Daily British Whig (1850), 4 Sep 1920, p. 5

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HH At Austin's You can get Fresh Chocolates . PAGE & SHAW'S AUYLER'S and NEILSON'S "Take a KODAK with you." Austin's Drug Store er King and Market Square Kingston - Phone 230 % » sprees a it] THE MARRISON STUDIO There is but ONE TIME | to picture the ¢hildren--AS THEY ARE TO-DAY. Phone 1818w. We We Have In Stock | Just Arrived Campbell's Tomas Soup Campbell's Vegetable Soup Clark's Tomato Soup Clark's Vegetable Soup Distribvtors for Red Ruse Tea--the | Good Ten W. R. McRae & Co. GOLDEN LION License No. 6-543. 3 92 Princess at ! | "HEALTH WITHOUT DRUGS" Drs. Robert 'and Edna Ashcroft are | now located at No. 204 King street, between. Earl and Gore. Telephone 447 for appointment. | BUILDING ? { REPAIRS OR ALTERATIONS? Estimates given by O. Aykroyd & Son i 21 Main Street. Phone 170. ELLIOTT & WILLIAMSON AUTOMOBILE REPAIRING Ford Cars a specialty. 378 BROCK STREET Phones: Shop 1039. Res. 1537), DR. NASH DENTIST 188 Princess Street. 'Phone 735 -WE TAKE X-RAY FICTURES of troublesome teeth Dormoform Gps aammistered for exe traction. / Safe and painless. ____ OFFICE HOURS: 9-6 | SEASONABLE FRUITS CHOICE VEGETABLES Always fresh and prices right. --at-- FRIENDSHIPS | 210 Division St. Phone 345, It Pays to Bay Your Groceries And Meat R. J. Shales & Son 71 PINE ST. Phone 1583 and Get Prompt Delivery mm PATTON'S DYE WORKS (Late Montgomery's) Kingston's Only Dyer. Dry Cleaning a Specialty. Phone 214. 849 Princess St. ~ FOR SALE An excellent farm of 150 acres, good building, splendid land. Another farm of 100 acres, seven miles from the city -- $4,600. W. H. GODWIN & SON Real Estate and Insurance 80 Brock St. Phone 424 I from our Coal are satisfactory. A. Chadwick & Son New location: Corner Ontario and West Sts. Phone 67, SOAP Dow't ruin your complexion with poor Soap--~GET THE BEST. We have fit, ond at prices that are reasonable for all HOW 4BOUT THESE ? ah 10¢., 3 for 28e¢. ...15e., 2 for 25e, | «.10e,, 3 for 25e¢. # --r lie Ne ts Om ri seers , We Invite You Rail us rash you wish to our old Mattress with & or Jave it renovated sclentific me- : thods mp! oq workman Which guaramtees satisfaotion concern PE call §0iw and our fixe a Ra mall ede FEY "COMFY DOWN" SILK FLOSS MATTRESS You would like It KingstonMattressCo. PHONE Gow. DID YOU EVER TRY Wagsrafi's Ginger Marmalade, WwW afl's Pineapple Marmalade, Wagstafi's Bramble Jelly. We also have . full line of other reliable makes of Marma- lades, Jam and Jellies for sale at: Bon Marche Grocery Cer. King and Karl Streets. License New S-27140 Phone Lb Kingston Cement Prcaucts Factory Makers of Hollow Dupe. Proof Cement Blocks, Bricks, Sills, Lintles, and Drain Tile, also Grave Vaults. Agd""all kinds of Ornamental Cenrent work. Factory: cor. of Charles and Patrick streets. PHONE 730W. Mgr., H. F. NORMAN It pays to save « Your Néwspapers, Magazines and scrap material---we are paying good prices. YOU MAY NEED Pipes for water or fencing or a tent for next summer. Call on us L Cohen & Co Phone 836.837. 267-275 ONTARIO STREET A Nr rr { Watches and Clocks Repaired © emebye-- G. W. LYONS are guaranteed for one year. phone and your ore bo promptly attended Note change of address: ° 'Phon. 1866. 267 Princess St. HERE'S only one way of finding out how de- sirable our pastry is. ke a cake--try a pie and you'll say "This is fine." When you're fed by our bread you will say "This for mine." All of the products of our bakery enjoy a first- class-family-reputation. CTE UY - YL A HOME MADE READ & PASTR ss THE DAILY BRITISH. WHIG & [Kingston and Vicinity . Send a Trophy. The government has sent a Ger- man trench mortar to Maynard as a trophy of the great war. ' { Landed Fish. ] While trawling in the vicinity of {American Island on Tuesday, R. Mec- [Nabb and William Stewart landed a {maskinonge which tipped the scales at twenty-ona pounds. Pried Off Window Bars. | Burglars entered Jamieson's dry- |goods store at Smith's Falls by pry- ing off bars protecting a rear win- !dow and escaped with several hun- {dred dollars worth of goods. Boy's Fall 'Suits. For fit, style and wear there are no | better suits than the range we are |sLowing; colors, greys, browns and |navy serges. All sizes, price from [$10 00 to $15.00. Prevost Clothing | House, Brock street. and, Captain Janney, the Ottawa avi- ator, who has been in Kingston re- | cently landed at Archibald Staley's, | Wolfe Island, on one of his flights, and took Wilfred Staley up with him |for a pleasure trip. This is=probably {the first time an aeroplane has land- jed on Wolfe Island. y | Landed on Wolfe I { | Will Be 'Much Missed. Expressions of regret are heard at {the removal from Toledo of Rev. | Father Hanley, parish priest there |for seventeen years. He has been {known to everybddy-as a thorough igentleman, and has a cheery word | for all people. He will be consequent- {1x much missed. | Among the Graduates. | Miss Alma J. Ferguson, daughter jot the late Robert Ferguson, Brock- iJle, and Miss Madeline M. Wend- i g, daughter of' Mr. and Mrs. M. Wendling, were among the graduatas of the St. Lawrence State Hospital, Ogdensburg, presented with diplo- mas on Wednesday evening. Will Build New Bungalow. C. W. Price, New York, spent a month at Wolfe Lake. Before re- turning Mr. Price completed the pur- chase of three acres of land on the lake front on which he will have erected a large bungalow, the con- tract for which has been awarded |to Mr. McIntyre, Westport. Death of Two Children. To suffer the loss through death {of their two children within a week {is the sad experience that has be- {fallen Mr. and. Mrs. John Massey, of | Lyn, their youngest daughter, Lila, aged two years, having passed away Eranliparonts, Mr. and Mrs. Seymour Cromwell, Lyn, just three days fol- lowing the interment of her sister, Emma, aged five and a half, who was buried Sunday. Both children were victims of summer complaint. eateries Married and Away. emnized at Remptiilie on Sept. 1st when Flossie, datighter of Mrs. Har- riet Tackaberry, became' the brida of J. McGuire, Spencerville. After a buffet luncheon Mr. and Mrs. Me- Guire left on a mdtor tour through the Adirondacks to Boston. Tendered Presents. James Thompson and family, Al- gonquin, who are taking up residence in Brodkville, were given a farewell when a pleasant social time was spent by a large number of friends. Mrs. Thompson was presented with a purse by the Women's Institute, and Miss Inez was presented by her Sun- day school classmates of Willing Workers, with an address and hand- some bible. Home From Trip. Frank Quinn, messenger at the Bank of Toronto, and Mrs. Quinn, hive returned from a vacation spent in Rochester, Buffalo, and Fort Erie. At Rochester they hdd the pleasure of meeting Frank McCue, the former well-known hotelkeeper of this city, and at Buffalo they met an old King- stonian, W. P. Kilcaulay, a former member of the Whig staff. Was Running Bar Room. License Inspector McGragor, Smith's Falls, with the assistance of special license department operatives, raided the premises of one, Cohen, located near the Frost & Wood plant and seized several suitcases filled with liquor. Cohen is alleged to have been selling liquor and to have had a bar fitted out, where Rickey was dispensed at 50c per glas Wedding at Millhaven. The marriage took place at the Conway Methodist parsonage, on September 1st, of Hilda Mabel, daughter of Frank Collins, Millhaven, and Arthur Sams, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Sams, of the same place. Rev. Howard Seymour performed the ceremony. Guests present at the wedding included Mrs. Charles Col- lins, Millhaven, and Mrs. James Oli- ver, Napanee. Grateful to J. M. Campbell. Gananoque Journal: Gananoqueans shou}d feel exceedingly grateful to J. M. Campbell for affording them an dpportunity to emjoy an occasional | Wednesday at the residence of her A pretty house wedding was sol- | of J. Calvin McGuire, youngest son | Through his purchase of the Str. St. | Lawrence, and change to Canadian registry, an opportunity has been af- | forded for many an .outing, which | otherwise could not have been en-! Joyed. en en nm------------ Rushing Work at Stadium. The work of completing the new stadium at the upper campus is be- ing rushed. Several of the walls have been raised and the framework for the grandstand has been com- pleted. The men are working .over- time at night now and everything possible id being done to have the grounds in good shape for the au-: tumn games. i 4 Will Visit China. Rev. Dr. 8S. D. Chown, general superintendent of the Methodist church, will sail for China at the end of this month, Dr. Chown's visit id in response to the urgent in- vitation of the Canadian Methodist conference in West China for an of- LUMBER We have a shed accommodation for a half million feet of lumber. This enables us to keep in nice, dry condition, a wide range of sizes in all the usual rade, S. ANGLIN & CO. Woodworking Factory and Lumber Yards, Bay ------ Streets, KINGSTON, Ont. Office ; oo Office Phone -. Fatal, 3 wo ~~ ficial visit of inspection by the chief officer of the general conference, who is also chairman of the board of mis- sions. | Return to St: Lawrence. Word has been received here that the Canada Steamship Lines will commence receiving at Halifax on September 4th, eight-of its former lake and river steamers, which have been in service in the United King- dom since early in the war. The vessels will be put back in the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence river trade. Four of the steamers have already: been mentioned and are well-known in local marine circles. They are the Turret Cape; Turret Town, Tur- ret Prince and Turbina. " A Disastrous Fire. Zion's Hill wag visited by a disas- trous fire on Wednesday as a result of which the fine dwelling of William James Tufts, son of Councillor W. B.- Tufts, Thurlow, his barns, gon house and drive shed were compfeiely swept away, and scarcely a vestige of them remains. From the drive shed was rescued an automobile and wag- ons. The contents of the barn, in- cluding forty tons of hay, 525 bush- els of oats newly threshed and other grain were lost. Twenty-one pigs were burned to death and all the farm machinery in the drive shed was destroyed. There was a large pile of wood also. destroyed. The loss will aggregate over $12,000. The dwelling was of frame construc- tion and was palatial. Hugh Greenlees, Bowmanville, na- tive of Argyllshire, Scotland, suffer- ed a paralytic stroke and was taken L outing dn the river this summer. Sunday Services in Churches PPP PPP eer Perret HOLY WRIT. * > + + +> \ > -- * - + % All that the Father giveth # % me shall come to me : and him + + that cometh to me I will in no + 4 wise cast out.--John 6, 37. + * * PRP E EPR P PPR R PETG St. Andrews--Rev. John W. Ste- phen, minister. Services 11 a.m. and 7 p.m., conducted by the minist- er. Sunday School 3 p.m. Strang- ers cordially welcomed at all the services. Union Street Baptist Church.-- Corner Union and Collingwood streets--Rev. J. K. Fairful, pastor. Services 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Sunday school and Bible classes 3 p.m. Ev- erybody welcome. St. Paul's--Canon FitzGerald, M, A., T.C.D., rector. Morning prayer, 11 o'clock. Evening prayer, 7 o'clock. Holy Communion first Sunday in month at 11 a.m.; last Sunday in month at 8 a.m. Calvary Oongregational Church Charles and Bagot street. Services | 8 p.m. Prayer meeting, Wednesday, {8 pom. All are welcome. Rev. A. F. Brown, pastor. . Present Truth Tent -- Sunday night, 8.15 p.m., subject: "Why I Am What I Am." 'Evangelist Richards. Popular Bible Lecture. Special lec- ture Sunday afternoon 3 p.m. "Is Temptation Sin?". All welcome. Gospel Hall, Princess Street; above Barrie~--Sunday\ morning at eleven. Believers meet for the Lord's Supper | in obedience te His command. "This | do for remembrance of me." All other meetings discontinued until the autumn, ? First Church of Christ, Scientist-- \{ Johnson street, between Bagot and Wellington gtreets--Sunday' school at 9.45 a.m. Service 11 a.m.; subject "Man." Public reading room same address, open every afternoon, ex- cept Sunday, 3 to 5 o'clock. All are cu. ally invited to the. service and reading .=om. St. Luke's Church--n®elson street, Rev. J. ae P, Wright, M.A,, B.D, rector. Sunday after Trinity. 11 am. 1 Sm prayer and Holy Communion, 2.45 p.m. Sunday School and Bible classes; 4 p.m., Baptism; 7 p.m., Evening Prayer. Music, Solo, D. Couper. Sydenham Street Methodist Church --+Rev. W. T. G. Brown, minister. Services 11 am. and 7 p.m. The minister will preach. Bible School and classes at 2.45 p.m. Morning class at 9.45 am. Prayer meeting Wednesday, 8 pm. Woman's Mis- | sionary meeting, Friday, 3.30 p.m. Strangers and visitors welcome, First Baptist 'Church--Sydenham and Johnson streets, Rev. J. S. La- Flair, pastor. 11 a.m. sermon theme "Christ and the Toilers." 2.45 p.m., Bible School. 7 p.m., sermon theme, "A Toller's. Creed." The services will be conducted by the pastor. A | special Wolousia extended to all ne, {11 am, and 7 p.m. Y.P.8.,, Monday, { + | day services 11 am and 7 p.m, terested in labor day themes and problems. Princess Street ¢ Methodist Church --Rev. J. A. Waddell, minister. Services 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. the minister at both services. 'Sunday School at 2.45 p.m., Epworth League Monday, 8 p.m.; Ladies' Aid, Tues- day, 3 p.m.; Prayer Meeting, Wed-| nesday, 8 p.m.; W. M. S., Thursday, | 8 p.m. Strangers and visitors cord- | ially welcome. m Street Methodist Charch-- co r of Queen and Clergy streets, Rev. W. 8S. Lennon, B.A., B.D., pas- tor. Services at 11 a.m. "and 7 p.m. Morning subject: "The Church and Labor." Evening subject: 'Seeing the'Kingdom." The Sunday School session will be resumed at 3' p.m. Church seats free. Strangers cor- dially welcomed. St. James Church, Cor. Union and Arch streets. T. W. Savary, rector, the rectory, 162 Barrie street Four- {genes Suiday after Trinity. 8 a.m. ly Communion; 11 a.m., Morning Prayer and Litany, Sermon subject, "Confirmation," (preparatory to clas- ses next week); 3 p.m. Sunday School; 7 p.m. Evening Prayer and 'sermon, 'The Aposle's Trade." Bethel Congregational Church-- Johnson andeBarrie streets, Sun- preacher, Rev. J. R. Urquhart, B.D. Lords' supper following morning service. Important congregational meeting close of evening service. Sunday Schocl now 3 p.m., Prayer Meeting Wednesday 8 p.m, junior and senior Y.P.C.E., Friday, 6.45 and 8 p.m. A welcome for all. t Congregational Church-- Corner of Wellington and Johnson streets. Services will be resumed in this church Sunday, Sept. 5th and will be conducted by Rev. J. O. Watts, Queen's University. Morn- irg service at 11, subject "Records Read and Unread'*;evening at 7, sub- ject "The Old_Saint and the Young Sinner." main closed during the first two Sundays in September. Everybody welcome. St. George's Cathedral--The Very Rev. G. Liothrop Starr, M.A, D.D,, dean and rector, 78 Wellington street, phone 2156. Rev. W. E. Kidd, M.A., curate, 7 Wellington street, phone 869w. Fourteenth Sun- day after Trinity. 8 a.m., Holy Communion; 11 a.m. Holy Com- munion (choral), preacher, Rev, W. E. Kidd; 3 p.m., Sunday School; 4 p.m., Baptisms; 7 p.m. Evensong, preacher, the Dean. a -- Cooke's Presbyterian Church Brock street. The minister, Rev. W. Taylor Dale will preach at 11 am. and 7 p.m. Sunday School at 11 am. apd 3 p.m. A cordial welcome is extended to everybody. da, Schubert; Organ solo, "The An- swer,". Wolstentolme; Postlagde, March, Pontificale, Lemineas. Evén- ing: Prelude, cradle song, Silver; Or- gan solo, Gesir Barnbino, Gow; or- gan recital after church: O. Sanctis- sima, variations, Lux; Sicilian morn- ing hymn; humoreske, Dvorad; Bar- varotte, Hoffman; the Broken Melody Van Bieno; Fugue in D., Guilment. Organist for the day, Frank Weaver, Mus. Bachelor. Sunday School will re-| Morning music: Prelude, Serena- | to the hospital, where he died. > "DANDERINE" en, WHY NOT FOLLOW THE OWL'S ADVICE AND USE MAXOTIRES BEFORE TIRES BLOW OUT. i "The Home of the Maxotires" 284 ONTARIO STREET - - - - - During September, we will sell all varieties in quantity. This is the proper time to buy for winter decoration. REDUCED PRICES for September only, Ferns will be reasonable. pensive this winter. . ; "We Strive to Berve." A. D. HOLTON 280 PRINCESS 8 "re Res. 2080W. They will be ox- Phone, 661; 'School Shoes We Have Everything There is to be Had in the Line of Good School Shoes ' Bring the Boys and Girls here; We're sure to fit them; sure to give them solid comfort and lasting service; sure to save the pocket book. Our $3.50, $4.00 and $5.00-School Shoes can't be beat. J. H. Sutherland & Bro. JHE HOME QF GOOD SHOES Stops Hair Coming Outy Doubles Its Beauty. A few cents buys "Danderine." Af- ter an application of "Danderine" you can not find a fallen hair or any dan- druff, besides every hair shows new life yigor, brightness, more color and thickness. rs i 4 ' Wolfe Island Farm of 100 Acres for Sale The East half of Lot 5, Conces- AIH paNL FALL CLOTHES OF THE FINER QUALITY "'<t For Men And Youns Men ung SMART NEW MODELS IN SUMMER SUITS AND TOP. COATS - = ++ (All rices betw ) Tri EO VALUES _BEST WEAR G CLOT TWEDDELL'S One Door | Below R ndolph Hotel, sion 9, South of the Base Line; very reasonable; for immediate sale. For particulars write: \ Box N-2, Whig Office. Girls! Girls!! Save Your Hair With Cuticura bao gm meinen Straw d White Foowtear Bargains all this week, or while they last. * LS AT REDUCED viions' H. A. Buck SYDENHAM, onrakio. Women's White Canvas Boots Women's White Canvas Laced Boots--light or heavy soles; Louis heel or low heel; all sizes 2} to 6. While they last . . ........ $2.28

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