THURSDAY, JULY 28, 1921. ee -- CHOICE WESTERN. MEATS and COOKED MEATS McGEEIN'S Phone 1182 282 Princess Street ---- FOR MOVING OF | ¥reight, Furniture, Safes, Pianos, and I Cartage of every description-- | Kingston Transfer Co. Plone 377. 153 Wellington Street. | DAVID SCOTT Plumber iumbing and Gas Work a special. fs. All work guaranteed. Address 145 Fromtenae Street. Phone 1277 DRAW. WINNETT D INTAL SURGEON. Corner of Johnsun and Wellington | \ Phone 256." Angrove's Repairs Seales, Talking Machines, Bleyclen, | Baby Carriages, Lawn Mowers, etc. We | do repair work right amd guarantee | mtinfaction. 107 WELLINGTON STREET WATTS People's Florist 177 Wellington street. 106 Wellington St. Fresh flowers and plants daily Funeral designs, and wedding bouquets to order. Phone 1763. Res, 1137, SRR, {yourService" W. R McRae & Co. GOLDEN LION BLOCK. - Br em a | COAL Chotcest quality of Scranton Coal. No other kind sold by Ub. 4 'BOOTH & CO. Grove Inn Yard Phono 133 REDUCED PRICES IN MONUMENTS AND CEME- | TERY LETTERING J. E. Mullen 161 FRONTENAC STREET Phone '1417. Partridge Wire Works NICKEL PLATING AND BRASS FINISHING Now prepared te do this work. Manufacturing , Wire Fencing, Flower Bordfe Guards, ete, KING ST. W. - - PHONE 3% 62 BUILDING ?.. REPAIRS OR ALTERATIONS? Estimates given by O. Aykroyd & Son 21 Main Street. - Phome 1670. Dr. Nash's DENTAL PARLORS:. 183 PRINCESS STREET KINGSTON, ONTARIO We specialize on:--Painless Extrac- tion, X-Ray work. ----- TAXI FOR HIRE Special prices for out- of-town trips. G. C. MILLARD 30 Main Street 'Phone 235 Iw: Dr. H. A. Stewart Dental Surgeon Wishes to announce that he has resumed his practice, cor. Wel- lington and Princess Streets. Phone 2092. Dr. H. A. Stewart Portsmouth Gasoline Service Station BEST GRADE S OF OILS-AND GREASES George Granger Phone 129, PATTON'S DYE WORKS (Late Montgomery's) Kingston's Only Dyer. - Dry Cleaning a Specialty. Phone 214. 849 Princess St Lake Ontario Trout and Whitefish, Fresh Sea Salmon, Had- dock, Halibut and Cod BOOTH FISHERIES Canadian Co. Phone 520. 63 'Brock Ste . 90-3240. Here is something new for the baby -- B. & B. Baby Tal- cum--it sheds water like a duck's back, and is antiseptic and soothing. 'Also Baby Soap--very pure and just suited for thé baby's skin. Made by Bauer & Black and sold by: -- M. R. McColl Prescription Druggist. Phone 82, "Higher Quality and Better Service" our motto, DID YOU EVER TRY 4 Wagsiafl'y Ginge: siarmalade, Wagstaf'y Pineapple Marmalade, Wagstafl's Bramble Jelly. We also have a full ilne ot other ruvbiable makes of Marmas lages, Jam and Jellies fur sale wii Bon Marche 'Grocery Cor. King and Earl Streets License No. 3-27149 Phoue in44d. FOR RENT 7 room dwelling. Apply W. H. GODWIN & SON rT Real Estate and Insurance 89 Broc!: Street. Phone 424. MEN'S AND BOYS' STRAW HATS : We are 'clearing out our Men's and Boys' Straw Hats. , Come in and pick out one and save something worth while. SUMMER SHIRTS $1.75, $2.00 and $2.30 WORKING SHIRTS $1.00, $1.50, $2.00 LEATHER BELTS Extra good qualit SUMMERJSOCKS 25¢., 85c., three pairs $1.00. GOOD LISLE SOCKS . ... 50c. © SILK SOCKS--all colors-- 75c¢. and $1.00 I. ZACKS 271 PRINCESS STREET Latest Treatment of Pyorrhea, | bon placed--at EA THE DAILY RRITIS SH .WHIG. Tr ---- Kingston and Vicinity slice frequents the place and grabs the children by the feet as they, are at- tempting to, swim. --v Sold a Farm. George Farrell has sold her Demorestville, to Alex. An- Norsiport Mrs farm derson, at nee Celebrated 84th Birthday. Cengratulations are extended Rev. Dr. Gracey, Gananoque, who on | Tuesday last celebrated his éighty- f fourth birthday "On! Why? " { pray tell, In this blistering heat, Do all the gay flappers Parade on the street? Oh why, { In Critical State. Appointed to Office, John Conlin, Marquette, Mich., who Bongard has been appointed | has beer confined to his bed for some First Division Court of | time at the home of his sister, Mrs Mary Johnston of Tweed, is still in a very critical condition. D 1. clerk of the the County of Prince Edward, |suc- 'ceeding Fred Slaven New Letter Boxes Installed. Married in Brockville. number' of letter boxes have | A quiet wedding took place when convertent--places-Mabet-trace Barronly daughter ot throughout the city. Princess street | Mr. and Mrs. Henry Barr, Fairfield, is now well supplied with receptacles marriage to Lloyd | for mail. A PAR ! mony took place in Brockville Saving Their Apples, . i Boys will be boys, and Kingston's | are. no exception. Some owners of | apple trees are said to be picking the | fruit before it is ripe so as to keep | the boys from stealing them. Keep Ladder Wagon on Street, The paving gang are working in front of the fire station on Brock street, and in order to make a quick | | getaway in case of fire, the ladder | { wagon is kept on the south east cer- ner of Brock and Barrie streets. Extensions Being Made. i Work is progressing rapidly on the extensions to St. Vincent's Aca- | demy on William street. Class rooms | {are being installed-in the™rick resi- | dence next to the academy i | - | Many Picnic Automohile picnic parties are all | the go now. The warm weather is! | driving the people out of the city, | {and nearly every night auto picnic | | parties leave the city for favorite re- | sorts a few miles from the city. Holding Swimming Classes, The class for boys in Frontenac | park under the direction of Cabt. H. E. Law, is ptoving popular for the lads of the district, ses are. being held at Richardson bathing house, Parties, and the struction. Located at Merrickyille, Dr. Glen R. Davison, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Davison, Brockville, | ---- es { who recently graduated from Swat These Boys, Please, | Queen's ; University, has opened up Some of the children at the bath-|a surgery Tar. the practise of medi {ing houses are complaining of the {cine at Merridkville. Dr. Davison is | actions of one of the older boys who | making his headquarters in the Bis- | * 'OUT IN THE WOODS By CHARLS GRANT MILLER (Copyright, 1921. All Rights Keserved by United Feature Syndjcate.) Come for a moment out into thé good green country--out into the woods, "Come for a week, moment. Out of the dirt and rattle the greater world that silent with peace. A moment the solitude and | help you grip on yourself, to draw yourself together, to | forget a little of the everyday greed and grind, to give you a clearer | look at yourself and a better conception of what you are trying to do | with this life of yours that is slipping like sand through your fifigers. | A moment in the woods, with your ear close to Mother Nature's | heart and your éyes finding vistas up int the blue eternal. mystery, may | teach you that yeur little selfish strivings, your little vanities, your little hatfeds and jealousies, that make up so large a part of your | daily living and your nightly worrying, are of no more worth to the world or you than are the nameless littlé gnats that so foolingly zigzag | in the sunshine. A moment with yourself and solitude. may teach you that the world is wide and its life is multifarious; or a month, if you can; but anyway come for a and confusion of the city come out into is clean, sweet, odorous, sunny with welcome, out in to get a new silence may refresh you, may that the universe does not nicely fit down around your little office in the city; that in the great plan you] with all your big bundle of self, | than the foaligh zigzagging gnats. It is good to get away, from the hurly-burly and take a little while | to dream, to form ideals, to shape and direct purpose, to realize what the noisy striving is all for. Ideals--they may be visionary but they are never Jain, 'They 'are [ to us what the star ot Bethlehem was to the three wise men of the East. | They lure to the fuller life; As in approaching foo near a mountain we lose sight of its shape, 80 in the close application to the detail of our work we are apt to lose | the perspective of our purposes. We are apt to plod $n through habit and forget our aims. Maybe some of us never have any. God pity us | then. Men without definite aims and purposes beyond mere means of | existence are animals on two. legs with nothing to compensate the loss | of the tail. f A moment in the wgqods may be a moment of Anyway, it is bound to be a moment of rejuvenation, alone in the woods will make a new man of anyone. are of only a 1 ittle more importance transformation. A whole week GIANT EDIBLE CRABS. : Photo shows an Alaskan fisherman with two giant crabs, one of which measures forfy-eight inches from tip to tips Alaskan waters abound with these erabs, which make delicious ealing. They. are being canned - in large numbers this year. A to | | was sae 19 | Wellington Hayes, Athens. The cero- | Swimming clas- | the George | Rivls are also receiving swimming in- | | sett. residence,~Bock street, I oceupiea 'by Dr. Bedell. To Speak at Dinner, A Rea] Bargain. TWé have we will sell for less than wholesale | prices, sizes 14 to .16 1-2. | lar price of thesé shirts was $2.50 | and $23.00; your choice, while they last, $1.50 each--Prevost, street. Dr. Connell's Movenient. The many friends of Dr. Wilis Connell, a former resident of Pres- cott, will be interested in knowing that he has been transferred from Jerusalem, where he lvas been engag- 'ed in government work for soma time, to the service in India. His wife and child, who have been residing in | England, will join Dr. Connell in | September. A After the Judgeship. lL.etds H. Ford! Clayton, N.Y. is candidate for the Republican nomina- {tion as county judge. Jasper W. Cor- [ naire, Cape Vincent, is also included. | Mr. Cornaire was supposed to have [the backing of the organization last | winter when it appeared that the election of Justice Alverson to su- preme court bench might throw the | appointment of his successor to Gov- | ernor Miller, Mrs. W. T. Halliday Dead. The death occurred -in Kingston general hospital of Mrs. W. T, Halh- | day Six weeks ago deceased was taken to Kingston to undergo a ser- ious operation from the effects of was formerly Miss Florence Shocker. and was born in England. Besides her husband eight children are left to mourn her loss. She also leaves her parents and one sister in Toronto. Boom in Real Estate Sales.' Cape Vincent, N.Y., is enjoying a boom in real estate values as a re- sult of the demand for homes=border- ing the St. Lawrence river as sum- mer residences for vacationists. Dur- ing the last year many wealthy citi- zens of New York and the middlé west who pass the summer at Capa Vincent have purchased properties for summer homes instead of pat- ronizing the hotels and boarding 'houses. - The result has been to in- crease values beyond war prices in Cape Vincent. Thirteen Cattle Slaughtered. ing to the mountains upset down a steep embankment near Hungerford. Not being abld to get out of a field into which they landed at the place where they entered, they went to an- other place, threw down the fence, and went away leaving it thus. The land belonged to Dolphus Bosley, his cattle went astray, got on the rail- road tracks, and a freight train came along and killed them. The killing Rappened about one mile east of Sulphide at Oliver's Cros:ing. This | is- indeed a very serious loss for Mr. Bosley, however he knows who left the fence down and it is up to these to help Mr. Bosley. Daniel 'Wilson, Adamston, Dead The death occurred suddenly on July 17th, of Daniel Wilson, Adams- ton, at the age of eighty-one years. Mr. Wilson; who lived with his son, Robert, on the old homestead, had been going about as usual on Sun- day, apd .had eaten a hearty dinner at home. In the afternoon Robert drove him over to Northcote to the home of his daughter, Mrs. C. R. Crozier. While eating supper he complained of sickness, and Dr. Mec- Kinnon was sent for, but he died a few minutes after the arrival of the doctor. The late Mr. Wilson was bern in 1840 in Edinburgh, Scotland. ; Comes Back Home, Michael] Hennessy, of North Da- kota, is spending a few weeks about Renfrew, having driven over from Pembroke with his sister, Mrs. Lea- cy. Mr, Hennessy was born and brought up on the farm of. his 'a- ther, one of the pioneers of Adams- ton, now known as the D, Stewart farm at McGee's Creek. Mr. Hennes- sy left Adamston thirty-three years 2go and settled in North Dakota, farming for many years. He has lat- terly been running a grain elevator. It {§ about twenty-two years since he 'home. He is returning soon to "ASPIRIN Only "Bayer"' is Genuine Warning! Unless you see the name "Bayer" on package or on tablets you are not getting Aspirin at all. Take Aspirin only as told in the Bayer package for Colds, Headache, Neu- ralgia, Rheumatism, Earache, Tooth- ache, Lumbago and for Pain. Then you will be following the directions and dosage worked out by physicians during twenty-one years and proved safe by millions. Handy tin boxes of twelve Bayer Tablets of Aspirin cost few cents. Druggists sell larger packages. Made in Canada. Aspirin is the trade mark '(registered in Canada). of Bayer Manufacture of monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid. formerly | received about thirty | dozen of Tooke's colored shirts which | The regu- | Brock | which she never recovered. Berta ot] Some huckle-berry pickers motor Streets, KINGSTON, Ont. Drain Tile Clay Tile for draining farm lands. : S. ANGLIN & CO. Woodworking Factory and Lumber Yards, Bay and Wellington Office Phone 66. Factory Phone 1415, Picnic Lunches Prepared To Order PETER LEE, 222 Princess Street - - When going for a Boat or Automobile trip let us get your lunch ready. We will make you like and th would like it Our prices are reasonable. up what way you Grand Cafe PROP. Two Doors Above Opera House 287 BAGOT STREET. 6%.-20 Year Bonds Interest June and December Price 97.17. Yied 6.25) Bongard, Ryerson & Co. '2he Home of Good Investments." PHONE 1728. 85 Bay Street, Toronto. $30.00, { ™ - We're Ready for Spring With a Large, New Stock of Fine Quality , Suits and | Top Coats For Men and Young Men at Lower Prices $20.00, 22.00, 25.00, 28.00 See our fine quality Blue Serge Suits at --$35.00 -- TWEDDELL'S 131 Princess St. (One door below Randolph Hotel) 32.00 ® Handherchief; AT NEW LOW PRICES 4 FOR WOMEN -- Fine Linen with narrow hemstitching at 20c.; 25c¢. and 30c. each: FOR MEN---full, large sizes, with and } inch hemstitching at 40c., 50c. and 60c. each. SPECIAL --Fine, White, Swiss Or- gandie, wide width, for $1.00 yard W. N. Linton & Co. ad Phone 191. N. Prof. G. W. Mitchell, of the de partment of classics, Queen's Uni- versity, is to be the speaker at the Kiwanis dinner aboard th: steamer St! Lawpence en Thursday evening. The Waldron Store. Prof. Mitchell is one of the cleverest humorists in Canada. -------- ei, Queen Victoria was at one time ah 'enthusiastic 'amateur actress, .