~The Biggest Slaughter Sale Ever Heid in the City of Kingston Will Commence Tuesday, October the 26th and Following Days AT THE MENDELS STORE WE ARE GOING TO VACATE THIS STORE IN A SHORT TIME. EVERY ARTICLE WILL BE SOLD REGARDLESS OF COST. THE TIME HAS COME FOR YOU TO SECURE Ce ' : _. READY-TO-WEAR GARMENTS AT ALMOST -- === {1 YOUR OWN PRICES. I il sr 1 HANDSOME OPERA CLOAK BLOUSES ! BLOUSES V! 7 I iE Military cloth, silk band trimming, BLOUSES). silk lined; reg. $75. Hundreds of Blouses--consisting of Sale Price Voiles, Crepes, Taffeta Silks, Silk Crepes --all colors and designs. Blouses to oh Erie roc. clear at about ONE-THIRD OF THE 100 LADIES' AFTERNOON DRESSES i BEGULAR VALUES, Beautifully made from Anderson's ------ . ; -- best (inghams; reg. $3 line. - WHITE WEAR Our Sale Price Balance of Our White Wear TO BE SLAUGHTERED 100 LADIES' FALL AND WINTER COATS TO BE SLAUGHTERED. SERGE DRESSES Navy, Brown, Black and Fawn -- Heavy All-Wool Serge--at the Big Re- moval Sale at $2.95 and upwards LADIES' FALL AND WINTER SUITS All the newest cloths, all the best shades, all the best qualities, in every size. From $6.50 to $25.00--worth just double the money. Velvet, silk lined; 500 PAIRS CORSETS To be on sale at 59c¢c, T9¢c and 98¢c -- worth almost double. SILK DRESSES Ladies, why pay $15, $20 and $25, when you can attend the Big. Removal Sale and make your Half Pric e purchases at 500 WASH DRESSES Splendid Dark Prints; reg $4.20, 'sale Price LADIES' RAINCOATS Worth up to $12.50. For this Removal Sale MILLINERY. EVERY HAT EVERY WING EVERY FLOWER EVERY FEATHER Will be sold at just HALF THE REGU- } LAR PRICE. SWEATERS Balance of our Ladies' Pure Wool Sweaters, to clear for this 1 FANCY OPERA CLOAK Silk lined; reg. $75. Sale Price Always sold at $4.00 SEIT Ten Be Sure You Attend This Big Removal Sale Beginning Tuesday. October the th and Following Bays Follow The Crowds To | MENDELS | 132 Princess Street a a OE a. THE MAPLES (By Captain Harwood Steele, A.D.C. to Officer Commanding Second Canadian Contingent, now in France.) FROM THE COUNTRYSIDE | I Lennox § Adsington | COLEBROOK. Oct. 21.--The Red Cross. workers dn Sori Hod tinted : i u 4 Ot 'tite Sn p , i "Sir Rober orden planted maple seeds on the graves o p OE Mossow, Shishrmk igh Jatker, Canadians killed in Flanders." -- (Newspaper Extract.) . eld a successful tea and concert in Yarker Tuesday evening, All were J highly pleased with the address gi ven by Prof. L. W. "Mulloy, Kingston 'M: McDonald, Lansdowne, at J.! { Murray's; James Somers, Ottawa, at James Key's; Mr..and Mrs. William Hanley at A. McKendry's; Mr. and Mrs. R. Webb, «at William Murphy's; | Miss M. E, Tierney and Miss Pearl | Murfay spent a few days in King- Yew Frontenac Twenty years hence, when the.last trench has crumbled, And Time has lifted Belgium from her knees, BELL ROCK. Oct. 21.--Rev. Mr, Curry, King- | ston, gave an interesting missionary | address, in the Methodist church | here last Sunday morning. Miss | Eva Craig, Verona, is the guest of Miss Libbie Pomeroy. WS: Brooks is combing his potatoes . out of the] ground with a new-fangled potato- ger. Temperance rally day will observed in the Methodist church | here on November 14th, Miss L. Pomeroy leaves on Monday to-spend a week with friends in Toronto. MYER'S CAVE. Oct. 21.--A number from here at- tended the tea meeting in Cloyne Wednesday night. Mr. and Mrs. | Thomas Tapping were week-end vis- 'flors at Charles MacGregor's. Miss | iMcConachee' has returned to her | school after attending the conven- | tion at Sharbot Lake. Miss Susie ' Cox spent Tuesday night with Miss | Mallie Mae Gregor. Mrs. I. Delyea | has returned to her home after spending two weeks with friends in| Arden. Mr. and- Mrs. N. Beany| were at Hill Crest Tuesday last. Mr, and Mrs, ap Wood, _Harlowe, are | at T. D. P DESERT LAKE. i Qot, 21,--Friends of Mrs, Bauder will be glad to hear that she is im- proving steadily. H. B. Page has returned home, He was accompan- fed by Mr. and Mrs. W. Collins and | daughters, Long Lake, who paid a. fiying visit to her mother, Mrs. A. B. Tage Potato digging ts nearly fin- | ished, and some of the farmers have | begun ploughing. A. Freeman ix building a large cement stable. Mrs. A. B. Page has returned from an ex- tended visit in Watertown, N.Y | A. Deyo and J. Deyo chose fine! nights for their husking "bees." Se- | ~ vergl from here attended the | funeral of the late Mrs. McCullough, | at Verona. Visitors Sunday were: John Hoffnian at Mr. Murphy's; H. | B. Page at W. M. Albertson's. Since then J. Hoffman made another trip to Desert Lake. eh BREWER'S MILLS. { Oct. 20.~-Most of the farmers| have finished digging potatoes sind | are filling their silos. Joseph Me- | Kendry has recovered from his re- cent illn and is able to be around | © again. William Murphy is building | a new sild. ~ W. H. Nicholl's house! boat has béen laid up for the winter. Messrs, McNeil and Gleeson, Ottawa, spent Sunday Mi | Mr. and Mrs. T. H. ston last week. BURRIDGE. Oct, 19.-- Every body seems well pleased over the way the grain is turning out th's year. Nearly all the farmers are done threshing. | Some attended the husking at R. E. Broash's last week. Mrs. 8. Bresee | visited Miss M. McNeil on Friday. MeNeil and fam- ily visited Mrs. MbNeil's grandpar: Lents last Sunday. Mrs. James Fitz gerald is seriously ill. Miss M. Mc- Neil spent a few days in Westport last week. School is progressing well under the 'able 'management of a young Kingston lady. R. Lewis and W. Patterson were called to Kingston to attend court. Miss An- nie Patterson, Westport, spent Sun- day at home. T. Mulville, attending | W. H.'8., spent Sunday 'with his grandmother, Mrs. P. McCann. ARMENIAN 'REFUGEES FLEEING MASSACRE, RESCUED BY ALLIES. The proceeds amounted to $185 Rev. Dr. Baker, Belleville, preach Sunday last. He is soliciting %id for 'Albert College, was very successful here. moved here from the Mowat Hospi- tal, = Kingston, 'passed away this morning. She was a sister of Mrs C. M. Woodruff. after spending a week in Toronto appendicitis, Several loads see the 59th soldiers who are expect- the night. has returned from visiting her un- H. M. Woodruff and Edward Purcell | motored to Napanee Saturday. 'Allies' wanships, particularly alg the Sy iam coast, have been vecently engaged transporting Hiese strie- | ken people to places where they would be safe from Turkish aggression, On left -is-a young Armenian girl who arrowly escaped death and was resened br a French battleship. liftle boy rescued. ed in the Methodist Church here on | Belleville, and | Mrs. Coates, formexly Miss Jennie | McCormack, who was\ recently re-.| Miss Edna Jackson has retutned | Miss Flossy « Woodruff is slowly re- | covering from a recent attack of | from | this place went to Harrowsmith to ed to arrive there and encamp for | Miss Gladys Wartman, | cle, Rev. A."¢/ Huffman, Plainfield | The wind that cools her hills and stirs her cornfields Will sing through Maple trees. And the old peasant, resting by the roadside, Will pause beneath their shade with lowered head, Holding the Groves as dedicate and To our all-hallowed dead." sacred Since here shall lie, far from the land they died for, Where they had fallen in the bat{le's heart, Thousands of heroes, nameless but immortal, s Forever set apart. J \ * Though they may slumber in a foreign country, MODELS OF BRITAIN'S BATTLESHIP FLEET _ GIVEN FREE TO BOYS BOYS--sun think of pwning twelve (12) beautiful | you'll soon devise Mo kinds of Groat games w' Ah thom. models of the fine ships of the British Navy --two great Dreadnought Battie per. ts, hwo Cruisers, four Destroyers, two Tor) Boats, and two Sub. veritable pd twelve model battlonhi Sackly a 1a represent ONTO, ONT. 35A Nothing- shall break théir rest or trouble them, For stately emblems of their great Dominion Will sigh their requiem. nn § The man who insists on being a 'slave to work is always a stranger to | pleasure. The critic can tell you how to do those things that he is unable to « himself. Matches Specialties We have been making matches for 64 years now--- domestic matches and every other kind. . Zome of our specialties are "The Gaslighter," with a 4 1-4 inch stick-- The "Eddystone Torch" for outdoor Ge 35 seconds in any weather)--Wax Vestas for the smoker, and many other variot.es, F.r home use the most popular match is : "The Silent 5" But for every use ask your grocer for Eddy' s Matches On right is it French'marine acting as a muse tof ice more than you ofight The cemetery is nothing more or work and worry at it the less than a ety of buried hopes and | memories, 'te