Daily British Whig (1850), 19 Jan 1921, p. 11

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/ WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 1 9, 1921. COULD NOT LEMVE HOUSE FOR WEEKS Toronto Woman Spent Most " Her Time in Bed-- Tanlac Restores. "Nobody will Her. ever © much I suffered till I tried Tanlac, » and I do say it is the best medicine I ever know or heard of," sald Miss Helen Parr, who lives at 7 street, Toronto. "lI was in a distressingly weak | Theatrical know how | 1 Uncle Tom's Cabin: "Uncle. Tom's Cabin" has been | spoken of as the play that will out- | last any of the present day plays; | the guaint humor of the southerners |and the yous fun of the darkies | make this play one that will live on {in the hearts of all those who have | seen it, long after the play has gone. { This company is composed of the best Matilda | Possible talent, each one having been | J? i i slated as best in his or her own par- | ticular line This company carries } e THE and Ruth is rescued to her father and fiancee. "Acting that scene was | the most nerve-racking experience I have ever had," said Marjorie. "Of I knew that everything would come out all right, but just | the same I had cold chills looking at that swinging pendulum. I be- lleve I went through all the sensa- tions of a drowning person, because it seems as though I thought of {everything I had ever done in my | {whole life. The scene was terribly | {realistic and I never felt more re- | {lieved than I did when it was all | |over.""--Advt. | j course, | | | | | | WILL MARKET TANLAC | DAILY BRITIS FINE SHOW AT. THE ALLEN "Nomads of the North® Pre- sented First of This Week. "Nomads of the North" is a pheto- play which seems to have been es- peciaily built for the connoisseur of moving pictures. Without any plot or action, the wonder and grandeur of the film as a scenic production would alone be enough for the most-' exacting." With the unusually inter- esting story by James Oliver Curwood woven into it, it becomes a play which is one-of the nearest ap- H WHIG. and run-down eondition as a result | "pecial scenery and electrical effects, of stomach trouble from which I had |and no expense has been spared to i THROUGHOUT WORLD proaches to perfection ever staged. H Of late the producers have learned usiness Grown Until it Is the value of the personal supervision { | BIG TIME AT KEELERVIL i -- | Skating and "Social Eve ! the Young Folk. Kellerville, Jan. 18.--Th people are having a great time on the ice. The boys are keeping the ice in good shape. "Social {for the young people are from house to house with great suc- | cess. Wallace Jackson has the wood |contract with the school fulfilled, and is busy drawing material for the cheese factory at Battersea, David Sleeth returned home after spending a couple of weeks visiting | | tri Round Lake. Robert! Tighe and T. Walker attended the | |sale at Figin on Friday. Mr, and! (Mrs. Edward Andrews have lett | Lyndhurst. Mr. and Mrs. James! McRory visited friends at Morton, | mings" for e young | being held | 1 Miss Goodiriend. The parents of tae children { speedy recovery. James Craig, King- | ston, visited his brother, T. H. Craig, evenings" | A. Curran, who bas been visiting her suffered for two years. I had lost [make this the finest production of my appetite and ate only enough to keep alive. I worried so much and Was 20 nervous I could not sleep well at night and in the morning felt so tired I could scarcely drag myself out of bed., I had a cold nearly all the time, as my system didn't have strength to throw it off. [ was just wasting away and lost weight so rapidly I had a dread of what the outcome was going to be. |SOff and the outstanding musical suc- | F. Willis, Internati There were weeks at a time when I |€€88 of the past few years, will be | of Tanlac, and the felt so miserable 1 couldn't leave |!he attraction at the Grand Opera | Company, | House on Thursday evening, Jan. city, the house and I spent most of my | > i d The new 'company Les time in bed. "I'll never forget the debt of gratitude I owe a friend who told me gbout Tanlac. This medicine has made such a complete change in me I can hardly realize I am the same person. Before I finished the first bottle I felt a wonderful improve- ment, and as I kept taking it all the old troubles left me. I have a splen- did appetite, have gained in weight, sleep lke a child and in the morn- ing feel bright and cheerful. Since Tanlac built me, up I have thrown off that cold ###t hung on so long, and in fact, I have nothing left of the old troubles except the memory of them. "It's a truly wonderful medicine." Tanlac is sold in Kingston by A. P. Chown, in Mountain Grove by James Macdonald, and by the lead- {a refreshing and original story. All! ing druggists in every town.--Advt. Queen's Alumni of Montreal. At the annual meeting of Queen's University Alumni Association held at the Central Y.M.C.A., Drummond street, Montreal, the following offi- cers were elected: Hon. presidents, E. W. Beatty, K.C., chancellor of the University, and Rev. Dr. Bruce Tay- lor, principal, A. J. Meiklejohn; vice- presidents, R. O. Sweezey, Dr. Dun- can Falkner, and Miss Fargey; secre- tary-treasurer, H. H. Black, 128 JBleury street; executive committee, Rev. George McKinnon, Lachine: K R. McLennan, G. H. Wilson, J. J. Harpell, Rev. 8. 8S. Burns, Dr. J. F. Maclver, and Mrs. R. F. Kelso. The second annual dinner of the association will be held in the Prince of Wales Salon, Windsor Hotel, on Wednesday evening, January 26th, at 7 o'clock. A Choir Reception, {Uncle Tom's Cabin that has been | seen in the last few years. There will | be a big street parade at noon on | Wednesday as well as numerous spe- | cialities during the action of the play. | This attraction will be seen at the |Grand Opera House tonight.--Advt. "Maytime." "Maytime', now in {ts fourth sea- 20th. It {s under the direction of the { Messrs. Lee and J. J. Shubert, and {has solidly established it | most popular offering yet sponsored | by this enterprising firm of impres- {sarfos. Rida Johnson Young, who {wrote such pleasantly recalied offer- {ings as "Her Soldier Boy," "Naughty Marietta." "Capt. Kidd, Jr." and "Brown of Harvard," is the author | of "Maytime." The musical setting of the plece was furnished by Sig- mund Romberg, composer of "Her Soldier Boy" and many of the song | nits in several of the spectacular | Winter Garden productions. "May- f time," however, is wholly unlike the | sterotyped musical comedy It is | exactly as classified, "a play with music' that fits logically into the action of the story. '"'Maytime" has {of the scenes are laid in New York \ City and the four acts, or episodes, give a picturesque representation of metropolitan life at four widely se- | parated periods.--1840, 1855, 1880 land 1920.--Advt. At Griffin's. Angther large audience witnessed our pleasing programme, and again the Eddie Collins' Musical company won all hearts. Their interesting play | "A Knight of the Klondyke" contains real merit, and each player contri- butes delightful acting. Eddie Collins himself, as "Riley" keeps the audi- | ence convulsed with laughter and the | balance of the Company provides much amusement also. Our feature picture "The Undercurrent" with | Guy Empy, s a startling story of Ci- vil Unrest, and proved very popular with the audience last evening, while the eighth episode of "The Branded Four" was followed with great Inter- est and provided many thrills, Good | EB | | By Harrison Vaughn. Atlanta, Ga., Jan. 18.--Announce- | ment has just been made here of the | organization of the International | | Proprietari€s, Inc., to take over the | business heretofore conducted by G. | onal Distributor | Wiilis-McDuffie | eastern distributors, of this | One of Largest in the Worid. 1 | 1 a paid-in | capital of one million and is one of | self as the | the largest proprietary medicine con- | | eerns in the world. The business ot | { the corporation will be conducted by the present management, which owns | the entire capital stock. It is under- | stood that no part of the stock will be | offered to the public. The officers of the company are G. F. Willis, president; P. C. McDuffie, | vice-president; M. A. Crumley, treas- urer; J. C. Goodson, secretary, Mr. Willis is a prominent Atlanta figure in the drug and advertising | Reid in both the United States and | Canada. Under the direction of Mr. Willis, the founder of the business, it | has attained its present position in | the very front rank of the country's proprietary medicine industries, Mr. McDuffie, wh factor with Mr. Willis in building up the business in the past five years, | is a leading Atlanta citizen and busi- ness man and is widely known to the drug trade throughout the country. The new company, which is the logical outcome of the rapid growth and expansion of the business, will market a number of Internationally advertised. and internationally sold proprietary and pharmaceutal pro- ducts, including tonics, Aspirin tab- lets, cold specifics, laxative tablets, ete, | Sale Unprecedented. Tanlae, their principal product, is probably the most extensively adver- tised and the most largely sold pro- | prietary medicine of its kind in the world, approximately 20,000,000 bot- tles having been sold since its intro- duction six years ago. An instance of the rapid growth A reception was tendered by Prof. | comedy subjects and other pletures | 0d development of the business with Nourry, organist and choir director of 8t. Mary's Cathedral, to Rev. Fa- ther A. J. Hanley, the rector and the choir on Tuesday evening. Addresses Were given by Fauwer Hanley, Mr. | make up the balance of our program- {me which will be shown for the last time tonight.--Advt. At The Strand. Atlanta as principa] headquarters is the statement that its products are now advertised in more than seven | | | thousand mewspapers in the United | States and Canada, and that the ad- vertising appropriation for this year business man and is a well-known | 0 has been a big | the author of the story which is dra- matized for the screen, of the North' the characters have been chosen to harmonize with those in the book to the last detail. The beautiful and awe inspiring scenery of the Canadian Northland, magnifi- cent when at rest, terrible when awakened, is presented in a manner which one would believe impossible. Into the story of the lives of the humans comes the story of the lives of two of the furry creatures of the north country and the active part they take in the general programme. A young bear cub amd a little pup, rescued by the "here" of the piece, ,amply repay his attentions in the { | duction with their amusing anties. | Animals figure prominently in the | pleture, and the close-ups of their | movements and the intelligence | shown by the bear and the pup par- | ticularly are nothing short of marvel- | lous. This fine picture is set off by a | Mermaid comedy telling of the ups {and downs of two jail-birds after {thelr release. It's bad enough to | ind a man in your wife's boudoir but | when he disappears and is replaced | by a tull-grown African lion then its | past the point of a joke. Other features and the rendition of { "What's in a Name" and other fine {selections by the Allén orchestra com- | plete the programme, { -------------- SPORTING NEWS Queen's McGill Game Postponed. Intercollegiate hockey and basket- i ball schedules and college examina- tion schedules show a tendency to conflict this season #nd, as a result, the athletics get rather the bad end of the argument. McGill was sche- duled to play the first game .in the | Intercollegiate hockey series with | Queen's, in Kingston, this coming | Friday evening, while the basketball squads of the colleges were to open the season here on Saturday after- noon. The MeGill faculty did not look up the schedules of the athletic association when they were setting the dates for the examinations and most of the players find that they have to spend both Friday and Sat- jurday showing what they have {learned during the first term of the year. As freshmen who fail in their first term quizzes are asked to there in the heavier parts of the pro- In "Nomads | end and relieve the ténsion here and | Carty, Dr. Crowley, Professors Mar- | The man who composed thé popu- rion and Gelly of the Royal Military lar song about the different varieties College, and Messrs Morris and Cross. | °f kisses omitted ome of the most Following the addresses refresh. | "vel kinds of all. But the photo- ments Wore served, and the producers who adapted Robert oye oker and musicale | Chambers' "The Fighting njoyed a sm Er | Chance," didn't. Those who read this Rev. | story in book form will remember e two | that one of the biggest and most at- | | uests | Play Sues |W. At Winnipeg, on Dec. 23rd, ~Mr, Campbell united in marriag 0 Athens' popular young people in | tractive scenes is where Stephen, the Df. Kenneth C. Blancher and Miss |hero, and Sylvia Landis dive together Irene McLean. The happy couple | into a swimming pool and their lips left for their new home in Yorktown, | meet in a fond good-bye underneath 8.sk., where Dr. Blancher is follow- | the water. The scene was only de- scribed in the book. It is shdwn in leave McGill, none of them are over- anxious to play this week-end. { Queen's has readily consented to | | will be in excess of one million dol- lars. The success and permanency of the but it is very business is assured from the fact that | POStPONG the games It has shown a rapid and subtantia) | difficult to arrange a suitable date ! am | increases each year since its organ- in the future as one or other te | i has a game in the Intercollegiate se- | zation, and the further fact that the ries every week-end. In addition, | business for the year just past shows the Queen's hockey team is also en. | in | 23 ihcrease of approximately 80 per tered in the O.H.A. series, making it | | | | SSBL. SYSF the preceding year. [still more difficult to find a date. Big Foreign Demand. | The only open date at the end of the schedule is March 5th, and this Tar oir the demand tor Taniae han allowed if they wish it has been necessary to erect two |!® later than allowe y recently. Douglas Anglin is spend- {Ing a few weeks at Manitoulin { Island, visiting his uncle, WwW, w, | Anglin. Mr. and Mrs. John Robb | visited at Harry Lake's, Carrying | ince, one day last week. | Visitors : Norton Wakeford, of [Seattle, U.S, Mr. ahd Mrs Karl | VanLuven, Battersea, at J. E. Ang- ilin's last week; Mr. and Mrs. Hugh | Ritchie, and Mr. and Mrs, Cum- {mings and family, of Cedar Lake, at | David Sleeth's, Sunday; Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Sands, Milburn, at {James Mcliroy's, Sunday; Kenneth { Pipe, Kingston, and Hugh Boal, ! Round Lake, at James Boale's; Mr. jand Mrs. Thomas Clark and family, | Cedar Lake, at Charles Clark's, | The anniversary of Thomas Ab- tt's birthday was celebrated at his me on Jan. 3rd. A large gather- {Ing was present, including his | {daughters and sons-in-law, Mr. and | | Mrs. John Campbell, Sand Hill, Mr. | and Mrs. Preston, Odessa, Mr. and | i Mrs. Edward Hagle, Sunbury, Mr. | |and Mrs. Charles Patterson, Batter- sea, Mrs. Thomas Abbott is quite {il {and has been under the doctor's care {for the past week. Alexander Jack- | trustee. + { bo | ho {son is the newly élected | Miss Mildred Yateman, Elgin, visit- ed friends here Sunday. \ | | | Quite a Number of People Are Laid Up With It, | « Yarker, Jan. 18.--This vicinity | was visited by a heavy snow-storm | |on Sunday night. Quite a number | | in the village are on the sick list | with 1a grippe. Mrs. Myles Wilson | has gone to Campbellford to visit | her sister, Mrs, Stollery, for a few | weeks. Mr. and Mre--Efrle Benn {and Day Sylver, of Trenton, spent | | the week-end at their home. Born, {to Mr. and Mrs, Albert Warner, vt ---- ee THE GRIPPE HITS YARKER | | | | | | | { | daughter. Quite a number are hay- | Ing their wood sawed. The young | people of the village are preparing to make a skating rink. Tracey Smith and Charles Ottis {spent Sunday at Verona. Mr, and | | Mrs. Leslie Card spent Sunday at {their daughter's, Mrs, Woodcock"s. | Miss Lizzie Babcock has returned | | from Port Hope, where she was vis- iting her sisters for the past three weeks. Mrs. Truscott and children, returned from their visit in Belle- | ville. A number from here attended Mrs. W. Wartman's sale of house- | hold effects, Fridlay last. A few of | | the Orangemen here attended a | meeting of the order at Enterprise. Mrs. A. W. Benjamin and son; "Teddy," are spending a few days Napanee with friends. The village -is well supplied with wood as M. Foster has had a large quantity for sale. Wilfrid Dunn has returned to St. Michael's Col- | lege, after visiting his parents. Quite | & number from here attended a sur- | prise party given at the home of | Eldon Freeburn's, Maple Lane, and | report a fine time. J. C. Connolly | has returned from his visit in Mont- | real. Miss Rhea Thompson has re- | | | in i al pp QeTes seve Rheumatic Pains Snolisis inl igel's S sftermeals and tinng. 1 eras th pa onretinay. count of the illness of the teacher, wish Miss Goodfriend a last week. Harold Wagar has been on the sick list, but is improving. Mrs parents here, returned to Kingston. William Wager is in a eritical condi- tion at his father-in-law's, Joseph Jeffrey. The funeral obsequies of the late Mrs. E. E. Peters were conducted in the Methodist church by Rev. Lawson, assisted by Rev. W. Gregory The choir rendered appropriate selec- tions and the services were very im- pressive. The family of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Davy most of whom have been on the sick list recently are im- proving. Mr. Davy, however, is not yetyable to conduct his business Mrs. A. Wells who has been on the sick list, is recovering. Miss Anna Otis, Toronto,' is visit- Ing her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs Howarth. Mrs, Williams, Toronto, paid a visit to Mrs. George Lakins. last week. Mrs. George Goodfellow, FA i in - Tichborne, is visiting her parents, ; Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Jeffrey. Mr. Geddes, Deseronto, spent a day with his son, Dr. W. J. Geddes, list week. Zara Ball has purchased a six horse power Renfrew oll engine, to replace his old five horse power gasoline engine for sawing wood. Wood sawers are busy | in the vicinity. - i ------------ Miss Ruth Zeiglar, Brock street, | will leave shortly for Toronto to en- ter as a nurse-in-training. Roasted right to bring out the full flavor and aroma Rideau Hall Coffee NOTHING ADDED NOTHING TAKEN AWAY SOLD IN TINS ONLY-BY ALL GOOD GROCERS Pay-Day Saving | You are paid regularly. Save regularly. When pay-day comes, put some of the money in a Savings Account in Th#Merchants Bank. One dollar -- five dollars -- ten dollars--whatever you can conve- niently afford. And put in the same coount--dopanits of 1 sad BANK Account..deposi ' Established 1864, THE MERCHANTS Head Office : Montreal. OF CANADA Manage KINGSTON BRANCH, ¥ . H. A. TOFIELD, PARHAM, ONA AND ARDEN BRANCHES, J. W. McCLYMONT, Sub-. pMountain Grove open Frida; 0 es to rent at Kingston Drench. ------------ LARGE PROFITS ARE BEING MADE IN RUBBER INVESTMENTS Fortunes have been made by the men who originally bought into the leading Tire manufacturing companies at their initiation, for instance-- $1,000 invested in one company has made ...4$36.000 1,000 invested in another com pany has made -$57.000 1,000 invested in still another has made .... +. . $80,000 These are the returns in ca sh and stock dividends. Shares in the Lion Tire and Rubber Company, Limited-- all Common Shares at $10 par with a 309, bonus ofler the Canadian investor an opportunity at home, to participate in the great earn- ings of the Rubber Industry. If Interested, call, 'phone or write The Prudential Bond & Security Company IN2 ONTARTO STREET (Hote! Froatense) KINGSTON rc CITY OF LONDON Coupon 6% Bonds {turned after her visit with her par- | ing his profession of dentistry, great modern laboratories--ome at | to enter the finals for the Allan Cup. » E> At the residence of her son-in-law, Mr. Milton R. Throop, Brockville, the death occurred on Saturday of Mrs. John Robertson, aged eighty years. Windsor aldermen in future will be paid five dollars for every meet- ing they attend. Envy flourishes in the want. - CONDITION EXISTS WITHOUT CAUSE It is being proven daily that there 1s absolutely no reason for one per- mitting a condition of nervousness, Weakness or palpitation or say form of home of Puma general physical de- ean quickly correct rough i giving nourishment to frgans of the body, VITAL to perfect health, Save Sirusture ou feel the feed of a tonle to build you up, to tak A fedling--start + 80 cts a box, at all druggists. For Sale By Mahood Drug Co. Put on More Insurance ! The sum that would have ap- peared adequate to protect the home ten years ago is wholly inadequate to-day. 7 If, in those days, $1,000 was carried, to-day it should .be made $2,000, while Five should be increased to Ten and, and Ten to Twenty thousand to maintain the protection at the Same point that it reached 10 years ago. Let me suggest additional amoun a plan for an i t. £ S. Roughton Mutual Life of Canada 60 Brock Street Phone 610. of the heart | the great blood and | EE [all its glory in the picture, which is | coming to the Strand theatre, Thurs- day, Friday and Saturday. "I hope we haven't started an epidemic of {submarine kissing among the youn | folks," laughed Anna Q. Nilsson, who | plays Sylvia in the picture, after the {scene was filmed. "If the girls and | boys at the beaches are Influenced to | try this under-water love-making, the | chaperones will simply have to don | bathing suits and learn how to keep | thetr eyes open below the surface.' | Miss Nilsson and Conrad Nagel head | the notable cast in "The Fighting | Chance." The picture was directed by Charles Maigne and is a Para- | mount Arteraft. The feature attraction at the | Strand theatre next Monday, Tues- | day and Wednesday will be the photo- | play version of Robert W. Chambers' | brilliant society novel, "The Restless | Sex." Marion Davies is the star. The story is declared to have been filmed upon an unusually lavish and artistic scale, with a ballroom scene in which over six hundred people take part in Costume a feature. Ralph Kellard and Carlyle Blackwell play the lead- ing roles in support of Miss Davies. [It is a Cosmopolitan Production for Paramount release and was girected by Robert Z, Leonard. --Advt. At the Allen. Marjorie Daw, the pretty little | motion picture actress, who will be {Seen in a leading part in "Diaty" | When that production opens an en- | agement of three days at the Allen | theatre on Thursday, declares she | went through the most squeamish | Xperience of her career during the | making of that film. She plays the | part of Ruth Whitely, daughter of Judge Whitely, who has incurred the deadly enmity of "King" Dorkh, Ma- lay half-breed and leader of 'a gang of highbinders. Dork kidnaps the judge's daughter and plans a ter- rible revenge for the sentence of his son. Ruth is strapped to a table under a swinging pendulum with a razor edge. The fiendish contri- | Vance drops just anviseh every time {It swings, coming nearer and nearer i the strapped victim. "Dinty" 0'- | Sullivan, a newsboy, and his Chinese friends, however, bring about a rescue in the nick of time Dayton, Ohio, and the other at Walk- erville, Canada. These laboratories The basketball game will be play- ed in Kingston next Tuesday, Jan. ' ~ represent the last word in modern | 2°: and Queen's will try to a construction and laboratory equip- | ment. The two plants have a som. | bined floor space of approximately [70,000 square feet, with a combined | | daily capacity of 60,000 bottles, Tan. | | lac, which is a medicine of recog. | nized therapeutic val tiohed merit, is now sold in practi | cally every city, town and hamlet | throughout the United States and | Canada, In fact, it is a household | | word throughout America. The new company will not o undertake the further expansion the business in foreign countri where there is u steadil demand, but contem at an early date add | turing facilities In this country and Canada, The company is doing am { annual business of from $5,000,000 to $6,000,000 with an annual pay-roil of approximately $250,000. The ex- ecutives and sales offices occupy more than an entire floor of the Fourth National Bank Building in this city. -- Early Soutliern Vegetables, Fresh spinach included in the lot, expected Thursddy at Carnovsky's. -------- Convict Committed For Trial. Leo Rogers, prisonet in the Ports. mouth penitentiary, was arraigned before Magistrate JW. Bradshaw, 7 warden's office, on Tuesday afternoon. W. Duncan, inspector of detectives, laid information against the prisoner under section 296 of the Criminal Code, and gave evidence de- tailing the assault made uot him by Rogers in the warden's office, with a piece of lead concealed in his mit Which" he had cut from the wasts pipe .of his wash basin. Magistrate Bradshaw committed Rogers for trial at the next cqurt of competent juris nly | of | es, y increasing plates acquiring itional manufac- Pansy, spent Saturday with Mr, and {range the hockey game for the same Mrs. J. Curl, River road. 'Jack' day, if possible. Carling Scores. The ice is in splendid condition for the curling matches. In the Ue and unques. [absence of A. B. Cunningham, W. H. | her Reid skipped the latter's rink on Tuesday, and was defeated by Skip J. B. Cooke's rink by a score of 12 to 9. Skip F. Waugh defeated Skip L. Sieeth by 13 to 10. In the singles, | T. R. Carnovsky defeated H. Angrove by 14 to 12. - Basketball Games. Queen street girls' basketball team were successful in winning | from the team represehting the Bap- tist girls in a closely contested game | in the SS AAA, played at the Y.M.C.A. on Tuesday evening, by the score of 16 to 14. The half-time store was 6-6. The play was even throughout, and it was only ia the last few minutes thdét Quéen street was successful in pulling out a win. For the Methodists, Miss Easson was responsible for most of the scor- ing while 'Miss Stewart starred for the Baptists. The teams lined up as follows : 3 Queen Street PS ptusts Miss Easson..forw'd.. Miss Stewart Miss, Healey .forw'd. Misd McCallum Miss Davies. .centre.... Miss Leslie Miss Clark. ..det'ce.. Miss Hughson Miss Truesdale.def'ce... Miss Beck Miss Nash...spare.., Miss Osberne Referee--Sterling Gibson, Great Match This. There was an interesting same of basketball at the Y.M.CA. on Tuesday night, when two picked teams from members of the associa- tion clashed. One team was named the "Cats," and the other the "Dogs," and \the ""bow-wows" suc- ded it over the "pus- in putting Sies" by a seore of 29 to 10. Thawing out of pipes caused a slight fire at 77 York street, occa- Pied by J. James, on Tuesday night. The firémen were summoned at 6.35 o'clock. Are you one of the Restiess Sex ? 3 |ents at Arden. | Mrs. George Curl and daughter, | Oldham, Detroit, is visiting his par- | ents, Dr. and Mrs, Oldham. Patrick | | Turpah's baby has recovered after | its recent illness of pneumonia. Mrs. | James Freman entertained a few of | friends to tea recently. Mrs. | | Earle Boyce and baby, of Lakeview, | spent Saturday at A. E. Holland's. ---- en. CONCBRT AT VERONA Boy Scouts Put On a Fine Entertain. ment, Verona, Jan. 18.--The concert in ald of the boy scouts held at the Or- ange Hall on Friday evening, was a great success. The hall was crowded. { Tae programme consisted of recita- tions by Mrs. Charles Amey, Moscow, Mr. Riddell Ottawa, L. Smith, Ver- ona; songs, by Mr. Shaw, Kingston, Miss Campbell, Verona; monologues, indian club swinging, flag signalling, dancing and boxing, by members of the Kingston Boys' Naval Drigade; music and song by Prof. Benn, dia- logues ty members of Verona Boy Due any year 1922 to 1938 Denominations $1,000,and odd amounts. Price: Rate to yield 6.25% to 6.30%, ac- cording to maturity. Bongard, Ryerson & Co. 237 BAGOT STREET. PHONE 1728. Scouts. Mr. Riddell, Ottawa, favored with an address on the boy scout movement, which was very beneficial to all interested. Those entrusted with the work feel very grateful to Mr. Bha% and his pupils, and to Mr. Riddell, also, Mrs. C. Amey. The door receipts totalled $45.90; expenses over all $19.65. There is now in the treasury of the boy scouts, $31. . The last two Sunday evenings Rev. Dr. Lawson heid a song service at the close of the usual evening sef- vice. The 'people are more than de- lighted with them. The Ladies' Ald met atthe parson- age last Wednesday. The attendanéa Was unusually large and a very plea- €ant time was spent. Mrs, T. H. Craig, treasurer, presented her re- port, which showed that the funds| were in a healthy condition. Several Rew members were enrolled. After the business had been transacted, the | president, Mrs. "Lawson, served a bountiful repast. The Aid will give 3 pie social in the near future. has been no studies in the i J SONORA A MARVELOUSLY rich tone --a design that is incompar- ably handsome, and notable fea- tures possessed by no other make of Phonograph make the Sonora agnificent upright and per- od models," DE To pe 12} PRINCESS ST. KINGSTON There lower yoom tor the past week, on ac- . \ ;

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