Daily British Whig (1850), 5 Jan 1914, p. 3

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HE SPORT REVEW | FRONTENACS MADE A ON THEIR TOUR. Without Practice They RFC on Lost Omly One Game In Four Games Played ~Detroit Sat Up and Took No- | SE [ The Frontenac hoc ky players arriv- od home from Vetroit; on Sunday morning. They speak in glowing terms of the? trip. The citizens of Kingston have need to feel proud of the boys, when they. consider that the team left the city without any ice practice, played four games and lost one. After leaving the city, last Mon. day evening, the team was matched against a conditioner outfit in Pres. ton. On this occasion the locals lost by two points. Wednesday evening a tie match was played at Sarnia. | After the . Frontenacs crossed the 'border, they showed Detroit that they could play the game, by winning both matches. This was a record at De troit, as Froutenacs was the first team to win two games in that city. The team also made a travelling re- cord, when it played four games in four days and also' journeyed between five and six hundred miles, On the trip home from Detroit the Sort Co) Is good coal rt prompt Booth & Co. Foot of West Sriet Bal Cures U ga Ho wong a ge oie of 'boys under the age of ben ty the Frontenacs played spectacu- Inr hockey. R. Millan, who played "a star game at centre, Sco points, once in the second half. His brother, "Perey" Millan, the rover for the | Canadian team, scored in the first bali. Taster and cleaner than any exhibition on the ice this year, was the clash between. Frontenacs and the Detroit arena hockey team on Fri- day evening. , Detroit Freo Press : "The Frontenaéa of Kingston, gave additional evidence Friday eveming that they are about as nifty a combination of puck chas- ers as any amateurs on skates." Toronto News on Frontenacs C. H. Good, sperting editor of the Toronto News, commenting on the teams 'comprising the senior O.H.A. grouping, says #There are not a few hockey cribics of the opinion just now that Mid- land and Kingston will provide the keenest competition in' the senior 0. H.A. and that if -theyv do not win out they will come pretty close to doing vo. The Frontenacs, carefully nursed along hy J. T. Sutherland, have been showing mighty good form on their present tour, aad will he a much harder proposition than they Frontenacs dropped offi at Toronto. _Therg. they witnessed the Quebec-Ta- ronto game, in the Arena, on Satur- day evening. When they arrived at the rink, the Toronto, of which Allan Davidson, a former member of Ffon- tenacs, is a defence player, were losing to Quebec, which led by 2 to 0. The cheering of Frontenacs seemed ta put new life into "Davie." A few minutes later he rushed up the ice for the first Toronto goal of the evening. The whole team seemed pull together and as a result Toronto won out by 6 to 3, -Pavidson landing three of the six goals. When it became: known at Detroit that a Canadian "team was to play in that ely on Thursday © evening the many « residents of Detroit, who are Canadians by birth, flocked to the rink. and cheered the local boys. to victory. Every man who accompanied the Frontenacs played well. (ook was a marvgl in the neta; Stanton and Fer | guson were faster than ever; Reginakl | Crawford, at 'centré, has improved | wonderfully; Brouse is going like a house on fire; while Boyer and Reid, the wing men, have improved great- ly since last winter, The - following juniors accompanied the seniors : Norman Millan, Rubia Millan;- Derry. "and W. Cooke. The management. of the team feels that after the showing which these juniors made in Detroit the local hockey fans on their present tour, and 'will be represented by the strongest junior squad that ever wore the umiform. On Friday evening the team which defeated the Americans by 5-0 1 was made up. of jumiors, with the exception of Brouse. Cooke, the New man at right wing, is certainly a "comer." = His play in Detroit was excellent. Cgpt. R. Millan, played his cool game at centre ice, His brother, "Terry," played a sfrong game at the rover position. On New Year's morning the = team got together at 'Sarmia and elected Rubie Millan as captain of the jun- ior outfit. No better choice: could have been made. With his brother, "Terry," at centre ice, the Milan family can certainly feel proud: of {fo hockey ability displayed by these Scalds, Burns, Bruises, Frost Bites, Old Sores, Ulcers, ete. and does it better and quieter than any other known healer. 25¢ and 50e¢. ' Guaranteed. Chilblain Cure Here Is a preparation - that instantly takes out all soreness and makes a permanent one of chilblains. 25 Cents All Best's % preparations do good and all are guaranteed. BESTS' The Satisfactory Drug Store. to 'COPYRIGHT . To You Ail. KEELEY k. - Optometrist We Grind the Lenses, | 8 Doors Above the Opera House urniture! Furniture! 2 15 to 20% off all Xmas and Fancy Goods | J Ko Wi UN OES OURAN I While in Detroit the local hockey: ists Were given two theatre parties and also a supper at the mew Fron- tenac cafe. The sporting writer in the Detroit Tribune .makes the following comment JENKIN'S HOOTING JANUARY SALE Commences To-day Every , [LP i fi (| AS > R. J. REID Leading Undertaker Phone 577 FALL SHOES Our men's tan storm calf | Dlucher, with viscolized : sole | eannot De beaten at $6.00. B skirt for T5¢ in our odd ! s ( OC 5 ; Other tans and blacks at : ae on 'trom $2.50 to Yeo. Custom shoes te order. article in the house at bargain prices. { I The first lady custom- er this morning pur- $3.00 under- chased 'garments. E. P, Jenkins - Clothing Co. { will undoubtedly were last season, when they were com- pelled to play without having more that two or three praétives. They give the St. Michaels hard battles both at home and at the Arena. Rankin has apparently gone ofl his game complefely and there does not seem to be any one capa- ble of filling his place. If he,is not able to play the Saints will be weak in centre jee and will be shorn their effectiveness. Kingston has a well-balanced team and their victories over Sarnia and De troit indicate that they are in pretty good shape for their opening game herd next. Saturday with Varsity." of much of easv Will Play Friday Evening Kingston Collegiate Institute team will play ita _. second game at the covered rink on Triday evening, when it meets Belleville. The local bunch are looked upon as win ning the group. The hockey Game Was Called Off The game botween Sarnia and Fron tenacs, which was slated for Satur- day evening, hud to be called off on account of the lack of ice. Hockey Notes." The Frontenacs are grateful Regiopblis for loaning the Millan to them for their tour. The junior Frontenacs will prac- ticg at the covered rink from 10 till 11 o'clock to-night, after which the teal vo play in Peterboro on Tues- day night will be picked. The play- ers will leave on the 12.20 trains Tuesday in charge of George Van- borne and "Senator" Powell. J. T. Sutherland has to go to Toronto on business, and will be unable to ac. company the boys. EEE to | | John "Turner, might have been t oh | ium man has been - ERNIE MARKS Who comes with his own co ED to the Grand for one week, commence , Ing Monday, Jan. £th Enver Bey, has been made minis- ter of 'war to Turkey. Trouble is feared from Russia over the appoint- ment. | * The federal government will build a dry dock at Esquimalt, B.C. Child Had Bronchitis Once people get acquainted with the wonderful control which Dr. Chase's Syrup of Linseed and Tur . pentine exerts over bronchitis, | whooping cough, croup and colds it iis not easy to persuade them that {anything else is "just as good." This iis why the imitators never get very | far f 5 1902 Ms. Fugene Tler, King street, Truro, N.8., wrote as follows: "From an infafit one of my child. ren was troubled with bronchitis and | the least cold would aggravate the | trouble. We could not get anything 'to help him, and were 'often great- ily alarmed. Hearing of Dr. Chase's | Syrup of Linseed and Turpentine as ia treatment for bronchitis, we used {it and are glad to state that it ef- { fected a complete cure, "If any of the children take a cold or cough 1 give this medicine, and have never known {t to fail toe bring relief." | | Mrs: Iler now writés that the. has since proven this o be a eure for whooping cough, ne would the house, Bot be without it ia the red the most | tallying once in the first and | younger | Y JANUARY 5 5, 9 4 TE DUCE ENCES" A SERMON BY REV. W. F. FITZ GERALD, A In St. Paul's Church on Sunday Fy. ening--The Bishop of Kingston Was the Evening Preached in St.! George's, St. Paul's church was filled on Sun- day evening when the vicar, Rev. W. F. FitzGerald continued ing of the series relating to the, papacy. ces, was his subject and. he ! based his very able discourse 'on Romans v,9: "Being not justi- {fied by His blood, wa shall be saved 'from wrath through Him." Mr. FitzGerald dealt with the idea 'of -indulgences, with their origin in the Roman Catholic chureh of the middle ages, and the effect; the prae- tice has had on the Roman com- munion, His reference was from his- tory, and he spoke in a scholarly manner. An indulgence, the remis- sion of a canomical penalty, was modernly concerned with the doe trine of souls in purgatory. The preacher dwelt upon the extent to which the Crusades in the middle aged were dependent upon indulgences. He declared that the granting of in- dulgences had always been a money- making agency, the two great sources of Roman church revenue being dis- peusations and these, and he quali- fied this. Mr. FitzGerald spoke in conclusion upon the basis = of this "man-made system of money making,' part of which was a false notion of God's forgiveness. \ The service was conducted by Cam- on 'x W. Grout, Canon E. Loucks and Archdeacon 0. G. Dobbs assisted. The choir 'capably led the singing portion of the service, . In St. George's Cathedral Rev. E. .J. Bidwell, bishop of King- feton, preached at the evening ser vice in St. George's cathedral, de- livering a fine discourse from John 4; And, the word was made flesh and dwelt among us (and the slory of the only begotten of the Fathen) full of grave and truth." The seedker dwelt upon the mysteries of the incarnation of Jesus Christ and how God became man, setting forth the ideals contained in the passage. f ------------------ WEDDED AT MERRICKVFILLE {The Newman Jakes Nuptials on { 30th of December Trinity church, Merrickville, was the scene of a pretdy wedding on Tues day, December 30th, when Miss Edna May Jakes, eldest daughter of Nr. and Mrs. J. J. Chester Jakes, was unit- ed in marriage to Wiliam Arthm Newman, B.Se.; of + Kingston. The ceremony took "place at nine o'clock and was performed by Rev. J. H. H. Coleman. The fair young bride looked particularly lovely in her gown of ivory bhrocaded charmeuse. She car vied a shower bouquet of bride roses, [ikea of the valley nnd maiden hair The bridesmaid was Miss Laure Jakes, sister of the bride, who was gowned in a handsome vostume palest ' pink, satin charmeuse, trimmed with white fur. Her ornament was the groom's gift, a pearl and peridot pend- ant. John Clark, of Smith's Falls, was best man, an intereeti fact in thiy connection being that his father, the late J. M. Clark, officiated ifr a sim ilar eapacity at the marriage of the groom's father, the late Michael New man. Mr. and Mrs. Newman leit at noon for a. wedding trip to western points, and on their return they will take up their residence in Kingston; the groom being a member. of the staff of Queen's University. - The bride wore away a smart tailored costume of navy blue serge, a black hat trimmed with os preys and black fox and ermine furs. The groom's gift to the bride wae a handsome diamond and saphire ring set in platinum. To the groomsman he gave a ped¥l scarf-pin. JOHN TURNER LOCATED He Was. (Il of a Fever In New York City. William Howland, of 196 King who feared 'that her rout, the man who suicided by . jumping off a ferry steamer between Windsor and Detrojt last week, haps received a let- ter from New You that the a fever in that city for some time, and was un- able to write. He is. con¥alescent and will soon be able to return home. He left Windsor aiter he last wrote to his relatives here, on Novehiber 26th. Ai- ter reaching New York he was stricken with illness, and being without friends, word could not be sent to his homg here. The young man has heey in an hospital for a month. Mrs. street, Weather Notes. The disturbance which was over the South ' Atlantic "states on Saturday; moved north-eastward, passing off the New Jerswy woast, and has caused heavy north- easterly gales near the shores oi the maritime province. The weatger has turned somewhat colder in Ontario and Quebec, and milder in the western provinces. . To- Convert lato Stores A permit has been takén out for the erection of a new frgut in the build: ing on Princess street, for years kuown as the Russell hotel, which is to be converted by the new owner, John Laird, into two stores. Captain James T. Borland, for merly a well-known: resident of Cape Vincent, 'aged ninety years, is oldest member of the county, having been made a Sir Knight in 1858 when George C. Sher eminent gy The C. P. R. steamer, Montrose, which left Halifax for London, suf- fered damage to her . machinery when sevaty milés out and bad wo return to Halifax. Eoin conviets. were kil ied at and fifi nded during a mut: iny. They were fired on by suard. laemadi sa of a re the in . ©. Balt and Fresh Water Lakes. : water lakes are alwnys only expansions of rivers, doe to the par tidular topographical configuration of t' valiey. They are all characterized hy the fact that the water that they re €-ive runs out either continuously or imtermittently and that the chemical consitution of their water remains constantly the same as that of the steams and rivers of the same region. Salt lakes, op the other hapd, are al- ways closed basins, without outlet, and their water 1s removed only by surface evaporation. These facts being well understood, we see at once why the former lakes contain fresh water and the others salt water. Water is na. ture's great solvent. Hardly a single substance, simple or compound, es capes its dissolving action. Conse quently the water that Sows over the earth's surface or in its dept! 3 con- tains constantly in solution substances that finally accumulate in the great common reservoir, the ocean, whose miss, removed only by evaporation, becomes more and more charged with saline matter, ------------ An Australian' Courtship. When William of Tree Fern made up to Kate Ryan the moon was bright and the weather was feeling good. He escorted her home over the two wile road, and never a word said he but Kate." poured the same remark into her shell- like dar. This went on for a week, and Kate bore it patiently, In the belief that when the moon waned and dark- ness was upon the earth and the sins thereof, William would be more ex: plicit. So one ddrk night she encouraged him all she could, but without making her bashful lover loosen his tongue-un- til the journey home was nearly com- pleted. Then be blurted it out. "Kate," be sald, "er"-- "Yes, William," sbe murmured. *"Er--a bloke wouldn't bave a dorg's chance with the pos sums tonight!" That settled Bill-- Sydney Bulletin. - Verlaine and the Burglars. According to a contemporary, a Par Is beggar, seeing an old man about to give him a balfpenny, showed his con. tempt for the gift by taking a silver coin from his own pocket and bestow- ing it on the almsgiver. Let us hope the recipient fared better than Paul Verlaine did under somewhat similar circumstances. - One night the poet woke up to find a couple of burglars in his 'room. Shortly . before he had been driven by poverty to sell every stick of furniture and was reduced to so touched by this evidence of dire poverty that they gave him a franc apiece and took their departure. "Un. fortunately," Verlaine bad to admit when be related the story, "both the coins were bad ones."~London Tatler. -------- He Curbed Cecil Rhodes. t~ Rhodes' masterfuiness and sense of fmportance met with little opposition, as a rule, but a little German clerk in the Transvaal government offices at taught him' a lesson. "Please attend to me at once!" thundered the colossus. "1 can't wait" 'When your turn comes, mister," replied the clerk. "Con- found you, man, don't you know who I am?" asked Rhodes. "Ob, yes, 1 know you, but don't worry about me," was the clerk's unruffled reply. "If you were in Cape Town I'd have you discharged at once!" roared the great man. "Yes," said the clerk, very cool ly, "I've heard they discharge people in Cape Town for doing their duty. But this isn't Cape Town--this is a repub- lic."--Manchester Guardian, ¢ Ruse of an Autograph Fiend. 'Autograph hunting sometimes proves & profitable pursuit. A French bohe- mian of the second empire, Ludovie Picard, made a steady income out of it for some years. His most successful coup was accomplished with a letter in which he posed as "one of the unap- preciated who Is meditating suicide and seeks for counsel and ald in this hour of sore distress." This effusion drew a number of celebrities, includ- ing Beranger and Heine. Lacordaire sent ten closely written pages, which were promptly converted into cash' Dickens also fell a victim and took the trouble to answer in French.' Eventual- ly Picard was shown up in the press by Jules Sandedn and had to seek an- other occupation.--London Chronicle, A Threat or a Promise? Jobn, a rather backward rustic, sat at one end of the sofa and his sweet- heart at the other. Both minds were too full to carry on conversation, but at last the lady spoke: "John, what are you thinking about?" John, awakened from his dreams, an- swered with a drawl, "Oh, fest the same as you are," and was surprised to get the retort: "If you do Pn slap you"~Ladies' - Howe Journal." A -------------------- A Strict Sense of Duty. The touring car bad turned upside dowd, burying the motorist ander it, thus Vghtly turnéd from fis duty. "It'S no use your hiding there" he sald severely. "I must have your Same and address."--Exchange. inns stamps ' Food Values. | A pound of parsnips only gives 12 unite' of strength. while , the same amount of skimmilk will give 84 and of split peas 250. oars 2 Grenier long thes the los of time--0ld Saying. W.8 ual, "It's a bonzer night for --possums;- Next night he met ber again and' sleeping on a sack, His visitors were | Johannesburg before the war once | but the village constable was not to be | TEE he } TR rn he com- | pd ea of 'the Georgian | _PAGE THR i -- STEACY'S Annual REMNANT is now in full swing and proving a greater success than ever. Unsparing price-cutting is making this special event a sale of colossal magnitude. Every thing marked in plain figures and from one-third to one-half off its original price. S "Last Call To-morrow is the last dav--and' remembery vou're letting a lot of good dollars slip through your fingers if vou're missing this sale. Ladies' Winter Coats $1.00 Watch to-morrow's paper for particulars STEACY'S For Service or For Ornament * Our store abounds. with the best Chinaw arefor all purposes and occasions. We have the solid heay v ware for service, and the dainty delicate ware for beauty. - Both in graceful shapes and tasteful colorings, in sets or odd pieces. ROBERTSON'S, LIMITED Fine China. Rich Cut Glass, WISHING ALL KINGSTON HOMES Prosperity and joy for 1914. Our Business for 1913, Kingston i is 8 Thanking You for Your Patronage. H W. NEWAN Electric Co. rr That the cold weather fas just mead So let us help to keep you warm by fitting - vyou with a 'pair of Felt Boots, . Prices $1. 75 to $350 Wh see BEG WIN ER Ae avd me a WE Es

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