COATS, ERO LN Nk BRO Reliabitics our label, carries the McKay Pure Fur Law, guarantee of SOCIETY PRINTIN | The kind you are looking for is the 'kind we sell. Scranton Coal Is good Coal and we guarantee prompt delivery. BOOTH & CO., Foot of West St. hts Demand warm bed covering in your sum- mer cottage. We. are well prepared to. supply your needs with. Comforters, $1.75 each Wool Nap Blankets $2.00 pair Bheets ...... 75c each Special value in bed pillows, large size, cov- with a good qual- ity Art Ticking. 50c ea, Nr ---- tions of the A PINT OF WHISKEY THE MAXIMUM SALE. Definite Instructions to Drug- gists--No Orders by . one. tele, ne ' in No more orders for whisky! -- The License Board has distoibut- ed to all dentists, physicians, drug- gists and veterinary surgeons in the Province of Ontario a blue book, which will govérn their conduct in the matter of requisitions for .}i- quor." Hitherto a doctor could 'phone up a drug store and tell the tain amount of liquor. fometimes the druggist was deceived by this beund that such mus cease, form which must be filled out by the physician and signal by the physician and signed by the person to whom the liquor is delivered saying plainly how much lquor is practices J required and what the disease is. Only six ounces may he pre- scribed for internal use, but a pint may be obtalned If the patient is to be bathed. The prescription may be filled only once,.and must be fyled for purposes of record, The blue book also contains sec- Ontario Temperance Act for tho convenience of the phy- siclane and druggists of the pro- vince, defining their powers and du ties and. the penalties for infrac- tions of the law, It was sent out Tuesday fo all In- terested parties in the province, NO CITY COUNCIL MEETING, Only Nine Members Could Be Mus- tered On Tuesday Night. Tuesday night for its last regular gession until October, but a quorum could not be mustered. Only nine members occupied their seats around the horseshoe when the City Clerk called the reil. Efforts were made by, telephone to round up three more members, but failed. they would come if their presence would make the quorum, had come there would have been a faithful nine left for home in any- thing but a happy state of mind. The ton, Couper" Chown, Kent, Laturney, Nickle, Peters and Wormwith. ---------------- 185th Band, This band will play at the C.0.C.F. moonlight excursion per Thousand Islander, Thursday evening, July 6th. Tickets, 865¢c. Boat leaves foot of Brock street at 7.45 p.m. Preparing for Campbell Power, The general manager of the Civie Utilities has ordered the material necessary to make the changes re- quired in order that the Commission may be in a position to take power fromr the Campbell interests. "English Fruit Saline," Gibson's, ; the guest of her aunt, Mrs. W. arrived in Kingston Tuesday, and -is E. MeNeill, 91 Albert street, during her course at the summer school at Queen's. Individual Eye Limited | &ttendant to give a patient a cer | method, and the License Board is | The blue book contain: a | The City Council was to have met | If they | members who attended were | Mayer Richardson and Alds. Clugs- | Miss Helen Libby, of Pittsfield, Mo,. ! THE DAILY --s eet KINGSTON FIRE - DEPARTMENT WAS GIVEN RUN WEDNESDAY, { hr-- : It Was For a Small Blaze on Roof of a House on Arch Street--*Safe. ty First" Methods Are Being Ap- plied Here, The quiet spell with the local fire department has been broken. For the first time since June Sth, almost a month, Chief Armstrong and his squad of firefighters were called out at noon on Wednesday. The call was to the home 'of Miss O'Donnell, at 84 Arch street, where | BRITISH sparks, supposed to have come from ia neighbor's chimney, set fire to the | shingles on the roof. Damage to {the extent of about $35 or $40 was | done, The alarm was rung in at 112.40 o'clock. For the firemen not to be called out in a month's time {is certainly some record. It is usual during the summer season for the men to have (a great many runs for grass fires, but the wet weather no doubt did (away with any trouble that might {have resulted from this source. | The fact that there has not been jany calls, however, goes to show that [eitizens have been standing by the { "safety first" methods in regard to {the starting of fires. IN MEMORIAM. | Verses for Mrs. Susan Perrin, on the déath of her daughter, Etta | Dear Etta, you have gone from me, And my heart is sore today, When i look up to the Father 1 know not how to pray |For you were the light of the home, | {And 'a comfort to me each day, | With your cheery smile, and i hand, And your bright and wjidsome helpful way | | { But God in mercy called you | From a life of suffering and pain, | |And I know that what is my great loss | For you, dear, is heavenly gain | | Arid so in submission I will bow, | Beneath the chastening rod jAnd when my poor heart yearns for] you {I will think of you up with God The nights are all so lanely And the days so long and drear; {Here and there I find dainty things My darling used to wear She 'wag so neat and dainty, No matter what she wore, And what will T do with all these! things, My poor heart is 80 sore. | But, dear Etta, 1 know coul | to me, You would tell me not | Your life was so ful] of s n That you often longed to leave 1d of sin and Sorrow, And be at rest with God; And so I will bow in submission | Beneath the chastening rod | INo sin is allowed in that C And nothing defiling or INo pain or no sickness No erepe Earth's s ity, mean; can enter on the door knob is se : Sorrows and cares are for Three | x aldermen replied over the wires that | Ne ver is spoken nothing to hurt or destroy 4 'By Mrs. Elmina Gilbert HACKETT YACHT, here is quorum, but they did not, and the | | Actor's Summer Home Made Ready For Occupancy. The pleasure yacht Flavia, owned by James K. Hackett, will be brought | to Mr. Hackett's summer home near | Clayton within a few days. Tha| | Yacht is now at the New York Yacht | { Club 1n New York. | The yacht will be in charge of! | Captain Clarence L. Kendall, a well- known Thousand Island and St. Law-| | rence river captain, Mr. Hackett | | will use it upon the St. Lawrence dur- ing the Summer. The new summer | home which he has purchased has { been made ready for occupancy. It {18 located nearly opposite Irwin Isle {the summer home of May Irwin, the { actress, : | i -- tm" THE CITY'S GRATITUDE | Received With Appreciation by US. | | Department of State. | | Some time ago U.S. Consul Johns- | ton, at the request of Mayor Richard- |8on and other prominent citizens, | | Wrote the State Department at Wash. | ington thanking it and the American | ambassador at Berlin for the trouble | they were taking in connection with | the parcels sent from Kingston for the prisoners of war in Germany. { To-day Mr. Johnston received a | letter from the Department of State, | stating that it had read with gratifi- | cation his despatch, and adding that a | copy of the despatch would be sent to f the American ambassador at Berlin, | | { | | | | i | | { | | | | { | ONE YEAR FOR DESERTION, Pte. Clark, of 98rd Battalion, Sent to Central Prison. { The stiffest sentence yet imposed by { Lieut.-Col. Hunter for desertion was | | meted out Wednesday morning, when | Pte. Clarence Clark, of the 93rd Bat-| | talion, was given one year in Central | Prison. He escaped from the deten- | tion camp at Barriefield, where he | was serving twenty days for deser- | tion. He was found fin Peterborg | Tuesday, hiding in a barn. { Clark's home is in Port Hope. DRIVER THIRTY-TWO YEARS. tween Princess and York. | | ally 111 at Cape Vincent. While | ing was set for next Monddy night. | der of Christian W. Shoup, of Wal wo Happenings In the City and Vicinity Readers of the Whig, "English Fruit Saline," Gibson's. The work of erecting the cemen wall at the G. T, R. station has been | commenced, Dr. A. R. B. Willlamson has re-| turned after two weeks' vacation in! New York. { "Neilson's Ice Cream Bricks," Gib-! son's. i John E. Gow, district inspector of | inland revenue, is leaving this week on a trip to the Pacific coast. "English Fruit Saline," Gibson's, Dr, Ruddick, Ottawa, chief dairy commissioner of Canada, paid a busi- ness visit to Queen's University on Tuesday. i "When the Boys Come Home," new Victor record No. 64594, $1.25. Hedr it at Lindsay's, 121 Princess street. Miss Vera Orr, Wellington street, has returned home aftér spending the past month with friends at Leo Lake. "Ice Cream Bricks," Gibson's. Lieut. James Graham, son of Mr. and Mrs. John R. Graham, Brock- | ville, is ill at the General Hospital of : appendicitis, Sergt.-Major A. J. Stevens, 170th Battalion, and bride, Toronto, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Montgom- ery, Odessa. Bay Rum, 26c and 60c¢ Bottles, | Gibson's, Mrs. James Berry and son Myrton, Mack street, are spending a month in Toronto,.the guests of her sister, Mrs. Dunn, Blecker street. There was a short session of the Police Court on Wednesday morning, One drunk was the only offender, and | he was fined $1 and costs, | "After. Shaving Lotion," Gibson's. Erwen Alexander has taken out a permit for a brick residence on the west side of Frontenac street, be- Miss Rose MacDonald, spending | the past month with the Misses- Ma- | thewson, Simcoe street, has left for | her home in Louisville, Ky. "English Fruit Saline," Gibson's. Major James H. Durham is critie- he possesses considerable strength, his | heart is sald to be affected. Mrs. David Woodhouse and Miss M. Givens returned home from Os-| wego, N.Y., where they were called owing to the death of a relative. Bay Rum, 25c¢ and 50c Bottles, | Gibson's | A soldier named Smart is mourn- | ing the loss of a valuable souvenir in! the shape of a shell from the front, | whieh was made into a coal scuttle. | "Ice Cream Bricks," Gibson's. | There was no quorum for the regu- lar meeting of the Portsmouth coun- cil on Tuesday night, and the meet- "Cream of Violets," Gibson's. D. Dennis, of the Prudential Insur- ance Company, left for Toronto to at. tend the funeral of his nephew, Dr. M. Dennis, who was killed in an auto accident. "Cream of Violets," Gibson's. The annual picnic of St. George's Sunday school took place this after- noon to Staley's Grove. A large number took advantage of the out- ing "Cream of Violets," Gibson's. Mrs. Edward Crumley, of Los An- geles, Cal, who has been seriously ill in hospital, following an opera- tion, is now slowly convalescing at her home. | "Ice Cream Bricks," Gibson's. | A large number of the members of the Y. M. C. A. went to the Y. M C. A. camp at Grenadier Island Tues- day, which will be held from the 4th to the 15th of July "English Fruit Saline," Gibson's. A young Barnardo boy is charged | with shooting John Simons, aged | seventy, in the village of Forestville, near Simcoe The shooting took place at the home of Miss Ida Carr. The latter is a sister of John Carr, now in the penitentiary for .theft committed in company of Emerson | Shelley, recently hanged for the mur singham. *'Neilson's Ice Cream Bricks," son's. AA Ps Pt Gib-| "The Hat Store" mi Ladies' Hats WHIG, WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1916. in Little Wonder Records. to-date Pennants and Pillows. selling price, owing to the sho ir military spoons known high-class goods, at Souvenir Hurd's well Latest war maps and books, The latter will be difficult to rtage of materials, caused by and stationery from the most Full supply of up- get at the present reasonable price to The College Book Store : Headquarters for al military supplies. 160-162 PRINCESS ST. OPEN NIGHTS. Dependable values in the wanted lines and at reasonable prices, are making business boom in this department. White, black, tan and popular shades in children's, misses' and ladies' range from 15¢ to $1.50 a pair. Sizes: all sizes, .. .. We mention just two specials Black or white lisle, all sizes, Black, white and colored silk PHONE 919. Reminder If that boy or girl of yours Punses, or han passed su credit ble ex alnatie this summer, treat 'bim" or er" to a sults able "Wrist aWteh." We have the range of prices to sult the occaslon.. Whether they have earned a gold one, or a Pie silver time plece un a st JEWELERS & OPTICIANS Issuers of Marriage Licenses sizes. Prices in ladies' ankle hose, .... 90c a pair Newman OLOSING OF MAILS British mall closes Irregu- larly. Information posted at P. O. Lobby from time to time. United States, daily ..13.45 p.m. Grand Trunk, going east Grand Ww Do. St 1.00pm, 1.00 p.m. es ae (Including Wester ates) Trunk and all west of city CPR, s C. N. R. { - For Bummer Wear In Marine Circles | tr PPR The steamer Belleville passed down to Montreal on Tuesday night. M. T. Co.'s Bulletin: The tug Bart- 1étt and Emerson arrived at midnight from Port Dalhousie, with the steam- Pictorial Patterns for August THE ALWAYS BUSY STORE Ew es Notice! Those who intend having Muskrat clipped an ' dyed or Hudso ason, I would advise them to send them in at once. W. F. Gourdier, Furrier Phone 700 & Shaw, te. poe BUILDERS' SUPPLIKS ey THE THRIFTY HOUSEWIFE Orders sereen doors and window sereens now. -- Anglin's screens are made to fit. and do not interfere with the: rais- ing and -Jowering of sash, They are not expen- sive and a well sereened house means restfulness Household Rubber Gloves The most perfect and serviceable rubber glove for household or photo- graphers' use, 50c PAIR Dr. A.P. Chown's Drug Store Sick Room Supplies and comfort. S. Anglin & Co. Woodworking Factory, Lumber Yards, Bay and Wellington Sts. Office Phone 66. 185 Princess, Phone 343 For Saturday Only jer Crowe in two sections; tug Bart- {lett cleared with the barges Gaskin {and Valencia to load coal at Char- {lotte; steamer, India cleared with the | barge Melrose to load grain at Pert | Colborne; tug Glyde arrived from { Montreal with one light barge, and {cleared with the tug Mary P. | Hall,- Having the steamer Crowe in | tow for Montreal; tug Emerson clear- ed light for Morrisburg; steamer Sim- la is due to arrive to-day with the Nastor) Phone 1415 Choice Print Butter Refrigerators 50¢ I 1. Here you will find that At the Premium Store | Steates That This is the Worst { Weather He Has Ever Experienced. | "I have been drawing milk to the | cheese factory for thirty-two years," {said a farmer to the Whig on Tues- | day afternoon, and in all that time "1 I have not experieneed such weather {8s we have had so far this season. | You can't tell me anything about ston Ostet Warehouse | A big variety to choose it every day. Some days the mud Fancy Clover Honey In one pound sections, 26c - the-- GOLDEN LION GROCERY the weather, for I had to be cut in was right up to, the hubs of my wag- gon, and with a big load of milk on it was certainly hard work." from and the best val- ues in Kingston, b: | ein from Port Colborne; | arges Hamilton and Selkirk with the tug hanley cleared with the barge Bella i bor Prescott, i The Donnelly Salvage and Wreck- roomy, economical, e]e-! gant and trustworthy re-| frigerator you have long! wanted, 'J. RB. Gage, Phone 549 Don't decide till; Montreal St, you see what we have to of -| mm fer you. Come in to-day| nd look them over, i y leach Have Done Their Bit. i . . . | Word has been received from Fresh California Prunes, | Flanders of the death of Pe. Willow i di {Manning, who succumbed on Apr! niee and Juicy, 10c, i 1-2c, 550 to wounds received in -battle,; Pte. Manning, who was in the final; | year of medicine at Queen's Univer- | sity when he joined the army, was a | grandson of the late J. W. Manning, Word has also been re- i Evaporated Peaches, 2 lbs, or 25¢. Evaporated Apricots, 18¢| coved Yom "Somewhere in France" ! | that Pte. Lewis Manning was wound- Sweet Cider, 40¢ per gal. in batfle on June 7th. Pte. Lew: is Manning is a son of W. H. Man- W. R McRae & Co ping, Clinton, and is also a grandson GOLDEN LION GROCERY, White Felts .. 65c to $1 | Linen and P.XKs : | 75¢ to $1.75 New Shapes, Half Price ing Company is still working on the tug Emerson and the barge Burmah, which went aground near Morrisburg several days ago. N. C. 0. WAS DESERTER. | But He Was Allowed To Go on Sus. Sentence. It is a rare thing for a non-com- missioned officer to be charge with desertion, but such a charge was pre- | ferred Wednesday morning against a sergeant in the 156th Battalion. The adjutant and other members of the staff made an earnest appeal for clemency, and County Magistrate Hunter allowed the offender to go on suspended sentence, Watch our windows, Here are some: Solid Oak Case, nine lined, Bon-Bon gen tb trigerators, twe doo Halng, for 810 up. Give ua gy of the late J. W. Manning. : Rum, 25c and 50c Bottles, Ww. A*MITCHELL 'S, ' ses7 " he ? Bay ois