Daily British Whig (1850), 27 Sep 1915, p. 6

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TAGE SIX : | YHE DAILY BRITISH wht, MowDAY EEE 27, 1915. N ek | 1 fo dl \ Oo ! IK RAILWAY "LISTEN FRU, THE GREAT Napanee | Nature Makes The Flavour of | [TEES S$) | Gananoque | | 'Local Branch Time Table. a IN ERFECT MAY SOTH, 1915, A | . Trains will leave and arrive at Clty Depot, foot of Johnston street. ! Geolag West. - ¥ i Lv. City. , h | No. -. 258am 335a No. 2% . " 2 N , , 1 J R ° PHYSICIA ; ----' Sept. 27. Hugh McFadden: a Sept. 27.--The annual meeting of} well-known and highly esteemed The cool, tempered breezes of the hill-top | the Napariee Red Cross Society was| resident of this town, passed away | held Saturday afternoon in the Town|at.an early hour yesterday morning | | Healing Powers of Fruit Proved gardens in Ceylon, produce a tca of delicate, a . : . -- Mall yet rich and Havoury quality. A carcful [No 16 ves se Hall. A very enthusiastic and en-|at the family residence, King street. ! " " by "Fruit-a-tives No. 33--Local to couraging report was presented, Several years ago deceased Was | showing that during the year past) stricken with paralysis. ~ Since that | Queen Shut, St Shdze 197, and| og simple juices of apples, oranges, ave the nstalled ia your figs and prunes, when transformed into selection of the finest growths is 'blended to |x, make "SALADA", No. about $4,000 had been collected by|time he has suffered five strokes, the | the Seciety, and that donations in-|last during the past week, when he | home, 'Fruit-a-tives' will relieve diseases of St kh, Liv A , v2 Light, Heat, Power and 'bc Smack, Livers Kidneys and Skin. Water Bs § linen and other necessaries to make service the Communion service was | ~ eo RB 1 7 articles needed by the wounded sol-|econdueted by Dr. Gracey. Nos. 1, ore wien ro a cluding cash and articles for hospital} was brought home from Watertown, | The truth of this statement hasbeen At the | ° I x diers. The officers elected for" the|Sunday school service {here was a | [other ralus daily except Sunday coming year were: President, Mrs.|grand rally. At the evening session | ew or ¥ ul Ol € nich. a Toronts, Pelorhore: A. W. Grange; 1st vice, Mrs. F. F.|Dr. Gracey's farewell' words were | [Chicago, 'Bay City, Saginaw. eal,' A ippoprypoéi Food when properly Cooked, Can be served First Class, And the way to obtain it is to COOKE WITH GAS. Drop a card to the Office of Works, | ® 1600 - MEP pe?" a se EF? BES PB BBEPEG needy institutions and the balance | preached his farewell sermons to his | had been spent in buying wool and flock yesterday. After the morning | use. amounting to about $700, had|N.Y. Deceased leaves a widow. i been made to Queen's Stationary Hos- Rev. Dr. Gracey, for the past thir- | § " | proved in thousands of eases of C. C. Folger, General Mgr. | Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Torpid Liver, A y | » Saginaw, Montreal, Miller, 2nd vice, Mrs. Rudd Perry,y spoken, words fraught with good will | Ottawa, Quebec, Portland, = St. John, secretary, Mrs. George Thompson; jand good advice. During his resi- | pital No. 5. Altogether about $1,800 ty-seven years pastor of St. Andrew) had been given in cash tg -various| Presbyterian Church, of this to Constipation, Kidnéy and Bladder | Troubles, Skin Diseases, Rheumatism, | Halifax, oston and New York. ; hE : | Cra ches, 11 qt. kets © @0c¢ |, For full particulars apply J. P. HAN. Drop a card to.13 Pine street when! 2 the best proofs of the value of Treasurer, Mrs. Herbert Daly. dence in Gananoque Dr. Gracey has tk ior Pea Chess M a Jack " sie | "EY. Raliroad and Steamship _ Agent, wanting anything done in the carpen-| is fruil medicine. Representatives were present from | endeared himself not only to his own | awlol en es, qt. skets ++ ®3C cor. Johnson and Ont rio streets tery line. Estimates given on all kinds, 50¢ a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size © the various Red Cross Societies in the congregation, but to the entire popu- | Blue and White Grapes : | . of repairs and new work; also hard- . ' 0, trial size 25¢. | county with the objeet of discussing|lation of the town. | Sweet. Oranges At dealers or sent Postpaid on receipt of | the purchasing of a motor ambu- Rev. Father Cox, 8.J., Loyola Col- | Grape Fruit [---------------------------- wood floors of all kinds. All orders 15¢ and 20¢ a dozen PAacCiFic Ree Srompt Miention. Shop price by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa. | lance, it was finally decided that one | lege, Montreal, opened a two weeks | Bananas ... "ey - should he purchased to be known as| mission in St. John's Church yester- | v | iene sean the Lennox and Addington Motor Am- day morning, and was greeted by | 314 PRINCESS STREET. Phone 1405 H bulance, the cost of the vehicle will|large congregations throughout the | : : : be about $1,800 or $2,000. and near. | day. Fruits delivered to all parts of the city. b TS THOMAS COPLEY | Neuralgia and Chronic Headaches. Telephone 987. | The enormous sales of 'Fruit-a- tives, 3, 4 and 5 for 25c ---- mn Smith ¢p, July 14 195 tlemen, Your lott * Contentg or of the noted and NCOURAGE your customers to call you by Long Distan-e Telephone! By keeping in intimate touch with them you can speed up both your business and theirs, Often a word of encouragenient from manufacturer to dealer is all that is needed to start business moving briskly. Thereis nothing can take the place of the spoken word, man to man. Telephone! Encourage your customers! Speed up your business! Every Bell Telephone is a Long Distance Station | Kingston's Electric Store | ly half of that amount was subscribed and promised before the meeting was over, A family quarrel bétween some residents on Water street resulted in the appearance of H. Hearns and Wil- liam Hearns before Magistrate Ran- kin on Saturday on a charge of dis- orderly conduct. On a plea of guil- ty they were let go by paying $4 costs each. An organ recital and concer: was given Friday night in St. Andrew's Presbyterian: Church under the aus- pices of the choir. William Hoe- king, a graduate of the School of Musie, Plymouth, England, gaye sev- eral selections om the organ, Miss M. Barton, Madoc, conducted vocal selections as also did A. Day and Bertram Weiss; while Miss-Jean Mac- intosh, Belleville, gave a number of recitations. The accompanists were Mrs. Bryaue Black, Mrs. Moore and Miss P. Nesbitt. E~J. Corkill acted as chairman. The proceeds, about $60, were in aid of a repairing fund. Daniel Lofy, wanted in Deseronto on a charge of assault, was arrested Saturday by Chief Barrett, and ta- ken back to Deseronto by the Chief of Police there. George Qreer met with an accident to his car while travelling along the road near J. Brandon's farm. The steering rod broke and the car went into the ditch and crashed into a fence. Fortunately the damage was very slight. The Picton beverages proved too much for Charles Babcock who im- bibed a little too freely of them while attending the County Fair there; con- sequently 'he fell into the hands of the police. When he arrived back in Napanee, he was let off by paying the costs of the Court when brought before Magistrate Rankin. " ABOVE THE ORDINARY. Good Maskinonge Fishing at Cape Vincent, Cape Vincent, N.Y., Sept. 27.-- Cape Vincent is keeping up its repu- tation as a fishing ground, a distinc- tion it has enjoyed for a good many years. A few days ago, E. J. Otis and Gordon Potter, of Utica, with Charles J. Roat as guide, made some extra catches in waters adjacent to this village. The first day they went out they captured a fine speci- men of maskinonge that weighed twenty pounds, also three pickerels, the largest weighing twelve pounds. The next day they landed two maski- ge, tipping the scale at twenty- one and nine pounds respectively. For a number of years past these men have 'been. fishing at Clayton, and during that time they state that they got but one small lunge. The fishing for maskinonge in the waters about Cape Vincent this year is above the. ordinary, and hardly a day Fifteen Days' Offer From now to 1st October, we will give free ONE CANADIAN BEAUTY ELECTRIC IRON to house- holders who will permit us te wire their homes for electric light this month. HW. NEWMAN ELECTRIC Co, 79 PRINCESS STREET. xX. 108 The, instrument tha is 'always 'ready to oblige : __ with the best dance music; that plays "itself and per- | mits every one to dance; that keeps right on playing as long as you want to You can get right away by our plan of easy terms, $21 to for a Victrola. _ g31 to $75 for a Victor. --_ +8 © J BRA sy sp M. 8. Grace, Manager. . a Victrola 1 . but what several nice speci- mens are landed by anglers. 4 Reunfrew's Fine Fair. * Renfrew, Sept. 27.--The sixty- first annual exhibition of the South Renfrew Agricultural Society, which closed on Friday evening, was in. ev- ery way the most successful in the history of the society. Thursday the attendance, despite some rain, was 7.000. Friday it was 8,000. The fair had different military touches; one of which was the¥presence of the 73rd Royal Highlanders' Band of Mont- real through which several 'recruits were secured here. Speaking at the directors' luncheon, J. C. Stewart, Dalmeny, Vice-President of the Fair Association of Ontario, said he re garded Renfrew as the best county fair in Ontario. Sine Inspector Killed. Cornwall, Sept. 27.--Harry Due- los, Montreal, line inspector for the Cedar Rapids Power Company, was killed while working on one of the towers just north of this town. He i {fell sixty-five feet, and death was in- Stantaneous. He was about twenty- eight years of age. He leaves his wife and parents, the latter also re- siding in Montreal. a rte Mr. O'Brien Doing Well. Renfrew, Sept. 27.--M. J. O'Brien, .| who underwent an operation for pe. ritenitis in the Royal Victoria Hos. Pital, Montreal, about a month. ago, is making rapid progress to re- covery. He expects to be e to legve the hospital in about two weeks' time. - a Razors For Soldiers, Cobourg, Sept. - 27.--The Boys' Bible Class of St. Andréw's Presby- terian Church, whose minister, Rev. William Beattie (major), is ¢haplain 'Jat the front, made a canvas of the town and 175 razors, which fhe formated to Toronto. i : "Kingston Fair week: specials" at 3ibson's Red Cross Drug Store. 25¢ baby's own touch syrup, 15e, 25¢ linseed and turpentine, 15c. Be syrup figs, 15¢. 3 2 for 25c¢, $L35 fountain pens for $1.00. ¥ "my FEL is $1.00 cod Hvar oil preparation, 50¢ The congregation of Christ.Church | celebrated its harvest home festival | yesterday, with Rev. M. G. Swayne, | rector of the Anglican Church at | Athens, in charge. He was greetea | by large congregations. Rev. Wal- ter Cox, rector of Christ Church, per- formed like duties in Athens, Grace Church Sabbath school held | its annual rally service yesterday af-| ternoon. An excellent address was | given by Rev. W, H. Stevens, Al- | monte, who also supplied the pulpit | of Grace Church at both services. C. A. Lewis; the popular manager of the local branch of the Merchants i Bank of Canada, who has ably filled | that position for the past ten years, | has received a well merited prome- tion to the ' managership of the branch of that institution at Galt, | and will leave in about a week to en- | ter on his new duties in that eity. | Mr. Lewis will be suceeded by F. W. | Bell, late of the Fort William branch. | Mr. Bell arrived here the latter part of the week. Messrs. Carr and Fraser, Hame manufacturers of Buffalo, N.Y., spent Saturday in town, looking over the | local manufacturing establishments, | Mrs. William Lynn, Sunbury, spent the past week in town, the guest of her father, William Salter. | Miss Kate Elder, spending fhe past | few days with local fricnds, returned to Kingston on Saturday. THREE CHILDREN DIE ' WHEN HOME BURNS Parents Leave Them Alone in House te Go Harvesting in Corn- field. Cornwall, Ont., Sept. 27.--While their parents wers engaged gather ing a corn crop, the three small chil- dren, aged five years, three years and three months respectively, of Mr. and Mrs. Cory Hollister, of Aultsville, were burned to death on Friday when their home was totally destroyed by fire. It was not known by the neighbors who endeavored to extinguish the fire that the children were in the house, nor were they aware of the where- abouts of the parents, byt A. C. Fet- terly, of Cornwall, who happened to be motoring in the vicinity, located them in a field almost a mile from their home. Mr. and Mrs. Hollister were distracted when they returned and found their little ones had per- hed. It is not kKnowh How the fire start- ed, but it is supposed that the chil- dren had been playing with matches and had ignited some inflammable matter in the house, NEW RECRUITING PLAN. Rural District To Be More Largely Draw Upon. Ottawa, Sept. 37.--A new scheme of recruiting is under consideration, whereby the rural districts will be drawn upon to a greater degree than formerly. Authorization has al- ready been given for the recruiting of 150,000 men in Canada since the war commenced, and so far there has been little trouble in: recruiting the totals authorized. Already the great- er part of the 150,000 have deen raised, the most of them being re- cruited in the larger urban centres. Men desiring to recruit from the rur- al districts have been compelled to! come into town ag their own expense. | . Should suthorkation be given for | the raising of fi nimbers--and | it is practically certain that it will-- | recruiting will be inaugurated at rur- al points. In connection with these | places the following arrangement will be made: In small rural places with a pop- ulation of less than 1,000 a mini- mum of 20 men recruited will insure the billeting and training of these men at the point in question during the winter months, or until they are drafted 'to other units for despatch overseas. : In villages and towns of over 1,008 population a minimum of 50 will have to be raised before the privilege is granted. In towng with 4,000 population the enlistment' must be af least 100, and in towns over 4,000 population a full half-éompany of 250 men will be re- quired. Drill instructors are at present be- Ing trained for the purpose of drill- Ing at these centres. | CHARM CEYLON 40c, 50c, 60c, Lb. Charm Coffee, 40c Lb. For Sale at All Grocers. CORSETS r Shrewd S will find this season's D & A & La Diva Corsets compare more favorably than ever The war tax adds about fifty cents on every dollar to the cost of ported corsets, yet ds nothing to their tgerit. 2s Hundreds of thousands 'of the best' dressed women in Canada have for years been buying the D & A and ka Dj perfect satisfaction. They arene clyEoe "Buy Made-in-Canada Corsets" 915 AT * a TEA . fore the women TRANSCANADA EXPRESS WINTER LEAVES TORONTO 6.40 P.M. DAILY Connecting Train Leaves Kingston 10.45 a.m, HOMESEEKERS® EXCURSIONS Each Tuesday until Oct. 26, inclusive Canadian Pacific All The Way No Chadge of Cars or Depots Pacific Coast Tours at Low -- Ine "CALIFORNIA EXPOSITIONS" Particulars from F. Conway, or A., City Ticket Office, corner Prin yo5s and Wellington stray. Phone 1197, bk z From MON Siellian n en Pomeranian Carthaginian Corinthian Siellian Pretorian . Gi Pomeranian pov. 7. . London or fu information te local ageuts or apply o A Canadian Cooking Fat For Canadian Housewives Patriotism sometimes leads us to buy 'a poorer product made in our own land in preference to a better product made on foreign soil. But when the better product is also the home-made choosing it. product, there is double reason for (Risce ca in'the States -- yet for four have used it be- hey are part and parcel of the The makers of Crisco are glad to put ihis fact be: 2 Th a 8 | age manufacturing of a ----------------------_ -- Te

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