Style for Men t of Sey 5 lent in the Semi-rcady Wardrobes, efully selected by men who have That is their forte. | refined taste. " We need fewer things and All your belongings should want them better. mean something to you." So W illiam . Morris said. cs is made distinctive and elegant by expression: " are well-dressed when your cofrect ouf exact measure. - The ** finishing ™ : than two hours--mostly less. From quality. Tailoring Bibby Co., sess Street. JR FAMILY ? ve SHOES for every mem- ho must have Spring Heels, he head of the house, We y are of proper material and hile the important pbint-- This fall we are showing rat $3.00, American made le in Kingston of the Men's ers at $4.00. This is an ourse, up-to-the-minute in the strongest line in the and & Bro, d Shoemaking. 1, having a most magical , machine grease, paint, ete, and may be used resh, salt, hard or soft aterial beneficial to the harmful. Itis especially hing by all whose work SUPERIOR TO ANY SE. 10c. Per Box. " & BIRCH CK STREET. the Week. 'eS, mirror in back. $12.00. J ine glass front. Regu- 530.00 for $25 318.00 for $13, 2 ds, Extension Tables pen Bed for $18.00. REID, J Princess Street. ['S corres FS pens alb.--2 Ibs, for 75 cts, ERYWHERE. Wholesale Teas, Coffees, T., MONTREAL, Cane. Spices, onnoisseurs! ~ It 1s subtle; suggestive ' strony winds: bore acavy: . da Forum, the Forum itself, the temple clouds that very littl of Jupiter and the baths of the Sta- The. shocks soon cams | ere unearthed. Some time alter tervals, the stiee and t ses in the sin of Abundance flied. with . smoke. Th streols re hrought to hh Though the alive with - the screaming of womer reater part , of the work has been and tho cries of childs Ros finished, hi year brings forth new raising their be a Tus. alifactive. aity may be praver. others intoy 3 ched hy eight different gates were running about ly ed the Gate of Herculanium, Vesu- the sky became: ro an vius, Capua, Nel, Sarna, Nocera, winds Were ontryi fro \ vies, 'and lastly hie. pte of the men and women ably pani w the port of Maris From stricken and fied ic Ve { these eight gates ran three princi al aries 'latér when: excavations were avenues kpown as Ud Rue de Sta- beeun. 'mothers were found ving l the Rue d# Nola and Abundan- children, one womay a «© i ing her husband's trousers and Iho ali tae houses were destroy- key to the house: another had 1 oF se J + been restored enough to slipped into her embroidered slippers. | si their past. beau teautiful In the banacks, we two. vies covered the Hoor, the Atrium vladiators who were unable to maks adoraed with marble, tables, their - escape. Some = entive familie s, statues and benches and stools - A father as found carry-. About the Atdgme, were found a lib- ing a gold sheep to bh ubtes rivy, reading room, 8 eption room, ranean passag bedroom amd dining i hove were followed by a lam, smaller apartments u for the ser- OPAC LLY TALLY a sack of gold He. vauts. Ti more spacious houses fel before he reached his tiny. were adorned with splendid columns i > : chile his: family of twenty were wait- avd small garden The chmirs aod i I'he traveller looking for the first | Storto "Respect the Judgment of the ing for him in a subterrancan pass. bed were made of bronze and hand time on the lovely 5 covered | Emperor" and agam in a shop inthe agé comely carved the. walls are sull mountain of Vesuvius finds it hard to | street Stabies, "Long live the It was hot inany vears belo bright in places with frescoes repre believe that it has tried time and | judgment of the Emperor and the terrible catastrophe fory senting men and women, gods and again to destroy wonderiul eultivated | Empress, be obedient and you will [and the city abandoned. It was not » revelling at banquets farms and thousands of lives. He is always be happy." The wealth of the [until 1754 when the building of =a Ihe vestibule or atrium was some: surprised and disappointed both wher soil and the thrift of the inhabitants {road on the south side of the city led times adorned with splendid mosaics he is told that Vesuvius' is now had helped to make it a wonderfully 'to the unearthment of some tombs | representing the Muses: again a chain smouldering and has been in active [interesting and attractive city when a {and ancient monuments. Though seve- od dog with the motto Cave Canem eruption and that the government re- | terrible earthquake destroyed it en- [ral finds were made it was not until (Beware of the dog.) Many of the fuses to let the tourists make the as- {tirely. The first shock came on the 1507 that the excavation was begun 'bronze knockers w heh adorn the cent !5th of February 63, B.C.. and two ' seriously. | houses are so beautiful they have been He takes a carriage and drives | other shocks soon after. Men and wo A number of large houses were ex placed in. the mussums at Pompeii through many Jl towns, attractive | men jumped out of bed, gathered in cavated, including the villa of Diome and Naples : 2 because of their fertile, well cared rroups and questioned whether the des and the house of Sallust. Queen Ihe Atrium in the houses of the farms. The thrifty, contented farm ought to remain where they were, or Caroline took a great interest. in the wealthy had a fountain. Jt was not work from carly morning until late | lee to thie country. The houses were finding of the hidden treasure, the unusual to find a bust of the master night, not realizing the harm that | shaken by long shocks that came at viila of Diomedes, was cleared the of the hou ¢ there. The bed-rooms may come fo them at any time | intervals_as though it were going to tombs, the house of 'ansa and the were sma for the most part ar The excavations and ruins disciose | tear the houses from the very founda- creat amphitheatre. King Murat gave ranged chiefly for hght the fact that centuries ago Pompeii { tions Men and women hesitated to liberally to the « arrying out of the Many of the diningstooms were very was one of the most powerful and im- | ro out of doors, because of the stones work. Little by little from 1515 to spacious, in } _ mansions, ther perialistic of Italian cities. One can | flying in many direction 1560 the Temple of Fortune. the were two, one for winter and another read words to this eficet in the Vicoli | Dawn gradually came. but the Temple of Apollo, the baths of the lor summer @ Shs $04 [OOOO P REMARKABLE ESCAPE. French Deputy Steps Drom Train | at Speed. Oct. 19.--M. Fernard Rabier, Chamber of Paris the vice-president of the Deputies, has had a marve Jlous escape from death while travelling from Bor | aux to Orleans | d | Early this morning M. Rabier, who {was but Lali-awake, leit his output ment and which thought ded to the lavatory. He -- ped forward and fell from the train, | which at the travelling | at the miles an mao opened a door moment was rate of thirty-six He lay stunned for , but on ome recovering was find that, beyond a aistained no in- | the line in| agree | | An Early Order jinry. He walk r Is so much better than a search of assis soon came to late rush order. It gives @ ia gatekeeper . where his contu- | you our best service in Q |sions were bandaged. A second train | screening, hauling, and de- roing to Orleans was stopped, ar od ¥] y | Rabier resumed the journey which ha | been so dramatiée ally intercupted. M. Rabier, provided by the gate keeper with a red lantern, returned along the line until a train approach livering. It's good for our drivers and our horses, and you'll get the most satis. factory wend of the bargain yourself. Order early. led in the right direction. He ther TheFrontenacLumber § iii' dw neon ant stop he rain. | | and Coal Company. £ == -- i Fraderic onter Frankford, has] p A. CHADWICK, Manager } gore into the store business @& Bucocessors of The Rathbun &| Rev. James Faulds, for erly: i Company. Phone No. 87. | ol the Presbyterian church, in Rar. 2 | mora, has accepted a call as assistan SROPLIOTHS400000000004 { pastor in one of the leading chur ches : o | of Rochester rye SHOP S090 ¢ { F. Rollins has been appointed wlark y the late Hn 4 of Stirling, 5 SuCTessot <0 AL ol. Halliwell. - A LS _-- -- sudden. one rd 2) | It's At First Beginning of Pain. | putting Jn Some ood Coal. We That treatment 'should be most vig- il good is the kind that orous. Get relief at the start Twin- a oe Moat hou, iv a { ge= of rheumatism are the first indica- the best money cem buy, | tions of inflammation. N thing wub- thers is pone better mined. | dues inflammation like Ner . Peue- We deliver it to you clean and | {rating deeply into thie tissues, being withor t slate, at the very bottom thes. stronger har other in beyond the comprehension of pever used it, Nervi- Prices i worth its BOOTH & CO. Sioss: whe us ine 8 1 Phone 133. Foot of West Bt weight in gold. 500666660098 000600008, | All dealers. 25 ments, those who "have saver is Have vou tried it for a large bottle "I'm Married * al The Grand, to-night. Now, , A Scene From Its fragrant steam, a golden dream, ts Bavor too, will just suit you, So buy it, try it, drink it, do. THE CANADIAN B OF COMMERCE HEAD Ol ICE, TORONTO az ! i | 8. B. WALKER, President | ALEX. LAIRD, General Manager A. BH. IRELAND, Superintendent of ; i | | Pai a up! apital, a Rest, - - - _ 5.000,000 Total Assets, = ns ,000,000 Branches wrouchout Canada, and if the United States and England Branches ANKING BY MAIL % Business may be 'transacted by mail with any branch " of the Bank. Accounts may be opeued and depesita | = | made or withdrawn by mail Every attention is paid | to out-of-town accounts. KINGSTON BRANCH, CORNER OF KING AND PRINCESS STS Barton The family aiways reclined on bench. es. The husband took the head «of the table, his wife was on one side of him and his son on the other. The guests were placed on other benches, according to their rank. The ban- quets were sometimes sumptuous and lasted for hours { The museums in Pompeii: and Naples show that beautiful - statues were plentiful in Pompeii, they adornad the houses, the streets' and the temples, Apollo was adorned with a statue of Apollo and a Duna in bronze that surmounted the arch, A magnificent bust of Jupiter was taken from tne temple dedicated to that god. The most famous of the bronzes is the Dancing Fawn found im | the streets of Nola and the Satyr in the house of the CUentenaire. The Fawn represents the joy of life sus tained by physical strength. The other shows a voung Batyr pourine water from a beaker. Every line of the body aud grace. The same ar The temple of shows ease tistie touches were given to the bronze and silver dishes, vases and lamps. Some were shaped in the form if faces, others were decorated with vichest embossing. The house of | Pansa, the poet, is sulliciently well | | preserved to show how beautiful Pom- pei was before it suffered destruction The house of the Rich Man was the largest private house in Pompeii. But this i« only a small part of the interesting things to be found there It is hard to imagine anvthing more splendid than the great Stabian baths worned with marble and mosaics. So large they could accommodate hun. dreds at a tine In keeping with this splendor are the ruins of the Forum, temples, the theatres and the gladiatorial barracks, Beautiful as are these ruins under an the great marble niles be. when the blood- Take NojChance. Buy the ROYAL. | SHOE . FORIMEN. PRICE $5.00 The highest class of Med's Footwear made in the United are y: Union Made material. The best Patent 1 azure sky, things of gokl come red sun goes down, whispering the yo. . » . Fie "nia ia the idle of Tie. joy Colt Skin, Vici Kid, Gua Metal Calf and and sorrow, beauty and destruction Velour. Calf that can be bought. Hugh . {ever playing hide aud seek with each | to ther class finish, superior fitting, com ind _shiape-retaining are the Se hranmristics o »f the Royal Shoes. x3 Widthsgirom B to EE. Reid & Charles, Sole Agents ' Successors to D. J. McDermott. a | ARE REWARDED. | Heroes Who Brave Death to Save | | Life. Pittsburg, Pa., Oct. 19 ~The _ { lar fall meeting of the Carnegie wg | Commission was held yesterday, and | F. M. Wilmot, tne secretary, announc- | es that twenty-four persons have re | 2 ceived awards for bravery. The num- Li ber is the largest in the 'history. of] Absolute purity and cleanliness in the manufacture "8 COWAN"S © awards 126 persons have os by PERFECTION sght by a cave-in of sand while at | { (@] OA the bottom of a decp well at Pierce: | ville, Kan. Nunn was suffocated and | King was slowly dying. Notwithstand: | (Maple Leaf Label) ing another cave-in seemed certain | Healthful and nutritious. ™e COWAN co. Limited, TORONTO 111 Princess St., - the hero fund and 1,121 persons have! been refused either money or medals. | For the first tune since the begin ning of the hero fund a negro received | a reward. The largest award was a gold medal | and 85,600 to Andrew J. Hodger of | Sante Fe, Kan. Mr. Hadger is county | superintendent of schools. Two men, | wh King and William Nunn were within a short time, Mr. Hodger had| * himself lowered into the well, and sav- | od King and recovered Nunn's corpse. | Ihe night after the there was another fall of a ton or more of sand into the well The money awarded Me. Hodger is 'to be used in educating his four child- | ren. rescue Everyday Heroes. Emil Carl Aurin, ju National Magezine. | he work om the great tall buildings That tower far up toward the sky, Or down in the mine's dark level } Where death is always nigh. | With death in a hundred guises They battle each duy in the year Without the notes of a bugle Or drum to give them cheer. have they to lsad them ; to spur them when Xo fag No glory I Tiwy stand face to face With danger But they stick to their posts like MEN. They ride in the cab of the engine As the train speeds through. | the night, {With the lives of scores dep On their reading the apr right. } | | i i | They stand at the helm of the vessel, : | 1893, where it received ninety-six i he i Rap pb ! As she tosses aml rolls in the gale; | Cr dling to the storm-swept Hei. i Ta furl the beating sail,