PAGE EIGHT THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, MONDAY, JULY 1 , 1915, Going Away Soon For Your Summer Outing ? "take along If so. don't forget to the things that's made for comfort. .. Don't spoil your va- cation by wearing un- comfortable outfitting. things The house to your service. mer Suits Light Dick of wear Weight ....812, $15 Trouserings, good is at Sum- khaki and white, $1 up Flannel Trousers; all $3.50 up colors Is Soft Shirts ollars, in new patterns, $1, $1.25, $1.50 up to $2 Cool and Soft handsome - Underwear, Neckyvrear, Hosiery,ete., ete. We've a regular store house of Summer Comfort and not a price we name will prevent your indulging in every- thing you desire *to freshen up your ward- robe. Livingston's, Brack St. A Little Out of the Way, But It Will Pay You To Walk == Wy close every evening during July and August at r 9 o'clock, Saturday. excepted. ) WAS HELD AT GANANOQUE ON MONDAY AFTERNOON. Joseph Tait, the Oldest Orangeman On Parade--Hon. W_T. White Was the Chief Speaker (Special to the Whig.) Gananoque, July 12,.--The Orange. men are in possession of the town to- day. Its the Glorious Twelfth, and the weather man provided glorious weather. Upwards of four thou- sand people are celebrating, inelud- ing members of the Orange order vom Kingston on the west and as far as Prescott on the east, and in ad- dition there is quite a large deputa- tion from Watertown, N.Y, The Kingsto, contingent, numbering three "hundred, arrived about ten o'clock over the 6. T.R., with the Pi- pers' Band of the 8th C. M. R., which put new life into the town with lively airs. Ex-Ald. Joseph Tait, Kingston, is the oldést Orangeman taking part in the celebration, The veteran - is celebrating his seventicth year in the AAAI grt | | Re EX-ALD. JOSEPH TAIT, | "The oldest Ofangeman in the parade at Gananoque. | AN ey order; and he has only missed one celebration. This is surely some | record, Mr. Tait will be eighty- | nine years old on August 21st next. | Before leaving Kingston Mr. Tait was presented with a handsome bou- | quet of flower by his lady admirers. Among the other old members of {the Orange order present from | Kingston were James Borney, past | grand master Ontario East; William Milligan, Thomas White, Joseph | Gould, Sergt. Wolff, L.. A. Cobet, and LRobert Walker. \ | The programme of the day in. | eluded a monster parade, baseball | match (Gananoque vs. Belleville), { and speech-making'at the park. Hon. | W..T. White, Minister of Finance, was the chief. speaker. The other | speakers included Senator Derby- | shire, and AE. Donovan, Brock- | ville; Rev. Walter Cox, Gananoque; | Rev. W, H. Towle, Lansdowne; Henry | Steele, State Deputy, New York State; James Berney, Kingston; €. 5 NDERWEAR For Hot Weather out sleeves, non-sli large assortment, from ...... Women's Cotton and Lisle Vests, with and with- ppable shoulder straps; a very 1-2¢ to 50c Combinations, in cotton and Lisle: short sleeves, { W. Landon, D.G.M., Ontario East; | John Webster, M.P, il | George B. Haynes, Grand Master of the "Prentice Boys, Gananoque; George 8S. Mastin, CountyMaster for Leeds, > » THE WHIG'S JUMBLE. A General Review of Country Dustriet i and Local News. {| C.P.R. earnings for week ending | July 7th, $1,666,000; decrease, | $677,000. | Aringo Thomas Kelly, Second Bat- { talion, C. E. F. from Brockville, is a prisoner of war. There will be a meeting of the if | City Baseball League in the Y.M.C.A, | parlor on Wednesday evening. Fifty-five hundred school teachers from England and Wales have joir the beginning of the war. A Nish despatch to the Messaggero says that large quantities of war munitions have reached Serbia. Further Turkish attacks on the ex- tréme right wing of the Allied for- ces on the Gallipoli Peninsula have een' repulsed. . | Major-General Sam Hughes Can- if adian Minister of Militia, and mem- | bers of his"staff, arrived at Liver- | pool Sunday afternoon and reached if | London late at might. i | | The Empire Parliamentary As i | { ie | | 1 | { i { i | | | | | sodiation is giving a luncheon in the | House of Commons on Tuesday, "to if | congratulate Sir Robert Borden up- i} on the part Canada is taking in the fj} war" Brockville; | "Leen taken, BIG ORANGE PARADEUPHOLDS THE RIGHT TO LIMIT THE TEACHING' OF FRENCH LANGUAGE | In Ontario Schools--Divisional Court Hands Out Judgment In the Otta- | wa School Case. (Special to the Whig.) { Toronto, July 12.--In two twelfth of July decisions in the famous Ot- | tawa school case, the First Division. | al Court te-day upheld -the right of the Ontario Department of Education | to limit the teaching of French in Ontario schools. The following points were made: 1.--That the Legislatu¥e by its de. claratory act of last session specifi- | cally vested this power in the De-| partment, { 2 --That even if the right to have | P¥ench taught had originally been | granted/by treaty, the British North America Act, with no such provision, is supreme, i 8.-- That the study of French | should be encouraged as an advan- | tage, instead of being denanded as | a right The Ontario departmental regula. tion involved in the case is known as "No. 17," and ong of the judgments is the outcome of the Separate School | Board trouble in Ottawa, which re-| sulted in the suspension of teachers | and other reprisals. | FRENCH FORCES HOLD. Entire Hill Country In Flanders -- Allies To Advance. (Special to the Whi On the Heights of Notre Dame de Lorette, near Arras, France, July| 11 (via Paris, July 12,)--After batt ting 120 days for the hill Cuinirv| between Bethune and Arras, the French troops are in possessior of all the eminence looking ou' upon the | plain of Flanders. Lille Douni and | Cambrai all are visible -from here. Every position along the broad national road between Arras and | Bethune has been won except Sou- chez, and Saturday another quarter mile of trenches in the Souchez web was torn away. The attack was made under parachute rocket lights, the French burning bluish white ana the Germans greenish white, cover- ing the scene of desperate conflict with a ghostly glow. The most desperate fighting has been along the shorl ten-mile front from Arras to Aix Noulette, which began March 9th with the taking of a few hundred yards of trenches on the watefshed of Notre Dame de Lorette. "Every day since then some | section of the German trenches have| lost or retaken. | Each side has been employing for- mwidable artilery- both of small and heavy caiime, the French guns be- ing somewhal the more numerous and served with unlimited quanti- ties of high explosive shells. . A correspondent of the Associated Press to-day went through five or six miles o. the trenches formerly h&ld by t Germans and recon- stucted by the French who now have abandoned them to move forward. Upwatds of 100,000 Germans have fallen or ben captured in these trenches, according to the French of-| ficial count, since the second week) of March. The check whiéh the Russians have imposed on Archduke Joseph Ferdipand's army in Southern Po- land and the additional strain which this has placed on General von Mackensen's German army to the right has postponed, it is believed in military circles here, the threaten- ed German. offensive in the west and there is now a possibility that the! Allies will be the first to take wi] offensive. KING'S CONFIDENCE HIGH. Will Surely Trimuphs. London, July 12.--~The belief that the British navy will win fresh laur- els, "whenever the day of battle comes," is expressed by King George in a message to Admiral Jellicoe af- ter a visit to the grand fleet. "l have had the pleasure of see- ing the greater portion of the officers and men of the fleet," said hi§ Ma- Jesty. "I realize the Patient and determined spirit with which you have faced long monthé of waiting and hoping. I know how strong is the comradeship that links all ranks together. Such a happy state of things convinces me that whenever the day of battle comes my navy will} add fresh triumphs to its old and | gloriogs traditions." Navy Add Fresh| Women's Dainty Summer | Dresses Are these warm days, and we invite you 3 Women's n Novelty Dresses, made of Voile -- striped--Checked -- spot and floral designs--plain full skirts or trimmed frills -- attracting unusual attention to see this collection. of others box pleated. to this offerifig very attractive. Prices from $2.15 up to $25.00 Everything combines make At A At A At at ats tar Wash Suits WHITE REPP SUITS, with plain flare skirt, with long back faney coat. .....: NATURAL LINEN SUITS, plain high waist line, skirt flared--with pocket; natty coat in Norfolk style ne cA. Scarce Summer Goods That May Be Had Here BLACK VELVET RIBBONS, all widths, for trimmings and belts. FANCY BLACK AND WHITE RIBBONS, for Hats, for Belts, for Sashes Long Silk Gloves In Black Silk, in White Silk, double tipped fingers; fine pure silk, - 75¢ a Pair PREMIER NORRIS DENIES That He Had Any Knowledge Of By-Election Deal. ' (Special to the Whig.) Winnipeg, July 12.-- Premier T. C. | Norris, in the witness box this morn- ing, denied absolutely any knowledge of the alleged deal between Hon. J. DISASTROUS FIRES, Are Sweeping Along the Turf in Ger. x many, no sleeves, ankle and knee lengths, the popular sum- mer garment, from . . . : ....00¢ to $1.00 Children's Underwear, in all styles and makes; I | (Special to ithe Whig.) | Amsterdam, July 12. = Several: i} great 'turf fires have broken out in; | Germany, south-west of Hanover, | H. Howden and William Chambers, § and war prisoners and German 'regarding the payment for calling off i} | troops have been sent to fight the election protests or changing Gov- "§i}| flames. The village of Michalken, |ernments, He said he never at any Vests,Drawers and Combinations, from 12 1-2¢ to 50¢ a ------ Men's Balbriggan and fine Dimity Shirts and Drawers, with and without sleeves and ankle and rer. knee lengths, at ....... oS --- ~~ Men's Combinations, in Balbriggan and athletic ..T5¢, $1.00 and $1.25 styles. at... .. 5. on Light Wool Underwear, Women and Children. | Muslin Dresses in all styles, for Men, between Witticsenau and Geissolz, is | time was aware that Chambers had threatened with destruction. Flames, actepted money for such purposes are also sweeping Schurgenmoor, aii o Wounded at Ypres. Brockville, July 12.--Unable to return to his home in Chicago be. canse of the strict neutrality regu- he United States, w and knew of no negotiations in that direction. TRAWLER GETS AWAY, { More About Our Sale Shoes They Are Selling Fine As we have enough for all who come to-morrow, we - call them i your notice again. ~ Patent Colonial Shoes, with white tops, sand or grey. Also a few of the New Oxfords, all worth $3 and $3.50