" PAGE SIX -- 7 News From Eastern Ontario JE HEWS FROM THE DISTRICT CLIPPED FROM Tur WHIG'S MANY BRIGHT EXCHANGES. In Brief Form the Events In The Country about Kingston Are Told Full of Interest to Many. Renfrew is tc lection imo © J. MM. Came very sudd enly-gn Sat Joseph Courneyea with his family Tweed, Dr. Cha: moved his Stewart's The Falls on Sat derson, after a lingering The double funeral of Mr I flark, the victims of Wednes ble tra Brod l from onnea dental offic Barber Si death took irday of James ( day's te took place on A life-long Falls passed av person of - Wil age of eighty S. E. Waffle, Fallg for trave Her for Montreal, will On April 24th at father, Marray towr third daughter was married to Ja Belleville £ F. J. Blake for thirty-five at employee of Mie w ooler Almonte years ¢ "department, ha tion. Smith's Fal spoken of as a the amount of on new cars some six cylinder class new town ball On April 15th, John Sellick ps ad away as the result of tained the previous Kemptville lost a. citizen spent more. than half a centu | a resident within her boundarie The Renfrew Printing Co., and the Renfrew Journal Co., have amalga | mated, The officers are dt PE Shaw, President -and secretary treasurer; W. I). Samson, editor, and G. A. O'Neill, manager of the print . ing department A double wedding took plare on Wednesday at the home, of liam Robertson, Drummond, when his el«f2 lest daughter, Eda, became the bride of Mervyn D. McLaren, and his sec- ond daughter, Mary the bride of William Napier. Two well known young Brockville citizens, Wilbur Jackson and Ernest Ford, were wrongfully arrested on the strength of warrants sworn out In Prescott charging them with saulting the proprietor of a Chinese cafe in that town The Chimaman "said they were not the men. x 5 ISL. ANDY WEETING kv m Larkipe WO years ident years i McArtt to Ottawa the home hip,» Ar Samuel ( H. Diame are over Alex move ten 0 askey mes Rosa Co and for uperiuter town of ' ulread them build mone of would SUS and had paralysis K, who wet as WOLF the Need of Greater Production. Wolfe Island, - April meeting was held on Saturday evening, presided | over by Dr. W, Spankie, to consider the war and absolute need of larger. products. Some valuable points and seed thoughts were given by him Mr. Rodger, of :Kimgston, though | not regarding himself a public speaker, laid down fine principles and gave stirring facts. Dr. A. W. Richardson delivered a masterful address that came large- ly from his own heart ahd moved the | consciences of his hearers. He drew a genuine diagnosis of the war and characted of our leading opponents, and the ghastly famine that threat- ens Britain, and urged all to strenu- cusly praetise industry and econ- omy. - The logic of facts and figures was convincing A vote of thanks, moved by ward Brickland, and seconded Rev. William Henderson, carried heartily by a rising vote. The Na-| tional Anthem closed a most inter- | sting occasion. : To Consider 30 Aub- lie in the istind | hall Ed- by = A NEW VIEW OF THE MARSHALL OF FRANCE | Mr give up his life | Ward, | Gananoque Amo Amo, Bvock Mc Donald, Donald n Mi wedding breakfa se launc for to at unexpected Mack both Mr are Kemp and husbands Also three sons front day dne d L.od wk he had will "be No been a olection ¢ member many years E. H. Hurd] business far a Kingston, was in town 1 ort t on sine yester day Lieut-Col, Dr. Jame A McCam moarriy sterday for a short HARROWSMITH MOURNS The Death of Pte. John WW. Martin at the Front. rsmith, April ay on April 25th Dorothy Dennison, Smith, at the age nany friends and ne » loss of a kind and The funeral services Peter's church afternos after which place in 'Bhere Wfter a wife of 84 years bors lov ing r were Wednesday internment cemetery Quarter the Met morning. A message w received on urday morning announcing death of Pte. Jolin W. Martin, killed in action April 9th De ased was the second oldest son of and Mrs. F. Maru. This is the Harrowsmith young man to for nis country in took ly hodist « held Sunday services were hurch on lat second side o Miss spent the two years. l.eah Jordson, week-end with Mrs. F. D Knapp. Mrs. J. S. Gallagher is ex pected home aftér spending the past two weeks with her daughter, T. H. Leggett, Ottawn. children are suffering with Miss Laura Fl ps is still quite Miss Phyylis Bradshaw, George Pixley and Earl Campsall, all at- tending Queen's College, are home for their holidays. Miss Flora Stewart, Kingston, was also a week end visitor. Mrs. W. Nivens and family haye moved into the house owned by John Shillington, Mur- Napanee, ill for a azain Armstrong, be out Andrew days, able to Frank Bowen has moved Truscott's house. is A pretty wedding was solemnized at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. L Ashley on April 25th, when only daughter, Bessie was given in marriage to A. Ernest Ward, Peter- boro, younger son of Mrs. Margaret formerly of Stirling. and r Me -Donaid left) ® on | Sydenham | in | | ®lter | electrocuted, who | while into. John | | reply. their | TT 3 SUBMARINE MENACE IS YET UNCHECKED Allied Vessels U- Boake Sink r Than They Can Be Replaced. 1 Whig) 1.--The German overshadowed | sending Ameri- ront at the wars serious," it tain's standard- 3 'made Rnown, disposal of all parley, ng ships faster building them" 'annot give you are appalling." has submitted onnage it can : informed the! aring to build 1 ships, he biggest in- ree continents : to beat the wn game, MARKETS, ventive ubmarin THE STOCK The Prices Quoted at Exchang: New Stocks, 2.320 p.m; 4 101% Ya 76 160 935% 26% 411 ™ York 52 945 801 136% 28% 80% 116% 4 41% ' , 687% Stocks. eams=niy ' eams hips THE WORLD'S NEWS IN BRIEF FORM Tidings From All Over Told in| a Pithy and Pointed Way. Parliament rejected, o Government a re n to have more Senate appointments next Federal election Osborne of Bellev and Wesley Millbrook, perhaps fatally working on a Hydr line at Trenton. Parlidamést unanimously adopted a resolution urging the Government to endeavor to have the embargo on Canadian cattle entering the British | Isles removed The House of Commons discussed proportional representation, and a| committee will probably appoint- ed to investigate and report on the system with a view to in the second general election, equest of th he oluti lle was lodd, of injured, electric John be its And Silence Ensued. An American just returned Europe tells this story: While riding from London erpool in a railway coach from it happen- ed thayhe was alone in the compart-| who ap-| ment with an Englishman, pegred to be deeply engrossed in the war news of one of the papers Thinking to start conservation, he sald in good old American slang: 'Some fight, eh?" "Yes, and some Everybody's Laugh a little troublés and a neighbor's. There never was a man as great don't," was Magazine more at little less Your own at your jas the average dog believes his mas- ter to be. A AA A A AA At Anat AT THE CAPITAL SAP Eor 7 9V8 itnn BY All ¥ bo bave sten hiss fu the streets of the capital, ine LES JUSSERAND FRENCH DOASI0N TD TYE UNITED STATES The Marsha! of France, 'one of the members of the French War Commission, is now Jone of the most popular figures at Washington, where greit enthusiasm bas oliowed the famous French men throughout the course of their official calls, Every appearance of the hero le Mane has been PY the Several until | wdoption | to Liv-| the | TORONTO OF OLD. ® iain Mrs. UR. R. Cockburn Link With Picti#fresaue The recent death of Mrs Cockburn will Péeall to many the ronto of forty years | life w not as crowded a Her dinners and soirees jn jeipal"s residence - of Upp College King street of importance in thos 3 Cockburn's humorous sketch of their <i: epergne, which former the dining-table was worthy of De Maupas appeared when the decoration purchased that a new dining-tabl worthy of the epergne was nece ¥; then chairs worthy of the table; then a carpet worthy of the chairs; theo curtains worthy of the carpet, etc. and then the upsetting of a caused in the epergne. The bright ericket afternoons, over which Mrs. Cockburn * so graciously | presided in the terrace overlooking the well-remembered were social-athletic special interest to Her memory was Past, CR.OR To- G I Dow 18 the Prin: | + Cang lamp room--execept the functions Toronto people. remarkable,, and her recollections of the boys who had | n the class | | fight, distinguished themselves lists or in the athletic wonderfully clear. ~Mrs. Cockburn field were was a Miss Zane, | the daughter of a distinguished Ken- | tucky family. Louis apn exile in America stayed for a time with the Zanes, and when later he was on the throne of France and i members of the Kentucky visited Paris their former hospitality was" graciously acknowledged. Her | father, Mr. Hampden Zane, came to | Canada at the time of the Civil War, his lameness unfitting him for { military 'service. It seems the. fam- ily came from England at the time | of the Restoration, when members | of the Hampden and Zane families would feel more comfortable, in the | colonies than in England with the recollection of the Civil War and the names of the Cromwellian lead ers still fresh 'in the minds of the people. Miss Betty Zar~'s exploit in | furnishing an Indian-beleaguered fort with ammunition is one of the | heroic episodes of early Virginian | history. Mrs. Cockburn's mother a Miss Churchill, Virginian family, While Mrs. Cockburn, by reason of her long residence in Cangda, was thoroughly British, she never forgot her southern origin 'nor lost her southern sympathies. She was a young girl living in Louisville at the time of the Civil War, and was accus- {tomed to recall incidents of that great struggle. Kentucky was oc- cupied by the North, though the oc- cupation was interrupted by frequent raids. On on@occasion she was on {a train journeying from the, planta- Philippe when was of a well-known i tion of an uncle north to Louisville. | The train carried, besides passengers, some hundreds of Union soldiers. was stopped by a large body of raid- ers led by Colonel Morgan, a brother of the still more famous raider. | fusillade ensued and the Union sol- diers retiged. Miss Zane our (southern) soldiers. She was recognized by Colonel Morgan, the Morgans also were Louisville | people. He said that he deeply re- gretted he had to burn the train, but that he would first remove the bag- { gage of the passengers and provide | for their further journey. The young lad$ told Colonel Morgan that seeing any large body of southern troops, whereupon the gallant Col- onel lined up his cavalry, over a thousand strong, and they sang for | young Miss Zane's benefit "Cheer, | Boys, Chéer," as she stood on | platform of the'car. The incident illustrates the chivalrous spirit the South even when at war. daughter, Lady Tait of Montreal. Her son, Major Churchill Cockburn, was killed a few years ago by the kick of a horse. It will be remembered that fe held the Royal Humane Society's | medal for saving two lives in Lake {won in South Africa. danger from his Scotch father. Prince Praises Canada. {+ The Prince of Wales attended a meeting of the Canadian committee in care of soldiers' graves. Present were Sir George Perley and other re- presentatives of the Dominion. The | Prince mentioned that ome hundred and fifty thousand graves were now | registered. "Over sixty of four hun- {dred burial' grounds- have already been laid out, under the advice of the Director of 'Royal Botanic dens. | these cemeteries look, with flowers; | but it is especially gratifying | to know that my visit from the front {should coincide with the first attend- tance of this committee of representa- | tiveg of the Dominion Governments, (a ne army in the field 4s now an Imperial army, so this committee {should be an Imperial committdg, en- | trusted, by th: Empire with the task Jof fittingly ~nd enduringly commem- | seating the common sacrifice of the best blood of this generation; the sacrifice which forms one of the sacred links of the Empire." The committee subsequently considered questions 'of marking the graves of the Dominion soldiers who have died in England. ssimieaeesc---------- Canadian Won Prize, The first prize in the Economie Essay Contest, conducted by Chi- cago University, bas been won by Duncan A. MacGiebon, of McMaster University, Toronto. Mr. MaeGib- | bon is the third Canadian to take | first honors in one of these contests. His prize winging essay was entitled the Canadian ."* The second, | third, and fourth prizes were won by students of American' universities, the contest being ioternational {one rirude Kel- Point, at Lans- Formed | ago when social.| idure | epics of 'scendants stod greater | never the déstruegion of everything | fateful | playground, | of | i to 1ed | they family | | Belleville, It | | for 25 Al rushed to | | the platform of the car cager to'see | for | | receive prompt attengion. | Queen street. this | was the first chance she had had of | the | of | Mrs. Cockburn is survived by her | Rosseau, and also the Victoria Cross | He seemed to | have inherited his daring from his | southern mother, and kis coolness in | Gar- | I have seen how beautiful | to me | It is Better to love the person you | can't marry than to marry the person you can't love. » 'STORY OF THE WAR WILL NEVER DIE Lloyd George "1 remember the dark. fellows in shatter- | dreary davs| {when our gallant ed trenches had nig mockery bt apd day to en- of the Germans They wav in which the guns the How they stood! British infantry of, Napoleon one day was one of the| military history Their de- | guns for days! the stood months was the and It weeks hed. the and and nights and never flinc greatest story world They broke, and only those who have met and talked\yith them can they did. The story never die. | to the brave in realize what will "Our gratitude is due tlittle man who ted them through all those months and never lost heart- Lord French When I 'took the job organize of Great Britain, 1 to give those to tae resources did it order men thank the and in brave real chance And, it--thanks manufacturers workmen and don't leg the who by the hundred thousand flock-| to the asked their Fhey a God, they've got i efforts the the to of | { us 'forget women, | what gallant nave | factories and could do to help in the field all they could, and the story very different In had eighty-four considerable number of Since a single gun" while Kinsmen done is I June, ! | | | lost | now 1915, a one. we lost guns and a pris- then we have not and have captured. 400, have oners taken Britisher they Riglge has been captured with fifth loss the! 'rench the early had equipment means ultimate The despair "" piracy we ten Ger ans for every have taken. | | Vimy one the sustained by when they | All this] less in days inferior cost hence the| black at this ulted viclory Germans know which has re in On took Thursday a place at St. Michael's church when Miss Mary 'Ethel Elvidge, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J E. Elvidge wag united in marriage to John Lattoune, son of AIr. and Mrs J. 'Lattone, bath 'of Thradsher's Cor- ners, No bottled Canattian pretty wedding! beer ig to be sold at! regimental institutes. Also;™ with a -view 0 econgnizing food, the hours. for tne sale of food are being curtailed. . The Toronto City Councilvoted in favor of depriving alien enemies of their 'vote unless resident in Canada years. Gen. Logie and his staff are mak- ing arrangements to take possession of Camp Borden on Victoria Day. THOMAS COPLEY Telephone 987 wanting anything done in the carpen-. tery line. Estimates given on all kinds of repairs and new work; also hard- wood floors of all kinds. All orders will Shop 60 Ready for Business. P. H. BAKER Is now in the grocery business, corner of Princess and Fron- tenac streets. Everything. new and fresh. Delivery to any part of the city.- A trial order sol- icited, PHONE 1016 BELONGING TO THE OROER) OF FAR AND SQUARES (= ADMITS You TO TnES My ' BEST CIRCLES!) = Caco FAIR AND SQUARE Our store is now open with a fall line of choice groceries, fruits and vegetables. We will appreciate your patronage and give you excellent service. UNITED GROCERY CO. Rigney & Mickey's s On Stand Phone 26 BUSINESS . CHANGES~ NAME The confectionery business of Baker & Co., 302 King street, will from now on be known as ' $35 per dozen. AAA A A AMA : "Ranks with the Strongest" Special This Week at the HUDSON BAY ; | . ~ Unique Grocery. Insurance Company | Black, green and mixed Tea, 40c¢ 1b, rs . | Our Usual good Coffee 40c¢ 1b. FIRE INSURANCE | The best Sweet Pickles 10¢ qt. Head Office. Royal 1swurance Bldg. | 5- Ib. tin of Corn Syrup ... 40¢ PERCY J. QUINN, C. H. PICKERING 490-492 Princess Street. Manager. Ontario Branch, Toronto W. H. GODWIN & SONS Phone 530. AGENTS, KINGSTON. ONT. ¢ | { | | i | { { HOME PORTRAITS A SPECIALTY 11 in. x 14 in. line prints, For engagement apply letter to G. BLAKEMORE, KINGSTON. | opies of all my photos in Whig's Wusarated supplement may be secur ' ed from me. by 7 One Quart of Milk Is equal in food value to three-fourths of .a pound of Beef Steak, eight eggs, fifteen pounds of oysters, two pounds of fish. six pounds of tomatoes. And the milk Is more easily digested and far more economical than any of the other foods. 'Phone 845 ~ Price's , GIVE YOUR POUL- TRY special feed basket and chicks. This feed is ialties and those enthusiastic admirer the and growing McBROOM 12.44 Princess St. 1686. A our and get results in in thriving of our spe who use it are its Try some and nt in laying hens the egg one note provems chicks "Phone THIS BEAUTIFUL Victrola AND '24 RECORDS OF YOUR OWN SELECTION FOR $123.60 Easy Terms Arranged If Necessary. C.W. Lindsay, Limited wy) "Canada's s 'Hair Fashion Store Glenn-Charles Hair Goods Our Miss Glenn will be in Kingston, Thursday, May 3rd, Randolph Hotel, with a full line of Ladies' and Gentlemen's Hair Goods, If you are not satisfied with the appearance of your hair, consult Miss Glenn, who is an authority on Hair Goods and Individual Ha Free demonstration. Glenn-Charles 100 King Street, West. Toronto. Write for Catalogue. Dg Saturday Clean-up | ¥ a EE We move Monday and offer extra bargains for Saturday. . House Dresses . . . . . $1.25 Kimonas . . .'. . .. 31.28 Children's Dresses . . . 30c and up Hat Shapes .-. .. .. . . 98¢ and up Silk Hose . . .. 42¢ Grey Tweed Sport Coats, extra value $9. 98 "a EXTRA SPECIAL -- All last year's sum- mer dresses, $1.00 to clear. rane MENDELS Opp. Grand Opera House, 217 Princess St. .