Daily British Whig (1850), 1 May 1915, p. 3

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url Hail h £ i Shot Weather !| Cameras of all kinds we have, from BL5O te $100.00 or mere. Square Hox or Smal Folders, all perfect machines. We rent and exchange Cameres and take your old one at un good valuation If you have one to sell let us have it. We nine repair all makes. Finishing~This depdrtment is Ji rushed to full capneity--it is ne- Ji cessary to enlarge it to accom. our many customers. satisfactory wervice at | lowest prices, { Filmy of all makes we oan } supply. | At Best's || The Satisfactory Drug Store. } Open Sundays, i pre NN 4 EY IHN:T3 AN [I KEELEY Jr. M.0.0.0 OPTOMETRIST AND OPTICIAN 228 Princess Street. 8 doors above the Opera House, } EP. enkins | Saturday Specials A Large Flowing End Tie, all colors, regular 50c. 3 for $1.00 Black Hose, Made of a Fine Union Cashmere E.P. JENKINS, "14 PRINCESS STREET. Heated Ironf} {hydrangeas and crystal | | William | hostess at included: | jorie jones. : 8 This letter will give you an idea jment is THE DAILY BRITISH » cscs = Told In Twilight tHE IHS 4044004 0880000¢ The Red Cross Society of King: ton held a successful shower o towels and pillow-slips at Grant Hall, Friday afternoon in aid of Queen's Base Hospital. The snowy heaps of linen at vhe entrance pro viding tangible evidence as to the popularity of the cause. The musi cal programuse in Mrs. Morgan s capable hands was enjoyed and in ¢luded several numbers by the R.C. H.A. Band, a piano solo by Mrs. A R. B. Williamson, and vocal num- bers by Mrs. 8, J. M. Compton ani C. B. 8. Harvey, Miss Eilee: Wrigh and R. R. F. Harvey were their ac- companists. Mrs. James Cappon hal in charge the arrangements for tea which were perfectly carried out at, ia long table draped with flags and sh | End! {7 Che ! ; Route taken by the German fl fleet w : ' . by , Eo 3 5 ouenrr, | { hich is reported to have shelled Dunkirk. ! centred by a bouquet of gracefui, The raid is another evidence that the Kaiser's Admiralty is again changing its) vases of! pink carnations. The ladies pouring! tea were, Mrs. W. L. Goodwin, Mrs. | J. C. Connell and Mrs. P. G. C.| Campbell, assisted by Miss May]| Ross, Miss Mamie Garrett, Miss Hil da Hague, Miss Drummond, Miss) Mary Stewart, Miss Hilda Gordon, Miss Mollie Saunders, Miss Dorothy Goodwin, Miss Kathleen Ryan, Miss Dorothy Chown and Miss Ruth Ang- lin. The delicious refresliments a. | home-made, were generously dona-|2re en pension at '"The Residence. ted by the professors wives and daughters, { * * * The annual Assault-at-Arms was | held in the gymnasium at the Royal Military College on Wednesday ev-! ening After the very interestin: events and gymnastics were over supper was served. Among ,those! noticed were Major and Mrs. C. N. Perreau, Captain and Mrs. Maurice Plummer, Professor and Mrs. Iva] Martin, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Carruth | ers, Colonel and Mrs. Hemming, Professor and Mrs. Alexander Laipd, Dr. and Mrs. John Waddell, Mrs. Hope and Miss Constance Hope (Montreal), Mr. and Mrs, Mor-| ris, (Peterboro'), Mr. and Mrs, Pel-|!um and A. H. Hinchey who are at| pominion Day. Jetier (Ottawa), Mr. and Mrs. Al- Present in France, were on shori| elected: Chairman, Mayor O'Connor, lan Mackenzie and Misses Reta Mac. | leave last week and spent four days| secretary, J. F. Green; kenzie (Montreal), Minnle Gordon, | Hilda Laird, Marjorie Minnes, Agnes | Bellhouse, Hazel Browne, Mollie] Bidwell, Ethel Kent, Lucy Waddell, Gwendoline Waddell, Kathleen Hughes (Ottawa), Mollie Saunders, Nan Saunders, Jean Young, Mar- jorie Gamsby, Minnie Allen, Jessic Hutton, Ethelwyn Macgowan and Evelyn Gilbert, 1 . » LJ Mrs. W. Steacy, King street, was a delightful bridge on Wednesday afternoon. There were three tables in play and the guests Mrs. C. 8. Bowerbank, Mrs. Keene Hemming, Misses Dor othy Carruthers, Charlie Short, Mar-| Brownfield, Norah Macnee, Doris Kent, Hilda Kent, Isabelle] Waldron, Mamie Garrett, Eva Rich | ardson, Kathleen Crisp and Rose! Rogers, ® ho. Miss Christine and Miss Cochrane were guests of honour at! a very jolly lunchéon at the Coun | try Club to-day, when the other guess included, Mrs. Carlos Kirke- | gaarde, Misses Norah Macnee, Hilda | Kent, Doris Kent, Mamie Garrett, Charlie Short, Marjorie Brownfield, | Kathleen Crisp, Edith Hague, Kath- | leen Ryan, Susie Anglin, May Rog | ers and Lilian Mundell. | Sylvia * * Miss Kathleen, Ryan will enter tain at luncheon at the Country Club | on Monday in honour of Miss Sylvia! Cochrane. » . 0» Mr. and Mrs. John McKay, Syden ham street, went to New York on Thursday. Ralph Emery will leave on Sun day for Toronto to spend a day be fore going on to Winnipeg for the summer. Mrs. street, day. Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Murray, hal} fax; were guests in town for a few days this week. Harold, Rathbun and Mr. Hodge were in town from Deseronto . to- day. ? John MeKinnon, has left for his home at Lake Ainslie, C.B. Courtney. Milne, Queen's, spend the summer at Niagara. » . R. went C. Stevenson, Broce to New York on Fri- whi Lieut. 8. C. McGee of the 2st Battalion is in Ottawa for the week. Miss Hepburn and Miss Tot Hep- burn have returned to Picton after a few days in town, Horace Lawson is spending the week-end in Guelph. Miss Bessie Smythe, West street, will go 'to Ottawa on Monday to If every mother could try Dr. Chase's Ointment for the chafing, skin irritation and resulting eczema a blessing it would be for the little of what a wonderful work this Oint- in the 'way of bringing comfort to who aré so un- 4% to contract eczema. It is so ensy for this trouble to develop from chafing or irritation caused by the clothing, and so difficult to get it cured; that Chase's Ointment . M. L. Ducles, Postmaster, Dugnayville, N.B., writes: "I believe it is my duty to recommend Dr. Chase's Ointment as a cure for ecze- | Grainey | Jean Duff, Princess street, Comfort and Cure for ~ Baby's Skin Troubles Dr. Chase's Ointment Cured When Baby's Body Was Covered With Distressing Eczema. which tortures so many babies, what | y100d vaval policy. . visit Mrs. J.D. Craig for a coup of weeks. Mrs. Hansord Hora has given up her house on Barrie street and is with her mother, Mrs. R. C. Carter, West street. . te * Mrs. J. B. Cochrane and the Miss- es Christine and Sylvia Cochrine who "Bel- Professor and Mrs. Hedman, have had apartments at the { videre," have taken Professor Mat-| now lodge of that order in that vil- chell"s house on Bagot street, fo~ the summer' mouths. Mr. and Mrs. Pelletief, up from Ottawa for the Assault-at-Arms have returned home. Miss Dorothy Carruthers and Captain Kenneth Carruthers are spending the week-end in Montreal Mr. and Mrs. Brown, who were in town for Convocation, left to- day for their home in Mount Clair, N.J., accompanied by their son, Gayley. Browne, B.Se. . * LJ Nursing Sisters Florence McCal- in Leondon. Mrs. C. W. Way, Queen street, and son Ronald, left for Ottawa on Wednesday to join Mr. Way at their summer cottage at Rockeliffe Park. Miss: Pryner returned to Adoi phustown on Thursday after spend ing a couple of weeks with Mrs. Brock Graham, Barrie street. Mr. and Mrs. Osborne and Miss | Mona Osborne, B.A. left on Friday for Arnprior, after attending the iclosing exercises at Queen's {niver- sity. Miss MacIntyre, Kingston, is visit- ing her friend, Miss Marion Huyek. Tweed. Miss Mary Boyd left on Thursday afternoon to visit Dr. and Mrs. Old ham at Desboro,)/ Ont. 4 * * Mackenzie Waters, who has been {in town for the past two weeks, re- | turned to Toronto on Thursday. Mrs. Gainey and the returned to St. Thomas on Thursday after attending convoca- tion. at Queen's when Miss Betty | Grainey received her B. A. degree. Miss Marjorie Duff, visiting Miss left on Friday for Toronto, where she will visit her aunt, Mrs. Noble, before go- ing on te Guelph. Mrs. E. A. Stone and Master Ran- | dall Stone, en pension at the "Avon- more," went to Toronto on Thurs- day. : Mrs. Colin Hamilton, Miss Sibbald Hamilton, and Colin Hamilton, Earl street, will move over to their sum- | mer cottage on Wolfe Island early in May. » . - Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Johnson (for- merly Miss Mabel Selby), married this week, left Saturday for their new home in Edmonton. Mrs. O'Neil, in town for convoca- tion returned to Vankleek Hill on Thursday, accompanied by her daughter, Miss May O'Neil, B. A. 'Mr. and Mrs. Guthrie, ' Kinburn, here for Miss Ethel Guthrie's grad- uation, returned home on Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Fleming re turned to Ottawa yesterday after a short visit with Mrs. Frank Strange, Sydenham street. Miss Bessie Wright. was in town from Gananoque on Thursday. W. J. O'Meara, Queen's, return- ed to' Ottawa om Thursday. Miss Ruby Donnelly, University avenue, left on Thursday for Walk- erville to spend a day with Miss Falconer and to-day she went on to Toledo, Ohio, to enter the hospita. there as'a nurse-in-training. John Hay has gone te St. Cath- arines to spend the summer. it covered the entire: body. found in his cradle once its healing | good she wonders how she ever managed 10 tolerate it at all, D | Misses | When the i ng beeame bad he would Ine apd was sometimes covered with mye | Gananoque } i nes { May 1.--Upwards of twenty-five | of the officers and members of Har | mony Lodge, No. 15, Daughters of | Rebekah drove to 'Seeley's Bay ys | terday afternoon, and last evening | assisted in the organization of a | lage. The coal schooner Horace Taber | has finished unloading her cargo for | the Taylor Coal Company and clear {ed light for another cargo. { The steamer Britanmic made her { first call of the season on her trip {up from Montreal to Kingston yes- terday and will call here regularly as she has done for several years past. A public meeting was held | evening, presided over by Mayor | | O'Connor, and arrangements wera! | made for the annual celebration on| These officers were! last treasurer, | W. J. Wilson. sports committee chairman, W. B. Mudie; racinz| | committee, W. J. Gibson; canvassing | | committee, Neil McCarney; advertis- | | ing committee, Dr. J. A. Mack; mu- sic committee, James Karr; tran- portation committee, C. 8. Lee. The | proceeds of the celebration will be devoted to the debt on the Driving i Park whieh was purchased by the town a few years ago. A LACK OF DISCIPLINE CAUSED THE GERMAN MUTINY AT FORT HENRY. | | The Guard Allowed the Prisoners | Too Many Liberties--The "Lights | Out" Order Was Not Carried Out. After the mutiny at Fort Henry on | Thursday afternoon the discipline of | the war prisoners has been ordered | to be mueh more strict than former- i ly. The principle that the more {liberty a man gets the more he | wants, was the direct cause of all the | trouble at the fort. Some time ago ion the demand of the prisoners, the soldier in charge of the canteen was | replaced by a German. The next | demand was the removal of the as | sistant cook who was formeriy chef pin a local hotel, and a recognized | splendid cook. This demand was { acceded to and the demand for a com- | plete German staff in the kitchen | was granted. The agitators are | more educated than the rest and | have been creating trouble all the timé. , The guards had orders to use force only as a last resource. The guards were not as strict as they should have been in maintaining dis- | cipline. One example of this was | the Germans' defiance of the "lights { out" order. Night after night the | prisoners would burn their lights un- | tli ready to go to bed. The spirit that prompted the re- volt of Thursday was a most natural one. After having been granted all the demands that they made, the prisoners were confident that they ! would secure control of the kitchen. It is the opinion of officers here that a portion of the guard &hould | have been chosen from the perman-| ent force. Men who were used to] | the strictest of discipline would dis-| cipline others if they did not obey { orders. } i A Superior Seryice. The Grand Trunk has a superior | service between Montreal and Toron- | to, and which is demonstrated by the popularity of their fast ' trains be- | tween these two cities. In aadition | to the splendid equipment on the | Internationa] Limited, on whieh train is carried a 'Pulippan Observatfon Li- { brary car, Parlor Library Car 'and | Dining Car. legving Kingston every aay in the yeat at 12.30 arriving at Toronto at 4.30 p.m., the magnificent | roadbed, laid with one-nundred- | pound steel rails, has become so well | known to the travelling public that the result is obvious. Vaudeville at the Grand An excellent bill has been secu. WHIG. SATURDAY, MAY 1, 1915. GF THREE . 'Bast to north winds, cool and showery to-day and Sunday TO- 'TO-NIGHT| From 7 To 9.45 O'clock A Rousing Clean-up of "An- niversary Sale" Specials Towelling 300 vards pure linen, natural stripe Towelling -- reg. price 12 1-2¢. everywhere. To-night Towels 10 dozen pure linen Hick Towels--good size; reg. price 15¢ and 17¢c.: Tonight .......: Table-Damask 120 yards pure linen Table Damask--good patterns--reg. 65¢ a yard. To-night .....: 10c 48c - Nightgowns Five dozen beautiful imported Gowns--made up in best quality Eng- lish nainscok--in handsome lace and embroidered effect; priced from $2.50 to $4.50. Tonight Separate Skirts 24 navy and black Serge Skirts--plain and braided flare ef- feets; reg. $3.50 to $5. To-night....... Silk-foot Hose - 10 dozen fast dye Utility Silk Hose--black and white only; sized from 8 1-2%a 334 the best 25e. hose in the market 19 C ToMight........connvcinsivsie. COME TO-NIGHT AND GET YOUR SHARE OF THE WONDERFUL BARGAINS OFFERED! SALE POSITIVELY ENDS AT 9.45. $2.95 "ress esses tres sur snans ey We are now equipped with a Wagner Rectifier for Charg- 'ing Storage Batteries Bring in your Batteries to us and we will renew solution when needed and re-charge at reasondble prices. H. W. Newman Electric Co. Phone 441 ' DAVIES NN AA A, tN sang SATURDAY SPECIAL BEEF Excellentquality OVENROASTS 16¢c Lb. The Wm. | | THERE IS A DISTINCTIVE QUALITY APPEARANCE About SUN-KIST packages--just as distinctive as the quality of their contents. : SUN-KIST Seeded and Seedless Raisins. GEO. ROBERTSON & SON, LTD, Youths, sizes 11 to 13 .....coocnivnniiiin.n.. SLTB Little Gents, sizes 8 to 10, from ceevee... $1.36 to SLT5 © With every 1.1b. tin of Egg-O Bak- : ; book of 120 tried re-| Pine Shoes for the Boys, from cerioen..... $2.50 to $4.00 es oy

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