- * Mrs. John Van __THE DAILY BRITISH. BATTERYMEN GIVEN GIFTS Testament And Cash To Each Man in Draft. : (Cobourg, Jan. 17.--At a banquet given by the Epworth League and members of zvents In the here to the overseas In Briel Horm " x ns Are Told | Heavy Siege Battery, Capt. A, E. -. Country About ngs Hoppef, officer in charge, the Official --Full of Interest to Many. | Board of the Cobourg Methodist 1deut.-Colonel Buell, Brockville,) Church presented the seven men has been granted another month's | from that church who had joined the leave. = | battery with copies of the Néw Tes- Ralph Ham, of the Napanee Ex-. tament and a cash gift. The reci- press staff, is the latest recruit for | pients were Capt. Hopper. Gunners the 146th Battalion. , Reuberi 'Jackson, Jas. Scarfe, Thom- The creamery started in Napanee | as Porter, Clifford Staples, H. J. H by Messrs. Francisco #nd Haggerty | Staples and Victor Clemd. Capt. H. ig in full running order, _MeCullough was Chairman and toast- Fred, Deare, teller at the Merch-| master. Brief addresses were made ants Bink, Napanee, has been tran-| by Rev, H. B. Kenny, pastor: Major sterred to Bothwell, Ont. * | McKinnon, Officer Commanding Co- Nelson Russell Harris, Trenton, ! bourg Heavy Battery; Capt. Hopper, aged twelve years, died in Belleville, | Rev. J. W. Cannon, Mr. J. G. Jacks, on Thursday, while visiting his aunt. Sergi. hnston 'and others. The WwW. C. Mikel, K.C., Belleville, will { gifty/ were presented by Ww. H. Hop- conduct the eriminal business on be- | perf" Recording Steward of the half of the Crown at Ottawa assizes. | chuyeh, F. Laidley & Son, Ernesttown Station, shipped hogs on Tuesday, paying the record price of $10 per Athens, Jan. 17.--The sudden ewt, death of 'Alvin W. Judson, a promin- Westminister Presbyterian chfirch | ent resident of Athen, which occur- his decided to. provide $1,200 10! oq Wednesday evening, was a great to keep a missionary in the foreign | pock "to that gentleman's many field. friends, He had apparently been The Roman in his usual health and had been church at Sebastopol, about down town in the afternoon. After miles from Eganville, was destroyed | oi rning to the house he started to by fire on Friday. do his chores and was found dead in Howard Young, a farmer of Mur-| ha. woodshed about five o'clock. He ray township was struck and killed was seventy-two years of age and at a Canadian Pacific crossing about | woo horn near Glen Bibe, a son of two and a half miles west of Trenton i pq 1ate Mr, and Mrs. Lyman Judson, on Friday night. : 1 He has been living a retired life in Timothy Browne, Brockville, i8| 4ipeng for the past thirty years and dead.. He once attended Regiopolis | vig kindly disposition made many College, Kingston, A widow and friends. The funeral was held. Fri- three children survive. day afternoon. He is survived by Andrew Keane, brakeman Was|,q wife, two sons and one daught- killed and Conductor Clark, badly | or James W. Judson, of Brockyille; injured in railway accident at Dor Fred Judson and Mrs. W. F larl, of yal, Que, They were Brockville men. | 4 yang: also by one brother, Rufus Frank L. Booth has resigned hie |p Judson of Athens position with D. A. Cummings & Co, $ Brockville; and enlisted in the ranks of the 156th Leeds and Grenville Battallon. Sergt. Frederick Edgar Slater, sna, CLIPPED FROM THE WHIG'S MANY BRIGHT EXCHANGES. draft of the -------------- The Late Alvin W. Judson. Catholic anission twelve Was Born in Kingston. Orillia, Jan, 17.--~<Charles Jacob Powley, who had been sick since last 4 summer, and was confined to bed for ard Battalion, officially reported ad-| ge, igen weeks, died at his home, 222 mitted to No. 2, Canadian Field Am- | Mary street, Orillia, on Saturday bulance January 1st, suffering from | yorning, January 1st, at the age of shock. His home is in Belleville. sowenty-nin® years. Deceased was Kenneth P. Macpherson, son of W. | porn in Kingston, being a.son of the F. Macpherson, - Prescolfy~ now in [late Jacob Huffman Powley. When Flanders, has been appointed to 2 Ififtéen vars of age Mr. Powley came lieutenancy in the Engineers force, to Marchment with his parents. He With which he went overseas. and his father ran a saw- mill and a It is not often that a Perth man grist mill at Marchmont, and after goes 10 Toronto to buy. stock for his father's death Mr. Powley oper- Montreal market, However, David | ated both for a number of years in McLaren last week boudght 1%0 hogs | addition to his farm. in Toronto and shipped tem to Mon- | sightecn years MF Powley nad Jived ofit. {in Orillia. © was ce 2d, trea] 900 nase # hea pron: of. the | and leaves a family of three children Pembroke Shook Mills, idle since the | DY nis first wife and eight children sawing of last year's supply of bolts | 88 a result of his second marriage. was completed, has resumed opera- tions, when twenty or thirty addi- tional men were taken on. Mrs. William Carruthers ill at the residence of her daughter, Dusen, Brockville, from the effects of a stroka which occurred last Tuesday. Mrs. Cars uthers is in her ninety-fourth year, her birthday being February 12th. Accidentally Shot Belleville, Jan. 17,--0On Thursday ig very J. O'Brien, who lives near Coe Hill was accidentally shot through both | legs by a companion named Amos Batchelor while out hunting. O'Brien, Batchelor and a couple of oth- er men were standing. in the woods when one of them. made a remark lssac Robinson, Tyendinaga, died which caused Batchelor to turn quick- at his home in the fourth concession. ly and making the Jiovement is He was a native of the township and | ae was Seeidentally isthary 1 lived his whole life there. He was & Brien was stant ng = a om d 0 member of Shannonville Lodge A.O. feet from him at the time and the U.W., and of the Metirodist- church. bullet passed through his -left Ni He had been in ill health for three just below the knee without touching Ty - the bone and lodged in . the knee yoars. of of his rightsleg. He is in Belle- been notified of the death from gun ville hospital. shot wounds on Dec. 29th of her hus- hand, Private Albert Gloyne, 21st Battalion. Mrs. Cloyne had just received a card from her husband dated Dec. 25th in which he stated all.was well. Faken ill of her residence J Thursday evening Mr Miller, a well known and esteemed resident of the Township of Eliza- bethtown passed away in less than Albert Gloyne, Port Hope, has | Died at Redan. Redan, Jan. 17.--The death _oe- curred on Thursday, January 13th of Mrs. Wellington Miller at her resi- dence, Redan, She had heen in good health and her death was a shock J Rocképring | to all who knew her. She was an ot Ri ieton | earnest Chri%tian woman and strong r member of the Methodist- Church, Rockspring. She leaves to mourn her loss; beside her Wushand, six minutes. She was a daughter | children, namely Charlotte an Sam- oti lste George Tackaberry and uel at Boe; vs wad Jessie, Toroh- resided in"the township iC tl ike. ol? He = Seveland, Berkley. Cali- Foster N. Ham died at Vancouver BEd Men. ar tor piace on Bil.; Iroln heats Pale, rinter and | Jan. 16th and was largely attended. horn vid Tp He fnferment was made in the Athens wne se. k bv sixty-two years of age. Ralph 8. vault. Ham, Napanee is a brother, Mrs. | Hudson, San Francisco, is a daughter 'His remains were cremated and his ashes will be buried in Bowmanville peside his late wife. Gordon N. Maxwell, the Wesleyan Theological and at MecQill Univeggsity, d has enlisted as a pr vate -in No. Field Ambulance, now being organiz- acute indigestion at The Council's Appointees. Newburgh, Jan. 17.--~The new LCduneil held its inaugural meeting on Monday. The following officers were appointed: Chas. Welbanks, Clerk; E. Gandier, Treasurer; , =. Mullholland, collector; G. F. Lock- wood, assessor; Dr. Macaulay, medi- cal health officer, ind he albag ith i eo. Maxwell's | the Reeve, W. W. Adams, she Clerk, oe he Moutresl, Be and he is a and Councillor Shorts constitute the past student of the Athens High Board of Health, C.F Shorts was Sehool, as well as a probationer for appointed Sanitary Inspector; I. A tHe Methodist ministry. Dunwoody, truant officer; T. 1 Win- : tor and Edward Nugent, auditors, and John O'Connor, poundkeeper y how Lost Three Fingers. Madoc, Jan. 18.Walter WHhy- a student at College, Montreal, 9 ---- --------c------ 5 Voting None At Balmer J<land. Arnpriar, Jan. 18.--Jolin Lydon was the oldest voter putting in an appearance at the polis on Monday. He has turned his eighty-fourth |, Madoc's popular young. Coun- year. . In speaking of elections this | oilman, suffered the loss éf three fin .aged citizen remembers: well when gers on his right hand on Friday last there was but one polling place in| jr Whytock was operating a meat the township, and that-was situshed | prinding machine in his butcher shop at Balmer's Island. Arnprior was n0t | 'and in pushing the meat into the ma- in existence in those days, although- chine his fingers were caught, taking there were several people here Tesi of the three between the thumb and dent. ¢ little finger at the'second joint. Fire In Church, Rednersville, Jan. 18.--Just as the congregation had finished leaving the Methodist church Sunday even- ling and the sexton was putting out {the lights, the large chandelier in ------ | the centre of the church fell, setting 38) lfire to the carpet and matting; for ¢ 3 {tunately the fire . was extinguished { before much damage was done. -------- Seventdén From Coe Hill Trenton, Jan. 17.--Seventeéen re-- eruits are reported from Coe Hill, who have signet up for the 146th Battallion. - a 3 Na FEI YY a r---- Watch For Each Volunteer. Cobourg, Jan. 17.--At the last | meeting of Cramahe Council it was | decided 16 present every young man | who has joined the colors from that J Sunivipality wi a wrist watch. ners JOHN, MCIAY umrres re KINGSTON ONT, the Methodist church |. For the past. WHIG, AUSTRALIAN TRACKERS. ® rise, The Blackfellow is the Greatest | Trackfinder in the World, | Wonderful stories of the doings of | Australian aboriginals are told by Norman Duncan .in his hook 'Aus | | tralian Byways." f § | Our North American Indians had) | skill in following tracks, and read: | | ing signs of the wild. But the | | blacktellows of the Antipodes are) | simply unique in their uncanny ability. © { One Australian in the South Afri- can war said so much of his follow-| | ers' skill that: { "To his surprise and indignatien, | he found that he had exhausted the | faith of the British officers with | fy Fotton, King street Wosl, (here. Maiteatcy a teiak of tho. bck passed to rest on Sunday gu aged and | ¢ 1 oie eunning, the conditions of esteemed resident in the person of yuh wepe these: that the five Mrs. Mary MacDonald Montgom skeptical British efficers, two atoot, | daughter of the. late John. -Lew . his ? "| three mountad, should start at vari- | MacDonald, of this town The fu ous intervals' neral will 'be private, on Wednesday in whatever directions | afternoon to Willowbank cemetery. they might elect, for a period agreed | Major W. L. Grant, O. C. "A" Com- upon; and that the tracker, knowing | path Battalion, O. E. F., gave] Inly the sclor of the hopse that each | an interesting and helpful address to mounted men rode, and baving seen | the pupils of Gananoque High School only fhe prints of the shoes which | in their assembly hall yesterday ai- each footman wore, . should trace | tkrnoon: The major is an interest- them all within a stipulated time. 'Ing speaker, and was listened to with The officers were incredulous when | attention by all. they learned that they might take off | At the-family residence, James their shoes, obscure their tracks, and | street, another of Gananoque's elder- search but the hardest ground to be| lv residents passed away in the per- found. . son of Mrs, Jacob M. Mallory. ~She| But-the tracker turned out to be had been in failing health for some] only contemptuously amused by all time past. Deceased was fwice mar- their artifices, He had followed ried, her first husband being a Mr.| the tracks of the mounted men at a | Griffin, by whom she leaves two sons, fun, identifying and distinguishing | Robert. located in the west, and Wil-| the movements of each by the colors | liam, Gananoque, and besides her | of the horses, producing samples: of husband, Mr. Mallory, she leaves two | the dark-brown hairs, light-brown sons, Milo, located in the west, and | bairs, and gray hairs which he found | Henry, at home by the way. | The men of "A Company, 59th In addition Battalion, making use of the recrea-| intimately tion rooms at Grace Methodist rides. Church, in appreciation of the young moun ladies who have been providing for seco their entertainment since their arri- val here tendered to them a compli- mounted, rested in the shade, and] mentary sleigh ride last evening. | climbed a tree for a view of the | There yere four lyarge sleigh loads, country. and a 'very enjoyable time. The Of the footmen, one had taken off teachers and officers of Grace Sunday his shoes, as a wisp or two of weod school are providing the entertain- from his socks showed, and bad later ment of the men of "A* Company, cut his foot The officers agreed 59th Battalion, at the recreationihat vhey had lost their wager rooms of Grace Church this week Mr.© Duncan tells extraordinary | The voung people -of St. Andrew's stories of tho trackers attached to Church and. the Presbyterian adher-! the 'police stations of the outlands. ents of * * Company, 59th Battalion, One, for example, followed a horse- [Hild a pice sleigh ride last evening.| thief from New South Wales to the There Were four large sleigh loads, | northwestern wilds, over stony plain | and lots of fun Mrs. Davig Butler, | and through forest, amid rain and who joined her husband, who has! drought, until he caugiit him at the been for some time 'past located in| end ofififty-six days. Another picked Montreal on*munitions work, has re-! up a fugitivé's trail at ogce from turned to town to 'reside. John | egpying a few grains of sand which Gould, King street, was in Brockville had fallen from his bare foot on a on'Sunday at the bedside of his sis-| flat stone. Anether tracked a crim- ter, Miss Jessie Gould, a patient in|jpa] through the timber bush at a| the General Hospital. Henry Bea-| eanter by means of the color of the verstock spent the week-end in Lans- jeaves--the difference in light and Sowne : Rid kvilie. Es Renton shadow ~though the white men with friends in Brotkyille Lim could see nothing, " All this rises from the fact that the blackfellow is brought up in the desert, where the animals are small, and he needs be cunning and dili- gent to get his daily food--rats, snakes, lizards, wallaby, and bandi- | cobts. A blackfello'y who must. be able to track a rat over hard ground or starve, who can see the track Gananogue | pr 3 (From Our Own Correspondent.) Jan. 18.--A session of the execu- tive committee of the Gananoque Pa- triotic and Red Cross societies was held n the ceuncil room at the town hall last evening, and was quite well attended. At the home of Miss Em- to this, he described the incidents of their s , The first horseman had dis- ted and lighted his pipe; the nd had been throwd while rid- ing at a canter; the third had ds- WOMAN BADI BURNED, dessins - She Fell Through a Hole Burned in Parlor Floor. 17.--Among are John H. Salem, Jan. dangerously ill Consecon, and James Weese, Victo- ] ria. Det W. W. Colton's children| of a bush mouse and know at a are recovering. from measles. Mr. glance whether it is fresh enough to Weeks had the misfortune to injure) follow or not, can read the human his spine in lifting out a cow which footprintqas so much big type. In had fallen intq a well. Much sym-| the criminal courts of the backblocks | pathy is expressed for Mr. Weeks, as a native' witness' identification of iwo of his children have the mea- the tracks of the accused, generally | sles and his oldest boy fell on a sharp | speaking, has much the value of the axe, almost severing the knee cap.! testimony of an eye-witness. Mrs. D. H. Vancott was seriously "You savvy this fellow?" {| burned on the limbs in a fire which "I savvy this fellow ull right." broke out in their home early Satur- "You savvy tracks mak-um by this day morning. Neighbors were | fellow?" ' awakened about 2 a.m. by her cries, "I savvy tracks him bin make, all and H. Spencer, C. C. Wannamaker, | right."" This is conclusive. : and C. M. Kemp were soon on the po scene and extinguished the fire, v "a & which was smouldering in the floor. The "Good Old Times. Mrs. Vancott had been awakened by H-a-modern workman could by any the smoke, and on going into the chance precipitate himself back into parlor to see where the fire was fell the 'good, old times" he would prob- through the "hole which had been ably imagine that it was high time burned. Not being fully #bcovered his union woke up to business, The from an attack of sciatica, she was statutes of laborers, from 1349 tg the severely burned before her clothes time of Elizabeth, bound him to work could be torn off. It was very for-| within the lordship to which he be- tunate that serious complications did! longed, and punished him for wan- | not set in, as Mrs. Vancott stood in| dering beyond the limits of his wap- | the road calling for help for some; entake or."Hundred." His hours of | time after she was burned. _ | labor were long, as ordained by the | Miss Hattie Hawley returns to To- law, and his rémunperation was mol ronto to-day after a few weeks at/ only poor, but was made, at the op- home. Mrs. Cassie Spencer did not tion of his lord, eithep--ia coin or | return to Oshawa as soon as she in-| corn. Corn was (dken to have a tended, but is remaining a few days, standard relative value, and when to assist. Mrs. Vancott. Messrs. Ed-| the harvest was scant and corn was | gerton, Claude, Walter and John dear the man was paid ia coin. Con- Wannamaker and their: families and, trariwise, when corn was plentiful the Misses Stapleton were entertaln- and cheap he was paid in corn, and ed at the home of Steven Vancott on the grain was often old and unsound. | i to those Howe, Friday evening. 4 For accepting more than the s Mr. and Mrs. C. Dolan and Mr. gard rate of pay the laboref sto and Me. Curnissham spent Sat- suffer punishment, while his master | upday evertng at J. H. Parliament's.! could inform against him and pocket | Mr. afd Mrs. C. Carnrike and Mr.| (pe illicit excess. Under Elizabeth and Mrs. Steven Vancott were recent hig policy, whic' was then butworn, visitors at Oscar Hennesy s. e was revised and largely reversed, but committee appointed by the directors ~py this time the spirit of unrest, | of the Ameliasburg Agricultural So-' which found expression in the Puri- clety met on Wednesday fight and: iyp revolt, was abroad, and laborer, decided to pay 60 cents on the dollar! oo recently emancipated from semi- o the prize money to exhibitors. sorrgom, were beginning a_movement wing to rain, the gate receipts were spaemodically and personally, which only $100.25, but the society receiv-| jp jator ages was to result in the pow- | ed $170 rainy day grant, besides sev-| o.ry) combinations to which tlie name eral' large dénations. The anhuall ce (ode unions has been given meeting is held on Wednesday affer- inions Bas heen Bi) : noon. me ------ © Christmas Cards. Died From Poisoning. Christmas cirds are now known | Pembroke, Jan. 17.--The home of | and | general use the world over, | Mr. and Mrs. Lemay Jette, town, was | but the first ome originated in Lon-| gadly bereaved on Saturday when don, in the year '1845. In that year their youngest daughter, Estella, a| Rev. Edward Bradley, author of Ver- bright little girl almost two years) dant Green, had a printer make him old, died from' ptomaine poisoning, some holiday cards from his own de> caused, it is thought, from eating | Si&M. 10 send to his friends. Two meat purchased on the market and years later the Newcastle pridter put | which it is believed was defective in out a number of cards which bold at quality. All the members of the! 2 pence (4 cents) each. family were more or less affected, but with the rest.the consequences How Australia Does It. did. not prove serious, The little girl The spirit of he British however, went Int$--convulsions on [may he partially grasped ! Friday evening and these continued | fact that in the antipodean posses- | practically all through the night, re-| sio "Australia Dey" recently net- | sulting in her death on Saturday | ted 35,040.00) for wa; and relief | morning : * | funds, when a tin whistle . brought | - $120, a box of writing paper $125, Land Kisses, =old by blushing maids, varving. and unreported sums, i Empire from the | . House Burns Near Cornwall. Cornwall, Ont, Jan. 18.--The home of Mrs, John Hall, on the East Front road, a short distance below| Cornwall, was totally destroyed by! fire on Sunday. The fird started front] an over-heated stovepipe and was | beyond control before neighbors jrovia reach the scene, / { i "There is no-excuse" for being sick | with Gripp when Gibson's Red Cross! Gripp Tablets eure in 12 hours. German workmen employed lied' war contracts in were threatened, al- | Massachusetts | Weather Man did not forget the coun- | brings the farmers to the market. | night. | Williamson Submarine ling wreck, | man {at V | es all parents to take their children | gation scientifically revealed by the | Strand adhering! to their policy ®f | meline Pankhurst, the suffrage lead- {of the Serbian relief government { Czar | wards (wards bright, fluffy; wavy and easy to han- out every particle |dandruft, a : |aTORM STRUCK KINGSTON DUR.| ING MONDAY NIGHT. | nterfered With Busines in the | Stores, But Steam and Plectric, Railivays Managed to Keep Their Lines Open--First;class Sleighing! Now. : 'The Storm King struck Kingston during Monday night, and as a resalt there was a very heavy fall of "the beautiful." he storm set in during the early morning hours, and between 7 and 8 o'clock, when citizens were on their way to work, the snowfall was very heavy. Although a lot of snow fell, it was not of the heavy kind, and as a result it did not give the steam and electric] railways the usual hard time. Per; haps the storm could be referred to as "a heavy fall of light snow." The Street Railway Company had its big broom early on the job, and although it was some task, managed to keep the line open. Trains were some- what late in arriving in the city, but the time-table was" not interfered with to any great extent up till noon. The storm, however, affected the business in the stores. Citizens who did not have to venture outdoors were satisfied to stay at home. and put off their shopping for another day. Tele- phone calls were the order of the day. As a result of the fall of snow, there is now splendid sleighing in the city and the country as well, as the / | uit Sale Continues all next week. Speeial lots will be added from our regular stock every day. Sizes ten to sixteen vears., Regular value G4 25 u $5.00 to' $8.50. Now A A A AA A Al - Roney's, 127 Princess St., Kingston try folk. This will mean that] Kingston will have a big market on Saturday, for good sleighing always™ It was not very=cold during the The lowest reading of the thermometer during the night was 8.8 above zero according to the offi-: cial report, Expedition. _ The first and only submarine mo- tion pictures were taken by the Wil- liamson Brothers originators of sub- marine pictures. , They reveal in a most ama#ing manner one hundred miles of ocean bottom secrets, am- ongst which dare native boys diving for pennies; deep sea divers explor- death battle between a and a shark and 1,000 other exciting and most intensely interest ing scenes, These pictures have been the talk of the Beientific and educational people of the United States for several months past, who headed by. the Smithspnian Institute hidgton volunteered their en dorsation of same. Dorothy Dix urg- Lily For the Future The piano you buy now should give satisfaction-- complete 'satisfaction--for a lifetime. Fifty "years hence your children and your children's children should be enjoying it: If ithe a Frintzman & Co. Art Piano "World's Best Piano' that will be the case. The Heintzman reputation is a reputation built on long service--permanency of tone, construction, finish. Every Heintzman piano is its own best advertisement. C. W. LINDSAY, LTD, 121 Princess Street. to see it. The Scientific American, Popular Mechanics, Collier's Weekly, [.ondqn News and in fact all the lead- jug. magazines and newspapers of America have written columns upon columns AF commendation of carvelous under the ocean pictures The last word in moving picture sen thes most marvelous invention of the age. These pictures have shown else- where at prices as high as 75¢ to $1.00, but the management of the one price always will present these truly remarkable pictures at the usual priees of admission viz: mat- inee 5c, evening 15c. At these prices there should not be a man, woman or child in Kingston who sheuld miss seeing these the truly eighth, wonder*of the world. At the Strand three days only, Thursday, Friday apd Satur@lay of this week. > - Mrs. Pankhurst Admitted. Washington, Jan. 18 Mrs, Em- NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY_ THE SAVINGS "ARE WONDERFUL. Our Fourth Annual Sacrifice Sale $50,000--Fifty Thousand Dolfar Stock Of Men's, Boys' and Children's Ready-Made Cloth- ing, Men's "Furnishings, Boots and Shoes, is moving very rapidly.' : Evervbody's taking Sacrifice Prices. Have you visited our Store ? morrow. Don't delay. er, How on parole in New York, un- der the immigration authorities, will be formally admitted to the United States soon after the papers in her case reach Washington, President Wilson is opposed to her exclusion Mrs. Pankhurst is working in Behalf ------------------ Are Ready for Action. (Special to the Whig) London, Jan. 18.:~An Athens de- spatch says that 120,000 Teptonic troops, with four hundred guns, have concentrated for the expected drive on Salonika. The Duke of Connaught has re- ceived a message of thanks from the fi for Canada's New Year greet ings and recent gift of $50,000 to- a hospital for Russian sold- 1ers. Good morning! Glad to see you around-again: . I took those Gibson's Red Cross Gripp Tablets last night, and I am all fine to-day. Lient.-Col. Sages, O. C. Fifth Mili- tary District, saxs the Quebec district will soon recruit the 20,000 volun- tedrs it will require proportionally to provide, "Phe best Tablet 1 ever saw," said, a customer the other day, speaking about Gibson's Red: Cross Gripp Tab- lets. Major-General Hughes has inaug- urated a new plan for educating of- ficers for service, placing an infan-} try school in each military district. "They work like magic,' Gibson's Red Cross. Gripp Tablets, A branch of the Sportsmen's Pa- | triotic Association was organized i Brockville, advantage of our great If not, call in to: It means a big saving to you. ALL PRICES SMASHED WHAT WE ADVER- TISE WE HAVE. x » . Louis Abramson's '336 Princess St. Don't-Let Soap ; Spoil Your Hair | When you wash your hair, be careful what you use. Most soaps and prepared sliampoos contain too much alkali, which is very injurious, as it dries the scalp and. makes the hair brittle. ot . The best thing to use is just plain mulsified cocoanut oil, for this is pure and entirely greaseless. It's very cheap, and beats the most ex- pensive soaps or anything else all to pieces. You can get this at anv drug store, and a Tew ounces will last the whole family for months. Simply moisten t hair with wa- ter and rub it in, about a teaspoon-| ful is all that is required. It makes | an sbundance of rich, ¢reamy lather, |' cleanses thofoughly, -and rinses out| easily. The hair dries quickly and | evenly, and is soft, fresh looking, | FAtablished 1862, Montgomery Dye Works For the Best in French Dry Cleaning, Dyeing and Pressing. | J. B. HARRIS, Prop, - | 225 Princess St. Phone 1114. THOMAS COPLEY - Telephone 987. | PRINTED ACCRDING 10 GOVERNMENT REGULATIONS 3 ~ BUTTER WRAPPING PAPER FINEST QUALITY AT LOWEST PRICE 4 T:Ialt | KINGSTON, | Eduard Fabre, Montreal Marathon champion runner, has enlisted with N6. 6 General Hospital, C. E. F. La- yal. He won last year's Boston Marathon, and Panama-Pacifie long dle. it loosens and takes of re of dust, dirt and | ¥ood Besides,