PAGE EIGHT The Three Button Sack Our illustration shows the Three Button Kng- sh Sack Suit, Tis a Suit that voung men admire. The coat is a medinm short length and well fitted to the form; the sleeves fit the arms closely; when but- toned with two buttons it hows a high cut vest, giv- ing it a decidedly English effect. The lapels are broad; the trousers have a narrow enff and are made in the straight Lnglish, style effeet. Fabries 'are many new colorings, $15.00, $18.00 up to $22 Livingston's, Brack St. A Little Out of the Way, But It Will Pay You To w 25¢ Sale Saturday 8.30 O'clock As HAA eat tat, 40 doz. White Muslin Night- gowns, 23. 17 doz. Ladies' White Knit Draw- ers, 23¢. 90 doz. Ladies' White Muslin Drawers, Zc. I 60 doz. Ladies' White Corset Cov- 34 doz. Black and White Sik Fin ished Lisle Stockings, 25¢ 'See them in' the window. THE DAILY BRITISH 'WHIG. THURSDAY, AUGUST 12, 1915 EACH HERO'S HEART GL ADDE NE D BY YOUR DONATION, CAN BE Tobacco Fund Campaign Fellows Who Fighting--Col- Join in the and Cheer Up the Are Doing Your lectors Now The Tobacco 'Fund grows apace. Collection: books have been sent out in' all directions. and unselfish work- ers are busy in a worthy endeavor to add a little brightness and cheer to the life of these who are bearing the heat and burden of war. If such enthusiastic souls are willing to give their share and also to met out and work, won't you at least give your bit? Remember, - there are many thousdnds of Canadian boys in France and Flanders, and it takes a lot of tobacco to go around. Busy. L More Money Wanted Tobacco ends in smoke, a long,~tong way from the battle- field to a shop where they sell the welcome weed. The aim of the Ov- arseas Club is to send a parcel of cigarettes and tobacco every week to every soldier at the front. We want to emphasize the importance of sustained effort and regular contri- butions The supply of cigarettes and tobacco must be maintained. We appeal to you with full confi- dence to keep the ball rolling. Our soldiers are you are asked to give them thing to smoke It isn't vou, but it is a great deal to my Atkins." somethimg to smoke is a solemn duty. The empty pipe is bad enough | anywhere, as every smoker KNows, | but at the front it is a tragedy. Our soldiers are invetbrate | smokers. Théy love their weed as | they love their country. A Card of Thanks. Every 25¢ heart of a hero . vou because your name and address is written on the postcard we some- scribe for. These postcards are a Fund They bring those into direct touch with those who re- attempted in a distribution of gifts from a general fund. It is a _fine work that 6fir success in the last few days mus spur us on to further efforts. "Tom my Atkins" smoke as long as we are assured of his bravery, left in the Eagle." wing of the mire their bravery. hame is thinking of him day by day and week by week. Recent contributions to the are: Previously acknowledged C. D. C., City F. G. C., city W. M. Keon, R.M.D. 1, enham Albert Sloan, city . : Miss Bessie Clayton, city "ois 00] Forne Irwin, R.M.D,, ginburg . | .25 J. F. McEwen, city . 50 Capt. W. Simmons, city .... 00 John Bews, city . 50 Lillian Clow, city .25 A Friend .25 A Friend . "en .25 Mrs. George Hunter, city ... 25 Asa Bishop, Hillier . ...... 25 Edgar Bishop, Hillier . .-.. 25 M. Neilson, Booth, Ont. .00 HK. Neilson, Booth, Ont. 5 M. G. Stark, Gananoque ... Bessie M. Saunderson, city .. Capt. Clarke Hamilton, Aanastasie E. Barr, Harrow- smith . 25 A Friend, city S. A. Truscott, Mrs. E. B. Sparks received a cable from Alexandria, Egypt, dated August 12th stat- & "% ing that Queen's Stationary Hos- + pital arrived there to-day, af- # ter an excellent trip. + . Shed +5 RUSSIAN Reported In SUCCESSES, Affect Stock Ex« e. (Special to the Whig. " London, Aug 12.-- Wide ? ciroula: tion was given this afternoon to a runvor that the Government had re- ceived news of military successes | affecting Russian. This rumour was | based on the of prices of Russian securities on the Stock Exchange. What Gun Cotton Is. Sir William say, the noted British chemist, nes cotton as gun cotton, and says that it is the only material which is in use for propul- sive ammunition; that other explo- vi trotol: hey may be used as fill- ings for shells, for they are stable enough to be fired "from" a gun without exploding until, when Sey reach their mark, the detonator of Horie Tropa (Special to Berlin, Aug. theatre of war and it is| | Bibles and giving their lives; | much to "Tom- | This sending out of | | | parcel will gladden the | He will remember | en- close with every 25¢ parcel you sub- | most pleasing feature of our Tobacco | who give | ceive in a personal way, never before | we are engaged in, and | | must be assured of his | a quality which will en- | dure as long as there is a feather | "Prussian | Our soldiers appreciate this prac- | tical way of showing how we all ad- | Every parcel is | welcome proof that someon2 here at | Fund .25| Robert Neil y th, Ont. . 25 ert Neilson, Booth, Ont 3% in Renfrew on Wednesday. M. G. Stark, Gan boinyr oa > 354 Bnoqye 1 = has successfully harnessed the Falls city. 1.00 of Eugenia for power development. bbb bbb bbb bbb dbbb ddd ddd bdd | ably sent by the Germans to % | Bamoverian SWamps. REACHED ALEXANDRIA, #| -- « | Tonto show that the 2,000 mark is # | nearly reached. Toronto's total con- + | tribution # | will not only maintain an | but operate a restaurant also to ad- # | vertise Canadian fish as an article of diet. | PEEL PP EPR dobdeb db bdodd BRITISH WHIG TOBACCO FUND. What the dollar box contairs 1 Briar Pipe 1. Rubber-lined Pouch. I Tinder Lighter 0 Cigarettes, 4" Ounces of Tobacco And a Return Postal address- ed to the donor Tebacco Me ole ole of ob ho oe ob bg oe Ghd rE ese T pd The 25¢ Parcel contains of Cigarettes 4 Ounces Smoking Mixture. Some Matches, And a Postcard addressed to you. Remember, there Shops. on the ire no 'Bacey Battlefield. PRBS SEPP p eS hdd diiidddob bib bd dd bbb bddd EFFECTS oF SL AIN ARRIVE. Belongings of Canadians Killed Being "Sent to Next of Kin. Ottawa, Aug. 12.--Pathetic me- mentoes of Canada's sons who have fallen at the front and now lie bur-y ied on the battlefields of France and Flanders are arriving: at Militia Headquarters here. They com- prise the personal effects of the dead Canadians, articles of clothing, pheo- tographs, letters, bits of jewellery, keepsakes of all kinds. The effects have been forwarded from the Canadian base at Boulogne for distribution to next of kin in Canada. All of the express ecom- panies doing business in Canada have agreed to forward the packages free {of charge to the families of the dead. | { gaged as clerk in the store of A. { } STR ot n DAVID BEATTY | lay. promoted to be a vice. | { jada. PITH OF THE NEWS. Dospatches From Near and isto: | Places. J. R. Cartright has been gazetted temporary Lieutenant of the 3rd To- onto Battalion, @® General 8. B. Steele of the Caunad- lan mihua is gazetted attached to | the Headquarters Staff, | The new Hydro-electric system of | street lighting was formally opened | Commission | The Hydro-electrie Mrs. Clarence Tox, a young woman of Port McNicoll, was burned, pro- "00 | bably fatally, when using coal oil to 00 | light her kitchen fire. The French asserted that their prisoners of war had been unjustifi- the L Latest recruiting figures for To- is now nearly 20,000. The Dominion fisheries branch exhibit, Fred. Moyse, a popular and efi | cient member vf the Toronto Globe | mechanical staff, was | Etobicoke Creek by the overturning A Germany and, Austria. '(tons ef drowned at of a rowboat. The will of the late E. C. Walker, of Walkerville, filed for probate in| Essex County Surrogate Court, dis- said to be the largest in volume and value ever probated in Ontario: «Henry J. Chute, Kentville, NS. ivity on 'the rising... whose son Roy sold an unserviceable! horse to the remount department, asked Sir Charles Davidson, Com-| missioner on war contracts, for per-| mission to refund the price, $165, to, the Government. «= Thomas Moffatt and James Mec-| Donald, who attempted. to escape! from the Provincial Prison Farm at' Guelph, but were capturéd, were sen- | tenced by Magistrate Watt, Moffat] to two years in penitentiary, and Me- | Donald, to three years. ' Announcement 1s made that for) the first time in the history of the sugar trade Switzerland has pur sugar from the United Sta-| its initial order is for 1,000 granulated. Hitherto | i Switzerland has bought sugar from tes. Memorial To Hon. C. F. Fraser. | Brockville, Aug 12.---A proposal has been made to erect a monumen here. in memory of Hon. Christopher "| Finlay Fracer, Minister of Public! Works in Ontario, doris phoge a | ministration the Par _ {ing id Toronto were constructed. The. Eastern Hospital here, in the grounds: of which it is proposed' to erect the monument, brain. © Saturday, Aug. 14th. SS and Islander leaves at 1. any | deceased | Loyola, poses of an estate of $14,126,000 is Edward Barry | Died in German Hospital, May Ist Word was received by American Consul Felix 8S. S. Johnson on Wed- nesday morning that Pte. Edward Barry, son of Mrs. James, Ellice streei, had died in a German hospital or May 1st having been wounded ip the battle of Langemarcke, and tak- en prisoner by the Germans. Immediately after the battle of Langemarcke Pte. Barry was report- ed missing, but it was not until Wed- nesday morning that the family got any word of his fate. As soon as the list announcing him missing was received, the family got into commu- nication with the militia authorities at Ottawa, but were unable to get other word than that he was missing. They placed the matter in the hands of United States Consul | Johnson, who - communicated with the American Ambassador at Berlin, | with the foregoing result. 1] When the family was called on by | a Whig representative, the mother | was so broken up over the news that she could say nothing. | When the cali came last August | for Canadians to go to the fron{, Bd- ward Barry was one of the first to enlist, He enlisted with the 14th Regiment contingent under Captain George T. Richardson. While at the front he proved himself to be a good soldier. Some time ago Capt. Richardson wrote the motlier of thé deceased stating that her son was | missing, but that was all he was able to find out . i Before enlisting Pte Barry n= Ro- | ney & Co., Princess street, The Late Mrs. B .H. Williams. At her late residence, 11 Colborne | street, on Thursday morning, Lena | Whelan, wife of B. H. Williams, pass- | ed away-after a brief illness. The was born at Westport thirty-six years ago, and for the past year had resided in Kingston. Pre- vious to thie she lived @t Garden Is- 'land. Her loss will not only be mourned by her family ,but in her death the Orphans' Guild of St. Mary's-of-the Lake will be deprived of an ener-| getic worker . | In religion the late Mrs. Williams was a devout Roman Catholic, and | member of St. Mary's Cathedral. She | was also a member of the League of the Sacred Heart. { To mourn her loss there are her husband and one danghter, Mary Williams, residing at home. Mrs. lA. P Donnelly, Vancouver, and Sis- | ter Mary Martina and Sister Mary both members of the local House of Providence, are sisters of | the deceased. | GERMANY MUST CUT Se i | Her Way Through To Constantin- ople, Says Count. (Special to the Whig London," Aug. 12.--Diso Ene the! Balkan situation in the Tage Zeit- ung, Count Reventlow declares that) #8 | Germany must cut her way through! to Constantinople and make the new Triple Alliance in reality. "The demand for direet communi-| cation between Hungary and Tur- key," he writes, "has found express-| ion more and more energetically {during the past few months.' The Balkan situation is featured by this morning's papers. Serbia's unwillingness to. cede territory,' claimed by Bulgeria, which will be necessary to insure the active operation by Bulgaria on the side}! of the Allies, has had a discourag-| ing effect. 35c Trip ¢ © 1000 Islands. 14th, per, S8.| Making | i { a | ( Saturday, August Thousand Islander. Admiralty Group. leaves 1.30 p m. sharp. Home at 5 p. m. sharp. Berlin Reports Captures. (Special to, the Whi { Berlin, Aug. . den. Von | Scholtz's army i ri the im- | portant bridge head at Vizna, east of | Lomiza, leading over the Narew riv- | {er. 'This afternoon's official state- | ment also raported the capture of the | Waln bridge head. ! -- i Just a Line To Let Yon Know | "That on Friday morning you can 'buy ap eleven quart basket of plums of peaches for hall a dollar at| Carnovsky" S. co- 14 { the! I complete 50-mile ramble through the t 'White Goods We are: showing many popular White Materials suitable for mud-sum- mer wear. . White Piques -fine and Skirts- medium -eords.-- For for Suits--for Waists, 25¢, 30c, 35¢, 39c. WHITE REPP WHITE INDIAN HEAD For«Middy Blouses for Skirts-- 15¢, 18¢, 20c¢, 25¢ yard. WHITE VOILE WHITE DIMITIES WHITE MARQUISETTE WHITE INDIAN LINEN, 15¢, 20c, 25¢c, 35¢ Yard. Cool Underwear for Wo- men .and Children WOMEN'S KNITTED VESTS, 1c, 20¢, 26¢, 35¢. WOMEN'S KNITTED VESTS, Hand finished, 39c, 45c, 50c. WOMEN'S COMBINATIONS, Short or no sleeves, 25¢, 35¢c, 39c, 49c. . WOMEN'S COMBINATIONS, Hand finished, 65¢c, 75¢c. CHILDREN'S VESTS, Short or no sleeves, 12 1-2c¢, 1bc, 20c, 25¢. Something Special for Saturday Be sure and read particulars in to-mor- row night's paper. \. J JOHN. Laidlaw & Son tt | 8 | | ! |} To help things move along during August, we are putting on sale this week Ladies' Black C anvas Strap Slippers and Black Canvas Colonial Pumps, covered heel; a nice, comfortable, cool. shoe--a shoe everybody ean afford to buy at the price, oF is also a child of hig. ae