Daily British Whig (1850), 19 Dec 1919, p. 5

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. THE DAILY B RITISH WHIG PAGE FOUR 5 hen bh. stock. EVN FY rr vr vy vee nishings Stores -- then you | know they're correct GIFTS Men A ppreciate | Buy your Men's Fur- at in every detail -- a man considers ours is a very complete "THE CLUB" 112 Princess St. Men's | GM TERRES -- ATOTH-HENE _It is true that four out cf five peor ple over forty suffer from me "shrinkage, or Pyorrhea (Riges' ' Disease), Dut ny people even under thirty ha¢@FYorthoa. Women, particularly after the -buby comes, are peculiarly subject to orrhaa, At such timo they eannot be too careful about their teeth Pyorrhea commences with terider come spongy. shrink. Tha ~Blseding, at tooth ually the gums be- They inflame and then teuth becorne exposed to decay at the base and tiny open- ings in the gums becom tho breed by k laces of deans germs which the jointe-wcr toneilo----or other ailments, } Beware of that first pum tender ness! Try Forhan's for tho gama, It Jositivaly prevents Pyarrhea, if used tithe and used copgistertly. No ordinary tooth paste will do this And Forhan's cleans teeth solent!n- £1 catise as well. Brush your teeth with keeps the teeth White andelean. M guim-shrinkage hasclready sot In, start using ForBan's aad coboult a dentist immediately for apecisl tress. ment. : 85¢ and 60c tubes. All Druggists. FORHAN'S, LTD., Montreal. FOR THE GUM SINCE 8 gion ILOH A safe and harmless relieve the Wisard Back dnd out tion eumatism, Lumbago is . Oil. It penetrates reness, and lim ts and muscles. | WOLFE ISLAND BAY FROZEN f ------ AND THE STEAMER OANNOT | REACH THE WHARF. } {highly esteemed residents, at the age | EG { Much Teedn the American ( "hannel-- {+ Daniel McGlynn to. Supply Hay {| and Oats ta Rockwood. | Wolfe Island, ' Dec. 17.--~On the | 8th ot December, 1917, we were visit. | ed by a snow storm that completely | deinoralized traffic for several days | Seven days later the steamer Wolfe | Islander made her last trip for the | #8s0on, and on the 17th of the same | month Messrs. Card and McDermott | crossed with horses to the city, | The Wolfe Islander was unable to | reach the wharf at Wolfe Island on | her afternoon trip on Wednesday. | She carried a record load of freight. {'MeDermott and Woodman, drove | horses and sleighs alongside the boat. | and the fre!ght Was transferred and | driven about half a mile to land. | Dre turkeys are soaring in | price, as high ag fifty cents a pound {being offered in some cases. One | lady states that she disposed of fresh | #B&s last Saturday for $1.25 a dozen {on Kingston market. The hen that | lays this golden egg 1s a treasure | these days. | A gang of men from Toronto are | engaged erecting W. B. Horne's steel barn on Point Alexander. Thomas { Hutohinson, who has been indisposed for some time past, is at present con- { fined to the Kingston General Hos- | pital, Leonard MeGlynn's many | friends are plcased to learn that he | 18 recovering from an attack of pneu- | monia. His brother, Joseph, who is | at present in the Hotel Diey. Hospital | suffering from an affectio of the | eve, is somewhat improved. | Daniel McGlynn has taxen a con- | tract to supply sixty tons of hay and 1 1 [8,000 bushels of oats to Rockwood Hospital. Islanders to-day, for the first time, | were barred entrance into Cape Vin. cent unless subjecting themselves to Jaseination or producing a certifi- cate. + | Wa. E. Horne is now garrying the {-Cape Vincent and city mail across | the {sland. I { There is a great deal of ice in the | American channel to-day. Miss Lizaie } | Grant's many friends are pleased to { learn that she is improving after her j recent illness. The life of Mrs. Pat- {rick Mellville is dispaired of. | Mrs. Oscar Fawcett has returned | home after a visit with her parents in Watertown, N.Y. The Misses Addie and Angie Horne, after a very enjoy- able week's visit with their sister, Mrs. B. Horne, Ernesttown, returned home yesterday. Miss Eileen Staley. and brother, Edwin and Wilfrid, re- turned home last week from Ham- boldt, Sask., where they. have been i in teaching for some time ast. 2 It is stated that th accordance with the last wishes of W. H. Winborne. who died recently ia California, his body is to be cremated and his ashes strewn in the waters of the St. Law- rence River. Deceased was a former resident of the island, where he was well known. . . AT SHARBOT LAKE. Jerome Tho Shoots 8 Foxe Presbyterian urch Sharbot Lake, Dec. 18.--Mr. and Mrs. Mallett, who have been spend- ing the past week in Kingston, have returned home. ke Buell, months, is 'Mr, and Mys, Kingston, arety parents, Mr. ad Doherty latter's Sargeant, day in honor of Miss Lois Shanks' birthday. Mrs. King leaves to-morrow for her Christmas holidays in Chatham. Jerome Thomson had the good fortune to shoot a fox recently. Mrs. Culbert left yesterday, after having spent some weeks here with her par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Avery. On Sunday last the Presbyterian church was re-opened after an inter- val of some yedrs, and thé first ser- vice was well attended. Arrangements are being made for a continuation of the services. » ? Woman A ted Bank Director. Geneva, ec. 19.--Mlle. Marie Prodhom, 28 years old, has bean ap- pointed director of the Bank of Gen- eva, and will sign the notes and scrip issued by the bank. Mile. Prod- hom, who proved herself an excellent financier during the war, is/the first woman in Europe to hold such an important position. There are now two judges, nine barristers, thred engineers and a number of university professors and doctors of the fair sex jin Switzerland. : {* Francis Paul, Poland, sojourming on one of the big farms of Sas! u- wan for the past three years, hag re- turned to the east, and visited his re- latives in Middleville last week. The Toronto smallpox mandamus . ' motion has been adjourned by Justice Kelly till Tuesday next. , {his daughter's, Mrs. SICK HEADAC | LATE A. H. NORRIS, ALTHORPE. | | Postmaster Thirty-eight Years-- | i E'dfr and 8.8. Superintendent. | Althorpe, Dee. 18.--On Wednes jday, Dec. 3rd, death cla! Albert | jm {H. Norris, sr., one of Althorpe's most | fof seventy-nine Years. Alt {ceased had been ill for ' his passing away came ss a great | shock to his wife and family, In| {1871 he married Elfzabeth Robert- son, who with one son, William J., | land two daughters, Misses Lizzie and | Maggie, are loft to mourn the loss of| a kind and loving husband and fath- | fer. He was a member of a large family, three of whom are still liv- ing, viz.: John, of Althorps, Thomas, of Bolingbroke; and Mrs. R. Mitchell, of Clue, New Ontario. Those pre- deceasing him were: Mrs. Hwen Cameron, of Bathurst; Mrs. Alex- ander Mensies and Jamuk and Joseph of Althorpe. Mr. Norris was a man of high prin: ciples and noble character and be- loved by-all who knew him. He was postmaster of Althorpe for thirty- eight years; he also carried the mall between Althorpe and Maberly for a number of years, and was a coun- cillor for two terms, besides being trustee and secretary-ireasurer ; of the school for a long period. In politics, the deceased was a reformer, and in religion a devoted member and elder of the Presbyterian chureh, which has lost one of its main sup- porters. The Sabbath school has also lost a faithful teacher and superintendent. The funeral service was conduct- ed at the house on Saturday at owe o'glock by Rev. Mr. France, pastor after which the remains were taken to Westport and placed in the vault, the burial service being conducted there: by Rev. Mr. Boudreau. The pallbearers were his six nephews Thomas, "John, Albert and Duncan Norris, James Kilpatrick and Joseph Menzies. MARRIED SIXTY YEARS. Mr. and Mrs. Stover Benn, Sydenham, | Observe Anniversary. iy Sydenham, Dec. 18.--On Monday, Dec. 15th, Mr. and Mrs. Stover Bean, of Sydenham, celebrated the sixtieth | anniversary of their marriage. - Mr. and Mrs. Bean are in good °® health and spent the day in the entertain ment of their children, grandchildren | and great-grandchildren, numbering | twenty-nine, of whom twenty were | present. They were the parents of four children: Mrs. W. H. Frink, Odessa; Mrs. H. M. McRory, Syden- ham; A. N. Benn and W. A. Bean, Moscow, the grand-parents of twelye ehildren and the great-grand par- emfts of five children. Grand-children present from distant points were: Mrs. George. B. Lagg, Rochester, N.Y.; Mr. and Mrs. N. T. Shea, Kingston; and Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert, Sillsville. Mr. and Mrs. Benn spent the early part of thelr married life on the | farm near the village of Moscow. and on retiring in 1905 became resi- dents of Sydenham. yep p---------- Paying High Prices For Furs, Vennachar, Pec. 13. Owing to the ' thaw yesterday and last night, take to wheels again.e R. C. Johns- | ton is taking another shipment of | pigs to load at Lavant for the To- ronto market. J. H. Sallans is again blacksmithing in his father's shop. Owing to the icy roads, horse shoe ing haé been the blacksmith's prinel- pal work. Archibald Jackson Is home from the Hydro-Electric pleat, laid yp with a sprained arm. , Adam McLellan, Renfrew, was a wéek-eng visitor at his sister's, Mrs. Solomon Bebee's. Mrs. R. W. Conner is at S.. Ball, Den- bigh, who 1s on the sick list. J. F. Johnston, Palmer, {is making his rounds among the local trappers here, buying fur and paying very high prices. For Last 10 Years: Headaches affect all ages and both sexes alike, but in all cases the treat- ment should be directed to remove the cause, for with the cause remov- ed the headaches vanish for all time. What is necessary for a perma- nent cure is something that will go right tg the seat of the trouble. For this purpose it is impossible to find a better remedy for headaches of all description than Burdock Blood Bit- ter., acting as it does on every or- gan of the body to strengthen, pur ity and regul the~whole system. Mrs. Flora Hall, Dominion, N.8., writes: --*I hive been troubled with slek headaches for the last ten years. I had lost faith if all remedies un- til recently a friend of mine advised me to try Burdock Blood Bitters. This 1 djd, and found relief in a very short time. {[ d- now re- commend B. B. B. to anyone who is suffering as I did. I only took 3 sick headaches any more." B 5,3. Ian beeu on the market for over 40 yedrs. Manufacture only by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, To ronto, Ont. . % bottles, and am never troubled with ! { |B | Be By v| If You See It In Our Advertisement B. W. (I the | wa stage from Plevna to Denbigh had to | 8 % The merchandise we are offering in this great Sale cannot be duplicated for next Fall under 25% to 30% mbre. This is a positive fact, yet our stock and limited space will not permit us to same over, as much as we would wish to, as we must positively have the space to make room for our Spring goods, which will commence arriving about the 20th of January, The Lion's Great "Champion" Sale at Its Height Saturday, ~~ December 20th " You'll believe Owing to the extremely mild weather which we in Santa Claus have had and being heavily stocked with winter in Santa Claus if you attend goods and limited space, much to our regret, we if you attend this great sale. find we will have to dispose of our stock at a great this great sale. ssssesmssesmm [0ss, as we ourselves will have to pay more for ee ------ , these goods next season. In these days of high ; prices, rising costs everywhere, it is unusual to offer reduced prices before Xmas. Knowing that the public would appreciate this at this time and having been showered with liberal pat- ronage since coming to Kingston, we thought this would be a good time to show our apprecia- tion. : . You Will Find It In Our Store | MEN'S OVERCOATS We will give you a great reduction on : every Overcoat in the store. i self ah Xmas. present by securing one of our classy Overcoats. Sizes 34 to/46. MEN'SFELT HATS $4.00 value. Sale Price $3.50 In all the latest colorings and styles. A -- I MEN'S SUITS : A Few Specials $21.00 Suits--Sale Price . . ..$17.00 $25.00 Suits--Sale Price . . . . $20.00 $29.00 Suits--Sale Price | . . . $22.00 $33.00 Suits--Sale Price ..... . $27.50 $38.00 Suits--Sale Price... .. . $32.50 $44.00 Suits--Sale Price . . $39.00 Special Scotch Tweed Suits--Sale : A XMAS. NECKWEAR $100 ies .........c... ... . (89, $2.25 Ties Crd sain. 31.98 --Handsome patterns. MEN'S SWEATER COATS : Regular $3 value, Sale Price $2.45 A MEN'S WORKING TROUSERS $2.75 and $3.00 values. Sale Price $2.25 RO ---- WORKING ' SHIRTS Men's black, fleece lined Worki ng HOSE Good, black, heavy, Ribbed Hose; were 45c¢. Sale Price 'WORKING HOSE Heavy, grey, worké- ing Hose. Reg. 30c. value. Sale Price 19c¢ Men's all - wool Mitts, to go under pullover. Reg. 75¢c. value. Sale Price $0 18; were $1.75, Sale Price $1.50 Tass XMAS, NECKWEAR 75¢. Ties. did Sale Price 4 WINTER CAPS With fur bands: were $1.75 and $2. Sale Price $1.35 The Lion Clothing THE BARGAIN SPOT OF KINGSTON Window. = nn SUSPENDER SETS IN BOXES 50c. to $1.25 ~ House Shirts; sizes 144 to ----

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