LC 237. QUEEN'S DID WELL But the *Varsity Men Eventually Won the Contest. By 7 to 1---The Game Was Keenly Fought--- 'Varsity Was in Better Condition and Had the Experienced Team. i | your man. Eliott did not play as | strong a game as he can, did last but no doubt when he géis in- hape he will again excel. YEAR 76-NO. series open- circles Varsity debut to Kingston football as outsido wing amd played a star game. He can fast and 1s a sure rackle, low dive tackle, the Tha senior intercollegiale edd hewe on Saturday, took the first game from Quem's by 7 to 1. The day was fine for the battle, almost too fine, being as warm as August, and the sun beat <lown the players for practically the game. The erowd wax very about 2,000 people, the students boing well represented on the and the rail, where they them selves heard. I'he better team won, merits, but what will happen when the two teams meet again will be another there in both than the condition and The 'Tore having las and gol away using the on entire or lat SOR SON , lo bleechors along mado The Play By Quarters. the toss and defénded | the north end. Williams kicked off to { Dixon, who f[umbleg, but regained in | time to return. Varsity secured ball | \ and went down to Queen's fifteen-yard Presbyterians. | Je Gall Kicked from third down to | Dickson, behind the posts, who re- | lieved well, getting in a twenty-yard ] Queen's lost the ball on downs. first down Dixon tried an ind put out in tackle. resumed, Williams punt nicely, relieving were the ball kicking ured the ball, at Queen's won its Jueen 8 won on question, as ample room for improvement fourtecns, ar sily was i9 heavicr better played (ol run entrg | {On end On in an steadier legre fortunate back division season. This great help, men have be broken players knowing their positions cach 'oth play. titchie the only man, but he makes up for lot. blue and white wings all husky follows, who play a good, game, making a well-balanced line. 'Varsity's team work showed clee that the men had been well drilled and their condition showéd much hard pract At parts of the game the heat very trying: on the players and must be said that. "Varsity showed less than Queen's. At times they right on the job, and tworthirds of the game were' the FressOr They play a systematic showing good judgment on the of the back division, who feel confident of good protection the wing line. In Call, Varsity fine half. He kicks exceedingly nnd can run some when occasion demands it. He was the shining star for the visitors during the entire game, and it was plain toiall that he was much depended on by his own players. Lawson has a fine rccord, Dat only once during Saturday's game was he at all dangerous. Queen's has certainly bunch - bf players, but they dition and confidence. Bad Queen's at least three points on Saturday, and probably far more. Most teams are always out for again, however small, and whenives a chance appears to kick for .points, the | taken. Had Queen's done this tha score might have very different. More than once Queen's had possession of {he ball inside 'Varsity's fifteen-yard line, and different held it for first down inside the fiveeyvard line, and 'still aid not score. A kick. in these places into would have helped a lot. Of the team knows own sytem know the game it plays, the only it appeared to tators It was also quite evident that tam did 'remarkably well. for short space of time at its disposal gob into shape, and its play of the red, yellow and blue porters, Very few: changes in the team; all hard practice, night. Crawford wa much on the half-back first and team fi like Lo the year, game. is in of a \ run, play andled r=iiy another was no 18 as being all's Queen s Hume's ide, | touch. Queen s aln Williams igain punting into touch. [Gall and Williams exchanged punts, the Queen's man having a little the better of the argument. Varsity cured the leather and forced Queen's back. from centre field to their own fifteen-yard Gall kicked to Wil who returned for a gain nailed Gall in his tracks. Quar- time was called with the play midfield. Varsity had' best first quarter. Hew to in, ( I given Wilhams knowing rs In scrammage is ag a are se- line Lee. L liams good Smitl ter about play was it it all ol wore in lor In the second quarter Gall kicked off Leckie, who relieved for good gain. Williams returned Gall's punt to Law who was caught by Smith before he could move. Queen's had the ball on Varsity Williams punted over to Gall, eeded in getting just one or on the safe wide of the line he was nailed. Gall kicked to Williams. Queen's given ball on Varsity five-yard line, Williams on- deavored to kick into touch, but Gall on the job and relieved well Queen's were quite near Varsi- line, Erskine was given.a bad twist in the back, and was out for about three minutes, Williams punted high to Gall on play being resumed and the latter muffed, Moran getting the ball. "Williams again punted to Gall, who returned to Leckie, who again boosted to Lawson, who muffed. held ball on Varsity fifteen- vard and on two downs gained | five -yvards, Williams kicked the | third down, but made a bad punt to Lawson, who gained about thirty vards, 'one of the best runs of the day. Gall punted to Williams on the first down, and the latter mufied the play changing *to Queen's thirty-yard Just after, Queen's received a kick for interference in the scrim- mage. Half time called without score. to game, part (quite from son, line, has a well, who sué feet before two was When ty's a good lack con- judgment cost any Queen's chance is line heen on three mes touch course | tree its and | abo was any Varsity doing all quarter. in a | down, his | on account Moran ¢aug Williams® did aight ny how start, third got from scofing in the kick-off, Lawson gain, On thixd went in then On the run for-a good Gall' kicked to Williams, near line, play being called back of no yards being given t Lawson as he nailed punt. On first down Varsity on second down Dickson punt; and Queen's (Continued on page ) holding si ne Ln TIRED OF HER HOME : last half, the line did not show Wp | well. On the back division Leckie |SHE MASQUERADED AS Ali BOY, strong. the the to surprised sup 1 is mén | s missed many own need: ¢ h made it requires vood, with overy out vi ovViTYy nol gain; ¢ on ry Hino tinil's In when neither put up line worked the second gs quar Queen The scored, 8 oo tainly a game wing I'rojan line at e about roally many wis a of his wsual 4ho only player that played homdy game all through, goals were due to h Willi little off tolor,-al times, punts being up to high standin but he we ways in the Dickson Moma both up Dickson only got on onl but when did he On the Smith best man +. She Worked Around For not Years Finally Identity. Doing Confessed As 18 game. to Her showed n Vory away N he hne, He 11.--After for three Ohio, ay a boys' games, local livery stable, driving a team and hustling heavy and cxpress packages heavy en- for a man, Harry | | Roberts confessed police, to- day, a girl and that "his" | name Lillian Hoffman, stepdaughte of Gottleib" Meiers, of Neventy- { third street. Oct. hoy Cleveland, wsquerading playing CR CHSIONS, masle | felt ¢} Wu ; i Jumself 3 about was his years, a made in DAILY MEMORANDA. 8 p.m: 9 a.m., Tuesday Drunkard"s Fate Wife" ; "The St. Patrick's Curling C Annual grocer"s:. boxes City Council, j ough strom young Court ; to the A R the pon Division At Bijou- and Wore The Me y re lar 'he' is Father Fimoston af Rink, 8 p.m. 0. H. Fuchre 8 sharp SARREGUEMINE WARE Fancy Cooking and Serving Dishes of a your Hat Dy Meeting ub East rty and Dance, t« Three years ago the girl, then only eventeens tired of her home. wav. donned boy's clothes and went out into the world to make a living work. In the = a Sh ured has time Wi hi stable arts and a carpenter wwked { ery mn hor fon helper to | toiled Her time iy known arrested while Martin, avenue, a small suspended, but into. Roberts' ats discaver- became hen sho was of D nt . was We mploy SH0S. De grocer on nt lox ed further serous This is Earthenware rich brown color, all fancy dishes, can be cooked and served in the same dish. We carry a full line of all the ° different articles, and they are very cheap. J Robertson Bros. they a few davs livery back wo a sta { ble, Loy &®. me was a confession brought The parent child's strange bent as ke for horses The had always wanted to be woman made a h © young to-day, 1 f clothes for | into | Three Heavy Work-- | : 1 working { She ran | edapsed the girl has | cleaning | even and | a short | i a BINUSTOS ONTARIO, MONDAY, OCTOBER Hn, 1909. EVIL TONGUES. How Women Scandalmongers 'Should Be Treated. New . York, Oet. 11.--"'What need," Magistrate Tighe said, in Butler street court, Brooklyn, "is ducking plank and a which to punish the women gossips who are almost daily summoned before me on charges of circulating scandal- | Ous stories about their 'neighbors, Not | that 1 advocate the restoration of the { pillory and thumb-screw, but I do be- that sudden ducking in cold wa- ter would seal the lips of women de- faming the characters of their neigh- and put a stop to an evil that {has Caused more than oné home to be | disrupted." we the a lieve bors CANDLE IGNITED About Priest. Newark, N.J., Oct. 11.--Rev. Augus- (tine M. Brady, chaplain of the New- lark iail and the Home for the Aged, «nd in former years one of the lead- ing Paulist missionaries of the A Muffler Neck of a coun {ry, was so badly burned at nis home| is feared he will not survive. passing from the bathroom | Iwhen a light muffler about his throat twas ignited by a candle he carried. |The flames spread to his bathrobe and before help reached him he was ter lribly burned. Father Brady sixty- goven vears old and a native of New York city. {that it He wes 1s gl + REFERRED TO ONE. 4 Ottawa, Oct. 11.---G. A. Harris, Canadian trade commissioner to Japan, has cabled the department of trade and commerce saying he never in a private letter, described all Japanese as unreliable. What he sayd was that one Japanese firm he had come across was unreliable. HHRHAAAIHHNNNNNK A COMMON SCOLD. * 4 | x * w + oY + ¥* Ha Means to Obtain Relief Against a Woman. Butler, Pa., Oct. 11.--The charge being a common scold has been' made Suraton, information Justice F. ol againsts re. Susanna of meng made in Davy, by bor. A Thursday Mrs. Suraton Corners, the .court of Mrs. "Maria Kohler, a neigh hearing has been set for afternoon. It is alleged that utters harsh and. voking words about her neighbors the little town. Mrs. Kohler plains that the woman spends her time nagging, fault-finding and tronble- making. A score of women, it is said, will appear against the alleged scold to insist that she be punished. on pro in com GENERAL RETIRED. And Reason Was He Talked Too : Much. Paris, Oct. 1I.--Gen. A. G. L. d'Am- ade, who in an interview declared the time had arrived for France to call a halt on Spain's penetration of Moroc- co, has been placed on 'the retired list. It is understood that Foreign Minister Pichon told the cabinet he would re- sign unléss Gen. d'Amade was punish- {N ed. An official note says that Gen. d'Amade has recognized the fact that he exceeded the reserve imposed on an officer active service, and that he is ready to bow tothe decision.of the government. on INSANE WOMAN'S FRENZY. Strappeu Station. Oct. 11.--Strapped to a police headquarters, Miss | RG M. Fargo spent tho greater part Thursday night. Going violently | linsane at the hospital, her condition hocame so violent that the police wero called upon to remove her. The calls | offered proteciion for the raving | maniac, battered * her body ory way. The is an epileplic, and came here Delta. over a vear ago for treatmont Prior to that she had been [burned to death by falling on hot stove while in a spasm. inow being cared for at the pS Had to Be to Cot in Irockville, jot mn fof no who conceivable in a rod She asylum. is | | A BAD FIRE. $60,000 Blaze. Oct. 11.- rling block, early, and before it°® the whole building structure, | The loss is estimated at $60,000, The loss on the building 1 £15,000, and Kirk and Torrey's dry | goods stock $30,000. Fire or {in exactly the same spot as did big 1901 fire. Loss of in NS broke Sar Sydney, Fire | out in the ( | turday morning, got under control {a large store and oflico brick was gutted was CHARGED WITH MURDER. | Arrested and [Lodged ' in Brace- bridge Jail. Gravenhurst, Ont., Oet Eva Suter, of Germania, about twelve {miles' from here, has arrested by Constable B. D. Armstrong, and lodg in Bracebridge jail, for the alleged murder of her vear-and-a-hali-old child, about two weeks It was kept quict, but 'recent led arrest. She a woman about twenty-one An will be held. 11.--Miss been ed ago. suspicion to young years ot To Attend Wedding. Ottawa, Oct. 11.--Allan Lewis turning from Toronto and Zack from Kingston, to attend the mar- Iriage of their sister, Miss Norah Lewis, rand Frank Ahearn. 1 fol- lowing the will be given by Mr..and Mrs Elmsleigh, which has been kindly to them by "Collingwood Sclireiber. reception ceremony Lewis at lent i | weather woman from | almost a Sydney | nailed | the | her | mnquest i L nie] sen fill pond with | Napanee Defeated Picton at Football. RECALL BETTER, The Funeral of the Late Jehial! Aylesworth--A Couple Who Have Been Married Sixty Years ~They Are Both Good | Health. Oct. 11.--6n Saturday football teams jour play friendly games Napanee teams. In the the junior game was pullod- Driving Park between the Juniors, of icton, and the Napanee Juniors. 'the pame was very exciting and some good playing was witnessed {for juniors. Tho result was 2 to 0, favor of Napanec. : In the in Napante, [the Picton to Napanee with the | morning in the 0 oft the "Senior Napanec was alttrnoon and gaune team Seniors played. The oxceedingly clean | throughout and resulted in og scare of | io U, in of Napanee. The | Picton loud in their praise | the atment accorded them ihe Napan Picton the - golf favor } hoys wire of tre by ¢ hove. met 'on also their Waterloo at Friday afternoon between Picton and Napanee Na- pance by score of 22 to 10. Pie- ton had ten men and Napance a like number. The best. scores were made by Messr:. Knight, Hepburn, Smith and {Daly. The Napance Club entertained [the visitors to dinner and supper The fumweal of the late Jehial Ayles- worth took place en Sunday afternoon from his late residence. A short pri- vate service held at the afterwards a public Mary Magcdalene's ment made tery. The weather has been exceplionally , warm, summery. The oldest inhabitant remember any thing finer than we are now enjoy ng. and Mra. B. Rockwell, debrated the sixtieth their marriage, tober 10th. They are both in health and spirits and their friend wish them many more happy returps. Mr. and Mrs. Rockwell were married | in Erncsttown township sixty years aco by Rev. George Benyon, dist minister, on the Wilton. gircuit. N Rockwell's maiden name Louis Johnston and both are scendants of U.E.L. stock: They lived forty-vight years on their farm at Violet and for the past have lived in Napavee. Mr. Rockwell | lex} the choir in the Methodist church, ? Violet, for thirty-five years and peo- plo yet enjoy hearing his voice. in Sacre music. They have three chil dren, W. A. Rockwell, J M. Labum, Scranton, Pa., and 0. Rockwell, Napanee. They entertain- od as many of their children grandchildren as could be present. A. Rockwell and grandson, Gordon, Mis. 0. N. Rockwell and daughter Laura. Letters of remembrance were {received from Mrs. Lapum and Algie | Rockwell, as well as , other friends, and presents from many friends most- ly in gold, testified to the estéem in which the venerable' péople are held They thoroughly enjoyed their anai versary dey. They are both in the best of health and say they never had serious illness in all their long life | match won was house, service in St church. The in Riverside intes- was for and can- not Mr. street, sary of S. of anniver- good a THINNING PAY _ PAY ROLL SALARIES OF OF CIVIC OFFIC- ~ 1ALS TO BE CUT. All Persons on City's Pay Roll From. Mayor Down, to Have Salaries Reduced Ten Per Cent --City Will Save $1,500,000. Chicago, Oct. 11.--A cut of ten per cent, in salaries all officials and employees of this% city,* from. Mayor Jusse's $15,000 down to the lowest la- has heen agreed upon by ol haorer. year, This measure was made necesgary by the fact that Chicago has not money » | enough to maintain the pay roll at its {normal level. The pay roll last approximated 15,000,000. The cut, before becoming effective, must be sanctioned by the city council, where a big fight against it is expected. year { i FEF HE Ek fy EXEERE NOT ADEQUATE. : Constantinople, Oct. 11.-- {'¢# The American missionaries {4 in Turkey have written to |# the American ambassador {!& stating the proposed in- r% demnities for the murder of ¥ missionaries in Adana are #% insufficient and expressing {3% the hope that the United + States: will insist upon ¥ adequate punishment for the 4 promoters of the massacres. | ® | | » |B i € < > | | Struck By A Train. Ottawa, Oct. 11.--Walter N. Barry lof the fnrniture frm of Harris & Bar- rv. was struck by a train, on Satur- day afternoon, and badly injured {that he died in half an hour. He was! fortv-five vears of age and a a wife and five children. There will be | an inquest, £0 Aes IT WON BOTH. VERY FINE WEATHER! OLDEST INHABITANT CANNOT) : { last | in | Picton Metho- | Wellington; Mrs. | - and | Ww. | » | Constables the mayor and department heads for next | 3 L SENT UP FOR LIFE. A Boy Who Brutally Mundered a Girl. Special to 'the Whig Guysboro, NS. Oct. 11.--Following a verdict of murder, handed- down in the supreme court, Andrew J. Izard, a { thirteen-year-old negro lad,. was sen- tenced to life imprisonment in- Dorches- ter penitentiary. The boy was con- victed of having murdered Maggie Ash, a colored girl, aged sixteen, by tying her to a ladder and beating her on the head with a stone last Aug- ust, Did Not Elect Officer. Dublin, Oct. 11.--The attempt to {elect a sword, bearir, 'of the city of { Dublin, resulted in riotous seencs and | the corporation mecting had to be adjourned. Capt. Edward 0'Mcagher | Condone will- he proposed for the of- { flea at the noxi meeting and, it is be- licved, he will be cleeted almost | ungnimously i il he consents {6 stand. Left Servant $10,000. I New York, Oct. 11.---By the will "oi Thomas B. Kerr, who, died at No. 44 {West Filty-Sixth street, Oct. ith, Mary Keegan, described as 'an old and faithful servant," is left $10, 000. The old woman was a servant in the family for more than twenty years Kerr leit a - v 25 300 000 estate. i | 14s WILL NOT GO. foie RAEN So Rome, Oct. 11.--The czar's: visit to Italy has been abandoned, 'at least for the present, owing, accord- ing to the official explana- tion, to the illness of the czarina, which is due to nervous excitement and worry. ° "+. 14 | 8 AINE ddd ui ceme- the past ten days the | | { John | vesterday, Oc- | i | | | 1 { dep) ' a twelve years \ ROBERT MOORE. is candidate *for controller York. He in New SEVERED TWO ARTERIES {In His It | Wrist By Poking Through Glass. Saturday afternoon, the police call to an hotel, where 'a raisihg a ° disturbance. Bateson and McAdoo re- sponded and found John Clarke, of Pittsburg, in a bad shape. "He was very drunk, and in his endeavors to lick everybody, had poked his right {hand through a piece of plate glass, land was bleeding terribly from cuts lon the wrist and on the back of: thi hand, The On | received | drunk a was man lost fo much blood on his way to the police station, that Ih | Bogart was sent for, and upon exam ination found that two arteries in the wrist had The docior made a temporary dressing at the sta- tion and then had the man removed to the general hospital, where the ar teries wer united and the wound stitched. The man will appear before | the magistrate as soon as he is out of the hospital. CTark™ Was police court, been severed. able to -appear in this morning, where was charged with being drunk, I was drunk, all right," said, when the charge was read to him. He had his hand bandaged. The magistrate imposed a fine of ¥1 {and costs, or ten days he "1 he ont GUESS SUMMERLIKE WEATHER. On Sunday the Theremometer Re- gistered 76 Degrees. remarkably fine have gone on riécord for Ok Not in vears has there been continued spell of beautiful au- tumn weather. Saturday and Sunday, however, were devided]; remarkable | days. The weather was actually sum- Lmer-like in its warmth gad brightness. The people thought Saturday was de- cidedly grand, hut Sutday had it "hoaten a mile." On Sunday, October | 10th, . the thermometer © at Prof. Knight's ohservatory registered seven- {y-six degroos the shade--as warm a oe, averace day in July lor Au. SU The day. was. clear from Full tht, the sun shining brightly, and the sky being absolutely clear. At night a breeze sprang up, and hlew all night. but Monday was ushered in fine bright and warm. In 1899, just Aen years there was fine October weather, but it couldn't equal the weather this October has given No Further Petition. to-dav, that them petition sent out for - the reduction of liquor | | licenses in the city. The matter was mow in the hands of the finance com- | mittee of the city council, and the; Social 'and Moral Reform League | "would await the decision of that body. Fleven days oi weather tober. such a in nig ago, D. would Laidlaw stated, he no further asking peal to the morn. ney | Hace tgrave Lk r-- Despatches From Near And Distant Places. THE WORLDS Tones GIVEN IN THE BRIEFEST POS- SIBLE FORM. Matters That Interest Everybody ~--Notes From All Over--Little of Everything Easily Read and Remembered. The merchants ol Montreal will ap- privy council to upsed the early closing by-law. Raspberries are being picked at Os- wego, N. Y., and strawberries are plentiful in New Jersey. Louis Lavoic has been gencral purchasing agent for the In- tercolonial railway, a new position. | President. Mahon, of the Street' Rail- {waymen's Union, was reclected hy act clamation at the Toronto ention. Richard Ford, Toronto, award- ed $2,500 in his claim against the Canadian pany. fon. A. ioek by Mrs, to Ottawa in England. Capt. Ralph Pringle, Canadian sailor at - St. last winter, has been manslaughter Peter appointed conv was for Express com- B. Aylesworth, accompan- Aylesworth, has returned after four months' absence who killed a Clair, Mich., convicted or i i Thornton, Toronto, notice of application for a divoree from ing in Cleveland. The national grain "dealers of the United Statics have passed a resolution favoring the admission, without duty, has given to parliament his wife, now liv- Jol Canadian wheat | Constables had a running fight with { three men; supposed to be the Wright safe Tobbors, Galetty, but the desperadocs all got away Fred Pegg, of Detroit, and a former St¥ Thomas man, was sentenced to four years in penitentiary on a charge of robbing Stirling's store. J. A. Macdonald, leader of the op- position in the British Columbia legis lature, has resigned and John Oliver, M.P.P., has heen chosen his successor. The United States is preparing to make a vigorous protest against thé recent agreement between China and Japan in relation Manchurian af- fairs. Alexander McCallum, bridge painter, fell Galt and struck on an island eighty feet below He is suffering from con- cussion of the brain. Rowland Bell, Toronto, has awarded the medal oi the Royal Canadian Humane Association for rescuing Edward Moriarty from drown- ing in Ashbridge's Pay, in July last, Application will be made to parlia- ment for authority to incorporate the "Dominion Drydock and Shipbuilding company,"' with a ecapilal stock of £1,000,000 and headquarters in Mon- treal. H. B. Tapscott, guage master, of logiate Institute, Toronto, has receiv- «od an offer of the professorship of Prono and German in the government university 'of Fu Chow, China. This oui lding ate tho asenes lington anil Scott strects, Toronto, form occupied hy the defunct On tario Bank, has heen purchased hy Pstriarche & Co., brokers, the antount paid hein® something over £100,000, Rev. W. G. Wilson, pastor Andrew's Presbyterian church, and one of the voungest as most popular ministers mn has been called to Old St chureh, Toronto, assistant Dr. Milligan. at 10 Co PR from a bridge at been M.A, modern Harbord Sircef lan Col of .. Wal of St Guelph, well the city, Andrew's to Rin as as LOVER, SUICIDED. She Was Known Widely For Her Beayty--Wrote _PBathetic Letter to Her Father--Great Affection Shown For Her. Man-les-Sur, France, Oct. 11 --The villa of Daniel Ridgeway Knight, | the American painter, at Rollebers, | overlooking the Seine, was the {of a dramatic tragedy, on Wednesday Armande Pizoni, a -seventeen-year-old girl, known throughout the country {side for her beauty, and who Mr. Knight in the double capacity | domestic and model, after being pub i licly jilted at a village ball by her [Tover, Gustav Fortune, returned to Mr. Knight's home; took the painter shotgun and, placing the barrel under her chin, blew off her head. Mr. Knight found the body of the girl the follow ing morning, upon his return Paris Before killing herself Armande a pathetic letter to her father, a chim sweep in Paris, io When Fortune heard of - the trap death of his sweetheart he tried to kill himself. The funeral of the girl wads the oc- casion of a remarkable demonstration of aflection for her. The entire popu- of the village attended the ser and followed the coffin to, the Mr. Knight paid all funeral expenses. He said that the girl had a face of the most remarkable beauty he ad ever seen. Seine, BOE served of from wrote vices Women And Girls. Join Y.W. and take free educational jelastes. Elementary ahd advanced work. Best teachers. Further infor mation at rooms, 196 Johnson siveet. LATEST NEWS damages' TRAGEDY IN VILLA we YOUNG GIRL. RL _FLOUTED BY ¢ = LAST -- EDITI IN fas WEATHER PROBABILITIES Toronto, Ont. Ogt. 11. ~Ottawa Valley and Upper St. lawrstee : (10 aaj South to west gales, rain to-night amd on Tuesday. Why be satisfed with this sort of performance? You can just as easily break away from the rest and win all the style _honors by buying the "Steacy" cloth which re- present distinctive style and supberb quelity at no gr cost to you than the o ary kinds. @ Bs This illustration represents oné of the many beautiful New York models to be seen in our showrooms. Note the close-fitting collar and weil built shoudders. The cloth is thoroughly shrunk and un- spotable, We offer ,them in colors Castor, Myrtle, Olive and Black. Come To-Morrow and Ses The Yaqu'll be delighted. McMAHON --In Kingston, Oct. 311th 1900, 40 Mr. and Mrs. A W. McMahon barl St a 8 DIED. tered on Monday, LOWRIE. ~~} Ordnance 1909, Whi fant da Lowrie MANLY 1909 into Kings imena ughteér al Oet weeks, and Mrs. 1458 9th, n= Ww. six of At Vance Joseph eighteen year Funeral pris ate. celebrated at . Thursday morning, Oct a.m. Friends invited n wm Oct. Manly, months w Ni ' Cathedr 14th, at 9.30 attend the 6th, aged A and G seven The ass ROBERT REID, The leading Undertaker. 'Phone, 577. 227 Princess street. Our -- Coffee Has that delitious fra with its lovely, golden brown color, it fairly makes voir mouth water -- before drinking and your lips smack alter. Ask for Our Java Mocha Blend PRICE, J grant aroma, and Guaranteed pure, 40 CENTS, Jas. Redden & Co. IMPORTERS OF FINE GROCERIES. "TAKE NOTICE." It you 'want any heating stoves, I have them in all sorts and sizes: Prices reasonnble, at TURK" Vhcoe, 705. of the has been It calls for construction in The extraordinary. budget Russian ministry of railroads submitted to the Duma. R3t, 100,000 for new 1910 'Many bets on Saturday' football games paid with McConkey's gnd Huy- ler = on Saturdav evening. Sold in Kingsion only at Gibsoh' Red Cross Drug Store, It 'is unders tood: that W. 8. Calvert, M. P. for West Middlesex, has been promised the vacancy on the Trans- continental railway commission. Edward 8. Caswell was appointed to the position of assistant librarian, by the Toronto public library board, at a salary of $2,000 per apnum. "On Monday moming," five large cases of MeC onkey" 8 choice of royalty sweets, at Gibson's Red Cross Drug Store, sweets, 8