FRIDAY, APRIL 3, 1021. | Spodal For Saturday 1 $2.50 Sale of White Shirts 'with self stripes; made by W. G. & R. We have all sizes, 14-16}. These are on display in our window. George Van Horne's - (Opposite Grand Opera House) Phone 362w. 213 PRINCESS ST. EVERSHARP PENCLS We now have a full assortment in --Gold Filled --Sterling Silver --Nickel ranging in price from $1.50 up to $5.25 the Comfort No matter how perfect your lenses are they will not give you We also have lead refills. Kinnear & d'Esterre JEWELERS 100 PRINCESS STREET satisfaction in on uncomfortable | frame We take extra precautions to see that every pair of glasses we make are comfortable and satisfied to the smallest detail oJ. DR.A.W. WINNETT DENTAL SURGEON. Corner of Johnsun and Wellington Streets Phone 863 "The House of Better Glasses" Opposite the Post Office Phone 699 - - - Kingston Where money is concerned you can bet that absence makes the. heart grow fonder. Banks don't sperd time in looking ap the credit of your ancestors. py BONDS AND DEBENTURES { C, 8. KIRKPATRICK i 36 Clarence Street. Tel. 568w, & "Gifts That Last" "HIS MASTER'S VOICE" THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. Rotarian George W. Matthews, | Toronto, Speaks at Rotary | # Club Luncheon. les of Rotary were set | rong address to the King-.| The prix forthinas ston Rotary Club by Rotarian George | Ww. Matthews, Toronto, at the Iunch-| eat: --tirdpiingstor Rotary--€iad; at the Brifish American hotel on Thursday. He declared that Rotary | stood for co-operation of the highest | { order, and that it stood for the mem: bers conforming their lives to God's | form of living, as set down in His commandments. Rotdry, stood for | the improving of mankind. 'One of the lessons to be drawn from the life of our Saviour," said 'the speaker, "is that it is wrong to abuse power in any way. The abuse of power has been the curse of the world." | The speaker congratulated the local club on its formation and the | advancement it had made under the able guidance of President "Joe" | Stewart He predicted for the club | great success judging by the rulings { of the president and the manner in | which the money rolled in. In the work of Rotary, the speaker i said that each member should begin with himself, "There were many op- | pcrtunities for service. One must not work in a narrow channel, but | ceek the path given to Rotary work {on which would lead to the sea of earnest endeavor. We should do our | utmost to improve our own com- { munity. No matter how small the | community, we should do our best to | improve it, Better communities i brought about better townships, bet- | ter counties and finally better prov- | inces. | The address of Rotarian Matthews | was a most inspiring one, and was | listened to with keen interest, and | at the close the speaker was tendered | a hearty vote of thanks. Following out the instructions | given him at last week's meeting, | Rotarian Harry Richardson had a | plano on hand for the "session." H. 1 J, Singleton presided at the instru- | ment, and the Rotary club's songs | were rendered with a swing that was | most refreshing. The singing was good; several of the numbers making | a big hit, President *Joe" was right on the job every minute, and as a result a good sum of money was collected in fines from members who disregard- ed rules and regulations. In the ab- sence of Sergeant-at-arms Graham, Rotarian "Jack" Phillips was ap- pointed to act in his place, and he collected the fines like an old timer at the game. H. Breathwaite and J. D. Bankier were introduced as new members and were given a warm welcome. Secretary "Roy" Ward read a com- munication regarding the big conven- tion of Rotarians to be held in Edin- burgh, Scotland, but no action was taken for the present, ' Resign Hospital Positions, Misses Murdock and Guild have re- | signed their positions on the nurs- ing staff of the Kingston General | Hospital, and leave 'on the 18th of | WRONG T0 ABUSE. POWER GUEST OF CANADIAN CLUB Sir Charles Stuart, K.B.C., to Visit Kingston Some= time in May. : iart, K.B.E.,, man- aging di he London Times, a native of M al] is to pay Can- ada a visit next month. He om- Ete Kg Som tO Vs Te IR HY plot in St. Paul's churchyard in which aré buried the Canadian founder of his family and other members of it L He is a, great great grandson of the Rev, John Stuart, D.D., the first rec- Sir Campbe | tor of Kingston and the first school master in the province of Ontario, The distinguished Canadian raised | the Duchess of Connaught Rangers in Montreal for service in the recent | war, did important diplomatic work ! and wrote "The Secrets of Crewe House" to tell of British propaganda | in enemy countries. | It is fully expected in his arrival in | Kingston he will be the guest of the ! Canadian Club, that organization having invited him to dine with its | members and to address them on some timely theme, | ici ANOTHER CRITIC OF YOUTH Things Are Not Nearly As Bad As Professor Believes. ! London Advertiser | Prof. J. L. Morison, of Queen' Uni- versity, took a rather gloomy view | of the reading of Canadian youth in an address before one of the sections | of the Ontario Educational Associa- tion meeting in Toronto. Prof. Mori- | son expressed regret that the aver- | age young Canadian cared nothing | for books. He said: "The disuse of | the Bible today is a disaster to edu- | cation. Organized amusement, the | automobile and the moving picture | show are challenging the reading of | books. The garage has displaced the | library; golf clubs have taken the | place of books." | Prof. Morison"s viewpoint is some- | what like that of a London clergy- | man who recently expressed the view | that the average young person today | "knows more about-Fatty Arbuckle | than about Abraham, more about | Mary Pickford than about Rebecca." | But, after perhaps it isn't | quite as bad as that. Im Toronto, | where Prof. Morison was speaking, | the public library last year loaned out | over a million and a half of books, and Toronto boys and girls borrowed over 400,000 of these. London Publie Library for a couple of years past Las loaned out over 300,000 books, which is an average of at least five per head of population. Many ghous- | ands more were read or consulted within the library, and not taken to the homes. More than any other in- fluence today it is the public library which conserves and develops the public taste. As Dr. Locke of the Tor- onto Public Library said in a recent address: "Without the library there is comparatively little protection in any community against the cheap, all, tion the vulgar and nasty in litera- ture. Its very catholicity in taste and the common, the trashy, not to men- | democracy'in administration make it the representative public social in- | stitution of any community---and our | SHOE SNAPS FOR ~ SATURDAY Compare These Prices With Anything in Town" $3.95 Ladies' Black Kid Oxfords All sizes 3 to 7. $2.95 Ladies' Brown $1.95 Girls' Black Laced Boots Sizes 8 to 10-- regu- lar $2.75 values Oxfords Sizes 2} to 6. , WE SELL THE BEST $5.00 MEN'S SHOES IN KINGSTON Black Bluchers; all sizes, 6 to 10, at this price. $1.75 Infants' Black Laced Stitchdown Bluchers Sizes 5 to 7}; a regu- lar $3.00 Shoe. Saturday .... $1.75 ' $2.95 Boys' Black School Boots Sizes | to 5. Regular $4.00 values $2.95 Youths' Brown School Boots Sizes 11 to 13. Regular $4.50 ee 7 AN Tea & Coffe That good Tea at ....35c. Ib. English Breakfast Tea .45¢. 1b. Lipton's Famous Tea .48c. 1b. Minto Tea, with the Spoon 60c. 1b. Other blends up to $1.00 per 1b Try our delicious Coffee . at 45c¢. per 1b. C. H. Pickering 490 aad 492 Princess Street. Abernethy's Shoe Store PL LAR : i Th ae BY EL Gig 00 Pom gm ss 7 --- 2% ¥, / | i i (8 reeammrreebliree | April for Philadelphia, Pa., where | they have received hospital appoint- ments. Both have rendered excel- { lent service in the General Hospital | here, | TAKE CARE { OF | . THAT COUGH | Some people get a nasty cough and don't pay much attention to it, say- ing, "Oh, it will wear away in a | short time," tut while it may wear off, serious injury may have been | done to the lungs and respiratory or- RED SEAL RECORDS BOSTON SYMPATHY ORCHESTRA Boston Symphony Orchestra has achieved an enviable position among the world's best symphony orchestras. It is made up of superb artists, who have played together for years under the guidance of conductors of genius, who have individually controlled its musical destinies over long periods. De- spite the reputation of the Boston Sym- as Prof. Morison would have us be- | = A lieve. The boys and girls of today | are reading more books and better | Frame house, 7 rooms, in Ontario communities are commenc- | Phone 530. ing to realize it." | No, things are not nearly as bad iaieann // NY books than the boys of fifteen years ago were reading. They are learn. | ing the use of libraries, and it will | stick with them. The reading tastes | of older folks, Prof. Morison"s con- | temporaries, are usually worse than | those of the younger generation, as | évery librarian knows. The young | folk of today are not perfect, far | from it, but as one writer recently | put it: "If they were very much | er worse they would be getting almost | : as bad 4% their parents were before | THERE 18S SOMETHING VERY ATTRA CTIVE ABOUT RATTAN FURNITURE All the very newest designs and fi nishes., We have everything from single Rockers, Arm Chairs, Lamps, Work B askets and Fernerys, to the most els borate suites, James Reid The Leading Undertaker Phone 147 for service. good location; hot water heat- electric lights, hardwood floors, newly decorated, and Phony Orchestra, comparatively few have eard it, for we do not all live in Boston, and symphony orchestras travel with diffi. culty. Yet through the agency of the Vic- trola the Boston Symphony Orchestra can now play in everybody's home. Largely through its instrumentality it is no longer necessary to travel to one of the great cities in order to hear examples of modern sym- phonic music. Come to our store and hear the Symphony Records. R. J. RODGER 132 PRINCESS STREET RN NEW SPRING FOOTWEAR TIES STRAPS When buying your Spring and early Summer footwear, we know that you will have Straps or Ties--very much in mind, because they will be worn this season. To meet this demand, we have a large stock of fashionable models, conservative expressions of the styles, at exceptionally low prices. Allan M. Reid . SHOE STORE | gans by the prolonged, harsh, rack- | ing coughing. On the first sign of a cough or cold | get a bottle of Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. It will stop that nasty, | troublesome cough, ease the tightness across the chest, and loosen the phlegm. Mrs. Wm. Earnshaw, Apsley, Ont. writes: -- 'Last winter I caught a bad cold, had a sore throat and a terrible hacking cough that I could not get rid of. I could not sleep at night. I tried quite a few remedies, but they did not do me much good until I got Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup, By the time I had taken two bottles, my cough was all gone. I feel that "Dr. Wood's has no equal." When you get Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup, you are not experiment- ing with new and untried remedy, but one that has a reputation extend. Ing over thirty years. Put up in a yellow wrapper; three pine trees the trade mark; price 35c. and 60c. a bottle, manufactured only by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, To- ronto, Ont. them." to forget its own youth, DECIDEDLY INTERESTING Was The Movies of a Newspaper in The Making. One of the features in the film bill at the Allen thy last three days of this week was interesting from the newspaper's point of view and would have been vastly more interesting screening of Canadian news subjects scenes were shown of the production of one of the large Toronto news- papers. As practically all newspap- ers of any sizs use the same methods now, it serves to give the people an idea of the various operations meces- sary in turning out the newspaper they read. For the sake of bravity it was necessary to cut out many of the details in the operations, but a good general idea may be obtained LD TALES | | TWICE TO News of Kingston TEN YEARS AGO. The Crossmon house at Alexandria Bay has already booked large parties for the coming summer. It opens June Sth. Two new watermains will be laid to increase the fire pressure. Dr. Mackie has notified the elders of. St. Andrew's of his intention of re- tiring next October. Miss Margaret Anglin appears in this city in a few weeks. WJ. Drysdale, Lanark, has accept- ed a position as traveller for the Winn Shoe Co., of Perth. Dr. James McCammon has beea appointed sheriff of the united coun- tiee of Leeds and Grenville. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO, McGill had 98 medical candidates, Queen's had 27. Yet! Queen's pluck- ed more than did McGill. J. Tobin and J. Payne, Portsmouth, will work in Port Hope this season. G. Murray goes to Chicago in a few days to purchase machinery for a proposed new business here. Joseph Wilson is superintendent of construction under the public works department of Ontario for the mew wing at Rockwood. John Twigg, who died in this city recently, was a veteran of the British army. T. Barlowe has been appointed en- sineer on the tug Petrel for the com- ing season. It is the weakness of age | had there been more of it. During the | possession on May 1st. This property is worth the money. Price $3,700. | | | | A. F. Purcell [lif Phone 704. 11114 Brock St. Real Estate and Insurance. from the picture. This film is worthy of special com- mendation as ara those in any other theatres which stick to Canadian subjects for the mews films and have the Canadian ensign waved once in a while by the crowds of school chil- dren, instead of what we have been accustomed to since the advent of the moving picture in Canada. Useless Appendix Not long ago a number of masons left Scotland to settle in this coun- try. One of them wrote to his wife shoftly after his arrival, and in- structed her to sell their household property and to take passage out to him. The good wife had a neighbor who came to help her with the pack- ing. In the midst of it they fell up- on Thomas' watch. The neighbor examined it closely and then said: "It's a grand watch, Catherine. Ye"ll be takin' it wi' ye?" "Na, na!" was the reply. "It wad be o' nae use 00t there, for Thomas tells me $» his létter that there {s some 'oors 0 difference between the time here and in Canada, so I needna be takin' use- less things." It's easy enough to say laugh at tribulations, but when it comes to cur door it's a mighty lot different If both sides of the story could be be less trouble in this old world. ¥ GOOD RED BLOOD is sagential one is to enjoy vigorous health and keen mental ctuities. Eliminate waste matt p 5 - oI er accumulated during the win NYAL BLOOD PURIFIER It contains some of the best known blood remedies, good, old-fashioned Sulphur in a readily assimitable form. Clears the skim--ellminates Pimples--relieves Spring Fever, $1.00 PER BOTTLE Sargent's Drug Store with New Eating House for Ladies and Gentlemen. Frontenac Cafe Everything we serve is best quality and our prices will please you. Comfortable Dining Rooms and the latest Sanitary Kitchen Equipment. Call in and give us a trial. Open from 7.30 a.m. till | a.m. 65 PRINCESS STREET (near King Street) CLEARING OUT SALE premises, we must sell before April 23rd, the te, 2nd Ne invite Prowpeelive ur. he ou Sales may made eariler, shop will remain open' for business antl 23rd inst: -- Safe. heavy and light spring waggons, counter scales, 5 hp. elec- tric motor. 2 switches and wiring. 2 ejectric forge fans complete, quan- tty shafting, hangers, pulieys and belting, hollow chisel mortolamg ma- chine, Universa] wood-worker, wood tur ng lathe, woodworkers vice bolt and nut threadin machine. light punch and saw gummer, Imperial power drill, emery grinder, bending mandrel tire bender, house cold tire setter, tire binder, 2 calking foo: vises, 2 blacksmith"s vices. anvil, 3 work benches, 3 desks, set auto box wrenches, bolt cutter, hammers, tongs, etc, and large quantity lumber rims, iron bolts, ete. McNAMEE & SLACK 54 QUEEN STREET. Phoa 121Tw. a You can make your criticism just told at the same sitting there would | sometimes uses a dead beat to adver. as effectual by mixing a good bit of | tise his product. . Against his will perhaps the tailor. courtesy with it. .