WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1921. CHP P ITIP br bE 3 * 9 } r. 2 Austin's Drug Store NEW 1921 SEEDS JUST IN RENNIE'S, FERRY'S, DUNKIRKS DISINFECTANTS FOR SPRING HOUSE CLEANING * Lysol, Creolin, Formaldehyde, Bulphur and Formaldehyde re Numigaior 8180 == MOTH BALLS MOTH CAMPHOR FLAKES and WAYNE CEDAR PAPER WARDROBE Austin's Drug Store Corner King and Market Square Kingston RH JONES Auto Tops repaired, recover- ed; slip covers; all kinds of cushions repaired. BOAT CUSIIIONS made all sizes with KAPOK filing. 390 PRINCESS STREET Phone 152, Watches and Clocks Repaired --by-- G. W. LYONS arc guaranteed for one year. Call or 'phone and your or- der will be promptly attended to. Phone 1866. 267 Princess St. ------ ; : FAULTY PLUMBING IS COSTLY NO MATTER HOW LOW THE PRICE Our Plumbing and Tinsmithing is being built up on a quality first basis. If you are going to build we will be pleased to quote you prices on the total fixtures and the cost of installation. Plombers and Tinamiths 203 WELLINGTON STREET Phone 688, Davie & Barrett l * W.R McRae & Co. GOLDEN LION BLOCK. For Sale A new Sharples Milking Machine. Will sell cheap. E. Brawley SYDENHAM, ONTARIO, enn PATTON'S DYE WORKS (Late Montgomery's) DN Kingston's Only Dyer. Dry Cleaning a Speciaity. Phone 214. 340 Princess St. ------ mn, DID YOU EVER TRY Wagstat's Ginger Marmalade, Wabotam's hramon® 2% Bramsie Jelly, We also have a full line of other reliable makes of Marma- 1ades, Jam and Jellies for sale Bon Marche Grocery Cor. King and Bari dtreeq, 'License No. 3-iTidy Phone 1844. A. | REAL ESTATE FOR SALE" W. H. GODWIN & SON Real Estate and Insurance SUFFERED DAY AND NIGHT The Tortures of Dyspepsia Relleved By "Froit-3-ives" Lrrrie Baas D'or, C. B. "I was a terrible sufferer from Dyspepsia and Constipation for years. I had pain after eating, belching gas, constant headaches and did not sleep well'at night. Finally, a friend fold me lo try' Fruil-a-tives"', In a week, the Constipation was corrected and soon Iwas free of pain, headaches and that miserable feeling thas accompanies Dyspepsia. I continued to take this splendid fruit medicine | and now I am well, strong and - vigorous". ROBERT NEWTON. 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 256. At all dealers or sent postpaid by Fruita-tives Limited, Ottawa. BUILDING ? | REPAIRS OR ALTERATIONS? Estimates given by O. Aykroyd & Son Phone 1670. | 21 Main Street. ne |: Dr. Waugh Dentist 106 Wellington St. W. H. STEVENSON | HORSE SHOER and BLACKSMITH, Waggons and Trucks Repaired. Prices moderate. 381 KING STREET EAST Phone 256. Smoke Distinctive in flavor and aroma FOR SALE GOOD, CLEAN COAL. A. Chadwick & Son New location: Corner Ontario and West Sts Phone 67. CHOICE WESTERN MEATS and COOKED MEATS MeGEEIN'S. Phone 1182 282 Princess Street a -- ---- ARRIED LADIES ARE YOU STILL DOING IT? You must know it is not fair to your husband to continue buying new Hats every season when we can reshape your old ones into the very latest Spring styles, Get wise! Save $10.00, and put it into that Suit you have in mind. The Kingston Hat Cleaners Opposite The College Book Store. 163 'Princess St. Upstairs. 'Plone 1488. THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. ~ Kingston and Vicinity | Death of a Child. be remodelled and fitted up as office A two year old son of Mr. and Mrs. | and residence | Leslie Row, Smith's Falls, died of Te -------- { diphtheria on Sunday. Saturday is Special Meeting. | | Th: regular weekly meeting of the lo Shirts-at Reduced-Pricer-- Hk iwamris-€1ub-was-held-in-the-Fron- { For a few days only we will put | ténac hotel an Mondon but through {on sale men's working shirts and (an inadvertence, the announcement | negligee shirts, values from $2.00 to | was made on Monday that it would i $2.50, for $1.50 each. Sizes 14 to 17. not take place until Saturday. The | Prevost Clothing House, Brock St. |Saturday meeting is a special meet- : ing. Throw Away our Rubbers ° | "Throw 'Away Your Rubbers for | Ontario's Voted Dry," is the slogan | jup in Rideau and Victoria 'wards, [spent a few*hours in Athens, renew- { which did what they could on Mon- ing 81d acquaintances, He leaves next ! | John A. Donovan, B.A., Toronto, day to stem the tide in Kingston. | month for Vancouver, whence he Making Repairs { #ppointed manager of the Manufac- | A number of 'men are employed | turers' Life Assurance Co., in China | muking some repairs to the ground | with headquarters at Shanghai. { at the Queen's bowling.green. It is | ---- | expected that the bowlers will com- | Ambherst Island Trip | mence their games in the very near| The stegmer Brockville made her | future, | weekly trip to Amherst Island on | | Tuesday and carried a number of ! Her Mother Recovered. | passengers and a considerable quan- Miss Walker, Carleton Place, who | tity of freight. She will make week- was obligedto ask the Board for. li-|ly trips until the middle of May or beration from her high school duties | first of June, when the traffic de- { because of the serious illness of her | mands a more frequent service. Marriage at Belleville. A charming wedding took place at | 8t. Thomas' Anglican church, Belle- ville, April 18th, the bride being Miss Dorothy Gerow, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Gerow, the | groom being one of Belleville's well- | known young men, Wesley Kiser, son | of Edward Kiser. | | { | mother, is teaching at Forest, Ont. | | Her mother recovered. Madoc Man Out on $10,000 Bail | John Alexander, Madoe, is out on { $10,000 bail until next Saturday on {a charge of assault occasioning ac- tual bodily harm to Thomas Cars- well, who works at a mine between Madoc and Queensboro. | -- Delayed on Her Trip. | The steamer Waubic was delayed | in her trip down to Kingston and had | Thinks He Is Missionary Believing that the man of mystery [taken into custody at Verona, Ont., to spend two days at Port Burwell | aay Ye Rudolphe Schoen, a Hebrew owing to/the storm. 2 {missionary who disappeared from ' | London recently, friends have sent » | photographs and a description to the | axithorities with a request for fur- Moscow Hen's Egg Record | ther particulars. A Moscow hen beats the egg rec- | ord. A Rhode Island Red, owned by | J. Green, must have heard of the egg | records, for on April 16th it produc- ed an egg which measured. 9 by 63% inches and weighed six ounces. Getting Ready for Examinations The authorities at Queen's Univer- sity are making arrangements for the examin itions' at the 'college. The | students will write fn' Grant Hall, 1 On Tuesday about 'three hundred ta- { bles were placed in that auditorium. | The examinations will commence on Wednesday. The medical students - To Locate In Ottawa. Dr. I. D. Cotnam, son-in-law of Mrs. W. H. Godwin, Pine street, has | purchased for $15,000 the residence will not write until the middle of in Ottawa formerly owned by Hon. May. Charles C. Murphy. The building will | NL re | County Workers Here. A number of workers for the ref- erendum in Storrington, Pittsburg | and Kingston townships came into { the city on Monday night, and re- mained up to a late hour to watch the bulletins announcing the results from different parts of the prov- ince. They were greatly staggered by the turnover in the city, a cou- dition never thought pessible. lh ] DODD'S mh oa To Address Retail Merchants. A. N. Lyster, manager of the Bank of Nova Scotia, wil] speak before the Retail Merchants' Association on Wednesday evening on the Kingston | Bankers' Clearing House," #nd Rob- ert Bruce of John Laidlaw & Son, will explain the powers of the On- ig PIANO ULAND. A nnn ONE MISER -- AND OTHERS By CHARLES GRANT MILLER A CANADIAN i ZUuL ex (Copyright, 1921, 'All Rights Reserved by United Feature Syndicate.) A ttt, A Connecticut miser, with $7,000 in a savings bank, died one night of the cold, in a cowshed that had been his home for ten years. Though ninety-one years old, and without a tamily, he had denied himself all of the comforts that money will buy, refused to touch a cent of the prin- tipal or interest, lived on garden produce he raised and on gifts from neighbors, and was saving his money for--the Lord only knows what. mn, A HINDS .. FRONTS LOINS .. LEGS ..... CHOPS . ... Princess Meat Market Ns 18c¢. 10c. 5c. -- .+ 20c. I15¢. But extreme as was his case, it is only a type of thousands of others whose alm is ever to get and never to give. Only for his great hardi- Jood and severe self-denial, which are really qualities of excellence, he would have been no worse, or better, than millions of others who love money as well as he did, but love personal comfort more, If all men whose chief desire alternates between money and the selfish gratification that money affords were gathered in a great group and put apart to themselves, there would be few of us left. © A miser, here and there represents the extreme degree to which life may be narrowed down by love of money. But countless millions are narrowing their lives every day from the same cause, Few of us may bave the physical hardihood to live in cowsheds, but lots of us furnish no better environment than that for mind and' soul. The average rich man may pamper his stomach and gratify his vanity of matters of clothes and houses and equipages; he may outshine his neighbors in the display of his wealth and fn conversation 'of it to his own pleasure; but for all that he none the less hugs his riches to his ows heart. The miser loves the money fact that it is his. The most of us who hold ourselves to be superior to him love the gratification of the physical senses which money brings. And the one love is as vain, as purposeless and as utterly selfish as the other. : The miser himself voluntarily suffers for the sake of money. But the average rich man makes other people--lamily, friends, employees--do the suffering, that he may be richer. : 4 ; Whether a man has $7,000 and lives in a cowshed, or $7,000,000, and keeps his heart in a counting room, makes little difference in the long run. The one is making a slave--a mere creature---of himself quite as actually as the other. itself; he revels in contemplation 6f the. | tario Government Minimum Female | | Wage Commission, as placed beforé a | recent business men's conference in | | Ottawa. A general discussion is ex- pected on the question of federal | EE ts i { i | Help to reduce exchange by buying as far as possible, MADE-IN - CANADA GOODS. In Kingston, we make Sash, Screens, Window Frames, Doors and Mouldings of fre -- Stage Driver's Escape. James Moulton, stage driver be- | tween Newboro and Bedford Mille, [ met with a very painful accident a few days ago when driving down a { hill at the Mills. The harness broke Becomes Insurance Manager In China [ang the horse, becoming frightened, | | turned the buggy over, and Mr. | Moulton was thrown heavily to the | ground. His escape from death was | miraculous and although he received | sails for China, having recently been |g severe shaking up, it is expected he | | will be able to get out again in a few | weeks. Absent-Minded People. Nearly every market day some person or persons leave articles on the island market, Today Market Clerk McCammon was looking for the owner of some maple syrup and other things which had been left in the market house. Some people have been known to buy chickens and oth- er good things and leave them in | the market house, and still we hear | so much-about the high cost of liv- | ing and the high prices on the mar- ket, -------- Gold Find Attracting Attention. The reported find of gold on the | south branch of the Petawawa river has created quite a furore in mining circles, During the past week many enquiries have reach:d Pembroke re- garding the matter, two coming from Buffalo, while quite a number of prospectors have gone up the Petaw- awa and it is understood that already a number of claims have been staked. | Many Pembroke citizens are showing a lively interest in the discovery and several syndicates are being formed to-éngage in prospecting. Thrift and Cigarettes. The Belleville Ontario says: If you would have your son grow up with- out becoming a cigarette smoker, start a savings bank account for him while he is little. The boy who has a savings bank account at the age of twelve, according to Savings Bank Associations, will not have the cigar- ette habit at eighteen. The psycholo- gical explanation is that the boy takes great pride in the growing sav- ings bank account and the possibili- ties it brings him. He gets a self- righteous "kick' out of putting away money for an educational fund. ---------------------------------------------- Welcomed The Couple, A very interesting event took place last Friday week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. T. Pridmore, when nearly forty friends from Rose Hall Sunday school called together to congratul- ate them on their recent marriage and to be introduced to the bride. A very pi.asant social time was spent and at the close, after a short pro- gramme of recitations, etc., Andrew Pettingell read an address of wel- come and good wishes, and Hilt Mec- Cartney presented a handsome gaso- line library lamp on bebalf.of tho two senior classes in the Sunday school. Mr. and Mrs. Pridmore both responded, expressing appreciation and thanks. Mrs. Pridmore was Miss Brown, Elgin, where' the marriage took place. Were Unfairly Trapped A surprising case occurred at Nap- anee, says t oronto Star. Some thirty perl ver called to appear before a cduple of fishery inspectors and pay $5 each for having, contrary to law, dipped suckers from the river without having secured a license to do 80, They had used dip-nets be- low the falls near the town, as they and their fathers and their grand- fathers have done every spring at that same place for the past seventy years. They didn't know--nobody knew--that it was necessary to take out a license at a charge of $2 if'you wanted to dip for suckers, or $5 if you proposed to sell the suckers af- ter having caught them. If this an- cient right of the Napanee people is to be interfered with, a notice post- ed in town or at the falls where the dip-netting is done would have pre- vented the infraction of the law. As it is, those who paid $5 fines are bound to feel that they were un- fairly trapped. : BEWARE OF BRONCHITIS Bronchitis is generally caused by neglecting a cold, or exposure to wet and inclement weather. It begins with a tightness across the chest, dif- ficulty in breathing, and a wheezing sound comes from the lungs. There is a raising of phlegm, especially the first thing in the morning. first white, but later becomes ~~ superior quality and at competitive pric | S. ANGLIN & CO. Woodworking Factory and Lumber Yards, Bay and Wellington | Strects, KINGSTON, Ont. Office Phone 66. Factory | ~~ Phone 14135. SOWARDS KEEPS COAL AND COAL KEEPS SOWARDS All kinds of cut: wood and soft Coal. Phone 155 Uptown Office. ." McGall Cigar Store, 'phone 811. Sik 2 USE SUNKIST SEEDLESS RAISINS FOR COOKING 5 Economic - - Wholesome J Vacuum Cleaners To Rent For Spring House-Cleaning Motor Boat Supplies, Dry Cells, Spark Plugs, Coils, Switches, etc. HALLIDAY ELECTRIC (0. \WHAT IS WRONG with your car will be surely made right if you send it here for repairs. It makes no difference what the trouble is or what make of car it is. We know autos from A to Z and have both the skill and the facilities to do any- thing needed. Thorough work and moderate charges always. ' Scott's Gar rn, SPRING FURS Dealer in Furs only. Gourdier's BROCK STREET We're Ready for Spring With a Large, New Stock of Fi i IA ine Quality Suits and Top Coats For Men and Young Men at Lower Prices $20.00, 22.00, 25.00, 28.00 $30.00, 32.00 . See our fine quality Blue Serge Suits at --$35.00 -- | TWEDDELL'S 131 Princess St. (One door below Randolph Hotel) At = rn A chorus gir! isn't supposed . t5| One nice thing about a bald-hesd- know how to sing. And a show girl led man : that he. doesn't spend isn't supposed to show half as mues | much tim posing for his picture al ] as » chorus gir: photograph galleries, -