The YEAR 76-NO. 258, & ily BINGSTON, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1900. GET REWARD = Re Fifty Heroes to Receive i vel Carnegie Gold. ACTS OF BRAVERY. SOME $33,000 AND MEDALS . DISTRIBUTED. Ohio Merchant Draws $1,000-- Rescues Two Men and a Wo- man at Risk of Own Life--Gift Pays Indebtedness For Little Store, Pittsburg, Nov. 5.~With the regular all meeting of the Carnegie Hero Fund Commission, came the rewarding of fifty persons throughout this coun try and Canada for acts of bravery | and illustrious conduct during the past three months, With the exception of one made to a citizen of Canada, the tire list of persons remembered by the Carnegie commission residents the Upited States, twenty-two persons living in Ohio Approximately 833,000, twenty-three silver and: twenty-seven bronze medals en- arc being were awarded by the action of to-day's | of heroic meeting the commission. Of fifty acts approved, fourte the persons responsible for them their death. received the award Deeds oi heroism during the flood at Athens, Ohio, on March 1st, 1907, ceived the greater part of the tion of the commission the en of met re- atten The acts of courage brought to the! attention of the commission included Saving children from fast running pas efiger trains, flood rivers, runaway horses from burning buildings. Prominent among the awards probably the most spectacular act bravery called to the attention of the commission was the case of Halley M Woods, a merchant of Athens, and an expert swimmer During the floods of the Hocking riv- in March, 1907, Woods, unassisted, rescued two men and a woman from almost, certain death when he flat-bottomed , skifi through wild running river current into the sccond | storey window of a hali-submerged house, carrying his rescued fellow-citi- zens to shore to safety, In investigating the case of Woods the commission found that he was in debt in excess of 81,000 for his small merchandise store, and presented him | with a check [1000 and a medal. Auother instance tion of the. commission was th William F. Sayle, of North Att Mass., an eighteen-year-pld boy, who unassisted and heavily sod, Jump ed into a hole in the ice broken the weight of a boy and vl had been skating on the and buoyed 'the couple sistance ¢ame Young aid himseli until tho couple taken from the ive hole and their way to salety A particularly worthy Mel Kan 5 rescuing from raging stopping unmanageable and a for SHV alled to the dre a gl thin conting, up until _as Savile, refused had beer Wer « the of act award wa case of George E Garden City, colored heroi ue, whose in rescuing a baby from in front of a | fast travelling passenger train: wa brought to the attention of the mission by «ity officials of where the colored hero lived McCué was given a bronz his act and 3500 for educ poses In Philadelphia the William M. Edwards, a long dg twenty-five voars old, who forgot prejudice in his anxiety vite to his fellow men While the Arcadia, a plving between delphia, was being June, 1903, an explosion in occurred. Most of the ing below decks and bruised, sone being burned » Many deserted the ship. Smoke flames came from the hatches Fd wards volunteered «to attempt the res cue of the imprisoned men Tying a rope to a lighter. Edward «lid into the burning hold, but could | not find anything. Hearing groans, com the tc wn ned, al fon mmission found to be of freight Hamburg and steams Phila unloaded during the stevedores work knocked down cargo were 10 DAILY MEMORANDA. At Campbell's store 1 like to shop For their Furs are Civie Finance: Committee Union Men, Labor Hal 'Don Quixote' A at the Spun 8 pu Bijou--* Brot Hate ete Lake Yacht Racing ng hers, to-morrow fo be sure of Quality and price "Wear George Mill's Is good advice Association Meet style Fish Globes ---------------- All sizes arrived. See the Jllusion Globes Something novel Robertson Bros. and shapes and new award, | ot} In these casa next of kin | and carrying persons Ol { Ohio, | rowed a { who | oe and | her's! 1 | deserted and after a located Lucius Hubbard, his guide rope, long seareh colored. Bearing his unconscious and injured |iellow-workman to the open hatch he | had him hoisted 10 the deck and safe- ty, following himself when assured there was no other person in'the burn- BUDGET BILL Passed the British House of Commens. THE VOTE 379 T0 149: THE SCENE IN HOUSE WAS MEMORABLE ONE. A silver medal was given Edwards land the sum oi $1.000 to be applied to | the purchase of a home such other rl purpose as mmy approved by the commission In each of the fifty interest story of real The Canadian award was to Hertha Imai wbury, Charlottetown, PEI, {daughter of Nelson Rattenbury, whole {sale grocer, who saved the life of a [ Miss A. Wellner, Charlottetown, last summer. Only a school girl vet, she exhibited great presence of mind in the emergency. When Miss Wellner, iwho was bathing and unable to swim, got beyond het depth and was in the jgreatest danger, Miss Rattenbury Taxes--The Chief Mén of the grasped the girl by thes hair and hg ; brought her to shore only just in time. Two Leading Parties Spoke. London, Nov. 5.--The House oi Com- CLAYTON IS DRY. mons, last night, passed the third reading of the finance bill by a vote | No Summer Booze at Island Gate-|of 379 to 149. The scene in the house { way. was a memorable one. Seldom had tl Water NY Nov 5.<A there been a larger attendance of mem- | atertown, N.Y, Nov, he a bers and peers, apd the diplomatic {that can be quenched only with galleries were crowded to their utmost {waters of the St. capacity Chancellor Lloyd-George, he soda water Premier \squith and Mr. Baliour leader the opposition, all spoke during the evening, und there was tense excitement through the session, John Redmond, the lrish nationalist leader. anounced that the members of that party would abstiin from voting on the finance bill. The party, he said, strongly favored land tax, but was hostile to liquor taxes, these were unjust to Ireland. Mr. Asquith, in a brief speech clos- ing the debate, said it was incumbent upon thofo who objected to the gov- ernment's taxes to provide al ternative scheme fo nation's necessities. Where was this scheme ? he asked The premier added sooner or later Mr. Balfour must show his hand, and it would have to be a hand that would suit thé game of tarifi re- formers I'he government, continued the premier, might well be content to rest themselves in Patience. There were-only two issues before the house, the taxes proposed by the budget, a tariffil reform I'he announcement of theyvete show. ing the government's majo¥ity 10 be Javger than expected, was greeted with prolonged ministerial cheering The conservatives had counted upon score of liberal abstentions, but, parently, only two liberals joined nationalists in not voting The bill will be formally passed its first reading' in| the House Lords, to-day, and the date, second reading, which will ite date, will take place ne). be awards a human heroism is told The Nationalists Refrained From Voting--The Party Favored Land Tax But Not the Liquor thirst the Lawrence or from fountains awaits next at the Thou- as Clayton and of the excepting those Alexandria Bay, are concerned. I'he prohibitionists have carried Clay- iton, and no more "'booze" can be legally sold there after October lst. Even the drug stores, where one could perhaps get a nip, are under the Ihe aniv relief in sight for ones is Alexandria Bygy, twelve away. Drinks can no longer be at the palatial Frontenac hotel. | Antwerp has gone dry, so has | Hounsfield, while hotels only can sell in Henderson, Pamelia, Theresa Lorraine. Twelve towns in the will have no license in Cape Vincent can only ut hotels. At Harbor everything will be dry THE REBELS SUCCEEDED. season's | sand other ' near summer Islands, man ; of so far resorts; as ban { thirsty { miles, | sold some meet: the liquor and connty | Drinks tained ob- kets' be Lives Lost on Sides. Orleans, La., Nov. 4.--4&" cable | messag from San Juan Del Sur, | Nicaragua, says the revolutionists met |Zelaya's army in a terrific battle, vi tarda) Hunmreds of lives wore lost J both sides The rebels captured {Las Lagas. This opens the way for Estrada to the capital. Tha fact that {he message comes from San Juan Del ' Sur indicates that thie rebels hold the [west coast. ' * I I i | JURY REFUSED TO INDICT. | | Hundreds of oth Now o a aps the on of on the determine November OLD MAN WOUNDED. Killed Farmer Who Had Ruined | His Home | Gallatin, Mo., Nov b.--Believing {Otis Claveomb, a young farmer, was | mustified in killing the man who wreck | od home, a grand jury refused to indict him for killing John Ward, a {wealthy land owner, and Claygomb his liberty. Claycomb kill- who was sixty-one years taking Mrs. Cl yeomb from and six children. a Near borne. . Ont., Nov. bd seventy-nime Shot in Orchard Port Welland lan, aged picking apples in his Colborne, yosierday struck in the stomach from a 32-calibre rifle wha lives alone, had in making his way neighbor's Medical 1 and it 1 thought, though the course five inches long. Two boys aged fiftecn, aml Howard Armstrong, fessed to having been by Mc Mil- while near his Jobn Years, orchard, afternoon, way by a bullet The. old man, some difficulty the nearest was called, will rreover bullet jwas given ed Ward, old, for er home . to aid he of the Charged With Murder. Syracuse, N.Y. Nov, J.--Francis | Nally, this city, was arrested, yes- terday, charged with murder in the first degree in killing John and Peter Boli in théir hut near Phoenix, Os- wego county, October 10th, 1903. Nally's , William, was also ar rested. The Oswego connty authori | ties claim to have strong circymstan- | | tit al evidence ? was ol Beam con- Gordon have shooting near |0n CAPT PRITCHARD RESIGNS | Commodore of Cumard = FHT IN A MINUTE Line Has Service Now York, Nov Captain John Pritchard, commodore of the Cunard ine, who began his fiftv-threa years sorvive at soa ma }50-tou schooner, ana who ends it in command of the 39,000-ton steamship Mauretania, an- nounced on Wednesday, upon sailing for Liverpool, that ht had handed in his resignation to the Cunard line. He said that he did not cxpeet bring the ship back ou her'next voy- age. There are plenty of young cap- taing waiting, and they ought he givim a hance «aid Commander Pritchard 5. BOTTLE EXPLODED BY FIGHTING GERMS. Typhoid Bacilli and Chocolate Creams Gigantic War. London, Nov 5.~Soon after ypening of the medical exhibition the Horticultural Hall, Westminster, large ulass bottle, which had {betraying symptoms of uneasiness, iploded and scattered its contents, a | creamy foam, over the rest o the | stall of Messrs. A. H. Cox & Co Originally the bottle contained milk | --just milk and a Tew million typhoid ball, which lived and grew happily {together in . this cultnre medium { Then, for demonstration purposes, a horde of 10,000,000 hungry monsters, known as the bacilli of Massol, were introduced into the cultured civiliza- {tion of the unhappy typhoid tribes, and remorscless war raging nn Tmoment { A storm in a tha battle in the bottle. turcid with the bodies wd still the Massol devoured their victims 1 bandit had filled himeeli to point he burst," and each of =H 000 ur HU 000 fragments de voung Massol baeil which foyght and ate in turn. milk foamed up with the multiplving of and the bottle on Those Wage ol a to "the at a been eX | to i | GAVE SERMONS IN FACTORIES Also in Stores and Theatres-- Novel Mission Plan New York, Nov. 5.--Clergymon in- vaded shops, factories and theatres in New York as a part of a mission plan which the Prechyterian board of homo missions has been carrving on in St. Louis, Chicaco, Newark, Buffalo Rochester, Factory packing cases girls' baggage were used for the preachers who sermons to of business lines ar and chops as pulpits sought by short "take the heathenmism out and soften its hard was a nothing to The milk of the militia When teacup was UIVW Will Take The Job. Toronto, Now. ~Aldcrman Albert J. Kevlar, who has for the past five years represented the fifth ward in the city council, will resien wilthiy the next two we 16 neccept the position of assistant assessment commissioner, ade vacant I» the Arthur Frankland. The s at least 22.700 a year hungry ks iy the ger tS nasion i exploded wv will arose out assertion that thy cid (the Massol be . a Wn -- a * Ex-Mayox A Candidate of- food. The Mas Victoria, BX Nov. d.--4 Ids. by rendering ley, formerly mayor "lengthens a |nounces his intention independent idat Meb n personal | ot bh tiseptic extraordinary eptional extent, niini- | per ul w her labore, and place tor him Tulgaria largely on the hacillus now presented i chocolate | 10,000,000 | : choco Y {late creams havoc | lining mong the inno typhoid microbes Compe reformers hnd a soured Persian Lamb Jackets bacilli, and own sKins pes ou may Ie We { your Ww guarantes a Camp- mm ---- -- ------ get our prices of fine Mars Col- | a ------------ VICTIMS OF MAD SPEED. Woman Killed and Man Fatally Injured. Utica, Nov. Mrs. Erpest M Smith, husband is a business |. man in Utica, was instantly killed in an automobile accident at New Hart. ford, suburb of this city, and Charles Nicee, of New Hartiord, a vic tim of the same accident, is in a eriti- cal condition. The auto, which con- tained, bisided the "chauffeur, d& man and (wo women, was travelling 'along the state road at New Hartiord, ata rate exceeding fifty miles an hour. As it approached 'a bridge, the passage- way of which is consilerably narrower than the highway, the driver lost cons trot and the machine crashed into the iron supporters of the bridge. The oc- cupants were all thrown out and Mus. Smith struck on her head, breaking her neck and fracturing her skull. The | other occupants of the car received only slight ipjmries. Niece was cross. idp the bridge wt the time and was struck by the machine as it reboimded from the crash. 'He was found under- NX. whose EE ---------------- LATEST Despatches From Neat And Distant "Places, THE WORLD'S TONGS GIVEN IN THE BRIEFEST POS- SIBLE FORM. Matters That Interest Eoiryhily --Notes From All Over--Little] of Everything Easily Read and Eemembered, Cheese sold in Peterbarg at Mle, R. 8. Lake, M.P., is opposed to the neath the wrecked car with a broken leg and scious injuries about the head. It is believed that hé also suf- | fers from internal injuries i . SAVED ROOSEVELT: From Death in the South African, Jungle. British Bast Africa, Now Crosswell, a government engi- the public works department Nveri, came into Nairobi, and brodght word that Mr. Roosevelt had a narrow escape when shooting hig elephant bull When phauts it is often into the herd and Nairobi 5. Mr. neer in very first shooting ele- neggsary to creep | shoot the selected | "RT. EO NETANT bull at of fifteen vards Mr. Roosevelt, accompanied by My Cunninghame, the big game hunte and guide, followed this progedure and killed his elephant at the, second | shot. "Suddenly, before Mr. Roosevelt | could reload, another elephant: bull | charged him at close range from the herd. Both Mr. Cunninghame and Mr Roosevel got behind trees and My Cunninghame turned the bull from Mr Roosevelt in time Other reliable sources au of Mr a range to just | the | Rousevelt's parrow es- | confirm OUR ape | AWFUL CONT CONDITION, SEVEN IN A A FAMILY SICK | AND STARVED. | Mother III With Nineanonthsyold Child Dead Beside Her---Terri- |. ble Case of Poverty. Montreal, Xov- -A terrible poverty and starvation was to light by two police officers. lane off, Richmond street found, aciated, ing caso ot} In & Iy and infant hed; far a nine-months-old dead beside her on the te other children all from starvation. Two weeks ago the father, a man called Joseph Cadieux. had left for the States to take up job he had secured, leaving his ih and seven children with forty cents to buy food. He was a heavy drink- er, and it is thought he may have, gone on a spree and forgotten his family.as ke did once before. The three rooms they lived in in an indescribable state of neglect six filth and MAY BE NEAR BROCKVILLE. Detective on Track of Young. Man. Brockville, Ont., Oct. 3.--~That Bar- ton: F. Raplgy, the young commercial In aveller who disappeared from the Campbell house, Napanee, (mt., the pight of October 10th, as: completely as though 'the earth had swallowed Kim up, is in this vicinity, is the opinion of Detective James Murphy, of the Thiel agency. Montreal, who was assigned to the Sase a day or two after Rapley's whereabouts, be unknown. Wednesday night De- | Mu who amived here 1 learned that a Missing ame te live "lh. yasehold eo dressed and 2 hes ription, had « William A. the town food answer alled at home of Latham, fiv west, of and given He was appearcd. 10. membérs of th demented ve recount of vhimself proceeded westward AT 3} it } - Murphy eit" with a hovse the country. ugh and would ¢ ving he De and 1 fea tective {rig to scom $332 In Conscience Money w. B5:--The\ gov As conscience py las to customs, 1 to printing pery, ¥7.23 to agriculture ernment {Salvation { lixt {093,104, and { Rockliffe Park and lay all might with ringer ision nna) | thirty It | | decoration | Sir brought | a family was | Hazell, the mother ill and terribly me) gone | were found | Tuesday noon, | tp | ; Jpoverumant at the government's naval RE New York will celebrate the passing (of the old year'by an aviation meet, The government will build a $1.500,- {000 floating dock at Prince Supers, Chili will order a 20,000 ton hattle- ships two destroyers and submarines. Pelen Gi. Leisk, a Savannah'hermit, wrote "his wilk on the wall of his room Commander Eva Booth, head of the Army 'in America, favors 1s woman suffrage. J George Galey is charged at or with smuggling a horse throu the Detroit river tunnel. : The Presbyterian. congregation Avonmore, has called Rev. S. D. Phee, B.A., of Belfast, P.E1 The United States tariff board views Canada as the mast diflicelt problem to solve, and fears x tariff war, At St. Catharines, there are about seventy-five people' on. the "Indian" several of them being women Canada's revenue this vear was $85. the expenditure on Con account $54 064,232, ratepayers, th the Tot ol Me- solidated fund Port Arthm day, carried by-law by one, Loudon, 'Ont., council has asked the provincial government's permission to take a vote on the Sunday ear. ques tion. George Cowan, will move for criminal code gambling. The wife of "Bob" Gook, terrorizing Oraageville, told torney-gencral"s department wm hydro-elsetric n of nearly three huss wer a to M.P., of Vancouver, an amendment to the prohibiting race track whe is the at- she be tlieves the man is insane, Mis. Tessie Lamerande, oi Ottawa, 1 ovr a thirtvilive wleot eff at a broken arm and fractured hip. Otto I. Bannard the, defeated re- publican candidate for mayor of New York. may stand for the state guber- natorial nomination nextdyear. At Vancouver. B,C., Dr. Isaac Ma. thers, brother of Judge Mathers, Win- inipeg, and former resident of Brandon tand Glenboro, Man.. died, on Thurs- {day, of typhoid fever. The colonial auxiliary force officer's has been conferred upon Mackenzie... Bowell, honorary co- lohel of the 49th Regiment, Belleville. W. T. R. Preston, who will be Cana- dinn trade commissioner in Holland, will sail from New York next week. His headquarters will be at Amster Al, itis Dobson, cashier of the Cann- dian Express company. at Niagara Falls, was knocked scnseless in his of- | tice by two men, ' and robbed of a {parcel containing over R14.000, on | Thursday night There have been eleven deaths on the United States football field so far this season, which brings the total for the last nine years up to 124 The greatest number killed in any one car was in 1905, when the death list totaled twenty-four George Neilson, aged nineteen years, {shot and seriously wounded "Esther nineteen years, at Toronto, while the girl was out walking with a friend, claiming the girl had slander- lod him to his sweetheart, The members of the building com- {mittee of the Hamilton Board of Fdu- ation have instructed 8S. D. Biggar, a |K.C., to issue a writ for hibel against the Times Printing company for reflec tions on their integrity. Chief Thompson, of the Toronto fire department, has received a check for £300 from the provincial government, {to be applied to the firemen's benefit fund, in recognition of services at the recent fire at the parliament build- ings, Alleging hat he had accused him of divulging the secrets of the confos- sional. Rev. Father J. P. Desrosiers, parish priest of Ville St, Pierre, Mont. real, has taken an action for #2000 damages against KE. Gauron, one of ers his parishioners Four men, who 'dig Tietlebanm, & non-nalcn |gon driver, from his * beat him to death ( wring a strike last spring in (hivage. were convicted to-day, and sentenced 10 twenty-five ypurs each in prison. Charles Ls wis, a West Virginia negro was shot for an assault upen Mrs: IMary Lockhold. Thre negroes went lto Lockhold's, and aiter tying the {farmer to a tree and whipping him on {his bare back with willow switches, {attempted mn as<ault upon Mrs. Lock- { he Henry aker wag- iggon, and Id OFFICIAL RETIRED. the |§ | J. H. Kenning, Windsor Steps Out of Office. ! Windsor Ont... Nov, 3.- {irom hardening of the arteries. J H. | Kenning, inspector of inland revenues, {has temporarily retived 'from active iduties. Permission has been asked {for 'a six months' leave of absence. Kenning is seventy-four years old, be ng in © the service of the" demigion age of thirty-one He has held various positions. -Sufiering years, | aeETING og WLU. Ou, Thursda a: the monthly 'of ae W.CT.U. was held in Thee! vn .C.A. parlor, with a large at- tendance. Two new members were re ceivid, in McCallua | fed the devotional ex- The the Banc in a a eT ohahorted The pounding secretary read a ie fo from the Moral ad Saal Reform Councit of Canada, signatures to a petition for eR fo im- portant amendment to the criminal code. Plans were discussed for in- creasing the finances, a number of the mem undertaking to interest those in sy ad with the cause who are utiable to attend the meeting: teresting reports were given by Mes. Craig and Mrs, 2 of the provincial convention, at Belle ville. Mrs. Craig told of the extreme kindness shown them on their arrival and the generous hospitality extended to them through the whole cohven- ton. The reports of departments were brimful of interest. The work. among the Africans is worthy of mention for the rapid advancement made in the cause. The lumber camp work, re- ported by Miss Sproule, W.C.T.L. mis- sionary in New Onfario, was infpiring as 'she recounted the diflienlties to met in travelling the rough roads - this new countrys She visited thirty- one camps, and was always received [with kindness, travelli ther ¥.910 miles. Mrs. F. Y. Milloo's report referred to the culmination of © the movement to abolish liquor in the military camps and its grand results The president, Mrs. MeKee's addres: told of advance made by wontan in unieipal and political life, and she believed that in a short time, the hal: of Ontario would be umler local op- tion. Mrs. McKee was presented with a life membership, as a mark of affec: tionate esteem Be the members of con ventions, in the form of 'a bow of gold sot' with pearls. Many wvaluabld hint were given that would help in carry ing on the work in the local unions. The convention was pronounced the best held in a number of years HELD AN "AT HOME." A Fine Affair Was Cooke's .Chureh. The "At Home™ which was given by the Presbyterian Guild oi Cooke's church, on Thursday evening, was at tended by nearly three hundred young people, and. evidently they enjoyed themselves to the full. Members of the guild were very attentive to their guests, and did all in their power to make them feel at home, The chair was occupied by Rev, MacTavish, and "those who contrib ww the programme were Mrs, . Jackson, Miss Edith Newman, Mies Jeisie Reid, Miss IL. Walker, and A} lan Lemmon. During thé evening re freshments were served Given at: pr, An Enjoyable Time. Another enjoyable euchre party dance was lield at the Young men's rooms, Wellington street. large number of people were tnough for [ pogressuve anc Irish- A resent, twenty-eight tables & euchre. Miss S. Newell wen frst ladies' price and Edward Beecher won first gentlemen's prize. The ladies' consolation prize went tc Miss M. Johpston, and the gemtle nign's to A, Stanford. About = mid night' dainty refreshments were served and then Staley's orchestra played the fust waltz number and card were immediately forgotten. Until the small hows of the morning the young people had a fine time and were sorm to break wp. 'lhe final euchre and dance will be Feld on Thursday, No vember 18th. . . SMUGGLING CHPIURL $10,000 WORTH KINGSTOM FURS AND DRY GOODS. Captured Near New York--The Goods Were Smuggled By Well to-do People--Spotters Tracec the Goods From Here. Word comes from New York that about $10,000 worth of furs and dry goods, smuggled from Kingston dur ing August and September, have beer captured en route there. These goods were known to Lave been purchased here by well-to-do people who sum mer in Kingston and the Thousand 1slands. There has been so much smuggling oi goods from Kingston during th summer time that the United State: customs ofbelals decided tO use ever, means to stop it, and during July and August spotters were engage here watching prominent New York + who when herd bought extensive ry Information was also secured fron local spotters, and, it is understood, that one local party will receive good-sized reward for informatio tirat helped materially to lead to the tracing of the goods. Some of the goods were taken the Thousand Islands in vachts and th nee shipped (hrougi New York sfate. No hurry way ta ken in dogag this but the customs of ficials had their « e§es open. and every suspicious box or trunk wis ex smined and finally this week the long. sought goods were discovered ane there will be large fines well duty to pay 8 privat as Savs She Lost Money \ woman giving the name of Cath erine Brown, and her address as Belle ville, was jound lving asleep, wrapped ap in a blanket, in a vard near On: tario street, vesterday. In police court this morning, she wa® taxed 82 and costs or-twpnty days. She claims tc have been relieved of £25 What About A New Derby. We have every £3, $i. Campbell Bro', Kingston's hat store, |. Sale "Empress" Kid Gloves good 'style, $3, $2.50, TO-MORROW - Ladies' Handkerchiefs All Pure Linen, barred and hemstitched. SPECIAL, 2 for 25e¢. Ladies' Vests And Drawers, nat ual color winter weight,' 25c¢. " GARMENT. 's Socks Fine Cashmere Wool, Black only 30c. QUALITY, AT 25¢. Ladies' Gloves, Black Cashmere with fleece ning. EXTRA SPECIAL AT All Woal, extra heavy sizes 6 to 10, 20¢c. AND rib, 25: fall $1.5 Rough mixtures, inches wide, WORTH FOR $1.25. 4 We offer these celebrated Kid Gloves, for Ladies, Tans, Browns; Greys, White. They are finished with arrow points and 1 fastener. : They are value, at $1.00. OUR PRICE 75¢c. PAIR. dome warterly Style Book For winter, now ready. ASHLEY .=1In_ Kingston. « 1908, to Mr. and Mrs 28 Livingston Ave ROBERT J REID, The leading Undertaker. "Phone, B77. 227 Princess sireet. MAGGI SOUPS Wil store be demonstrated all this week, NOV. 1st to 6th Convenient afd Economical. Jas. Redden & Co. [IMPORTERS OF FINE GROCERIES; + "TAKE NOTICE." If you want any beating stoves, I have them in all sorts and shes. Prices 'reasonnble, at TURK'S, Phise, 708; CLEWS HAVE SEPARATED. ob and Mrs, Henry Clews Decide on Divorce. Baltimore, Md., Nov. 5--~That Mz. and Mrs. Henry Clews, of New York, have finally separated, was admitted by Mrs--Clews sister "John €-B:- Pendleton, of this ety, who says that, while she would not discuss the mat- tar, it iso fact that the sepatition has taken place, and is final, and that a divor wiil probably . result. Mrs. Clews, whose first' husband was Fred: erick Gebhardt, New York, was some thing of a celebrity in bor maiden hood as the beautiful Louis Moris, of this city Burned To Death. > Boston, Now. &#.~Mre. Rebecoa Roach, aged ninety-four, died at the Waltham hospital, yesterday, sne was addicted to the old-fashioned habit of seeking comfort in a pipe. ------------------------ New Superitegient Of Mines. Ottawa, Nov. 5.--E. R. Faribault of the geological survey staff, has accepted the post of superintendent of mine for the Queiwr govm Rent. because 'y,