HE DAILY BRITISH Wits, FRIDAY. OCTOBER 25. 1912. Ei uh Thanksgiving The annual Feast Day so universally observed in every Can- adian home is close at hand: : Preparations must be mw ade for the many needs Thanksgiv- ing Day brings with it. . Every Man and Boy will want to appear at his best on thie Joyous Feast Day, and our Home of Good Clothes is at the ser vice of the man who cares for the best of Qutfitting! Our handsome Suits, our elegant Overcoats, our correct Hats and choice Haberdashe ry would be a credit to the ward. robe of any man. Suits $12 to $20 Overcoats $12 to $20. We'll Be Closed on Thankgiving Day LIVINGSTON'S BROCK STREET - ale Saturday, 8.30 O'clock 18 Doz. Black Cashmere, Sateen and Muslin Blouses. Regular $1.50, $1.75. : Saturday 98c 12 Doz. Flannelette Wrappers, made from a good quality of Flannelette, size 34 to 46. Regular $1.50 and $1.75. ~ Saturday 98ec 15 Doz. White and Pink Fla nnelette Night Gowns, good wide width, trimmed with silk, embroidery and insertion. Regular $1.50 and $1.75. Saturday 98c 11 Doz. Red Flannel Lined Il ack Sateen' Underskirts, always sold at $1.75. - u Saturday 98c¢ es" Umbrellas, made with a a good, value at $1.75. Saturday 98¢c 9 Doz. New York Men's and selvedge edge on the border, ® 68c. 6 Doz. Ladies' Knit Skirts in nice fancy stripe. $1.00. Regular price, Saturday 8c 5 Doz. Ladies' Long Kimonas in Garnet and Navy Stripe. Re- lar $1.75, - Saturday G8c¢ 12 Doz. Ladies' White and P ink Flannelette Nightgowns, well made, with frills and tucks. Regular $1.00 and $1.25, | Saturday G80 | 10 Doz. black and White La dies' Bloomers, Fleece Lined, knee length. Regular $1.25. : . Saturday §8c * 1 : ty 4 8 Dos. and Flannelette Wrappers, factory 4 Saturday 48¢ good heavy quality of German Saturday 48¢ 08, Ladies Strips Fisnwe lutte Nightgowns. Regular, Toe a g » . Ladies House Dresses 'Regular $1.26, $1.50. from ] Skirts, made flannel. Regular $1 00; lv {to THE HALLS OF QUEEN' THE DINED At the Frontenac Hotel on Thurs. day Night--Political Science Club Officers--Senate Room Magazines Open for Use of Selence and Medical Students. By Correspondents ; The banquet which was advertised to take the place of the regular Arte rush, passed off without any inter- ferénce on the part of the senior sty- nac hotel. To aydid outside inter ference, the bangaetters secured the services of féur policemen, who guarded the entrance to the hotel This precaution, however, proved un- | necessary, for the freshmen and so- !phomcres had kept the affair secret that scarcely one outsider got wind of what he read about it in the Whig. ered round the festive board. They were honored by the presence of their honorary presidents, Professors Matheson and Morison, each of whom made fitting addresses to the gathering. When seen Friday morning, both - freshmen and sophomores were jubi- lant over the success of their unde=- taking. Sophomores state that REV. WILLIAM MORGAN, D.D. The new Sch atle theol College a ont tp ti ct even surpassed the Arts dinner, and the treshinom, are overjoyed that they succeeded in stealing a march on the other students. On Thursday evening the first reg ular meeting of the political science club' was held, Vice-president Ge: vock presiding. Discussion took place regarding the programme for the session, and it was decided to intro i ittish professor &Y In Queen's of system Theologica iebates than previously. bates proved a great success last year and enabled more members to] participate in the activities of the club than was provided by the longe debates. The prospects are bright. The election. of officers re | sulted as follows Hon. president, Prof. Skelton; president, R. M. Fish er; vice-president, J. F, Twigg; sec retary, Clive - Burke. Committee Arts, Mr. Baker; science, John Mar- shall; education, W. medicine, A. Whytock: theology, M. Omond, ! Invitations are being sent out for | : 'Ithe freshmen's reception to he held Tickets will be M, on Wednesday next. on sale Friday at the Y rooms. spend Thanksgiving day at theh homes George Sleeman, arts "15, will not pects to enter upon a course in medi- cine next year, Miss MacKay has studies in arts Mr, Alguire, Quebec, Is registered resumed hep Archibald Beecroft has returned to the city and is again registered in theology. Miss Gladys Dix, arts '13, has re- sumed her studies at Queen's. Roy Goodearle has joined the.year arts "16. Miss Malel Mackenzie, arts has returned to college. '13, At the Medical College. > The senate room has been thrown open to the use of medical and sci- ence students, for access to the magazines on file there. This is a great advantage to the students as the very best periodicals of England, Canada and. United States are sub- weribed for by thé senate and it would be difficult to secure an equal advantage any other place_than at the college. Medicine will take a prominent part in the parade this year, as pre- parations for the 'best yet" are in progress. Last year, although the exhibition was very good, it lacked originality, but by present .indica- tions of activities of the parade com _ mittee, it will fulfil expectations and give the worthy citizens a treat. The exact date of the parade has not been settled but if will probably take place some Saturday night during November. James H. Moxley has discontinued his course in science and has entered the firgt year in medicine. "RB. J. Reid, B.A, of Melville, Sask, formerly of Kingston, bas returned ueen's, and entered medicine. sre will be a faculty executive meeting in medicine on Friday at which the question of fees will be Sanuig grads t week e closes next week . The different Years are holding meetings for the purpose of electing officers and appointing sthjetic com- mittees. The medical Iatoratories building is being used for certain lectures of the teachers' convention = The lanterns with which the lecture roms sre equipped are especially ad- for the illustration the lectures in anatomy, arts sud biology. » ---- Notes. of officers nominated. for dents, Tuesday night, at the Fronte-, 8C | was to happen until: At eight o'clock the students gath- ity | excursion. € 'bridge at eight o'clock, but If it raing {duled game of soccer between duce a greater number of impromptu | These de | very i A. Campbell; | ii | outer forts of the city and C. A. ) { Turks Many of the students expaet tc return to college this year, but ex; Kirk-Kilisseh is not definitely known } Advices from Sofia, Vranya and | grade estimate the losses as "'several in arts, 1 Registration in medi. of the I ' lieu, The 'clection ol Mr. Carden. in Riche carries with The it a deep signific 1 ance. constituency went liberal in the last election, when Sir Wilfrid i Laurier was regarded as the peerless leader in Quebec. Under a change of | govermnent it was expected that it would go conservative, that its elec | tors would show that they were with- out political principle and conscience. Sir Rudokph Forget represented the | mind. and purpose oi the government when he visited the conpstituemcy and attempted to bribe it with the pro- mise of a railway scheme. The liber- als have cast his They have told him and the fovern- bribe in his | COMMENTS ON CURRENT EVENTS { influence in some constituencies, but] { when its acceptance meant the deser- | | sion of Laurier they would have none | lof it. » ! The Forget faction have been rebuk- {ed in another way. Théy were osten-! { tatious in the display of their money Sir Rudolph bet $5,000 that the con- | servative would be elected. To-day | {he is out the $5,000 and much of his bluster and blufi. Richelieu is liberal; | soundly liberal: and now that it has! | spoken one ean see why the election | {in it was not called at the same time | and on the same date as the election | {in Macdonald, The Borden dea of | : having ali bye-elections, for vacant i scats, on the same day has proven to ment that patronage may have some | be only an opposition idea. | Alter a trial which was not allowed , his defence was shown the utmost fair i play, Becker, the captain of police, in ! New York, who was accused of inspir: inz the*death of Rosenthal, has been | found guilty. : The verdict is one which must ap- peal as a just. ome to amy ome who his read the details of the trial. Ros- efthal, aghrieved, an feeling that he had been imposed by the police and taxed unduly for the protection of his gambling house, "squealed," (to use a word "which described his « offcneej, to the district attorney. His removal wasys means to an end, and that «nd tha closing of his mouth. Ths defence was that the gamblers h:d "framed up" the charge of mur- der azainst Becker, and the conspir- acy was alleged to have been hatched ov jail. But leng before that the dis! mri-- and the elections will be he!l from 9 to 10 o'clock Saturday morning Good men have been chosen and the election will be close. Prof. Wil- ltam Nicol is honorary president by acclamation. W. Dalzeil and dency. Students in geology will go to Barriefleld Saturday on the weekly They are to meet the uu another disappointment will be felt. | Don't forget your lunch, boys. Wet weather prevented the sche- '15 and "16 yesterday. THE BULGARIANS WON ONE OF BLOODIEST BATTLES OF MODERN TIMES. Ottoman Forces Surrender the Fortress at Kirk Kilisseh--Thou- sands Were Slain--Conquerors Headed for Sultan's Palace. Londom, Oet. 25. The Bulgarian army, having captured Kirk-RKilisseh, {a heavily fortified outpost, after one ,of the most sanguinary battles of modern times, is advancing on Adrian: ople, the fort encireled city that stands between the northern invaders and the sultan s palace at Constantinople. According: to a late report from Sofia ths advance guard of the Bulgar and Servian armies has taken two begun a heavy connonading of the city with the own guns. Practically every division of the alied army is on the move, maneuvering so as to ultimate ly attempt a united assault on the stronghold. I'he number of dead in the baitle ol Bel thousands," both sides suffering heav- ily. 'The Bulgarians took a great numbei of prisoners who are said to be on : their way 'northward to cross the hor- der into Uulgaria. ! That Czar Ferdinand achieved yes terday's victory by a daring flanking movement whith brought a stroag div. {1sion of Bulgars to the Uttoman rear is conhirmed by all dispatches from the {war zone to-mght. The battle had been in progress prac | tically three days before the advan tage Surat; do either side, although {the Bulgariand were known to he fe veloping a strategical division o ie "forces that would double their chances of victory m a final assault. i f How Battle Was Fought, The czar divided his forces into three distinct armies, sending one against {the Turkish front and the other two , detouring to strike from the rear. The Turks concentrated their strength be "fore them. Turkish reinforcements ar- rived almost hourly, until in numbers | the armies were about "evenly matched. , The second army found a vulnerable {spot in the night flank of the Turkist -froce, and it was turned by a swift, crushing assault. The outcome of the battle hinged on the success of daring move, | The second army then marched straight to the enemy's rear without effective resistance and joined the third army operating from the left. The Turkish surrender followed. Thus the Turks are now between two fires. The bine of communication between thers and Counstanti is at the invaders' mercy, and con quering armies are marching on tl capital. 3 Sultan Minimizes Reverse. al depatshen iron DT, ¥ to 3 1 th: Bulgarians had been utterly rout- ed, and later, apparently after dis -- aging messages from their. own the porte issued mes sages minimizing the importance of Rirk-Kilossh, and insisted that only surrender of i could be acospted ax 2 reverse. | Conditions within the city of Ad vianople are reported to be . The hia fo be he % ad 1 Ottoman town 'Sterne are contestants for the presi- this THE GUILT OF BECKER. trict attorney was after the "higher of i to drag, but during which the man in| ups," and now that Becker has been | ccnvieted he may see his way clear to { Lift the weil and give the officers of i the law a view of the men with whom | he associated, and who profited toan infinately greater extent from the tax- | ation of gamblers. " | Long since the mayor received a no- | tice that there were illegal relations | between the police of New York -and j the gamblers. He did not act upon { the information. He was inclined to abuse ths district attorney when the Rosenthal murder occurred, because ol Mr. Whitman's deductions. Perhaps | | he and his police commissioners will realize th» necessity of purifying the service ¥o that the guardians of the peace will perform their duty fairly and impartially, so that they will be a terror to evil-do'rs and a help to all who do well. ET ] occupation of the city by tens ol} thousands of reinfortements has ve duced the food supply to starvation rations. The Groeks report the capture of the of Servia, seventeen miles north of Mount Olympus, and thir claim is unchallenged from an, source. They report: that the Turks massacred seventy Christians and a priest before fleeing. Several hundred prisoners were taken. . Kirk-Kilissech fell at eleven o'clock in the morning, according to the la- test reports received from Bulgarian sources. The Turkish troops retired in disorder in the direction of Bun harrizar, fourtegn miles to the south: east. They leit a battery of quick firing guns, sixteen ammunition wag- gons and large quantities of ammuni- tion und food. : When the news was received in Solia | vast orowds bearing the flags, of all} the allied states formed processions and marched to the Greek, Servian, Russian and British legations, the palace and the Military Club. * Io front of each the national snthen | wag xung and cheers were given A party of boy scouts headed ome of the processions and the Greek min- ister was carried through the streets on the shoulders of some of the en thusiastic demonstrators. Church bells were rung and the whole city was hung with flags. Turks to Fall Back, Constantinople, Oct. 25.--It is stated here semi-officially that the Turks will make no real efiort to defend Adrian ople, but will at the physchological moment abandon the city and fall back on (Ggneral Abdullah Pasha's main Purkish army. 'Then the great and decisive "battle of the war will be fught south of Adrianople. A Ferocious Fight. Vienna, Austria, Oct. 25. --- Direct advices received here to-day of fighting around Kirk-Kilisseh state that the position was carried by the Bulgarian troops at the point of the bayonet, the Turks resisting till the last man dropped, Hand to hand struggles were the most ferocious in the history of modern war farce. Three thousand Bulgarians were killed and five thou sand Turks, while the wounded hoth sides exceeded ten thousand ter repeated charges of = assaulting troops, dead and wounded were piled up in trenches five feet high. Red cross and wounded. Adrianople is strongly fortified, but poorly provis ioned and watered. 'The Bulgarians ex pected to begin bombardment of thi: town any time. . TO SUCCEED MR. KIDD. Ald, Garland Selected by Conserva- tives of Carleton. Ottawa, Oct. 25.--W. F. Garland, of Ottawa, was the chojce of the Lib- erak-Conservative Association of the county of Carleton, which met in cor vention at Stittsville to appoint a successor to contest the riding for the Federal seat made vacant by the death of Edward Kidd, M.P. | It is likely that will mean an aclamation. Campbell Bros'., The home in Kingston of [ high grade hats. Miss Edith Maud Grisewood and Frederick George Barden, both of Brockville, wer: married on Thurs- day morning. "KHubberset Gib- Beott's Tooth Brushes." sou 8. Charles Lang, Belleville, died on Thursday from paralysis, following two weeks' illness. He was eighty ph years of age. " 'Thomas Kiley, under sentence of fdeath, was shot at the states prison in Salt Lake City on y "Rubberset Nail Hrushes." Gib 'parties are still sorting out the dead | still - the nomination | Remember Two Days Shopping In One 5 To-Morrow As Monday Will Be a Holiday Special for Saturday Morning, 9 to 12 1.00 Ladies' Umbrellas A good frame and good cover None in the lot worth less than Some more. Handles. $1.25, Your Pick To-Mo a very with Stylish rrow Morning $1.00 200 Pairs For Boys and Girl in an English Tan Cape Glove, give excellent wea at 75¢ pair. Kid Gloves All the best sizes These rand are always sold Ss. Yours To-Morrow, As long as lot lasts, 48c. These are fresh, soft Kid and a decided bargain. oe To-Morrow We expect will be a busy day in tour Coat and: Suit Department. We have a number of Stylish Coats that have just been receiv- ed. These are different from anything you will find elsewhere, and we ask you to come and see them. " YOU MAY CHOOSE any Coat or Suit, and if not ready to buy have it placed aside. Butterick' S Large Fashion Book for Winter just received, 100 pages of New Patterns. Get one To- Morrow. HEAVY WINTER CcAL¥ TAN CALF WITH HONEST , BOOTS IN TAN AND BLACK. - . $5.00 00 BLE SOLES, WATERPROOF -- GOOD EITHER TAN OR BLACK, REMEMBER THESE ARE HEAVY DOUBLE SOLES. The Shoe Store