EH Lh FRIDAY, SEPT. 0 1921. THE DAILY BRITISH _WHIG. -- Sa CHOICE WESTERN MEATS 'and COOKED MEATS - Phone 1182 282 Princess Street FOR MOVING OF Freight, Furniture, Safes, Pianos and Cartage of every description-- Kingston Transfer Co. PLone 877. 153 Wellington Street. | DAVID SCOTT | Plumber | Piambing and Gas Werk a special. ty. All work guaranteed. Addregy 145 Frontente Street. Phone 1277, DR.A.W. WINNETT WINNETT D.INTAL SURGEON, Corner of Johnsvm and Wellington | Btreets Phone 863 Dr. Waugh Dentist | 106 Wellington St. hone 256. Angrove's Repairs Scales, Talking Machines, Bicycles, | Baby Carriages, Lawn Mowers, ete, We | de repair work right and guarantee watisfaction. 197 WELLINGTON STREET WATTS People's Florist 177 Wellington street. Fresh flowers and plants daily Funeral designs, and wedding Be to order. Phone 1763. Tr hones = W. R McRae & Co. GOLDEN LION BLOOK. Brena en TA COAL Cho'cest quality of Scranton Coal. No other kind sold by us. BOOTH & CO. Grove Inn Yard Phone 138 REDUCED PRICES IN MONUMENTS AND CEME- TERY LETTERING J. E. Mullen 161 FRONTENAC STREET Phone 1417. DID YOU EVER TRY Wagstafl'p Ginger slarmalade, Wagsiaf'y Flueapple Marmalade, Wagstali's Mrambile Jelly. We also bave a full line of other reusable makes of Marma- lades, Jum and Jellies for sale wii . Bon Marche Grocery Cor, King and Earl Streeta Licemse Neo. 5-27149 Phone 1844. | FOR.SALE _ 100 acres about 12 miles from city. Fair price. W. H. GODWIN Furniture--Freight--Baggage TRANSFER Phone 1776J S. WHITEMAN 210 QUEEN STREET BUILDING? - HEPAIRS OR ALTE RATIONS? Estimates given by O. Aykroyd & Son 21 Main Street. Anant ante I TAXI FOR HIRE Special prices for out- of-town trips. G. C. MILLARD . 30 Main Street Phone 235 1w. FOR SALE GOOD, CLEAN COAL. A. Chadwick & Son New location: Corner Ontario and West Sta Phone 67. Hunter G. Ogilvie INSURANCE AND GENERAL BROKER | In daily communication with Monts real and Toronto Stock Exchanges. Dominion, Provincial and Muniezi- pal Bonds for sale. 568) & 1087) R. H. JONES | Auto Tops repaired, recover- ed; slip covers; all kinds of cushions repaired. BOAT CUS\TIONS made all sizes with KAPOK filling. | | 390 PRINCESS STREET | Phone 133. Ar Nn magn. | A il | Unusual Things Anything about the home that needs washing and that will not be hurt by pure water itself may be safely immersed in the creamy, pure, cleans- ing Lux lather. Silk shades, hangings, oil- pictures and their frames, jewelry, bric-a-brac, heir- looms, etc., all are purified like new with Lux. LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED, TORONTO % 'We Are Pleased To Announce That our Fall and Winter Clothing for Men and Boys now arriving are of the old time qualities and our prices will be lower than ever, including: -- ~-Men's and Boys' Suits ~Top Coats --Sweater Coats ~--Hats and Caps ~Fine and Heavyweight Gloves ~=Underwear, etc. Come and see us. get real value here. IL. ZACKS 271 PRINCESS STREET You will It's a poor writer that escapes erit- Phone 1670. | | that measures seven inches i cumference, | fifteen inches long. | Mr. jotam, Kingston and Vicinity Prove Effective, I bride wore a handsome suit of navy { there will be no shortage in supply. you've used the classified ads | | biue tricotine and a black velvet hat. | The present quotation is sixty cents | efore, you will use them again with- being urged because you. know | by are effective." Set -- To Teach in Sarnia. Leita Arnold, B.A. left | Y.M.C.A.'s Fall Season, oot | The tocal ¥. M. C. A. 'are prepar- ing for a successful season of work | {and have renovated the building dur- | highest price this year. {ing the summer months. The carpen- | a peck, or $2.40 a bushal, but on | Saturday lower levels are generally | [looked for. It can fairly. be stated | that potatoes have - reached heir Butter rémains unchanged at 43 | ns for Toronto, where she spent | ters are now at work repairing the | to 45 cents, and eggs are firm at 35 | days before proceeding to a, 'wheré she has been engaged on the teaching staff of the collegiate, \ -- Work is Progressing. Good progress is being made on the new Merchants' Bank building, at Athens, The foundation work is now completed and drilling opera- tions are going on for a vauit in| the basement, Can You Beat This? William 'Ennis, Perth Road, has a tomato grown from his own crop across the top and eighteen inches in cir- Engagement Announced. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Armstrong, In- nisville, announce the engagement of | their fourth daughter, Catherine Al- | exandra (Carrie) to William C. Me- Call, son of W. J. McGall, Carleton Place. The marriage will take place | | the first week jn September. tres To Dedicate Tablet. The Lord Bishop of Ontario will dedicate a brass tablet to the mem- | ory of the late Bishop of Ontario, Dr. Mills, who preached his last ser- mon in St. Mark's church, Deseronto, Advent, 1916. The dedication will take place on Sunday evening, Sept. 11th. -- Life is Just One Opportunity after another to the folk who study and read the classi- fied advertisements every day. They keep in touch with the market of wants and are in a position to make a selection of the best that is offer- ed. Married at Sackett's Harbor. At Sackett's Harhcr, Ont, the marriage of A. W. Munk, Watertcwa, N.Y., and Miss Catherine M. Cam- eron, Brockville, was solemnized in the manse of the Presbyterian church, by the pastor, Rey. T. J. Searles. Engagement Announced, Mr. and Mrs. D. F. Lynch, Pam- broke, announce the engagement o! their youngest daughter, Mary Eve- lyn to T. Lawrence Heney, son of and Mrs. P. J. Heney, Arn- prior, the wedding to take place the latter part of September. Oliver-Kedwell Wedding, Miss A. Myrtle Kedwell, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. I, D. Ked- well, Enniskillen township, and W. Lyle Oliver, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Oliver, Petrolea, were quietly married on August 29th. They were in Kingston en route to Mallorytown where they will reside, eldest Tunnel Work Progresses, Good progress is being made on the tunnel work at Queen's grounds. Wooden forms are being made for the concrete tunnel and tile pipes for carrying away the surplus water have arrived. This part of the job is being done by McKelvey anu Birch, Died Quite Suddenly, Quite suddenly death came on Thursday evening to a venerable and highly respected Pembroke lady, Mrs. M. Howe, Sr, Shé had not been in good health for some months, but was able to make a trip up the river on the Oiseau on Wednesday. Death is thought to have been caused by acute indigestion. Purtelle-Steinburgh Wedding. On Aug. 29th, at the parsonage, Bloomfield, a marriage was solemniz- ed between two well known persons, James Purtelle and Mrs, Steinburgh, by the Rev. A. E, McCutcheon, in the presence of a few friends. Mr. and Mrs. Purteiie have been residents of Bloomfield for many years, where they are held in high esteem, The ---- and also an ear of corn | | ceiling in the gymnasium which is to | | be sheeted over with beaver board. | | The gym classes start on October | 1st, Had a Narrow Shave, Mrs. Dickson met with a serious | firm owing to heavy export demand {accident while working in the corn [and limited supply, | She fell across the corn car- | | shed at the A. C, Miller factory, Pic- | | ton, rier and cut her wrist and bruised her side quite badly, The result | might have been more serious had | not Philip Head acted promptly in | rescuing her from her dangerous | positicn, | When something useful in lessen- ing the drudgery of household rou- | the tidings most often come to you | through the store advertisements. Jf! you would know how to make your time count more, read the store ad- | Yertisements. The Late Mrs, Aleta Humphrey Mrs. Alet. Humphrey, wife of Fred Humphrey died on Saturday at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Derby, Belleville, Tha deceaged was born at Hay Bay in| 1901. She is survived by her hus- band, of Sa dim one daughter, Pearl, her parents, and one brothosr, Harold, of Napanee. She had been in ill health for about two months, | The remains. were taken to Napan=2 for interment. | = ee Large Bass Catch, A catch of 268 bass, five wall-eyed pike and a number of pickerel was the record made by a fishing party composed of Dr. and Mrs. A. D. Mit- tendorf and Mr. and Mrs. George Mittendorf during their nineteen days of fishing on the St. Lawrence river, with J. M, Senecal, guide. The Mittendorf party, who are all from New York City, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. William T. Dewart at Keewayden, having come here on their cruiser "Lancia." Van Natta-Butlin, A quiet wedding took place in St. Paul's church on Wednesday morn- ing when Canon W. F. Fitzgerald united in marriage Larita Mae, eld- er daughter of William Butlin, this city, and Harold C. Van Natta, Lake- wood, Ohio. The bride, who was giv- en away by her father, looked char- ming in a smart brown velour suit with beaver trimmings, and togue of beaver to match, and wore a cor- sage boupuet of sweetheart roses. Mr. and Mrs, Van Natta left on a motor trip through the Adirondacks and White Mountains before return- ing to Lakewood where they will in the futurs reside. Potato Crop Satisfactory. The potato crop, for which some people feared, is now regarded as quite satisfactory, and the prospects, according to some of ghe wholesale -- Where to Get News, | the tine is invented and placed on sale | IStration and classes on Sept. 28th, 12 i | Lennox agricultural fair, to famous | men, are that the price will drop as | False Teeth Held Firmly in Place By WILSON'S COREGA Now selling in CANADA at 45¢. - 98¢c. - 3128 Ask your Dentist or Draggist Buy the $1.25 size--it contains 51% times more than the 45c. size. COREGA CHEMICAL COMPANY Cleveland, U.S.A, Comfort Baby's Skin With Cuticura Soap And nd Fragrant Taleun Dima Sem $37,000 AND A JOB By CHARLS GRANT MILLER (Copyright, 1921. A Long Island chauffeur who to quit his job: me useless." It is true that the man who stops work is likely to die. he might just as well. cff. To sit down is to rust away. Nine people in tem, perhaps. would allow wealth to end their usefulness. Here is one whose incentive to work is not the mer» animal need of subsistence, but the human impulse to be of service to mankind. Here is a line that divides the how many of us walking on two legs and divested of tail can honestly claim to be on'the right side of this It would be impossible even to guess what proportion of us calling | ourselves humar have any definite purpose in lite other than to get all we can by giving as little as possible. Lots of us, when se think we have accumulated enough io keep us comfortable the rest of our lives, Many of us have not aven the good sense of the aut, but dissipate our it, work only to get it, and gel it only to substance as fast as we get spend fit. : Of course. we can pooh-pooh and say we would do just as this chauf- feur is doing; but the fact is that when it is put up to us, even in little things, mighty few of us make good. All Rights Reserved by United Feature Syndicate.) "I'd die if I'd stop work," he says. Nature abhors the superfluous, and soon cuts it 3 has fallen heir to $37,000, declines "Money sha"nt make Anyway, sudden acquisition of apimal from the human being. But line ? sit down and go to comsuming it. This man is wise in recognizing that his greatest fortune lies not i his $37.000, but in the fact that do it for i's own sake, he has work to 40 and the heart to cents. Cheese took a further drop on Thursday to 17 1-2 cents. Fresh beef prices are. unchanged | { but with the approach of cold wea- | | ther there will be a decline in the | | prices of both beef and pork. Fish is | -- Things Lively at Queen's. With the coming of the students to write on supplementary examina- tions, Queen's begins to take on a lively appearance again. This week the arts students are writing on ex- { aminations, and on Monday, Sept. | 19th, similar examinations begin in faculties of science and magi- cine The Faculty of Arts opens for reg- and a fair registration is expected in all the years. The first year in sci- ence, which this year will probably not be as large as the previous ones because of the raising of the entrance standards, commence siadies on Sept. 8th, while the senior years start on Sept. 29th. In medicine the prospects for the first year are good. All the years start to register on Sept. 26th and commence work on Sept. 28th. To Hold Cadet Drill. Lt.-Col. G. H. Gillespie has arrang- | ed for a cadet drill competition at the | take | place on the fair grounds, Napanee, | on Wednesday the 14th inst. A fine trophy was donated last year by U. | M. Wilson, county crown attorney, and it was won by Napanee high school. This year there will be teams from Trenton, Belleville, Picton and Kingston Collegiate Institute to con- test in the competitions. The cup must be won two years in succession to become the permanent property of a team. Arrangements have been made for the reception of cadet teams at the Napanee armouries. They will be met by the citizens' band and con- ducted to the fair grounds. There is great interest in this event of the fair, and Kingston Collegiate Insti- tute looks forward to winning the cup. ---- eee Bride Born in Kingston. A wedding of interest to Kingston- ians took place in Meredith, N.H., on Wednesday evening, Sept. 7th, when Miss Irene McIntyre, daughter of Col. and Mrs. W. A. McIntyre, of the Sdlvation Army, was united in mar- riage to R. E. Walbridge, Peterboro, N.H. Miss McIntyre was born in Kingston, while Col. McIntyre was stationed in the work of the Salva- tion Army in this city. The bride did excellent service during the war and became one of the Salvation Army's famous doughnut girls and was awarded the distinguished cross for her.bravery and devotion to duty, The ceremony took place in the pre- sence of a large number of friends and Salvationists. Col. McIntyre was on two occasions in command of the Army's work at Kingston and visited friends in the city a couple of years ago. ° esis Family Reunion. On Friday last "Lilac Lodge," the delightful home of Dr, and Mrs. Gil- bert White, on the bay shore, east of Picton, was the scene of a most | enjoyable family reunion of the des- cendants of Richard and Lanor Mor- den, about forty-five being present. Of their children the only survivor is Mrs. John Calnan, aged eighty-six years, who retains her vigor of mind and body to a remarkable degree, and who thoroughly enjoyed the days gat- hering. The only other remaining representative of this first generation was Mrs. D. R. Morden, who was also present joining heartily in all the | days festivities. Dinner was served on the spacipus verandah at "Lilac Lodge" all doing justice to ~ the abundance of good things provided. On behalf of the gathering Rev, D. N. Morden very fittingly expressed the appreciation of those present of the gracious hospitality of Dr. and Mrs. White, on this occasion, also emphasizing the very great pleasure enjoyed in the days happy iuter- course. Further remarks suitable to the occasion were made by Dr. G. W. Morden and A. E. Calnan. A Family -Re-Union, A family gathering was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs, W. A. Mogre, Anderson, on Aug. 24th. It was the occasion of a re-union of the McCaugherty family before Mrs. Emmons, their sister, returned to her home in Saskatoon, Sask. The members of the family were all pre- sent except Lester McCaugherty, La- mont, "Alta. Among the guests pre- sent were Mr. and Mrs, A. McCaugh- érty and Miss Anna McNeil, Bath; Mr. and Mrs, A. P. Davy and family, Bath; Mr, and Mrs. Bdward Me- Caugherty and family, Hawley; Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Emmons and family, Saskatoon, Sask.; Mr. and Mrs. Roy Miller and family, Morven; Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Moore, "Somerset Farm," Marysville. After a bounti- ful dinner, the time was spent in music and games, followed by a few speeches. Mr, and Mrs. A. McCaugh- || sTRouD'S TEA | GOOD TO THE LAST LEAF We are not looking for any reduction in the price of Coal. Now is a good time to lay in a supply for next winter. S. ANGLIN & CO. Woodworking Factory and Lumber Yards, Bay and Wellington Btrects, KINGSTON, Ont. Office Phone 66. Factory Phone 1415, Treat the Family Dinne Jo a Dim Jey Bring in your family and let them enjoy the service and surroundings of King- ston's best Restaurant. Woman! Grand Cafe PETER LEE, PROP, 222 Princess Street - - Two Doors Above Opera House Phone 1843. OTHERS ARE MAXOTIRED WHY NOT YOU ? EASTERN CANADA MAX OTIRE RUBBER CO. A. NEAL, Manager 284 Ontario Street. Phone 2050. SOWARDS KEEPS COAL --and-- COAL KEEPS SOWARDS * PHONE 155. UPTOWN OFFICE--McGALL'S CIGAR STORE PHONE 811. SOWARDS COAL COMPANY New Stock of Fine Quality Suits and Top Coats For Men and Young Men at Lewer 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 bélow Randolph Hotel) L J erty had the pleasure of seeing sev- enteen of their grand-childrem to- gether. Another feature of the gath- ering was the occasion of the forty. For Saturday FALL RANGE OF NEW FLANNELS -- For fall wear--grey, white, red, navy, natural and the new colors for Dresses and Middies. Special- ly priced at 60c., 75¢., 85¢., $1.00 and $1.25 a yard. KIMONA FLANNELS- In heavyweights and good pat- terns. at ..... 4. -37%e. and 50c. WW. N. Linton & Co. i 191. 'The Waldron Store. first anniversary of the grandparents' wedding. They received tions from their children and grand. children, *