Daily British Whig (1850), 27 Sep 1920, p. 5

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r EEESEARNENARNENN . PHOTOGRAPHS | ments from your best vacation films. x Phone 1818w. EE - MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1920, PICKLING AND § PRESERVING TIME § Rings --Dominion Fruit Jar for pints and quarts. ~--XXX Corks, all sizes. ~~Parowax. --Freed"s Bottle Wax. CANDY DEPT. Fresh-- Huyler's, Page & Shaw's, Neilson's. Austin's Drug Store "The Kodak Store." Corner King and Market Square Kingston - Phone 230 J) We can make beautiful enlarge- re ------------------------------ on ------ Kingston and Vicinity THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG ° ! NERVES ALL GONE TO PIECES "Fruit-a-tives" Conquered Nervoss Presiration R. R. Xo.4 Guxasxy Prams, Mas, "In the year 1910, I had Nervoms Prosiratéon in its worst form; dropping from 170%e 115 pounds. The doctors had wo hope of my recovery, and every medicine I tried proved useless until & friend induced me to take ""Fruit-a-tives", Ibegan to mend almost at ones, and never had such good health as 1 have enjoyed the past eight years. { am mever without *' Fruib-a-tives™ in the house". JAS. S. DELGATY. 50c..a box, 8 for $2.50, trial sise 25a. At all dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa. Westport Got War Trophy. The government has sent a German |! trench mortar to Westport as a tro- pliy of the great war. Perth Made Richer. Fines amounting to $300 were col- iected in Perth last week for infrac- ! tions of the Ontario Temperance Act. Sydenham and Kingston. | Bus will leave Sydenham at 7.30 a.m. and leave Kingston at 6.30 p. m., while Kingston fair is in pro- | gress. To Unveil Monument. The official unveiling of the high | school war memorial tablet at Tweed | | will take place on Oct. 8th, the cere- | mony to be performed by the Hon. Sir Sam Hughes, M.P., ex-minister of militia and defence. Heavy Tax Rate, At a meeting of Marmora. council { the tax rate for the year was Hed at - [ fifty-three mills. The council algo de- cided to appoint Messrs. H. R. Pearce DAVID SCOPT |. : and H. A. Connors, hydro-electric Plumber | commissioners for the village. Plumbing and Gas Work a special. | ty. All work guaranteed. Address || 145 Frontenac street. Phone 1277. | | Give Us a Trial. Our range of made to measure sultings and overcoatings are of the THE MARRISON STUDIO 92 Princess Street. "Campbell's Vegetable Soup ! Clark's Tomato Soup Clark's Vegetable Soup vtors for Red Rose Tea--tiw | ||| Good Tea i J. R. McRae & Co. iil GOLDEN LION i License No. 6-543. DR. NASH :: 188 Princess Street. Dormoform Gas adimnistered for exe | best material. we guarantee first- | class fit and workmanship at a very reasonable price. Prevost, Brock The Hottest Weather. Kingston had about the hottest | Phone 730 | weather of this year on Friday, Sat- WE TAKE X-RAY PICTURES |urday and Sunday, the mercury ris- of troublesome teeth. { ing to eighty-six degrees, a real sum- | mer temperature. the equal of any- | thing in many years. | | DENTIST traction. Safe and painless. OFFICE HOURS: 9-6 Sd -- Brockville Merchant Dead. Crawford Smart, long identified || with- the mercantile interests of I L || Brockville, and member of one of the um er dal e | town's oldest families, died on Fri- 8 ned Soft. or Hard JYuch | | day, following a long illness. His wife | -' Lumber and 13§ Inch Oak, | and grown-up family survive, Rock Elm or White Ash. | McNAMEE & SLACK Blacksmith and Carriage Shop 54 QUEEN STREET A PHONE 1217W. "Boost Bushell's Fair" To Teach School. Miss Daly, Port Hope, is principal, | and Miss Stewart, B.A., Consecon, as- sistant of the new continuation school, Marmora, which opened with an attendance of almost fifty pupils, with a few additional one - _ rted. A Verv _sarge Plum. G. S. Ackerman, Picton, exhibits a Bradshaw plum grown in his gar- den, Centre street, measuring seven -- - PATTON'S 'DYE WORKS (Late Montgomery's) Kingston's Only Dyer. Dry Cleaning a Specialty. hone 214. 849 Princess St. -- and a quarter inches in circumferen- ce and weighing five ounces. This is the largest on record. Watches and Clocks Repaired ~--by-- G. W. LYONS are guaranteed for one year. Call or 'phone and your or- der will be promptly attended to Note change of address: 'Phono 1866. 267 Princess St. Presentation to Church, Mrs. Earl Knapp has presented to the Anglican church at Rockport, an altar service book and a prayer desk book, bound in Morocco leather, "to the glory of God and in memory of her parents Bowle and Louisa Bash." Injured In Auto Smash, Dr. W. C. Brown, collector of cus- toms at Prescott, was taken to the Hepburn Hospital, Ogdensburg, N.Y., § =4 Arne | SULfEring from severe injuries receiv- - FOR SALE An excellent farm of 150 acres, good building, splendid Vie bu i Another farm of 100 acres, fs miles from the city -- 'W. H. GODWIN ! & SON | Real Estate and Insurance 89 Brock St. Phone 434 or -- ed in an automobile accident when returning to Prescott fromfBrockville where he attended the fair with a party of friends. Again in Trouble. At Stirling McGee's gents furnish- ings store was broken into and goods stolen. It is alleged that four young men weye implicated in the affair and one Jgmes Naylor was apprehended, charged with the offence. Naylor a ol days ago was allowed his liberty SEASONABLE FRUITS CHOICE VEGETABLES Always fresh and prices right. r--at-- FRIENDSHIP'S 210 Division St. Phone 545. suspended sentence for an infrac- ion of the law. Purchases Hotel. ! Ey ff | AT PROUSE'S DRUG STORE. i Ey 1 'War price, $1 a bottle, at fi yo at all times. FOR SALE D, CLEAN COAL. A. Chadwick & Son New location: , Corner Ontario and West Sta. i Phone 07. J. Ford McCarney, formerly of Ga- reer | Advice to Dyspeptics Well Worth Following In the case of dyspepsia, the appe- tite is variable. Sometimes it is rav- enous, again it is often very poor. For this condition there is but one sure remedy--Dr. Hamilton's Pills hice cure quickly and thorough- y. Fresh Dairy and Creamery Butter. Cooked Meats and Bacon. Fresh Fruits in season. Lanka Tea Coupons exchanged Closed Wednesdays at 1 p.m. Sufferers find marked benefit in a day, and as time goes on improve- ment continues. No other medicine will strengthen the stomach and di- gestive organs like Dr. Hamilton's ji | Pills. They supply the materials and =| assistance necessary to convert every- thing eaten into nourishment, into by Your Wampole's + Cod Liver Extract We have received our winter sup- ply (several gross) and can supply It has proved its value as a tissue ds of people. * muscle, fibre, and energy with which to build up the run-down system. 'Why not cure your dyspepsia now? Get Dr. Hamilton's Pills today, 26c, per box at all dealers. It pays to save Your Newspapers, 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. 267-375 ONTARIO STREET - e---- as and general tonic to thou- : Get a bottle to-day at the pre- | Prouse's Drug Store y Phone 82. f I' i We Invite Yon s $0 cunsult us wuen you wish to * Teplace your old Matiress with & It Pays to Bay Your Groceries And Meat R. J. Shales & Son | BOW one, or have it renovated ag, Jenswed, acl : © em © thods ang Ahod BE Which guarantees sa 2 .L COnSoIReY. . in I pro- } ust call §02w and our Sentative will call and offer a practical suggestio . forget to ask us about our "COMFY DOWN" THE SILK FLOSS MATTRESS You would like it, KingstonMattressCo. 8556 ['RINCESS ATREER DID YOU EVER TRY Wagafaf's Ginger Marmalade, Wagsiat's Placapple Marmalade, Wagstafi's Edwin P. Fischer Sentre) sending postcards to friends nerican detectives. . { which leave here daily, making con- | } nanoque, who has been manager of | the Albion House at Potsdam, N.Y. | for the last year, has now purchased | the hotel, which he will continue to operate. Loses Sight of One Eye. David Keith, a machinist in the employ of the Marsh Engineering works, Belleville, was hammering a | piece of steel when a piece broke off, | penetrating his left eye, destroying | the sight. The injured qptic had to be removed. 3 @rockville Protests Cancellations. The Brockville Board of Trade pro poses protesting the cancellation by the C.P.R. of two passenger trains | nections for Ottawa at Smith's Falls and Carleton Place. These changes take place with the advent of the winter time table. : To Curl in Scotland. Capt. H. J. Airth, Renfrew, broth- er-in-law of C. S. Anglin, Wellington street, has been selected to go to| Scotland next winter to curl for Ca- | nada against the exponents of the game in the Old Land. Capt. Airth is | one of six curlers to go from the Que- | bes district. These six are the only players who use metals, all the others playing with the granites. Victim of An Accident. Many in Brockville will learn with regret of the death in Toronto on | Thursday of Helen J., eldest daugh- | ter of the late James S. Lanskail, The deceased was the victim of a street car accident in June last, from which she never recovered and which ulti- mately resulted in her death. Miss | Lanskail had been for many years on | the tedching staff of the Toronto public schools. (Her remains were buried at Brockville. Has Skull Fractured. His skull fractured as the result of the breaking of a flywheel on a gaso- line engine during ensilage cutting operations. John Thompson, aged eighteen, residing in the township of Matilda, six miles in the rear of Iro- quois, is in the general hospital, Brockville, in a dangerous condition. The piece of metal struck him square ly on the forehead, inflicting a ter- rible wound. As the result of an ope- ration there is a chance for his life. Appointed To Board. | Prince Edward county council ap- | pointed Miss Filona Barker, Bloom- | field, Mrs. W. R. Browne, township of Athol. to the Mothers' Pension commission, local board for Prince Edward, and the following names were recommended: W. H. Monag- han, Wellington; J. Hazel, Picton; D. W. Robinson, Consecon; H. R. Way, Demorestville; James Lochlin, Con- secon; H. H, Horsey, Cressy; E. B. Yarwood, Picton; W.'I. B. Striker, Milford. Lansdowne Folks Married. On Wednesday morning at Escott, Rev. John Puttenham united in mar- riage Miss Beulah Grace Graham, youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James H. Graham, Lansdowne, and Bryce Burns, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Burns, Lansdowne. Miss Burns, a sister of the bridegroom and Arthur McConnell were the witnesses After tig ceremony Mr. and Mrs. Burns left on a motor trip, on the completion of which they will reside in Lansdowne. Medical Society Meeting. At a meeting held in Kemptville a few days ago, the Leeds and Gren- ville Medical Association elected the following officers: President, Dr. C. H. Bird, Gananoque; vice-president, Dr. R. R. Paul, Athens; secretary to be selected by the president. Papers were read by Dr. W. T. Connell, Kingston, and Dr. F. Kidd, Ottawa. A resolution of regret was passed at the impending removal from Kempt- ville of Dr. Wallace, who will shortly move to Ottawa to practice. Albert Rodway Injured. An accident occurred on Friday at the Old Homestead factory, Picton, resulting in serious injuries to Albert Rodway, a farmer living in the Fish Lake neighborhood. Mr. Rodway has just finished unloading a load of corn and stepped out on the wagon tongue, it is supposed, to get a line that had fallen on the ground' In some way he fell between the horses and they became frightened, running away and-dragging Mr. Rodway un- der the wagon. He was seriously bruised, the wheel running over him. Fortunately, the horses were stopped OF WALL STREET , arrested in n advance of the Wall street explosion. The picture was taken ° on Fischer's arrival in New York. The other figures are those after running only a few rods, and Hamilton, after | their return motored to the bride's | bome in Elphin where a dainty sup- Mr. Rodway released from the lines, in which he had become entangled. | He was rushed to the hospital, and at last reports is-recovering. Filling the Silos. | In nearly every section about] Tweed farmers are busy cutting corn | for their silos. Already a number of farmers have housed large quanaities of ensilage. It is stated that there is a record crop of corn. Farmers who ! have. a large number of cattle are very glad that the corn crop turned, out so well as the hay crop was ra- ther light. "Safety Week", Observed. The Ontario government has issu- We have a shed accommodation for a half million feet of lumber. This enables us to keep in nice dry condi- tion, a wide range of sizes in all the usual grades. . i Ww ¥ Ne we S. ANGLIN & CO. Woodworking Fuctury and Lumber Yards, Bay and Wellington -, treets, KINGSTON, Ont. Office Phone 06. Factory y «+. Phone 14.8 ed a proclamation that the week from Oct. 10th to Oct. 16th, be known as "Safety Week." The proclamation is | contained in the Ontario Gazette of | this week, The proclamation says: | "We express the earnest desire that each and every citizen of our pro- | vince of Ontario will do his or her part in eliminating unnecessary acci- | dents and fires, and we urge the full- est co-operation of all classes so that our province, as a whole, may bene-! fit from this humanitarian move- ment." t Married At Perth, A quiet wedding was solemnized on Sept. 15th, at Perth, when Miss ~ We Wouldn't Advertise If we thought you were not telling your friends about our service. If we were not trying to bette r that service, your praise. so to "See for y ourself.™ v We strive to serve. warrant aw mwneiBy Ds HOLTON FLORIS? Jessie 'F. Stewart, daughter of Mrs. John Stewart, Elphin, was united in | marriage with Albert E. McKeracher, | Perth. The bride was becomingly at- tired in navy blue serge suit opening with flesh georgette blouse and hat to match. The groom's gift to the bride was a cameo necklace set with pearls. After the ceremony the happy young couple left for Ottawa, and on per was served in honor of bride and groom. They will reside in Perth. Cataraqui Wedding. | A quiet wedding took place Wed- | nesday, Sept. 22nd, at noon. at the home of Mrs. John Aylesworth, Cat- araqui, when , her only daughter, Meda Vera Fern was united in mar- riage to Edward Norman Eastman, son of William Eastman, Guelph. Rev. C. V. Fairbairn performed the ceremony. The bride was becomingly attired in silver grey silk poplin, and was attended by Miss Mildred Stover as bridesmaid dressed in Alice blue serge suit, black and grey hat and fox fur. The best wishes of a host of | friends go with the young couple to their future home at Cataraqui. | | Comes Highly Recommended. | Mayor Riggs has received from! Chief Alexander Kidd, Parry Sound, | his acceptance of the position of chief | of police of Belleville. The new chief | takes charge on the first of Novem- | ber. Chief Newton, who has for up-| wards of forty years been the custo- | dian of law and order in this city, | will shortly retire as chief and will be appointed police court clerk at the | ~ MAXOTIRES See our big exhibit at Kingston Industrial Exhibition, Easte ern Canada. MAXOTIRE RUBBER COMPANY, 284 ONTARIO STREET - - - - - PHONE 2050 ------ at Ta SOMETHING NEW TWEEDIE BOOT TOPS . Many women object to wearing Spats and Leggins on account of poor fitting. Tweedie Boot Tops are special material and fit per- fectly to Oxfords of any make. Shown in four colors--Taupe, Fawn, Castor and Brown. rie > ro J. HB. Sutherland & 'Bro. IHE HOME OF, GOOD SHOES . salary of $1,200 per year, it is un- derstood. So Belleville will not lose | the advantage of all the years of ex- | perience which Chief Newton posses- | ses. His successor, Chief Kidd, is a! young man who comes highly recom- | mended, as he has done duty in Parry | Sound and Peterboro and served ov- erseas. | Send-Off At Willetsholme, Mr. and Mrs. William Boyd, Wil-! letsholme, who are going west, had a | gratifying send-off on Sept. 13th. Friends and neighbors met at their house and presented them with an | address and a purse of money. Alex- | ander McLean read the adress, which | expressed regret that Mr. and Mrs. Boyd were leaving the neighborhood | after such a long residence amongst | them and wishing them every suc- | cess in their future life. The presen- tation was made by Walter Wilson. | Mr. and Mrs. Boyd returned thanks | in a feeling manner. Supper was par- | taken of and a pleasant 'evening spent. .Mr. and Mrs. Boyd left on the 16th, amid the good wishes of their many friends. Died Very Suddenly, Shockingly sudden was the death in Smith's Falls on Sunday of Mrs. | John Wood, Perth. She had been vi- | siting at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Mervin Joynt, and with Mr. ana Mrs. Joynt and two boys started by automobile for Smith's Falls to at- tend Plymouth. Brethren services. Just as she had her hand on the door lo enter the meeting place she took a weak turn. Restoratives were appli- ed and she appeared to rally. A little later, however, she again became faint and passed away, a victim of heart trouble. En route from Mr. Joynt's a blowout had occurred occas ioning several minutes delay, and the excitement of this is supposed to have contributed to the fatal weakness. New York, warning them in ~~ | Children' FALL CLOTHES (of the finer quality) For Men And Young Men SMART NEW MODELS IN FALL ~ SUITS AND TOP. COATS + $25.00 to $50.00 (All Prices Between) BEST WEARING CLOTHES VALUES fl ' j TWEDDELL'S One Door Below Randolph Hotel. 'S -- You will need the best that is made in shoe leather, to stand the bad weather that we are sure to have this Fall. You had better get a pair of our Children's Boots and be pre-

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