€ of WINTER Overcoats "DURING FAIR WEEK Special Values ! 0 r& Our stock is now J complete. The values "NF here offered will NN prove decidedly at- HY tractive to the great body of prosperously circumstanced Men who can afford to be = forehanded and thrif- ty. Come in and look around. Putting Character Into Your Headwear FALL HATS All the new shades. All the new shapes. SPECIALLY. PRICED $3.95 75-79 BROCK STREET If Of Your Route It Pays To Walk erson Bros. Ltd. LARGER MARKET Week-end Sale of Week-end Sale of old fashioned Damson Plums. s Bartlett Pears. s Flemish Beauty Pears. De Anjou P gan. PY $s Reine Claude Gage Plums. Royal Duke (large blue) Plums ts Grapes. CITY AND > DISTRICT Attended the Funeral. Principal R. Bruce Taylor was in Belleville on Tuésday, attending the funeral of the late Lady Parker. : Blacksmith, The ada 'Gazette notes the permane appointment by ithe De- partment of Justice of Henry N. Tor- rents as industrial guard blacksmith at Portsmouth. Field Secretary Here. " Mr. Wilfred Bolan, Field Secre- tary for the Ontario Prohibition { Union, was in in Kingston on Tues- day conferring with . some of the | leaders in the prohibition movement here. A Cause for Long Life. Mrs. D. H. Sager, an eighty-three year old iresident of Ameliasburg, is one of the Belleville Ontario's old- est subscribers. . Mrs. Sager began taking the paper sixty years ago. Yachting Circles Quiet. The busy season at the Yacht Club has ceased and things are very quiet. Few, of the local boats are out these days and the number of outside boats visiting here are also few. Boy's Wheel Smashed. A young boy had his bicycle bad- ly smashed up Tuesday evening when he ran into a big rock at the foot of Johnson street. The front rim broke in two, destroying the tire and tube and necessitating the buying of a new front wheel. Transferred to Brockville. Wilfred Hourigan was removed to St. Vincent de Paul Hospital, Brogk- ville, on' Monday evening from the Mowat Memorial Hospital. While his condition is serious, he stood the trip well and his friends are hopeful for his complete recovery. The Lawyers Were Late. Justice Logie opened the Fall As- sizes sharp on time, but was held up for lack of lawyers. Later it. was discovered that a witness was late. Said his Lordship, "Things progress evenly and quietly in Kingston. No- body seems to hurry." * Boys Still Swim. Despite the rather cool weather, there are some young boys who have not given up swimming yet. Nearly every day after school, they take their dip at the bathing house, but they will soon be deprived of this privilege as it will not be long till the bathing house is closed. Not Concerned Much. Through the downpour of rain walked a young man down Princess street Tuesday evening, 'whistling "It Aint Gonna Rain No More." He certainly was very optimistic about it and everybody hopes his song will turn out to be true the next few days. Pigs Plastered With Mud. One county: resident who has an exhibit of pigs at the Kingston fair, stated that the judges who made their inspection on Wednesday had trouble On telling whether the pigs were black or white as they were plastered with mud. The Palace Leaked. Although a portion of the roof of the palace at the fair grounds was shingled during the summer, it did not stop the ra from coming through. The directors in charge were surprised to find that the water came through the roof and wet some of the pictures on exhibition in the art exhibit. ¢ Fans Disappointed. Some of the football fans are sadly disappointed because they are refused the liberty of seeing the Queen's gridiron" warriors in pracs tice. However, the railbirds will see plenty of action in the first 'game THE REDESIGNED é Exhibit at the Kingeton Foi Grounds on Wednes- on Fair Grou here. Queen's will have to be reg- ular wizards to be any better than they hive been is the local fans' opinion. , Passed Away in Brooklyn. Mrs. George W. Geddes, a former well known and estimable resident of Brockville and Lyn, passed away on Sunday at her home in Brooklyn, N Y., aged ninety-one years. O You Weather Man! Owing to the wet weather, the half holiday arranged for the school children on Wednesday afternoon, to attend the fair, was cancelled. The children will be given Friday after- noon to attend the exhibition. -- Burial of Mrs. Catherine Grant. The funeral of the late Mrs. Cath- erine Grant took place on Tuesday morning from her late residence Wolfe Island, to the Sacred Hea | Church, where a solemn requiem mass was sung by Rev. Father M. James. The funeral was under the direction of M. P. Keyes, undertak- er, and the pall-bearers were M. Johnson, R. McCready, Joseph Mec: Kenna, James Dabis, Edward Griffin and George Rogers. A Native of Campbellford. Col. G. Hunter Ogilvie, sergeant- at-arms at the. Parliament bujld- ings, Toronto, dccompanied 'by Mrs, Ogilvie visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Hume, Campbell- ford. The colonel is a native of Campbellford, a member of one of | the pioneer families, and he received his early education in the public and high schools here. Death of Mrs. J. W. Down. Mrs. (Rev.) J. W. Down, Tyrone, after a painful illness, passed away Wednesday. The interment took place at Riverview cemetery, Nap- anee, on Friday. Napanee friends and those on the Selby, Bay and Yarker charges, where Mr. and Mrs. Down spent happy pastorates, feel the deepest sympathy with = Mr, Down and his family in their be< reavement. Golden Wedding Event. Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs. George E. Reid, 90 Mayfair avenue, Notre: Dame de Grace, Montreal, who, on Tuesday, quietly celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of their marriage. Mr. Reid (now retired) has been associated with the Sun Life Assurance Company for the past thirty-eight years. He is a nephew of the late Sir Mackenzie Bowell, *x-Premier. of Canada. Myron J. Chesebro, Picton, Dead. ~Myron J. Chesebro, a resident of Picton for years passed away on Sept. 5th. Although his illness was a'lingering one death came suddenly | at the end, Mr. Chesebro was born in Syracuse sixty-nine years ago. He was employed in the Boulter factory, the very first canning factory in Prince Edward county. For five years he was at Hillier factory. Dur- ing the war he was sent to British Columbia and finally to Winnipeg where his health broke down. He never regained his former vitality. Mr. Chesebro married the widow of Henry R. Pope who survives him, | together with one brother, James, Binghampton, N.Y. 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