PAGE TEN THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, TUESDAY, AUGUST 10, 1915. ART SR VL 0 5 7 SRNR AN ET, / (A Mother's Love Is Best Of All. Lo Sung by The Popular Vaudeville Team BARR and BRUNSWIG. / Wopds and Muasle . By ARTHUR E. BARR. Andante' Moderato. nf FE Ti think-ing of my mother old and gry, Whom Ive notseen forman-y years, __ | To . mor-row I am go-.Ing far a - way, A thou -sand miles o'er land and sea, To i oe Sse * pe Re -- emia pee geet pp She "S-- of her brings bit-ter tears; ____ how hap - py be; miss ber' moreand moreeach day, --_ To think meet my moth-er old and gray, __ Aud oh,. she wili Twill SS RE Surge" care, __ And tried and fill ber heart with Joy, ---- Once more always watched o'er me with tender tot 2 com-fort her to teach me right from wrong, _ Ita Il holdher to. my breast, And 7 ' m---- : . Copyright MCMXIV by Barr & Prulwig 7 Published by Edgar Selden Music Co, Luc. 1560 Broadway, Long Acre Square, New York. Ail Bights Reserved *" International Copyright Secured Used By.Pyrmission, Murray Music Co. New York, ows. of the late Mrs. McDonald arrived here on Tuesday night. The largely attended funeral was held from the deceased's old home on Wednesday afternoon to Glenwood vault and the service was conducted by the Rev. James Cumberland. ~The deceased is survived by a sorrowing husband and two young daughters, also two brothers, John and Hugh Glenn of the island, Harvesting has received a very severe set back, owing to the wet weather. Quite a number from here took in the excursion on. the steamer America to Picton on Thurs- day last. Mr. and Mrs. D. Caughey, Jr., attended the Filson--Hinton wed- ding in Kingston on Tuesday last. Miss J. LT, Cochrane, has returned home froin a short visit at St. Cath- arines. Miss Muriel Filson returned with her, and will' spend a few weeks with friends here. summering in Mr. Erwin's cottage. (| Mrs. G. T. Maley, Montreal, Miss | Welna Thomson, North Augusta and Frederick Herdman, New York, are visitors at the summer home of Dr, Kilborn, Bay View Cottage... Edgaft Erwin who has been ill is better. Mrs.. J. Goodfellow, Tichborne, visit- ed at Dr. Kilborn's last week. D. Cummings, Smith's Falls, preached in the Methodist church last Sunday. Some good sized fish are being caught out of this lake. Mr. Brad- ley and family, Smith's Falls, are occupying Elm Cottage for the sum- mer. T. Newman, and L. Porter, New York, are in their summer cot- tages. Mr. Cass and party, Winches- ter, are in Fernbank Cottage and Mr. Metcalf and family, Ottawa, are in Rockland Villa. Miss Irene Al- lan, Smith's Falls, has returned home after visiting Miss Abbie Kilborn, Bay View Cottage. Fred Johnston, Ottawa, spent the week-end at Mr. MeJanet's cottage. Mr. Davage, Tor- onto, spent the week-end with his family at his summer home here. A very large number of students at- tended the summer Model School here this year. Four instructors have been employed to teach. An "At Home" was given by the Epworth League of the Methodist Church to the students of the school on July 26th. 'The English church garden Aug. 4. -- Mr. and Mrs. Fred. Hicks, son Rod, and daughter Win. nifred, St. Catharines, also Mr, Hicks' mother, Mrs. N. D, Hicks, are visit- ing Mr. and Mrs. B. Rose. BATH ROAD Aug. 6.--The recent storms have caused considerable damage to the grain and cori crops. WF. Greer's beé" yesterday, hauling stone, was well attended: Five pupils of the palace school were successful in the High School Entrance examinations ¥2, Rita Harkness, Ruth Redmond, Bertha Ol, Francis Gardiner and Keith Hull. Much praise is due the teacher, Miss Jones, for her painstak- ing efforts,, It is stated that the Government intends making some improvements on the Bath Road shortly. | 'Hastings TWEBD, Aug. 15--We are pleased to an- nounce. the marriage of our towns- wan, P. Mcliroy, to Mrs. A. Doran, formerly of Stoce. It took place on Aug, 5th, at Rochester, N.Y., when the bride has resided during the last year. After the wedding tour is ended, Mr. and Mrs. Mclliroy in- tend to take up house-keeping in his beautiful home on Bridge street. Miss Mary Quinn, visiting Belleville friends returned home on Sunday accompanied by her cousin, Miss Marie Papineau, Napanee. Mrs, James Faulkner, San Francisco, Cal., is visiting her sister, Mrs. P. Lena- han. Joha Quinn who has been out lof town holidaying during the last month, has returned. Mrs. A. J. | Fitzgerald and daughter, Greta and Thelma are camping with friends at Stoney Lake. Juss » Erins- ville, spent a few days here week on business. Mrs. 'Bajalis, Chicago, Ill, is visiting friends at Tweed. VERONA. Aug; 6.--W. Morrison, Kingston, is visiting. his cousin, Wesley Bur. Anish, Ty as tang Miss Efile nge, Tic rhe, visited the latter's | party was en oyed by all, mother this week Miss J. Grant 2th, doy y ow July has gone west to visit her brother. Davey, Herbert Burleigh and | Smith went to Sharbot Lake to baseball, James and' in are eslefnMart gL now a iumobites, dw Be aughten an e, Perth, at C, W. Leadley's; John Ger- aldi and wife, Inverary, and their son-in-law, James McCallum, of the same place, also Gilbert Gerald, wite and children, Kinburn, at John E. James Payne's children, at John McMsater's; Jo. » STELLA Aug. 9. There passed away after a lingering illness, at her home in Busts, NE: on Sunday, August,1st, ormer well-known resident of the an ter, Col at home at | island, in the person of Mrs, 8 a » , Sylves- {he Vandewater fouss. ohn Walker | ter MeDenald, only daughter of the mi ving. use repaired and late Alexander Glenn, The remains ents, Mates. > Ruby Wilkins, with their Par-: ents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Wilkins. Eddington and Florence Connotly, B.A Tallen's; Miss] nburnie, at Eugene in charge hy BA. | 'returned to 'the institu- SHARBOR, LAKE hii rd | rocking chair. | for their kindness. '| Harry is a general favorite -- Ver . y, ver. y. hard to hear her say, darls bear,____ To My- stay fears for Ys a i CHORUS. Valse Moderato A brotherwill love you as all brothers do ' mf > sis.ter 1s proud of her trou-ble your dls, Wiat eermay be. fall, Will be ready to help all "3 er; Miss Pearl Gorman, Chantry, at Mrs. Munroe's. About fit. ty from this vicinity went to Charleston for an outing on Satur- day last. Mr. and Mrs, William Looby are visiting friends at Lombardy. A number from here attended the cele- bration at Brockville on Monday last. Rev. A. E. Hagar will mofor to Morewood this week to preach anni- versary sermons on Sunday next. Enos Soper has purchased a Ford auto. The Frankville Auxiliary of the W. M. S. went to Delta park on Thursday to convene with other au- xiliaries. = R, Hanto lost a valvuable horse this week. TREVELYAN, Aug, 6.--The garden party held in R. J, Leeder's grove on Wednesday was a grand succcess.. The proceeds amounted to over two hundred dol. lars, James Williams, Caintown, was the lucky one in winning the Mr, and Mrs. Mi- chael. Heffernan and son, Edmund, Athens, are spending this week on their farm. here. . Mr. and Mrs. William Chick, Mallorytown, and Mr. and Mrs. Bern, Flood and children motored to Toledo on Sunday last. Migs Ethel Shea, Brockville, has re. turned home after spending a few days with relatives here. Eric Dobbs, Athens, is visiting Lis uncle, Robert Dixie, Misses Olive Anglin and Loretta Leeder spent Sunday in Rockport, and among the islands, Frederick Leeder and D, Donevan, Escott, attended a social in Spencer- ville on Thursday last. Misses Genevieve and Irene Leeder spent the Nask-end in Mallorytown and Lans- owne, CHANTRY Aug. 6.--About fifty people met at the home of Eli Chant Tuesday even- ing in a downpour of raim, to tender a farewell to Harry Wykes before go- \ Ing to Barriefield, The evening was Spent playing. -games, and after a dainty lunch was. served, H, E. Eyre read an appropriate and feeling ad- dress, and Miss Pearl Seed: handed Harry twenty- dollars. The recipient was so rcome that he had to re- tire to room for a time, but find- thanked his good friends sincere "God be with you till we meet again," was sung and made many friends his short so- journ in Chantry. Y., are visiting her father, Eris Sop- oh a. way from ber so W111 shareallyour sorrows or Joys, long. ure now at rest, ___ A bigbrother t0o,And thinks you're the best of all boys __ When in ° - = 2 § . the love inthis ~ wide, wide world, A Mothers is best of all. Ak guests of Mr. and Mrs. . Robert Steacy on Saturday and Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. James- Moore and little sons, Fairfax, were guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Vanderburg on Sunday. Mrs, P.Millne, Brewer's Mills, spent the past week with her parents Mr. and Mrs, T, Deir, Mrs. Leeder, Brockville, is visiting her daughter, Mrs. W. A. Dier, Quite a large party of pieasure- seekers motored from Warburton and Duleemane to Ivy Lea on Satur- day evening, and went on the excur- sion to Alexandria Bay. Mrs. A. Vanderburg and children, Avonmore, spending a few weeks with friends here, were the guests of Mrs. John Reid a part of last week. Mrs. W. T. Parsons 'is able to be around again after her severe illness. Mr. and Mrs. David Waldie, Greenville, South Carolina, made a short visit with friends in this vicinity on Sat- urday. Mr, and Mrs. Waldie motor- ed from Greenville to Watertown, N.Y., where they spent a few days with friends, then to Clayton, where they took the boat for Gananoque, and where they will remain with friends and relatives for a few weeks before they return to their home in the South. ROCKPORT, Rockport, Aug. 6.--At St. Bren- dan's Church, Rockport, on the 28th July, a pretty wedding was solemn- ized, when Miss Bernadette Effa Lyoneh was united in matrimony to Leo C. Trudeau, Montreal, by Rev. Father: Cullinane. To the strains of Mendelsshon's Wedding March play- ed by Miss Lorette Harrigan, the bride attired in a gown of blue sat- in draped with silk chiffon, wearing a bridal veil with wreath of orange blossoms, entered the church on the arm. of her brother; Augustine. Miss Cecelia Lynch, sister of the bride, wearing a dress of chantily lace with tunie of blue silk, and picture to match, acted as bridesmaid, while Eugene Lynch performed the duties of best man. During the ceremony two pretty. hymns were sung by tal ent from: Brockville and Kingston. After the ceremony the bridal par- ty amid showers of rice and confet ti. left. the church and. repaired: to the home of the bride where a sump- ity trionde. Tachadume. Bove. Bh. oF -£ . yD A, Cullinane who. which all drank to newly married T e. able afternoon J. W. Richards had a valuable| being furnished by TH i Fi §3¢ if ~ Whenever you call, But of tie Noga! | Letters To itor | The Crops Are Splendid Canonto, Aug: 6.--(To the Edi- tor): 1 had ocfasion to travel twen- ty-five miles to visit a sister who is sick. 1 travelled through the east of Frontenac, and into Lanark Coun- ty. 1 was immensely pleased to see the county so flourishing All crops look fine and in good shape. Pota- toes are splendid. I have stalks here near an inch thick and standing over three feet high. Corn is higher than I am and lots like that all the way I went. There seems to be a lot of rye out; looks great. I saw one large field of fall wheat the first I've seen in years. Peas and oats are grand. It must be a bumper year surely. New potatoes here are nice and dry. I've seen not such for years. The rain is forcing a growth we seldom ever see. Yours--HUGH CAMERON. Dangerous Seed Grain. Canonto, Aug. 7.--(To the Edi- tor): Farmers should beware of dan- gerous seed grain. Last year I got some seed oats and now find blue weed. It is a terment like mustard which will not travel unless carried or will pollute a farm in a year. Ina place it can grow, it forms a bunch about three feet around which breaks with wind and blows until it reaches a woods or fence, sowing as it goes a fine seéd. No animal. can eat: grain with it in. It resembles a fine weed with a small yellow flower. [Yesterday morning I counted fifty pads on ten inches of one branch and every pad contained twelve seeds, therefore 600 seeds, and ten times that on one stalk. It will pay any farmer to cut a field and burn the a toast the health of the An grain when this weed is found in it. I must have got mine in some seed purchased in the city. HUGH CAM- ERON, Seriously Injured. On July 22nd Mr. Schilling from Ohio, helidaying at Bom Echo Inn met with a serious accident while he was awaiting his train preparatory to going home, at Kaladar, It ap- pears that Mr, Schilling understood that the train pulled in on the second track and as it was in the middle of the night he was dozing away. When was | the arrival of the train was announ- ced, he being in a more or less of a comatose state, grabbed his valise and Jumpsd: on the. frst. track direct front of: THE SPORT REVIEW | The close of another week of Na- tional League baseball similar - to that which ended Saturday will find Philadelphia deposed from the lead- ership, with either Chicago or New York at the top. President James A. Gilmore of the Federal League aunounces that the Federal League will try out 10-cent major league baseball in Newark instead of '15-cent. baseball, as has been reported. -- "Jonnie" Evers, of the Braves, threatens to retire for the balance of the season owing to ill-health and the unjust criticism of some of the magnates. * In the Delaware County League, the same organization that harbers Home Run Baker, is George Mullin, the old Detroit pitcher, A baseball writer points out that Ty Cobb has stolen more bases than the entire Philadelphia National League team. But what does the entire Philadelphia Nationals care so long as they are leading the league. At the annual meeting of the Can- adian Association of Amateur Oars- men it was announced that 754 out of an active membership of 1,301 were now. serving the Empire at the front. ' Frank Moran has arrived at New York, saying that he was after Jess Willard's scalp. I am going to fight Willard if he will get off his horse long enough to take off. his Spurs and meet me," he said. "I think Willard will evade me," though," he continued. "He will fight anybody but me. I am in fine condition now, weigh 200 pounds, and will be ready to fight anybody in five weeks." Some remarkable statistics have been compiled in connection with the record made by 'Jack' Ness of the Oakland Club of the Pacific Coast League, in securing at least one hit in forty-nine consecutive games. Ness started his stiring of hits, which eventually displaced the rec- ord held by T. Cobb, on May 31st. His batting spree did not end un- til-July 21st and during that period the giant Oakland first baseman went to bat 184 times scoring thirty- six runs. and eighty-one hits includ- ing thirteen two-baggers; three three-baggers and six home runs, His total number of bases was 118 for the forty-nine games and his batting average for the same period Old-time baseball fans probably remember "Joe Hornung when he played left field for the champion Bostons of 1883 and later covered the same position for the New York Giants. Hornung was one of the greatest throwers in those days, al- 80 a fine batsman and base runner. He has been appointed a member of the military police, which preserves order at the Polo Grounds, New York, and togged in a new uniform he began his duties In the centre field bleachers. The Vancouver Athletic Club will Strain every effort to maintain its hold on the Mann Cup. Dr. David- son, British Columbia representative of the Canadian body, has announc- ed that as long as the Mann Cup was officially recognized by the Amd- teur Athletic Union of Canada as the trophy répresentative of the Ca- nadian amateur lacrosse champion- ship, and as long as British Colum- bia holds that honor, every means would be adopted to hold the cup. P. J. Lally has notified the officials of the Vancouver A.C.M., that he will take legal action to recover the cup un ess it Is returned to the trustees. Hamilton Spectator: The idea of forming the Sportsmen's battery has met with the. gemeral approval of members of the various sporting or- ganizations throughout the city, and there nromises to be a large number of football, hockey and baseball players sign the roll, The battery will not go overseas. for some time, but will drill here so as to be ready when called upon for active service, Every one of the commissioned offi- cers. of the new battery has won fame on the field of sport, and it is the intention to have none hut athle- tics or friends of athletics oa the roll. In this way the unit will be like one happy family and should be very po- pular, Captain E. V, Wright, of Morris & Wright, stock brokers, is in charge of the enlisting. -" THE LATE MRS. G. H. SQUIRE She Had Lived In Kingston For Years. Mrs. Harrigst 'M. K. Davison Squire, widow of the Rev. George Henry Squire, died on Saturday at her summer home between Collins Bay and Millhaven on the Bath Read. The funeral was held Mon- day and the burial was in Wilton. Mrs. Squire, who for more than twenty years was a resident of Kingston, was the only daughter of the late Jolin Darley Davison and his wife, whose maiden name was Han- nab Harriet She was born on Foorusty sy, 1851, in Ernestown Towns Was mare ried' there in 1870, After the death of the Rev. Mr. Squire, in 1884, she came to Kingston. Her chief in- terest outside her home was in the Sunday School of Queen Street Me- hich developed into the Young Men's Club of the church,