Nol ai The Daily YEAR 76-NO. 264. : KINGSTON, ONTARIO, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, HIS FOUR WIVES IN COURT, When Lucian Pickett Was Conviet- ed of Fraud.- Cleveland, Ohio, Nov. 12.--- Lucian Pickett, who, it was charged, married four women and absconded with sev- eral hundred 'dollars of their money, 15 40 CHANCE 9 Of Support For Weman's|["| "WU" women to whom he be Suffrage Plank |came engaged, was convicted of using . . | the mails in a scheme to defraud. The BY UBERAL PARTY SE EEE is four and a halfsyears in the peni- tentiary and.a fine of $1,500. Pickett's SO EARL OF CREWE TOLD LIBERAL LADIES four wives were in court, as were some of the girls to whom he had promised marriage. ' -------- STARTLING MESSAGES. One Son Was Killed, --Second Bad- ly Scalded. 8t. Catharines, Ont., Nov. 12.--Just after receiving word from Ottawa that he had been awarded $1,500 damages from O'Donnell and O'Brien for the death of his son Frank in an accident on a steam shovel which he was firing, Joseph Doherty, of Thorold, was hand- ed a message from Trenton, stating that his other son, Joseph, had been fatally scalded 'while working on a steam shovel. The other son, Frank, was killed about a year ago. ---------- | CEMENT MERGER MANAGER. Who Waited Upon Him--Sharp Differences of Opinion in the Cabinet--Suffragettes Held Up Performance at Savoy Theatre. London, Nov, 12.--The Earl of Crewe, lord privy seal, told a deputati>n of liberal women, yesterday, there was no chance of the government support. ing a woman suffrage plank in the next election. There were, he said, sharp diffierences of opinion on the question among the the cabinet. He was convinced, as the question stood the of members of now, House -- Frank P. Jones of Steel Company Gets Place. Montreal, Nov. 12.--It is under stood that Frank P. Jones, general manager of the Dominion Steel com- pany, has resigned to become general | manager and vice-president of the Can- |ada Cement company, the new cement | merger, at a salary of $25,000, Mr who comes from Brock- | ville, joined the Dominion Steel com- {pany as sales agent. Jones, Ithaca, N.Y., Nov. ~12.--A college {romance came to light when Mrs. Ar- {thur H. | N = Results In MElopement. | i Allen, of 209 Williams street, | ithaca, admitted that her | year-old daughter, Charlotte, eloped with Frederick P. Badger, of { Pittsburg, a Cornell student, and that | they had left Ithaca on the evening | train for Bufialo, Monday night. Mis. [Allen tearfully related how she had | seventeen had left 'her house for a few minutes before fh and when she returned found that her daughter had gone. Mrs. Al len said her principal objection to the {marriage was the girl's extreme youth. | Two ygars ago Miss Leah Allen ran away to Auburn and. was married to s-- {Germain Larrabue, son of the vice | president of the republic of Peru, who was at that time a student at Cornell, | They now live in Peru. Sep EARL OF CREWE Commons would defeat such a posal by a very large majority. Sufiragettes held up a performance the Savoy theatre last night. sarning that Mr. Lloyddieorge, chan- cellor of the exchequer, was going to the theatre to see the comedy opera, pro- ------ Cobomrg Church Census. Cobourg, Nov, 12.--A church census Aken Frrives-the relative strength taken her FATA i 1 Children Burned to Death | in Hotel Fire. HERDINE LOST LI SHE PERISHED ALONG WITH HER BROTHER. She Went Back Into BuiMing in An Effort to Save Her Brother --Her Mother Saved Three of Innisfail, Alta., Nov. 12.---A fire which burned the Revere house to the ground, Wednesday night, burned to death two children, Ethel Arnell, aged soventeen, and John Arnell, aged twelve, daughter and son of the" pro- prietor of the hotel. William Arnell and the parents and four other children, along with a num- ber of guests, had narrow escapes. One of the boarders, named Munroe, had a leg broken jumping from the second storey. The girl who , perished could have saved her life by jumping from the window, as she went to a window for that purpose, but she learned that her little brother had not been rescued, | and went back to his room to get him, land both were cremated. | Mrs. Arnell saved three of her chil- dren by throwing them to the firemen {from the second storey. | Innisfail is about ninety miles north lof Calgary, on the C.P.R. Calgary- | Edmonton line. | w-- | FIRE AT POTSDAM N.Y. | Caused a Serious Loss | Lockwood. Potsdam, N.Y., Nov. 12. eleven o'clock, last night, fire was discovered in the basement of the grocery part of the Lockwood depart- ment store, causing a loss on. stock estimated at $15,000. Mr. Lockwood carries stock of $30,000; damage to building not very heavy. Damage. to the stock caused mostly by smoke and water. When first discover- ed the smoke was so dense it was ut- terly impossible for the firemen to enter the building and locate the fire, until they had put several streams of water in the building, causing a heavy loss by water. The building" is owned by Mrs. Rose Wright. Mr. Lockwood received a bad cut on his reenet--froncfath to Mur. About was g-glass: A LEGAL POINT. Cannot Recover * Child. White Plains, N.Y., Nov. 12.-Su- preme Court Justice Arthur 3S. Tomp- kins handed down a decision in which he dismisses action brought by John Miles, of! White Plains, against Thomas N. Cuthbert, a lawyer, for £100,000 damages for the alienation of the affections of his children. Myr. Miles is a millionaire wholesale mil- linery merchant of Manhattan. Judge Tompkins in dismissing the complaint of Mr. Miles, said : "In my opinion the complaint does not state a cause of action against the defendent Cuthbert, for the reason no action will lie by a parent to recover for the love and affections of a child." For Love Despatches From Near And Distant Places. THE WORLD'S TONGS GIVEN IN THE BRIEFEST POS- SIBLE FORM. nn Matters That Interest Everybody --Notes From All Over--Little of and Remembered. The inquest into the fatal wreck is in progress at Vancouver. Experimental farms are to be oper- ated by the New. York Central lines. William James, a negro, was lynch- ed by a mob at Cairo, 1ii., on Thurs- day. The cable companies have failed to establish communication with Jamai- A, W. SMITHERS, He is to Take the G.T.R. Chair- manship. Alfred Waldron Smithers, appoint- ed chairman of the Grand Trunk rail- way company in succession to Sir Rivers-Wilson, has been its vice-chair- man for five years. His connection with the company dates back Lo 1896, in which year he made his first tour of inspection in Canada, travelling over all the numerous branch lines of the company, #s well as along its 0. Candidates wore nominated for the legislature in British Columtia on Thursday. Franz Ferdinand, of Austria,and his wife are on a visit to the kaiser at Potsdam. * The Canadian club, Winnipeg, elected Rev. Dr. W. C. Gordon (Ralph Con- nor) president. Oliver Wilcox, conservative, was elected to the commons, in North Es- sex, Thursday, by 155 majority. Attorney-General Wickersham denies that the U. 8. government has aben- doned its pursuit of the sugar trust. The British committee on the dra- matic censorship has advised that the censorship be retained and extended to music halls, Fort - William has been billed for $3,345.50 for costs of the services of the militia in connection with the re- cent strike riots. People of Hazelton, B.C., are peti- tioning Premier McBride for constables to protect them against possible trou- 'Ible with the Indians. At Halifax, N.S., it is reported that one. of two sugar refineries will be closed pormancotly because of over- production in Canada. A Melbourne despatch says it is con~ i sidered unlikely that the naval bill will be pressed by the government during the present session. Bediort violently assaulted the war- don at the Brixton, Eng., prison a fow days ago. Bedfort now denics that ho had even been to Hamilton, Most of the victims of the Vancou- WwW, SMITHERS, main arteries. This trip he has since repeated. In 1907, in company with Mr. Hays, he travelled over a large stretch of the route to be taken by the Grand Trunk Pacific railway, go- ing from Vancouver to Prince Rupert, the sale of which as a terminal port much impressed him® with its "fine na- tural harbor, open all' the year of the different congregations as fol Church of England, 1,047; Ro- man Catholie, 1,026; Methodist, 943; Presbyterian, 801: Congregational, 354; Baptist, 211; Salvation Army, 55; denominations, 47. Seventy- one come under the head of no pre ference "I'he Mountaineers," in which there is a topical song bantering himself and {lows : the budget, the suffragettes took seats in the dress circle. The chancellor and his party accupied a box. While the | budget song on the suffragettes rose and shouted it down with shrieks | ol "Lloyd-George, why don't you give | women. votes ?"' F : WAS smaller and similar utteran- | waved a stomach | Ona wildly f Huge Cargo Of Oats. pump and another a bottle of milk | Lindsay, Nov. 12 The largest grain Policemen, helped by miny willing {hoat in Canadian waters, has arrived hanes, ran the woinen out to the ac- lin Midland harbor from Fort William, companying chorus of "Boos." | with 527,000 bushels of oats for Peter- boro. This is the largest cargo that { has ever been unloaded in Canada, Out. roi ger ANY YEARS AGO Cuaig, a member of the Dominion po Jive; Dutays, became Inentally unfit | MRS.KINGSAW HER FATHER and finally was taken to Brockville | INTRODUCED. asylum, his people did not thie 1.0.F. of his total disability he was under suspension. As a resalt the divisional court has dismis tion brought against the 1.0.1 allowed the order's appeal trial judge's award of 31,000 McCuaig was dead at the time of th trial, -and the judgment did not pre dice the MecCuaigs right to sue for other thousand of the policy. Ces, ~ I. 0. F, WINS. Conditions of Policy Not Carr notify until I -------- | And Now Her Son Was ed the | the House and in a ee al Position--Debate day. Seated in Cabinet Begins Mon- | Special to the 'Whig. Ottawa, Nov. 12. --The ceremonies at- the | tending - the opening oi parliament, were more brilliant than been known for many yeats, on account of the beautiful and also because it will be he last occasion on which Earl Grey, ws governor-general, will officiate at the function. The gathering in chamber was Lieut.-Gov. Ideut.-Gov, yesterday, ---------- have Pav vour bets on the football games | partly wth McConkey's or Huyler's class sweets. Sold only at Red Cross drug store. rm high weather, Gibson's ft DAILY MEMORANDA, senate t irge one. Gibson, tne Has been proven By actual test, That Campbell's Band Concert night Mitinee, Grand p.m, Saturday, *' Special Sale of Coats | tario; Furs are the best. v the Roller Rink, to-] Yukon Territory, were amongst | distinguished guests present. 2.30 |. His excellency, accompanied by travelling escort, was welcomed by a Waldron's, Saturday morning. salute from the guns of Nepeau Point Bijou Theatre--Powerful Sea Drama { whilst the Governor-General's Foot «rhe Lady of No Man's Land ' 1 nique | Guards formed a guard oi honor out. Biograph Comedy. Illustrated Songs | side the parliament buildings. Short- : ~ FO i a2. ) i i ' Rughy' = to-motyow, at 2.30. i "ly after three o'clock the members of Queen's vs. Ottawa College At c } Grounds ; RM.C. 1. vs. "Varsity Il. the commons were summoned by R.M.C. Campus. Black Rod to the senate chamber, "For Men's stylish Hats Or Ladies" Fine: Furs wn, George Mills & C« You ought to buy yours a ---------------------- at the ATA House 5 Bad Boy and Suits at See adv at at} throne. On returning to the commons cham- ber members transacted a little for mal business and then adjourned. Three new members were introduced, | Hon. W. L. Mackenzie King, who took his seat for the first time since his | appointment as minister of the { crown; David Lafortune, Montcalm, and J. M. Douglas, Strathcona. Mac- kenzie King's father and mother were in the speaker's gallery, when he took his seat, and it that the mother was present { years ago when her father first { his seat in the house. the an took I'he debate on the speech from the ¢ has been postponed until Mon- Cow Takes Rabies. Welland, Omt., Nov. 12.--A month ago a mad dog ran: about Wainlet township all day before it was killed, land on Saturday a cow that was bit- "1ien- by it. developed rabies. The cow time for These long evenings are the i. ac to reading and our perfect lamps thie pleasure of your books. 2 Fasy on eyes, not like Flectr light or Gas. We have many metal and china ¢ All kids of lamp trimmings } Robertson Bros. le 10% dey the pretty Government Inspector Shount, Toron- It is feared that other cases will lop. the | an exceptionally | Pelletier, Quebec, | | and Gov. Alexander Henderson, of the | {where Earl Grev read the speech from | is interesting to nete | many | shapes ih glass, {was ordered 16 be killed yesterday, by | A TERRIBLE CASE Has Been Disclosed at Frankford, Ont. Belleville, Ont.., Nov. 12,--A terrible cage has been discovered in Frank- {ford, in Hastings county, by the Children's Aid officia}s. Twelve mem- bers of a family, named McDonald, were found living ih, two rooms. There were the parents, five brothers, three sisters and an uncle eighty years old. The eldest girl, Sarah Me¢Don- ald, has had three chilldren, two of {them being now 'alive. She says her {brothers are the fathers of ¢ her | children. The girl was brought to {the shelter here and her brothers will be prose uted. | | WILL NOT SUPPORT IT Because of Its Apparent Social- istic Tendencies. Nov. 12.--The most impor tant. secession, from the present gov | ernment, vet announced, is that of Sir Robert W. Perks, the noted civil engineer and railway and shipbuilding contractor. Sir Robert, who has been ta fiberal member of parliament for the ' south division of Lincolnshire, sinte 1892, and is one of the founders {and treasurer of the liberal league, announces he will not support the | ministry any longer, because of its | socialistic tendencies. London, TO USE BLOCK SYSTEM. i | Railway Commission Considering New Regulations. Ottawa, Nov. 12.--For the further | protection of the travelling public the railway. commission is considering inew regulations and it is not impro- | bable that the companies will be asked {to install on their lines between the {principal centres the block system of jrignale. Information, with that ljeet in view, i» now being collected. The block signals, it is claimed, ob- | viate the possibilty of collisions. | i oO Shot Bank Cashier. | New Albany, Ind., Nov. 12.--A young | white man entered the Merchants' Na {tional bank at Pearl and Main streets, and, after ordering everybody to throw up their hands, began shooting. Cashier J. Hangary Fawcett was kill- ed almost instantly. President J. K | Woodward was shot several times and {badly wounded. The murderer {captured at the river bank. [le come from Louisville in {bile. He has not been identified, nas bad Nine Shot At Dinner Party. Petersburg, . Nov. 12.--Invading i the Presbytery Krouptre, where Fat | Tchenlitzki was entertaining a dinner party, 'three hrigands, - armed with { Mauser rifles, shot down the priest, his father, and mother, and six ogher {guests, The nine are dead. The | brigands rifled the clothing of the nine {victims sand fled: The been_whable to secure any trae trio. ot. police have of the Hair brushes, genuine bristles izolid backs, Buy {Drug Store, corner streets, and them at Prouse's Princess and Cler- gy an automo ver, B.C., elcotric railway; vs round, having an entrance T.800 Tet a ee mae wide, opening into a sheet of water from one to one and a half miles broad, and ten miles long." Mr. Smithers is thoroughly optimistic as to the future which lies before the G.T.P. systems. He is an active, alert man, still in the fifties, and is credited with that mastery of detail which is so essential in the head of a great or- ganization such as the G.T.R. Mr. Smithers has been a member of the Stock Exchange since 1873; he is chairman of the English Association of American Pondholders, having suc- ceeded Joseph Price, formerly president of the G.T.R., tion in 1904. CANADA 1S ALIVE TO POSSIBILITIES OF WOOD PULP SITUATION. © widows and six children fatherless. R. S. Lyon, ong of the persons kill- od in the electric railway wreck, near Vancouver, B.C., was a brother of Stewart Lyon, news editor of the To- ronto Globe. A At Hutchison, Kansas, eleven thous- and chickens were burned to death when fire destroyed the pleat of the United States Packing company. The loss was $50,000. At Albany, N.Y., Clark Williams was, on Thursday, appointed comp- trolley to succeed the late Charles H. Gaus. He immediately resigned as state superintendent -of banks. The wecciptea of the Intereolonial railway for stho first six months of the present fiscal year will, it is stated, bear a very favorable arison with those of the same period last year. 'The offer of the dominion govern: ment to erect a new. $150,000 post of- fice at Brantiord on a portion of the market sqilare, in exchange for the present post office, the latter to be used as a' city hall, was voted down by 55 majority. Pearl . Waddell, the cloven-year-old daughter of Robert Waddell, Canton, was lighting the fire whon her cloth- ing caught, and in a very short time sho was, onveloped in flames. Fortu- pately. help was at hand, and the flames soon put put, but not before she was seriously burned vice- in that posi- President of American Paper and Pulp Association Says Paper Will Never Again Be As Cheap As Under Dingley Tariff. Chicago, Nov. 12.--Paper and pulp | manufacturers in convention her¢ will ignore any question regarding legis- lation of tariff revision, according to President Arthur (!. Hastings, of New York, the head of the American' Paper and Pulp. Association, which com- | prises about one-half of the paper and pulp makers of the country. "The tariff revision is settled," said President Hastings. "We naturally do not. consider the tarifi successfully or properly revised." The speaker took the position that the agfntion by the American Pub- lishfrs' Association and others has de- feated its own "aim, and that paper would never again be as cheap as un- der the Dingley tariff. Canada has wakened up to the possibilities of the situation, he said, and prices of raw materials have advanced. TO LIFT THE GATES. Pontoon Derrick Will Brought Into Use. Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., Nov. 12.--It is expected the Poe lock will be ready for service again within a week's time. The sill and breast walls are practi- cally uninjured and it will be neces- sary only to replace the damaged leai. For this purpose the pontoon: derrick of the Canadian, canal - will be taken over to lift heats iron gates which weigh ninety tons each. If there should be a hitch in the proposed plans it will be necessary to pump out the entire canal thus also render- ing the Weitzel lock inoperative, A large fleet is held up above the Canadian canal and glio below, The Canadian officials are handling the traffic as fast as pos: ie, but boats are suffering a delay of from fifteen to twenty hours, awaiting their locking. The Be GOVERNMENT QUIET AUSTRALIAN STRIKERS MAKE NO VIOLENCE. Were In An Upset. David Trotman, a carter, rasidinic at 7p Division strect, had a narrow escape from serious injury on. Thurs- day. In company with a young man,' namod Williams, of the Ontario Pow- der company, the carter was leaving employers and strikers in the strike of hin Yard jor hell A iN the Australian coal miners welcomed | 2 o . = 1dv Gananoque. tor get- the declaration of the premier that the {ds namite to . a a -- aq t- : ; . y { ting safely to government will take no part in the | co. tipped over, burying both troubles. Both sides have declared | on it. The horses tried hard that there can be no compromise, and fio get away, but Trotman held on that no concessions will be made. | being dragged varde along the road. Factories all over the country have |Hs received a bad cut, on the head been foreed to close, and more will | had his clothes torn, and receidrx do so if the situation is not relieved. | many bruisce on his body. Williams The price'of coal within the last twen- | scapes with pu thorough coating of tv-four hours has gone from $13 10 musk and a fow bruises. It was forin- £16 per ton. X week ago the price inate that the mishap ocenrred before was $7. i the dynamite was loaded. 'The strike =o far has been free from | violence 'and there seems nc likelihood Government Will Not Interfere in Coal Troubles--Factories Have to Close Down. Sydney, Australia, Nov. 12.--Beth Follow the crowd to the Orpheum blankets, as I saw it on the street to- day 1' 'certain powers, Everything Easily Read] Chambly, and Sb. division. Lr Pinon HORSE BLANKETS ON BREAD, A Complaint About the Delivery of . the Staff of Life. M. P. Armstrong writes as lollows to the Whig : health allows the city with the top of their wag gons full of bread, covered with wi above matter, but the sanitary inspector has and he easily ef jéct a remedy. The board of health would not tolerate such a thing as Mr, Armstrong mentions. THREE BYE-ELECTIONS Are Now Proceeding in Quebec Province. Montreal, Nov. 12.--Throe bye-elece- tions are taking place in the province of Quebec y, St. Sauveur, Mary's, Montreal. The latter, where N. K. Laflamme, K. C., the Bourassy candidate, is oppos- ing Alderman Robillard, liberal, is by far the most interesting, and quite an exeiting contest, is going on in the Up to noon three alleged vote togtaphors. had been arrested at the instance pf the Laflamme workers. N. K. LAFLAMME, K. C. A heavy vole was being polled. At Chambly, the Bourassa workers arc helping Mr. Marcil, the opponent of Pr. Desaunlniers, liberal, while in the Queboo division © the fight is not straight party. ' HAVE GIVEN UP HOPE. Very Anxious For the Central Hamilton, Ont., Nov. 12.--~The Ham- ilton school trustees have about aban- doned all hope of landing the Techni- cal College for Hamilton, although they spent over $100,000. crecting a Technical school with that hope. They think Toronto will get the college, and they view with suspicion the proposal to establish -- the --new central prison near here, believing that the govern- ment will use the argument that, with a new normal school and the prison, for which the city is not bidding, Hamilton could not expect to get the college, M.Y.C. PENSION FOND AGED WORKERS WILL GET $500,000. Eventually 100,000 of Lines' Men Will Be Retired Under New System Which Bedomes Opera- tive on January 1st. New York, Nov. 12. --Announecement is made by William C. Brown, of the New York Central lines; that at. a meeting. of the directors of the 'New York Central, Lake Shore & Michigan Southern and Michigan Central com- panies plans for a pension system for employees of these lines was adopted. The extension of the plan to other fines of the New York Central is also under consideration. At the age of seventy employees are to be retired and if 'they have been continuoly in the service for at least ten yearf immediately preceding their retirement they will be entitled to a pension. An employee who has been at least twenty years in continuous service ang has become unfit for duty may be re tired with a pension, although he has not reached the age of seventy. Officers of the company declare that the pension system to be put into els fect will eventually benefit 100,000 of the lines' employees and will make necessary the distribution by the New York Central, of $500,000 an nually. The scale of ' pensions is one per cenit. for each vear of conginuous ser- vice based upon the average rate of pay received during the ten years pre- ceding retirement. The system will be administered by a special board. ° Sir Louis Congratiulated. Quebec, Nov. 12.-8ir L. A. Jette, ex-lieutenant-governor of the province of Quebec, is receiving congratulations upon his nomination as judge in-chief of the court of king's bench, to succeed the late Sir Henry Taschereau. Perks Busy In C da. London, Nov. 12.--Sir R. W. Perks will not seek re-election to parliament, one of his reasons being his preoccu- pation with importeut- contracting work -in Canada. More Hawe's Hats. Another shipiaent of the popular Hawes $3 hats were passed through of disorder, o-night--amateur night, bed the customs to-day for George Mills & There's nothing directly mentioned in the by-law concerning the a Toronto, Ont., Nov, 12.--Ottawa Valley it. Lawrence : (10 aJam jv . winds, shifting . to and cloudy, occasioual craig. SoNler o-aight. Satur- Towels Elastic Belts Studded swith small nail- heads, neat Ibuckles. They come in colors, Navy. Green, While, also Black. They are well worth, Tbe. SALE PRICE, 50c. Ladies' Hose Fine Black Cashmere Rib- bed Hose, usually sold at 50s. per pair, and well worth it. SALE PRICE, 35¢c. per pair, 3 pair, for $1.00. Ladies' Vests And Drawers, of fine Cash- mere Wool, fine close ribb, and guaranteed unshrinkable, Vests have buttoned front, neatly trimmed. Drawers to match, $1.00 goods every- where. SALE PRICE, 75e. each. Bath Towels 39 inches long, worth 20ec, each, regular. SALE PRICE, 2 for 28e. FA Read Our Ad. 'Saturday Evening. It willinterest yous ROBERT J REID, The leading Undertaker, "Phone, B77. R27 Princess street. New Goods Armiving Dail ving Daily New Valencia Raisins, NeweSeeded Raisins, New Sultana Raisins, Table Raisins, Cooking Figs, Table Figs, Dates, Sweet Cider. Jas. Redden & Co. P.S.--Hickory Nuts, 8c. per quart. "TAKE NOTICE." If you want any beating stoves, I have them in all sorts and sires: Prices reasonnble, at TURK'S, Vhuse, 708: THE "PROHIBITED LIST. There Are Now Ninety-One Names on It. : At the present time there are ninetys . one names 'on Inspector Wright's "prohibited list." To-day the-inspec. tor served notices on the hotelmen for six new members. Three of the six were "repeaters," that is men who ave already been on the list, and two of the other three asked that they be placed on the list and the inspector complied with their request, Snr Want More Concessions. .The board of trade has sppointed a committee to again aproach the G, T.R. company for concessions, Petier freight rates are the first thing wani- ed. The board will again ask that the train known as the Mocoasin; and which runs from Montreal to Droek- ville every evening, be continued to. Kingston, arriving 'here at 10 p.m. This' would be a decided convenience, Campbell Bros'. For Christy's, Scott's and Buckley's Famous hats. od ----------------r Co., the sole agents in Kingston, Newman & Shaw's "suit sale,"