THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1918. ve 3 PAGE SIX _ Records from the ~ Grand Operas "LUCIA "CARMEN," "FAUST" AND DI LAMMERMOOR." We have all the following records in stock: LUCIA DI LAMMERMOOR. Act I---Gardeng of the Castle Price an $2.00 No. Sflence Qver All--Guiseppina Hugnet,. # . 39 Borne on the Sighing HBreeze---Nellson and Constafitino. 74064 Aet. Il--Great. Hall of Bhe Castle Sextétte--What Restraing Me--Caruso, Tetrazzini Amato, Journet, Jacoby and Bada ..926201~ Sextette--What Restrains Me--Galll, Curecl, Car 180, Egenerd Deluca, Journet and Bada .- 96212 ex totte--Vivtor Opera Sextette ... ... 0038 extette--Pryor's Band |. |... 31460 Sextethe--Versella's Italian Band . . 36356 Act Ifl.--Hall in Lammermoos : Mad scene--Barrientos .., .., . "hry, ' Act IV~Tambs of the Ravenwoods. Tanks of My Ancestors--Polveros' "iy Miscellaneous Lucia Di Lammermoor Selections----t*une's Band ... is Naw vas FAUST. IL--Public 8quare in a German Villa Kermesgl scene--N.Y., Grand OperaChorus Even Bravest Heart--Reinald Werrenrath Waltz from Kermessi--Pryor's Bana ... Fi . Act 11 --Marguerite"s Garden All Hall Thou Dwelling Lowly-- Caruso . All Hall Thou Dwelling Lowly---MoCormick All Hall Thou Dwelling Lowly-~George Hamlin All Hall Thou Dwelling Lowly--Charles Harrisono Jewel song--~Marcella Sambirch . CTT Teun Let Me Gaze---Nellson #nd Constantine Act IV Public Soldiers Chorus--Victor Band ... What Is Your Will? Van Hoose Gogorza ,., .. $8.00 $6.00 $1.50 Castle, 18627 Al648 records; Act ge Square Journet and De . y 4 a : "eau « .. 74004 -Frison Cell of Marguerite Prison scene--Victor Opera Trio . 3 whe Fue .60097 | | teers and to remunerate them from | south ward, Miss Mabel M. Car (of the north ward and Miss Minnie | - |. GANANOQUE | . | From Our Own < espondent.) ! | St on Din sheridan, a well-| | known resident of | made Toronto his { some years pa | suddenly on Tu been on the stree i y { He leaves one bre r, Allan Sheri- { dan, and two sisters, - Mrs. Christy { Knight and--Miss-Sadie Sheridan, i Capt. D. J. Kenney's ferry launch { Yennek II., made her last trip on the| | day. " | David Bentham, Broek street, re- { ceived word this week that his son, | | | 5 town, who has | d "during the day. | te. John Bentham, who went over- | seas with the 3rd Battery of the 1st Bridage in the fall of 1914, and has | | been on active service ever since, had| | been wounded in action. The question of an emergency hos- | pital here was given thorough dis- | cussion by the town council and { Board of Trade and wad abandoned,as | the disease will have run its course "| traveller, { dozen rude'farmhouses, less than five | here before requisite quipment | could be obtained. The 1.0.0.F. as-| | sembly hall and Masonic amusement | hall were mentioned as handy and also as available if needed. It was! decided to call for still further volun-/ the municipal coffers, These will be! placed in charge of the available! trained nurses and sent wherever the | need is greatest. Drs, Smith and| Carruthers, of Queen's, arrived last] evening and will assist the local prac-| titoners; | Yesterday afternoon a large gath-| ering of the ladies of the town assem- | bled at the council chamber to meet | with the special relief committee of | the town council for organization to | combat the spread of the epidemic | here. The town council offers re-| muneration for the services of those who will do volunteer nurse duty, Quite' a humber have so far volun- teered, but not nearly as many as needed, Mrs. W. K. Crouter has been appointed to take charge of the penter | Prison scene--Versellas Band 35449 Miscellaneous Faust records Sejection of Favorite Alrs--Introduction to Kernesse, Act I; Flower Song, Act. 11, Soldier's Chorus Soush's Band . o ' * ao x . Selection---lntreduction to Act III Flower Song Waltz and Ballet from Finale Act II 'fetor Band ...35016 CARMEN. Aat I--PubMe Square in Seviil Prelude--Firgt part--Herbert's Orchestra Prelude=dLast part--Herbert's Orchestra TY ' Habanera (Love Is Like a Wood Bird)--Sophie Brasiaw.é Tell Me of My Mother--Lucy Marsh and Jno. eC... Act Il--Tavern of Lilka's Pastra, Flower Song---Glovanri Martinelli... [0 Flower Bong in English--Evan Williams | rae Act I11--A Mountain Camp. {1 Am Not Faint Hearted)--Alma Gluck. V.--lxtarior of ghe Bull Ring, Seville C'est tol (You Here?)-- Farran, Martine... ... ... . Miscellaneous Carmen records: Selection of Principal Alrs--Guard's Oall, prelude Act Li Entracti Act 1V.: Torcador Bong-4Sousa's Band J Sefection--Prelude--~Habanera--Torcador Song---Victor Band . | Sha ah ra ww Ee Gems from Carmen C. W. Lindsay, Ltd. 112 Princess Street 31104 Micaela's Air Act 1 "~ Carpenter and Builder | W. R. BILLENNESS Specialising Store Fronts a A Fit. tings. Remodelling Bulldings of ali it EXPERIDNOB University Ave. CLOTHING ON EASY TERMS N.. Morris, 374 King St. ATHS Address, 273 "dwellings, Nos. li province will be Stunden ofthe west ward. The | medical men will notify them of all | cases they meet with requiring atten-| tion, Mrs. Maxim Bishop, First street, | was summoned to Kingston on ac- | count of the serious illness of her | daughter. i Alexander McDonald, Pine street, | was summoned to Mallorytown this | week on account of the death of his! brother-in-law, | Mrs. R. G. Graham and daughter, | Miss Dorothy Graham, have gone to | Ottawa, where they will in future re-| side. | Jesse Smith, Toronto, spent the | past few days in town with his par-| ents, Mr, and Mrs, Daniel Smith. | Brock street. | Mrs. 'W, S. Bedard, North street, | spent a short time this week with friends in Kingston. | -- Sale Of Real Estate, The following sales have been | made through E. W. Mullin & Son: Frame dwelling, No. 447 Alfred! street, owned by C. Brooks, to J. J. Munden; dwelling in Portdmouth to B. Derbyshire; dwelling, No. 59 Elm! Street, owned by J. Glover? brick dwelling; No. 310 University avenue, | owned by Miss E, Keen, to M. Bailey; | 78, 80, 82 William street, to B. Derbyshire; dwelling, | No. 303 King street west, owned byy W. Spencer, to B.. Derbyshire; de- | tached dwelling, No. 64 John street, | owned by V. McCarey, to D, Whelan. | Net Leaving Kingston. | James McParland declares that | the report that he intends to remove | from Kingston is erroneous. He | spent last winter oft of the city, and | may do so again this winter, but has no idea of seeking a permanent | home elsewhere. | All churches throughout Quebec closed next Sunday | by an order from the Central Board | firor Health. AN A Ar Ate, A Pimply Face or | Poor Complexion | Quickly Restored! Thousands of young men and wo+ men would be handsome and attrac- tive were it not for unsightly pim- ples, blackheads, and rough uneven skin. Custom seems to recommend lotions and salves, but unfortunately their effect is but temporary. These disfiguring' blemishes do not origin- ate in the skin--thefr birth in every case goes further back, to the blood, which must t® cleansed of humors before the pimples depart for good. 'A physician who has made a care- ful study of such cases, says that the quickest cure comes from a blood- building medicine like Ferrozone. The minute Ferrozone strikes. the Easy Terms Will Be Given To Those Of Good Reference Choice stock of ladies' ready-to-wear Soe] goods. iq Ladies' Velour Coats, Ladies' Salts Plush Coats, Ladies' Silk Poplin and Serge Dresses : A full line of Silk Poplin and blue and o£ black skirts : All kinds of children's wear. of Men's, Ladies' and Chil- dren's boots and rubbers. House furniture, ~ dining room setts, bed room setts, etc. Choice stock | blood its good work begins. Poisons and foul matter are expelled. Every trace of humor is driven out, and the whole life current is supplied with nutriment 'and health giving quali- ties. You can always tell a Ferro- zone complexion when you see it--the cheeks are clear and rosy, no signs of -sallowness--the éyes are 'bright and expressive because rich, red blood is ° circulating through * the wlole. system carrying health, en: 8Y, and strength with it. Not only will all skin eruptions disappear, but i} an increase in vital strength, an all- round improvement will be apparent. No rebuilding tonic could he more eflicient. Get Ferrozone to-day-- Good for young and old, for well folks and sick ones, too. 50¢. per box, or six boxes for $2.50, at all dealers. = : | peared in the night. | lie--too good" almost to be true-- | miles and miles of laughing country, | it, -- IN BEAUTIFUL FRANCE. A Description of the Beauties of the La Marne, } "l am sure that You, never heard of Huiry., Yet it is a little hamlet less than thirty miles from Paris. is in that district between Paris anc Meaux, little known to. the ordinary. It consists of ldss than a i i miles, as the bird flies, from Meaux. which, with a fair cathedral, and a beautiful chestnut-shaded promenade on the banks of the Marne, spanned just there by lines of old mills whose water wheels churn the river inte | foaming eddies, has never been popu- lar with excursionists," Mildred Ald- rich wrote in 1914, in "A Hilltop on the Marne," describing hér new home, . "The house stands in a small gar- den, separated from the road by an old gnarled hedge of hazel. It is al- most on the crest of the hill on the south bank of the Marne -- the hill that is the watershed between the Marne and the Grand Morin. "From the lawn, on the north side of the hoiise,-I command a panorama which I have rarely seen equalled, In the west the new pait of Esbly j elimbs to the hill, and from there to & hill at the northeast I have a wide view of the valley of the Marne, back- ed by a low line of tills which is the watershed between the Marne and the Aisne. Low down in the valley, at the northwest, lies Ile de Villenoy, like a toy town, where the big bridge spans the Marne to carry the railroad into Meaux. On the horizon line to the west the tall chimneys of Claye send lines of smoke into the air. [n the foreground to the north, at the foot of. the hill, 'are the roofs of two little hamlets--Joucheroy and Vois- ins---and beyond them the trees that border the canal. "On the other side of the Marne | the undulating hill, with its wide stretch of fields, is dotted with little villages that peep out of the trees or are silhouetted against the sky line--Vignely, Trilbardou, Penchard, Monthyon, Neufmortier, Chauconin, and in the foreground to the north, in the valley, just halfway between me and Meaux, lies Mareuil-on-the- Marne, with its red roofs, gray walls and church spire. With a glass I can | ind where Chambry and Barcy are, on the slope hehind Meaux, even if the trees conceal them." "This is a rolling country of grain | fields, orchards, masses of black cuy- rant bushes, vegetable plots--it is a| great sugar-beet country--and aspar-4{ agus beds; for the Department of the | { | Seine et Marne is one of the most | productive in France, and every inch | under cultivation. It is what the! French call un paysage riant, and 1 assure you, it does more than smile these lovely June mornipgs. I am up | every morning almost as soon as the sun, and I slip my feet into sabots, | wrap myself in a big cloak, and run | right on to the lawn to make sure that the panorama has not disap- | There always | little white towns just smiling in te/ | early light, a thin strip of river here and there, dimpling and dancing, stretches of fields of all colors--all 80 peaceful and so gay, and so 'chummy' that it gladdens the open- | ing day, and makes me rejoice | have lived to see it. I never weary of | It changes every hour, and if never can decide at which hour it is | loveliest." | | The Murman Coast. The landing of the Allied troops on 'the Murman coast would have | been a subject of supreme interest | to Richard Hakluyt, for in his day | the coasts to the north: of Norway were often visited by the seamen ad- venturers in thelr endeavors to find a northeast passage to China. In| May, 1663, Sir Hugh Willoughby, "a | goodly gentleman," got as far as the'| entrance of the White Sea and event- | ually Jandéd at a suitable place on | the Murman coast. Hakluyt says he Was accompanied by 'pilots, maisters; merchants and marfners" and had three ships "well furnished, to wit, | the Bona Speranca, the Edward | Bonaventure and the Confidentia." Richard Chancellor was the pilot of the Bonaventure, which ship got sep- arated from the other two and -an-. chored on the shores of the White Sea where Archangel now stands. From there Chancellor travelled to Moscow and returning to his ship 'eventually got home to London. Hax- luyt in these days is particularly worth reading again on Yhese early relations aud communications with Russia, and on the daring and enter- prise of the seadogs of his-century. Striking Likenesses, There are some curious coinci- dences in the strong likeness which has been noticed to exist between celebrities - belonging to different --- TE A -------- -- n A In view of the severity of the present Epidemic of Influenza and in order that all efforts may be concentrated on the stamping out of the disease, the local Board of Health, after consultation with Kingston Medical Society and the Mayor, has enacted that after Oct. 16th, and until further notice, i : 1. Theatres and Moving Picture Houses shall be closed and remain closed. = 2. Churches and Chapels of all denominations shall be closed and remain closed on Sundays. . 3. All Schools, Public or Private, including Sunday . Schools, shall close and remain closed. 4. Hospitals shall be closed to visitors. : 5. No public shall be admitted to courts except those essential to the prosecution of the cases called. 6. The Board advises the public most strongly not to crowd into street cars and to avoid as much as possible 'any crowded train or an assembly of any kind. Provisions have been made by the Kingston Medi- cal Society whereby all cases applying for assistance will receive the same either by registered practitioners or by final year medical students acting under instructions. Therefore every case of illness should send in a call to a physician. . A. R. B. WILLIAMSON, Medical Health Officer. Pl y A A Ni, - -- > Easy and Practical Horne Dressmaking Lessons wonderful cleaner, time and labor saver. Telephone 819. J.R. C. Dobbs & Co. "reiephone B10. "T" perforations. Sew waistband to dower edge of waist, with center backs and front edges even; bring small "0" perforation to under.arm seam. = Fold the waistband through the. eenter and fell the remaining edge over seam; and If desired, in- "gert tape or elastic to regulate the size. : Plait the vest, placing "T" on cor responding small "0" perforation, and tack. Adjust to position under neath front with centerd{ronts and lower edges even matching single large "0" dnd small "0" perforations: stitch the right side to position and finish left side for closing. Next, close back geam of collar in- dicated by small "0" perforation. Face collar and sew to neck edge with center-backs even and to front edge of front matching the notches. Close sleeve seam as nofched. If desired-open at the back, gather sleeve at lower edge from the "TI" perforations to the seam. Turn edge of cuff under on slot perforations, lap to small "0" perforations and finish for closing. Line turnover and sew to lower edge of cuff as notched. Sew cuff to lower edge of sleeve as notch- ~~ IN STOCK . Best quality Cannell coal for open grates and domestic use. / Also select lump soft coal for all purposes. Tan crepe Georgette blouse trim- med with beading to wear indepen dently or with the tailored suit. A dressy blouse to wear separately of with a taillenur is shown here. It ages. For instance, in Charles Mac- Farlane's 'Reminiscences of a Liter- ary Life" he deseri) how, ufeeting Shelley in the Royal Bourbon Mu- seum at Naples, he showed him a statue of Agrippina, the mother of Nero. "I told him," he says, "that the Bonaparte family considered this the very image of their mother. When Madame Mere was in Naples, her daughter, Queen Caroline, indue- ed her to sit by the status, and made, a large party remark on the sl ig between two great men of the same age was the likeness between Motley, the historian of ane ise on Duteh Republic," and ; so marked as to be described by the poet's wife as "most wondérful," . . Formerly you you wanted to eat. 1 ou what you can have." resemblance." A similar coincidence | ed; bring the small "o" perforation at top of cuff to seam of sleeve and bring the "T" perforations In sleeve toge her over the opening in enff. Al dow tHe sieeve to hang free from the cuff between the "T" perforations, It desired with the entire sleeve gath- ered to cuff. gather the entire lower edge of sleeve and sew cull to sleeve ar notched. with small "0" perfora tion in ¢uff at seam of sleeve, 'and bring the large "O" perforation at lower edge of sleeve to opening in -euff.. Sew sieeve in armhole with notches and small "0" perfora'lons even easing in asy fulness between the notches. Hold the sleeve toward you when basting it in the armhole. Brald may be used in place of beads to trim the revers, especially if the waist is intended for hard wear. is, carried out in ecru crepe geor gatts and requires no lining. There is on inset vest of sell material, with straight neck edge. The large collar is cut in ome with pointed revers which are edged with tan and blue beading. - The back of the blouse extends over the shoulders jn. yoke effect. Deep caffs findgh - the one place sleeves which are allowed to hang free above the cuff at hé back. ™o reproduce the blefise in medina jie requires 2% yards 40 inch mate uy § » 'The blouse should be embroidered before its construction 1s ansmpted. Af er beading, take the frost of the wa'st and. turn hom as indicated. Cather at upper edge dDetwesn 'T » ise: undonaniy and a % ther - Owing to sickness prevailing amongst their drivers the New England is unable to maintain their regular prompt delivery. to their customers, Customers will much oblige by going to, the nearest store and asking for New England Bread if the driver fails to call, = \. NEW GOODS JUST Poatiat Buiter, the best ne, the | Mince Heat. ne i Bs Unique Grocery 400 & 402 Princess & Phone 330. C. H. PICKERING, Prop. 'Canada ood Doar Linas (Xo hs: "anit wedding took place at the i a aa # ---- The Methodist thi "ténera erence] papers; at Hamilton dw SAaiiterencs There are said to he about 5,000 y alia' Babine smoking | cases of influenza and severe colds in Kingston. '