Daily British Whig (1850), 2 Oct 1908, p. 5

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

THE DAILY BRITISH WHIGC, cosine csp -- 1] HORRIBLE STORY WHAT 1S HIS POLICY ? , Time Borden Got Busy And! Named His Wants. | A GIRL KIDNAPPED BY NEW ¥gnirea! Witness .. YORK GANG. ; y lorden will, no he, at least, inns land that it is well known. Was Kept Prisoner in Filthy Hovel Is 4 hs in East Side. While Friends! ..... t. sectoral and Police Searched For Her. civil service aet, both New York, (et, 2A of mistreatment spirited away from maica, was told by Lena Thorn, when she was rescued by policemen from a filthy hovel in East ) \ vew York, where she declares support of the party of privilege which had been held a prisone for nominally behind him ? He has said weeks. Rayfield Susso, who occupied a good deal about helping the work- the house where the cirl was found, jingmen So keep down the working and Annie Carlo, who is charged population of thé country. What does the girl with having aided in kéeping he propose to do in the fulfilment of her a prisoner, have been arrested. this restrictive policy ? It a no Lena Thorn has told the police that | doubt as patriotic "and as free from she was - orossly abused during her |pandering to pure selfishness as his captivity. Her clothing was taken | other hoasted policy to check the ex- from her and she was dressed in rags, ternal commerce of the country. He she said, was frequently beaten, was says a good deal 'about this noble not given sufficient food and was con- principle of excluding foreign goods. stantly threatened with death if she' Will he tell us what he is going to do sought to escape. in this line ? Will he leave the tariff After the girl disappeared from her pretty' much as it is, or is he going home six weeks ago, the police search- | to, destroy the British preference, or ed in vain until people in the vicinity | rafse thé cost of woollens, or inflict a of the Susso house reported that they | duty on users of tin plates ? In his had heard a woman's screams coming | last great campaign through the coun- from the place ag, all hours. Early | try. preliminary to this 'morning policembn invaded the tions of November 3rd, 1904, Mr. Bor- house and fonnd the girl. den was insistent that higher duties Sy meet spn were necessary to protect Canadian HAD NOT ENOUGH MONEY manufactured goods, especially against len the United States. Since then the To Come Into Canada Even on a conservative orators have made no Visit. secret of the fact that the British pre- Windsor, Ont., Oct. 2.--Barred from distasteful tq them. Canada and refused an opportunity to minke a brief visit to his brother in Montreal, is the experience which be fel Henry Youngstown, Ohio, when he tried to cross the river, here An immigration officer to whom Mr. Cook explained the purpose of his trip, asked him how much money he had. Mr. Cook found he had a trifle more than $17 The official, there upon, directed Mr. Cook to hasten back to the United States, explaining that the Canadian regulation required aliens entering the country to haveat, least $25 in cash doubt, say that | Has he-announced on the hust- | and which act, ol horrible alter had her home : . as sixteen-vear-old 'public ownership of public utilities. | What is he going to do in this line ? story she been in Ja-|™m she six (J by | ference Jhas. heen | Exactly" wheve now in waiting for Mr. Borden to [them. Such! information would much better worthy of grave consider- than over-doses of dirty-linen We can only say that most sets view, tell be is Cook, lation oratory of the things which Mr. Borden forth a8. his policy are in dur in the 'view of many conserva- dangerous, and we can hardly hope that he will be very specific ahout them. and tives, At Station Hospital -- ; Trooper Johnston, of the 3rd Dra goons, who had his hroken camp, is still confined the hospital, on Queen street, but is do img micely. Gunnér Hagley, of the 24th field battery, Peterboro, who suffered a sprained wrist, is reported to be do ing 'nicely. Sergt. Worth, who contracted rheu matism at Petawawa camp, has been discharged, although vet completely recovered at tack. leg in to station not the he has from Died In The "Bread Line." New York, Oct. 2. Standing the "bread-line"' and clutching in his hand a ticket which within a few moments would have given him the food he sorely needed, a man of forty-five sud denly crumpled up, pitched to the ground and died. He neatly | dressed, bug appeared to have suffered from lack The body has not yet been identified } Boston in Maids,' Oct. 7th "Three Little on Wednesday, in the at Grand, A Well-Meant Pointer. Herald Seene was I'he greatly of nourishment {flat opened his basement door in ans lwer to a ring, and found there a tidy-appearing young man who inquired if Mrs. Cleverington lived in the flat I'he janitor answered in the aflirmative, the visitor slipped him a requested to be apartments Widespread Corruption. San Francisco, Oct. 2.--The nicle, to-day, publisfles a statement to the effect that the change in the immigration department in this state the of &tigra tion disclosing widespread corruption Chro recent were result an inve | welcome coin, and shown to that Stimulated by the money thie man readily led the way upstairs. At Mrs, Cleverington's gloor that lady, on be holding her long-absent ther, flung arms about ¢ ee _-- and kissed him before the eyes of The Sultan's Purpose. astonished janitor. 2.--Abdul Hamid, | A hali-hour later the flats wants war with Bulgar- | ap again hurried up the stairs | knocked at Mrs. Cleverington's v When it was opened by a maid tion he was recently forced to grant | stuck his head inside until his his people. This the of many | same upon the loving pair chatting of the leading diplomats in European together on the sofa capitals, | fellow P---- vice the college better out of this. Mr. Cleverington !"' in the service along the Mexic hor lady's der by which hundreds of have gained illegal entrance United States during the years past bro- neck, the college her his London, Oct <ul tan of Turkey, ia in hope that in the resulting he ean abrogate the handy and door. hie eyes con fusion constitu- is VIeW " was his ad brother, "'vou'd Here Say, young to wet comes Baseball On Thursday. National Lea New York, Philadelphia, 3-6 I y 6 nati, 0;, Brooklyn, 2 American lLeag 2 New Yq 1-2; Cincin ue Mr. Borden In Bad Company. | Brockville Recorder The premier l'oronto in the snipe. It sis a to Canadian public life that public hould by a indecent s of utterance; yet he was much below. the level of his cial travelling companions. Their ! performances in Pembroke, London and Toronto have been contemptible Mr. Bowser's has been to preach hatred of the Japan- The Tokio government has maintained faith with this country; it has strictly controlled emigration and kept it within the limits. pre | scribed in the agreement with Ot Itawa. Mr. Bowser cannot say thata . psingle Japanesd coolie has entered Canada this year. Philadelphia, 5 2: Washi Manitoba spoke at of a gutter and reproach ol occu of foston wk, ton, | jargon shame one Burned To Death Ot. © be its positions Young into the falling five and burned stows Ohio % ! man so and reck burnin hnox ten-cent store, three to death, last night, fatally or seriously flames by not & firen roof, of prov mn were several jured others special business It is understood that Walter G. Kel logg is to be the repubbgan candidate for mavor of Ogdensburg, N.Y It pays to buy hot water bottles at Red Drug Store ese (Gibson's Cross Phone 230 Is Without Ideals. Queboc. Te Soleil Without authority and without pres. tige, because being without fixed ideas and ideals, Mr. Borden has floated hither and thither like a wreck, at the will of the various currents which drive his party along. The only per- effort he undertook, his pitiful programme was an immense Not feéling himself sufficiently strong to meet the conflicting ideas which on almost all questions are di- viding his partizans, R. L. Borden at- tempted to erect a new political credo for his party; but, exhausted, by this first endeavor, he has not dared to impose it upon his partizans and has- tened to vield before the recrimina- tions which he had raised. TAG DAY In Aid of K.G.H. sonal Halifax fiasco. OCT. 3rd. 25c. Tooth Brushes, For 20c. I'o reduce our stock of tooth brush- we will sell daring this month only (October) all our 23e. tooth brushes for 20¢ Every brush guaranteed. Wade's drug store. i W. D. P. Barker. Richard L. Cowan. R. L. COWAN & CO. STOCK BROKERS. Members of Standard Stock and Mining Ex change. COBALT STOCKS A SPECIALTY. {8 & 90 Yonge St., Toront Ont 'Phona Main 135. At Mullin's. farmers' butter per lb, {Corner Jolmson and Division stree Choier With his wife dangerously ill in St ronto, died at the Western hospital of {septic poisoning. | | has a positive policy, | But what | | definite improvement on the | its | he | claims with some show of sequence as | arrows from his quiver ? He has said | "days past a great deal about the | If he spoke plainly, would he have the | the general elec- | does the party stand | these matterse®y The country | | The janitor of a fashionable Boston | 'monarch Michael's hospital, Frederick Bell, To-< THE NEWS OF WORLD OCCURRENCES RECOUNTED IN BRIEF FORM. -- Matters That Interest Everybody ~--Notes From All Over--Little of Everything Easily Read and Remembered. George Adamson, Toronto, collector of taxes, was committed for trial on a charge of theft from the city. A logging train at Scappose, Ore. {on Thursday, ran away on a grade, | jumped the track and killed five men and injured eight others. | Through the breaking of a scaffold, (William Young, Carlow, Ont., broke this neck. He fell thirty feet and death was instantaneous. A circus lion escaped near New | Brunswick, N.J., and, after roaming lover the country all night, was kill- ed by a man with a shotgun. David Marshall, conservative candi- date in East Elgin, served notice of laction of damages against the St. | Thomas Journal for alleged libel. | Cheese sales : Belleville, 302, at 112 3-16e. t 12 5-16¢.: Brockville, 2,- {420 at 12}c.: Alexandria, 675 at 12}e; Russell, 285 at 12}; Vankleek Hill, 11,369 at 12}c. : | Acting on the advice of the attorney- {general for New York, the shérifi at {White Plains, N.Y., where Harry Thaw is imprisoned, has refused to deliver Thaw in Pittsburg. | An effort is being made to postpone the holding of the assize court at Sault Ste. Marie in order that one hundred citizens may not be natural ized in time to vote on October 26th. (TBarles Livingstone, an engineer on {the National Transcontinental rail- | way, was instantly killed and thirteen { persons had a narrow escape through {an engine running off the track about (fifty miles east of Winnipeg. : | Alarmed by the report of Chinese | agitators that the United States fleet | when it visits the ports in the latter part of October, will seize Amoy, and make it the base of operations in a | coming war with Japan, hundreds of | ¢ hinese have fled the city for safety. | ---- | PERSONAL MENTION. oO C. Movements Of The People--What They Are Saying And Doing. Miss Ada Birch, Kingston, the guest of Dr. and Mrs. Emery, Ottawa, H. Dingman, visiting at his home, on Wolfe Island, has returned to Bran- Man. Porter, Cleveland, Ohig, parents, Portsmouth, is don, John visiting a few days Dr. "Harry" Duluth, where ters' hospital. Arthur W. Beall, M.A., of Whitby, is visiting his sister, Mrs. J. W. Beall, William street, for a few days. Messrs. James and Patrick Kennedy, employed on R. & 0. steamers, have returned to their home in Portsmouth. H. G. Beall, after spending a couple of weeks' hbliday, with his mother, has left for Springfield, Mass., train- ing school. | Driver and Mrs. . Marshall have {the sympathy of friends, owing to the {death of Dr. Marshall's sister, Mrs. { Irwin, of New York, Charles Miller, second engineer on the steamer America, left, this after- noon, on a visit to his wife and fam- ily at Watertown, N.Y. J. F. McDonald, M.A, acting temporarily as English master at the Lindsay Uollegiate Institute, has returned to the Limestone city to resume lecturer in Eng- lish. is his for Dunlop has left for he will enter the Sis- of Queen's, his duties as Presbyterian Deaconesses. It has just the Presbytery lish and maintain a ing women as deaconesses. . The first school of this kind to be established by the Presbyterian church in Ameri- ca was opened about a year ago by the Preshyterians of Philadelphia. It does appear that the wo men trained in these insti tutions are to be regularly ordained, as are the the Luther an,. the Protestant Episcopal and the Methodist Episcopal churches, al though the leaders the movement say there is no reason why they should not be publicly set apart for the work In the Presbyterian churches of Scotland deaconesses have been officially recognized many announced that of Chicago will estab- for train- been school not now who are deaconesses in of for years, Women Keep The World Moving. What do men do with their money Most of it they Spend on women woman off the shopping streets the of the world would to-morrow. Most of the" money of the world goes to my lady for her adorn ment, her her comfort, her heautifving, her indulgences. Take wo- men out of the world--just supposing the case, not too seriously, and not longer than a minute--and all the earth's palaces would come down. The entire commercial life of the world would ba granged. There would be no civilization as we know it now. The wildernesses of the world would arise again. Take and marts close ease, King Edward's Wise Advice. The Tatler tells an amusing little story about some advice given to _the Queen of Spain' by her uncle, King Edward. Her majesty wished to have some friends who were not of royal blood stay with her, but, finding that this was considered absolutely out of the question in the Spanish court, she wrote to the king and asked what she should do. The reply of that astute is said to have been: "Do not make enemies, and respect other people's stupidity--when necestary. In time, if you are wise, you will get ev- erything your own way." Velvet Buttons Revived. Directoire coat with a princess skirt of cheviot. The coat has seams to the shoulder, in back and front, gnd is finished with one row of heavy stitching, with a semi-fitted back and a double-breasted front. It has a vestee of dark velvet and buttons, covered with the same velvet, trim the sleeves and the front. The skirt is a princess with a front panel decorated with six velvet buttons. The floor space of St. Peter's, Rome, 207.000 square feet--the greatest ca- is--2 thedral in the world. re rd NEW YORK STOCKS, Prices Furnished By J, P. Bickell & Co., (per W. Hector H. Hume). October 2nd. Stocks. Opening. Close. Amalgamated Copper .... 74} 754 American Loco., com. ... 46} h Am. Smitg. & Refin. Co. 584i Am. Car Foundry .. 394 Anaconda Min. Co., § cent. XD r Atches. Top. Balti. & Ohio Brooklyn Rapid T. .. Canadian Pacific Ches. & Ohio C. Mil. & St. Paul Cons. Gas, N.Y. ...... i. Col. Fuel & Iron Erie, com: G. North Ry., pref. .... Hlinois Central td Kansas & Texas, com. .. Louisville & Nashville ... Missouri Pacific "in Min. St. P. & 8. St. M, Poet & StF N. ¥.. Central ... ... ' N. Y. Ontario and West. Northern Pacific Penn. R. . Reading ....i- severe vie Rock Island Rock Island, pref. ... ... Southern Pacifie ... ... ... U. S. Steel, com. U. 8. Steel, pref. Union Pac., com. . Westinghouse ...... . CHICAGO PRICES. October 2nd. Opening. Close. L 1038 102} 964 Wheat. 648 637 AR 653% 64} 663 51% 641 663 514 637 653 Bickell's Financial News. Americans in London heavy & to 1} below parity. London market generally inclined to say. | ondon considers improving Ameri- can demand for diamonds a sign of a turn in prosperity. A. C. P. earnings warrant larger dividend but no increase. Numerous freight rate advances ex- pected aiter electioh. Stocks plentiful in loan crowd. ldle cars now only eight per cent. of U. 8. total equipment. American bankers" convention at Denver votes against guarantee de- posits and postal savings bank. Corn products now operating on basis of seventy-five per cent. of nor- mal. There is no reason to look for any- thing but a dull professional market. For the next few days the best re- sults will be found on selling the lead- ing active stocks on the bulges for turns. Banks lost $5,488,000 to sub-trea- sury since Friday. Union Pacific two months net in- [Srease, $1,002,000; Southern Pacific two months net increase, $325,000. A Queer Kind Of Savage. When Albert Henry Savage Landor reached St. Petersburg on his way from the forbidden land, the fact was duly chronicled, and the London press associations sent cable messages to Australia telling of the hair-breadth escapes and manifold sufferings. The Melbourne Times received but a short note, which was this: "A Savage Landor Petersburg to-day f arrived in St. Thibet after hands of the from suffering greatly at the natives." This was meagre enough, but the news editor was equal to the oceasion. The following morning, among the other matters of ndws, the readers of the Times found this startling infor- mation : "A savage landor got into Petersburg, vesterday, and the people of the city were terrified. After con- siderable ~ difficulty the beast, which came from Thibet, was captured, taken to a remote place and there dispatch ed. Tt said that this the first animal of the sort ever in Rus- sia. How he reached the city after his figits with the natives of Thibet, which is a comparatively unknown country, is a mystery." St. is is seen Find Three-Toed Goats. Two remarkable heen made recently goats of Catalina, coast of California. One is that there are in reality two great families of goats on the island, and the other is that the goats of the interior Cata: lina have three toes instead of the two common to all the goats known to naturalists in other lands. Aside from this the origin of the animals has been determined with rea- sonable accuracy. Theories differ in accounting mysterious origin of the wiki The most widely tion, however, discoveries have regarding the wild an island off the for the goats. accepted explana- that they were brought to the island by the early Spanish navigators. Driven by the western gales, their clumsy galicons were often forced to seek refuge here, and the goats were intended for a food supply in these times of stress. A Woman Lawyer In Algiers. Mile. Blanche Azoulay, who is the first woman to be admitted to prac- tise Jaw in Algiers, has just taken the oath in the court of appeals. To com- memorate the occasion the counsel of the bar of Algiers organized an ela- borate ceremony. The barristers were all present, and the leader of the bar made a speech welcoming Mlle. Azou- lay to their ranks. The president of the court also made a speech of wel- come. Mlle. Rieder, a prospective bar- rister, was present by invitation from the bar. She had just carried off the first prize at the general examination 4 of the students in the law school of Ahriers. / Russia is drafting a note to the powers dealing with the railway situ- ation in the Balkans. The govern- ment's view is that the material in- terest involved should receive prime consideration imposing on Bulgaria and the Oriental railway company the duty of reaching a satisfactory set- tlement, DED IN THE dL HE WAS ACCUSED OF HIGH. WAY ROBBERY. Suffering Acutely When He Ap- peared in Court--Power of Board Has Again Been 'Up- held. Toronto, Oct., 2.--Francis Smith died in the jail, this morning, of alco- holic poisoning. Smith, who lived on Spadina avenue, was in the police court, this morning, on a charge of highway robbery, it being alleged that on the night before he snatched a chatelaine from Mrs. Elizabeth Rog- ers. When he appeared in court; yes- terday, he was suffering acutely from liquor and Crown Attorney Corley declined to proceed against him. The power of the Ontario railway and municipal board was once more upheld by the court of appeal to-day. The case was that of the Toronto street railway, which applied for leave to appeal from the order of the board setting out that certain routes be followed by the cars- running to West Toronto. The court refused to allow the appeal. Under the act there is only one appeal from the orders of the board, namely, to the court of ap- peal, so that, in this case, the com- | pany must do as the board wills. | The master-in-chancery, this morn- | ing, made an order postponing the | Warnock will case, which was to have ' been heard at Brockville on the 6th inst., until the non-jury sittings to be held at a date to be fixed later. James Gregory Warnock, in his will, named Eva Warnock as his wife, while Agnes Warnock claims she was his wife. Both women are contesting for the estate. The divisional court, to-day, upheld the conviction and fine of 850 imposed by a magistrate upon Mrs. Julia Herbert, West Toronto, for the alleged sale of liquor, West Toronto being a local option town. The woman was charged with taking orders for liquor @nd filling them in the, city of Toron- to. The divisional court held that this was being done for gain and not by her as a bona fide agent of any of the Loos from whom the liquor was hought and delivered. Up to two o'clock the Retailers and Producers' Association had failed to reach an agreement to end the milk strike. Very little milk was delivered in the city to-day. The convention of the American Hospital Association in session for four days, was brought to a close by an election of officers : President, Dr. John M. Peteres, Rhode Island Hospi- tal, Providence, R.1.; vice-presidents, Dr. Aucker, City and County Hospi- tai, St. Paul, Minn.; Dr. J. D. Brown, General Hospital, Toronto, and Miss Emma Blunderson, New England Bap- tist hospital, Boston; secretary, Dr. W. L. Backcock, Grace Hospital, De- troit; treasurer, Dr. Asa Bacon, Pres- byterian Hospital, Chicago. It was de- cided to hold the next conference in Providence, R.l., from September 22nd to 20th. Another Orange Order protests SPECIAL VALUES, weather. Begin now saving. against the employment of Roman Catholic teachers on the public school stafi. This time it is the district lodge of Centre Toronto. Fines Imposed. Montreal, Oct. 2.--At the trial of those connected with the "Mange De Linge' Club, an organization which has been carrying on immoral busi- ness in the eest end of the city, Dr. J. U. Geofirion, superior of the or ganization, 'pleaded guilty, and was remanded for enquette. Two others were sentenced to a fine of $50 or three months in jail. Four other men pleaded guilty and were held for trial. During the evidence it was stated the club had branches in Win- nipeg, Quebec and Boston. Harréwsmith Typhoid Cases. Harrowsmith, Oct. 1.--The typhoid fever patients in the Kingston general hospital are, according to reports, re- covering slowly. There are two more cases in the village, Mrs. Miles Mar- tin and the four-year-old son of Miles Walker, making thirteen cases for Harrowsmith. Miss Annie Shibley and Mrs. (Dr.) Lockhart have return- ed after attending Ottawa fair. W. H. Walker, of Yarker, is at T. E. Smith's. Choose One Of Their Own. The governors of the general hos ital have decided to appoint Miss Bertha Willoughby, a recent graduate of the institution, as superintendent of nurses. Miss' Willoughby is at pre- sent taking a post-graduate course in a Philadelphia hospital. The gover- nors have come to the conclusion that one of their own capable graduates will do the best work, both for the nurses and the institution. McConkey's restaurant, Toronto, was granted a license to sell liquor. EVERYBODY COME! A fellow Brantford, Oct. 2.--After sitting all night the coroner's jury on the recent explosion, which wrecked Colborne street buildirigs, and caused deaths, returned a verdict that two the were sitting on the steps in front of the theatorium. It was held further that gas had leaked into the theator- um cellar through a dead-end pi which had been connected with ' new main mistake, not decide t the blame. Was The Wrong Man. Lindsay, Ont., Oct. 2.--Vito Spina, an Italian, charged with stabbing a countryman, Marcooretle, at Fenelon Falls, some weeks ago, was discharged by Judge Harding, to-day, after a lengthy trial, It was ven that Spina was not the man who did the stabbing, and that the real cul- prit had mingled with the crowd at the time and . The injured man got out of the hospital anly the other day. A long gash having been inflict- ed in his stomach. Disappoint the man with a chip on his shoulder by pretending not to see it. omen, without comfort. Made of uality "mate -byirecos gnized eof Jood quality art.' fale On Sale'at Your Dealer ; Descriptive circular mailed free'. No. 507, coutil, 18 to 30, $1.50; No. 487. batiste, 18 to 30, 84.80 DOMINION CORSET CO., Mnfrs, A fitting of 'one of these new hip reducing models, will satisfy you com. pletely of their absolute excellence. Yogioal : faci : Red of y sefont}fe and hygienic construe: corset m. ular priced, Shatuingly shaped es it possible to attain the present of slender hips, slight bust and flat the least particle of diss + Quebec, Montreal, Toronto GREAT DOINGS T0-MORROW | OCTOBER -- FALL. Prepare for cold ! These prices represent extraordinary money- COME AND SEE. trimmings in and fit very apparent. will offer. you until wanted. The 36 New Black Beaver Coats That Mean Dollars Savad New well cut, perfect styles, material is best quality Black Beaver, loose and semi-fitting, fancy braided designs, velvet and tuttons. Three quarter lengths, nalf-lined. from $15.00 to $16.50, but we want to make a special price. for early fall CHOICE ON SATURDAY ONLY Individuality and distinction of cut regular prices selling, run so 10.50 If you are not prepared to buy, come and select a Coat anyway. We will put it aside for 100 Women's Flannelette Nightgowns Well made of neat striped Flannelette, mother hubbard make full edged, with lace around neck and sleeves, full sizes. Good value at 65c. ON SALE 49¢ SATURDAY ---- -- 20 Doz. Plain and Ribbed Cashmere Hose Very soft, pliable and last- ing, full fashioned. Sizes 8%, 9 and 9}. Regular price, 35¢c. pair. ON SALE 23 SATURDAY, pair - - - ¢ Will make excellent school- dust Received a Shipment of English Wool Blankets Fine TUnshrinkable Wool, thoroughly scoured, well napped, pink or blue borders Tlbg. Size 64x84. Regular price, $4.50 Pair. ON 3 48 M Ladies' Ribbed Cotton Vests and Drawers Fine Ribbed Cotton Vests, have high neck and long sleeves, buttoned front, trim- mings of lace, drawers are ankle length. Regular price, 35¢c. each. ON SALE 25¢ SATURDAY, each - - - SALE SATURDAY, Ladies' Cardigan Sweaters in all Knitted of soft yarns, fancy . stitch, banded around, fastened in front with pearl buttons, patch pockets, very stylish. colors, grey and white. Regular ON SALE SATUR- stockings. price, 2.50 and $2.75. 1 75 . 25 Japanese Mink-Throw Scarfs Very latest, 70 and 75 inches loner, lined with Brown Satin. Seme have rounded ends, others have trimmings of tails, neat ap- pearance. Regular price, $7.00 and $8.00. 5.48 ON SALE SATUR- DAY A Saturday Raincoat Special Neat Grey and Fawn Cravenette Cloth, tailored in splendid style, short top- pers and Chesterfield. Value elsewhere, ¥10.50 and 6 95 . $12.00.° ON SALE SATURDAY The Montreal Phone Np. 842 Boys' Seasonable Clothes 2-piece Norfolk Suits All Wool Scotch and English Tweeds, well made and lined Knee-Pants. Sizes 25 to 30. Regular price, $4.50 3.75 and $5.00. ON SALE SATURDAY Another Big Day in Clothing Department | Men's 65c Fleeced Under- | wear at 48c a Garment | Nice quality Wool Fleeced Underwear, for Men good | fitting. Sizes for any man. : i Regular price, 65¢c. each. SATURDAY 48 Cc SPECIAL ----.--- Peabody's Railroad King Overalls and Jackets Union-made, the best and most durable made. Colors, plain blue and black striped blue fast color and practically unshrinkable. ON SALE, garment -- -- - = 1.2 80 Princess St, 18 (1) Stock Go. "=. 212eEis 2 /

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy