Mi litary Tailornig and Supplies Officers' Uniforms Made To " 'Measure Tailored by énperts from correct imported cloths with careful attention to regula- tion details. Service Jackets, Breeches, Slacks, Great Coats, British Warms. We are especially equip- ped for this exacting class of work and guarantee satisfac- tion. Prices Most Moderate. Officers' Uniforms, Ready to Wear. 'British warms, great coats, service jac- kets, riding breeches, slacks, slickets, rain coats. Military Accessories Fox spiral puttees, leggings, Sam Brown belts, tan. military gloves, Jack spurs complete, "riding crops, walking canes, badges, khaki shirts, collars, ties, handkerchiefs, etc. Our new line of Dress English Staff Caps now.in. Busbury Aquatite Military Overcoat. 1c. Livingston & Bro. MILITARY TAILORS 75-79 Brock Street. » | |] | | | . spoil it? vantages in ady- To-Wear Clothing How often in the-old days of home dress-making you have wondered how it will look when you are finished. Will she... With our immense assortment of Gaats, Suits and Dresses (one of the largest in Ontario) you have only to step into a fitting room and don the of your choice, There is no uncer- tainty and should any, changes be ired, we have a competent staff who Rooke the necessary altefaltions free of charge. Oo : Cass lee han full of surprises in many 8 Jose than you would ordinarily pay a invite your inbpection, 7 -------- THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1916. | POINTED REV oL VER AT WOMAY AND FLED FROM HOUSE. | Found Crouching ; Behind Plapo In Home on King Street, in Broad' Dra Monday --- Discovered Just in Time to Prevent Him Mak- ing a Clean-up, Monday afternoon was a holiday In broad daylight, on Monday af- for the soldiers at the camp | ternoon, a bold burglar entered a home on King street, but the fact|{ In the absence of Serg | that one of the members of the fam- the school cf signalling : f ily caught him crouching behind a being conducted by Sergt. | plano, prevented him from secur- ding. | ing- any booty, although he managed | to make good his escape. The women were glone in the | house at the time. They were in an upstairs room when : one'of them . happened to hear a _ T:.C. noise in the drawing room, as if N Bald Camp with the ¥ H.C. A. some one had dropped'the lid of a a e M..C. | writing table. 'hed the Mia 01 5 Mr. Horsfield is an Exglishman and stairs to find out the cause of the hag been doing Tecial iasion work noise, and on going into the draw- . e pa ing droonf, was sumprised- to find a Several Tears He will speak to the young man (with a cap- drawn over | Ben on Thursday night. his face, crouching béhind a piano. st y Rev. Mr. Stewart, of Battersea, hb Tan polated 3 revolver at hers; gave an interesting lecture on "The would shoot. He then ran down History yand Development of the into the basement, and made a hur- Ysion a Fw iis Soldiers in the ried exit. He probably got into the Bandsman 2 Dror: 1 5th, Who hopie by Nay af the basement, Gon. had his leg broken on Fo night Habis Dis hy Patterson re by Taiting over a rock, is progressing - a ¥ " 1 or v9 9 sponded, but Mr. Burglar had ample satisfactorily at the: Ongwagada time to get under cover Hospital. . : A London cable § t Lieut.- A search was made, but nothing 7 . says; tha on ; Col. C. C. Bennett, formerly of the was missed from the heise. It 18 534 reverts to the rank of major at quite evident that the man had just yi. jun request. : entered the house, and was setting -. out to make a clean-up when he was At the bivouac on Friday night a caught. In his rush out of the g,10,4qid impromptu concert was giv- drawing room, the burglar tore dOWN ' gp phy the soldiers with the following a pair of curtains, He was de-'programme: Selections by band; scribed as a very youpe man, Wear- jection by Bandsmen Burke, Wilkin- ing a light suit hen' the police gon Lieut Cameron, Lieut.-Col. Put- arrived. and made an investigation man, Capt. Wrightmeyer, Lieut.-Col. they were told by a man that a young § A. Thompsen, Capt. W. J. Mec- fellow had been seen to make his Manus, Bugler Harte, Sergt. Morri- way out of a gateway at the rear son, Piper McKinnon and Piper Mc- of the home where the.case had been Kenzie; quartette of 'Sergt. Morri- reported. son, 154th; Lieut. Cameron, 156th; As a result _of this episode, - it Ptes. Burke and Hill, 156th, and a would appear as if some nervy burg- wrestling match, in which Sergt. lars are on the-roupds, and" it would Loveless, 155th, defeated. Pte. D.| be well for citizens t6 take special Furgeson, 154th. care and see that every door and; window 'about the house is' securely | fastened, so that 'no temptation | might be placed in the way of the Jen who want to make an "Tam KILLED ON THE "hw, § PTE. JOHN Y. BEATON, BELLE- VILLE FOUND DEAD. (See also Page 13.) Major D. E. Mundell, commandant schoo! of sigmalling, had returned from Murray Bay. Inst. Red- Pte. Lesperance, has returned from course at Quebec. 154th Battalion, the Armoarers' Roberts Horsfield, Brooklyn, "CBITUARY The Late Roy Milligan. Roy Milligan, Harrowsmith, who suffered a fracture of the skull last week when a piece of rock from a blast struck him, died in the General Hospital on Monday morning. The remains were taken to his home for burial. Victim of Sad Fatality Near Kings- ton Mills Late Saturday Night-- Attached to 155th Battalion, at Barriefield Camp, Death of Mrs. H. F. Metcalfe. B The dead body of Pte. John Y.| After an illness of but one week's eaton, Belleville, a member of the, duration, the death occurred on Sat- 155th Battalion.at Barriefield Camp, | urday afternoon, ;at, her home, 384 was found on the Grand Trunk! Alfred street, of Mrs. Metcalfe, wife tracks, about a mile and three-quar- | of H. ¥. Metcalfe; principal of! the ters west of Kingston Mills, about Kingston Busin College, and eight o'clock, on Sunday morning. | chairman of the Hoard of Education. The body was found by. Conductor | Death was due te an attack of pneu- Splain and the crew of a west-bound | monia; freight. { friends, the news of her sudden The remains of the dead soldier death came as a great shock, and were removed to the. undertaking much sorrow was expressed. Besides parlgrs of R. J. Reid, and on Mon- her husband, deceased is survived by day /afternoon, Dr. D. E: Mundell two daughters, Mrs. William Gam- held an inquest, and the verdict pf | ble, Oxford, Ont.; Gertrude Malloy, the jury was that deceased had t | at home, and one son, Cleveland H. death by being struck by a Grand; Metcalfe, Walkerville, Ont.; also two Trunk train, while trespassing on the ! sisters, Mrs. M. D, Brayman, Athens, right of way of the railway. { Ont., and Mrs. John Burns, Buffalo, Military evidence 'was given to and one brother, Frederick Drue, show 'that deceased was a member Akrony Ohio. Deceased wis a mem- of Barriefield Camp. He was at| ber of Chalmers Church, and the camp on Saturday, and had been giv-' funeral Service; was held on en a late pass for Saturday night, Monday aftérno ¢ 1.15, was con- good until m'dnight, ducted by Rov 11 . Malcolm Mac- The medical evidence showed gillivray. The remains were taken that deceaséd died as a result of to Harlem, the former home of the a fracture of the skull. It is sup- deceased, for interment. posed that he had been out around Kingston Mills, and while walking | Sark to Kingston, late at night, he --- id not hear the train and was © re Di caught in this way. Seven Convalescents Came to the Pte. Beaton was twenty-six years City on Tuesday Afternoon. of #ge, dnd unmarried. The re-' William Charles Ardern (C. E.), mains were taken to Belleville on | 2 Concession street, city. Monday night. George 'Hunter, Russell Germaine ((C. E.), Alwing- Justice of the Peace, was foreman of . ton avenue, city. the jury. | Sergt. Stinson (21st), city. . | Michael Kennedy, South .Glouces- 4 = : ter, . DEAR OLD SCHOOL DAYS. Harvey C. Ketcheson, 4 street, Belleville. Had to. Resume Their Arthur Groulx, :9 Osgood street, Studies Tuesday. Ottawa. « "Hurry up now; Harry, school 550 Lis- RETURNED SOLDIERS 295 John "Kiddies" Alfred William Chapell, gar street, Ottawa. . Miss will spend several days at Bar- se- | Beloved by a wide circle of | Stang to-day, and you must not be ate A Whig representative heard this remark coming from a mother as he was on his rounds on Tuesday morn- ing, and it served as a reminder that this was the day for the opening of the schools, No daubt many of the mothers in Kingston had to brush up! the "kiddies" a little after their two months' vacation. At any rate the schools opened and' are off with a good start, and the| swimining holes and former lots will' he quiet places-for-the greater part of each day {rom now on. he at- tendance at all the publi¢ schools was reported to be good. At the Col-' legiate Institute it was reported that 141 new pupils were enrolled. - Dr, J. H. Bell's Troubles. er Kingstonian, had a series of mis- firtunes while fishing down the river on Saturday. He started on his Axip in one motor boat, ' which Il Dr. J. H. Bell, Hamilton, a form- finally when the second broke he returned from Brophy's Point the r Wolfe Islander with the In Veteran excursion. . ; The above men arrived in the city at 2.300 p. m. Tuesday from England. All but Pte. Ketcheson were able to get to the front and he was recalled from England after going over with the 80th. > FELL ON RAILWAY TRACKS. * Taken to General Hospital and Afters wards to Police Station. Picked up onthe street car tracks on... _street, about his face, a man giving the name of Robert McCumber, and Wa- tertown, N. Y., as his home, was af- terwards landed at' the police sta- ion as he was under the influence of liquor. Hho axtest was made by Can: stables Patterson and Graham at o'clock Tuesday look another, and duties tb | | THEATRENL NEWS ] The Grand. { The management of the Grand] excelled itself last evening in the fine programme presented. Vir-| ginia Pearsom, a charming -and win- some southern 'belle, 'was seen in the 'feature picture, "Hypocrisy," a production stupéndous in scope and gorgiously prodigal in 'detail. This| id, is beyond all question the most ex-| "traordinary picture that has been! seen in the Grand so far. A two- ree] Universal feature, 'Under New Management," a comedy, ." A Toy Soldier," and the Pathe News were also shown On the vaudeville bill Phyllis Devlin delighted the! audi ence with the following songs, "In The Garden of My Heart," and | "1 Could, Couldn't 1?" Miss Dev-| lin's fine singing was highly appre- ciated. To-night and to-morrow matinee and fight Bab McLaughlin and Miss Stuart wi vill appear in a vau- deville act. Strand Theatre. Big houses greeted both the after- noon and <"vening shows at the Strand Theatre yesterday. The reat-| ure aitsaction was a five-act en- trancing photo play, 'The Crippled Hand," in which dainty Ella Hall and handsome Bob Leonard of "Master Key" fame are _pesented. The story is an entertaining romance of a pretty shop girl Grace' Cunard and Francis, two other big favorites, were shown in a deul drama, "Mad- (cab Queen of Corona," cartoon film, and an extra good comedy completed a well balanced programe. : At Griffin's. ) The very large audiences at bet afternoon and evening shows at, this popular piace of amusement yester- day were highly pleased: with the bill pesented to them. The feature sub ject, entitled, *"The Island of Sur prise,'t being a creened version of ithe well-known novel of .the same 'name by thai clever author, Cyrus Townsend Brady. This subject as presented at this house yesterday is ibrimful of interesting situations, 'and holds your attention from start to finish. It also has a' Pathe Week- ly Gazette showing various views of a military" i%fhee_ sports and pas- times of soldiers now at the front, also departure of Australian troops for battle, and other views of interesi to all. The programme concludes with one of those very laughable Lonesome Luke comedies--a highly entertaining and amusing bill from start to finsh, Lake Ontario Park. A large crowd was present at Lake Ontario Park yesterday and all thoroughly enjoyed themselves. In the evening the following pic tures were shown "The Gap Be tween," A three-réel feature, "A Lucky Mistake," a comedy, and the Pathe News. This bill will be seen to-night and to-morrow night, entire- ly free of charge, A change of programme will be givep on Thurs- ay Brockville Bowlers Defeated. Brockville lawn bowlers paid a visit to Kingston on Labor Day, and played a couple of exhibition games with the members of Queen's Lawn Bowling Club, but the local bowlers took them into camp in both games. One rink 'was skipped by W. R. Giv- ens, and the score was 14 to 10. The other local rink was skipped by J. M. Elliott, and the score was 16 to 8, Warrant Out for Gypsy. Charles Trudell, of Cataraqui, has sworn od a marrant ag#inst a gypsy woman, chug her with stealing $17 from him,' ed, have teen robbing hen roosts and gardens in the vicinity of Fo tid Road. SEVERE RHEUMATIC on an acid the Rheumatism d which flows in the muscles and joints, mation, stiffness gets in the a blood through Sama dos ect in remains there Re liver, kid- es nm esl) t off. Hood's Sarsaparills, the old-time blood tonie, is very suecessful in the treatment of rheumatism. It acts directly, with purifying effect, on the blood, and through the blood on he liver, kidneys anl skin, which it (stimulates, and at the -_. time it improves Hood's ypsies, it is report-|}i PAINS. DISAPPEAR | For Women, $15.00 and up. These new suits show particularly good value. Well tailored; made of excellent ma- terials, and cut on the latest lines. : This is a showing that should interest almost every woman in Kingston. Come tomorrow, if only to look. = We are anxious 40 have as many as possible see these new suits, even if not ready to buy. You have a choice from $15.00 up to $35.00. NEW AUTUMN ARRIVALS IN BLACK SILKS ! 'We have just'placed in stock a large shipment of French silks. These we secur- ed last March. Since then prices have advanced fully these new silks at old prices. 25 per cent, but we have decided to offer BLACK PAILLETTE SILKS A rich, deep black and very desirable for fall and winter wear. 36 inches wide, and special at . _ .. $1.00 yard BLACK DUCHESSE SILKS Pure unfilled silk, a perfect black; deep lustrous finish, gives excellent wear. 36 inches wide. Special at : 3 25 BLACK DUCHESSE SILKS High grade French silks at . . . . $1 50 : 'High grade F rench silks at . . .. .. $1.75 : BLACK TAFFETA SLRS 36 inches wide . . .. 39 inches wide . . 39 inches wide . . We are showing a complete range of school shoes. for girl or Cibo calf bluchrs. ize 110 2. Boys Solid Boats, sizes | fo 5, eis \