He was unmarried and | about twenty-one years old. A coro- iner's inquest will be held. THE EDITOR ACQUITTED. The Charge of Defamation Was Not Sustained. Berlin, Oct. 29.--Maximilian Harden, 'on trial here for some time in the | defamation case brought against him by Count Von Moltke, was acquitted, to-day. Von Moitka started violently when Justice Kern announced the ver- idict; then he settled back in his | chair and sobbed aloud. The street | was packed and as the count came out a hurricane of hisses, hots vile ephi- Ithets and vituperative cries fairly swept him from his feet. | Boy Killed By A Car. Winnipeg, Oct. 20.--While a twelve- year-old boy, Leslie Alexander Tait, {was riding on. his bicycle alongside an | electric car on Portage avenue, on Saturday night, a sudden gust of wind in Hamilton, | r \ dangerous ailment. |The election of officers the thirty-third | Not long after he was called hurried- | {he re-election | HOSPITAL WOMAN'S AID... Meeting Was Monday. | Annual i | + { during the yeAr was given and proved to be a most satisfactory one | the exception of correspondin : | secretary, and to this position Miss| ight, was Powers, as president and | or > re Totton 1 Te ALY, i 5 > hy rs a h I 1 In her trunk a bundle of love letters | Mcintyre was elected in the place of | Liza-0'Brien left on Thursday last for { Miss Dutton, who resigned. | All the returns have not yet bee | made in | Just what will be done with the re | ceipts will be a matter to be decide | upon later. posed that these were the remains of victims of the famine. | 3c. to 10ec. strait lie between latitude 38 and 63, [$5.35 to $6.20; | The fourth spoon match of the 14th | Regiment was shot on Saturday after- Held on |1% pigs, $6 to $6.25; | Woman's Aid was held on Monday af- | Helen Worth | ternoon when most encouraging reports | jv' and 15c. lower. lof the year's work were received. The | 5 jewelry, | president, Mrs. Connell, occupied the |e i » resulted in| of all the old officers, | Marysville, Oct. 99.~The C.M.B.A. Hogs, receipts about 16,000; market higher; light $5.66 to mixed, $5.60 to £6.25, heavy rough, $5.35t0 $5. 50; pigs, $4.50 to #5.65; bulk of sales, £5.60 to $5.90. Sheep, receipts about 40,000; market is weak: natives, $2.70 to $6.45; | western, at $2.70 to $5.15; vearlings, £5.20 to £5.90; lambs, $4.50 to $7. 20; Westerns, $4.50 to $7.15, £6.20; Buffalo Figures. | East Buffalo, Oct. 28. Cattle re- ceipts, 5,000; good, active and 10c. higher; common, steady; prime steers,, £5.75 to $6.25; shipping, 85 to $5.65; butchers, $4.25 to $5.35; heifers, $3 to £5; cows, $2.50 to $4.40; bulls, $2.- 75 to $4.50; stockers and feeders, §3 to £4.25; stock heifers, $2.25 to $2.- 75; fresh cows and springers, steady, $20. : Veals, receipts, 1,500 head, active and steady, $5 to $6.75. Hogs, receipts, 18,700 head, fairly ac- tive and 10c. to 23c. higher, heavy, | 86.50 to 86.60; Yorkers, $6.20 to $6.- roughs, $5.30 [to 85.75: stags, $4.25 to $4.76, and | dairi s, $6 to $6.25. | Sheep and lambs, receipts, 23,600 heed; sheep active and steady; lambs Lambs, 85 to 5; yearlings, $5.75 to $5.85: weth- £5.50 to 85.85: ewes, $5.25 to 5.50; sheep, mixed, $2.50 to $5.50; | chair. | 82 | A review of the work accomplished | Canada lambs, $6.95 to $6.60. it | | News From Marysville, which € ball, was held on Wednesday great success. Miss her home in Elgin, aiter spending two Di months with her cousin, Miss Annie : Tur Sho iif connection with the ""Made-| Fahey. The many friends of Paul rom a number of difierent |; Canada" fair, and thus a financial Berry will regret to hear that he is | statement has mot yet been prepared. | very low with a severe attack of [ t¢¥phoid fover. Miss Frankie Currie d|{returned home on Saturday after visiting friends at Marlbank. Michael | During the year just closed the la-| Fahe- has returned to Kingston after | dies have made numerous changes an | alterations at the hospital, the laundry. d | spending, Sunday under the parental sum | roof. Miss Marv Farrell recently visit- of $1,000 being alone expended on the ed her aunt, Mrs. It was during the past year|{Napanee., Miss Anna Marshall and Sarah Donoghue, that the Napanee branch was formed | James Meagher came down from Belle- and the ladies of that branch hav made a great many bandsame aona-|the C.M.B.A. ball. Miss Annie White | tioas to the hospital. Weighed In The Balance. J. W. Hambly, a hog dealer, of Ne | the shooting of all kinds of birds and | panee, has an action pending against] 'all kinds of small game, on Sundays, | { German Wagar, a farmer of Nort Fredericksburgh, slander. In 'the spring I ble was disco upon becomir justed the matter are of the fact ad satisfactorily wit | Thrown Forty Feet and Instantly |i. owners of the hogs. It is alleged the shoulder blade injured. claiming $500 for | of 1907, the | players, was | foundation for the G.T.R. freight scales tice last evening, although he did not br t | | was renewed, and a loose stone got! fully | The deputation was assured of the de-| under the scales, in such a way as to During ia serimmage sire of the department to put a stop | affect its balance. Hambly had a num- ghoulder injured ber of hogs weighed before the trou- land went ne but immediately | morning ve | ville, on Wednesday last, to attend | spent Saturday last in Napanee. Messrs. P. McAlpine and H. Siverton | have started a° new grinder in the ns village. \ h| Collar Bone Broken. John McDonald, one of Limestones was badly injured at / prac realize it until this morning he had his He left tha Held home. Upon rising this he was suffering so much - that he went to a doctor who found hi that the collar bone was broken and It will be that Wager referred to the incident in| some time before he is around again slanderous statemer Mr. Turgeon were (0 Whitby, was killed, here, this morn- | Hambly's statement of claim. His | sminations of the lordship has direc ted particulars, anc at the junction, he stepped | Hambly will be debarred from giving | Raid, Kingston, in evidence as to certain things. Arrested Steamer Norwark. | Welland, Oct. 29.--Sheriff acting under a warrant issued at the New justance of the Montreal Transporta tion company, on Saturday night, ar | rested the steamer -Norwark, bounce from Quebec to Detroit, laden with pulpwood. On October 23rd the Norward col | lided with the steamer of the Montreal Transportation company, laden with and the Jet went down. She Montreal Trans- editor of Die Zeikunft, who has been |portation company claims this was the fault of the Norwark, and asks dam- flax seed, in St. Louis Bay, | ages to the amount of $26,500. Appointed Inspector Of Meats. Strathroy, Ont., Oct. Edgecombe, who, for vears, has been superintendent an ! processor at the dominion government | meats, with headquarters at Inger soll, under "the meat agd pure foo act." Musical Treasure Trove. Berlin, Oct. 29.--The Tageblatt say the manuscript of dances by Beethoven have been dis s. Wagar. applied to Master-in-Chambers Cartw right for | particulars of certain paragraphs of | Smith, 29. -- James the past ten leach, two for 25e. Passed Medical Council. Queen's men, who passed the fall ex Ontario Medical Council are: 8S, J. Keys, and G. R the intermediate, fand G. R. Reid, and W. Spankie (Wolfe Island), in the finals Edison Sent $150. York, Oct. 29.--Thomas A | Edison, who is still a member of .the Telegraphers' Union, has sent '$150 ' to the strikers at Milwaukee. i For The Men. Get a new cali shoe, good soles, nice light uppers. We have the best. The Lockett shoe store. In view of the stringenoy in the money market, Messrs. Mackenzie and | Mann may not take immediate steps to carry through their proposition for a smelter at Ashbridge's Bay, To ronto "Made-in-Canada" programmes, 15¢., Also Quotation 1 | Calendars, 25c. Only a few of each Strathroy canning | joft. Wade's drug store. factory. has been appointed by the ¥ inspector of Augustus Heinze, Charles W. | Morse, and E. R. Thomas, have been = | compelled to resign high positions in 1 | New York banks since the tremendous slump in Wall street stocks. They are | charged with creating the panic A writ for 812.500 damages was is- | sued against the Grand Trunk rail eleven i unknown | way for the death of John Fraser, one of the men killed at the Bay street came along and threw him under the covered at Leipzig. They will shortly | crossing, Toronto, on Victoria dav. wheels of the swiftly moving car. Death 'was almost instantaneous. The father is a salesman, living at James place. ---- Had Car Drive And Died. Vancouver, B:C., Oct. 29 --Joseph K Barber, aged "Forty-Niner,!" , | arrived in Vancouver, Sunday, on his high at ¥1.; New goods. twenty- | shoe stor first visit to civilization in He had just returned from eighty-four, a Cariboo! We worth half a million | brown, grey and fawn, fow 7 be published. 1819 for friends forming a musical sc The dances instrumeats. -- Ladies' Overgaiters. spats, black, tan , anc Ihe Locket have ladies' They were composed in | Dr. Walter Gilette, former vice-presi {dent of the Mutual Life Insurance St. | sicty at Moeding, a suburb of Vienna. | company, New York, has been sen- are orchestred for seven]tenced to six months in the peniten- | tiary The treasury department has receiv- {ed 89.200 in payment of . | duties on the estate of the late Henry } | Beust, Collingwood ¢t | It has been discovered that the only ! chance a man has to best a woman in {an argument is to let her do all the succession py aired venue, on A . i axa 7 | . 16 Fairleigh ee ering illness. De-| his first electric car ride, Sunday, The sc hool management committes | talking. : : : DE | evening, after a ng third ear™ when he fell dead in the Metropole | declined to grant a holiday on Friday Save money. hy calling at D. E. @& |ceased . was in his forty.third year, Hotel following Thanksgiving Day to the | Fraser's, for wall paper, sale all this p sease , 3 i SOF € |and was troubled with hese} 0) 1 o -- pupils of the { ollegiate Institute, who week, 78 W. lliam street, ® i; la of ten years e hac . . P od F The steamer 'Turret Crown reached or upward " Lopbl sa. Anpointed Collector. | petitioned for it. h eamer 3 Leen a member of A" battery Ring Candidate ay Oct. 20. --Granville There will be elestions in twelve! here. this afternoon from Duluth, on ® | ton: "C" battery, Victoria, } ; St Tomas, nh : a he states of the union one week from to- the way to Prescott. 3 es ge citadel, cand. "L"" compeny [Maile Sports. Enst Elgit has ten- | day | Mrs. J. 8S. R. McCann, left, to-day, v ¥ . st Elgin, n rn - AY. . : x r I $e RC.R,, Torontd. fi ton to Fo executive Steinway and Nordheimer pianos, | for London, where she: will visit i a 5 resie S ? ta rk? 3 : s > dere n - tat the position of col- | agency at Kirkpatrick's - Art Store, | friends. } lit | {and has acce} A F mii aan = i - . ali $s Very Populsr. «and [lector of customs at Aylmer succes] | Prince ote Camavkys. i Many an im seems all right until i . ~ . sate < « o s 8 r sky's, . ® Men's English: spats, hiac Livy. B. Ogilvie, deceased. Mixed nuts, a » Carn y {is found 0 p | brown, at The Lockett shoe store. ng +. 2 ¥ \ R he Heatherbloom has th rustle and elegance of the richest Gros Grain, bu much more durable; at $2.75, 3.75 and 4.50. Pretty New Costumes Half-length Coat, military trimmed, in Navy & Black, very handsome, only $18.00 a Suit. : Now is the time to buy: your New Fall Coat. The stock is now at its best in Ladies' and Children's sizes. See them. Spence's, The Leading Millinery and Mantle Store, 119 Princess St. RTOISE For Hard or Soft Coal or Wood. - Gir woh BS ts This is the slow combustion stove that is fast gaining favor. It is a powerful and durable Heater, and very easy on fuel. Will give double the service of any other make. 4 SIZES of stove at twice the price. & BIRCH, 69-71 Brock St A ! i | 4 i : BRASS AND IRON BEDS In great variety. Pillows ,Springsand Mtresses. BEDDIN ; AR PETS --A nice line of imported Brussels, Tapestr.® and Union Squares at a price that sells." Phone, 147§ --Yours, JAMES REID. PAPER BAGS ALL WEIGHTS AND SIZES. 3) *) THE E. B. EDDYGOMPANY, LIMITED, HULL, CANADA. STOVES! STOVES! The HAPPY HOME? range still holds its popularity as one of the most economical ranges made. Tt will bake perfectly with less fuel than any other range on the market. We also carry a fine line of Steel Ranges. It will pay you to examine our stock before purchasing, ELLIOTT BROS. Telephone, 85. - 77 Princess St. Specials For the Week: China Cabinets, 5 shelves, mirror in back. J Regular price $18.00 for $12.00. China Cabinet, full serpentine glass front. Regu- lar price $25.00 for $20.00. 1 Buffet. Regular price $30.00 for $25.00. 1 Buffet, Regular price $18.00 for $13.00. A few specials in Sideboards, Extension Tables to match ; also ore $25.00 Iron Bed for $18.00. ROBERT J. REID, | Telephone, 577. - #30 Princess Street. £ i