Daily British Whig (1850), 27 Jan 1921, p. 2

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THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. If you live out of town, write us your waauts, : ( + $6.00 Fur Stoles sate Fur Muffs tyirre.. $6.00 t Good wearing; warm; well made Furs. JOHN McKAY, Limited THE FUR HOUSE 149 YO 157" BROCK: ST. of | castes, the creeds and the custhms "His Master's Yoice™ Records Victrola XI $240.00 Hawaiian Records e Ainahau (Music by Princiso Sikilikl) Irene West Hawalians Meleance (Hula)--Irene West Royal Hawaiians Aloha Ai! (Farewell to Thee), Guitar s--Palek Lua-D Kalli The Rosary (Neirm), Guitar--Palek Lua uitars)--Palek Lua-D. Kajif® Cunha Medley (Hawaiiah Guitars), Palek Lua-D. Xalli Hawafllan Walts Medle) (Guitar Duet), Lua and' Kaili Killma Waltz (Guitar Duet)--Lua and Kaill Hawallan Nights Waltz (Hawaiian Sweet Hawallan Moonlight Waltz-- Ben Hokea-A. Hulu Medley (Hawaila Guitars)--Hokea Nant, Nani Kailimai Medley (Hawalian Guitars) --Hokea Players Wallaner Waltz (Hawalilan Guitars) --Hokea Players My Isle of Golden Dreams--Beg@ Ho kea Missouri Waltz--Ben Hokea My Hula Love--Medley March--Lua and Kalli Kawaiian Waltz--Lua and Kalli 216100 17863 All the popular Vocal and Dance Records in stock, at:-- , MAHOOD BROS. "THE HOME OF THE VICTROLA | captivity and were deprived of '§ | know not God. J | cher, India, gave a very i l and helpful missionar i} | caste, and assumes | kills off large numbers of these, At Edwardsburg--2 ha... 5 Ibs. ... = 10 lbs. ....$1.00 CORN MEAL 500 1bs. Gold Dust--6 lbs 25c. 500 Ibs. Hand-picked Beans 3 lbs. 21c. * $4,300--Alhert street-- brick; 7 rooms; hot water heating; hardwood floor; electricity; " « verandah and balcony. Pos- session May 1st. $4,100----Johnson Street--brick 7 rooms; furnace; electri- city; fir floors; verandah. $8,200~--Union street; brick; 7 rooms; verandah, - $1,750--Stanley Street; frame; 6 rooms. Victory Bonds bought and sold. Money to loan. Califorhia Navels--45c. qual. it 3%7¢. dozen 300 Ibs. Beef Dripping. 18¢. 1b. Belleville Creamery : 100 Pails Pure Jam, 4s . . The usual good Flavor Tea 83c¢. Cullen's CASH AND CARRY Real Estate, Insurance and Financial Broker 86 Brock St. Phone 320 or 631 .. are congenital--that is the person was born 4, with them. There is often a flattening of the eyeball, or 3 shortening which renders seeing diffi- cult ~The muscles of accommodation antoina- tically strive to overcome these defects, which strains the eyes and causes all sorts of bodily discomforts. 5 There is a simple, pleasant cure for all E these troubles--the wearing of Glasses. . We are able to determine what lenses : - each case needs--able to do it with scientific . accuracy. Consult: J. S. ASSELSTINE, D.0.S. 342 King Street. Phorie 1019w. [| sentenced to eighteen || Burwash reformatory on the charge | ALFRED and PRINCKSS STS. - (STIRRMG APPEALS MADE INCIDENTS OF THE ol Racy Local News ¢ and Items of' eneral Public Interest. Try Chadwick's coal. Prone Pianos tuned. Prone 1544, C. W. Lindsay, Limited W. Swaine, plano tuner. Orders at 100 Clergy street. Phone 564w. Gen. A. E. Ross, M.P.P., has put | up at the Prince Toronto. f Mrs. E. D. Towsley, gave a Bible read spend ten days in Ki ngston visiting first Mrs. Alfred Dulmage. J. M. Simpson, je- To Help People in Heathen Lands--Meeting at Bethel Church. The convention : { held in Bethel Congrega are growing im interest. Wednesday afternoon Pastor / | W. Roffe, Toronto, had charg service, Rev, William Fra | 01d Orchard, Me., {ing on "Knowing God." He showed how God in His word 5 A hc . { plored the fact that His people did 2op0iated mtn of not know God.- They offered sacri- |* Ct aay | fices and practised their forms of ré- |. "After six mbnths' rental we will | ligion, ut that did not satisfy God. lallaw. money paid in rental to apply He it His people to know Him; jon Pusehsse of pane. C. W. Lindsay, | that of old His people went no Thomas Drjscoll, reeve of Howe slang, is spending a few days in he city attending a meeting of the council. Miss Callaghan, Kingsion, sail: | ed on Tuesday for Nassau, Bahamas, on the first sailing of the S. 8. Canad- ian Fisher. | power because they knew nol God | Ife made the application that God's | | people now were gone into captivity | | to sin and worldliness because they The way back was to get back to knowing God in God' 3 | way. In the evening Rev. Christian EI- | interesting | Present governor of New York state, deal- | Nathan L. Miller, taught school in {1g with the problems of that coun- | Spe Vincent, N.Y., and was greatly | try L 1Ked. {mw y B ive. " said the Miss Mary Wilson, daughter of fore og, Tog things that hold | Mr. and Mrs. James A. Wilson, Na- { back Christianity in India. The '| panee,a was operated on for appendl- citis in Kingston General hospital, and is progressing favorabhx, Miss Lilliam Case, Picton, and Miss | Evelyn Dempsey, Rednersville, | assistants at the drawing-room given by Speaker and Mrs. Nelson Parlia- ment, in Toronto, on Tuesday, 1dress are some of thg hindrances placed in the way. But caste is the worst of { them all. The Brahma is the highest to be lord of the | creation, while the lower caste must | j cross the street when he passes so | : . | that his shadow will not fall upon | Rev. ye. Wilson was in Toronto and defile him {on Tuesday to take the service at him | it the annual rain fall (the marriage of his cousin, Miss Ber- tha, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. | "In India, | fais, this means famine, and means ial- | G. Wilson, Indian road, to Frank | :nuch distress ard hardship, espe:i {ly to the under-caste. There are | Smallman. | about sixty milion people in the un-| John Kearney and Thomas Dale, der-caste, always under-fed. Famine [sentenced to four and three years, r respectively, in penitentiary, for theft at Corby's warehouse, Ottawa, were brought to Portsmouth by Sheriff | Richardson. W. D. Black, M.P.P., Addington, will ask the Drury government: (1) | such times as these, water sells at | about 26 cents in our money 'for a pint, Six million people died in less | than three months with the 'du,' and the distress and suffering were | awful, From whom are the auto markers "But what are we doing, as Christ- | purchased; (2) were tenders asked | for; (3) how many tenders were. re- fans, to help these people who live | in the dare lands of the ear.a® Can.' j carved; 3 (4) What is the price not we, like Paul, hayj that desire to | being pal tell (thers about th unsuAceha's | President Beatty, of the CPR. riches of Jesus Christ, and swing [at the Queen's University Alumni Christianity again eastward so that [banquet fn Montreal, told how uni- the dark places of the earth may |Versity men must play the game. again speak his Holy Name in| They cannot win frem the grand praise?" | stand. Trained men are needed in all During the evening, Bethel Males] walks of life. Quartette sang "Speed Away," and Mr. Eicher sang part of "Tell The Old, Old Story," in the Muratti lan- guage. These meetings continue during Thursday and Friday of this week. TO SERVE AT GUELPH. Two More Days Our Sensational Price-Cu Sale of Furs : '»! ol i Hats. and Millinery . Ends Saturday Lots of lines in each of our departments will be offered at special bargain prices during the last two days of our price cutting sale. If you have not yét filled your wants in prepara- tion for all the cold weather that is yet sure to come, toe morrow and Saturday will De your opportunity. Shane and Bermingham Go to the Prison Farm. It is expected that Albert Shane and Vernon Bermingham, who were months in of stealing furs from the store of | George Mills & 'Co., will serve their | sentences at the prison farm, Guelph An order has been issued by the On- tarfo government to the effect that | all the prisoners pow detained at the Burwash will 'be removed to | Guelph, | During the war the prison at | Guelph was handed gver to the Do- minion government for hospital pur- poses. The buildings are no Wager | required by the government, so the Ontario government has taken them | over. { The attention of the Whig has been drawn to the fact that'the pa- role system in use in the provincial reformatories is altogether different to the dominion system. Aceording to tHe law, when a magistrate is | sentencing a person to a term in an Ontario prison, he must state the minimum 'and the maximum term | the party must serve. When" the! minimum sentence is completed, the | parole authorities make a close in- | vestigation. The record of the man while he is confined to the prison or reformatory is looked into; as! well as his home surrounding. The parole officer tries to get him a posi- | tion, end then, if everything is satis- factory. he recommends ' that the! prisoner be given his liberty. i It Is altogether likely that Charles Grass, who was sentenced to six months in the county jail, on the charge of selling liquor. will serve part of his sentence in the prison at Guelph. | Deputations to Wait on Civic Finance Committee || RICH FUR SETS The low prices on Fars of every description have been a great attraction since our sale started, and to-day we mention some stylish Fur Sets, Neck- pieces with Muffs to match. Canadian Beaver Sets-- serinaee. $75 to $90 Persian amt Sets $45 to $65 At the meeting of the civic finance committee this evening, delega- tions will be present from the King- ston and Diftrict Milk Producers' As- sociation, and also the public library board. The latter will be represented |i by Col. G. H. Ogilvie, Norman A. ||} Smith, William Casey and A. N. Lis- ter, who will ask for a substantial | grant for the library in order to | place it upon' the basis of a free library, Black Wolf sets .. $10 to $40 Natural Wort sets $18 to $40 Bolivia Buyer sets X30 to $35 'White Sable sets ..$20 fo $25 Civit Cat sets ....818 to $20 | Had a' Fine Time, | Tie weekly euchreé and dance held [i jat the Labor Hall on Wednesd i | evening was a great success. There | were seventeen tables and afterward {a large number of young people | i came in for the dancing that proved | to be one of the biggest yet held. These occasions for social gather- ings are becoming more and more appreciated as shown by the attend- ance and the real yment afford- ed to all. The ladies first prize was won by Mrs. Fowler; the gentle. man's by W. K. Jackson. Ladies' consolation," Mrs. Wilson; gentle- man's, T. O'Rourke. > ALL SALES FOR CASH George Kills & Co. 67. | George "Hotel in | Ottawa, will | 1 Napanee, has been motor vehicles || Thirty years ago the wife of the | were ll | new organist of Cooke's, for his work {in supplying the programme for this Brown Wolf sets . .$25 to $40, ! teessrrscesnssnes -- | Feather Your Nest. Sung by Mr. Sid i Telephone 919 Theatre, Monday, Tuesday and Wodnesiay o of this week. ' THURSDAY, Hear These Three Big Numbers | Rose of My Heart Grieving for You. Grant, the gifted Baritone Singer, at the Strand a "The Restless Sex" then see the play. The College Book Store Phone 9 19 to make sure of a copy, as long as the supply lasts. Open Evenings Read the book and IS clippedto:.....:... clippedto ......... 0 ....%..... Salts Seal Plush-- Ae saan . $13.50--clipped for Friday selling .. eis 10 yards Beaver Plush--52 inches wide; reg. $7. 50 quality Yor halfprice............ The Pruning Knife STILL BUSY--READ! ' 500 yards of White Flannele tte--full 32 inches wide -- good and heavy--our 45¢: cloth clipped to... ....... ...... 500 yards of mice quality White Cotton--even threads fine for Sheets, Pillow Cases or general use; 35 inches wide. . Our 35c. line; . 29c. . 20c. 300 yards Striped Flannelet te--30 trichis wide ur 35c. fhe: Good, heavy quality Sheetin 72 tralia wide clipped . 75¢. a yard. 52 nchins wide--beautiful qealitViecoue price J REMNANT SALE v Ses 08 0008000 nesy A table filled with remnants of wool goods and Cotton goods at remarkably low prices--good buying. Pictorial Quarterly for Spring. | Newman & Shaw "THE ALWAYS BUSY STORE" ann Eh OLD TIME TEA MEETING | He 1d In Cooke's Church Hall on Wed- nesday Evening. An old time tea meeting was held | in Cooke's church hall on Wednesday { evening, under the management of | the Ladies' Aid Society. D. A. Shaw presided as chairman, and gave some | | well chosen remarks. Rev. Taylor Dale tendered everyone present a | most cordial welcome. - The pro- gramme was by local talent. Those | taking part were: Miss C. Diack, Mrs. | Foster, Mrs. Horton, Miss Ethel Ross, | | D. Couper, A. Lemmon and R. Filson. | soloists; violin, selections by Miss Jean Douglas; monologue, Miss M. | | Hough; a recitation by Miss A. Good- | man; quintette, Messrs. Lemmon i { Filson, Claxton,, Newman and Don- nelly; and a duet by Messrs. 'A. Lem- | {mon and R. Claxton. The tea meet- | ing was a splendid success and it is ll expected a good sum will be realized. | i Much credit is due B. Couper, the | | i | sere cee rues CORRESPONDENTS WANTED. % "The Whig needs correspond- : ents at Cole Lake, Fall River, Glendower, Glenburnie, Howe : Island, Kingston Mills, Merrick- # ville, Mississippi, Mountal. # View, Sharbot Lake #d Tick- ¢ borne. + <Any réefer interested may # learn fuil particulars by writ- ing to the British Whig, King- # ston. AS i Fall On Ice Fatal RY Fracturing his skull on Tuesday, when he fell on his head from a load of bran, near the W. HH. Lingham | mill, Cannifton, at which he was em- { ployed, Richard Badgley passed away in the eveaing. He was born in Thurlow sixty-eight years ago, and Yom OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS DON'T BE CAUGHT WITH THE STORM DOOR SAUT $2500---Earl Street; brick dwelling; barn and garden. $2500--Hichson'Ave.; frame dwelling; extra lot. $3400---John street; frame dwelling; extra lot. $2800--Portsmouth; frame dwelling and 1-3 acre. land. $16350---York street; cement clad dwelling. $2500--Markland Street--Cement Block Bungalow. - aud a complete list at office. 'E. W. MULLIN & SON Borers mad Sellers of Heal " Cor. Johnson and Division Sireets, « « JANUARY 27, 1021. sme At Less Than Pre-War Prices Men's high grade Brown Boots--Goodyear Welted Boles; in both narrow and wide toes; splendid looking: well made shoes and shoes will give excellent wear. Regular $9.00 values. Al SEE THESE IN OUR WINDOW S. J. MARTIN "Shoes of Hert and Distinction" 189 Princess St. He was a Methodist and a member |: A man fsn't such a much. of Buteka Lodge No. 283, A F.&AM. Mofirning his loss are his widow and one daughter, Mrs. Earl Sheffield. |the same time L- 1'd like to see a man wear tight shoes and a tight corset and a sweet smile all at A \

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