Daily British Whig (1850), 27 Feb 1914, p. 8

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| Tailors You Sir 7 A great many men have tried a great many tailors, and have never yet had their clothes ma deexaetly to. their liking. I There's always been a fault some- where. We ask these dissatisfied men to come here and talk over the tailoring preb- lem with us, From the first clip of the shears to the last touch of the "Goose," there ave no mis- takes or uncertainties. We are showing Choice New Spring Suitings Our Early Importations Suits $22.50 Up. ys a SE mre Cu BNE ass wile madd ck a "BEL, Test us with your spring tailoring-and we'll place you in line with the best dressers in this community. ox ; 3 Ek RN LIVINGSTON"'S BROCK STREET A little out of the way, but it will pay you to walk. OVERALL APRONS For Women \ Made from best English Print, neat stripes and fhecks in assorted colors o nlight and dark grounds; guaranteed fast.dye A very handy garment, saves the dress {from being soiled 48, 58, 68 & T9¢ each \ White Muslin Aprons, with and without bibs, plain and fancy 25, 40, 50 75¢ each hv SE Tea Aprons in spot and fancy muslin, very daintily trimmed ......48, 68 and 86c New Prints, best English makes, a large assortment in all the new patterns. New Embroideries in all widths. - New Frillings and Pleatings. Ee ers of the Ig pets, flocks, li OF THE GAME WITH OSHAWA IN| PETERBORO, : ------ The Referee Gave the TNelloville Team a Raw Deal, the Peterboro Review Says -- Other News of Sport, the following comment on the Osha- wa-Belleville game of Wednesday evening. The game was witnessed by a .very small crowd and everyone came away with the idea that the GoLawa team can Jast about as long with Orillia as one of the jumior city league teams." "The boys from Belleville had two Geaf and dub lads from the D. D. Institute and they were the victims of some of the inside stuff of Rior- den and Weller. The former is stock" whom the Toronto papers were talking about and incidentally one of the poorest sports in the O. H. A. "The goal that beat the Belleville team was made in a way that is a dicgrace to the O. H. A. Weiler feet and when the puck came up the ice he unhesitatingly scored." : : "The way Weiler handed it to the deaf and dumb boys wasn't hockey that Referee Whitehead let him get away with it. 'Billy' Eaton might as well give Whitehead a blue and white sweater for he was the best man he had last night." Curling Games The ice at the curling rink was kept in constant use on Thursday. Four games were scheduled but only three were played on account of. J, W. Power defaulting to J. 8. Assels- tine. In the club series played in the afternoon the rink skipped hy M. B. Baker slipped one over Skip W. L. Goodwin by 17 to 6. Skip J. Marshall won from Skip T. R. Car- novsky by 11 to 5. In the Whig trophy games Skip J. F. Macdonald won from Skip 1. W. Gill by 14 to 9. The rinks A. Snodden, W. D. Taylor, I. I, Flynn, M. B. Baker, skip--17. 1. B. Walkem, D. Ellis, E. W. derson, W. L. Goodwin, skip--&6. Hen- L. Boswell, 0. Aykroyd, .J. Pigion, J. Marshall, skip-11. \ W. Carnoveky, A. B., Williams, T. Copley, 1. R. Carnovsky, skip--5 J. A. McRae, H. T. Wallace, RR. McCannel!, J. F. Macdonald, skip-- 14. A. B. fl. Montgomery, 1. Williams, W. B, McKay, W. W. Gill, skip-9. » lee Races at Nananee Several of the race horse sportsmen af this city leit, on noou, in company with their horses, to attend the races which will be pull- od off at Napanee on Friday after noon, Those who will enter horses from Kivgston will be: L. Martin, G. Lennox, A. Hayes, P. Ward and W. Corcoran. Some of these Kingston horses have been successfal in | the races which have been held gt Batter- seq, Cape Vincent and Wolie lsland. The Collins Bay races, which were to be held on Saturday morning, have been postponed, on account of Nr. Truesdell, the president of the associ- ation, meeting with an accident. { Protest Not Yet Entered Up until eleven o'clock on Friday morning no protest had been entered by Belleville against any of the play- Oshawa team. As a team 18 allowed forty-eight hours to enter no protest, it is expected that Dr. Gil- beri, manager of the team, is taking the fuil time =o as to allow the man- agement to get all the necessary proof before the matter M broight before the attention of the O.H.A. sub-commit- Ladies Curling As the curling rink, on Friday morn- ing, the ladies' curling rink skipped hy Miss Jean Craig won from the rink skipped by Miss Ada Birch by a score lof 10 to 9, ip the consolation games, The rinks were : Mrs. A. E. Ross, Mrs. ugh Mae phersan, Mrs. R. Waldron, Miss Jean Craig, wkip--10. Ars: WyoE. Macpherson, Mis. George Mchay, Mra. BE. H. Young, Miss A. Birch, skip--9. ! Belleville's Protest A telephone message received from Belleville, on Friday afternoon stated that the protest, which has been entered hy the Belleville juni- on OH. A. team against some of the Oshawa players, would come be- for the sub-committee of the O.H.A. on Friday afternoon or evening. Since the game in Peterborough, on Wednesday, the Belleville manage- ment has -been gathering consider- able information about two of the players on the Oshawa team. It is nonderstood that when the case is heard, the Belleville manager will bave a statement to show {hat one Oshawa -player accepted money for pitching a couple of Eames of base- ball last summer. Jacobi, the goal tender is also accused of playing pro- fessional - baseball. The age of Riordan is also being investigated. Cataraqui Won the Game Cataraqui senior hockey team de- feated Wolte Island in the first of the. home and home games for the Edward's trophy at the Palace rink, The ret =» game will he played at. Wolfe Island on Satur- day afternoon. q me -- Our Welcome to Soring | We offer. spring onions, green radishes, letluen, parsley, Cumbers, spignch, tomatoes, | celery, rhubarb, ofc. at Carnovsky's. e---- in "Kodak filme." Gibson's. ine The Peterborough Review makes} the "nice pleasant fellow of [Irish |! was loafing off side about twenty |: took it and | av all and the worst feature of it was | Thursday aiter- on Thursday afternoon, by a score! Hof 2 to 0. } Coppess Smalters | O.P.R. % Reading Union Pacific United States Atchison |, Frie it might be well to mention that he's | Rubi Lehigh Viliay American (an, McCurdy's New York Reports New York, Feb. 27.~High autho- rity is held for the statement that the market is now getting into the condition that existed regarding the shortage prior to the January rise. Several hundred railroad interests are understood to he holding off fi- nancng on the assurance that low- er money rates will be had in ~ the next few months, Information channels refer to the Supporting orders in volume in Can- adian Pacific gear 210. The advices of majority of big com- mission hoses are not pessimistic on the stock market now. lt is important to notice {hat railroads are beginning to exhibit a better tone than they have for many months 'past. ---- PENITENTIARY RIFLE RA NGE Will Be Used by the 14th Regiment This Season. According 10 present anticipations the 14th regiment will have the use of the penitentiary rifle range upon which to do its rifle practice and efficiency: pay.. shooting this season. During the past yvear"there has heen an increase in. the number of N.C. Us. and men taking an interost in shooting, especially in that conduct- od in. the armowries tinder the. super- vision of Lieut. W. E. Swaine, mus ketry instructor. One of the greatest needs of battalion is an indoor rifle and bowling alley, such.as the Belle | ville regiment and other city . corps | are provided with in their armouries, { Howover, in the engineering estimates for this division. for this year, 'a range, in an addition to the drill hall, is. provided for. The ranges at Barriefield are not the most accessible for the local regiment, and the time allowed yearly for practice is short. The regiment has to depend for the training of shots largely upon in- door practice. . A 'new range is im- perative, The penitentiary range will be handy fer the men, and they will doubtless take full advantage of it. the range The regiment will be provided vith a permanent instructor, likely Sesgt.-Instructor A. R. Baggallay, (RK. C. R.) in Succession to the late Sergt.-Major J. Hagans, and classes of instruction for officers, N. C. O's. and men will commence in the. near future. FIRE AT BOW ISLAND, ALTA. Kingstonian "Writes Regarding Con. flagration at That Place George Veale, a former Kingston- ian, has written to his father, John Veale, of Dargie street, under date of Feb. 22nd, regarding a bad fire which: devastated a portion of main street in Pow Island; where he resides. The "fire broke out, it is thought, from an explosion of a gas stove. early on Sunday morning last, and waged for some hours. Eight build- ings in all. on both sides of the stre were destroyed. They were all places of business, but in a couple of in- { stances, where people were living a- i bave the stores, they narrowly es- jenved with their lives. i. The town has a population of about 1400, and the loss is greatly felt by {some. Mrs. FE. C. Ludtke, sister of {Mr. Veale, lives there, as well as | Ernest Kennedy, formerly of this city [Mr. Ludtke's place was included in the damage done by the conflagra- tion. : ' the Alta, The Late Mrs. Albright Albright, who died in Renfrew, Tuesday, arrived in the city on 3.40 o'clock C.P.R. train on Thursday aiternoon. They were removed from the station to Cataraqui cemetery, jand placed in the vault. The funeral deceased in Renfrew. who accompanied his wife's remains, returned to Renfrew on Friday noon. Seedless Oranges One Cent Each. tuce, 5e., Saturday, at Carnovsky's. Society of Queen's University on tor of the Filth avénue Preshyieri church, New ork, bas - anked 3 The remains of the late Mra. Moses! | the | | seevioe was held at the home of the || Mr. Albright, 1 Pineapples, 25c.; rhubarb, 15c.: let- || The junior year furnished the nyo- i gramme at the meeting of the Levans |} erno Refreshment] | Rev. Dr. John Henry Jowett, pas- |} flerian '|MAN GIVEN MONTH FOR ITIL. TREATING BABY 4 | Percy Bould Struck Child in Fit of Temper and Was Summoned Be. fore Police Magistrate. Percy Bould, about thirty-five Years of age, hung his head with shame, in the police court, on Fri- day morning. He was found guilty of ill-treating an infant child aged eighteen months, and Magistrate Farreil sentenced him to one month in jail. : 'And 1 feel like giving yon more," remarked the magistrate to Bould. "To think that you would strike an {infant on the head." The accused mumbled something about not. striking the child, and that he 'had merely laid the young- ster on the bed. Then he gave him- self away when he remarked "1 didn't mean to strike the child." The mother was called and ques- tioned by the court. She said that on Wednesday evens ing, while she was absent from the house, a short time, the affair took place. When she came back, she found that the baby was suffering from severe wounds on the head. Dr. A. R. B. Wililamson said the injuries had either bean caused by a blow or a fall. The child suffer ed from some injury on the left side of the head, the wound extending from the eye to the ear, "Had your husband been drink. ing?" asked the magistrate of the mother. "No he was, not drinking." Evidently the accused in a fit of temper, while the baby was crying administered the punishment. PITH OF THE NEWS Tidings Told in Terse Measure For Busy Readers Ontario branch of the. Dominion Alliance wants the three-fifths clause abolished; it has endorsed abolisa- the-bar campaign. Sir Wilirid Laurier has given notice of a motion to prevent the 'deputy. speaker, P. E. Blondin, taking part in an electoral contest, J. M, Tellier, K.C., M.P.P., leader of the opposition in the legislative assembly, "and Mrs. Lellier, have left for a trip to Florida. Richard George Yeates, foreman bricklayer for Schultz Bros., Brant. ford, dled without a moment's notice while playing an encore with his son at a concert. » Fireman James Symes was killed by escaping steam in a wreck on the Grand Trunk at Mandaumin, in which eighteen freight cars were smashed. U. 8. President Wilson's policy in Mexico assailed in congress and he is called on to state what protection is provided there for I'. 8. citizens and foreigners. A unionist candidate was elected in Lolth Burghs to succeed Sir Ronald Munro-Ferguson, the liberal just ap- pointed to be governor-general of Australia. The Grand Trunk Pacific is en- larging its stock of freight cars at the rate of a ueore a month. Aec- cording to an official statement the railway now has 8,000 cats either either Indlt or-~building. eS ------ CANADA IAN MILLERS Ask Government to Combat Ocean Freight Combine Ottawa, Feb. 27.--A deputation 'of the Dominion Millers' Associdtion, the Canadian Tumbermen's Associa. tion and Ontario Boards of Trade waited upon Premier Borden, Hon. ©. E. Foster and other members of the cabinet to-day and urged upon them the necessity of the government-own- ed fleet of Atlantic steamships to combat the ocean freight rate com- bine. It was_maintained that the rates on wheat, flour and other com- modities had increased tremendously since the formation of the' present combine within the past two Sears. The deputation presented strong opposition to free wheat and free flour proposals, declaring that it would not only increase the price of flour to consumers but would ruin the Canadian milling industry, At the conclusion of the interview the de- putation was promised careful con- sideration, Scientists claim that love is due to a microbe. Some of us are' willing to go even farther, and say it's a bug. The ultra precise man is seldom a friend getter or retainer. Heated discussions don't always make warm friends. f Special Sale i, «Of Embroideries TO-MORROW MORNING FROM 9 TO 11 L Quite unexpectedly we have secured one of the best Embroidery Bargains we have ever had, and to- morrow morning will share it with vou. The sale starts promptly at 9 o'clock and closes at 11 o'clock, whether all is sold or not. 2,113 Yards Fine Embroider: And Insertions to match, made from an extra good quality English long-cloth that gives most ie tory wear; in fact, just double the usual Swiss cot- tons. These are all Convent designs and worth 10¢, 12 1-2¢, 15¢, 17e, 6¢c Yard Your Pick To-Morrow, NO TELEPHONE ORDERS accepted for these and none charged --all to be paid for at time of sale. Fine White Cottons We have now ready a large collection of the best makes, and you will find here many qualities not usually kept in town, FINE ENGLISH Longcloths, special HORROCKSES famous Cotton ..«121-2¢ NAINSOOK, a sheer fine cotton, 6 makes, from 'iS k30te 30¢ yd MADAPOLAM, medium weight but very fine. . .15¢ JOHN LAIDLAW & SON A Large Stock of Trunk * Just Received GOOD TRUNKS AT LOW PRICES - We buy our Trunks in large quantities from the best and largest factory in.Canada, Trunks from $2.00 to $50.00. Glad to show our stock. TT Nem

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