THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, THURSDAY, JUNE 10, 1915. PAGE THREE Local Branch Time 'Table. IN BPI T MAY ea. 1945, Tr vi ave af & Gt Going We id 1 partic TY apy 2X, Baliroad and 8 cor. Johnson and Ontar! a. TT PACIFIC GREAT LAKES STEAMSHIP SERVICE, Stgamers leave Port MeNieoll Tuekdays, Wednesdays, . Thursdays and Saturdays for SAULT STE. MARIE, PORT ARTHUR aud FORT WILLIAM The steamer "Manitoba" sailing from Port MeNieoll on We Me i 8, will « all at Owen Sound, leaving that point 10.30 p.m STEAMSHIP EXPRESS leaves Toronto 12.45 pm. dally, ex. cept Friday, mak ng direct connecs tion with steamers at Port Mec- Nicoll on sailing days Particulars from I. Conway, A., City Ticket Office, corner cess and Wellington streets, 1197. GET OUR PRICES | For plumbing work, or gas piping Have your repairing done by us. Sat- isfaction guaranteed. A. AND J. JAMIESON, a ) street? C.P Prins Phone 7 A 6, NY Lh 7p LA Cw ¥ Ling) Mon, aa THE STANDARD ARTH SOLD 'EVERYWHERE REFUSE SUBSTITUTE Best English Glycerine TRANSPARENT SOAP 3 Colors, 3 for 25¢ At Best's The Satisfactory Drug Store. Open Sundays. ARS SA == Pinmhern amd Gasfitsers, 11% - MARBLE HALL 3 Pure Ice Cream In Bulk or Bricks. Packel and delivered lo any part of the city. GEORGE MASOUD, | Phone 980, 238 Princess St. KINGSTON CEMENT PRODUCTS Can supply Cement "Blocks, Sills, '| Lintles, Bricks, Flower Vases, Tile, | Caps, P'er Blocks, ete. We also | manufacture Cement Grave Vaults | Estimates given for all kinds of Ce ment Work, Kingston Cement Products H. F, NORMAN, MANAGER, | Office, 177 Wellington Street. Phones: Office, 730; Factory, 1204 | Rm Pure Marmalade D. COUPER Phone 76. Prompt Delivery. (Coast Sealed Oysters) Poisonous Gases This is NOT the kind we are talking about. Have you 'phoned in your order yet to have the Gas Meter installed sa you may enjoy the many benefits derived by the use of GAS FOR COOKING ? "Phone 197 or drop a card to the office of the works, Queen street, Light, Heat, Power and Water Depts. C. C. FOLGER, Gen. Man. Time and 'Wore a Multitude i of es Whit was best a few years ago may to-day be practically worthless. New ideasare con- stantly displaci sie and be- an | rience What a Difference! Spectacles were invented by Alexander de Spina, a monk in Italy about 1285; Pictures of them appear as early as 141%, were crude, ungainly things in heavy, queer iron frames. Since then eyeglasses have been constantly improved. OUR GLASSES are the glasses of to-day--not yesterday -- and reveal the very latest improvements in lens and frame. KEELEY Jr, M. 0.D.0. OPTOMETRIST AND OPTICIAN 226 Princess Street 3 doors above the Opera House Those + rar on | | Sr Am deta et 8 i MORNING ToStraw Hats man feel be- Every boy and will be, look and more'. ? eomfor table »ause he wears a Straw. : 55 boxes of new Straws for Saturday. Men of all ages will find just what is suit- able to them in our col- lection. Boys Straws, 25c, 50c and $1. 's Straws, rim, 356 t0 $1.50. Men's Sailors and {| Pencil Rim, $3.10 89. . PANAMAS We never saw values. Realty a : Our such soft 2 WORK OF THE SOLDIERS IS HIGHLY SATISFACTORY A "Camp Alarm Post" To Be Established. NO LIQUOR WH WAS FOUND Ihe h A. S C Twill give an ner 2 in A. IN THE CANTEENS AQPTER INSPECTION, Twins Born te A Sergeant Of 38th Battalion, and His Wife Sent Word For Him To Come Home And Sce Them. The work of the soldiers is highly satisiactory to the officers and in- siructors, and the good effects of the camp life are already being seen. The camp population is like a dig family. Every man takes a pride in his camp by the outside world. It is this pride in the work that has been the means ment in the work of the men. soldier realizes that the sooner he is well drilled and thoroughly capable | of doing the work, the will get to the front. sooner he In the mind of every man in Bar- | riefield Camp is the firm conviction! that until enough Canadians go to the front the war cannot possibly | end in favor of Britain and her Al-| lies. ion bat it is the proper spirit. For this reason, the man who throws up {a good position and puts on a uni- form ready and willing to go to the! front to fight for his King and coun- try, knows that he cannot be a sold- | ier unless he is properly trained. The result of his feeling has made the soldiers camped at Barriefield | what they are to-day. A "Camp Alarm Post™ will placed in a central position. With this it will be possible to call out every soldier in the camp on short | notice. In the elaborate schemes | whieh are to be worked out this alarm post will be the means of sig-| tnalling to the differ¢gnt units that they are required ofi the parade grounds immediately, W. E Dexter and E. G.G.F.G., are attached Battalion for Lieuts. Fosbery, the 38th and duty. G.| to | instruction An officer of the camp made an inspection of the civilian canteens! along the road. Each place was] thrown open for inspection at the officer's réquest ant in ne case was the objeet of the. surprise visit] (liquor) found on any of the prem-| ises. This is not a surprise, as the | owners know very well that their canteens would immediately be put out-of-bounds should - the officers have reason to suppose that liquor! was being sold. At 3 o'clock on hn Wednesday after- | inoon, 330 members of the | Regiment, Lindsay, arrived at camp {ahd immediately went to their quarters. The men will have to be outfitted. | They have been absorb- fed into the Base Battalion, and Lieut.-Col. Fee, who is colonél of | 45th, pany. i -- | "The 7th Artillery Brigade, consid- ering the training received, is one I of the best artillery units in the Do. minion. This brigade has only been | organized since February, and re- | ceived remounts last week. Never, | theless, both men and horses are pro. | gressing rapidly. Thursday both {the 25th and 26th Batteries were en- gaged in driving drill. Capt. McGrath, adjutant to Col. il | Stewart, brigadier, arrived in camp | on Wednesday from Lethbridge. He immediately took over his duties. | Major F. H. Honeywall, 8th C. M. { R,, is in Ottawa. Pte. Gannon, Base Battalion, was { removed to the Kingston | Hospital on Wednesday with a se. | verely sprained elbow, | A sergeant in "the 38th Battalion | recelved the following brief telegram on Wednesday afternoon: "Come home; twins. Grace." como Underwood, 8th .'M. R., is in Kingston General Hos- veo suffering with mumps. lo { {| Pte. Beaupre, 38th Battalion, while | ,. | jumping over a blanket on Wednes- | day, had the misfortuneto fall and | fracture his arm, | Pte. Johnston, C. A. 8. C., who was in hospital with a sprained~ankle, is back on duty. Lt.-Col. Ross, O.C. Canadian Postal Corps, is expected in camp on Thurs. day from Ottawa, on business in con- '! nection with the mail strvice, Which AN the platoon or section in the -bat-+ talion and the opinion held of the! ef such a great improve- | The This may be a conceited opin- | ve | 45th | is quite proud of this com-| General | Prine is' pr there ving highly satisfactory, but are still some details that need aitention The transport horses of the C. A. 1} 5. C. were given exercise on Wednes: | by Lieut. Dewey. the Militia Y. tent on ny evening MC It is known that the which has been chosen from the Battalion as reinforcements eave in a very short time. -- ad v cases were handled at the t Hospital on :side a number of dressings 38th | " Coriipany, 38th Battalion, was || en-! The men || on the ranges on Wednesday, gaged in rifle practice. are showing up splendidly at this all- important work, The men in eamp were given a half-holiday so that they could at- tend the garden party in aid of the Red Cross Society on Col. G. Hun. | ter Ogilvie's lawn on Wednesday. Last evening several games of base ball and football were played between. the different squadrons and | companies in the Unit League. One did not need to look long to see that | in every team there were men of no| mean ability. | The game between the 26th and the 25th Batteries was very evenly contested. At the end of the ninth innings the score stood 13 to 13. A number of chess and checker en-| { thusiasts; including several officers, held a meeting in the Y. M. C. A. mess tent last night. The checker tournament whieh has been running this week has aroused considerable | interest in the game ahd at the meet- ing'a chess and checker elub was or- ganized, and the following officers elected: Hon. President, Col. T. D. R. Hemming; president, Major Starr; secretary-treasurer, H., J. Swetman; | committee, Lieut. MacFarlane 38th Battalion; Leut. Morris, Base Battsl-| ion; Sergt. Sewell, 8th. C.M.R, 1 -- | The committee met last night at {the Y. M. C. A tent and arranged | the first club tournament. Suitable | prizes will b~ given. It is expected there will be fully one hundred en- | | tries. These will be divided into | three classes, and prizes given to] | best players in each clase. ! | The regular Wednesday evening! | song service was held in the Y. M.| 1 C. A. tent last Bight, t 'F. Lillie is expecting an addition to his staff in the person of Mr. Fish- er, a Y. M. C. A, worker from To-| ronto, who will arrive at camp to-| | day. | Rev.J. H. Wallace who has charge | of the religious work of the Y. M. C. A. camp, is now in Toronto in confer- | ence with the National Council with | reference to the Work at Barriefield. | King George moving picture theatre ja camp was filled almost to capacity all Wednesday 'evening. This en- terprise has proved one of the best of the many conveniences in camp. A camera club is is to be formed in { camp and many of the boys are quite interested. A grand concert is to be given by the A. 8. C. in camp on Thursday night. Choruses from the 38th Bat- talion, 26th Battery and other units will take part. W. S. Fishér, a new official in the | Y. M. C. A, tent, arrived at camp on | Wednesday from Teronto. Mr. F'sher is a second year student of To- ronto University. Major Brown, GE 8.0., has returned from Lindsay where he conducted ex- aminations in a qualifying sehool of infantry for the 35th Regiment, Dogs are nearly as plentiful as horses around Barriefield military camp. There are some exceptionally fine specimens'in the lot. Some of them have 'become so fond of the soldiers that they snap, at anyone dressed in civilian clothes. While in barracks at Lansdowne Purk, Ottawa, a little black mongrel made himself at home with the 8th Canadian Mounted Rifles. He was fed and made quite a a= In the Sonfusitn of moving the little dog ve Nounie forgotten. ounted Rifles left here on a Senday ana Int the following even- ya the el dragged himself in- to the tent of one of the officers, cov- ered with dust and almost all in. How he made the trip is a mystery, ig from hjs appearance it was hard to believe he had ridden. conipany || will || Wednesday, || . | i 1 Probs: Moderate winds fair and cool. -b Friday showery. 3 tH + obs tonto The greatest Silk socasion of the year--a one day sale of unusual-interest. ---- BLACK SATIN MESSALINE 300 yards Tet Black Messaline real French dye--full- 40 inches wide; special value at $1.25.¢ To-morrow NATURAL PONGEE 1,500 ) Yards at the most drastic price reductions of the year! years 34 inch Pongee; regular 50c. To-morrow .. 700 yards, 34 inch--extra fine Pongee; reg. 65¢c. SALE STARTS AT 9 O'CLOCK -- NO TELE. PHONE ORDERS ACCEPTED. DAVIES Fresh, Sweet Davies' Co. Lin . EMPEROR IN IN Hs DOTAGE. Spends Time , Playing ¢ eying. Chligiuhty With Paris, Ta ett. 10.--The Austin Em. |, peror has fallen into his dotage, and is playing childishly with _decora. tions, according to the "neutral cor- respondent" of the Petit Parisien, who has just returned from Vienna. g8¢ ? a3 o? i he . KINGSTON'S ELECTRIC STORE Electric Fans for Home and Store Use. FANS, FANS, FANS, and soothing, 8in,, 10in., 12in, 16 in.. .. IC IRON ~ Spedial one at $2,25. Come in = see it. THERE IS SOMETHING ABOUT THE SERVICE Given here that makes eustomers stay. with 'and re- commend us. Probably we could please you too. Just try us and see. FORRITY GARAGE Cie Limited Pungsten points pit o on Spark Oolls--isuperior to platinum, Columbia Ignitor Batteries, always fresh stock About SUN-KIST phckages-- just as distinetive os | the quality of their contents. SUN-KIST Seeded and Séedless Raisins.