PAGE FOURTEEN 3 - THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG SATURDAY, JANUARY 17, 1920. FOR CHOICE GROCERIES And Fresh Vegetables go to FRIENDSHIPS Fresh Goods. Quick Service. + 216 DIVISION STREET PHONE 545 Pe R. B. Russell was unanimously nominated by the Socialist party of Canada as candidate for Winnipeg " at the next provincial election. Mayor Church, Toronto, announc- | £8 that he is going to oppose the pro- posal to hold night courts at present. 1 | WooD ALCOHOL POISONING was fit for removal to Canada. reached Kingston as a returned casu- CAUSED THE DEATH OF WILIZIAM CHORLEY, PETERBORO, He Was Found Unconscious in His Boarding House gnd Was Removed to Sydenham Hospital, William Chorley died in Sydenham Hospital on Friday morning, one hour after his admission for treat- ment for wood aleohol poisoning The circumstances connected with death are very sad and another se is added to the.long Hst of vic- | | s of wood alcohol taken:in mis-! for whiskey. take { Chorley enlisted, in the 93rd Bat-| | talion at Peterboro in 19156 and went {in the 1st Battalion, C.E.F. He was | wounded and placed under treatment { mar gm ¥ A Growing Industry THE JAVEL MANUFACTURING CO. Manufacturers of "KLEAN ALL" JAVEL WATER Contains--NO ACID--NO LYE Manufactured Specially for Whitening and taking out Stains from white linen and Cotton Without Boiling Also cleans bath tubs, sinks, copper, porcelain, marble tiling, ASK YOUR GROCER FOR IT--12c. A QUART BOTTLE Return bottle to grocer and save 2c. To disinfect' leave some in open container in room. Germs can- not live where it is used, - JAVEL MFG. CO., 19 ONTARIO STREET, KINGSTON. PHONE 454. . -FURS- Ladies' Hudson Seal Coats and \ Sleigh Robes Gourdier's overseas, where he served in France | in British military hospitals until he | He | . ! y July 12th, 1919, and took up Jetan-- ational training under the de- partment of soldiers' civil re-estab- | NESS IN KINGSTON. lishment, i ---- On Thursday morning a medical | He Helped Charles M. Schwab to sets Was summoned to attend him | Turn Out Submarines--He is With at his boarding house and found him | di , unconscious from drinking wood Brolin n Vickers, Limited, | alcohol In mistake for whiskey. He | Frederick Orr Loi: who received | {had him removed to Sydenham Hos- a baronetey among New Year's hon- Ors, was president, as he still 1s, of pital, but no treatment was of any avail and the unfortunate man passed Canadian Vickers. Limited, when | | Charles M. Schwab arrived in Mou. | away without returning to conscious- Jess. ah inquest was not considered treal, post haste after submarines | S9ary. | for the British Go ent. It had | The deceased was Born in Eng- | been hoped that Syeramen oiion ot | {land and his next-of-kin reside there. | these defences could have been se- | He 'was single, thirty-four years of | cured in the United States. but the age and had no relatives in this oun- | j4.. incurred opposition at the time, | try. | and Mr, Schyab, with his character- { istic energy, and indomitable force | | of character, determined to see What | | Canada could do in this line. He {found the great shipbuilding Works | | that F, Orr Lewis had been largely | instrumental in having established | | bere, in conjunction with the British | | Erm, Prepared to do this work. It! CBITUAR¥ is sald it took only a few minutes | for a bargain to be struck by which | Mrs. Mary Myers, widow of the late | the Works were taken over and oper- | | Henry Myers, of Kingston, passed | ated. Later on Canadian Vickers | {away on Friday, at the residence of | Poth built and repaired a large num- | { her son-in-law, J. A. McDonald, 311 | ber of these under-water craft for the | { University avenue. The late Mrs. | British nayy, Folowipg this signal { Myers was born in Ireland eighty | Service the Vickers works constructed | years ago and came to Canada with |@ Dumber of cargo vessels for the | her parents when a child and resided | Canadian. mercantile marine during | | here all her life. She was a devout | the past two years. It was with this { | member of the Roman Catholic | concern, and the huge British plants | | church. She is survived by three | for shipbuilding, and the manufac- | daughters, Mrs, W. W. Sommers, of | ture of guns of the largest calibre, | Syracuse, N.Y, Mrs. J. A. Comeau, of | and other engines of war, that Sir | Pittsburg, Pa. Mrs, J. A. McDonald, | Frederick Lewis has been most in- jof Kingston, and one son, Willlam | terested of late years, and it might | | Myers, of Syracuse. Mrs, Sommers | be surmised that the honor bestowed {and Mr. Myers will attend the fun-| upon him by the King was in recog- eral, which will take place to St. | nition of the services he was able to | Mary's cathedral on Monday morn- | perform through his connections jing, when a solemn requiem mass | chiefly with the Vickers works. | { will be sung. But it was in the hardware busi- | The Late Mrs. H. Myers. ness that the new baromet served his { longest apprenticeship and he isl] NEEDS OF THE SCHOOLS known all over Canada as president | | of Lewis 'Bros., Limited, wholesale | v | hardware merchants of Montreal, | | DISCUSSED AT MEETING OF PAR- | transacting one of the largest busi- | | ENT-TEACHERS' ASSOCIATION, |0esses of the character in Canada. | ls 7 : Mr. Lewis was born in the city of | | > | Hamilton, on February 11, 1862, and Of Victoria School--Miss Hoppin, | was the second son of the late Wil- | Dr. H. E. Day and Mayor Nickle | liam Thomas Lewis, a native of | Were the Speakers, | Swansea, Wales, The father operated | A meeting of the Parent-Teachers' | a line of boats on the Great Lakes Assocation of Victorfa School was | Maly years ago, between Chicago held on Friday evening, in the kin. 20d Kingstom, Ontario, and retired | dergarten room. The president, Mrs, | from active business in 1890, moving | Coleman, defupled the chair, and in { to Montreal, where he died in 1908. | spite of the severe weather, there | L0¢ Son received his education at | was a very good attendance. | Kingston, and embarked in the hard- | { Miss Hoppin gave a very interest-| Ware business in that city. Joining | |ing paper. She spoke of the necossity | the Wholesale firm of J. Muckleston | WAS EDUCATED AND DID BUSI. | feity council of 1920 takes place on | fg icloge to Mr. Robinson's dwelling, the | | Sir Richard Cartwright 78 BROCK STREET, ERLE 1 OF TAR & COD - LIVER OIL } CURES Coughs, Colds, Grippe, Bronchitis, - Whooping Cough, Asthma, Ete. MATHIELS SYRUP is 8 Sovereign tonic combining curative properties cf i gthening virtues of COD LIVER OIL, © Stren Colds, when neglected or badly treated give rise to consequences of sucha grave character that you shonld ~ not risk using inferior Preparations. MATHIEU'S SYRUP fs the only genuine remedy whose putation has. caused to crop up many imitations of Joubtiny ale ON SALE EVERYWHERE : | that the people isolated should be { properly looked after; that there was | of better school equipment, if the | | best work was to be done by the] | pupils, Lack of material caused | | waste of valuable time, Miss Hoppin | | also referred to the need of a special | { teacher for backward pupils. It was | { also pointed out that the average aty) | tendance in Kingston, was forty-two { pupils per class, the largest of any | city of its size in Ontario. BEven { When a new school was built, the average would be thirty-nine, the largest average attendance in On- tario, excepting Toronto and N iagara | Falls. Much better work could be | done if the average attendance was smaller, Miss Hoppin spoke of the increase In salary, asked for by the teachers, {ond felt that the amount asked for | as really necessary to enable a | teacher to meet her expenses and de | | her best work. | Mrs Coleman spoke, thanking Miss { Hopi for her paper, Dr. H. E. Day also gave an address, dealing with the diseases of children, and emphasized a number of most important things, Among the chiet points he stated that children must be healthy in order to study; there was urgent need of isolating people; that a special teacher was needed for defective children; that isolation was necessary for many diseases, but great need of a man who could give hig entire time to looking after the health of the community, to see to proper isolation, ete. Mayor Nickle was also present, and delivered an address, After the meet- ing adjourned the members took tea together, The meeting as voted one of the most enjoyable held by the association" 4 PRIZEWINNERS ANNOUNCED For Event Held Under Auspices of Kingston General Hospital. It was announced on Saturday that about $500 had been collected at the event held a week ago in the City Hall under the auspices of the Kings- ton 'General Hospital Ladies' Auxili- ary, and that about $435 would be realized, when all the expenses were paid, and this is most gratifying. The following were the prize-winners: Bridge, Miss Bessie Smythe and Mr. Peterson; special prize, Miss Vol- Don't Let Cold | Weather Keep ~~ You From Sutherland's Big Money Saving Shoe ~~. Sale COME IN TONIGHT .H. Sutherland & Bro ume; euchre, Mrs. Pyke and Leighton | Guess; five hundred, Mrs. James | Crawford and Andrew McMahon. INJURED IN AIR RAID. And Has Just Undergone Operation For Shraponel Wound. : Mrs. M. F. Considine, 258 Qtieen street, underwent an operation at the General Hospital on Ssturday morn- ing for a shrapnel wound which she sustained in an air raid in England during the summer of 1917. Since that date she had been an invalid as a result of her nds. The opera- tion was performed by Col. D., E. Mundell. Mrs. Considine is one of the few Canadian civilians entitled to wear the gold wound stripe for wounds sustained overseas. Military Notes. © The council of the Ontario Rifle Association will mést in Toronto on Jan. 26th, and Major W. J. McManus wilh represent the Kingston Military fon. = férred from Ottawa to Kingston, and moved here with his family. They i reside on St. Lawrence avenue. | ¥ tse sm ----" . eipal Taylor gave an address in e last night in the interests of the campaign of the Inter-Church Forward Movement. Major-General Victor Willlams, .0.C., of military district No. 3. who in the capital on official business, | was oite of the guests of Bonor af night's entertainment of thoy & Company, Mr. Lewis applied him- | self diligently to the mastering of | details of tie hardware business and | on retiring from that firm decided | to enter business on his own account. | This he did in 1887, but he remained in the smaller city only ome year. Realizing the advantages of the larger and rapidly growing centre, he moved his business to Montreal in 1888, 'where the firm of Lewis Brothers was begun, his brother, James Graham Lewis, the present vice-president of the company, being associated with him. For several years the firm was known as Lewis Brothers and later was formed into the present company of Lewis Broth. ers, Limited. Of this company F., 0. Lewis became president, and holds the position to-day. While the vanhied interests of Mr. Lewis, call him away, he still looks uron and calls Montreal his home. Last summer he spent sev- eral moemths in Montreal is always greatly interested in his progress ee! his ini- tial venture, the firm of Lewis rothers, Limited, and still takes a keen interest in the business of his early choice. It was in the year 1907, that Mr. Lewis transferred his activitiés very largely to Canadian Vickers, Limited. But other industrial and financial concerns claimed his services, and for many years he has been a direc- tor of Montreal Cottons, Limited, and follows the fortunes of the in- dustry very closely. He is also a director of the Merchants Bank of Canada, * Club life has found in Sir Freder- ic an enthusiastic member, and he is | connected with the Mount Royal, St. James, Forest and Stream, Canadian, Montreal Hunt, Royal Montreal Golf, Royal St. Lawrence Yacht, of Mont- real; while outside of that city he is a member of the Rideau Club of Ottawa, and also the Wellington Club of London, England. It was the experience of Sir Frederic to be aboard the, ill-fated Lusitania when it was torpedoed off the Irish coast on May 1st, 1915. He had the good fortune to be rescued, but ofily after an exciting and trying experionce. N : TOWNSHIP COUNCIL. ' Hinchembrooke. Picadilly, Jan. 12. --Council met and subscribed to declaration and qualification of office gs follows : R. A. Hamilton, reeve; A. C. Rey- uolds, J. F. Quinn, L. B. Cronk and C. C. Babcock, councillors. Minutes of last, meeting adopted. Moved, Babcock---Reynolds, that D. Leslie be appointed assessor af $75, and J. P. Howes and L. B, Bate- man auditors at $6.00 each and Thos. Howes member of Board of Health. Bylaw passed confirming said ap- pointments. Moved, Babcock---Rey- nolds that bill of EB. Hayes be laid over. Communication of A. R. Wil- liams filed. The road superintend- ent instructed to cover road across the I. marsh with gravel and put stone on road at Garret creek and across marsh at F. Moore's. Moved, Cronk---Babeock stone be was sombily at Versailles 'Bax Commission at the recvived 734 votes. - - f Local Notes and Items of General 8 Interest. 8 The first regular meeting of the |}! Monday evening. i Miss Edna Parkin, Division street; | who is in the General Hospital, is | improving slowly. SI § Ralph Sills, Napanee, underwent |} an operfition for 'appendicitis at | Kingston General Hospital. i One drunk.was-the only offender !§ at the police court on Saturday, and | he was fined $10 and costs. | Arthur Kirkpatriek, of Bedford |} township, on Friday, was fined $50 |} and costs by Judge Lavell on & charge | of assault, The charge against him h of attempting to set fira to a hay [J stack was dismissed, | Mrs. D. Stafford's barn and con- | Place Your Order Wit Why place your order out of town when you can get the finest DUBLIN GINGER ALE, ENGLISH GINGER BEER, CLUB SODA, at ~~ All brands of Domestic and Imported Cigars and Cigasettes. Thompson Bottling Works Wholesale Tobe mists, Phone 202 Princess St. : Geo, Thompson, ay tents at Tichborne caught fire my- | steriously on Thursday, and was burned to the ground, Being very neighbors turned out and helped Mr. | Robinson to save his home. i Lieut.-Col, F. L. Cartwright, of the | Strathcona Horse, has been decorated | with the order of commander of the | British Empire for services in Si-| beria. He is the fifth son of the late | and - Lady | @artwright. | The charge is made at Alexandria |, Bay, N.Y. that certain doctors in | Ontario have been issuing faise corti ficates of vaccination. Lists have | been sent to each port of entry, and | any certificate signed by any one of | these doctors is refused by United | States immigrant inspectors, i "SP OF FIGS" 15 | LATE FOR CHL Look at Tongue: Remove Poisons! From Stomach, Liver and HUNDRED TO USE THEM? ARE AN INVESTMENT--THEY PAY FROM ONE TO TWO HUNDRED PER CENT. DOES IT PAY er ------ WILLARD'S CHOCOLATES Fresh Stock at SARGENT'S DRUG STORE Telephone 41 Cor. Princess and Montreal Sts, dsimassimsimion. Accept "California" Syrup of Figs | TOYES BREAD UTI \ and | dent of France by the national as Saturday. Ho | only--Ilook for the name California | | on the package, then you are sure. your child is having the best and fT harmless laxative or physic for | | the little stomach, liver and bowels. | | Children love its delicious fruity | | taste. Full directions for child's dose | { on each bottle. Give it without fear. | Mother! You must say "Califor- | nia." | ON Itt Nt, | AWAY WITH THOSE ACHES AND PAINS | | Keep Sloan's Liniment Handy to Put | the "Feel Good' Back Into i | : ! LL it"needs is just one trial --) a little applied without rubbing, | for it pemetrates--to convince | lumbago, neuralgia. pains, aches and | | strains, the after-effects of expo- | sure. | ! promptly, cleanly, without effort, eco- | | nomically. You become' a regular | | user of Sloan's Liniment, adding | | thousands of other friends the world | j over, who keep it handy. Made in| | Canada. 'Three sizes at all drug- | the System. you of its merit in relieving sciatiea, | The congestion is scattered, | | Your enthusiasm to that of its many | | #fsts--35c., T0c., $1.40. | SERB eR heh: FSC I Fre 3ol0 ho Biler¥i Ky NENEROEGENNODERR NOW OPEN i | The Marrison Stulio is Again ! . Ready for Business 1 | ortraiture, Commercial Work | } Copying, Enlargmg, Etc. | Pione 1318w. - 92 Princess Street | Anything --Any Time----Any Place | BANUENRENEENEEER i I g is il al » + (Ess THREADS" (Hrhedert Rar Act wed ) 3} ) ; "Sell Us Your Old Piano" Or Exchange it for a Lindsay Player-Piano or a Columbia Grafonola Why keep the old "silent" piano any longer? We want it; sell it to us. We will pay cash for it, or allow the same amount in an exchange transaction. A LINDSAY Player-Piano or a Co- lumbia Grafonola in its stead, in your home, would mean count- less new pleasures to the family circle. Anyone, even a child, can play the Lindsay Player-Piano and the Grafonola would bring you "All the Music of All the World." Mail the coupon to us at once. It will receive our immediate attention, a eS WEY TTY TTT TTT CC. WL LIN DOSAY Lin ITE OD 121 PRINCESS ST REET, KINGSTON. TTT nay COUPON. C. W. Lindsay: Gentlemen: I have a Plano which I would like to dispose of. Send your representative to see it: - ~ Name ,.......... Address vera i tEs rss Enenuna City or Town ...... P.8.--Requests from out-of-town « equally welcome, ¢ h, A CLASSIFIED AD will find a buy- A HULL {er for your car--4f your offer is at- of Perth | tractive, pective Buyer experts. Saba Sa th Give the detalls a pros-