. CATARRHAL DEAFNES MAY BE OVERCOME If you have Catarrhal Deaf- ness or are even just a little hard of hearing or have head noises, go to your drug- gist and get 1 ounce of Par- mint (double strength) and add to it 14 pint of hot water and a little granulated sugar. Take 1 tablespoonful four times a day. This will often bring quick relief from the distressing head noises. Clogged nostrils should open, breathing become easy and the mucus stop dropping into the throat. It is easy to prepare, costs little and 'is pleasant to take. Anyone los- ing hearing or, who has Catar- rhal Deafness or head noises should give this prescription a trial.--Advt. ITS UNWISE to put off to-day's duty until to- morrow. If your stomach is acid-disturbed take Ki-M0I05 the new aid to digestion comfort today. A pleasant relief from the discomfort of acid-dyspepsia. MADE BY SCOTT & BOWNE MAKERS OF SCOTT'S EMULSION SAGE AND SULPHUR DIRKENS GRAY HAR Re- It's Grandmother's Recipe to store Color, Gloss and Attractiveness. Almost everyone knows that Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly .com pounded, brings back the natural color and lustre to the hair when faded, streaked or gray. Years ago the only way to get this mixture was to make it at home, which is: mussy and troublesome. Nowadays, I ing at any drug store for Sage and Sulphyr Compound, will get a large botfle of this fam- ous old recipe, improved by the ad- dition of other ingredients, at a small cost. Don't stay gray! Try it! No one can possibly tell that you darkened your hair, as it does it so naturally and evenly. You dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning the gray hair disappears, and after an- other application or two, your hair becomes beautifully dark, glossy and attractive. A nn $00, 02°20, & 8 Be AFE Es AS Bargain For This Week SHARPLE'S MILK SEPARATOR Suction feed; nearly new. Watch our advertisements each week. E. Brawley Flour and Feesl Man SYDENHAM, ONTARIO, for Voiles, Linens, Batistes, Cottons Do not think of LUX as a cleanser for only georgettes, chiffons, iticolettes, crepe-de-chines. e bubbly LUX lather double life to same -- use pV SPORTING NEWS ONE HUNDRED OUT ON QUEEN'S CAMPUS The Beginning of a Big Re- | vival of Athletics i$ Apparent. Monday, October the fourth, 1920 | | ired men out in uni- | practice on Queen's They were not out occasion nor for a tion of any kind, but mere- e of the two practices held On September 13th, the > squad turned out, compris- | about two fullateams and the number ben steadily with every practice until the s been reached and he daily but a show of lood coming to the has the sur- with demonstration to go increas- | practices. | the | trough. The studentg have seen how | athletics were paralysed and reduc- | ed by war last realized talking about Therefore they sible thing and crowds to see through conditions and that standing it not have done the sen- are turning out the whole show have at "$s Ss, of course, 1 one day of their own Last fall Professor Lind- Malcolm, in co-operation with veral other e students of the university to- gether and put it wp to them. He showed them how things stood and pointed out some of the ways of mak- ing up the deficiency. | more than that. mination he worked and had already accomplished some of the most im- portant of those remedies. But, as he said himself, the main part of the programme depended on the stu- ts and it was up to them to carry through. It certainly looks as if the students are going to do that and with a will The soccer team, also, ig showing up well. Two or three good work- outs in uniform have been held, while there is a soccer ball being kicked around somewhere all the time. Monday the soccer squad was out on the Cricket Field for two hours or and well drilled in the game. captain and several others of vear"s played just as good and better ability than last year. The track team has started in to work and several were out taking runs on the campus track yesterday afternoon, putting themselves in shape for the big events later on. The tennis courts, of course, were crowd- ed, and to those who think that ten- nis is a mollycoddles' game we would give the advice that they try it first He even did The last with a beginner and then with an ex- | perienced player. It certainly is not the soft job that it looks. | Altogether the sport outlook at Queen's is on the mend and decided- ly so. started, it is going to be some re- | vival. It is not a matter of a week's enthusiasm thjs time but a solid de- termination to get down to work and show the world in general that Cap- tain Curtis 'has a few, successors in the modern college. and the best of luck. STOCK MARRETS. | Quotations Furnished by Bongard, Ryerson & Co., 287 Bagot Street. New York Stocks. Opening. Closing Am, Beet Sugar ... 75 American Car Fndy,.134% i American Locomotive 955; Am. Internat. Corp.. 71% Am. Sumatra Tobac'o 893% Smelters 61 Baldwin Iocomotive.111 Baltimore & Ohio... 47% Bethlehem Steel "B" 71% Anaconda C..P. R. Crucible' Steel General Motors Mexican Petroleum. . | Willys Overland Pierce Arrow | Reading | Studebaker | Sterling Stualaiz oil | | | 1903; 10% 37 94% 583% 32% Brazilian | Brompton | Canada Bread | Canada Steamships Canada Steam. Pfd.. | Cong. Smelters | Dominion Bridge ! Dominion Steel | Dominion Textile | Dominion Fdy. & Steel | General Electric | North Amer Pulp | National Breweries IN. Y. Exchange | Riordon | Steel of Canada Spanish River 38 25 bid 24% bid 88 bid 61 bid 99 bid s bid A move to forestall crime has { been made at Detroit, Mich. Busi- | ness men will aid in patrolling the { city. to right, front row : Mitchell. Olson. Second row : in | did not | true Queen's men, got | With quiet deter | so and the material is fast | line-up were on deck and dis- | All over the university there | is evidence of a big revival in athle- | tics and, at the rate at which it has | Go to it Queen's | | Brooklyn Ball Club, winners of the National L McCabe, Taylor, Nies, Eddie Bennett and Ric around | the cure, | ARRANGEMENT MADE ; OVER TRENT POWER Bay of Quinte Manufacturers 8ign Agreement Reliev=- ing Government. whereby the ways and Canals will permit the storage waters of the Trent canal Isystem to be let down and reduced for power purposes to the extent of one-tenth of one foot per week from now until the present critical condition to manufacturers from lack of power owing to the low con- dition of the waters of the river Trent and s ed by fall Department of Rail- or otherwise, In order to protect the government from any possible action for dam- ages to private power developments or otherwise the manufacturers of 3ay of Quinte district 'have signed | an agreement relieving the govern- ment and Department of and Canals from all claims for | Jury or damage that may arise in | consequence of lowering the in the storage lakes. | All of the manufacturers in { following places have signed the |agreement: Belleville, Trenton, Nap- { anee, Deseronto, Cobourg, Madoc, Deloro, Port Hope, Corbyville, Have- | lock. | rains HAD NO ( | With the Wall Street Ex New York. New York, Oct. 5.--William J. JTlynn, chief of the bureau of investi- gation of the justice department, to- day expressed the belief that Florean | Zelenko, held in Pittsburg, had no | connection with the Wall street ex- plosion. After having completéd the local investigation, he said he believ- 'ed no real conspirator would have | left himself as open to suspicion. A { despatch from Columbus, Ohio., said that Zelenko is wanted there for the theft of dynamite, caps and fuses from a construction company on Sep- tember 21st. JCTION plosion In Solve Housing Problem. Hamilton, Ont., Oct. Clerk Kent has a brand new sug- | lem. He suggests that a number of public spirited landlords get togeth- er and rent their property only to people who have families. He thinks this would overcome the handicap of the selfish landlords who will not rent homes to people. who have children. Chief Engineer Found Dead. Quebec, Oct. 5.--George Beaudoin, chief engineer of the steamer Mon- treal, of the Canada Steamship Lines, was found dead in his stateroom on the vessel last evening, He had retir- {ed to his stateroom about four o'clock and when called for dinner it | was found that he had expired. Mr. Beaudoin was about sixty years of age. He is survived by his wife and family at Sorel, At Non-Jury Sittings. The non-jury sittings of the county court opened on Tuesday morning at 10 o'clock with Judge Lavell pre- |siding. There are nine cases on the | docket. At adjournment at noon, one case, that of W. H. Goodwin & {Son vs. Neeley's Ltd., had been dis- posed of, judgment in full for $305.- {76 being given for the plaintiff. | New Westminster won the final lacrosse game 4 to 1, but Vancouver takes the Minto cup and world championship by 13 goals to 11 on the series. Profits equivalent to 67 per cent. of the $7,000,000 of capital stock outstanding were earned by the Ford Motor Company of Canada in the year ending July 31st. The French government is inquir- ing into reported Bolshevik loans to French papers. $4 TROOPS MAINTAIN ORDER IN BE British troops barricaded in the streets of Belfast following the recent disturbances. | ann An arrangement has been reached ! THE DAILY BRITISH: WHIG. dnp a NAPANEE DECIDE TO BUY WATERWORKS The People Also Vote to Pur- chase Land for Manu=- facturing Sites. -A by-law to buy » waterworks was carried vy by a huge majority ) w to purchase the can- al and adjoining property, on which are erected the' Gibbard J'urniture company's factory, W. D. Midmer's lumber and box factory, and the Pumping station of the Napanee wa- terworks, was carried by as big a { majority. Trent canal is reliev- | Railways | in- | water the { | | gestion to relieve the housing prob- | ¢ The town now owns Its waterworks and splendid sites for manufacturing plants. The by-laws .indicate a big change in the digposition of the peo- ple of Napanee. Ten years ago neither of these by-laws would likely have carried. ------t WILLIS SHARP KIL BINGHAMPT( st winner of the Ontario s avtumn meet. Mr. Kil- ixterminator carried off two and his Our Flag another, MER, OF IN IN MARINE CIRCLES > The schooner Davis, which has been held here for three weeks, cleared on Tuesday for Uswego. The steamer Jeska cleared on Tuesday for Oswego. Commonwealth Wheat Outlook. Ottawa, Oct. 5.--Wheat prospects | for the coming season in Australia | are considered most favorable for one of the largest yields in the com- monwealth. Assistant Trade Com- misioner C. Hertlett, writing to the | Weekly Bulletin of the department LFAST. |THE IRISH DESIRE TO TRADE WITH CANADA | Belfast, Dublin and Cork Mer- chants Wish to do Busi- ness Direct. | ' Ottawa, Oct. 5.-- Writing from Belfast to the Weekly Bulletin of the Department of Trade and Com- merce, Trade Commissioner J. Ver- non of the disturbances in Ireland upon trade. He gtates that after a fairly | comprehensive tour of the leading | commercial centres of Ireland, he | finds that there is considerable temp- {orary and local dislocation of trade. The logical centres for distribution of goods, he states, are Belfast, Dub- lin and Cork, but at the present time it is practically impossible for any {one house, in any particular city, i to distribute effectively throughout { Ireland owing to the many boycotts | and counter-boycotts which have | been enacted. |a keen interest in Canadian goods | |in all parts of Ireland, and a de- | finite desire that direct trading re- | lations may be established. and Cork merchants are unanimous in endeavoring to establish a trade with Canada, which does not have to pass through the hands of Lon- don brokers. There is a demand for Canadian cheese, timber and wood products of all kinds. Agri- cultural implements and garden tools have found a ready. market. Bel- fast timber importers are interested | in getting supplies from British Col- | umbia at a reasonable price. | Mr. McKenzie notes that the Ger- | mans are already sending small ship- | ments to the Irish markets. Husbands Must Go, Too. | Chicago, Oct. 5.--Unmarried wo- men who register to-day or on Oec- tober 12th, then get marired before election day will be required to go to the polls with their husbands to be identified as the same person who registered as unmarried, election officials announced to-day. Hood's Sarsaparilla Makes Food Taste ( Cood Creates an appetite, aids digestion, purifies the blood, and thus relieves scrofula, catarrh, the pains and aches of rheumatism and gives strength to the whole system. Nearly 50 years' phenomenal sales tell the story of the great merit and success of Hood's Sarsaparilla. It is just the medicine you need now. Hood's Pills help--fine cathartic, | mm of trade and commerce, states the! total area under wheat in the four | wheat-producing states of ,Australia this year is 11,552,000 acres. This is nearly a record. An arrangement has been entered into between the gov- ernments of the wheat producing | compulsory | established | during war years is to be continued states by which the wheat-pooling scheme on somewhat similar lines for the 1920-1921 harvest and possibly longer. GRAPES AND PEARS AT COST. Chicago Makes Big Bring Down Prices. Chicago, Oct, 5.--Prices were giv- i en another jolt here. Grapes and pears--a whole shipload of them-- arrived here to be sold at cost. The shipment was part of a purchase by the city of Chicago from Michi- gan fruit growers in an effort to force prices down. loads have been ordered. eague, and contenders in the world's series. From left hard Cloud, mascots ; Elliott. Sheehan, | Kruger, Kilduff, Johnson, Wheat, Manager Robinson, Myers, Konetchy, Smith and | Back row : Sheridan, Mohart, Schmidt, Miller, Marquard, Lemar, Cadore, Grimes, Mily and Griffin. i 03 Purchase to | Six more ship- | He finds that there is | TUESDAY, OCTORER 5, 1920. DELICIOUS WORLD p AT-- JAS. CRAWFORD, JAS. H ENDERSON. Nothing goes into Hir Herbs, EXCLUSIV TELEPHONE 304. | HIRES AMOUS ROOT BEER BEVERAGE IN BOTTLES FOR YOUR HOME. JOHN GILBERT. es but the pure healthful juices of Roots, Barks and Berries and Pure Cane Sugar. Thompson Bottling Works DISTRIBUTORS FOR KINGSTON DISTRICT. JAS. REDDEN & CO. W. V. WEBSTER. OFFICE: 294 PRINCESS ST. | | a | T | Seven Millions Increase In Inland Revenue | Ottawa, Oct. 5.--There was a net | Increase of over seven millions in in- | land revenue returns for September, | according to the monthly statement { issued by the department. The total | inland revenue collected for the | month was nearly twelve millions. The chief increase came from war taxes, which brought in seven and a | half millions more than the war taxes { for the corresponding month | year. { . WHEAT DOWN IN 'PEG. A Decline of From 131; to Over 1715 { Cents Noted. Winnipeg, Oct. 5 Due in part to svmpathy with Americar markets and pressing of hed sales and absence of buying volume, Py the Winnipeg wheat market ec! d yesterday with a decline from 13134 to 17%ec. loc October wheat closed with a drop | November | of 13% from Saturday; 13 and December 173% at 2193 and 204%, respectively, which were the McKenzie discusses the effect ™MOW points of the day. { EIGHTY-FIVE CANADIANS Attending The Sunday School Con- ference In Tokio. Toronto, Oct. According to Rey. H. C, Priest, retary of the Canadian forward missionary move- ment, Canada sent eighty-five dele- cates to the Tokio convention. His | information was to the effect that Fs | | servation | | | sugar markets on Monday. | were half a cent | close of last The Youth Did Not Murder His Mother Toronto, Oct. 6&.--The Ontario government will act this week upon reports of Dr. Harvey C. Clare, dir- ector of Ontario hospitals 'in the department of prisons, Dr. Arthur Jules Johnston and Dr. C. K. Clarke, who have had Arnel Love under ob- since he made the start ling confession that he murdered his mother, the crime for which his fath- last j er was hanged at Owen Sound. All the doctors are convinced that the young man did not murder his er and that his story that he nitted the erime was "a sudden sion," due to the excitement of the religious revival which was be- ing carried on at the time in Salem, Grey county, which is not far from the farm where the young man 'was employed as a farm hand. - His stor- ies told at the time of the trial, and following the revival, according to the doctors, "do not fit together." Prices Go Down To Low Record of Year Sugar New York, Oct. 5.--New low re- cord prices for the ydar were estab- ushed in both the raw and refined Prices lower than at the week, with raw sugar selling on the basis of 8.51 duty pad. hile refined was quoted at 123 | cents a pound by the Federal Sugar the building burned was erected spe- | cially for the occasion at seventy-five thousand dollars. HAMILTON BAY FILTHY. | a Sewage Problem. Hamilton, Oct. 5.--City Engineer Gray announced to-day that the only solution of Hamilton's sewage prob- lem is the construction of an inter- ception sewer at a cost of $500,000. In the meantime millions of gallons of untreated sewage are flowing into the bay daily. BARGE HITS LOCK PIER. St. Catharines, Oct. 5.--The wood- en barge, Melvin S, Bacon, owned by a Montreal steamship company, col- lided with the stone pier leading to lock 2, Welland Canal, stoving a ten- foot hole in her bow, She was pulled out by tugs Cross and McNaughton and Is being taken to the Port Dal- housie dry-dock, where she will spend a week undergoing repairs, Decline Below $2 a Bushel. Chicago, Oct. 5.--All grain prices smashed down yesterday to the low- est level since 1917. Impairment of confidence on the part of owners appeared to be largely responsible, The finish in wheat was semi-demor- alized at 111% to 121% cents net de- cline with December $1.95 to $1.95% and March $1.91 to $1.91%. Corn lost 434¢ to 5c. oats 1% to 1%c to 2%c and provisions 20c to $1.17. Fixed Assessment Granted. Deseronto, Oct. 5.--Only four votes were recorded against the by- lay which was submited to the rate- payers yesterday, granting a fixed assessment of $10,000 per annum to the Quinte General Manufacturing Company. A ten to fifteen per cent. reduc- tion in prices is announced by the Shoe Manufacturers' Association of Canada. There may be more a few months hénce when the present cheaper priced hides will be in use. a cost of | | { | : | ob | #4 | | City of the Mountainous Skyline Has | > Mr. | McKenzie says that Belfast, Dublin : Refining company. -- --_ EY PREP EEEFEREP ERP r ed COFFEE PRICE UP AND LONDON YELLS +» London, Oct. 5.--Lyons, the % largest caterers in London, have "+ jumped shop girls' coffee from 6 to 7 cents a cup, though cof- * fee is no dearer, and yells that rend the firmament are arising. % Lyons profits for the year were + $1,900,000, and a dividend of + 42% per cent, was declared. * SRR b bbb rr bree AA AA an BORN. North Fredericksburgh, 26th, to Mr. and Mrs. Fish- * FEL bP eb eee dt FISHER on Se er, O'CONNOR---At North Fredericksburgh, on Sept. 23rd, to Mr. and Mrs. Mor. ley O'Connor, a son. LOWERY--In Picton, Sept. 24th, Mr. and Mrs, Howard Lowery, At to a SWORDS--In Wellington to Mr. and Mrs, son. CAHOON--TIn Bloomfield, Sept. 15th, to Dr. and Mrs. Cahoon, a son. MARRIED, MARLIN--At Tamworth, on 20th, Margaret A. Alcorn, of Tamworth, to George Nelson Mar- lin, Sheffield Township. HOLMES -- COLE -- On Sept. 24th, at Picton, Inas Alberta Cole to Charles Jeffrey Holmes, both of Hallowell. KEMSLEY--BROOKS--On Sept, 28th. at Picton, Cynthia, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. C. H. Brooks to Frank William Kemsley, Picton. MacKE IE--KING---At Toronto, on Sept. nd, Willam T. MacKenzie, Napanee, to Miss Gladys 1. King, Gravenhurst. O'HAGAN--COX---At Picton, on Sept. 22nd, Mary Deborah, only daughe- ter of the late Captain n. O's Hagan and Mrs. O'Hagan, to Vine cent St. Charleg Cox, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Cox, Madoc, Ont. WRIGHT--HAMMEL--In Picton, Sept. 28th, Miss Kathleen Hammel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Hammel, Picton, to Fred Wright, Belleville, WHALEN---O'CONNELL--A%t Read, on Sept. 6th, Miss Mary E. O'Connell, Richmond, and John J. Whalen, len Sept. 22nd, John Swords, a ALCORN- Sept to one style of reco diamond point, an ed with a diamond point ? 2 Or must you limit your musical delight rds--say those play- The Sonora --the highest class Phonograph in the world--plays all makes of disc records whether played with a steel needle, saphire or d plays them perfectly. Will Your Phonograph Play AllDiscRecords? Do not buy your new Phonograph before first having seen and heard the Sonora at CC. WW. LINDSAY LIMIT, 121 Princess Street - Kingston \ 7) _--