Daily British Whig (1850), 14 Oct 1919, p. 3

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TUESDAY OCTOBER 11 19410 THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG Hickey's Speedy Cure NS Canes and Umbrellas 4 We have an excellent | cONNaT "au Cenis. At Best's||t The Popular Drug Stere showing of the bet- ter grades of Gentle- Canes and Gentle- U mbrellas. Branch 2018 Phone 5p. Less mens Ladies' men's No more and article forms a appreciated of gift than either these. Priced $3 to $20.00 SMITH BROS. JEWELERS Limited Those people (and they are many) who dread the ordeal of an eye examin- ation are agreeably aston- ished to find that, as made by us, it causes no pain, discomfort, or inconven- fenoe, Established 1840 Ringston And We Use No Drugs. Keeley Jr., M.0.D.0. ; 226 Princess Street A NOX A COLD TABLETS speedy cure for LaGr Headac! Ne Eiug Striet THE NEW FREON Samawy. 3 THERARIGN No 2 TH ErARIon No.3 ur » Trerare my EMITS FIT ariraomecw wi -- d-Co.. ao CEST BATT) worn Fraup Amys ™ hibald Stevens 7 died on T Mrs. A of Bastard, "at Best's Drug Stoke. 1 Sold Time To Buy Your Stove Years of experience las taught us that our line of Stoves WE carry Is The BEST for CONTINUED SERVICE and SATIS. FACTION. Proof of this statement is based on the fact that we have fewer complaints and dissatistied customers since we secured this line than in all the years combined. It is wise to make your purchase here--the prices are lower and satisfaction assured. Our Happy Cooking Range . . 866.50 Our Cozy Home Heater Rr . 826.00 Thought Dur Dandy Oak Heater » . SL S15.00 Our Nickled-plated Heaters Oil £7.00 Our Japan Oil Heaters x . $6.00 Drop in and let us show them to you even if you are not prepared to have One now. Don't forget our Bargain Counter. McKelvey & Birch Ltd., Brock St. PHONE 237-- large a UN A A A a Se tt i ot. ey We have a complete stock of comfortable Chairs and Chests erfields, covered in Tapestries and vich shastes of Velours, io UR any room. . 1 Everything to make your home cheerful for the winter months, Vierrola Records and Viectrolas, est pieces, Come in and hear the lat. | * 5 car. Whooping cough has been very FIGHTING LIQUOR TRAFFIC REV. PETER BRYCE, OF TORON- TO, MADE A STRONG APPEAL Address at Sydenham Street Met- Church Sunday Eveaing---- Declared Has Decreased in FToront One-Third Under On- tario Temperance Act.--Does Not Believe Workingmen Want Beer. for the sake of the the home, the child, the happiness the people of the : Under these Bryce, cf st wurch, Toronto, g app peal to his hearers am streer Methodist church ay He did not t as the repre 1e Ontario Referendum includes the Dom- | W.C.T. U. and zations, he spoke en who are directing the to wipe out the liguor tra- appealed for funds to defray >f the work. At the out- ess, he denied that the s ten tons of literature which to flood 1se of tobac- present referen- He did not deny i be an object of the commit- iting the liquor rs would be ended icceeded. "Why are thous- n and women giving their his work? It was iction wrought told touching ives inhappy hildren,_ all be- to alcholi licende in the min- where the ¥. He was he socal Toronto, and rime had decreased e O. T. A. and he Minnihan and Miss versity Settlement ifying to the great Lhe Seattle Times Seattle the sales o1 to women and creased under Own province d othgr business men re ncteases in production gher state ble vy the Un- in hodist Crime hy on, Earls- ETRE against the as the engaged its lat ars he was shoes vu ered a 'warniug re- nnancial position ot the y i showed ihe great neea employment of our whole in production. The sum oi 36,000,000 was spent for liquor in Satads in one year! He did not be- iteve that 'the working man wanted the Inc rial Banner, the organ of organized labor in , Bndorsed prohibition. "The traffic means "destruction, » 'prohibition means tion", declared Rev. Mc. Bryce, ahd he appealed to the best men and the best men in Kingston who have the est inferests of the country at heart to give their tion. At Calvary Church on Sunday ey ening J. W, Be yugh of the central eterendum committee, Toronto, | 2 on the coming referendum in| Li § pravince. He spoke On the great ! work in hand of trying to stamp out i.the evils and workings of liquor and i urged everyeneg' to stick behind the local committee in its good work. The First Baptist Caurch was fill- ied on Sunday morning to hear George Bell, M.P., speak on the re- ferendum. He spoke on the evils of the open bar and urged the congrega- tion to give their vote very careful consideration. Thanksgiving services were held both morning and evening. and a splendid musical programme was given at both services. Christian Science Lecture. Dr. John M'Tutt, C.8.B,, to speak tin Cheistiap Science Church, Johnson | | street tonight. A religion, which Jin twenty five | | years has built moré fine church 'edi- fices than any other denominaion { within the same period; 'which brought 49,000 enthusiastic believers to Boston, Mass. on the occasich of the dedication of the great mother | church, needs no introduction re- garding ' its outward accpmplish- | ments. {| What Christian Science is, and! | what is the underlying spirit which'| | promps so great and beneficial an ag- | gregation of good works, can best be | { learned by attending the lecture to- night, which is free, and offers help | for the hearing. i or stre influence for prohibi- From the Far West. ! Condor. Alta., Oct. 6.-- The farm-! ers are having fine threshing weath- ier, and threshing machines can be | heard on all sides. Crops are very! { good in this district, Barfon Brothers | { threshed over nine thousand bushels | | of grain. F. W. Barton threshed three | | thousand bushels from thirty-two ae- | res, ¥F. Card has a brand new Overland bad. in this vicinity, but is disappear. | ing. W. E. Barton is visiting at 8 | Barton's and F. W. Barton's. i A number of returned soldiers! { have bought land in this part of the! ! country. The chicken season has op-| ened again and guns can be heard in| | every direction. ving Services. : Thanksgiving services were hel. { both morning ' and evening at the; i First Congregational Church on Sun-| i day. The church was very tastefully | decorated for pie occasion with flow-" ers and she. of grain. A splendid | | musical p.gframme was lie feature Lof both spfrvices which were largely | { attended. {At the evening se-vice, a | duet. A Yong of Preise" was sung | { by Miss Woolgar and Eytan Warbur- | { ton, and a quartette "Come to Me™ | | by Misses Woolgar, Fearne, Burnes | land Mrs "Coward. There was alse a { vielin solo by Miss Helen Taylor. { Sir Henry Drayton, Minister of | i Finance, will be at Union campaign | | headquarters, Dally ftandard office, | { to-night, from 8 to 10 o'clock. Aji | extizens. are cordially welcome. : Night Classes. At Kingston Business College. head of Queen street. commence on Wed- | !nesday, Oct. 15th. Rates moderates | Phone $46. H. FV. Metcalfe, Principat. | ' Sir Henry Drayton To-night. | 'dehd whenever there was a lull. Thus construcs {as large of the C.E.¥., | Curran. was a Miss Gibbs, Her first i cousin, Major Evelyn Gibbs, the well- BIRTH OF A POEM. 13 3 "In Flanders Fields" Born of Fire | and Blood." "In Flanders Fields." to quote the words of Maj.-Gen. Morrison, who commanded the brigade to which Lieut.-Col McCrae was ttached, was literally born of fire and blood during ottest phase 58- cond battle of Ypres "My headquarters were in a treach on the top of the bank of the Ypres Canal: and John had his dressing station in a hole dug in the foot of the bank. During periods of the bat- tie men who were shot actually roll- ed down the bank into his dressing' station. Along from us a few hun- dred vards was the headquarters of a regiment, and many times during the sixteen days of the battle, he and 1 watched them burying théir of 5 the crosses, row on row, grew into a good-sized cemetery "Just as he describes, we heard the larks singing high in the air, between the the crash the shell and the reports of the guns in the battery just beside us. I have a letter from him in which he men- tions having written the poem to pass away the time between the arrival of batches of wounded, and partly as an experiment with several varieties of poetic meter." The unit with which McCrae serv- ed was the most advanced of all the Allies' guns by a good deal, except one French battery, which stayed in a position yet more advanced for two days, and then had | to be taken out. often of Heroic Work of Canadian Doctors. The faithful' labors. of tke Cana- dian Army Medical Corps are draw- ing to a close. At the date of the armistice 1,000 sick and wounded soldiers lay in France and 38,000 in England. At the end of September there were only 164 Canadian sol- diers on the roster, of whom seven were wounded men, twenty-four blind and the rest sick The work of the corps is enshrined in' 64 boxes of records which are awaiting despatch to Canada Maj.-Gen. G. I.. Foster, C.B., Direc- tar-General of Medical Service claims that a detailed record of the injunigg and treatment of every man who pasged through his hands may be found in those 64 boxes to prove, if necessary, to every wife and mother in Canad® that no man of hers ever failed to receive proper consideration. He finds no words of praise too high for the medical men who Jeft their practices in Canada and came overseas to work and suffer with the troops, either under fire, where their casualties were on a level with the infantry, or ih the drudgery of administration. "1 am intensely proud to belong to such a service," said Gen. Foster, "and consider it a splendid privilege ta have lived in an age which pro- duced this war, for, as the horrors were very great, the heroism which faced them was infinitely greater The Canadian and Imperial medical services worked together like broth- ers, and close association helped us to grow, until the C.AM.C. became as the whole of the British R.AMC. at the time of the South African war." Related to Royalty. By a recent wedding a former To- ronto man, Capt. Walter A. Curran, becomes a cousin, by marriage, with a niece of the Queen. Capt. Curran, who {8 a soni of Mr. John Curran, of Orillia, married Mrs. Cyril W. Cunard, of Grosvenor Square, London, widow of the late Cyril Cunard, of the well-known steamship family, in February, 1918. Previous to her first marriage Mrs. known officer and sportsman, married Lady Helena Cambridge, younger daughter of the Marquis and March- ioness of Cambridge, on September 2, The Marquis of Cambridee is a son of the late Duke of Teck and brothy er of Queen Mary. # DEWS OF EVE No More Gentle Than "'Cascarets" for the Liver, Bowels ii 18 just as needless as it id danzg, | vrous to take violent or nasty cath artics. Nujure provides no shock-ab- sorbers for your liver and bowels against calomel, harsh pills, sicken {ing oil and salts, Cascarets giv: quick relief without injury fror i Constipation, Biliousness, Indiges tion, Gases and Sick Headache. Cas carets work while you sleep, remov- | ing the toxins, poisons and sour, in | digestible waste without griping o inconvenience. Cascarets regulate by strengthening the bowel muscles. They cost so little too. Amin mm Asn Just received a large assort ment of High Grade Chocolates Sold in bulk and in fapcy boxes. The quality of our Ice Cream cannot be excelled in Kingston. IBAR'S 288 PRINCESS STREET PHONE 1128. PAGE THREE x ° PROBS: Wednesday, unsettled, local showers. ---- a RE ---- Steacy's Presenta- tion Of The Auth- orative Fashions For Autumn Our position as the fashion centre for ladies' wear in Kingston is more pronounced than ever, by r eason of the master exhibit of qual- . : fg i ; ce ity apparel now on review--a ®dt hering of approved fashions with- out a peer i "on 3 il. There is every evidence of supremacy in the styles and values presented by this store--the result | of matchless resourcefulness in assembling the cream of the produ ct of the world's most noted mak- ers. Coats Strikingly beautiful in richtfess of their materials and the softness of the furs that trim them, the Fall and Winter Coats surpass anything we Have ever seen. The wide range of materials is particularly in- teresting in view of the high price of woollens and shortage of labor.' Priced $25.00 to $100.00. Suits New in many delightful phases are the suit fashions for the fall season. Suit modes have longer coats, slightly more tailored; many of them belted: close fitting at the waist, but flaring slightly at thetbot:™ tom. In these suits embroidery of braid or of Silk and unusual pockets are noted, and many of them are trimmed with fur. Priced $35.00-to $85.00. i Dresses The showing includes many exclusive models. Here are to be seen smart Dresses of Silk, Satin, Taffetta, Georgette, Crepe de These dre must be seen to be fully appreciat ed, and the prices will be foun Priced. Skirts The fine quality of the fabrics, the exceeding care with which the Skirts have been made, and th e fact that these styles have just ar- Priced . $8. 75 to $27. 50. Chene, Serge, Tricolette, in various charming styles. to $16.50 to $95.00 be moderate in each case." rived for Fall, make these skirts particularly desirable. Fall Hats All the popular pew models are now on-display--roll brims, collection $3.00 up to $10.00 tam effects, mushroom shapes--a very comprehensive designed for Autumn wear. Priced 2 INC SU TLS AP I, LL SRT

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