~ _PAGE F OURTEEN GANANOQUE (From Our Own Gorrespondent) (From Our Own Correspondent.) Nov. '24---At the spring and axle depattment of the works of the On- lario Steel Products Co., Limited, on Saturday morning, a pleasant event took place when, at a concerted sig- nal the power was stopped and the eroployees assembled to show their Wppreciation of their superintendent, Thos, A. Adair, who' has held that position since the inauguration of that company, and who left yester- . day to take charge of the company's new branch factory.at Oshawa. De- puty Reeve George A. Dousley read an address which; avas. @ecom panied by 2 more tangible testimonial of the siteem of the firm's employees in the, form of a_ handsome selid--leather tlub bag. Mr. Adair was deeply af- 'ected by their kindness but made a nost feeling reply. At the session of Grace Sunday, School yesterday afternoon, Rev' William F. Crawford, of Ottawa, sec retary of the Ottawa Branch of the Canadian Bible. Society, gave an ex- "tellent fantern exhibit on the Bible, wid later gave a similar exhibition in the Sunday school hall at St. An- drew's Church. "At the close of the regular evening service in Christ Church he gave an excellent lantern xhibition on India in the parish ouse, and drew a large attendance. The Gananoque High School Liter- try Society has reorganized for the jeason, with these officers: Presidént, pera X eyes; Vice-President, Wil Berry; Sectetary-Treasurer, Mr. Jackson. In the auditorium of Grace Church fast evening the Young People's So- tiety of that church held its annual ally, and drew a large attendance. 'here' were af number of short, in- structive addresses and a fine music- il programme with a chorus of 100 roices, ! At the special Meeting of the Board of Education on Thursday afternoon % the Assembly Hall of Gananoque igh School, Miss Nellie Lake read mn ultimatum, signed by herself and nine other teachers of the staff of the public school demanding a mini- mam salary of '$750 per annum, with }50 annual increase until a maximum yet by the Board be attained. The meeting was adjourned for one week when a reply will be given to them. Town Treasurer James Sampson, who has been: enjoying a month's yacation with relatives: in England, has returned fo town. Miss Mary Nobes, .of Brewer's Mills, and Mrs. Charles . Whitcomb nd granddaughter, "Miss Dorothy Whitcomb, of Kingston, are guests pi Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Jeroy, Brock street. [stder the political situation. THE WORLD' TIDINGS IN CONDENSED FORM | Tidings From A All Over Told in a Pointed and Pithy Way. | The Players Ave at Work bar- was | Edward Sherman, London ber, sixty-five years of age, asphyxiated in his room " + John Swartz, Ht Springfield, near {' London, Ont., was fatally hurt in a motoring accident near Jaffa Voting is to be made compulsory in the Hungarian elections on Dec. 20th, when the National AsseTmbly is to be chosen. Hydro-radial hy-lawe were carried by large majorities in the Eastern | Ontario municipalities voting on { them on Saturday. C. A. Nolan, a farmer, of Rosebud, Alta., has been awarded $5,900 dam- ages because five tractors were not up-to what was claimed. Ax embargo, on export of anthra~ cite coal except to Canada, was an- nounced Friday night by the United States Fuel Administration. The Liberal members and defeat- ed candidates in the recent provincial elections meet in Toronto on Tues- day at a private conference to con- The smallpox situation in Strat- ford continues to improve. At fhe present time there are only twelve cases, some of which will be let out of quarantine almost daily from now on. Returned men who attended a meeting of radical Labor men in Mas- sey Hall, Toronto, on Saturday, were roused to indignation by the manner in which their «presence there was received. Sir Joseph Flavelle, gave empha- tic denial of the story published ina Toronto paper to the effect that he | had disposed of his interest in the | William Davies Company to a Cleve-,| land packing concern. Plans are under way urging upon | the Dominion government the neces- | sity of returning to normal consti-| tutional law, of removing from the | gtatute books the orders-in-couneil and of showing consideration to men | and women imprisoned for political | offences. } The discovery } clothing, a suitcase and other per-| sonal effects in the bush on the | shores of Lake Frontiere, Bellechase County, Que., has léd to the belief | that a trapper lost his life in the | woods nearby. The clothing 'was identified as belonging to Joseph | Fortin, whose wife and children live | in Quebec city. i John Swartz, of Springfield, was | seriously injured when the auto in which he and three other persons | were travelling turned turtle in the road near his home. Mr, Swartz was pinned beneath the car and ren- dered unconscious for several hours. His spine has been injured, resulting in paralysis from the neck down, of a bundle of [been engaged in getting the covered the hockey teams THE. RECORD HOCKEY SEASON EXPECTED TAT « QUEEN'S THIS | COMING. SEASON. <4 in the f Gymnasium Getting Into Condi- | tion--Preparing the Two Univer- | sity Skating Rinks. For some time the Queen's Hockey { Club has been' endeavoring to get a | suitable coach. A few days. ago | Nighbor, of the Ottawas, was ap-| proached with the intention of get- | ting him to give the team some time, but so far he has not given a defin- ite answer. There proniises to be a record sea json in hockey at Queen's University. ! James Bews, secretary of the athleti committee, when speaking to the Whig on Monday, stated that he ex- pe 10 have a bumper season. Al- though it will be some weeks before there is sufficient ice, the boys who intend taking part in the game.real- ize that it is necessary to get into physical condition, so they are spend- ing considerable time in the gymnas- jum. For the past ten days men have Is a m, rink and also the outside rink in shape for the cold weather. When asked if he thought that the citizens | would be able to get the use of the outside rink for private skating part- fes, Mr. Bews stated that according to present pians it is doubtful if all representing the university will he able to get the use of the rink, let alone outsiders. Ww BRITISH POUND QUOTED AT $4.05 (Canadian Press Despatch) New Yark, Nov. 24.--For- eign exchange rates were con- siderably improved in early trading in the market here to- day, Demand sterling, which had dropped to $3.99% for the English pound last week, was quoted to-day at $4.05. & a pa -- STOCK MARKETS, Quotations Furnished by Bongard, Ryerson & Co., Bagot Street C.P.R. TRAIN CRASHES known to have been: killed and -six were injured on Saturday night, when special carrying passengers from the Saturday at Quebec, for Toronto, and the Montreal-Quebéo express. men killed were members train crews, while the injured were, the boat special in the Montreal-Que- bec express. boat special escaped with nothing more serious than bruises. are: the boat special. messenger on the Montreal to Quebes express. From German Barque in Distress Off Halifax Nov. 24.--The latest word from the Germen four-masted barque Paul, in distress oft Nova Scotia, re- layed by a steamer which withholds her identity 4s that several members of the crew have been washed over- board and drowned. vertisemeut appearing Whig on page thirteen. the form of a co-operative fire insur- . ance announcement local agents participate. this kind has ever before been pub- lished In Kingston. not only the enterprise of the fire in- surance men of Kingston, but also their shrewd bysiness acumen. BAILY BRITISH. NITT1 GHEOKMATES THE INTRIGUES (Canadian Press Despatch) i Rome, Nov. 24.--Plans for | | uprisings in various paris of Italy, particularly along the Adriatic coast, have been found on a man recently arrested. Premier Nitti, who has been | watching carefully all' move ments of Capt. D'Annunzip and his followers, has succeeded in checkmating the intrigues and breaking up arrangements for seizure for revolutionists of ex- tensive stores. * lg * * + lp a. INTO BOAT SPECIAL £5 ---- Gep. 3 illiams "Appoints Lieut.-Col. | Two Trainmen Were Killed-- | None of the 300 Passengers Injured. Montreal, Nov. 24.--Two men are head-on collision took place near 7 oR-the CPR. between a mpress of France, which docked The of the ith one exception, the engineer on The passengers on the The dead J. M. Sanche, Quebge, fireman on A. Milner, Montreal, an express ---------- 'ASHED OVERBOARD. Nova Scotia, (Canadian Press Despatch) Read Unique Advertisement, Attention is called to a unique ad- in to-day's This 1s In in which ten Nothing of It demonstrates KILLING THE WALRUS. % 'which meets this afternoon, will i % ltkely deal with the question of | % reduction in water and gas rates. | # commission will strike off the { # bath and closet charges of the % water department. # the gas rate redietron will be is % not known. # can give a $1.2 + the present one of $1.50, it will 4 do so. * per cent. Tedustion, 1 ny Madera YY. G.0.C., D.D. No. 3, visited Belleville | on Saturday, where he met the offi- | cers of the 156th Regiment, Light Infantry; in the armourjes. In | she véning he aitended a meeting of | On Soa Sunday be wen service in Wes- ley Methodist church and unveiled a tablet to fourteen Trenton soldiers who fell in France. Major-General Williams took up the question of reorganization of the | 16th Regiment while in Belleville, and as a result the announcement fis made D.8.0., the 2nd Battalion, C.E.F., has been appointed to command the regiment. Major Vanderwater had a splendfd record in France. the . rank of lieutenant-colonel, his appointment is a very popular | one in the district. i Simultaneously with the appoint- ment Capt. D. T. MacManus, late adjutant of the 6th Reserve Battalion, C.E.F., bas ben appointed permanent adjut- ant of the regiment. Capt. MacManus has taken over his duties. E. C, Gildersleeve, honoraty secre- tary of the Kingston Curling Club, is busy arranging for a meeting of the club on fe. 8th, when the teams will be sel Quéen's University Y.W.C.A. held a very successful tea and sale at Grant Hall on Saturday afternoon. event was well patronized. Many a young man looks upon a dollar saved.as a good time lost. -- ------ To The Electors Of The City Of WHIG ---------- TRE I -- REDUCTION IN GAS * HEALTHY, PURE, AERATED WATERS Made from Pure Sugar and Imported Syrups. Dublin Ginger Ale, English Ginger Beer. COLA CHAMPAGNE APPLE CIDER Agents for Dowe Ale and Port a and Dominion White Label A Thuis son ii Boting Works wb os AND WATER RATES The «Utilities Commission, the $1.25 Per Case 50c. Per Gallon The expectation is that Just what If the commission 25 rate instead of If not, it may give a ten EEE EIR ete hide RE-ORGANIZE T THE 15TH, Nr i wt tc USE MAXOTIRES ---- - Strengthen your casings where they need it the most--from the | anderwater to Command. A. 8. Williams, | inside. The Maxotire bears all the strain. STANDARD VULCANIZING SHOP 254 ONTARIO 8 T., COR, QUEEN Argyle | .V.A and gave an address. | | A. NEAL, MGR, he went to Trenton and | | oo --r------------------ = -- NUJOL--- 75¢c., $800, $1.50--ALL SIZES, AT SARGENT'S DRUG STORE Telephone 41 Cor. Princess and Montréal Sta, ~ PHONE 2080... 1. that Major Vanderwater, late second in command of He is promoted to and of Lieut.-Col. Vanderwater, | + UAH"; iv nm The Records You Buy Are Perhaps Not Th To The Children BUBBLE BOOKS are made specially for children. They contain pretty pictures, stories, and the rhymes are contained on miniature records which are sung perfectly. The A complete little play in story and song. Price $1.25. HEAR THEM AT LINDSAY'S ~~. Will This Mammal Follow the Baf- Union Pacific ,.. .. k . falo to Oblivion? Atlantic Gulf , . . . The killing off of the walrus had Marine far more than anything else to do Marine, pid. .. . with the peril of starvation which Gen. Motors . .. ... menaced the very existence of the Maxwell Motors . . . Eskimos only a few years ago. Rein- Studebaker ... deer, imported from Siberia, have Willys-Overland . saved them, but to them the loss of 4 the gigantic marine mammal is a really dreadful misfortune. The walrus is one of the most use- ful creatures provided by a beuntiful providence for the benefit of man- kind, and since time immemorial It has been the main dependence of the Eskimos. There are to-day comparatively few walrus left alive, and the prospect is that before long this valuable spe- cies will be virtually exterminated. Persistent slaughter has reduced its numbers to such & point that there is no longer much profit in hunting it for commercial purposes--wherein lies the only hope for its survival. Hunters seek the beast for its tusks, which are of very fine ivory; for its hide, which makes first-rate | leather, ang eves for its whiskers, | which furgifh picks for opium pipes. To the ine it 18 (or was) foed, clothing, house, utensils (from bones and tusks) and most other neces | saries of life. | More than half a century ago the! whalers, responding to a commer | cial demand for ivory, turned their | attention to the walrus and proceed- | ed to wipe them out systematically, | Sometimes as many as 2,000 of the animals were slaughtered on a single cake of ice merely for their tusks, Thus to-day a walrus is hardly to be found in waters where the. creatures ed States Government's note de-| used to be se numerous that their '| manding the immediate release of | bellowings were heard above the roar William O. Jenkins, American con- | of the waves and the grinding of thé sular agent at Puebla is understood | ice floes. to have been considered by the Me- The poor animals had no chance at xican cabinet last Friday, the State | all. Usnally the method adopted wis department announced today. Gov-| to approach a herd of walrus on the érnor Cabeta of Puebla was present, | ice, and after picking off the most but the department's advices did not | alert bulls from a safe distance, with say what action if any was taken. rifles, slaughter the rest at leisure, ¥ Em ------ i AWAIT THE 1 DECISION 2a Demand ¥or the ¥en © "Learn to say 'No,' excieimed the of Fuel Administrator Garfield As to proverbialist. : Cas dine le toh oh) "The accomplishment is too com- Washington, ae 24. --Operators mon," answerad Mr. Crosslot, "What and miners of 'the central competi- | "tive bituminous coal fields, marked I want to see is a grocer who bas 'learned to say 'Yes' when you ask time today in their negotiations for ke a new wage scale while awaiting a | SUSAr. . him for a couple of pounds of decision by Fuel Administrator Gar-| ~ : i bod Re hm portion of Any wae "What's rotligate we Ye get- vane © 8 dhe passed on: hs ihe tin' married again, Wullle Tamson?" ET ---- tain "Oh, aye; I'm venturing on matri- HE USED AN AXE moniai bonds wi' Jean Cameron." "Losh me, man, ove been mar. And the niles Hoamited na Mans [ied three times al (Canadian Des milton, Miss Mildred Berry of the staff of the local post office is spending two week's vacation with relatives in De- Iroit, Mich. All Fat People: : Should Know This > The world owes a debt of gratitude to the anthor af the now famous Mar. mnla Prescription, and is still more in. debtedl for the reduction of this harm- lens, effective obesity remedy to tablet form. Marmeola . Prescription Tablets can now be obtained at all drug stores, nr "by writing 'direct #0 Marmola Co. 64 Woodward Ave. volt, Mich, and the'r reasonable price (75 cents for a large Size) X 1 ves no fxcute for dieting or violent reise for the reduction oF the far body to normal propor. | Owned by John Harfmann, of Fair- | pons. <i bes mont Farm. - --r IMPROVED THROUGH ServicE Between KINGSTON and OTTAWA Comfort -. Convenlence Archdeacon Mackay Dead. Ottawa, Nov. 24---Ven. Archdea- con A. W. Mackay, rector of All Saints' Anglican church, Ottawa, since its completion in 1899, died last night after a lengthy illness. He was secretary of the Provincial Synod of Ontario. Kingston Being unanimously endorsed by the Veterans Municipal. Committee, and having been requested by many representative citizens' fm the com- munity, to be a candidate for Mayor | for the year 1920, I have consented | to do so. ! My record as an Alderman and a citizen is before you, on this I seek your support. On election day 1 solicit your votes, and in the interval your influence. HUGH C. NICKLE --~------ a EA Am, Smelters Anaconda . . Inepiration ... . .. 6&6 Utah Copper 76% Bethlehem, Steel "B" 95 Cryetble ... ... .. 213 Midvale ... ... ... b1% Rep. Steel ... .... 107 U.S. Steel ... 104% Allis-Chalmers .. . 42% Am. Can. . ... .... b4 Am. Car Fdy. ... .. 135% Ind. Alcohol .. Am. Sumatra Tobacco Prods. .. 62% Six ' RT TR TT TV LLETITITIVIVIVIAV VND) AW. liNDS AY INA IT EE BD) PRINCESS STREET, KINGSTON. Montreal; Ottawa, Quebec, Brockville, Belleville *, and Three Rivers OS a MONDAY IS "Table of Payments" OPENING DAY OF THE NOW FAMOUS White Progressive Club Small Payment Cash Is All You Need. Come and Let Us + You About It. THE WORLD'S BEST SEWING MACHINE PLACED WITHIN : REACH OF EVERY HOME Do your part by doing your own sewing. We are making it possible for every woman to have the best, practise real economy and sew under the pleasantest conditions. "iw" EASY PAY . THE SPECIAL CLUB PRICES : are permitted by the manufacturers during this . Sale only. : Famous $50,000 Bull Dies, Middletown, N.Y., Nov. 24.--The famous Holstein-Fresian bull, King Segis Pontiac Alcartra, valued at $60,000, died here Saturday. It was iui Can. Steamship, pid. Can. Loco. ... Dom, Steal iv... . Quebec Ry. ... ... Steel of Canada . . . Wabasso Cotton . .. Daily except Sunday AM, PM 102B. NOON PM. i CONSIDERED U. 8S, NOTE Regarding Coneular Agent Jenkins, Bat Action Unknown. '(Canadian Press Dasgatsn) 'Washington, Nov. 24. The Unit No Ohange Merning Train from Kingston Necessary Afternoon Train from Ottawa THROUGH TRAINS 108 For Tickets and Information, Enquire Nearest C.N. Tiys Agent _ M. C. DUNN, OITY AGENT, 217 Princess Street, KINGSTON Sy Tell ve a Th oi 18h J CORNER GORE AND WELLINGTON STS, PHONE 248 BUY YOUR SUPPLY NOW-- OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT Brooms EXTRA VALUE Only Hmited suwply) §5¢ EACH . YOU HAVE YOUR CHOICE OF ANY White AT SPECIALLY REDUCED PRICES DON'T DELAY . ONLY 25 MACHINES "Four times, four times. » "Eh, Walle, ye're awfu' wastetu' ] | women!" BE a ai ~ Gen. Bir Arthur Currie will leave | {etoria, BG, on - Wedn t : Ne nthe tiie eat and enjoy tera never were they finer than this season. or fruit dealer should have send vel his name and we'll og a pan a 1 Discount 0 cach al payment rom make bore de. | COME IN--§EE THE WHITE AND HAVE Us . EXPLAIN THE PLAN Sok