THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, S ATURDAY, JUNE 6, 1008. es YN PAGE SEVEN. -- -_ ------ - -- Misy Spangenberg's, Johnson trot. | Mrs. M. McKay, of Toronto vas in| 3 exte and ted ab invitation to. the King. | .. GRAND OPERA HOUSE, to see her, at the tea hour, ou 1 burs |e this week, on her way to Gan ston workers to attend. He said that : +3 G 1d : day, abl had a pleasant litth bat | Box ve. ti Lil " J satue of the best Meas fore of mis Sian, {Fiske Company Concludes En. 0 over o ime { Bon voyage to Miss Lillian ovat | and also some of the best workers | gagement This Evening in - - - land Miss May Ross who sailed, to | would be present, at this meeting il OCAL 1 ES AN TH GS at 2 . Mes. A. P. Knight, Alice street, was day, for England. AT THE CLOSING SESSION | Rev. Mr. Gupn visited the west last | RO NDI IN 1. Zhe Lisks i sOMBANY . H the : e verande 0 Miss Blackburn, of Ottawa, is stay- | OF THE C.C.W. B.M. tall and he told of the advauce made fa i ---- Th Opera a Ey Fr € & wee as b alr ob { hostess at a little verandah tea- yes © terday. ing with Mrs. Robert Meikle, Clergy {in the work there, telling a great wilight - - - | stroet. 5 lg ¢ Given C ._ |many interesting and not a few amus- | Occurrences In The City And | | autionee present, The company pre- The crojuet season is on in earnest! Mrs, John Davidson, of Toronto, | © atemen "a. h Loncerning fe! stories of the home life of the re- Vicinity--Other Brief Items of |"! 8 high-class bill, "Forget Me POPPI P IRI Ta RVI | vow, and, daily, the three greens at wus in the city for a day this week Expenditure of Money--Rev. W. | dents. He described, in detail, the Interest Easily Read And Re | {Ne ods Sand it was handled ig a oredit ¥ ; the park are the scene of many bard! Dr. K. 8. Richardson gnd bride, To- | T. Gunn Speaks on "Home | much talked about "sod shacks' on aeph d Gay Te Maiey a first-class company : The surprise party at Mrs Charles | uoht patties for the stake ronto, will spend the week-end, with | iife On The Prairies." {thi prairies. He also told of the hard. A Bo lL o-night the company will make itayiny Low's, Union street, on Thursday oie {Mr. 'and Mrs, A. E. Hunt, [Princess| i f «hips of the settlers as a result of These are about the longest days of | weal appearance mo the city and ill -gvening, was a¥greal success I he A van load of cadets of the pecond | treet. | The closing sodsion. Of the Canada inot being able to get their supplies | the year | present one of A hear best plays, "The verandah and lovely lawn shared the fo 0 and some of the yor ger' girls | -e Congregational Woman's Board ol | regularly, because of the long dis Juy foot powders at Gibson's Red Shadows Uf Midnight. honors with the big drawing-room, {ieft at hulf-past two for n omic down | Mrs. Hiram Calvin gave a very de | Missions was held an the First Con {tances they had to travel. Cross drug store. Phone 390. § -- where dancing was going on, and loo Biieas shove. | ightiul 'tea, yesterday, for Miss Bessie | gregational | chur h, last night. The i -- The CPR. will give out the elec Mrs, Leslie-Carter In "Du Bary, many a couple found their way out L - ae ow» oyd. The affair was rather jm. | Convention just losed was one of the | THE SPORT REVIEW. tions returns in the city hall on Mop-| The coming of Mrs. Leslie-Carter, there. The girls who got the affair Mrs. 'T. J. Rigney will not hold her | promptu and seemed all the pleasant- best ever hed by the sotiety, aud the {day night. {the foremost dramatic artist of out up were : Miss Madge Taylor, Miss post-nuptial reception until the au-ler om that account. Mrs. James Hen- workers will now enter upon anothay | Baseball Teams Should Practice | Lime juice," in pints and quarts. | time, is a matter for general congra Mamie and Miss Susie Anglin, Miss tun, neither will she establish * any | drie 'was in charge of the tea and cof: year's work with remewed vigor, as a | 2 Together. Fresh at Gibson's Hed Cross drug | tulation. Mrs. Carter will be seen a Jeanie McCann, Miss Isabel I'ol=on, particular "doy" till then, but will, | feo, with Mrs. J. C.> Connell cutting result of the able addresses delivered F Pour vastiall ame worked oot ak store. Du Baréy in David Belasco's play of Its Miss Jessie Dickson, Miss Lenore fiowever, be glad to see her friends at | ids. Lemonade had Miss Florence and the most cncolraging reports pre- | he cricket field on Friday evening Thomas Mooney, late of Napanee, |like name, at the Grand on Tuesdawg rigilo Homion, Miss Haddon Higgins, ioe any, time through the summer. | Cunningham as its dispenser, and the sented by the vargus hinhches 4 she | ad all put. in' Saiety oo Ring, died on May 30th, fn Kamloops, B.C., | June 9th. 11 was in this great drama Ri TO ae Mise Glades B ten gaa girls. assisting were Miss Bessie Gor on he ioe resident, Secupied "she Ji the teams would bunch together apd SHEP eight JON it in an' eta that Mrs. Carter achieved her greats A thei ns srare = Cadets Me. Cyril Bight came down from don, Miss Minnie Gordon, Miss Mabel chaic. at Jast picht's session. and af-| ore, and be a little more friendly in |, I. v ie gal 3 an BE Lent triumph. She is great in this play mong their partners wore pele Toronto for. the week-end, and is with | Brownfield, Miss Beatrice Tandy, Miss pir at ls PE ody the Lucactice a far better workout for all this week which was 3 in. by 7} Hor the reason that she is tempi Fa Hamon, _ fed Power, Mr Me. Mrs. A.V. Knight, Alice street. Marion Redden and Miss Bessie Rich- | *°%. Jevotional cxetises; EE Fi ms would be secured. I the four | '™:? weighing 14 ounces. : mentally fitted for this impersong Ee a ry Mr Charles . - - - - rdzon, 3 he tea tahle ps extremely delivered Ee the tena, Miss | cams would join for the evening and | uy tnleuin, powders ~ eons Red gation, and it calls upon her to exett Livingston, My. C. Campbell and Mr. |, Congratulations fell to Mr, Pense's | pretty with Persian lilacs in o wicker Emily Thompson, on "Where Our have a good stiff game they would pe the as . t you I I -- ee Vimast: YAS Ting' Mprtin. lot this week, when he attained his basket. Amon, the uests were Mrs. Monéy Goes," and the second by Rev, [get far more practice than thdy would ain) hy he a Sortinl you fave n the whole range of the drama one sixtieth birthday, though so far js ho kT. Taylor, Mrs. T. I). R. Hemming, | w of Gunn, the general secretary, by merely knocking out the ball. The to choose rom In ugh-ciass candy atlwill seek far and wide for another from looking the part his friends think ' Mrs. Edward J. B. Pense, Miss Elsie who spoke ok "Home Life On he way they practice now is all right in Gibean ¥ Red ross drug store. Me | such role as that of Du Barry, --one he must have accidentally moved on | Pense, Mrs, Walter Macnee, Mrs. Fran- Prairies." he hole was present, and [some ways, but it does not include Conkay s and Huyler's ae sold there. | that at all approaches it for variety class cadets gave, on Wednesday, the wheal of time. 'la cis Macnee, Mrs. Howard Folger, Mrs. |, iicted in the musical part of the base running, very little hase throw- ---- 1 a th o : . and BiyTigse But it must he takenin were : Miss Grace Hemming, Miss Mes. Rober Meikle, Clergy street, | John Macnaughtgn, Miss Keekse, Mrs. programme, and Miss Hazel Massiv | {ing, and there is none of the snap and i a tent - -- be i d 5 . ol to account that the story that this Mildred Cooke, Miss Mildred Jones street, returned, yesterday, from Ot- | James Cappon, Miss Alice Macnee, | fv red with a fie solo. action in it that there is in a good | MOT™CS last Week, oth dying rom play tells is one of the most tre ment; Mise Lota Caren. Miss Litlian Kent, tawa. Mrs, John Bell Carruthers, Miss Marie | nico Thompson gave a very inter- | work out. Old ball players, whe have hn, Tp ind i dous known to history, the rise of Miss Dorothy and Miss Marjory . : - - Carruthers, Mrs. Jeremy Taylor, Mrs. esting review of the successful work | ollowed the game for years, and who is b re ri m Ret on Jeanelte Vaubernier the little millin Brownfield, Miss Marie and Miss Mra. J. 0. Crisp, Portsmouth, and | Cornelius Bermingham, Mrs. R. Wal being carried on. During the year the [take such an interest in the city lea- ua 0 , Hhson 8 "FOSS | or of the Rue St. Hounore, to fhe su I i ' Es : uy . ) py 2 Miss Kathleen, intend leaving about! drom, Mrs, Alexander Kirkpatr ok sum of $3,205 bad been raised, amd of gue teams that they turn out to see drug store. Phone 230. preme power, next to Louis U8 The merchant who is shire that ad | Francs, It is an enthrilling a vertising doesn't pay, as a rule, gets {gaking first rank among modern ; his goods, as far as possible, out on Jotnys. ie the gidewalk, and that's one kind of MG 5 o> -> -> The girls whom Mrs. F. D. Laflerty chaperoned to the picnic the first- Dorothy Carruthers, Miss Portia Mac- kenzie, Miss Phyllis Short, and Wise the end of the month for Halifax. Miss Molson, Mrs. R. C. Carter, S% | this amount, $2,610, or eighty per {them practice, have made the abo Trene Swift. The party left the Yacht { Mik. Palliott, who is now in New | {Madelon Carter, Mrs. H. W. Richard cent., had been devoted towards for- | tatemept, that the teams should join York, was not able to come on with son, Mrs. Herbert Horsey, Miss Con eign and home missions. In regard to | ogether for their practice. Mrs. F. W. Alhree when she returned stance Cooke, Mrs. a H. 1 andy, Miss | the work in the North-West, this year, | Two good:games of baechall were | from Atlantic City, but is expected at Lottice l'andy, Miss Bessie Smythe, | the sum of = #300 had been given for [pulled off in the cricket field this af- advertising salt street. has a splendid] "The Lion And The Mouse." +4y od : was the destination, looked its love Closeburn" in a few days' time. Miss Etta and Miss Lilla Callaghan, | the + work in Saskatchewan. Some t:rnoon. At two o'clock the Vie in Be f conta' he ep : After witnessing "The Lion and the liest. The pienie was decided to he Mr. and Mrs. John Best returned to 'Mrs. W. B. Dalton, Miss Lorraine Dal: | wore very anxious that th® amount | orias and C.L.C. met for the first SHOFe a Re. ane ouse," which "He wry B. Harris wiligse }- « Vel \o Peterboro, to«lay, after their visit {ton Mrs. Allaire Shortt, Mrs. A. P. 2 . : a uaa ready-made clothing at low prices. The * » hx the very best ever. » Yoiay, er , NO! be doubled, and an effort would "be | ime this season. and at four o'clock lor departuient well assorted with | offer at the Grand © on Wednesday ow a to Mrs. Louis 'I'. Best, Union sireet. | Knight, Miss Gertrude Strange. "The | made to see what could be done in the | he Mie-Macs and RCHA. came to ure er ep - eo . 3 | . i fit {June 10th, one .is willing to heliovyy The battery officers intend making -> ~~ "-- verandah fand lawn were very much way of increasing this grant. It had | ether. ow goods. WE cans Yau ane A [that it possesses every essential of . the first ball, at the barracks for ; Mrs. Arthur Matheson and her little {patronized during the afternoon. been frequently remarked that the as- | eunsantond. ' aise beolut pe ricctly constructed play In amas many years now. as brilliant as the | gif}, have Trturyed to Ottawa, Fon - sociation paid all ite attention to Lacrosse Practice. i wy Cnr gana an et 1 tie 'strength it is unequaled bY Alive sceonses of the long ago, so that it |. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Pense came || The hostesses at the golf club tea, | foreign missions, and that nothing The lacrosse teams had one of the pV Ores 0 BER i am he am thing seen on the stage for PI is certain thit this generation which |Jown, to-day, em Toronto. this, afternoon, were Mrs. Richard [was done on behalf of home missidus. |} of w rl uts of the year at th Bateglm 1, Lamp on oe on tion; its story is fascinatis § i ot han been invited to Tete de Pont. for | Mrs. Herbert Horsey will not go up Hooper, Mrs. Howard Folger, Mrs. [it was true that the interest taken | ¢ Ficket field Friday evening lores Youday- or b a Were rel Leating and intenrely Ton the dest 8 1 * 3 + a + hp ) 3 ph . 2 Lev . p 5 3 » . qe pe ™ s 8 2 ' next Wednesday evening. will believe [to her simer home, at Point Plea- {Campbell Strange, Mrs. W. St. Pierre | in the North-West was not as great as | 460 being out for work. '1 - boys | I this 'ape of egitation. for pure, [acters are men and women promine | | Club, some in the war canoe, some in frailer, smaller craft. The afternoon was perfect, and the Ridean, which the tales of mothers and aunts re- sant, till next Wednesday. : Hughes, Miss Bessie Gordon, Miss heretofore, but the work was progress- |. "ory anxious to secure a game Jo toads, it is refreshing ta. k in the social. financial and politic garding the jollity of the old regi- Mrs. Clinton Crawford, of Balti- ' essie and Miss May Smythe, Miss ing very iavorably. The gpeaker em hE cure | clean foo it is refreshing to know a ad, | er ; mental balls, more, who was, the guest of Mrs. W. Mabel Dalton, Miss Lettice Tandy and | phasized the fact thét the amount | 3 Oo 2 0 Tn © see | that "Salada Tea is sold to the | WO LA La hl wy are made ati Sh a . : a : a he ; what they dre like They should have | public in all its native freshness and |to act jist like the types we ove fa- "oe ee J, Fair, Kio street, went down to | Miss Bessie Richardson, raised for missionary work stood for Yeouble in. dele a I 4 Cher] The week has been busy with pav- | Cornwall, this week, to visit Mrs, | oe a a great deal of self-sacrifice, and that h We 4 ob : ne JenAnOYues as | ragrance, pre Served in sealed ait Jom 3 rig? nt i Rin hue hi ing and receiving of visits, people Frederick Davies. Mr. Crawford came | Mrs. William G. Anglin, Earl street, | God's blessing was resting upon the ¥ iy wets dulea tat in their own town! tight packets, direct from the gardens en othe P! AYE Ww rie r have brought = » res being i ro oir « iences | on from Baltimore, this week, and has | save vlensant little tea, yesterday, | workers oy Broekvitle, who proved only fa {to the consumer, .inguring a cup of [him very prominently before the pub ing anxious to get their consciences s , 2 Ja a pleasa a, Vy ay, | workers. fivcht lunch for the oc) Vietor El he . Nie i , clear of these duties hefore startine [also gone to Cornwall. They will 're- | in honor of Miss Portia Mackenzie Rev. My. Gunn, in his opening re- (1% ws The mA on I pig jen in perection hitherto unknown. { lie; but he has never created one that off on their summer holidays. and [turn to Mrs. Fair's the end of 'next | Miss Mamie Anglin was her mother's | marks, extended to the convention Day. 'amps Bre trying lo be Jar Luke Krink ollins Bay, died on | has carned "the ok op RY atitude of all also before the rush of June caiety | Week, and picking up Miss Ruth Craw- [deputy and did the honors very | the greetings of the Foreign Mission ranged ith hoth Belleville and Ge | Monday morning, after a short illness, | those who witness "The Lion and the begins, ford, who is still here, will go on to prettily. Miss Susie Anglin and Mish | ary Society of the chureh, and took |*"o1"* ! dates can be secured {He sufieved a stroke of paralysis from | Mouse - a Niagara and home that way. Eva Richardson were chiefs of the tea | occasion to explain that the past { which he never rallied. Deceased was | A, few very old friends of Mra. J. 8, Mrs. James Bennett, Clergy street, { things, and their helpers were very | year had been an unusuaily good one | Tennis At Queen's. {aged about ecighty-two on nd c bell Bros' Putch, of Montreal, dropped into |#0e8" down to Montreal shortly. efficient. The guests were Miss Nora | for the cause of missions. The re Queen's College tennis courts are he- {leaves a widow and twelve children : ampbe ros A Cordon, Miss Graco Hemming, Miss | ceipts for the year ran over $6,000, | oming quite popular now, and every | You can lengthen the life of your For nobby outing hats, be. up Ans - Marion Lesshie, Mise Mildred Jones, | and the debt of $5,000, of a vear ago | ay large numbers of students are | house and give it a distinctive per it _ " a} Miss Dorothy Brownfield, Miss Phvilis' had been cut down to $000. The exe- | ver playing. Many are getting in| sonality amonyst its fellows with the : eben sees #1 hort, Miss Marie Carruthers, Miss | entive wag pow in a position to en- | raining for the tournament in the |'8® of Ramsay's Paints, guaranteed Are Your Hands Chapped ? No dl ~» orothy Carruthers, Miss Lenore | ter upon new work. all, and will practice all summer, The | the very best, full measure full va Spon they will crask open, perhaps or seimer Steinway" Hamilton, Miss Christine Cochrane, | The speaker alse extendell the greet. | ourts are kept in fine condition all Jue, at fair hoticst prices. W. A. Mitch foster and cause puin that can he Miss Mamie Garrett, Miss Hilda Kent {ings and sincere thafks of the Home | he time. jel has them and will show you the {avoided by rubbing on Dr. Hamil-*tessw Pianos Pianos 1}! and Miss Charlie Short. Missionary Society for the able assis i | splendid range of eolors ton's Ointment. So pure ani healt; (Continued on page 5.) tance rendered by the Woman's Banrd 1 Only one place in Kingston you can | EE ---- so powerfully antiseptic is De. Homil Warehouse: KIRKPATRICK'S ART STORE, 159 Princess St. | pn of Missions, He announced that a [buy high-class candy. Gibson's Red | 'Re sure that vou cannot better con-|ton's Ointméat that al) skin irtithe Ln i ; 5 Cs Many a man's wife is not his silent | summer sc hool would be held = at | Cross drug store sell Huyler's and ditions before vou are content to let | tion is cured at once Try Dr. Hamil sas Whithy, opening on July 2d, and | McConkey's. A them regain as they are ton's Ointment yourself, FinEREs } partner. yg vil » » ' Housekeepers, | A Decided Drop in | HANDSOME SHOWING Attention ! "Coons NET AND LAC HORQCKSES, 36 IN. WHITE COTTON, FORMERLY 14c BLOUS . 3 Cases of Irish | "noah ae ENGLISH PILLOW COTTON, formerly 20¢ d : ' y PHRerY 2k yurd. Mw. 15: White, C Black. New York Styles. $4.50 yard. Cream, ENGLISH SHEETING, fine strong quality, Bleached and to $18.00 each. Linen Remnants guaranteed free of stagfch. Se Formerly 30c. dow 27}c. yard wil Kitten Tove so SII Ralls he | SUMMER STOCKINGS Table Linens | Reliable & Desirable Reliable Qualities = Moderate Prices BLEACHED AND UNBLEACHED, 14, 2, 2{, 21, 3 yards long. YOR CHILDREN, in Black, Tans, Whit, 15 ty #56. 20 35ec., 40c. a Blac oods FOR LADIES, Black or Colors, in Plain and Fancy Styles. A very large assortment. M Balb 0 es508 2%in e n 5 dE S { F by ack a ue - : riggan BLACK JAPANESE SILK, for Blouses and' Dress . in. R YS, Hea and Fine hs, 1n lac and ANS, guaran wide, guaranteed to wash, 50c., 60c., 75¢., 90¢,, $1. teed to wear, 15¢c., 20c., 25¢., 30c., 35¢., 40c. Underwear ALL BLACK MUSLINS, inPlain and Fancy effects, best er -------------- ---- ------ priate Dictate NEW EMBROIDERIES Shirts, in long and short sleeves. n ong 8 or BLACK WOOL TAFFETA, for Summer Dresses, light and Drawers, in Ankle and Knee lengths, sizes 32, 48 igches, 50c., cool, all wool, 50¢c., 60c., 75¢. IN WIDE OPEN EFFECTS, FOR CORSET COVERS, 25c. to 90¢ yard. Ladies' Lisle & Summer White Lawn Aprons FINE SWISS EDGINGS, BEAD- INGS AND INSERTIONS sts each ' orth 75¢., 80¢., for 50c. A ery large variety, all new styles. Long and short sleeves, all sizes. * ns IEANTS Licht Sumner woul Vests, long and vor srs. | © Dont's Celebrated $1 Silk Gloves : To-Night, 7.30 O'clock to YS Nigran Shirts and Urnwes, vary Sestred wu, ¥304 (BLACK), name in every pair. Will out-wear Kid. ial Sale | Bp Waldro: Ul R. Waldron 30 MENS WHITE COTTON 800 Muslin Drawers, Corset | : NIGHT SHIRTS ; Covers, Blou s es for 12l4¢ Each \ Brock & Welling ton Made of Heavy Twilled and Plain Cottons, neatly : / BAe i A : : : : p gute i Bg trimmed. Extra long and wide; All sizos. This is alnvost giving these garments : Streets. * worth up as high as $1.35 For 68¢ Each a yx | » i All sizes up to 17} inch. : 2