rep omy BRITISH ; AGED COUPLE RENARRY |~ I AND ARE HAPPY AqAly| LMA Ress fi SNA TY 2 Beauty It's the greatest showing of fine quality Fur Coats we have ever offered. ". _ Pelts that are the finest to be had, fashioned into gar- ments of youthful aspect. Inspection is invited and we urge you to compare, which is the only way to de- termine values in Furs. Manufacturers Fioe Fas Joho McKay Limited KINGSTON, CANADA | 149 to 157 Brock Street - Kingston } Because They "Just Couldn't Agree." { | Berteviste Ontario. { When Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Fow- { ler were married in Brighton by Rev. | Andrew A. Smith, pastor of the Wesle- { yan Methodist church in that village, { in the year 1869, the groom was 23 and { the bride three years his junior. They | were separated 12 years later, divorced { about 10 years afterwards, and after a { separation that lasted until June of this | year, they were remarried on August, {17th at the home. of their daughter, | Mrs, George Mutton, who resides near | the Shiloh church, in Cramahe town- | ship, by Rev. W. H. Clarke, the stew | pastor of the Hilton circuit. At the first | wedding the. two attendants were ! youthful friends of the bride and | ond ceremony were George E. Mutton, | their son-in-law, and Roy Nelson | Packard, the husband of their grand. | daughter. Standing under a tree in the | cquple, the husband, 79 and the bride | 76 years old, clasped hands, and in the | presence of their friends, vowed that they would be faithful to each other pe separated by death. The bride and groom are spending their honey- moon at the home of their daughter, which home will continue to shelter | them for the remainder of theip exist- | ence, It was largely through the offi- | ces of their 'son-in-law, Mr. Mutton, j that they were re-united. | Adter the first marriage of Mr, and i Mrs. Fowler, they took up their resis { dence on a rented farm in Murray town | ship, near the home of the groom, [FULL C LA CARTE MEALS and excellent service. URSE' DINNER, 65¢ 40c. AND UP in attendance every day 12 to 2 pm., '8 pan. and 9 to 11 p.m, Picnic Lunches prepared. THE GRAND CAFE PETER LEE, Prop. {and downs of a young couple with li- | mited resources just starting their { married life. The cause of their separ { ation seems to have been really noth. {ing serious, simply another case of 1 "Betty and I.are out." "She had no { man, he had no other woman," both were set in their opinions, and after 12 years of living together the apparently | were unable to agree on any import | Bl | ant point with one exception, and that [was that they had never been intended { for each other. Anyway, the husband {left home and found a haven 'in the for their daughter, now Mrs. Mutton, United States, leaving the wife to care {what at the time of his departure was DOORS BELOW WY SUI I Ss MAD L E-TO-MEAS URE 2D See window display to-night. THE CLUB eh GRAND THEATRE dru ht gh event in XE - a ng 3 she will treasure. always ste your "baby" anges that MARKET FULL § BASKET PLUMS, BASKET PEARS, BASKET GAGES, BASKET -PEACHES. BASKET SWEET APPLES, BASKET TOMATORS. BASKET CUCUMBERS. BASKET ONIONS. from year ¢ Clover Honey (5) Kippered Snacks .... i ofily two years old. Matter of Religion. | Mrs. Fowler was more disposed to i talk of the separation and subsequent | reunion than was the groom. From her childhood Mrs. Fowler had been { intensely religious. Her husband was J [free from flagrant vices but he was | careless with regard to spiritial mat- | ters. She tried in vain to draw him {into the influence of the church in i which she found so much solace. Es- en a "protracted meeting," as a pro longed revival service was called in | those days, failed to bring him into the id! light, although, Mrs. Fowler says he ll! was much affected by the singing of fl | the familiar hyma, "The Dying Thief ll Rejoited to See." li Eighteen years ago Mr. Fowler ll heard that same hymn sung by a lady i evangelist at a revival meeting in Mi- fl! chigan, and he surrepdered, marching || up to the penitents' beach. | But everything in his life had chang- ll: ¢d and repentance came too late for il! him to make amends for his worldly i! mistakes. He was married again and fli had a son about 12 years old. His sec- i ond wife died in October of last year, i his son was grown up and the thoughts of the aged wanderer began to turn to ll! the home of his youth. As Goldsmith ll} puts it, he had "dragged at each re- ii move a lengthening chain." but the lic fll! mit of this tether had been reached. So il: he returned to his early environments. Never Visited Former Wife. I During the 56 years of his residence iin the United States, Mr; Fowler had I made several visits to his parents and other relatives in this district, but on I! none of these did he meet his former wife, The latter had returned to her mother's home, taking her ~daughter with her, and remained there until Mr. Mutton became her son-in-law, since which time she has resided under his roof. The daughter would call on her father at the homes of his relat when he came on brief visits to Can. ada. When he returned last spring he was persuaded to remain. Mr. Mutton brought him to his home, the cou x » ; i | groom, while the witnesses of the sec- yard of the Mutton home, the aged] | whose parents lived in the Township] B of Brigliton. They had the usual ups } { : { Clearances on Tuesd.y: Winona, {Parted Thirty-four Years Ago west at 9.46~p.m.; John J. Ram- Pe . | inacher, éast at 5.40 p.m.; Shelton Weed, west at 11 p.m. y Clearances on Wednesday: Maple 'hill, cast at 13.30 am; Edwin PF. | Douglas, east at 183.45 a.m.; Shirley! |B. Taylor, east at 8.45 am.; Toron- i {turns this afternoon and clears for {Charlotte and Toronto; Glenella, | The steamer Brockville arrived | from Picton this morning with a {cargo of canned goods. { The schooner Mary A. - Daryaw {cleared for Oswego last night fo {load coal. | It was expected that the steamer { Pat Daris would clear for Oswego jto- 'day. { Released Glenlochie, { . The tug Mary P. Hall and barge Mamie, of the Donnelly Wrecking Company, released the steamer Glen- {lochie, of the Hall Coal and Towing | Company, which was ashore near | Waddington, N.Y., on Tuesday. The | boat was loaded with pulp wood and after being released was able to pro- ceed on her trip. Boat Damaged. ! The steamer Louis Pahlow, Os- wego, N.Y., was damaged as it was leaving the Consaul-Hall coal docks, Clayton, N.Y., where it had stopped to take on coal. The boat was en route to Cleveland with a load of stone, which it had takep on from the stone quarries near Alexandria Bay. It was leaking when it reach- ed Clayton, and as was leaving it jrammed into the dock, and knocked {a hole in its side. . The trip up the | lake, had to be abandoned and the Marshall, Clayton, NY., is engineer on the boat. Barge Pentland to Be Repaired. Work has been started on raising the Pentland, a steambarge which has been sunk in the bay at Clayton, N.Y, since -early spring. The boat, owned by A. R. Hinkley, was tied up in Oswego for two years, until compldints from people there made it necessary to have the boat moved. It was towed to Clayton several months ago ,and sunk in the upper bay. Summer residents on Bartlett Point and along the shore complain- ed vigorously about the presence of the boat and finally the government has ordered it removed. The Isabelle H., another of the Hinckley boats, is at work on the boat, and when the water has been pumped out it will be towed to Ogdensburg, where re- pairs will be made and the barge put in commission to bé used anoth- er season. Purchase Adjoining Land. The General Hospital authorities have purchased the bit of ground on King street lying east of the Part. ridge wire works, and adjoining Macdonald Park. The hope is that the college authorities will be able, with civic assistance, to sectrre the Partridge plant and throw the en- tire plate open for boulevard pure poses. If would make a distimetive addition to Macdonald Park and eon- tribute greatly to the beauty of the King street front. : Sunflower Record. A new record has been established by Kingston sunflowers. J. D. Me- Williams has in his garden at 91 Livingston avenue a single plant with thirty flowers on it. Mr. Me- Williams® garden excels in many other lines. For instance a plot of beans is now furnishing its second ¢rop of the season. The homé of Albert Apps, Brant. ford, was the scene of a pretty wed- ding on August 15th, when his eld- est daughter, Alberta Robertson, be- came, the bride of Harris R. How. ard, BSA, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wallace L. Howard, Elisabethtown. |to, for Prescott this morning, re-| craft was obliged to go down the! river and go in dry dock. Edward J.| ~ DOM Tires and Tire Repairs, PY; 4 Ba Pictorial Magazine for Septergber . . . . . SHEETINGS Only get that snappy ap rance by being 'equipped with The kind that add class to your car, miles to your gasoline and put money in your pocket. : MOORE'S Telephone 815. ExtraValuesIn Cottons All the best makes, including "Prue," '"Wabasso" and English Sheeting in all widths--63 inch, 50c. yard up; 72 inch, - 50c. yard up; 81 inch, 75¢. yard up; 90 inch, 95¢. yd. up. CIRCULAR PILLOW COTTONS In all-widths, in "Wabasso™ and English makes: absolute- ly free from dressing. Priced 40c. yd. up to 65¢. yard. BLEACHED COTTONS lity. Priced 8c. yd. up. quality. ric Cc. yd. up ny yard wide. Priced 30c. to 45¢. yard. > Pure Linen Towelling ....... NAINSOOK AND QUEEN'S CLOTHS In a lovely, soft, Chamois finish; absolutely pure and full FACTORY COTTONS 36 inches wide and good strong | 36 inches wide, in several qualities that we can recom- 16¢. yard up. 5 yards Yor $1.00 White Flannelette--special . Floor Oilcloths--Linoleums--R ugs. " sr-- Hodgins were born in Picton and spent their early days here, where Lo have many friends. Early Fall Hats Parisian Shop 822 RROCK STREET Miss Wilson has returned to her home In Galt after a visit with Miss | Katharine Tobey, Mary street west. Mrs. Harry Musgrove, who has PICTON O'Neil, for Toledo, Ohio. Mr. and eral days the guest of Mr. and Mrs. 'have removed to Toledo, where their A. P. McVannel. Miss Greenlges' home will be in future. father was at one time principal of/ Mr. and Mrs. L. J. H. Redmond Picton public school. and little son, Hughie, have return- Picton schools opened yesterday, ®d to their home in Winnipeg after Sept. 1st. . and Mrs. J. Herbert Hodgins the illness and death of Mr. Red- of Toronto were récent guests of Mr. mond's mother, the late Mrs. Joseph and Mrs.) Robert Davidson, Paul Redmond. re of street, Mr. Hodgins is one of the, MI. and Mrs. Leslie Holmes of staff "of McLean's Magazine whose St. Thomas have returned home af- writings are looked for with interest 'eT a month spent with the latter's || parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Holmes. Mr. and-Mss. J. B. Howell of " Kingston were recent guests of Mr. |} and Mrs. Guy Johuson. FOR ' Detroit, Mich, are visiting N ow 'brother and sister, Mr. W. J. Carter and Miss Jessie Carter. J. K, Holland of the Baptist Church; has left for a fortaight's (he returns he will be accompanied tnt in each tdsue. Both Mr: and Mrs. i been spending the summer with her || | sisters, the Misses Doherty, loft last ff week, with her little grandson, Joe [Ji (Mrs. O'Nell( formerly Kathleen Mus- | Picton, Sept. 2.--Miss Eva Groen- | 8rove), who have been making |i lees of Kingston has been for sevreal their home in Hamilton and Toronto, | [i an extended stay in Picton, owing to |} Mrs. Mertz and Mrs. Johnson of || holidays. It is expected that when | area erases J0G yd Up Newman & Shaw THE ALWAYS BUSY STORE -. Street, semi-de- Boating. 3 Rose Tait wate and large barn; centeal. $6,200 -- Detached 8 roor situate. Lot 70 by ------ and "Apartments for of all kinds. ; : We make and sell Furs overy month of the year for sll sea 'home : sons. Our values are always right because we are manufacturers. Spending the summer on the Bay 3 ' ; a 'Shore near Glenora. We are recognized headquarters for F urs -- = eT by his A YOUTH 1S DROWNED 'a wonderful money saving op- n's Felt Hat in 'the store now