YEAR 77-NO. 234 --_------ AN IDEAL DAY For Football in Ottawa is Promising. TEAMS IN SHAPE BOTH QUEEN'S AND OTTAWA COLLRGE ARE HOPEFUL. A Close, Hard Fought Battle is Pre- dicted -- The Opinion of Father Fallon--Queen's is Assured of a Royal Reception. Special to the Whig os Ottawa; Oct. 8.--TFhe sup shaning brightly and the air ww just aol ow ough for idol football. The - colle e teams is, undoubtedly, the est that the garnet and grey has had fof years and while the Limestone City has lost many of its old guard, including "hen" Williams, it will be in great shape. A close, dicted by those who have seen teams at practies, The Ottawn Colleginng have prepar ed a special set' of parodies and will break fase about 2.30 o'clock Rew, Father Fallon, who har had the boy 'in hosid for three weeks, thin that their stock will be given a great boost after the Cieon's gramme, Queen's will have Willy Carsock, of Ottawa, at quarter, Elliott and many ober old favorites from the educational town will also be in um form with the visitors and there are many former (Qucon's sti ents Ottawa, they, too, are of roval reception. 7 Wr. Patterson and "Marty Walsh, I ive former Kingstonians, will refeves, hard, fought battle is pre both Edwin ax n nssured n TRACED BY DREAM, Son Missing Fifteen Years Found in Western City. Catasangua, Po., Oet, 5- A moth eor's dream resulted in the finding of a long lost son wha, through neg lect, had failed to make known his where abouts for fifteen years. £ When Sergeant Edward Trine of this was honorably discharged from United States éalvary in San Francisco on: Sept. 18th he had ao fow days before veceived o letter from his parents, Mr. Mes, John Trine, that his fwat William could he found jit a city surrounded by moun loented Broth, wha had left Ca tasadqua We 1805, and had not been seen or hoard of since. He is pros pering in baxuess in Denver, and promised to pay a visit to the par ental homa soon. EEN ; { BOME DESTROYED HOUSE, Italian Banker and His Family Had Narrow Escapes. New York, Oct. 8~A bomb was exploded in the home of Paul Vitale, an Malian banker, at Bath Beach, which set fire to the buikliag and de stroyed it. banker, with his wife od six children, had narrow escapes, tale conducted a private bank whieh received recently suspended, and he numerous thregtening letters. TO BE HANGED, Sentence Imposed on Robert Parker at Belleville, Belleville, Ont, Oet, ' Parker, found guilty of murdering William Masters, on April 3rd, was sentenced to Ho hanced on Satumay, Pecemper 3rd, The jury deliberated on the case for five hours, Sentence was pronounced by Chiel Justice Sir Will jam Mulook, at four o'clock this morning. CABINET CHANGES. Sir Rufus Daniel Isades is Attorney. General, London, Oct. 8.--Sir W. 8. Robson, " mttorney-general, has heen appointed lord of dppealin-ordinary to succeed Lord Collins, who has resigned. Sie Rufus Isuncs becomes attorney-general while John A. Simon, member for the Walthamstow division of West Fasex, succeeds to the position of solicitor: © ensral. Discriminated Against. , Oot. ~ BoAsserting that Ontario vessels are discriminated judiciary, Cdptain Derby Reuehville, d a Minded dul g ous he So a the matter hefore the department marine. I ------------------ . wo Post for Senator toy. Ottawa, Oct. S11 is authoritative stated here that Senator Philippe of Edmonton, has heen selected A : to succeed the late 8.--Robert at LiewtoGiov. Forget w Hon, Mr. Roy, ESCAPED FROM SING SING. Five Convicts Made a Most Daring Exit, New York, Oct, B.---Five convieis, quartered in the chapel of Sing Sing prison at (W¥ington, N.Y., becaise of the prison's greatly overcrowded con. dition, escaped from the institution after beating and then binding two yuards. The men got out by sawing away the bars of one of the chapel windows and then scaling the southern wall of Sing Sing, which is thirty feel high. The escape was one of the most daring in annals of state prison. A remarkable feature of it was that one the prisoners, William Green, weighs 250 pounds. How he managed to seale the wall is a mystery, Ouve of the guards was terribly besten by the convicts. The escape was not dis covered until nearly an hour after the five men had left the prison. of PASTEURIZER EXPLODED And Caused Death and Injuries in Milk Depot. Pittsharg, Pa., Oct. 7.~Edward P, Simonds dead of injuries received in the explosion of a pasteurizer in a milk depot, here, while three others are' seriously hurt, The explosion hlew out all the windows and several in the building, a hundred the plant os i» partitions other men working in caping. TWO HUNDRED TWIN BABIES Have Been Born in Chicago This > Year. Chicago, Oct. 8.~Two hundred twin babies have been bora in Chagoo so far this vear as against 140 for the according to the office of the twin' epidemic but the entire year of 1910 figures given out at the registry of births. The is not contined to one locality, seems to be general throoghont city. FOUND THE GEMS WORTH FOUND AT OGDENSBURG. $£35.000 Pullman Conductor Recovers Jewelry Forgotten by the Misses Burnham of New York, Ogdensburz, N.Y. Oet. B--Jewelery vahwd at over $6,000, whieh had been forgotten by the owners when they Jeft the Pullman at Redwood, was recovered nere in a New York Central steaping cur. The vwners of the gems, the Misses Burpham of New Yok, whose father, F. HI. Burnham, has a magrificent summer home on the St. Lawrence river; were on their way from ew York to Alosamiriy Bay, They hail placed the jewelery. in a little Dmg" and lad it away in their stateroom. When they arrived at Alexandria lay they discoversd their loss amd notified BE. H. Crowinshield, the loesd agent. Conductor Clark of the Pullman car wins sent for, and after a long search the valuables were found and wore ex wessed back to New York to Mrs Burnham. HIGHER THIS YEAR. Pack Only 50 Per Cent. of Amount Required, Toronto, Oct. 8.~The canners and packers have sent out quotations "for tomatoes. They show a 'twenty-five per cent. increase over the prices of last year. This year's rates are $1.12} and $1.15, according to the brand. Information now in the wholesalers is to the effect that to daie the pack is only fifty per cent. of the amount re quired to fill orders. Tomatoes will retail this vear at two cans for twen- ty-five cents, instead of three as lai year. Local merchants find that in American centres the shortage is as great as it is here. Beans are off the market, and peas were only thirty-five per cent. of a crop, and pack corn is the heaviest. of the vegetable packs, and reaches only seventy-five per cent. of the amount ordered. The frost kill- od off the blueberries, and the pack is away short. All the small fruit pack falls very heavily below the mark. Y DROPS HER DAMAGE sUIT, No Funds to Prosecute Case Against Hotel. New York, Oct. S--Tecanse Evelyn Nesbit Thaw, wife of Henry K. Thaw, is without funds to pay the costs of prosecution, a suit that she instituted pearly two years ago against James B. Regan, of the Knickerbocker ho tel, for $50,000 damages, was dis- missed to-day in the supreme courl. Mrs. Thaw was ejected from the grill room of the hotel while dining with a friend, and she sued on the und that her dignity had sulfered, rs. Thaw's counsel made the sa nouncement today that she was without funds, MISSING WOMAN TURNS UP. Mrs, Jones, of Moffatt, Was Working in Toronto. Guelph, Ont, Oct. S~Mrs. Waller Jones, of Moffatt, who two months Ago ered some excitement by myw terio ¢ suring from her home there, has returned almost as quietly as she went away. She had appa ly tired of domestic routine work, and wert to Toronto to seek other en ployment, where she worked for = twe went after 'hor and she' returned with him. y sale to-night at Waldren's: mon before being found. Her hus band wr, Okt, 8-1 is reported Sir Lipton has decided 10 enter tment slection, contest and that fo that end he! ol . ! - . Monks and Nuns Must Leave Country. CLERICAL GARB FE 15 FORBIDDEN TO BE WORN ON THE STREETS. li Pope Will Not Recognize the Portu- guese Republic--Reports Say the King was Slightly Wounded----One Paper Says He Tried to Suicide. Berlin, Oct. 8.---The Frankfurter Zei- tung, states that the Portuguese pov ernment has decreed that the monks and nuns must leave the country with- in fwentyfour hours. Priests are for bidden to wear clerical garb in the streets. An order has been promulgat- od for the closing of all Roman Cath- olie schools and for the ioveptigation of all elerical institutions. A despatch from Rome states: "The pope and the vatican are greatly down-cugt by the success of the Port- uguaw revolutionists and the republic will not be recognized. It 1s likely the vatican will recall the Lisbon nuncio forthwith, Tt is convinced that the Portuguese emeassy to the vatiean will be supressed." The King Tried to Suicide. The government has no information as to the Jength of King Manuel's stay Gibraltar. 1 said, that his possibly, will oveapy the at bLuropa at is majesty governor's country cottag: Point for a short time, A News Agency dispatel, from Gil altar, says King Manuel is slightly wounded, A Lisbon despatch says the Seeulo, a republican newspaper, states that the Ling tried to commit suiade at Mafra, after his flight from Lisbon, but was prevented by his mother. PITH OF THE NEWS, The Very Latest Culled From All Over the World. Failures in the dominion daring the past week were 21; same week, 1900, 32, Sir Thomas Shaughnessy states that the C.P.R. has extensive plans fo Toronto. Fugene Ely will start from Chicago to-morrow in an attempt to fly to New York, acievich, the Russian aviator, was odd," "wt St. Petersburg, by This biplane falling 3.000 feet. It has been decided to sell the pre sent McMaster university building. at Taronto and locate elsewhere, Otto Breise was killed and and Fred. Breise injured by the plogion of the boiler in their mill at Frederick House. Miss Bessie Carter, Canadian nurse, wnt killed, and Dr. Charles Kemball seriously hurt, when their auto went ovér an embankment at Kingston, N. Y. They were rushing to a case. Edward Clissold, for thirty-three yenrs a member of the Advertiser stuff, London, was presented with a purse of gold and an address at a ban- quet held in his honor. He is retir ing. Robert N. Venwing, superintendent of fisheries for Canada, who went to the Hague as an expert to advise with Hog. AB. Aylesworth inthe fisheries arbitration, recently concluded, has strangely disappeared. On Sept. 7th, at Tamworth, marriage took place of Miss Fanny MeKnight and E. B. Way, Corbyville 'The bride, unattended, looked hand some in her lace gown with gold beading over cream silk voile. ' William ex- saw the AN ALMONTE CONTRACT. Dams to Be Erected at Lakes Gull and Cross, Almonte, Ont., Oct. 8.~The contract for the erection of concrete dams at the outlets of Lakes Gull and Crows, at the headwaters of the Mississippi fiver, has been given to A. C. Gil mour and George Bradiond, of this town. The Mississippi River Improve mont company, in which convern mahy pover-owners in Almonte, together with the municipality, are interested, will construct Jams on these lakes for the purpose of conserving the waters, until the dry spell in the late summer and antumn, when the water will be allowed to come through the stop gates. The work of building will be commenced at once iy order that the dama will be in readiness for the spring froshetsa. J. B. McReq, of Ot tawn, is comsulting enzincer. Notes From Macdonald. Macllonald, Oct. 6A gang of men with a sum of money to expend for the improvement of the highway were engaged a of days last week grading and awing ballast on the No. 11 road, Mrs. Hawley and Miss Cravens, of Hawley, visi their nd ter, Mrs, William Cranston, recently. George llawler and William Goodman spenit a day last woek in Rochester, N.Y. Mes. E. Sharp, Hay Bay, spent Ww yyof lah week with hoe sis- _-- KINGSTON, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 8, ABOLISH TOLL-GATES, Soon a Thing of Past in Quebec Pro- vince, Montreal, Oct. 8.~It is seémi-official- ly announced that the toll gates will soon be a thing of the past in the province of Quebec. Hou. Mr. Tas cherenu, minister of public works, stated at the Tessier banquet at Three Rivers tnat this question would be settled at once, and, ar the govern: ment has just bought 5 Bridze in the district of Quebec for $100,000, it is moré than probable that the private interests in the Montreal and othér sections will also be purchased by the Quobee authorities, Ai E. Rivet, M.P,, also states that he does not believe that the province of Quebice and the English provinces are further apart than they were forty years ago. Un the contrary, the mem- ber for Hochelaga, who, by the way, will address the Canadian Cluo in St, Thomas on the race question Oet, 2rd, declared that there is 54 nation al fecling knitting the whole country together. LEPT WIFE IN HOSPITAL. Peter Johnston Sells Furniture and Disappears, Oshawa, Oct. 8.- Peter Johnson, the base line, here, on September 10th, took his wife to the Oshawa hospital suffering from typhoid fever. [Ie paid a week in advance, and promised to pay each week as it fell due. He has pot appeared at the hospital since, and pn few days ago he sold his furni tire and left the town, His wife, who in a very eritieal condition, ¥ i= fears husband has committed suicide. her Fined and Imprisoned. Aubarn, N.Y, Oct. Bart Brad- way, of Watertown, was sentenced by Judge Ray, in United States district court to pay a fine of $100 and to be confined in the federal prison at At lanta, Ga., for a period of two years for exchanging elothes with Private John MeCarigle, of company "C)" 5th United States Infantry, stationed at Plattshurg, while the company was in camp at Pine Plains, near Water town, N.Y. EB Cashier Gets Fourteen Years. Auburn, N.Y, Oct. 8i--John Howard Lowery, former assistant cashier of the Utica City National Bank, who embezzled $124,000 of the funds of the institution, was sentenced to the fede ral prison for ten years by Judge Ray. He was sentboced on four counts of the indictment. Burglars Got Liquors and Cigars, Niagara Falls, Out., Oct. S.--Simon Bolitho is believed by the city police to have burglarized B. H. Cole's NW guor store and secured two doen bottles of Tiquor ded 1000 cigars, by breaking the plate glass window of the store, . A MATCH CAUSED AND WIFE FATAL DUEL, He is Armed With a Shotgun, She With a Revolver, amd He Dies---A > = Dreadful Tragedy. Lake Charles, La., Oct. 8.--A between husband und wife, he armed with a shotgun and she with a re volver, has had a Tatal ending. Dr. B. Templin Smith died from wounds in- flicted by Mrs. Smith in the duel on the morning of September 25th. The sensational story was brought out before the coroner's jury, and Mrs. Smith was held responsible for hor husband's death; Jt was through her testimony that the story came to light. There had been a match and the building of a kitchen fire. The physician slapped his wife and, when she protested against such frentment, he commanded her to get 8 weapon. et your gun, : I'll get mine we'll shoot this out right here," eried, They met, both armed, in a hallway of the residence. Whether the doctor tried to use his shotgun has not been brought out in the testimony. Mrs. Smith fired twice, and her husband staggered to his room, where she fol- lowed. The woman knelt, by his side an the floor and cried, "My God, 1 had to do it." Then she says asked her to "go ahead and him." This morning . the distriét attorney formally charged Mrs. Smith with manslaughter. She was arrai for bail. Just before his death Dr. Smithy made a statement fo the district at- torney. This will pot be given out until the trial. Shot Into Powder Keg. Ponoka, Alta., Oc. 8.~The hard- ware store of Spackman and Rowe was partially wrecked, when Vernon Rowe, aged seventeen, in examining a twenty dwo calibre rifle, which he id mot know was loaded, Siushurged it into a keg of powder degtisy. sides Jdoing $1,000 demage to. the store and stock, Rowe and a friend were badly burned. : it i Unite Twin Cities. Port Arthur, Ont, Oct, S.A oon ote move towards the union of Port Arthur: and Fort William has been Arrangements have Leen per peter for a Danguet to be held about Ootaber 19th, to whlch a hundred oot. zens of either city will be invited, The question will be folly discussed, > HUSBAND duel quarrel over a and he he finish a permanent committee to necessary steps wp raphy of | 1910. -------- SEEK TERNS United States After a Reciprocity Treaty. PLANS MAPPED OUT TALKING THEM OVER WITH i PRESIDENT TAFT. Are Hopeful That Negotiations Will Be Taken up at Ottawa Within the Next Month----An Agreement With Newfoundland Also Incinded. Beverley, Mass, Oct. S.~lHenry M. Hoyt, counsellor of the state depart ment, and Charles M. Pepper, tariff expert, called on the president, yester- day, sod reported on the plans they have mapped out for the openimg of reciprocity treaty negotiations with Canada. Messrs. Hoyt and Pepper came to Beverely rom Valley Forge Pa., where they had conferred with Secrctary of State Knox. The president spent sev- eral hours with them and after re ceiving certain instructiohs from Mr, Taft, they left, last might, for anoth er conference with Mr. Knox. It 1s likely that 5 formal statement will be issued alter the conlerence with Secretary Knox outlining the steps that have Owen taken and plans for the formal negolaitions, Negotiations will be taken wp in a month, probaily at Ottawa. This wae determined upon al yesterday's meet { ing, The reciprocity programne of {the government also includes an | agreement with Newfoundland. GREAT INVENTION, Crewless Warship Made Ger- many. London, Oct, 8.--{ireat Britain, eager to catch up every story as to many's naval programme, again has its eves turned #deross the North Sea. For the latest report has it that two Germans--Herr Christopher Wirth, an electrical engineer, and Herr Christo- pher Beck, a manufacturer--have in- vented & '"'crewless'" warship whose engines ean be started or stopped and whose hélm can be controlled hy elec trical waves communicated without wires to un receiving ship apparatus aboard the mysterious vessel by a sending apparatus from shore similar to that utilized in wireless telography. Fusther, so the report has it, by means of these electrics) waves goos oh the crewléss vessél can be con trolled and fired, while signals can be transmitted either by bells or flash: light, and all these wonders are possi ble within a radius of eighteen miles from the wireless®station which trans mits the controlling force. An eye witness who has observed ex { haustive experiments conducted with a motor boat model on the Dutzendteich, ia large expanse of water near Nurem berg, has affirmed the stories of this wonderful method of control. "I have seen the interesting trial trips of a large unmanned motor boat," said this observer in a state ment which has been published in Lon don, '"'which was controlled and steer- ed from the bank of the lake by means of wireless - telegraphy. I also saw guns being fired of board the unman- ned vessel, and a bell being rung on the deck, and also flashlight signals being given in the same way with the help of electrical waves, When 1 first arrived the motor boat Prinz Ludwig was lying motionless in the middle of the lake. No ome was on board. Sud denly a gun was fired on the deck, and | saw the screw begin to revolve and drive the boat forward. "Then I saw the boat follow a zig zag course, steered hy some unseen power. There were ordinary rowing boats on the lake, and when the un- mantied vessel approached them she gave the signal by means of a hell to indicate whether she intended to go to port or starboard, and the in dicated course was carried out with absolute 'accuracy. I watched the ma nosuvres of the unmanned boat for a whole hour during the daytime and again in the evening, when the signals were not given by means of bells, but by flashlights. At the end of these tests the unmanned vessel was brought to her anchorage by the same unseen force. These forces were emitted from ia sending station on rhore to a re {eeiving apparatus on the Boat, emit ted from a sending station on shore started and stopped the engine. and controlled the helm of the vessel. The will of the man who controls the elec- trical waves on shore thus exercises ahsolute command over the unmanned vessel." "Our invention is intended Lo be of service in naval "and military opera tions," runs the statement issued hy the inventors of the craft, which the peasantry in the neighborhood refer to as the "phantom ship." "With its help it would be possible, without risk- ing usagn | ves, ta block the entrance to a harbor, to lay mines, to direct an unmanned submarine into the midst of a hostile fleet. An unmanned nir- ship could be steered upon hostile posi 'tions where antomatic Photographs conld be taken, or explosives dropped, afterwhich airship be hack to ite starting point The manifold uses of the invention at wea and beneath the surface of the sen and in the air will be evident." -------------------- Grer- hig -- ------ -- RELIGIOUS CAMPAIGN Of the YM.C.A. on Oct, 18th, 14th, and 135th. The campaign to be conducted under the auspices of the Y.M.C.A. next week ought to be far-reaching in its effects on the church and associa tion life of the city, On Thursday evening next Mr. Drum, international Y.M.C.A., secretary, will speak to young wen in the association parlors, On Friday afternoon he will address the students at the collegiate and the university, Friday be will hold a conference with the pastars, Sabbath school workers and officers on "The Relationship (f The Older Boy To The Sabbath School." . tn Saturday evening at seven o'clock Mr. Drum will talk to the boys of the Y.M.CA,, and on Sunday afternoon at four o'dock will the cam paign with a big mass meeting for men in the Orpheum theatre; subject, "An Honest Man." There is no question but that YMCA. is undertaking a very worthy object in this work, and the meetings should be taken advantage of by everyone. close the "JUST FOR TO-DAY." A Convict in Penitentiary Says He Composed It, Special to the Whig Ottawa, Oct. 8S. Claiming he wrote the hymn, "Just For To-day," one of the principal ones in the Anglican hymnal, William Huckle, a econviet, writes from Kingston penitentiary to the archbishop of Ottawa. He goes fully into the fncts gays: My wile has cqpies of the original which can be obtained from her, her ad dress being 1,200 Goodman street, North Rochester, N.Y." |The was generally supposed to have been written by Rev. Dr. Wilberforee, long since dead, though deceased went so far as to say claim will be thoroughly NEVADA DIVORCES THEY ARE NOT LEGAL IN NEW YORK STATE, A Woman Who Goes to Nevada for the Express Purpose of Obtaining a Divorce and Then Returns is, in New York, the Wife of That Hus- band. Néw York, Oct, o.~Suprome Court Justice Whitney, has just held that u woman who goes to Nevada for the express purpose of obtaining a divoree and then returns to this state is, in New York, still the wife of that hus band. He further decided that the New York courts might arrive at this conclusion from evidence showing that" divorée proossdings were institu ted as soon as she remained in Nevada tong enough to satisfy the authorities there that she had obtaived a resi dence and that she left that state shortly after obtaining her decree, The decision was given in the suit of Mrs, Marian Briggs Catlin against her husband, George I.. Cathn, to en foree 5 Nevada decree which gave her the custody of her two children. The Catling were marrisd in 1900 in Versey City. Mrs. Catlin was divorced dn Reno in July last and now in drooklyn. Her husband the children, and hymn neve Huckle's investignted sO. lives ke pt The Ladies' Musical, first evening Ladies" Musical Club, was Thureday, October 6th, in tion Hall, and in spite of weather there was a very tendance: The pisno-- yombors were well rendered by Miss Shaw, Miss Wright, Miss Addie Tove, Miss Daisy Chown, and Miss Muriel King. The vocal numbers hy Miss May Hinckley and Miss Carrie Waldron, were wnwmch admired. The club were del¥ hited in heing so fortunate as to Migs Hincklay, as it is her last appearance, she having accepted a Toronto, as soprano soloist St James Presbyterian chiurch: her lovely voice will be a great lose to Kingston. Miss Carrie Waldron always charms all hearts fy her sweet singing of the held on Convoeg the bad good at The recitab hear position in m Great Christmas Kdition. The coming Christmas issue of The Standard of Montreal is held by com petent judges as certain to captivate the hearts of all Canadians and all friends to whom it may be sent The enthusinsm excited in the minds of those who bave seen the advance proofs clearly indicate that we are to have a Canadian Christmas publica- tion this year that will reflect credit on Canada and create a telling im pression op every one lucky enough to aot a copy. Those permitted a private view of advance proofs are writing the Stan dard in the highest praise of the com- ing Christmas Number, It is felt that The Standard is entitled to warmest congratulations, « The Late Mrs. Robert Smith. Death came very unexpectedly to Mrs. Robert Smith at an early hour, Saturday moming, from pneumonia, Decessed had. been ill for some time with a slight attack of this disease, out Friday she rallied somewhat, and it was thought she would recover, but it was not 10 be. She was the wife of Robert Smith, a well-knbwn quarry man, who resides on Lansdowne street and besides her sorvowing husband, she leaves one son to mourn the lom of a devoted wife and kind mother: A daughter died about two years ago. Notes From Murvale. Murvale, Oct. 6.~Williaps Reid's few silo blew down last Saturday, sadly wrecking it. Mrs. John Young, seriously ill, Js somewhat better. Mrs Gill, the guest of Miss Mabel Hover, for wome time, Jeft on Monday for her home in Buffalo, N.Y. Visitors: W at William LAST EDITION -- m---- ---- WEATHER PROBALILITINS, to, Ont, Oct. X 18 am Htawa and Upper St Lawrence ine and on Sunday, a ttle higher Vail to-day temperature To-night Clearance of Corsets Odd lots of the best Ameri- can Corsets, including the cele brated makes F.P., WB. and Kabo Models Medium and short hip lengths, slzes 18, 23, 24 to 30. © Regular Prices, $1.85 to $1.80. Dale 5c. Price Cash Sales, No Approval Special Sale of Ladies' Underwear Silk and Wool Vests In Creme White, light welght, very suitable for early fall wear. Guaranteed un- shrinkable. Regular Price, $1.00. Sale 75c¢. THE NEW STYLE BROOKS ARE HERE AND FREE. . 'STEACY'S BORN. REID---At 76 William Street, Brantford, Ont, on October bth 1810, ta Mr, and Mrs. 8 HH. J, Reld, a son MOORE-In Kingston, on Friday, Oet,, th, 1910, te Mr. and Mrs. Thos Moore, 76 Frontenae Hireet, a daughter MARRIED. CLEMENT -BUCK--At Yarker, on Sept, 25th, Btewart Clement to Miss Ida Buck, both of Camden BOTTING KNOX~--AL Yarker, on Oot. bth, Thos Bottin to Miss Etis May Knox, borl of Hinchinbrook WAGAR-CRAIG-On Rept. 28th, Btan- ley Mowat Wagar to Miss Edna May Cralg, both of Camden town ship DIED, CUSHING Suddenly, at Montreal, on September §0th, 1810, Charles Cosh ing, Esq. Notary Publis, brother of Mrs, Donald Hess, Alfred Street BMITH In Kingston, an Oct. 8th, 1910 at 66 Lansdowne Sireet, - Sara Magarvy, beloved wife of Robert Smith, aged 78 years, Funeral private ROBERT J. REID, The Leading Undertaker. Phone 577. { Princess Street. JAMES REID The Old Firm 254 and 256 PRI i TAKE NOTICE. Just got in a lot of different kinds of Furnitur especially in Dresse at ressonab e prices. TURKS, one FOND OF COFFEE? TRY OUR Java and Mocha Blend PRICE, 40 CENTS. Absolutely Pure. Ground while you walt, : Roasted on the premises. Sr-- $ Jas. Redden & Co. IMPORTERS OF FINE GROCERIES. Every Best Make. Buckley, Beott, Christy, Heath. Me ing 'the largest importers of late in this part of Ontario eaables us to show tha largest sssortment in the best makers, which you easnot get st any "other wore. Cmmpbell on', Kingston's only exclusive hat and fur store. -------------------- Frank Simons died st Prantlord. Tt is alleged componionn used thelr Shellington's; Mrs. Taggart, at Max welt "Miss F. Babeock, Sharp ton, Villon Harper's, dinner pails on bis body.