THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1916. - THE DISTRCT NE CEIPPED FROM THE WHIG'S MANY BRIGHT EXCHANGES, In Brief Form the Events In the Country About Kingston Are. Told ~Full of Interest to Many. Lake Eloida ice ix being harvest ed and quantities of transparent blocks are being brought to Athens. Sergt.-Major Best, a Belleville member of the 24th Battery, who went overseas has been promoted to the rank of Lieutengnt While endeavoring to manage a horse at the fair grounds, Brock Corporal W. J. Clement of the I Hattalion dislocated "a shoulder. . Lieut. Eddie Phillips of the Arm) Service Corps, now in Engrand ha been promoted to a captaincy and ex. pects to leave shortly for the front A number of Brockville's popular bachelor young ladies are giving a Leap Year dance in Victoria Hall, on Friday of next week. The ceeds ars for patriotic prirppses "A pretty wedding was celebrated in St. Columbus Church, Elgin, on Monday, when Helen, daughter of Thomas Simmons, was united in mar riage to. Timothy J, McGarry, Elmira NY = le, Oth pro Sympathy is felt for Mr. and Mrs W. D..V. Earle, jrockville, in the death of their son, Norman Henry Earle, aged thirteen vear He has been ill for the past two months On Monday in the presence of sol diers of the 80th Bastalion at the Khaki Club, Oscar Towell, Toronto, a member of that unit and Miss May | Witter, marriage. A very pleasant time was spent on Friday last at the home of Harry Tweedy, Thurlow, when more than thirty neighbors and friends who in- vited, met on his return from his honeymoon trip, Mrs. "James Smart, one of Brock- ville's oldest residents, died on Wednesday after a long illness. Mrs. Smart was the oldest daughter of the laté John Bogue and was born : in London, England. > : Mrs. Margaret Ferguson, widow of the late James Ferguson, dfed on the 12th inst, at Caintown, aged ninety- five years. The late Mrs. Ferguson was a native of Scotland, and had been residing with her son. Mr. and Mrs. W, P. Miller, Winni peg, formerly of Brockville, an- nounte the « engagement of their Belleville, were united in daughter, Marguerite, to Chester. G. | McRory, Weyburn, Sask. The mar- riage will take place at the end of Febru ary. Mrs. R. E. Shera, Peterboro, re- velved the sad news of the death of | was in his usual good health before! ('. her brother, - Matthew Wareham, which oecurred at his home in Lake scar at the G. T. R, station, Wareham resided in leaving for Lake | Linden. \Mr. | Peterboro "before Linden. Sergt. Alf. Kemp, who enlisted in Edmonton a year ago last November, is officially reported as killed in ac- tion in the fighting in France. Sergt. Kemp lived in Peterboro with his | parents about twelve years ago and was a clerk in Adam Hall's stove i store. A quiet wedding was solemnized | -| at the home of the bride at Soperion, Ont., when the Rev. Mr. Calvert, Delta, united in marriage Miss Mar- tha Jeffrey, daughter of Thomas Jeff. rey and Mr. Compo, Edmonton, Al- ta., on the 18th inst, ELECTION OF OFFICERS Those Chosen, At Belleville Agricul- tural Society's Meeting, Jan The" annual the Belleville Agricultur- Association was held in the city on Tuesday aftérnoon and was well attended The receipts were $2.979 expenditure, $3,015.19 The election of officers resulted President -- Arthur Jones First Vice-Pres Harry Qi Qe 20.- 99 Ketches- Vice-Pres v cond MK Den- y OS, K Ww Brickman, LL. R Anderson, WJ George B. Me- Clough, P. J. Denike, C, W. Weese, W, C. Reidy George F. Reed, R. J Garbutt, W. Martin, F. R, Mal- {lory and S. Wellbanks Auditors---J. Clapp man Directors - C'. Ketcheson, Terwilligar, W Wood, R. P Mayor Asa w White teheson and H. Fair- Doing Their Bit. Smith's Falls, Jan. 20.--Dr. J. S. y McCallum is the proud - father of { three stalwart sons, all of whom are somewhere in France doing their bit in the great svar of freedom. Ail of them are" Canadian university graduates. Private F, Harold of the | Divisional €yclg Corps was a theo- logical student and graduated in Arts from the University of Toronto. Liefit. John S. joined the Royai Ar- my Medical Corps and is attached to the 10th Gloucester Regiment as sur- geon. He graduated at McGill in Arts and Medicine, [ILieut. George H,. civil engineer, wes attached to "J Company Divisional Engineers, | graduated, from MeGill with the de- | gree of B. Se ". Io Dropped Dead At Haliburton. Lindsay, Jan. 20.--On Tuesday Malachi Earl, Haliburton, dropped dead while loading cord wood on a The de- ceased was ® middle-aged man and | the sudden call came. His 'wife and, family reside d in the village. \ an Mimmmtin ~ ON RECORD SCORED BY A BRIT- ISH AVIATOR. On the Wesiern Foont--Shot Down Two Battieplanes and Forced A Third to Degscend. London, J#n. 20 One of the Brit ish corre adn at army head quarters in a despatch dated yester- day reports that the greatest feat of its kind on récord is to be credited to%one of the best known British air amen, who in the course | single Might shot dows ana chased an Albatro forced it t descend "How great the feat was." lie telegraphs, "can only bé understoo by those who know the power Fokker It to be able 180 1 hour equipped with a deviee whereby it is enabled to shoot directly in front : 4 great advantage in air fighting The machi also is some degree protected. "Searcely any taubes are fow used The new birds of prey were first seen in~force after the last German attack, when several flow position that had heen atts were greatly a of a Foihers s and two of the af of and is gas the tked and admired * ever ---- Fitted With 200 Horsepower, The performances 'of the new Fok- ker a planes, to which the recent increase in German air successes is ascribed, is attracting great attention hére + "The . finest flying' men in the 'world ~-- the British --- are being out-engineered and outpowered by the deadly German Fokker batil plané, The French authorities be- Heve that the latest type of Fokk machine, which 'is a monoplane, i fitted with a two-hundred horse-pow: er, water-cooled Mercedes engine. The machine is probably :more pow erful than even the . latest French Nieuport or Morano Its immense engine .power_géves it extraordinary speed and climbing capac®ty, "The' Germans. well knqw the im- portance of thie engine's superiority, | as Witness the constant references in| : of them lying beyoad the boundar thelr communiques from headquar vers since Defember 16th, These comtuniques, unlike the wireless, rarely lie. They report the destruc- tion in air fights; of thirteen British and two French machines, as against two Fokkers brought down by the French' and two by the British. "The matter is one of, the greatest Juiportance, not only at the front! But here, for the Fokkers will doubt- less come over to drop bombs." Tha Government, it is understood, will shortly be called upon to answer | questions in the House of Commons | as to whether the British aergplanes at' the front can equal the efficiency of the Fokk PRINCIPALITY'S PLIGHT. in Difficult Position Because of the War. » Fhe little independent principality of Liechtenstein, lying between Aus- tria, the Rhine and Switzerland, has not been heard of since the war. Its independence ensures for--¥ THNADT tants freedom from _ taxation military servgce, but this has not pre- vented them: from feeling the effects of the war severely in other ways. The Swiss papers have récently call- + ed attention to the plight ef the 1 000 persons who are cut off from hil communication with Austria The Liechtenstein sre Schwestern mountain range Hes between Liechtenstein and Austria, and since there are no roads through the district and. the inhabitants are forbidden to make use of the paths which cross the frontier, they find themselves cut off from their source of food supplies For many months the bakers and butchers Rave had to shut down. In. these circumstances the inhabitants turned to Switzer-| land for help This country, though: having bafely sufficient for its own needs, agreed to pfovide bread' at the, rate of two pounds per person per day, and meat at the rate of twos pounds per household per day, on condition: that the inhabitants came and "fetched the provisions them- selves. The people, foural occupa tions fire mostly agricultural depend very much 'raising for" a living. « > " ------------------ Visible Stars. The nuniber of stdrs visige in ihe Ihrgest telescopes has been variously sated A few years ago dn esti- | mate of 125,000,000 was. current. Alecording #5 a recent estimate by Chapman and Melotte there , are {about 219,000,000 stars brighter {than the twentieth magnitude. Pro- | | fessor Hale has recently stated- that t | 'there is reason to hope that a 100\ | inch telescope would, add negrly 100,000,000 still fainter stars, many on cattle . | of the universe as it present known." { and within a, yedr of so such a tele- | scope (ie. a reflector) will probab- | {Ty he in use at Mount Wilson Obser- | vatory \ Gripp Curd Tablets' qt Gibson's. ! A resolution calling for Federal prohibition during the war and for l.three years after and until repealed | { by a vote of the people was adopied | by a joint meeting of the Dominion | Alliance~&secutive, Parliameniarians | { and the Ottawa Committee, and a committee appointed to wait on the | { Government. . ' { | "Gripp Tablets" at Gibson's i 7 The Dominion Government is ta-| | king steps to assist Canadian breed- | j era to obtain breeding stock. { © Sir Robert Borden announced that | during the first half of January 15,-' "532 men had enlisted in Canada. | the 1st Brigade some fifteen months 70 DISCUSS BLOCKADE %, London, and women ars rapidly taking the " . * "THE IRISH REMAIN i \ r-- {Sacrifice of Two Irish Companies |. : Who Saved the British Army. The brilliant radiance of uncon Guerable-heroism and a glory tha | § | Will neYer fade pierced the gloom ol | Both Sides Refuse to Allow Rival | | the British retreat from Serbia like.z | Mail to be Expedited--Points in | | ishtaing fash shooting its vivid the Dispute. | ame through fhe lurid darkness of | Loudon, Jan. 20.--Thé controversy | Siaraesiven clogs, Jat Bressed | etween Great Britain and Sweden | b Ltorious Bulgarians, the British forces ove! tie detention o Walls bias | were saved -from complete disaster | ea ped an 1 azse, = : oth Sides (From Our Correspondent.) only by the gallant self-sacrifice of sty, on i. u ae ded thy > Jan. 20.--Capt. Howard Taylor,! (wo Irish companies, who died in| 0.5 halls to 'be Sap ite through | who left here with the 3rd Battery of | their tracks rather than yield an inch The, Tespective countilea an enor to the oncoming foe. The deathless : nue quantity of the English fame of the Royal Inniskilling Fusil- destined for Russia, while mail Is be of 1915 at the front, and sailed from! eers has no been made any® more ing taken fron: .e¥ery Scandinay 36- Englakd on the Missanabie on Jan. sure by ue glorious stand--the {jiner brought into Kirkwall a sith, ar n Gananoque yesterday episode is ud without precedent in | and. : Site nod RY a a Tousiag ihe Stisripg history of that gallant Nigoraus seprosentations are being "A' Company, 54th Battalion, Mayor The British had awakened to the! ry. ne Sib omatisis of both F. J. O!Connor, and Councillors as music of a heavy bombardment by | gents so many novel features that ex» well as elvic employees met the train Bulgarians, who poured. .a hail of | tensive debates may™ be expected at the King streef pavilion, together thot and shell en them. Splintering | Neutral diplomatic circles here are with a big'gathering of citizens. Mrs, rocks intensified the effect of the fire. more concerned over the detention Taylor met her husband at Ganan- The Bulgarian infantry then ad- of mails than any other fact arising oque Junction and come in with him.' vanced to the attack in massed form- from the British blockade. On the arrival of the train both Capt. alien and were punished severely The Foreign Office here takes the and Mrs. Taylor were placed in a but the scarcity of British guns did | definite stand that a parcel, no mat- ~carri and soldiers, municipal uot permic the defenders to take !ter what class of postage it.bears. ! bays, dnd citizens ers them Proper tall of the advancing Bulgars. | is no more entitled to protection than home . The Captain is lookin The British emptied their rifle ordinary freight The neutral pink condition, as if the rupidly into the crush and tried to cduntries have not yet controverted ous times through which stem the tide with bayonels, but were this stand, but base their objections passél had boen benefit overborie e) weight of num- on interferences and delays to which He Will act as an artillers bers, and fhe position was lost actual first class postal ~ correspon- here for the next few months Similarly the second line was lost, dence has been subjected. . The C. 1 A.C entertained the and the British fell back on the third r. Great Britain further claims the Roman Catholic mehibers of ' Co. | line of defenses right to cepsor 'mails in transit to 5h 'Batali Vials alu I'wo companies of Inniskillings, other countries if the ship carrying 59th Battalion at their elub rooms however, 'held to the ridge known as them comes voluntazilyinmto a TFitish last evening. Kevis Crest and kept back the Hul- | port This directly affects mails to The A. Y. P. A Christ Chure } garians the whole morning, although, Holland, and the United States, back- entertained the icans of \ upported only by &TFifle, fire. Hardly ed by other ngutral countriés, it is Co. 59th Battalion at their meeting | ; nan escaped, but their stand im- said, will take the stand that gince it in the Parish House last evening. A | procsed and dela¥ed the Bulgars, thus | is impossible, on account;of the Brit- fine programme of musical selections giving the British much needed time | isliswar measures /fn_ thie English was given, to complete defensive dispositions jn | Channel, for Dutch iiiers to avoid David McClement, sr., passed away | (he third line, where the --Bulgars | coming within the thr&e-mile limit, at his home near Pittsferry on Tues-| were finally held up four days. the mails aboard them are entitled to day aftern an illness of some dura- The men who performed this mag-' the same immunity as those aboard tion.. He was well known and high- | nificent deed of courageous self-sacri- | $hips which forcibly are brought into ly respected throughout this section. | fice were not seasoned veterans of< Port from the high seas. . The funeral of the-late Mgs Mary | many wars. The regulars of their . A novel feature of the controversy MacDonald Montgomery, who 'passed |-famous regiment had perished glori- | 15. the holding up of British mails to away on Supday last, was held from | ously in the bloody trenches. of Flan-| Russia by Sweden, this being the first the home of Miss Emily Colton, King | ders. The men who held the pass in | [AD&ible reprisal measure by a neu street west yesterday afternoon to|the Balkans, like Leonidas and his tral rad : : Willowbank Cemetery three at Thermopylae, not far away, . Swedish diplomats declare that Thé funeral of the Mgte Mrs. Ja-| belonged to the Tenth Division. one § ace the Swedish Government for cob M. Mallory was held yesterday! of the three divisions that embodied bids 1 ie expor of rain articles, afternoon from the family residence, | the Irigh recruits who had not join- lie has a Fight io hold up Hie British James street, to the vault at Ganan-| ed English or Scotch regiments. A | parce pi ie to nae ae ods oque Cemetery eat 250 ey iardiy bag an pAiSt: gumehit, are not entitled ary more to Appointed 0 Hawkesbury. merely lads of the countryside and protection than is ordinary freight y Ottawa, Jan, 20.--Rev. W, P. Gar-| town, leading peaceful lives far from | Jett, rector of the parish' of Bear-| war's alarms, gallant and gay in Brook, gnd rural dean of Prescott! their frolics and their fun. and Russell, bas been appointed by When the call to arms sounded, Ld et a 3 the Bishop of Ottawa, to tire parish | they sprang eagerly to action, up-! !8rio has in the County of Frontenac of Hawkesbury and will assume versed in war but stirred . to the | (he most valuable deposits of felds duties there about the middle. of depths by the invitation to glorious| PAT 07 the American continent, and February . combat that has evér proved an ir- the analysis of it shows it to contain | resistible appeal to the gallant hearts | {he right ingredients, X ithout Zany Engagement Announced of Ireland. For a year they chafed addition of potash, for 18¢ ipahifpe Jan. 20.-Mrs. Hawil- under the necessity of the rigorous | !Te of the highest grade of enamel announces the engage-| training which held them in peaceful ing Its analy: 8 15 Silica, 62 36 daughter, Margaret! camps in 'he south of Ireland, strain | PST cents: alumina, 22 BSL .genby (Olive), to Hallard| ing like hounds on the leash, proud | ron. a Hace; lime, A rece; nag Argue, sori of M¥s, Charles Ar-| of their countrymen at the front, but | Besa 29 pee: Boga bs FR oral} zue Millbrook. THe wedding! fiercely envious of-them and deter-| PoLant, 2. 1 pes cent, DL its sees 1 will take place quietly in January miteds when their chance came | . Ram : w. 3 "na le BE po » emulate the heroic deeds of their kin | L7Y. Elass, graniteware, glazed brick, and add a not unworthy chapter to | enamel-ware, bath tubs and sanitary the glorious annals of martial Erin i Ware, aie By-products are poultry "The Irish sti remain" said grit, cement products, cleansers, etc. Marshal Saxe to his despairing King and for many pthor Purposes and ¥ at Fontenoy and out of that pregnant | SToperiy yoveloped tho folds par o IN THE BRITISH COMMONS NEXT | fact he forged a weapon to turn the [5° valuable sustainers of tndustry WEEK British victory into inglorious defeat iP Canada. my gX ny i I'or the British in Serbia as for the igi utd ily Briti h Government May Make Some Preach 3% Foulenor tue lish {Hn re. \ Timely Warning. not. to seize impossible viciory from Across the line there the arms of defeat at least to die as | society which is ve Whig.) their fathers often died to clamors against the Announcements armies in peri¥ selling. their 'lives this war 7 foliey towards dearly and defiantly, with .a gallant A lady who belongs to_the blockade song on their 'lips to avert disaster sent to a Canadian friend the about the entire from their reireating comrades. In emblem---an American. flag, with an probably will: be the Dardanelle in Flanders, and in olive branch painted across the stars the Balkans the Irish have covered. and siripes, 5 x themselves with glory and added un I'be Canadian studied dvingslaurels to the magnificent and out. and, withGy' wishing imperishable traditions of their mili- onthe lad tary fame. note of .thanks for the alded this little sting to it: "I would suggest, however, that those who painl an olive branch on the Ameri- BETWEEN BRITAIN AND swig. DEN IS SERIOUS, Gananoque Own ago, and who spent the greater part ' in the 18 enu has of he ' by. shee; 0 instructor | of Ontario Feldspar. It is a little realized fact that On Mi ton ment Olivia Beatrice librook, Kennedy 20 = of her also of Concessions to Neutrals, Jarly. the United States. attic : Particny is a peace ry in its continuance of active ial to the save Jan, 20 of the Government's the proposals that a tablished coas ocjety be es ociety German made ~.wrext ANSwering a query in House Commons this afternoon, Sir Ee ard Grey, Foreign de lared that the whos with to Americ tic Foreign he the "thing to reflect ', Wrote a emblem, but Secretary, situation \ an trade stat * r Office Didn't Wish to Know Him, =~ 's policy, will ) in Parliament next David Garplck, . the greatest Eng Winnipeg Railway Winnipeg, Jan 20 Railway Company has notified the City Treasurer that its gross earni- ings last year amounted tp $1,856,- 867.70, five per cent..of which, or $92,842.28, will be paid to the city under the charter Earnings. ™ ~The Street 1 to articles, to 1 the acter Miss Fannie Tissi- | one of the oldest The family set- | At Chatham, man, the last of families, is dead. tled there in 1835. < Ends Dry, Hoarse--or Painful Coughs Quickly A Simple, Home-Ma Remedy, Inexpensive but Unequaled . A | BEPPPELPPDPPEPP PPP SEPP Pp | the| Tees esd | The prompt anid positive results given | [by this pleasant -tastiug "home-made | | cough syrup has caused it to be used in | | more homes than any other remedy, It! fhe almost instant relief and will usual. | b + was taken to) mean lish actor of his day, had a brother tan flag should take care not 'to istry will lay-ts fro. living in the country who was an ake it look like a White feather.-- | gramme before the Commons. The Hdglaizaus Ji of Jie Seaius, Canadian Courjer, Poreign Secretary save i y a. :8ays George omeroy oodale 4 ---- - Foy En - REAMIY ave no informa riel- neighbor. a grocer, being about' prepared go in preventing ship to visit London, this brother insisted nd ¢ : hn : his taki 4 or of . re ments from reaching Germany. He x his Iking A heise ont Iatrodug. did .complain, however, that London bi Ip aad ot os: i as SWEDIBEr : yi d § 1 ist 0 he er Het Sve TY OnE Davy the first day of his stay in RO Gs present ioc RAL _ | London, 'thé grocer went to the thea- a farce and does t stop shipments tre in the evening and saw Garrick in to Germany are 'grossly unfair." the char: of Abel Drugger, the It was accepted in some quarters disrepptable protagonist of Ben as an indication that if the Govern- JobaSon's The Tobacconist. On .his ment decided upon a blockade pol- refurn home the eountry brother icy, important tOncessions "will .be eagerly inquired respecting the visit made to neutra to avoid arousing| je had been anxious to bring about, feelings' of hostility, particularly in "Why, Mr. Garrick,"" was the ip-' the United States. genuous reply. "I am Sorry to hurt | z et your feelings, but there's your létter Fifty Shekels For Kiss. 1 did not choose to deliver it." | A Supreme Court jury brought in "Not deliver it!" . a verdiet'oT $400 against (fol. George "Well, 8i¥, I happened to sée him { F. O'Nefll, a Binghamtbn, N. Y., when he did not know me, and I saw | millionaire, who has just sued Miss that he was such a dirty; low-lived | Belle Cornish, a thirty-year-old dres- | fellow that I 314 sot like to have any- maker, for stealing a single hug and | thing i ¢ am, ; kiss. - Col. O'Neil, on the.stand. de- Seldom has an uy TR Wg nied the charges. The jury, appar- romp eatary di ite ently, complited damages along lines eilectiveness o 8 ari. suggested "by Thomas B. Merchant, i Pp : attorney for Miss Cornish, who quot M Opie} pa M s i well- | ed from, the Book of Deuteronomy mI. pols, M.D. ¥ ; co \ Nn 8 . - uy | 5 vy overcome the average cough Sn 24 and declared that in Biblical mes deserved Iehutation a 3 saeanteds | O11 18. Ee such thefts from a maiden involved | At 8 lecture the other evening he | Get 2% qunces Pinex (50 cents worth) a fine of fifty shekels. The value of caused great diversion by défining | from any drug store, pour it into a 16- a shekel, accordi to' the 3 ney, the difference between an optimist | ounce bottle and fill the bottle with plain was $7.76. The verano GUOTHEY, 'apg a pessimist. The author, he said, | granulated suzar syrup. This makes 16 was $7.76. The verdict, with costs '5 a . . | ounces--a family supplv--af the most of- is' slightly more than® 50 shekels { was a colonel who confided the de | fective cough remedy at a coset of enlv 64 8 sligntly gre that b0 shekels finition to him on his recent visit to | sents or Jers. S the Front. y Fon Discussion Gat No Further, says here in thé paper that | oy | ready-made cong "An optimist," he said, "is a man | Easily vrepared fo has 'done' everybody, and takes | directions with he ig not 'dope in'! The prom Re Ap ? with which th A pessimist is the mah who | medicirie for $2.50. wl never spoils. Full inex. | certainty and ease 8 Pines Syrup overcomes a | "rt a places | sony good care himself lived with him." | ef men "That reminds me," said he quiet- ly. "Have you fixed the furnave for the night, ny dear?" remarkable. It quickly loosens a dry hoarse or tight ough 'and heals and spathes i p ful cough in a hurry. With A persistent, loose cough itstops the for mation-of 'phlognt in the throat and bron. ehial - tubes, his 'en the annoying ! i British Army Rations. ERSTE v pie British. #Pmy a battalion of | The report oX the Royal Northwest | ¥7% men requires for ite daily ra-| Mounted Police Shows that the alien tions 625 two-pound loaves, 127 situation in the west had been so ef-' pounds of; baton,' more than 31 ficiently handled that the extra force pounds of sali, and merely 12 pounds | of 500 men is no longer needed. of pepfler--to mention only a fow of | "A Department of Labor and a La-| tha {tems. i bor Commission for Ontario are Ne ------ ~ 4 among .the things recommended by A Chinese Government army wat | the © Unemployment Commission, Deaten with heavy losses in Yuu-uan | this, ask your. destgmist for >i. on which presented its report. by the rebels. ; | Pimex," and don't accept art ing else. The Ontario Government "Gripp Tablets" at Gibson's | A guarantee of absolnte P| a highly concentrated eom- | pound of yenpine Norvay ping extract rieh in guaiacol. und is Gunous the world over for its splendid cffect in bronchitis, whooping cougl, bronchial asthma a winter coughs. To avoid disappointraent in making inces voted | ; { money promptly reflinded, $2,500 to. the Seamen's Hospitil, Great damage was done in Bel. | promptly ref ¢ ToL ibis reparation, e Pinex Greenwich, England gium by floods, 1B * - You couldn't buy as muel | § | bad cough. chest or: throat eold is truly ¥ Wool - Sweater Coats $3, $4, $5 Colors. Grey, Tan, - Brown, , Navy, Maroon. Shawl or reversible collars; sizes 36 to 44. Roney's, 127 Princess St., Kingston Q 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 #ieintzman & On. 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. Mendels ' Big Bargains me A, A AA i ra . In Ladies' and Children's Ready-to-wear and Furnishings We Bb clear our room for new goods. Watch our windows for bargains in Serge Skirts, Serge Middies, Serge Dresses. You can buy wool serges now cheaper than vou will be able to inthe next ten years. ALL COATS HALF PRICE ALL SUITS HALF PRICE ALL MILLINERY MUCH LESS THAN "HALF PRICE Te D. & A. Corsets, with aluminum ribs and of newest stake, regular £1.75, for cea, 1980 'Just a little out of the way, but it will pay you Ga to purchase at a 8 -- entire stock to make ~ Mendels Between Princess and Brock Streets. Pgs ary THOMAS COPLEY . Teigphone 987, Drop a card 19 Pine siraet when to wanting anything done in Gr ie Rees he onal! o : ! wonq Suces ot an ts will receive prompt attents § 0 Qupen Biroer, 3 8.