Daily British Whig (1850), 11 Dec 1920, p. 16

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Christmas Gifts--At a Discount LIVINGSTON' THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. 0 0 1 Theatrical 1 | Coming to the tana. y, Dec. 13th, s company of advanced repertdire and vaudeville players i will present that comedy {drama, "The Price," -é sure is a hearty laug! itful play from ste play has | been a at success for several sea- because it's chock full of fun, 1ing over with good humor, | ory that grips the @ is entertainment galore im | » Price," with its music, Clean, | | bright comedy, and scenes and situa- i tions of thrilling excitement and | touches of pathos, all so true that | it seems like a page torn from Na- | ture's book, a great play for the | children. Popular prices prevail. | Ernie great | with fresh meats and fowl of all {kinds as the predominating slocKs. { quoted at $18 and |dya's quotations of Snuon. Faround §1.75 and $2 a bag. Apples SATURDAY'S MARKET Rutter a- Little Fower--Some-Eggs + . $1 a Dozen. There was a"market of the aver- age winter size, Saturday morning, were marked at $1.75 to Beef carcase was 22 per hundred, with hinds alone at $273 and $27. Dressed pork remained at last"tatur- and 20c a from 22¢ to! Chickens $2.50 per: pair. pound. Lamb varied 3be. : Potatoes were more plentiful than" ldst Saturday. The price stuck remained the same as last week with a slight increase in the cooking Hne on an account of the fact that not so many were offered for sale. As usual, butter and cgg: were the main centres of interest. There was a fairly good showing of both in the covered market. One seller SATURDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1920. pms --. 1 » TONIGHT 7.30 O'CLOCK SPECIAL SALE a (Butterfly) Silk Hosiery ° A / Zz ? weni enjoyme 0 } For an cveniug of enjoyment g0 0), 04 3 dollar a dozen for his hen- 20% Off every article in Our Store Jaeger Goods Only Excepted The largest' collection of English and Canadian Haberdashery in Kingston X to choose from. Buy your gifts at Livingston's. Handsome gift boxes if requested. Discount allowed for cash only. Livingston's (Founded 1847) 75.77 BROCK STREET "If Off Your Route It Pays to Walk." Anderson Bros. Limited Princess and Division Streets WANTED SATURDAY, DEC. 11th to 20th 3,000 lbs. Dressed Turkeys 3,000 Ibs. Dressed Geese. 2,000 lbs. Dressed Fowl. 2,000 Ibs. Dressed Chickens. 2,000 Ibs. DressedDucks. All No. | quality--highest cash prices will Stewing Cuts Boiling cuts Oven Roasts . . ChoiceRibs ..................25¢.1b. Boneless Roasts ...............28¢.1b. Hamburg Steak . . . .. Chopped Suet .. ....... Beef Dripping . . 500 Ibs. Peerless Shortening . . . . .24c. Ib. 500 Ibs. Anderson's Pure Lard . . . . 30c. Ib. 1,000 Ibs. Finest Creamery Butter 57c. Ib. 500 Ibs. Prime, Rich Cheese . . . . ..29¢. Ib. 1,000 Ibs. old English Mincemeat .25¢. 1b. EGGS--fresh; every egg guaranteed; spe- cial price. x Phones: 458-459. Wholesale i767. ' Lost Himself" tells the story of | his barber shop the Grand Opera House on the open- ing of the Ernie Marks Stock Co., | supporting the clever 'actress, Kittie { Marks. This clever company of en: ! tertainers come to the Grand Opera House ith a change of play nightly and six big new vaudeville special- | 1 | ties between acts.--Advt. " 'Big Happiness' contains a theme | | 80 real and vital that it will find a | { responsive chord in everyone who | sees it," said Colin Campbell the | roted director on the eve of the com- | { pletion of this Robertson-Cole super- | special showing Dustin Farnum, the! { "man's-man"' of the screen in his first great picture for this company, The | picture will be seen at the Strand] | Theatre, Monday, Tuesday and Wed- | | nesday. | "Since the beginning of time exis- | | tence has meant physical and mental | { struggle," Mt. Compbell added. "In| | 'Big Happiness' there is the tremen- | | dous struggle of three persons, twin | | brothers--unlike except in face and | | torm--and a girl, who lives, destiny | | ferm--and a .girl, whose lives, des- | {tiny has interwoven in a strange man- | | ner. | "The girl married to one brother-- to save her father from financial dis- | | grace--finds herself unwittingly the! victim of her husband's lust forgold, | which causes him to ask his brother | | to take his place on the night of | | thei rmarriage. The brother, an ad- | { venturous spirit, with real finese of | | character that is not at first percep- | tible, does not realize the seriousness | | of the situation and consents to the | | unusual scheme. { | "Gradually these two, the brother i and the wife, fall desperately in love with each other. Taunted by the knowledge of his falseness, the] brother is about to make a clean | breast of it, when word reaches him { | that the girl's husband is dead. But | his happiness is short lived for the husband returns, ill with fever. | Then comes a dramativ climax. { "I doubt if Dustin Farnum had aj | role which called for greater dram- | | atic work and in 'Big Happiness' he | reaches a height which will set him | | down as one of the finetst screen art- | | ists of the day. 'Big Happiness' is a | tremendous - drama, big, alive, and human."--Advt. At Griffin's, * To-night will be the last oppor: tunity to see the distinguished actor, William Faversham, in 'The Man Who Lost Himself." "The Man Who man who assumes th personality of another, and the difficult situa- tion he encounters calls indeed for superb acting, but in the hands of Wm, Faversham the role is complete. Some unique photography is shown, particularly when both men appear on the screen at the same time, and shake hands with each other. As Wm. Faversham plays both roles he is literally shaking hands with him- self. A splendid cast supports. the gifted star, headed by Mrs, De Wolfe Hopper, .who gives a:/splendid inter- pretation of the dissolute lord's wife, The balance of our programme is also we]l worth seeing, and con- sists of the 6th episode of 'Pirate Gold,"in which the hero meets up with some totally unexected adven- | tures, and provides much amuse- ment for the audience. ' Those mas- ter pictures of nature Known as Prizmas are a delight to the eye, as they are revealed on the sereen in | exactly the same colors as seen by { Nature. This programme will- be given a final showing tonight.-- Advt. | Y.M.C.A. MEMBERSHIP CAMPAIGN Fifty-Seven New Members Have Becn | Enrolled. | In the first half of the Y.M.C.A. | membership campaign, some fifty-se- | ven members have been enrolled, in- | dicating that at least the teams have gotten off to a good start, and if the | experience of other years counts for anything, the next few days will show very much better results. The team standing by 'points is as follows: i "Stutz", 114; "McLaughlin", 70; | *Pajge", 27; "Chevrolet," 16; | "Ford", 13; "Staff", 10; Saxon", 8; { "Packard", 9; "Essex", 6; "Rolls i Royce," 5; "Reo", 4; "Franklin", 1. | The lead maintained by the "Stutz" {is due practically to tHe splendid ef- | forts of Van Mills, whose individual {score at the present is 23 members. |The other individual 'membership igecores are Earl Moncrieff, 12; F. | Vokes, 3; Tait Gibson, 3; Harry Ed-{- 3; W. Bruce, 2; F. i Nicholson, 2; D. Grimason, 1; M. Abramsky, 1; J. Sandwith, 1; J. Tweddell, 1; Wallie Newman, 1; B. Hall, 1. The committee was pleased to re- ceive a cheque from the Nurses' Alu- mnae paying for'the memberships of three worthy boys. Among the others who paid for deserving boys was the Sydenham Street Methodist, Y.P.S.C. E. The membership committee are looking for others te purchase "The Gift With A Lift" for other boys, who cannot afford the small fee ¢harged for annual m&mbership. gar, 3; Staff, Tuesday night next at 9 o'clock when the team winners will be declared. A large number of renewal member- ships are expected in the interval. As Usual, . "Waiter, how long is that steak of mine going to be?" "About two inches, sir." ---------------------- Paul Killorin, Napanee, has sold to Arthur Young. for the entire week of Dec- | { ery, flavoring herbs, and homemade | cooking was { able prices. { Utica, N.Y., to spend the Christmas | A. Graham. | last week. p he campaign will continue until |» | fruit while his fair competitor was | selling out her stock at eighty cents. | Butter was a little more reasonable. | The first prices heard were 7%c and | 60c a pound, but as the time passed on several places were quoting at 5hc and one as low as 53c, The usual array of cabhages, cel- prominent at reason- A SPLENDID BAZAAR Was Held by the Ladies of Trinity Church. (From Our Own Correspondent) Napanee, Dec. 10.--The ladies of Trinity church held their annual bazaar and lunch on Friday. The sale of fancy and useful articles was very satisfying, and was well attend- ed. 'A very appetizing lunch was served from twelve till two, and tea from six to eight. The ladies are to be congratulated "on the success of the day as about $800 was reali- zed for the schemes of the church. On Thursday evening fire was dis- | covered in W., D, Widmer's house, Piety Hill. The firemen made a quick run and it was found the fire was about the chimney on the kit- chen, and it was quickly extinguish- ed. Several hours later the firemen were called again and discovered some fire about the roof. But very little damage was done. Miss Lena Graham is home from ! TT TT TTR holidays with her mother, Mrs. C. Mrs. B. F. Davy is! spending a week in Toronto. Miss Marjorie Meyers, daughter of Bobert Meyers, Bridge street, has been ace | cepted as a nurse-in-training at the | Roosevelt traing school in New | York. Mrs. Vrooman, a guest of' J. W. Metzler, had the misfortune to fall and break her arm one day | Does Real Farming Pay? Swift Current, Sask., Dec. 11.-- Does real farming pay? Axel Nel- | son, of Pennant, is a firm believer | that it does. Last year Mr. Nelson | bought a quarter-section of land two | and a half miles south of Pennant, | for which he paid $3,200. He crop- | ped the land this year and sold 1,600 bushels of wheat some time ago at $2.60 a ~ushel, realizing $3,900 from wheat, or $700 more than he paid for the land, and that is not all, as Mr. Nelson still has 800 bushels of wheat and 1,000 bushels of oats left from this season's crop. Closed A $40,000 Deal. Saskatoon, Sask., Dec. 11.--H.| Gauvin, inventor of the insulated wall construction which has been successfully used in SasKatoon in connection with electrical heating, is! now in Ottawa, and has closed a' $40,000 deal for the Ontario rights of his patents. Toronto and Ottawa parties wili exploit the insulated wall | construction on a large scale, espe- cially along housing scheme lines, | according to information received here. Sweet Innocence! Newedd--I'm afrafid we're going to find it hard to get coal. Mrs. Newedd--Oh, dear! I do wish they'd plant larger crops in the coal fields. ¢ On Saturday morning Anthony Rankin, M.P.P. for Frontenac, when asked what the government high- way commission had done about the new highway, which extends from Kingston through Westbrooke, stated that he thought the commis- sion would likely call for tenders for a hot top (asphalt tep) in the very near future. Tilbury flax mill, the only factory in operation in the town, was de- stroyed by fire attributed to spon- taneous combustion. DAILY MEMORANDUM: See top of Page Three, right hand corner for nrohabilities. CHRISTMAS CARDS Beautiful designs, neatly printed with Greeting, Name and Address. a Prices very reasonable, Hanson, Crozier & Edgar Merry Christmas Printers. Market Square, Kingston. MARRIED, NOONAN--BOUTH--At Beachville, on Nov, 29th, Mar Haynes Booth, to William Fleming Noonan, both of Kingston. + DIED. JAQUES-~At Wolfe Island, on Nov. 27, 1920, Mary Imogine Hughes, wife o Bruce T. Jaques, Moose Jaw, Sask, Aluminum coffee percolators, $3 each at Lemmon & Sons, A TAA |= i TO-NIGHT $1.25 PAIR BLACK Regular Value "$2.00 Pair. First Quality Extra heavy A gift item of practical worth-- rightly timed--a make of Hose that is noted for excellence of dyes, and for durability, rein- forced heels and toes, with garterproof top. For Christmas giving or for your own choosing this is an exceptional oppor- tunity. Black only. Size: 8}, 9,94 and 10. $1.25 PAIR. SALE. OF HANDKERCHIEFS 5 PY hal v 0M "y Hi Regular Value me. de 50. Yr 25¢. each Ladies' extra fine Swiss Batiste Handkerchiets, h e m stitched, with embroidered corner designs, in a beatiful variety; some embroidered in white; others in colors. The designs include floral and the new bird patterns--all nicely finished. TO-NIGHT ...........c.ccumn ede. EACH - RTT my bees [twill BOXED HANDKERCHIEFS SUITABLE FOR GIFTS FOR WOMEN . To-night 25¢. Box up to 50c. abox Ladies' Shamrock Lawn Hemst itched Handkerchiefs-- box of oue, box of two, will be found in this specia! '~t: embroidered corners; showing both colors and all white; iu effective designs; in very attractive Christmas gift boxes. SAFE 730 OCHOCK ....i.. ciiiviiie 28a yp John Laidlaw & Son, Ltd. SS pn, AT Tn BOX -- EERE THOT [] = BOUDOIR SLIPPERS = THE GIFT OF COMFORT To think of a friend's comfo rt is to be truly thoughtful. There's no gift which will more fully express your wish es for great comfort than Bo udoir Slippers. : Felt Boudoir; soft Elk soles; Pom-pom; three colors to select from; rubber heels; : "ede ahi aves $1.65 and $2.00 pair. Suede Leather Boudoir; thre e shades to select from; rubber heels; Elk soles; $2 pair, Suede Leather Boudoir; eight shades to select from; rubb er heels; Eld Soles; $2.73 pr $HsCents sheen armans ew » ~ Lockett's ¢ Hil ALEC OLA ALARA AEC RHE A

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy