Daily British Whig (1850), 23 Oct 1915, p. 3

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{ Li FERROVI The Inv aT 1 TET YY flonic For Sudden Exhagstion, Thin Blood, General Debtiity $1.00 par bottle: Davis & Lawrence Co. Moutread PRODUCT Blocks, Vases, an supj ntles, Brick Cement Flower appier ke, Ree, t t Grave Vaults. ork i Office and Factory Oor. of CHARLES AND PATRICK. Phone 730. MGR. H. ¥. NORMAN. Best's Cameras; #11 makes, for films and plates. Papers both gaslight and P. O. P., the best brands procur- able. * Films, the best makes, includ- ing the Eastman films Supplies--A complete stock of Albums, Chemicals," Tripods, Trays, Frames, etc. Repairs--We make repairs to any make of Camera Exchange' made for any Cam- | eras taking your old one at a good valuation. The Amateur Finishers. Best's The Popular Drug Store. Open Sundays. EYE GLASSES The kind you want--the kind most everybody wants MODEL glasses scientifically ground. MOPEL adjustment insuring' perfect comfort. MODEL shapes that add dig- nity to the face. ODEL clips that don't slide, tilt or hurt the nose. MODEL methods lowes: prices. KEELEY Jr, M. 0. D. 0 OPTOMETRIST AND OPTICIAN 226 Princess Street 3 doors above the Opera [louse insuring 20th Century and Fashion -Craft have built a rep- utation that does not down in these strenuous times. "Prices are as low as goods of merit will permit. They are 'built for the - man who wants to pay a reasom-) able price. Canada's Best Work ma nship and material. wad E.P. Jenkins Clothing Company." { KINGSTON CEMENT Sills Tile, We also manu- Esti- r all kinds of Cement CameraSupplyDepat {ll | amount IRON STEALING CASE 1 SE HEARD AT NAPANEE--THF CUSED COMMITTED. AC- Frank Peacord From Home--Napanee Raised $1,700 for British Red Cross Fund. Ow Disappears In th Rankin, peared on a I stealing a quantity of scrap ir Moses. Ellenson on August R, Nesbitt, Toronto, appeared accused, and D. H. Preston, K the Crow The complainant, Me ses Ellenson, told of a previous part- nership with Gross, in which they had deposited um of money in the Dominion Bank in Toronto in order to building coltages and buying 1 Gross aad been {i with him when he bought the serap in question from the Seymour any here Witness also wat he had hired a teamster to e away this iron and deposit it on nises of the Canadian North- ailway, ready to be shipped when he could get enough to wake a carload He then left Napan¢e, and wt return untif Oct. 3rd, when d that this iron had been ship- 1 away by Gross under the name Bergstein. : C. A. Walters, local managerof the t Seymour Power Company, gave evi- > tothe effect that Gross was i{ with Ellenson when he sold the iron to him, and that $5 was paid on ac !l count. The balance of $15 was to do bus de iil be paid when the iron was removed. {| He understood they were partners in +the deal, and that is why he allowed Gross to take the iron on Aug. 26th, and also that Gross paid him the due, namely, $15, on that date E. Kelly, a teamster, testified that i Ellenson had hired him to take away Hi! this iron, and paid him part of his charges, and that he thought they were partners, as Gross had paid him ill the balance of his account when he { came: to ship the iron. Robert Blackader said Ellenson had hired him to break up the iron (and help load it, and that Gross was with him at the time. Ellenson paid him for his work Roy McClain, station agent for the Canadian Northern Railway, produc- ed the shipping bill rélating to the iron in question, and signed by one M Bergstein. He remembered Gross as the man who shipped the iron, and he also had dealings with these two men before in getting cars | for their shipments. { After hearing the arguments of the > el + WAR BULLETINS. Neutral travellers returning X declare 'thous- there, and occurrence, 3 i The Bulgarian coast lines on the Aegean and Black. Seas are being bombarded by the Brit- sh and Russian fleets, with heavy damage, + The Russians continue to gain successes. Austrian and ers were & » fighting. German taken in PPPOE P Pg bobby prison" two days' King George has appealed to his subjects in a new manifesto to come forward for Britain. It is reported in Paris that a large British relieving force has reached Serbia. »! +] *| + | ' | ere atrete 4 + Canadian packers will supply # the British War Office with six # million tins of canned beef. * | + *| : > Two men charged with giving + | + signals to Zeppelins in the re- +! 4 cent London raid were deliver- # | ¥ ed into military hands for court- *5 + martial British casualties since Octo- # | ber 1st total 2,285 officers and + | 50,072. non-commissioned offi- | cers and men, + - * * TEEPE FP FPP EP LEP E PEP P PP | METHODIST PASTORS SONS RESPOND NOBLY In Two Provinces Every Eligible | Minister's Son Has Joined the | : Colors. Toronto, Oct. 23. --Sons of Metho- dist ministers from Newfoundland to Vancouver, have been among the most responsive to the call of King and Country In two western Pro- vinces every son of the parsonage who was eligible for service hds be- come soldier. Chancellor Bur wash has two sons in khaki, and| Rev. W. H. Emsley of Pembroke, | Ont., who is serving as a chaplain | at the front, has three sons fighting | and one daughter a Red Cross nurse Rev. Dr. Chown, General Superinten- | dent, and Rev. Dr. W. R Creighton, | editor af the Christian Guardian, both have a son preparing for active | Opposing counsel, the Magistrate de- j service. Private H. N. (Mike) Moore | cided to commit the accused for trial, i bail being allowed in three sureties {$500 for himself, $250 by his sister- jin-law, Miss M. Wuom, and $250 by A. Nesbitt, The firemen were given a run yes- terday about noon by an alarm of fire sent in frour the residence of H. M. Deroche, Crown Attorney, who is ill in bed. It appears that the roof had caught, supposedly from a spark either from the chimney or a pass- {ing train. However, some work- men on a house opposifé saw the blaze, and were able to put it out with véry little damage. Frank Peacord, an eiderly man, { who was living with his wife here, | has been missing since Monday morn- ing last. He was engaged in team- ling and doing odd jobs around town with a team. He got up last Mon- day morning about half-past four, and fed his team, and then ate his breakfast and left the house, presum- ably to finish a job of plowing on { which he was engaged. ~ Since that time nothing has been seen or heard sof him. As far as can be ascer- | tained there was no cause for his i disappearance. He was not missed { until the evening, when he did not il dome home for supper. He had abeut nine dollars in his pocket, and was dressed in rough clothes, as he Il would wear' to work. He is about i six feet tall, bald on top of head, has sandy and grey moustache, and walks |} farward. Any news of him would J: be gladly received by-the chief of po- {| lice or his wife. li The campaign for raising funds il for the British Red Cross Society ii conducted ' Thursday resulted in {about $1,700 being raised in Napa- | nee. ¥ | MEN WILL BE BEAUTIFUL. || Latest Thing In Male Fashion Is i "Prosperity Overcoat." i New York, Oct. 23.--Women will {| no longer have a monopoly of the hi art of beautifying themselves with {| clothes, The turn of mere man ll has come. fl The latest thing im male fashion {is an overcoat to be known as the 1 "Prosperity overcoat." It will be { made of smooth cloth, only 37 inch- i! es long, with a flare of nearly 109 i inches around the bottom, and in case of a stout man, fully three i! yards. The coat will be double I breasted, with three big pearl but- || tons on each side, oval lapels, and & i! velvet collar, and will hang from the shoulders like a cape. A re ity frock coat will also be worn with lt ne top coat. % «i nemrest recruiting office. son of Rev. T. Albert Moore of the Social and Moral Reform Depart- ment, is with No. 4 University Com- | pany, Montreal, which will go to re- inforce the Princess Pats. A list of the nameés of Methodist nifnisters' | sons is being compiled and so far 140 names are registered, three of these 'young men having been killed in action, i Besides thede sons of ministers, | some of the Methodist ministers thémselves, many unordained men and probationers, about 50 'in all, | { have enlisted for overseas service! {and are either at the fromt or in| training. | MAROONS WANT TO FIGHT Offer 4,000 Men To Go With Jamai- ca Contingent. Kingston, Jamaica, Oct. 23.--The Maroons, a warlike people descended | from Spanish slaves, who escaped to the. hills on the conquest of Jamaica | by the English, and have been free! ever since, offer four thousand men to the Jamaica contingent. The of- fer is under considération. One suggestion is that they should be! employed to fight in Africa. { FEF EFRPEPER PRR EN INN ?! #* | nuptial reception at her cosy home Fourteen thousand % | an #+ | roomy was bright with pink roses and * | asparagus fern. * * ! THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1915. PAGE THREE On Thursday afternoon, Mrs. J. Franklin Pound (formerly Miss Blanche Woodrow) held her post The Princess street, drawing- of pink roses and maiden hair fern. Receiving with her were Pound, mother of the groom, gown- *! ed in violet silk and corsage bouquet | of cream roses and Mrs. Woodrow, mother of the bride, owned in black. silk with touches of white. ton, assisted in the drawing room. | The dining room was bright with] autumn tints, the color scheme be- ing crimson and yellow, with. many crimson shaded candles in brass holders. The polished table was cen: tred with a tall eut glass v of | yellow shaggy chrysanthemums, rest. ing ou a bank of smilax, Mrs. E. Seale poured coffee and Mrs. Douglas Pound tea. The pretty gowned girls assisting were Misses Isabelle Hack- ett and Willa Mitchell. Little Miss | Reta Butland, wearing white dotted swiss, opened the door. Mrs. Peaind | wil in future receive on "the thigd Thursday of the month, at 437 Prin cess street. - - - - Miss Isabelle Waldron, King street, entertained informally at the tea hour on Friday in honor of Miss Lil- ian Mundell, when her other guests included Mrs. Neil C. Polson, jr., Mrs. W. E. Steacy, Mrs. Hubert Stéethem, Misses Hilda Kent, Doris Kent, Norah ' i Macnee, Dorothy Carruthers, Kath- leen Carruthers, Lassie Kirkpatrick, Marjorie Brownfield, Charlie Short, Lillie Murray, Helen Uglow, Marga- ret Cunningham, May Rogers, Rose ! Rogers, Helen Campbell, Hazel Browne, Katharine Hart, Kathleen | Ryan and Gwenneth Merrick. - Mrs.. W. W. Swanson will receive | at day, Oct. 26th, the second and fourth Tuesdays. Ne Mrs. Edward L. Spence will re- ceive Wednesday, Oct. 27th, at her home, 17 Clergy street west Mrs. Neil Polson, jr,, Studrt street, will nesday. - . » - On Thursday evening Mrs. B. O, Whitney entertained at a linen and china shower in honor of Miss Edna Jenkin, the bride-elect, Mrs. J. O'Grady and little son, vis- |} Division | | ftreet. have returned to North Ray. F Miss Gertrude Low and Master Bil- |} | lie Wilgar, Brock street, have gone iting Mrs. S. Grimshaw, to Ottawa to visit Mr, and Mrs. Ed- | | ward Low. . * - * - Mrs. W. E. McGillivray and daugh- | ter, Adella, Smith's Falls, are the | guests of friends in Kingston. Mrs. R. J. MacDowall and Miss | Elda, Wellington street, are visiting | { Dr. and Mrs. J. J. Robertson, Tweed, | for a few days before going south for the winter. Miss Ornéa Brill, Kingston, is vis- {iting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Brill, Tweed. | Mrs. T, Burké, Picton, is visiting'! in Kingston. Before her return she will vi§it her son, Harold Burke, in | Sydnay, N.S. Mrs. John Welch is the guest of | her parents: Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Wil- | } liams, University avenge. | Capt. W. L. Grant has returned | | from New York. } Canada Would Bar Slackers . From Country . London, O¢t. 23.-- The feeling in | the Canadian Emigration, Department | in regard to recruiting necessities js such that if there were any attempt {on the part of military eligibles to (enter Canada in large numbers, the Dominion Government would prob- | ably make effective certain general provisions of the Immigration Act," declared Gbed Smith, chief commis- sioner of emigration. | "Certain evening papers have rais- | ed a scare by asserting that young i Hen were Aryias to escape Lord Der- | by's attention by emigrating to Nor {or South America. for ue are | both the' an n { 7 ted. i is. ing 150,000 of (her Dest men to fight the Empire's battles just to make rom fof slack- ers," suid Mr. Smith. "As a matter of fact, we do not receive half a do- 280 enquiries per mouth from eli- gibles, but any evident slackers would . be politely directed to the This has been our policy for the Past year." : eden, Nine Times Out Of Ten, Says Home Secretary. . London, Qet. 23.--Sir John A. Simon, the Home y, raplying to a question in the House of Com- mons as to whether it would not be possible warn Londoners of Zep- , asserted that nine times the German airships wepe dftven off they even reavhed ° Cc Was warned every ins were sighted, on thei: id thé Home Secretary, "nine time out of ten they would be dizappointed. 3 the Government could not say whieh part of the metropolis would be vi- sited, as the Zep crews ) Ta ae a {slreet, is home after visiting Mrs. | | Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Gann have re- | turned after visiting in Prince Ed- | ward county. . Mrs. R. W. Brigstocke, Wellington | F. Botterell, Montreal. . Mrs. Bidwell Day, Hamilton, is the | guest of Mrs. Harold Davis, stuart street. : i R. R. F. Harvey has left for Re- i na. Mrs. Cornell, Gravénhurst, is the | guest of her sister, Mrs. F. Welch, | Division street. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lewis, "The | Wellington," returned to-day from | New York. | Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Winnett and Miss Willa Winnett, London, - are with Dr. and Mrs. A. W. Winnejt, street. g Ra Chrles Al = is at Mrs vanagh's for a days fo visit: ord wb 80th ofr Mrs. George Mahood, Gore street, went to New York yestérday to visit her mother, Mrs. Bade. . H. W. Richardson, "Alwington," returned from Ottawg on Thursday. Mrs. F. Hubert Ryan, Brock street, returned from a visit in New York on Friday. _ F. F. Corley, Standard Bank, is Spending a week's holidays in De- troit. F. H, Ryan, Brock street, is in To- fonto for the week-end. ; : . . - - Mrs. Oswald Wilson, of Oshawa, who hasbeen visiting her her, Alan Sutcliffe, will len # her home on Wednesday. = Probs.: Fine and quite cool to-day and on Sunday. Mrs. G./§ becomingly ' § Mrs. Percival Way, Pie ; 16% Collingwood straet on Tues- |} and afterwards on |} entertain at luncheon on Wed- | The dainty bride ji was gowned in blue georgeita Crepe § | over white silk, with corsage bouquet: § 'A very special THE Wm. Davies Co we Specials Fo TO-NIGHT __ During the week 'we have secured a number of exceptional bargains, which we offer to-night at i fraction of their regular worth, Stamped Neckwear 15-doz dainty new Collars, imported from Crowley of New Yark -- made of Orgfndy, Net.and Pique---worth regularly 35¢, 40¢, 50e¢, 6Q¢ and 75¢, To-night Stamped Nightgowns _ 8 doz. only stamped Nainsook Gowns--packaged with full amount of working floss -- special values at $1.35 and $1.50. To-night Stamped Linen Centers 12%¢ 10 doz. assorted designs Centers, with complete floss for em- broidery--all new patterns; reg. 20¢ each. To night ery Special For Men Watson's Spring Needle Underwear, Winter weight, regular $1.25 a garment. Tonight 75¢c a Garment or $1.50 a Suit 25 doz Heavy Winter Weight Underwear, a beautiful soft finished garment; all sizes, from 34 to 42, in Shirts and Drawers-- ex- cellent value at the reg. price, $1.25. To-night Guaranteed first quality--not seconds ! \& & : y ~ Steacy's "The Woman's Store of Kingston" ( DAVIES' quality of Table Whistle Cords, Whistles. Spurs, Leggings, Shirts, Caps, N.C.O. Badges & Lanyards--White Crawford & Walsh Civil and Military Tailors Ltd., Phone 597. Bo a hig roll of bills is better. FALL SHOES See our Special B x Calf, Leather Lined,. Sole Blucher ... ' . . Or in Tan--our piices a change is a good thing, but

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