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YOUR DREAMS Of Apparel Correct in Style, Exclusive in Fabric Perfect in fit and tailor- ing, such as is ible RE only done by mas- come ter craftsmen, wil true in "Fashion Craft Clothes" We want you to see for yourse . reason why the best dressed men are wearing them; why the are more" satis- and why we believe you would Tike to wear them. Prices are all moder- ate, from $15 to $25. E.P. Jenkins E'. Company a -- Et) : A MURDER Al BROCKVILLE! DOIRAN, HISTORIC TOWN. = ---- ~--{ Under Declivities of Belasitza Mous- S| tains, Prominent in Middle Ages Doiran, the town at which the -- | Franco-Beitish forces from Sslomica Both Are Dead--"They Were Patients began their lomg-expected drive re- In Eastern Asylum--The Superin-| cently, 18 described In the following | tendemt Had Forbade Their Mar- | riage, | Brockville, Nov. morning shortly [Wiliam 8tokex, aged {charged patient of the pital, murdered his wife, who was srmerly Mrs. Floyd Mclean, So » WILLIAM STOKES CUTS WIFE THROAT AND HIS OWN, ° tional Geographic Society Washington headquarters: Situated on the frontier Serbia and Greece, and only about ten miles south of the Bulgarian boundary, Doiran, also known as Poliznino, is forty miles north-west of Salonica, on the southern shores near Maitland, after one week o | of the almost circular lake of the jmarried Hfe. He afterwards cut his | Same name. : own throat and died in the hospital Lake Doiran, nestling under the |about three hours later. Sauthery declivities of the Belasitza The murder took place at the home Mountain range, is probably the Lake f Mr. and Mrs, W. J. Gilder, at the| Prasias mentioned by Herodotus, CORRES hp f Park and Fines at ts,| Whose deseription of the Paeonians, So wih M. "Stokes I 1d been working! 1IVing 48 houses built over the edge of nit oll ni weeks. and where, ©f the water, fits in a 'measupe the for the past six weeks, a Ved.| modern flsherfolk living in huts in Stokes has been boarding since Wed- this vicini Th , ; t : t Ute Vicinity. The women of present- nesday Jas aT a' traveller 16 | day Dairan are not 4s famous for Mr. Gilder, who is a rave ler TL their industry, howéver, as were jthe James Smart Mfg. Col, left 1 their noted forerunners, house about eight o'clock and board-! Eight miles west of Doir ed the 8.15 train for Kingston. Mrs. | 8 river, which rises Gi'der continued her household dut- Shar Mountains, flows through jies, getting her children ready for |school, ete., and after the children | had left home she went upstairs to} her room, but on reaching the head of the stairs, saw Stokes standing ID Seu. Beiwesn the Vardar and his room door attired only in his| Struma river (to the east) extend underwear, which wa: covered with the Belasitza Mountains, blood, and with his throat cut trom | some tifty wn In length forming { | part of the eastern houndary of Bul- 14 after eight forty, a Eastern Hos- lock | {is to ' {- resid ap is the in the the Saloniea, thus constituting for hun- dreds of years ihe nrincipal route {rom Ceniral Lurope to the Aegean es ext to ea: i t | Stokes, vn in England.! garia. came as a patient to the Eastern Hos- | pital about six years ago from Otta-| al iwvho was ways be associated with one of the wa. be stupid ation ; [411 of the Balkan Peninsula and quite rational at all times until about! all o e alka a r years ago, when he had another| whose sway extended from the Dan- four yea ube to Morea, met defeat at the hands of the redoubtable Byzantine Emperor, Basil II, surnamed Bul- | guroktonos (Slayer of Bulgarians). a During the battle of Belasitza in About a month ago he wis di-| 1014, Basil captured 13,000 Bulgar- charged as cured from the institution | ians. He blinded the whole number, for the insane. but was hired by Dr.| leaving but one eye to every hun- Mitchell to continue in his Position. | gregh man, spared to this extent in Ahout ten days ago he signified his| order that he might act as a guide intention of getting married, and In| for the pitiable host of warriors thus a talk with Dr. Mitchell over his| returned to their Czar. When Samual prospects talked quite sensibly. Dr. peheld this helplefs army of his mu- Mitchell did not approve of his in} tention, and told him that if he got! he fainted and two days later died married. he would have to leave his| of grief. With him died the Slavonic position at the Eastern Hospital. Empire of the Balkans. Sunday, November 5, was the last | mn day he worked at the hospital, and on] WEALTHY IMPERIAL the following day he tried at Chrys- . ler's & Steacy's jewiliery stores a. Japan's Rulers Have Fortune in town to get a marriage license, Bank Shares, Forests, and Palaces. Ins i ratic ith y » both firins got in communication with | The property noldings. of. the attack and was confined to his room at the institution for about a month Warned Not to Marry. FAMILY, Dr. Mitchell over the 'phone, and Dr. | Mitchell forbade the marriage, . tone went to Prescott on Monday! Bare Je EToRRe to 3250.500.000, ut. and were there married. cording to an artic n : Stokes declines to make any state-| Nichi Nichi of Tokio. Thes gr ment at first, but when told by Rev. | Ing= lie shurey in Se a 4 L. E. Davis, of his condition, stated | Japan, { € ake lama filotle nk, that his wife had come upstairs tof he TE nonatan (alnishy. hav the room and quarrelled with Bi | coy "Added to these Iuterets ors Stokes stated that she grabbed af contributions made by the Gov- razor, and threatened to cu . is ernment after the Sino-Japatese throat, but he took the razor from her war out of tho faodemnity obtained {and killed her. 2 ! trom China. The indemnity funds The deceased, whose maiden name oa the 'stock holdings are aad to {was Lillian Rockey, was a patient in total $80,000,000. | the Eastern Hospital shortly before Foreats covering 2,130,000 sores Stokes was removed to the institution | and 150,000 acres of prairie land about six years ugo. About a year yo valued at a sum which would ago she applied to Dr. Mitchell for a | bring the total up to $250,000,000, position on the staff of the hospital! fr (¢ the foregoing the market value and was accepted, but after about! or the property of the imperial pal- two weeks was discharged, owing 10] gee and detached palaces throughout her intimacy with the men. . { Japan be estimated imperial pro- In his statement to Rev. L. E.[ porty would reach a much greater Davis, Stokes asserted that his wife figure. The value of this property had said she was going to run away| is increasing 20 ber cent. annually. with a soldier. In an examination of | At the same time, every year an the room in which the murder was| enormous amount is expended in im- committed a piecé of poetry was) berial grapts, In accordance with | found, which was presumably written | the will of the Emperor Meiji, father Ib p the deceased, in which she talked | and predecessor of {he present Fm- | ' Jealousy is | peror, the actual expenses of the im- |of leaving her husband. 1 | the possible motive of the crime perial family are said to be mini- | mized as much as possible. The : idthering. greater part" of the revenues from Madoc rata) 5 he atid pat- f the imperial properties, says the ar- [ viotic and organization meeting of | Hdle 18 Daed fo various teremonies, the Liberals of the nine northera f SMlATION: pen a) expen: townships of the County of Hast:nes | royalty of other Nat \, was held on Wednesday in the Pub- | In addition the imperial Soase. lic. hall at Bancroft. The following | Bold receives annually $1,500 000 Silcsrs Joceiveq the endorsation' of from the Government, and 'the sal. the meeting: Hon. Pres.-- Fred Mullett, croft. » President-- Frank Thomson, lian. eroft. dan- | bold department are paid out of | that. ati It Was Meant Well, is told concerning the new chaplain fe Ran- | oar Frank a good story eas) --p alndyy | Canon roegie, Ban arirer Emerson, Lae? of the British House of Commons. . | It relates to the time when he wag working as a curate in the east end GIRLS! BEAUTIFY t {of London. He was Preaching to a ' congregation largely composed, so far as the men were concerned, of Becomes Cha waterside laborers, and his subject was Fasting." rming, Lustrous and Thick In Few Moments. , "Of course," he said, "many of | you men, earning your living as you | do Every Bit of Dandruff Disappears And Hair Stops Coming. - Out, Kelusky, by Rard and exhausting toil, can- | not be expected to deny yourself of Wavy, | food. But you can fast in another | way, and I do urge you to do this-- ® yourself the use of strong lain sudge." After the sermon Mr. Carnegie was passing out of the church when | be overbieard one of his late congre- -- | gation remark: "That was a ---- For 25 cents you cam save your &ood sermon the parson hair. In less than ten minutes you | Preached, Rill. L ; can double its beauty. Your hair ------ g00d,"" was Bill's t becomes light, wavy, fluffy, abundant Pbatic rejoinder. and appears as soft, lustrous and ee daebdp---- charming as a young girl's after ap-| All But Cripples. 7 Plying some Danderine. Also try this| Austris-Hungiry, is calling up fit- ~--moisten a cloth with a little Dan-| eeu classes of men which heretofore derine and carefully draw it through | bad been exempt from military ser- your hair; 1 | one small strand Yice, says a despatch from Berne, at a time, 'will cleanse the hair I Laeriand, lees Press. of dust, OF excessive ofl, and in eo Just a few moments you have doubled | tlud® a the hair. h ful surprise fying the avery purifies and Hair actually eripples of forty-four for ser- sometimes cause more War geography note issued by the Na. | from irs | between | Uskup Plain, and enters the Gulf of | the | . range! The name of these mountains will | He was a very depressed and | most harrowing episodes of the Mid- | melancholy patient and appeared to) dle Ages, for it was at the battle of | "He recovered from hishBelasitza that Samuel, the Bulgarian | @r a while and appeared | Ozar who had conquered practically | The | imperial household of Japar amount | | aries of the officials of the house-| cleanse and regulate the day | undigested fos ~PAGE THREE er-- | BULGARIAN PREMIER SAYS TERMS WILL NOT BE SIGNED At a ( onference--Everything Is Fine --Radoslavoff Holsters Up Come fidence by Considering Situation When Best Favors Teutonic Allies, Berlin, Nov. 14.--At ree confi- dential conferences with ms ers of the Government party, the Bulgar- | ian premier, M. Radoslayolf, made] some significant utterances peace, according .to the 'Sq ! pondent of 'the Vassiche Zeitung, | Characterizing the situation of \ier- bund in all the areas of war as splen-| id. M. Radoslaveff said the resur- | rection of the kipgdom of Poland | was to be regarded as a great step toward peace, the Central Powers | having proved thereby that they did | not desire to iretain oc¢ pied Rus-| sian territories. Moreover, it would | pave the way to future good rela-| \ ter Wearables We have now ready a great assortment of winter wearables in knitted goods. The prices are exceptional, in many cases be- ing less than today's wholesale cost. tions with Russia and considerably | lighten the peace negotiations. M. Radoslavoff finally intim wace would not come of a conference, hut that would probably be signed on battlefield According to the Azest's Sofia cor- respondent, M, Radoslavoff told Verio's ministers and representatifes yesterday In the course of a general urvey of the military and political situations that Bulgaria's situation continued to be especially favorable and that operations in al! theatres {of war was developing in- such a way that a decisive turn for the bet-, ter for the enemy was out of the question, and that the Central Powk ers were certain of victory According to this partic ularly well. {informed Hungarian correspondent, M. Radoslavoff said that 1 war | | would probably come to an end with- { out any particular peace conference, meaning that peace would | very | 9 Hkely restored by direct negotiations | | between the states involved old values at 25¢c, ated | the | it | the 'that as resuit and $1.75. ors; all last e eo WAR MAY CONTINUE BEYOND NEXT YEAR| J. L. Garvin Says the Entente Allies Must Strike More Swiftly. | { London, Nov. 14.--J, Garvin, | | writing in The Observer, predicts that unless the Entente Allies come {| to more vigorous decisions the war) | will he prolonged far into 1918 as | a Ata tgttnatiatne® | "the result of the new outburst of | | German energy aon all sides and the | { unity of direction under Von Hin- | denburg." | | "The Allies in the east have per- | {| petrated almost every blunder left to | them to commit," writes Editor Gar- | | vin, "after a previous record of mis- | | management that seemed well nigh | exhaustive. The prospect is not dis-# | astrous, but is disagreeable as the! | fault is reparable only at the cost i Of several million avoidable casual-, | ties, and thousands of millions in| | money which might have been saved. | | "The glorious ghapter of the Allied! i | offensive on the Somme is closed. | g4 The new chapter is beginning as the fe | Gor have fully recovered their | "3 | Borde There will be no breaking | | through by the Allies 'on the west | this year, nor will there be an ex-| | tensive withdrawal of the German | | lines between Arras and Noyon." | i ---- | DEPORTATIONS CONTINUE | WOOL OVERALLS In colors grey, and black, in all sizes, priced at WOOL SWEATERS- In brushed shades and sizes, WOOL TOQUES--A year's values priced a - WOOL SETS--Comsisting of 8v brushed and shaker knit. WOOL MITTS--A splendid ran white, brown, scarlet, maroon 5c, $1.00, $1.25, $1.35, $1.50 and shaker knit wool--all wanted specially priced from $1.39 to $3.00. great assortment of solid and combination col- t 25¢, 30¢, 35¢, 45¢ and 50c¢. eralls, toques and sweaters, in the Priced from $2.25 to $4.50. All ge in black, white and colors. 35¢, 45c¢, 50c and 75c. FEE[STEACY's tilated xubjeets marching toward him | "The Woman's Store of Kingston." XMAS PRINTING EARLY ---- See Our Beautiful Line of Xmas Booklets & Cards { Antwerp and Ghent Are Being Slow. i ly Denuded. | London, Nov. 14 --Special despat. | ches from Rotterdam say that the| | deportations of Belgians continue | | daily on a large scale. Antwerp and | | Ghent, the despatches fay, are being { { slowly denuded of able bodied males, | | Sixteen thousand have already left | { Ghent, { | The men deported from Ghent | | have been almost exclusively of the | unemployed class, hut elsewhere, the despatches say, and especially in Antwerp, there has been less dis- crimination, and it is alleged that ! many workers were taen. No men early than a day late. JOB Just the remembrance for our soldier fi | boys away from home and friends. If Better to have your order in a THE BRITISH WHIG Order | GOOD INTENTIONS ARE OF. {| TEN SPOILED BY PUTTING I week || f SR Now 1 OFF UNTIL TOMORROW. Golden Rule Service Publishing Engraving Duplex and Weekly Envelopes Embossing DEPT. as yet have been taken from Brus- { sels, but it is said that deportations | there will begin on the fifteenth. "According to stories eurrent in Holland, says the despatches, in the' | "raided towns, many men were, | pounced upon suddenly and escorted | | away by armed guards and not per. | mitted to communicate with friends. | Attempts to escape the searchers are | { futile. Harborers of men who are | to be deported are severely punished. | | Hunger forces hiders to surrender. | | Wire barriers and machine guns are | placed around the stations where | men are to be entrained lest the trowds threaten to make trouble. BAD COLD? TAKE ! Paris, Nov, 14.-~The newspapers, while printing the news of the Am- i J BOWELS TONIGHT erican election in a prominent posi- | tion, express little opinion ag to the | They're Fine! Liven Your Liver |'®5ult. What comment and Bowels and Clear {fympathetic to President | Your Head. = The "Petit Journal" -------- dent Wilson's victory is highly satis. factory to us for two reasons: The first is"that for tour years American foreign policies will be free from wil electoral considerations, as the con- stitution forbids President Wilson from seeking a third term; the second reason is tiat the result of the elec tion must put new life into American neutrality. Evidently. an immense majority of the electorate pr d against war, but, apart from the mil- lions of voters who approved the vigor with which the President forced the Germans to cede on the submarine war question, other millions voted for Hughes because he demanded an even firmer defense of American rights. The chief executive is ob- liged to take into account this double wish. Just as Hughes could not have ignored the verdict against war, so Wilson must 'tithe condemnation of 3 dine 3 Jolity ; 3 {which Roosevelt has characterized as this candy cathartic and it is often. backboneless all that is needed to drive a cold from | The "Matin" and the "Parisien" ex. thelr little systeps. Wilson. says: '""Presi- Get a 10-cent box, Colds--whether in the head or any part of the body--are quickly over- come by urging the liver to action and keeping the bowels free of poi- {son. Take Cascarets tonight and you will wake up with a clear head and your cold will be gone. Casear- ets work while you - sleep; they 'press the same view. The latter pa- "C " FOR | Says Result Should Put New Life In- i to American Neutrsiity, take into comsideration|tq Binding Loose Leat PHONE 202 Systems, Business Office 243 306-310 KING ST. a EXPECT FIRMER STAND NOW. =n "rt Parlor Furniture ! y there is is| Special Lines have been added to our fall stock. Three-piece suites, $18.00, $25.00, $30.00 and up. TEA TABLES AND PARLOR TABLES PATHE--The most remarkable in the world. Ask for R. J. REID, Leading Undertaker Per concludes: "It is because he play- ed a4 very honorable role in a mio- ment of grave crizis that the Ameri} €an people have renewed their man-! date to President Wilson. In 1912 he! owed his election to the division of his adversary. This time he owes it | his pres tige. to his electoral cam- paign and to the confidence which he! desery, It is possible thai his earer policy will now become aspen role ad Pee ub a 5 deter. rer, profiting by his experi- | mine, champion of the flaw of na- on ta Sting Play 2 Jarseriqnas "7 STC 2 D0 IAN of v &