Daily British Whig (1850), 1 Jul 1921, p. 20

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

esp Sen MA pp . DURING A LIMITER PERIOD. . LIVINGSTON'S WILL GIVE YOU 20% Discount Off all Ready-to-wear Clothing for men. Off all Ready-to-wear Clothing for boys. Shirts, Underwear, Collars, Pajamas --in fact off everything in Ready-to- Wear Clothing and Furnishings in the store, Jaegar Goods excepted. No Approval --All Sales for Cash. Goods marked in plain figures, | i | @ ® 9 Livingston's Founded 1847. 75-77 BROCK STREET "lf Off Your Route It Pays to Walk" ASR 0 Anderson Bros. Limited Grocery Specials ~ Jaturday Corn Flakes, 10c. Granulated Sugar, 10 lbs for 98c. Canned Salmon (choice) 300 tins, 19¢ tin. Whey Butter, 29c. Nn FRUITS % Cherries, Elkhorn, Sweet. Cherries, Montgomery, Sour. {, Cherries, White, Oxheart. + Raspberries, Melons, Canteloupe, Peaches, Plums, Gooseberries, MEAT DEPARTMENT SPECIAL 1000 Ibs Western Beef, stewing cuts, 10c Ib. GURDS POPULAR SUMMER BEVER. = AGES : : [Bred up for Georges, and | (Continued From Page 1.) | Frenzy of Excitement, New York, July 2.--New York and the entire metropolitan area, which | reaches out and embraces the now | Acres" in | 4. Jersey. City, seethed today with the savy weight | famous "Boyles: Thirty | frenzy of excitement wholly unpre: { cedented in the annals of sport, as | the hour, rolled slowly on-for the | urday morning: | istic clash for the world's heavy- | Georges Carpentier, | weight championship between Jack | Dempsey, United States title holder, | and Georges Carpertier, idol and | champion of Europe. New York's mansions and her gor- | | geous hotels early begin disgorging | brilliant parties of men and women, | intent on threading in ample time the | Cluttered automobile highways that | lead to Tex Rickard's mammoth are- | na in Jersey City. Less opulent fans | had begun their scramble towards Jersey hours earlier, by ferry, by flivver and train, but even the ear- | lest arrivals this morning found themselves out-generaled by an ad- vance guard of about three hundred men and boys who had spent the night in line waiting for first crack | at $5.50 unreserved seats. The day opened with a brief flash | of sunshine, but by nine o'clock the | | sky was overcast and the threat of | rain was in the air. Champion Dempsey, primed and eager, 'awaited the hour to defend his title in the Jersey City residence | , { to which he had been spirited from his training camp at Atlantic City | his | | late yesterday. Carpentier left { quarters at Manharsett by automo- bile shortly after breakfast for Port | Washington, where a yacht awaited | to bear him to the fight city, | Carpentier All Ready. | Manhassett, N.Y., July 2. -Arising this morning at the usual hour of six o'clock, Georges Carpentier break- fasted, spent fifteen minutes at"sot- ting up exercises, then permitted | himself to be amused by his com- rades. Descamps had mapped out the day to coincide with the training sched- {ule the challenger has followed for | six. weeks. Luncheon was scheduled | for 11.30 o'clock, then the motors { were to take the party to Fort Wash- | ington; on Manhasset Bay to go | aboard the sixty-five foot power yacht Lone Star. One of the bunks was he had planned to sleep an hour while tha little craft sped down the sound to | Jersey City dock. There a closed car and special guard of six motor cycle policemen awaited the party. Strict | orders were given by Manager Des- | camps to keep everybody out of the challenger's dressing room until he starts for the ring. He said Georges would be ready when the time for the main event arrived. Four CPR. Employees Retired on July 1st] Four very valuable officers of the Canadian Pacific Railway in King- ston were retired on July 1st. They are F. W. Clark, locomotive fore- man, who ' served forty-two years with the company, John Slemmons locomotive engineer, thirty-five years, | Charles 8. Davidson, locomotive en- gineer, thirty-four years, and David Young, conductor, thirty-three years. George Holland, engineer, was re- tired on January 1st, 1921. He and David Young completed the Kingston and Pembroke into Ren- frew and secured from the munici- pality the bonus of $20,000. Shipbuilding Wages Lowered And the Hours Increased The employees of the Collingwood Shipbuilding Company received word Thursday that on Monday the work- ing hours would be increased from eight to nine hours a day and a fif- teen per cent decrease in wages would go into effect. This affects all hands alike. The agreement of the unions with the company expired the end of June, and the men are now open to re-engagement, This change is similar to that put into effect at the plant at Collingwood some time ago. Mixed Drinks Caused Sorrow in Police Court Three holiday celebraats appeared in police court on Saturday morning all pleading guilty of intoxication. David Sullivan, Toronto, got drunk 'on bay rum, Lawrence Devine on beer, and Gordon Byron on lemon extract and two per cent. The first was remanded until Monday and the latter two were fined $10 and costs or one month. Stanley Easson, charg- ed with vagrancy, was sentenced to three months. . ------------ Snook-Hunt Wedding. A pretty wedding was solemnized by Rev. Mr. Lennon, at Queen strest Methodist parsonage when Arline Gertrude, eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Delmer Hunt, was united in marriage to Harold Stanley Snook After the ceremony. a dainty lunch Was served at the bride's home, after which they left for Detroit, Mich. The bride received y useful pres- ents. The a to the bride Was a sunburst of pearls, which she wore. On their return they intend | 3 Dry Ginger Ale. : Aromatic Ginger Ale. | ; | l residing in Kingston. To Alexandria Bay, Str. St. Lawrence will make her Tegular trip to Alexandria Bay, on Sunday, leaving Ferry Dock at 2 p-m. Fare round trip 6c. ------ Collamer C. Folger, manager o the civic utilittes, is attending t Dempsey-Carpentier fight at Jersey City. He is expected to return on Monday. io ed lv -- 2 5 --te oa THE DAILY BRIT BETING FAVORS DEWPSEY ingston G.W.V.A. Sends Best Wishes | To Carpentier The following telegram was sent lo Georges. Carpentier, sie. - French 2 challenger for the | world's title, by the Great War Vet- |erans' Association of Kingston, Sat- "Jersey City, N.J. | "The members of the Kingston | branch; Great War Veterans Associa- | tion, your fellow comrades in the late areal war, wish you success and vic- tory in attaining your life-long am- bition, and trust that you may return to your native land with the heavy- weight boxing championship of the | world added to your laurels." -- LATE SOCIAL NOTES * - * Mrs. Ethel Oldham, Sydenham street, left Thursday to spend a month with friends in Owen Sound. ISH WHIG. | Miss Hilda Black, Port Arthur, is spending the week-end with friends in Kingston, on her"way to her home {in Renfrew, where she will spend | her vacation. Mrs. M. Clayton has returned to | her home in Rochester, N.Y., after | Visiting with Mrs. Hambrook, Weil- | ington street, and her son in Mon- |! treal. Miss Dealtry Parlow, Ottawa, and | Orton Lannin, Rochester, N.Y., are visiting Miss Irene Shaw, Gore street. Miss Ardagh, Arch street, gave a duster shower on Wednesday for Mrs. Jones, a recent bride, and Miss Flora Abernethy, the latter the bride | [of next week, | cs » Miss Flora MacLean, King street, | entertained at tea on Thursday for {Miss Flora Abernethy, whose mar- riage to Capt. Clyde Malioch takes place on Wednesday next. Miss Mac- | Lean's sister, Mrs. Buckley, Rhine- | beck, N.Y, who is visiting here, was [8 welcome addition to the party. | Mrs. Henry Connell, King "street, [is entertaining at tea this afternoon | for Miss Flores Abernethy. | Canon Daniels, Rothsay, N.B., was | street, this week. Canon Daniels is an R, M. C. graduate, and was great- ly interested in the improvement at | the Royal Military College. { Mrs. J. M. Machar returned | Thursday from Niagara Falls, | Sadie Hood, eldest daughter of | Mr. and Mrs, George McAllister, Bar. | riefield, and Erwin A. Hass, Neenah, | Wisconsin, were married June 29th, { at Toronto. Mr. and Mrs. Hass are visiting the bride's parents at Bar- riefleld. ------ | | Saturday's Market, Despite the heat there was a good sized market Saturday morning. But- ter was sold 'for 40 cents a pound | lana eggs at 40 cents a dozen. A few j farmers were offering new Potatoes.| at 60 to 65 cents a peck. The market | gardeners had large loads of vege- | tables and greens. DAILY MEMORANDUM. Monday, July 4th, i | day School Picnic to Brophy's Point | Str. St. Lawrence leaves Brock Street wharf at 2 p.m | HANSON, CROZIER & EDGAR PRINTERS | MARKET SQUARE, KINGSTON. MARRIED. | GRAHAM--CONWAY--A¢ St. John's Church, Bath on Wednesday, June 29th, 1921, by the Rey. A L Me- | Tear, Roy Graham Odessa to Helen | Mabel Conway Sydenham. | 1 WHEELOCK---RAYNOR--A t St. James' | Church, on Sept. 29th. 1920, by Rev. | | TW Savary, May Florence Raynor | to Robert V.' Wheelock. nm, DIED, ABBOTT--On Thursday. June 30th, 1921, Rodney H. Abbott, M D., of Amherstburg, formerly of Kings- on. Interment at Amherstburg. CLEARY--In Kingston, on June 30th, 1821, Catherine, widow of the late Hugh Cleary, Funeral (private) took place from the amily residence 117 Lower Bagot Street, on Saturday morning to St. ary's Cathedral where a solemn Sung at nine repose of hep soul. { (Montreal Hamilton and Chicago pe-| pers please copy.) CATLIN---In Kingston, on July 1st, 1921, Catherine Inez, youngest | daughter of Mr, and Mrs. J. T. Cat-| lin, aged three Years and three months, (New York, Chicago and pers, please cop KELLS--At his home in Palisades, N.J., William_J. Kell Dubuque pa- y.) the guest of Mrs. T. G. Smith, Bagot || St. George's Sun- || | | | | | | "ison the alert for seasonable, SATURDAY, JULY 2, pai. SPECIAL SALE TO-NIGHT » COMMENCING 7.30 O'CLOCK Unusual offerings will be ready for the thrifty buyer, who 4 prices. i. Stockings, full -soles; spliced heels and toes, with a deep garter-proof top. Black only. Sizes 84, 9, 91 and 10. dur able merchandise at very special A Liv A ' la t "0 PAIRS PURE Silk Stockings Regular Value $2.00 pair { _ Special $1.25 pr. 200 _ pairs Ladies' Pure Silk fashioned, doyble & Odd Lot Women's Silk Hose WHITE i, 10. GREY 81,9, 94 SKY - 9, 91. Regular value 75c., 90c. a pair. To clear 49c pr. Ladies' Jersey Knit Bloomers Price 39c¢ pair 20 dozen, Ladies' fine Sum mer at waistband and knee with ela stic. ~~ Jersey Bloomers, gathered Color: Pink. or Ladies' Summer Vests Regular value 75 ¢.-- Your Pick 50c. 50 dozen Ladies' Summer Under-Vests; knit from select- ed Egyptian Yarn. Some Cumf y-cut, and all in white; no sleeves MEN'S SILK SOCKS Colors: Grey, Navy, Brown. Sizes 10, 104, 11. \ 75¢. Pair LADIES' LONG SILK GLOVES (Kayser Make) 1 All have reinforced finger tips and come in various lengths. Colors: Grey, Mastic, ite and Black. $1.50 to $2.00 Pair ohn Laidlaw Son, Limited €lls, son of the late Robert Kells, Sunbury. ROLLISON----Ip Watertown, N.X., Saturday, July 2nd, son 1921, 1 N ' Funeral wil] take place from the resi- denge of his sister, Mrs. John Fran- cls, 312 Collingwood Street, Monday afternoon, 3 o'clock. Friends ang acquaintances ar spectfully invited to attend. SNOWDEN---In Kingston, on July 1st, 1921, Frederick Lecil, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. George E. Snowden, go months, atath Ss grandfather's resi. dence, George hagon, 6 Orchard treel, Monday morning at re lock, to Sataraqui Cemetery, - nds Acquaintances respects: invit, to mans : py ully on alter re- For Hot Weather We have a special Hot Wea- ther Kid Boot for Men-- nice, comfortable last; welt sole; soft upper. Kangaroo Leather . . . . $8.00 © LOCKETTS

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy