| THURSDAY, eee "SEEDS VEGETABLE AND FLOWER SEHDS « Sow your early Seeds it your house now. They will bave a good start, and you can trans- plant them to your garden when the warm weather ar- rives, . Have You a Few Feet of Wasted Ground? If you have make it a bright t by sowing a few of our op i I Holynock- Seeds. They «grow any place, and will deeco- | rate your backyard, fence cor- ners and lawn. . Seeds STI Drug Store MARKET SQVARE KINGSTON MAY 13, 1920. x THE MARRISON STUDIO : Tere is but ONE.TIM to picture the children--A THEY ARE TO-DAY. S » 1318w. 92 Princess St. THE DAI LY BRITISH WHIG WAY ACurefor Pimples "Youdon'tnsed mercury, potash or any other strong mineral to cure pimples caused by poor blood. Take Extract of Roots-- druggist calls it "Mother Scigel's Curative Syrap--and your skin will clear up as fresh as a baby's. It willsweeten your stomachand 4 regulate your bowels." Getthé genume. 50c.and $1.00 Bottl AA AR AR "mh .-3hip. CARPENTERING Estimates Given. O. Aykroyd & Son ters and Builders 21 Main street. - Phone 1670 DID YOU EVER TRY Wagstafl's Ginger Marmalade, Wa M's Pineapple Marmalade, Wagstaff®s Bramble Jellly. We also have a full line of other reliable makes of Marma- lades, Jam and Jellies for sale at: : Bon Marche Grocery Cor. King and Karl Streets. License Neo. 5-37149 Phone 1544 I Cement | et 140 Factory Makers of sdollow Damp- Proof Cement Blocks, Bricks, 8ills, Lintles, and Drain Tile, also Grave Vaults. And all kinds of Ornamental Cement work. Factory: cor. of Charles and 3 Patrick atreets. PHONE 730W. Mgr., H. F. NORMAN eHave Clark's Vegetable Soup ribrrtors for Red Ruse Tea~--uie oe uood Tea : W. R. McRae & Co. GOLDEN LYON J taanea Wn R.K42 ---- mn a nan It pays to save " Your Newspapers, Magazines and scrap material--we are paying good prices. YOU MAY NEED ipes for water or fencing or a oh for next summer. Call on us. I. Cohen & Co. Phone 836.837. 207-275 ONTARIO STREET { 1 | | i ' i | G. Hunter Ogilvie for Excelsior Life Insurance i Company Representing: RYAN, GRIER AND HASTINGS, _Merabers of the Montreal Stock ats, Exchange, \ Insurance and General Broker. 281 King Street DR. A. W. WINNETT i { | | | | } | 368) & 1087 i # $15.00 $15.00 Stewart Phonograph WILL SURPRISE YOU. COME IN AND HEAR IT. A. G. Williams 171 WELLINGTON STREET PHONE 40 It Pays to Buy four Groceries And Meat R. J. Shales & Son 71 PINE ST. Phone 1583 and Get Prompt Delivery Kingston and Vicinity & Call in and See Them. ated by the board until the finance We guarantee to save you from committee has reported that there 10 to 20 per cent. on boys' and | are funds availajle." mens' ready-to-wear clothing. Spec- | lal men's blue serge suits, $35, are of the best material and workman- | ok revost. clothing. Louse, Brock. To Go to China, Dr. R. M. Anderson, Deseronto, has. Been... ted. board of the Methodist church for service in China, in connection with his profession and he and Mrs. And- ; erson expect to leave Canada about September 1st. Mrs. Anderson is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Cole, Deseronto. street. Has Resigned Office, James McLeod, wno for a number | of years has been secretary-treasurer lof Almonte Board of Education, has | | tendered his resignation which was | | accepted and will come into effect in | ! July, I Major Palmer Leaving, } Major Roundell Palmer, late of | tife Royal Engineers, acting as ma- nager of the Brockville Public Utili- of technical education, will be pres- ties is leaving to become manager of ent at the meeting of the Board of | the Hydro Electric Commission at Education, to-night, to confer" with | Alexandria, where a hydro-electric {the trustees regardihg technical | installation is being made on the St. | education. | Lawrence system. Major Palmer will 3 ------------ | have charge of the installation of Gets Vote of $4,000. { the hydro plant mat Alexandria. The Cape Vincent, N. Y., agricul- | tural fair association has been grant- Big Mining Deal. {ed $4,000 by the state board to be S. W. Wellington, Madoc, has pur- | used .in paying prizes in addition to |-chased for a fancy price, all the min- | the amount the fair association de- ing rights and interests of the Inter- | votes to the same purpose. national Fluorite Mining Company ---- known as the Cowan Mine, on Lot | To Talk to Trustees. Col. L. W. Gill, dominion director. | ' Are After the Star, | "Bill" Box, well-known hockey | | player is receiving congratulations | two miles south of Madoc Village | on the successful close of his studies | and close to the G.T.R. Mr, Willing- in dentistry. It is not known where | ton considers that this is a very va- he will locate as .several hockey | Iluable property and will begin fur- clubs outside Toronto are anxious to | ther development at once. get him. | To Reoganize the Band, Another Newspaper, At Newboro, several members of Announcement is nade Oshawa Telegram, a new paper, will | that the | th following officers were elected: Hon. President, Dr. Preston; Hon. Vice- President, George Bawden; President George Warren; Vite-President, James Knellar; Secretary, J. V. Mo- riarty; Treasurér, J. H. Lyons. Gor- don Pierce was chpsen teacher. 13th. The paper will be published | i by Messrs. Alger, formerly of Tweed, | {and well known in journalistic circles, Laying in Coal. | During the past few days the local !coal dealers have been very busy signing up citizens for their coal sup- ply for next winter. At the present | time the set price is $14.50 a ton. The dealers have no idg¢a yet what | the price will be in June. Dr. Barclay Left all to Wife. The will of the late Rev. Dr. Jas. Barclay, who died recently in Scot- land, was probated in the Tutelle Di- vision of the Superior Court, the late clergyman being domiciled in Mont- real at the time of his death. The Liquor Sent to Toronto. | will in holograph form, was made in | | 1 | The twenty-five cases of liguor sent Ly...the mission. 10 ip'the 12th eoncession of Hunting- | don township. Thisproperty is about © one-time brass band met for the | purpose of re-organization and dis- | make its initial appearance on May | cussing plans for a future band. The ! here from Montreal in care of a cap- | | tain on a vessel, who disclaimed the { ownership of the "wet goods," and | for which Magistrate Farrell gave an | order for confiscation, were forward- Edinburgh on March 3rd, 1917, and reads as follows: --"I hereby be- queath all that I possess to my be- loved wife, and I appoint her sole executrix for my' estate." 'ed to Toronto on Wednesday after- noon to the provincial license board | by Inspector McCammon. Co-operative Mill Incorporated. With a capital of $40,000, the Rideau - Co-operative Milling Co., Limited, has been incorporated at dant, Toronto, with head office at Smith's Miss Lily Wheeler, Glenora, who | Falls. The provisional directors are: has been bookkeeper for the past | James E. Edmunds and George R. eight years for the J. C. Wilson Com- | Condie, both of Montague; William | Miss Wheeler Presented With * Pen- COAL COAL "For satisfaction and prompt delivery. A. Chadwick & Son New location: Corner Ontario and West Sts. Phone 67. pany, first at Glenora and the last | L. Code, Elmsley North; John D. few years at Belleville, has retired | Ferguson, Smith's Falls, and John from her position and is returning | Wiloughby, Wolford township. The to her home at Glenora. Prior to her | charter gives wide scope to the | departure the office staff of the Wil- | operations of the company. son Company presented her with a pendant and an address. To Reside in South America. ---- Ralph and Harry Mifflin left Clay- Increase it to $100, ton, N.Y. to begin their trip to th At the last meeting of the Board | America, where they will be 'em- of Education, Trustee Anglin gave ployed in Brjtish Guiana. They were the following notice of motion : "At |accompanied by their mother as far | the next meeting I will move that as Ithaca. They will go to Phila- the amount of $50 in clause 25 on |delphia, Pa., then to New York, and page 10 of the by-laws be changed | will arrive in Georgetown, B.G., in to $100." It will come up to-night. twelve days, and will proceed seventy- The clause in question read : *'No|five miles inland to the plant of the amount above $50 shall be apropri- | Emerra Boxite Company, myself regarding the same case? It Fresh SPRING VEGETABLES CHOICE GROCERIES Prompt delivery. FRIENDSHIP'S is also rather curious that, if the law {had been fully kept, it should still {be necessary for '"'the head of the | family about whom complaint was | made," to come to the M:-H. O. and | explain that "the instructtons had not been understood." . Again, "The doctor attending the May t5jugston avenue, Kingston, jcasp informed him that he was not been away on a business trip, and {certain if the child had scarlet fever | ETTFRS 10 HE EDITOR | Wants Board of Health to Investigate. Ralph was, therefore, unable to give any attention. to the report of the meet- ing of the Board of Health, publish- |or not, BUT AGREED TO REPORT {IT AS SUCH." Agreed with whom, when and why? _Was it after com- |plaint had been made? This point i 84 In Your issue of Friday, until is quite important, and should not be after I had seen it, 2 b There are a few sentences in that {le tino a by 1 i report which call for some notice. In | Once more, * There had been no fa. Moving Troubles For greasy floors and foul odors, use Solution of Lysol. For disinfecting'in case of contagious diseases, burn Formaldehyde Candles. For insects, hed bugs, ete., use: --~Sulphur Candles. --Keating's Powder: --Nyal's Roach Powder. --Sure-Kill Bed Bug Poison. Full information at: Prouse's Drug Store Corner Princess and Clergy Phone 82. DENTAL SURGEON » ~ Begs to announce that he "has resumed his practice, corner Johnsou and Welling: ton Streets, Kingston. Tale. phone 36%. -- | | | | | ---- ES, our pure food, bread has a worthy purpose. It brings health and strength and a meal-time satisfaction to the folks who partake of it regularly. One * slice calls for a loaf, one loaf forms the habit | calling the attention of the board to | YOritisni shown in permitting an- | my letter of last Tuesday. "Dr. Wil- | other member of the family going to | liamson showed that the provisions | school. The case was a very unusual | of the health law had been fully car- | one" I sincerely hope so. But it ried out after the case had been re-iDas been the striking frequency of ported to him." Now, the-ease was |'0€se "unusual cases, ; {reported to him on Thursday, April | with alarming prevalence of infecti- { 29th. Did the good doctor inform |°US diseases in the city at the present the board that as late as Monday, time, that'has given many, besides May 3rd, he received at least two | myselt, serious apprehensions, 2a complaints from perso | thrust upon our attention the unfa r- y 35 other than | ness of the existing method of ad- | ministering the law. Might I ask the 00d doctor if, when the same doctor | was attending the same patient at Christmas time for measles and the { same other member of the same fam- {ily was allowed to keep on going to | the same school, the ¢ase was then ! also "a very unusual one?" The remarks of the M. H. O. anent {the "scaling period" are quite inter- esting, not alone because this is not "PALE ANAEMIC CHILDREN NEED VINOL It Makes Puny, Thin, Ail- | a question of obedience to established | law; but also by reason of the fact that patients are released from isola- ing Children Strong, Robust and Rosy tion on Dr. Williamson's say-so, and h the test there is the test of "peeling." 2 This man blows hot and cold in the same. breath; which, again, is the simple nud the whole matter, and the ground &f the original complaint. I am surprised that the board should, without investigation, lightly thrust aside my complaint as being without ground. Especially as an investigation was the one thing hoped for when writing my first let- ter, f i i it Sincerely yours, ~--CHARLES McDONALD, ---------------- What's the Plural of Scissors? * "Are you fond of the gladiolus?" asks the Boston Globe's gard: er, thus getting around the old op of whether the plural of gladiolus is i £gE3 E | 3 { : : i I § : : F : | HH i | 1 E i Eg : i g gardener further along in his brief essay refers to the "common gladi- oli," thus proving that it is imposei- 5 iE £ i £ & i lk i i i and simple responsibilities. it : 2 § { sik g 2 3 F : i i i Cleveland, Ohio, is said to have a larger Czech ulation th city of Caecho-Slovakia, th tion of Prague. : } E 3 { iE : E id i 4 iH if i ' combined | | a question of medical opinion but is! gladioll or gladioluses. However, the | ble to always escape certain plain Mifflin will be "employed in the of- | tices, ahd his brother, Harry, will be | a machinist. { {| Sudden Passing of Mrs. T. Bixby. { Mr. and Mrs. Raison, Harlem, and family -were---shacked=--on=receiving the news on April 23rd of the death of their daughter, Mrs. Thomas Bix- | by (nee Miss Falitha Raison). The deeacsed was united ih marriage ten | | years ago to Mr. Bixby, Gloversville, | N.Y., where they spent years of happiness. The deceased leaves to mourn a husband and infant son, her parents, three brothers and two | sisters, George, Harlem; J Leaf; Arthur, Harlem; Mrs. John Pattamore and Mrs. William Fargo, | | Soperton, i Remanded for Trial, | Josie Var Wart, aged seventeen | years, was remanded at Belleville to | jail until May i$, after being tried | summar-ly on twe charees to which | { vanWart pliaded guiliy. lle admi* { ted breaxiygz into and entering on | May 7th the office of the Point Anne | Quarries, Ltd., and stealing a doub!'? barrelled shot gun and twe packages | {of shells. He also admitted having | lon the same rate broken into tre! store of Mrs. Esther Palmar at Point | {Anne with intent tg steal, and hav- ing stolen a quantity of cigarettes | | and money. i | | Start Chain Factories. The Appleford Milk Products, Li-| mited, which has secured a Federal charter with a capital of $1,000,000, | will control a chain of powdered milk * factories throughout Canada, the new factory at Gananoque being included in the merger. U. L. Apple- | ford, St. Thomas, is manager of the | venture in which Ottawa, Brantford | and Kingston capital 1s interested. ! The cold storage docks at Trenton | have been purchased for a factory and a new factory at St. Thomas will be rushed to completion. Similar fac- tories are projected or under con- struction at Paris, Gananoque, Sy- denham and other places. Their Golden Wedding. At Glen Ewen, Sask., on April 21st Mr. and Mrs. R. M, Arnold, formerly | of Leeds county, . celebrated their | golden wedding day. . Mr. and Mrs. Arnold were married in Athens in 1879 and have resided in the west since 1900 when Mr. Ar- nold abandoned the trade of carpen- try and purchased land at Easby, N. | Levi, Oak || D. Later he located on the interna- { tional boundary a short distance | | south of Glen Ewen. Since retiring | | from the farm he has been engaged | in the fuel and coal business, He was born in 1844 in the township of | Kitley. Mrs. Arnold was formerly | Miss Violetta Gray, of Addison. . Died at Vancouver. John Pinkerton, who died in Van- couver recently, was one of the last of the real pioneers of the west. Born in Westport, he crossed the Rockies via the Yellowhead Pass as early as | 1862. Mr. Pinkerton spent approxi- | mately fifty-five years of his life ac- tually engaged in mining in the Bark- erville district, either managing or | running claims of his own. In 1875 | Mr. Pinkerton returned to his native | town and married Miss Margaret | Blair, who predeceased him forty- | one years ago. He had one son, | George, drowned in 1907. Two daugh- ters survive, Mrs. D. H. Elliott, Van--| couver, and Mrs. P. Carson, Rossland. THE NEW ALLEN THEATRE The Steel Frame Work About to Be Commenced. In the course of a couple of days the work of erecting the steel frame work for the new Allen theatre on Princess street will be commenced. | All the steel has arrived and is now being unloaded at the Grand Trunk freight yards. The steel wepk will take considerable time to get in place. When the building is complet- ed it will be fire proof in every res- pect. The buildings on Princess street, which were formerly occupied by .Pearsall's millinery and the Singer Sewing Machine company, is no more. For some days workmen have been engaged in tearing it down. The site where the building stood will be used for the lobby of the new thea- tre. The lobby will run back for a distance of 107 feet. In this lobby will be located sitting rooms and smoking rooms. There will be two ticket offices, The main auditorium will be 142 feet in length and will seat 1,200 people. The ceiling will be very pret- | ty, and made of fancy plaster. The | lien company intends to hifroduce | ne of the most up-to-date orchestras as well as a pipe organ. It labor conditions do not hinder the contractors, it is expected that the theatre will be open for October 1st. ---------- Too Short, "How did you enjoy the sermon?" | "Too short." { "That 80? I never heard anyone complain that a sermon was too brief before." "Well, you see, it was this way; I'd | hardly dropped asleep = before the | thing was over." His Weak End. Serala-- am just here for a week end. - PAGE FIVE _ PEWS A job lot of Pews from a local church-- enough to seat a small hall or country. church--will be sold cheaply for quick re- . moval. -- im thse S. ANGLIN & CO. Woodworking Fautury and Lumber Yards, Bay and Wellington Streéts. KINGSTON. Ont. Office Phone 66. Factory Phone 14.5. = arm cp e $A re { i arr MOTHER'S DAY, 2nd SUNDAY IN MAY Make this day her happiest! Each year impresses deeper what we owe to mother. You will want her to know of this profeund ree spect and devotion. No de gift cam q! iy But flowers, God's gift, will impress In a bea Your heart means to say. SAY IT WITH FLOWER® Member of the F.T.D.A. A. D. HOLTON 280 PRINCESS STREET Phone, 661; e the homor due her, utiful way ju=+ what ~W Res., 2086W. \ Owing to the shortage of Bran and Shorts there has been a great demand for mixed feeds. To supply , this we have secured large quantities of a high grade general purpose feed with which we are in a position to offer a fair proportion of Bran and Shorts. W. F. McBroom. 42-44 Princess St SMART FOOTWEAR FOR LITTLE WOMEN The growing girl is just as particular about her shoes as the grown-up, ahd she has a ri ght to be. We make a specialty of co rrect Footwear for the Junior Miss. Our models are distinctly appropriate for young girls, combining style and beanty with absolute comfort. Ana we give special atten tion to correct fitting of grow. J. H Sutherland & Bro. THE HOME OF'GOOD SHOES 'SOWARDS COAL CO. Until further advised, and subject to change without notice, the price for COAL will be: ECE ei reidsl STOVE $ Pr crrrereenseaan 14.50 per ton cereeseiei.... 14.50 per ton NUT: srrensdasianasd so 13.00 per ton PEA 25c¢. extra for carrying. PHONE 155. ALL SALES FOR CASH. Phone orders €.0.D. | Geraldine--Is your head troubling you? ------ A woman who isn't curious is a curiosity. vo We are nearing the Running Shoe Season We have everything that you need in the way of RUNNING SHOES, Women's--Men's--Boys'--Misses' Children's from ............ $1.00up H. JENNINGS KING STREET 7