Daily British Whig (1850), 6 Mar 1916, p. 5

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Now i is the Time! "To Choose: YOUR NEW SPRING SUIT OR COAT. Our stock is fully assorted with Serges and Wor- steds that are guar, anteed pure wool and fast dyes. The early buyers are the wise ones this year, as none of the cloths now being shown can be had later on. 'Com pare our Prices On Individual Style Garments. A pleasure to show vou, w hether buying or look- ing. Any Suit, Coat or Dress placed aside -to suit your convenience, NEED * EDUCATING THE ? WOMEN "10 1 THE EMPIRE' NEEDS FOR MEN. Mrs. Willoughby Cummiiigs, Toron to, Addressed Gathering Of Wom- en In Grand Opera House On Sun- | day Afternoon, * Mrs. Willoughby .Cummings, Tor- onto, secretary of the Dominion Na- tional Council of Women, and Pre- sident of the Red Cross Society, spoke in the Grand Opera House on Sunday afternoon to a large audien- -ce of women, and gave details of the work that Capadian women were doing to help the cause of the Empire in this great struggle. All of the diffgrent societies of the Second Military Division with headquarters in Toronto have been brought toge. ther and are now working in unity on a systematic basis. In opening her sddress Mrs. Cum- mings said that the part that the wo- men of Canada were playing inthis War was not properly recognized. | They had started to raise $100,000 at the request of the Imperial auth- orities and had at the close of the campaign collected $283,000. Of this amount $1,771 had been secured in Kingston, The next demand was for soldiers comforts and following this were demands from the Red Cross Society. The women are now called on to | assist In recruiting. Mrs. Cummings | advocated very strongly a better sys- " | wrecked by the storms of competition, THE VALE OF TRUTH | Truth in business is justas important | as truth in every-day life; truth creates confidence, establfhes good-will and | builds a reliability that -will not be { Throjgh three generations people | have learned to place reliance on the advertised words of Scott's Emulsion, because they pre untarnished, unex- aggerated trufsms about a household remedy of real and actual worth, The poputarity of Scott's Emulsion is increasing as intelligence advances, because in these days of adulterations it continpes to guarantee pure cod liver oil medicinally perfected with glycerine and bypophosphites to build strength, im prove the blood and strengthen the lungs. It is free from harmful drugs--a whole- | some food-tonic, truthfully advertised, Scoft & Bowne, Torpnto. Ont. 15-20 of Snow Shoeing dred men to bring his battalion up 10 tw strength. He took occasion to re-| mark that he did not have the sup-! {port of the citizens of Kingston in| his endeavors to raise the men for! {his battalion. During the months| that the battalion has been in: the course of formation he had not been waited upon by any body of citizens| offéring to aid him in recruiting. | The male quartette composed of) Harold Angrove, Harvey ' Amngrove,|. PAGE FIVR : Sh Enjoy the Winter Sport Snowshoeing is one of the healthiest winter sports. We can supply you with Snowshoes and Moccas Ladies' Snowshoes $2.75 and $3.00 Men's Snowshoes ..........$3.50 and $3.75 aire eaves nes 3100 .$1.25 ~ Abernethy's Shoe Store Men's Moccasins William Mack and Noble Armsuong| sang. tem of edueating the women to the ONE SERIOUS 1 DANGER I needs of the country and Empire for | i for more men. She has heard that | women are holding the men back. [es IN TRYING TO D TO DO TOO MANY | This is caused by the fact that the THINGS. women do not realize the seriousness | T.d. OCONNOR '260 PRINCESS STREET. PHONE 800 Home-Made Candy and] Chocolates Higher up street, but lower in price. ® ® - a Patriotic Concert QUEEN 'S UNIVERSITY CHORAL SOCIETY IN AID OF QUEEN'S BATTERY, C.EF. Miss Dora Gibson PRIMA DONNA, ROYAL OPERA, COVENT GARDEN b Assisted vy MISS BERTHA WARDEN, Pianist; M. FAGET, "Cellist, R.C.H.A. Band GRANT BALL TUESDAY, MARCH 7TH. PRICES: $1.00, 80c, 25e. Plan open n at Uglow's Hook Store You will like the rich strength and full flavor. "Iivd men sélling jewelry. ofthe situation. It 'is doubtful if | Canadians as a whole understand what 1s needed. It is time now to begin to prepare | to meet these needs. fault of the Allies had been that none were prepared properly for what is taking place. The women have now to prepare for heir part. Scarcely half of the 500,000 men asked for by the Prime Minister had | yet been secured. If the industrial | and commercial balance is not to be | women must learn to take | disturbed, the places of men in Canada. Vacant positions must be filled first if pos- | sible by soldiers who have been at | the front, secondly by ineligible men and thirdly " women. The soldiers- who have returned so far have for the most part been incapable of do- ing much work owing to the war's effects on their nerves. For this rea- son the part that women can play is | very large. Jn Toronto a register of | men who can not go to the front but who could relieve others to go is be- ing taken. Already over 100 retired bankers, farmers etc., have signed up showing their willingness to take some position until the close of the war if it will relieve some men elig- ible for overseas service, If the women in Great Britain and France can make the sacrifice the women of Canada can do it: A friend of Mrs. Cummings lately told her | that in a certain jewelry store in To- | rrnto there were seventeen able bod- | Women could do this and would probably be | able to do it even better. In another | store there are five men ladling out ica cream. With their experience at ¢hurch bazaars women could do this Mrs. R. Cacr-Harris, presided at the. meeting. Mrs. H. T. J, Coleman sang | solos and the band of the 146th Bat- Tea "is good tea" | ris and Mrs. C. Ladies' and Gents' Dres sers in Oak, Walnut, Mahogany --late designs, just out -- mirrors of the best plate, Y drawers convenient | size--$10, $13, $19, up to $150. . Rugs and Carpets in: Tapestry, Brus- sels, Wilton, ete. Curtains in Lace, Brussels Nett, Ma- dras, Velour, ete. Yours, Phone 90. Pm ii | work. talion gave selections. Mrs. Carr-Har- A. Low algo spoke. Mass Meeting at Night. Mrs. Cumming addressed a mass meeting in Sydenham Street Method- ist Church on Sunday evening direct- ly after the evening service. She | explained the necessity for more men | to fill up the units which are being | recruited and will be recruited before | the war is over. During her ad-| dress she stated that she believed | that the women of Canada were not | familiar with the conditions which exist. She believed that if they were shown the great need of enlist- ment the five hundred thousand men would be raised without a deal of Speaking about the German ele- | ment in the United States, she stated | that high officials had informed her| that the Germans could come over to Canada if they saw fit, and that the United States would not be able to | hold them back. Germany had planned to humiliate England by tak- ing Canada; and had éven gone so far as to name a governof-general, re- marked Mrs. Cummings. She be: lived that women could fill the places of men in many places of business. Lieut.-Col. Charles Low, command- | el | is not gone. rHves, | tle things of a trivial character. The | danger | things should be guarded against. | Winning Ot Souls Should Not Be | | Fdrgotten Says Prof. John Dall, | In His Sermon At Convocation Hall On Sunday Afternoon, The danger of losing the greatest | | thing in life, that of winning souls || fof Christ, in spending time on small [fi insignificant things in life, was'|[}i | pointeal out by Prof. John Dall, in| his sermon at Convocation Hall, on! Sunday afternoon, He spoke from the text, 1 Kings, xx, 40: "And as thy servant was busy here and there, he was gone." One great danger of,the church was in endeavoring to do too many | things and not doing any of them well. The speaker said: "By all means let us have fine church, with~their beautiful services Let us multiply our societies and or- | ganizations. Let us gather money and spend it. But let all these acti- vities be subordinate so that the one great vision--that of saving souls, x An event where gen- ij erous price concessions, elegant styles and desir- able selection make a wonderful buying op- portunity. Discounts that are genuine. It was true that the more active a4 man was the more entangled he , became in different things. A man becomes identified this thing and that thing, with the result that in his trying to do so many things, he could not do one] thing deceptly. The main thing in life was to get the spirit that" brings | one in touch with God. Sometimes in the activities and cares of life and the pursuit of business and plea- | sure the main thing was neglected. In trying to gain .the world one | would lose his own soul. ""Wa should by all means live good help our fellowmen, worship God reverently, but we must not lose Sight of the stnipleé truth, that God | is the Saviour, If we do, 'we lose the chief point of our religion." The speaker emphasized the den- ger of spending so much time on lit- Now is the time for bargains in fine Furs at Campbell Bros. 84 Princess 8t.-- FASTIDIOUS FOLKS FAVOR Our Coffee! We ave building up a very (Coffee, the {kind that we grind fre A great many had the idea that a kind that we 1 sh onf | university was for the building up of lou own pre ise Ss. every | character. There were two things a MOFRiNG. person would get at a university, he | NDERSON'S COFFEE | would never be able to get any other | HE place. These were the great opportu- i . . { {Is in a elass by itself. Money cannot buy better: It's a nity for study, and communion with men of different minds, But the dan- ger of mixing up into too many : . i breakfast necessity. Try a One must not think that the "husy pound. body" was a busy man. Thex w | two different persons. The service was very poorly at- tended. For some time past the Uni- versity service has been held * i a.m., but on Sunday it was cha till 3 p.m. This may have Ty ~ pousible for the slim attendance Principal Gordon was present, and |* the choir composed of students ably | assisted in the musical part of the programme. of the individual was also the danger of the church, The result was that the individual as weil as the church, was weak instead of strong. There should be a greater lar ge trade in unity of spirit. Henderson's Grocery 59-61 Brock Street. A Squre House to Deal With, yesterday on the work of the Domin- ion Alliance, and secured a good sum Fresh Made Every Day SAKELL'S Phone 640 corm New designs in Brussels, Axminster and Tapestry Squares, Oil Cloths and LL inole SINS, Upholstering-and Repairing promptly done at James Reid, For the Leading Undertaker, Phone 147. ee Specials At HOOD'S 100 Milk Fed Chickens 100 Young Fowls - 500 lbs. Young Pork 500 lbs. Farmers' But- ter, . in rolls and prints = at special prices. | HOOD'S WEST END MEAT MARKET, Phone 407. 4 A WISE MAN STAYS) | ON THE FENCE | LONG ENOUGH TO THINK ) x QUESTION OVER FAIR AnD SQUARE You will decide your food buying. problem quickly upon the event of your first visit to our grocery. Mince Meat 10ceib. 3 Ibs. Biscuits 20¢ Fresh Celery, Lettuce, Onions and Rhubarh., GROCERY, EMPIRE Phone 349, i of money for the furtherance of the cause. Mr. Bailey said that af- ter years §f labor on the part of the churches and aided by the great wa prohibitioX of the liquor traffic in Ontario was now in sight. However the desired goal would not be reach- | ed throughout the country until the people looked at the liquor question from a national instead of a personal standpoint. The prohibition forces had now the greatest statesmen of} the world at their back. ing officer of the 146th Regiment, | . > was present with a large number of Dominion" Alliance Work. officers, and spoke a few words. He Rev. John Bailey, Toronto, spoke showed the necessity for four hun-|in Chalmers and Cooke's churches Spent Countless Nights Unable to Rost or Sleep Was Run Down and in Terribly Using Dr. Chase's Nerve Foc ood Gained Regularly. In this letter is told once more in bed, awakened by bad dreaius; in the story which comes from many [fact, I was so bad eat I could thousends of womea. Tt is the story [Rot live Faris Food wits: see Dr. of exhausted nerves, of a run-downfhope. system and of all the accompanying | * «Jt was not long before I began to misery of sleeplessness, headaches [improve under this treatment, and I and loss of energy and vigor. {can truthfully say it has done me 'a Bat there is a silver lining to this iworld of good. It took some time to cloud. There is the light of new get the nervous system restored, but hope and courage which comes with iI kept right on using the Nerve Food the use of Dr. Chase's Nerve Food. 'regularly, and gradually gained in This letter is so representative of [health and strength. I have a fine the kind we are daily receiving that [baby boy now. He weighed 12 Ibs. you can judge from it what you at birth, and though my friends were might expect from this tredtment anxious after the condition I was in, under similar circumstances, 41 got over that fine, and now weigh Mrs. Conrad Schmidt, R. R. No. 1, 120 Ibs. Before using the Nerve, Milverton, Ont., writes, "Two years Food 1 was a mere skeleton." ago last spring I was run down, had! You are Hot eked to expect mir- nervous prostration, and was in a |acles from Dr. age's Nerve Food. terribly nervous condition. I could | But if you are willing: to fend Tack ad pr gt . hen a not 'sleep or eat. Could scarcely | your exhausted nerves to health and | A, and the campaign organized. count the nights that I passed with- strength you can depend absolutely | Knowing that many hands make out sleep, and if F did eat, had sick lon this great food cure to produce light work, jhé directors are anx-i headaches and vomiting -spells. My jthe desired pesults. 50¢ a box, 6 for| jous that a many men as possible limbs would swell so badly that it{$2.50, all dealers, or Edmanson, | will lend their assistance in the ible] hurt me to walk. I would jump up Bates & Co., Lid, Toraty, | ouien- E NEW FRENCH REMEDY. Not. No! H ERA APIO Baed Na i Hospitals with great SUCCESS, CURES CHRONIC berip lag DISCHARGES, Sones, WLADOER, UEINASY DISEASES "lh POISON, IST of MATL $1, POST 4 TS FOUGERA Co, $0, BEEKMAN ST NEW YORK 0f LYMAN BROS TORONTO. WRITE por FRER Book 10 Dr, Le CLERC MED, CO, HAVERSYOCK KO, HAMPSTEAD, LONDON, ENG, TLLNEW DRAGEE (TASTELESS) PORNO EASY Io "Wood's Phosybodins, Tins: Grept Dngiish the paryts atothy makes ueet Blood Debilit Meni) da ran CT Gonos: Fo denen. ou of Eneom: bo 1 per br thie coms. 3 iting for$5. One weit SEE THAT TRADE MARKED WORD 'THERAPION' 15 on | druggists or n pain pkg. on Tod - GOVE. STAMP AFFIZED TO ALL GENUINE racyere . | Res, New pm im ea THE T. F. Harrison Co. * Repair and Upholstering Work done Prompt! op and Well py ve aa] la TO CANVASS CITY. Y. MC. Nervous Condition -- By A. Directors Meet--Arrapg- ed For Campaign. A special meeting of the Board of! Diréctors was held on Friday night! to make arrangements for the an- nual subscription campaign which! commenced to-day, when teams of! business men and young men canvas- | sed the city for the $5,000 required | td' carry on the 1916 work: of the! City and Military Associations. t The Board was greatly strengthen- | ed by the assistance of Messrs. H.W. | Newman, Harold Davis, I. A. Shaw and Prof.. W. T. -MacClement, the! new men elected at the annual meet-! ing and who have accepied seats on "the directorate. Assisting the Board in their sub- scription campaign is the young! | men's Cabinet Military Committee { and a number'of other business men, A meeting of these workers will be 80th Overseas Battalion! Band of 0 Accomplished Artists GRAND OPERA HOUSE, Monday Evg. Mar. 6 Under the Auspices of the Daughters of the : . Empire and the 4 PATRONAGE OF SIR SAM HUGHES, ; Minister of Militia and Defence. Bandmaster H. A. Stares, Mus. Bach. Assisted by Victoria Stares, Soprano. ickets: $1.00, 75¢, 50c, 25¢. A Maryellous Military Musica] Treat. F ews y During this week we are showing a few lines of Men's Tan Calf Bluchers, Gun Metal Bluchers, G Metal : regula $5.00, $5.50, $6.00, oe "$3. 75 Special |W omen' 's Overgaiters, all colors; Regular $1.00, for .. co. ovviiis ivan 25¢ Allan M. Reid, 111 PRINCESS 8ST. KINGSTON

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